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...,

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.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'·

Commentar

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 9,1981

The techniques of suppressionL________Wi_U_lia_m_F._.B_uc~.k_tey_._Jr.
To refresh your memory: Tilere is
this Englishman, William
Shawcross, who published a book in
1979 that had a considerable success
riding on the inertia of two liberal
tidal waves. The first, the enduring
hostility to Nixon, and derivatively
Kissinger. The second, a frightened
reaction to the transpiring horrors of
the Khmer Rouge regime in Cam·
bodia under Pol Pot.
There was the frightening
possibility that the public would
come around to recognizing that our
venture in Vietnam was
geopolitically and morally vin ·
dicated, and that our failure in 1975
to enforce the terms of the Paris ac ·
cords would be condemned by
history as on the order of the failure
to stop Hitler in 1936. There was only
one obvious solution, namely to
prove that the people responsible for
the carnage in Indochina were Nixo!Hind Kissinger! Let those who
believe that such an enterprise
would die a quick death because of
its inherent implausibility recaU
that there are loads of people around
who defended Stalin's show trials ,
who believed that Mao Tse-tung was
a great humanitarian and who are
convinced that Harry Trwnan

initiated the Cold War.
Here is an interesting sequel.
When the Shawcross book came out,
Kissinger was completing his own,
and his first impulse was to ignore
Shawcross, on the grounds that most
balloons come back to earth when
the political thermals cool.
However, in order to examine the
scholarship of Mr. Shawcross, Peter ·
Rodman, Kissinger's principal
researcher, commissioned the Pentagon, under the same Freedom of
Information Act Shawcross had in·
voked, to provide him with the same
set of documents. These he
examined, alongside Shawcross'
allegations. The result was a lengthy
memorandwn which Kissinger sent
out to a nwnber of friends and journalists. It was acknowledged and
discussed, e.g., by Mr. Edwin M.
Yoder Jr., editorial page editor of
the Washington Star, who matter-of·
factly acknowledged its provenence,
giving Peter Rodman's name. This
is of interest because Shawcross et
al. delight in referring to the memo
as " anonymous."

A few months ago, Rodman
declared to expand 'on the memo,
and wrote an article for the
American Spectator. This was so

$2 million worth
of opinions
Believe them, they ask. They want only to express their own opinion, not
to set themselves up as censors.
"They" are the Coalition for Better Television, an alliance of right ·
oriented organizations determined to clean up the nation 's screens. Their
method is a thretened consumer boycott of the products of companies spon soring programs deemed objectionable because of excessive sex violence
and profanity.
'
Any questions as to the potential effectiveness of that method were an swered even before the boycotters could name specific target companies. A
clutch of television 's leading advertisers immediately offered to discuss
compromise 1nd one did more. Wasting no time on talk, Proctor and Gamble
jettisoned a nwnber of programs that might not pass the coalition's scrutiny.
The networks, whose mega buck revenues derive in significant part from
the type of prograrruning in question, are understandaby alarmed. With ex·
cellent reasoo. The major component of the coalition is the potent Moral
Majority, which is reported prepared to spend at least $2 million on newspaper advertising and a direct-mail effort on behalf of the cause.
Others are concerned for other than financial reasons. Civil libertarians
understandably. Also some longstanding critics of television who see the
boycott as a simplistic, even dangerous approach to the problem. The im·
pact is narrowly coercive rather than broadly constructive. And it could set
a disturbing precedent, opening the way to restricting public exposure not
only to material of questionable taste but to infonnation on sensitive
political and -ial issues.
In a word, despite the coalition leadership's disavowals of any such in·
tention, censorship.
Well. what about iP Is that bad' Or, considered as a cure, any worse in
this case than the ailment to be treated?
Those are not easy questions to answer briefly and convincingly.lt is not
easy to make an objective case for preserving in a pluralistic society the
greatest possible degree of freedom of individual expression - in the press,
in broadcasting, in public behavior - when freedom in some cases can be
taken as license for the objectionable. The advocate often must take the
position of defending the right to public exposure of what he may personally
reject.
But right there is the essence of the case - personal preference, the
necessity of guaranteeing freedom of choice in what individuals may read ,
say, hear and see to a public of catholic opinions and tastes. As the
Washington Star recently commented editorially on the 50th anniversary of
a landmark Supreme Court First Amendment dec1sion. " Unless that
freedom protects the rights of a rascal it cannot protect the rights of the virtuous ... "

How can that be applied to the boycott issue ' In simplest terms, the
rascals in television programming arc today free to offer and the likeminded portion of the viewing public is free to view material that the virtuous may find questionable. The virtuous are also free - to choose not to
view. No one is compelled to be the captive audience of anything that goes
out' on the public airwaves.
A successful boycott, or even the successful threat of one, would change
that by restricting the freedom of the rascals to program and to view. They
would be compelled to become as virtuous as the Coalition for Better
Television, like it or not.
3ut if the freedom of the rascals can be limited in this fashion so con·
ceivably could that of the virtuous on some future issue - say, ~ver the
airing of politically oriented religious programming.
Carried to an extreme you have a censored society. Worse, one in which
a dominant orthodoxy ruthlessly imposes conformity, as the mullahs are
doing with such bloody effectiveness in Iran.
But that is probably too extreme. The Iranian revolution is, of course,
much more than a dispute over Islamic dogma and national morals. It is a
no-compromise showdown between fundamentally opposed forces for control of contemporary Iran's political destiny.
On the other hand, if you think the Coalition for Better Television's ac tivities don't have political implications for contemporary America, you're
probably willing to believe that its participants reaDy are interestted only in
expressing $2 million worth of personal opinions.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill C··mrt Slrl"t'l

Pum.-r••)·. Ohio
lil4-992·Z15i
Ill \ I~TEDTOTiiF.INTF:RF.ST OF ntE MEIGS-MASON AREA

BOB HOEFLICH
Gt'IWTIII ~BII(er

DALE R!YI'HGEB, JR.
Nt'WII Eltllor

,\ MI-:MIIt~H ul T~· ~K~H·iakd Prt·Q, Inland Dally
o\mt·rka• Nf'•NPIIJM'f l"uhlbdM·rN A14110filllit~n .

Derek Davies, dismissed Rodman's
paper as the WOI'k of " bigots and
professional polemicists" and ended, "I see no point in prolonging
correspondence with the ven ·
triloquist's doll."
It is interesting to witness the
derogation of a thesis on the basis
that the research was done other
than by the principal. Mr. Rodman

He is accomplishing things .
Reagan has won House approval of
his efforts to reduce budget increases by dint of his political persuasiveness. On Tuesday he named
Judge Sandra D. O'Connor of the
Arizona Appeals Court to fill a
vacancy on the Supreme Court,
But pressing in on him are
decisions on such topics as the MX
missile and a manned bomber, extension of the Voting Rights Act and
the Clean Air Act, and a new immigration policy.
In addition, he is anxious for
Congress to finish work on his taxcut proposal before the beginning of
August. He also faces stiff opposition
on his proposal to seU radar planes
to Saudi Arabia.
None of the major issues on
Reagan's agenda must be decided
upon in a few weeks, but he and his
aides make it clear that they are
working toward decisions. Each

"And I tbink t,!lat the other liberal
owners - the guys like (the New
York Meta', Fred) WUpon, (the
Texas Ranger!!' Eddie) Chiles, (the
ljaltimore Orioles' Edward Bennett)
•

Prn~

AMIMK' .. lioa 11nd thr

l .t- .T I'fo:IL'\ Ut• CII"INI~)N an• • ·t•ll·••m•-d. Tlwy !lb!MIId bto 11'!111 thin 310 wordtl I••A· All

14'11•.,... .,,. }lllh,t.~ · l ••• Nltllnlt and mu"' ttl' HIJCht'd " 'lUI lllllt', IHidlrn» alld &amp;el......,...
tt11111l11•t 'IIIJ•tflsi~tMod tl&gt;il••rs "ill hrl• publislwd. rA'l&amp;.•r!t !lhifllltl hr ht l(tic!d &amp;a11lr, acldmMill.-

wrottt',, ltMI l"'.....lftltlllh•.,

--------'-"-~-------~ -- -- - - -

1

':•

'

•

Williams"- ,wiJl foBow and c:reete a
sort of~'
Jolwa .;.,. If "the ltrike c1oe1 enc1

ch," orebe, aald. ''I'm not llltld at
Mr. Wt11ilq!J, bat.J~Edp~Wed
r.;,~.:_. -~..... ~ p1a- .met

be because ol George·~ new

bl!n and ~ their llll!f1ed
lllanlt •p~ ~ It'~ a:·

'I .. . .

within t!Je next few'cla)'l or 10, ''it'll

JII"'1)"MI "

_,_ -

......,

•--

Stelnblerulel' wu1 be among 21 · peded that the .._.. wiJl throw
011jor leap owners -~ to be their wbollibelrteil support -~
at tonight'I meeting cbaited by Ray $
~ COIIIIIIlUee u weD
Grebey, dlief negotiator of the ill~·· ~~~KUng,
·
Grebe)' aald·,lle wished to continue
owners' bll'pinlrig. ccimmlttee in
"I'd he willing to bet1111th111Ctbat the negotlatklill Wednesday, but had
theie atriketallla. Tblrewere repor· the mMtlncresultllnllraalsUPport to attend a National Labor Relations
ta that Gre,Wiacbsupport from aU for. tbe ~·· (ICiiltion," '!BY&amp; · - ~· ~
. · un the union's unfair
21 owners and that lol)lgl!t'a meetinC CI'!!Der · Jerry. Reinltlclrf ' of the _labor'· .practice charge that the
mlgbtbeulonnyone. "
·
CliiCigo ~te ~ '" U the meetinll owners have failed to bargain in
"I have unanimity where I need It, · ..... Ocieurred ~!"'to lui Saturday I Rood faith.
ontheboardbr~of-thePla)'er llUik it. would have been dlfferl!llt.
Relations Coininlttee," · 1M! aaitl. BUt IIIII' ,CCllii!Jl(ttee IIIBde a major
"You nev&amp;: expect unanimity from J11C)Ve$1tunlay."
"We've made some moves and
211 clubs. If you get a 211.0 VCite,lt'a. a
Reinadorfs refereuce wu to last bad some more to make lui Satur·
fix."
Saturday's negotiating ~ bet· day when we asked the union to stay
Grebey said he wu not angry with ween management and players, and negotiate," Grebey said. "I'd
Chiles and ·· WUIIBmS, identified where the owners came up with 8 have rather postponed this hearing
earlier u the Only owners who have new prupclAI in an effort to resolve (Wednesday) and spent the time at
not sent telegr111111 ofiiiJIPOI'I to the the key Issue in the strike, free agent the bargaining table."
PRC.
.
compe!I&amp;IUon.
·"The last time 1 tallted to Eddie,
They pl'1lp09ed a limit ol12 on the

~~~~~.!~u=e::r~

me the next time he went to chur·

as compensation in any re-entry

•

NEW YORJc'(AP)- "I've always year-old Ivan Lendl, who is ranked
rm not a teaJn man in fourth in the world behind McEnroe,
any way," says Jimmy Connors. But Bjom BOrg and Connors. Tomas
Connors' decision to join'1he U.S. Smid, Pavel Slozil and Stanislav Bir·
Davis Cup team for the first time ner complete the Czechoslovakian
since 1976 has boosted his country's team.
"We have two strategies," said
chalices in this weekend's series
asa.Jnst defending champion Ashe. "One ·strategy is to beat Smid
twice (In singles) and win the
Clecboslovakia.
Qmnors and Wimbledon cham· doubles. Tbe Other strategy Is to try
PIOn John McEnroe will play the to win 5.0.. But Lend! is 10 good it's
four singles matches for the U.S. not out of the realm of reality that he
team, while veterans stan Smith and could win two singles. That brings us
-~Lutz will play the doubbes in the
back to our fir$ strategy."
liest·of.five quarterfinal competition
And that strategy reUes on win·
_. the National Tennis Center. Two ,Ding the doubli!S, where Smith and
sinl!les matches will be played Lutz have a 12·1 record in Davis Cup
Friday, the doubles Saturday and competition dating back to 1968.
the remaining .two singles matches They are gene~y considered the
second-best doubles combination in
SUnday on the fast, cisnent courts.
"'l'heri!'s alot of ezperience on our the world, behind the team ol
team," qblerved Arthur Ashe, the McEnroe inc! Peter Fleming, who
non-pla)'i!lg · captain of the U.S. beat Smith-Lutz In last week's Wim·
~t~uad. "All the players we have here bledoo rma1. Ashe said Smith and
are used to pressure situations and · Lutz were picked beeause he did not
play well on cement. Jimmy won .the want McEnroe to play three best .of·
Open here in 1978 and John won it five set matches in three days.
McEnroe Is al the top of his game,
here the last two years, so they've
having dethroned Borg at Wim·
shown they play well here."
Czechoslovakia's key player is 22· bledon and gained the NO;! spot in
bQen a loner.

.,."IJ(J.')Jfl

®lolll•l&gt;&lt;l\~

111E NEW CO~

issue is sticky, and it is possible that
Reagan could make decisions that
will anger some longtime sup·
porters.
The MX missile is one. The
weapon would be placed in shelters
under the Western deserts and
would be moved about on an underground railway to confuse an
enemy aiming its missiles toward
the MX. But in Utah and Nevada ,
both home to longtime Reagan
loyalists, there are objections to tur·
ning the states into targets for a
nuclear attack.
Reagan is searching for a
replacement for the aging B.S2s that
make up the nation's fleet of manned
bombers. President Carter, early in
his administration, decided the B·
52s could continue to do the job and
turned down a proposal to develop a
new plane, the B-1. But Reagan has
resurrected the question and is
facing a decision on whether the B·l
would be the best choice.
Before the decision reaches
Reagan, however, options will be put
forward by Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger.

OJ~{

Letter·to the editor
A big thank you
The Rutland firemen and ladies
auxiliary would like to extend their
appreciation to all who helped make
this year such a large success.
We feel that without each and
everyone's cooperation that it could
not have been accomplished. The
Rutland Ox Roast and parade was
felt to be very successful and we
could not have done it without the
help of the residents, merchants,
churches, business people and of
Rutland adn the surrounding areas.
It goes to show that if we all work
together tht even a small com·
munity can produce a good outcome.
Lilly Kennedy
Rt.l
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Let's fight ..•
It's going to be a long time before
some of us can retire. America got
the news the other day. Our Social
Security system is going broke.
Let's not stand by and Jet this happen, America. Let's fight. We, the
working taxpayers and the retired,
should start now to save our only
program from bankruptcy.
We pay all those taxes in to our
government and they do what they

best~

will with it.
They cut our programs and our
retirement is going, but still we can
send millions of our tax dollars in
foriegn aid to the countries over·
seas. I've said all along and still say
we can only buy friends until our
mone}' runs out and who said that we
had to send all that money overseas•
It sure wasn't the taxpayers of
America. I know some of you out
there are saying what kind of person
is this taking their aid away. Well
then, I hope that you never go to New
York or Detroit or Pittsburgh and
other cities which have children who
go around hungry. Yes, it's just now
getting out in the open here in the
USA. But we, too, have real
problems and the government
should be let known now that the
USA comes first, then foreign coun ·
tries.
We don't get their tax dollars and
we started by ourselves and look
where we are. We worked for it.
Well, America, I am darn mad about
this deal of Social Security and think
our government should think of us
Americans first, so let's Jet Mr.
Reagap know this and write him and
say the foreign countries will have to
wait for their payday.
Floyd H. Cleland

____R_ob_ert_J._._w.--=-agma_n

provisions - often hastily penned at several representatives agree to
the last minute- increasing funding again vote with the administration.
in all of these areas.
So, Reagan's statements that
Other potential defectors had to be those who backed his budget
reassured that an earlier. deal would proposal represented "a new
no\ be undone. In preliminary coalition" that was listening "to the
bud!NU voting, several Southern voiet of the people" must be ac·
Democrats had agreed to defect af· cepted with at least a little
ter being assured by the president suspicion. So must Budget Director
and his operatives that the ad- David Stockman's assertion that
ministration would not caJJ1paign ''only a few small adjustments"
against their re-election in 1982. The · were made during the last·minute
president publicly repeated this dickering and Deputy Press
assurance, saying, "I could not in Secretary Larry Speakes' COD·
good conscience campaign against tention that "the few compromises
any of you Democrats who have w~re not of significant dollar value."
helped me."
But several ltepublican campaign
More to tthe point was the remark
organizations, notably the by Rep. John Breaux, one of the
Republican Congressional Com· Louisiana defectors, that he had
Guess what? Repeal of the of· mittee, had started to renege on the simply "gone with the best deal."
fending section was added to the i.ssile. They began saying, in effect, Aaked by reporters whether this
Republican substitute. ' Thus, by that the president had not been meant that he had sold his vote,
voting for the administration's speaking for them and that they Breaux responded, "Hell no, but'it
budget, a legislator would also be would bring Republican heavy' can be rented."
voting to strike down the conversion · weights into any dlstl'ict ·.where the
The matter was 11Is0 put into per·
provision. The result was eight Demo~ratic .. Incumbent was, spective by a. ~ea"ri aide' who was
defections from Texas Democrats. · · vulnerable.
asked as he emerged afte~ the vote
Other defectors had concem5 , In t!ie final hours before the . !rpm , the ~clcr!lti&amp; cloakrOom
ranging from synfuel plants plannel! budget votes, the prealden~ and lila whether de!!lS :ha~' played. &amp;,t.I'Qle 'In
for their districts to ciltton pri!:!!'tup·, aides h!ld .to convince several fence .' \he preslden(s vlcfoey. "O(f the
ports to mass transit subSidies. to sitters that Reagan could deliver on record, of c!'urse," he said.
continued federal funding of
his pr:evioils pledge. Only after this "Without them · ~ would have lost
The Republican substitute
'had bien specifically guaranteed !lid by at!east 1Q v~tes...
.
Eight more defectors come from
Texas, where natural gas is a major
issue. Congress was inspired by the
natural-gas crisis of a few years ago
to pass an emergency bill that included a section mandating that
many commercial users of natural
gas switch to coal and setting up a
timetable for the conversion that
was about to take effect.
Natural gas now is In good supply.
In fact, many suppliers are having
trouble getting rid of all the gas they
are producing. So, the law has not
been popular among the Texans,
who conveyed their leelings on the
matter to Reagan's political
operatives as the important votes
neared.

r--.......,_ _ __,

this week's computer rankings. But
Connors is also playing well, as
evidenced by his tough five·set
semifinal loss to Borg at Wimbledon,
and he's beaten Lend! all seven
times they've played.
Connors lost his last Davis Cup
match, to Mexico's Raul Ramirez in
1976, but did not play since because
of "private reasons and personal
conflicts. I didn't enjoy it-l'llleave
it al that. Why do something and not
be happy doing it?"
Connors had his differences with
past Davis Cup captains, but over
dinner last January be tofd Ashe
he'd like to play this year. Why the
switch?
"Four words: I feel like it," he
said. "It's something I haven't done
in a long time. Most of the time I've
played for myself, which is ·good in
some ways, but to play for the
United States is good, too. I'm
looking forward lo it."
"I don't question his motivation,"
said Ashe. "He decided he was
ready and I'm just delighted to have

hUn."

Summer ·baseball results
Also in MelgB·Mason Pony League
Racine's Pony League team coo·
·play,
Pomeroy blasted New Haven
linued to roll last evening, as It juin15.0.
Raney
Stewartt pitched five in·
ped out to a 13-2 lead, then held on to
Dings
of
one
hit baseball enroute to
defeat host Albany 14-12 in Meigs·
the
shutout
win.
The lone single was
Maaon pony league action. Racine,
who has a 5·2 record, was out hit 12· by Matt 'Dawson, the leadoff batter
in the first inning.
e..
Stewart retired the last 14 batters
Sieve F.lsheF . had a double and
siDCte for the winners and Richard in a r:ow, either by strike outs or get·
Hill had iwo siitgles to lead tthe ting the batter to hit to the Pomeroy
Racine ·team. Tony Riffle, Paul defense, which was credited with
Hlrrl.s, Wade Connolly, and Jay playing an acellent game.
Stewart fanned seven batters and
Bostick each had singles.
Steve Fishet's fine relief pitching allowed only two walks in picking up
saved the win for Racine. Fisher the win. John RoUins suffered the
came on in relief of Tony Riffle. defeat with MaU Dawson coming on
Green and Carsey each had three in relief. They fanned two and
·
alngles for Albany, while BrOoks, walked 11 Pomeroy Royals.
Pomeroy
hitters
were
Scott
who started 011 the mound. took the
HatrisDII, who had two sillgtes to
lOIS. carsey relieved in the fourth.

Latonia resuits

BIG RBI - Meigs' Jerry Fields, No. 3, coane&lt;!tB for BD RBI loop
siDgle that gave Meigs BD early advantage Wec~Jle~day evenlllg ill tbe .
game agailllll Murray City.
•

M• I •
=~~~::.:e:;: · eigs eg~on team posts 10-3 win

~~nt.J.ors joins U. S•. squad

Going with the
WASlliNGTON (NEA) - The
Reagan administration continues to
deny that political deals were
responsible for the president's
recent budget victory in the House of
Representatives.
But mounting evidence indicates
that many, if not all, of the 29 House
Democrats who supported the ad ministration were influenced by
promises extracted from the
president and his aides in the final
hours - even the final minutes before the showdown votes.
Four of the Democratic defectors
come from Louisiana, where sugar
is a major crop and sugar price supports are a major politi~alissue. The
president telephoned those
legislators to suggest that he and his
party would accept whatever
program of sugar price supports
came out of Congress this summer.
These calls were quickly followed
by calls from Department of
Agriculture officials - including
Agriculture Secretary John Block,
who stated directly what Reagan
had openly hinted on the issue of
price supports. These calls, coupled
with promises of increased price
supports from House Republican
leaders, ·were enough for the four
Louisianans.

the editor of the New Statesman and
the editor of the Far Eastern
Economic Review were using paid
hands to compose their letters for
them, though this is unlikely since
editorial assistants are Ullu&amp;lly held
to higher standards of workmanship
and behavior.

rm·

~r'sHCI'etweapon.

President has lots of
work before vacation
vacation.

Harvard Law School; and was an
assistant to Mr. Kissinger at the
National Security Council.
If any reader - let alone editor believes that the historian does the
whole ol his own research, he must
.think that Punch and Judy are real·
llfe adversaries. The only good news

Tommy •Jolui; ••If-appointed
pollyama of the NnYorit Yankees,
~·crack itlthe buebaUstrike,
"Ma)'be
too·oPtlmlauc. but 1
lleve faith that the striknttll end
~ within the neil three days,"
111YS theY~ pitcher.
Jobn'a high'hopes, despite noise by,
most other players to the contrary,
are linked ~ the efforts of George
Steinbrenner. :J;tle' ~ owner 1s
reporteclly&gt; ~ on a plan - as ·
yet unreveal~ publicly - that
hopefully ,ul11111p tbe logjam bet·
1!ftll playeiaQ\t~.
.
-'ppareatly, 'UIIit will be one of the
matters ~ . when . major
league
' meet in ' midtown
Manbittan~ ' .
· "I think George can do It - his
~ !I .~! to what. the players
have beeil rptOposing since April,"
says John, who didn't elaborate on

owners

Eastern Economic Review, Mr.

WASlliNGTON (AP)- President
Reagan has much work to do in the
next four weeks if he hopes to clear
his desk before his summer

is a graduate of Harvard, where he that would come out of this silly
studied wi~ Mr.·Kissinger; of the business would be if we.learned that

'·

ROBERT L. WINGE'l"f
I' AT WHITEHF.AO

crushing that professional enemies
of Nixon·Kisslnger and the entire
Cambodian questi.on have labored
mightily to dismiss it by using essentially
the identical
technique. Namely, denouncing
Rodman as a mere amaneunsis for
Kissinger.
Lewis Lapham, editor of Harper's
(who published the Shawcross
diatribe), rejected Rodman's
surrebuttal to Shawcross on the
grounds that the controversy was
stale and had already been
published, and rejected a sup·
plementary manuscript on Iran on
the grounds that Rodman had written it. " If, however, Dr. Kissinger
would be willing to sign his name to
the manuscript, then the delay be·
tween the event and the perception
of its meaning would be overcome
by the luminousness of Dr.
Kissinger's reputation as a practitioner on the diplomatic art."
Neat.
The editor of the New Statesman
of London, Mr. Bruce Page, is as '
coarse in manner as the thinking of
his journal is in thtought. First one
of his writers, without going into
Rodman's research, ·dismissed it as
in effect McCarthyite. When Rodman wrote to Page asking room to
reply, Page scornfully refused and
ended his letter, "By the way,
Kissinger ought at least to possess
the decency to sign his own name to
these polemics, instead of standing
on the pretense of paid scholar·
flunkies." The editor of the Far

· 8J wacila)IIIJ'ral

lead his team in hitting, and Jackie
Welker, Randy Stewart, Rodney
Roush and Bryan Zirkle who all ad·
ded singles.
In girls' softball action Pomeroy
blanked Mason 11.0 behind ~ ten hit
attack. Lori Pickett\ do
hadbl three
d
singles, BarbeffGrueser a inglu e anD
single, Val J ers two s
es, ·
StegaU-a double, and K. Rought, P.
Swindell each singles.
For Mason, M. Sisson had two
singles, C. stanley a double and C.
Stanley, R. Gibbs, and V• Hickman
each had singles.
K. Rought wu the winning pitcher
with
two strikeouts
and
walks.
M. Mossman
suffered
thetwo
ldss
with
and two strikeouts.
Pomeroyouthltltsopponents 10 to&amp;.

By SCOTl' WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS - - Th ram·
paging Meigs American Legion
baseball team claimed another victim Wednesday evening 10·3 over
visiting Murray City's unit.
Meigs pounded out 1~ and hits
while raising its record to 15-2-1,
behind another outstanding pitching
effort by Jeff Wayland.
Wayland, who posted a no·hit
shutout the last time out, cll(lle back
to scatter four hits over nine innings.
Wayland and batterymate cousin,
Terry Wayland, combined to fan 10
Murray City batsmen and walk five.
Berry canned nine Meigs batters
and walked four, while going the
distance and suffering the loss.
The Meigs team has been noted for
making things happen. In the second
inning the crew continued its winning cycle. Bob Foster singled with
one out, then went to second on a
passed ball. Roger Kovalchik then
drew a free pass. The fleet-footed
Meigs runners went for the stolen

base, but Foster got gunned down at in the eighth, m support of
third. Terry Wayland then singled, Wayland's super pitching perp:
however, to put runners on the cor· formance.
In that round Kovalchik singled,
ners and Kovalchik scored on a
passed ball. Meigs, at the time, Tony Riffle walked , Hemsley
grabbed an early 10 lead, which at it walked, and Brown delivered· a tW&lt;l
run single. Wolfe, who went 4-for.S,
never relinquished.
In the third frame, Kenny Brown, then foUowed up with another two
Kent Wolfe and Jerry Fields each tun double . Powerful Fields then
singled to produce a run, while collected his third hit of the game
Foster followed up with another RBI and drove in another run. Fields' hit
single. After four complete frames, was a double .
Meigs hitters were Wolfe, who had
Meigs led 3-1, but increased its lead
three
singles and a double, Fields
in the fifth when Brown was issued a
free pass, Wolfe reached on a with a single and two doubles, and
fielder's choice, Fields doubled and Bob Foster with two singles and a
Foster delivered a two run double. double. Foster also had four RBI's
Brown had two singles, Wayland two
The score was now 5-l.
Meigs broke the game wide open single and Kovalchik had a single.
Cortney, Pitts, Odenthell and
Scioto results
Galentine each singled for Murray

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Single
Hill and Spring Dash won the Ohio

Sire Stakes for 3-year-old trotting
fillies at Scioto Downs on Wednesday night.
Single Hill, driven by Russ Baldwin in the $econd race, paid $8.60,
River Downs results
$3.20and$2.80.
CINCINNATI (AP) _ Fantastic
Spring Dash, driven by John John Sport was handicapped with a top son in the eighth, paid $3.80, $3.60

City.
Meigs travels to Parkersburg on
Sunday, then hosts Washington
Court House Tuesday evening in. an
important regular season game. The
1 ed R k s ··
game will be P ay at oc pnngs
.-o_n_t_he_M_e•_g_s_H_ig_h_f_ie_Jd_._ _ __

AMERICAi\~

TOP40 \ltl

weight of 122 pounds for today's an~~;· nlnth-race trifecta, 10·9-7,
$4,800 featured eighth race lit River
Downs in a field of eight horses over .--pa-•·d_$4_1_8-_50_·_ _ _ _ _ _ _---1
Hosted by
a mile and ?0 yards.
On Wednesday, jockey Perry OuzAGRICULTURAL LOANS
ts rode both halves of the daily
double and finished second by a nose
StOO,OOO minimum
in the $4,200 featured ninth race. '
e Flefln1nce
Edward Norman and Prince Cor·
THE 40 BIGGEST
,..
eSIIrt-up
nlsh paid $98.80 in the double on the
e 11..1 &amp;t1te
•
HITS OF
,.,
combination !Hi.
• Operlting
In the feature, Another Dragon,
-~
JOHN, PAUL, GEORGE ,.
e M1cl1inery
ridden by Blake Collins, nosed out
Savido Prince to pay $6.40, $3.20 and
&amp; RINGO•• .AS THE
:
eUveetock
$2.80. The place horse returned $3.80
e Convert Short to
and $2.110, and Vo1 ga Ace, third,
BEATLES,
: ·
Long Tenn
$3.40.
and "on their own" in a It
Phone: f402) 392·1171
Jockey David McKee also had two
special exclusive 4th oflt
(C1ll Collect Anytime)
winners, No Oracle in the fifth racl!
July Countdown.
·:
and Blackllght Brave in the eighth.
MIDWEST FINANCIAL
Joekey Patsy Cooksey, on the first
RADIO 14
92FM:
SERVICES. INC.
day back from a seven-day suspen ·
Sui'' a203
sion for rough riding, snffered a
"U4 Welt Certter Road
minor foot injury when her mount,
Omthl. Nl 6812&amp;
Ossie Jay, fell in the stretch of the
first race. ______ ___________.__________
_::=::.:..:.:.__
80

,..coli;ca.,a

i ~~..~EM j6
f

tt:

i

*

...
,..
..

WMPO •
...................

-.~..

six • walks

CLEARANCE SALE

L

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Ftylllg
KeW T captured the $1,200 featured
eiglth race Wednesday night at
Latonia and paid .11.20, $5.110 and
$3.40.
OK Dougmlte was second, retur·
$11.20 and $5.60, and Bunny's
Knlght Time was worth $2.80 for

.una

third. .

.

. ' 11le 1'1 double of Net Adl011 and
Kiml Flub returned $2'1.110, and the
crowd of 1,095 wagered "",ot9. ·
'

i

REDUCTIONS TO 50%
INTIRI STOCK

HART SCHAFFNER l MARX ClOTHING ....... REDUCED 25%
.PAUl BEJCII CLOTHING ....................... REDUCED 25%
JOHNNY CAISON CLOTHING ................... REDUCED 25%

AU. MEN'S LEVI'S

FASHIOit JEANS

REDOCED

20%.

· MEN'S LEVI'S
~EAYYWJIGHT &amp; UNWASHEC

EANS

STRAIGHT LEG
FlARE

$17

fjJ

SPOm .COAT$ ....~;:~··25% to 50% OFF

SWIMWIAI ......... ............~:~·~~-~~~~ 25% OFF
••,,.. ""'.. 25% OFF
WALK 5HORTt ........................
LADIES' WEAR ................~:::'.~~:~~- 25% OFF
•••••• '"" 25 eL
SPORT SHI RTS ..... .... ...................
,. OFF
DR1SS SHIRTS ................. ~-~~::.~·~.'.. 25% OFF
bliSS SLACKS. ......•;~:: 20% &amp; 25% OFF
CASUAL SLACKS .. ...........~:!';~-~~25% OFF
'
LUGOAGI. ........... ~.·:::~ .'.'!-:.'25"• • 33% OFF
.aTs.............................
"""" ""'' . 20% OFF
STRAW H"
· . ' SHIRTS.................
........... 25"
KNn SPORr
,. OFF
•••;•oiiO&lt;k 20% OFF
LT. WT. JACKITS........................
_.
11Ntt•
WIAt' ..\..............~~. ~~:~. ""·
.OPF
'
-,
.
•
......
••%
OPP
~ WIAI ..~ ...............................~
llt~ ... ::......... ~-~·::~.~·.~:;15% to 50% OPP

�. ·'

..

come into the conununity and
David L. Gleason
study several facets of our
lt~s happening! New paint, new
roofs; new downspouts, and system.
repairing of boilers is going on
Bids have been let on the roofs
throughout the
and we will be opening those bids
districL Mid ·
at 12 noon on August 4, Hopefully
dleport Elemen"
work can be started on the other
tary has been the
. roofs by August5. We also will be
target of the paint
, doing downspout and eave trough
crew for the last
work at the same time, For you to
two weeks. The
get a better understanding of the
face lift going on
problems, s,tep by the junior high
will give the
building a new, Supt. Gleason school afternoon when it is
cleaner look for the fall. Mid" raining. You will get a firsthand
dleport Elementary became the view of water running down the
first building to get new paint outside walls, running down the
because it is one of only two of our inside walls, and dripping in most
buildings that does not leak. As classrooms. The situation is in soon as the roofs are fixed on the tolerable.
The resolultons necessary for
other buildings, we will be pain"
the
issuance of the bonds will be
ling and cleaning them. We will
do as much as possible by the fall acted on at the July 13th board
and then will continue , 1ght meetmg. The bonds will be nwn .
bered from I to 200 and be of the
through the school year.
The Pomery Elementary boiler denominalton of $5,000 each and
was treated last week by a boiler bear interest at the rate of 10 and
I 1 crew, Repairing and cleaning of one -half percent interest per an"
• the boiler were the first chores of num payable March I, 1982, and
the boilennen. We also had the semiannually thereafter. The
other condensation pwnp taken sa 1d bonds will mature in their
out and a new one has been or· consecutive seria l order $110,000
dered. Many of the pipes under on September 1 of each year from
the building have been replaced 1982 to 1990, inclusive, except
and the remainder will soon be. 120,000 matures in 1990, which
maturities re hereby detennind
Our maintenance men are doing
this work around their other sum" to be substantially equal annual
installments.
mer maintenance jobs.
More information regarding
I will be recommending the the bonds will be furnished as I
board employ an architect finn get it.
from Columbus to do a feasibility
If I can be of a ny assistance,
study of our distri ct at the July
meeting . Th1s architect firm will please contact me at 992·2153.
By Supt .

Shower honors newlyweds

CONTINUES
AT THE

heritage
house

•. [..._!

-:..

BATH '2" '1
HAND sps

w.c.

20%, 25%, 30% OFF
"

All OVER THE STORE
Infant to 14
Barga1ns on :
Shorts, Tops, Sleepwear,
Infant Fash10nwear.

~~~~
i'~R:·:&amp;~
2nd

1/4

The Bedford Township Trustees
will meet Saturday at 6 p.m. at the
home ofthe clerk , Helen Swartz.

OFF

~""

!I

SU~

SX 70 FILM
SPECIAL

~U':""rPG

'l'he 11182 county b'udget of the
Southern LoCal School District will
be available for public inspection
from 7:15 to 7:30 p.m. Monday
. evening in the office · of Supt Bob
Ord.

~59

'U

Ronald Wayne Wilson, 23, Route 2,
Raclite, Bnd TereSa Ann Eivln, 20,
Route J, Ri.clne. ·
·
JaCk Uie Provence, 53. Long Bot·
tom, and lllnda Lou Waters, 30,

MAT IHWi 1;1 0 &amp; J : JO

Colwnbiis,
REG . $2 .25
ONLY

111 W. 2nd

p~ nce l957

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

H2 E . Ma in, Pomeroy

Your FTD Flori'!

,.--..,

The Dail y Senti ncl

CLEARANCE
SALE
IS STILL

IUSPSIU.!liOt
A Dtvlslon nf Mulllmt•clla. lnt .
Publi:o~lk'tl t'V~r)'

urtt:rnvun. Monda)' lhru u.~:h
Fritl:n· . I l l Court St rl"\"L bf tt1t Ohhl V&lt;~llc v
Pub!iS hm ~&lt;t Cumpan y · Mu l llltlt'dl&lt;~ . hw :.
P\nn1·ruy , Oh111 4~769 , m -2 1J6 Stol·llnll das.-.
pu:&lt;lllli!l' p.~tld HI Pmm· rny , Oht1-'

I

Mt&gt;mbt•r : The A""Ul'l:tll'fl Pn•s.o; , l11 la mJ D&lt;i t·
I)' PT'ft;l; Ali!W•I'IUllun cwd tht• 1\llll'ra·a n ~
Nt.•w:ipapcr Publt slw rs A ssut·J~Iwn , Nutwnal

lh·prt'."l'lllall n·. B r&lt;~nh a rn
&amp;til's. 73.1 Th1 n l An·rmc. Nt•w
Yurk . Nt&gt;w Yt&gt;rk 1001 7
Advcrhll lllJI.
Nt•v.·~po~pt&gt;r

PosTMASTf:ll . ~nd ttth.ln.•ss h&gt; TI"It' Do il)·
Sl'utint'l . Il l Ct1urt.St .. Pumt'rtl)' . Ohtu 45769.

SubHc:ril&gt;ers nut dc:-:lfllll!! lu pu y 1ht· t'urrier
u'wy n&gt;mi1 tn itdvilnt'l.' dira1 to The lnlily
Sfnlinel on ~ 3. 6 ur 12 munth bHs1s. Cred it
will be tcivt&gt;n CHrrier eHdl month.

OI&amp;Joalld West VirJioi.l

.. . llUl

." ~:

8 TRACK TAPES ••••••••••••••••••.••••••• :.:~~:!::...?~:~ ..

Unda Faulk, flrst grade teacher
at Chester, was given a one year
le~~ve of absence when the Eastern
LOcal School District Board ot
Education,
met In special
session
Wednesday night.
.
The board hired "Elizabeth Bow,
Ohio University graduate, as a
special education teacher at Chester
and gave pei1n1Bslon for two board
meinbers and Supt. Richard Roberts
to attend a meeting in Columbus on
July 29 dealing with personnel mat·
ters and budgeting. A discussion was
held on .rernainlng staff vacancies.
A special meeting was set.for July
14, 7:30p.m. to approve the budget.

In the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court, an entry bas been filed
ordering Clyde Ferrell to pay Bank
One of Pomeroy, $Ir,906.82 plus in·
terest on •a note and authorizes
foreclosure procedures if FerreU
fails to do so.
.In the same court, James Will, Jr.,
Pomeroy, entered a plea of guilty to
a theft charge and was placed on
probation for one year. Dennis
Shuler has entered a plea of gullty to
theft charg~~ and sentencing
deferred until later.

SOLARCAINE SPRAY••••••••••••••••••••••••
3 518 tn . by 6

in.

••••
1

••n-

was

.

u.re.lened
-

LOAVES

ri:~;;;P;oi~ni~P~I~ea~sa~n;t~..;;;;;;;:;;;;;::;;::~~~~~~~;;;;;;~
S~M_MER WEAR ON SALEI
SELECT GROUP
SUMMiR BLOUSES .................. ; 20"• OFF
SELECT GROUP JEANS ..., .. ; ... ;t •.~ •• . • '10.DO
SUMMER DRESSES,
SHO~T SETS AND SWIM WE_AR .. 2_5% OFF
-

TWO'S COMPANY
POMEROY, OHIO

~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~~

MARGUERITE SHOES

EACH
2DIIS
OILI!

CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES I
CLEARANCE SALE

II: I

LK

·'12
GAL

10

LIMIT

10

COUPOIS
IEEDED

JR's SUMMER JEANS

FRI·SAT·OIILY
ED ISOli
20 IIICH

ONE GROUP PRE-WASHED DENIMS

30% OFF

2 SPEED
" FilS

Dan's Boot Shop
Ohio
'

~/,o~J:v·
JIWILRY

JULY 4th
DIAMOND SALE

'

:.~!~.?~~:. sl"

.

Reg. 5149.95
' .
. ~--

.

\
0

~

t

Now thru

1

•

uly 11th We
Al't:
, Diiunonds In stqc:k. Ti!ke
' :Adviritage "Of This Grea'i
Sale.
·
·

H._',v,e · R -e~uced

2DIJS
OILY

EACH

.

SPICIAL

' .

·

oz

. 446-9800

Fire guts home

=~~;:;.

sz•

U-100 DISPOSABLE INSULIN SYRINGE~~~:.:~.L·~···· sil4

18

CHILDREN'S CARPENTER PANTS

100 ENVELOPES ••••••••. :.~~~=~~ ....................... ?.~~:. 63~
PACKAGE OF 10

IIRII:HID
IRIID

;::::::Ford F"IOO, 302 V-8
Oids Cutlass "S"
Ford LTO 4 door
• 11074 Chevy Suburban
Ford Elite
Pontiac Catalina

Approves judgn1ent

FAST RELIEF OF SUN · BURN PAl ill

I. .

r

t;~ow '79'~AVE SlO.OO

lADiES. BEAUTIFUL DIAMO!)ID EARRINGS
" choice ol .
14 K Y
or White Gold

DIAMOND SOLITAIRE
- Was$129.95

Beau

'69''

FRI·SIT-OILY!
IIIWELL
HOUSE

Mil

SAVE S60.00

I ·IQK Y;euow or White Gold.
'

,.._._.R CLOTHIE

RalnO.IIIMOitlo
allll Wnt \'h'II•Ja
J Moolll .. .. .. ..
.. .......... 111.00
. ~ • """' '·...... "
.. " " . 13).00

~;'"::
~

Employs teachers

BUY&amp;
WHITI

1977 Ford Granada, 4 dr.
1977 Chevy Monte Carlo
Ford Maverick
1977 Buick Regal
1977 MG "B" ConvE!flible
Ford FIOO, Range

SAVE 560.00

HURRY ON IN .

MAIL SUBSCRII'l'IONS

3 MUIIIh .. . .

W. Va, ;

2o-so% OFF.

NnsubN.'riptwn." by 1nail ptnniUed in town!t
wherl' home carrier llervk't' is H v wilo~~.ble .

811..,.,.., .. .
.. . .. .. .. . ,,, .50
1Yar . . . • . . . . . . . . . .... . ..... .. 133.00

with the Rev.
William
officiating.
Burial
will beMiddleswart
in the Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may
callalthefuneralhomeanytime.

CANDY BARS •••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••.••• ~:.~~!o.c...~~.:!. 21•

AMITY LEATHER BILLFOLDS ••••••••

oNf -

COUNTRY STOBES

RUSSELL STOVER

MEN'S&amp;WOMEN'S

GOING

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

Ry Canitr or Motor Ruul4"
Orw w1..-k .
. . . . . . Sl.llO
One Mor1th . .
$4.40
Ont· Year . .
. ~2 . &amp;0
SING I.E COP'f
PRICES
. 15 Cent"
Duily .

r-----------1

J~· wamsley, Pomeroy, and

A garage at the Roger Roush
borne, 7968. Third Ave., Middleport,
was completely gutted by fire 6:Oi8
All llielnbera of Drew Webster
p.m. Wednesday,
· Middleport
Poet 39 -Auxiliary will meet at the
firemen bad the blaze under control
leglorf ha!!-.at 8 p.m. Friday before
·at 6:19p.m. Cause of the blaze
II« 'known. The 'nearby residence
was
by the fire•
.Gelilma
CUci at 7. .p.m.
.
, r ; ..., •
~- ..

1

PH. 992·2644

Collins~ersburg ,

Meets Friday

BIC LIGHTERS •••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••• ?.~~:.. 47'
SYLVANIA
FLIP FlASH••.••.•••.••••.••••.••..•.••••• ::.~~::.~~ ••••~~-L.~. $}•

Pomeroy, Oh.

1

o·

Marriage license

OFF

FLORIST

•

Public inspection

CORTAID ..
CREAM

Jrd Wli.IC 1 : 10 &amp; 9 : 30 I'M .

KIDDIE SHOPPE
Your · Ex t ra Touch '

9. 00 P.M.

\"'
~~ ~'\,~;
--~ '"'"~~r. SAl &amp;

Trustees to meet

7 00

•

-- -

POLAROID
TIME-ZERO

100 Capsules
Reg . $7.29
ONLY

) AT &amp; SL N ~IA ~I N [l ~' 00 &amp; j·QO

y4 oFF

SWIMWEAR

~ [[K '

.,

At 7:19 p.m., the Syracuse .Unit
took J. R. Wamsley from Miner·
sville to Veterans Memorial
Hospital following a motorcycle ac"
cident; ~cine at 9:45 a,m. look
Clarence Conger from Route 124 to
Veterans Memorial; at 12:43 p.m.
took Jiunes Heaton from Basban
Road to Veterans Memorial; at7:30
p.m, took Otis Bailey, Elm st., to
Holzer Medical Center, and at 10:45
p.m. look Kenneth Smith from his
home on Route 124 to Vetenins
Memorial. The Rutland tirlltat 5:54
a.m. took Roy Sorrel from Meigs
Mine 2 to Holzer Medical Center.

-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-----------~~~~~~~~~~~il

TYLENOL

l

matter o1 senteoclng CIJIItinued upon

·]: =;~::r=~El~

anYtime.

oo

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Extra Strength

Judge Bacon onleted the

Ar~ ·tk,aths

repol'ls.

rr--

.

Veterans Me_mon·al

Six ~ were answered by local
units
Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service

THE SHOE BOX

PRICES GOOD THROUGH MONDAY, JULY 14TH

~.·

•

m
. and ~teti !':;"' the breald!t&amp; , gullty,

Emergency calls

a

CONTINUES

•

Meigs County happenings. .

~446 · 4524

. Charles Adams, Jr. , fonnerly of
New Haven: W. Va. will hold a
seminar at the Christian fellowship
Church, 383 North Second Ave ., Mid dleport, Saturday, July 11 through
Saturday , July 16.7 :30 p.m. nightly .
Adams is a 1981 graduate of Kenneth
Hagins' Rhema Bible Training Cen
ter, Tulsa, Ok.
Assisting in, the semmar will be
Charles R. " Bob" Hollins. fonner
pastor of Chnstian Fellowship Chur ch, also a graduate of Rhema .
The felowship cordially mvttes
you to attend . For inquiries ca ll992 ·
58!13 or 992 ·2271.

'

Home with
the Rev.Burial
William
Mid·
dieswart
o(flcltilll)g.
will be
in
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home

531 JACKSON PIKE ·RI. 35 W£ST

SUMMER SALE

'

'
··
·
~on ~ a pre""="tence in·
vestlg&amp;Uoo ·anc~ 'Npott. Park was

"

All TENNIS SHOES

BAROAW MATINEES ON SAT SUN
AU. S'f'ATS JUST $1.50
A0MIS$10N EllERY TUES.:MY $1.50

t

.~ Holter, Racine.
Allen .Wafd'lijlttley, 80, 121 Union " Helen E. Holt
~ &lt; ·• · Dlacbarge&lt;hlean Hall, Ronald
.\ve., Pomeroy, retired Pomeroy
·
Coates, Wfibur Hanning, Cllirence
businejlsman, •died Thqrsday at
Mrs. Helen E. HOlt, •.62, ·Mid· Frank, Opal Barr, Mildred Milburn ,
Veterans Me!norlaiH!MPI¥\
dfeport, died_.. Wednesday at Mary Nichols.
Mr. Hartley ·W U ncin at the Iate Veterans rr1.em0rial Hospital
HOLZi:IUiEDICAL CtNI'ER
W&amp;M U¥1.V~ Wllllamsim Har· Mrs. !lOll was a daughter of the
· DISCHARGES JULY 7
tley · lJe waa aJ,so ~ In death late Arthur and Ulllan Snow
Mrs. Keith Bledsoe and son, Willie
~"""~: Wife.! __Evelyn,·. and a _son, Sp1'0115e. She was also preCeded in Hackney, Irvin Harper, Thelma
"""
.
death by two children, Wilma Jean Johnson, ltyan Kilgour, Charles KinMr. · Hartl~ - waa . the ··original Holt llodds andJOilepb William Holt, Dison, Ethel Lowery, William Miller,
owner of Hartley ~ in Pomeroy.
and her husband William R. Holt in Michelle Myers, Jieneice Newberry,
He was a meniber11f·the Lutheran 1972.
•· ~
IQmberly Preston , ' Mrs. John
Chureh, Pomeroy Lodge Free and
Survlying are five daughters, Richards and son, Larry Roach,
Accep(ed . l\f8S011s and Aladdin Mary Jane Selbe, Colwnbus; Shlrl~y · Jewell Robbins, Gerald Sayre,
~. CoJWhbus.
·
.· Legg, Cleveland; Karen Harrl,s, Harold Sell, Donna Sheline, Virginia
Survivilg' are a son, Kenneth W. Xeilla; Margaret Ellen Jllries and Shields, Doris Stapleton, Ruth
Hartley;··.Porneroy; grandcliiidren, SharoriGOOdwin, both of Middleport, Stover, Elsie Vanness, Edward
Kennelll G. Hartley, f'onleroy, and _13 .grandchildren and three great" Viers, Joshua Walker, Charels
Suzanne Hartley, Deitver; Colo.; a grandchildren.
Swill, Michael Wolfe
~.r-ln·law, Lorena Mikesell,
Mrs. Holt was a retired practical
Bffi111S
Youngstown, and several nieces and housekeeper, She was a member of
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Childers,
nepheW$.
St. 'Paul's Lutheran Church.
daughter, Coalton; Mr. and Mrs.
Funerahervlces will be held at 2
Services will be held aiJO a.m. John McGowan, daughter, Oak Hill ;
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home Mr. and Mrs. Michael Perry,

ALL WHITE SHOES

Jackson County Pomona Grange
members will be guests when the
Meigs county Pomona Grange
meets at 7 p.m. friday at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. A potluck sup"
per wiU be served .

'

Allen '\V. Hartley . . .

Cannon Applause Towels &amp; Wash Cloths .

FRIDAY, ·JULY lOth

To meet Friday

.

~~_!a!'Jj~ W.. fa., e!i·ft lnd ~ qt Tom's •CinY.OUt lri ;
I
Qfs~fO-.t.lnf. anct, " Dol
-· ' late"'.....t• ,......,. .. , '
·'
~--~
· • f.: .h-.
_ i'.i"""'""" .· -, $&gt;'"*!'1
•..-.Y
·~ , ,
..:..w ~·c"f"'. aJ!pelted' -c~1.~...~ - ~ '011: ~bef~
'"--~ "".!'L - ~In tile ~ ."1 olfl~ ol tlie l'llnlerOY
Meigs ~Y COnunon Pleu Co"rf Police )l~iwtnl,nL
:'lie· 'bad ·

l

fanner Shari Colmer, who were r~Or~et~ha~Sn~i~de~r~a:nd~T~a~mm~~y~Jo:hn~so~n:._
. ,.------------1~~~~~~~~~~~
married in May.
Hosting the shower were Mrs.
Blackwell 's mother, Barbara
Colmer, and her grandmother,
Mamie Stephenson. A rainbow
theme of pink, yellow, blue and
green was carried out.
Tanuny Johnson, aunt of the
bride, led the games with prizes
REG. SALE
going to Kim Payne, Debbie Roush,
11
Nancy Whittekind and Barb Roush.
Eunice Eblin won the door prize.
A three-tiered wedding cake
decorated in pink and green and topped with a miniature bride and
groom was served with miniature
cheese and ham sandwiches, chips,
Colors: Beige, Yellow,
mints and punch. Attending were
Penny M. Clark, Sandy Wright and
Green, Brown, Blue,
JessiCa, Catherine Little, Barbara
Pink
Roush, Freda Henderson, Bridget
Carmichael, Paula Carmichael,
Paula Carmichael and David,
Ma mie Stephenson, Barbara

20%0FF

•

80ei'Doorl·. . ·

OF SHOES

All SANDALS

Plai'L&lt;; for sponsoring workshops in ling and framing demonstration will
preparation for exhibits at the Me~gs be g1ven by Maxine Hart.
County Fair were made during a
Delores Long presided at the
recent meeting of the Bend 0' the rm.&gt;eting with reports being given on
River Artists Council held in the the Big Bend Rega tta art show. A
total of 32 artists participated
Crafty Ladies Room.
The workshops will be held on Jul} exhibiting approximately 135 pieces
13 and 26 at7 p.m. at the home of Mr. of artwork . It was decided the
and Mr.;. Hershel McClure. Anyone exhib1t will be an annual Regatta
wanting information or planning to event. Next meeting of the artist
participate in the fair show" 1nv1ted .. ouncil will be Aug . 6 at 7:30p.m. at
the hume of Mr. and Mrs. McClure.
to attend .
f eatured at the workshops will be To speak Sunday
Pat Thoma , director of the fair art
The Rev. Cecil Wise will be
exhibits. She will discuss guidelines
spea
king at the Hobson Church of
and categories for entries and a mat
Christ in Christian Union Sunday,
July 12, at 7:30p.m.

~

Colmer, Amber Colmer, Eunice
Eblin, Becky Eblin, Nancy Whit"
tekind, Debbie Roush, Kim Payne,

..

re~mbiiOWI!recognlzance.
~ and entering Ia a fourth
W~y
".I
. .
reli1oved a·port.able televi810ii aild a degree felooy and catrles a JIC!SIIlble
~'l'!le~,wu~li'·•biU. : ~ ~ .r_ ~ U. ~ penaltyl!fmmonlhstoflveyeaf.ln
~~ted b)' MeJga ~oretlw,~arriv.eil. . . .: . ajlellallnstltullonandafineofupto
.-.._..u,..,.~FredW.Crow
Upon re&amp;l.vlng Parlra plea of $2500:

Social cale~dar GREAT SAVINGS
POMEROY CHAPTER, Women's
Aglow Fellowship, Thursday night
ON SUMMER
at the Meigs Inn. Christine Epling,
Gallipolis, to bti the speaker. Dinner
at 7 with speaker at8 p.m.
SHOES

SATURDAY, JULY 11th

Garden club plans
workshops for fair

New Haven native
to hold seminar

~."

A shower was held recently at the
Pomeroy Nazarene Church honoring
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Blackwell, the

;

The public is invited to a service of
sacred music presented by the " Pen
View Echoes," a quintet of young
people from Penns Creek, P.a. The
service Will be held at the Wesleyan
Holiness £hurch, St. Rt 143, on
Thursday, July 9 at 7:30 p.m.
Musical selections will be presen"
ted by the quintet, ladies !trio,
mixed quartet and mixed trio.
Several instrumental numbers will
also be included in tt)e service.
The Penn View Echoes represent
Penn View Bible Institute in Penns
Creek, Pa, Barry L. Mason, Director
of Music ·a the school, will ac"
company the group. A welcome is
given to the public.

HONORED BY SHOWER Reeeol newlyweds, Sbarl Colmer
and Steve Blackwell, were honored at a obower at the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church.

~

;-, :_ : iA-_;t''lrgttll~~enters gUilty plea·

.. ~~rvice ·of ·
' sacred music
set tonight

Ro.und Meigs Local

~

i-'

c

... ............ : .. . .... .. .... t31.00.

•

·' Main

I

I

...
'
..

•

13
IZ ·
Cll

10 .
LIMIT
10

COUPOIS
IEEDED •

�-~Mrs.
'

Roy
Holter
guest
of
.
·Rutland Garden Club recently
'

. Mrs. Roy Holter, Region II dlrec·
· tor, Ohio A!sodation of Garden
~u._, was a guest at the recent
meeting ~ the Rutland Garden Club
held at the home of Mrs VIrgil
Atkins.
Mrs.

arrangement&amp; in June. Gardening
tips for July were glveu by Mrs. Ber·
nard Ledlle. She said that l'GIIeS
should be dlsbudded and cut at an

announced the
regima1 meeting to be held at
Olester on Oct. 31 with a flower
show m the morning. She asked that
there be one arrangement for each
10 members of club enrollment en·
tered in the show. Name tags for the
meeting are to be made by the
Rutland club.
Members voted to make a
donation of money to the Rutland
Fire Department in lieu of entering
lheJu1y4parade.
Tbe traveling pnze donated by
Mrs. Charles Lewis was won by Mrs
Dean Will. Miss Ruby D1ehl a nd

s piders and mites.
Mrs. Harvey Erlewine talked
about " Tbe Glory of the Rose" poin·
ling out that it is the best loved
flower. She noted that when the
pioneers carne down over the
Allegheny Mountains and mto the
plains of Kentucky and Ohio, they
found the wild rose everywhere and

!7)

allocatron

Rulland Townshop
Trustees
EdnaM Swtck

Public Notice

Small investment, large

Ruth D Euler, de~eased,
Iale of 2-411 N Fourth Ave ,
Moddleporl, Ohoo45760.

returns, Sentinel Want Ads
-

IN rH E

recorded .n vo lume !75 ar
Paqc Ill 0€'ed Recor ds of
Me •gs Cou nt y Ohto
TRACT TWO 6egtn ntng
a t the Sout hwest cor ner of
.1n etgn recn .1cre 101 tn the
nor lheasl co rner ot th e
Norfheast qua rt er at Sec
tton No b Town sh p No J
Rang e N o t l at fhe Oh to
Comprtny s
Purchase 1
t l u n cr Eas t on the ltne o f
tand own('d by R E Gr ee n
tormcr ty ownea by William
Green lO roas to a corner
th ence Nor th H rods fo a
co rn er
!hen ce We st 20
rrxls to n co rner then ce
sou 1h H rods 10 tt1 e pla ce o f
bcq ,nn.nq con tatn tng one
ocre m ore or tess See
Deed No ~138 Vo l 121
Page 4~6 Deed Records of
Mf"tQS Cou n t y Oh •O A lso tn
Book N o
1)(/
Page 3R8

COMMO N PlEAS

COUR r OF
ME IG S COUNTY .
OHIO

f H E PEOP l ES B A NK I NG

A ND

rR U S r COMPA N Y
A CO RPORA r!ON
Pl.11nt.tt

v&gt;

WILLIAM l
~fRFf CA

Al

HO OVER ri nd
H OOVE~
Ef

C.H€ No 17 tl 73
- NOrtC EBY
PUB l i CA liON -

Wtl l tam
L
Hoover
whose address was 4:l71~
Vandehott Road Coolvil le
OhtO and whos.t p ld CP of
r es• dence tS now unknown
and
Rebe cca
Hoover
w hos.e address was 4U1Y
va ndehoft Road , Coolvtlle
Oh•o 457:l3
a nd
whose
pl ace o f res tdence ·~ now
unk nown
arP
hf'rf'by
notdted th at The Peoples
Bank tn g and Trust Com
pany A Corpora t ton P 0
Box 158 , Belpr e Oh t o4~/14
Platn l tff tn Case N o II tl7J
Comm on Pleas Cou r t ot
M etgs County Oh to has
!tied a Co mpl it tn t aqa tn st
eac h ot you tn the a mount
of $9 72B 0 1 w ttll tn terest at
the rate of S4 'l7 per day
tr om June 5 198 1 In the
Second Court ot satd Com
pl a •nt th e sa •d Platnltl l
d emands f or ec l osu r- e of ti S
mor tgage reco r ded '"
Volume 146 Paqe J I) ot til e
Mortgage
Recor-ds ot
M etgs County Ohto on the
t-ol low m g descrt b ed real
es t ate
S1t uatf'd m tllf&gt;
Town sh tp of Oran qe Coun
ty ot Metgs and State ot
Oh •o to w •t
TRACT ONE Bcg 1nntng
1n the cen ter of Old State
Rou te No 7 n l the South
w('St cor-ner of a one acre
lot ot Vada Koentg r-ecor
ded .n V o lum e 151 Pa ge
238 M e tg s cou n t y Deed
Reco rds then ce Eas t 190
teet along th e south ltne ot
the satd one ncre lot to th e
ce nter of New State Rou 1e
th ence Sou th 11
No 7
deqr-ees 50 west 480 teeTto
a post '"the c€'nter ot sad
Stale Rou te t hence West
143 5 tePt to the cen ter ot
Old St ate Rout e No 7
thence Nor th 5 deg r-ees 7d
wes t 410.., teet a long til e
center of sa1d State Rou t('
fo th e p lace of bCQ tnn•nq
co nta1n1ng 1 5 Acre, more
or- tess excep ttng all legill
ngnts of way
E)Ccepttng one half of the
od and gas nghts w htch
were r eserv ed by tormer
owner. and the Grantee tS
to have all rentals from
teases fr-om sa •d land
bemg the same as reserv ed
and set for t h tn the deed to
George Howell by Cha rl es
Bell and wtle recorded '"
Volume 151
Page 569
Me•gs County D eed Recor
c:ts reference to wh1 ch tS
her eby made
Betn g th e sa m e premtses
conveyed by Deed fr om
Floy d H Marftn , m ar ned,
wtth r e lease of d ower by
CMolyn A Marttn , hts
wtfe to Mortgagor her- Pm
da ted August 12, 1979 and

al so m Book No 152 Pa ge
!" }

Pl&lt;i tn1• 11 f ur Th er al leges
!hat each a t you are .n
dcldu l1 on t he payment ot
the n01 c o f F ebr ua r y 17
19tl1
and t hat th e real
es ta te descr bed heret n bl
so ld and thaT the amou nt
due Pl,lt n l tl on such no te
be prud out ot the procPeds
at the sa le ot sa td r ent
es tat e togethe r wt th tis
cost s
You are requ tred to an
swer wtth m Jill days atTer
the 1as1 publ tca Tt on whtch
wtll be on th e 13th day ot
Auqu st !98 1 Th e nnswer
dnt c s on Scptr mbC' r 10
I ~H

Case No 13412

NOri CEOF
APPOtNrMENr
OF FIDUCIARY
On J\Jjle 26t h , 19B 1 tn the
Metgs Co unt y Probate
Court
Case No 73472
Tesste Rose Evans BoK
186
Rac tn e Onto 4577 1.
was
a pp o.n t e d
Ad
mtn str atrt x of th e est ate at
Jt m m te Fra nklin Evans
deceased la te of R D 2
Ractne Oh to 45771
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge
1
Cler- k

171 l, 9. 16 J lc

' GET YOUR

WITH A

;Want Ad
t

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On July 6th, 1981. on the

PUBLIC NO riCE
Nottee tS hereby Qtve n
that on Saturday , July 1lth,
19tl1 at 10 00 am a publ tc
sale w tll be held at 105
Unten Avenue Pomeroy ,
Oll10 to sell tor ca sh th e
to tl ow tng co llate ral to W1t
~ t 1 1979 Harley Davtd
son Serial No 6E54759H9
t 11
1977 Plymouth Sert a l No HH29C7 B 1713 18
1Jl 1976 For-d Granada Sertal No 6E81FI7222J
rh c F.;~rmers Ba nk and
Sav .nq s
Company
Pomeroy Ohto, reserve s
the rtqh1 to b1d at thts sale,
and to wtthdr-aw the above
ve htc les prtor to sale Fur
the r The F a rmers Bank
and Savt n gs Company
reserves th e r.ghl to re1ec t
any or- all btds submttted
Furtherveht cl es ar-e
sold 1n th e condthon th ey
arc tn w1th no expressed or
tmp lted wa rran t 1es g tven
'I

I

'\

1J

I0

Metgs
Court,

OF MEIGS COUNTY
H

!/IJ "/

16

I
J]

ton

Street ,

E)(ecutmc ofDav1s
the estate
of
Geraidtne
Young,
deceased, late of 222 West
Ma1n Street, Pomeroy,
Ohro

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk

! 7l 9, 16. 23. Jlc
49

For Lease

FOR LEASE

ltr

all sealed bods shall be

recetved '"the Off1ce of the
Treasurer, South
Thtrd
Avenue, Mtddleport, Ohio
on or before 12 00 o'clock

noon on July 13, 1981

The Board of Edu ca t1on
reserves th e right to accept
or ret ec t any and all b1ds
Jane Wagne,..-,
Treasurer
M e•gs Local
Sc hool D1stnct
South Th trd Avenue

Moddleporl, Ohlo45760
16125 !71 2, 9, 3tc

DATE SATURDAY , JULY 11 , 10.30A M
Route 7 between Coolvtlle, Oh10 and Tuppers platns
(look tor segns) James L Deem, Owner- 1 614 667
3824 "Refreshments Served''
Dodge truck 100 Senes, 318 automatic, 8 tt bed,
33,000 mt , body good new ttres Walk beh.nd Ward 's
garden tractor &amp; attachments alumtnum plank

walk behond Gravely tractor &amp; attac hments. power
tools, mortar boxes. anttqucs, aluminum wtndows

all SilOS, dOOrS, plumbong materials, plumbong
tools, elednc wlnng, mechanic s tools, drtlls, drill
b1ts, chatr hotst, power saws, Milwaukee S1de gnn
der, concrete mtxer, fuel oil ta'nks, Presthte tank,
fencmg wtre, new Sears cistern pump &amp; tank, ex
tension ladders, step ladders, water coolers,
ceramic ttle cutters, nat IS, 300ft aertal wire, wOOd
stoves, drywall tools, 3 •" socket set, several wren 1

clles, household lurnolure, u 11 fiberglass boat,
motor &amp; trader, small tarps, shovels, matlcs, sledge
nammers Many other items not ltsted will be sold
Local check, cash or bank teller of certotlcallon
only.

Pomer-oy, OH .

Farm Buildings

57 lfc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
IICt t-IOR'H

r

VIRGIL8 SR ·P t1 r .o'

.

992-2259

••tchnq

NEW

Phone

LISTING

Rac tne area fa r m - Ap
pr ox 80 ac r es land w1th
older ho m e Hou se has 4
bedroom s, approx 50
acres tdlable land and
30
acres
tt mbe r
$42.000 00

• r H'f' r&lt;.t tm.ltl ·
t l(l

,.- -., 1

~pi

r-11 n rl'

TOM HOSKINS
1 1

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

CONSTRUCTION

NEW LISTING -

38

acres plus a newly
re mOdeled farm home
The 3B acres are all fen
cec:t
House has 4
bed rooms, llvtng dmtng
room , k1tchen
bath,
storage room, 2 par
c hes Large barn , pole
shed ,
pump house
Secluded pr1vate and

peaceful S45,()()() 00
SYRACUSE -

Mode rn

ranc h wtth 3 bedroom s,
half basement , l tvt ng,
dtntng,
kttchen, half
basement
Atta ched
garage $44,000 00

MIDDLEPORT
Remodeled 3 bedroom
house Close to shopptng
area
Very
nt ce t

NfW LISTING - - S

yr
old
ran c h
211
ce r a m tc baths
btrch
k•tchen dtsosal d1sh
washer
3 bedrooms,
co nvec t1on heat uttltfy
rm , 3 car garages, lull
ba sem ent w1th family
rm 'l pat1os and large

landscaped
overlooking

Pomeroy,Oh

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• Backhoe
• Excavattng
• Septic Systems
eWater, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lmes
eoumpTruck
eTrencher
Ltcensecl &amp; Bonded

Drolled

BRAND

NEW

Fur

n1shed 3 bedroom home
at Ftve Poults EQUIP
ped kttchen, carpettng
and large lot Want 1ust

CLOSE TO PARk AND
SCHOOLS - 2 bedroom

- Bottom land and lots
of wOOds tor hunttng 7
room house and several

home wtth ftrepta ce, Jt;,
baths,
level
lot

$24.900 00
REALTORS
Henrv E . Cleland. Jr
992··191
ASSOCIATES
Roger Turner 992· 5692

Dolloe Turner 992-5492
Jean T russell949·2660
OFF1CE 992-2219

ta'·
--

'

GARAGE

lo9 High st., Pomeroy
628lmo.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

i

. . ..
.. ..-........
'

'

6

eANNOUNCEMENTS

RENTALS

1- cerdtl Thitnh

4t-HOU"s tor ltnl
42-Mobllt H..,"

,_tnMemorlatn

tor Rent

)-At1nounctmtnll

44-APirtmtntt for Rent

4-0IVIIWI'f

45-Furnlstled Room1

t-HIPPY Acll
._Lefttand P:ouncll
1- Yard S.lt
t-P"IJIIc Sale
&amp; Auction /
t-WantM to Buy

new or rep•rr gutters
and downspo"!b, guHer
cleantng and pa1nt1ng
AU work guaranteed .

46-'INIC. tor lent
47-WII"ICI te Rtnl
41-Ectulp"'IM for Rent

eMERCHANDISE

51-HeUMttokl GOOds

52--(1, TV, Rldlo Equ..,..nt

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Call Howard
949· 2862
949 Z160

Sl-l.nllqup

S4-MIIC lp\trcMnciiM

I 1- Ht'lP Wa nttcl

ss-auiMint su,JI"
SI-Ptb tor Salt

U- Sitvtted WtntH
ts-t~ts•ranct

t...,:.auslnul Training

2 4 lie

TJ-Sc~tstnsrruction

I FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

16-Ridio. TV,
I Cl Rt~1r
11-Wa"tect To Do

Rttftrenc•

' 1- p 1 rm E'IUipm.nt

U-Wtnt.cl to Ivy

eFINANCIAL

63-LIVHfOtll

.._Hay I Grain
" - Setd&amp; Ftrfllhtr

7:1- MOIItY tO LIMn

awutten

e

ll-Profenlonal
5erV ICtl

1 Dryers

• D•shwastte-rs

aR.antjlts

• HotW.ater Tanh

eTRANSPORTATIDN

71 - AutoS far Salt
7l-VUII4WO
74-Motorcycln
7!-Auto Par-h

e REAL ESTATE

DISpcKIIS

21 _Homasfor sate
32-MDbllt Hamtt

torUla

I ACC:tslllrlts

JJJ-F:arma for Sale
34- Butlness Bultdlngs
3!-Lats I Acrea ..
,._:.~tall! state Wanted

' Spec•al Rates For '
..- Cotn L.aundnet
...- Rental Pruperftts
...- Apt Hauseownsn
"' Mob•lt HOWitt Partes

71-Auto Atpllr

eSERVICES

37- Rtalfon

''- """'' I mprovaments
12-Piumblnt 1 EllcaveHftl

Tuesday thrv Friday I.JO PM
SuiMI•'I 1
~•

•!

,•

)0

P M Frld•'l

...

•

Rilles and Other Information
~

Up to Is wOrtls•••aMUy lnurtlan

up tau wonts
Up to u wonts

thi'Md•y lnstf110n
sl• Chtys •nstrtl• •

MIO

•

• . •• . •••••• •• 11M

tA,verl.. 4 wen:ls par llflt)
Mlbllt MOM I PitS.,... Y,, rd taltt IN ICCt,ltd tMIY WI HI CIM Wltfl
GI'Oir II cent &lt;"•r.. tor IllS Cltr'Yint lox HumHr In Car. If TN
ltntilltl.
The PubllsiMr r.....W. tftt rlttlt to ICIII" rtltd any

"Beaut1fut. Custom
Buttt Gantges"
Call for free sid1ng
esttmates, 949-2801 or

949 2860.
No Sunday Calls
3 11 tic

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

ts-c;tMr•I,HIUIInt
16-M H hiNir
tJ-upltolster-y

lhed•Y btfonpubllnti«NN

BISSEll
SIDING 00.

• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

13-l!xc•v•flnl
14-IMctrlcat
I Rtfrltfl'&amp;Uon

Mtitday t ·JD on S.turd1y

Vmyl &amp; Alum mum
SIDING

obttdlanat. ne

Pt~ltllsller

will not M

rftpaflsl~e

tncorrttet insertion.

•tts....,....

firm"' ttMtn one

----

Curlt Inflation.

Pay Cash for ..
Cla•lfleds-and
Savell I

1

I
I
I
I
' I
I
I

write your own ad and order bv mall with tills
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not retundabt..

Lost ' ~ear Save Map
Station In Middleport, older
grey tiger female cat.
Wearing flea
collar
Named General, family
pel. 992-5286

'

Slncot,re
thanks to
everyone. Friends, nelg~
bors and relallves who
were so kind and thoughtful
with cards, flowers and
prayers dUring my recent
hospitalization
Kind
llloughta always hasten the
healing. Martha Searls.

Lost In the area of Forked
Run Lake. 1 male treeing
walker wllll collar &amp; name
plate Also male elk hound
with blue collar. Call 367·
0637 collect
LOST Class ring Class of
83. Meigs High School.
Girls Siver with yellow
stone. Name of Barb on
ring 992·3853.

Announcements

Area
courthouse to
Shoneys. Gold
Timex watch, dark face .
Please call 882 3146
evenings. Reward.

Karen's Beauty Saloon Is
Located on
Gall Ia St., Crown City, OH .
Call for appointment 256·
1624.

now open.

Toy chocolate poodle,lost
In vicinity of Meadowbrook
Saturday night call 675·
1353

7:-===~y:;,=r=d:=S;:a::;l=e===

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

Cleland Greenlloose Is now
open. Vegetable plants.
tomato plants, bedding
plants, pots and hanging
baskets.
Geral!llne
Cleland, Racine, 01110.
1 PAY
hlg~est prices
possible lor gold and sliver
coins, rings, 1ewe1ry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
ATT-ENTION LAOIESIII
Help pay off those unwanteq '!Ills working
evenlnosfrom 7: JO to 10:30
p.m. as a fashion 'stylist.
Earn sa.oo 10 110.00 per
hoor profit. Ideal for
homemaker with family.
Call992·39-41 from P-6
Traders day 11 Meigs Co.
Fox Hunters cabin on
Eagle Ridge Rd. Buy, sell,
trade or give away. see
Corby Cleek or Bob Clonch.
Sat., July 11.
L.ONEL.Y
Christian
Singles. Meet Christian
singles lnyour area. Write
Southern Christian Singles
Club, PO Box 1823, Sum·
mervllle, SC 2943 or call 1·
103-871-9850, 2411ours.
PIAI'o40 Lessons. Lucy Jane
Bulmer . Hartford, wv 11822395.
Turn yoor living room Into
a greenhoose, possible to
Increase all plant produc·
tlon 91 per cent. Free
report. Box 83, Gallipolis
Ferry, wv.

'

LEO MORRIS
Rt 1 Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
PH 742·2455 •
5 11 tfc
11

J'

~·

Help Wanted

SURGICAL
TECHNICIAN
'
•'
~

'·

..

f

\

•J.f

C1J11ilct:
terHI Collins, R. N.
Veteraasi\Afmorlal Hospital
Pomlrey, Dl!lo 45769
Phone 614·"2·2104
Eqval Opportunity Employer

'

,

·(
(
(
(

&gt;wantea
I For Sale •
l Announcement
) For Rent.-

•

17.
18.

19.

20. ,.M'-:-&lt;-7..,-~~~

7

Yard Sale July 9, 10,8.11. 9·?
-6 miles past HMC Rt. 160 N.
Evergreen ext

PATIO SALE July 10.11
BHide church on Chester
Stereo, bicycle, dresser,
radio-record player. 9 5
Yard Sale at 493 Broadway
51, Middleport Wed.· Sat
3 Family Yard Sale. Frl ,
July 10, 10 ?. On 248 '12 mile
from Chester at Pal
Morrissey residence. Nice
adult &amp; children clothing,
wallpaper, toys, etc
3 family July 9 ID-11, 9?
Dlnnette
sets,
base
cabinets, baby Items 992
3079 133 Bullernul Ave
Garage Sale Frl Sal Ar
baugh Addition , Tuppers
Plains. Jackson residence

Garage

sale

~:23. ,~~~~tv~§gir:.~
Jlitl

2015 Maxwell Road Thur
sday, Friday, Saturday

HUGE yard sale Friday &amp;
SBturday, 823 lOth St.
Behind Vlllaga Pizza, Pt
Pleaslnlt Everything from
A to Z all kinds of clollllng,
glasswear, pictures, puz
zles, bedspreads, etc.

Yard Sale 2 ml oot
Georges Creek, Ehllno A
Frame. Clothes, Sears sew 8
Public Sole
machine, and misc. July 10
&amp; Auction
&amp;11.101o-4.
Neals Auction Hogsett
WVA Rl. 2. Every Sat. 7·00
Yard Sale Fri. &amp; Sal., 5th PM
(Consignments
on right past Texas Rd . taken), (will buy furniture)
Clothing dishes, baby Lonnie Neal367 7101 .
clothes, car seat, and
leans.
Consignment Auction
Saturday July 11111, lOAM.
Moving Sale miscellaneous All consignments welcome
Items, July 10 9AM 1111 5 largo or small You bring II
PM; July 11 9AM 1111 5 PM, we'll auction 11. 5 percent to
Spring Valley Green Apt. 3 percent commissions
303.
Terms cash or positive 1 D.
L.ocallon Slate Rl 62 North
Garage
Sale
With of Eleanor W.V. at Magaw
Treaaul'ft Galore! 6 family Country Service Feed
sale at 525 First Ave. Fri. Store. 30-6· 586·2479.
all!l Sat. from 9:00 1111
7:00PM. Furniture, an· '
wanted to Buy
llques, exercise bike,
boaks, dishes. clothes, and BEDS IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, sliver
mise,
dollars, wood Ice boxes,
stone Jars. antiques, etc ,
Complete
households.
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt, 4,
,Pomeroy, 011. Or992·7760.

WANTED TO
BUY
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS,
RINGS ,
JEWELRY, MISC. ITEMS .
ABSOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEED
EO BURKETT BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT,
OHI0992 3476

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

t

I I

...

• ••

0

ser lees

II

Help Wanted

WANTED · Lease men , to
leasae oil and gas proper·
lies, GAlli a and ..surroun
ding counties lnl!uire to
Great Bend 011 Inc 269
Lower
River
Rd
Gall opolis. Call446·4285
Auto Body repair man ex
penenced only, contact
Harold Davis, at Gal1tpolts

Motor
co
Garage)

&lt;Chevorel

HAUL gravel , limestone.
coal, etc Oencll Dunlap
Phone 675 5215

ORRENT almostnew14 x
70, 3 bedroom, 1 112 baths,
slllong on nice lot, ready to
move 'nto Phone 304 576
2711
2 story frame house,

22

9

acre, large garage AOx30
Phone 304 895 35AO

Money lo Loan

FHA· VA Conventlal Home
Loans, Columbus First
Mortgage Co , -4113 Second
Ave , Gallipolis, Oh , oU6
7172

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

:ii

Mobile Homes
1or s • 1e

PRICES REDUCED · used
mob1le homes and travel

23

lraolers
TRISTATE
MDBIL.E HOMES CALL

Professeonal
Serv1ces

446 7572.

COMMERCIAL and on
dustrlal
photography CL!'AN USED MOBILE
Phone oU6 290'1 or 446·7226 HOMES
KESSEL'S
alter 4 p m
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
Piano tun1no and repair, WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
Love your neighbor tune 35 PHONE 446 3868 or 4-46
your Piano. Boll Ward, 7274
Wards Keyboard 446 -4372,
Gallipolis
1971 Schultz Homestead
12X60, wash &amp; dryer, new
GALLIA Cleaning and carpet, com furn , set on
Rent A· Matd Serv1 ce Inc, lol 6 on Quaol Creek In Rod·
Free Esttmates, bonded, ney, OH $8,750.00 2-45 5-120
Insured, phone 2&lt;15 92].1 or J88 8349
clean, ng by the week, mon·
thor contractual

Mobtle

home for sale 62

model Greallake Call oU6
Complete Auction Service 1036
stock reduction close outs

Princess House Crystal
part time nelp avail., party
plar&gt;, earn S100 to $200
wkly One management lob
open Call614 894 3308
Baby sotler needed In Ad
dlson area near

Tara Apts

estates-farm equlpment-11
vestock·real estate Ltcen

sed and bonded In Ohio,
and West WV Bud McGhee
Aucloon and Real Estate
Co. Call for terms 446·0552
or oU6 0818 428 Second
Ave. , Galllpolos, DH , &gt;15631

For Sale 12x60 1972 Oak
brook traoler Call446·0952
For Sale By Owner 14x65
Windsor mobile hOme with
over 112 acre lot 112 down ,
will finance remainder al
10 per cent interest Call
446 2807 .

for shofl work Call alter
5PM367 0692

WELL dnlhng, both rotary

DISPLAY
MER
CHANDISING
EX
PANDING MUST BE
ABLE TO START IM·
MEDIATELY Because of

on 1 day Call Ray Beagle For Sale New 1981 Fair
mon~le home 52xl4,
304·895 3841
all eleclrlc, 2 bdr only 7
mos old Need to sale due
STARKS Tree Trimming &amp; to relocalong Call&gt;l-46·9303
Shrub service. Insured.
Phone304 576·2010

ou.r

unique

expans1on

program we oor hiring In
the Gallipolis, PI Pleasant
area .

1 Starting salart $1,000 per
mo , based on performance
lor !hose who qualify
2 No layOffs or strikes
3 Management position
avallble
High School education and
car required No previous
experience necessary For
Interview call between

lOAM and 1 PM only 1 304
295·-4371.
$185 00 lo $500 weekly doong
mailing work
No ex·
perlence

required

AP

PLY Circle Sales, P .O
Box 224· D, Richmond Hill,
NY 11418.
GET VALUABLE lraonong
as a young business person

and earn good money plus
some great gills as a Sen
llnel route carrier Phone
us right away and get on
the ellglblllly llsl al 992
2156or992 2157
Opportunity Is yoors tusl
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
of9·6

&amp;

cable tools, usua\ly wetls

1973 Crown Haven, 14)(65,
three bedroom, new c~r

..... . .. -.... ..........
·····..
· · -~ --

pet, 1971 Cameron, ujji;f,
two bedroom, new carpet
H""o=m:-:e: s:-.f=o=r•s=at;:e, - - 1972 Champion, 12x60, two
3:-;1- -'"'
bedroom, new carpet 1976
Cameron.
12x60. two
NEW CABIN or small
home, completely fur bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
noshed, $3900. Call 446 0390. carpet 1970 PMC, 12x60,
two bedroom, new carpet,
B &amp; s Sales, Inc., 2nd and
House woth a creage tor VIand Street, PI PleMant,
sale, 3 or 4 bdrs, fully car Wll Phone 675·«24.
peted, 2 barns, 379 2258 or
379 23-43, aller 6PM
1970 12x60 Hollcresl, tlpoul
Immediate possession•

~

tn living room, gas heat, air

condotloner,
storage
bdr . farm home on Brolling building on one acre 2-47
acres, large white house 3915.
woth log cabin and 3 out
buildings at Hollcrest, 1
m11e south of Vinton on USED Mobile Home 576·
Slate Rt 160 Old McGhee 2711 .
homestead Land Contract
25 per cent down 8 per cent 1971 Darlan 12 x 65, 3
1972 Crown
interest or 10 per cent down bedrooms
12 per cent Possible rental Haven , 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
with commltt to purchase e•pando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
No tees Write Bob Mur utopia 12 • 65, 2 bedrooms
phy , -433 Soulll Firestone 1972 Invader 1-4 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, u
Blv, Akron, Oh -4-4301
x 60, 2 bedrooms B 'I• S
BY OWNER 4 Bdr spill sales, Inc. 2nd and VIand
level, living room/ dining Sts. Pt. Pleasant, wv
room combination, eat· ln Phone 675·.U2A.
kolchen, lg family rm , 21h
baths, located In Tara 1973 Hallmark 12•60 For
Estates, Club House and more Information call 773·
pool privileges, $75,000 5127.
firm Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt 1973 NASHUA 14x70 $7,000
only. 367 7835
304·675·67118

Person to cut grass and do
yard work. Should have
own transportation 98}
-4387.

New 3 bdr. house wllh 14•70 mobile home, 2
garage and full basement bedroom, 2 baths on large
$45,000. Call oU6 0390
101. 3 bedroom home, 2
baths. on lot completely
R.N. needed for weekends Large 2 story stone home, furnished for sale or lease
Exc. benefits. Call Arcadia welllnsullated, wllll 3 large with option to buY or rent.
Nursing Home, Coolville bedrooms, one full bath, 2 Pholne 2n·51.S
667 31~.
1/2 baths, formal dining
room, newly remodeled kit 33
Farms for S•'Baby slller wanted chen built In InclUding diSh
washer,
basement
with
55 acres, nine room llouse,
reference required. Phone
304-882·2010 New Haven work shop, 2 car garage barn, minerals, sacl)lded,
with work shop, large gar· good hunting. Morning Star
Area.
den, 2 porches. 548 Grant area. $65,000. Additional
St., Middleport. $59,500 101 acres available. 9.(9MECHANIC for Gas Wanting quick sale to settle WO.
Station. Apply In person, estate Coli 61-6 :!a. 3809 tor
2608 MI. Vernon, Pt. appointment. (After I PM)
34
auslnns Bulltllnps
Pleasant, WV.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter
on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab. ' $10.50 , &lt;per ton.
Dellverd to 01110 Pallet Co.,
Rock Sprints Rd._,
Pomeroy. 9P2·HIP.
" i&gt;tentnt,

u·

Will do babySitting In my
GOOd 2 bedroom house for sate
references. very reliable Fully carpeted, central
Phone 992 3110 or 949 2791
heal a. air, lull basemen!
with garageon basement
1
Wi II do custom sawing Approximately 3 12 acres
North of Racine on carmel located at end of street, 927
Brownell Ave , Middleport
Rd James R Parsons
$30,000. firm 992 3935

home In Syracuse

wanted to Buy used Buck
Stove Call245-9375

Thurs

Garage Sale, 9 till 5, third
brick out Plymale Road,
Yard Sale Saturday, July Gallipolis Ferry,W .V. July
11, 9-5. Portorbrooke Sub· 91h and lOth
diviSion off Fairfield·
Centenary Rd. Cosh only
Old furniture, stone Iars,
copper kellles and other
Yard Sale 2 miles pass types of antiques Phone
Holzer's off 160 on Kemper 4-46-3925.
Hollow Rd. Thurs., Fri., &amp;
Sat. July 9,10,&amp; 11. 911115
LARGE yard sale al Coun·
try Lanes Bowling Center,
Garage Sale July 9·10.11 . Rt 62 &amp; Tribble Road, Ar·
Below gift shop, Rt. 7 9 to? buckle WV Saturday July
Womens, girls, boys school 11, 9 1111 5. Lots of clothing
clothes, low prices, octds &amp; and misc. Items, hotdogs&amp;
ends galore, drapes. bot· cOffee will be avaolable
ties, 8 track tapes.
Sponsered by Leon WBA .
Yard Sale July 10·11 ·12
Clothing, dishes, bicycles,
lots of miSc. Items. On
State Rl. 7, 1/2 mile below
Ict. Rt. 218.

WANT TO BUY Old fur
nllure and Anllques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
256 1967 In the evenings.

through Sat. at Bradbury 9
am to5p.m

Three family garage sale
Men's, women's clothing ,
wide size range Toys,
books, furniture, Sony
stereo, speakers, tapes,
tewelry, misc. Everything
Yard Sale, Thurs and excellent condition Friday
Friday, July 9 and 10. First and Saturday , 9 ? . Denver
llouse on Llnte Kyger Rd. Weber, Reedsville, op
across from Kyger Creek poslledam .
Plant,
Clleslll re,
011 .
Dishes, dlsplav shelf, small 2 days only July 10 &amp; 11
organ, 2 old trunks, Friday &amp; Sat. Yard Sale
chlldrens and womens Jeans, teen ' s clothing,
clothing, a lillie bit of camper!
20 ft. self·
everything .
contained Banner End of
Wright St., Pomeroy.
HUGE
YARD SALE
Motorcycles, household July 10· 11 Rain or shone. '12
Items, pool table, station· mile off Rt. 7 bypass on
wagon, clothing, furniture, Leading Creek Rd Lillie
tools, &amp; etc. Gary Bane, bit of everything.
Neighborhood Rd., July 10
&amp;11,9105
Wednesday and Thursday
July 8·9, 10·4 301 x 303
Garage Sale J8 VInton Ave. Third Street, New Haven .
July 9111 &amp; lOth, T~urs &amp; Large assortment of ttems
Fri., 9AM fill?
Including baby clothes.
Yard Sale 11 mile on Neigh·
borhood Rd Thurs &amp; Fri.
Lots of good chlldrens
clothes.

Wanted to .Buy
$CASH!
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL
4-46 4775
OPEN9T05

lor sale or trade lor a place
on the Ohio River 222
Beech St ., Alberta Backus.

9

Yard Sale

4 FamilY Yard Sale Friday
&amp; Saturday, across from
Kanauga Drive-In Tires,
gas stove. weed eater, lots
of good clothing. fantastic
bargain, and knick knacks.

Jackson County Horse Club
Inc. Is having a open hone
ShoW Fri. July 10, 1981 at
Jackson County Form.
ShOw starts 7 p . m.
Everyone welcome.

HJ 5Ct"-:ZO.:JO H.P.
HA 60"-25·60 H.P.
HE 60"-4,.10 H.P.
All Models Available

lfc

Lost afld Found

By owner , old !loose, 101

Farm Market O~ng July
10th
Strlngle
green
beans and new
tatoes.
156
Jackson
Pike,
GallipoliS. 4-46·4710.

72- Trudlator Sit Ia

21-austnens

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES

~::::-11

electric, gas, water in town

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies. · Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Cree~ Rd
Call
4-16-02'14 .

ROTAVATORS

992-5682

"

Card Of Tfllilks

3

Nam•------------------

Repa1r
Hrs.: Mon.- Fr1 .
9 a.m .· S: 30 p.m.

.

New 3 bedroom home, 2
baths, large living room·
18
Wanted to Do
dining room combination,
buill in kllchen·laundrv
O.J 's LAWN MOWER room . 2 garages, tully car
REPAIR
On Neigh· peted, forced air heating &amp;
borllOOII Rd , all makes ser air conditioning Corner
vlced Specializ ing In Lawn lot 992·5062 . aa m ·1 p.m
Boy. Blades sharpened Shown by appointment
Call 4-46-4125 alter 5 p m Middleport.
Pick up and delivery
avaolable.
Very n ice 2 be&lt;jroom home
Wall to wall carpet, drapes,
Will take care of patients In large lot, 2 gardens, 3 car
their home llve·ln or 8 hr garage, 4 young fruit trees,
Shill Call367 0394
grape arbor Full size
basement 135,000 Carl be
seen anyllme, IDS Maple
Place, Pomerov, Ohio.

I "'

By owner, old house Elec· Country Grocery IHIS pum
Go- trlcity, gas, water In town. ps, air tank, living quar·
required For Sllle or trade for e ters. BY owners. J-614-612·
177, Point place on the OhiO River. 7813 Oak Hll~ a~ea.
WV.25550.
Write Alberta Backus, 222
Beech st., Pomeroy .

EXCElllNl, SALI.RJ AND BEN£Fm :
;,.·,.~,tfi
Callaet Diidltaf,,...... ' '

$27,500 ;,.,
BUYIN&lt;o
AND,
SELLING IS OUR
SPECIALTY . OTHI'R
SERVICES AVAILABL·
E. SUCH AS Pl'AN·
riNG ,
DIVIDING,
_.SONSUL TAT! ON, FIN·
ANCING AND AP·
PRAISING.

1 1

&lt;'

' I'll.-., lloiPIIII
Pie•
...... ,..., Drill
' '

~ ·I'.

Pi Plirt•lf w. v..·255M•'
)

Ht '.!rliJu"' rt ., ·,

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

- Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission

•

mtnerals tncluded Only

Hrm',lfiC/

PHONE 992·2156

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

• Insulation

6 15 1 mo

and
Acute Core Nu,.lng Units

All

wolhout

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

12 Perk St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
Anytime

ROGER HYSELl'S

Nursing Care Unit
(primarily geriatrics)

SJ5.000
53 ACRES OLIVE TWP

oulbuoldongs

PWMBING
.AND
HEATING

I J ttc

N H

,..,,c tank
Want~.. ... '/ $6,500

tnto th1S nt ce 4 bedroom
ouse, 2 baths, fam1ly
and T V room, 1 acr e
tot
Gara ge
and
workshop
tn
full
basement $45,000 00

-Look
obligation

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

KAUFF'S

r'O&lt;tei'II~Hly••r&lt;l

REGISTiir~S

lot

\,0

1rW

I
l

is currently s'eeklRI
qualified

ACRES

West oo;. ...

S 21 lfc

·PLEASANT VALLIY ..OSPITAL

br1ck home, ce ntral atr
and heat new shtngle
roo f , P~? baths, garage
w 1th storage over N•ce
corner tot near schools
and shops
t ~ 'I tier

PH. 992-7201

'

' "'

5
HappyAds
Plcklng·up easy-play organ
In yoor area. Low doWn
payment. low monthly
payment. Credit manager
collect, 6)HP2-5122.

Me19~ County

accessories .
Reasonably
prtced,
qutck service

want-Ad Advertls1ng
Deadlines

11

Les than $2 000 00 per
lot
ENORMOUS - - 9 rm

I 66

ti6Utl 0 1('&lt;;('1 f orc1
r- .1c tar w 1 .1h
I Od&lt;'l U':! O t e~ el r , f

t JO

t
1- f'

1

I) I Ol•lt r 't tJ I

'\7,.._ POMEROY
~LANDMARK

- 30 acres suttable for
subd1vts10n T P water
by land and ntce ntce
lay1ng well drat ned Ex
ce llent for a bUilder
planner on t r ader park

well

REEDSVILLE - Move

7

Askong $75,000
PLAN YOUR FUTURE

Butldtng on

1-

COMPLETE
CLOSEOUT.
BUY NOWI

lol
Rt

l •~.t

In

Opportunity

992 6215 or 992-73 14

'

Nine week·old red male kitten, 101111 haired. Nine
-ek·old black kitten,
Sllorlllal red. 675-61 -45.

and

Call Ken Young

V. C. YOUNG II

New 11omes • ex•
tensive remodel·
in g .
• E lectncal work
• R ooflng work

446-07-42.

Invitations

APPLIANCE SERVICE

- Addonsand
remOdeling
- Roofmg and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrtcal work
(Free Esttmates)

t h ~H / 1611

f A I· f' I t 0 l • It f' , I tJ I
I A to I \
\I ... \ I ( I

Magnolia Trees
Many OthetS

H614)
·992·332S
~·

mversary

ICHo Tht' Ad lor Futun

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

• • Pmm1• hnq

C uy W 1IIC OH
1 hone 614 66'1 ]fl1t
lluthOrtlcd John Deere
I'Jt• w Hot1.1nd H n"' h Hoq
F olrm t Cllllpm cnt 1 (' t)('r

Mlple Trees

an·

,lln1f'tl,li1Ct'

ll~t.'tSOI.l "&gt; l

M1sc. Merchan1se

line

of wedding

ond

'

' puppiH mixed
'
Free
breed .
Cell between 9 &amp; • or after 7

In Mason County

•t ontmqot 111 t v pl:'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Azaleas
Upright Yews

216 E. SeCDfld Street

'-

Homn for sate

Modified A-frame, lllree
bedrooms, two ballla, car·
pet. Spiral stairs, circular
stone fireplace e acres.
992·77-41

992-2156

em·

pressive, complete

Ph 614·143·2591
6 15 tic

BOGGS

FINAL
CLOSEOUT

POMEROY,O.

~

~2342

Free Estemates
Reasonable Pnces

Rt . l, Box 54
Rac•ne, Oh

6 3 1 mo

992 6611

In Co lila County

All types of roof work,

UtilifJ Buildings

Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

Fenced In Yard Storage
Contact Jtm Thomas

EAFORDm

~~:~tr

I.

31

RldloTV
&amp; Cll Repolr

RON 'S TV SERVICE
Specializing In Zenll~.
House Calls Now servicing
Motorola Quazar. Call 1·
,..,.,~I 304·576-2398 or 4-46·2-15&lt;1

...

I

ROOFING

"From 3Dx30"
SMALL

13 Years

6,000 Sq. Fl. Storage

- Portraits
-Weddings
- Anniversaries
-Possports
- and Now, an

Sezes

Ph.

992-2174

Offtce &amp; Sales Area

54

•
'4

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

H. L WRITESEI

ALL STEEL

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

2300 Sq Fl

$18,500 00

AUCTION· AUCTION·

NATHAN BIGGS
3S Yrs. Experience

Air Condit1oned

Pubhc Nohce

8
Bread and bak ery
produc ts
9 Meat
10
Pr-oduce and dry
goods
In order to be cons1dered,

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560

Moddleporl, OH

/It

rs

tn .Me1gS, Galha and
Mason Counhes
FREE ESTIMATES
All Bulld1ngs
Guaranteed

THE PHOJO
PLACE

Radeator Spectahst

COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY

JO ! Hlfl ll

Th e Board of Educatton
of the M e!QS Loca l Sc hool
D •sfrt ct destres to rece tve
sea l ed
btd s
for
th e
followmg
1 Stud e nt acctdent tn
sura nee
2 Ft eet tn surance
3 T tres a nd tubes
4 Gaso lme, Ot l, a nd ant •
f reeze
5 Fue lotl
0 Coa l
7 M1lk a nd datry proc:tuc

largest Radtator

Nelsonvtlle,

Ohoo 45764 was appoonled

0

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

From the Smallest
Heater Core to tile

Elaine M Rogers, 84 Chn

LA RRY E SP ENCER
CLERK OF COUR TS
0

SERVICE

County Probate
Case No
23477

I

8

'
'

Case No 23477

Public Nollco

PROBATE COUR r
OF MEIGS
COUNTY . OHIO

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016
or 992-7505

POLE i'uiLD•INC,S
15'x20' up to 40'x100'
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS
oa•vu!. I'XI', I'JC10' ,
IO'x12' &amp;
Any me built to your
spec•hcahons. Models

S11es from h ' to 12x40

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF GERALDINE
----------------~----------------,-----------------;-----------------,DAVIS
YOUNG ,
DECEASED
Pubhc Notice

REESE

SERVICE

RobertEJudge/
Buc k
Probate
Clerk
! 7l 9, 16. 23 Jlc
Public Notice

Pubhc Notrce

Quality Built
Economically Priced

SANITATION

Executor of the estate of

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

Public Nohce

28 tic

J&amp;C

• 17 lfc

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE 6F RUTH D
EULER , DECEASED
Case No. 23467
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On July 3, 1981 , on the
Meigs county Probate
Court, Case NO 2:1-467,
James D Euler, 2-411 N
Foorlh Ave , Moddleport ,
Ohoo &lt;15760 was appointed

shoppmg tnp and to lunch. A fam1ly
covered d1sh dmner was also planned Mrs Moore gave devotiOns
Attendmg were Mrs Patty Stem,
Mrs Judy Crooks, Mrs Mildred
Bailey, Mrs Helen Sauer, Mrs. Gall
Kirkham. and Mrs Carol Harper

'

~

the funds from Federal
Revenue
shar~ng

Nett meeting will be a picnic at
Forest Acres Park on July 'l/.

Tanks

Caii742·319S
or 992·7680

6 8·1 mo

..

Melts"Co. Areo Codi
•
614
, " ln.n•..-z&gt;
44~GJIHpolls
992-Midllleport
367"'"Cileshtre
Pomtrlly
311'-l(lnton
98}-(:llnler
245-Rio Grande
343-Piirt!and
37~Walnut Dist.
l47-Letart Falls
256-Guyan Dlst.
94,...Raclne
641-Arabll Dlst.
742-Rutland
Mason cO.w. va.
Area Code 3M
675-pt. Pleasant '
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
182-New Haven
- "
195-Letart ,
937-Buffalo

Llne-DIIdles
Line Hook-ups

Resident• II

~f.

#

Gatlla Co. Area COde
,14

TRENCHING
SERVICE
water·Se-r-Eiectroc

system.

Call949·2710

SJ)eetHln Th1s also rncludes

(7 ) 9, lie

~
j

&amp;Commercia•

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Trustees of Rutland
Township will hold !heir
budget hearing July 15,
1981 at 6:30 p.m at the
Rutland F 1re Station office
In Rutland
The proposed budget for
1982 will be available for In·

Mrs. Ruby Halliday.

The recepuon will be held on July
19 from 2 to 4 p m on the churc h
SOCia l room . Mr. and Mrs Johnson
rest de m the Middleport manse
Dunng the mcetmg plans were
abo made to take the reside nts of
the Meogs Count y Infmna ry on a

£or a n open reception
hononn ~ the Rev Wa nda Jo hnson,
new pastor o£ the Middleport F1rst
Umted Presbyterian Church, a nd
her husband, Harold, were made
dunng the Monday mg ht meetmg o£
t he deacons al the home of Mrs
Jean Moure

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
2, 9. 16 31c

Let George !'j;~.:i:;·~~frl·l
your present 11

Public Notice

Open reception for new pastor being planned
Plans

For all of your wiring needs.

Now Tlklng Enrollment
for Summer Classes.
In Pomorov &amp; Rulne
Ages Unll Up

Mrs. Erlewine de8crtbed the nile
as an embllm ol joy and love, and aa
asign ol pel'llllllelley. It Is a lllliver·
sal flower,llhe said, and Ita appW to
everyone Ia indicative ol Ita merit,
she said
"Summer Abundance" wu the
arrangement thel1ie with Mrs. Roy
Snowden using l'OIJeS. Mrs. AtkiDa'
devotions were "I Saw Geld Wash
The World", "Good FellOWihlp" and
" Patriotic." Members IJIIIIled their
favorite n11e In response to roll call.
Guestll were Mrs. Holter, Mn. Dena
Hoffman, Port Charlotte, Fla.; Mrs.
Norman WUII, Star Garden Club;
Mrs. Dean Will and daughter, Mrs.
Sharon Jewell and daugbter, and

angle leaving a fotiage group of five
leaves, that dead flowers should be
removed fnm petunias, and that
flowers should be fed with a manure
"tea" of§ cow manure to + water.
She also aaid that fall vegetables can
be started now, iris can be divided,
and shrubs should be checked for

Holter

DMCE
STUDIO

16

toU~WIDgt~lep}\one e~ehanges'., : '

i/!IN

R~E

'CARPENTER'S ·

it brougbt a vl.llloo ol peace and sentlment to thelt struggle.

Mrs. Harvey Erlewlne made church

'

'

Cla!fsified Pages cover the · , · .

,

An
'

-

•.

~

lots. Fair
Rd.; approved
city IChtiOI,
31-4ecres,
acre , ~.soo.
fiiJIIlCI; 10

�BY: -ner, 3 apartmo~t
houae on approx. 1 11cre.
Live In one, rent others to
mal&lt;a your payment. Can
be cllnverted single nome.
City . water, will consider
land contract. 675-1883 9-5
p.m.

Houses tor Rent

For rent new small 5 rm.
brick, carpet, range, lg.
front porch over looking 0.

River, lawn mo. tree. You

pay S9.00 water, electric
mo. Unfurnished. 15 min.
from Gallipolis, lower Rt.
7. Want middle age couple
or lady, no children, $200
per mo. Call256·1198.
Small house for one or two
working persons, deposit,
references. Reply P .O . Box
10, Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .
Nice home near shopping
center.

Adults preferred,

no pets, deposit plus
reference, $250 per mo.
CAll 446· 7322.
House for rent in Crown

City, 5 rms &amp; bath, S175
mo., S275 sec. deposit. Call
Hunlington 525·0391 week·
days, after 5PM 522·1735.
3 bdr. turn. house, large
wookshop, garage, fuel oil
furnance or wOOd burner,
ref. Call256·6015.

For Rent 5 room house on
St. Rt . 7, accept on child.
Call256-647 4 or 446-4292.

Clean

5 rm . house In
Eureka, full size basement,
fl)el oil furnance. Call 2566547.

Six room house SlOO. a
month, great for large
family. 675-5104 or 675·5386.
North ot Point
4 bedrooms, 2
baths, S265. plus deposit
and reference. 614-928-4339
no answer call 304·773-5235.
Rt.

62

P·leasant,

For rent will furnish house

Senior Citizens 1 bdr. apt.,
rental
assistance
available. Call446·27ol5.
2 bedroom, unturn .. apt. In
Vinton on Main St. Calen,
convenient location, large
yard. Caii245-581B.
REGENCY APT. INC. 2
bedroom ,
kit ·
chenfurnlshed, carpeted,
bills partially paid . S200
mo . Excellent neigh ·
borhOOd, 675·6722 or 675·
5104.
3 R &amp; Bath, Ut., furnished, .
$225 mo. 2 R Bachler apt. !
$125. 5 R house un-'
furnished, $175. Dep. &amp;
lease. Call • to 10 PM 446-

Furnished apt. $160, 2 bdr.,
water paid, children OK .
Call446-4416 after 3PM.
JACKSON ESTATES AP·
TS. has 1 bdr. apartments
rent starts at $152 mo .•
deposit $200. Call 446·27 -15.
1 bedroom apts. available

at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call
992·7721.
For rent in Mlddleport--2
bedroom furnished apart·
ment . No children. Call 1·
304·882·2.566.

2 bedroom furnished apart·
ment In Middleport. $175.
month. 992-5545 between 7·

nished or unfurnished. 675·

60x12 mobile home 2 bdr, 1
112 baths, $185 mo. in town,
small deposit req. Call 446·
0318.

2 bdr. trailer with large ex·
pando, 1 mile out of
Gallipolis on Rt. 588 . Call
2-15·9170.
Mobile home for rent. at
Rodney, Oh . Phone 388·

8368.
2 bdr. trailer Roush Lane,
Cheshire, Oh . Phone 1·304·
773-5882.
2 mobile homes In Portor
Area with 2 bdr, 1 mobile
: home with 1 bdr . for 1 per·
: SIIn .. Ref. and dep. Call367·
.. 7101.

· 14x65 mobile home 2 bdr, 1
112 bath, beautiful river
view, and 2 more lsi of
_t.ug., no children, no pets.
call 446·6642.
1980 double wide mobile
:home, 3 bdr, 2 full baths,
·like
new.
$16,500.
Negotiable. Call 256-~.
For rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom
mobile home. Racine area.
992-5858.
2 bedroom trailer for rent.
Brown's Trailer Park. 992·

54

Misc. Merchandise

For Sale : 1000 gallon
PLASTIC septic tanks .
State approved. Phone 2865930 . Jackson, Ohio.

263·2669 .

trailer, furn ., gas
and water turn., $225. mo. ,
SlOO dep., no pets. Call 446·
4745.

l&lt;i7S 125 Yamaha Enduro,
must sell . Phone 304·895·
3917.

APARTMENTS.
1371
days,
evenings.

Fur ·

Most anything used In
Restaurant and store
equipment. RADCO 304523·1378, Huntington.
10 multipurpose doors for
sale. 446· t21~
Special Sale! Satellite Antenna , BuY dl reel from
monfacturer,
180 TV
stations. Call 602·622·2290.
' 16 c u. ft., side by
For Sale
side refrigerator, $175. Call
256· 1427.

Used Hotel FurniShings
Bed frames, head boards,
night stands, mattress &amp;
box springs, bed spreads,
carpet &amp; carpet padding.
Wednesday, Thursdoy &amp;
Friday Only . No phone call
please.
Holiday
Inn
Gallipolis.
1970 Chevy 1 ( T pickup 6
cyl .• standard. 8 HP 36 ln .
cut riding lawn mower.
Call 446·9698.
1975 Chevy Luv truck ond
Sears garden tractor II.
mower with snow blower.
Call 446·3113 .

675 -3812

APA-RTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES675·4130.
Apartments. 675-5548.
2 bedroom apartment. Call
675·6020, 9:30 to 5.
SMALL furnished apart·
ment, no pets, references
required, 304-675·1365.
One bedroom furnished
apartment In Henderson
StSO. per month. 675·1972
alters P.M.

Galvanized Culvert $2.35
ft.,up . Brldge,etc. Steel , 10
cents lb. up. Phone 925·0884.

15 ft. crest liner new seats
and carpet, 60 HP
53
Antiques
Evenrude trailer $1100.
Parts tor 50 HP Mercury
AT TENT I 0 N :
(I M - outboard.
Phone 304·882PORTANT TO YOU) Will
3664.
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collectibles or entire estates. Hand gun model 14, Smith
Nothing too large. Also, and wesson , pocket watguns, pocket watches, and ches, Susan B, Anthony .
sets. Phone 304·675coin collections. Call 614767·3167 or 557·3411.

2 bdr. apartment, across
from perk, $175. mo .. par·
!Iaiiy turn., ref. &amp; dep.
required. Call446·3919.

a.m.l p.m . weekdays.

2:bdr.

Maytag dishwasher $100.
Call675·32.c.l.

0952 .

miles
South of
Pt .
Pleasant . References and
deposit, l-614·263·8322 or

Mobile Homes
. for Rent

1773.

i
~========:;=========!.~

~:·

Desota
glass
door
firescreen, size 33 1/8 to 39'
wide x 28 3/8 to 32 1/4 high.
New in box, S114 asking
$75.00 . Call «6-4189.
SWIMMING
POOLS:
PRE · SEASON SALE:
$999 .00 INSTALLED! I!
Above ground pool COMPLETELY INSTALLED
starting at $999.00. Price includes pool , deck, fence,
filter, · liner, and in·
stallatlon under normal
ground condition. Free
shop at home service. Call
1·800-624-8511.

Modern 8 It. couch and
chair, blue floral design .
Excellent $175. Phone 304675-4123.
Sundeck less than two
years old. 6x8. Phone 6755509 .
OLDER model gas range in
good working order, priced
on inspection, 304-675·6605 .
2 lO·speed bicycles, need
tires and cleaning up $50.
for both. Call 675·4111 days
or 675-3389 evenings.
32" wide entrance door SJO.
twin bed with mattress and
box spring S60. 12" black
and white TV $40. 10 gal.
fish aquarium with large
pump $12, full size bed
spread with shams $7. twin
bedSpread with sham SS.
other clothing and misc .
Items. Phone 304·458-1086.
240 volt 3 phase switch box .
Phone675· 1090.
Roper 8-HP riding mower.
Good working condition.
Phone 675-6774 or 675-2194.
55

Building Supplies

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call 245·5121.
56

Pets for Sale

Pets lor 5ale

Puppies for adoption. Call
Humane Society. 992·6505.
THE FISH TANK and Pet
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
675·2063, Pt. Pleasant. out·
ch dwarf rabbits $10.99,
Canary and Cockatiels.
Open 11-4.
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian an Poodle
pups 895·3958.
AK C Boxer puppies. 304·
576·2919.
Looking for a house pet?
Poodles are !he best. For
Sale-four male, black AKC
Registered $75. Partially
paper broke. Phone Ripley
372·6740.
PUREBRED Australllan
blue heeler puppies, $75.
304·675·3832.
Rabbits. Different sizes,
cages and all ~.00.
57

Musical
Instruments

R1120 Luxmon receiver
with Bosse speaker JVS
turntable. Call388·8240.
58
Fruit
_ __,&amp;~V~egl!'e'!.'t~ab~l'!e.!.s_ _
Half runner beans, $12.00
bushel, free delivery over 5
bushels. Call 2S.1752, Northup, Oh.
Green Beans for sale. Call
245·9183.

..,.

-

xs

ex1972 Capric' Cllev., good 1976 Yamaha 360
cellent condition, 6 speed,
cond. Call245-9492.
newer battery, tires, chain
$650. Call 675-4111 days or
1973 Mustang V·l, auto.. 675-3389 evenings.
PS, PB, $400. Call Terri
Henson .ut·2502 or after
75
B011tsand
5:00 367-1• •
Motors lor Sale

74 Bonnavnte, $750. Call
446-4580.

1971 Ford dump truck.
Good cond. F600. $3,5CIO.
985-4395.
1976 Pontiac Sunblrd. 6
cyl .. 5-s~. Good" con·
dillon. $2~. 742-2249.
1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675·
2722or675-5571 .
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV. Phone6751574or675·2881 .
1973

Carflaro,type

LTO,

good cond. Phone 675· 1424.

For sale or trade, 1971
Super Beetle convertible,
1500 mllet on motor $1700.
576-2720.
1972 4-door Impala, 8 cyl .
fully equipped, 1 owner,
phone 675-1570.
73 Dodge Dart, sport black
on black cragers, new
!Ires, 340 automatic. Phone
304·675· 1769,

77 Grand Prix, 301 engine,
Fruits
&amp;
Vegetables air, cruise, AM· FM 8 track .
Homegrown-sweet corn, Very good car. Phone 304cabbage, mangos, etc . 675-5075.
Charles McKeon Farm.
1973 Pinto. Good condition.
Call 446·9.« 2.
Phone 1·304·812·3664.
PICK your own half runner
beans, sweet corn. Happy 1975 Dodge Coronet 2 door,
Hollow Fruit Farm, 304· runs good. Phone 304-675654.5.
576·2026.
CABBAGE 15 cents a head,
304-675· 2527.

1980 200SX Datsun, excellent coridltlon, loaded,
S6, 100.00 Clll304·675-5090.

59

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY - KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. Seal &amp; cream
point Hlmilayan &amp; White
Persian kittens. Call ~3844 after 4 p.m.

For Sale or Trade for
livestock S800, 1962 Chey 1
112 t:m trk. with steel rack
to haul 200 bales hay. 7,..!z'-_T!.!r..!!ut~k~l!.!fo.!!r!..:S~a!!te!!__
Phone 2S.1352.
78 Ford 6 cyl. pickup, gOOd
cond., $3500. 2-15·514 after
For Sale or Trade for 5:30.
livestock, $200 manure
loader to fit Ford tractor. 74 Chevy :J/4 ton PU, auiG.,
Phone 2S.1352.
$600. Call ~4225.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call ~- 4191.

ForSaleorTrade

~____!:!!!..:=~!!!!~-

72 Massey Freguson 135
tractor for trade for pickup
less than 900 actual hours,
$3900. Call367-0632.

-__ ..

............
. ...... ,' ,...... .

1970 MUSTANG, In good
shape, 304'882-2195.

1975 Ford . F-1~, PS, PI,
AC, AM-FIA rtreck. trailer
broken, 57.000 miles, $1950.
Call~3987.

1979 Starcratt fiberglass
boat, skis and accessories.
90 h.p. used bery lillie.
$4,500. 992·6212 after 5.
1978 Fiberglass boat. 15ft.
open boW . 50 h.p. Merc~ry
motor, 55 prop ., llie
Jackets, skies, top full
cover, depth II nder II.
trailer. 667-3025.
1977 Checkmate Trl Mate
II, 16ft. 140 HP Evanrude
motor·wlfh drive on trailer

388-8240.
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. ~7717.

~ a'"

'. , ' '

• "

•.,

~=========l.:========~

TRAILER spaces for rent.
SOUthern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992-3954.

3324.

Horse mowing machine,
disc, cultlvatot, sled.
Phone 576·2254.

7:01
7:30

7:35

BORN LOSER

A u t 0 R epa Ir
ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker
service. ~~Big or small" we
,_them alii 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
- 446·2.c.IS or Night - 446·
4792.

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Healing,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367-7853.

77

Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any color,free pickup
&amp; delivery In Gallipolis
area, Hammond Body
Shop, 221 Mill St. 379-2782.
E &amp; V Body Shop Want
your car looking new? Call
446-931).1 Georges Creek Rd .
78

camping
Equipment

1971 Fold -down Camper
with awing &amp; port-a -pot.
Call~7230.

1963 Yellowstone 16 ft.
camper, sleeps 4. Call 4461157 weekday, 2-15-5438
evenings and weekends.

~~~hi Hauling, tree work,
g1rege and basement
cloafte~~ alit. Call anytime
2&lt;15'92~ . Ask for Roy, Thurman, OH.

l

~. 20-20 Hugh Dcwno

'BE
,l &amp;outP
.
5ENDIN6 YOU

OUTON~E

CALLS'...

BUT riM PUTTING
MY REPUTATION

ON THE. LINe

WHEN I

ro.+

PCW'r WAIIT

ANY MOlt£
/Mnf:TKJN$. ..

anchora thla wHkly magazine
profiling noteworthy ev4tl1ta In
newa, acience and entertain·
mont. (8Q.mlno.)
• (I) all KNOTS LANDING
GoryE"'Ing, onA.A.oponoorfor
alcoholic Eort Trent, Iindo him·
aolf In thepoaltlon of atlytngthe
wllolonlght"'lth e.~'. poaolonltl wife, Judy, 11 they aearch
Eort. (Ropoot; 80 mine.)
COMSTOCK LOAD
NI!WS
10:015
TBII!VI!N ..GNEWI
10:28
CIN UPOATl NEWS
t0:30
JOHN ANKERBERG

I
1r.::
D

U~POW'EIII

Zi

.....

t2636; .

... .

+KJ109742

.AK

+A 10 9 ~

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer North
West

North

t'l
z•

Pass
Pass
Pass

4+
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:+B

card two clubs on the top
diamonds. but still had one
club to lose in addition to
the queen of trumps .
How did West figure out :
that spade lead1 Had he
seen all the cards' Was he
clairv&lt;&gt;yant' No' He was
just clumsy.
It dropped out of his hand

face up as he was reaching
for the jack of diamond•. So
·much for experts. There is
plenty of luck in bridge.

n

Adolescenl

DOWN
1 Greeting lor
Larry Holmes
2 Venerate
3 At one's (as one
wishes)
4 Undersized
5 Downright
6 Shift (change)
7 Beard
on grain
8 Select
9 Amplify
12 Sedative
(slang)

Yesterday's Amlwer
16 Sundered
27 Citizen
19 Painful
of Batl)
.
%2 Paddles
29 Indian com
23 Dirty
30 Rebelled
politics
31 "Sunflower"
ploys
star
24 Sky
36 Tippler
path
37 Ran
25 Herb-plant
Into

~~...,.,......,,....

21 Classify

OUTI!ll UMrrB

m~a.~~.

22 Former

23- bleu!

LEIION
VI! AWN AT LARGE
11:01
NIGHTQAWRY
11:28
UPOATINI!WI
11:30
TMI!TONIGifTIHOW
'The Bell 01 Careon' Gueoto:
Ja~ttee Garner, Larry Getlln.
Ltoley Ann Warren, Buoter
abbe. (Ropoo
. t; eo
. mine.)
AlfOTHill UPI!
,IIIIIY tiLL ltiOW
Cil ~~TI,IIOVIE 'THE
JEFFERIONS: Tho Morrtoge
Counoolor' The Wllilo' tormulo
obotlor
tile

25 Omsumer
advocate
ZISwamp
ground!7 Playwright
Connelly

I

Z8 Before
29 Foch!s rank

3Uigt.
3SSuccor
3t Gold (Sp.)
35 Sultana, e.g.

:11 Anchor
J8 Dole olf
J8To be (Lat.)

· C~ll +16-7404.

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

- -.:;=====-

bedrOOm trailer on
•te_·. lot. .No pets 1175.
·
· ,' ""' H•ven. Phollt

WEST
tQB 3
+6 ~
., 7 3
.J986
• Q 862
.Jt0903
+Q74
+KJ2
SOUTH

Mobley

Two 2 bedroom hOuse 5;;1
trallers for' rent, furniShed,
Housellolll Goods
1 With c4HIIral air, good for
USED
AP ·
Working couple or couple GOOD
Wlfh1 child. $150 per ..-th PLIANCES - washers,
dryers,
refrllJeratorl,
piUS ilellosll. 675-«188.
ranges.
Skaggs Appliances, 1911 Easl'ern
.~ue home, unfurnished Ave •• ~7398 • .
married couple only.
PhOne 30H75· 1076.
Electric Stove. Pnone 675' .
2.74.
q
Farm• 1..- Rent
2

• A K 74

+86 3
EAST

20 Mary -

Dll..LAR OS
WATER';
DE;LIVERY SERVICE, ;

' suo -

.Ql0~42

by THOMAS JOSEPH
40 Register

ACROSS
1 GI meal
5 Yawning
10 Gordie
of hockey
11 Tape
recorder
mode
13 Baxter
or Bancroft
14 ' 'El Grande"
15 Clothing
sty )e
16 Coal
derivative
17 Kansas
River
18 Newgate
and others

to be her lo•er, but panic gripe
thelovelalrwhantheboaaunex·
peclodly ohowo up. (Ropoot)
ooed·Coptlonld; U.S.A.)
GOOD NEIGHBORS
NATURE OF THINGS
10:00
IIOYlE ·(COIII!DY) ••
"Smokey And Tho a..dltll"

WINNIE

NOW HAULING house coal
II. limestone for driveways.
Call for estimates 367-7101

7-•-ll

61Mtlll "t q('

ployer' arevenge-aaeklngwlfe

Fuller Electric Co. Com·
plete rewiring, commercial
or residential, and electrical malntalnance, also
on call. Ph . 446-2171.
Gallipolis.

~- anytime.

NORTH
+A

Although it looks strange
for North to raise South 's
three spade jump response
to game on only a singleton,
it was his only good bid.
South should bid five clubs
at his third turn, exploring
slam, but North-South were
a new partnership and South
decided to go right to slam.
The opening lead was
crucial. II you polled the
world's greatest players
about defense, they would
probably all agree that the
opening lead is the most
crucial stroke of the defense
and frequently (liO percent
or more) decides the success
of the contract.
It is unlikely, however. il
even one of these players
would make the killing lead
against today's slam.
Against a heart, club or diamond lead declarer is home.
He wills the lead, cashes the
ace-king of hearts, crosses
to dummy's ace of trumps to
cash the bigb diamonds and
the queen of hearts, disposing of all three club losers.
Although West ruffs the
heart queen it is with his
natural trump trick.
Our poor South was not
that lucky. He received the
devastating opening lead of
the eight of spades. This
removed the vital trump
entry to dummy before
South could unblock his aceking of hearts. South did dis-

'ForYourEyeaOnty, ''TheGraet
Muppet Copor; ·oragono!Jfer '•!ld 'Strlpeo.'
11:30 lli iDl• TAXI Lechorouo
Louie hlllho dubloua honor of
being Hlected by hia em·

Electrical

General Hauling
~I'M'S . DEPENOAB~E '
water delivery . Call 256·

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

town, and ahow acenea from:

&amp; Refrigeration

85

A most unlikely lead

Siakel and Roger
Eben review the new movlaaln

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service. Larry Slden·
stricker. 675-5580.

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition 'S .rvlce,
commercial, Industrial.
Phone 8&amp;2-2079,

BRIDGE

lr&lt;ll!
BNIAK PREVIEWS Film
crltlct1 Gena

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank . 675-1234.

SEWING ·Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer ·
Sales II. . Service. Sharpen ·
Scissors. Fabric Shop, '
Pomeroy, 992·221W.
·

Jumble Book No. 18, contll"'ng 110 purzlll, 11 ewaUabte tor $1.75 pollpiiCII
from Jurnbtt, clo this nenp:-;;,, Box ~ Norwood, N.J. 07848. Include yaw
ntiM, adchll, zip codll
make ·cMckl payabte to NewtplplltDDk1.

~

Dltcher work . Charles R.
Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe.
Gas, electric, and water.
742·2903.

Quaitly Cooling and
Heating Service Call 388· ·
9698.

Vostorday'sl Jumbleo: METAL POACH WEEVI~ CARNA~
Answer: "Just what'a behind such painting-?" "THE WAL~"

li

Excavating

XI] (X I I I)

Gooo(

(Answers tomorrow)

an Emmy for hla reporting from
Vietnam, covoro !I.e dey to cloy
lite ot U.S . combat aoldleraln
Vietnam and Combodll, In thlo
film which originally aired on
CBS In 1970. An update hu
n Included. (80 mlna.)
8:30
IOU!ID OF TRUMPETS
(Ill • BOSOM BUDDIES
Kip end Henry' a friendship
t•etara on the brink when Kip
lnoloto that tho boautltul, sexy
Sonny live with them after her
roommate, Am~. In a tit of anger.
throw a her out of the apartment
Y ohore. (Repeat)
8:58
1:.8N UPDATl NEWS
8:00
• 11tURIDAY NIGHT AT
ntE MOVIES 'Tho Adventures
Of Huckleberry Finn' tllllt
Stare: Forraat Tucker, Larry
Storch.
C1J 700CLUB
(I) (Ill •
BARNEY MILLER
Harria haa been aaaigned to
write, produce and direct an
adult film for uae In an official
lnveatlgotlon, but hil grand
plana to create an epic produc•
Uon drive Barney crazy.
l!l."'l!!•ll (Closed-Captioned)
. l l i ()ll) IIAGNUII, P.L Five
little achool glrto, thalr mloolng
teacher and a prlcelau paint·
lng couoo Chrlotmoo holldoy
compllcotlono. CRepoot; 80

Dozer work. Small jobs a
specialty. 742·2753.

84

AMwerhete:

PANY CBS newo correapon·

D. c. Contractors Plum·
bing, electrical, heating,
rooting, aluminum, vinyl
siding, and hOme painting.
675·3376 or 675-1240.
83

B FACI! 11ti11UBIC
11luBALL Atlonto Brovoo

dent John Lawrance. who won

ALLEYOOP :

HAVe.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the aurprlee anawer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

crDWORLDOFCHARUI!C~

HOW 10 ~ TO'"

'YOU

5P0i A 6LACIER'.

.wwl)ntEWALTONSCindy
legrlefatrickenovertheaudden
deeth of her tether, and
shocked after diacovering aha
waa adopted by him. (Repeat;
fl!l mlna.)
(J)OMEGAF/ICTOR'IIIuslons'
Dr. Kart BrucKner, an expert on
mlndcontrol, haadetactadfrom
EaatGermany and 11 brought to
8r.Roln by RonRor. (80 mine.)

YOU'LL BE HAWIIS
EMOTIONAL NEE£79 THAT
ACIWSTY OLD BACHELOft
Lfll.E ME I'WLDWT

WHAT

TO HAVE TO

i!llll!J~ (Repeat)

ANNIE

..,

• lUll
AIIQ..1'111RUFI!
• Cll JOKI!R'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD 8QUA111!8
(If) DICK CAVITY IHOW
RICHARD IIMMON8

gourmet delightI ehe tum a into
1 wocky.Orkari horae II, oendlng
her femlly reunion into a rollick·

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

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or «6-«77

.VI!

I

I HETOLC±

IIORK AND lllNDY
When Mindy eotoone of Mork'o

Ser·
wv ·

1965 Jeep body. Minus ten·
den &amp; hood. With 2 win·
dshields. Never used. $600.
992·2124. Mon.-Fri. 8-4:30.

HIIIIII
ALl. liTHE fAMILY

ri\'Cft, •

HARPER Halstead, lawn
mower repair and shar·
pening service, 10 a .m.-6
p. m. 675-5868 .
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, ·Quazar, and
house calls . Phone 576-2398
or 446·2-154.

IIACIII!lL.UHR~R

vaCillelnnotiRidl (In tha ovont
of o ployoro' ttrlke, aHornato
ronimlng "'Ill be olred.)
7:58
c:tNJIPDATI NI!W8
S:CICI
• (lJ I!IC MAGAZINE
W111t DAVID BRINKLI!Y Thlo
weekly aerteo olforo. blend ot
current nawe atorlea, topical
roportiOndprollleo.HoatDavld
Brlnltloy lo lolnld by contrlbut·
lng roportoro Garrick Utley,
Jock Perklno. Dougloo Kiker
and B1t1y Aaron. (80 mine.)
(J)
PRIORITY
ONE
1!1.11!RNATIOHAL
(!) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) 00 1'1
"Ducllon And'Tllo Dlrtwotor

CONTINIOUS no leak gut·
terlng, custom made for
your home. For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
ANI:l DOOR . 614-&amp;98·8205.

Jones .B oys Water Service.
Call367·7471 or 367-0591.

Two bedroom house trailer
' on . AShton-Upland Road.
plus utilities and
Clam age depoSit. 3 miles
f~O(II lltt. 2. 675-4088.

· CAPTAINEASY

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive .
Emergency service. Call
882·2079.

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

YILIC

QLaOPIIY .
T1CTAcDOUGH

T and
R
building,
remodeling, a Iso papering,
Chrome hooker header and carpet installation, and
side pipes, Call 446· 2687.
tgeneral
home
im ·
provements. 675-5689 , 675·
1980 Prowler camper 17ft., 5304.
fully self contained, ex. ;;;===::==:=:;:;::===
cond. Must sell. Call 256· 82
Plumbing
6626.
&amp; Heating

1980 vw .. truck diesel For Sale pickup camper,
engine, 40 Ji\PG, ex. concl .. walk·ln, aluminum, never
$5,800 firm . Call after 5:30 . been used, exc. cond .. built·
O'Brien Slalom water ski
PM 367-0694.
In stove, refrig., sink,
61
Farm Equipment
ONE 2 bedroom apartment 68" . Exc . cond. $75. 992· table, cabinets, carpeted
and one efficiency apart· 6330.
Sale 197~ .GMC 7500 and 2 double beds, S650.
AKC St. Bernard Puppies 3 John Deere 24T baler with For
ment, 304·675·3000.
Diesel dul\lij'tr'uck. Call 1· Call2ol5-9118,
bale
kicker,
Maney
males, 2 females, well
Clothing for large men . marked. Call 367-7594 After Ferguson hayrack, 3 point 614-694-784.
3 room furnished apart· Sony stereo, speakers, 6PM.
post hole digger 9 ln., all In
Camper for sale. If• mile
ment, air conditioned, tapes. All excellent congood cond. Call 1-614-286- 67 Ford pickup truck. Call from hlgh school on 124,
utilities paid, ground floor, dition . Call 378·6m.
2394 or see Tom Jones near after 6 2-15-9153,
Recine, Ohio . Call
AKC
Poodle, Apricot Thurman, OH .
private entrance. Phone
anytime. 949·2244.
female, 3 yrs. old, $75. Also
675-6730.
Half runner beans. SlO.OO AKC German Shepard pup,
Used R65 Dlteh Witch tren·
bushel. Pick your own, very nice, 150. Phone ~- 450-B John Deere dozer cher &amp; 1972 GMC 7500 10ft. truck camper. Phone
45
Furnished Rooms
with &amp;-way blade. Call 379- series Tamden axel Diesel 304·576-2585.
bring your own container. 2310.
2340, Patriot, OH .
George
Hill,
Racine,
Ohio.
Dump Truck. 1·614·694SLEEPING ROOMS and
71W2.
.
light housekeeping apt.,
AKC Weimaraners, 8 wks.
Four
15,00
gallon
tanks
Canning
i
ars,
sewing
Park Central Hotel.
old, bred for hunting, outmachine. Call 949-2241 at- standing 4 H obedience, located above ground at 77 CHEVY truck, 305
ter5p.m .
blue eyed, silver beauties, Athens, Ohio. S3,000.oo automatic, 51,000 miles, 11
46
Space for Rent
Home
S2«10. will ec,cept trade In,
and parvo &amp; dhl shots. Call each. Phone 1-304·422-2781.
·improvements
304-675'3Q.M. • .
•
Secluded private trailer lot 26' TROUTWOOO travel George Woodyard 614-379·
In wooded area . Ideal for trailer end ·camp site on 2597.
'. .
FOR BEST In Carpet
Case farm tractor. Newly
that summer outdoors. Raccon Creek. Close to
overhauled motor. New 1957 Chevrolet one-half ton Cleaning - Call Smeltzer's
Contact Br~·s Trailer Ohio River . S500 down.
Steamway. Call 614·446'
Mlnature Dachshund, AKC brakes &amp; clutch. Like new pickup good shape.Phone 2096.
Park, 992-3324.
Owner will finance . 614-~ reg., female, $125. Call~- tires all arourid . Will 304·675·6544, p
1216.
sacrifice for SSOO. 742-2502.
354.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
STANLEY STEEMER
1987 I nteniitltonal ' Pickup.
Carpet Cleaning
·
Park, Route 33, North of I
Gravely tractor with sulkle 30H51·192.C.
. ~4208 '
Pomeroy. Laroe lots. Call I"
mower and grader blade.
992-7m.
They'll Do It Every Time
Phone304-57&amp;-2720.
,

•

Hoover Sweepers repa ired
at Empire Furniture, 842
Second Ave, Gallipolis, OH .

For sale M• Ford Galaxle
500, 2 dr., hard top. Call 72 TRIUMPH 650 motor·
cycle, phone 304-675-1751 .
~4410.

•ua... for •-te

~

n

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE - quality and ser-:
vice, call675·1582.

RINGLE'S
SERVICE:
complete
building,
remodeling, repairing,
large or small jobs done ef·
flclenlly. Phone 675·2088 or
675-4560.

71

j
l ·tx

· ==-=·~
1111.
PAaHI!UD
' IACKITAQI! AT TNI!

Interior and Exterior painting, traitor roots, and dry
1977 Kawasaki KZ
wall $18 and up, 15 yrs . ••·
cellent condition. Ph•on•• I perlence. Free est. Call.c-46675-6810atter 5 p.m.
1562.

1978 Kawaskl LTO 1,000.
$2,000. Excellent condition.
6 1 s - 5 o .1 9 .

.,

7:CICI · m
·

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free estimates, reasonable
rates. Scothguard, 992-6309.

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, Clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call 446-7795.

WOOOSHOP · Cabinets,
picni c
tables,
porch
swings, most wood products. 101 Court St., GallipoliS. ·

450 Honda, 1975 mOdel,
1425.
- -675·3135.
-------

• • • -.•

bedding
In the
area. Fur·
Call I"
1
for
prices.
Village
nlture, 2605 Jackson Ave.
675-1773.

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER ·
VICE, Complete sales, ser·
vice, supplies and in ·
stallation. ~- 1324 .

3 room furnished cottage,

42

.....

56

Apartment for rent. Call
992·5908 .

TWO bedroom house 304·
675-1371 or675·3812 .

~~

Call~2572 .

1975 750 H.onda. Excellent
condition. Phone 304-675·
1971 Odyssey, good condition. Phone 304-675-5173 . .

Lowest prices on Bemco

Furnished apt. $160, 3 bdr ..
water paid, children OK .
446·4416 after 3PM .

2 bedroom furnished apart·
ment tor rent, $150 per
month plus utilities. $50
deposit. No pets. Located In
Racine . 949·2875. Available
July 8.

21!2 bedrooms, 1 acre, 6

2132.

BIG discounts for cash and
carry at VIllage Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
AIR CONDITIONERS sale priced, all sizes In
stock, expert Installation
available. VIllage Furniture, 2605 Jackson Ave.,
30&lt;4-675-1773.

Furnished
Apt. $195,
utilities pd ., adults, 1 bdr .
Call446-«16 after 3PM.

or farm in exchange for
caring for an elderly lady,
preferred retired couple.
Please send resume and
reference to P .O. Box 6193,
Charleston, wv 25302 .

utilities furnished, adults,
no pets. Phone 304·675-2812
or 304·675-1580.

1977 Honda CB 550K, 4 cyl.,
1000 miles. PhOne 304-675·

NEED several Items of furniture,
appliances,
televisions. Big discounts
for quan lty purchase.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675-1773.

F'or rent new 1 bdr. apt.
Call 446-0390.

41

. .

Call~2107 .

2 bdr. apartment lg. LR
and Kltchan. Across from
Hondo Shop no pets. Call
l.c-4•3937 or 367-0560.

Second floor finished ef·
flclency apt. Furnished,
adults only, no pets. 729 2nd
loiS ACRES 412·378· 11104.
Ave. Gallipolis. Call ~100 X 110 lot. 304-882-2954 or 0957.
882-3162.
4 rent unfurn. ept. all car·
peted, S250 mo. $100 dep,
20 ACRES on black . top utilities
paid, no children,
rood SB,OOO. 1-614-263-8322 no pets. Call
~ - 3.(!7 .
or 263-2669.

AeRials

.Television
vtewmg

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning feaf!Jred by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.

A X Y D L B. A A X a
LONGFELLOW

lo

One letter aimply 1toncla for another. In thio sample A..U·
used (or the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln1le ltnen;··
apo1trophe1, tha lenll
_ h end formation of the wonlo are all
hints. Eieh dill' the code letten are cll(lerent.
, ' ·• • '

CRYnOQUOTBS

H

.

KZFC

FJ

QTD

0 ZH D

H~-\

QTFRD

ZHSQXS

FK . JX0

.ccan_=·

· . Y~
_··. •

, . AN
EFroRT
pAil~Eft
. TO

'.

!'

•

.,
FK

GZHD

VX!!.- Y .

H.

.........,.....li&gt;

.,

KHVA,;

;:'" ~···

.

(Jrf'•·

K ZF .

KZAb'o\

. :HAPPINESSISI.BY·~~ ' ""'""""..... El:SE ·HAPPY~..,Q
. l!I;TrA:. I

�•
The Dai

Thurscll

Ohio

Sentinel

Senate won't wait on DemocratS

WASHINGTON (APj "' While
Senate , Rep.ublicans say ~ts and
House Democrats say ma~lil !o one
last pass at a•tax co~. the
While House insists that Pi'esident
Reagan is unwilling kl ,\re any
more on his plan for a 25.!*cent cut
ov~r three y,ears.
In the meantime, l!!U
a moil·
th from the president'• dkdline for
getting a bill to his desk, the Senate
will defy tradiUon and go ahead with
its own, Reagan -like measure
without wailin3 on the House.
To the While House's surprise,
talk of reopening negotiations was
resurrected Wednesday by Senate
Finance Chainnan Bob Dole of Kan·
sas. He said Republicans could give
up an extra share of relief for low·

tJin

BEGINS FRIDAY, JULY 10th

.

.
and middle-income workers while
,Democrats could give Reagan the

tliree·year tax cut 1!e wants.
· But there were. no inunedlale
takers.
House Democrats, battered in
earlier co!lfrontations with Reagan,
were skeptical, although Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. Sll,id Ways and
Means Chainnan Dan Rostenkowskl
will meet with Dole, his Republican
counterp.rt, to explore the
possibilities.
At the White House, however.
deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes issued a carefully worded
sll!temept,saying Reagan "will not
comprqmise Qn the basic
plan ...across·the·board cuts for
three years and 25 percent."

SAVE PLENTY ON ALL SUMMER
CLOTHING
FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN,
.
.
MEN AND BOYS- QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED
- ALL SALES
FINAL
...
.
.
--

.

Large group of quality Revlon

Our entire stock of women's
summer dresses is included in
th is sale . Misses and Half Sizes.

Quality Jr . Dresses in the latest
styles and colors.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

$12.00 ............ SALE $9.00
$15.00 ............ SALE $11.25
$18.00 ........... SALE $13.50
$25.00 ........... SALE $18.75

Sizes S·M · L · XL .
styles.

BOYS 13.95 SHORTS ... : ............. 12.56
BOYS 14.95 SHORTS ..... ........... '3.21
BOYS '5.95 SHORTS ................ 13.86
BOYS 18.95 SHORTS ............... .. 15.81

$5.95 SWIM TRUNKS .. .... $3.85
$7.95 SWIM TRUNKS .. .... $5.16
$8 .95 SWIM TRUNKS ...... $5.81

Special Sale Reg. '5.00 &amp; '6.00

GUN CABINETS

Terry Scuffs and
Ballerina
styles. In assorted colors. Sizes
S·M ·L · XL

Gun Capacity
-Locking Doors
-Lower Storage Compartment
-Pine or Oak Finish

MEN'S '19.95
MEN'S 122.95
MEN'S 124.95
MEN'S '29.95

.

JACKETS ................113.95
JACKETS ............... .116.00
JACKETS ................ '17.45
JACKETS .............. .. '20.95

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

.

'6.00 ................. ...... SALE 13.90
19.00 ....................... SALE '5.85
'13.00 .................... · SALE '8.45
118.00 ................... SALE 111.70

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

' .PRE-TEEN SPORTSWEAR

Sizes 8 to 20. Wear with jeans, or for
dress . Stock up now for back to school .
Tank tops are included .

Blouses, slacks, skirts, tops, shorts and
jeans. Sizes 3/ 6 to 11/14.

3.95 Shirts-~ ,.... .,, .. 2.95
Boys' SS.95 Shirts. ................ 54.45
&lt;
BOY5;-ss:9fshirts ..
.. :·.t6.7o
Boys' '9.95 Shirts.,. .............. '7.45
Boys' '10.95 Shirts ............... '8.20
5

Reg. 5 7.00~ .. ·~-- .. Sale '4.90
Reg. '11.00 .................. Sale '7.70
Reg. '1J.OO ........... _, __Sale '11.90
Reg. '25.00-..................
Sale '17.50
-· - - -· .. Reg. '31.00 .................. Sale '21.70
~ -~

VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS .................. '8.40
MEN'S $13.00

VAN HEUSEN .SHIRTS ...... ~ .. .. .. ..... '9.10
"

VA,N HEUSEN SHIRTS ................. '10.50
·MEN'S $16,00

VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS
.. _............ 11.20
. -..

'

REG. $7 .OO ...............SALE $5.25
REG. $9.00 ............... SALE $6.75
REG. $13.00 ............. SALE $9.75
REG . $17 .00 ........... SALE $12.75
I

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

DRESS SALE
sunsuits, pant outfits,

Dresses,
coat
and dress sets, crawlers and sleepers.
Sizes NB to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7 to
14.

MEN'S $14.95

REG. '3.50 ....................... SALE 12.45
REG. 14.50 ..... ;................. SAL£ '3.15
.
1
REG. 7.50 ... :,, ................. SALE '5.25

SPORT SHIRTS ........................ '7.~6
MEN'S 511.95
SPORT _S}tiRTS........................ '8.36
SPORT SHIRTS ...................... '10.46

REG. 112.00..................... SALE '8.40
REG. 1 17.oo ~:: ..... ~: .. :....... SALE 111.90
.REG. '23.00 .................... SALE '16.10

MEN'S 516.95

I

SPORT SHIRTS ..................... '11.86

REG. 58.50., ................. SALE '5.95

Men's sll.95 ~;~ .......... ~. ;..SU$· .

'·

REG. sn.OO ... .'. :: ........... SALE ?.70

•

.

.

- ·.'·.

MensI '12•95

.

~

.

FRID"Y TIL 8:00P.M.- SATURDA

•

'

o

I I

0 I

1 '

'5.96

,•...•................ '7.46

enttne
1 Section , 11 Pag es
15 Cents
A Mul1im ediil Inc. N

10,1981

Court orders man's release
. DENVER - A federal appeals court on Thursday ordered the
release of a Cuban refugee imprisoned.since his arrival more than a
S/ear ago on the "Freedom Flotilla" on grounds the government was
using imprisonment in place of deportation.
The 1oth-U,S. eircui( Court of Appeals gave the government 30 days
to release Pedro Rodriguez, 48.:It said the government has the options
of simply releasing him, 'paroling him or attempting to deport him to
Cuba or any other country that would accept him.

CINCINNATI - A federal appeals court is pondering whether a new
civil trial should be granted to victims of the fatal Beverly Hills Sup·
per Club blaze alter a lower court jury found the alwnlnwn wire in·
dustry not liable.
.
·
The May 28, 1977, fire at the posh Southgate, Ky., nightspot claimed
165llves and injured 50. Attorneys lor the injure~! and victims' families
have won nearly $20 million ill subsequent litigation.
Plaintiffs maintained that the fire was caused by "old technology"
aluminum wiring, but a jury ruled in 1980 that their lawyers had not
prove~! the case.

~~~ :Ohio - rider~ firearms agents SI!Y they had fireworks
dealer Billy'Stevenson under .surveillance for three years before he
and three pf his fariliiY members l!ere shot to cl9eh.
Aspokesman for the ti,s.Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
said Thursday in Cincinnati that the agency had been watching
~Venljlln because infof~IU~nts said he had guns In his possession.
Slevei'L!Iop, 49, his 36-year-old wife, Linda, 5-year-old son, Billy, and
30·year;Old brother·in·iaw, Edward Dowell of West Virginia, were shot
to death Monday morning in the family 's 15·room home. The house
had been set on fire.
·

Unemployment rose last week

SITE PREPARATION Karr Construction Com·
!!'BY, l:bester, general C«!ntrBctor for tile $1.5 million
Meigs County school for the mentally handicapPed aud
adult workshop to be built on the former Carleton
College land in Syracue, began site preparation work
this week. In the above photo, Blaine Milhoan, bulldozer
operator for Pulllns Excavating, is shown moving dirt
and, at right, Paul Karr and his son, Roger, are pictured
shooting grades. Paul Karr will be in charge of the work
done on the project by Karr Construction. Groundbreaking for the new ·facility, to be named Carleton
School, has been set for by the Meigs County Com·
missioners for Wednesday, July 15, at noon.

'

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-...

·' ;i

,, .•

,.,
1
'

OOLUMBUS, Ohio - Both employment and unemployment rose
during the week ending July 4, state officials say.
The nwilber of claimants out of work one wtek or more was
estimated at 128,000 last week, down from 132,620 the previous week.
Newly jobless claimants totaled 18,621 last week, up from 17,237 the
previous week.
'
The decline among claimants unemployed a week or more stemmed
from benefits e"'!iring and unemployed people finding jobs, officials
said.
··

WASHING TON - The Reagan administration is formally dumping
human rights as the key factor in whether foreign nations may buy
American anns. "We will deal with the world as it is, rather than as
we would Jilie ltto be,'' the new policy declares.
The ad!ninistration also is abandoning what It says was former
President Carter's policy of " unilateral restraint" on arms transfers
abroad.
Nonetheless, the officials, who spoke on the condition they not !Je
identified, denied that the policy will ignite a new arms race In con·
ventional weapons.

R iO,ts.spread across London .
_:.,

f.

'

' '

I

LONDON - Rlqtlng spr~d across 11 IAncion neighborhoods and
broke out again tn 'MJinchester in the seventh ltnifght night Of Britlah
*"t violence, But the poll~ struc!t back forcefully and s"med to be · ·
getting the upper hjjnd .
Sco~. Xaril. S~tld It me~ jeenng mobil in. strength wilh bobbil!s
carryiQ8 n,ot shiel~, arrested more than 50 people In London and
dlspe~ tile pn4Ji of while and black youtha who were roaming the

~:~·~ =~ce ~as WooiWJ~h, in~

In
southeast, where
'l1 people were arrested, two CBJ"!l overturned 8J!d lih9pe damaged.

' '"' )

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.

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Panel .may face political questions
COLUMBUS, Ohio f AP ) - Anew
HouseSenate panel created to ad.
vise Ohio how to spend federal funds
it gets under a proposed block grant
program may face thorny political
questions, the Senate minority
leader says.
" It's going to be a serious
problem," said Harry Meshel, D·
Youngstown. "It could be political
dynamite."
The lP·memher Joint Legislative
Committee on Federal Funds was
crea~ i!ll! joint resolution ap·
· prOYJd last week recommend bow
ihe •block grant "tunds should be

session is to be held in conjunction
with a meeting of the National Con·
terence of State Legislatures.
The panel, in other duties, will
monitor the receipt, expenditure and
distribution of federal money ap·
propria ted by the General Assembly
and he required to review all ap·
plicatlons made by state agencies
for federal money. It also will
suggest how the amount of state

programawouldbeconsolidatedinto
sixll bltedocktgralndin~vl·dThel
ylawteould ofbe
0
08 s
a oca
s to ·
[set part of the Spending Cutbacks In
variO!IIfederalprograms.
Meshe~ lllld Ohio overall is ex·
· 25
t 1
pected to receive
percen ess
federal· ai~ ,ll) ·the fin! year of the
JII'OIIrBill than the year before. "It's
my~ tha.t the effective loss ov~r
"' the Re
·
the ·... four years · "'
- Ine....
s would '- 1
t' 50agan
,..
.,.......
...., c Iller o per· .
centormore,"
hellai!!.

Jerome R. Brockway, Wor·
thlngton, was named new superln·
tendent of the Gallla.Jackson-VInton
Vocational SChool district during the
vocational board's Thursday night
meeting.
E!rockway succeeds Ponney Cisco,
who.-hasbee
' ,n,actlngsuperintendent

matching funds, in relation to
federal programs, should he ap·
propriated and report to legislative
leaders on congressional action that
could affect any General Assembly
appropriation.
Senate President Paul E. Gillmor,
R·Port Clinton, said the panel will be
a step forward in deciding how state
agencies receive and spend federal
money . It "will alw be valuable in

dealing with the Reagan ad .
ministration's proposal of block
grant' by making sure that the block
grant monies are spent based on
priorities established by the
Legislature ," he sa1d. ·
The panel will consist of three
majority party members and two ·
minority party members !rom both
the Senate and House.

8 oard e.mp }oys supermtendent ;
w
~51~~:r:~:::c::~~~ CAA wo~ay for youth program
1

''

sin9t1 the re~I!I\Btion of Clarence E.
TI!Qmpson last:October.
~ vote ..;as
" '7·2 for Brockway's
a· tn'= ent. v:..'-~,
agafnst were
uw'~~

Local govel'llllle{lts facing money, . ~~ ~ ~~::· ad·
shortages because of federal cut. -,~lniO.oaw~ay,in
:stu'Cien't d'e•,-elop·
bacl!llnd other fiscal problems will ~·-r,-.
·
-· '" ·
inen! se ces · · ~nt Of the
111!8k equtta~te treatlhe!lt from the COl b CJtv School District
stale In: dlatrlbUtion .f!l block gra~
H~ aJl·a ·COnllultant with the
fWlda. M~ jllld.· ~ also will ...le .wu.....,;;.,t of education in
want "Uiurances !her'! won't be .... r r-· -·:-r: .
-.t~..n poll..-...1 ••-u l'·~e said· '•' 1973·75 ,and. a' .teacher il) the
r::~.·
..... .-,._
' . .. ~leld · Local School District
. ii!Prtl'..
ftirllltitilll will lave Ill bl.aet, up,~r · fmn
,?3. Br.Mway received-his
•ofthemoney,Milbel-lalct,,.: J, . •-"•-•1988
u-""' ••'" .~.~...-~I
~ lllWIIII8 at u~&lt;JI'l Cc!l!ege, ~r ·
. - - __, ID ··-•·- Clll .,.on,~ 'bcilltVill . ~ -~ Binl'lin&amp;'Gs:!l;t!l Stale
0.1HMII'tlt ltjjl•~ lea~ 'UIIivelat~·
Ohio S&amp;lte~ Unlver·
Olilo and 4lblr IIGiih llld ·
~~
·
··
" II .DiitltlliltDillllltiiiAtlliita til\&gt;'· · ·, .
· · ..
July to dllc:iiD tbii lilue. The' Is matrloo alid has two

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-~iiies casual styles. Good selec·
~
S, M, L, XL, XXL .

REG: ·tS.OO .. :...... ~ .......... SALE 14.20

..

•

MEN'S.·KNIT .SHIRTS

This sale includes denims, tennis shor·
ts, action shorts, and dressy styles . Not
.
every size in every style.

.

·'

· ENTIRE STOCK
-·

MEN'S '7.95 Shorts ................ '5.55
Men's '9.95 Shorts .................. f6~95

REG. 4.50.................... SALE S3.15

at y

•••

R 'eagan dumps human rights

LITTlE GIRLS'

S, M, L and XL Sizes. so li ds and pat·
terns. Good selection. All short sleeve
styles.
MEN'S $10 .95

Pastel colors in assorted styles. Sizes 6
mos. to Size 14.
..

Feather Leather, Cloth, ca·n·
vass, Cloth Eyelet and Terry_
Cloth. Many styles and colors.

JULY SALEI

MEN'S SHORTS

.

SUMMER HANDBAGS

Tank Tops, Blouses, Midriffs
and Knit Tops. Sizes 6 mos. to 24
mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14.
REG. $2.50 .............. SALE $1.85
REG. $4.00 ............. . SALE $3.00
REG. $6.50 .............. SALE $4.85
REG. $11.00 ............ SALE $8 .25

FASHION PANTS
·-· - .
1

•21100

SALE

SUMMER TOPS

DRESS SHIRTS
.

REG. $419.95

SALE

JULY CLEARANCE

Clearance sale prices on entire stock
men's short ~leeve styles . Neck s izes
141!2 to 17 112. Solids and patterns .
MEN'S ff2.00 .-

•

Ohio, Friday, Ju

.F'_tt.~.,'!l~!'~ W':f~C.!!:~ng victim

Beautiful
lighted · display
cabinets for your home. Oak,
cherry and pecan finishes.

Y2 PRICE

LimE GIRLS' .

~

CURIO CABINETS

One size fits size 10 to 13. Choose
Banlon panel. o:- bulky knit
orion . While they last.

VAN HEUSEN

1

REG . $14.00 ............. SALE $9.10
REG. $17.00 .. ......... SALE $11.05
REG. $24.00 ........... SALE $15.60
REG. $38.00 ........... SALE $24 .70

LimE GIRLS'

Sunsuits, Sleepers, Fancy Out·
fits . Sizes N B to 24 mos . 2-4, and
4·7.

XL . Limited

Men' s $7 .95 SWIM TRUNKS $4.75
Men's$8 .95 SWIM TRUNKS$5.35
Men's $9 .95 SWIMTR U NKS $5.95
Men 's $10.95 SWIM TRUNKS $6.55

MEN'SS15.00

Special prices on pre· teen,
junior, misses and extra size
swimwear.

MEN'S $1 50 DRESS SOCKS

•39900

•

Court ponders trial situation

SWIMWEAR SALE

Good style selection. Sizes S·M ·
L· XL. Buy now for wear now
and
early
fall .

SUMMER OUTFITS

MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS

Boys'

WOM~N'S

LITTLE BOYS'

SALE PRICES

5

-

~ TO

SPECIAL

Size S·M ·L and
quantity .

REG. $12.00 ............ SALE $8.40
REG. $23.00 ........... SALE $16.10
REG. $29.00 ..... ...... SALE $20.30
REG . $31.00 ..... ...... SALE $21.70

CLOSE-OUT SALE!

ANGEL TREAD SLIPPERS

" -

JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR

BOYS '8.95 JACKETS ................... '5.37
BOYS '14.95 JACKETS ................. '8.97
BOYS 118.95 JACKETS.: ....... ....... 111.37

REG. $489.00
... .

SALE

Slacks, blazers, tops and shorts.
Jr. Sizes. S·M· L· XL

waist

'

%_PRICE

MEN'S

Boxer

Even that did not quiet Senate
Republicans.
After the Speakes statement,
Senate f-4ajority Leader Howard
Baker said he still thinks there is
room for compromise as long as
~gan gets a bill that covers three
years, benefits every class of lax·
payer and provides special in·
centives for savings and investment.
That would fit any compromise en·
visioned by Dole.
·Rostenkowski did not react
publicly to Dole's invitation to talk,
which the senator repeated at the
White House on Thursday. But some

share it - that there certainly is no
rush in the House" to pass the bill,
Baker said.
The House traditionally originates
tax legislation, but Baker said he
S&lt;.es no reason the Senate cannot go
first. Even if the Senate can pass the
largest tax cut in history with no
more than four days' debate, there is
no assurance that will force the
House into quicker action. The bill
cannot become law until it clears
both houses in identical form .
The Ways and Means Committee,
which is continuing to write its own
bill, now plans to wrap up work by
July 24 and have the House pass the
measure on July 31 . That would give
a House Senate conference one week
to work out differences

-

Boys sizes 8 to 20. Good style
selection. Perfect for wear now
and back to school.

BOYS SWIM TRUNKS

Size 8 to 18 . Action shorts and
denim cut-offs. Hurry in for best
selection .

Americans.''

J:?emOCIJ!.ts who did only ser· Democrats.
"Well, we got shot down so quickly
vel! !O clo"'ftlle ~ue further.
when
that tried to happen that I
"It will never '!Iappen," R.ep. Tom
don't
know
whether it's worthwhile
Downey, D'-N.Y., a ntemher of the
trying
now
or not, " the
Ways and Meai'L!I Committee, said of
Massachusetts
Democrat
said. "But
the compro{nise effort.
Rostenkowski
will
talk
to Dole
House Republican Leader Robert
again.
tt
H. Michel of Illinl&gt;is said he thought
Meanwhile, Baker announced that
talk of a corripromise was " over·
the
Senate - tired o! waiting on the
exaggerated."
House - will go ahead with its own
And O'Neill, wbo already has lost
three major tests over budget tax-cut bill next week. In fact, he
policy, did not sound excited about told a news conference, his plai'L!I
the prospect of another round of call for the Senate to complete ac·
negotiations. He recalled that tion on the measure by the end of the
0eJJ1l)Crlltic leaders tried for several · week. That version, written by
weeks to negotiate a tax bill with the Dole's corrunittee, is very dose to
White House, only to have those ef· what Reagan recommended.
"There is a growing belief in
forts abandoned after Reagan
struck a deal with conservative Washington - and I'm afraid I
~r

Dark tanning oils, sunscreens,
sunburn relief, after tanners .

LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS

Cl.IARANCE

BOYS SHORTS

HAWAIIAN TROPIC
TANNING. SUPPLIES

BOYS'

Denims, twills and polyesters.
White and assorted pastels in
styled pants. Sizes 3 to 20.

$14.25
$17 .25
$23.25
$28.50

CLiARANCE

1j3 OFF

JR. SLACKS

Speakes said. "He wants a tax cut
for all Americans, not lust some

e

,

One and two piece suits,
trunlls and c:overups.

1f2 PRICE

JR. DRESS SALE

-

.

"That's what he agreed to,"

.

CHILDREN'S SWIMWEAR
.··SALE

cosmetics, perfumes and colognes.

SAVE 30%

$19.00 ...... ... .. SALE
$23 .00 ... ...... .. SALE
$3l.OO ............ SALE
$38 .00............ SALE

.

COSMETIC SALE

WOMEN'S DRESS SALE

REG .
REG.
REG.
REG.

.

'

.,;.

,,7'1 .
aM

·-·'u" ·,

In""

,,,
1

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·

,

children.
In other action, two represen tatives of Community Action Agen,cy
told the board they will not bono&lt;:r a
contract to pay for a summer school
for disadvantaged y,outh.
I)aveGlocknero!theGdaDolliaF·Muletolgs
branch of the agency an
n
n
of the Jackson-Vinton branch met
with the board and said CAA would
not honor a Contract· with Buckeye
HiJlS·Career Center .in effect since
last October ln which the center
would provide counseling and
training for disadvantaged youth un·
der the Youth Employment and
Training Program.
Glockner and Fulton said the cen·
ler has not satisfactorly met the ter·
ms of the contract, so the agency
will not pay Its agreed &lt;JI'l portion for
the summer session.
The contract between the aaency
..
. and the school is due to expire Sept.

lawyer.
The board also adoptoo a 1!182 total
budget of $3,841,110. A balance of
$627,733 is projected at the end of the
year.
The budget includes a general
fundof$2 ,477,292. h boa d
In other busmess, t e r :
-Reopened bids for 30 days for
the purchase of data processor
word-data keyboards. The board
said the corporations that have bid
thus far did not follow ProPer
procedures.
· ·
..:.Approved a contract with the
stateBoardofEducationfortheconstruction of the Human Resource
Center. The center will be built with
a $250,000 Appalachian Regi01181
Commission grant.
- Approved an EMT·A refresher
course with the Gallia County
Eme""encv Medical Service
_ .
.
... '
-Revised the contract .of Marian·
31.
ne T. ()"omartle from one to' two
The board decided to discuss the yearsand~reasedhersalaryfrom
situation with the school system's $15,536 to $16,183.

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