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                  <text>Planner reviews us _e proposals

.,

By JEFF GRABMEIER
The Meigs County Regional Planning Commission
heard plans to develop councy-owned land near
Veteran's Memorial Hospital at Its quarterly meeting
Monday.
James Jennings, of James Jennings Aasociates, a
p1aMing consultant finn from Columbus, told the commlsslon the land could be used for a combination of
congregate housing , a convenience store and parking,
1ow·1ncome public housing, a single family subdivision,
a recreation center and a county park.
Very little of the land Is developable because of the
steep slopes, widely varying drainage conditions and

.....

Our Sptoill Prioe
$4.11 Ltu $1.80
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NEUON'S REG. 11.11

CRAYOJIS

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New Yorkers pay high rates

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WASIDNGTON- New Yorkers pay the highest rates for electricity
among the nation's 25 largest cities, according to the N'tional
Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners.·
The organization said .Moriday that electricity cost New Yorkers an
average of 11.67 cents .a kilowatt hour between last December and
F:~l!niacy, _cQ!Ilpa~ with 4,:l6 cents..a kilowatt hour in St. Louis, the
city wi!h Jlle low~t r.ates.
.The ~ond highest rate, 10.06 cents, was paid by residents of
Honolulu. San Diego, Calif., was third at 9.89 cents, followed by Boston
at 9.45 cents.

0

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Excessive usage impairs drive
WASIDNGTON - &lt;kcasional use of marijuana can enhance sexua
desii"e, but chronic smokers may find their sexual functions impaired,
a new study says.
Researchers at the University of Texas said Monday that new
animal studies appear to resolve the contradiction be1ween what
marijuana users said they felt and what scientists measured.
The active ingredient in marijuana, tetrahydrocapnabinol, or TIIC,
has different effects on male sexual honnones in a short period of
time, the scientists say.

NELSON'S REG. $4,79
NILSON'S RIO,

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Police investigate stabbings

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vision of Paul Karr is the general contractor. The bulding will have 21,000
square feet and is expected to be completed by June of next year,
providing the building is under roof before winter.

UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Construction of Carleton School, a
trainiDg center and workshop l~ated In the village of Syracuse for the
mentally retarded, Is well under way. Karr Comtructlon under the super-

Firm recommends water tower site
. ,.

.....

Middleport may have a site for a
new water tower, Mayor Fred Hoffman told the village council at a
meeting last night.
An engineering firm hired by the
city reccomended It be built on the
hill west of Vine Street, on property
owned by Jim Brewer.
Brewer said he would give the city
easement to use the land , under
several conditions which the council
discussed last night.
Brewer asked for, and council
discussed the following: a six inch

tap oat the top of the hill; unlimited
use of the access road to the new
tower for Brewer ; a fire hydrant on
Vine Street; and free water service
for Brewer.
Hoffman said the engineering finn
will begin doing core drillings at the
site in the near future.
In other business, the council approved using $3,000 eannarked for
lighting in Middleport Pa rk to resur·
face and repair the basketball courts.
The recreatilt boa rd has said the

money is not needed fur lighting,
Hoffman told the council.
The $3,000 is part of $5,000
originally appropriated for lighting .
Hoffman also told the council that
the village will be able to wait unti l
neKt year to pay $4,000 it owes for
road resurfac ing.

Road improvement co"t $17,000
this year, but only $13,000 was
avail•ble, he said.
The resurfacing company told the
village it ca n pa y the remainder or
the bill next year, Hoffman said .

The council also discussed the
possibility of buying land near the
city park fo r use as parking.
I .and on A"h Street near Imperial
Elect ric and land between Plum and
Syca mo re

str eet s

we re

tw o

possibilities discussed.
Hoffman sa id he is unsure if these
properties are avail able .

The council approved on second
read ing ordinances to raise the
wa ter service deposit and to close

the marma al 11 p.m.

Democrats predict tax plan victory

(API
WASHINGTON
Democratic leaders, accusing
President Reagan of waging a
" political trench fight ," concede his
nationally broadcast appeal may
have swayed crucial votes for his
tax cut but predict they will heat him
anyway in Wednesday's showdown
on the House floor.
Saying " this is not the time for
political .fun and games," Reagan
sought Monday night to mobilize an
.
.
anny of Americans to lobby for his
tax plan with "letters, telegrams
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - A Coast Guard rescue team turned up a
and
personal visits."
. five-foot sec.tion of an airplane wing Monday during its search for an
Some
congressmen reported an
Ohio-born pilot and an Piper Apache aircraft missing since last Thurimmediate
burst or telephone calls,
sday.
but
one
Democrat
who sided with
A Coast Guard spokesman said the debris was found drifting off
Reagan
on
budget
cuts
earlier this
CQoper Island Just sout.h of Tortola In the Britlsh Virgin Islands.
year.said he would vote against the
president on taxes and at least two
Democrats ~rgeted by the · White
House lobbying drive remained undecided.
!,{eagan also tried to blunt
Democratic criticism that he was
sides~pping the politicaily sensitive
issue of Social Security financing,
telling his audience: " You have no
reason to be frightened," that no one
.noW 1~ependent on bl!nefits will have
their monthly checks reduced.
,He said he would·talk about Social
..
.Security at length later but the
~
I~
overriding factor now is taxes.
the· spe!!Ch came. less than 48
' l
,
hours before the tax batUe is to
. ·/·1~ ~ ~ wlnnlitg number) lr•wn Miin!lay night !ii'tlie · :·reach the floot "" 'the Deinocra.tic' ®ototter)''sdlllyg\I!M"'TI\e.Numlier" wu243". : . . • ·
. c.ontrolleil f!Otlle. The chOice wUl be
~
between . Reagan's plan and a
·· Dt mocrauc ·, alterna~lve the
.·P?'l!¥nt p,_l}ded af'j~ apotljllr
"~' 'i!Jl!pty.pro~ .'~ ' , .
. .
;
Reagah's jllan'lil for a 33-ffiorith, 25
percent Cllt in ta1 ntes, starting
~- I With everyone g~ttlng the
SaDie pemntage, J'educll\111 re_
gardless of ", !ncome" It l!lcl.udes
· tllutlei!l. . ·. · autclmatle cuts each year. Sl&amp;lting In
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Bexley police on Monday were investigating
the slaying of the Ill-month-old girl whose body was found during the
weekend.
Catherine Ferrin and her mother, Marcia Jane Ferrin, 31, were
discovered lying on the kitchen floor around 4 p.m. Saturday, police
said.
According to the Franklin County coroner's office, Mrs. Ferrin's
wrists had been slashed and Catherine had been stabbed in the chest 25
·times.

cent cut, also effective Oct. 1, tilted
to people earning less than $50,000 a
year. A third-year, 10 percent cut
wot~ld be allowed only if the administration meets its goals for
lowering inflation, interest rates and
the federal deficit.
" I must agree, he's a super
salesman," House Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill Jr. said after watching
Reagan's speech on televisiOn.
The Massachusetts Democrat,
who lost to Reagan on two earlier
budget votes, said that as of .Monday, " we have the votes to win" on

taxes, but llt! sa id he couldn't say
whether that margin would hold up
in the face of the president 's new lolr
bying offensive.
O'Neill sa id he counted 14
Democra ts soli dly aga in st the
Democratic bill with seven or eight
still on the fence . He predicted an
overall loss of 21 to 22 Democrats which would give the Democrats a
narrow victory asswning all 191
Republicans voted for the Reag an
plan.
There a re 435 House mem be rs.

Rep. Dan Rostenknwski of lllinois,

the Democratic chatnnan of the taxwriti ng House Ways and Means
Conuni ttec, said Reagan " has
reduced the debate over a trilliondolla r ta x cut to a political trench
fi ght."
Reagan also stepped up hi s lotr
bymg in the White House, meeting
with 16 House members Monday and
in viting more today.
The thru st of the White House
campaign, however, was to build
publi c pressure on Congress, the
s aJne strategy Reagan used in win-

(Continued on page 10 )

Offers U.S. military facilities

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Search continues for Ohio pilot

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•Heavy duty material that withstand excestlve use
•Water resistant and scuff -proof
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/

'

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - A Laotian refugee who told his wife the
only option they had was to " hang themselves" was found hanging
near his home - the same day federal officials decided to continue
funding a special welfare program the family depended on.
A social worker said Shue Long Vue, 62, was despondent over a letter he received Saturday saying funding was being canceled for the
Hmong Family Association. He was found hanging from a tree Monday.

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•Pu ll ou r dull point
•Push new point up

IN THEW

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PEACOCK WATER COLORS

NILSON'S 110. ts•

FLEX 3 IOTEBOOK

2 Section s, 14 Pages
15 Cents
A Multi m ed ia Inc . N ew spaper .

RALEIGH, N.C. - Rep. Stephen Neal, 0-N.C., says he's asked tbe
U.S. attorney general 's office- to investigate a letter from a conservative group he said tried to bribe him into voting for President
Reagan's tax-i:ut plan.
Neal said the letter he received Friday was from John T. Dolan,
chainnan of the National Conservative Political Action COIIJillittee.
Neal said NCPAC is spending $500,000 in 13 congressional districts on a
campaign il) favor of the tax program.

NELSON'S REO. 11.29

&amp;9c

18" VIIYL SPORT BA&amp;

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MARKERS
$149

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 28,1981

Claims group offered bribe

CRAYOLA

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YOUR CHOICE

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He said there are also numerous gas and electric
transmission lines, water tanks and their buried lines
lhlltJWlY pose problems.
Most of the land, which ls boarded by Mulberry and
Union Avenues, would be best suited for a county park,
Jennings said.
A convenience store, which would sell 8 limited
range of popular items such as bread, milk. and ice
cream, IB suggested for 8 site near the hospital. ·
· Low-Income public housing has been proposed for
the southward trending ridge located southwest of the
conununlc8tion towers and water tanks .

NILSON'S RIO. 17'

NILSON'S RIO. '14.4t

.....

who do not have to live in a nul"lling horne, yet want
About 30 homes c.-~ ·•.olfl accom.,. if a road conmore services than they receive living alone.
nection ls built, he said.
. '
In other business, the commission :
Jennings pr'OpOSed a recreation center consisting of a
swimming pool, tennis courts and parking could be "' - Voted to suptlori the hiring of a full-time county
planner at a cost of $25,000. The final decision rests
built along the west side of the Union Avenue-Mulberry
with the county commissioners.
Avenue access road.
- Fonned a conunittee to examine how the county
The northwest corner of the property would be suited
for large-lot, single family homes, he said, if an access
can streamline its system of approving property tranroad to the area is built.
sfers. The present system is confusing to the public and
takes too much time, the conunission agreed.
Jennings said plans have already begun to build a
congregate housing facility near the multi-purpose
- Decided to ask the state to build a connecting road
center and the Children's Horne.
between Rock Springs and the new Ravenswood
bridge.
He explained congregate housing is for the elderly

other problems, according to J ennings.

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Pag-2-The D.ally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlejlort, Ohio
Tuesd.ay, July 28,1981

·Sports, ,World
.

To a granddaughter, aged ll..a.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J_am_es_ J._ .x_upa_tri_ck
(Editor's Note: Mr. Kilpatrick's
column today is cast as his annual
birthday letter to his granddaughter.)
Heather, my love So we get to Milepost II. It's what
they used to call a way station, hack
in the days when passenger trains
ran everywhere - a point that's
neither here nor there, a kind of flag
stop between little girl and young
woman. It 's not a bad place, just a
necessary place, and I think you'll
like it.
But, then, I can't think of anything
offhand that you don't like, snakes

and wasps and getting out of the
swimming pool excepted. That's one
of the truly nice things about you,
Heather. You go at new experiences
like you go to dinner, running hard
for President of the Clean Plate
Club. "That's neat," you say. In a
disorderly world, what could be
nicer?
For the record (your grandfather
is forever saying, "for the record" I,
you reach II years old standing four
feet, 10 inches tall and weighing just
under 90 pounds. Your eyes get a lit·
tie bluer year by year. That blond
hair of yours comes down to your
waist, and your legs stretch a ll the

Brazil seeks to
clarify image
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (API - Brazil, which claims to be capitalist but
which has a large measure of state control, is seeking to clarify its image by
selling government-run companies to private parties.
One reaSon, observers here claim, is the feeling that the government
bureaucracy has grown too large and unwieldly, and that it contributes to an
inflation rate in excess of 100 percent a year.
But the offer to transfer assets to the private sector is limited.
First, sizable categories of government-run firms are excluded from the
offer, among them businesses linked to "national security." Those falling into the categories of " legal state monopolies," "products of basic strategic
importance" and " Brazilian control of the development process," are also
exi:Iuded.
That means private entrepreneurs can't buy the post office, the Rio de
Janeiro Phone Company or the Sao Paulo state railway system. Neither can
they bid for Ebraer, Brazil's main airplane factory, or Petrobras, the
federal oil monopoly .
Second, no state-run firm up for sale may be turned over to a foreigner.
The government doesn't explain why - IJ.Jt there has been criticism recently
of multinational corporate activity in Brazil.
President Joao Figue~redo said the sell-off plan is designed to lessen "unfair or unnecessary competition" between the government and local private
enterprise. But newspapers here say a more accurate reason is that
Figueiredo, an ex-army general, is upset that many government-linked firms are exceeding their budgets and contributing to the nation's record 120
percent annual inflation rate.
In 1964, when armed forces leaders overthrew a legally elected civilian ad·
ministration, they explained that among other things that they were seeking
to stop Brazil from '' going corrununist.''
Since then, however, the federal bureaucracy has expanded so much that
critics say it is hard to detect economic differences between "capitalist"
Brazil and centrally planned conununist states.
According to the latest issue of Visao magazine's " Who's Who in the
Brazilian Economy," a sort of " Fortune 500" report, the nation's biggest 32
companies are under some form of government control.
Veja magazine, Brazil's largest newsweekly, reported that of the $96.4
billion dollars of assets represented by the country's 200 biggest firms, 77.9
percent is linked to the government.
Luis Eulalia Vidigal Bueno, president of the powerful Sao Paulo State Industries Federation, probably the country's most'powerful private busmess
lobby, cautiously called Figueiredo's plan to sell government companies
"opportune."
But Fernando Nabuco de Abreu, Sao Paulo Stock Exchange president, told
a Braz&gt;lian newsman the president's plan does not go far enough.

Letter to the editor
Proud coaches-- - - - - - . , - -. - -

This year l was asked to coach aT·
Ball team at Racine. From the start
of the first practice to the last pitch
of the last game I was really impressed and proud.
During the season we had a bake
sale which was a big success. All
parents worked hard to make eve rything so easy.

What I'm trying to say is thanks to
all Moms , Dads and people who
sponsored the team . Also the
coac hes, Graig Harrison. Terry Var-

way to the floor. Those legs will be
spectacular one of these days. Right
now they're chigger-bit and blackberry-scratched, but that's country
living.
It's been a good year for you, the
year that you were 10. Back in ~
Iober, you may remember, our
house was open for the church's annual House Tour. You got assigned
to serve as a hostess down at the
greenhouse, and you proved to be a
natural-born tour guide. "This is the
rubber tree," you told the visiting
ladies. "His name is Livingston,
don't ask me why. And these are the
orchids, and that is the hibiscus, and
the name of that !em is Fluffy Duffy,
and this is the Bird of Paradise only
it has smut on Its leaves. This is
Boogie the bougainvillea, and the
rest of the things are geraniwns and
stuff." Next year, Disney World.
Along in February came the great
Girl Scout cookie sale. You won a
hook bag, a pencil box, and all that
other junk - this is getting to be an
old story - by selling 124 boxes, of
which grandfather bought 22. This is
what grandfathers are for . They
have practically no other role in life.
It's great to see you so active in
the Girl Scouts. You may remember
this sunnmer as the summer you
wenl to Girl Scout camp and came
home with a sunburned nose and H
merit badges, including a badge for
"aerospace, " for heaven's sake.
You also qualified for an "advanced
beginner Red Cross certificate" in
lifesaving. Nice work, my love.
Once I asked you to plan your perfect dinner. There was a considerable furrowing of the freckled
brow. "Crab salad," you said
finally. "Lasagna. One of those
French pastry cream cakes for

Douglas in - be can't climb up a

knotted rope. From your tree house
you can see the pond where the
beaver is building his house. The
supporting posts for this mansion
will be set in concrete, but sigh,
cement costs an awful lot of money.
Honey, I tell you, that is the way
homebuilding is.

NEW YORK (AP) - From
whatever source your economic
message comes, it bears rather poor
news for the next few months. Some
bit of discomfort seems assured for
nearly everyone, and a recession
grows more likely.
If your source is antiadministration , the grim outlook is
served up like a dish of cold greasy
stew: Inflation could worsen any
day now; interest rates .plight
remain high; unemploym~nt is
likely to creep up.
Should your source be more friendly to the Reagan people, you will
hear that the economic menu,
though unpalatable as cod liver oil,
1s conducive to the building of strong
bones for future growth.
The message is the same,
however, in that they tell you not to

make big spending plans or take big
risks or dream big dreams for the
rest of the year because its going to
be a tricky time .
The Federal Reserve has
reiterated its intention of keeping his
foot on the monetary brakes. Now ,
people who try to forecast interest
rates have just about written off any
sharp drop before winter.
Cannakers already have experienced one of the worst Junes in
their entire history. They had had
big hopes; this was to have been the
year they would give the American
public the cars it had been demanding. But the public seems unable to
afford them.
Five years ago the family that
needed a big sum - perhaps to buy a
car - might have taken a loan on the
homestead. Try getting a second

mortgage loan today that can be
repaid on "easy tenns."
As the economy slows and as
government support for job
programs shrinks, unemployment
seems headed higher. That doesn't
mean you can rely on the classic
corollary of smaller rises in consumer prices.
No more than decreased economic
activity means Interest rates are
certain to fall. For reasons we'll understand only when these days are
history, prices and Interest may now
have a mind of their own.
The people at the Federal Reserve
who control monetary policy, and
the people at the White House and in
Congress who decide on fiscal
policy, won't come out and say it but
their goals are clear. That is, they
are consciously and willingly flirting

followed by more enormous losses
too.
So what if critics suggest it
resulted from rearranging production periods, or that it might be
traced to tank production or items
other than cars. It was a profit, and
it was certified by the accountants.
F'irst, he said, the country must be
rid of "wasteful and unnecessary
regulations that are crippling

The Daily Sentinel

~v

you can see the lights or Davenport
right over there."
" That's amazing," I said. " I knew
I had gone pretty far, but I didn't
think I was anywhere near Daven-

port.

tl

••• .

Gibson would'pitch game

. Bob Gibson pitched In an era of some of basel)al!'s greatest hurlers. Major
league mounds were peopled by pltcheril like Sandy Koufax, Juan Marichal,
Don Dryadale, and Jim Maloney in !bose days,
SO it seemed eqtlrely reasOnable to ask Gibson which pitcher from his time
he would choose to hurl if his team needed to win that one, crucial game.
He considered the question lor, oh, perhaps two seconds. The answer was
easy. It required a single word.
:"Me!" he said.
Not a ·bad choice. The man compiled an enviable record, winning 251
g~!ffies ih 17 seasons with the St. .Louis Cardinals and striking out 3,117 batters, lhil:d best on the alltime Hst. The credentials earned him election to
baseball's Hall of Fame, and he will be Inducted Sunday.
His plaque in Cooperstown will contiiin - the usual set of numbers
chronicling a marvelous career which produced - ·among other
achievements - 56 shutouts, five 26-victory seasons and a ~ .91 career earned-run average . .
That's all very nice, but if Gibson could choose one thing to be remembered by, it would not be the numbers he accumulated, bul the way heapproached his craft.
"I don't care If people like me,'' he said. "I want people to respect me. I
want them to know me as a competitor, to know that I gave 100 percent
everytmre. I don't want them.to think I ever cheated them. I want them to
know·that I gave my best, every time."
Gibson's ·best was a,m.Jly. good. The.-e was a 7-2 '{l'orld Series record· in·
eluding an awesome, record-setting 17 strikeout performance against
Detroit in the 19118 opener . The 15th whiff Ulat day set the record, and catcher
Tim McCarver, understandably, was rather excited by that development.
"At 15, McCarver came out and was waving his arms," Gibson recalled.
"I motioned for him to throw the ball back, but he wouldn't. He kept pointing
at the scoreboard. I said, 'OK ,fine, now give me the ball and let's go."'
That was Gibson's style. All business. No nonsense. There was simply no
monkeying around allowed while he was In his office on the mound. His competitive approach to the game was legendary.
"Bil!._~te and I were roommates at St. Louis,'' he said. "He liked to
swing '~ .ball outside. I told him if either of us ever got traded and he hit
my pitch out there, I'd hit him on the arm ."
White was sent to Philadelphia, and sure enough he came to the plate one
day with Gibson on the mound.
"He fouled off an outside pitch, and I hit. him on the elbow with the next
one. He and I were close, but when he was on the other club, I had to win."
Winning - that's how you get to the Hall of F'ame.

Love,
Grandfather.

Yokohama breaks
swimming record

with a recession .
They would agree that it would be
nice to avoid it, but to not have a
recession or something akin to it is a
contradiction of the policies they
pursue. Recession, or a serious
slowdown, is a natural consequence
of persistent restrictive monetary
and fiscal policies.
For President Reagan, a tighter
budget is an absolute requirement in
order to get government out of
wasteful, consumptive pursuits, and
return the economy to the more
productive private sector.
In each instance, the probable net
errect is to reduce economic activity
over the short term, regardless ci
the more lasting benefits that might
be expected to follow over the next
few years.

BUCHAREST, Romania iAPI Mayumi Yokohama of Southern Cal
may have surprised a number of
people when she broke the World
University Games 400-meter individual medley record in swimming . She surprised herself even
more by doing it twice in one dsy.
y &lt;ikOhama shaved siX seconds off
the previous record of 5 minutes 6.65
seconds when sbe was timed in
5:00.49 in qualifying Monday morning . She lowered that mark by
another five seconds tater in the day,
capturing the gold medal in 4:55.45
in the final.
" I was pretty surprised by the
whole day," Yokohama said. "I'm
usually pretty nervous during competition 11nd don't expect this sort of
thing."
The United States lost a silvermedal performance in the race.
Stanford's Anne Tweedy was second
in the 400-meter individual medley
in 4:57,68 but was disq'l!liifled for
malpng · an , Ul~gal turn along with
Canadian Lisa .Dixon and Barbara
Seller of West Germany:
American coaches filed a protest,
butto no avail.
"It's 8 pretty . rare thing to seethree disqualifications in a single
race," said U.S. assistant coach
Frank Comfort.
The silver medal was awarded to
Romania's Irinel Panulescu, while

America's basic industries."
"Keep the good ones, and throw
out the bad ones," he said. "Get rid
of the air bag. Belts are better." A
return to regulatory reason, he said,
would save Chrysler alone more
than $000 million by 1985.
"Second, we need a monetary
policy that assures a steady supply
of money at a rate the country can
afford," he said.

A breakthrough in air trave_]_Art_B_u_ch_wa_ld
ch a plane in Chicago for Davenpor~
Iowa. I started walking toward my
gate; then, realizing that I had only
an hour to make it, I started jogging.
A few miles later I noticed that I still
wasn't anywhere near the gate, so I
started sprinting. But because I was
carrying a briefcase, I just didn't
have the spurt I needed for the last
few miles, and I missed my plane.
The airline ticket attendant was
very sympathetic and said to me,
"Why don't you walk to Davenport?
It's only a fliw more miles down the
road."
"Only a few more miles down the
road?"
''Yes, we don't like to talk about it,
because we naturally want peOple to
fly, but most of our airline terminals
have been spreading out so far, that
our departUre gates are located only
a few miles from where people are
going. If you look out the window,

.

·.·

'----------------------~

Chrysler chief may have listeners
straight quarterly losses totalling
$3.1 billion?
Now lacocca may have listeners.
Although Chrysler's had a first-half
loss of $287 million or $4.46 a share,
the second quarter of that period,
taken alone, showed a $12 million
profit, six cents a share gain.
That's a profit so tiny it can almost
fit on the tip of a creative accountant's pen. And it may be

.

.

BjWIDG~

tember Is a long way off. Meanwhile
there are books to be read and trees
to be cUmbed and anlmals to be watched, and of course, an eleventh birthday to be properly· observed. Will
you remember what you wanted for
this birthday? A tackle box, a pair of
skates, and something for the stamp
colleclton. That's neat, Heather, and
so are you.

In September comes the sixth
grade, with a couple of favorite
teachers for· math and English and
history and all that stuff, but Sep-

'

Al'Cornt~

Economic outlook still looks bad •••

NEW YORK (API - Lee lacocca,
chairman of the embattled Chrysler
ney, Ronnie Wagner , Kenny Rizer
Corp. and architect of the ' 'biggest,' '
and Larry Groggle.
most glorified and publicized sixWe had a great time and even lear·
cent quarterly profit ever recorded,
ned a little.
generally has a lot to say.
Denny and Linda Evans
The problem for him and
Racine
Chyrysler, however, has been that
he hasn't always had an audience.
Who seeks opinions from the head of
What 's wrong with this country? before long or jelly beans, one or the a company that compiled nine
The goverrunent keeps investing or other? Well, America, your stars
playing with our money in the Social and stripes are getting old, but we're
Security fund . The government lets still free Americans and let's let Mr.
fore&gt;gn people come to this country, Reagan know what we mean . We
gives them jobs, do they pay? We want our Social Security fund left
l am constantly amazed how the
have to pay the day we start alone not touched!
airlines
are solving their problems.
We pay all our life. We might even
working , now we're hearing it's
Everyone
is aware that ene of the
die before we get it. But we can say,
broke.
big
stumbling
blocks to future air
The American people had better leave it alone and don't use it for
transportation
is airport facilities.
wake up and speak out or we're anything except Social Security
No
airport
in
the
country is prepared
going to be working for peanuts when we retire . - Floyd H. Cleland.
to handle the new air buses carrying
400 passengers that will soon be put
into service.
Today is Tuesday, July 28, the 209th day of 1981 . There are 156 days left
l was under the impression that no
in the year.
one
was working on the crisis, but I
Today's highlight in history :
was wrong. The airlines and airports
On July 28, 1914, World War I began when Austria declared war on Sertogether are solving the problem in
bia.
one of the most unconventional ways
that human engineers have ever
devised.
They're making people (ita!) walk
iunital) to thelrdestinations.
Ill Court Str'Ht
As the airports get larger, they
Pomerny, Ohle
keep extending their tenninals, and
114-ttHIII
DEVOTED T0111ErNTERESTOFntEMEI~MASON .4.REA
the gates to the aircraft keep getting
farther away.
I discovered the consequence of
~Jb
this
the other day when I had to catB!m~ r""T""L....L-"""T'"'·~d·~

Leave it alone - - - - - - - - - -

dessert. And a pitcher of mllk." That
is not how we keep the old weight
down.
This summer, In between Girl
Scout camp and 4-H camp, you're
doing a lot of dreaming about the
new house your mother and father
will be building. You have your eye
on the scrap lumber for a tree house,
and your plans are taking shape
dream by dream. This will be a
hideaway to read in, where you can
look at the Blue Ridge Mountains
and see forever, and you won't let

•

"'

Poland's Rozycka Malgon:ata got
the bronze.
Kim Linehan of the University of
Texas gave the Americans a second
swinuning gold Monday, taking the
BOO-freestyle in a games record
8:37.50. Irina Laritscheva of the
Soviet Union was a distant secon\1.
Sergei Fessenko of the Soviet
Union won the other swimming final
Monday night, winning the men's
400-meter indivic!ual medley in a
gamesrecordtimeof4:25.53.
The American women's basketball team advanced to l&lt;lday's gold
medal game against the Soviet
Union, defeating Romania 7~
behind a 21-point game by Oregon
State center carol Menken. The
Soviets downed China ,78-53 in the
other semifinal.
Semifinal action in men's baskethall gets underway today with the
United States meeting Romania and
the Soviets playing Yugoslavia.
Local. idol Virgini~~c R\'Zici captured a pair of gold medal in tennis.
·She downed Lucia Romltnov 6-1 , 6-l
in the all-Romanian women's singles
final and then teamed with Florin

6-3,'~

5&lt;-&amp;llrceanu to post a·
victory
over Russia's Sergei LeOniuk and ,
Ludnlita Makarova in the mixed
doubles final .
American Kelly Henry won the
bronze in women's singles, defeating
Makarov&amp;, 6-3,6-1.

PoMEROY-MIDDLEPORT LEGION TEAM-The PomeroyMiddleport Legion Team has, as of today, a 22-:H record. The team Is
caecbe(l by George Nesselroad assisted by Homer Smith. Team members
are, front 1-r, Coach George Nesselroad, Joe Bob Hemsley, Roger Gaul,
·Nick l..eooard, Tony RUfle, Homer Smith and Homer Smith, coach; back,
Kent WoUe, Roger Kovalchik, Jeff Wayland, Jerry Fields, Terry

Union representatives give Miller
vote of confidence after meeting
CI:IICAGO (AP) - Striking major
league players and club owners will
be meeting on opposite coasts Wednesday as tbe walkout that has canceled more than 25 percent of the
1981 baseball season continues
through its seventh week .
Armed with a vote of confidence
from the player representatives,
Marvin Miller, executive director of
the union, .will h.old the first in a
series of regi~nal meetings in Los
Angeles . Miller said no further
meetings had been scheduled.
At the same time, the 26 club
owners will gather in New York for
an update from the Player Relations
Committee and their chief
negotiator, Ray Grebey.
That means there can be no
negotiations to end the strike
probably before the weekend .

By The Associated Press
Syracuse pitcher Ken Schrom
used only four pitches to end his
team's contest against the Richmond Braves. That's because Randy
Jobnson ripped Schrom's fourth toss
over the left centerfield fence in the
loth inning to give Ricbmond a 4-3
International League baseball victory . Jobnson had scored the tying
run in the eighth inning.
In other league action Monday,
Columbus blanked Pawtucket 2-{1,
Tidewater edged Toledo 2-1, and
Rochester beat Charleston 7-3.
Schrom, 3-5, relieved Dale Murray
in the lOth inning. Murray had
replaced starter Paul Mirabella in
the seventh.
Ricbmond's Tony Brizzolara pi~
ched 8 2-3 innings of shutout ball in
relief of Jim Acker, who left the
game in the 11eeond when Syracuse
scored three 'runs. 'It was the fourth
win inarow,£or Brizzolara, 4-3.
Jerry Keller put Ricbmond in
front in the first inning with a two-

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With-a Wlll"tn. summer sun outside, last winter's

heai.ingbil)s'areprobably the last thins on your mind .
But Auiust·is the time UJ put a lid on next winter's
'' billsby·gettingon COlumbia's Budget Payment Plan.
· WiththePlan.yournaturalgas bills will beaver·
aged out over 12 months. So you'll pay a manageable
amount'eaCh montli:That can simplifY your family
budget planning, and eliminate heating bill surprises
when the temperature drops.
1b get on the Budget Payment Plan, simply pay the
amoitnt indicatedas"MONTHLY BUDGET" on your
August bill. Nothing further is needed.
n.erO'a no aeryjce&lt;hafl!e for this oonvenienoe, and
·'you,i-meteiwilllitill be read regularly. And next July,
'f!ii Will be bjlledyourbudptamounlpjus or minus
,, ~.diiJ'erentlebeiW.On~~onnqalbudgetand
thO odualllDolillt- during the )"''Il'.
'
· SO.'~thet*o~liB-wints'sbudgOtby
'i' Ptifril••iCOI~~·~~I~ P~nl Plan now.
And whlle ""''"' lhllwll( About'ldwerhO!lting bills,
... . . rorid.pyof-he"~yEneraySaver's
OWdo_"atanyCol"'"biaGiooffioe. Ithalhundreda
oflip,o IDb.lp,)'OII;t!iinaerve energy •.• and save money.

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COLUM.BIAGAS
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J.__________ --·--··-- -f -··----·-- - - - - -

•.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Bob Thorpe, -:
driven by Ron Knepper, won the ·
featured eighth race in 2:01 Monday
at Scioto Downs, paying $11.20, $5.20 ·
and $3.110.
Aaron York Town finished second
and paid $7.20 and $3.80, and
Trickster was third, paying $2.60.
The lsi trifecta of 9+1 paid ·
$1,033.80.

......
.....
. . . . . . . . ·;·rr_. . . ··. . · ·

L!TI'EIIS OF OPINKJ!IOft ........... Tll&lt;y- be'- .......... 1oq. All
1ttttn 1n . .jed &amp;e edHJM ucl mul bt 1lprcl wUIIamt, ..sdrn. •• ~ •mo
iler. No
lotion ..Jil... pooblbloed. Lou.n olooold be illlood lllle, - . .•.,

••lpod

break Rochester's momentwn, even
after Karl Pagel led of! the ninth .
with his 13th homer of the season for _
Charleston.
Mike Bucci and Jim Lentine added ·
singles and Mike Fischlin doubled··
past the third baseman, bringing the
score to 7-3. But that was it for the ·
Char lies', as Rochester reliever Jeff ·.
Schneider came in for pitcher Jim
Umbarger. Schneider got Ken Barton to pop up to the catcher, and he ·
struck out Von Hayes to end the
game.
..

Scioto Downs results

. REOUI.AA

A MEMBER tf De AIHdlkd Prnl, lallld Daly Prn1 AelorlaUoa 1Dd thr:
A1Dnka11 N~ Pl.lll'rnAifOC'lldoa.

-....-

Brent Gaff, 6-4, pitched the entire
game. Ric Williams, 9-7, was the
loser.
Rochester 7, Charleston 3
Dan Logon hit liis 19th home run of
the season over the Watt Powell
Park fence to drive in three runs and
pace the Red Win victory.
Rochester tallied four runs in the
first inning, and Charleston never
came · close to breaking the Red
Wings' lead. The Charlies mounted a
in the ninth innin~ but couldn't

'"'J
el l
1

~-inPJJ~

Geteral "'-•let

24, the club losing the free agent
could pick the No. 25 player from the
roster of any of eight teams."
·
But the union chief said
management's counler~proposal
was that non-signing clubs could .
protect 28 players, less COII,l- .
pensation than the union was offering, while signing clubs could
protect only 24.
" That 's to make sure that thi
compensation is taken from the ·.
signing club," Miller said.
·
If a club lost a player through .
compensation, it would receive
$150,000 under management's plan
unless the signing club was involved . .
In that case, no payment would'
follow.
·
" That 's another example of :
punishing a team for signing a free
agent," Miller said.
· ··

::'

-·· ,. -

BOBHOEFUCH

-·

Thke the heat off
next winter's
,.!1.98 b:ll ..;~.,...~
r·n •uut;tt::ll.

,.

DALE R0'111GEB, JR.

Columbus 2, Pawtucket 0
Columbus used two runs in the
eighth inning as Mike Patterson
singled to right and Marshall Brant
hit his 20th homer of the year to beat
the Red Sox.
Andy McGaffigan, 4-4 , gave up six
hits and struck out four for the win,
his fourth of the year for the Clippers.
Danny Parks, 5-10, had a nc-hitter
for the Red Sox for five innings,
striking out nine and giving up only
two hits prior to the eighth inning.
Tidewater 2, Toledo 1
Gil Flores hit a sacrifice bunt to
score Ron Gardenhire's winning run
in the Tide victory.
Toledo took a !-{) lead on a double
steal in the fourth inning. Ron
Washington walked, stole second
and reached third on a wild pitch. Ed
Cipol then walked and stole second
while Washington stole home .
Tidewater tied the game in the
seventh when Brian Giles singled,
stole second and scored on a single

prise wben I discovered that by the
time I got there I was only five mlles
from the Santa Barbara city limits.
Then recently .I was in Miami and
had to fly to Tampa. As I walked
through the terminal to my gate, l
stopped off for lunch at the Palm
Beach Airport snack bar, and then
continued straight on to find my
plane was parked at a gate number
just beyond Orlando.

Pablilkr

Aullt.IPB11111er/Cootnll&lt;r

close to a settlement, that there had
been some progress made for the first time about midway through the
bargaining In Washington last week.
"But there is still an awful gap
between us ."
The basic issue remains the sour.ce of compensation for teams losing
free agent players in baseball's annual re-entry draft. Miller said that
the players' last proposal, made a
week ago today,. offered more compensation in the form of a
professional player than the clubs
had asked for.
"The clubs' position throughout
has been the necessity o£ filling the
hole left by a free agent signing with
another team," said Miller. "We
have known for a longtime that's not
the problem. We proved it last week .
Our offer said that after you protect

.

~r=un~h:o:m:e:r~,h=i~s~17~th::sh:o~t:of~t:h:e~y~e=a~r~.-~b~y~M=i=ke~H=ow~a:r~d~.-------~==~~":::::::~~~~~--A---cr_o_w_d_o_f3_,9_50_w_a=ge_r_ed_$3_25_.~37_6_.·

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
PAT WHITEHEAD

Miller spent more than five hours
Monday night briefing the executive
board of the union on the
negotiations, which broke down last
Thursday in Washington. The two
sides had bargained for four days
with a news blackout and Miller said
he thought the players needed an update on the status of their strike.
Some 25-30 players whu are not
executive board members showed
up for Monday night's meeting.
"Half of them didn't have the facts," Miller said. "There was an information gap not of our doing. A
news blackout is a catastrophe for
an organization like ours. There was
a terrible information gap for four
days (in Washington) . Those were
important days."
Miller said that although the
players have never felt they were

::

Columbus beaten; 2-0; Charlies lose

" Most people don't," the ticket attendant said. "But you see we have
to keep extending the wings of the
terminal to handle the traffic, and so
the cities get nearer and nearer.
Next year we plan to link the Davenport and Chicago airports so
I found out that every major airpassengers can walk between the port in the country is now working on
two of them without getting wet. It tunnels and ramps·which will evencertainly will solve the pressing air- tually hook up with airports in other
port traffic problems."
cities. It's the first breaktllrough in
I thought Chicago was Uie only air- airline congestion. Englnet-rs in the
port doing this, but not long ago I · United States will be linked
was out in Los Angeles and had ,to together, aiM! by the time a
make a plane for Santa Barllara. pasaenger reaches his gate nwnber
When I was given my gate number on foot he will have arrived at the
for the flight, I started for it, And place IJhere he originally· ~nded
you can imagine my delight and sur- to fly.
·
·

-

Wayland, Robbie Cumlngbam, Zane Beegle and Mike Nesoelroad. Abo
sent were Bobby Footer, Kenny Browo, and Randy Murray. Team opooson are Diamond Savings and Loan, Racine Home NaUonal Bank, Bank
One of Pomeroy NA, Farmen Bank and Savings, Fraternal Order of
Eagles, Central Trust and Royal Crown Bottling.

.

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t}

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Page-4

.

By 'lbe Aueclated Preu

Looking for new world! to
conquer, Bill Kazmaler has selected
professional fOQtball as his nelrt
challenge.
.
Kazmaler, winner of the "World's
~eat Man" competition the
put two years, is in the Green Bay
Pieters training camp, attempting
to win !l.,ol a. a defensive lineman.
He has lC18t 30 pounds and hopes to
trim~?Dpoundsoffhis&amp;-foot·

2 frame. Kumaier, 27, currently
welgbs300pounds.
"I wanted to try foOtball because I
wanted another challenge," said
Kazmaier, who also won the world
powerlifting title two of the past
three years and has bench-pressed a
world record 661 pounds.
" I've conquered almost
everything there is to conquer in lif·
ling, so I wanted to try something
else."
Kazmaier hasn't played football
since he was a sophomore fullback
at Wisconsin in 1974. The Packers
heard about him
a former club
employee and signed him.
The Packers waived cornerback

Powell. S..,ond row - Keooy CaldweU, Dao Tripp,
Chris Adams, Jay Blackwood, Jeouy Meier, ScoU Filch. Absent was Jeremy Blake. Coaches are Don Flkh
aDd Keooy Caldwell.

INDIANS- The Tuppen Plains lndlaos Pee Wee
leap team receoUy claimed the league UUe with an
eseelleot &amp;-I record. Frout row- Jason Meier, Jason
Hager, Theresa Lambert, Toby Curtis and Bradley

from

physical
after knee
surgery.
Virgil
Livers,
who failed
to pass his
Severs! quarterbacks made news

Losses said
substantial
CLEVELAND (APl - Oeveland
Indians' President Gabe Paul says
his American League team's losses
due to the 46-day-old major league
players' strike are substantial.
"I cannot say what we will lose,"
Paul said. "But I see us taking a
financial bath no matter what we
draw if the season starts again, If
the season does not start, it will be
even tougher for us."
The Indians lost $2 million in 1980.
If the strike is settled and season
resumes by Aug. 6, the day the
owners' strike insurance expires,
Oeveland's losses lor 1981 will be
about the same as last year, Paul
said.
"I cannot see us making money
this year unless something dramatic
happens. No one knows how the fans
will react, so it is impossible to
project attendance," Paul said.
Before the strike on June 12, the
Indians had drawn 4611,221 fans.
"Everybody says the strike insurance is a bonanza and that we are
making money," Paul said. "No
way. All it did was ke&lt;&gt;p us afloat for
a few weeks during ti.2 strike. In a
situation like this, there are no winners ."

Richard Deem. Second row ...:. ShaUD Savoy, Mark
Murpby, Scott Pblllips, and Scott McDooald. Absent
were Kevio Golf and Jason Riggs. Coaches are Terry
Deem and Gary McDonald.

COMPLETES SEASON - Hawk '• Peunzoil of Tul"
pers PlaiDs receoUy completed an outstanding season
by wiDDIDg the league tournament with a 9-1 record.
n.., Pee Wee toornameot champions are, !root, Kyle
Stoclalr, Chris Schultz, Aaron Wilson, Christy Koenig,

Strike, Reds' treatment
disillusions Ken Griffey
CINCINNATI I API - Cincmnat1
Reds outfielder Ken Griffey has
doubts that many players could be
ready even if a settlement 1s
achieved in the baseball players
strike.
Griffey noted it would probably
take two to three .oeeks for the
players to prepare themselves to
play again, and since July is almost
over, that would mean that action
cooldn'l be resmed in the majors until mid-August or even later that
month.
Since the season ends on Oct. 4,
that could mean that there would
only be about seven or eight Weeks
left to play.
"It might not be too bad for the
regulars, the guys who are in the
lineup every day because they could

Riverdowns rvsults
CINCINNA TJ I API - Davey
Roth, ridden by Oifton Schwing,
slogged to victory by a neck in the
$4,800 featured eighth race at River
Downs on Monday and paid ~ .20, $3
and $2.20. 20, S3 and $2.20.
Royald Punch placed, $5 and $2.40,
and Bull Durham, third, $2 .20.
The Misoourian and Slaw combined HH in the daily double for $141
and the crowd of 3,851 bet $450.913.

play themselves into shape. But it
would be very, very tough on the ex·
Ira men who sit on the bench most of
the tinoe .
" And It would be even tougher on
the pitchers, who could hardly be expected to go all the way after this
long layoff." sa1d Griffey .
.. After all, we have absolutely no
wa y of telling just how much pitchers like Mano Soto. Bruce·
Berenyi , Frank Pastore or Tom

Seaver, among others, have been
working out. And even if they have
been throwing, that's nothing like
actua l competition," Griffey said .
He said mental preperation will
also be a problem but believes he
will be ready.
"Even though I haven't taken
much batting practice .. .l know what
I can do and I've swung a bat daily .
I've played a lot of goU, too, but even
that has gotten boring to me,
because I was so eager for baseball
to get started again.
" Insofar as I'm concerned, it
would be a challenge to me to see

how fast I could gt back into the
groove, and I'm sure man other
players feel exactly the same way,"
he said.
Griffey, disillusioned about his
own negotiations with the Reds, is
even more upset about the strike.
"Everyone is losing in this strike
whether it's the fans, the players,
the owners and even the nation as a
whole.
When
get isright
to it,
the
really
sadyou
thing
thatdown
no one
is
winning .
" And that's why I have a gut
feeling that there will be no more
major league baseball this season .
It's only my opinion and I hope I'm
wrong because I honestly believe
that the strke could have been averted.
"But the way it has dragged on
through the swruner leads me to feel
that unless there's an unexpected
breakthrough and settlement in the
next lew days, we will ha·ie played
our last baseball in mid-June, when
it all started," said Griffey.

LIVING COLOR
PACKAGE SPECIAL

YOU GET ALL IHIS

The Duil\' Sentinel
Pub\i!lhed every Hftemoon, Moo•" ""'""' " I
Friday , 111 CourtStreel, by~
Publishin~ CompllllY · Mult.un~dlll , Inc .,
Ponwruy . Oh111 4S7&amp;9 . 9'n-2156. S«ond cl&lt;~!'iS
po!'!Wt(~ poud ill Pumeru)' . Ohto.

only WHEN
S3 00 PHOTOGRAPHED

Member : 11\t' A.s..'IOCIIIled Pre~~ - lulamlOaL·
ly Pr• A,g,~uc.mlwn and l ht•
Nt!w'NJNIJ)tf PublJ~~r~ ,
I ,
I
Adverti!dnl( Repre!'lenlatlve ,
Newllp.llptr Salr!'l, 733 Th1rd Avenue,

.

Yorlt, New York 10017

•

wbeayou
pick up yuur packqe.

~UBSCRJPTION

RATES

By C•IT'Ier ur Motor Rouk

One week .

OntMonlh .
()ne Year . .

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.

. . ...

I Ul.llfl OtARIII'I§ ON
SCNI.l .t . S\ ' tiHTT!\ --' ITH
2

PliMt' IIASt: n• Tttt: PAC ' kAC O. : .

SINGLE COP&gt;

Specializing In Internal Medicine
Is Now Accepting Patients..

Office Hours

Will Be
· 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

( f iAfi( ,j NO A( 1! l iMIT ()nOf

A.\ MANY OA.( II,A.(, f ~

'0

rl

The table was re-set and everyone
enjoyed the evening meal before
returning to the 7 p.m. worship service.
Three direct descendants of the
original builders of the church wefe
in attendance: Mrs. Ada Bissell,
Mrs. Leona Hensley, and Mrs. Mae
McPeek.

Call 675-6143
FOR APPOINTMENTS.

·Dr. Navalkowsky's Office Is
Located At
2513 Jackson Ave.
In The Professional Building
&lt;

•

Point Pleasant, W.Va.

r~~~~~~~~~~~~d:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ashleys have
first child

FUND
Here's a unique opportunity for you to
earn high interest on as little as $2.500
in just 89 days.
Our Ready-Access Fund Is a repurchase agreement between you and
Diamond Savings. Quite simply, we
transfer to you an Interest In a U.S.
government lor government agency)
security. After 89 days. we repurchase
your agreement for what you originally
paid plus Interest.

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Ashley (the
former Wanda Keesee l announce
the birth of their finlt child, Jennifer
Marie, on June 24 at Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed eight
pounds and 12 ounces. Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs . James,E. Keesee,
Mlddteport, Canhd Mrs. GJos~e
Callahan,
os octon.
rea·
grandparents ·are Mr. and Mrs.
RaymOnd Keesee, Pomeroy, and
Claude Woodard of Portsmouth.

No peaaltiea or feea. Cancellation of
the agreement may be made anytime
after I 4 days with total Interest earned
to date and no penalties. And you don't
pay a brokerage fee to purchase the
Ready-Access Fund .

SaYIDM•· We're leadl,ng the way for
savers and Investors to get more for
their money. Stop In today. We'll help
you earn more; too!
'

. e Albany Busine~•.' and ComTh
mm~ity Organization wlli'.be spon-

••••r·Aa.......... _, •••..._. •...._,

soring an enUre day of fun and
festivities in A,lbany Aug. I. TIMI
Albany. Bt~i~ and Ci\onununityt
Orgamza 10n · 1s a
on-pro1I
orga!liJatlon i{ltent pn . building
. umty . · and
awarene••
- of cornm
bus~.
·~
d
"All Day Ill Albany" will inc1u e a
parade, huge'yardsaleat_the Albany
fair grounds, baking conlellt, dance
· contest; talent contest: ' bicycle
tourrodeo' .and a, little le~•ue
...,
nament. Iii ,•additiorl · to these
•·
festivities, many of the retail merchants will be celebfating with
sales.

..,..._...__ c:arpar.-;.......lllt-laMt-ltJtloal'...nl

...........t a t - t forr.ulletollo.

Today' a rate:

13.5.~
per annum

Y()IJ

Nlf D'

.

c•rrier each munth.

sgas

f6x,20

'

Keep cats out of garden with spices
By Poll:r,.FkiN.r

Speclal~poadeat

DEAR POLLY Do you or your
readenl know
w to keep my
neighbor's cats
from using my
flower beds lor a
Utter box? Every
place I dig and
plant, the cats ara
sure to follow. R.R.

DEAR R. R. You might try
Polly
sprinkling black pepper or curry
powder on top of the soil wherever
you want to fend off the cats. One
whiff and they'll usually take their
business elsewhere.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - The best way I
know to use up heels of bread is to
make peanut butter sandwiches with
them. Spread the peanut butter on

When ironing a shirt of blouse with
the crust side of the slice and put the
slices together wi!h the white sides buttons, place a bath towel folded
out. The ~ut butter won't tear the lengthwise on the ironing board and
bread like It BOJDellmes ilDell with place the buttons face down on it.
regular bread slices, and l~ooks' like I You can then iron right over the
a regularaandwich.- MRS. A.C.G.
butons, since they will sink down in·
DEAR POLLv·- Here are some to the towel. - MRS. H. K.
Pointers that your readers might
DEAR POLLY - To clean combs
find helpful. A folded newspaper l1P' and hair brushes easily, soak them
der your waffle lron while you're in a mixture of water and baking
WJing it catches any spill-overs. It soda in your bathroom sink. This not
makes your counter or ·tabletop only cleans the combs and brushes,
but also cleans the sink. Then work
much easier to clean up.
A large piece of plastic-covered the comb through the brush and all
freezer paper makes a good pastry the dirt and grease will rinse right
cloth. Use It plastic side up.
out.-BEITY
If you snap a plastic CWI cover -Polly will send you one of her signed
i found on some pet food caa5 and thank-you newspaper coupon eli()'
other canned goods) on the IMinom Of pers if she uses your favorite Poin·
your metal scouring powder eans, ter, Peeve or Problem in her
you won't have rust rings on your colwnn. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.
sink or counter top.

Area families hold reunions
40TH ANNIVERSARY - Mr. aod Mn. Tbomu Holter IEvelyo
Rose) will be booored by !Jielr cblldreo on their 40111 weddiJI&amp; alllli&gt;ersary
with an open bouse on Thursday, July 30, from 7 to 9 p.m. at the borne of
Mr. aDd Mrs. James Werry, Moraiog Star. The eouple were married July
30, 1941 to Syraeuae. They are the pareots of five chlldrea, Mrs. james
IKareol Werry, Roger, RoDBld, Mrs. Paul (Sharon) Card and Kevin, aD
of Rt. I, Racine. They have 11 gt'!lndchOdren.

Preserve
'n 'Serve
Dale Stoll,
Meigs County
Extension Agent,
Home Ecooomlca

Pickling

the pH of the product to levels which
could enable clostridium botulinum
to grow in the product.
g) Alum? When "pickles" are
selected for processing atthe proper
stage and bsndled according to

Here are some questions and answers about pickling. If you have
any problems or questions, call the
Extension Office at 992-ii696 - we'll
directions, a crispness additive is
be glad t0 helP out ·
not needed. If you want to use one to
QUESTION··
be sure, ask for powdered..alum -: .
When I ma ke pickles I'm not potassium aluminum sulfate.
always sure what ingredients to use. Caution : t~much will cause a bitter
What about...
taste and may cause stomach UP'
a 1Salt? Use pure granulated salt.
(Iodized salt may darken pickles se~UESTION:
and "non •cak1'ng" salt has
Can I use old pickle recipes? You
ingredients which may make pickles are wiser not to. Vinegar used to be
cloudy.) Look for granulated, sold at seven percent (or 70 grain) ,
pickling or dairy salt, meat curing stronger than today's vinegars.
or barrel salt; or Kosher salt which Recipes planned lor stronger
is flaked and dissolves faster.
.
? U
hi 1&gt;- d 'd
vinegarwouldbetooweaktobesafe
b 1 Vmegar.
se g gra e c1 er today. Find a new recipe using
or white vinegar of four to six per- similar ingredients and discard the
cent acidity 1.4fU!!60 grain). Forly old recipe.
grain or four percent is standard.
QUESTION:
Cider vinegar blends well with other
Why must 1 process pickles?
flavors, but may darken fruits and Processing - . for five or more
vegetables. White vinegar has a minutes_ has been found necessary
sharper flavor and is desirable when ·because there was so much spoilage.
light color is inoportant. Do not Much of this has been due to hacdilute 40 percent vinegar.
terla, yeasts, and molds which occur
cl Water? Softened water is
in the air and therefore easily conpreferred for pickling. Hardness laminate food in transfer from kettle
may cause cloudiness, and iron and to jar. The reheating, combined with
sulfur may both cause off colors in preservates in pickles, is sufficient
pickling.
to control the organisms.
d) Sugar? Either white or brown
QUESTION:
sugar may be used. Brown will add
What causes pickles to become
some color.
· soft• There are IJI&amp;ny possible
e) Spice~• Whole fresh spices causes. Be sure to renlove the
sbould be used. Whole because blossom end of cucumbers, as it
ground spices darken products, and produces enzymes which soften the
fresh because spices quickly lose pickles. Pickles not covered with
their best flavor.
b · bee
oft M ld
t
f) Lirrie? Lin!e is not needed. Most
nne
orne s . o 'yeast, oo
lime available is UJlSII(e for this use. little acid or salt, poor sealing or

Miller

Spencer

Seven Of the eight children Of Ger·
trude and the late J. Doyle Miller
gathered at the home of Ronald and
Janice Miller, Colgate Road, Columbus, for a family rem~ion on July 12.
The only family unable to attend was
the Russell E. Miller family of Tuc·
son, Ariz.
The July 11 birthday of Gertrude
Miller was observed along with the
birthdays of Mary Smith, Elmer and
Paula Miller, Willard Miller, Dale
Miller, Johnnie Davis, and Henry
and Becki Lemons, also In July. The
July 11 wedding anniversary of
Ronald and Janice Miller was also
observed.
Children and their fmailies attending were Jack and Virginia
Miller, Johnnie, Jon, Melissa and
Jason Davis, Jackie, Mikey,
Stephanie and Kevin Lenox, Vicki
Miller, Louis and Mary Smith,
Rosemary and David Smith, John,
Wanda, Jeff, Jason and Mary Lou
Abshire, Pam Smith and Jim and
Mary Ann Smith and Ricky, all of
Columbus.
Gertrude Miller, Carl, Dorothy
and Darin Roach and Trudy and
·Kasey Williams, aU of Pomeroy ·,
Elmer, Paula and Shari Miller of La
Grange, Ga.; Willard, Judy and
Loraine Miller of Wooster; Ronald,
Janice, Angie, Ronda and Steven
Miller of Columbus·, Henry and
Becki Lemons of Indiana and Dale
Miller Of Tampa, Fla.
Also attending were John, Mildred
and Patricia Crooks of Columbus.
Mildred Crook's mother was the late
Norma Miller Lisle, 3 sister to J .

The family of !he late Kirtley and
Tressie Spencer held a reunion at
the home of Guy Spencer July at
Tuppeni Plains.
Those attending w
Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Webef and Michael,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Linda Doe, Debbie,
Mickey and Jinuny, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Spencer, Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Spencer, Tim Spencer,
Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Har·
per, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Meadows,
Spencer, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Harper, Akron; Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Parker, Long Bottomj-Mr.
and Mrs . Larry Osburn ,
Washington, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Ken Fausnaugb, Mrs. Eunice
Gilland, ReedSville; Norman
Midkiff, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Windiand, Guysville.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Spencer,
Angie and Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Spencer, Larry, Bryan and Karen ,
the host and hostess, Guy and
Evelyn Spencer ..
Gifts were presented to different
individuals by Mrs. Florence Spencer. The afternoon was enjoyCd by
playing horseshoes, badminton and
croquet.

Doyle Miller.
The reunion next year will again
be held on the second Sunday in
July.

two ta bl· ~poons per ga 11 00 · Many
QUESTION
What causes: pickles to shrivel?
pickle reelpes that originated yesrs.
strong a mixture · I too much
ago ·· indicated· that ' lime ·· was Vinegar, ~ilr or sitlt) ..Start with a
necessary .for:a crisp pickle product. weaker n\ixture and gradually make
Ho~ever, if g~=ty mgredluaed
.enls • It stronger. Over-processing can
and up-to-date p
ores are
, · shrivel pickle$ also.
lime is ·not required to iliake ·l)riap,
qUESTIO''
fi nn p1c
· kles. Dr. tt
F1
m1
":
' bec1M:J1e hollow?
nenry . e ng,
Why 00 ·pickles
USDA ·Fermentations,. Laboratory, This happens when; a) pickles are
Raleigh, North' Carolina, strongly stored tO&lt;!.long (over 24 hounl)
advises against.uslng llme h) !Jonn! . bef~ pidling; b) cucwnben are
recipes for pickles .since' the home poorly di!vt!loped; c) they tennent
caiU)ermayuiletoomuchUmeornot
, 00 'aat-' ath••htempe 'l .
1. the
. tbo""'••hiy
.
lime
,
-IOlu
,
uon.
•
'
r · ..,..
ra ures- or
•v...,
'"""'
d)lfiJrinelatoowfalioratrOIIg.
from ·the v.~~~tables ,before tl~)'llre
For some free pickle recipes, .glve
pickled: lf~miiChUmereniairllln USI!call. ·_
the picklejl l ~etables It can
..
· neutralize the v'lneRar thus raising
k
.
b. th

The annual Matlack family
reunion was held July 19 at theLancaster Fairgrounds for the descendants of the late William and Lydia
Matlack of Long Bottom.
Prayer by Woodrow Robinson
preceded the potluck dinner. Those
attending were John and Ethel
Matkack Arbaugh of Tuppers
Plains; Lily Arbaugh Shultz o(
Columbus; Leah Arbaugh Hawkins
of Colwnbus; Chloie E. Matlack
Ballard of Westerville.

Nelson
The Nelson reunion was held July
12 at the Black Lick park in Colum-

bus with63 attending:
Mrs. Roy Ogdin, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank McKibben and Paul, Alvin
McKibben, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Largent and family, Mr. and Mh.
Archie Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Canode, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Nelson, Mrs. Peggy Kuhns and girls,
Roger Canode and family.
Mr . and Mrs. Donald Mansfield,
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mansfield and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Brian Mansfield and family, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
McCoy and family , Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Morin and Erin, Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Nelson and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Clair Nelson, Mrs. Wanda
Nelson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Downie Nelson, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Dyer, Mrs. Nina
Macomber, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Nelson and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Redd, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Cooper, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Nelson and Tracy.

lin and Around Meigsf
Electa Circle meet
The Electa Circle o1 the Middleport Baptist Church met at the
borne of Shirley Coleman recently.
The meeting was opened with a
prayer by Freda Hood. Mary
Brewer presided in the absence c1
ChalrmanCathyRiggs.
lJrelter gave devotions fr&lt;m Job
1:4-11. The devotion was titled "The
Fruit of the Cbrlstlan Home." She
also read an article called "Turning
the Other Cheek."
Jt was announced the Sanborn pic·

Rhoda Hall read an article from

roo·

Matlack

Ray and Jean Ballard Owen of
Columbus; Charles and Louise
Brooks of Mansfield; Foster and
Freda Bean of Guysville; Don and
Virginia Campbell of Guysville;
Lillian Kino Basso and daughter
Kelly of Columbus; Woodrow and
Marilyn (McGhee l Robinson Of
WOOdstock, Va., and Virgil and Bet·
ty Matlack Roush of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Josephine Matlack McGhee,
the only living member of the late
William and Lydia Matlack was
unable to attend. She will celebrate
her 95th birthday in September.
The day was spent visiting and
looking at family pictures. The 1982
reunion will be July 18 at the same
place.

TAB which was a report on
Nlcarauga given by a mlsslonary.
A prayer circle ended the meeting.
Attending the meeting were Gwin- ·
nie WNte, Golda Roush, Elizabeth
Searles, ·· Rhoda Hall, Lillian
Demolkey, Mary Bmter and Freda
Hood.

On Dean's list

length.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Benny Spears and the
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Olin Knapp, all of Syracuse.
The couple are also the parents of
Jennifer Rae, age6.
·

New arrival
I

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. -Alan
Swindell, Route I, Athens, annoW\ce
the July 3 birth of a son, Anthllny
Todd, at the Holzer Medical' Center.
They are also the parents of a
daughter, Keri Lynn, 4.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Gardener, Jr., Middleport; and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Swindell,
Route I, Shade.
·

.

\

..

, . .• '.·:...r-'..f
•,:'

·,

I

•l

•

.,

jennifer Yeauger

I

Girl celebrates
_· first birthday

SOCIAL
CALENDAR.

TUJ!liDAY
SYRACUSE·RAC!Nlj: Regional
Sewer office will be cl~ Tuesday,
Wednesday,andThursday.
DAlE ANDERSON, Seasonal
Naturalist, at Forked Run State
Park will present program on
snakes at Middleport Library
Tuesday at 2 p.lR. All children are
welconie and the program Is tree.
HARRJSONVIUESeniiii'Cii!Rns
Tu.-Sayat7p.l!l.atthe .... ~.p.;..

A birthday party was held May 22
at the borne of Kenneth Yeauger,
honoring the first birthday of Kenniter Rose Yeauger, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Christopher Yeauger .

Cake, ice cream and refreshments
POMEROY - Named to the
Dean's list at Oh.io Univenlity for the
were served to the guests. Two large
cakes were made for Jennifer by her
spring quarter were Arthur Ray
aWlt, Aladine Baker, and one large
Leach, Cheshire; Teresa Lynn
cake for Benny Dowell who was also
Buckley, Coolville; William Daniel
celebrating
his birthday.
Hayes, Long Bottom; Dale Lee
,d
. ar·
ur es announce 1r
Browning, PQIIIeroy; Jayne Lee
~· .MI-. and Mf.. ·ae:..ki,II!Ute an- . HOeflich, Pomeroy; Myriam RuthGuesblincludedMr.andMrs.Jen. ~ · ,g. ,
.
·'ll . ·•
" 1.
f
,
.1
.
,
.
•
~the.bil'thofthell'f~c1Ul~
.
Child,
POmeroy;
Kanm
Elizabeth
Jlaniemadei~~m~~'wllt
nlngaJett·anddaughters,Mrs.Ruth
1
1
,__~ ~ rbr'~~ , Aug.S\.:.. lbtiF~~ ,
:a~ Grego~)' "arnua.July 8 ~~ J&gt;rVbert, ReedsviRe; Jana Kaye .be served. Allliilitfbert'I K.... to AMYeauger, Mrs. Sylvia Cq, Mr.
. cif•"-· ...l.ri98lfot'~ ·cyi\lntyla ,. AIIg.? - ~pJIJdllnl. '
St. J'*l!h ....18), ~~· BaritOII, Shade; Harry Frederick attend.
o·.
-; •1 ;.. •• : . and Mrs: Marvin Yeauger, Selilon .
,
••
•
,.'
Aug.lNI...lMelpCGunty.Falr
'111elnfantwel8hedelgbtpoilildsaJMI
Kane,
Shade,
and
Leslie
Jaye
Ord,
ANNUAL
PICNIC
of
'J)rew:.Web- Baker,, Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
7
.: •
• , 1 ~· Alf. ..·'
. · 1 Aug.l440""7~o8&amp;8!4Falr. • • tllneOWICt!Sand~2llncbes Syracuse.
.
Bier Unit », ~ American. ~on McLaughlin, Mrs. Aladlrle Balier,
j t ""jlll)''»-AI!IJ.4 .~t-:Hfiayut~np .'
...
~ stpl !fer,
~. ii)MllipCth. ' t
I .d···
.. '· . '
'J\.T"'W
. ~~atllon!llf.Mrl. ~r. aMnd MRars. SBe~nhy Dowe~ ~
• 11 ' ISla¥
··
. • ,•
~ 30 , Qhlo.1·t-K Advilon' , · !l.t erna
gran parents are J. •Vrvw
.. ,. LGrll1ll 'neiJWfW·, lAicl!n8 Cfeek uuys, I'll. Y rrut and chij~
~ .,.
· , Aliplt ~. .• · · · · I ~IIIOf! ~~·m Cobirqbuil, ', 1 Warren .and Clw'lotte .Va!l Meter
. Mr and Ml1. !Wdv·• Ci!!ila .· ~· Btlng ~dish ind tabie Mrs. Doug Rosenbaum, .·~
:::
' Aug. 't - '~ Judltdl.' 'Oiilo/
'' l ' .:
I . '''and ,.,liter'n'al . &amp;i'andliarenli . are: ~. •• zi~&gt;!'ilf"'Wrth . llt ~ ,. Jlll'vt~.
Yeaug~f ~n~ boys, Mf!i. f'lill ~n
·!· alifwan~~~~iitJI~.
't
. . 1 ·. ~ ··I.
RobtJ18JIII ,Vitginia ·:Burlle,. lllof • ..
lld-~onJIEiyl4'·" RACINE LODGE 461 FUM , and children and Mrs. Sharon
• • . Alii 4 ..:, lltJie ~ Eutem Oct.I-AwardsN· • ~I'Wni.
· ·· ·
·•. •
'11 11 fCIEIW•.'J.'ilelltfem . Tulllldayat7:30p.m. Workjn~· ParkerandTravls. Unabletoattlnd
. ::: , · ·_ Jlill Crl;, f:a ~~ IIlio ~ Oct. )7·11 ... , .. .
'-!~,.r·~·g''~ \If~ .
.. . JIGU'I!Itt Iiiii illlllift.l' ·~. ~;?~.' ~; ~~; ' but. aenCling.,a. gift was lttrL &gt;~Jtae

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MeiilS -extended 4-H aa1en

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·.FJU:;;: • : ,

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COMING .. .
FRIDAY, JULY Jl, TIME : 2 P .M. TIL 7 P.M.
\/AUG HAN CARDINAL SU
in ...

.

992·66S$ ' · ', .' .. •, ·~ ,
f.llon.-w....,.,., TI!Yt, &amp; ~at. 9·flloon ·. ,. , '
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We dare you tocomParf!{':• ·

WITH "'R(HAI&gt;EOrTHE PAfX.\GE.

() ·-•oewt,..,. ,..........

,

_

Polly's Pointers

• tl•Ofl pIanS
Orgaruza
'All Day in 4Jbany' ~~,i::!t~~=~=~eedi~~:t~:~~ ~=:~::":.peruse of alum ~c~be:U~~~~3atthehome

•-•J'·Acceaa had fre• ot.a.ead

PI! ICES

~::-::..-.::,:.~.

jennifer Ashley

-ACCESS

Daily .
Subtlcribers not de:o~lri~ to pliY l~ca_rr•~•l
mnit m adv11net diret:t to .... ;c-·;,
1 oo 11 3, 6 ur 12 month bllll!!l .

Pag~S

'

times.

Dr. Navalkowsky

In only 89 days. $500 minimum with·
drawals may be made anytime after 14
days, ·provided a $2,500 balance Is
maintained.

( /\OIJP'I L ~AMI! Y POO.ffi,AII\
IAII.I N AT NQ AJ)[)!l i() NAJ

The MI. Olive Conununity Church,
back cl Long Bottom, recenUy
celebrated 100 years of open doonl.
On Sunday, July 12, the people
gathered to attend the all-&lt;lay
meetirig and re-new old friendships ..
Services began at 9:30 a.m. with
Sunday school, then songs by the
Youth Choir, and a short talk by the
pastor, Brother Lawrence Bush.
Dinner was prepared by the ladies
of the church.
Services resumed at I p.m. w.ith
the pastor, Brother Lawrence Bush,
introduciog the local talent and the
fonner pastors that could return for
the observance.
Forlner pastors included Earl
Shul~r. Doug Circle, Jake Bush and
,.
- Russ'ell Cline. Each pastor sang
special Sollgs and also reminisced
lor a few minutes.
Talent included the MI. Olive
Youth Choir, Doug Circle, daughter
Sue, and her husband, Harold
Hager, Margaret TutUe, jake Bush
' family, Earl Shuler, Russell and
· \ Leona Cline, Robert Bush of Lan·
caster, and Jack Swnmers of
Columbus.
A poem by Mrs. Daile Pigott con·
cerning the looth year anniversary
was read.
The afternoon service lasted until
3:30 p.m., at which tinoe everyone
gathered outside to lalk over old

Monday - Friday

llbort tel'lll. Your agreement.matures

POSTMASTER Send 11ddr~s.!l HI The

'•

Tuesday,_July .28,19&amp;1. ·

Mt. Olive
celebrates
100 years

Dr. P. James Navalkowsky

81H%

Srnti~l. 111 CuurtSt., PLHneruy, Ohlc•4571&gt;9:

.

The Daily Sentinel

.

determined dally by market conditions.
But, unlike money market funds, the
Interest rate Is fixed at the date of purchase for the term of the agreement. You
may· reinvest at maturity at the prevailIng Interest rate. Or we'll transfer your
funds directly into a Diamond Pay•by·
Phqne/NO':'J or other savings accoum.

2- Bx 10 s
2- 5x7's
10- Wollets

ADivllieDoiMul~~ . lnr

.

terback
after the retirement of Ken
.,
t-~this~·
~sea~s:o:n~as=~th~e:Oil:·~e:rs:'~q~ua~r-jJ~~~~~;~~~~~
Stabler.

Bilb iat.e net rate. Interest rates are

1-11xl4

iUSpSI4S-JMI

Archie Rose, Eastero head
football coacb, auoonced today
helmet fltttog for prospective
grid players at Eas_lero will be
held at 5:30 p.m. Friday 1D the
blgb school gym.

By The Bend

Monday In National Football League
training camps. Tom Owen, a sevenyear veteran, re-signed with ~
New England Patriots. Owen, who
has spent most of his career as a
backup, held out as a free agent Wltll
Oct. 1D last season, mlsslng the first
nine games of the seuoo and sitting
on the bench for the final seven
games.
steve Myer, wbo missed the entire
ll*l &amp;easiHI with a back Injury,
retired after four seuoos as Jim
Zorn's backup with Seattle. Myer
was hurt in a team !~Cfimmage last
sununer and complained of back
pain this year.
Atlanta cut QB Larry Fortner,
along with reserve running back Anthony Anderson and offensive
llnemanDexterBerry.
Miami waived three-year pro
signal caller Pete Woods, who was
with his fourth NFL team despite
never appearing in a regular season
game.
St.Louis released QB Mike Loyd
among Its lour cuts.
HoUBton's Gifford Neilsen expects
to make plenty of news on the field

Helmet fitting set

,......------------------------1

--southern Photo's - -

r ----~··

Tuesday, July 21,1911

Pomeroy-Middlepor:f, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

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

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•

.

�The Da i I

Sent inel

Pomeroy- Middl,.n•or t . Ohio

28,1981

Propertyuansfers----------------~-James J . Proffitt, Sheriff, Donald
G. Shepard, eta!, to Racine Home
National Bank, Parcels, RuUand.
J . otis Bailey, Phyllis Bailey to
Teddy Joe Bailey, Parcel, Sutton.
24 Easements, Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Elec. Co. , Pomeroy.
William C. Bartels, Mary V. Bar·
tels to Cora Lee Bartels, Parcel,
Syracuse.
Glen R. Bissell, Naomi R. Bissell
to Theresa Starr, Lot 2 Fallon's Ad·
dn., Rutland Village.

E a rl L. Faudree, Thelma
Faudree, eta!, Pomeroy.
James J . Proffitt, Sheriff, t o
Lowell D. Chevalier, Bonnie Sue
Chevalier, Correction Deed, Olive.
Essie B. Russell, dec. to Richard
D. Bolin, Cert. of Trans., Middleport.
Richard D. Bolin to Eugene E. Underwood, Ruth M. Underwood, Lot
36, Middleport.
Nathan Brady to Mary Brady,
Parcel, Columbia .
Nathan Lynh Brady to Mary
Brady, Parcel, Columbua.
Kenneth Wilt, Doris Wilt to Marcus J . Guhi, Debora h E. Guhi,

Lawson, P a rcel, Chester.
Raymond E. Proffitt, Mary Low
Proffitt to J ames E . Diddle, Right of
Way, Lebanon.
Raymond K. Gmther, J acqueline
A. Ginther to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Don M. Ro.e, Donna Rose to
James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Lebanon.
Phyllis E. Harris to State of Ohio,
Parcel, Sutton.
Delton W. Fowler, Mary A. F owler
to Stale of Ohio, parcel, Sutton.
Charles R . Sheets, Margaret L.
Sheets to Billie A. Davis, .56 acre,
Bedlord.
R oy E . Miller, Maurita L. Miller to
Billie A. Davis, Parcel, Chester.
The Racine Home Natl. Bank, The
Central Trust Co., N.A. to Laura A.
Dellavalle, Parcels, Rutland.
Lawrence R. Gluesencamp, Sr.,
Clara Louise Gluesencamp to Denver Curtis, Neva Curtis, parce ~
Lebanon.
E. J oyce Miller, Ma riOn C.
Crawford to Garland A. Miller,
S1eglmde Miller, Parcels, Rutla nd
J erry W. Bogard, Marilyn Bogard
to Clayton Bogard, Rasalee Bogard,
Pa rcels , Le banon.

Larry Holsinger, Nancy Holsinger
to Ray Junior Roush, Elizabeth Mae
Roush, on~hallacre, Letart.
Racine Home National Bank, Central Trust Co. , NAto Roy Kesterson,
Maxine Kesterson, 14.424 acres,
Rutland.
Nancy Adams, Affidavit, Sutton .
Kelly Mfg. Co. to J a y Hall Jr.,
Lots, Middleport.
Eva Mae Stoecker , William K.
Stoecke r to Emme t t Gregor y
Rawson, !..Dna Ann Rawson, Lot ,
Middleport,
Merium Hoffman , Affldav1t ,
Rutland .
Sevf n Rights of Wa y , Herald Oil
and Gas Co ., Pomeroy .
Annabelle Ward ,
Afridav 1t ,
Pomeroy.
Ruth D . Euler, dec. t o James b
E uler, Cert. of trans., Middleport.
Archie E . Lee, June P . Lee to J ohn
Thomas Northup, Vicki J o Northup,
Parcel, Sutton.
Dennis I. Boothe, lnna J. Boothe
to William M. Lawson, Margie Sue

Minersville.
George M. Collins, Nancy J .
Collins to Roger Glenval Willford,
Violet Isabell Willford, 2.10 a cres,
Olive.
Patrick H. O'Brien, Mary E .
O'Brien to Charlie E . Collins, P a r cel, Salisbury.
Freda S. Koenig to Elsie Koenig
Cook, 4 acres, Saliabury .
CleatllS Arnett to Herald Oil and
Gas Co., Right of Way, Rutland.
Thomas C. Edwards, dec. to Edna
Edwards, Ella E . Williams, Cert. of
Trans., Sulton.

Ella E. Williams, W. E. Willianis,
J r. to Edna Edwards, Ufe Estate,
Sutton.
Edna Edwards, EUa E . Williams,
W. E . Williams, Jr. to Sybil Ebersbach, Pan:els, Sutton.
Sybil Eberabach to Edna Edwards, EUa

E. W~,

PlfC\lls,

Sutton · Carletonvllle.
Josephine
Rutland.

Stiles,

Affidavit ,

Garden Grove, Calif., Mrs . Emest
Johnson, Mrs. Howa rd Blazer a nd
daughters of Belpre, OhiO VISited
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle a nd
family a rece nt Fnday

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester called at the home of Robert
Lee and family on Sunday .
Mrs. Thebna Walton of Spiller and
Mrs. E velyn Holter of Morning Star
VISited a t the Douglas Circle home

Mr. and Mra. Dale Whaley,

Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church July 19 was 66. Rev. Cecil
Wise was guest speaker. Mrs. Bertha Parker read the poem, "The
Bar,"ln theadultctaas.
Mrs. Anna Jackson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Jackson, Milton, W. Va . recen.
Uy called on Mr. and Mrs. Norman

Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kasper,
Dayton, spent the weekend with
Mrs. Bertha Parker.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church July 26 was 76. The new
minister, Rev. Robert Miller,
delivered his first sermon Sunday
momlng. Everyone is welcome to
come to the local church .

recently.
Betty Van Meter and Sheryl Leann
Johnson spent Monday at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. William Carel ton
and daug hters.

•

were Mrs. s.dl•

Carr, Margaret

evening

Douglas; Mlnnle.-Wooten, Freda Car-

with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alldre.
Mr, and Mrs. Mike Epple visited a
few days in Zanesville with Mr. and
Mra. Bob Allen and visited other
relaUves.
Members of the senior citizens
from thla area who enjoyed a trip to
Col~ Frl~y to view the Cardinal lnduatrtes Inc. Apts., which
are being built In Middleport soon,

SE!. Minnie McGrath and Bessie
Graham.

Chillicothe, visited Sunday

·Laurel Cliff News Notes
,

Carmel News By the Day._ _ _ _ _ __

- Mrs. J ohn Brooks a nd daughter of '

' . .I

·Mr. and Mrs. 'Wyatt Sehaeller, Mt.
Vernon,

spent the' ~ with Mr.

anti Mrs. Norman ~effer.

,.m. Jerri F~ and James,

Columbus, visited Sunday with Mrs.
Bel1ha Parker.

Fairview

By Mra. Herbert Rousb
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, son
Tim, attended the arts and crafts
fair at Ripley over the Fourth of July
weekend.
Saturday guests of Mrs. Elba War· '
ner were Edward and Flossie Kane
of Summerville, N. J., Hoyt and
Cora Ferguson of Point PJeasant,
Jim and Gertie Pierson of Clifton,
and Pearl Norris of Letart, Clarence
and Inez Roy of Racine, Tom and
Janet Warner, Racine Rt.

Returns from Center
POMEROY-Charles Hayes, 13
Oak St., Pomeroy, has returned
home following extensive hip
surgery at Holzer Medical Cent~r.

The annual famlly reunion of Mrs.
Bessie Graham and children and
grandchildren was held over Fourth
of July . with 8G present Mrs.
Graham's two sisters and f811lilies

f"'l" West Virginia also attended.

ALL ST EEL

OHIO VALLEY .
· ROOFING

Farm Buildings
S1zes
" F r om lblO"

SMALL

• Roofing of all types
•siding

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 1h 40

and Mrs. Earl McGrath.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry ·Ciart and

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

children, Middleport, were dinner
guests of hili mother, Mrs. Lola
Clark, Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman
visited Mr. and Mrs. John Wiseman
and friends at Springfield, Oh. and
attended the lntemational Church
Convention in Anderson, Ind.
Mrs. Clara Hull, Waldo, spent a
few days recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Bud douglas and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Williams.
Mrs. Gerry Behrendsen of Mansfield spent a few days with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple.
other callers were Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Brown, Jackson, and Mrs .
Frank Epple and children, Middleport .
Mrs . Barbara Schantz and
children of Silverspring, Md. visited
a week with Mrs. Stella Atkins and
Ruby Diehl.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gibson of
Maryland s pent a week With Mr. and
Mrs . Bud Douglas and Mrs. Lana
Gibson.

Rt. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614 ·843·2591
6·15·1fc

CONSTRUCTION
New ttomes · ex•
tensive

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIG S
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTAT E OF WILLIAM M.

HALEY , DECEA SE D
Case No . 23494

PUBLICATION
OF NOTIC E
TO All PER SON S I N
TE R ES T E D IN
T HE
ES TATE OF WILLI AM M
HALE Y,
DE CEAS ED .
LATE OF R D I, N ew

L• ma R oa d. Rutl and, Oh to
45775, MEI GS COUNT Y

PROB ATE COUR T. CAS E

NO . 13494 An appl tCCITt o n

has been ftled ask•n g to
relteve the estate from ad
m tnt s trat ton , Sd yt ng th a t
t he a sse t s do not exceed

Sl S, OOO a nd the c red itors
wd l

not

th erebv

be

pr e rudt ced

A hear• ng o n the

app lica t ion will be he ld
August 5, 1981, at 1 30
o'clock
PM
Person s
know1n g any r eason why
the a ppl ~e at1on should not
be g rant ed ShOUld arpea r
and 1nform th e Cour The
Court IS located at the
Prob at e Court in th e M e 1g s
County Courthouse, ~econd
Str ee t , Pomeroy , Oh 10

45769
17)

27 , H e

Rober t E Buck
Probate Ju d ge/
Cle r k

Public Notice

Public Notice

EASED

NOTIC E OF

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
In acc ord ance w1 t h th e
COUNTY , OHIO
prov 1s,o n s of
Secr 1on ES TATE OF STEPHEN
331J 4 I o f th e Rev•sed Code E UGENE
SMITH .
PU8 LIC SAL E

o t Oh •o. not •cc 1S her eb y
g•vcn tha t the Board o f
Educ a fl on ot the Me•gs
Loca l Sch ool D •sfr •c t . wil l
ot ter t or sa le a t Publ iC Auc
t 1on a t th e loca tt on da te.
and t1me l• sted be low th e
toll ow .nq Rea l Est ate and
Old V ehrc les
Old Church P roperty
Pear t Str ee t
Mi ddl epor t , Oh• o 45760
IOOOA M Aug ust 7, 1981
Veh •ctes
Old
Bus
P1ck up
T r uc k
Shell s, and Van
Bu s Ga r age
Ru tl and, Oh 10 45775
10 30 a m Augus t 7 1981
T he pem •ses w ill be open
tor tnspec t1 on b y tnt er es ted
pa rt tes on Wed nesday,
August 4, 198 1 fr om 1 00 to
~hel l s ,

J

00 P M

Add• t. onal
.ntorm at •on
mdy be ob ta m eo tr om the
Super •nt endent' s Offi c e •n
f\.ll tdd teport , Ohm
Metgs Loca l Board
Educa Ti on
Sou th Thi r d Avenue
M•dd lcpor t , Ohto 45760
(/1

14

11.

:m .

of

sc No. 23480

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

I

ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, AUG. 1, 1981 AT 11:00 A.M.
ESTAT E OF CHARL ES LAWRENCE
Located from Ractne, Ohto on S. R . 124 turn north on
Co. Rd . 18 (Ba shan Rd .) go appro&gt;C . s m1les then
eas t on Co Rd 31 ( Sttversvtll e Rd . ) appro)(. J m11es,
th en north appro•. 1 mtle on Dew1Us Run Rd Walch
for .a uchon s1gn s.

" ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS "
Oa k stand, dresser w/ma rbl e ml ay, ches t, wood
rocke r , tr unk . wood c ha~r s, spool leg tabl e, bean
sca les, brown Donaghho-2 ta r , butter mold, tron tea
kelt le, fla t 1rons. appl ebulter kettl e &amp; sti r r er , lard
pr ess, Da 1sy churn , old d•shes. quilt1ng frames,
ch•ff er obes, P•e safe, wi cker baskets, wood tabl e,
tr eadle sewtng m achtne, tee box (bad shape). steel
t r aps, stone rars, wood whea t r ake , ox yok e, grain
crad le, hor se shoe kit, horse collars . copper wash
botler &amp; m1sc

" TOOLS "
Cra flm an table saw &amp; iO•nter , gnnder , Craftman
cha1n saw 8. sk ill saw , c yli nder outf1 t, 3 H P.
r ototdler , l awnmower , a ll k1nds of hand tool s

"MACHIN ERY "

-1t c

Fa rm all H, Fa rman cub , mower , plow, cul ftvator ,
stde dresse r . corn pl anter , cut off sa w tor cub ,
mar k•ng out pl ow, tw o IH 4ST PTO ba lers, Nl hay
ra ke, two w heel trad er, 51 m 1nser t tooth
F arg uarhr saw mtll, 80 H P garden plow, 1954&amp; 64
Dodge pi ck ups, 4x l 1 Sea r s Pl anner , pile of coal and
m •Sc other •lem s
Cas h
POS1f1 11e t D .
Ca se No. 22780
J•m Carnahan
Auct1one er s
Dan Sm1th
" Not respon si bl e tor acc1dents or lo ss of property "
Co·Adm1n1 Sirator
H ow ard and Cl arenc e Lawrence

Public Notice
On July 8, 1981 , 1n t he
Me1gs County Probate
Court. Case No
23480,
Rebecc a J . Smith, 39421
Sm1th Road , Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769, was appointed
Admim strator of the estate
of Stephen Eugene Smith ,
deceased, laTe of 39421
Sm1th Road , Pom eroy ,

remodel ·

s Robert E . Buc k
Probate Judge/

Cl erk

Ill 14,2 1. 28.31c

PROBAT E COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF EVELYN J .
HARTLEY, DECEASED

PHONE 992-21S6
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St ., Pomeror, 0., 45769

Ca se No. 23465

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On July 14, 1~8 1, 1n t he
M etg s Count y Probate
Court, Case No
23465,
Edison Hobsletter, Lincoln
Hill, Pom eroy, Oh10 was
appo1nted
Admmistrator
With th e Will Anne xed of
the estate of E vely n J . Ha r ·
ti e'( , deceased, late of 121
Un1on Ave nue, Pomeroy,
Ot11o
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/

Cle rk

1-

c.,,.ciOI Thanh
1- ln Mtl'ltor••m
J- Announctm •nts
)- HIPPY Ads

.,..._Lo,ltncl Found
1- Y.nct

S..tt

Sun Flirt!
Prinl ed Pallern

RENTALS
4l - HOuSts fOr Rt rtl

42 - Mob•lt Homn

for Rtnt
4111 - AfNrlmtntslor

,._.._s,.u for Atnl

11 - HeiPWinfl'd

) wanreo
1 For Sale
) Announcement

) For Rent •

17
18
19
:10
21
22

23
24
25
26
27
28.
JO

31 .
32 . _ _ _ _ _ __
33 ·-·3~ ----

I J- StfUIIe-d Wanted
IJ- tnsunnu
14- Bus.nen Tram1n9
IS-SciHIOIIIn t tl'\l c i!OII

..- Rtdto, TV ,
&amp;CIIRt~or

II- Wanted To Do

e FINANCIAL
Jl - Bws •"""

St - HoUSthOid Go)OCh
~2 - C8 , TV, Rtd lo Eq1.upm ent

U- An i iCIIJII

,_,. - M fsc Mtrctland•u
U - 8utld•nl Svpptin
U - Pett 101' S.lt

$29,900.00 .
NEW LISTING -

n - Montw 10 Lou

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

home with 6 rooms.

'' - Farm ECit.upment
•2- Wantl'd to luy
72- Tr-uc:kttor hit

31_

Homtt lor

5111

l2- Mobtlt Home s

ll- Ftrmllor hit

)4-- lutlflttl lu•ld•fltl

" - Hay a Gra1n
&amp;5- Su d &amp; Ftr filtlt r

U- Lots &amp; Acroa ..
»- Real Ettato Waflled
J7- Rtalton

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines
MfMay,2: ll Oft S.hi..O.y

Tu•sday ttlru ltrhtay 2:ll P.M.
the day Hlort'ltUDIIcatiGft
Iunday 2: 10P.M. Frklay

216 E . Second Street

Phone
H614)-992 -332S

IH-Qoicl/Easy T-"n
Books and Cataloa - add 111
eKh 101 postage and handhng

90

ac re s of good hunting
woods and f1elds in
Le banon
Township.
Good gravel road. 3
bedroom
home
12
yrs.old . Formi ca bath,

full basement, F .A.

fur ~

nace, drilled well and

BIG APPUANCE
SALE AT
POMEROY
.

~..
.....

~a rage

for all .

$550.00 per acre

SOUND -

and qua lity

built . 3 bedrooms, nat
gas F A furnace, wood·
burn1ng fireplace with
built -in bookshet'lles on
ea c h
S1de.
Otning ,
co ver ed palio, elevator,
futl basement, large at
tic for storage, 3 car
garages, and 2 lois

13 Years

Exp~rience

Greg Roush

614·992·2 181
Freezers
Refrigentors
Washers -Dryers
Air cond1t1oners
Also
sev e ral
Repossessed at GOOD
Prices.

b1rch kit . with diSh ·
wa sher. nat. gas F A
furnace ,
pafto
overlooking the Ohio
River , 2 parches and
g arage in Cheshire. A
rea I nice older hom e for

$45,000.

7 ACRES - Free gas
heat, small home with 2
outbuildings
and

FINAL CLOSEOUT
OF SHRUBS
Make An Offer

Leading Creek . Will se ll
on terms. Only Sll,SOO.

REALLY NICE - 3 on

REALTY
OFFICE 742·2003
Geor-geS. HobsteHer Jr.
Broker
FARM - 4'1 acres mi l.
Approx . 6 acres tillable,

9 pasture, 33 acres
wooded Comfortable 3
bedroom home with kit·
chen, bath and
room .

Lots

of

buildings and
pond. The almost
.
tinual breeze and the big
shade trees give you the
feeling you •re right at

home. Located appro•.
one mile out New Lima

Rd . Reduced for quick
sale to $32,500.00.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092

0

bedrooms, large famil y
room , lots of ni ce car
peting and remodeling.
Built -in stove , dish·
washer, F .A . furna ce,
dr i llect well and over 2
acres of nearly level
land with large barn and

garage . Only $43,000.
45 ACRES on good
gravel road . School bus
and mail routes Will

se ll for $350.00 per acre
for all.
13 YRS OLD - Perma·
stone

3 bedrooms,

firepla c es ,

ch, and could have ren tal unit over garage .

71-Auto Parts
I Ac:CtiiOf"iu

4 bedrooms, 1112 baths,

7J- vansA • w.o

This 7 room home has 3·

full

fhaYir

basement,

W.B.

f ireplace3, and is really

noce. $52,900 .00.
NEW LISTING
older

eSERVICES
1 1 - Homtlmprtvlmtt~ts

12- Piumlitint &amp; Eaunll"t
IJ-Eauvallfl9

......,..,.11...

..- EtiCtriut

4672

I J-GoMrat Haullnt
M-M.H . ••pair

$1ZES

11- Upllolsttry

.8-20

2

full

basement, 3 lots and
garage. Patio, storm
drs and windows. For·
ced air heat . Asking

S4S.OOO.
·rRAIL ER LOT - With
&lt;Ill ut ilities, level lot

.w!th vi ew of th e Ohio ' '
R1ver .

All tvpes of rool work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts. gutter
cleantng and patnting.
All work guaranteed.

WELCOME TO OUR :· OPEN HOUSE
'

•

we would like to extend
our speclelt11ank11nd love
to Mike Bowl.., lklbby
Wllllaml, and Brian Grin·
dslaff, for their help 11 the
lime of C!Ur 10111 accident.
Also tllan!&lt;s to ell of hi s
many frlendl for their car-

bUt our love and memories
remain through the vears.
Sadly missed by Otho.
Bettie, Bernice, Edith,
Jean and Families.

Free e sttmates
Reasonabl e Pnc es

RcA~r.iibER

SERVICE
F rom the Smallest

Construction

Radiator Specialist

Custom t&lt;itch ens, Ap·
pl1ances ,
Custom
8athrooms, Remodelin·
g , Plumbtng, E l ectric,
Hea1ing.

Heater Core to
Largest Radiator

the

NATHAN BIGGS
~.

•

-

•

•Steel • Alumtnum •
Ca sting • Tr ail er Hit·
ches
•
Metal
Fabrication s.
Monday · Frtday
4p.m . to11 p.m
All Day Saturday

Free Estimates

Ph .

992~011

5·7·11C

992-7656

HARPER · HALSTEAD IN LOCAL Territory, In· Certified Clerk· Tvplst will
SALVAGE CO., lith and dustrlal Sales, excellent op· do typing. Call 367·7615
~':.~':;
~~:e~a~~d~ ec~r. VIand Street, now buying portunlly If you have am· anytime (80 cents per
o29·
metals ( c opper, brass, blllon. Soles &amp; technical page) .
provided .
aluminum, lead, stainless training
hanlcal
aptitude
&amp;
Were the ten com · steel,
batteries
and
Will do housekeep ing or
mandments nailed to the radiators, ginseng, yellow college degree helpful. We babysitting or sit with
sell
quality
products
&amp;
Cr05s? Bible study Wed· root, catnip and sassafras) .
In hospital or home.
nesday 7,30 PM at 1057 10 om to 6 pm dolly. Also need quality people. Do you elderly
Call-146·9623 after S:30.
send
resume
to
qualify?
Fourth St., Apt. 2.
Flea Market on Saturdays.
P.O. Box 230 Worthington,
CAII67S·5868.
Ohlo43085 .
Vinton Child Care In my
ROSENBERG RECYCLI·
home . Weekdays only, ret.
NG
Opening
soon Old furniture , stone jars,
Vi ck ie Diddle 388·8832.
orderly
for
r.J
Experienced
specializing In aluminum copper kettles and otller
cans, aluminum siding, types of a ntiques . Phone shill. Call Nancy VanMeter
at Pomeroy Health Care TV service calls Call 992·
sheet &amp; cast alum., c - r -"6·3925.
Center. 9·S Mon.- Fri. 992· 6776 or 992·2034. Also used
wire, brass, radiators, and
6606.
c:olor TV for sale.
euto batteries. Watch this COCA·COLA bottle collec·
paper for loca~tl~lo~n~~a~ntd~L I'or needs 6·ounce Coca· INFORMATION
on WILL do house cleaning
grand opening.
Cola bott le with November
16, 1915 or December 25, Alaskan &amp; overseas em and sewing, phone 304·675·
Recvcllng, 1«1
Rd ., Athens, Oh. -15701. Call 1923 patent date with Pt. ployr:nent, excellent In· 2088.
913·7477 .
Pleasant WV on bottom. come, call 312·741·9780 e•·
David Lyon, 23 S. Corwin, ten lion 917.
Leanon, Ohio -15036 .
WORKING girl with auto to
4
Glveaw•y
GOOD used baby stroller, stay with lady for room and
board. 304·67S·6'1'1'1.
22
Money to Loan
ANY PERSON who has 304 ~ 67S · 3214 .
anything to give away end
FHA·VA·Convential Home
does not offer or attempt to
HONEST . mature, depen· Loans, Columbus First
offer any other thing for
dable lady. Apply In per· Mortgege Co , ol63 Second
sale may place an ad In this
son . Apple Tree Deli , Rt. Ave .. Gallipolis, Oh .. -"6
column. There will be no
35, Henderson, WV .
7172
&amp;er •ees
charge to the advertiser.

-...· ...

PH. 949-2285
Located at Maplewood
l ake in R acine .

7·17 1 mo

.'VINYL ·

·srbiNG

~olfitt , ,
Gutter,
·: Roofing , Remodel! ·
ng,
Ro'lm
Ad ·
ditions, 'orywall
~nd Repair
Call :

ROBERT MASH
992-6323

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

- Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hr.s.: Mon.-Fri .
9 a.m. · S: 30 p . m .

EUGENE LONG

F r cc E sttmatc s
Crlll Colt ecl
Ph H4J :JJ1 2
I · 13 'l mo pd

4 17 lie

dttJ/

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

CAT

10 7 ft c

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"
- Addons and
remodeling
'- Roof1ng and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbrng and
elecfnca I work
(Free Eshmates)

V. C. YOUNG II
or 992-73Ii

D~·C

Farm Ponds· Land
Clearing - Roads .
Call :

Water· Sewer-E lectrte
Gas line-Ditches
Water Line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush L,ane

K '"'P Th1\ Ad lor

Fulure Reft&gt;renu

•

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

• Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
e Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas lines
• Dump Truct&lt;
• Trencher

L1censed &amp; Bonded ·

PH. 992-7201
5·21 lie

Pomeroy, Oh.

PARTS AND SE R VICE
ALL

M A KE~

O· ~ po \.l l ~

• w .u ll &lt;'n

•

1
•

a o,s,.w.tsher'
• Hot W,J!er r .:. nil \

Dr ye r ~

Ro~ n q e~

Rep.il oron q Sonce lf SJ

" Spec oJII R ;t t e~ For "
- Coll'l Li'lund rte\
• Renta l f'r o p(rto c\
. • ApJ

HOU\(' O w fl ('r\

. Motl•l• Hom e P.:~ rk \

- - - - - - -- - --llf - - - - - - -- ---lf-- - - -- - - - - - j

lHE PHOTO
PlACE

SALES

&amp;

- Weddings
- Anniversaries
- P assp(?rts

- and

Now, an i m·
presslve, complete line

LEO MORRIS

of w.ciding and 1anniversary invitations
and
accessories.

Reasonably

Rt. 1 Side Hill Rd.
Rullana, Ohio
PH. 742 ·2455
5·11 -lfc

priced,

quick service .

without

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflic;ti
Io9 High St .. " omeroy
6·28·1 mo.

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
HJ 50"- 20·30 H.P.
HA 60" - 25-60 H. P.
HE 60" - 45-80 H.P.
All Models Available

- Portraits

-:::s::=====

;...,.......;. :;;

EVERYBODY
Shops · the

WAH AD WAY

Cool&lt; wanted tor new area
restaurant. Exceptional
person .

Write

Box

Social work posit ion

for developmental disabled
related

or

have

••·

perlence. Send resume to

For all of your wir·
ing needs.

executive

gifts

to their

customers.
Men
and
women who can work
w ithout supervision can

build a career with the
Thos. D. Murphy Co. a
pioneer In advertising sin·

ce 1888 . This Is your op·

MANAGER

S ~ Assislant

managers and clerks for
Convient Store . Please
send resume to Gas Plus,

Muriel Ranum, Suite 112 Box 33~ . Gallipolis Ohio
1350 W. Slh Ave. , Colum· &lt;15631
Oh 43212.
bus,
Free to good home 3
Baby sitter for one Infant In
lovable kittens, 62 Lincoln
St ., behind Roccl's Rest. af· Person to call on business our home near Holzer
and industrial acounts In Medical Center. Ref req.
ter S:OO.
areas
surrounding Call-lo46·8563.
Gallipolis.
Must
have own
Old English sheep dog, car. Send resume
to
female to glveawoy . Call Sparkle Supply , 150 3rd
12
Situations Wanted
-lo46·7708.
Ave., Gallipolis, Oh. or call
custom
brush hogging .
(614) -"6·4109 for further In·
Post hole digging . 742·2577 .
DOUBLE bed, springs &amp; formation .
maHress, good condition,

30H75·2267.
FREE couch, chair &amp; old
dishes, 304·675·3312.

Need reliable baby sitter
for 2 children, ref . req .
Good pay . Call ,j&lt;l&lt;l-8652

ALCOHOLISM
Coun ·
Kindling end lirewood . selor / DWI School In ~
Phone304·675·2ol06.
struclor .
Bachelor's
Degree Social Service
Clothes Ironing mangle. Field. Southern Ohio. Send
resume to : Search Com ·
Phone 304~ 67S·2267.
mlllee, 327 Main Street,
3 Puppies, Bweeks old , part Jackson, OH 45640. Gallla ·
Cocker Spaniel. Phone JO.I· Jackson-Meigs Mental
Health Board Affiliated .
6'5·1229.
E.O.E .
6
Lost and Found
Lost since Thursday, July
23. Lare mele brown
Shephard. No collar. Childs
pel. Call 992·2382 alter 5:00 .

Have VliCllncy for room &amp;

board . Elderly or retired or
disabled . 992·6022.
13

Insurance

SANOY AND BEAVER In
surance Co hlls offered
services for fire Insurance

coverage In Gallla County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property co'llerages are

available

to

di'llidual

meet

In ·

needs .

Conflict

Lewis Hughes,
Phone ,j&lt;l&lt;l-3318.

agent .

S185.00 to S500 weekly doing
IN ·
mailing work . No ex · AUTOMOBILE
perlence required . AP· SURANCE been can ·
Lost
your
PLY: Circle Sales, P.O. celled?
Box 224·D, Richmond Hill, operator' s License? Phone
'1'12·2143
NY 11418.

Yord Sale
!!::========~~~Yard Sale· 29,30,&amp;31 :'
Bullevllle
10:00
to
5:00. Townhouse
Various 1tem1,
clollllng oil sires.

SERVICE

giving calendars, pens and

part~

3 tiger kittens IIIIer
tra ined, 6 wks old. 1 pure
black killen , a wks. old .
Call ,j&lt;l&lt;l-0475 or see ot 3
Garfield Ave ., Gallipolis .

BS/ BA

want to be in·

Murphy, P .O. Box 382 , Red
Oak , Iowa 51566.

time at local Develop·
mental Center advocating
Must

Do you

dependent?
Business
people like to advertise by

portunity for good com·
missions and continued In·
c:ome from repeat orders.
Full or part time, Write Pat

Call388·9001.

individuals .

SALES AGENT WANTED.

316,

opportunity tor quelifled
GallipoliS.

Tame, outdoor, short hair·
ded kittens to giveaway .

992 -2478
or
Blaine Milhoan
985·3965
7 15 I mo. pd

Ph .'367 ·7560
1·7 I lie

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Kittens 6 wks. old . Phone
,j&lt;l&lt;\ . ,(.48.1,

PULLINS
EXVACATING

7

GET VALUABLE training
as a young buSiness person
and earn good monev plus
some great gills as a sen·
llnel route carrier. Phone
right away and get on
eligibility list at 992a Family Yard Sale·l/4 2156 or
992·2157.
mile on Bullavllle Rd. July
3lst 'to' Aug. 1st. 9 1111?
Priced · to Mil household
ltemi, clotlllngand misc.

-~

call 742· 3195
or 992 -7680

&amp; CB Repair

8 11

- .· .· .. :': .: ..

:~

992 ~ 250:2 .

446- Gallipolis
367- Cheshire

992- Middleport

388- Vinton

985-Ches ter
343- Portland
247- Letart Fall s

Pomeroy

245- Rio Grande
379- Walnul Dist .
256-Guyan Disl.
643- Arabla Disl.

Yard 101e. T~ursday and
FriU'i' ,' f · 5',
SR7 ·
GreenhouM by State Highway val'l!lll·

Piano tuning l!lnd repair,
Love your ne ighbor tune
Bill Ward,
your Piano

Wards Keyboard. '"&lt;1·4372.
Gallipolis.
GALLIA

Cleaning

and

Rent A Maid Service Inc .•

3 bedrooms, full basement
&amp; garege. Sullable for
business, on :1M acre with
pool , fenced yard, &amp; gar·
den. In Middleport. $.45,000.
992·7370.
HOUSE-Meadowbrook Ad·
dillon, 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement,

30~ · 675 ·

1542.
NEWLY remodeled hoUlle
on 1 acre. 2 Bedroom, com·

pletely
s iding

cerpeted, new
and windows

guaranteed for .W years.

$9,000.00 or $6,000.00 down
and take over payments.

Must relocate. Call JO.I-576·
2102 after 5 ·00 or 562·9292,
10 to 3.
9 ROOM house plus some
furniture, 2 baths, patio,
18x:10 shop building, 116
Park Dr . JO.I-675·25'/2 or
675·2053 . Priced on In·
specllon.
INVESTMENT property .
Newly remOdeled two story
house in Point Pleasant,
corner tot has been con
verted into for rental units.

Good extra income . 525,000
" Principals only" . For in·

formation 614·,j&lt;I&lt;\·7S26.
Mobile Homes
for Sale

PRI CES REDUCED · Used
mobile homes and travel

trailers .
TRI - STATE
MOBILE HOMES. CALL
-lo46· 7572.

Free Estimates, bonded,

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
thor contractual .
HOME SALES, ~ MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, liT .
Complete Auction Service 35. PHONE ,j&lt;~&lt;~- J168 or 4411·
insured ,

phone

2olS·923A.

Cleanong by the week, mon·

stock reduction close outs
estates-farm equipment·li·
vestock ·real estate. Licensed and bonded In Ohio,

and West WV . Bud McGhee
Auction and Real Estate

727~ .

1981

Fairmont

mobile

home, S2x1~ . Need to sale·
relocating . Cell ,j&lt;l&lt;\·9303.

Co . Call for terms . 446·0552

or -lo46·0818. 428 Second
Ave , Gallipolis, OH ., 45631.
Your Piano rusting in sum ·
m er Humidity? Free In·
spec tion with tuning . Lane

197~ liberty 70xl~, 3 bdr., 1
i/2 bath, with drver hook·

up, unfurn. Does have ap·
pliances. electric fireplace,

carpel throughout. Blocks
and skirtings, steps and

742·2951 ex 992· metal building. $5,995.00.

Dan iels
2082 .

Johnson Mobile Home
Brokers, new listing 466·

STARKS Tree Trimming &amp;
Shrub

servi ce .

Insured.

Phone JIU-576·2010
HORSE
6626 .

shoeing

3547.

1978 70xl~, 2 bdr., I 112
balll, front den with wood·
burning

fireplace,

patio

304·675· awing , skirting, ap ·
pi lances, dining room table

and chairs. No other, like

EVANS Dav Care Center, new

furniture .

1&lt; ings Dr ive, Evans, WV Is ' Johnson

now accepting applications
tor enrollment. Opening
Augustl7, ages 21hrough 5.
Teacher Becky Sharp,
phone 30H72·S398.
~

. ~

.._
,

....
........ " ...
..
~

Homes for Sale

NEW

CABIN

or

completely

sale~

Home

Brokers, new listing 444·
3547.
---------73 Schultz mOitile nome
12x60, total electric , cen ·

tralalr, 57,500. Call256 1265
or 379·2250.

31
home,

510,000.

Mobile

For sale 197~ fOreedom ,
mobile home and lot
110x250. Located 2 mi.

small
fur ·

3 or -4 bdrs., fully car·

1bove Henderson, WVA. on

fU. 35. Will Sill '-Iller of
separate. f'hoM 675·4310
tiler 6PM.
12x60

E leona,

excellent

peted. 2 barns. 379·2258 or
379·2343, offer 6PM.

cond. , priv1te tot. Clll 2.S.·
6()33 .

New 3 bdr. house with
garage end full basement
$.45 ,000. Call '"&lt;1·0390.

1973 Crown Haven, U x65,
three bedroom , new car·

pet, 1971 Cameron, 1~•6-1 ,
two bedroom, new carpet .
Champion, 12x.O, two
BY OWNER : 4 bdr., split ~ 1972
bedroom
, new ctrptl . 1976
level, living room &amp; dining·
12X60, two
room combination, eat-In Cemeron,
bedrooms,
bath
&amp; 112, new
kitchen, lg. family rm ., 2 carpet. 1970 PMC,
12•60.
112 baths, located In Taro two bedroom, new carpet ,
Estates, Club house and B &amp; s Sales, Inc ., 2nd and
pool privileges, S75,000 VIand Street, Pt. Pleasant,
firm . Kvger creek School WV Phone 615·ol424.
District. Shown by eppt.
onlv call367·7135.
12 &gt;&lt; 60 Mobile home. P'alfo,
awning, underpennlng,&amp;
tlr conditioner. Will sell or
rent lot . Call992·21185.

Meigs Co . Area Code
614

. 614

L~~----~2 ...,_ :-'-'l

COMMERCIAL and in ·
duslrlal
photography.
Phone -lo46· 2909 or '"&lt;~ · 7226
after 4 p.m.

House with acreage for

RON'S TV -SERVICE
Specializing In Zenith .
House Calls. Now servicing
Motorola Quazar. Call I·
JO.I-576·2398 or ,j&lt;l&lt;l - 2~ .

Gallia Co. Area Code

Yard sale Nenle carter't.
old Rt. 160 at Kerr. Tue.
end Wed.

Professional
Services

RadloTV

16

Residential

tru W...!

23

nished, S3900. Call '"&lt;1·0390 .

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

Let George
ur,;:,~!'f:,~-fi
·your pr_esent l!
sv stem .,
&amp;Cornln erc1al

.;:~ .!~~

&amp;

11

4 lame rabbits full grown . 1l_!,__~H!!e!!I.I!P..!W~a!!n!!ted~-­
Call379·2742 or ,j&lt;l&lt;\·2329.
WANTED · Leese men, to
leasae oil and gas proper ·
Kittens, 8 wks old. Call'"&lt;~ · ties,
GAIIIa and surroun·
o4020.
ding counties . Inquire to
Great Bend Oil Inc. 269
KItlens free to good home . Lower
River
Rd .,
Hand raised since 1 week of Gallipolis. Call-lo46·4285.
age, IIIIer box trained. Call
245·5565 .

DOZER WORK

Cheshire;, Oh .

992-5682

~92-621S

S1d1ng
Roofing / Gutter
Remod eling
~ erv1ng Your Are.1 for
20 Year s

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

7 24 1 m o. pd

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

VINYL
PRODUCTS

room,be~ement

garege. l'rlvott IWim pool
with 6 acres land. Real nice
4 room nouse with double
garoge that brlftl$ 1200.00
mo . on Slme pr~ . Cell

3
Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing

BARNETI'S
WELD SHOP

C. R. Mash

with

Fully cerpeted, 2 ballls,
laundry

Call Howard
949 2862
949·2160

basement

Real nice 7 room house .

949- Raclne

742- RUIIand
Mason Co. W. Va ,

Area Code 304
675- PI. Pfeasenl
451-Leon
516- APt&gt;le Grove
· 773- M•son
112- Ntw Haven
195-Letart ·
9:17- Buffalo

'

Floaty then llounced- kick up
you• heels llld have fun· uniler
lhe sun 1n lh11 carehee cooler.
Zips up the lronl. zips 0. a.nd oil
you• sewmi mKhlnt. Stnd),
Pattt! ~

washer,

work shop, 2 ctr 111rage
with work shop, large 111r·
den, 2 porcl'leS. 548 Grant
St. , Middleport. 159,500.
wanll ng qu lck 101e to Slttle
eslote. Call 614-314·6309 for
appointment after 1 p.m .

and our conscience Is clear

t.,-_fh._ -/1.1-s

P1inted

Large 2 story stone hOme,
welllnsullated, wltl13 large
bedrooms, one full 111111,
2112 batlls, formal dining
room, newly remodeled kitchen bUiltin Including dish·

BEDS· IRON, BRASS, ;old
furniture, gold, sllwer
Kennelll
. Hanlng,Jr
ds
end E
VIII".
Family of dollars, wood Ice bo•n,
stone Iars, antiques, etc.,
2
In Memoriam
complete
nouuholc!s .
In loving memory of our Write : M.D. Miller, Rt. .1,
dear mother, Katie Young, Pomeroy, on. or 992· 77601
who left us 7 years ago,
July 22, 1974.
we do not live In 111e past

Pick up end
and
machlnerepelr,po~,
.~======~====~6-~3=1~m~o=·~::::::::::7:=26==1=m=o==p=d~~==========~~~2=4==tl~c~ supplies.
delivery, Davis Vacuum

- Look
obligation.

cases, front sitting por ·

7t- Motorc yclts

1
mil e
w es t
ot
F rllrgrounds on Old Rt.
33

ROOFING ·

Mon .- Fn. 1,30 to , ,oo
Aller Aug 3
Ph . 992·6S64

Ph .'992·7S83

Askong $28,500.
LEVEL RIVER LOT -·
4 bedrooms. 2 full baths,

Beautiful older home
w1th nice original WOOd·
work , built-in book ·

7! - Auto• to• Salt

77 - Avtcl

VIRGIL B. SR .ri.J3

~

bldg., and . nice front
porch $24,500 .00.
NEW LIS'TING

e TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

fAFORDm

NEW LISTING -

130-S---Sbls 31-56

bedroom s, large k1t ·
chen . basement, storage

U - Pra.Jtu•ontl
Str¥tCII

Por·

SCRAP
( Pomeory scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)
bodoes, s crap oron and
metals .

Pomeroy, OR
,92·2174

fland - Large level lot
Wtfh a 2 story frame

•J- LIVIIIIKII

Opporluntty

burv - Just completelv
remOd eled by one of the
best ca rpenters m the
area . It has new vinyl
s1d1ng, new roof, new
w1ndows and doors, new
plumbing , new winng,
new oak c abinets, new
appli ances, ne w car·
•n
fa c t
p e t1n g,
everything
1S new .
There is 7 room s, 3
bedrooms, pantry in the
kitchen , ut1hty room ,
nice yard and garden
area .
neighborhood . A 1 1/~
stor y frame with a ni ce
front
porch, storage
over garage, recently
remodeled
wtlh ~6
rooms "" 3 bedrooms,
tamlly room , utility
ro om
H as
an
as s um a b le
l oan .

47-WtntM to Rent

eMERCHANDISE
SERVICES

Grove - 7 m11 es from
the bridge Approx 37
acres, W1th a beautHul
v1ew of the rtve r . One
sfor y hom e W1th s
room s, 2 bedr oom s.
d1n1n g r oom , t.Jllhty
area, and an enclose d
lront porch Th ere is a
renta l house. med1um
S(I ed barn , cellar w1th
smok e hou se. workshop
and 2 one car garages

NEW LISTING - Mid·
dleport
E xcellenf

&amp; ALICI(On

e EMPLOYMENT

NEW LISTING - Apple

H. L WHITESEL

• Electrical work
• Rooting work

SMIT\t NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Housing
Hearlq11artv rs

IOOIS .. $2.ot lldl

Sl3.000 .00
NEW LISTING - Brad·

41- Equ•pmtnt lor Rtnt

1- Public S.lt

LISTING

Rutland 12x54 fur·
n1sh e d N e w
Moon
mob1le home w 1th 2
bedrooms, a.r cond ttior
and washer dryer Nice
leve- l 1 4 acre lot w 1th a
one ca r garage, con
crete walks. pat10, and
som e
fen c •n g .

Rtnt
45-- FurntStiMiilOOIIU

• - G nltiWI V

NE W

$26,900 .00.
NEW LI STING

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
e ANNOUNCEMENTS

AutAdM!s
Plltlnl DlpL

134-14 Qolcl Qollts
13:1-faslllell HIIM Qoilli_"l

Rutland - Really big
pretty y ard and energy
eti K 1ent one floor plan,
2 bedroom home. with
d•n1ng room , l&lt;1fchen,
n1c e bac k porch, car·
port,
and storag e
butlding . $21,000 00 .

" Beautiful, Custom
Buill Ga rages"
Call for tree Sid ing
est1mates, 949·2801 or
949·2860.
No sunda y Ca lls .
3 11 -ttc

IIIIHIII... Stod b1:

AU.

Public Notice

171 2i , 28, 18i4. Jtc

ltld

Ph. 949·2160

r ap prices paid for auto

far IKil ]lllllm far . . . .

·The Dally Sentinel
243 Wilt 17 SL, 11ft Y... IY
10011. Prinl IWI(, ADOIESS,
ZIP, Silt, lid STYl£ NUIIIll.
We sll.. mllned the sewinc to
save you 11me so you can save
moneJ! Send now lor NEW 1981 •
SPRING-SUMMER PAnERN CATALOG . 100 slyles, free patte10
cou'(:.Jf2 Value). CataiQI, Sl

Ohoo 45769

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Write your own ad and order by mail with thi s
coupon . cancel your ad by phone when you get
resul1s. Money not refundllble

12 (busl 34) lakes 2 718
45-.nch fabr1c
.. uc:h polltnl. A4d 50$

TOM HOSKINS

ing.

A

Public Notice

• Remodeling
• Free es timates
• 20 y r s. e)( per ienc e

1 r oom house,
large patio &amp; garage at·
lached &amp; 8 acres of land . '"'
mile out of Racine of Oak
Grove Rd. If can't wll all
will consider selling land
seperetelv. ShoWn by appointment . Call efler 10
a .m. U9·240S. Faye Powell.
Modern

~1f~c~~========~
~::::=:;~;;;:::;~~=====~7~-5
WANTING TO BUY

35 Yrs. Experience

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

af1d Home Maintenance

Otis McGrath of Athens was
weekend visitor of hili pareniB, Mr.

rooms , bath . I n
Langsville. 1«1 fl . on Itt.
1 2~. John snee", 3'"' miles
south Middleport.
4

V inyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

,'

t

~

I

I,

4612: !!isses

f". Meigs County
'
0

992·2156
Modified·A frame, 3

In Mason count•
•

67~1333
. ~--~~~~~=-----~.---JI
~

.

1971 Dorian 12 M 65, . 3
badrooms . 1972 cr-11
Haven, u M 65 with. 1 ic. 10
••pancto, 3 bedroom&amp;. •
_Utopia 12 • 65, 2 bedri~Gi~'!l.
1972 lnvtder '14 M 70, S
bedrooms. 1972 N.....U, 14 :'. , 60, 2 bedrooms. • 'At s
Sales, Inc, 2nd IIIII \1111111
SIS. Pt. . Pl....nt, ' wy.l'hoM 675-4424. \..

un

..

&lt;l"'&lt;

TO ~L/ICI5 AN AD CALL

1n ca111a CQUniy
~~ "

Sizes 8. 10. 12. 14. 16. 18. 20.

USEO Mobile Home. 576·
2711 .

,.

bdr. 2

balll" carpet. Sprlalllalrt.
circular 1tone fireplace, I
acrn. Call992-n41 .

.

' '

�•·,...
Page-8- The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1971 BrOOkwood, bath and
hall, hn bean remodeled,

well

to

wall

c ar ·

petlng,unturnlshed . PhOne
675·1553.
1979 LIBERTY mobile
home. 14 II. wide, total
electric. 304-675·5-444.
Mobile home located In
Camp Conley, Extra nice
and clean. Phone JO.C-11953967 .

JJ

Pomeroy- M

Farms for Sale

55 acres, ntne room house,
barn, m inerals, secluded,
oood hunting. Morning Star
area. S65,000. Additional
101 acres ava ilable . 949·
2630.

BY owner, .53 acre farm,
remodeled ,
beautiful
Colonial style home, ..
bedrooms, 2 new baths,
central heat &amp; air, 2 wood·
burning stoves, 1 connected

lo heallno system . 3 wells,
on blacktop road , 25
minutes from Pt . Pleasant
on Rt. 62, «&gt; acres fenced,
SB2,500. 304·937·3A32 .

Two bedroom house1raller
on Ashton· Upland Rood.
S150 plus utilities and
damage deposit . 3 miles
from Rt . 2. 675-GI.
bedroom houle
trailers for rent. furnished,
I with central air, good for
working couple or couple
with 1 child. $150 per month
plus deposit. 675-GI.

Two

2

2 bedroom mobile homo In
New Haven, adults only , no
pets. Phone ]0.1-675-1452 or
675·2996.

46

Mobile home 101 tor rent .
John Sheets, 3112 m lies
south Middleport.
TRAILER space 3 miles
from town function 2 flo 62 al
old Y, Pl. Pleasant, 6753248 .
LISA' S Trailer Park,
Mason. wv. Lois for rent.
Travel trailers. bY week or
month . All ulllllles paid .
Also Mobile home spaces.
304· 773-5319.
TRAILER lot 304·1195·3486.

lS

Lots I Acreage

LOTS · Real nice c ampsite
on Raccoon Creek. !II
ut ilities available, $300.
down, owner will finance,
callafler 3 p.m .• 256 - ~13 .

2 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd .
close to Rl. 160. $4,000.
Phone 446·0390.
I plus acre lol on Flalwood
Rd., all wooded . Call 992·
5396 after 5.
21 acres bottom land
located in Bidwell , Oh . Call
388·8429.
6 acres with well between

Rio Grande and Vinton,
$5 ,-100. Call 388·8139 .
45 acres tor sate by owner,
8 miles from town . Hannan
Trace School Distr ict, nice
wooded land, with ptenety
of road frontage, rural
water, $21 ,500 . If interest
call 4.4&lt;1·4775 from 9·7 or
evenings 446· 2928 .
Roughly Ph acre , S.R. 684,
Harrisonville _
Asking
$3,500 . 7~2 · 2577 .
Lots for sale in 2 new subdivisions In Racine Village.
On VIne Sl. flo Yellow Bush
Rd . '"9·2J.«l.
owner, 3 apartment
house on approx . 1 acre.
Live in one, rent others to
make your payment . Can
be converted single home.
City water, will consider
land contract. 675-1883 9 5
p.m .
BY

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

1mmedlate
Possesion .
Large whtre S bdr . farm
home on 8 rolling acres
with ioo cabin and J out
bUildings. One mile s.ooth
of Vinton. on St . Rl . 160. Old
McGhee home, 15 miles
from Gall ipolis . Asking
$.44,000 on land contract. 25
per cent down/ 8 per cent
interest or 10 per cent down
1 12 per cent Interest.
Possible
rental
no
reasonable offer refused.
Open house Wed. July 2'1
thru August 3rd . lOAM 1o
8PM.
2 bedroom house on 1 acr e,
R!. 62 S. 6 miles from Pl .
Pleasant, reference and
deposit. Phone 1·6U·26J·
8322 or 263· 2669.
House 3 bdr . ranch , 2 car
garage, swimming pool,
Gblllpolls Cily Schools.
$300 month plus utilities.
Phone «6·0355.

41

Mobile Homes
for Rent

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

FOR RENT 2 BR . mobile
home, 6 m lies from H MC
o&lt;11 160. 1 acre of land 1 oar·
d&lt;in. 446·0157 .

2 bdr . trailer
Evergre-en, all
call245·9170.

back of
ele-ctric.

For rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom
mobile home. Racine !rea.
992·5858 .

2 bedroom tr a Iter for rent.
Brown's Trailer Park . 992·
3324.

Two mobile home lots lor
rent, married couples apply In person to Everette
Schwartz, Rl. 1, Locust
Road. Point Pleasant.
OR RENT · almostnewUx
70, J bedroom, 1 112 baths,
sitting on nice lot, ready to
move Into. Phone 304·576·
2711 .

For rent trailer space for
small trailer weekly and
monthly rates, air con·
ditloned rooms by week,
cable TV . Mary R. Trailer
Park, Mason, WI/ . Phone
304· 773·5651 .

47

2 BEDROOM trailer near
Leon. WV partially fur ·
nlshed, $150. per month
plus deposit . Pay own
utilities. Call 30H58· 1978
after 5 p .m

Apartment
for Rent

2 BEDROOM, air con·
dltloned. turnlshed, out of
town on Rt. 2, small deposit
Phone 304·675-6277.
2·bedroom central air, fur· ~
nJihad. large prlv•t• lot 20' :
IOdld a room, wat.r-age-paved
Phone '
1·304-743·5077.
·
,

suo.

Wanted to Rent

Young,
respons i ble
professional wants to rent
in R lo Grande area. Call at·
fe r 5 :00«6·9770.

Misc. MerchandiH

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

75 Che\lrofetl T, 12ft. stake
bed low milage. Call 4460322.
1975 Ford 314 ton pickup
!ruck, automati c, PS, PB ,
360 engine. air cond . Call
446-2641, 1·5.

' HAY FEVER' HOME
remedy, tradition for cen·
turles. It warks. For com·
plele Into and receipt send
today sell addressed slam·
ped envelope plus S1 .00 to
S. R .A. Co., P .O. Box 284,
GallipoliS, OH 45631 .

1975 Ford 1 !on flatbed
truck, good engine flo
1:25&gt;&lt;20 tires, body rough .
CalloiA6-2~1 . 8·5.

Lowest prices on Bemco
bedding In the area. Call
lor prices. Vllllage Fur·
nlture. 2605 Jackson Ave ..

For sale 1979 Bronco ex.
cond., low milage, 55,700.
CelloiA6-7383.

For Lease

1-tOO sq . ft . retail space, air
c;onditloning &amp; cllrpet. Pt.
Pleasant, 675·3788 after
5:00.

51
For rent new 1 bd r. apt.
Call «6-0390.

REGENCY APT . INC. 2
bedroom ,
kit ·
chenfurnished, carpeted,
bills partially paid . S200
mo .
EKcellent
neigh ·
borhood , 675·6722 or 675·
5104.
NICE
UNFURNISHED
Garage Apt . $200 mo. plus
utilities. Adults only, no
pets. Ava ilable Aug . I. -"'6·
8067 .
3 bdr . house for rent and 3
rm apt . utilities paid . Call
675 51«1 or 675 5386.
Apartment
completely
turn., all electric, 3 large
rooms, with porch, newly
decorated, Second Ave.,
$200 mo., ref . &amp; dep. req .
Phone 4.4&lt;1· 2236 or 4.4&lt;1·2581 .
Brand new, small, 5 rm .
apt ., 15 minutes from
Gallipolis. Call256·1198.
2 bdr . apt ., partly furn .,
$115 . Slafe Sl., Gallipolis
across from park . Dep.,
ref ., water paid. Call 446·
3919 .

657~ .

Portable welder, 225 Am
Hobart. 19olll Chrysler. 5
window couple. 18 H P out·
board engine. Call446·9638.

dltloned 2928
with
new tube.
or «6·4775.
Call446·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker , ot·
foman. 3 tables, $500. Sofa ,
chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $275. to $695 . Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·a·
beds.SJ-10 .. queen s ize, SlliO.
Recliners, $165 . $2'/5 .
Lamps from $18. to $65 . 5
pc . dinettes from S79., to
$365 . 7 pc .• $189 . and up.
Wood table and ~ chairs,
5350 up to 5495. Hutches,
5300. and S375 .• maple or
pine fin ish. Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak, $649 .,
Bassett Cherry, $765 . Bunk
bed complete with mal·
tresses, $250 . and up to
5350. Captain's beds. S275 .
complete. BlbY beds, $89.
Mattresses or bo:x springs,
full or twin, SS5., firm, S65 .
and S75 . Queen sets. $185 . 5
dr. chests, 549. ~ dr . chests,
S-42. Bed frames, $20.and
$25 .• 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
SJSO., dineHe chaln $20 .
and S25. Tappan gas or
electr ic ranges, $285 .
USED
Ranges ,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am 1o 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am to Spm, Sat.
4.4&lt;10322

Apartment for rent. Call
992·5908.

ID'SED brown and while
living room chair $15 . See
at 769 Brownell Ave .. Mid·
2 bedroom
apt .
i n dleport.
Pomeroy . Equipped kit·
chen. $150.00 per month . Side by Side refrigator with
Call Cleland Realty , 992· ice
maker . Admiral.
2259.
S150 .00. Call992-7352 .
Used sofa and chair. May
be seen at Ingels Furniture, Middleport .

HOOVER Portable washer
&amp; dryer, like new, JO.t -675·
6504 .

PORTABLE washer flo
dryer, loveseat and
rec lining chair, coffee
I able flo 2 end tables. TV an
tenna, 3301 Robinson, Pt.
Pleasant .
ANTIQUE poster bed.
while spool bed, J C Penny
Berkshire wood stove, 304·
675·2039 .

614 · 8&lt;13 · 2~1.

SHERICH Birch kitchen
cabinets, double ·Hotpoint
Furnished efficiency apt.
ovens &amp; countertop range
Air conditioned &amp; TV . with grill . 30.-675· 1831.
Adults only . 992·5304.

Lono white wedding gown
and veal, ex . cond ., $75 .
Call 4.4&lt;1·0696.

POOLS '
S WIMMING
PRE -SEASON SALE :
$999 .00 INSTALLED!!!
Above ground pool COM·
PLETE LY INSTALLED
starting at $999.00. Price in·
eludes pool, deck, fence,
filter, liner, and in ·
stallation under normal
ground condition . Free
shop at home service . Call
1·800·624-8511 .
EASY credit available now
to purchase furniture,
televisions, or appt iances.
Village Furniture 2605
J ackson Ave .• 675· 1773.
Yellow Freestone canning
peaches . Now thru Sept . 20.
Any quantify available .
Retail &amp; wholesale. Bob's
Markel. Mason . Phone 773·
5721. Open dally 11119 p.m .
Canning tomatoes . Andrew
Cross,Letart Falls, Ohio
2~7 2852.
14 in chain saw with
carrying case. $100 .00. Call
9~9· 2779

26' TROUTWOOO travel
trailer and camp site on
Raccon Creek. Close to
Ohio River . S500 doWn .
Owner will finance. 614·256·
1216.

Rooms for rent, utilities
paid, TV fn rooms. S55 and
up. Call446·2501 .

#

S,-ce for Ron!

m1.

72 Ford Van or 74 Ford
Van, your choice S650. 1971

~~~~~~~~~~:=-r::;==:;;::=::::=:::::;:::':'-t 7037
Maverick,
$450.
after 6PM.
54

Misc. Merchandise

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows. lintels. etc . Claude
Winters, R lo Grande, 0 .
Call24.5·5121.
Pets for Safe

S'

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor al 367·
7220.
DRAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies . CFA
Himalayan, Persian lind
Siamese kittens. Call 446
J844aller4p.m.
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds. clean
indoor·outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call «6·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC Gordon setters.
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call446·4191.
ACF Registered White and
shaded Silver Persian and
seal piont Himalayans.
Call304·523·7749.

2 rabbits with nice cage,
$25 . Call 388·8711.
AKC reg. while loy poodle,
13 mo. old. Call «6·7948 .
A.KC Doberman pups. Red,
black, and tans. Call 446·
1562.

THE FISH TANK and Pel
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
675·2063, Pl. Pleasant. New
hours. Now open on Wed .
Open 11-4 Mon . lhru Sal .
Fri. hours 11 ·6.

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

AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian an Poodle
pups895·3958.

OLYMPIC slain. in stock
only $13 .95 Pl . Pleasant
Paint &amp; W.!llpaper Center .
Portable welder 225 amp
Hobart . 19~9 Chrysler, 5
window coupe. 18 HP out·
bOard engine . Call 446·9638 .

TWO 72 VW seals . S10.00
each . See at 2910 Spruce
Ave . Pt . Pleasant .
LIKE new 5 piece Home In·
terior clock set (white
wicker) originally $97 . will
sell tor S35. Also would like
to sell remaining yard sale
items as one lot . ~ boxes in·
eluding clothes. household
items, drapes, rugs, etc .
Will sell everything lor $20.
For information call 304·
675-6535 al!er 5:00.

TWO. 5 month old female,
white. Germlln Shepherd
puppies. AKC registered,
304-895·3473.
AKC Chow Chow puppies.
excellent pedigree, black
cream and red, mllle and
female . Glenwood 304-762·
2035.
AKC registered Beagle
pup, three males . James
Davis, ~ · .576 · 239(1 .
Registered
Australian
Shepherd . Blues and solids,
excellent cattle doo lind
pel. Phone 30&lt;-586·4367.
AKC red-rust Doberman, 7
months, bo•ers, fawn ·
black mask SIOO. Shots and
wormed. Phone 304·743·
8002.

AKC cream puffed
bloodline poodle and pup·
pies S75 .· up.
Shots·
wormed, Beagle female
registered. Phone 304-IAJ·

8002.
57

Musiclll
Instruments

Maestro electric plano, e• .
cond. Call245·9258, $200.00.
Elegant Baldwin piano
belno picked up In your
area . Responsible person
mav assume low monthly
payments. For information
call coiled 61073-5125.
Ask for credit manager .

WANTED : Responsible
party to take over low mon·
lhly payments on spinet
plano. Can be seen locally.
Wrlle Credit Manager :
P .O. Box 33 Friedens, PA
15541.

-··. .....
_... ...
. , .. .
_,
~

Farmall F20 tractor, SJ$0.
Massie Harris with front
end loader, $650. In·
ternatlonal 1e 11. flatbed
1966, $900. Phone 256-9303.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North o1
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.

Allis Charmers w.c. trac·
tor, OOOd cond. R ldlng hor·
ses. Call379·2761.

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Soulllern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire. Oh.

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
OhiO. $3,000.00
1·304-422-2711.

992·3954.

V•ns&amp;4W. D.

1978 Chevy 314 T, 4 whHI
drive, Scotsdale 20 series,
4,300 miles. Call after 6 446·

NEED several items of fur ·
niture,
appliances,
televisions. Big discounts
for quanity purchase .
Village Furniture 2605
Ja ckson Ave . 675· 1773 .

2 bedroom apt. Adults only . 52
CB,TV, Radio
No pels. Deposit flo reteren· _ _ _E=qu:::i,.p_,m.:.:eo::nc.l_ _~
ces required. 2 miles on QUAZAR portable TV,
S. R . 1&lt;13. 992·36-47 .
electric lighter or 9-voll
baMery . 30.-675· 4042 after 77 GMC pickup topper,
APARTMENTS
ANO 5.
slide in sleeper. also large
MOBILE HOMES 675·4130 .
hutch . 206 Smllh St . Hen·
Sl
Antiques
derson. Phone 30.·675·3333.
Apartments. 67S·S54 .
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will Etectrolux carpet·shampo·
SMALL furnished apart· pay cash or certified check oer, floor polisher , 6 bo•'s
ment, no pets, references tor antiques and collec· flea market. 1971 Yahama
good condition for
tibles or entlre estates. 11S
required, 304·675· 1365.
Nothing too large. Also, $175., 1 electrical oul!ar
and amp solid state GA(I10.
2 BEDROOM, unfurnished guns, pocket watches, and Phone 304·675·1179.
apartment and 2 bedroom coin collections. Call SS7·
furnished apartment, JO.f· :Mll .
10' aluminum boa!, flat bol·
675·5571 .
!om, 10 speed trolling
54
Misc. Merchandise
motor forward lind rever·
VERY clean &amp; nice 2
bedroom apartment in New Green bean!.. Pick your se. oars, life jackets S175.
Phone 304·675·5017.
Haven, lots of room. air own . $8 .00 bushel . 247·2664 .
condlllonlno flo completly L,.;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;..J..;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;;:;;;:;;.
furnlshect $250. a month, r
$100. deposit. Call 614·«6·
7526.
APARTMENT lor rent,
furnl!ohed or unfurnished,
very reasonable, 30-4·882·
JJS6.

11

Sears wood burner with
blower. $180. Speed Queen
25 IN . COLOR TV Sylvania wringer washer $200 .
Superset. dual speaker . Bedroom suite S125. 1972
Ford Torino, Oood running
$600 . 4.4&lt;1·4051 .
cond.$350. Can be seen
beside grocery store In
For sale 1970 El don Langsville.
Cadillac mint cond . Self
defrosting refrig ., tape
deck, FM radio and
55
Building supplies
speaker. Call367· 7209.

Household Goods

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
1 bedroom apts. available dryers ,
refrigerators ,
at Riverside Apts. Equal ranges .
Skaggs
Ap
Opportunity Housing. Call pliances , 1918 Eastern
992·7721 .
Ave., 446·7398.

OPENING SOON . Senior
Citizens &amp; handicapped
apt. community opening.
Featuring 1 bedroom un·
furnished with wall to wall
carpeting, wall-teK walls,
built in bookcase, ap-pl iances, smoke detectors,
air conditioned, private
patio. stor!oe facilities,
single story with no stairs
to climb, private entrances
with Individual parktno at
your
door ,
laundry
facilities on premises with
recreation &amp; meeting
rooms .
Professional
resident
manager
on
premises. Stonewoods Ap-ts .• Rl. 7, Middleport. For
rental information phone

1972 CHEVY pickup, short·
bed, 3 speed, 350. 62,000
miles, good running, $1250.
304·89.5-3559 after 5:00p. m.

F irewood for sale. Call 256·

For sale Lazar Trans. Dial
a grade, spectra·tronlc.
Valued at $6,000, asklno
$1 ,700. Completely recon·

IDJCKTRACY

by Larry Wrtght72
'-''---T.!eru=ck~s~...-~S•:::Ie!..-_

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER·
VICE, complete sales, - vice, supplies end In·
s tallatlon. 446·1324.

CANNING JARS, 379·2115

2 bdr . aparlmenl lg . LR
and Kitchen . Across from
Honda Shop no pels. Call
4.4&lt;1· 3937 .

4S
Furnished Rooma
2 bedroom mobile home. 1
child accepted. No pets or SLEEPING ROOMS and
drunks. John ShHts, 3112 light housekeeping apt.,
miles south Mlddfeport.
Park Central Holel.
2 bedroom trailer. fur·
nlshed. Adults pr~ered .
Oeposll. Call992·2749.

54

615· 1713.

49

BY owner lAO acre farm . 35
Acres creek bottom , ap·
proximately 70 pasture,
resf In timber. 2 !lory
house, 2 large barns,
several out buildings, large
tobacco base, oil and
mineral rights, drilling In
area . 4 Miles off R! . 35 on
gravel road . $110,000 . 30~ ·
675·2'133 .

Space tor Rent

Farm Equipment
61
Farmall cub tractor with
cultivators. Has new clut·
ch, pressure plete, throw
out bearing, transmission
over hauled, magento
overhauled, new starter,
new battery, battery
cables, new voltage relay,
runs good . 247·2092.

FARM wagon, new 14 fi.M7
fl . oak bed, $350. Spoke
wheel, side delivery hay
rake, 3 pt. hook up. $400 .
N~w 6ft . disc, 3 pl. hook up
$350. Phpne 304·882·2819 .
Call after 6 p .m .
FARMALL C tractor.
plows, disc, drag harrow,
hay rake, cultivators,
mower. waoon. 304·522 ·
7577. All $2200.

Motorcycfes

1979 HOnda lOth An ·
nlversary, 750. $1,900. Call
379·2133 after 5.

1980 Kawaski KE · IOO ex .
cond. , 500 miles, $499. Call
446·7381 .
1976 Kawa!.nkl KZ 400, new
banery, 17,000 miles, $650.
675-5504.

1974 Honda 350, needs bal·
tery . Excellend condlllon .
Ridden very little. Phone
304-675·5085.

INTERNATIONAL Far ·
Boats and
mall Cub with mid mount 75
bailing mower, 5 ft. cut.
Motors for S•le
$2,500. 304·675·2835.
1979 BASS boat, 16 II. 55 HP
•l
Livestock
Johnson motor, Depth fin ·
der, trolling motor, ex·
2 milk goats, $60. each
cellent condition, $3,500 .
bolh for SIOO. Fresherled I 304·675-&lt;1327.
June. Shade, Ohio (6U) .'7===7=:::====
696· 1234.
76
Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories
2 kid goats, 5 weeks old,
112 CHARLIE ' S SALVAGE "
males . S25 . each.
Nubian . Shade, Ohio 6U· Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
696·1234.
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 4.4&lt;1· 7717 .
2 RIDING horses, 5500.
each, 304·675 ·5851.
For sale car for parts, 72
2 RIDING horses,
each 675·5851 .

Duster slant 6, Sl25. Call
$500. 446·7835.

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

2 NEW tires &amp; rims for
small pickup, 304·895·3441 .

77

Auto Repair

Autos tor Sale

ROBERTS BROTHERS
Camero 6 cyl, 3 spd .. GARAGE. 24 hr . wrecker
PS. AM/FM radio. Phone service. "Big or small" we
low !hem alii 23321iastern
388 ·9334 after 6 PM.
Ave. , Gallipolis, Oh10. Day
· 446-2445 or Night
446·
1971 Ford L TO Country 4792.
Squire, ~ - Dr. Station ·
wagon. Complete tuned· up,
new exhaust, 5 new radial Auto Painting &amp; sanding
tires. radio. AC. PS. disc. $175, any calor,free pickup
brakes, uses no oU . Ex· &amp; delivery in Gallipolis
cellenl running shape and area. Hammond Body
verv good body. Asking Shop, 221 Mill Sl. 379 2782.
$900 or best offer. Call 388·
81-«&lt;after 4PM .
E flo V Body Shop Want
your car looking new? Call
78 HONDA ACCORD 33 to 4.4&lt;1·9304 Georges Creek Rd .
35 MPG. 5 spd .. std. trans ..
hatchback. ex. cond. AM· JERRY'S Garage now
FM, new radial. Call after 6 open, Southside. 9 Miles on
446·2055.
35.
General repair on
automotive and trucks.
1975 VW R abbil very good
cond., S2000 . Call24.5·5077.
Camping
78
Equipment
1977 AMC Hornet station· 1976 Fold up Apache cam·
wagon. Call «6·7109.
per. Call318·8132 .
1974 olds, e•lra good cond., U II. TRAILER camper,
new !ires. S895. Call 256· sleeps 6. 304-675·2267 .
6582.
1969 Dodge Dart G TS,
asking $1 ,300. Call949·2123.

1977 Olds Brougham, ex ·
cellenl condition. Can be
seen at 2307 MI. Vernon
Avenue .
© 1976 FORO Granada,
good condition, phone 304·
675·3645.

81

Home
Improvements

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Sleamway. Call 614·446·

2096.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
4.4&lt;1·42011

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding. 30
1979 CHEVETTE, ex · years experience. Free
. Remodeling.
cellenl condition, 33,000 estimates
Call 388·9857.
miles. silver with racer
stripes. Best otter, 304·773·
STUCCO PLASTERING ·
5660 or 304·675·5603.
textured ceilings, com·
73 GRAND Torino, lor par · merclal and residential,
free estimates. Call 256·
IS, $150. 304·675-6219
1182.
59 WILLIES In good Sha~,
rag top, 4 chrome whaelo, 4
cyl. engine with low and
high transfer case, $1,000.
Serious callers only ]O.t-6756219.

•

'

..

"·

CAPTAIN EASY

SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING, Carpentry
work ,&amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446·2717.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet . Cleaning featured by
75 DODGE Dart, 6 CYI., air,
power brakta, power Hallelt Brothers Custom
FrM estimates.
steering, automatic, priced carpets.
Calt416·2107.
$1600. 304·576·2535.

Wl DICK CAVITT IHOW
IIICIWID IIIMMONI

R

FACI! THI! IIUIIC
7:311 illii.ai!BALLAtlanta Bravn
vaSt. Loula Cerdln1l1 (If
player•' atrike continual,
programming will be

' :"..:..~- · - --

() I

NOT A VEHICL-E
'TO D~lt.JI&lt; ON.
Now arrange the clrclad leltoro ID
form !he surprloe : ••
geotod by !he cartoon.

suo·
[j
Prlntan8werh•re=[ I I J "( I I I I t
(Anowera tomorrow)
Yesterday's

I

Jumbleo SKUNK

ABBEY

CROUCH

MEADOW

Answer: " When did you first notice that weak

back?"- .. A WEEK BACK"

•"::r.:'"

7:18
8:00

BORN LOSER

l

CIN UPDATI! NI!WI
HI!RITAGI! IINGI!RI
MOVIE ·(DRAMA)'''
'.11~w.ll" 1871
(1)(11). ROYAL WI!DDING
PR!vt!W Peter Jennlnga 1nd
Barbara Weltere preview the

BRIDGE

pomp andtradhlon eurrounding
the royal wedding ot Prince

HARPER Halstead, lawn
mower repair and shar pening service, 10 a.m .·6
p.m . 675·5868.

Charlet and lady Diena
!!J!oncer. (flO mlno.)
Cll LOBO Deputy Porklno'
niece, an eapirlng rock alnger,
involvaa Lobo and hie deputlee
In e dengeroue altuatlon with
record plratea who are
determlnedto continuecaahlng
in on their Illegal bualneae.
(!!e~oa~ nilno .l
• (I) W11 WALTER CRONKITE'S UNIVERSI! CBS Nowo
Specie! Correepondent Walter
Cronkite enchora thla newa
magazine eerie athat ••aminea
the full flcope of eclantlflc
activity lnvol-.lno the wldeet
poaeibla range of human
curklaity.
(J) NOVA •Animal Olympian a·
The beauty, endurartceand raw
power of anlmaleln the wild are
ceptured on film a a Nova
Juxtapoaea Olympic athlete a
performing feat a which have
parallela lAthe animal kingdom
with anlmala who are champlana of grace and apeed .
(Cioaod·Caplloned,U.S . A.)
(e_Omlno.)
I)D APPOINTMENT WITH
DESTINY 'Tho Crucifixion of

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

wv

ANNIE

- AH' HE U5E5 HI~ OWN MONEY
SO'G HE DOO'T HAVE T' EXPLAIN
T' NO 5TOCI(.HOLOEil5 l'iHY
THEY'LL BE LOGIN' l'lONEY

F flo K Tree Trimming,
slump removal. 675· 1331.
T and
R
building,
remodeling, also papering,
carpe:t Installation, and
general
home
im ·
provemenls. 675·5689, 675·
5304.

FEP&gt; YEAR.5 BEFOfZE THEY
f.EE APllOFIT.'

Cabinets,
WOODSHOP
picnic:
tables,
porch
swings, most wood produc·
Is. 101 Court St., Gallipolis.
Call «6·2572.
8:30

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

ALLEYOOP

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477
J flo· P Plumbing flo Heating,
Rl. 1 Gallipolis, 367·7853 .
D. C. Contractors Plum·
bing, electrical. heating,
rooting, aluminum, vinyl
siding, and home painting.
675·3376 or 675· 12«1.
Excavating

BACKHOE Complete ser·
vice . French City Mobile
Homes Inc . call.c46·9l40.

GASOIJNE ALLEY

DITCHER Complete ser ·
vice. Water and sewer
lines, drainage ditches.
French City Mobile Homes,
Inc . call «6-9340.

Hes diqqinq hirnc;B•If
· anole In

do we do?
We can't let
themt

1Whi'lt

do

Rover!

Dozer work . Small jobs a
specialty. 742·2753.
Dilcher work. Charles R.
Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe .
Gas, electric, and water.
742·29&lt;13.
EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank. 675·1234.
BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . Larry Slden ·
stricker. 675·5580.

WINNIE
SO MUCH FOR
i7R . BllLII1AN '5

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

"'lET .'

Fuller Electric Co. Com ·
plete rewiring, commercial
or residential, and elec ·
trical maintainance, also
on call. Ph . 446·2171,
Gallipolis.

SO I 'M TIRED
AND NERVOUS.
l 'M UNDER A
LOT OF

STH£55

... TRYING TO
PLEASE
MARINI&lt;A AIVI?
WINN IE !

NOW THAT Yeti 'Vf'
&lt;SOT CONNIE ON
THE R lcSHT TRACK ,
MAYBE SHE'LL
START "'ATING

ME/

i

!iOO.D NEWS
(J) ilDl COMEDY OF HOR·
RORSPatrick Macnee alaraaa
the hoet of a dramltic comedy
that examinee a honeymoon
tal hexed by a haunt .
8:58 ; CIN UPDATl! NEWS
1:00
700 CLUB
(J)ilJ). THREI!'SCOMPANY
Jack Ia thrilled to receive an
opportunity for advancement
when Dean Traveralnvltea him
to teach at Jack'e old cooking
school. (Repeat) (Ciooad·
Captioned: U.S.A.)
ClJ HILL.BTAI!ET BLUI!S
Macatee ,a crooked former cop
who once attempted to frame
oftlcef LaRue, triea to make a
deal wilh Captain Furlllo In
exchange to~ hi a freedom and a
new lden!My. (Repeat: flO
mini_J_
• (I) ilDl CBS TUESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Stunl Seven'
t979 sure : Chrlalopher
~nnelly, Elke Sommer.
CIJ liD MY8TERYI 'The Racing
Game' Eploodel. 'Oddo
Againat' Thil ••lea Ia baaed on
the myeteriea of Dirk Francla .In
lhlo aploodo , jocke~ Sid Halley
linda a new occupation etter he
II injured In an accident.
(Clo oed· Coptloned, U.S. A.)
(§!Imina,)
8:30 C1J !Dl. IT'S A UVING Lola
atruQOIII through an Imp...
aioned and comical apeach in
detenae of a weltreaaln front of
her daughter Amy' a c..11 aHer
Amy tella everyone her mother
~ b_l!lk vice prealdent.
10:00 lV •
Cil NBC NI!WS
SPECIAL: ROYAL WEDDING
PREVIEW NBC Newo corre·
apondent• John Chancellor,
Tom Brokaw and Jane Pauley
report tram London on tlnal
pltnalor tomorrow' I weddinG
of Prince Charlel and Lady
Olano Spancar. (80 mlno.)
(]) C..OIIII!NTING ADULTl
(J) (IJ). HART TO HART
Jonathan and Jentllftr are hald
aa h08tao•• by two deaperate
klllerowhowlllatop 11 nothlngto
obtain an !"criminating bullet
thai
ataltted in the Hlna'
manelon . (Repeat; eo mine.)
/ilooed·C.ptloned: U.S.A.)

ro:OI;·E:N:~:""D

,.

to:21

l

10:30

BARNEY

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commerci-al, Industrial.
Phone 882·2079.

SNUFFY!!

I . GOT A
SUMMER ·
SALE ON
. POCKET

General Hauling

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery . Call 2S6·
9368 a~ytllne.

iUI'

w••

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer ....
Sales flo Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop • .'
Pomeroy. 992·2284.
•

!!WHAT ARE
THE'V SELLIN' FER?

TH'HOOTIN'
HOLLER
I D.JIT

STRIKES
AG'IN

.KNIVES

C8NUPDATI!NIWI

~:~~==~~EI~.

A
Different Kind of Life' In lhio
profile, three people cope
effectlvelywHh America 'a moat
druded dla.. H, cancer.

I • ·m

TWLIGifT ZONI!

10:18
tt:OD

CI!!LU~~­
.

Unusual spade contract
By Oswald Jacoby

aad Alaa Soatag
Six spades is a rather

NORTH

nor ~

mal contract for North and
South . Some optimists might
even get to seven and only
real underbidders would
stop below some slam.

Of course, this pair were

helped by their opponents
preempting against them.
The play at any spade contract Is interesting. South
sees two certain losers. One
In each minor suit . It is a
book situation. He must cash
out his diamond and club
winners and then throw one
opponent in. If that player
has no remaining card in the
other minor suit he will have
to lead a heart and give
declarer a ruff and discard.
The particular South we
watched made his contract
by playing two rounds of
trumps, cashing dummy 's
king of diamonds and ace of
clubs, continuing by cashing
his diamond ace and club
king.
South noted that East dis·
carded on the second club .
Then South counted the
hand. East had shown seven
hearts by his openins three
bid. He had one card on each
black suit which left him
exactly four diamonds. West
held three and there was no
point throwin~ West in with

.A+

+QJ9153

K &amp;2

+A63
EAST

.....
WEST

+2

.K 9 7 2
.QJIOB6&gt;1
t973
Q J 10 I
+QJ98H
+to
SOUTH
eAK10764

+

.3

t A85
+K42

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East
Norlb

West

• 6•

3.Pass

Eall

So oil

I+

Pass

Opening lead:•2

a club

so he - led his small
diamond .
East had to win and give
South the ruff and discard.
Note that East could have
beaten the slam by dropping
two of his high diamonds on
the ace and king, but East
ha~_ overlooked that play.

ti~·····,(
by THOMAS .IOSEPH
ACROSS
1 European

38 Faltered

in speech

river

38 Pitcher
DOWN

5 Ukemany
driveways

1- Lawrence
College
%Boxing site
3 Dliclt

10 Argonauts'
ship
11 Actress,

Vivian-

4 Carew

12 Peruse
13 Secluded
It Black cuckoo
15 Fluffy scarf
16 Back talk
17 HaWlt
19 Golfer's

or Stewart
5 Fold
&amp; Dutch
measure
7 Commit
a crime
8 Lured

9lntenslfy
thrill
ZO Any minute 11 Journalist,
Heywood~

now

n Actress,

Yeslerday'a .AIIswe:r'
15 Merry
25 Cut down
18 Toe distress27 "If I - You"

(1945 song)

21 Dismissed

22 Stephen
21 Choice
Foster girl 21 "Easy ~"
23 Measuring
( 1969 film i
device
34 Rich mineral

24 Make

35 Andreu
film

glisten

Anna-

zz Benumb
%3 Legal
document
Zf Golf stroke
%5 Suggestion

21 KlrRhlz,

U.S.S.R.

n Mocha, e.g.
30 New Guinea

tOwn
31 Symbol
ol. wisdom
3Z Man's name

t-::-::+-+-

33 Wecldln8

minded
FOR

THI!

35 Old 8
buepath

maneuver·
36 Caught

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways .
Call for estimates 367·7101

1.-.1.-.1.-.1.-.l.-

37 Bear maUce

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

'.

'.

AllYDLIAAXa
LONGFELLOW

One letter aimply olonds for another. In thlo sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten ..
apostrophe&amp;, the lenrth and formation of the worda • ..., oii
hiats. Each day the eode Iellen ere dllerent.

'·

DILLARDS
WATER ' •
DELIVERY SERVICE . . '
Call «6·7«14:

'Mobile nolnea mo~ (
licenSed, and lion~d. 576~ ,
2711.011675·4391.
...
(

TICNID

1

CONTINIOUS no leak gul ·
terlng, custom made tor
your home . For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUT ·T ER
AND DOOR . 6U·698·820S.

JONES BOYS W;t\TER ',
SERVICE. Calf 367:7471 or .
367·0591 .

IIACIII!li.AI!HRIR

'1'£
JOKIR'I WILD
HOLLYWOOD IQUAREI

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

Jones aovs Water Service .
Call367·7471 or 367·0591 .

!J

~.

Gene's Carpel Cleaning,
deep stream extraction .
Free estimates, reasonable
rates. Scolhouerd. 992·6309 .

IS

I I t

7:01 •E:THI!FAIIILY
7:30
IAII!IALL Cincinnati
Redo vo Plttoburgh Pltotoo (If
pleyere' atrlke conUnuea,
aHomolo programming will H
aired.)
(JJ ANOTHI!R UFI!
(])
RACI! FOR THI!

Mobile Home roof painted
lor winter. 535 you supply
paint. Will also do pipe In·
sulatlno. Call Ken Mannon
at446·5577 or 256-1932.

Quaitly Cooling and
Healing Service Call 388·
9698.

• • FAIIILYFI!UD
&lt;tJKNOWLIDGI! : FIVI!
TOU¥1
TICTACDOUGH

7:00 (JJ. PIIIIIAGAZINI!
(JJ
JOHN AIIKEMI!IIG

"I

Home building, home
remodeling and repair.
custom work from start to
finish . Call 388·8711 .

83

J

EVI!NING

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
malntalt'1ance
end
remodeling. Phone 388·
9326.

82

I (]

' I"ULY21, tNt

~

COOK'S Television
vice,
Henderson ,
Phone675·2250.

•

VIewmg

Interior end Exterior pain·
tlng, traitor roofs, and dry
wall S18 and up, 15 yrs. ex·
perlence. FrM est. Call446·
1562.

84

69 Z28. 992·36-47 .
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson. WI/. Phone 675·
1574 or 675·2881 .

Hoover S~rs repaired
at Empire Furniture. e42
Second Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

Television

.'

Call 446·

1979 CHEVY Pickup, lour
wheel drive, lock out hubs,
with camper . Excellent
condition . $5,000.00 or
$1.800. and · lake over
payments. 304·675·4327.

74
John Deere No. 7 mowing
machine. Fair end. $45.
Call alter 8 p.m . 992·5956_.

_The Daily

Ju

Tuesday, July 28,1981

OhiO

"CRYPTOQUOT£8

'nlERE ALSO MAV BE

AFEW EAA'fl.IQUA.KES .
AND ~E FL.OODS

T14AT'5

FQAW

HWQH. OW

FWYFDGillltW

'

.F Y E T . T W J

GURG

RNW
GUWZ

FQ
CWW()
• "J

DC

R Y.

W H D J W A D. p
.

~.

'

:

QKWNOQQSF . QUWA : - Sl&gt;Y UETTRN J .,
Y..-.ra Cltf!'llllil: ONE. DOES NOO NEED TO Ji:A'f~ '
MORE 'tHAN P T OF AN EXlG TO KNOW IP rr' 11: ~
BAD.-WAL......,P·•·GE
,
'· ·
.
'""'~."·
'
1&amp;~
n:
\ ' ,.1.
•I \ ' •

'

I

'"" ' 1"

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Battle lines forming on
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Some
unusual batUe lines may be fonning
in the General Assembly, where talk
of school funding and tax hikes continue even during· the swruner

recess.
Monday, one senator envisioned a

of senators will reswne efforta in
early August "to find middle
ground."
·
He said he tbints a bipartisan
agreement could emerge from the
Senate, but he would not speculate
about its fate In the House. Rhodes

Riffe liave Cooperated on such

scenario in which a bipartisan
proposal miglt emerge from the

and

RepubllcaJM:ontrolled Senate only
to run afoul of GOP Gov. James A.
Rhodes and~ Democratic House.
Rhodes hat. suggested a temporary tax increase to run the state
and the ahnost bankrupt schools for
a year while officials try to harruner
out a pennament tax. refonn and
school-aid pacliage.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New .Boston, has suggested
finding an interim solution to school
and other fiscal problems, then
name a committee to come up with
pennanent tax refonn.
Sen . Kenneth R . Cox , DBarberton, said Monday that he
hopes an unofficial, bipartisan group

noted.

matters and rnillht do so again, he
"But I don't think we should have
temporary taxes to run just until a
new governor comes In," Cox said,
referring to the fact that 1982 will be
Rhodes'last full year in office.
Cox said an initilll meeting of the
bipartisan group July 16, called by
the policy conunlttee of the Senate's
GOP caucus, included discussion of
various tax p111p01181s. But no
agreements were reached, he added.
However, he 118id he believed
then! was a conseDSII&amp; among the
group - in which Sen. Richard H.
Finan, R-Cincirmati, acted as unof-

schoo~

ficial chairman that few
Bepubllcans or Democrats would
support a temporary tax hike.
Whether that same group could
muster enough votes to pass a compromise package is yet to be determined, he said.
" But I think we have to get the
schools on solid ground and take
them ~ut of this neveNJever land,"
Coxsa1d.
Sen. Marcus A. Roberto, DRavenna, also participated in the
talks along with an aide of Sen. A.
Schwarzwalder,
0Michael
Columbus, Cox said. Other
Democrats could have been invited,
he added.
He said differences within the
Democratic caucus and the GOP
caucus make it difficult for any
single school or tax plan to get the 17
votes needed for passage.
Cox said the unofficial committee
was convened ~ause people on
both sides of the Senate's political

bill

awe feel that a bipartisan measure
Is the only kind that stands a chance
of passage.
Sen. Paul E . PfeHer, R-Bucyrus,
who also attended the meeting, said
several members of the GOP
caucus, including its leader, bave
dHferences with Rhodes. He said
Senate President Paul E. Gllhnor,
R-Port Clinton, rejected · Rhodes'
idea of new temporary taxes ,when
the governor first brought it up
several weeks ago before floating it
publicly Jut week as an apparent
trial balloon.
Most legislative leaders are in
Atlanta this week for a national
legislaUve conference, but Finan
said befon! his deparlun! that he
plans to call the bipartisan group.
Most legislative leaders are in
Atlanta this week for a national
legislaUve conference, but Finan
said befon! his departure that he
plans to call the bipartisan group
together again iii early August.

Democrats predict ·tax plan victory
1Continued from page 1)

ning approval of sweeping budget
cuts .
" I urge you again to contact your
senators and congressmen ,"
Reagan said. " Once again, they
need to hear from you. That doesn 't
give you much time, but a great dea l
is at stake ."
White House a ides acknowledged
that the issue was in doubt but said
momentum was with the president.

Five Texas congressmen who are
corrunitted to vote for Reagan's bill
said their phones began lighting up
ahnost as soon as the president
finished speaking. And the White
House said almost 1100 telephone
calls 10 the first I ~. hours after the
speech ran more than :&gt;-1 in
Reagan's favor.
Rep. Glenn English of Oklahoma,
one of the Democrats wooed by
Reagan at the Camp David, Md.,

presidential retreat, said: "I don't
think that as far as convincing me, I
don't think that did it. He made a
good speech to have the country
rally behind, but beyond that I'm not
sure it did much."
He added , "It sounds like I'm
going to get a lot of telephone calls
tomorrow."
Rep. Beverly Byron. Q-Md ., who
also was among 15 Democrats at
Camp David on Sunday, said she

remained uncommitted, although
she pn!ferred the Democrats' plan
to make a third-year tax cut conditional on an unproved economy.
The House Rules Corrunittee was
meeting today to set ground rules for
Wednesday's floor debate. The
Senate, meanwhile, neared completion of work on its tax bill, with a
vote scheduled today on an amendment that would liberalize a tax
credit for child..:are expenses for
working pan!nls.

Casey inquiry may last until fall

Strikers get warning

WASHJNGTON IAPJ
The
Senate Intelligence Committee
inquiry into CIA Director William J .
Casey's fitness is expected to stretch
into September, and the panel might
seek tus resignation even if no
criminal wrongdoing is found , sources close to the investigation say .
As Casey continued v isiti ng
senators to rally support and the
White House 1ssued a fresh vote of
confide nce from President Reagan.
the Intelligence Conunittee put
veteran Watergate investigator
Fred Thompson in charge of the
probe .
Thompson, joined by Republican
committee chainnan Barry Gold·
water of Arizona and ranking
Democrat Dame! P Moymhan of

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)
Striking city employees picking up
pay for work performed before
walking out got something extra
with their checks: a warning from
Mayor Vincent Cianci Jr. they would
be fired unless they returned to work
today.
Declaring that the week-old strike
violates state law, the mayor
threatened to fire all 1,600 striking
municipal workers in Rhode Island's
capital and seek contempt-of-court
orders against key employees if they
dido 't go back to work.
The strike started when about 70
sewage workers walked off the job to
protest a reduction in overtime their work week was cut from 48
hours to 40 hours to save money .

New York, heard a preliminary staff
report Monday on Casey's tangled
past business practices and his appointment of businessman Max
Hugel to head CIA clandestine services.
The full committee was to hear the
briefing, based on a review of CIA
and FBI files, at a closed session
today.
Thompson, 38, who served as
Republican counsel to the Senate
Watergate Committee in 1973, is a
close associate of Senate MaJOrity
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee. "This gives Baker more input into the committee," according
to one source, who asked not to be
identified.
One source said the staff report

was very preliminary and basically
outlined areas to pursue. Ttus source
said that effort was expected to take
two to four weeks, which would postpone the committee's Final conclusions until Congress returns from
its August vacation in early September.
Casey and the White House had
hoped to extinguish the controversy
before Congress leaves town.
Thompson promised "a thorough
mquiry" but added: "I hope it will
be resolved in the near future . I
don't think it serves anybody's purposes to have a long drawn-out af·
fair ." He declined to commit himself
in any more detail on timing.

Reagan administration solicits help
F'rom wire and local staffers
From the Oval Office to the Deep
South, on radio and television a nd in
newspapers, the Reagan White
House 1s trying to enlist the s upport
of the voters for the tax-cut battle on
Capitol Hill.
The message is the same: Call
your congressm an and demand that
he vote for Reagan's tax cut.
"They need to hear from you,"
Reagan said in his nationally broadcast speech Monday night, two days
before the tax showdown on the floor
of the Democratic-controlled House.
" I know that doesn't give you much
t1Jl1e, but a great deal is at stake."
A spokesman for lOth District

frt-'t-' rlothing day set
Free clothing day will be held at
The Salvation Army. 115 Butternut
Ave .• Pomeroy, Thursday . July 30)
from 10 a.m. until noon. All area
residents in need of clothing are
welcome .

Congressman Clarence Miller 's IR)
offi ce in Lancaster reported
" ... nwnerous calls in support of the
president's tax cut plan ."
"I don't have any percentages for
you as to the number in support or
opposition ," Miller's spokesman
continued. " but, the president's call
was specifically for those who supported him to contact the ir
congressmen ... and, the speec h
created a lot of traffic here in the of-

fi ce."
"One point of interest," the
congressman's representative ad-

Boos ters will mt't't
The Meigs Marauder Band
Boosters will meet Thursday, July
30, at 7 p.m. in the band room at the
high school.
The booth for the Fair will be
discussed, workers and donations
al'e needed.
Questions will be answered in
regard to band camp which will be
held Aug. 9 through14.

Youth hurt in cycle mishap
A Gallipolis yo uth was
hospitalized in a motorcycle accident on SR 141 early Monday af-

Lernoon.
Russell E. Shaw, 14, was admitted
to Holzer Medical Center with a
fractured ankle and was listed in
good condition this morning.
William R. Shaw, 18, Gallipolis,
the driver of the motorcycle, was
also injured, but was treated and
released for knee bruises.
The patrol said the Sha ws were
eastbound at noon when one of the

bike's tires went flat, causing
William Shaw to lose control.
The bike then overturned on the
left side of !he Mllld and skidded to a
halt. Slight damage was n!ported to
the vehicle.
The patrol said Paul H. Crawford,

ded. " is that many of those who
called said it was the chart that convinced them to support the
president."
During Reagan's Monday speech
to the nation, he used a graff to trace
the alleged future progress and
results of his tax..:ut proposal as
compared to the Democratic sponsored a lternative.
A spokesman for Senator John
Glenn's I D) office in Columbus said
there had been a significant volwne
of calls, but could not comment as to
content.

Ohio Vall~y Uvnlock Co.

Markrt Rrp~~rt
Pnces taken from llle auction of Sat u rd~ y.
July ~ - T r ends: Ve"'l ca lves steady . Cow!&gt; $1

300 to 400 lbs. 44-50.50: 400 to 500 lb.&lt;; . 41 ·
47, 580 lu 600 lbs. H-41; 600 to 700 lbs. 42.50-48 : 700
lull&amp; \b,&lt;; . 40-46.50: IDland ovtr _.o-45.
'
F'eeder Bulls : GOod and cho1ce 2!JO to JOO lb.'i
48-57 : 300 to400 lbs . 511-:a.'i ; tOO tu 500 llts . 47-M : ~
tn 500 lbs 47 _5().SJ: 60I'l to 700 lbs. MI: 700 to 800
lbs. 42-48: 800 and over 40-45.50.
l-k&gt;lslein steers and bulLs 300 tu·800 lbs . 42.{J.0-56
Bulls I,OOOlbs. and up~ - ~ Sitt u~ht t r cow~ - utilitie!! 37-45 ; c.tanners oml
r utteN 37 and down
Sprin){t&gt;r l'UWS by t.he he.ad 2&amp;&gt;3.'\0
OJw!J a nd c.alves by the head l20-480.
Vt11l calve!l - choice and prime~ : I{Ood 5I}.
80.50
Baby calve!! U-80.
Top hvl(.s ZIOto 2J047 . so-49 . ~ .
u .~l :

S.lunbly. Jqly !S. 1981

CAm .E PRICES ,
Slaughll?r Slftn 151 .50-66.50.
Sla ut(hte r Heifers 5fi.S().$ .:Z::,.
FeOOer Steen /Good and ChoiceJ 200-500 lbs.
47 .50-56; ~700 lbs . 46-58.50.
Feeder Heifen : !Good and Oloicel300-500 lbs
" -~9 . 50 :

500-700 lbo. 44.50-S&lt;.
Feeder Bulb: i Good and Ch1ict' JOO.&amp;Jn lbs . 46-

JS.25: 5t»-100 1bs. 40-{11.25
SlauMhterBulls : tOYer 1,000 lb.s . t44 . 25-~1 . 7$
Slaughte r Cows: Utilities 43.25-4fi.40: Cannen;
and Cutters 22-42.50.

Phone (614J !&gt;94-3571

Olan
DerenHysell,
berger, Nellie
GeraldMcGinnis,
Hayman. May

I~~~~======~~

Veterans Memorial

Five runs were made by local
emergency units Monday according
to Meigs County · Emergency
Medical Service.
Middleport at 6:01p.m . to Ash St..
for Virginia Buchaman who was
taken to Holzer Medical Center;
Racine at 12 :26 a.m. to county road
28 for Martha Wolfe who was taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospital ; Racine
at 2:20a.m. to Letart Township for
Gerald Hayman who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
Racine at 7:05p.m. to Racine Fire
Station for Patrick Snider who was
treated at the scene; Rutland at I : 27
p.m. to Meigs Mine, number one, for
Jeffrey Wilson who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center .

su

\

~~:~~~~;;;;;:;i :~~tltes. 8 718" - 10 1(4

REUTER-BROGAN
INS.

1:i!r 1~ ·~" 19c
SCIIe Pn&lt;::e 1:902)

.

.

SUMMER HANDBAGS IS

. • . . • ·: 1

ELBERFELD$. IN ~MERO'Y

1,'

' ' Mildly abrasive liquid
c~ner. 26-oz." bottle.
'FlO&lt;

11

FOR

NOW

Rtght now whan you b~y Ihe St1hl " Model ~l . !-.,· ' • 028 Wood Boss"~ you
·can get more than the worlds hnest chatn sa.W. You can ljlet our new doublb·
walled carrr,mg case.
And a lie and hle hanqle, a heavy ·duty bucking wedge. 8 ounces of StJhl

.

.

. :

, ~· Av.uuau ~*',

~.!'!Jl;!t;;.·~~OMEROY H~ME. &amp;·AlJl(f
.
P~. H2-2G;4
PQ!nerov. Ohiq·
f'ront En" Alitnmeni-SU.JO Most Pas11nter c•rs ;
~rake Servlc•
• '

•o• E. Malri
·1

·

1 Gallon Clorox
Bleach.

1
.
Thank You for Shopping
at
K
mcnt'
.
•'

· · .
Altogether il's worth over $35 . Yours· FREE 1 Now ,th at's a :;&gt;11hl.

SALE Y2 PRICE

.~ .. ~

Laundry Soii-Ofld stolnrernOiter. lQ.oz.' size.

engme 0 1!. and our helpful hrewood booklet.

REDUCED 50%

·'

ShOUf".A..Oiol

SUMMER HANDBAGS

(904)

..j.

faa

with adequate insurance. Add a "rider" to
your present residential insurance policy
to add extra coverage
for special items.

Residents Ot Meigs with the last
initial K or L must get their license
stickers for their vehicles by the end
d July, Sarah Gibbs , Deputy
Registrar of Motor Vehicles announced today.
The office os located in the former
Gibbs Grocery building, Milberry

7

~~

.~,

F~m Picnic Plates
'sturciv plastic
in to ·
stand·up to hearty

PROTECT
YOUR
VALUABLES

JULY CLEARANCE

••

r-1r
. The Saving Place

'NIIW!.

ELBERFELD$ IN. POMEROY
'

For Ht•nrin~t A ill
St•lt•rtion. Sc·r,·i("t' . or ( :tmsultation .
Ka••••l On 32 \ ••aro · ExJH•rit•n&lt;'t'And/Ur Ht•ft•rrol To AJIJlrOJirinlt·
Vl··lli&lt;'nl s,wriali•ls:

ADMISSIONs-Gerald Hayman,
Racine; John Dill, Middleport ;
Wealtha Bryson, Pomeroy ; Charles
Young, Middleport.
DISCHARGES-Margaret Goetl,

Ave. Pomeroy .
.
The office is open on Friday
eveings from 5:30p.m. to 7 p.m. to
accommodate those who are unable
to secure theri stickers during
regular hours. The office is also open
on Saturday until noon.
·

Butcher Sows 31.50-43.50.
Butcher Boani 36-!9
F'eederPit(ll, : f8y lheHeltdJI2-42.50.

OUR REMAINING STOCK Of

'

Meigs County happenings
,.. .. ~

o&amp;8 .7&gt;49.:i0.

northbound on U.S. 33 in Meigs
County at 6:40a.m. Monday.
The crash caused alight damage to
Crawford's car.

444 W. Union St.- Athens, Oh .

.

The 1982 County Conunissioner$
Day will be held at Wooster on Junf
17 - the opening day of a four-dar.
open house of the JOoth birthday of
the Ohio Agricultural Research and
Development Center.

Ve11ls : •Choic:ellndPrimel~7!J .

r-r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

Hearing Aid Center

research featuring thornless blackberries and interseedings of forages. ·
Also, Harriet Stivers, Pn!sident,
County Conunissioners Association,
opened the afternoon program with
remarks from the association. Dr,
George Gist, Associate Director,
Cooperative Extension Service, introduced guests, following a
welcome by Robert Howser, Chairman, Brown County Commissioners.
Talks included Pride in Farming
by representatives from the Adams
County Extension Service; Price iii
Tobacc9, Jim Wells, Manage~,
OCES, "Ripley; and Price in Extension Service, Dr. Roy M. Kot~­
man, Director, OCES.
,

Baby Calves : 18ytheHe.tadl ll-137 ..SO
HOG PRICES ·
llu~s : •No. I, Barrows and Gills! 200-230 lb."&gt;

38,
Beverly, was not injured when
his car collided with a deer while

DILES

RIPLEY, 0. - County commissioners from throughout Ohio
met here last week for their annual
meeting and updating
in
agriculture, John Rice, County
Agent, Agriculture, reports.
Attending the event from Meigs
County were Commissioners Rich
Jones, Dave Koblent.z and ilenry
Wells, a gent John Rice said.
The group toured the Southern
Branch of the Ohio Research and
Development Center. The branch
does research on white burley tobacco, forages, beef cattle, tree fruits,
grapes and other related projecls
being conducted by 25 staff members, the commissioners were told.
Corrunissioner&gt;; visited research
plots where Extension specialisls
and research personnel discussed
tobacco research, the latest in
soybean varieties and Mexican bean
beetle control, conservation of soil
through proper tillage, small fruit

Deadline near for
K or L motorists

Athens Uvf"~&gt;tock Sales
Alb.ay, Ohio

tlcad 473.
Feeder steers : Good and Choke 250 to 300 lbs .
~ . !10 : 300 to too lb:i . ta-57 : 400 to 500 lb.o; _47...l:i:
500 tu 600 lbs . 4&amp;-55. 75: 600 to 700 lbs. tl-5,"i.~ : 700
toM~! lbs . 45 . ~ . !10 : 1100 and over t4-5S
Fee-der Heifers: Good and Choict !:)(~to JOO lbs .

•••

Boars 38---40.50.
Pi)!s by the head 10.2!1
Suws 400 lbs . and up 41 . 30-4~

luwer. Ft'eder cattlt&gt; steady to S2 \ower . Total

Commissioners
•
attend session

Emergency runs

He said calls had been coming in
"constantly" throughout the morning .
Ohio Senator Howard Metzenbawn's 1D) _office could not be
reached for comment. The phone
lines to his Cleveland-based regional
office remained busy until presslime.
A random poll conducted Tuesday
morning in Pomeroy showed very
little concern on the part of Meigs
Countians. Six of seven people contacted said they didn't hear the
speech.

Market reports

A'rfEND MEETING - AtteiiCilq lut week's annual IGba~
meeting In Ripley were left Ia rlgbt, Rlcb Jones, Dave Kobleots, Henry
Wells, aocl Jobn Rice.

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