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                  <text>Man faces charges after high speed chase
David Persons, 19, Rt. I, Cheshire, WBB arrested
Tuesday following a high-speed chase by area law en·
forcement officers,
Accordilng to Meigs CoW&gt;ty Sheriff James
Prof·
fitt, Persons was arrested in connection with the theft
of four stolen vehicles.
The episode began when a 1975 International tactor
and trailer was reported wrecked on Roush Lane In
Gallia County. An officer from the Ohio State Patrol
upon investigation discovered the tractor and trailer
had been stolen from Lawrence Yeauger, of Cheshire,

J:

near Gilbert's Texaco Staticin in Meigs County.
The Gallls County Sheriff's office, in the meantime,
·notified the Middleport Pollee that a Ford Cobra owned
by Stephanie Minor, Cheshire, had OO..n stolen from
the Rouslt Lane area and was believed to be In the Mid·
dleport area.
The Pomeroy Police found the Cobra on the parking
lot of the J&amp;R Motorcycle Shop in Pomeroy.
While Jim Frecker was reporting the breaking and
entering of of the J&amp;R shop and the theft of a motor·
cycle, Gary'""Wolfe, investigator, who was enroute to

e
Voi.JO,No.59
Copyrighled 1981

'

meet an Athens County deputy in Tuppers Plains, saw
a driver on a motorcycle pull from a night club parking
lot on SR 7 at a high rate of speed, Wolfe lmmedleley
gavechase. ·
He followed the motorcycle north on SR 7 toward
Royal Oak Park into a corn field owned by George
Karr before calling for asslatance from other units.
After several hours of searching the wooded area of
Royal Oak Park, Persons was found in a tree near one
of the ponds at the park.
,
Upon questioning of Persons officers discovered two

•

at y

motorcycles bad been stolen.
The second bike was later found by two hoys over a
hill in the area where officers were searching.
Assisting in the search were Sheriff Proffitt, Wolfe,
Deputy Dave Ohlinger, off duty officers of the sherifrs
department, Middleport, Pomeroy, Rutland and
Racine pollee, Gallla County Sheriff deputies, Ohio
Sl.:lte Patrol, Jim Frecker and Roger Starcher.
Chorges are expected to be filed later today ac·
cording to the sheriff's department.

en tine
1 Section, 10 Pages
IS Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 8,1981

No action ·
taken on
purchase

GUTTED- The Railroad St. Body Shop, operated
·by WUilam Capebal1, was gutted by lire early Tuesday
afternoon. Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst said losses

of equipment and paint wUI run a boot $17,000. Cause of
the fire bas not been determined. No one was at the
body shop when the lire started.

Corry outlines Issue One
By KATIE CROW
Thomas P. Corry, regional
of the Ohio Committee for
Free Enterprise competition
outlined state issue nwnber one
during Tuesday's luncheon meeting
of the Pomeroy Chamber of Com·
merce.
Issue one is a constitutional amen·
dment regarding changes in
workers' compensation.
The Free Enterprise Amendment
simply gives regular insurance com·
panies the right to compete, both
among themselves and with the
state fund, In writing workers' Cam·
pensation insurance In Ohio, a right
they already have in 44 other states,
Corry stated.
The new Amendment, according
to Corry, does not disturb the
present state fund in any way, nor
does it interfere witll the right of em·
ployees to self·insure. It merely
provides the employer with another
choice of coverage - a Free En·
terprise choice, Corry commented.
The Amendment simply does four
things: (I) It gives insurance com·
panies the right to compete with the
mana~~

State , Fund. (2) Provides for the
regulation of Insurance cmpanies by
the State Department of Insurance.
(3) Provides. that the State Fund
shall not be required to pay the
claims of an Insolvent private
carrier and that a private carrier
cannot be required to pay the claims
of an insolvent State Fund. (4)
Provides a constitutional safeguard
of the rjght of an employer to self·
lnsure.

Endorsing the issue are insurance
companies as well ·as small
business, accorrung to Corry. Again·
st the issue, Corry commented are
labor and the Nationwide Insurance
Co.
..
Corry said Ohio ranks first In ac·
cideitts and second in deaths in
Unitd States. "With competition the
state will clean up its act," Corry ob·
served.
The chamber took no action on en·
dorsing the issue due to the lack of
members present.
·Brian Conde, president of the
Meigs Qounty Jaycees, said the an ·
nual Jaycees sponsored Big Bend

Regatta was a huge success.
Projected profit for the Jaycees
has been estimated between $500
and $1,000. Conde went on to explain
that he has learned that some
residents and business peopl~ in
Middleport were disappointed that
the annual parade route was
changed in that it did not travel
through Middleport.
Conde stressed he did not wish to
upset residents of Middleport and
for them not to think the Jaycees
were "putting them down" as the
Jaycees have several projects
scheduled for Middleport Village.
He said Jaycees are in process now
of building steps at the Middleport
ballfield.
"The Rl!gatta went well and we
are happy with the outcome. We ex·
tend thanks and deep appreciation to
all those who helped," Conde stated.
Paul Gerard, general chairman of
the Regatta, said it was the first
year for the Jaycees and they made
first year mistakes, but, hopefully
problems experienced this year will
be worked out before the next event.

Democrats promise action
Qn major tax-cut proposal
WASHINGTON (AP) - House
Democrats, under a new round of
pressure from President Reagan,
are taking their time on a major tax·
cut bill but still promise to deliver by
Aug. 1.
The Democratic-controlled House
Ways and Means Commitlee w'fll not
consider a tax bill unW Thursday,
althOuBh Congress was · returning
today from a 10-day Fourth of July

Probe thefts

pass the measure before leaving
town for its August vacation.
Most Democrats are backing a
two.,.ear plan for cutting individual
taxes that would give low·and mid·
dle·incorile people more than
Reagan recilmmenils.
Reagan renewed his demand for
quick action on a tax cut·during ·a
RepUblican fund ·raising dinner .
~Y night in Chic~go, home of
Ways and Means Cbalnnan Dan
Rostenkowski.
"'l'he. American people must have
tax relief and ·they must have it
now,;:•!Reagan said. "U there Is no
tax bill&amp;e!lt to my desk for signature ·
by eatly August, there won't be a tax
cut this year."
He ,called on Rosterilrowski to

charges that Democrats are
dragging their feet is the work of
political tacticians, not economic
realists."
' Reagan, who won most of the
budget cuts he sought from
Congress, called the upcoming fight
over taxes "the largest, most dif·
ficult and most important step" in
his economic plan.
The Senate passed a package of
recess.
about $38 billion worth of budget cuts
In addition to the )ax bill,
whl)e the House, following a bitter
Cong~ will have to grapple this
parUamentary battle, rejected por·
month with landmark packages of
tions of a measure backed by , the
'budget cuts passed by both ·houses
Democrati_c leadership and ap·
just b~fore the recess. · The
proved a ~.1 billion package.
Democratic Study Group, a liberal
Democrats, still smarting from
HOUle research office, calls the
budget defeats on the Hou.,e floor,
blidget"(Ut measUr-es "the largest
have Indicated that there still may
piece of econiJIIllc legislation In the ~'jm~Vide ' the leade~ necessary be skirmishes over the budget cuts •.
~ofthecountry."
.
, to~ataxbWtoUlelfquaeflOOI' · Differences between the.two ver·
to the recess, the Senate
tlrile for the~ to debate'it, : sions of the bullget-cutting bWs will
Finance Commltlef approyed ' aDd' ~ .floth housel1 to ~. and have · to ~ irone!l out by -8 con·
President Reagan's reqiles!ed· ~ tlmills runniJJB out.'~ ,
·
fl!reJ!CI! commiUee that will Include
' pe,rcent, three·year ~ b,l J~~~r· . John Sb,emJan, · 11 . ~nkOWBtl more 11-m half the Sellate and a
sona1 tu rates In an attempt~ apur . spqkesman, said, "'111e chalnnall.• large ~~t~ the tloUIIe.
. . the Waysand M~ Comml!fee
mea111 to dellver a bW I!Y August J."
To .avOid·a JlfO!racled conference,
action. .
,
• . ' F~ llinUar 8llepU0111 ilf foot· 11001e HOUle ' iiepubllcans bave
BQt the Honie cOmiillttee, Wbere clrialtlc frGm ReilpD a!. . Jut sucgested· that ·tile .GOR-contr0ned
Dernoclllll enjoy a H ma~, baa RIOICb, !Wtenkontl told npoJ"ten, Senate simply adopt 11001e of HOUle·
n.it CIJIII)direcl tbii Jill I 1e ilnce ' "Tba ~Istre.~· this iu backtdProvillonathat'ireslmllarto
J - M.
~ biiJ,._~t~Uaaf•wl!ll•mec· thple petd ,ill the llqte. It was
[W ~ . . Willi by July 17~ tid to lhilpe U·- p If~ WlilalpOI"· undelt Whether Senate leaders
olhlch ~ pw the ROI!M!ime to ~event.- Tbe dallY~~ of
(cantlnuedonpagel2)
~~
.
1!1/l .' -

Prior

Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday discussed the possibility of
purchasing approximately 60 acres
of land in Salisbury Township for the
purpose of developing a new landlill
site.
The board decided to look at one
other site in the same vicinity before
niaking a final decision.
Official
groundbreaking
ceremonies will be held at the site of
the new Mentally Retarded Center
and Workshop in Syracuse Wed·
nesday, July 15 at noon it was
decided. Meeting with the board to
discuss the groundbreaking was
Chris Layh, administrator.
County engineer, Phil Roberts,
met with the board to discuss high ·
way matters.
Commissioners
asked the engineer if his department
was willing to apply dust control
materials for the various township
trustees when requested .
Roberts point out that if the
trustees purchased the materials his
department would distribue the
material but he could not make
direct purchases for the trustees.
Roberts also discussed the
possibility of purchasing a , new
dump truck. The corrunissioners
ageed to revi~w specifications when
they are presented.
· ..
A discussion concerning entering
into an agreement with the Meigs
County Fair Board for the use of a
water tap to supply the county dog
pound was held.
Corrunissioners wiU pay the water
bill for 11 months with the fair board
paying for the month of the county
fair. The prosecutor will draw up the
necessary legal agreement.
Mrs. Ruth Cotterill met with the
hoard to discuss the operation of the
coW&gt;ty home. The board designated
Mrs. Cotterill as \he person in
charge at the home during the ab·
sence of Mrs. Jacobs who is on sick
leave.
The meeting was recessed until
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at which time
bids will be opened on the con·
struction of the acc~ss road from
Union Ave., to the Mulberry Heights
area.
Attending were Henry Wells,
president, Richard Jones and David
Koblentz, corrunissioners, Mary
Hobstetter, clerk and Martha Cham·
ber.;.

The Meigs County Sheriff's Depar·
tment is investigating the theft of
three tables that were taken from
the home of H. B. Hannon, Hannon
Road. Also taken were a battery
charge, and battery ahd cable from
an oil well that was running.
The·department reported damage
to a mailbox and paper box
belonging to Jim Stettler, township
road 157. The incident occurred bet·
ween !2:30a.m. and6a.m. on JulyS.

President likes silent formula
CHJCAGO - President Reagan says "good foreign policy is the use
of good common sense" and it's best not to tell the nation and the world
CKactly how he will handle international relations.
In a speech in which he also declared that Congress has a choice bet·
ween his tax cut or none at all this year, Reagan took iS&gt;;Ue with press
criticism that he has been inconsistent on foreign policy and that he
has not made a major speech on the subject since taking office in
January.
Reagan, who sa id during the 1980 campaign that the nation's foreign
policy should be clear and predictable, told an Illinois Republican
fund-raising dinner Tuesday night : "I just don't happen to believe it is
necessary to spell out in detail and in advance a formula which will
guide our every move in international relations.

Officials scale down order
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Huntington officials have scaled down the
scope of a gag order imposed on city employees in an attempt to limit
news coverage.
Mayor Bill Toney and the city council "clarified" instructions issued
last week by the mayor, according to City Manager Dick Barton.
In a memo Tuesday afternoon to all department heads, Barton said
statements to the media must be cleared with the mayor only when
they deal with "policy or policies under consideration for future adop·
tion ."

Tuesday's memorandum superceded the mayor's instructions to
Barton last week, when Toney - in a memorandwn to the city
manager - said flatly that "no public or media releases on city mat·
ters will be made without the mayor's approvaL "

Youths continue rampage
LONDON - Britain had its fifth successive night of street violence,
with a third city affected, as 500 youths rampaged through a North
London suburb and rioters set fires to stores and stoned fire engines in
Manchester.
The mob in the Wood Green district of London "went absolutely
mad" Tuesday night, said cafe owner Saul Liasi . " It was not racial,
just pure hooliganism. Undoubtedly, they want excitement and they
want to destroy things - they are not short of money."
Jeff Crawford, a West Indian community relations officer in the
area, said most of the mob was black. but a "significant" nwnber of
young whites took part, ''white lads and a nwnber of Cypriots ."

Dockworkers walk off jobs
WARSAW, Poland - Dockworkers in major Polish ports walked off
their jobs for a one-hour warning strike today, demanding improved
living and working conditions, a Solidarity union spokesman said.
The spokesman, reached by telephone in the port city of Szczecin at
the East German border, said the strikes began without the traditional
wail of sirens or other dramatic acts. The workers planned to stay at
their posts through the work stoppage.
The brief strike threatened to be only the first in a series of blows to
Poland's crumbling economy at a crucial moment - less than a week
before the July 14 opening of a refonnir.g party congresS viewed with
alarm by the Soviet Union ,

Weather
Mostly clear tonight Partly cloudy Thursday. Continued very
warm and hwnid . Highs Thursday in the low 90s. Lows tonight in the
low 70s. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and 20 percent Tbur·
sday. Winds becoming southwesterly around 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
Chance of showers or thunderstorms each day. Highs mostly in the
80s. Lows in the ml~50s to mid-60s early Friday and In the 60s early
Saturday and Sunday.

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ACTION -A nmber of worten were busy In the
- af Powell St., Mlddlepol1, Tllelday afternoon pu&amp;tlng ftUI tollcllel on the foandattone for a senior

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clUzens apartmeat eomplex being built In lbe communiCy thllllllllimer. Completed modular unllll will be
moved onto the site out of Columbus.
fi :
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�.,
Ohio

Comlhentar

·~ : Baseball

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 8,1981

By Auoclated Preu
The player union's executive
board has met, tbe club owners will
meet, the National Labor Relations
Board hearing conttnues...and the
baseball strike is now In its 27th day
witb no end In sight and the AD .Sta~
Game aU butleftfor dead.
.
·M arvin .Miller, the 1,1nion's
executive director, said following
Tuesday njght's meeting in New
York - which lasted more than four
hours_and was attended by at least

Bob 'Jones and the taxmanL___________J_am_es_J._Kr~'lpa_tn_'c_k
WASHINGTON - For the past 10 ... " These beliefs, supported by the
years the Bob Jones University of university's interpretation of tbe
Greenville, S. C., has been fighting a Bible. " arc genuine religious
batUe witb the U. S. Internal beliefs. " •
Now we come to the heart of the
Revenue Service. The battle is about
matter
: Is such a religious in to go Into a decisive round. It's a
stitution,
holding such beliefs, a
fight tbat concerns every one of us.
religious
institution
under tbe Tax
For the record, the university is a
Code?
The
IRS
says
it is not. The
fWldamentalist religious institution,
government's
position
is that unless
founded in 1927, now headed by Dr.
Bob Jones III. It has a current Bob Jones University fonnaUy
enrolbnent of 6,300 and a teaching renounces these "genuine religious
beliefs" and abolishes its doctrinal
staff of roughly 1,000.
The government has not position on interracial marriage, the
cballenged the pervasive role of university cannot qualify for tax
religion in tbe university's life. exemption .
For the university, the issue is
Nearly half of the students are
studying for the ministry or very nearly an issue of surviving or
preparing to teach in Christian perishing. The code J&gt;TOvision that
schools. Every teacher must be a deals with tax exemption is tied
born-again Christian who must dtrectly to the provision that deals
testify to at least one saving ex - with the deductibility of con·
perience with Jesus Christ. Prayer tributions to religious institutionss.
Is a continuing occupation. Worldly If the government prevails, the
amusements are J&gt;rohibited, in - university could be liable for more
eluding dancing, use of tobacco, than half a million dollars in back
movie-going and listening to jazz or taxes. Worse still, without a certificate of deductibility, the conrock music .
The Fourth U. S. Circuit Court of tributions n which the university
Appeals did not dispute a trial depends would be keenly affected .
court's finding that "A primary fun - You will surmise correctly that Bob
damentalist conviction (of the Jones receives no direct federal aid
university) is that the Scriptures for- of any sort.
But the issue now being urged
bid interracial dating and marriage

Way others see it

upen, the U. S. Supreme Court has
implications that reach far beyond
this fundamentalist campus in Soutb
Carolina. Implicit in the govern·
ment's position is the government's
power to abridge the freedom of
religion. In his petition for Supreme
Court review, William B. Bell, the
brilliant Pennsylvania lawyer whose
First Amendment victories have
gained national renown, contends
that "all religious institutions in'the
United States are potentially
threatened" by the government's
line of reasoning in the Bob Jones
case.
That line of reasoning, to state the
matter mildly, is bizarre. The Tax
Code accords exemption and deductibil)ty to organizations operated exclusively for "religious, charitable,
scientific, literary or educational
purposes." The IRS contends that
the word "charitable" applies to aU
the subject institutions; no in stitution is "charitable" if its racial
views violate public J&gt;Olicy ; the
J&gt;Ublic policy of the government approves interracial marriage;
therefore, Bob Jones is not
charitable and does not qualify .
This is incredible. The govern ment is contending, in effect. that
the First Amendment's guarantee of
freedom of religion must yield to a
bureaucratic determination of

NEW YORK (AP)- Ina mockery
of sound economics, the cost of
living index is almost certainly inflationary .
It is universaUy recognized as
marred in conceJ&gt;I. Various
economists point out that the
housing category, which makes up
45 percent of the index, carries far
too much weight, ·at least under
current conditions.
In J&gt;ractice, any exaggeration in
measuring tiving costs is immediately compounded by cost -of·
living adjustments written into
union and pension contracts. And so
the index contributes to what it
allegedly measures.
And that brings up - before
Congress this week - the subject of
the cost of living index as it applies
to Social Security's 23 million
reCtJ&gt;ients, who benefitted this mon ·

THE DAYTON .JOURNAL HERALD - "Closing the House-senate conference committee on Ohio's budget in Columbus was one of those neat ideas
that defeated itself .
•'Republicans came out angry at the end of the day because they said the
Democrats had refused to bargain in good faith . Since the meeting was
closed, however, they had no proof.
" It serves them right. Ohio legislators have mandated that the sun shines
on virtually all of the public 's business all of the time . Of course, the
legislature can be private any time the legislators' little hearts desire - and
Lhat's usually when they think a deal is brewing_
" ... It's all because Gov . James A. Rhodes and the House Democratic
leadership are doing another political dance over who stands for more spen ·
ding and taxing and who stands for fiscal integrity, the taxJ&gt;3yers, apple pie,
soybeans, -more jobs and all that.
"Someone thou~ht it could all be worked out quietly in conference Mon day . They should have known better.
"You can't work in a sewer without coming out smelling like one ."
THE CANTON REPOSITORY - ·' Although federal spending in Ohio jumped 19 percent in 1980, moch of it can be attributed to increased costs of
programs rather than establishment of new expenditures of U.S. doUars.
"Ohio ranked 46th in receiving federal government funds per capita and
again was much lower than per capita funds flowing to the Sun Belt.
"Ohio, the sixth largest state with 4.8 percent of the population, received
3.7 percent of federal expenditures, while furnishing 5.4 percent of government revenues.
"There is no spirit of equality in this issue . Obviously the legislators from
the Sun Belt are out-hustling the northern group for the federal bucks.
"Of course there are many factors in garnering U.S. money, not the least
of which is seniority in Congress. Clout is the name of the game when it
comes to getting federal projects for U.S. projects.
"Clout can be gained through seniority, or coalition of several
,congressmen. The most powerful are those who have seniority and the
ability to form a coalition backing a proposal.
"The seniority for our area is coming with time. Until then, it would be a
good idea for Ohio's congressmen and those of other northern states to start
working together before they lose many congressional seats to the areas that
are getting the big bucks from Congress.
" Congressmen will tell you that they have grouped into a northeastern
United States coalitition. It must not be working very well."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Motorists who want to return to the
days when Ohio's automobile license
plates could be identified by county
would be able to do so under a bill
pending in the Legislature.
But Sen. Michael DeWine, RCedarviUe, said the measure is actually designed more as an aid to
local law enforcement agencies.
II enacted, DeWine's Senate·
passed bill would require that
J&gt;3ssenger car tags issued by deputy
registrars bear stickers with the
name of the county in which they are
issued.
"This is princiJ&gt;3IIY a bill that

Ill ( ·,,uri Strrrl
l'tlmt•rn)' . Ohln

614-:m-2 156
ill

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INTt:RF""i"TOFTH E MEIGS- MASON .4.REA

1-N~L~~
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Does it, for instance, cost more to
feed a retiree Lhan to feed a famlly of
growing youngsters? Who mwt
spend more for clothing? How much
more does a retiree spend for unin·
suredmedical care'
The purpose of studying the cost of
living index, and the adjustments
made on the basis of it, are not to
reward or deprive any group, but
simply to develop and implement a
sensible criterion for payments.
Critics have for years asked why
the cost -of -living Index should be
employed as an escalator if it
doesn't apJ&gt;ly to recipients of Social
Security. And, while Congress isn't
dealing with tbe index as such but
with the more specific question of
equitable Social Security payments,
the question applies equally to all
cost-of -living escalators.

periencing them. Most ' people,
especially retirees, bought \heir
homes years ago, when prices and
mortgage rates were much lower.
Taxes and reJ&gt;3irs exceJ&gt;Ied, major
costs are fixed .
Rental costs are another matter.
Rents in many areas have risen
faster than the overall inflation rate,
a result in part of the low level of
rnulti ·family housing construction
over the past few years.
A more accurate index would adjust for these factors . And it would
be further refined to reflect changes
not just in the overall cost of living
but in the specific living costs of the
elderly as a group.
Is the cost of living higher for
older people' Or lower? Clearly,
many of the factors in the overall
cost of living don't apply in the same
weight to the elderly.

County sticker proposal would help lawmen
should help law enforcement,"
DeWine said. "It's merely one more
method of identification.' '
He said authorities who back the
bill contend that the county stickers
would help them more quickly determine if a car tbey spot is from out·
side their local areas. In addition,
witnesses who may have difficulty in
remembering a license plate number may at least be able to recall the
name of the county on the tags.
Until 1980, license plates in Ohio
bore a specific combination of letters and numbers that indicated the
county of registration.

·'The question is on the De Wine 25
cent tax," Sen. Theodore M. Gray,
R.Columbus, joked during Senate
debate on the biU.
But WiUiam Antonoplos, bureau
legislative liaison, said the charge
would be imposed only when a
motorist bought new license plates,
once every four or five years. Antonoplos said the bureau has taken
no position for or against the bill.
Senate OJ&gt;ponents questioned the
extra cost and the need for deputy
registrars around the state to stock
the identification stickers from all88
counties.

But lhe bureau of motor vehicles
scrapped that in 1980 in favor of a
random system of three letters and
three numbers which give no clue as
to the county involved.
Leslie Gardier, bureau public information officer, said the 13 million
J&gt;Ossible combinations the old
system provided was insufficient.
The new procedure allows about 26
million combinations.
DeWine's bill would add a 25-cent
charge to the cost of obtaining license plates to cover the cost of
producing the county identification
stickers.

teres!, "the float" can make money
for its owner on nights, weekends
and hQlidays. Special divisions have
been set up to make sure every bit of
cash in a company is earning in teres! at aU times, whether it's
money that belongs to the company,
or money Lhat is 6wed to you.
This is how it works. You have
provided a small service for Cor·
poration Busbee, and your bill
comes to $5,000, a pittance to this
great conglomerate. One month
goes by and you don't hear a wordthen the second montb goes by, and
you decide to caU up the man who ordered the work.
Because you're hoping for more
business from C.B. you're very
polite on th~ phone.
(Large companies who deal in
"the float" count on the little fellows
not becoming belligerent when it
comes to asking for the money owed
to him.)
The man ~ho ordered the $5,000
worth of services is expecting the
call. "I· put in a voucher'for that biU
the day I received it," he says in his

ROBERT L. WINGETI

most surprised voice. "I 'll call
Wheat Bluff, Kansas, and see what
happened to it."
"Why would you call Wheat Bluff,
Kansas, when you're located in
Philadelphia, Peimsylvania ?"
"That's where our computers are.
We J&gt;3Y all our bills from Wheat
Bluff."
"Isn't that a bit out of the way for
you?"
"Not really. They have two com muter flights going in there every
week . I'll get on this right away ."
The next time you caD the man is
on sick leave, and the time after he's
on vacation. Two months later you
get him-back on'the phone."
" Any news about my $5,000?"
" Didn't you get your money yet?"
the man says. "This is a shocking
state of affairs. The people in Wheat
Bluff promised me tbey would put
your check in the rna[I tbe next day.
I'll get right back to yqu." ·
The next week the inan at C.B.
caUs. "Well, you'll be glad to hear I
found out wbat the hold-up was.
Your invoice never · reached

Boulder, Colorado."
" Where does Boulder fit into
this?"
"The computer in Whea I Bluff
won't issue a check unless tbe com·
J&gt;Uter in Boulder confinns the figure
is correct. I've sent a duplicate of
the invoice off today. I wouldn't be
surprised if you got your money
within a week.''
Whether you finally get your
money in a week or a montb after
this call, depends on whether the
treasurer of Corporation Busbee
wants to let you out of the company's
float.
You may be wondering where
your $5,000 was -while you were
tryirlg to keep your head above
water. If it will make you feel any
better, it wasn't just sitting In Wheat
Bluff, Kansas. It was floating in U.
S. Treasury Bills, Gennan marks,
Japanese yen, tax-free hockey bon·
ds, or an off ·sl,Jore Euro-d~tllar fund
and Oil of Olay futures in Toronto,
Canada.
Who says the big companies don't
give you a ride for your money?

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

. "Asrou who have been involved in
strikes know, as tlrne'goes on you get
more militant, solld and stronger,"
saJd Miller. "That has bappeiled
oore without any question. That's
not always good. It makes it more
difficult to get a settlement.
"What was acceptable in April
and May is not acceptable in June or
July."

negotlallons ~Y plan to voice
their feelings atthe meeting. ·
Meanwlllle, I(J11m testified at

members of tbe .Player Relations
Committee. Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn .will also aUend tbe session, at
the owner's Invitation. It's the first
such ineetlng fqr the owners since
the strike began June 12.
"We have nieetlngs once in awhile
and Mr. Grebey brings us up to date.
We don't expreii our views," saJd
Minnesota Twins President Calvin
Griffith.
But a growing nwnber of owners
who are dissatisfied witb tbe pace of

'fuesdlly's NI..Rll heariJ1M ~ jhat
player aalarlel ,are escalatin(f at a
rate exce.edilf« Ute one he qDtit,d in a
speech tO club_-OWillets last Deeem·
ber, when he cited proje¢t!Qill by the
certified public acalWIIIng finn rl
Ernst and Wbinney wblch said the
average salary would reach $320,000
by 1983.

" I think they're low," Kuhn said of

Nt•~s

Game 10

Game 13

Game
Game
Game
Game
Game
Game
Game
Game
Gn.me
Game
Game
name
Game
Game
Game

1

TEAt1
Team
Team
Team
Team

g 1

2

3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10-1-1--

12-13-14-15-II
II
II
II

2

3

4

5

Thurs.
Thurs.
Fri.
Fri.
Sat.
Sat.
Sat.
Sat.
Sun.
Sun.
Sun.
Sun.
Tues.
Thurs.
Fri.

July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
July
JulY

23
23

24
24
25
25
25
25
26
26
26
26
28
30
31

1 vs. Team 2
Team 3 .vs. Team ~
Team 5 V5, 'l'ear.t 6
Team 7 V5. Team 8
\Hnner 1 vs. Winner 2
Loser 1 vs. Loser 2
Winner 3 vs. \o/inner 4
Lo;;cr 3 VS • Loser 4
Winner 6 vs. Lo:.er 7
\-~inner 8 vs. Loser 5
\Hnner 5 vs. \{inner 7
\-11 nnc r 9 vs. \&lt;/inner 10
\-~inn e r 1~ vs. Loser 11
\-/inner 11 vs. \-/inner 13
\.Jinner 14 vs' Loser 14

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
a.m.

5:30
5:30
5:30
5:30
--11: 00
--11:00
-- 3:00
3:00
--11:00
--11:00
3:00
3;00
5:30
5:30
5:30

Tear:~

a.m .

p.m.
p.m.

--

a.m.•

a.m.
P, m.
P.m.
p.m.

p.m.
p.m.

Former Bengal pushes boycott
'

o•

~·I I

.,.;,1 -tor•

CINCINNATI (AP) - A former Cincinnati Bengals football player is
propcllling a fan boycott of Cincinnati
Reds gupes when · tbe baseball
players' strike is settled

American u apple pie. Apparently a

told him they didn't want to attend
tbe " Hamilton Night" game on Aug.
4 be«ause they were angry at
played and owners.
"The feeling I get is tbat they are
going to boycott when and . If
(ballplayers) return," Shepherd
said. "'11ley are going to spend their
monel' ' In other areas of en·
tertainlnent."
Various Hamilton groups had
bought 11 ~ ~ckets for tbe tbird an·
nual ''HIIIIlllton Night" game.

come.''
Craig said The July 1Club, fonned
last month in hopes the strike would
be seWed by tbat dilte, Is proposing
· that angry fana tum In tbelr season
tickets and boycott Reds 881111l8
when tbe strike Is settled. He said
tbe 800 I18IDI!I were sent to tbe .Reds
and negotiating teams for tbe
players and club owners.
Craig, a candldlte b- Cincinnati
CitY CounCil, said he decided "as a
fan" to form the July 1 Club to
I ep!' II tnt filii. "' said ~ l'8lpOIIIIC!
so far llbon-ltrongsentlmeot again·
st tbe strike;·

A M•:MRfo:lt nf Tht· IU~IIdltt'CI Pn'MII, lnla.-:1
1\mrrM.. It Nt'"IIP'II"'' l"uhli~h4·rs J\ssnf'iiiUun.

Dall~

I .t:n·t:tt~ fit" IWI NIU~ lrt' lll't·lt·nmt-d . Tllry Mhnuld tw It~ lhlln liCI wtll'dK;h~q, All
lt•ll•''" 11n· "uhtr•·l In t'11ili"A 'IItwl m11"1 IM• MhlPI-d • ·lth n~mr. 11ddn&gt;1• a.t LelrpiM•
tMiml~t•r '!f11 IIMiltlll'd h•lh•A "ill hi• puhlillhl.ft. l.rtlt•n KhtNid Jw In jttNJd tiUilf'. '""'""'lllifiK
•

.

'.\

'

.,

TRIMMERS
GASOUNE AND

Steven L. Story
Karen H. Story

ELECTRIC MODELS.

"

236 W. 2nd., Pomeroy, Oh.(Formerly Meigs Gen . Hospital)

HOME PH. 992·3523

OFFICE PH. 992-6624

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

Ingals doubled and tripled . twice,
Lee • Powell .and Artie Hunnell

at Middleport.
·.
·
Entry fee Is flO pi~~&amp; two sOftballs.
Deadllne 1for entry fee and roster Is

slnglf(ltbreetimes,BriapTannehlli
addecl t\¥&lt;) _!11ngles, and steve Musser

will'l'lle top ,t-;ro teama in' ei!ch .clasB

· ·

.::::~~~E~~~~!~

t
IKO INDUSTRIES, INC. t~
t
Introduces The \_
NEW IKO
t
AM ARMOUR t
SEAL ASPHALT t
SHINGLE t
$2490 t
· - - - - - - - ..._ _. ..._ _. ..._._ ..._ _. ..._._

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

Tourn..ment set

by: Weed Eater

AnORNEYS AT LAW

A

-

\ '

'

WEiVE MOV~EDII

E
·
MEIGS
TIRE
C NTER
. ·
·
·

-

'

IS NOW.AT .THEIR
'

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242.'WEST:MAl~" .·

'

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~ ,~.,~~~! _Q~O

SQ.

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. . ~~~ .,~A':·.av.c.
rtM£1QS,tTIRE

Prt't111 .4.f'IK4M'llltlon and tilt'

2

1
2
1
2
1
1
1 ( 1f needed )

AVAILABLE IN BOTH

N.E,W .LQC&amp;T~ON

•

2

l

NYLON STRING

STORY &amp; STORY

stadlwn) to sUpplement his in·

'

'

2

1
2
1

Helper

vertllled tbe organization.
Assistant City Manager Hal
"No one has spoken about the Shepherd881d Tuesday.
fan," 881d Craig, a· Bengal a' safety
Shepherd said many Reds fans
from 1971·73. "No one baa spoken ~-------------'---------1
about the lltUe people, tbe guy who
sells peanuts and beer (at the
"

·

l

Summer

li ol

"BasebaU is supposed to be as

lot of people !Ike pie. They'rerespon.
ding to not having tbeir dish served
to them," Craig said
Neal Craig, an agent for
A group of more tban 1,000
professional football players, saJd a Han)llton, Ohio, resldehts has can·
local baaeball fan group tbat be for· celled Its annual excursion to Rivermed has received about 800 front Stadlwn because r1 un·
Inquiries, even though he has not ad- certainty over tbe strike, Hamilton

Jul~U.

Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field
Field

Field 1 TrautHein field
Murray City
Field 2 Vlest State St.
New Lexine;ton
\•/ellston
·.ream II G Lancaster
Crool&lt;sville
Team II 7 Glouster
Meigs
Team # 8 Athens

,,. ,... ;'' •

DOONESBURY·

15

13

man singled · and tripled,' Bryan

sin81ed'tlflce. ·

Gam~;~

!IllNER

A U.S.S.S.A distri~ qualifying sof •
tball toiimalneni .W be lield July 18
and 19 In Syracuse and Middleport.

•.uowar\1 · and Gary
_ • TIJlls
s~ ' once, and Chris Howard ·

Game 14

Game 12

•

Hurlnell relieved for the wtnnera. He
and Hysell combined to fan 11 Bod
walk four.- Haning fanned· six and

We!
siniiedOnle:·--

'

loAIU"r

estimates.,,
The Players Association has filed
an unfair labor practices charge
against the owners, claiming they
have not bargained in good faitb and
seeking to force the clubs to make
public their financial records. Chief
adminlstrative law judge Melvin
Wellea is hearing the case and wiU
decide whether to seek an en ·
forcement order requiring the clubs . ·
to comply.

· IllNER 12

· UMI PHONI AND

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

those estimates. "I think the salary
has •- gone up faster Lhan their

Oame 11

w~~~:;·Powell'sJamesNor· :g:~18a:~·~c;:

l·uhll.,lwr/1 ••nlr•dlrr

,,..,.... ~ . II,IIIIM'f ' "IL:IIil .. ' "

What Is nOt acceptable tQ tht\
players right now Is management's
plan for compensation to teams
losing free agents. The dis(iute has
been over what free agents, and how
many, will be subject to _com·
pensation by professional players
ratber tban ,amateur draft choices,
and how the compensation will be
detennlned.
The club owners will meet Thur·
sday in New York witb their chief
negotiator, Ray Grebey, and other

ever.

Hysell
was thewas·
winning
pitcherArtie
and
Chris Haning
the loser.

BOB HOEFLICH

I' AT WHITEHF.AD

one player from each otthe 26 teams
- that the playen were as unified as

In regular season little league
play, powerful Syracuse defeated
HarrisonviUe 13·2. David Amburgey
was the winning pitcher witb eight
strikeouts and ''two· walks. Howard
suffered the Ieiss, although he posted
tour strikeouts and four walks.
Williams came on In relief to fan two
and walk two.
Amburgey gave up two hits the first inning, but then settled down· and
allowed 01\ly"two more 1\its in the tn·
tire game. Syracuse is now 9-4 on the
seaon in regular season action.
Doug Owens had I! grand slam
home _run for tbe winners and a~o
added two singles . .Jolm Riffle and
Todd Lisle each doubled, a~d Mike
Klees, Shawn Cunningham, Shawn
Arnott, and Chris Baer add-:&lt;! ·
. -singles. Williams had a double and
single for Harrisonville, while Han •
ning doubled, ollRd Barrett singled.
In .Big Bend UtUe League action,
Pomeroy Powell's Giants rolled to a
12-4 ;win ·over- Harrisonville. Todd

The float.,_ _________.. ____A_rt_B_uc_hw_a_ld
Everyone can understand it when
a little guy owes you money and is
late in paying it. But it's hard for
most people to comprehend when a
big corporation will play games with
you.
Because of high intere~t rates
more and more of the larger companies are dragging tbeir feet when
it comes to paying their bills. These
are the same ouUits who tbreaten an
individual with tbe deatb penalty if
he doesn 't J&gt;3Y his biU on time.
The reason for this can be at ·
tributed to what is known in the
banking business as "the float."
"The float," is the amount of cash
that a company has on band at any
given time to invest in 's hort·term
bonds, notes, &lt;K certificates of
deposit paying 14 or I~ or 18 percent
interest.
The longer the corporations hold
on to your money, the more money
they make on it for tbemselves.
When interest rates were low,. companies didn 'I pay much attention to
" tbe float." Now it's keepin$ I:DIIRY
of tbem alive. Witb double111gtt in·

strike in 17th day despite vari.ou~

The annual Syracuse Little
League Tournament got underway
last night witb Syracuse, · Mid·
dleport'll' Braves, and .tbe New
Haven CUbs posting wins and ad·
vancing to second round play.
In the opener, tbe hometown boys
from Syracuse blanked the
Gallipolis Red Sox 8.0 behind a no·hit
shut out by pitcher Doug Owens.
Owens went the distance to pick up
tbe win, while Jlm Dilvis suffered
the loss for Gallipolis.
Leading 'hitters for Syracuse were
Doug Owe115 witb a home run and
single, Chris Baer a triple and
single, and Shawn Arnott a double.
The winners had eight runs on nine
hits and only one error. Gallipolis
was blanked in the hit and run
column, while committing four'
errors.
The Middleport Braves claimed
an undispull\d 8-4 win. over Hannan
Trace behind an eight hit attack .
Donnie Becker claimed the win for
Middleport and Mark Jenkins suffered the loss. Becker gave up. four
runs on only three hits.
Middleport hi~rs were S. Cassell
wilh a doubl~ ami single, Jeff Nelson
two singles, T. Cassell- two singles,
and S. Hanning two singles. P .
Bailey. S. Jarrel, and S. Caldwell
each singled for Hannan Trace.
In the las_t. round of the evening,
New Haven'~ ,.Cuj&gt;s, pu)l4)d. out lhe
heavy artiUery iri the last inning to
defeat Al_bany's Merchants 8-4. J. T.
Uoyd posted the win in going the
distance, while M. Wakh suffered
the loss. Albany out-hit the winners
nine to six, but it' Willi New Haven
who capitalized on its oppoi1unities.
The winners depended on the long
ball to stay in the game and claim
the win. P ..Briles hit a home run and
single, whlle B. cnavis ' and J. T.
Uoyd each had home runs. For
Albany B. Douglas had,two singles
and R. Atorhad a'homernn.

l ~'i
\..IKUO ~

tb from an 11-percent J&gt;BY raise.
Did the cost of living for Social
Security recipients really rise 11
percent? Or was it less?
For the years gone by, the
question is academic. But in the
future , a more accurate index, it is
argued, conceivably could save·the
Social Security retirement fund, and
the government, many billions of
dollars.
The more accurate index would be
one Lhat (I) more accurately reflects changes in living costs, and (2 1 is
more attuned to the costs of living of
retirees, who make up the bulk of
recipients.
Critics of the index say a more accurate measure would put housing in
its place. Despite today 's high prices
and interest rates, only a small !rae ·
lion of homeowners are ex -

.. --·····

Syracuse
tourney
underway

~~

,...--------.

• ~•:•"'

the whole affair. Mr. Reagan's pen·
ding tax bill has something for
everyone.
It would be a blow lor liberty If the .
biU were amended to provide
something for fundamentalists who
believe unpoJ&gt;ular beliefs.

this be'
It probably wiU be October before
the Supreme Court announces
whether it will hear the university's
appeal !om the adverse ruling in the
circuit court below. Meanwhile,
perhaJ&gt;S Congress can be alerted to

fP ~
Cost of living index certainly inflationary

By The Associated Press
Here is some editorial comment from Ohio neWSJ&gt;3J&gt;Crs in the J&gt;3Sl week :
THE TOLEDO BLADE - "As tempting as it might be for some political
prognosticators to consider the closeness of the Fourth District
congressional election last week a referendum on the Reagan administration's record in office, it would be extremely misleading to do so.
"The contest apJ&gt;3rently was won by Michael Oxley of Findlay, who
defeated Dale Locker, the Democrallc candidate, by only 378 votes of some
83,430 votes cast. A recount is being conducted_
"Although the district had been deemed a safe one for the Republicans, at
least as far as congressional races are concerned., the J&gt;Crsonal popularity of
the late Tennyson Guyer was undoubtedly a major factor in his heavy
margins of victory. At least half the voters of the district are listed as indeJ&gt;Cndents, and a good many of them voted for the Democratic candidate.
"Mr. Oxley was hurt boll! by apathy of Republican voters in his own coun ty, Hancock, and bX the bitter primary between him and Robert Huffman of
Miami County, which cut sharply into the Republican vote in that county .. .
" The lesson, if there is one, could be that local factors often count for far
more than any voter perceptions of what administrations in far-off
Washington are doing. A divisive primary, voter aJ&gt;3thy, the absence of an
incumbent, or the fielding of a popular opposition candidate can knock any
party's grand strategy into a cocked hat.
"Republicans are working hard to achieve a majority in the House in the
1982 off -year congressional election. They might be able to accomplish that,
but it may be for reasons havmg little to do with the administration's per formance at the time. Trying to distinguish mandates from congressional
elections, which turn on so many disJ&gt;arate factors, is a tricky business at
best."

The Daily Sentinel

" public policies." Churches and
religious schools must conform to
IRS decees or face the punitive consequences. An Orthodox Jewish
school, by extension, would have to
recruit students and employ staff
solely on
criteria. How can

,- ;.,

CtftTER.

f

�Players remain

JUlY

Leonard~Hearns

~THE

~'·'&gt;\

.........._,.£

~

SHOWDOWN ANNOUNCED Sugar Ray
Leonard, left, and Thomas Hearns pose at a news conference in New York Tuesday wbere It was announced
they will meet for the undisputed welterweight championship Sept. 16 at Caesar 's Palace in Las Vegas. Th•

long-awaited fight between Leonard, the World Boxing
Council tllleholder and Hearus, the World Boxing
Association champion, is being billed as "The Showdown." ( AP Laserphotol !See AP Sports Wire Story!.

Commissioner Bowie Kuhn gives
testimony on escalating salaries
NEW YORK I AP I - Accor ding to
Corrunissioner Bowie Kuhn , sa laries
*or major league baseball players a re
escalating at a ra te exceeding the
one he cited in a gloom and doom
report he made to club owne rs last
December.
Kuhn testified Tuesday at a
hea ring before chief a dmin istrative
law judge Melvin Welles in which
the National Labor Relations Boa rd
is cha rging the owners with an un ·
fair labor practice of ba rga ming in
bad fa ith . The NLHB . a cting in
behalf of the striking Major League
Players Association. wa nts the
owne rs ordered to open their financia l books for examination by the

union.
The playe rs association maintai ns
that, in view of statements by Kuhn
a nd some club offi cials relating to
rising player salaries, it needs the
financial data for use in its
bargaining on the free agent compensation proposal which triggered
the strike
The numbers the union wa nts to
see are essentially the same ones
Kuhn referred to m his state of the
sport address ma de at the winter
ba se ba ll meeti ngs. T he co rn missioner call ed the address. " my
personal view," seeking to separate

t hem from a ny connection to the for·
ma l positi on of management in
negotiations with the players.
The club owners negotiating
representative, the Playe r Relations
Committee, has maintained the re is
no ina bility to pay for an y settlem e nt
reached with the players. It has
dismissed various statements by
Kuhn and a nwnher of owne rs
bem oaning ba seball 's current fina n c ia l condition.
In Dallas , the comrnisstoner cited
a study by the certified publ ic a ccounting finn of Ernst and Whinney
whi ch sa td tha t by 1983 , the a ver age
ma jor leag uer 's salary would be
$320,000. Union attorney Dona ld
F'ehr asked Kuhn if he thought those
projections wer e accurate.
" I think t hey're low ," the com mi ssioner sa id "I think the salary
rate has gone up faster than the tr
estirna tes _"
Meanwhile , according to two
leading player agents. major league
owners are awaitmg the outcome or
t.lte f&lt;ee a gent compensation battle
before negotiating long tenn c on tracts for players.
Dick Moss and Tom Reich. both
attorneys who now represent a nwn ber of players, testified that clubs
have adopted a wait -and-see posture

m contracttalks.
Ma nagement' s c ompensation
plan, sole issue in the 27 -day-old
strike which has forced cancellation
of 338 major league games, seeks to
provide replacement players lor
free agents leaving one tea m to sign
with an other · The p layers
association claims the plan will
restrict the bargaining power of the
free a gents by inflicting a penalty on
learns
signing
new players.
and
Moss
were called
to relateReich
their
recent experiences in bargainmg for
player contracts.
RETURN TO ACTION
Alter being rained out for over
a week, the Meigs American
Legion team returns to action
tonight on the Meigs High Sehooi
field, beginning at 6 p.m.
,.
Meigs carries u very respectable 14-2-1 record into the contest with Murray City. Sunday
Meigs will travel to Parkersburg,
then next Tuesday Washington
Court House will play the locals
at the Meigs High field. July 16,
Meigs will travel to Parkersburg,
then Parkersburg returns the trip
on Saturday, July 18. The district
tournament starts July 2:1 at
Athens.

also did his bit to push the contest.
world Boxing Association champ,
" This is going to be a real great
light, a tough fight," said the cham·
pion known as " the Detroit Hit
Man," who has 30 knockouts in 32
pro bouts. "It's hard to say how long
it will go, but 1 don't think it will last
15 rounds."
Hearns and Leonard, 30·1, even
engaged in a bit Of dialogue
· ·
t f M ha
d AI' t hi
remtmscen 0 U rnma
I8
S
prime .
"It'll be like thiS alJ day," started
Leonard, rapidly smacking his left
' h 1m AJl da
fistinto hisrtg tpa · ''
y.''
"AU it 's going to take is one shot,
Ray," replied Hearns. " One shot,
and you wake up in a hospital. One
shot is alL "
" I'm not saying you haven't
fought
anybody, "
countered
Leonard . "You've had knockouts.
You've knocked out ... Who have you
knocked out?"
Answered Hearns: " I've knocked
out everyone you wouldn' tfight. "

CLEA~ANCE

$24 rnillion-$25 million for the first
Leonard ·Roberto Duran fight in
Montreal tast year.
Later, Trainer said be expected
the bout to "net $ro million, and to do
that you have to gross in the $30
million range ."

SALE
CONTINUES
AT
CHAPMAN'S
. .
.
SHOES

Main
Event , meanwhile ,
estimated gross receipts as high as
$51.5 million, with $5 million from
the live gate, $30 million from
closed-circuit telecasts, $15 million
from pay·per·view cable TV and $1.5
million from foreign broadcast
rights and sales of posters,
programs and corporate spansorships.

-

POM ~ROY

lr=~;~;~;.~:~lrt~~~~ii~i~~~f
The Daily Sentinel
&lt;USPS,.,_..,,

ADivlstonoiMulllmedla. ID&lt;Publl!-iht~l every aftemoon, Monday thr\)u~h
Friday, lll c ourtS)"" ' · by the Ohi_u Va lley
Pu!Jh s hin~ Company • MuiUmed111, Inc.,
Pun~roy, OhLU 457&amp;9, 992-2156 . Second cla s..o;

posUt.:eJ»~idat PtJJneroy. Oh1o.

Member : T~ A.ssoc iall.'d Press, Inland Dai·
Jy Pra;s Ass uciatiun and the Americlin
Newspaper PuW i.s her.s 1\.'\..'iiJl'iatiun. Nati(}llal
Advertis inK Repr~: s en\11\lve , Rranh&lt;tm
Ncwspuper Sales, 733 Th1rd A\ll.!llUi!, New
York., New York 10011.

.~)~~')~~l~:

PRICES
. .. .

I ~Cc nL"i

S11bscn bers nut tiesiring tD pay the carrier
mHy remit ill t~dvancc direct to Thl! D111ly
Sentinel on a 3. 6 or 12 rnonth ba ~iiS. Credit
will~ ~i ven carrier rt~rh 1mH1Lh
Nu ~ Ub.'i(r ipli un." by muil pennitkd

111

' ·~

CtlRISil~£R
RFF \11

MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONS
Ohio and West Virginia

W

fiini

!-!:!!

110 50

3Mill11h .

Six IIJUnlh .
1Yt•ar

, •1

L_

3rd WH K: 7:1 0 &amp; 9 :30 P.11.
SAT &amp; SIJN MATINEES 1: 10 &amp; 3: 30

towns

where lunn~ c.~:~ITI ~r st.'f'Vkc is available .

The bout, arranged by rock·
concert impressario Shelly Finkel
and promoted by Main Event
Productions Inc., is expected to be
among the richest in history.
Mike Trainer, Leonard's chief ad·
viser, said chances were "very
good" that the Leonard-Hearns bout
would gross more than the record

$17 so
$3J 00

.. .
Rates Oul!ddr Ohiu
and w~~~~ Vlrgluiu

$11 00
$zt1 .00

JMonth .

6Munth
I Y~ar

$38.VO

riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili

$}200

SALE PRICE

Installed Over Pad

.

Do It Yourself
And Save.

5 2

Hits and Misses
Middlepbrl

s

2

4

4

Sandwich Spread
FRENCH CITY
oz.
.
W1eners..............~K:~.

2

3 4.
Brazle and Brazle
2 s
Pt. Pleasant Waterson
1 4
Mason
o 6
Game results : Pomeroy 6 Mid·
dleport 3; Dravo 10 Middleport 9.
June 25 : Dr avo 8 Pt. Pleasant Fruth
6. June 30 : Pomeroy 19 Bra'Zte and
Brazle 1; Hits and Misses 15 Pt.
Pleasant Fruth 14; New Haven 24
Mason 8; Middleport 8 Pt. Pleasant
Waterson 3.
JUNIOR DIVISION
Team
w. L.
Salisbury
B o
Letart
4 2
Mdpt. Wrangler s
5 3

'5"

CRISPY SERVE

New Haven

Mason

4 3
3
3
2
o

2
2
4
6

0 7

.

FROM

SQ. YD.

-

10¢

$ .

USDA aiOICE BONELESS

SALE PRICE

Installed

LB.

•

·.

. $ 29
Cube_Steak•........~~.

'1 Q~

Yd .

_
·
4
$
Bananas ...........~.. I 1

PLAY GRASS

2 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM

•399 SQ. YARD

'3''

&amp;CARRY

PAR KAY

SQ. YARD

Margarine ........~.

40 %ro 50% ON CARPET REMNANTS
Rust &amp; Green Saxony

12x9

~.00

10

GRADE A

White Plush

49

Wolfe, Heidi Caruthers, Amy Beth Brothers, Mayrene
Thomas, Angela Pierce. Rear, coach, Candy Brothers.
Absent were Amy Dawn Rouse, Kristin King, and Sue
Fry.

12xl4
12x12
l2x15

$120.00 12x92

Rust &amp; Green ·
Saxony

Light Green Saxony

$7

Green Saxony

l2x8'

Blue Plush

'

-T
, · - •·. ;· ,
Rust Plush ·

Rust Plush

Rust Plush

.

'

LARRY'S

t

'

~

.

'

,.

.

* BORDE~'S

ELSIE

HALF

'

.t

•

$J29

Ice Cream .•......G!'!~~ •••
1

' (l\!PeN

SUGAR -'SWEETENED

DOG FOOD

KOOL AID

'

li·

.

2::·.· $349

.
"

,

HYlAND CHUNK
• .

, M~Y ~~RE TO ~E FROM•• '.BRING YOUR ROOM SIZE AND SAVE. ..
•

',

Med. ~~..•...... ~.
C ,liP,JI\

219

Grey Saxony

· 4ROLL
PACK

. 1.ssue...._
.·····:.

Blue Plush

"

t-218

59

Installed Over Pad
ONE COLOR ONLY- B

ARMSTRONG LINOLEUM

6

Bacon ...................L~.

Chuck Roast ....... ~..l
99
$
__ ___ _
Stew Beef•••••••••••••••
.

SAVE

LB.

MEDIUM WEIGHT
100% NYLON
REGULAR 119.95 SQ. YARD

Over Heavy Pad

12

HOMEMADE

BUCKET.

Wlm RUBBER BACK

s COLORS TO CHOOSE

8 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM

·--VE

6

Game results: Salisbury 14 Mdpt.
Wranglers 7; Bill's Sport Shop 18
New Haven 0; Mason 31 Pomeroy 3;
Mdpt. Panthers 25 New Haven 1;
Masop 19 New Haven 7.

&amp;CARRY
SCULPTURED
NYLON SAXONY

COLOR~ TO CHOOSE FROM

'1 o~~d-

Pt. Pleasant Fruth

CASH

Sq. Yd.

SAT., JULY 11, 1981

12

Dravo

Pomeroy

SAVE UP TO 50%
STATIC PROTECTION
STAIN PROTECTION
REGULAR 123.99

11\\IVIlln

w . L.
6 1

Pomeroy

Bill's Sport Shop
Mdpt. Panther s
Syracuse
New Haven

CARPET SALE
ANSON IV NYLON

PRICES ·GOOD

The meeting was called to gauge
the feelings of the striking
association members and to update
the player representatives on the
status of negotiaUons with the
owners. There have been no talks
since Saturday when the players
rejected management's latest
proposal . on free agent com·
pensation, which led to the strike on
June 12.

Team

SINGLE COPY

D&lt;tily .

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, O.

SENIOR DIVISION!

· · · $4.4()
. S52.8Cl

Clot' Yci'l r

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

The execuUve board of the Major
League Players AssociaUon met
Tuesday night and, when the four·
hour session was over' solidarity
was the main word being bandied
about.
·
. " U anything, the players are gettmg stronger," said Kansas City
Royals pitcher Dan - Quisenberry,
one of about 40 players at the
meeting·. " Each team was polled
and each one is taking a much harder line than on June 1. It was a sur·
prise tome."

.. $1.00

One Muulh .. .

SIORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sit. 8 1111·10 pm

standings. • . '

SURSCRlPTION RATES
8)' Carrier or Motor Routt'

One week

NEW _YORK (AP) - Twenty·
seven days into their _strike, the
major league l)aseball players insist
they are even mol'!! solid than when
the walkout began. _

M-G-M softball

POSTMASTER : Send addri"Ss 1t1 Th~ Da ily
Scntinci, III Cour1 St .. Po111eroy, Ohio45769

SCULPTURED SAXONY

POMEROY BLUE JAYS - Pictured above are the
Pomeroy Blue Jays, Pee Wee Softball League, sponsored by Dale C. Warner Insurance. Front row, left to
right, Christie Sauters, Angie Sloane, Mary Norman,
Tara Wolfe, Audra Houdashelt. Second row, Shelley

~ond strike

GREAT

fight Sept. 16
NEW YORK (AP ) - "No hype or
promotion is necessary" for his
world welterweight championship
bout with Thomas Hearns, said
Sugar Ray Leonard.
Then, just to make sure everyone
was paying attention, Leonard star·
ted to hype and promote the much ·
anticipated fight set for Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas Sept. 16.
" This will be what I consider the
greatest boxing match in history,"
Leonard, holder of the World Boxing
Council version of the title, said at a
news conference with Hearns
Tuesday.
While far less flamboyant than
Leonard, Hearns, the unbeaten

sOlidly behlttd

.

·2·I. 79.'.·

2 QUART
PIG. . .

#41&lt;36-2+10-07
. Limit On.e Per 1 ustomer
•Good only at Powell's
Offer
Jul 11, 1¥81

i
..
•.

�Wednelda

8;1981

The Dail Sentinel-Pa e-7

Area·nurse ·Warns tuberculosis is not disease of past

Or. Wilma Mansfield will conduct
the first In a series of five cancer
education classes at the SeniOI'
Citizens Center, 1 to 3 p.m. on
Tuesday, July 14. All classes are
open to the public and they are free

Mr. and Mrs. Tad Darling

Announce marriage
Jeanette Julia Cook and Tad
Darling were married on June 5 at
the United Methodist Church il1
Pembroke , Va . by the Rev .
Raymond Kelly.
The bride is the daughter of
Katheryn Cook. Pomeroy . and

Marlin Cook, Englewood. The groom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alan
Darling, Long Bottom.
The couple will return this fa ll to
Meigs High School to complete their
senior year. They are residing at
Long Bottom.

Local cub scouts to
attend Camp Arrowhead
Cub Scouts from around the Tri·
State Area will be attending the Cub
Scout Day Cam p to be held at Camp
Arrowhead near Ona, W. Va. from
.July 13 toJuly 31. Cub Scouting is the

etg ht, mne and 10-year old program
of the Boy Scouts of America .
·'Day Camp is a day-long program
held in an outdoor setting," says Er·
nesti ne Hippert, Day Camp director.
"The program of activities provides
fun,

adventure,

a nd

new

ex ·

periences. The program of the camp
is designed to meet the needs and in·
terests of the individual boys to help
them pass their achievements and
electives."
Throughout the week the Cub
&amp;outs will participate in swimmmg,
archery , making craft projects,
nature and ecology, achievement
skills, panning for gold, sports ac·
tivities. a raft race and a critter
race .
On Fridays it will be parents' day
and there will be a water carnival,
an Indian Olympics, and an evening
campfire. The Cub Scouts will be
· perfonning skits and songs at the
campfire and the Order of the Arrow
Indian Dancers will perform.

Each day has a separate theme.
There will be a Gold Rush Day,
Daniel Boone Day, Buffalo Bill Day,
Tom Sawyer-Huck Finn Day, and In ·
dian Day. The activities for each day
w.ill be related to one of the daily
themes.
Operating the Day Camp program
will be Cub Scout leaders, parents,
Boy Scouts and individuals from
various groups in the area. The Red
Cross will be operating the swim·
ming pool and will take the boys
through the Red Cross swim
program, members of the Hun ·
tington Archery Club will give in ·
struction in archery. and Becky
Thacker of the Huntington Park
Board, Gary Norman of the Me·
Clintock Wild Life Station, and
Woodrow Smith of the Department
of Natural Resources will have the
nature programs.
If there are any boys who are
members of the Cub &amp;outs and
would like to attend Day Camp, con·
tact the Boy Scout Service Center at
733 Seventh Avenue, Huntington, or
call 523·3408. Fees are $5 per day or
$20 per week .

Social calendar_____ _
REVIVAL at Rutland Freewill
WEDNESDAY
Baptist
Church now il1 progress
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
through
July
12 at 7:30p.m. nightly .
IJONS CLU B, Wednesday at noon at
Evangelist
is
Paul Taylor and there
the Meigs Inn. .~II Lions urged to at·
will be special singin g each evening.
tend.
Pat or Donald Karr invites the public
MIDDLEPORT Amateur Gar ·
deners, 8 p.m. Wednesday at the to attend.
home of Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Lin ·
POMEROY CHAPTER, Women 's
coin Heights.
Aglow Fellowship, Thursday ntght
at the Meigs Inn. Christine Epling,
THURSDAY
Ga llipolis. to be the speaker. Di nner
ROCK SPRINGS and Hemlock
at 7 with speaker at 8 p.m.
Grange joint inspection, 8 p.m.

Meeting cancelled
A meeting of Pomeroy Lodge 164,
F . and A. M. scheduled for Wed ·
nesday night has been cancelled.

FRIDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange, Friday, at Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Potluck supper at 7;
Jackson County Gran~e will visit.

of charge.
The classes will be held on con ·
secutive Tuesdays at the same hour
and will deal with prevention and
early detection, how it affects life·
style, the numerous support
programs available, cancer and
nutrition, and the specific areas of
colo-rectal and oral cancer with
physician discussions.
At the first class the American
Cancer Society will present the film,
"Man Alive" preceding Dr. Mans·
field's discussion. Her topics will be:
. - What is cancer? Adiscussion on
nonnal cell growth versus abnonnal
cell growth; and how cancer spreads
through loca l extension .and
metas~.
·
- Why is ca ncer a major problem
with a discussion on the incidence of
cancer and the conunon kinds,
reasons for prevalence, .and the need
for ca ncer control through early
detection and diagnosis.
- What causes cancer? A
discussion on specific causes which

caUBell·
•uch
vironmenta)

u~~' ~==~E!~=~

hazards, ana IQc! age inftuence. . .

factor.

'

- How can cancer be controlled
and/or c~? . Stressing lbe ~­
portance of early diagnosis, knowing
the seven warning signals, ·annual
health ~heckups, means r of·
diagnosis, and a definituon of
chemotherapy, radiation therapy,
and surge.,Y.
Included in the format for each of
the five classes is a time for·general
discussion and a question arid ·an ·
swer period.
Classes are being offered ·by the
Ohio Department of Health with
Qlroiyn s. McKinley. social progr·
rna coordinator of ~ DiViSion of
Chronic Diseases, ·aa tile ~on in
charge. Other agencies including the
Meigs County Health Department,
the Meigs unit of the American Can·
cer Society, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Senior Citizens, and
several health professionals
working with the cancer education
clal!SfS.

's
Cooking?
Dale Stoll,
M,etcs County
Extension Agent,
Home Economics
for doneness after 20 to ·30
minutes. Serve with sour cream.
The following fruit !lalad is
great for a specjal dessert. Use
any fruit that is , in season and
supplement with canned fruit.
Prepare most or the fruit in ad·
vance and put the salad together
at the last minute.
Creamy Fruit Salad
i Prepare a total of two quarts

of mixed fruit)
Strawberries
Pitted sweet cherries
Seedless grapes
Marshmallows
Fresh peach chunks or canned
peaches
1" banana chunks
Apple chunks
Canned.pineapple chunks
Raspberries
Ca nned mandarin oranges
Prepare bananas and apples at
the last minute, as they may turn
dark.
Creamy Dressing : I three oun·
ce instant pineapple creme pud·
ding, prepared
I 9 ounce container whipped
topping
Combine prepared pudding and
whipped topping. Fold fruits and
creamy dressing together. Serve
immediately.
Grilling foods outside presents
special problems and challenges.
Timing is critical. I like to
prepare side dishes in advance so
that I am flexible when ' grilling
time arrives.
One of the unpleasant tasks
assoelated with outdoor. cookery
is cleaning the grill. I plan ahead
for this job by spraying the grill
with vegetable spray prior to
grilling. After the cookout, J put
wet paper towels or newspapers
on the grill to soften the cooked·
on food! Cleaning is easy!
For a free leaflet on swnmer
salads, call the Meigs County Ex·
tension Office at 992-6696.

can

nonnal activiUI!l!. They can return
to work or to school. .
.
.
T)lere is no quick and easy way of
dealing with · tuberculosis. It
requires fairly proiOilged treatment
-a year on the average. An im·
portant fact is, the patient must take
his or · her medicine every day .
Patients find it hard to stick to the
treabnent partic1ilarly when they

don't feel sick. If people start taking
TB drugs and then discontinue. them
because they don't feel sick, these
drugs may not work at all; then
other drugs would have to be uaed
which are not as effective and are
mOI'Il expensive, and more toxic.
One of the responsibilities of the
county tuberculosis nurse is getting
patients to complete the treatment.

Some patients fail the community
because they will not take their
medication. Then, there are two
alternatives. The first is to keep
such people in som~ sort of in·
stitution. The cost of inpatient
hospital care is very high , with the
taxpayers ultimately paying the bill,
or face the prospect of treatment
failure for those patients, with

possible consequences of drug
resistance, and further spreading of
infection.
Tuberculin patients who won't
take their medicine have to be
hospitalized for at least six monthb
or maybe longer, if they are going to
be cured.

SAYI Ull TO •o% ON
. . .ttlaCOSTCUnlaS

CIIPAIED TO OTHEI IUIDS• AT UOCEI.
•FGIIMI
emus, II ITIIIIUI. AIIITICIID..

Dr. Mansfield

Chester Garden Club
hears of wild turkeys

,

(

AVONDALE

':i.

A program on the reintroduction
of wild turkey flocks into
Southeastern Ohio was given by An·
dy Lyles, Meigs game protector, at
the annual family picnic of the
Chester Garden Club held in the
recreation building at Royal Oak
Park.
Lyles talked about various
publications available from the
Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Wildlife, for a nominal
fee preceding his talk on wild
turkeys . Lyles noted that from 1904
to 1952 wild turkeys were extinct in
Ohio. At that time when many aban·
doned farms were going back to
woodlands, the turkey was rein·
troduced and from 1957 to 1963 the
Division of Wildlife successfully
built up flocks by trading grouse for
turkeys with other states.
He noted that by trapping in nets
turkeys have been put into 22 coun ·
ties of Ohio.
The speaker talked about catching
turkeys noting that they have 273
degree peripheral visual and a reac ·
lion 12 times faster than man. To
catch a turkey, he said, it may take
up to three weeks of baiting and
waiting. Once caught, the birds are
crated and transported to the

loca tion where they are . to ~~
released, marked and then let go.tl 1
Lyles noted that in 1971 M¢lgs
County had abundant tur-k~f
population and hunters enjoy~1bJi
first turkey season for many YCllts ~
By having proper hunting laws !jpd
keeping the population at a ~ijl
level, diseases which threaten ·~~
birds ca n be•better controlled;:,he
reported .
i;,
To hunt turkey, Lyles said tl)lit
hunters must be complet~Ir
camouflaged and take their Sll\l!~­
before daybreak. Usually hun~r:s
use a turkey ca ller to call the b~
to them. He displayed sev~rljl
callers and fascinated the g~up
with the various sounds of ~
turkey which can be made WW,I
them.
\;
. Hostesses for the picnic were Mr~.'
Donald Mora, Mrs. Pearl Mora, alid·
Mrs. James Andrews who served"
dessert and beverage following the
covered dish dinner . Tables were
decorated with red and white and
featured American flag cen·
terpieces. Forty-seven members
and guests attended. Door prizes
were awarded to Leonard Erwiri,
Mrs. Homer Holter, Sarah Machir,'
and Ryan Buckley.
,

•

Ice cream
social Saturday

Decorated.Cakes

The Long Bottom Conununity
Association will hold an ice cream
social beginning at 4 p.m. Saturday
at Red Crispin's Corner between the
Methodist Church and the post office
in Long BOttom. '!'here will be
square dancing with various types of
music provided. A bake sale will be
held also and there will be hot dogs
and other food items for sale.

For All Occasions

co r vi iGHT~

I,. I

THl KltOGU CO . IUMS AND PIICES

C.OO OSiJNDAT JULY 5 THIU SATUIOo\t' JUlY It
POMEROY Atto GALLIPOLIS STO~ES . ·

NONE

.

..:.:' ;.

Foil .. ..

Kroger
Dressing ..

lst

. :il
~

Banquet
Fried Chicken

...'
p

..

2$

SAVE

~.~
.._

':

I

• IL
11 •

Ptr "I

I
I 1%
I ..
••

39

lox

.

LIMIT ZPUS. WITH COUPON

- . . *' Sllh Lll. llllll. Ill I
-CI It llftiC.IIII IIIII lliCAllllll
LtMIT ONE COUPON PEl FAMILy

I I

•

,liiil\

..

\,.~~ Catfish .... ...... . lb.
;''/ti.I\ FlliSH FLOUNDER
SJ99
- ·--·
=~ Fillets
............. . lb .
.
01.
.'T.:':'J\ FRESH
•
99 ICIOOII
·,~~ Trout F1llets ... lb.
Buttermilk
. 20-ol. 512 9
•-:I
...~ :acl
...... •..
FIIOZIN
(12·0Z. CANS)
J
• .. .. .. .. 3·Ct.
·
0rapge UICe
Pak

$2

WH~TI

.
3

Avondale
Flour .... ..

,.....,_. 49c

4
HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A . INI'ECTIO
GRADE A FRYING

lae

40··· ·

Mix ..

.

A.VONOA.lE

Pork 'N'

15 .5· 01 .

Beans ..

. Can

ClOVll VAHIY

Chicken Breast...... lb .
OLE CAROLINA
l ·lb ,
Sliced Bacon ... .. ... Pkg
.

95

44e
s.,b 7gc
age
"'•·
29c

laking

Fryer
Parts
....... lb.
_
LIMIT PLEASE

U -o1
111.

Hot Dog
luna .......... Ho
•ke..

JIFFV

;~;;r

$2 69

FlESH OtllSSED

SUN GOLD
SANDWICH 01

29

$

I

$.1 2 9

Pork.Steak• ..... lb.

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

.I

····--~~---·····-~
WHOLE FlESH

~~~~~ Butt

: Bo·ston Roll Roast .. lb. $229
: 5·7·LI. AVG . WHOLE
79
e
Smoked Picnics ........ lb.
;_
I GWAlTNEY HOT OR MILD
l·lb. $119
I Pork Sausage ..... Roll
I
I

IN THE
FROZEN MEAT
CASE

.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , BEEF
CHUCK AIM BONELESS ·

e

1000 ISLAND FRENCH OR
IT AllAN LIQUID

:::lj

3a e

Tea
Bags ..

~·

•

25·SCj .
.. ft . loll

EMlA SS Y

CHOICE

JUliN

m ltUUVE THE liiGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
\0 10 TO Ol'AURS

Aluminum

USDA

sJl 9

Margarine

l -Ib .
,.,

Quarters

39e .·

COUNTIY OVEN

ggc

~· food .....

..... ...... •ko

SJ29

ICROOU

Flake
Coconut

SJ49

GOlD CIIST

7ge

Marshmallow
,.,
Creme . II·••

LVI.

ICIOGI~

ILUE IONNIT QUARTERS

. • .. .. .. .. ... .. .16·0ll.
Margar1ne
,.,,.

JOHN ·A. WADE, M.D., INC~
VETERANS MEMORIAL ·HOSPITAL

kiLLOOG 'S

Special K
.Cereal. .

SPEC:IAL FORMULA

Kroger Bread ....

...

15·01 .

GOLD CIEST

Marah·
l -Ib .
mallows ... •••
AVONDAU

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

GENERAL ALLERGIST
.OHice Hours DV Appointment O"ly

Miss Durst
hospitalized

TAILETS

Alka • · 36-Ct.
Se1zer
I .. .. aox
:
Morton Dinner
FIO~I~

Reunion Sunday
The families of the late George
and Catherine Baer will hold a
reunion Sunday at Royal Oak Park
Recreation Center.

NO-NONSENSE "EASY TO
IEME"
.
. .

Approve purchase

~UIIERM.AID

$13~
ll•OI.

Pkg.
.

Pa~tyhose :.. .... ... Pair
2C ·

Ice C~be ,.Tray~. · · '·

Purchase of a Shop.Smith Mark V
woodworkmg machine was ap ·
proved when the Meigs Association
for Retarded Citizens met Thursday
evening at the Meigs Community
SchooL
The MARC also approved funds to
send the teachers to an in·service
day at Columbus. Ground breaking
for the new school on the Carleton
Coliege grounds in Syracuse was an ·
nounced for Wednesday, July 15, at
noon.

averallt stay now is measured ·(n
weeks, :rather thaJj ~ or even
~tha. Tbey ~ IIQD·Ilifectiolll
very quickly with the medications.
Then 'they
continue their treat· '
mentuanoutpatient.
People who are Iinder treatment,
and are feeling well, a.re no longer a
hazard to others, and, while taking
their medication, can resume their

for

- Mlaconceptions about cancer,
including tl!e unproven methods of
cancer treatment and the hereditary

W~at

If your cookouts are getting
yawns instead of applause, spice
up your barbecue with pork.
Skewered pork is a great main
dish for hot summer weather: Jt
can be prepared partially in ad ·
vance and it has that extra
special twist that makes it good
enough for a company meaL
Cooking outside keeps the kitchen
cooler, too.
'
Skewered Pork
1Serves &amp;-8)
2 pounds Jean pork, cut in 1"
cubes '
Pineapple chunks
Green Peppers
Cherry Tomatoes
Cook the pork cubes in a
covered pan in a little salted
water for 20-30 minutes, stirring
frequently. The pork should be
cooked completely at this point.
fYou may now refrigerate and
finish cooking on the grill later ),
Thread pork on skewers alter·
nately with pineapple, green pep·
per and cherry tomatoes. Cook
slowly over hot coals, basting
with melted butter, salt, pepper.
Pork must be thoroughly cooked
before eating. This is the reason
for cooking the pork prior to bar·
becuing. This way, the
vegetables and the pineapple are
not overcooked at the cOOkout.
It's good'
Try potatoes cooked in foil for a
goo d accompaniment for
Skewered Pork. This recipe is
easy, yet it has a special flavor
that's terrific with any cookout
meal.
Potatoes In Foil
For each person, slice one
large scrubbed unpeeled potato
onto a 12" double thickness
square of aluminum foil. Sprinkle
with crisp crumbled bacon bits
and one teaspoon chopped onion.
Dot with one teaspoon butter or
margarine. Sprinkle with salt
and pepper. Fold foil lightly so
there are no leaks. Place over hot
fire , turning occasionally. Test

&amp;me people believe tuberculcila
is a dilebe of the past becauae of the
dramatic eha'lKes .lri the medical
care. People wltll tuberculosia don't
bave to go to the sanatarium and lie
in bed
years J!liY niore. Many do
not need hoap!tal care unless they
are acutely ill. U they do have to go
to the hospital, they usually go to thi!
general community hospital: Their

are~

·73c
.

,

SJ39
,.

99.

or .

·,a$

Pep1i
. Cola

I!

AVAILAILI ONL V IN
STOlES WITH
DILIDIPT$ .
HOT FOODS
AVAILAillllom
Tit. 7plll

S499
12 P1eces .
Fried CJiicken.
a
7
e
Potato Salad ..........
4
$1
Fried Pies .. ...... ... ...
$219
\roiiHSe
e....
89
C
.... ~ic~:
READY

Pear
16·0 1.
Halvu .... C••

HlllCIUT

Mecoa.:hino
J•r
Ch t rriII . •·••·

• EAT WISHIONE

AYONDAll

M.derin
- - - . . . .. llCon
·ol .
.,,....

Bucket

AMEIICAN OR MUSTARD

KIOOIEI

Vienna

-sag• . .c..

lb .

1-a.

· APPLE, C:HIIIY, PIAC:H
OILIMON

kiOGII

u...

For

C

Beans

IRAWII. . Y,IlUIIIIIY OR

~ TOPPIDCal'tiNkCH

1'111MIAKID HOT DOG OR

( lfliYIIY LIW PIICI)

7·lnch

Cake

S-oa.

63c ··
4ge
43c ..
age

-

DAYTlMI

"V'

~:~:'. ~~~· $479

age
. . .. ggc.
$ 09
er....
1
c.pa, .. , .. "'•·
ICIOGII

.Wtrcestershire
S.C. ...... ••·•1.
Ill
KIIOGII

Steak
S.ce ....

•

:

COUftTIY OVEN

,.

SERVICE CENTERI

,.

l

· YOUR CAR READY FOR FALL
TAIL PIPES, BRAKE SHOES,

Ice

41·CI

•

sge
...
••••
...... •···· 22(
. sgc
sgc

I

Ylnila

..

I l-oa .

KIIOOII

f.-to

,

'

,

'

INSTALLED

I .. ....

(en

o~c

~lllenllnga~· ·

=.

HARIMARE ·,
•

~'

1 •

IQIOOIUIOUN

I

.

•.. Ctwr1..

,

·-

110 VAlUE

:%
.

TER PIPES, ETC.

. . Itt

..

'

·•

.,....
..

,,

.,.,,'
'''
•'

".

~ ·,.:'

�Friday.
Mrs. Olevla
Cunningham
celebrated her birthday. recenUy
with an observance at the home rl
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart. Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman, Mr. and Mrs . Bruce Hart,
Columbus, Brice Hart, home for the
swnmer from Ohio State University,
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Cunningham and
son, Zac, Cottageville, and Beth Ann
Hart.
Wednesday evening guests of Mr.
·and Mrs . Herbert Roush were Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Roush of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Roush, daughters
Kimberly and Jennifer, Mrs. Betty
Roush, Mrs. Edith McDade, Mrs.
Nancy Russell, chlldren Mandy and
Michael, visited Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis recenUy .
Brian and Robbie F1ndly of New
York are visiting their grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Fin·
dly, and father, EdwardFlndly.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri, Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Wilson, and Mrs.
Katthryn Hunt visited Arthur Wilson
at his home in Marietta Sunday.
Mrs. Edith McDade accompanied
her husband to their home in Troy
after spending two weeks with Mrs .
Gladys Shields assisting in the care
of their mother, Mrs. Edna Roush.
Walter McDade and granddaughter,
Kim, and family of Troy spent a
weekend with Mrs. Gladys Shields
and Mrs. Edna Roush.

Apple 'Grove J~ews Notes

La~ Wells, Dawn Elliott, Amy

fiie family of Lester Roush held a
dinner recently in observance of
Father's Day at the Portland Parlt.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs
Lester Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Connolly , Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Greg Cundiff and daughter, Valerie, Mid·
dleport ; Mrs Joyce Riffle and
chlldren, Mrs. Gary Roush and
chlldren, Mr. and Mrs. Michae l
Roush, Johnnie Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Manuel and childr en, Brian
and·Shelly Connolly , and Jun Smith
of South Webster . Reg ina Manuel,
daughter of Mr a nd Mrs Roger
Manuel, observed her first birthday
at the g athermg. Travts Smtih, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Dtck S rruth was the
youngest chtid present.

Fathers were recognized

and

presented whtte carna tion boutonmeres at the Father' s Day se rvtces
at the Apple Grove Umted Methodist
Churc h Rev. Carl Htcks ga ve the
F a ther's Day sermon and a program
was presented m trtbute to fa the rs.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Dorsa Parsons a t·
tended the Bob Eva ns Country
Mustc Convention held at Bob ~vans
Farm recently . They were dinner
guests of Mr and Mrs. Gerald Wells.
Othe rs a ttending we re Mr . and Mrs.

and Mandy Wells.
Mrs. Edna Stobart and daughter,
Mtami, Fla., are here visiting her
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Guy Shule r .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr.
were F a ther's Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs . J e rry Johnson and family,

Racme.
"'
Mrs. Eileen Buck, the Rev.
Florence Smith, and Mrs. Fay
Sauer, Middleport, attended the
West Ohio Methodist Conference
held at Lakeside Sunday through
Thursday.
Mrs. Phyllts Young, Middleport,
vtstted Sunday with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart of
Columbus were the weekend guests
of Mr a nd Mrs. Don Bell and Mr.
a nd Mrs. Robert Hart at Racine.
Mrs. Anna Wheeler vtslted her
mother, Mrs. Bessie Stitt, at Racine,
Sunday .
Mr. a nd Mrs. Gene Jewell and
children have returned from a
vacalton wtth hiS sister, Marie, and
her family, at Naples . Fla. While
there they vtstted Cypress Gardens,
Orlando, Sea World , and other
places of mterest.
Mrs J ewell visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman

Hl'ildC/1' 1rcer.~

P ublic Not. ce

pr el 1m1nary CETA grant
appil ca t ton for Ftscal Year
1992 t o th e Department of
la bor t o provtd e ellg•ble 1n
dt VId Uals w tth em pl oy ment
and t r a1 n1ng ser v•ces 1n th e
56 countt es of th e Balanc e
of St ate
Th e pla nn1ng a11 oc at1on s
ar e as follows Tttle l iB,
$19,368,000 and T1fl e V II ,

$3,726,000

T he Comprehens•ve Em
plyment and Tr a1nmg Plan
and a compart son of per
t or mance agatnst the pr. or
year's plan thro ugh the
most r ecen t quarter may
be r evt ewed between B 00
a m and 5 00 p m 1n th e
CMD L1 brary , 1160 Dubli n
Ro ad, Col umbu s, Oh• o

432 15, phone6 14 466

ee~6

W r itt en
co mment s
should be dtrec ted to Mr
Leonard Bl anton at th e
sa me address by Au g ust 1.
l98 l
Inte rested g roups.
org an 1z att on s,
or
tn
dtVtdual s may nottfy t he
Pnme Sponsor of thelf
destre to r evt ew a ny sub
se qu e nt
mo dlf t ca tton
dunng th e gra nt yea r
.( 7)

No 23210

IN THE MATTER OF
THE AOOPTION OF
JOHN JAY PROFFITT
JOHN L DODDERER ,

,.,

As ktng $75,000
PLAN YOUR FU TURE
- 30 acres suttable for
subdivi s•on T P . water
by l and and nice ntce
lay tng we ll drained . E x
cellent for a budder ,
planner on Tr a•ler park
Les tha n $2,000 00 per

lot
E NORMOUS -

whose last Known address
was 524 Brown Avenue,
Harvey, Louts1ana, 70058,
oth e rw1 se
r e std e nc e
unk nown, will t a ke not tce
that on th e 6th day of Oc
fab e r ,
1980 ,
Joseph
R a ymond
Proffitt,
Pet1ttoner , filed a Pet 1t1on
for Adoptton per tam•ng to
ohn Jay Dodderer , a chtld John Joseph Proff1tt .
November 1st, 1967, at
You are requ~red to an
Columbus , Oh•o
Satd swer w•thin twenty -etght
Pet tttoner seeks a change d a y s
afte r
the
last
of the name of sa •d child publlcat 1on wh rch will be
from John Jay Dodderer to on the 5th day of August.
John Jay Proffitt
1981
Furthermore, the
Sa1d Petittoner further heanng on sa1d adoption •s
st ates that he was marned scheduled for lhe 9th day of
to Ardeth Kay Proffitt, for
September, 1981, at 10 00
merly Ardeth Kay Dod o' cl ock A M . before the
de rer, on September 30th, Honorable Robert E Buck ,
1972 , and said chtld has Probate Judge, at the
been l tv tng 1n the home of Me1gs County Court House,
sa •d Pet1 ftoner s1nce Sep
Pomeroy, Ohto

JOSEPH RAYMOND
PROFFITT
Peftf•oner
Robert E Buck, Judge
Probate Court ot,
Me•gs County , Ohto
&amp; Ex Offt c•o Clerk

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for .
Claulfleds and
Savell I

9 rm

bn ck hom e, central a ir
and heat, new shmgle
r oo f , 11h baths, garage
w tth storage over N ice
cor ner lot nea r schools
and shops .
Butldtng on t .- =tiler lot

wes t o" ·o\.0 Drilled
~
,. ,c ta nk
well
Want'-

.~y$6 , 500

NEW

Fur

n•shed 3 bedroom home
at F1ve Po1 nts Eq u ip
ped k tfchen, ca rpe tt ng
and l arge lot Want tust

$35,000
51 ACI&gt; ES OLIVE fWP .
- Bottom land and l ot s
of woods for hunt1ng 7
r oo m hou se and sever al
outbutldtng s
A ll
mtner a ls 1nc1uded Only

$27,500
SUYING
AND ,
SELLING IS OUR
SPECIALTY
OTHER
SE RVIC ES AVAILABL ·
E. SU CH AS PLAN·
DIVIDIN G,

AN C ING

AND

AP ·

PI&gt;AISING .

Housing
, Headquarters

waters' '

~­
NEW

Mobtle Hom e Parts and

Acce ssones

a lt~qwlum

with

r ~uhng

S189,
l?oof Co.1 tmg S 31 SO ;
W.Her H eater 10° o Ott
durtng month ot July
M e t~11

wmdow

$42.000 00
NEW LISTING -

cr~nk

t&lt;IN G SSURY HOM ES

P .ru ·ts a nd Ac ce ssortes

5 7tc

38

acres plus a newly
r emodeled farm home
The 38 acr es are all f en
ce d
Hou se ha s 4
bedroom s, lt vmg, d1n 1ng
r oom , kttchen, bath,
storage room , 2 por
ches Large barn, pol e
shed , pump hou se
Secl uded. private and

handles - SpeCial 89 c,
Std e mount wtndow
ope ra tors S1 69.

161 24, 171 I, 8, 15, 22.29181

LISTING

Rae me area farm - Approx. 80 acres I and wifh
older home House ha s 4
bedroom s, approx . 50
acr es tillable land and
30
ac r es
t tmber

Hotpomt

reg
ca pacity
wnshe rl drv e r SS99 , E ntra nce f?latform w1steps
1~9la ss

1&gt;1 124
Mtners vtll e, Ohto
99 2-5587

peacef ul S45,000 00
8

PUbliC Sale

SYRACUSE -

&amp; Auction

ga rage $44 .000 00 .

DATE SATURDAY , JULY II , IO :lOA M
Route 7 between Coolv•lle, Ohto and Tuppers platns
(look tor stgns). James L. Deem, Owner- I-6U-6673824 . "Refreshments Served"
Dodge truck 100 Sertes, 318 automat1c, ti tt bed,
33,000 m1 , body good new tires Walk behtnd Ward 's
garden tractor &amp; attachments, alum.num pla nk
walk behind Gravely tractor &amp; attachments, powe r
tool s, mortar boxes, antiques, alumtnum wtndows
StZes, doors, plumbtng matertals, plumbtng
tools, electric wiring, mechant cs tool s, drtl ls, dnll
btts , cha 1r hoist. power saws, Mtlwaukee s1de gnn
der, concrete mncer, fuel oil tanks, Prestltte tank,
fenctng w1re, new Sears c1stern pump &amp; tank, ex
tenston ladders, step ladders, water coolers,
ceram1c t11e cutters, nails, 300ft . aenal wtre, wood
stoves. drywall tools, 31.. " socket set, several wren
ches, nousehold furnrture , 14 ft . ftberglass boat,
motor &amp; trailer , small farps , shovels, mattes, sledge
hammers Many other tfems not listed wtll be sold
Local chec k, casn or bank letter of cert tftcatton
only

~I N a m e - - - - - - - - - 1
IAddreu_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

MIDDLEPORT
Remodeled 3 bedroom
house Close to shopptng
ar e a
Very
nic e 1

REEDSVILLE - Move
tnto thts n1 ce -4 bedroom
oUse, 2 baths, family
and T V. room, 1 a c r e
lot
Garage
and
w o rkshQP
•n
full

Phon'~----------------

base ment $45,000 00.

-Passports
-and Now, •m impressive, complete line
of wedding and an·
Invitations

accessories.

Reuonably
quick service.

priced,

~~~~~§§.~§~~~ -Look

obligation.

SERVICE
For all of your wiring needs.
Let George M• Uer
your present - ~,,,.,,,,,,
system.
Restdenr•al
&amp;Commerctal

Call742-3195
or 992-7680
2 e tic

wlthou t
Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

109 High St., Pomeroy
6·28·1 mo

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water-Sewer-Electric

Gas L.lne· Ditches
Water ltne Hook·ups

Septoc Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshtre, Oh.

Ph. 367·7560
1 7 I tic

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

- Addons and
remodeling
- Rooftng and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbmg and
electrical work
!Free Est•mates)

V. C. YOUNG II
992-6215 or 992· 731 4
Pomeroy, Oh.

BOGGS-

SALES &amp; SERVICE
USRt50 E .-.st
C uysvelle, OH
t' hone614-662 38 21
Authonzed John Deere,
N ew Holl&lt;tnd, Bu sh Hog
F ;arm f qu1pment Oe.11er
fA~MfOlllf'MfNf

t A til~ I ~ t. t1 'v IC £.

U"t OfOLIII~Mt Nl
1- No 11600 01e sel ford

_ I r.1ctor w; c ilb
l - l\1odel '175 Ot esel l'l f"
1- 1'10dei47Y H.ly H1rd
N H
7-J-Ttc

KAUFPS
PWMBING
.AND
HEATING

N.c

P~IJ.INS .

) wantea
) For Sale
) Announcement

l For Renf •

11 .

1

18 .
19

I
I

20

21 .
22
23
24.
25.

I. - - - - -2.
3.
4.

I
I

992·2478
or
Blain Milhoan
985-3965

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING ·
All types of roof work,
new or repatr gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleamng and painttng
All work guaranteed .

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard

949·2862
949·2160

- - - -- - II
I

26.
'D .
28.

5.

6.
7.

~.

8.

:ll.

9.

31 . _ _ __ _ _

10...
· - - - -11.

32. _ _ _ _ __

12 .

3). -

13
•14.
15.
16

34. ~~-

35 . _ _ _ __

Mail This Coupon with RemiHance
·
The Daily ·sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy Ohio 45769

l----------·----------·-.,,..1.1

dwood floors, ftreplace, clean, neat and ready for
you to move .nto Manv extras 10% Mort ci!!ln be

assumed . Asking $35,900.
NEW HOME -

spacious LR, archway into formal DR. Kttchen

equipped. 3 BR and 2 baths, carpeted throughout,
full basement Could have extra BR's or family
room, ready tor 3rd. bath If needed . Garage and

AU. AMERitAN HOMES

storage area Call for appt. S62,000.

1% Interest

20 ACRES - On land contract. 10% down, owner to

help finance . Asking 113.000.
RACINE - Lg 2 BR mobile home

3 Bedroom Ranch Home
(I

BR 14xl6),

large eat in kltchen, many cupboards, covered front

patio, carport, outbuilding Yours for only $22,000

1

39 ACRES - 3 BR home 3 miles off Rt. 7 on Texas
Rd. All mineral rights. Asking $37,000.

NO DOWN
PAYMENT

Payments as Low As ...
51 50.000 .,r mo"th
Dependng on your income
Number in Family- Maximum
Yearly Income
,,

ACREAGE - Ux70 mobile home. This location has
shade trees, pond &amp; garage. Asking $16,000.
CHESTER - 3 nice acres with shade &amp; fruit trees.
Insulated 3 BR home. garage, small barn. L.otsof In·
door living space as well as outdoor. Asking $58,900.

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560

Farm Buildings

In Caflia County

446-2342
In Mason Coun1y

"From JOxlO"

~~ .: . :

SMALL

Utility Buildings

Rutland Furniture carpet Shop

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

ALL CARPET IS MARKED DOWN

Racine, Oh

Ph 614·843·2591
6·15·tfc

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOFING
.1nd Home ,...,, ~1 1nt c n n nce
•t.•ool1ng ot .llllype!&gt;
·~tdmg

•t.' e modehng

rcc c~ 11m .1t c &lt;&gt;
•:JO y r "&gt; e , pc n enc c

•F

TOM HOSKINS

Cash-n·Carry
1 Roll Each
Brown, Blue,
Green

&lt;Extra Good)
Reg. $16.95 sq.
Installed vd.

ss•

$1~.

NowSl~sq.

yd .
sq. yd.
1....---..;_-t._ _ _. . ; _ _ . l - - - Yd.
GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy NC!W &amp; Save $2·$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roil Ends Remnants $2.50 up. Grass carpet $4.99 yd.
Green and Brown.
Drive A LiHie- Save A Lot

742·2211
Keep nus Ad lor Future Aeter.nu

APPLIANCE SERVICE
SERVICE

Call Ken Young

----------+----------1

From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator
Radiator Specialist

NATHAN BIGGS
35 .Yr~. Exper~ence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Pomeroy, OH .
992·2174

Ph.

57 tic

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New t1omes - ex•
tensive remodeling.
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work •
13 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph.99H583
6 3 I mo .

RACINE-SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS
Don' t wa1t. Contact Ohio
Valley Plumbmg tor
sewer line connections,
and any tn house
changes that have to be
made. Bade hoe and
dozer service avaelable.

992·2036
5·20 I mo.

·PLEASANT VALLEY JtOSPITAL

PARTS AND SERVIC E
Al L MAl« E S

•Wa! hen
• D,.yers
•Rang ts

•

15

eD tsp4sals
• O t~ hwa s hn s
.HOIW iU~r T.ank s

J

currently seeking

qualified
REGISTERED NURSES
for

Rep••nng Stn &lt;e 19Sl

"S!M'&lt;tal Rates FOt""
.... com Laundn• s
.-- Re ntal Pro~,.,,.,
...- Apt Hov 5e Ownsn
.,. MObtle Home Parks

• Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
• Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lmes

wards,

Contact: Director of Nursing
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. 25550

-

PH. 992-7201
t·ttc
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

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

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Kitchen cabinets, bath

remodeling, roofing &amp;

eANNOUNCEMENTS

RENTAL.$

1-card Gt TN nils

41 _HOUS.s tor Renl
42- M*Ie Homts
for .....
44--A,.,.t:menb tor Rent
4J-Fifmi1Mtll Rooms

~•• Mtmtfllm
,_:..u~ttv.Ctfftetth
.-GI"""'IY
J-HIIPPYA••

gutter, Sid1ng &amp; plumbing &amp; electrical, concr ete, storm windows,
woOdburners •nstallecl.

CLUB REPAIR - FAS'I SEII¥U

47-WinfM to Rent

7-YirdSIII

41-Efl'll,..nt tor R.-t

1-flubllc Slit

CALL :
Paul Sigman- 992-2984
Pat Mitchell-742·2562
6·7-1 mo.

&amp; AlldiOII
t--WIIItecl It luy

eMERCHANDISE
Sl-tfoUHMid QMdl

S2-CI, TV, RlclloEIIIIiPIMnt

eEMPL.OYMENT
SERVICES
12-SINitM

! ROGER HYSELL'S

SJ-Aitllqun

54-MIIC. M.,.CJ\IIICIIIM
SJ-IIflldinW SlfPPIIII
56-fleti,.,.S.Ie

w••••

11-"lftiVriMI
1.-lulflels Tretltlftt
11-ScMM lllltniCtiOII

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

4
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or affempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In this
column. There wtll be no

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; L.IVESTOCK

11-RHio. TV,
&amp;CIRtp~~lr

61- FarMI!flttipment

-waattfTooe

Bertha

Stevens,

1.-•.,.......

and

one

short

3 ktnens 10 wks old, llffer
box broken. Caii24H492.
Free to good home, male
beegle pup. Call affer 6PM
A46-.o806.
Lovable kittens to good
home 2 males and 1 female
llffer trained. Cail4411·9479.
Tiger klffens abOIJt 9 weeks
old. Phone «6·0974.

r

.

eTRANSPORTATION

,.._
.............
.
u..-,
.
_.....,...........,.

JJ-YIM&amp;•W.O.

tr-::"'"s
...
.........
u-w••.,_. ........

992-5682

'

a-Acc.t..nn
77-AitltiRe,atr

~

.a-L...

,_.......

•

...

LARGE yard sale at Coun·
try Lanes Bowling Center,

Yard Sale II mile on Neigh·
borhood Rd . Thurs. &amp; Fri.
L.ots of good childrens
clothes.
Yard Sale Saturday, July
11, 9·5. Portorbrooke Sub·
divlsion off Fairfield·
Centenary Rd. Cash only .
Yard Sale 2 miles pass
Holzer's off 160 on Kemper
Hollow Rd. Thurs, Fri.. &amp;
Sat. July 9,10,&amp; 11 . 9 tl115.
Garage Sale July 9·10· 11
Below gift shop, Rt. 7. 9 to?
Womens, girls, boys school
clothes, low prices, Odds &amp;
ends oalore, drapes, bottles, 8·track tapes.
Yard Sale July 10·11 ·12
Clothing, dishes, bicycles,
lots of misc. Items On
State Rt 7, 112 mile below
jet. Rt. 218.

130 ACRES - (Old Durst F.arm) close to Raven·
swooel Bridge. All mineral rights. Plenty of pasture
and woods.
.

refrlg.,

bedroom

suite, AM· FM stero with
speakers, books, and
clothes

.........~""""
...-u-""'

__
--·--·• • ' - 4111M11
I

.

lnformatlen

11~-----..:;P;H~.•:•;s-:41~9~7--·;.,.---~

~A!'fl'llt............

t

11

.

··-··

~~

. . . . . . ,,

'

.

~ 1~

--

H .....

•

•

...

3 percent commissions.

Terms cash or positive I 0

Location State Rt 62 North
of Eleanor W.V . at Magaw
Country Servtce Feed

Store. 304·586·2479.

OPEN9T05

kinds, call Kenneth Swain ,
256-1967 in the evenings .

73 OR 74 VW Super Beetle

&lt;P

Stereo,

Wanted to Buy used Buck

bicycle,

dresser,

radio-record player. 9 5.
YARD SALE . Firs! ever.
Roger Spencer residence.
S.R. 33 Some antiques,
small appliances. Large
size ladles clothing . L.ots
misc. Items. Kitchen table,
chairs, paperbacks. July 7·
8·9, 9·5.
YARD SAL.E. Brannan
Residence, 288 Main St .,
Middleport . TV, tors,
clothing, appliances, some
misc .

items

Wed. &amp; Thurs. 8 &amp; 9. 9 4
clothes . diShes , much
more
Hubbard St . ,
Syracuse Thursday 9·4.
Yard Sale af 493 Broadway
St., Middleport. Wed ·Sal.
3 Family Yard Sale. Fri.,
July 10, 10·?. On 248 1/&gt; mile
from Chester at Pat
Morrissey residence. Nice
adult &amp; children clolhlng,

wallpaper, toys, etc .
3 family. July 9·10·11. 9 ?.
Dinnette

sets,

base

cabinets, baby Items. 992·
:ll79. 133 Bunernut Ave.
Garage Sole . Fri. Sot. Ar·
baugh Addition, Tuppers
Plains. Jackson residence.

Garage sale.
Thurs .
through Sat. at Bradbury 9
a.m . to5p.m .
Three family garage sale.
Men's, women's clothing,
wide size range. Toys,
books, furnltur~ , Sony
stereo,

speakers,

tapes,

jewelry, misc . Every!l&gt;lng
excellent condition . Friday
and Saturday, 9·? . Denver
Weber, Reedsville, op·
posltedam.
Wednesday and
July 8·9, 10·4. :Ill X
Third Street, New Haven.
L.arge assortment of Items
Including baby clothes.

G.rele

$' . . . . , _ _ . .

large or small You bring It

we'll auction it. 5 percent ro

Call «6 0827.

GARAGE sale Thul'ldly,
.July 9, 9:00 to ! Calllpolls
Ferry, T.11rn et Powells
Site 31 VIntOn Ave: B•rwr Sl\oP • follow signs.
Jul\t·tftl. IDIII. Tltun. • ClotheS, books, • dishes,
Prl.,tAMtlll?
.
toys, clll'amlcs• misc.

-

All consignments welcome

hood and right front fender

.,.l. ......... l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , j ,,, .... . ... . . . . . ... ....

.
PH. l4Ht75
VIrginia Hayman- A's soclate

Auction

PATIO SALE. July 10·11.
Beside church In Chester.

IN houlle saii'Frldey July
10. •· 9:011-4:00, 713 Main
,t. ,Pt. Pleasant. Gas
range, gas •tows, dinette
set•. IOfe bed, tablet. misc.
Items. and ltoOks·boOks·
,bOQksl ' ·

1,

Other
"111!111-·---·
·.......................
-.. . . .... . . ........... . ....
.,
..........
.
.
..
.'. _, , : .._...,...........____ _
...... ·-·-~~~---·--..
•

~~~yuJ~:~~suv ,!&gt;s~~~a~~

··~-oaa. .IHat.u~

Consignment

«6·4715
Yard Sale Rain or Shine 9·

....... teetncal

a

8
Public Sale
_ _ _.!&amp;:.:A~u!:.
ct!!lo~n~-Neals Auction Hogsett,
WVA . Rt . 2 Every Sat 7 00
PM . (Cons i gnments
taken) , (will buy furnlfure)
Lonnie Neal367 7101.

9,_ _~W:!:a!'n".'t~e:--.d_o:to~B~uyL.._
$CASH!
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
Yard Sale 2 mi
out
ONE PIECE
Georges Creek, Ehlino A·
OR HOUSE FULL
Frame . Clothes, Sears sew
COME TO
machine, and misc. July 10
42DLIVE&amp;SECOND
&amp; 11 . 10 to4.
DR CALL

1

t '

Rt.62 &amp; Tribble Road, Ar·
buckle wv Saturday July
11, 9 fill 5. Lots of clothing
and misc. items. hot dogs &amp;
coffee will be available.
Sponsered by Leon WBA.

Saturday July 11th, 10 A M

··-~
··~-~~
a-Ptvtn""
a lnawatt~tt"
a-a.caw•IMI

Tara

New 3 bdr house with
garage and full basement

room,

attached

Insurance

13

eSERVICES

l •

Pt .

In

pool privileges, $75,000
firm Kyger creek School
District Shown by appt.
only 367·7835.

uttlity

Garage Sale. 9 till 5, third
brick out Plymale Road,
G,alllpOlls Ferry,W.V. July
9th and lOth.

74-:Mifrwc:rctn
7~AuN fllrfl' l

Ga s

located

Estates, Club House and

garage, Rodney VIllage,
No 2 Call446·1358.

2015 Maxwell Road. Thursday, Friday, Saturday .

n-• .,..,.,. ....

e REAL !!STATE

•,

for

Apply in person,

baths,

dist . LR , lg kitc hen, bath,

3 family, nice maternity

d-SHIII Ftrtlllur

Haven

BY OWNER : 4 Bdr. split·
level , ltvlng room/ dining
room combination, eat-In
kitchen, Ig . family r m ., 21h

J BDRM hou.e, city school

Female kitten
colored. 992·3577.

Light

interest or 10 per cent doWn

$.45,000. Call «6·0390.

COLLIE and Coonhound
Puppies. 992· 2770.

M-Hay&amp;Gr•.,.

2Jo-,flnifti11MII
' s.rwtcel 'l •

New

2608 Mt. Vernon,
Pleasant, WV .

antiques,

11-LhHfld!

.

Station

stove,

haired

wanted

Area.

2 black klnens one long

72-Truckstorllte

-~
n--jto,I-NO

sitter

304·882·2010

charge to the advertiser.

u-wanlld te lwy

'

e FINANCliALo

Baby

reference required. Phone

5, 90 Cedar St ., Gallipolis .
July 9 &amp; 10 Golf bag &amp; WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
clubs (ladles), gas cook niture and Antiques of all

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

..... s,.calor Rfftt

6-LIDtlml Po111tC1

1t- ....,WIRtwd

Vinyl&amp;
Aluminum Siding
• Insulation
• Storm Doors
. • Storm Windows
• Replacement
WlildoWI '
Free Estlmat.e
James ~Hitl! .'
,; Ph. 9~~-2772

Turn your living room Into
a greenhouse, possible to
Increase all plant proeluc·
lion 91 per cent. Free
report. Box 83, Gallipolis
Ferry , WV

Four male klffens, nine
months old neutered with
bors. the Nazarene Church, all shots. L.oveable and
and everyone whO sent good pets. To good homes
food, cards, the beautiful only . Call 675·2208 after 5
flowers and for all of the p.m.
prayers during the recent
death of our loved one. Also Nine week·old red male kit·
we want to thank Dr. Mark ten, long haired . NJne
Cheng, Dr . John Grubb, the week·old black kitten,
nursing stall of Pleasant short haired. 675·6145.
Valley Hospltal,especallly
the ones on second floor 5
H
Ad
south lor all of their care ,__ _ !!.".aP~PI!IY~~·!...
and all of their kindness. Picking up easy·play organ
We want to thank In your area. Low down
Rev.Bryan Blair and Rev. payment, low monthly
William Bridges tor their payment. Credit manager
comforting words and also collect, 614-592·5122.
the Wilcoxen Funeral
Lost and Found
Horne tor their kind assist· 6nace and managemant. ~-~~~~~~-­
The family of RObert H. L.ost near Save Mart
Baker.
Station In Middleport, older
grey tiger female cat.
Wearing
flea collar.
In Memoriam
2
Named General, family
In L.ovlng memory of my pet, 992·5286.
Husband; James c. Hook
Jr.
L.ost In the area of Forked
Four yl!ors ago today, '
Run L.ake. 1 male treeing
The L.ont tOOk you away.
walker
with collar &amp; name
I mill you more and more plate. Also
male elk hound
every passing day.
with
blue
collar.
Call 367·
1 k~ the L.ord know best, 0637 collect.
He know you needed rest.
Sadly missed by Beulah J .
HOOk.

PHONE 992-2156

M&amp;S BUILDING

carpet. Mus! have own
tools. Call675·1371.

Cleland Greenhouse Is now
open. Vegetable plants,
tomato plants. bedding
plants, pots and hanging
baskets
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

LONELY
Christian
Singles. Meet Christian
singles lnyour area Write
Southern Christian Singles
Club, PO Box 1823, Sum·
mervlfle, ~"C 29483 or call1 ·
803-871 ·98ov, 2ft10Urs.

1mmed late possession I 5
bdr. farm home on 8 rolling
acres. Iorge white house
with log cabin and 3 out
buildings at Hillcrest, I
mile south of Vinton on
State Rt. 160. Old McGhee
home$tead . Land Contract.
25 per cent down I per cent

NEED someone to install

MECHANIC

ATTENTION L.ADIESIII
Help pay off those un·
wanted bills working
evenings from 7: 30 to 10:30
p.m. as a fashion stylist.
Earn S8.00 10 S10.00 per
hour profit. Ideal for
homemaker with family
Call 992·3941 from 9·6,

Homes for Slit

12 per cent Possible rental
yard work. Should have with com mitt to purchase.
own transportation 985- No fees. Write Bob Mur
4387
phy, 433 South F irestone
Blv., Akron, Oh 44301

Turn your living room Into
a greenhouse, possible to
Increase all plant proeluc·
tlon 91%. Free report Box
83, Gallipolis Ferry,WVA.
25515 .

Free puppies mixed breed.
Call between 9 &amp; 4 or alter 7
«6·0742.

Gladys Thomas, carrie
Beaver, Brenda Holley,
Carolyn Thomas, Alma
Randolph,
Camr,bell
Stevens, David Wei man,
William Thomas. Rick
White, Todd Handley,
Ricky Crawford, Cammy
Jo Vester, Bruce Cunningham, Terry Matheny,
Sarah Douglas, Eleanor
Elliott, Risden Miller, Ed
Bush, Camaleffa Vester.

INFORMATION
.

949·2860 .
No Sunday Calls
3· 11 tfc

Person to cut grass and do

Karen's Beauty Saloon Is
now open. L.ocated on
Gall Ia St., Crown City, OH .
Call for appointment, 2561624.

----------+--------~_, WE would like to thank all
of our friends and neigh·

"BeautifUl, custom ·
Bu•lt Garages"
Call #or lree s1ding
estemates, 9n· 2801 or

OpportunitY Is yours lust
for the asking . Ask your
Beeline stylist and she will
be happy to help you loin
the Beeline world of
fashion and success. Phone
992·3941 between the hours
of H .

City Cab, office 39 State St.
Gallipolis, open 5:30 till
11 :30PM 7 days. 446·0451.

1 PAY
highest prices
possible lor gold and sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkeff Barber
Shop, Middleport.

31

Help Wanted

11

NEW GARAGE OPENING
• Automatic transmissions
end all sorts of mechanical
repair and major and
minor auto body repelr.
See James Smith or Tom
Masters or call.utr7757.

haired. Call 367·0581

Dept., Chris Bauer, Mike
Shaw, Southern States.
Dick ThOmas, Kevin Durst,
counselors 'and other help,
Teenle Stevens, Katie
Beaver, Debbie Deal,
Melinda Kapp, Ann Ed·

EXCELLENT SAlARY AND BENEFITS

• Trencher
L1censed &amp; Bonded

The Mason County
Association for Retarded
Chllaren would like to ex·
press their appreciation to
the following businesses
and IndividUals lor their
various donations (as well
as their time)
to :
camp
sunshine,
Citizens
National "Bank, Tiffins
Jewelry, Building and
L.oan, Charlie Damron,
Bob Evans, Waldens Book
Store, Prescription Shop,
J's Food Mart x Oall, Pen·
nyfare, Fruths, Hecks,
Johnsons Jackson Ave.. Or·
dnance School, Wendys,
MdOonalds, Long John
Slivers, Burger Chef.
Madlsons Shoes, Stlfflers,
Peoples Bank , Ap ·
pelachlan Power, camalet·
ta Vester and
Hall,
ueen
I

Acute Care Nursing Units

eoumpTruck

: ~ . ~.

Cox's Dept.

Nursing Care Unit
(primarily geriatrics)
... and

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•

..

Sincere thanks to
everyone. Friends. neighbors and relatives who
were so kind and thoughtful
with cards, flowers and
prayers during my recent
hospitalization.
Kind
thoughts always hasten the
healing. Martha Searls.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Stt c

f

RUBBERBACK Mc::,~~~~~pet

cARPET

wrPaddlng
Installed
Sfa rtlng

:·;.: .::

I WISh tO thank Dr. ' Sub·
blah, Dr. Berklch, and Dr.
Yodlawski for a su.ccesslul
surgery and the wonderful
care the nursing staff at
Holzer Medical Center
gave me. Also to friends
and neighbors who called
or sent cards. Herman Will
and Georgia and Harley
Smith.

SUMMER CARPET SALE

Rt . 3, BOX 54

3 ACRES - In Racine. Surveyed. Asking Sl6,000.

,

992·2156 .

=LANDMARK

I

They'll Do It Every Time

3
AnMUncemetJtl
SWEEPER and IIWing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
dellvary, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, One half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Cell
&gt;1&lt;46·0294..

In Meigs county

Sites

llll . l II ht

•

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

~POMEROY

ALL STEEL

2 4 tfc

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Rt 554 Gallia Co .. spl it entry,

COMPLETE
CLOSEOUT.
BUY NOWI

I h .,.49 'J lbU

Want Ad

LETART, OH. - Brtck home, l'h bath, 3 BR's, har

Magnolia Trees
MallY Othels

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

- · lfiii1-E ~)

WITH A

Upright Yews
Maple Trees

Guaranteed

Farm Ponds - Land
Clearing- Roads.
Call :

MIIIICl-

GB1' YOOR ·

Alaleas

10'x10',10'x12' &amp; up)
Any s1ze built to yaur
specifications. Models
in Meigs, Gallla and
Mason Counties .
FREE ESTIMATES
All BUildings

.

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

CENTRAL REALTY

Gallia Co. Area Code
Meigs co. Area Code
614
614
A
4-Golljpolls
992-Middleport
367- Cheshlre
Pomeroy
3-VInton
985-Choster
245-Rio Grande
343-Portllnd
379-Walnut Dlst.
247- Letart Falls
256--Guyan Dist. "'
949- Raclne
643-Arobla Dlst.
742- Rutland
Mason Co. W. Va.
Area Code ~04
675-Pt. Pleasant
4S8-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882-New Haven
895-Letart
937- Buffalo

'

l'xl', 1'..:10',

(4'xl6',

Classified' Pages cover lhe

FINAL
CLOSEOUT
. .

Garages - Buildings
_ Barns- Equipment.
ShedS
POL.E BUIL.DLNGS
15'x20' up to 40'x100'
PORTABLE STEEL.
STORAGE
BUILDINGS

WORF ·,

6·15·1 mo.

These cash rates
m(lude discount

Mise'. Mtrchlnlse

•'

EXCAVATING

s 18,500 00

an

I

Modern

ran ch wt t h 3 bedroom s,
ha If basem ent, It vi ng,
dt nmg , kttchen, halt
ba se ment
Attached

AUCTION • AUCTION

write your own ad and order by mail wtth this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you oet
results Money not retundab~

~

Call949· 2710
6·8·1 mo.

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Misc . Merchcmdise

-Anniversaries

Ohio

following telephone exchanges •..

REESE .BUILDINGS

-Portraits
- Weddings

and

54 ·

Quality Buill
EconomicallY Priced

lHE PHOlO
PLACE

niversary

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh .
Ph. 992·5016
or 992·7505
4·17 tic

" Around here. Neulon we never
speak of pourmg o1l on troubled

S4

Age.s3and Up

ACRES

CON SUL fA rtON , FIN·

to thts

Dodderer
has
fatled,
without tu stifiable cause t o
communt cate with th e
mmor or to provide for the
maintenance and support
of the mmor as requtred by
law or 1ud•cial decree for a
p e rtod
of on e y e ar
precedtng the filmg of the
adopt1on pett1ton or the
placement of the mmor tn
the home of t he pet1t10ner ,

r-----------------------

1

requ~red

~

yr
old ranch . l 1h
ceramic baths, birch
k 1tchen, disosal, dish·
wa sher , 3 bedrooms,
conve.c tton heat, utility
rm , 3 car garages , full
basem ent w it h family
rm 2 pat1os and large
l a nd sc a pe d
lot
ov erlooking
Rt .
7

I 66

Now T,jiklng Enrollment

for Summer Classes.
1n Pomeroy &amp; Racine

,~ -,..-.-

rtNC ,

fact that the sa1d John L.

sa1d mtnor 1S m the per
manent cu stody of Ardeth

8 , H .:

~

BRAND

adoption by reason of the

te mber 30th. 1972. and lhat

Phone
1-.W .H-;.9 92-3325
·-

NEW LISTING -

P ubl•c Nottce
Kay
Proffttf, Route 3,
Ra c ine, OhiO, 45771.
Satd Petitioner further
alleges m hts Petttton that
the consent of John L Dod·

derer tS not

.a..1 r061

216_E. SecCifldStreet •

-

LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF COM Th e Oh10 Bureau of Em MON PLEAS, MEIGS
pl oy me nt Ser v1 ces, OffiCe COUNTY ,
OHIO
a t Ma npower Development PROBATE DIVISION
IC MD l has presented a

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

EAF~Rm

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Noftce

Business Services

-·

HOII'ilt . , '

VIRGIL 8. SR .iH

1981

'"

Stove . Call245 9375.

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN
c an

celled'
Lost
your
operl!ltor's License? Phone

992-2143
16

Radio TV
&amp; CB Repair

Lar ge 2 story stone home,

wel l insullated. with 3 large
bedrooms. one full bath, 2
1/ 2 baths, formal dining
room, newly remodeled kit
chen built in including dishwasher, basement with
work shop, 2 car garage
with work shop, large gar·

den. 2 porches 548 Grant
RON 'S TV SERVICE
St., Middleport. $59,500.
Specializing In Zenith . Wanting
quick sale to seHie
House Calls. Now serv1c1ng estate. Call 61~ · 384· 3809 for
Motorola Quazar Call 1· appointment. (After I PM)
300 576-2398 or &gt;1&lt;46 2454.
17

Miscellaneous

Want to establish Gospel
Groups .

Let1ie

Davis ,

Phone 304-675·5166
18
Wanted to Do
D J 's LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Neigh
borhood Rd .• all makes serviced . Speci alizing in Lawn

By owner, old house. Elec
tncity, gas, water in town
For sale or trade tor a
place on the Ohto Rtver
Write Alberta Backus, 222
Beech 51 ., Pomeroy.
N tee 3 or 4 bedroom home
acre. owner will help
w tth downpayment Priced

v..

reasonable at $28,000. or
$20,000. &amp; assume loan of

Boy
Blades sharpened. $8,000 at only 81h pet. In·
Call 4.46·4425 after 5 p m. terest. 2 baths, fully car
Pick up and delivery peted laundry room, large
available.

Will take care of pat1ents in
thetr home live-in or 8 hr .

shift Call367·0394
General House Cleaning or
Offices, weekly or S3 25 per

hr . Phone«6·2427
Will do babysitttng in my
home m Syracuse Good
references, very reliable

Phone 9'12 3110 or 949 2791 .
Will do custom sawing
North 01 Ractne on Carmel
Rd James R Parsons

HAUL gravel, limestone,
coal, etc Dencil Dunlap

Phone 675 5215.

•

living room , kitchen with
ltke new Harvest Gold
range &amp; refrtgerator .
Natural gas furnace, wood burner
Extra
large
storage or
business
building. Chain link fence.

Roy (Frank) Riffle at 985·
4395 or 949·2aOI
Modified A-frame, three
bedrooms, two baths, car pet. Sptral statrs, circular
stone f1replace 8 acres.

9'12 7741
New J bedroom home, 2
baths, large living roomd tning room combination,
built 1n kitchen laundry
room , 2 garages, fully car
peted, forced air heating
a•r conditioning. Corner

a.

lot 992 5062, 8a .m.· l p.m.
Shown

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
C 0 INS,
R IN G S ,
JEWELRY, MISC . ITEMS .
ABSOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEED
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO 992 347~.
BEDS · I RON, BRASS, old

by

appointment

Middleport.
21

Busines'

Opportunity'--- LAWN II. Garden power
equipment sales &amp; service
Owner wishes to retire

1nquire at Outdoor Equip
ment Sales, Jet R•s 7 &amp; 35.
Gallipolis, or phone «6·

Very n1ce 2 bedroom home
Wall to wall carpet, drapes,
large lot, 2 gardens, 3 car
garage, 4 young fruit trees,

grape

ai!Por .

Full

size

basement $35,000 Can be

seen anyttme, 105 Maple
Place, Pomeroy , Ohto.

3670 for appointment .

OR RENT · almostnewl4x

OWN your own Jean Shop.

Complete
households.
Write : MD. Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Oh Or 992 7760.

Offering all the nar,onally

70, 3 bedroom, 1 112 baths,
stHing on n•ce lot, ready to
move into Phone 30-4·576·

CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1ameter 14" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab . SIO 50 per ton .
Deltverd 10 Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Springs
Rd,
Pomeroy . 9'12 2689

known brands 5 13,500 00
includes beginnmg in ventory, tratning, fixtures
and
Grand
&lt;)pening

2 story frame house, .9
acre, large garage 40x30

Promotions . C.lll Mr .
Wilkerson at 1·800·643·8760

Phone 304 895·3540.

22
Money to L:::Oao:cn::__
FHA· VA Conventlal Home

32

Loans, co1umbt1s F1rst
Mortgage Co , 46) Second

CLEAN USED MOBIL.E
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT.
35 PHONE «6·3868 or 446·
7274

furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood tee boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc ,

HARPER · HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CO .. 11th and
Viand Street , now buying

Ave , Ga llipolis, Oh., «6
7172

metals (copper, brass,
alumtnum, lead , stainless
steel~
batteries and
radiators, ginseng, yellow

23

root, catnip and sassafras) .
10 am to 6 pm daily Also
Flea Market on Saturdays.
CAII675·5868.
GOOD used 24" gtrls
bicycle with 3 or 10 speeds,
304-675-5624.
--.
.....

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

~

Professional
Services

COMMERCIAL
dustrial

1n·

Phone «6 29()1! or «6 7226
after 4 p m .

INCOME TAX PlND AC ·
COUNTING SEI'!VICE ·
Call 446 7068 lor ap ·
po tntment anyt im P.
Piano tuning and repair.
Love your nelgh!&gt;Or tune

Plano.
_.,-- ....,.,.-,-:-=:--c:--:-11
Help wanted
WANTED · Lease men, fo
leasae oi I and gas proper·
ties, GAffla and surroun·
ding counties. Inquire to
Great Bend 011 Inc. 269
L.ower
River
Rd .,
Gallipolis. catl «6·4285 .

and

photography

Bill

Ward.

I Gaili-P.,iKiseyboard. «6·4372.
GALL.IA Clean t,n g and
Rent·A·Mald Service Inc.,
Free Estimates, bonded ,
tnsured, phone 245-9234.
Cleaning by fhe w~'&lt;!k , mon ·
thor contractual .
Complete Auctlorl Service

stock reductlon·close ·outs·
estates·farm equlpmenHI ·
vestock·real estate . Llcen·
sed and bonded ' In Cillo,
and West WV. Bud McGhee
Auction and Rel! l Estate
Co. Call for terms; «6·0552
Princess House Crystal or
428 Second
part·tlme help avail ., perty Ave.,«6·0818.
Gallipolis,
0~ .• 45631 .
plan, earn SIOO to S200
wkly. One management lob
WELL. drilling, both rotary
open Caii61H94·3308.
&amp; cable tools, usu~lly wells
Baby slner needed In Ad· In 1 day. Call Rar Beagle
dlson area near Tara Apts. 304-11'15 ·~ I.
for Shift work . Call after
5PM 367-0692.
Auto Body repair man ex·
perlenced ohly, contact
Harold Davis, at Gallipolis
Motor
Co. ( Chevoret
Garage) .

$185.00 to $500 weekly dOing
mailing work. No ex·
perlence required. AP·
PL.Y: Circle Sales, P.O .
Box 224· D, Richmond Hill,
~ ""H"'o_m_e_s-::f-o r" 's;,.a-::1-t - NY 11418,
GET VAL.UABL.E training
as a young business person
tnd·••rn goqd money plus
some great gills as a Sen·
tinel route oarrler. PllOnt
ul right away and get 011
lite eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

NEW CABIN or small
jlome, completely fur ·
nlshed, l3900. ~all'&gt;l&lt;46-0390 .
House with acreage tor
sale, 3 ot 4 bdrs., fully car:
peted, 2 barns, 379·2258 or
379·2343, alter 6PM.

2711

1971

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Schultz

Homestead

12x60. wash &amp; dryer, new

carpet, com . turn., set on
lot 6 in Quail Creek in ROd-

ney, OH . $8,750.00 245·5420
or 38a·8349
Mobtle home for sale 62

model Greatlake. Call «6·
1036
For Sale By Owner l4x65
Wtndsor mobile home with

over 1/ 2 acre lot. 112 down,

will financ~ remainder at
10 per cent interest Call

_________ ,

&gt;1&lt;46 2807

1973 Crown Haven, 14x65,
three bedroom, new

car·

pet, 1971 Cameron, 14x64,

two bedroom , new carpet.

1972 Champion, 12x60, two
bedroom, new carpet. 1976
Cameron,
12X60, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/ 2, new
carpet. 1970 PMC, 12x60,

two bedroom, new carpet,

B &amp; S Sales, Inc , 2nd and
VIand srreet, Pt. Pleasant,
WV Phone 675·4424 .
1970 12x60 Htllcrest, flpout
In living room, gas heat, air
conditioner,

s1orage

building on one acre. 247
3915.
USED Mobile Home. 576·
2711 .
1971 Darlan 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedr,oqms.
1972 Invader U x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B 1/.o S '
Sales, Int . 2nd and VIand
Sts. Pt. Pleasant, WV.
Phone67H424 .

'

1973 Hallmark 12X60. For ~,
more Information call n3·

sm.

�.,

l91l
42
PRICES REDUCED · used
mobile homes end travel
frallers.
TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES . CALL
&lt;1-16· 7572.
For Sale 12x60 1972 Oak·
brook trailer. Call4-46·0952.

33
Forms tor Sole
55 acres. nine room house,

barn, minerals, secluded,

gOOd hunting . Morning Star
area . $65,000. Additional
101 acr~s available. 9492630.

34

Business Buildings

Country Grocerv gas pumps, air tank , living quarters. By owners. 1·61A·682·
7813 Oak Hill area .

lS

lots &amp; Acreage

Mobile Homes
lor Ront

2

acres on

Two

2

bedroom

For Sale Choice building lot
3 mi . f r om Gall ipolis over 1
ac re, $6500 .00. Phone 256·
13S~

BY · owner, 3 apartment
house on approx. 1 acre .
Live in one, rent others to
make your payment. Can
be converted single home.
City water , will consider
land con t ract . 675-1883 9·5

house

Mobile home, unfurnished
married couple only .
Phone 304·67S·1076.

4"=3;:=~F;::a:=:r::m:;s;=;l;::or:=;;
R;::
en:::t~=
bedroom

trailer

on

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

44

Apartment
lor Rent

Small house tor one or two
working persons, deposit,
references. Reply P .O. Box
10, Gallipolis, Oh-45631. 1

peted, $250 mo . $100 dep,
uT i lities paid, no children,

1 BDRM ., completely fur ·
nished . All elec t ., newly
decorated ,
depos i t ,
references . $200 peor mo.

4-46·2236 or «6·2581.

House for rent in Crown
City, 5 rms &amp; bath, $175

mo .. S27S sec. deposit. Call
Huntington 525-0391 week -

days. after 5PM S22173S .

lam ily . 675· 5104 or 675 5386.
Rt

62

North
4

of

baths, S265 . plus deposit
and reference . 614 -928-4339 .

Charleston, WV 25302.

no pets. Phone 304-67S·2812
or 304·67S· 1580
2'12 bedrooms, 1 acre, 6
mites
South ot
Pt .
Pleasant . References and

deposit,
263·2669 .
41

J-61-4 ~ 263 · 8322

or

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

3 bdr . lrailer, $200mo. $100
dep . furnished . Phone 367 -

Senior Citizens 1 bdr . apt .•
rental
assistance

available, dep . $200 . Call
4-46·2745 .
2 bedroom , unfurn., apt. in
Vinton on Main St . Calen,
convenient location, large

yard . Call 24S·5818.
REGENCY APT . INC . 2

3 R &amp; Bath, Ul., furnished ,
S225 mo. 2 R Bachlor apt .
$125 . 5 R house un ·
furnished , S175. Dep . &amp;
lease . Call 4 lo 10 PM 446·
0952.
2 bdr. apartment, across
from park , $175. mo., parti a lly turn ., ref. &amp; dep .
required . Call .446·3919.

Furnished apt . $160, 2 bdr .,
water paid, children OK .
1 bedroom apts. ava liable
aT Rillerside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call

2 bdr. trailer with Iaroe ex·
pando, 1 mile out of
Gallipolis on Rt. 588. Call
245·9170.
Mobile home for renl, at
Rodney, Oh. Phone 388·
8368.

Mattresses or box springs,

full or lwin. $55., firm. $65.
and $75 . Queen sets, $185. 5
dr . chests. $49. 4 dr. chests,
$42. Bed frames, S20.and
$2S .• 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350., dinette chairs $20.
and $25. Tappen gas or
electric ranges, S285.
USED
Ranges ,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd .

Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am to Spm, Sat.
«6~ 0322

GOOD

pliances, 1918
Ave., 446·7398 .

992 ~

month plus uti II ties. S.SO

deposil . No pets. Located In

EaSiern

chairs, excellent condition
also 2 bowl kiTchen sink .

call304-675· 1438.
53

2 bedroom furnished IPIIrt-

ment in Middleport . $175.
month . 992·5S45 between 7·
a .m.3 p.m . weekdays .
APARTMENTS .

Fur ·

nished or unfurnished . 675-

1371

days ',

675 · 3812

e11enings.

APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES 675·&lt;130.

2 bedroom apartment . Call
675·6020, 9 : 30 to s .
apart·

bedroom

apartment In

furnished
Henderson

$150. per month. 675·1972
alter 5 P.M.

2 bdr. trailer Roush Lane,
Cheshire. Oh. Phone 1·304·
773·5882.

ONE 2 bedroom apartment
and one efficiency apart·
ment, 304·675·3000.

2 mobile homes In Portor
Area wllh 2 bdr, 1 mobile
home with 1 bdr. for ·1 per·
son. Ref. and dep. Call 367·
7101 . .

45

U&gt;C65 mobile home 2 bdr, 1
112 bath, beautiful river
vi-. and 2 more Jst Of
Auo•• no children, no pets.
Call AA6-116d.

46

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotet.
s,.ce tor Rent

TRAI L.E R .,.ce 3 miln
from town lunctloil2 &amp; It
OldY, 675-32.il.
'

a

Charles McKeon
Call «6·9442.

ble, and bronze memorials .
Display lot on Main St. Pt.

Pleasant Granite Com ·
pany . Phone 675·SS48 .
26'

TROUTWOOD lravel

trailer and camp site on
R:accon Creek. Close to
Ohio River. $500 down .
Owner will finance. 614·256-

Jackson Ave .. 675· 1773.

quanity

Village

purchase.

Furniture

2605

carry at Village Furniture

260S Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.

For Sale : 1000 gallon
PLASTIC septic tanks.
Slate approved. Phone 286~
5930. Jackson, Ohio.
Most anything used In
Restaurant and store
equipment. RADCO 304·
523· 1378, Huntington.
' HAY

FEVER'

HOME

remedy, tradition for centuries, it works. For complete Info and receipt send

today self addressed slam·
ped envelope plus $1 .00 to
S. R.A. Co., P .O. Box 284,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
SNAPPER
MOWERS,
$.40.00 off list on all push
mowers in stock . $60.00 off
on
all
self -propelled
mowers. One 8 H P rider tor
$950. Outdoor Equlpmenl
Sales ~ct. Rts. 7 &amp; 35,
Gallipolis, Ph . 4-46·3670.
sale. 4-46· 1216
An~

AIR CONDITIONERS ·
sale priced, all sizes In
stock, e)(pert installation

available.

Village

CABBAGE IS cents a head,
304·675-2S27 .
For Sale or Trade

For Sale or Trade tor
livestock $800, 1962 Chey 1
112 ton Irk . with steel rack
to haul 200 bales hay.
Phone 256· 1352.
For

Sale or Trade tor
S200 manure
loader to tit Ford tractor.
Phone 256·1352.

livestock,

--·
. --. ...... . ...
_............
-=~:.·:. :.:.. -:,: . : ...:

61

Farm Equipment

"--'===-=-==-

John Deere 24T baler with
bale
kicker.
Mossey
Ferguson hayrack, 3 point
post hole digger 9 in., all in
gOOd cond. Call 1·614·286·
239~

or see Tom Jones near

Case farm tractor. Newly

304·675·1773.

overhauled motor. New
brakes &amp; clutch. Like new
llres all around. Will
sacrifice lor $500. 742·2502.

bedding in the area. Call
for prices. Village Furniture, 2605 Jackson Ave .

67S· 1773.
Galvanized Culvert $2.35
ft .,up. Bridge,elc. Steel, 10
cents lb. up. Phone 925·0884.
IS ft. crest liner new !ieats
and carpel, 60 HP
Evenrude trailer S1100.
Ports for 50 H P Mercury
outboard. Phone 304·882·
3664.
Hand gun mOdel Smith and
Wesson,

pocket watches,

Susan B. Anthony. Mint
sets. Phone 304·67S·6439.
Modern 8 II. c7uch and
chair, blue floral design.
Excellent $175. Phone 304·
67534123.
Sundeck less than lwo
years old. 6x8. Phone 675·
5509.

For Sale 16 cu. ft., side by
side refrigerator. S175. Call
256·1427.
5,5_ _,B,;U::.:I.:.:Id::.:ln::.:A-.::;SU:::JPP=II:.:H:.__
Building materialS, block,
Used Hotel Furnishings brick, sewer pipes, win·
Bed frames, head boards, doWs, lintels, etc. Claude
night stands, maHress &amp; Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
bOx springs, bed spreads, Calll-45-5121 .
carpet &amp; carpet padding,
Wednesday, Thursday &amp;
Pets for Sale
Friday Only. No phone call !141
please.
Holiday Inn POODL.E GROOMING.
Gallipolis.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
1970 Chevy 1( T pickup 6
cyi., standard. 8 HP 36 ln. DR~GONWYND
CAT·
cut riding lawn mower. TERY • KENNEL, AKC
Call~9698.
Chow ChOW doge. CFA
Himalayan, Panlan end
1975 Chevy L.uv truck and SiamtM caii.Sril &amp; crnm
Sears garden tractor &amp; point Hlmllayan &amp; While
with snow· blowef. Ptnlan kittens. Call "''
38.14 etter • p .m.
AM-3113.

mc•1

Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone 1·304·422·2781 .

Fur·

BUY direct from

mantacturer,
180 TV
slations. Call602·622·2290.

located above ground at

nlture, 2605 Jackson Ave.,

Lowest prices on Bemco

Datsun,

ex ·

cellent condition,

Four 15,00 gallon tanks
Misc. Merchandise

1975 Dodge Coronet 2 door,
runs gOOd . Phone 304·67S·
6545.

$6,100.00 Call 304·675·5090 .

450-B JOhn Deere dozer
wilh 6·woy blade. Call 379·
2340, Patriot, OH.

pocket watches, and

1973 Pinto. GOOd condition.

PICK your own half runner

BIG discounts for cash and

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or S57·3411 .

77 Grand Prix, 301 engine.
air, cruise, AM·FM8 track .
Very gOOd car. Phone 304

beans, sweet corn. Hoppy
HoiiOY/ Fruit Farm, 30.4S76·2026.

1216.
to purchase furniture,
televisions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 1605

304·675· 1769.

1980 200SX

59
ALL types of granite. mar·

Farm.

Nothing too large. Also.

tenna,

One

mitted .
Forest
Hill
Cemetary R t . 2 North.
Phone 675·S548 (James H.
Lewis)

Fruits
&amp;
Vegetables
Homegrown-sweet corn,
cabbage, mangos, etc.

Thurman,OH .

Special Sale! Satellite

One bedroom apartment,
one bedroom mobile home.
Air conditioned, utilities
furnished, located In Hen·
derson. Phone 304·675·6730.

sale.

black cragers, new
tires, 340 automatic. Phone

675·5015.

Jackson Ave . 675· 1773.

ment, no pets, references

required, 304-675· 1365.

for

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.

10 multipurpose doors for

SMALL furnished

lots

Beautiful, perpetual care,
uprighft monument per-

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will for

Ra cine. 9.49-2875. Available

Apartment for rent. Call
992-5908.

BURIAL

NEED several itemsoffurniture,
appliances,
televisions. Big discounts

Antiques

on

Phone1 ~ 304 ~ 882 · 3664 .

EASY credit available now
2 LIGHT blue living room

Musical
Instruments

Green Beans for sale. Call
245-9183.

2474.

S4

2 bedroom furnished apartmen! for rent, S150 per

AP ·

Electric Stove . Phone 675·

g~ns,

For rent in MiddlePOrt-- 2
bedroom furnished apart ·
ment . No children . Call 1-

USED

PLIANCES - washers,
drvers,
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·

57

58

tapes. All excellent con·
dllion. Call378·6293.

model,

------

76

Super Beetle convertible,

0' Brien Slalom water ski

Clothing for large men .
Sony stereo. speakers.

&lt;1-16·4416 alter 3PM.

-·

1nterlor and Exterior pain·
ting, troilor roofs, and dry
well $18 and up, 15 yrs. ex·
perlence. Free est. Call446·
1562.

Cockatiels.

store .

68" . Exc. cond. $75.
6330.

Hoover sweepers repe ired
at Empire Furniture, 142
second Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

Gravely lractor with sulkle
mower and grader blade.
Phone 304·576-2720.
63

Livestock

12 YR . OLD, 1,000 lb. work
horse, gentle, works single
or double. $550. Call 256·
6040.

72

loaded,

Trucks for Sale

&amp; Accessories

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service,
buy

automobiles. radiators and
batteries. 4-46·7717.

1965 Jeep body . Minus fen ·
ders &amp; hOOd. With 2 win·
dshields. Never used. $600.
992·212•. Mon.· Frl. 8·4 :30.

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker
service. "Big or small" we
tow them alii 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis. Ohio. Day
· -446·2445 or Night · 4-46·
4792.
Auto Painling &amp; Sanding
S17S, any color,lree pickup
&amp; delivery in Gallipolis
area, Hammond Body
Shop, 221 Mill St. 379·2782.
Camping

Equipmenl

1980 VW truck diesel
engine. 40 MPG, ex. cond.,
$5,800 firm. Call after S: 30
PM 367-0694.

81

BORN LOSER

CHEVY truck, JOS
automatic. 51,000 miles.
$2400. will accept trade In,
30H75·J04.1.
1957 Chevrolet one·half ton
pickup gOOd shape.Phone
304·675·6544. p
1967 International Pickup.
304· 458· 1924.
73

Vans&amp; 4W.D.

1977 Ford 4 wheel drive,
59,000 actual miles. Cali
446·41102 alter 5.
1979 Jeep Cherokee Golden
Eagle. P.S., air, radiotape, exc . cond. 304·773·
5323.
74

Motorcycles

1981 Honda, 1100 Interstate.
Fl'f' sale or trade lor small
.car, $4,600. Caii67S·6644.
· - -- - - - - - 1980 TT 500 Yamaha dirt
bike. $1300. 304·675·3938.

Television

~

&amp;er"lees

and

R

OVE~

.
''

.

com·

~"""" ~~"'

OONNA Tfii{E IT?

mine .)

(jJ) ALL CREATURES GREAT

AND SMAU 'WIIIIo Li•e' Ilia
bad enough when a dog goes
blind, but breaking the newato a
neurotic owner reminds James
of Cotterell's suicide . (60
mine.)
8:58 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
11:00 (IJ 8 CIJ
DIFF'RENT
STROKES Drummond aeeka
Arnold's advice after baing
turned down tor a date by apret ·
ty exec ut Iva who Ia again at mixlng buaineea with phtaaure .

ALI..EYOOP

(!lepeal) (Ciooed-Caplionad)

... HE I.OOICS LIKE
HE'S HURT PRETTY
BADLY!

fice. 446 ~ 3008 night,
emergency no. 367·7131.

(I) 700CLUB

... I'LL GO UP 10 THE HOUSE
AND CALL ll-IE EMERSENCY
SQUAD IN 81.JC1&lt;8E~!

C!J MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••

"Human Factor" 1Q80
[J) (I2J •
ABC SUMMER
MOVIE 'WhlteLinaFever' 1975
Stare: Jan-Michael Vincent ,
Ka~ Lenz.

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367·7853.

Cil BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL

D. C. Contractors Plum· •
bing, ~lectrlcal, heating,
roofing, aluminum. vinyl
siding, and home painting.
675·3376 or 675· 1240.

'A VIsit With Dame Rebecca
Weal' Dame Rebecca Weat ia
one of the moat auccaaaful Brl·
tiah writers of this century. She
Is known forhareaaaya, novels.
reporting, andcrltlclam andhaa
written on literary, aocial and
RQiiticalaubjecta. (60 mine.)

E•cavating

,

(l1J

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 9'12·2284.

INSTALL fireplace facing
or chimney, dry wall,

JACK'S

401.1 know No.

... n,Qrt:&gt;
ou;mo

l

You've
seen he is~

Mrs. is neares'
is?
o' kin!

Now, get/

8:30 CIJRCilTHEFACTSOFLIFE
Tootie invlteaNatalleto Buffalo
1o visit her Aunt SylvtaandUncle
Brian, ahe' a black and he' a
White; and during their atay, a
domestic criaia arlua when
Sylvia is offered a job in New

· York C!!fpaal)
10:00 CilitW QUINCY Quincy and

CONNie covrrNI.Iei
OV liB? ti"AI?
PfET !IV A &amp;ES·
pgATE Pt!!!/1RE

.

.. r

,
'•
:.

SHOOT/ I'M ONLY
~ FIVE POUNDS

)OU'R'E JUST NOT

AFTER F'RACTK'Ali.Y

ENOUGH! YOU'RE
NOTcSIVIN6

1RYING lfAHP

S7iiiRYING MYSElF

ME YOUI&lt;

10 PEATH.'

ALL/

mf'!EA5E

AT ALL(
INMCT, I/41
BE6/NNING TO
AFEI. WeAK/

MAI(INI(A •••

•

:;•
••
·!

10:05 (I) NASL SOCCER Allonla
iele va Colllomlo Surf
10:28
CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30
LARRY JONES
C.BN UPOATE.JII;WIL
10:58
. 11:oo
•OOCilG(I)[JIJCIZJ•

W

REFRIGERATIO ~

Jones Boys Water Service.
Call367·7471 or 367-0591 .

hia ace lab technician, Sam, go
to Mexico to aiJslatln determining whether bones found in a
cave where a young woman ia
reportedly performing miracle&amp;
with the alck are actually those
of a priest who died In the 17th
century. (Repeat; 60 mlna.)
(J) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Oucheaa of Duke Street : For
love of Money' One of the hotel'a gueata, Count Paul Oppen·
dorf,la intrigued bv the apparently rich LadyDaiay Adam. He
launches a campaign of flattery
to win mora than thelady'a af·
fectiona. (60 mlna.)
(jJ) NEWS

•

WINNIE

~':1s IS THE UFE
{t)IIQVIE -(DRAMA) " "The
l... ftd" ttao
•
(I) DAVEALLENATLARGE
TEAUMITS
11:28
UPDATE NEWS
II :30
THETONIGHTSHOW

N . air coriditlon service,

man, OH .

NATIDNAL GEOGRAPHIC

'Etoaha: Place of Dry Water' Extraordinarv animal behavior. in
aome case a unknown even to
zoologiata and athologlata, ia
observed In thie film which
recorda the wildlife in Etoaha, a
preserve surrounding a huge ,
dry lake bad In the aouthweat
African country of Namibia. (60
mlna_,}
·

GASOUNE ALLEY

SANO!:RS
CON ·
TRACT I NG, Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446·2787.

CON ·
CRETE. • 'QUality and· ser·
vice, call675; )582. ·

HOI'i'5 "DADOY"

EACH OTifft "'

=·

SOUTHERN
SERVICE
CO . - Heating - mobile

merclal and residential,
tree estimates. Call 256·
1182.

Cabinets,
WOODSHOP
. picnic
tables,
porch
Sl"lngs, most- produc·
ts. 101 Court St., Gallipolis:
Call AM-2572.
.

IF IT'S MA~IH' Me
FEEL 00 A'I/FlJL '"

FRIEtiDLY l'iHEN
lHEY'R.E HU6GIN'

IN ANGELA'5
LIFE"'

'Etoaha :PiaceotOryWater'Ex·
iraordinary animal behavior, In
eome cases unknown even to
zoologists and ethologiata, Ia
obaerved In thla film which
recorda the wildlife in Etoaha, a
preaerve aurroundlng a huge,
dry IaU bed In the aouthweat
African country ot Namibia. (60

OH, '1!0'11, GANDY!

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Quoltly Cooling and
Heating Service Call 388·
9698.

est.

AREH'T THAT

OTHEil'~Y

Phone 4-46·3888 or 446·4477

PAINTING · Residential Ditcher work. Charles R.
and commercial. 'Interior Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe.
and exterior, mobile home Gas, electric, and water.
roofs. Free estimates. 17 742 ·2903.
yrs. exp. with references
call 367·7784 or 367· 1160.
EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in
septic tank. 675· 1234.
JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding. 30
years experience. Free BACKHOE, Septic lank,
estimates . Remodeling. and Swimming pools Ser ~
Call 388·98S7.
vice. Larry Sldenslrlcker.
675·5580.
CALL 446·2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent. 84
Electrical
spiders, fleas and other
&amp; Refrigeration
small insecl control. Free
estimates given . A local Fuller Electric Co. Com·
plete rewiring, commercial
company
locaed
i
or
residential, and elec·
Gallipolis
area.
Bill
trical maintainance, also
Thomas.
on call. Ph . 446 ·2171,
Gallipolis.
STUCCO PLASTERING ·

W.EAT~H"RAL.L

BEIN' JEALOOS
OF ANE!ELA 'H' ,_;::;..._ _ _"
·AH' TH\HKIH'
"DADOY" Llll.lf'i'
HOW 6KEAT
EACH OTHER"'
THEY ARE FOit
EACH OTHER~

JUGT "FRIEND.;"

--4\I'I'GUDOEtiLY
THERE'G GOME

CARTER'S P l UMBING
AND HEATING

Simulated brick or stone, commercial. Industrial.
Greg Burdette, call 675-· Phone 882·2079.
6357.
85
General Hauling
HOWARD &amp; PISTOL.E JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
3 REGISTERED Nubian
Contractors · Build, siding, water delivery. Call 256·
goats. 1 Billy $80.00, 2 nan~ 1975 360 Honda 1,300 miles, remOdel, concrett; roofing,' 9368 anylime.
ny'·s S7S.OO each. Call 304· excellent condition S795. free estimat~. Call col:,
67S·2372 or 895·3952.
Phone304·675·3995.
614·259·2814 ask lor Charles
NOW HAULING house coal • ,
1 .::::::;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;..L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...j or Mike.
&amp; limestone fpr driveways.
1--.,..---·---- Call for estimates 367·7101
CAPTAli~' STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured bY
Hatfell ,B'r others Custom Light Hauling, tree work,
carpets. Free HtlmatH. garage and basement
cleaned out. Call, anytime
can oloi6-2107 .
245·9264. Ask for Roy, Thur·
Golden and Glgi pheasants,
Bantam chickens also
female racoon. 304·895·
3972.
·

l JUST

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

Dozer work. Small jobs a
specially . 742·27S3 . .

stucco, free

BoY~

building ,

installafion, and
general
home
improvements. 675·5689, 67S·
5304.

Cil NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

ANNIE

&amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675· 1331.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaninq
446·42011

plaster,

1978 Stars: Franco Hero. Anne
Archer.

wv

DOZER · qackhoe, dump
truck. Call4-46 ~ 4537 .

ceilings,

NIGHT MOVIE 'The Plrale'

Ser·

Home
Improvements

textured

lllJJilal CBS WEDNESDAY

F

T

VALUABLE

The angels play whh fire when
they eat up a con man who
believes he haa found alarcenoualovar In t&lt;rla, but the beautiful angel joins the unholy al·
llance a a the bait to trap the
clever but deadly crook at hie
own__g_ame. (Repeat; 60 mlna.)

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 4-46·2454.

'

BARNEY

GLORY BE!!

SOMETHIIIJ'
TELLS ME .
'lORE WifE

,.

PILE 0~1 \2

',
'.

SNUFFY

'The Beat Of Caraon' Gueata:
liberaca. Andrea McArdle,
Dick Van Pattan. (Repeat; eo
mlna.)

WHAT GIVE 'lOU
THAT IDEE,

CALEB?

15 FIXIN'
TO COME
INTO A

I

ANOTHI!A UFE

AF'II!R lll!fiiiY

(I) CBS LATE IIOVIE 'The
Spiral Slolrcaao' 1876 Slara:
Jacqueline Blnill, Chriolopher

1:1,~~CAPTIONED NEWS

MONET.....

IIMOVIE-(DIIAIIA)""" "Two
forttte .....w" 1187
(jJ). AIICNEWSNIGHTUNE
Mchofed by Ted Koppel.
12:00 (I) ABC ti!WI NKitfTUNE

'

·,'

;Wt\f~:'i'C:Cm;P,eln

I

DILI,.ARDS , ,W ATER ~ j
DELIVERY SERVICE .
Call4-46·7404.
-Mobile homes '"· moved
licensed, and bOnded. 576:
2711 or 675·43'18.

7-8

GET COMFOUA6LE

-c..:

r

'

,.

,·
I'

,, .

'

,, ' ·
'

..

.'

•.

.,,

••

. ''

StublnO loreunHedwllh hlolove
ohlld, VIcki: and li man and •
womenwhohtlleducholhtlron
Jurrdutytokethtllrhhrloulblll·
·tletolh•open-.CR-•1:70

5ULKIN6 ·15 SPOILED

WHEN '(OlJ CAN'T

o.)

12:01
12:30

"

.

M

1: ~

COAIT·TOoCOAIT

~:JtVIE -(AO~NTUIII!) •••
1

1JN"1•2

I

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above canoon.

I I Jr I I I

Yester day s

r

(Answers tomorrow )

I Jumbles NEWLY

GUILT

EXTANT

AFFIRM

Answer: What the mouse found himself in -

A "GNAWFUL" FIX

JumbMI 8ooll No. 15; containing 110 puutea, Ia avaiiabie Ior $1 .75 poe;tpakl
from Jumble, de thts MWSpiiJ*". Box 34, Harwood, N.J. 07648. lnclucM your
Rime, tddml, ztp code and make ct.dta payable to Newspapetboots.

BRIDGE
Lightner on lead
r----------,

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soalag

NORTH
• J LO I 2

The bidding needs some
explanation. North-South
had an excellent auction to
the "virtually" layd 0 wn
small slam in hearts .
North's raise to three hearts
was game forcing and set·
ling hearts as trumps. North
and South then each cuebid

tAK

auction.

West ,

WEST
tK 7653

an

unusual

tJ9 75!2
•~

• Q 10 81
+J6 513
SOUTII

•8

.KJ1081!
• 6
A K 10 9 2

t

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

East

Soutb

Pass
Pass
Pass
Db I

3•
4+
s•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

••••••
s•

Opening lead:•7

who

lead

EAST
.AQ 9

., 6

remained silent during the
bidding with his 6-5 distribution, came to life at his last
turn • with an imaginative
Lightner double. This lead·
directing double, the
Lightner double, which asks
for

.,

+Q 7 6

their minor suit aces. After

ic

7-R-81

• AQ92

South subsided in four
hearts, North with 16 high
card points decided his hand
was worth one more move.
His five heart call asked
South to bid the slam if he
had first or second round
control in the unbid suit,
spades.
The drawback to this bid·
ding is that the opponents
also hear the bids and can
surmise what North and
South have for their scientif·

spade ace, he would be obli·
gated to bid five spades over
five hearts as a grand slam
could still be laydown. Six
hearts by South showed
either a singleton or the
spade king. West had the
king so he knew South had a
singleton. East, therefore,
had the spade ace and an
entry for the club ruff.
.'he opening spade lead
was won by East's ace and
he quickly figured out
West's ingenious reason for
doubling and gave him that
club ruff.
Sometimes science can be
too revealing.

is

almost always made by the
partner of the opening lead·
er. In today's hand West, the
opening leader, was able to
draw the proper inferences
from the auction to reverse
the Lightner procedure.
West knew North's five
heart bid asked South lor a
spade control. When South
accepted the · invitation,
West knew that South had a
second round spade control.
If declarer had a void or the

t'l~lt• "*r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

10 Belgian
ACROSS
river
I Cook
5 Like
DOWN
toothpaste
I Ruth
10 At hirst
and others
2 Naulical Cl111
II Unruffled
3 Resolve a
12 F oundation
lovers' tiff
13 Treat
14 Written
4 Nigerian cily
letter
5 Mournful
15 Apiece
6 Vase
16 Criminal
7 Sophis·
charge (sl. J
licated
17 Majestic
comedies
19 Rich rock
8 Magnify
20 "Hud" Oscar 9 J&gt;!ost
wiMer
profound
21 Future hams 11 Ca!Ulonade
15 Cornice, e .g .
22 Missile
detector
~~~24 Heavenly
sight
25 Trees
26 Eschew
27 Arab
gannent
211 Gunfire
31 Dutch river
32 French river
33 Actor
Leibman
34 Peaceful
36 Pict's
descendant
:n Movie feats
:Ill Bacteriologist's wire

Yesterday's Answer
18 Afternoon
receptions
21 Frost
22 Pra ctical

person
23 Canadian

province
:!4 It pops
26 Laymen

28 Come-&lt;&gt;ns
29 Baseball's
Gossage
30 Door
sign
35 Opposite
of SSW
36 Oriental

sauce

7~Tr~~

39 Does a
recording
job

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEII

Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter aimp)y standi for another. In this sample A is

used for tbe three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers .
apo.trophea, the leneth and fonnati~n of the words are all
blnts. Ea&lt;h doy the rode !etten ll'l! different.

caYPTOQUOTES

.

TU EBIIING ti!WS ·
CD
TOIIORAOW
•

(I) L.OVE BOA'r ceptoin StallIng lo raunllod with hlo love
child, VIcki: ond 'a man and •
womanwhohoteducholheron
lurydutytakalholrhllorlouoblll·
tlelothoopen ..... ("-•1: 70
12:31

'·

l
I I I (]

INARLAC

UPDATE NEWS
REALPEOPLl Avial!

MU~AAU!'SANGELS

mower repair and shar-

Henderson,

.CII!I.
~.CIJ

MOST

HARPER Halstead, lawn

(J

) ()

{I) BASEBALl Atlanta Braves

to the annual gatharlngot Laurel
and Hardy lana In Southern
California, a profile ol Mary
Bakunin, a teacher who can talk
backwards, and a look at a De~
trait rock band made up of
pollee offlcera are featured .
(Repeat; 80 min a.)
(I) CHILDREN-THE WORLD'S

CDNTINIOUS no leek gut·
terlng, custom made tor
your home. For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR . 614-698·8205.

83

]~~~--------------

7:58
8:00

r

I I

Prlnranswerllete: "(

I!~ FACE THE MUSIC

va Cincinnati Red a (In tht event
of a players' strike, alternate
grammlno will be aired .)

home furnaces, electric hot
water tank tepalr. Call of-

evenings and weekends .

1-614·694·

7 :35

882·2079.

carpel

1975 Ford F ~ 100, PS, PB ,
AC, AM· FM 8 track, trailer
broken, 57.000 miles, $1950.
can 4-46· 3987.

Truck.

TR~E: .

Emergency service. Call

remodeling, also papering,

Auto Repair

1963 Yellowstone 16 ft.
camper, steeps 4. Call 4-46·
11S7 weekday , 245 ·5•38

Dump
7842.

NOBODY
Ko.JOW5 AIJY·
TiliNG AROWND
HERE.

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential. automotive.

Phone 675·22SO.

74 Chevy 3/4 ton PU, auto.,
S600. Caii44H22S.

series Tamden axel Diesel

!1080DY IN ME;Ri'
KNOW5 ABOUT A
M/ff/118 11lNI&lt;fEIC/
VOU'RI! BARKING
UP THI': WRON!l

RINGLE'S
SERVICE:
complete
building .
remodeling , repalrmg ,
large or small jobs done el·
llciently . Phone 675-2088 or
675-4560.

side pipes. Cali4-46~2687.

1978 Fold down camper
with awing &amp; port·a · pol.
Call 446·7230.

Used R65 Ditch Witch tren·
cher &amp; 1972 GMC 7500

THAT "'iGHT 1&gt;1 A DOW&gt;ITOWIIl CARUIII! MOT~VOT­

rates. Scothguard. 992·6309.

vice,

78 Ford 6 cyl. pickup. good
cond ., $3500. 245-5148 after
5 :30.

For Sale 1972 GMC 7500
Diesel dump truck . Call 1·
614·694·7842.

i

•

Free estimates, reasonable

COOK'S

78

7:00 ()). PM MAGAZINE
())
HEW BIBLE BAFFLE
8110W
(]l MOVIE •(DRAMA) ' '
ndt.,ohoe" 11177
(jJ). FAMILY FEUD
WILD KINGDOM 'WIIclllro'
rtll.
(I) ncTACDOUGH
(jJ)
MACNEIL-LEHRER
PORT
NEWS
7:()6
AUINTHEFAMILY
• BULLSEYE
7:30
ANO_THEA UFE
• (I) JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(jJ) DICK CAVETT SHOW
RICHARD SIMMDNS

....
•' ·

Gene's Carpel Cleaning,
deep stream · extraction.

Chrome hooker header and

77

EVENING

pening service. 10 a.m. ·6
p.m. 675·5868.

Auto Parts

I ELTA"H
I I

JULYS, IIIII I

•-.:

Unocromble.,... four Jumbleo,

four ordinary wonll .

VIewmg

.·

ftf}~NliD'il ~THATICAAIIII ED WOAD GAllE
~ ~ ~~·
byHenriArnalclondBobLoe

one lellor lo ucl1 aquara . to form

•

•

=·'

1977 Honda CB S50K, • cyl .,
1000 miles. Phone 304·6752832.

1971 Ford dump truck. 450 Honda, 1975
GOOd cond. F600. $3,500. $425. 675·313S.

73 Dodge Dart, sport black

•

.

1974 Chevrolet Suburban. 1977 Kawasaki KZ 1000, ex·
New tires. $600. Phone 992· cellent condition. Phone
675:6810 after 5 p .m.
2881 .

1500 miles on motor $1700.
PUREBRED Austraillan 576·2720.
blue heeler puppies, S7S.
304·67S·3832 .
1972 4·door Impala, 8 cyl .
tully equipped, 1 owner,
phone 675·1570.

.

mica counter tops, all work
guaranteed. Call446·8019 .

1973 Mustang V·8, auto ..
PS, PB . $600. Cali Terri 1975 125 Yamaha Enduro,
Henson 446·2502 or after must sell. Phone 304·895·
3917.
5:00367·7488.

1971

AshWOrth Installment Ser·

Phone 304-882·J66.1.

77 Trans Am, black with
many options. Compere at
1978 Odyssey, gOOd con·
$3,800. Call4-46· 1136.
dillon. Phone304-675·5173.

For sale or trade,

~-

Motorcycle 2 Honda Trail

1973 CHEVY Impala, 4
door, $475 or best offer. 46jl·
1975 750 Honda . Excellent
3948.
condition . Phone 304·675·

985· 439~.

+
:-;
•• :,•

905. 1 runs good, $300. bOth.

Television

Improvements
•• •
•
•
FOR BEST In Carpet .
Cleaning · Call smeltter's · ;
Steamway. Call 614·46jl·

vice . carpet,
vinyl.
ceramic tile, floor tile, for ·

1978 Kawaskl LTD 1.000.
S2,000. Excellent condition.
1976
Pontiac
Sunblrd.
6
Open 11 4
cyl., s~ speed. GOOd con· 6 7 5 · 5 0 7 9 .
. .
- - - - - - - -dillon. $2,300. 742·2249.
AKC
Dachshund,
72 TR f UMPH 650 motor·
Pomeranian en Poodle 1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675~ cycle, phone 304·675·1751.
pups 895·3958.
2722 or 675-S571 .
Boats and
75
AKC Boxer puppies. 304· MORRISON'S Auto soles.
Motors for Sale
576·2919.
Henderson, wv. Phone 675· 1977 Checkmate Tri Male
1574 or 675·2881 .
11 , 16 ft. 140 HP Evanrude
motor with drive on trailer
388·8240.
and

R1120 LU)(mon receiver
with Bosse speaker JVS
turntable. Call388·8240 .

work shop. $79'1 . See these
at Kingsbury Home parts

lresses. $250. and up to
$350. Captain's beds, S275.
complete. Baby beds, $l!9.

water pa id, children OK .

2 bdr . trailer, turn., gas

60x12 mot~lle home 2 bdr, 1
112 baths, S18S mo. in town.
small deposit req. Call 446·
0318.

chairs,

~

Insulated storage building.
8x10 with 1ft . ceiling. Ideal

car seat . 992·5621 .

Apartments. 67S 5548 .
S100 dep .• no pets. Call 4-46·
4745.

from S275. to $69S. Tables,
$38 and up to S109. Hide·•·
beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, $16S. , $295 .,
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
pc . dinettes from $79., to
S36S. 1 pc ., $189. and up.

shop at home service . Call
1·800·624·8511.

bed complete with mat-

0271.
and water turn .• $225 . mo.,

rocker, ofloman, J tables. $500. Sola.
chair and 1o11eseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
chair,

filter , liner , and in ·
stallation under normal
ground condition . Free

Furnished apt . $160, 3 bdr .•

July 8.

J room furnished cottage,
utilities furnished, adults,

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

SWIMMING
POOLS:
PRE · SEASON SALE :
$999.00 INSTALLED!!!
Above ground pool COM·
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting at S999 .00. Price in·
eludes pool, deck, fence,

Old Maid coal stove, cop per wash boilers, infants

304·882·2566.
For rent will furnish house
or farm in exchange for
caring for an elderly lady,
preferred retired couple.
Please send resume and
reference to P.O. Box 6193,

door

Bassett Oak, S649.,
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk

Point

bedrooms, 2

glass

Desota·

!I rescreen, size 33 1/8 to 39'
wide x 28 3/8 to 32 114 high.
New in bcx. $114 asking
$7S.OO. Call446· 4189 .

pine finish. Bedroom suites

9'12-7721 .
Pleasant,

B'arbwire, Caii256·143S.

Call4-46· 4416 afler 3PM .

S195,

Call446·4416 after 3PM .

Six room house $100 . a
month. great tor l arge

In·

$350 up to $495. Hutches,
$300. and $37S., maple or

Apt .

3 BDRM. HOME , 2 full size

CAII446·7322.

vice, supplies and
I II II
' " 132'
sa a on. - - ~-

uTilities pd., adults, 1 bdr .

bcrhood, 675·6722 or 67S·
5104 .

Nice hom e near shopping
center . Adults preferred .
no pet s, deposit plus
reference, $250 per mo.

Househo1li&gt;Goods

Sl

Misc. Merchandise

Vl!llley · Mobile

Wood table and

3 BDRM ., large fami ly
room, 446· 4754. In Northup.

256· 1456

Canary

Sofa,

bedroom,
kif ·
chenfurnished, carpeted,
bills partially paid . $200
mo.
Excellent
neigh -

baths, total elec. with wood
burner, J mi. south of city .
$300, $1.50 dep . You pay uti I.

VICE , Complete sales, ser-

09S7.

Furnished

For rent new small 5 rm .
bri ck, carpe1, range, lg .
front porc h over look ing 0 .
River, lawn mo. tree . You
pay S9.00 water. electr ic
mo. Unfurnished . 15 min .
from Gallipolis, lower Rt.
7. Want middle age couple
or lady , no children, $200
per mo. Call 256 · 1198.

in wooded area. Ideal for

Ave. Gallipolis . Call 446-

Call446·0390.

Houses tor Rent

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER ·

SA

'7.-1'_ _.::
A,u-"
tos=to,rc.:S:::•:ol=
• -71 Camero balck, T ·top,
air. cond .• AM·FM stero 8·
track .
Call
446· 4002,
Gallipolis.

Motorcycle Harley super
guild 1200 cc low mileage,
black and chrome $2700.
serlou• Inquiries only
please. Phone afternoon
30-4-576·9071 .

- --------

Secluded private trailer lot

space for Rent

46

a dulls only, no pets. 729 2nd

4 rent unfurn . apt . all car-

4

AKC Weimaraners, I wks.
old, bred for hunting, out·
standing 4 H obedience,
blue eyed, sliver beauties,
and pervo &amp; dhl shots. Call
George WOOdyard 614·379·
7
259
THE. FISH TANK and Pet
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
675-2063, Pl . Pleasant. Dut·
ch dWarf rabbits $10.99,

Second floor finished ef - Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
ficiency apt . Furnished , 992·3954.

145 ACRES 41 2·3781804.

41

t~·=·="=-~-~~~~===r.~~~~~~~~~

Southern

For rent new 1 bdr . apt.

Rentals

•

House for rent, 57 Olive St. thai summer outdoors.
1 bdr .. unfurnished, no Contact Brown's Trailer
pets, you pay utilities, dep. Par'k. 992·3324 .
req" $150. mo. &lt;1-16·7886. AI·
ler 5 4-46 ~ 4045 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
2 bdr . apartment lg. LR Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
and Kitchen . Across from 992·7479. .
Honda Shop no pets. Call
«6·3937 or 367-0560.
TRAILER spaces for rent.

no pets. Cal1446·3437.

20 ACRES on bla ck lop
road $l!,OOO . 1 · 614 ~2 638322
or 263·2669 .

AKC
Poodle, Apricot
female, 3 yrs. old, S75. Also
AKC German Sheperd pup,
very nice, $50. Phone 446·
2310 .

1 with central a ir, good tor
working couple or couple
with 1 child . $150 per month
plusdeposit. 67S·.was.

p.m .

100 X 110 lot. 304-882 2954 or
882·3162 .

AKC St. Bernard Puppies 3
males, 2 females, well
marked. Call367·7594 After
6PM.

trailers for rent, furnlsh@d ,

pr ivate lot. No pets S17S.
304-882·2636.

Floyd -Clark Rd .

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
AKC Gordon setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call4-46·•191.

Two bedroom house trailer

month . New Haven . Phone

close lo Rt. 160. $4,000 .
Phone «&lt;&lt;· 0390.

..... . ·-·. ...... .

on Ashton· Upland Road.
$150 plus utilities and
damage deposit. 3 miles
from IH 2. 675·«188.

call after 3 p .m ., 256·6413.

$10•000 . 1 1/ 4 acre $4,500.
Owner will finance, 10
down 379·2196.

br-.

HIL.LCI\EST ' KENNEL · 50 bushels. ean ot corn.
Boarding_all
clean Call ~4344. ,
lndoqr:·QUtdoor tacllliiH .
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans, ~all 46jl·7795.
..
'
'
'"' ..

2 bedroom trailer for rent.
Brown's Trailer Pork. 992·
3324.

2

rura l water, 3 3/~ acres,

Hay&amp;Graln

For rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom
mobile home. Rec ine area.
992·5858.

LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, i!lll
utilities available, $300.
down, owner will finance,

Beauliful a. level lots, Fair·
field Church Rd .• approved
sub division, c ity school,

by larry Wright

'N' CARLYlE'"

\#IIIU

rUIIICI

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VA

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AK ·

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Q B M Q 0 Poft R U . - X E Q V V P
RP8 F QE
¥al dly'l ~: PEOPlE TALK ABOUf LOVE AS

IF lT WERE iiOMt'nDNG YOU COUlD GIVE, LIKE AN
· Alulnn.OFFLOWERS.-ANNELINDBERGH

�,

...,

I

when struck by car
A youth was injured in a ca r ·
pedestn an acctdent in Racme late
Monday afternoon. the Gallia ·Meigs
Post of the Ohio Highway Patrol said
today.
The patrol reported Kendall
Grady, R. Lafayette, Ind., was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the Racine emergency squad, where
he was treated and released.
According to the report, Grady ap·
parenUy ran into the path of a
vehicle driven by Terry L. Williams.
23. Racme. while Williams was east ·
bound onSR 3.111 at 4:10p.m.
In other action Tuesday,the pa trol
said a car driven by Michael A.
Weisend. Rt. 1, Bidwell. was
deslroyed tiy flames tn Bidwell at
10 :50 a.rn .

The report said Weisend was
trave lling westbound in the village
when the bottom of his vehicle hit
the railroad tracks while crossing
and the vehicle caugh fire.
Weisend escaped injury in the fire,
the report noted .
The patrol reported no injuries in
a on e -car accident in Meigs County
Monday morning.
Troopers said Karl W. Kuels, 66,
Syracuse. was southbound on U.S. 33
at 8:45a.m. when the trailer he was
towing fishtailed , causing Koels to
use his brakes.
He then lost control of his vehicle.
went off the right side of the road
and hit a ditch. His auto was
moderately damaged .

Democrats

ELBERFELDS

Come see one soon!

off Rt . 7.
Remodel ed 3 bedroom
home, living room, kit ·
c n e n , utility , b a th,
ce ll ar on 2 1 4 ac res w ith
fruit tr ees and g'rape ar
bor. $ 16,000.00
lOAN ASSUMPTION L ow
int erest
In
Rutland
Two stor y
hom e. 4 bedroom s. 'l
bathS. utility on 315
a c r e . Ask ing $33.000.00.
N EW HOME - Ni ce 3

bedroo m ,

a ll

2. BACK PACK
3. STROLLER BAG
4. SHOULDER BAG

$2ZX'
Elberfelds In Pomeroy .

Snugtl
Denim Dlltper Bag
Denim

elec t r i c.

l a r ge l i ving room , kit
chen and dining comb ..
bath .
carport
and

storage o n l a rge corne r
lot .
Pri ce
r edu ced
$38.5{)() IJO .
FARM - 72 acres, large
1 story home, J or 4
be droom s.
2 br~th s.
living room . modern kit
c hen ,
c arport
nnd
workshop
sa,n w 1th
elec tri ci ty a n d water
PRICE REDUCED $37.000 .00 .
Velma Nicinsky, .Assoc.
Phone 142-3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Phone 742·3171
·

SALE

1ng Ol1 111 rres t and requ 1re a ~u b S 1 £t n h allnle r es t pe nalt y tor e.:Hi y WI IMrawal

DIAMOND SA\IIIIGS
AIID L.O!'N COMPANY
ll.o I Ou•lb 'r'&gt;" ' en I ~ $ 1011

l)l lll n, I ~: r

216 w. Main, Pomeroy
M ·W 9-4 Thur. &amp; Sat. 9·Noon
9-6

RUTLAND

DEPARTM ENT

2

•

-·-

~

1 Sec tion, 10 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NeWIIYP8'
.

Phone 742-21 00

Prices Effective Thru Saturday , July 11th
12 oz. Eckrich

PACKAGE
BOLOGNA ••••::. s1.79
oz . Eckrich
ROLL
SAUSAGE ••••••• ::':.
oz. French Citv
PACKAGE
WIENERS.····· '·P·k~$ 95'
Homemade
HAM SALAD •••••••••••• ;b. 1.39
16

By Bob Hoeflich .
When is a truck driver a car·
penter? Well, when the truck driver
is Russell Cline of upper Syracuse.
Having spent all of his working
years driving truck and supervising
other drivers, the 74·year-old Cline
amazes even his own family with his
carpentry ability.
With absolutely no training in the
carpentry field, Cline, apparently
with a natural knack for the trade.
has developed quite a following in
the area due to his ability to come up
with reproduCtlons of antique pieces
and hjs . fortitude in endless e~ ·

I

lib. Krait Parkay

89~

MARGARINE
oz . Borden's
Pimento Sltcec'

PRODUCE

Quarters

Pk.

CARROTS •••••••••.... • 29'
10 lb. New California

Lonq While

'"q

POTATOES ............

11

CHEEsE'wra,

16 oz. Cello Pack

1lb. New Wt'lite

$1.79

sz-79

~

ONIONS .. ..........~~ 89'

New N. carolind

...... 2....

lbs . For

BIRDSEYE LARGE COOL WHIP• gge
200 Ct. White

FACIAL TISSUES .•••••••• ~~:· 79e
4Y

TIDE DETERGENT .:~~~·~.s~~ s2.09
.

'

I

DRESS, CASUALS,
HEELS and SANDALS
SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

REGULAR JELL0··········2469'
BEEF BARBECUE ••• •••.c;:~ ·1.39
•

.

.
.

.
32 oz. I&lt; rat~

.

.•

_$

GRAPE JELLY •• •••••••• ~:, t-29.
"

'.

Plan open house at Meigs
An open house and sign·up day
will be held at Meigs High School
at 7:30p.m. Tueday in teh Larry
R Morrison Gymnasium.
While the open house is
specifically intended to provide
incoming students with a look at
their new school and its
jprograms, all Meigs High School
students and their parents are in ·
vited to attend. School personnel
who will be op~:rating the

'

-h

,; •

•.
• I

•

-

10 oz.
'

INSTANT ·NESCAFE

athletic, music and academic
programs for teh 198Hl2 school
year will be present to discuss
their respective activities.
Head coaches of all sports will
attend and speak on thetr respec·
live .programs . There will be
signup for football, volleyball and
golf. grades 9·12. The boosters
association will have a meeting
during the evening and wiU
provide refreslunents.

Directors of both teh vocal and
inst rwncnta l music programs
will talk about heirj plans for the
new school year, and James
Diehl , high sc hool principal, will
speak and answer questions con·
ce ring all phases of the high
sc hool program.
There will also be tours of the
athleti c. music and academic
faci liti es.

Clark Street. assistant director of
the Ohio Department of Tran ·
sportation, will be the principal
speaker at a 'dinner meeting
following the tournament.
·
Street wiU discuss a highway
priorities in view of the recent added
gasoline tax, especially those in
southeastern Ohio and the highway
program of the SEORC.
G. Kenner Bush, chairman of the
highway conunittee, and members

of the committee were instrumental
in moving the Applachian Highay
project toward 1 l) mpletion .

ODOT Director David L. Weir has
stated two of the three remaining
Appala chian Htghway projects in
Brown County would be pla ced un ·
der construction tn 1981 and the third
would be done in 1982.
Golf play begins at 8 a. m. and the
hospitality hour at~ :30 p.m. with the
dinner meeting at 6 30 p.m

Bell feels Church is out

LUCKY LEAF APPLESAUCE .•2197e.'
\

..

marked with his creations - kitchen
cabinets, rocking chairs, gun
cabinets, a snack bar, picture
frames, a repplica of an antique
china cupboard, tables and other
items.
The home of the Clines' next door
neighbor also bears his stamp with
coffee and lamp tables and a large
ceiling high hutch built by Cline just
to fit the space that neighbors,
Charles and Ruth Canter. had
allocated for the furnishing.
So Cline, who spent many years
driving trucks, is spending his
retirement years driving nails.

S

10 oz. Vietti

16 oz.

perimentation to match finishes of
earlier furniture and cabinets.
His home nP.ar Snowball Hill is an
example of his ability. He purchased
the run down residence in 1978 and
set about doing his own interior and
exterior remodeling. Before and af·
ter photographs emphasize just how
well he has done. He has constructed
a workshop on the rear of his proper·
ty. but due to the variety and
nwnerol!S pieces of equipment that
he keeps adding, the carpentry ac ·
tivity is beginning to take over the
adjoining garage.
The interior of the Cline home is

The Annual Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council Golf Tournament
will be held on Thursday, July 16, at
the Fairgreeris Country Club in
Jackson County, it was announced
by Robert L. (Bob) Evans,
President of the SEORC.
Evans said that the tournament
was an open · affair with Hayden
Oiler, Jaclqion, serving as tour·
nament manager.

PINEAPPLE JUICE ••••• ;:: ~1.29
ON SELECTED

theft complaints

SIGN-UP DAY Is
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
Meigs High School for
students in the 1981-82
school year athletic
programs. A volunteer.
open-gym program Is underway at the school from
9 to 11 a.m. each day. Here
freshman, Steve Crow,
works out on the universal
gym as his father, Coach
Sam Crow, iooks on. Emphasis is on getting the
athletic programs moving
before school opens In Se~
tember. Tuesday's open
house at Meigs High
School will give freshmen, '
Uke Dan Thomas, shown
at bottom, at the universal
gym, and his parents, a
chance to become familiar
with the school's athletic
program.

SEORC to discuss highways

oz.

3 oz.

Deputies check

Trucker turns carpenter

1

DAIRY

Access road
contract set

..W.eather

STORE

46 oz . Dole

.

1. CHANGING PAD

live annuc1 1y1et&lt;1 tla sed on re.nve stment ol prmc1pill am1rnleresl at maiLmly 1hrs rs
an an nu al 1&lt;1 te !:&gt;Ullfecl to ch;mge at renewal Feder at regutatron s pro hrb rl compound ·

NEW LISTING - N ea r

LADIES' SHOE

I

WORKS FOY ·~ WAYS

$10 000 mrnrmum Investment reqUired lnteresl rna~ be IJil ld monttlly QUdlterly ur at
mJtur1ty dnecll~ lo you or transferred mto anoH1er 01amond Si1v1ng s accou nt fffec·

M1ddl eport,

THROUGHOUT
THE
STORE.
.
.

Diaper Bag

6-month Money Market Certificate

NEW
LIS'TING
Racin e.
Love l y two
story home . Owner is
wood craft sm a n and
woodwork is exquisite
th ro ughout . 5 be drooms,
bat h ,
living
room .
dining room, fa m ily
room , moder n k i tchen
with bre a kf ast room .
Also ext ra nic e 24'x44'
workshop . $37.500.00 .

LADIES• SHOES

Snugli

Current
lnleres l
Rale

Office 742-2003
George S. Hobstetter Jr .
Broker

It's Snugli 2. The new soff
baby carrier from Snugli . At
a new soft price.
Snugli 2 is made by machine
In blue brushed denim. With all
the ingenious design features
of the original hand-crafted
Snugli. At a fraction of the
original's cost.

15.027%
14.300%

Effect1ve
Annual
Yield

HOBSTEITER REALTY

To end marriages

The new Snuglr2

Rainbow."

r--;:========::::;--1

Area ·deaths

Remarkable Snugll
design and craftsmanship
at a remarkably low price

,

earn more tbant$50,000, you would starting its rnonth·ldng summer
want Reagl\D's blll."
.
recession Aug. 7. But ate added he
The Reagan administration has .sees no. need to rush just to meet
opposed tilting a tax cut to low-and such a timetable.
middle·lneome Americans, · con·
Some ~gan advisers have ac·
tending that wealthier people are cused l)!!mocrats of deliberately
more likely to invest the savings in stalling•action on.the tax bill. O'Neill
ways that would benefit the · denied It. "Thls'is the hugest tax bill
economy. But Dole said the in ~'history of the world and you
Democratic plan "would not do just can't get thin'gs done over·
night, " he.sald. ·
violence to the tax bill."
Tlie congressional Joint Com·
mittee on Taxation estimates that
34.7 percent of the individual tax
cuts in Reagan's bill would go to
those with incomes above $50,000 a
year, compared with ;!0.6 percent In
the Democratic proposal.
A contract for the construction of
Democrats say those with incomes
an
access . road from Veterans
under $50,000 must be given a larger
Memorial
Hospital to Union Avenue
share than Reagan reclirrunends
is
expected
to be awarded Monday
because they are hit hardest by inby
the
Meigs
County Board of Com·
flation and rising Social Security
missioners.
taxes.
The commissioners opened five
O'Neill repeated his promise that
the House wiU complete action on bids on the project Wednesday.
Apparent low bidder was Shelly
the tax bill by Aug. I. He said Rep.
and
Sands Co., Zanesville, with a bid
Dan Rostenkowski, D·Ill. , the Ways
of
$296,633.65.
The only local bidder
and Means chainnan, described as
on
the
project
was the D, V. Weber
"complete hogwash" Reagan's
Construction
Co.
of Reedsville.
claim that there can be no tax cut at
Bids
have
been
turned over to
all this year unless both the House
Flemming,
Page
and Stolte,
and the Senate pass a compromise
Marysville,
consulting
engineers on
version before their August
the
projeet,
for
evaluation
and
vacation.
reconunendation.
The Internal Revenue Service
The project will be funds in part by
says it needs six weeks after a tax
HUD
and FHA funds.
bill is passed to prepare and
distribute new tax·withholding
tables. If the tax cuts go into effect
Oct. I, that preswnably would mean
the IRS would have to have the final
bill in hand by mid ·August.
Senate Democratic leader Robert
Money. batteries and gasoline
C. Byrd said it would be very dif·.
were
stolen in breaking and entering
ficult - although possible - for
incidents
on July 7 and 8 at the D. V.
Congress to enact the bill before
Weber Construction Co. at Reedsville, according to the Meigs Coun·
ty sheriff's department.
Deputies also report there was a
bre@king and entering at Eastern
High School on July 8. A nwnber of
Showers or thunderstonns possible tonight. Lows in the upper 60s.
windows were broken and the gas
Partly cloudy and less humid Friday. Highs in the upper 80s. Chance
pump
damaged. Nothing was repor·
of rain 30 percent tonight and 20 percent Friday. Winds northwesterly
ted stolen.
10 mph or less tonight.
The third breaking and entering
Extended Ohio Forecast
on Wednesday took place at the
Salltrday through Monday:
·
Gary
Gibson residence, Route 4,
Chance of showers or thunderstorms each day. Highs In the 80s.
Pomeroy. Three shotguns, one pellet
Lows In the 60s.
gun, 19 inch color TV and a turntable
were stolen.

Highest Yield.
Guaranteed Rate.

(Continued from page I)
would go along with such a plan.
When the Senate returned today, it
faced a filibuster over a proposal to
bar the courts from imposing any
school integration plan that would
require the busing of pupils more
than five miles or 15 minutes.
Sen. Lowell Weicker, R.Conn .. is
leading the effort to kill the amend·
ment.
But the measure's sponsor, Sen. J.
Bennett Johnston. D·La ., said
Tuesday that there will be an at·
tempt to end the filibuster, which
requires a two·thirds vote.
Ironically, Johnston said, the vote
to defeat the filibuster also would
make it impossible under
parliamentary rules for the Senate
to adopt the amendment. That would
leave the Senate with the option of
adopting a milder anti ·busing
provision to bar the Justice Depart·
ment from spending any money to
enforce court·ordered busing.

Mary Ellen Stewart, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. filed suit for divorce in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
against Carl E. Stewart, Rt. 3,
] . Pomeroy, and the marriage of
James Willard Ohlinger and Carolyn
Park,
Fla.;
Arthur
of
St.
Louis,
Mo.,
Lee Ohlinger was dissolved .
Gt•mma M. Casl'i
and Ronald of Houston, Tex.; three
Mrs Gemma M. Casci, 59, 766 daughters. Miss Teresa Casct and
Brownell Ave.. Middleport, died Mrs. Rita Whitlatch, both of Mid·
Pumps off Thursday
Wednesday morning at Holzer dleport. and Mrs. Ida Counts,
Medica l Center follow mg a lingcnng Racine; a brother. Guido Girolaini
Water pumps will be off in tbe
til ness.
of Pomeroy: a sister, Mrs. Lilly
Vlllage of Radne all day ThursM". Casc i was born Sept. 14, 1921 Strickland, Woodville, Ohio ; a
day. VIllage offlclals ask that
in Kan~as City, Mo . She was a mem- brother·in·law, Robert P. Casci, St.
residents conserve on water
ber of Sacred Heart Church. Paul, Minn ; five grandchildren and
while repair work Is being comPomeroy: the 300 C1ub of St. 10 nieces and nephews.
pleted, Mae Cleland, clerk, reporCronans, St. Louis, Mo.; a mem ber
Services will be held at 10 a. m.
ted.
of the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Saturday at the Sacred Heart Chur ·
Webster Post 39, American Legion, ch with burial to be in Sacred Heart
and a member of the Ladies Guild of Cemetery. Friends may call at the Marriage license
the Sacred Heart Church. Mrs. Casci Ewing Funo;ral Home Thursday and
A marriage license was issued to
was a vetera n of World War II Friday. Legion Auxiliary services Donald Barry Allen , 20. Rt. 2,
havtng served in the WAVES for 26 will be held at 7 p.m. Friday and
Racine , and Rebecca Lynn Gheen,
months.
rosary services at 7:30 p.m. The
Mrs. Ca.sci was married to Paul L.
family requests that flowers be 17 , Racine.
Casci, retired Middleport post· omitted.
Friends may present
master. who survives. Also sur · spiritual bouquets or donations to
viving are three sons, David, Lake the cancer society.

•

f ·. Pomarqx,-MiddleP!Irf• Oll!o, Tl!ur~ay, July 9,l911

.. . . . .

WASHINGTON (A,P)._; 1be chair·
man of the Reputllican-co~trolled
Senate Finance Committee ls ready
to talk . compromise with House
Democrats on extra tax reli~f for
low'lind mid~e·income Americans,
saying that "would not do violence"
to President Reagan's lax plan. ·
"Between now and ' next week I
hope to have some dialogue with the
House Ways anii Meam Com·
miUee,"·Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said
Wednesday. The Hollse panel was
resuming work todl!y on its own ver·
sion of the tax cut.
Dole's cominittee already has ap·
proved a tax -cut plan mirroring
Reagan's reconunendation for an
across:the·board 25 percent cut in
personal tax rates over 33 months
starting Oct. I.
DemoCrats, saying a three·year
tax cut would worsen inflation, are
pressing a two·year plan with more
relief for people making less than
$50,000 a year. In addition, their
proposal for reducing business taxes
is .considerably different from the
one advanced by Dole's committee.
"We could sit down and work out
our differences on the b1!5iness tax
cuts in two hours," Dole said in an
interview m CBS Radio. On in·
dividual tax reductions, he said, "I
think they (Democrats) could give
up the third year; we could give up
the skewing.· •
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
made clear once again Wednesday ·
that the "skewing" issue targeting more relief to those with
incomes under $50,1100 a year - is
the major question.
"the whole issue is the $50,1100
question." O'Neill told reporters. "If
you earn less than $50,1100, you
benefit by the Democratic bill. If you

of July parade held Saturday In Racine. Tbe float
carried the message "Freedom Ues at the End of the

FIRST PLACE-Tbe float of the United Faith CbiiJ'Ch
took first place honors in tbe theme division at the 4th

Veterans Memorial

Charles Tyree.
Admitted .. Mary Nichol s.
Rutland; Mildred Milburn, Mid·
dleport ; Bertha Diehl, Pomeroy;
Floyd Bentz, Pomeroy; Stella
Atkins, Rutlaned; Amy Metzger,
Pittsburgh; John Harrison, Mid·
dleport; Della Cleland, Rutland ;
Clara Thomas, Pomeroy; Linda
Powell , Pomeroy.
Discharged .. Harley
Koenig,
Phyllis Clay.

Vo1.30,No,60
Copyrl,htecll911

Dole ready
•
compromise

WASIDNGTON (AP) - With truly against abortion, and Reagan Carolina.
praise from both ends of the political said he was "completely satisfied"
Goldwater lashed out at critics of
spectnun, Sandra D. O'Connor on the matter.
Mrs. O'Connor's positions on abor·
seems headed for easy Senate con·
Mrs. O'Connor was the only can· tion and the Equal Rights Amend·
finnation to take " her place in dictate whom Reagan interviewed men!.
history" as the first woman ever on personally to replace Stewart Pol·
" I don't buy this idea that a justice
the U.S. Supreme Court.
ter. who retired last Friday, and of the Supreme Court has to stand
From the moment President become the 102nd justice in the for this, that or the other thing," he
Reagan's choice of the 51 ·year-old Supreme Court 's 191 ·year history . said. " And I'm getting a little tired
Arizona appeals judge was an· "One of the reasons Reagan was at· of people in this country raising hell
nounced Tuesday, senators ap· tracted to her was when he looked at because they don't happen to sub·
plauded her legal credentials as the total woman," said deputy White scribe to every thought that person
" bfilllant" and "eminently well House chief of staff Michael K. has."
.
qualified" and hatled Reagan's Deaver. "She had not been an ac·
Kennedy said he was "extremely
fulfillment of a campaign pledge to tivist on either side. She had taken a pleased," and Hatch, a noted op·
appoint a woman justice.
moderate posi tion."
ponent of legalized abortions, said
Republican leaders promised to
Congressional sources. however, he was "elated" that a woman was
heed Reagan 's request for swift con · said Sen. John East, R·N.C., who is chosen.
£irmation " so that as soon as leading the fight for anti·abortion
Thurmond, chairman of the
possible she may take her seat on legislation that may ultimately be Senate Judiciary Committee which
the court. and her place in history. " tested on constitutional grounds will consider the nomination before
It may be September. however, before the Supreme Court, would
it goes to the full Senate, said : " I
before hearings begin.
assail Mrs. O'Connor's votes on the will do everything I can to help"
Public opposition 'came from the issue in the Arizona Legislature.
fundamentalist group Moral
East was considering announcing
Majority and the National Right to his opposition to the nomination,
Emergency runs
Life Committee, both normally perhaps today.
Reagan a llies, which bitterly
The prevailing sentiment in the
The Middleport Emergency Squad
questioned Mrs. O'Connor's record Senate. though, was positive.
was called to the village jail at 10:42
on abortion and vowed to try to
Praise came from senators as p.m. Tuesday to treat Roy Boggs. At
defeat the nomination.
divergent in their outlook as 10:41 a.m. Tuesday the Pomeroy
At a news confe rence in Phoenix, Democrats Edward M. Kevnedy of
Unit took Floyd Bentz from But ·
Mrs. O'Connor declined to answer Massachusetts, Joseph Biden of
ternut Ave., to Veterans Memorial
questions on abortion and other sub· Delaware, Alan Cranston ofThlifor· Hospital and at 11 :10 a.m. took
sli:l ntivt&gt; issues pending the con - nia and Dennis DeConc ini of Arizona
Ralph Hall to Veterans Memorial.
fin nC:~tion process.
and Republicans Orrin Hatch of At 12 : ~2 p.m. the Rutland Unit took
But deputy White House press Utah, Barry Goldwater of Arizona
Della Cleland, Langsville, to
secretary Larry Speakes said she is and Strom Thurmond of South Veterans MemoriaL

Admitted .. Ronald Coats,
Pomeroy; Junior Lee Hunt. Long
Bottom; Christopher George, Mid·
dleport; Benjamin Smith, Racine;
Melvin Forester, Racine; Stella
Kloes. Pomeroy ; Donald Weaver,
Pomeroy ; David Carsey , Racine;
Betty Bates, Gahanna.
Discharged .. Sarah Seyler .

enttn,e

:A

Expect easy confirmation
on first woman high judge

Pedestrian injured

•

'

.,

DIU.ES BO'M'OM, Ohio (AP) United ' Mine WOI'ken Dlstrl~t 6
-' President Ed Bell says Union chief
Sam Chllfd!bas ~ riC!tt to threaten
'to tali:e oller the dl(itrict because of.a
~e by .tflce .worlt~rs at its
eutem Ohio beadqllarters.
1
' He d~'t have lillY. business tQ
carey .~b ·rin ·lhafthteat," Bell
laid •late Wednelday' night. "This
'· :jlli!rict is in no flivlllcial troubles,"
Bell ,llild ~ 8Jid Anthony Bumblco,' lntel'nltlonal ~ve board
representatlv11 for District 6 ,
·,

received the letters from Church ,on
Friday. Tfle notes also were sent to
the UMW bargaining council and
presidents of District 6 locals, he
said.
·
Church urged an end to a walkout
by 16 office workers at the district's
headquarters in Dllles BOttom, ac·
cording to Bell. The employees,
members of the United Food and
Commercial Workers Local 1059,
walked off the job May 26 when their
three·year pact expired.

of ~ place

"He (Church ) sent us a letter
saying if we didn't settle the strike,
he would use the authority under the
constitution to take over the
district," said Bell. who represents
about 18,1100 miners in eastern Ohio
and .the West Virginia panhandle.
" He threatened us to get into
negotiations, to give these women
whatever they wanted."
Bell said he sent a rebuttal letter
to Church on Wednesday, noting.that •:
District 6 officials were disturbed by
his letter.

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