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•

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enttne

Voi.30,N0.74

Copyrighted 1911

1 section , 12 Pages
A Multimedia Inc .

Ohio, Wednesday, July 29,1981

lS Cents

L.D·
E~ A releases

cleanup funds

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The U.S. Envirorunental Protection Agency
has announced that it is releasing $125,000 to aid in the cleanup of a
· hazardous waste site in northeastern Ohio.
According to Allan Franks, public infonnalion official for the Ohio
EPA, the II)Oiley released Tuesday will be used to clean up and dispose
of aboq~ 1 million gallons of oil contamlrialed with PCP. The waste is
on the site of Poplar Oil Co. in Jefferson, Franks said.

Construction worker killed
~

't-Jed·

1t\f\l SO'·

MAY OPEN SOON Tbe new Obio River bridge
connecting Ravenswood,
W. Va. and the Big Bend
Area Of Mejgs County may
• n someUme next month U the ·weatherman
cooperates. According to a
·spokesperson with the
West Virginia Department
of Highways, work Is
progressing ahead of
schedule and could be
finished next month, two
months before the original
completion date. Carl M.
Geupel Company was the
main contractor and continues work on the Obio approach. Bristol Steel and
Iron Company erected the
super structure while
Stevens Excavation handled the West Virginia approach for the $16,500,000
project.

JACKSOl'l, Ohio - A Wheelersburg man has been electrocuted
while working at a supennarket construction site.
.
The V!Ctini, Identified.as Lowell Queen, 30, was employed by Rush
Electric of Wellston, which is a subcontrsctor on the project.
WI~ said Queen had been working with a 22()-volt power line
when the accident occurred at about 9a.m. Tuesday. He was pronounced dead on arrival at Oak Hill Hospital..

so\e

Refuement sy(tem enjoys battle
COLUMBUS, Ohio - One of Ohio's four major public employee
reuremenl systems has already reaped a sizeable profit from the bid·
ding 'tiattle over Conoco Inc. and another stands to gain millions more.
Tiley are enjoying the substantial financial gains from attempts by
the Mobll Corp., DuPont Co. and Seagram Co. to take over Conoco, the
nation's ninth-largest oil compsny.
Aboul280,000 shares of Conoco stock is stiJI being held by the Public
Employees Retirement System.

LaWmen begin major crackdown
ANADARKO, Okla. - Lsw officers in Anadarko, following
promising leads unearthed in the search for the motorist who struck
and killed three children on the shoulder of U.S. 281 last week, have
begun a crackdown on drunken drivers.
Thirty-one people have been processed through the Cadtlo County
Jail on alcohol-related offenses since Thursday's hit-and-run accident
- alloul five times the normal number, deputies said Tuesctay.
Killed were Anthony J. Holder, 8, of Gracemont, and his two cousins,
Jamie Dewayne Yater, 8, and Shannon T. Yater, 10, both of Fairfield,
Ohio.

•

Tornado hits community

Jury deliberations in third day

MARIETTA, Ohio ( AP)
Residents of the southeastern Ohio
community ~-..po~:t_are picking
up today after an apps~enl tornado
swept through the area, demolishing
four house trailers and leaving five
people injured.
According to Sgt. Ronald Courtney
of the stale Highway Patrol, the
twister touched down at about 7 p.m.
TueSday.
Joe Pickens, community relations
director for Marietta Memorial
Hospital, said five people were
treated . for cuts and bruises and
released.
They were: Marlene Eddy, 39, and
Nila Smith, 43, both ol Newport;
Anita Bel1, 11, and Howard Be11, 8,
both of Parkersburg, W.Va.; and
Robert Oliver, 48, of Reno, Ohio.
The tornado was psrt of a storm
system that raced across Ohio, durnping up to an inch of rain in some
psrts Qf the state.
After sweeping near Newport, the
reported tornado appsrently crossed

COLUMB!!S, Ohio-: A Franklin Coqnly Common Pleas Court jury
is to go into ill! lbird day of delibenilions today on an aggravated murdel'·charge In the retrial of Akron businessman Frederick Milo.
The 37-year-old defendant is accused of hiring others to kill his
brother, Constantine "Dean" Milo, 41, to gain control of Milo Beauty
and Barber Supply Co., a multimillion-doll~lr family business based in
suburban Akron. Dean Milo was gunned down at his Bath township
home Aug. 10, 1980.

Claims pay hike will do it
WASHINGTON - Defense Secretary Caspsr Weinberger says he
thinks the United States can build up its military forces with volw\·
leers it Congress 4pproves the military pay increase the Reagan ad·
ministration wants.
"If we get a psy a psy increase of 14.3 percent, then I think we can"
maintain an all-volunteer force.
Weinberger said the administration probably will ask Congress to
increase the size of the military by 200,000 over five years. There are
now more than 2 million persons in unifonn.

Our
Reg .

5.96·6. 96

•

Our
Reg.
7.96·8.97

•

Our
Reg .

Boys' And Girls'
Denim llue Jeans

Latest Jeans For
Men And Women

Choose from cotton or polyester/cotton denim and
twill jeans with elasticized
bocks. at savings. Save row.
Infants. Tots .. ·(934) .... 54

Boys' western jeans ore
pre hemmed. Girls' fashion
styles In sizes 7-14. All
of polyester I cottar'\ · blend

Save on misses' cotton
jeans. many styles. In, denim
blue: or men's boot-cut blue
jean of polyester I cotton.

.

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Tuesday night in the

9.97· 10.96

Infants', Toll', Utile
'loys' •n Girls' Jeans

Not AH Style• In All Store•

Winning Ohio lottery number
Ohio Lottery's dailJI game "The Number" was 300. The lottery repor·

.Clear tonight. LOws jn the mi~ to upper 50s. Sunny Thursday. Highs
Winds
northerly 6-15 mpli tonight. . ·
. .
, ·• Exteaded Forecast
Friclay through Suitday:
ChaJice of showers ·or. lh~rstorms through the period, but mainly
on Saturday. Highs in the 80s. Lowsin.lhe&amp;Os. •.
near.~. Chance flf.rain near zero percent tonight and Thursday.

Ji''
.

homes and trailers in Pleasants
County, W.Va., and Newport, Ohio,
according to West Virginia state
police Trooper D.P. Lske.
In Pleasa nts County, Lske said
five frame homes and six mobil e
homes were destroyed by the storm,
while major damage was reported
by five other homeowners. He said
between 15 ana 20 homes sustained
minor to moderate damage.
One business was destroyed and
four others heavily damaged, he
said .
"You can unagine - it's a mess
out there ," said Sgt. Jack Barnard ,
of the St. Marys city police depsrt·
ment.
Lake said the tornado took a "sort
ol hit and skip" path across Pleasants County, doing its worst damage in
Belmont, south of St. Marys. Lske
and another stale policeman were
assigned to set up a damage control
center at the Belmont Volunteer
Fire Department, he saaid.

O'Neill, all but concedes

ted earnings of $428,434.50 on the drawing. The earnings came on sales
of ~.201 .50, while holders of winning tickets are entltied to share
$438,767,Jottery officials said.

Weather

the Ohio River and touched down at
four separate points in Pleasants
County, · W.Va., causing property
damage and minor injuries, state
police said.
"There were about four different
areas in which it touched down, just
sort of hit and skip," said Trooper
D.P. Lske , one of two state police of·
fleers assigned to set up a damage
control center at the Belmont Volunteer Fire Depsrlment south of St.
Marys.
Lske said damage in the four
areas was ''minorto moderate.'' But
Sgt. Jack Barnard ol the St. Marys
city police department said the
storm caused "severe properly
damage" and some injuries.
He said the four areas in which the
storm touched down included Rock
Run along W.Va. 16 between W.Va. 2
and U.S. 50; the Shadow Hill Green 's
Run area of the county; Belmont
and St. Marys.
Between 10 and 15 people suffered
minor injuries as the storm swept up

WASHINGTON (AP) - House likely vote in the House showed the
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., com- outcome "too close to call."
He said White House aides worked
plaining that his .Democratic troops
have been "engulfed by telephone "into the wee hours this morning"
calls" urging support for President on the issue and continued calls to
Reagan's tax cut, today an but con- members untiiJO p.m. Tuesday.
"II is right down to the wire, "
ceded the long-awaited showdown to
Speakes said. "We feel we have got·
the president.
·
In liis gloomiest assessment yet of ten a number of people in the last 24
Democratic chances, O'Neill hours. We feel the momentum going
declined to repeat his earller predic· our way."
A victory in the Democraticlion' that 'DemOcrats would defeat
Rfa,gan's. tax plan and substitute a controlled House would give the
president a double-barrelled triumtw~year, 15 percent ·proposal of
ph as the Senate was also poised to
lheirown.
vote
its expected approval todBy for
"All l can . say is we are ex·
his
three-year,
25 percent tax cut
periencing a blitz ... a telephone blitz
· like thl' natlini'·hlls never seen. It's bill.
.
Reagan was virtually certain of
'b8d a dev.StaUilg effeCt," O'Neill
told l'epC!riers ail the Ho'use prepared victory in · the Republican-run
• to~ (lebate on'ibe taxlegis1alion. Senate ..
But• deplity:1White House press · Reagan's plan, the keystone of his
secs;etary Larry Speakes S!lld today llconomic program, calls fo{ a 25
that an administtatiori COIIJ!f of the percent cut in tax rates over 33 mon-

. Co~·_mi~siQn
'

.

I

, &lt;

tbs, with all taxpayers getting the
same reduction regardless ol in·
come. There would be automatic annual reductions to offset inflation
starting in 1985.

--•

Em,,Joy roarht's
The Southern Local Board of
Education in special sessi on
Tuesday night employed Frank Por·
ter and Darrell Dugan as football
coaches for the 1981-82 season.
The two coaches will ool be paid.
Their time involved in the program
will be dona led .
According to Nancy Carnahan,
treasurer, the district is still in need
of coaches lor the boys' freshmen
and junior high bask.tball program
and the girls' junior high basketball
program.

Both would take effect Oct. 1, and
either would be the largest tax cut in
American history .
Because the cuts are permanent,
the effect multiplies in future years,
saving taxpayers and costing the
goverillnent $700 biUion over the
next five · years under the
Democrats' version and $750 billion
under Reagan's plan.

~

_...._.the

According to Lake, most people
whose homes were damaged were
able to stay with relatives and friends, although authorities established
a a relief center at Pleasants County
Corrununily Center .
Ambulance crews took those injured to the Marietta Memorial
Hospital in Ohio. Two West Virginia
residents were treated there for cuts
and bruises, said Joe Pickens.
spokesman lor the hospital. They
were Anita Bell, 11, and Howard
Bell, 8, both of Parkersburg.

economy.

water and sewage service in the up signs on county roads indicating
Tuppers Plains, Racine and Por- their name and number.
'
Conunlssioners awarded the bid
1 either county plaMer or oliullty ad- · tland area.
~tor, It was' decided ~ at 8 1 ,In other business; q,e comtor purchase ' of bituminous
~ 111 COrnmilllonetil"ruelday: · liussioners beard rel&gt;orts from materials for the highway depsrt·
• The'
c'owiti.~ Com- County Engln~ Phil Roberts in the mentto Mar-Zane Materials Co. 'The
.,.._._ ' nU
foUnmlnaarea5:
.
bidis.forthemontho!Augusl.
·~·~
Y----~·
~ ~lf. lllls position,
..,.RObei1s tecomme'1ded a bridge
The comm!ssiObers also ·granted
••ot~.oGDa~, . .
c on\{oe~~~berepsired. ' perinlsslori to the Meigs County
; Clllrlll Blikllllee, illnctoi'1 of the
- He recOmmended' .the county REACf Cluli to use a roo~ in the
)llanidineeGmmluloniliBC~that buy two additional !nicks for his · basementoftheoldChildren'sHome
With tile CCIIIIIIiliiiQiletll' at the department.
•
,building.
_
-:....- .... - . .
..,.He and the· conunissioners
'The commissooers will meet
~~~ ·;,..eaented · a diacussed the p,ossibilily of putting againal7:30thlsevening.
~~lor ·~ and ·
•

1\letP

some rural areas."

The rival Democratic bill calls -for
a 15 percent cut over 21 months, with
the largest share of relief going to
Americans earning less than $50,000
a year. A third-year, 10 percent cut
would be conditional on an improved

.co.nsiders suggestion

The Meigs County Conunlssibners
will Cooisi~er creating the position of

"St. Marys basically was un touched," Lske said. " Most ol the
dama ge happened in Belmont and

NEW PRESIDENT - Dr.
James Witherell, M.D., bas been
appointed president of the Meigs
County Board of Health, Franklin
C. Petrie, Jr. , R. S. Deputy
Health Commissioner announced
today. Dr. Witherell flUs .the
uaelqlired term of Qr. Lewis
TeUe, who recently resigned. Dr .
Wltbe~l maintains a family
medical practice at the P,1elgs
Medical Clinic, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. . He has
worked closely with the bealth
del'!'rlment f~r the past tw9
years as the physiciao 1~,. lbe
Well-chUd clinic aad PlB.IIIIed
Parenthood.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wtdnelclav. July 29,1981

Commentar

.

li
.
.
.
·.M
. e1gs r~,ma~JDS a · ve
behind 4-3 triumph

.

Page-2-The Pally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 29,1981

.

What can they ask Mrs. O'Conno..._r______w._._uia_m_F_.___,.Buc_k_tey_Jr.
Usually, in this trade, there is
somebody at the other end of the
telepbone who can give you the answer to any question save possibly
what the Aztecs were trying to say
on their calendar stone. The morning paper often reveals that Shy
Di's uncle, or somebody serving the
dyna~~tic concerns of Great Britain,
acknowledged that a discreet
examination established that she
could bear a successor to the throne.
As the people in Silicon Valley are
fond of saying, " it's all a problem of
software. In hardware, there are no
more problems." Well, I'm still in
search &lt;t a definite body of
knowledge on the question : What
exactly can you legitimately ask
someone who has been named to the
Supreme Court'
There are apparently no hard
rules. Such as there are depend for
their effect on plausibility. For instance :
Senator Jones : Mrs . O'Connor, if
the Hwnan Life bill is passed mto
law and its constitutionality is
cballenged before the court. how
would you vote'
Mrs. O'Connor: Senator, I don't
think it proper to say how f would
vote on a pending matter. For one

thing, I would want to study the
briefs, hear the oral arguments, and
perhaps even ask a question of my
own.

J : Does that mean that you can't
make up your mind on the question
whether the Congress of the United
States has the constitutional right to
declare at what point a biological
organism becomes entitled to the
protection of the Fourteenth Amendment?
O'C: Senator, you are not asking
my personal view on the matter.
You are asking how I view my constitutional responsibilities as a
member of the court on a matter
concerning which there is spirited
disagreement among accomplished
students of the law. I am replymg
tbat I ba ve not done the kind of
meditation that properly precedes
the making of a judgment, and that
that thought can't be done in the air
sence of the hearing of arguments
traditionally done by sitting members of the court.
J: Do you remember the Dred
Scott decision?

O'C: I assume you mean the
notorious decision in wh1ch Judge
Taney, speaking for the majority,
said that Congress could not pass a
law depriving a man of the right to
take his slaves where he wanted'
J : Right. You think that was a
good decision '
0' C: Of course not. It was a
decision that said, in effect, that
human bemgs were not human
beings if their skin color was black

The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy , Ohio
'14-!1!12-tlS6
DE\'OTEDTOTIJt: INTER F) ;TOFTHE MEIGS-MASON AREA

WASHINGTON lAP)
CIA
Director William J . Casey is not the
f1rst official the Senate has confl.rmed 1·n haste and s~ond-guessed
••
atleisure.
The Senate Intell1'gence Comrru·ttee is conductl·ng in July the
l·nquir)' 1! didn't bother with in
January. It hired a special counsel,
Fred Thompson' a Veteran Of the
Watergate hearings, to oversee the
investigation of Casey's business
Past and his management of the

HOBERTL. WINGETT
l'ubl1sht'r

Ai~lsLant

BOB HOEFLICH

Pnbllstlt'r/( ontrnllt•r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
~t''lll~

A MEMRI'R nl Tht'

A~Sh(' iah•d

Editor

Prt&gt;ss, Inla nd Uail\· l'rrss ,\ sstwiation and tht•

Amt&gt;riean Ne'lllspaper Publlsht'l"li As!iudation .

·

l.t:TIERs.or OPI~ 10~ an· wt·kumt•tl. ThrJ shnuld lw lt·ss than 300 words Inn,;. All
lt'tk'n arr sub)t'Tl lnl"dttlll!(&lt;llld mustlw slgnl'd 'Aith namt , addr,..~s and lt'll'phont• num·
hf.r. Nt~ IID!ItKnrd l«&gt;tlPn will'-' publl•h~tl . Lettt&gt;n •t'toutd M 111 RIJOd l.a&amp;tll', addr~nln~
bi!I.UH • .nnt

pt"rsrma II tiPS

I £

d

that the Constitution directly took
notice of the institution of slavery,
for instance, in the clause that
stipulated what a slave woukl be
counted as in making up the voting
roles.
J : With all due respect, Mrs.
O'Connor, you are not answering my
question, which is: Just as 124 years
ago a senator was entitled to ask a

nominee whether he considered a
slave to be a person, so today a
senator is entitled to ask whether an
appointee considered a fetus to be a
person.
O'C: But don't you see, Senator, to
ask an appointee that question
elicits an answer that iSn't relevant
to how that person would vote. I
might think a fetus nothing more

. ATHENS - An a:cttlng 4-3 win by
fof~ over New LeJ:Ington here
·~Y ev~ In Oistrict eight
.\llleliC811 l.egtCII TOU!'IIIIIIIIII!~ .p!Jy,

than a protoplasm, but vote to
upbold anti-abortion laws. Or 1
might personally believe that a fetus
is a human being, and vote to uphold
permissive abortion lawa. What I
think on the matter is precisely wbat
is not relevant to how I would vote.
Senator Jones: I give up.
Mrs. O'Connor : Tbank you,
Senator.

,set up a billlhoiidotrQ to !leU!n!llne

.~.~ clwmpiCII on 'l'hur&amp;dv evening. 'l'l!e 4-31rln gave Meigs

the O(ijJoftwUty for a rematch-With
JIO!IerfJI1· 1 ~, who defeated
Meigs~ ill.the Opening round of the
double etlrnlnatton set up:
Now only two teams remain M~ and Laricaster: A Meigs victory !l'Jiianrday would extend. tourl18111el¢ jllay one day as the two
clubs · ~d meet Friday for the
~p .
.
A MeigS loss, however, would give
Lancaster the crown and a berth In
the. $ill: tournament also to be held
in Athens. Meigs will carry a 23-3-1
record into the contest and has the
ability .and desire to come home the
winner.
Tuesday evening Jeff Wayland,
Meigs'' pitching ace, started and
posted•the win l'or the local powerhouse. Bob Foster came on in relief
to give Wayland a rest, while Roger
Kov~ came on In the clutch to
post the save for Meigs. The trio fanned six, walked four, and gave up
eight hits.
J. Brown went the entire distance
for New Lexington, striking out four,
walking two, and allowing just six
Meigs hits. ·
Meigs got on the scoreboard in the
first, when Joe Bob Hemsley
singled, then stole second, and rode

E1T~@19il F01?r woRm S'Wi'·~~f'IIM

f.IU!.ME

II.E,II .

t

CIA.
" I expect it to be a thorough
inquiM•,
. , but I hope it will be resolved
in the near future,' ' Thompson said.
Ironically, most of it could have
been explored and resolved six months ago. Instead, the same committee spent 21·2 hours chatting with
Casey about World War II espionage

and the need to strengthen the CIA.
It r~ommended
Casey's con,,
f1'rmat 1'0 n to a Senate whl'ch a""
~
proved him, wi th little discussion,
and no opposition. The vote was 95-0.
Not hing was said about the
business dealings. There was plenty
·
on the record, some exp1ored m
earlier hearings when Casey came
.
.
d d
up for con f1rmatwn a eca e ago as
h
h
c airman of t e Securities and Exchange Commission, later as undersecretary of state for economic
affairs.
Transactions t hat suddenly are
deemed worthy of close Senate
· 1y were 1gnor
·
ed in t he
scrut'my stmp
Cl A con f.1rmat10n
·
proceedings.
Ca sey, and Pr es1'd ent Reagan as his
sponsor, would have been better served if the whole business had been

explored then.
He almost would surely have been
confinned anyway. The Senate is
not in the habit of reJ· ecting the
nominees of presidents.
The controversy over Casey's
future began with the resignation of
Max Hugel as the agency's top spy.
When Sen. Barry Goldwater, RAriz., the Intelligence Committee
chairman, said he thinks Casey
should quit or be fired , he said it was
because Casey "appointed an inexperienced man " to that sensitive
position.
It was not inexperience that did in
Hugel; it was the disclosure that two
former associates accused him of
improper business dealings .
Reagan repeated on Monday his
expression of confidence in Casey,

R
•
k
eagan
s
spo
esman
a d1'st1'ngu1S·hed'p
bl ' callingt Casey
u
There's om th' IC servan
f 'I'·
·
s
e
mg
that and · th h 1 · ann
od 1ar m
•
'" e w o e eplS e.
Four y
Carte b dg
ears
r u d et
directo B
rt ago,
La
r
e
nee
came
er
Senate r't'
·
the Se te un be
1 ICism,
c
n
.na
pro
of hi
t'
bank
be s pra~ Ices as a
er. He had
en con irmed after a cursory
Se te · ·
h' h
na mqu1ry, w 1c did not seek
the FBI report on his nomination or
f10 di
ff
ngs 0 ederal bank examiners.
Two of the senators who didn't
100k
ed tha th
propos
a new
s ste f t e Senate create
Y of
m or non-partisan
vestigation
·
to
jin- ·
nommees
rna
or
nn•;t'on
~_.
1 s. It was su~
~to
provide
d ta'led
·
t' t'
· 1 mves 1ga
1ve reports prior
toeconfirmation
votes.
Th
e senators aren't there any
more. The new system isn't there

By The Associated Preas
The' 48th day of the major league
ba5eball strike finds feuding players
and owners' negotiators meeting
some 3,1100 miles apart. Whether the
walkout is any closer to a settlement
Q18Y be known after those separate
meetings on each coast today.
'While the 26 club owners were
scheduled to sit down with their
bargaining unit, the Player
!Ullations Conunittee, in New York,
the ex~tive director of the Major

n orme consen Tax hill treatment termed 'h;rdball'
The Declaration of Independence prorrused a government that derived
its power " from the consent of the governed ... But that comumtment cannot
be fulfilled if the people are not qualified to provide informed consent.
Informed consent reqUired knowledge of the issues - yet much of the
requisite information is in the hands of public officials. elected and appointed, who supposedly represent the best mterests of the citizenry.
In theory, those c•tizens ought to have full acces. to all materiab af·
feeling decisions made in the1r name. In practice, it doesn't quite work that
way - and that's why a strong Freedom of Informat1on Act is so Important.
Approved by Congress and signed into law by President Johnson in 1966.
the FOIA was strengthened by amendment in 1974 - but today it is in danger
of bemg gutted by a coalition of politicians, bureaucrats and spccial-intere;1
groups uneasy about public scrutiny of their work .
President Reagan has never displayed any enthusiasm for full

disclosure . During the f1rst s1x months of his tenure, the While House ha s
quietly but effectively throttled the now of public lnfonnation throughout the
government.
Attorney General William FrerH.:h Smith. in one of his first acts after

taking office, abolished the Justice Department's procedura l guidelines
requ1ring federal officials to jusllfy w1thhold1ng infonnallon from the public
on the grounds that disrlosore would be "demonstrably harrnf ul."
Although Smith's action probably was more symbolic than substanllve,
11 sent a message throughout the government : The Reagan admmistrallon Is
not particularly mterested in unfettered fr eedom of infonnation and is en·
couraging bureaucrats to resis t requests su bmitted under provisions of the

FOIA.
The Federal Budget of Investigation and the Centra l Intelligence Agen·
cy have been campaigning for several years in favor of restrictive amend·

•

ments to the law , possibly even exempllng those two agencies from all FOIA
reqUirements .
The FBI and CIA claim that their work IS hamstrung by the law , but
neither has ever been able to provide a single convincing example of FOIA·
mandated disclosure that adversely affected their lawful missions.
Moreover. the law already mrludes exemptions that allow the FBI and
CIA to deny requests for information that would harm "national defense or
foreign policy" or compromise " investigatory files compiled for law enfore~;ment purposes.'·
Some of the nation's biggest corporatiOns and most powerful trade
associations are lobbying for restrictive amendments because they have
been embarrassed by disclosure of information in government files about
their questionable practices.
(ironically, the business community has been by far the most prolific
user of the FOIA because government files contain vast amounts of otherwise unobtainable data about competitors. I
Finally, too many federal employees view the FO!A as a threat to their
job security because it requires disclosure of materials docwnenting their
mistakes, poor judgment and incompetence.
"Fighting for recognition of freedom of infonnation," says former Rep.
John E. Moss, the chief author of the FOIA, "is like stepping on a balloon.
You stamp out excessive secrecy in one place and it pops up somewhere
else."
Examples of government information denied to journalists and citizens
in recent decades include Navy telephone directories, reports on the fat con·
tent of various brands of frankfurters, data on pesticide dangers and retired
servicemen's military effectiveness reports.
.
In one case, the Agriculture Department even refused to reveal what
· specific Information it had classified as exempt from FOIA requests.
·Critics of the FOIA claim that it has been abused, is nawed, is too expensive to administer and endangers the sei;recy of information that is
legitimately classified.
·
The law isn't perfect and no doubt could be improved- but almOst all of
the current attacks come from those who want to cynically destroy the Mght
of cltizenl and the news media to continuously evaluate tile work of gOvern. ment.

WASHINGTON tAP! - Congress·
treatment of President Reagan's tax
bill has been political hardball from
the start - with just enough curves
thrown along the way to enliven the
debate.
One was tossed by Reagan's
political adviser, Lyn Nofziger.
At a recent GOP gathering , Nofziger was called upon to introduce
the next speaker: Rep. Jack Kemp,
R-N.Y .. whose 1977 across-the-board
tax cut proposal is the model for the
current Reagan three-year plan.
"Jack Kemp is more than a football player." said Nofziger of the

former Buffalo Bills quarterback.
"Not a ... lot more."
Nofziger also gave th1s personal
view of economic recovery:

··I

believe all of government should be
destroyed except my offfice. ''
Another light moment came as the
House Ways and Means Committee
worked into the early morning hours
on the tax bill.
As Rep. Philip M. Crane, R-Ill., an
infrequent attender of committee
meetings, strolled in about I a.m.,
the entire panel erupted into hearty
applause.
·'Maybe he gave the cab driver the

wrong address," quipped Rep. Andrew Jacobs Jr., D-Ind.
Crane's face reddened as he took
his seat. He stayed about half an
hour, then left as the committee
plodded on with its work.
Meanwhile in the Senate, Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, and
several other Northern liberals were
burning the same midnight oil to
protest an amendment for additional
tax breaks to the oil industry.
Senate Majority Leader Howard
H. Baker, R-Tenn., asked Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, if he
was waging a filibuster.

Once Mr. Schmick said to me.
"We may not have all the comforts
and pleasures of the rich, but do you
think that makes us unhappy ? You
bet your sweet life it does."
The Smugs, on the other hand,
wouldn't have it any other way.
Mr. Smug told me, one night when
he had a few drinks too many, "You
know, when I was young, I was in
love with a poor girl whO worked as a
secretary. I w~r too and we
were going to be married. Then I
met my wile who was rich, so I
decided to marry her. You know
something? I bumped into that poor
girl a few weeks ago, and she had
gone allt9 pieces. It takes money for
a woman to keep looking young. I
was sure glad I · married the rich
girl."
The Smogs are not happy all the
time. Sometimes they fight and then
Mrs. Smug Oies off to California to
visit friends . But the Schmicks fight

..

home on a Jerry Field:r double.
fO!: the llririnen, Ten)' Wayland and
~~with a1-4lead, the Meigs Rogle 'Gilul eacll banged key
crew again st8rted to make a move doubles~ and Hemsley, Foater each
singled. Canncin bad three singles
and added two more runs.
. In the S4!COI)d, Terry Wayland led ·for the loaers, w)llle Wollenburg,
off with a double, and Rogle Gaul Wood, Brown, Carney, and Blanbanged another double to knock In chard each singled.
In Sunday's see-saw battle with
Wayland. Gaul later sprinted home
after an error by the New Lexlngtyn . Weu.ton Jeff Wayland hit a key
second baseman.
·'
home run to ,k~ Meigs In the
New Lex broke the Ice In the four- ballgame; while Kenny Brown and
th on singles tO D. Wood -=~rown. Jerry Fields' deliver¢ blows In the
Wood scored froin third
on a 11th frame to ciineh the win for
hard bit ball by Blanchard that was Melg&amp;
Additional hitters In Sunday's first
muffed by the Meigs infield. While
contest
were Brown a home run,
leading 3-1, Meigs a~ one more In
Wolfe
a
single, Fields a home nm,
the sixth frame, when Ke.!!t Wolfe
double,
and
single, Terry Wayland a
reached on an error, stole second,
double
and
single, Jeff Wayland a
and rode home on a Bob Foster
home run and single, and FoSler,
single.
'!be opposition, however, made a Gaul each singles. ,
In the ,aecond conteSt Brown added
late game comeback .to keep Meigs
two singlf!S and a doubl,e, Terry
on Its toes.
In the seventh, J. Brown reached Wayland five singles, JeffWayland
on an error, Blanchard singled, and and Rogie Gaul two singles each,
Huffman walked to load the bases Foster two singles, a .double, and
with no outs. Cannon then delivered home run, Kovalchik a single and
a two nm double to pull his team double, and Kent Wolfe a single.
Meigs won the game lf&gt;-9 over
within one at 4-3.
Reiger Kovalchik came to the Wellston behind a 20 hit attack.
Meigs will play Thursday at 5: 30
mound for Meigs and proved to· be
the stopped. he came on with no out p.m. on the Ohio University field in
and quickly retired the side before Athens.
Unescore:
any more runs bad scored. The great
120 010 006---4 6 3
effort by Kovalchik sparked .the Meigs
000 100 200-3 8 4
Meigs defensive crew and Meigs N. L.
Batteries: J. Wayland, WP,
held ori for the win to keep its hopes
alive for a tournament cbam- Foster, Kovalchik and T. Wayland.
J. Brown and Blanchard.
pionship.
Jerry Fields doubled and singled

League Baseball Players
Association, Marvin Miller, was to
meet with a group of players in Los
Angeles to brief them on the status
of the negotiations.
There has been no bargaining since the talks collapsed in Washington,
D.C., last Thursday just as an
agreement was nunored to be Imminent. No further meetings have
been scheduled, but Ray Grebey, the
owners' chief negotiator, said he
was available for joint talks at any

time and a source close to the PRC
said it was likely that a session
would be held Thursday in New
York.
The strike has wiped out more
than 25 percent of the season with
some 579 games canceled through
today.
Although Miller's office indicated
that he may return to New York after the Los Angeles meeting, that
session also may touch off a series of
regional briefings to close what he
called "a terrible information gap."

OUTSTANDING SEASON- The Pomeroy Plnites
Ultle League team recenlly IIDisbed tbe season with a
perfect 24-0 record. Over tbe course of tbe season, tbe
Plnltes won tbe Middleport Utile League Tournament,
the Pomeroy Powell's Tournament, and the highly
compellllve Syracuse Utile League Tournament.
ae.Ides claiming three tournament championships,
the young Pirates won the Big Bend Utile League

Not exactly, said Metzenbaum,
one of the Senate's premier praetictioners of the delaying art. "I, in
the past, have found it to be a
privilege to be on the noor in the wee
hours of the nil!ht."
When the \ Democratic tax-cut
" alternative" came back from the
printers, House Ways and Means
Committee staffers were horrified.
There, in big letters on the cover of
the thick document, was committee
Chairman Dan Rostenkowski's
name
misspelled as

CINCINNATI (AP)- When Procter &amp; Gamble heir Louis Nippert
sold his controlling interest in the
Cincinnati Reds last spring, a
baseball strike was only a vague,
hazy threat on the sports liorizon.
Marge Schott, one of group of
limited partners who bought the
Reds, says that Nippert chose the
perfect time to step aside .
• PRD¥11

IUIIAIILm

" He looks like the smartest man in
town," said Mrs. Schott, a long time
Reds booster who operates an
automobile dealership here. "Right
now, it's not the greatest invesbnent. Between Chevrolet and
the Reds, all I need is an apple pie
factory to go belly-up."
Brothers William J. Williams and
James R. Williams were long-time
part-owners of the National League
club here until they acquired m~t of
Nippert's controlling interest.
"When Mr. Nippert decided he
wanted to sell the club, he wanted to
keep it in strong Cincinnati ltapds,
and W.J. and I seemed to be the
logical ones to carry on," James
Williams said. "We had been talking
with Mr. Nipper\ for a year or 18
months, and it kind of culminated
toward the end or last year.
Everything came to a closing in late
January or early February. Any
possibility of a strike wasn't considered."

''Rotenkowski. ''

Scioto Downs results

too. Only when they get into a our children anything but love and
quarrel Mrs. Schmick has no place devotion- and they hate us."
to go, so they yell at each other until
Smug told me, "I've tried to i~
the police come. Last year, the Sch- press on the children the Importance
micks were fined $30 for disturbing of being rich and the great benefits
the peace.
that can be derived from having
The Smugs entertain a lot of im- money. They know exactly what I'm
portant and . influential people who talking about, and they respect me
accept their invitations because the for my wisdom."
Srnugs are rich. The Schmicks can
Schmid said, "1 tell my kids
only afford to entertain relatives mopey isn'.t evecything: :!;here are
they don't . like, who complain af- some values in life tl\at are much
terwards about the food and liquor.
m~re innportant, such as love, frienWhen it comes to children, the · dslllp, and farnily. And you know
SmugsandSchmicksalsodiffer.
what they do? They go around ·the
Smug told me, "We have two neighborhood and tell everyone,
children. We've given them.~he best 'OurfatherlsnuiS."'
.
,
of everything. Priyate schools, .
And so it goes with S111t1gs and Sch- · ;
ridipg lessons, tennis ·· Jessop&amp;,• micks - economically, socially, in- · ;
catered. parties - we've bought?' . tellectually they are poles apart. But ;; ·
evel')'\hmg for them that money Will because they live in America the · ~ ·
buy and they'n;,smart, hapPy, con- land of Opportunity, the only' dir- • ''
tented children. . 1
· • , ,terence between them Is that tile .
Schmick, · on the other hand, told • Smugs are happy and ,the Schmicks ·
me, "We haven't,been able tp gi'ie are not.
.
·
. ·
'

ChamploDBblp. The Plrntes were coached by Phil
Harrison, Uoyd King, and Creason Pratt. Team members are, front, Brian Freeman, Greg Fields, Rex
Haggy, Rodd Harrison, Danny Carl, and Dave Hendricks. Back row - Coacb Creason Pratt, Pbli King.
Randy Werry , Hey Easoa, Gerald Moore, and Coaeb
Phil Harrison. Absent were Coacb Lloyd King, Brian
Layh, and Todd Collums.

Reds' brass still behind committee

The seven-week-old players strike
and the hole it has left in the 1981
baseball season haven't &lt;jampened
Williams' enthusiasm any more
than a stern sermon from Co~
missioner Bowie Kuhn last December.
"I don't think that fazed our
group, or would faze our group,"
Williams said. "But where they
didn't get into it to double or triple
their money, you don't want to kiss
your invesbnent goodbye."
He sail) the Reds owners are committed to following the leadership of
baseball's player relations co~
mittee.

You can buy happines s. . . . .____A_rt_B_uc_hw_al_d
All my life I've been told you can't
buy happiness, and I must say I used
to believe it. But lately I've changed
my mind .
Money can buy happiness and
usually does.
Take my friends, the Schmicks.
They're poor, honest, hard-working
people. All they have is each other,
and they 're miserable.
Then take my friends, the S01ugs
- he's a banker, she inherited
money from her father. They live on
Park Avenue in the winter and in
Westhampton in the sununer, unless
they go abroad. Everything they do
costs money, and you won't find two
happ1er people anywhere.
The Schmicks live in a small apartment in Brooklyn in the winter, and
they vacation in the same small
apartment in Brooklyn in the summer. When they really get
desperate , they go to Far Rockaway
for a swim.

~

Separate meetings may
dictate further strike status

Was Casey's appointment too hasty?

Ill Court Strt&gt;f'l

PAT WHITEHEAD

and someone bad a title to them.
J : Did you hear the oral arguments or read the briefs in that case?
O'C: Well, er, obviously not. Those
arguments were held about 75 years
before I was born.
J : How come, then you can give an
opinion on the constitutionality of
that decision, concerning the
arguments of which you are far less
familiar than the argwnents about
the Human Life bill, which
arguments have been the talking
point of the legal profession for some
months now'
O'C: Well, Senator, in our culture
you grow up more or less with the
received wisdom of your generation.
Certain things are accepted as
"good" - the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, the
Gettysburg Address - certain
others as " bad" - the Alien and
Sedition Acts, the Dred Scott
decision, Reconstruction, Jim Crow,
lynching. These are legends that
constitute our legacy.
J : Would you have thought it i~
proper in 1857, if a senator,
examining a presidential appointee
to the Supreme Court, were to ask
tbat appointees whether he considered that a black man was entitled to the rights given under the
Fourteenth Amendment'
O'C: Senator, in 1857, the Fourteenth Amendment didn't exist.
J: All right. The rights given under the Fifth Amendment.
O'C: Senator, it's very clear to
everyone now that slavery was
wrong. But you have to bear in mind

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Barna
Special, driven by Frank Todd Jr.,
won the featured 8th race in 2:00
Tuesday at Scioto Downs, oavilll2 I
$6.20, $3.40 and $2.40.
Cincy AI finished second, paying
$3.80 and $2.40, and Parker's Champ
· was third, paying $2.20.
The first trifecta of 6- H paid
$2,025.80;
Acrowd of 4,253 wagered $302,765.

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�•

Pag&amp;-4- The Daily Sentinel

•

Wednesday, July 29,J9~1

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday(

-Pruitt·

Nicklaus still seeks
Canadian Open title

. '

f.ights
fo~;job

~

OAKVIlLE, Ontario (API - For
Jack Nicklaus, the Canadian Open is
the big one that got a way .
" I haven't won It, " Nicklaus said.
" It's lime I did. It's something I'd
like to do very much.' '
The absence of this liUe serves as
one of the few blemishes, poso;ibly
the only one, on his career record. It
is the only major national title that
has eluded him.
He has won four U.S. Opens, three
British Opens and six Austra lian
Opens, but in this national championship, he has been shut out. He's
been second four limes, third once,
fourth once and fifth twice.
" It's time to change that,"
Nicklaus said while waiting for a
chilly rain to subside so he could get
on a practice round Tuesday on the
7,056-yard, par-71 Glen Abbey GoU
Club course, site o{ the 72nd
Canadian Open beginning Thursday

in suburan Toronto.

,

" I'm playing reasonably well. My
health is gOOd. I'm striking the ball
reasonably well. It's just a matter of
getting something in the hole at the
right time," Nicklaus said.
" I'd very much like to win this
tournament. "
As an indication of his desire for
this title, he is making a rare competitive appearance the week prior
to one of the Big Four events. The
American PGA championship, in
which Nicklaus is the defender, is
scheduled next week in Atlanta . Normally, he s kips competition the
week before one of the Big Four
tournaments.
The growing stature of this tournament, however, has drawn a
strong field to the course Nicklaus
designed as a permanent home for
the Canadian Open.
Topping the J:M;-man lineup are all
the men who have dominated the
Ameri can tour this season : Masters

Greg Pruitt
.lstlie~ aa lltartinl! running .
~Ck ftlr·~ Cleveland Browns, but
.that ~·t tnean he won't have the
:tight Qf· his; !If, ~ li;eep the job thla

champion Tom Watson, U.S. Open
king David Graham of Australia and
Ray Floyd and Bruce Lietzke, each
a three-lime winner this season.

season, .

Probably the biggest threa~
however, is Lee Trevino, who has
won three Canadian national championships, including in 1979, the last
time it was played on t11is course. No
player has won it more than four
times. Bob Gilder won it last year in
Montreal.
Some other major standouts in the
72-hole event that offers $425,000 in
total prizes are Johnny Miller, Tom
Kite, Ben Crenshaw and former
champion J e rry Pate .

Perhaps the worst part of the
strike that stopped summer is that
the two sides have succeeded in robbing baseball of its most basic and
perhaps most important quality -

innocence.
For a ce ntury or so, the sport sold
escape. You could go to the local
ballpark, and for a couple of hours
you could be free of the world's
hassles. The stadiwn wa s a sanctuary of fresh air, a patch of green in
the middle of a concrete city . It was
set aside for this very special activity where grown men played a little hoy'sgame .
Baseball restored for its fans a
time of innocence in their lives. It
supplied winners and loers with no
time limits imposed . It prov1ded
mortal-sized heroes who didn't have
to weigh 300 pounds or stand 7 feet
tall to excel.
And most importantly , it supplied
a very special continuity from one
game to another, one pennant race
to another, and one season to
another. That was the essence of
what baseball was all a bout.
Now all of it has been destroyed.
shattered in the fallout of this s trike,
provoked by the owners (remember,
they even went to court to force ill
and carried out by the players.
It has been a sad s1ght to contemplate.
They have taken the bloom off the
rose forever . For many of us , there
no longer will be a spec ial feelin g for

The Game. It will be just another industry , concerned with profit and
loss - the bottom line.
Good-bye , innocen ce. Hello,
reality .
The sweet sound of wood against
horsehide, once so very special for a
baseball fan, will be no different,
essentially, than the noise of another
factory drill press turning out its
daily supply of widgets. This is no
sport. This is a business.
With that in mind, baseball's
bosses have been scurrying about
piecing together various plans to
salvage their season, save the
playoffs and World Series and its important reve nue. They should have
worried about that back in early
Jun e when they argued so eloquently
in the Roches ter court of Judge
Henry Werker against an injunction
that would have postponed this mess
for at least another year. But they
wanted this strike now and they got
it. The reason, a very businesslike
1nsurance policy that wouldn't have
pa id $50 million next year.
F:very lime the slightest bit o[
progress in negotiations is made and most of it has been just that,
slight - plans begin surfacing about
how to put the season back together.
Well, 1f management has any
respect at all left for the fans, it will
scrap these outrageous schemes.
The strike already has created
enough chaos to last a lifetime for
baseball . We don 't need more .

Ettect1ve
Annual
Y1eld

~: ~e

Rate

6-month Money Market Certificate
$10 000 mrn1mum rnve sTment reQu• rea Interes t may De p.trd monThly Qua rterl y or al
malur,Ty di!Wi vt o you or tr(l nster rearnTo another Oramond Savmgs accou nT Eller&gt;
liVe annu al v•eld tld sed on rer n1.1esr ment ot prmcrpal and ml ere st cu maJurrly 1hrs rs
an annual rate sutJject To change aTrenew&lt;! I f ederal regulatrons prohrbrl compound
rng ol•nt eresr and req urre a sut&gt;stanrral mt ere sl penalt y lor earl y WII~O r,1 wa1

In addition to Graham, the foreign
fi eld is headed by South African
Gary Player and Seve Ballesteros of
Spain. Dan Halldorson and Jim
Nelford lead the 22-man Canadian
contingent.

'DIE VET'S BACK -

21,W. Main, Pomeiov ·

APPROVED FOR
VETERANS
FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE
DAY OR NIGHT CLASSES
pplications for Ohio Industrial Grant must be made
ug. 20.

PHONE 446-4367

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MEIGS COUNTY CHURCHES OF CHRIST

)

tnjurle11 ud ready to play full lime. (AP Laserpholo)-

"He is a leader, the elder
slateaman of the offense," Ross
said. "Everyone loots up to him.
He's been there for so long and does
so weU that you want to do anything
you can for the guy."
Anderson said there were several
·reasons for the club's poor offensive
showing, Including injuries to his
receivers.
"It's tough to get your ttmlng If
you can't practice with them during
the week," he said. "It's tough to go
out and try to throw to them for the

r~firs~t~tim~
· ~e;o;n;S;un;da~y~."~~~;;;;;;;;:,~

POMEROY
PASTRY SHOP
WILL RE-OPEN
AUGUST 3rd
----

moved

---~----~-

i: -passes last season.

SPECIAL OF THE WE.KI ,

•;. "It m,lght be a consideration If we
;:: lost a tOp wide receiver," Rutigliano
~: said. "I think he could go out there
.::: and play well, but it's remote. It's

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BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) Americans dominated · swimming
events at the World University
, ,Games, but the American women's
~f: basketball team and the U.S. water
~: polo squad blew chances for gold
" medals. '
..
~: Jill Sterkel collected her fourth
,, - gold m~l of the gap~eS as the
.,. · United States took three of four .
.; swimming golds. She also was part
of the &amp;meter freestyle relay team
which won its event In 3 minutes,
55.05 seconds.
Kin1 Unehan tpok the women's
butterfly in a gamesrecord time of 2:15.71 . .

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PH. 992-2556
Pomeroy, OH.
"LoM:atl!d at the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

·,

HOMEMADE

-:• not in our plans.''

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

COUNTY-WI DE REVIVAL

'

,

.: .ClUiip at Ken.t State University. "I
• ·welcome the challenge. What those
~ other guys have done in the past
' speaks for itself. What I've done in
the past speab for itself, too. But ·an
that is ltfstory. The only thing that
matters Is what we do now."
Reisman Trophy-winner White
was the . Browns• second leading
rusher with279 yards last season·.
· MiJler, a fourth-year man acquired
· from Buffalo ln an off-season trade,
rushed for more than 1,000 ya.rds in
his rookie season with the BU!s but
played sparingly since then.
·
"The challenge is gOOd," Pruitt
said. "It will make all of us better
players. T)lere is no room for rel!t
because we are all pushing each
other to perform better. If you base
it on what I've done for the Browns
over the years, I would say I have to ·
have the oppOrtunity to keep my job.
That's fair."
Pruitt ·said he was "concerned
· deep down inside" that the Browns
inight try to trade him ln the off· ·
season "because I'm 30, I've had an
lnjury and I've played beyond the
lifespan of a running back in the
NFL."
.
Browns' Coach Sam Rutigliano
says Pruitt has little to worry about.
"He's doing fine. I'm very pleased
with the way he's responding to
practice. It looks like he has the acceleration of -old; It's obvious he's
the incumbent. The most important
thing is for him to hold onto it. II'~ .
not.really up for grabs," Rutigliano
said. '
.
The' three-year coach earlier said
performance would ·determine thestarter, Rutigliano . duhed
speculati!lti that Pi-uitt nllght be
lntkl ·a wide receiver spot,
.. •even thoui!h he grabbed so many

~cbe, says be's fully recovered from laal-.n's

Clnd111181l Beogat quarsporting a oewly·grown

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS. COLLEGE

.

M-W 9-4 Thur. &amp; Sot. 9-Noon

frotn veterans Charles

~ · runnbig back position.
• "I see myself as a starter," Pruitt
' said Tuesday at the.Btowns tr~

15.834%
15.040%

Current
Interest

PRlCES GOOD THROUGH SAT., .AYG. 1, 1981

:!,White •alid Terry~ for the No. 1

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~;;="

Highest Yield.
Guaranteed Rate.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

:: !llgh 5!! passes.
!~ ··He admits he faces a stiff

REGISTER NOW FOR FALL CLASSES AT

5-5 seventh-inning
to break
lead
the aPawtucket
Red Sox tie
to and
vic- 1
tory .
Pawtucket picked up an insurance
run m the ninth on a ground out by
Lee Graham . Luis Apo.lte, 6-4, was
the winner, Jim Lewis, Hi, the loser.

.

'o:ll7 yards last season,. hiS lowest

'

two runs and scored one .
In the second game, Sm1th
knocked a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer.
Toledo's Mark Funderburk hit a
tw&lt;&gt;-run homer in the first game, and
the Mud Hens' Doc Estes had a solo
shot.
Ed Cipot of Toledo slammed a tworun homer in the second game.
Pawtucket8, Columbus 5
Dave Koza hit his 18th homer of
the season, and Jim Wilson singled

.

:, iOta! ev,r, but he hauled in a career

Mud Hens capture twinbill
By The Associated Press
For the Toledo Mud Hens,
Tidewater's Keith Smith is a thorn in
the side. Just when the Mud Hens
were getting over the beating he
gave them in the first game of a
doubleheader, Smith stung them
with a home run m the second game.
Behind the hot-hitting Smith
Tuesday, the Tides won the first International League contest fo-3 , and
took the second 0-3.
In the other league game Tuesday,
Pawtucket beat Columbus ~ - Both
the Syracuse-Richmond
and
Rochester-Charleston games were
postponed because of ram .
Smith slammed a double and two
singles in the first game. He drove in

.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

says

WILMINGTON, Ohio (API- The
quarterback to play," Anderson
bruises and aches that shortened his
said. "We weren't winning. It's easy
1980 season are sufficiently healed to switch quarterbacks."
for Cincinnati Bengal quarterback
Now healthy as be starts his 11th
Ken Anderson to joke about them.
professional season, Anderson said
"It goes in IG-year cycles," An- he's not bitter about the boos.
derson said. "The first eight were in"I guess it's part of the game. I
jury-free. I've been struggling a lit- don't Uke it, but It's part of it," he
tle the last two. I should be OK for said. "It's not the first time it's hapthe next eight."
pened. Any quarterback who plays
The 1G-year veteran plans to play more than two or three years Is subanother five years In the National ject to it."
Football League - if be can stay
Anderson called his 1980 per·
healthy. That would mean avoiding formance mediocre.
a repeat of his 1981l season, one of the
"I think
were
a big
parthis
of
roughest in his career, when he hob- it,"
said injuries
Anderson,
who
hurt
bled in and out of he lineup with a knee, sternum and ankle at various
series of injuries. ·
times. "I don't think that last year
He started 12 games, completing was the kind of year I should have
two, and became a target for the had."
hometown fans' wrath as the CinDespite the fans' sentiment for
cinnati offense sputtered.
Thompson, Coach Forrest Gregg
"The press and the fans made has named Anderson as his starting
things tough last year," he said. quarterback going into the
"It's a liWe tough to go on the field preseason.
and get booed off before you've
Tight end Dan Ross, an Anderson
thrown a pass. It wasn't fun for my booster, said that the offense missed
family to go to the games anymore. " the veteran's presence last year.
Statistics show that Anderson, 33,
has been one of the league's most
consistenUy accurate passers. But
he finished last season with 1, ns
yards passing, his lowest total since
he became the Bengals' starting Latonia results
quarterback in 1972; he threw six
FLORENCE, Ky. ( AP)
touchdowns and 13 interceptions.
Kellytuck Palhall captured the
Meanwhile, strong-armed backup $1,500 featured pace mile Tuesday
Jack Thompson was throwing for night at Latonia and paid $8, $4.20
1,805 yards and 12 touchdowns in An- and$2.80.
derson's absence. The veteran
Papa J. placed, $5.80 and $4.40,
thinks that had a lot to do with his and Sail A Long, third, $2.60.
rude receptions in Riverfront
Imago and Kim's Flas~, 9-5, paid
Stadiwn.
$28.40 in the double and the crowd of
" I think they wanted the other 1,222 bet $101,006.

By WUI Grlmlley
AP Correspondeat

'

I

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

: , The '.year yeteran, who wt&lt;
·, d_erwent 1 knee surgery nlldway
.;: thnlugh, tile 1979. National Football
Aaguetseaaon and saw only limited
.:·actionl8st y~r.
the past should
:: 1&gt;e left jljere. Pruitt rushed (or only

Anderson jokes about his bruises

Sports World

.STORE -HOURS:

QNT; Ohio' (AP)' -

terback Ken Anderson,

Today's

.

5 LB.

BAG
Limit One Per Customer
onlv at P.o welt's
.h .

MASTER
D
. MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
13 oz. $}79
CAN

Limit One Per Customer
.GOod only at Powell's.
Aug. 1, 1981

�Wednesday, July 29, lfl!l

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r unr.:r uy- IV&amp;IUDieporT,

In and ArOund Meigs County]
Announce birth
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Cross,
Syracuse, announce the birth of a
daughter, Bridget Renee, on July 14
at Holzer Medical Center. The infant
weighed seven pound&lt;! and six ounces and measured 21 inches in

length.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Benny Spears, Syracuse.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Olin Knapp, Syracuse.
They are also the parents of Jellnifer, age 6.

Garden Club meets

LADY DIANA SPENCER and her father Earl
Spencer smile to well-wishers while being driven to St.

The Winding Trail Garden Club
met at the home of Addalou Lewis
for its annual picnic dinner. Each
member was to bring a covered
dish.
Ruth Moore returned thanks and a
meal was enjoyed by Cora Beegle,
Jackie Brickles, Alic.e Thompson,
Peggy Folmer, Pat Thoma, Ruth
Moore, Margaret Parker, Patty
Parker and the hostess, Addalou
Lewis.
Following the dinner a short
business meeting was held on the
front patio of .the Lewis home. Mrs.
Lewis gave out Meigs Fair Books
and the nower show was discussed.
The open meeting in September

Paul's Cathedral lor her marriage to Prince Charles In
London today . I AP Wirephoto) .

Story family visits Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Story parked their
Mr. and Mrs. George Story, Webster City, Iowa, were in Pomeroy trailer at Roy Oak Park. and visited
and Chester visiting relatives and and left Monday morning for a trip
to Permsylvanla and Canada.
friends over the weekend.
Sunday evening, Mr. and Mrs.
Story visited his aunt, Mrs. Georgia
Thoma, Chester. While there a light
lunch was enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Thonna, Suzan, Roy Thoma,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Thoma, Mrs. Wilhelmina Thoma,
Chester, Mr . and Mrs. Guy Thoma,
Terri, J&lt;evin and Cheryl, Rutland,
and Mr. and Mrs. Leo King, Colum·
bus.

med and it was decided to invite
Paul Strauss, noted lecturer on herbs, to speak. The public is invited to
a ttend. The meeting will he Sept. 21
at B p.m. at the Diamond Savings
and Loan, Riverboat Room,
Pomeroy.
New Club books will soon be cor~&gt;­
piled for the 1981-a2 year.
There will he no meeting for the
month of August due to the Meigs
County Fair.

Joan Tweksbary, R .N., Meigs
County tuberculosis nurse, will be
giving free tuberculin skin tests for
tbe convenience of any person who
will he handling food at the Meigs
County Fair. The tests will be given
on August 3, 4, and 5 from 8:30 to
11 :30 a.m. at the TB office on
Mulberry Heights, and also on
August 10, 11, and 12 at the same
hours.

POMEROY-The annual Beegle
family reunion will be held Sunday.
Aug. 2, at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center, Pomeroy.
Registration is at 11 :30 a .m.,
basket dinner at 12 :30 p.m. followed
by a short business meeting and
program.
Notices are being mailed only to
out or town relatives. Spencer Carpenter, Racine, is this year's
president. All relatives and friends
are invited .
PRINCE CHARLES and his hestman and brother,
Prtnce Andrew 1rtgbll wave to the t::ro~d on their lii'BY

Some SO ptgs born recently on a
farm near Galva, ru.;are being watched closely for traits of Belly Bust,
Conunodity Broker and Market
Manager. In case you aren't well·
inlonned on what enthusiasts claim
is America's fastest growing sport,
Belly Bust, Commodity Broker and
Market manager set world records
in pig racing. ·

" Heinold Downs will be one of the
main atiractions at the 1981 Preble
County Pork Festival, Sept. 19 and
20, at the fairground&lt;! in Eaton,"
· said Lee Vance, president of the
festival board of directors. " Though
not the usual topic of conversation in
racing circles, pig racing has
charged around the corner from
nowhere in four short years," Vance

-

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Loch of

.._._

•lftl'llS

,~ '"' '~ 101 ~~~ ,, N c h

.

••

l eQ UI Uid

l(•ove• Store

.

{

' ·-

SUNDAY
" THE MESSENGERS" from
Wellston will be featured at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church Aug. 2
at 7:30p.m. The public is invited w
attend.

~

Decorated Cakes

~ ncxed .n 0. td !'! """"' do run out of an ~-

l'tem . we 'Mil

Inflatable

oH• voo 'fOUr chOice ot 1

comp.~ r .blt •tem .

w,.,. N v•ngs or 1 •t•ncheek

IVII&amp;Ible r~t•ng the
~'IICM 11¥111 ec'lhtle t0u 10 purchMe
~

Mtv.,.,,Md priCe ..,,,.u" Jl 01~

SWIMMING
POOLS

THE DRESS - Lady Diana Spencer in her stun·
niog wedding dress on the steps of St. Paul's Cathedral

CONFECTIONERY

Ph. 992·6342
317 N. 2nd
Middlepor.

in London on her way to the wedding ceremony. At left,
unidentified. I AP Wirf' photo J.

....
"II

Seven diamonds sparkle
with the beautiful radiance
of a single diamond. Real

IN

POMt:WO'I' A NO GA l~i P OL I')~ f O W F~

WI IUUVI THl IIC:.Hf TO LIMIT QUANTifiU . NONI SOLD
TO OIALIIS

cut diamonds- seven in
all- yet still affordable .

REVIVAL
AT THE

VICTORY BAPTIST

CHURCH

525 N. 2nd ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDS., JULY 29
thru
SUNDAY, AUG. 2

STARTS JULY 30th
13 OH 45" Polyester and Cotton Blends

1

60" T-Shlrt Knit, and 60" Textured
Polyester and Linen Types.

LARGE SELECTION OF FABRIC lh OFF
60" Printed Polyester Knit,
60" Plain Polyester Knit
60" Stretch Knit
60" Sweater Knit
Shirred Fabric

7:00 P.M. NIGHRY
GUEST SPEAKER: .

THE FABRIC

ART MARTIN

sHOP

FROM CANTON, OHIO

·W. 2nl! St.
Pomeroy
992,2284 &gt;; '
•

"

&lt;[

,ROZEN

Fn De LUKeI I 0 1
Piuo
£M8A S'i. •

5~~~-AIC;~;I~ss

Tea
Bags

$119
Smoked Ham ..
s
129
Ground Beef .
s109
Beef Patty Mix ..
s
179
Pot Roast . . .....

ICIQG( • HA.MIUI G U

CANDY'S ClASSIC
COLLECTIONS

lb.

A lUND OF BEEF &amp; HYDRATED . TEXTURED
VEGETABLE ,lOUIN . KROGER'S PRO

•••

SUN GOLD lAND,tiC"

Hot Dog

U.S . GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE . liEf CHUCK

BONELESS

Pomeroy, Oh.

I Uftl

.

JifFY

lb.

Bolting
Mix

+-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij.
I
KROGER

Vac Pak
Kroger Coffee

Meat
or
Beef 12·01.
•
.
W1eners .... .... Pkg.

89

$

SLICED V ALLIYDALE

ggc
$139
Pkg .
l-Ib.

Bacon

FlESH

DRY SALT CHUNKS •••••••••••••••••••• :.~ 99'
12.oz. French City
PACKAGED WIENERS •••••••••••••••••• ~~~- 95'
12 oz. Eckrich

(~ARM

·l.~f.'
=·-""' F"ll
1 ets
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2
5199

.. lb.

FlESH

22 oz.

COTTAGE
s
CHEESE •• ••••• 1.39 POTATOES
1 lb. Package
Half Moon Pkg. ,

CELERY

•••• ••• •

ORANGE JUICE •••••••••••••••c.a.n. 79t.
2 lb. Jack Forst

.

IS oz. ,Sweepstake

JACK MACKERAL .•••••••••••. 21s1.19
15' '2 oz . Chef-Boy-Ar-Dee

.PIZZA w/CHEESE
49

Box

SOAP DETERGENT. •••••••••'!~:. $1._
99
15 '2 oz. Armour

Wilh 7c Off

CORN BEEF HASH .••••••••••. 2P2.09
10''2 oi. ~raft Miniature

MARSHMALLOWS ••••••••. ~ .... 2/
. $1.19· .•·
,
.
.

12 oz. Jit creamy

.

................. $149
.

PEANUT BUTTER

. .

Jar .

·

.

16.oz. Betty
Croc.k'er Ready to
Spread
,.
.

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~

:FROSTI"tS ·~·-~·••••·~••••• :.~~~~:~ s1.29,
19 oz. Reg. i)u,n(~tn

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t
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~~~L AV AllAILI ONLy IN
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DEL! DE,TS.
HOT FOODS
AVAILAtLII Ia"'
TIL 7p111

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·

NO · NONSINSE . COMFORT STRIDE
TO, .

.

Fried Chicken .Bucket
99
Swiss Cheese ... lb .
s 09
Potato Salad . lb .
l·lnch s13 9
Apple P1e .. .. .. .. .. l'le

S2
1

AMIIICAN OR MUSTARD

s119
· .

$499

WHOLE OR HALF AMISH IAIY

s199
·.Buff er1n
o
100-Ct.
......... 1111.
TAILITS

49

sse

1

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;P'ntyhose . .. .... Pal•

••••••••••••••

$

..'t;~:.- s149

79

TOOTH,,r.Sfl .

CO~TROL

oz . Tide

1

SIC

MAIKIT IAIKIT liLICT GUOI AA lAIGIIGGS OOZ U ·

$

limit2

I·Ct.

.. Pkg.

. Grade A
CLarge Eggs. ooz .
s l9
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6·01.
Ultra Br1te ...... Tube .
KROGER

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Angel Food
a e
Pk v
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JUMIO

Red or
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Blue Ph•ms .. . lb.

79c

sgc
39c
.·.Peacll.es .. ..... .... .
CALIFORNIA

Nectarines
... .. .. lb.
2'/..StlEi

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SOUTHERN

UP
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lb • .

RID.,liP.

C\JT

Witennilons ....•~.

15. C

s1••
Honeydew .... .. .~eeh

~I)MIO 5 sizi MElON .

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Ice Cream

KROGER 0.5"• lOW fAT MILK
GAL. 'LAS TIC CTN . .. SU9

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Bunch

Pot Pies ... .. .

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30 Count Florida

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White
Bread
Orange Juice .

$2.39

Roll

$129

Corn 011
Margarine

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IN THE OAIRV O!PT
MINUTE MAIO

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l·lb.

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Wiener Buns .

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SAUSAGE •••••••• •••••••••••.. •.. • $1.99 ·-'.
Homemade
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l'!t(~._ Perch Fillets lb .

PACKAGm
BOLOGNA ... ••••••••••• ......
t .lb. Eckrich

Farm Sausage ..

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"•

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CLOVII VAlliY

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25c
04
4
.....,, sgc
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lb.

Ph . 992 · 2848
124 W. Main

U -oa

Slicea

IN·STOU GROUND OR CHUB PAK.
ANY SIZE PKG .

ring you've always wanted.

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Why not treat yourself or a ·
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GOOD lUNDAY JUlY,. THIOUC:.WSATUIDAY AUC I

MOORES
AMERICAN
HARDWARE

rmour

Progr ess Show Sept. 29 and 30 and
Oct. I near Brimfield, ill.
" Almost certain to be chosen in
the first training group a r e six ball·
brothers and sisters of Belly Bust,
the world's record holder ," Evans
said.
At the Sun belt Expo last fall in
Georgia, Belly Bust covered the 75
foot horseshoe in 3.51 seconds,

SLICED FREE
INTO ONE
CONVENIENT
TAKE -HOME ,KG.

Evety1h11'"1Q yOu bu'f at Kroger o$ guar1 n teed lo r I'OU• IOUI
lll•tfiC110f1 -'8Qo''dleu Of man u iJC!ur., II 'f0 l.j 1 11 not YI •S
K rogtof ,...,,, •epiJc e vou1 •tr
w •t r"l the w m e b•lnd or a
OC)Inpl.l1bie Ill' and Qf refu'1d vour p ur c r1aw P"Ct

.
GRANULATED SUGAR ·•.... .. .. 169
SUMMER CLEARANCE
·SALE

sound of a bell and race 75 feet
around a horseshoe track to the
finish line. " The fastest pigs will
become members of our famed
racing pig stable and will first appear Aug. 7-14 at the Illinois State
Fair in Springfield," Evans said.
Another group is slated to appear
at the Preble County Pork Festival
Sept. 19 and 20 and at the Farm

$ S9

the Advflf'TIIied •1111'1"1 11 tht

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

S2"xl0" (2 ring)
• Tennis Rackets
• Tennis Balls
· Horse Shoes
• Frisbees
For Summertime Fun

For All Occasions
~ROUSH

be long-legged, long-gaited, have a
tendency to run at their own shadow
and have the quickness and s peed to
evade capture - traits that would
drive most hog producers up the
wall," said Steve Evans of Heinold
Commodities, Inc.
"For five weeks the 30 pigs will be
conditioned and trained to come
charging out of a starting gate at the

Pork Loin

&amp;• capt •

SOCIAL
CALENDAR

SATURDAY
BEDFORD Township Trustees
will meet Aug. I, at 2 p.m. instead of
6 p.m. at the home of the clerk .

It was started in 1977 by the
Heinold companies as a promotional
event and last year over 350,000
people watched the company's
racing pigs at shows across the
country. "In a couple of weeka, 30 of
the SO pigs still cavorting around
their mothers will be selected for
racing training. The chosen few will

Fresh Whole

to St. Paul's Cathedral in London for Prince Charles 's
wedding. ( AP Wirephoto) .

THURSDAY
MEIGS MARAUDER Band
Boosters Thursday at 7 p.m. in the
band room at the high school. Booth
at Fair will be discussed also
questions on hand camp will be an·
swered . Band camp will he held
Aug. 9 through 14.

said.

IAYI u•I'O eo% ON
100•1• COlT CUTI'IRI
COIPU£D TO OTHll IUIIDS" AT KIOCll.
"FII -~ IIIP£1 COST Cmtft, •a OTMEI IIA•M All STOC:UD

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

Reunion Aug. 2

Preble County Pork Festival will feature racing pigs

Lucky ladY.
·7oiaino00
dusters

Free TB tests at Fair

was discussed, corrunittees were for·

un10

.

pe
'

\

,t

~

'

.

.

'

PIIIH IAKID o

FRISH UKID

16-az:.

French Bread ... . Loot

89 C

IliAD A'JA.UAIU ONU' AT YOUI
SILVII IIIDGII "OMIIOY IICIOOU STOll

69c
$129
$149

79c

�Pomeroy-M eddl

Public Nollco
PUBLIC NOTICE
Offen will be received at
the taw offices of crow,

n-~::~==~~~:
*•

WOIDID lljlt - - llf
for tbe lllllldllly wllb llllda
Yeaucer llld llltt¥- BlaelltiOdd •

w.es.

~

Crow and Portf!r on the cor

of Mulberrv and
Second Streets In Pomeroy ,
Ohoo, at 10 00 A M on
Fr.day, July 31st, 1981 tor

.

the restdence of the late

Guy H Neegler, Sttuated 10
the Voltage of Racine,

' lllinl Matu- J:W7 follaw'ld by •

and....,.,.

OHto

Kathleen Sctllt, program leader,

Mary Nease, president. read a let-

Women's Oub meets, _ _ _ _ _ __
Professtonal Women's Club met at
the home of Alwilda Werner recently

for a potluck dinner
New chairnlen and colllllllltees
were read at the meeting Eva Robson was named the district publictty
chainnan for the orgaruzation.
A silver dollar drawmg was held,
which Alwtda Werner won
Karen Story was accepted by the

cannot be sold for less than
percent of the appratsed
va lue Terms of sale are
cash and ts to be so ld sub
teet to the lten for real
estate taxes tor 1981 the
property may be seen by
appo1ntment by call.ng the
understgned at 949 2589.

Ways and means were then
discussed and tt was decJded to serve refreshments at an auctiOn which
wtll be held m Tuppers Platns on

club as a new member,
It was brought up that two melf&gt;.
bers of the club. Edith Forrest and
Pearl Reyno!~ are ill
Eleven members and two guests
were present at the meeting The
guests were Kathryn He!Sell and
Geneveve Ward.
The next meeting will be a family
ptcruc, but a stte and time for the

Ho lion Wolfe. Sr

Admtntstrator of
the Estate of
Guy H Netgler.
Oeceased-

(7)

Aug I
After the meetmg was adjourned,
refresdhments were served to mem·
bers and guests
The !lf!xl meetmg wtll be Aug I at
the ftre housr, anyone wtshmg to
JOID the Ladies Awnliary ts welcome
to attend that meetmg

p1cinlc has not yet been dectded

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF COM
MON PLEAS, MEIG S
COUNTY
0H (0
PROBATE DIVISION
No 232 10

(N THE MATTER OF
THE ADOPTION OF
JOHN JAY PROFFITT

JOHN L

DODDERER

whose l ast known address
wa s 524 Brown Avenue
Harv ey Lou •s •a na 70058
otherw.se
r es• dence
unknown will take not• ce
tha t on the 6th day of Oc
tober
\98 0
Jos ep h
Prol tdt
R aymond
Pf'l1110ner ftl ed a Pet1 t on
tor Adoptton perfa •n•ng to
John Jay DOOderer a chil d
born Nove mber 1st, 1967 a t
Columbus
Oh 1o
Sa •cl
PP I 1f 10n er seeks a change
ot the name o f sa •d ch il d
frorn John Jay Dodderer to
J ohn J.=~ v Proff•ff
s~1•d
Pet t1o ner furth er
states thai h e was marr•ed
to Ardeth Kay Proff1tt for
merl y Ardefh K ay Dod
ciPrer on Sep te mber 301h
1972 an d sa 1d ch•ld ha s
been I1V1ng 1n the home of
sard Pe llf to ner s•nce Sep
tember 30th 1972 and that
sa •d m•nor •S m the per
m a nent c ustody of Arde th
Kay
Proffit t
Ro ute 3
Ra c• ne Oh•o 4577 1
Sad Pf'l1t oner furth er
ull cgcs 1n h1 S Pet tmn that
the consent ot John L Dod
d er er tS no t r equ.red to lh •S
adop11on by r eason ot the
tact that the sa1d John L
podder e r
has
f a• l ed
w•thou t JUSt f1ab le ca use to
commun .cate w •th the
mtnor or to pr o v1de for the
ma 1nten an ce a nd suppor t
of the m1nor as requ1red by
taw or tU diC ial decree for a
per od
of
o ne year
pre ce d•ng th e hhng ot t he
acJoptron petll on or 1he
pla ce m ent at t he m1nor 1n
the hom e ot t he peT1lfOner
Jonn Joseph P r o ff1~t..
You a r e reQu•rect kl an
swer wtth•n twenty erght
day s
after
tne
la st
~vbhcat.on wtHCP'I wttl be
•n the 5th day
August
1981
Furt hermore
th e
hear ,ng on sa 1d adopt•on •s
scheduled tor th e 9th day of
Src pt embf"r 198 1 at 10 00
o c loc k 11. M
be for e th e
Honorablf' Rober t E Buc k
Proba te Judge
.:~t
the
M etq S Coun ty Cour t House
Pome r oy Oh10

c»

Publ•c Nottce

40 eas t 200 teet to a potnt

a nd to term mate any r1ghts
you and cert a•n other
defendants may have or
c la 1m •n a 1970 Richa rdson
Mobile Home ser 1a l nu m
ber 407l3 w h1 ch 1S the sub
1ec t of th 1s act•on, and th at
Defendant w I !tam M M •t
c hell be found to own the
enttre 1n teresl •n Parcel
No
1 of
the
above
descr•bed r ea l es t ate
The pra yer ot th e F 1rst
Amended Compl a tnt also
prays for the forec l osure of
Pla•nt •tt s mortgage on t he
above descr tbed property
Par ce l No 2 hav1ng been
transferred to Jou and
Defenda nt Haro l N Hud
ne ll by deed dated Ma rc h
31 1975 tor a term1nat•on
ot any r1gh1 s yo u or certa tn
other named defendants
may have or c la1 m 1n a 1970
R1c hardson Mobile Home
sena l number 4071 3 for a
court order that possess •on
of sa 1d mobile home be
deltvered to Pl a tntlft th at
the named defendants be
requ. re d to set up thetr n
terest 1n the r eal es ta te or
be for ever barred tha t th e
te ns be marshall ed that
th e real propert y be so ld
accord ng to l aw that the
t•tle to the re a l es tate be
qu•eted ' " lhe purchaser
and for reasona bl e at
tomeys tees and cos ts
You ar e req ut red to a n
swer the F r st Ame nded
Compl a1nt w1th1n t wen ty
e1ght days after t he last
publ .ca t.on of tht s not1ce
whtch Will be p ubli shed on
ce each week for SIX sue
cess•ve weeks and th e last
oul;)ll catton wil l be made on
Sef) tem ber 2 1981
11'1 case ot your tallure ro
answer
or
otherw 1se
respond as perm •tted by
t he Ohro Rul es of C1v tl
P.roc:E:'dure wtfhtn t he t 1me
stated
\udgm e nt
by
default w• I be r en dered
agamst you for the re lief
dem anded .n the com
pl amt
Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Court
of Common Pleas,
M erg s County Oh1o
Merg~ Count y
co urthouse
Pomeroy
Dhoo 45769

South 67 deg 13 20 east 25

fee t thence sout h 57 deg
20 20 east 175 teet thence
nort h 38 deg os 40 eas t
100 feet thence no rth 57
deg 20 20 west 17 S teet
thence north 67 deg 13 20
east 25 feet to the po1nt of
beg.nnmg co ntam .ng 0 46
ac r e more or less Deed
Re fe r e nce
Vol ume 253
PaQe 449 Me1gs County
Deed Records
Parcel No 2
S• tu ated '"Sect on No 7
SC IPI O
Townsh p
Me,gs
Coun ty Ohto and be mg
mor e
part cula rly
descrrb ed as fol l ows
Beg. n n.ng a t the
m
terse c tron of t he eas lltne at
a I 45 acre lot reco rdec1 .n
Deed Book No 222 Page
No 189 Deed Records of
Me•gs County OhtO and a
o tnt 12 teet a t r1ght ang les
rom the ce nter! me of State
Route No 143 thence south
83 deg 40 east 200 feet to a
po1 n t thenc e south Bl deg
50 east 175 feet to a po•nf
then ce south 78 deg 00
east 20B 2 feet to a potnt 1n
the ce nter of the south con
crete br1dge rail1ng (12 feet
oft the ce nterline of S R
143 at r1ght angles) and file
true po1nt of beginntng tor
the
follow.ng descr.bed:
tract Thence south 67 deg
13 20
east 254 95 1 teef ;

r.

thence so uth 38 deg 05' o1t1 •

w est 100 feet thence south

67 deg l 3 10 eas1 25 teE11
the nce south 57 deg 20 20 '

east 175 feet thence soutll
38 deg
os 40 west
( pas s•n g an 1ron P• n at 89 46
fee t) for a to1al d1stMtce of
225 68 feet to an tr-on p 1n ,
mence north 73 deg S6 .so·
W"e"St 2~ 01 f ee t to an tron
p1n thence north 21 deg
16 10" east 122 88 feet to an
1ron p 1n rnence north .w

de\) 40 "'"'sl 90 0 feet to on

iron ptn ~nee north .u
deg 40 west 90 o ~et to an
•ron p1n mence north 07
deg 15 eas t 120 D feet to
lhe poml of begmn• ng, con
ta1n10 g 2 192 acres Deed
refer e nce
Vo lum e 252
Paoe 811
M e1as DPf'rl

sur

(Note
Th1s Nottee 1S
ISSUPd ar1d pu bli Sh ed
suant to R uie 4 4 oi th e h10
Rules of C1v11 Proced ure)
(7)

6tc

61 24 ( 71 1 B IS 11 19 (8)

Pubhc Nohce

ADVANTAGES TO THE ADVERTISER
I. Reach:

No"" over II 000 homn are reach
Oflly one ad

td W1fl'l

MARIETTA
Pta.nt.ff

Defendants

3. Cost:

CoH Ill ru n .1cl '' low er
pre-11ou, (omb•nH cost

lflftl

-45769

The obrecr of the com
p1a1nt IS to obta1n a money
tud gmen t aga.nst you and
certain other defendants.
to torec lose a mortgage
agatnst
th e
foll owmg
described real estate

4. Results:

ADVANTAGES TO THE READER

1. Selection:

Volume 222. Page 189. ,
Meovs County Deed Recor
"~ • ds, •rid~ poont 12 ' " '· at•
' rlgllt envies from tilt• cen
•• t ter lille ot State Route No
14, !lienee SOUth 13 deg

Se-e all selltn n ltt e Tn County
area

2. Convenience: clau•
On. of our Pip@f"s
hMs you
~~~tant

gives

the

• • Com.-.re '""" ' " o"'er counttn
3 Companson
-----•

• ,..,. UIO

Situated on the Townshop
of Scipio. County of Meogs

and State of Oh 10 to w1t
Parcel No 1
S1tuate tn Sec t ton 7,
Scipio Townshtp, Metgs '
Townsh1p
Ohto, be1ng
more
partrcuiarly
Uescnbed as fo llows
8eg1nn1ng at the m
tersectton of the east l•ne of
... a 1 ~5 acre tot at the •n
, ter:section of the east l1ne ot
a 1 45 acre tot r ecorded 1n

Co11er•ng lltrtt coullhH vou sell

•••m la st

DAY

'3

3
DAYS
1

4

&amp;

10

IMYS

IMYS

'7

10

1

UP 10

25
WOlDS

'4 ''l

.

'9
'

11

116

11

1

1

1

19

Farm Buildings
S•zes
" From 30xl0"

SMALL

Utility Buildings

• Sodtng
eR emodehng
• Free eshmates
• 20 yrs eJCpertence

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rac•ne, Oh

TOM HOSKINS

,

I

SZ 00 11&lt;h

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New 11omes - ex '

NEW

N EW
LISTING
Rutl.lnd 12:.:54 lur
n• she d
N e w Moon
mobile home w1th 2
bedrooms a 1r cond 1f or
and washer d ry er N 1c e
levc 1 1 J acre lot w ttll a
one car qarage con
cr e te walk s patro and
s ome
l e n c 1ng

su ooa oo

NEW LI ST ING - Bra d
bury
Just completely
r e modeled by one of th e
bes t c ~rpenters rn the
area tt h as new v •nyl
s• d•ng new root new
w tndows and doors new
plumb•ng ne w w1nng
new oak c ab1 nels new
appltanc es
new ca r
pe t 1nq
1n
f ac t
every t h 1ng
1S new
T here 1S 7 rooms J
bed r ooms pantry tn the
k tchen
ut•llfy room
n 1ce yard and ga rden
area
NEW LI ST ING - Mtd
dleport
Excellent
n erg hbor hood
A 1•12
story fr ame Wtth a n•ce
fr on t
porc h
sto rage
over garage, r ece ntl y
remodeled
With
6
rooms
.J bed roo m s
fam• IY room
Ult l1ty
room
H as
an
assuma bl e
loan

90
ac res of good hunt.ng
woods a nd f1 elds •n
Le banon
Town s h1p
Good grave l road
J
b e droom
hom e
12
yr s o ld Form.ca ba th
l u ll b.3sern en l F A fur
nacc dr ill ed we ll ann
qar ag e S550 00 per acre
for all
~OUNO and q ua l1ty
buil t 3 bedrooms nat
qas F A I urnace wood
burnmg f1rep1a ce w1th
buill 1n bookshel ves on
ench
s •d c
D1n1ng
covered pa 110 eleVCI TOr
tull basem ent l arge at
t c tor stora ge 3 car
qarages
and 1 lots
ASk 1ng 528 500
LFV EL RIVER LOT

4 bedroom s 2 full b r'tths
With diSh
b1rch K1f
wits her na l gas F A
l ur n ace
pa tt o
ovcr l ook m g the Oh•o
R •ver 2 porches and
garage •n CheSh •re A
reel n 1ce older home for

119 900 00
NE W LISTING -

Free gas
hear sma l l home w1th 2
ou tbulldtngs
a nd
Lead•ng Creek W 1ll sell
on terms On ly Sll 500
REALlY NIC E - 3 or 4
bedrooms large family
room lot s of n•ce car
pet•ng and r em odel 1ng
Bu It 10 SIO\'e
dtSh
wash er
F A furna ce
dr1 l led w e ll an d over 2
acres of nea rl y level
land w1th la r ge barn and
garage Only S43 000

45

ACR ES

on

NEW

good

NEW

LISTING

~

Stately older home 1n

Middleport woth many
posslblllttes
Plus a
Garage Apartment for
e)(fra tncome Th1s one
ou must see SJS,OOO '00

Perma

stone 3 bedrooms, 2
ftreplaces
full
basement, 3 lots and
Patto, storm
garage
drs and wtndows For
ced atr heat Ask.mg

$45, 000
TRArLER LOT -

LISTING

Beaut •tul older home
w•th n1 ce or1g1nal wood
work
bu111 tn book
cases front S1 ft1ng por
c h , a nd could have r en
tal untt over garage
Tht s 7 room home has 3
4 bedrooms, l iJ::t baths,
ful l basement, W B
frreplaceJ and tS really
ntce $52,900 00

grave l road Sc hool bus
a ne1 matl routes Wtll
sell for $350 00 per acre
for a ll

13 YRS OLO -

Por

tl a nd - Large level l ot
w 1th a 2 story fr ame
home w• th 6 room s 4
large kt1
bedrooms
c he n, base m ent stor age
bldg
and ntce front
por ch $24 500 00

$4S 000

boches scrap 1ron and
metals
1
mile
w es t
ol
Fatrgrounds on Old Rt
33
Mon Fn 8 3Cto4 00
.otter Aug 3

Custom I&lt; 1tchens, Ap
pltances ,
Custorn
Bathrooms R e modehn
g, Plumb.ng, Electnc,
Heatmg

Radtator Spectahst

NATHAN BIGGS
lS Yrs Expenence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

11-Holll W•ntN
12-SihMt.d Wanted

ROOANG ·

l :J- In.-~rtnce

14- lusilttu Training
U-ScftOOIIIIIUructlon
!._Radio. lV
I Cl RtPilr

new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts, guHer
c1ean1ng and pa1nt1ng.
All work guaranteed

Pomeroy, OH

Ph

992 2174

s 7 tfc

' 1-F 1 r m Equipment

n - wantHto 8uy

e FINANCIAL

U-L•vestoclc
1+---He,&amp;Grt •n

27-MOMy to Loan

u-s..a &amp; F•rtmrer

Opportunity

U- PTctfenklnal
Sonlc:.s

949· 2862
949 2160
2 4 tt c

31_ Homtslar sate
32-Motlile Hom"

74-Motorcyclts

MOnclay 2 :10 on S.turd• y
Tuesday lhru Friday 2 JO P M
the Clay C..fort publica lion
Sunday 2 lOP M Frldn

onedaylnsttrtlon

""'

SERVICE
•
Trash Ptckup In
The Vtllage of
Mtddleport, Oh
Ph. 992·5016
or 992-7505
4 17 lfc

REESE~

ROGER HYSELL'S

GARAGE

objt&lt;fjOnal Tile Publi sher wUI nol be
Incorrect illlerllon

--Auto and Truck
Repatr
--Transmesseon
Repatr
Hrs Mon · Frt
9 am. 5 30 p m.

Water Sewer· Electnc
Gas L1ne Ortches
Water L.ne Hook ups
Sephc Tanks
County Certthed
Roush lane
Chesh1re, Oh

992 5682

Ph 367 7S60

10 7 tt c

l 7 1 ltc

S1d1ng
ROOfing I Gutter
Remod el tng
servtng Your Area tor
20 Years

. J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
eBackhoe
• Excavatmg
• sept1c Systems
eWater, Sewer&amp;
Gas Ltnes
eDump Truck
•Trencher
L1censed &amp; Bonded

Addonsand
remodeling
- Rooltng and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbrng and
elec tncal work
(Free Estimates)

ALL CARPET

CARPET

Ph 843 3l22
1 13 2 mo pd

W/Padclong
Installed

V. C. YOUNG II
992

PULLINS
EXVACATING
992-2478
or
Blame Milhoan
985-3965
715lmopd

PH. 992-7201

6215or99173li

Pom eroy, Oh

5 21 1tc

Blue,

ss• sq

Main St.

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

13"sq

742-2211

.

r----------------------Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for

SERVICE
All MAI&lt;ES

PAii'lSANO

Claulfleds and
Savell I

• Drsposals
• Oostlwa,hers
• Hot Wattr Tanks

R atos For
L&lt;lundr;••s
, Rental Prop•rt•el
.- Afll HOII!.eOwnen
, MOb• lit Homt Parkl

Brown,
Gre-en

3ROLLS
McGee Carpel
!Extra Good)
eg 116 tS sq
Installed vd

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Reler~tnce

~PK•ill

Cnlt-n·Carry
I Roll Eoch

DOWN

yd
yd
Now 1
L---==~~~~~~~~--~~~d
GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy Now &amp; Save S2·$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from .
Retular backed, carpet installed free
wilt! pad. Good selection Roll Ends Remunts $2.50 up. Grass carpet S4.99 yd.
Gr"n and Brown.
Drive A LIHle- Save A Lot

CAT D-6-C

~ c o.n

IS MARKED

RUBBERBACK

$1')15
£ -,q

DOZER WORK

eWishers
•Orren
eAanges

=
J.
u

wr~te your own

ad and order by mail w1th th•s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
result• Money not refundable

,...

•
1

HOWARD

BOGGS

THE PH010

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PLACE

U S Rl so East
Guysvtlle. OH

- PortraitS

- Weddongs

Phone 614 662 3811
Author.zed John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pment Dealer

- Annrversartes
- Passports
-and Now, an 1m
pressrve, complete ltne
of weddmg and an
neversary •nv1tat•ons
and
accessortes
Reasonably
pnced,
qu1ck serv1ce
-Look
w1thout
obhgatton

FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS/SERVICE
U5EO EQUIPMENT
1- No 8600 Dresel Ford
Tractor w i Cab

1- Modei27S Doeset M F
1- Model 479 Hay B•rd
N H
7 3 lfc

ROTAVATORS
HJ 50"-26-30 H.P,
HA 60"- 25-60 H P.
HE 60"-4"10 H. P.
All Models Avollablo

•Nam•------------------IAclclreu,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1

I
1Phon.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

LEO
MORRIS
•

6 20 1 mo

Thew cash rates
1n~lude dtscount

( l wanteo
( , 1 For Sate
( ) Announcement

17
18
19
20
21

:n
2

I

3

Lei George Moll@!; ~h

4

•

s

New 3 B R bl level gives you amazong flexibility
YOU desogn tower level tor a 41~ . or even a 5th B R
or f)C!$Soble family room Laundry area and a Jrd
bath already plumbed. Vosol us Sunday, Aug 2nd
I between ) 00 6 00 on Rt 554 Let us help you woth
r beSI avaolable financing Thl• beautiful home Is
, ctooe to Power Plants, Holzer Hospotaf and the coat
I

m1nes

' TUPPERS PLAINS - Well kept 3 B R . home with
\ garage and ala'"ge lot Prl~ed In the low 30'11

"

' home, remodeled
'
' CHESTER - 2 B.R.
ins\de Has
:Central A.C bllaement, screened In porches, sets on
2 acres. with outbuildings and a small POnd Also
1haS. tun trailer hOOkup space 539,900
j '

.

P.!i.MNGJI

I

Yard Sa le 9 4 Sat Aug l 4
miles on Bulav1lle Porter
Rd
Baby furn1ture
clothing, and mrsc

Garage Sale 509 Holda
behond
Sprong
Valley
Plaza Saturday 9 to 5
Furn1ture

•

toys, and good

clothes

3 Famtl'; Yard Sale July 30

31, 104PM 25 Moll Creek
Rd,

Call

Gallipolis

dolls.

collectables.

household 1tems, plants,
fru 1ts and vegetables
Green house 1 mtle above
Racoon bridge

and

Garage Sale 4 mtle tram
Holzer Hosp1fal Rt 160
Evergreen Thurs I Frt
Btcycle, sweeper flowers
and lots more

Thurs &amp; Fro. July 30 &amp; 31
10 6
Ph
mtle
from
Langsv olle on 51 Rt 325

as a fash1on stylist

4th house on nght

hour prof1t
Ideal for
homemaker w•th family

Yard sale

Call 9'11 3941 from 9 6

Yard Sale

SR7

home

Sat

1, 105

Beh1nd Codner's
Syracuse

does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thmg for
sale may place an ad 1n th1s
column There will be no
charge to the advert1ser

Texaco

Garage Sale Fro. July 31.
Sat, Aug 1 Jtm Mays
Garage at Chester turn on
to co Rd 25 &amp; go If• mite
See s•gns Ram or shtne

3

lovable kotlens. 62 Loncoln
51 , behond Rocco's Rest at
ter 5 00
Englosh

9 5

Greenhouse by State H1Qh
way garage

G1veaway

Garage Sale 277 Loncoln,
Moddleport July 30 31 Aug
1 9a m Twon bedspread,
canopy &amp; curtains, toy box ,

sheep dog,

feml!lle to gtveaway
.u6 7708

Thursda y and

Froday ,

ANY PERSON who has
anythong to give away and

Old

and

Call

h1gh
chair,
Admtral
refrrgerator, electrtc stove

2 Famoly Sale Frl &amp; Sat 9
s 304 Hamilton St • Mod
dleport

f1rewood

~ronmg

6
7

•

23
24
25
26
27

:18
2'1
30

9
10'· ' - " - - - - -

31

11

» -~~~--'-

12

33 ••_ _

(copper,

batteries
and
gtnseng, yellow
root, catnip and sassafras)
10 am to 6 pm datly Also
Flea Market on Saturdavs

CAII675 5068
Old furntture, stone tars,
copper kettles and other
types of antiQues Phone

446 392S

Boys

maternity

&amp;

Help Wanted

WANTED

Lease men, to

teasae oil and gas proper
ttes, GAIIta and surroun
dtng counttes lnqutre to

clothes,

toys,

washer &amp; dryer, 1 18 cu ft

upright, refrigerator , 1 IJ
cu ft freezer. 1 dinette set
ather mise

YARD sale July 29 &amp; 30, 5
miles above Henderson at
brown trailer From 911115
Clothing,
furnolure ,
flowers,
appliances,
miscellaneous

9 PUPPIES, Irish Setter &amp;
Labrador Retrlver. 2 mon
ths old, 3Q.4 882 3587

JUly

Rd

Rtv e r

Gallopolos Call446 4205

stan plan Plus , the Army
Guard's valuable tec hnrcal
schooling wrll prepare you
for a well paytng c1V1I1an

Soctal work posttton part
time at local Develop
menta l Center advocat1ng
for developmental dtsabled
tnd1v1dual s
Must have

or

related

ex

perlence Send resume to
Munel Ranum Sutte 112

1350 W 5lh Ave , Cotum
bus. Oh 43112
POSITION

AVAILABLE

Adm1n1strat1ve Secretary
Quallhcattons, H1gn school
degree, formal secretanal
trammo beyond htgh school
l"lelful,
and
baste
knowledge of bookkeeptng
Responstbtllttes, Performs
complex secretanal duftes
matntalns flscll l and per
sonnet records, prep a res
reports orders supphes
processes purcha~ 'lrder s
and bills, resear c1 .t!s and
analyzes materut~l, m tun
tarns orderly off1ce area
and perform re lated dut1es
as reqUired Salary, S6,784

to $0,927
Avaolabololy,
August l7 1981 Contact
Loren D Phelps, Superln
tendent, P 0
Box 14,
Cheshore Oh 45620 July 22 .
1981 ( closong date to accept
applocatoons 8 3 81 I Ap
plocanls please onclude
work
h1story ,
salary
htstory, current resume
and three references

MANAGERS Assistant
managers and c lerks for
Conv•ent Store
Plea se
send resume to Gas Plus,

TRAINED
medocal
secretary, local physlcan's
off&lt;ce, P 0 Box 276, PI
Pleasant, wv 25550

1

318- VIMton
245-RID Grande

Heals Auction Hovsett,
WVA. Rl. 2 Every Sat. 7•00
Pill .
(Consignments
taken) , (will buy furniture I
Lonnie Neal !167·7101 .

Lady tor part ttm e work tn
Jewerly Stor e 1nqu1re at

422 2nd Ave
Retatl
prefered

Gallopolos

mailtng work
No ex
penence requ1red
AP
PLY C•rcle Sa les P 0
Box 224 D, Richmond Htll.

NY 11418
GE T VAL UAB LE traonong
as a young bus.ness person
and earn good money plu s
some great gtfts as a Sen
f tnel rout e earner Phone
us nght away and get on
the ehg1bthty l •st at 992

Gama t...o Area Code

614
446- GalhpOIIS

typong

anyt1me

Call 367 7615

(80

cen t s

per

page )

l1fe Estate Constst 1ng of
fa rmhouse w•th acreage
Further 1nformat•on call

'1'12 6747 alter 4 00 p m

W•l! do housekeep ng or
babys1tttng or srt w1th
e lderly tn hospJta l or home
Ca ll 446 9623 after 5 30
V mton Child Care 1n my
home WeP.k days only, ref

VocK oe Doddle380 0832
TV serv1ce ca lls Ca l l 992
6776 or 992 2034 Also used
co lor TV for sale

Large 2 story stone home
well msullated with 3 large
bedrooms, one full bath,
2'h ba ths, format dining
room newly remodeled kit
chen bu11t tn tncludtno dish
wa sher, basement with
work shop, 2 ca r garage
w1th work shop, large gar
den 2 por ches .548 Grant

Sl

Moddlepor1

$59,500

Wanting quick sale to settle

estate Call 614 384 6309 tor
appomtm en t after 1 p m

22

Real nt ce 7 room house

Money to Loan

Fully carpeted, 2 barns,

FHA VA Conventt al Home
Loans, Columbus F 1r st
M ortgag e Co 463 Second
Ave , Ga l lt po hs Oh 446

7172
23

COMMERC IAL
du strtal

laundro; room,basement &amp;
garage Pnvate swtm paol
wtth 6 acres l and Real nice
4 room house w1th double
garage that brrngs $200 00
mo on same property Ca ll

'192 2502

Profes sional
Servtces

and

on

p hot ography

Phone 446 2909 or 446 7226

Opportuntty 1s yours 1ust
for the ask .ng Ask your
Beehne styl1st and she w1ll
be happy to help you 101n
the Beeltne world of
fasht on and success Phone
992 3941 between the hours
of 9 6

Ptano tun.n g and repatr ,
Love your ne tgh bor tune
your P1ano
Btll Ward
Wards Keyboard 4.46 4372

IN L.OCAL Terntory , In
dustnal Sa les excellentop
portuntiY 1f you have am
b1t1on Sales &amp; tec hn 1ca l
tra1n1ng
prov1ded
Mechant ca l aptitude &amp;
college degree helpfu l We
sell quallto; products &amp;
need qual•fy people Do you
qualify" Send resume to
P 0 Box 230 Worthmgton,
Oh10 A3085
Expenenced orderly for 7 3
sh1ft Call Nanc y VanMeter
at Pomeroy Hea lt h Ca r e
Center 9 5 Mon Fn 992

6606

•

I NFORM A TION

on

Alaskan &amp; overseas em
ployment
excellent 1n
come, call 3127 41 9780 ex
tent•on 917

HONE ST, mature, depen
dable lady Apply m per
son Apple Tree Dell, Rt
JS, Henderson WV
IJ

Insurance

SANOY AND BEAVE R In
surance Co has offered
servt ces for t.re tnsurance
coverage tn Gallta County
for almost a ce ntury
Farm , home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet m
dlvtdual needs
Contact
Lewts Hughes, agent
Phone 4A6 3318

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN
can

your
celled'
Lo st
operator's L1cense? Phone

'192 2143

Gallopolos
GA LLI A C lean1n g and
Rent A Matd Servtce Inc
Free Estimates, bonded
.nsured
phone 245 9234
Clean1ng by the w eek mon
thor contractual
Complete Auction Serv 1ce
stock redu ctt on c lose outs
es tates farm equtpment lr
vestock real estate Lt cen
sed and bonded tn Ohro,
and Wes t wv Bud McGhee
Auct10n and Real Estate
Co Call for terms 446 0552
or 4.46 0818
428 Second

Ave. Gallopolo s. OH, 45631
You r Prano rustmg 1n su m
m er Humtd lfY" Free m
spec t 1on wrth tuntng Lane

Danoels
2001

742 2951 or 9'12

STARKS Tree Tnmm.ng &amp;.
Shrub servt ce
Insured

3 bedrooms. full basement
&amp; garage Su1table for
bus•ness on l!.a acre w1th
pool, t enced yard &amp; oar
den In Middleport $45,000

247- Letart Falls
949- Ractne
7!~- Rulland

Area Code 304
675-PI. Pleosont

1n Muon County

tra oler s
iR( STATE
MOBILE
HOME S
Ga llopotos CA LL 446 7572
CLE AN USE D MOBI LE
HOMES
KESSE L S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WE ST. GAL LIPOUS, RT
35 PHONE 446 3868 or 446
7274
198 1 Fa trmont mobile
home 52x14 Need to sale
relocattng Call 446 9303
1974l•ber ty 70x1.t, 3 bdr 1
1/2 bath w•1h dryer hook
up unfurn Does have ap
Pl•ances electrtc ftreplace
ca rpet throughout Block s
and sk•rt1ngs steps and
meta l buoldong $5,'195 00
Jo hnson Mob 11e Home
Brokers new llst1ng 446

3547

EVANS Day Care Cente r
Ktngs Dnve, Evans WV tS
now acceptmg appllcattons
for enrollment
Openmg
August ll, ages 2 t hrough s
Teacher Beck y Sharp,

phone 304 372 5398

3547
73 Schu ltz mob1le home
12x60 total electnc, cen
31

Homes for Sale

NEW

CABIN

home,

or

com pletely

tralaor $7,500 Call2561265
or 379 2250

s mall
fur

nos hed. $3900 Call 446 03'10
House wtth acreage for
sale, 3 or 4 bdrs, fully car

peted 2 barns, 379 2258 or
379 2343. after 6PM

H~SE Meadowbrook Ad

dit ton, 3 bedroom, femtiY
room wtth fireplace, cen

tral a or, basement, 304 67S
1542
NEWLY remodeled house
on 1 acre 2 Bedroom, com

ptetety

carpeted,

stdtng

and

new

windows

guaranteed for 40 years
$9 ,ooo oo or $6,000 00 down

For sa te 1974
mobile hom e

110x250

F reedom
and lot

Located

2 mo

above Henderson, WVA on

Rt 35 Woll sell together of
separate Phone
after 6PM

12x60
cond

675 4310

Elcona, e)(cellent
prrvate lot Call 256

6033
1973 Crown Haven. 14x65
three bedroom, new ca r
pet 1971 Cameron. 1.. xM
two bedroom, new ca rpet

1971 Champoon, 12x60. two
bedroom new carpel 1976
Cameron,
12 x 60 ,
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112 new

carpet

1970 PMC, 12x60,

two bedroom , new carpet ,
B &amp; S Sales, Inc , 2nd and

VIand Street, PI Pleasanr,
WV Phone 67S U24

and take over payments
12 X 60 Mobile home Patio,
awntng, underpenn lng,&amp;
air cond1t1oner W1ll sen or

rent lot Call992 2885
9 ROOM house plus some
furniture. 2 baths, patto,

18x20 shop building, 116
Park Dr 3Q.4 67S 2592 or
675 2053 Priced on In
spec lion

'
992·2156

tn Meogs count~

446-2342

Pnces r educed on all
mobile homes and trave l

1978 70x 14, 2 bdr . 1 112

U8- leon

tn Caltra County

Mob1le Homes
tor Sale

bath front den With wOOd
burn.ng frreplace
paho
aw •ng , sk•rtmg, ap
pl1ances. d.n lng room table
a nd chatrs No other. ltke
new furn 1ture
$10,000
John son Mobile Home
Broker s, new hstmg 446

Must relocate Call 304 576
2102 alter 5 00 or 562 9292,
10 toJ

Mason CoW va

32

Phone 304 576 2010

New 3 bdr house w1th
garage and full basement
$45 000 Call 446 0390

Metgs Co Area Code
614
992- M•ddleport
Pomeroy
98s-Chester

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

GOOD ''Used bllbV a troller,
304 675 3214.
•

do

after -4 p m

343- Porlland

379- Watnut Dost
256--Guyan Dlsl
643- Araboa Dlst

34. .-..;~..,.~
35 _ _
•_
' __.:..:_

.!J

Certlfted Clerk Typtst w •ll

2156or9'12 2157

713-Mason

w..... fe

d elivery

Elnanelal

112-New Haven
"5-Letart
937- Buffafo

I

ba ths carpet Spnal statrs,
c trcular stone f1replace, 8
acres Call992 7741

and

ex pertenc e

576--Apple Grove

f

Modoloed A frame. 3 bdr 2

P1ck up
avatlable

Ever

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

317- Cheshore

Public Sole
&amp; Auction

JOB '

$45,000 Ca( l446 0494

992 7370

Cook w anted for new area
restaurant
Except•onal
opportuni t y tor qualified
person Wnte Box 316,
Gallipolis

BS/BA

A

$6,00 cas h down payment
w tl l get you .nto thts
presttgtous
home
Assumeable 8 per cent
mortgage A or 5 bedroom

Ca ll 446 4425 after 5 p m

$185 00 to $SOO weekly doong

Wtth the Arm-; Nattonal
Guard, you II have a part
ttme 10b wtth full ttme
benefitS You Wtll attend
tratntng one weekend each
month and two weeks each
year Beneftts 1nc1vde low
cost life 1nsurance, ex

GARAGE sale Friday &amp;
Saturday 9 5, 8 miles out of
town on Rt 2 N Childs
clothes 3·6, toys

TWO lx10 ft metal utility
Sheds, wtnlf damaged, can
be salvaged 304·675 4111
days, 675 3389 evenings

Los! opel f'"'nd

269

MOVING sale 1'105 North Box 334, Gallopolos Dhoo
Mal~
1 antique maple 45631
bedroom suite, 1 set

3 Puppies, 8 weeks old, part
Cocker Spaniel Phone 304
675 1229

COUCH &amp;• 2 chairs, old
dishes, 304 675-3312.

Lower

NEED

thought of working on a
towboat'&gt; The nver rn
dustry employs thousa nds
of men women
Recteve
top wages Many fnnge
bentftts Free room and
board m ed1ca l and dental
TransportatiOn patd
No
relocation Work 30 days

faster servtce send self ad
dressed stamped envelope

gtrls

books
mangle

borhood Rd , a ll makes ser
v tced Spectal!llng tn Lawn
Boy
Blades sharpened

stay home 30 days C R F ,
Inc , Box 121 Dept 240,
Dontphan Mo 63935 For

EMpiBi'MBAI

Wanted to Do

D J s LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Neogn

brass.

tOb Call675 3950

3 Famtly Yard Sale Thurs
Fro , Sat , &amp; Sun Good
clothes, ant1ques anttque

working

good

House

beside of 35 Overpass

Earn S8 00 to 110 00 per

to

metals

cellent pay and a free pen

evenongs from 7 30 to 10 30

Free

HARPER
HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CO, 11th and

Great Bend Oo I Inc

ATTENTION LADIES"'
Help pay off lhose un

4

Garage

Frtday a nd Saturday

grand openong Rosenberg
Recycling, 140 Columbus
Rd, Athens. Oh 45701 Call
593 7477

p m

18

11

Sale 112 mole ott Rt 35 on
Bodwell Rodney
Rd

C:ALL \II TO auY OR SELL
N•ncy Ja..,. - AIIKiale

Vlrtlnla ltarman- Anoci•J•
PH. taHiti

f

well Mt Olove Rd

auto batteroes Watch this

bills

sterlmg,

Yard Sale July 30 &amp; 31 One
mile from Btdwell on Btd

spec1ahzing In aluminum
cans, alumtnum Stdrng,
sheet &amp; cast alum , copper
wtre, brass, radtators, and

wanted

sliver,

ber Shop Moddleport '1'12
3476

adult clothing, and m1sc

Phone 304 675 2267

MILLER ELECTRI
SERVICE

2 8 If &lt;

th ot Hol zer Hospotal out
Rt 160 End tables, cur
ta ons. books choldren &amp;

sewong

location

OPM

n~diators,

Thurs &amp; Frt , 2 mtles Nor

ROSENBERG RECYCLI
NG
Opening
soon

for

per cent down/ I per cent
mterest or 10 per cent down
I 12 per cent Interest
Poss1ble
rental
no
reasonable offer refused
Open house Wed July 29
thru August 3rd rlOAM to

1ewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
cur rency Ed Burkett Bar

steel

machtne repatr, parts, and
supplies
P1 ck up and
delivery Da'V'IS Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

paper

Gold

for s1ons

Georges Creek Rd
446 0294

McGhee home, 15 miles
from Gallipolis
Asking
$44,000 on land contract 25

Complete
households
Write M D Miller , Rt 4,
Pomeroy Oh Or 9112 7760

3112 miles from town on SR

Yard Sale July 30. 31. &amp;
Aug 1 5 moles past HMC
Sf Rt 160, turn left Watc h

and

buildings One mile south
of Vinton. on St Rt 160 Old

furniture, gold,
sii'V'er
dollars, wood 1ce bOxes,
stone 1a rs, antiques, etc ,

aluminum, lead , stainless

Phone 304 675 2406

( l For Rent •

Call742-3195
or992-7680

SWEEPER

home on 8 roll1ng acres

woth log ca bin and 3 out

BRASS, old

Garage sate July 30 3ll 9 5

Announcements

3

~e-eor
~OV·

Vtand Street, now buy1ng

588at Boll Tawney's

WANT AD WAY
.... .. .
_.........
...... ...·-,···............

Kindling

WELCOME 10 QUR OPEN HOUSE

your present t:.lectrtcal
system
Re51denttal
&amp;Commerctaf

on Rt 7

EVERYBODY
Shops the

Clothes

_For all of your wer·
eng needs.

Across from

clothes. mens. womens &amp;

Rt. 1 Sode Hill Rd
Rutland, Ohro
PH 742· 2455
5 11 tfc

CENTRAL REALTY

109 Htgh St, Pomeroy

Items

locks and dam at Eureka

Male black German
Shepard, 5 mo old Call
.u6 4727

--- --- RtaiiStiie- Genera~ ---- - --

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

mrsc

M a ke An Offer

SUMMER CARPET SALE

Free E shmates
Ct~ll Collecl

nu!l. .&amp;d lor Fulure

2 Famoly Yard Sale Lots of

FINAL CLOSEOUT
OF SHRUBS

for more than one

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

EUGENE LONG

Kt~ep

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

chlldrens

F1rst t1me ever,

Farm Ponds Land
Cleanng - Roads.
Call:

TRENCHING
SERVICE

Rugs, dishes, cur

taon s.
and
clothing

Al s o
se v e r a l
Reposse ssed at GOOD
Pnces

The Publ1sttor rfterlotfl lfto r1tht lo lfd1t or re1e(t any 1ds dHmed

Possesion

ofems,

Yard Sale Thursday On ly
100 yards eust oil Loncoln

F reeters
R efngerators
washers Dryers
Arr Condthoners

SHIII'MII

1mmed•ate

Large white 5 bdr farm

Thurs, &amp; Frl

~

....

NICI&lt;I!I. .. 8&lt;Af

Furniture across from Car
ter and
Evens
Wed,

..._

llOO

three day lnsort1on

six days ln~ertron
IAver•ge • wora s per 11n•1
Moll•!• Home
1nd Y~rd sa1n1r1 •cctpftcl only wltll c1111 wltlt
order JJ unl cttargt fer ICII urr.,.tng lo• Nvmbtr In C•rt ol Ttlt

Up t• U words

111EWUTY
Of'&amp;IU10I&lt; arr
10 PIIT ,4

used Items AI Neal Used

614 992 2181

Rates and Other I nformateon

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

J&amp;C
SANITATION

Yard Sale Many

M1sc. Merchandise

17- Upholstery

TlW F.(! PMll'
IJSCU TO SEHP

room combination, oat In
kitchen, lg family rm , 2
112 baths; located In Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
firm Kyger Creek School
District Shown by appt
only call 367 7835

cherub lamp, tools, many

BIG APPLIANCE
SALE AT
POMEROY

•r - Home Improvements
IJ - Piumbtn9 &amp; E~~:uvatrng
n-Excavar1ng
14 - Eiectriut
I Refngera l lon
U-General Hauling
a.-M H Rtpa"

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

uti••

VINYL
SIDING

S4

eSERVtCES

l7-Re•lt01"S

7 17 1 mo

Noce 2

:"' .. ~.. !! Jlfi 3092 •

Parts
&amp; A.cctstOflts
71-Aulo Rep•.,

»-Rut Estate wanttd

Located at Maplewood
Lake tn Rac.ne

Chevy pi ck uP topper, and
metal tools box

Phone 742-3 171
ve tmc1 N1C1nsky, Assoc

7~Auto

Sale

Uplo1sword•
Up to 15 words

m•sc dishes, gun &amp; ammo,
some antiques, good 74

story 3 bedroom home
Full basement L.ovely
wrap around porch Has
own garage for off
street parkmg Ask1no
526 500 00

BY OWNER 4 bdr , split

Good used Spinet and Con
sole plano's Call 614 773
5125

BEDS I RON

Homes for Sale

levet, living room &amp; dining

Town

3 Family Garage Sale 1/2
mile off of 160, third house
on right up Kemper Hollow
Rd Some toolS, clpthlng.

Comfortable 3 bedroom
home w•th bath on 21 ..
aces Sells for S16,000 00

POM ER OY -

Centenery

House

73- V•ns&amp;4W D

l4-lullnou lv•ldlngs
JS-Lots &amp; Acre•te

Monday Fnday
4pmtollpm
All Day Saturday

CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars Smith
Buick Pontiac. GAllipolis.
Ohio Call 446 2282

sizes

Cheryl Lemley, Asoc

e TRANSPORTATION
11 - AutoS for Salt

•Steel • AIUm1num •
Casttng • Tra11er H1t·
ches
•
Mefal
Fabncattons

Clothing Sale Frl &amp; Sat
July 31 &amp; Aug 1. 10? Good
c lean school clothing, a ll

•

P1ke

eREAL ESTATE

n-F.,I'IU for

STARTER
or rental on

ms
COUNTRY LIVING -

Jl-Truclls for Salt

21-Bustntn$

PH. 949-2285

992-6011
992-7656

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;UVESTOCI&lt;

tt-Wanteello Do

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard

Free Estimates

...
I

eMERCHANDfSE

51 -HoUUftold Good1
52- CB TV Radio ~qurpmern
Sl- Antiquts
M-MIIC MtrchaMIIIt
n - au,ld•ng Supplies
»-Pets for S.lt

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

BARNETT'S
WELD SHOP

Construction

From the Smallest
Hea ter Core to the
Largest Rad1ator

I

Ht!ddt/ll.lt tl! t s

I Aucllon
,_wantH to luy

All types of root work,

C. R. Mash

. .
'
-·~-[i

Hnusinq

Sate

tar Sate

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

Henry E Cleland, Jr
"Hlfl
ASSOCIATES '
Jean Trussell 949 2640
Rover Turner"H'92

all uttlttles. leve l lot
wtth vtew of the Ohio
Rtver

7-Ya,.., Slit
~Public

H. L WRITESR

Ph 992 6564
7 26 1 mo pd

~EALTOR

W&lt;th

2860

St1rting

$26 900 00

LI ST ING --

41-FurnlshH Roams
4t-Spacttor Rent
47- Wented to Aenl
,.._Equrpment for Rent

LI ST ING

Rut1 .1nd Really bt g
pr etty yard a nd energy
eff1 c1ent one fl oor plan
2 bed room home With
d n1 ng room k1tch en
n ce back porch ca r
port
and
s to rage
buddtng $21 000 00
N E W LI ST ING - Appl e
Gl"ov e - 7 miles from
the bn dqe A pp rox 37
dcres w1lh a beau ttful
v•ew of the r• ver One
story home w t h 5
rooms
2 bedrooms
dln tng room
utll1ty
area an d an enclosed
fr ont porc h There 1S a
r en tal hou se m ed 1um
s•zed barn ce ll ar w 1t h
smoke house work shop
and 2 one car garages

Phone
(614) 992 3325

5-MI,yAds

6-LD'&amp;tandPound

3 11 lie

( Pomeory scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)
rap pnces pcud for auto

tenseve remodel ·
eng.
• E lectrtcal work
• Roofing work
13 Years
Expereence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6 3 1 mo

7 24 I mo pd

'~J::!

or

No Sunday Calls

WANTING TO BUY
SCRAP

992-6323

V IRGIL B SR
ll6 E ~ccon d St,.eet

949-2101

44-AHrfmtntt for Rent

NICE
HOME

Large, sotid brtck
home 1n Pomeroy 3
spacrous bedroom!, 1' '2
baths and equ1pped ktt
chen I ftreplece Home
•s well lr'ISulated Close
to shopp1ng Call for ter

fCW' Rtnt

4-Gh'HWI~

FEATHER BEOS WAN
TED, ANY CONDITION
MISC , BOX 65, AURORA,
INO 47001 GIVE DIREC
TION WILL CALL SOON

31

They'll Do It Every Time

WANT TO SUY Old fur
nlture end Antiques of all
kinds, cell Kenneth Swain ,
256 19671n the evenings

Moving Sale 2 ml out Rt
218 Lg size curtains, kids
clothes 3 8, .and household
Items Wed and Thurs Bto

Broker

ONLY 515,000 00
OWNER FINANCING

41- HOUits tOr Rent
42-MObilt Hotn"

J-Announctmtnts

s1dong

7 5tfc

ROBERT MASH

T

free

Ph 949-2160

Call

EAFORDm

for

949

So lfttl,
Gutt e r .
Roofing, Remodelt·
ng,
Room
Ad ·
dot1ons,
Drywall
~ nd R e patr

Housing
Headquarters

Call

est1mates,

Real Estate- General

Real Estate - General

eeaut1ful. Custom
Bu11t Garages"

Rt 3, Box 54
Ph 614 843 1591
6 15 rt c

l- c 0,,ol TNin"=a

GeorgeS Hobstener Jr

vestment 3 bearooms,
carpet throughout t n
Middleport close to
stores end shopp•ng

RENTALS

,_ 1ft Memoriam

Family Yard Sate-114
mile on Bullavllle Rd July
31st to Aug 1st 9 till?
Priced to sell household
Items, clothing and mise

OFFICE 742 2003

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

a

HOBSIEIIER

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

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•nd Home Ma1ntenance
• Roohng of a ll types

S1tes from 4K6 to t2x40

134-14 Quotk ()nib
133-flshoon Homo Qutltin&amp;
130-S•uttrt-Siltl 38-56
IZ9-Qu iU/ Easy Transfttt
Books and Catalog - add 251
each for postage and handl1ng

7 ACR ES -

CASE NO 17740

NOTICE
Pla1rittff Ftrst Bank of
Man ett a has brought th•S
actton '" the above court
na mtng you as one of the
d efendant s by ftllng 1ts
Complarnt 1n Foreclose on
Februar y 4 1981 and a F tr
st Amended Com pla 1nt ' "
Forec losure on July 9 1981
Your last known address 1S
Route 4 Pomeroy Oh10
I

':,

AU CRAfT BOOKS

NEW

5 7t c

vs
HAROLD N HUDNELL e t
at

Prinl .. d Pallt•rn

29 (01 5 12 19 26 (9) 2

Pet1 tt oner
Ro brrt E Bur k Ju cl ql"'
Pr ob 1l ( our! a t
Mt ,q o;, Cou n rv on .o
x. E)( 0 11 c1o Ct 1 r l&lt;.

$2.00 for uch 1111Wn. Add SO.
lor uth polttro for ponep
10d hondhnc. Serrd 1o:
AnMAUnts
Pahem Dept
The Daily Sentmel
243 West 17 Sl, New York, NY
10011 Pnnl NAME, AIIOIESS,
ZIP, SIZE, ond STYL£ NUMBER.
We slreamloned the se w~ng lo
save you t1me so you can save
money' Send now lor N£1'1 1981
SPRING SU MMER PAn£RN CAT
ALOC I00 slyles free pattern
coupon ($1 Value) Catatoa $1

Records

then ce Souttl 81 deg 50
eas t 175 feet to a pomt
thenc e South 78 deg 00
east 208 2 feet to a potnt tn
the center of th e South con
crete br1dge rail.ng ( 12 feel
otf th e ce nter li ne of St ate
Rout e No 143 at r1ght
ang les)
then ce south 67
deg 1J 20 east 2S4 OS feet.
the true po1nt ot beg1 nnmg
tor the follow ng tract
Be~1nn ng South 3B deg OS
40 west 100 feet thence

J OS EPH RAYMO ND
PROFF ITT

TO DEFENDANT GWEN
DOL Y N F
HUDNELL
W HOSE
~ESIDENCE
ANO
WHEREABOUTS
ARE UNKNOWN
CO URT OF
COM MON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
ME ( GS COUNTY
CO URTHOUSE
POMEROY OHIO
FIRST
BANK
OF

Dawn-to-Dusk

Pubtoc Notoce

No wa 1st seam- easy fllttn g'
Pro nted Pattern 4501 Wom
en s Sozes are 34 138 onch bust
••lh 40 onch hop) 36 (40 bust
41 ho p) 38 (42 busl 44 hop) 40
\44 busl 46 hop) 42 (46 busl
48 hop) 44 (48 bust 50 hop) 46
r50 bust 52 hop) 48 (51 busl
54 hop) \0 (54 bust 56 hop)

-::::::::::::::::-ir:::::--:::::::::~~::~~~~::::::-r------------------1
-:

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

OHIO VALlEY
ROOFING

ALLSYEEL

Wilted to Buy

9

PHONE 992-2156

22 26 29 3tc

.j-----.. . .-----1

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Nottce

Thts property was

appratsed at $20,.000 00 and

bers answenng the roll wtth the
name of thetr favorite tree
The high cost of electric m the ftre
house was then discussed, and some
actton was taken to try and lower the
cost of the electnc btU

illvlted Beulah Wanl of tbe Syracuse
Charge to show slldta and descnbe
her trip to the Holy Land

The Middleport BUBlness and

Business Services

The DatiV Sentenel-Page-9

leport, Ohio

INFORMAnON

ner

Omllyn Salleto bd, 4*4&amp;111111!

reaclltg

Wednesda

Wednesday, July

OhtO

INVESTMENT property
Newly remodeled two story
house In Point Pleasant,
corner lot has been con·
verted Into for rental unit•
Good extra Income S25,000
" Principals only" For In·
formation 6 U 446 7526

USED Mobole Home 576
2711
1971 Daroan 12 x 65 3
bedroom s
1972 Crown
Haven 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expando. 3 bedrooitos 1973
utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms 197:1- Nashau, 1~
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B If• s
Sales, Inc 2nd and VJond
Sts Pt Pleasant, ,\Nv.
Phone 675 4G4

�Sentinel
42
m1 Brookwood, bath and
Mil, has been remodeled.
wall
to wall
car ·
petlng,unfurnlshed. Phone
675-1553.
1979 LIBERTY mobile
llome, 14 ft . wide, total
electric . :IIM-675-5-444.
Mobile home located In
Camp Conley, E xtra nice
lnd clean. Phone 304·895·

:1967.

!6 acres, nine roorr house,
barn, minerals. secluded.
tiOOd hunting. Morning Star
orea . 165,000. Additional
101 acres available. 9.c9·

2630.
BY owner 140 acre farm . 35
Acres creek bottom, approximately 70 pasture,
rest In timber , 2 story
!louse, 2 large barns.
teveral out buildings, large
tobacco base, oil and
mineral rights , drilling in
1rea. 4 Miles off Rt. 35 on
1rave1 road . $110,000. 304·
675-2933.
Lots &amp; Acreo~ge

LOTS - Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek. all
utilities available, $300 .
down , owner wi II finance,
call after 3 p.m .• 256·641 3.
2 acres on Floyd·Ciark Rd .
close to Rt 16(), S-1,000 .
Phone «6-0390.

1 plus acre lot on F IatwOOd
Rd .. all wooded . Call 992·
.5396 after 5.
' acres with well between
Rio Grande and VinTon,
&amp;5.400. Caii388·81J9 .

45 acres for sale by owner,
1 miles from town . Hannan
Trace School District, nice
wooded land, with plenety
of road frontage, rur al
water, S21,SOO. If interest
call U6·4775 from 9-7 or

Two 2 bedroom house
trailers for rent, furnished,
1 with central air, good for
working couple or couple
w i th I c hild. S150 per month
plus deposit. 675·4088.
OR RENT · almostnewux
70, 3 bedroom, 1 'h baths,
sitting on nice lot. ready to
move Into. Pt')one lO-i-5762711.

2 BEDROOM tra iler near
Leon. WV partially furnished. $150. per month
plus deposit. Pay own
utilities. Call JO.I--458·1978
after S p.m .
2 BEDROOM. air con·
dltloned •. furnished , out of
town on Rt. 2, small deposit
Pnone 304·675-6277.
2-bedroom central air, fur nished, large private lot 20'
added a room , water sewage-paved $1.50 . Phone
1·304-743-5077 .
44
Apartment
_ _ __.l~o._
r~R~
e!'.nt!__ __
For rent new 1 bdr. apt.
Call U6·0390

REGENCY APT . IN C. 2
be d room ,
kit ·
chenfurnished , carpeted,
bills partially paid . $200
mo .
E~&lt;cellent
neigh borhood, 675-6722 or 675·
5104 .
NI C E
UNFURNISHED
Garage Apt . $200 mo. plus
utilities. Adults only, no
pets. Ava ilable Aug . 1. 446 8067 .

3 bdr . house for rent and 3
rm . apT . utilities paid . Call
675· 5140 or 675·5386

Apa r tmen t
co m p l ete l y
turn ., all electric, 3 l arge
rooms, with porch, newly
decorated, Second Ave. ,
$200 mo., ret. &amp; dep . req .
Phone 446-2236 or «6 2581 .

Brand new, small , 5 r m .
apt ., 15 m inutes from
Gallipolis. Call256·1198 .

•venings446-2928.

l=or sale : Deep water to
River Lot 80X200. Water
electric and Septic tank .
ldelll for camping, lots of
snade. Pnone 256·6690 .

Lots tor sate in 2 new subdivisions in Racine Village .
On Vine St. &amp; Yellow Bush
Rd . 949·23AO

2 bd r . apt., partly furn .•
$175 . State St.. Gallipolis
ac ross from park . Dep .,
ret ., water paid . Call 4.46·
3919 .

Furnished Apt ., 2 bdr .,
$ 220, utilities pd . One child
acc eptable . Call
after 7PM.

446·4-416

BY owner, 3 apartment
bou!te on approx . 1 acre.

1 bedroom apts. available
at Riverside Apts. Equal

live in one, rent others to
make your payment . Can
be converted sing le home.
City water, will consider
land contract . 675·1883 9·5
p.m .

Opportunity Housing. Call
992· 7721.

:10 ACRES on black top
Foad, timber . Phone 1·614·
263·8322 or 263·2669.

Houses for Rent
l.mmediate
Possesion .
l;.arge white 5 bdr . farm
home on 8 rolling acres
with log cabin and 3 out
buildings. One mile south
If Vinton, on Sl . Rt . 16(). Old
McGhee home, IS miles
ft'om Gallipolis. Asking
S44.000 on land contract . 25
per cent down/ 8 per cent
ktterest or 10 per cent down
1 12 per cent interest .
Possible
rental
no
reasonable offer refused .
Open nouse Wed . July 29
Jhru August lrd . lOAM to
I PM.
j bdr home, large tam ily
room, S300 per mo. Call 446·
.OS..

bedroom , all carpet.
atove, refrig ., unfurnished,
1 mile from town, city
scnools. $350 per mo .•
tecurity dep . required and
references. Call 446·0494 .

oi

2 bedroom house on I acre ,
Rt. 62 S. 6 miles from Pl .
Pleasant, reference and
deposit. Pnone 1·61063·
1322 or 263·2669 .
Houw 3 bdr . ranch, 2 car
earaUe, swimming pool,
Gallipolis City Scnools,
1300 month plus utilities.
Phone U6·0355.
Mobil• Homes
for Rent

42

2 bd;. trailer Roush Lane ,
CheShire, On . Phone 1·304·
773·5882.
FOR RENT 2 BR . mobile
llome. 6 miles from HMC
out 160. 1 acre of lane! / gar ·
den . U6·0157 .
2 bdr. trailer back of
Evergreen. all electric .
Call2ol5-9170.
For rent 2 bdr. Mobile
llome located In Portor
Area. Air cond., dep. req .
Calf 367·7101 .
For rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom
II'IOblte home. Racine area .

"2-5851.
%!Mdroom trailer lor rent.
arown'l Trailer Park. 992·

:1324. .

a

!Mdroom

trailer.

fur ·

nlshed. Adults prefered .

Dtpolll. Call 992·2749.
I !Mdroom MObile Home In
ltlclne. 1175. month, $75.
-dltlaelt. ,Pay own utilities.

W •7t11..
'

'hila bida _ ,

'

trailer
' . . Allltan-.Upland ROIId.
nto . ptua utlllll• and
• .....,. dapllell. 3 miles
11'0111 Rt. 2. 675-4011.

Apartment for rent . Call
992 ·5908 .
2
bedroom
apt .
in
Pomeroy . Equipped kit ·
chen. $150 .00 per month .
Call Cleland Realty , 992 ·
225'1 .
OPENING SOON . Senior
Citizens &amp; hand icapped
apt . commun ity opening.
Featuring 1 bedroom un·
furn ished with wall to wall
carpeting, wall ·tex walls.
built in bookcase, ap·
pliances, smoke detectors,
ai r conditioned, private
patio, storage fac ilities.
single story with no stairs
to climb. private entrances
with individual parking at
your
door,
laundry
fac ilit ies on premises with
rec real ion &amp; meeting
rooms .
Professional
res i dent
manager
on
premises. Stonewoocts Ap·
ts ., Rt. 7, Middleport . For
r ental information phone
614-84.1-2341 .

TRAILER space 3 (Tilles
from town Iunction 2 &amp; 62 at
Old Y , Pt. Pleasant, 675·

3248.
LI SA ' S Trailer
Park.
Mason. wv. Lots for rent.
Travel trailers, by week or
month. All utilities paid .
Also Mobile home spaces.
304· 773· 5:!19.
For rent trailer space for
small trailer weekl y and
monthly rates, air conditioned rooms by week,
cable TV . Mary R. Trailer
Park. Mason. WV . Phone
304· 773·5651 '
47

Young ,
responsible
professional wants to rent
in Rio Grande area. Call after 5:00«6·9770.

2 bedroom apt . Adults only .
No pets. Deposit &amp; referen·
ces requ ired . 2 miles on
S.R. 143. 992·3647 .
APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HDMES675 ·4130 .

51

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.
Rooms for rent, utilities
paid, TV in rooms: m and
up. Call U6·250l.
46

S!MCit lor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. Nortll of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.
TRAILER spaces for rent.
southern Valley MObile
Home Pork, Cheshlrot, Oh.
992·3954.
TRAILER lot304·895-346.

1971 VOLKSWAC,EN Camper. Fully equipped, very
DOOd condition, $1,850.00
304·675-4327.

25 IN . COLOR TV Sylvania
Superset, dual speaker.

Si!OO. 4&gt;16·-1051 '

72

For sale 1974 El
Cadillac m int cond.
defrosting refrlg ..
deck,
FM rad i o
speaker. Call367·7209.

Trucks lor 5•1•

75 Chevrolet 1 T, 12ft. stake
bed low milage. Call 4A6·
0322.
1975 Ford 314 ton pickup
truck, automatic, PS. PB,
360 engine, air cond. Call
446·2641 , 8·5.

Long white wedding gown
and veal. ex. cond .• $75.
Caii4A6·0696.

1975 Ford 1 ton flatbed
truck, good engine &amp;
. 8 : 25x20 tires, body rough .
Call446·2641,8·5.

Good top or fil l dirt, will
deliver
anvwhere
GalllpOIIs· Bidwell area .
S15.00 load. Call Leroy
Caldwell 4A6·4851 .
Cast iron tub,
U6·7146 .

•

For sale 1979 Bronco ex.
cond., low milage. $5,700.
Call446-,7383.

sso.

Improvements

Hoover Sweepers repaired
at Empire Furniture, 842
second Ave. Gallipolis, OH.
Interior and Exterior pain ·
tlng, trollor roofs, and drY
wall S18 and up, 15 yrs. ex·
perlence. Free est. Call446·

.'·

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

-· ·

· ·-----· -

.
.
VIewmg

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa , chair, rocker, ottoman , 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa ,
chair and toveseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $275 . to $695 . Tables.
$38 and up to $109 . Hide-a·
beds,S3.40., queen size, SJBO.
Recliners. $165 .. $295 ..
Lamps from $18. t o $65 . 5
pc . dinettes from $79., to
$365. 7 pc . . $189 . and up
Wood table and -4 chairs,
$350 up to S..t95 . Hutches,
$300 . and $375 .• maple or
pine finish . Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak , S649 .,
BasseM Cherry , $765. Bunk
bed complete with mat·
tresses, $250 . and up to
$350 . Captain's beds, $275.
complete. Baby beds, $89 .
Mattresses or bO)( springs,
full or twin. $55.. firm. $65 .
and $75 . Queen sets. $185. 5
dr. chests, $49. 4 dr . chests,
S-12. Bed frames , S20.and
S25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
SJ50 ., dinette chairs S20 .
and $25. Tappan gas or
elec tric ranges, $285 .
USED
Ranges ,
r ef r igerators, and TV' s,
J miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon
thru Fri., 9am to Spm , sat .
446·0322
G OOD
U S ED
AP ·
PLIANCES
wash ers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave , 446·7398 .

16 cu . ft . refrig . freezer ,
$115 . Call256 ·1427.
USED brown and white
l iving room chair $15. See
at 769 Brownell Ave., Mid ·
dleport.
Used sofa and cha ir .
be seen at Ingels
ni ture, Middleport .
HOOVER Portable washer
&amp; dryer, like new, 304·675·
6504 .
ANTIQUE

pos ter bed .
wh i te spool bed , J C Penny
Berkshire wood stove, 304·
675·2009.
52

CB, TV, Radio
Equipment

QUAZAR portab le TV ,
electric lighter or 9·volt
battery. 304·675·4042 after

5.
Antiques

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ W i ll
pay cash or cerf ified check
tor antiques and collec ·
tibles or ent ire estates .
Nothing too large . Also,
guns, pocke t watches, and
coin collections. Call 557 ·
3411.
54

Misc. Merchandise

~ARMALL

EASY credit ava ilable now
to purchase furniture,
televisions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave ., 675-1773.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor -outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call U6· 7795.

Yellow Freestone canning BRIARPATCH KENNELS
peaches . Now thru Sept . 20. Boarding and grooming.
Any quantity available. AKC
Gordon
setters.
Retail &amp; wholesale . Bob' s English Cocker Spaniels .
Market, Mason . Phone 773· Call U6·4191.
572 1. Open daily t lll9 p.m .
Canning tomatoes. Andrew
Cross,Letart Falls. Ohio
247-2852 .

ACF Registered White and
shaded Silver Persian and
seal piont Himalayans .
C&lt;N I 304· 523· 77 49 .

Green beans . Pick your
own . $8.00 bushel. 247-2664.

2 rabbits with nice cage,
$25 . Cal1388·8711 .

Sears wood burner with
blower . S180 . Speed Queen
wringer
washer $200 .
Bedroom sui te $125 . 1972
Ford Torino, gOOd running
cond .$350 . Can be seen
beside grocery store in
Langsville .
14 in chain saw with
carr ying case. $100 .00. Call
949·2779
Kitchenete, coffee &amp; end
tables , be droom suite,
stereo &amp; stand, 2 buffets,
etc . Call 992 ·6709 after 6
p.m .
Slabs for sale. North of
Racine at sawmill . Carmel
Rd . 47598 Rt . 1.

AKC reg. wnite toy poodle,
13 mo . old . Caii4A6·7948 .
AKC Doberman pups. Red,
black. and tans. Call U6
1562.
THE FISH TANK and Pet
Shop. 2101 Jefferson Ave .
675·2063, Pl. Pleasant. New
hours. Now open on Wed .
Open 11 ·4 Mon . thru Sat.
Fri. hours 11 ·6.

AKC registered Beagle
pup, three males . James
Davis, 304-576· 2394.

26' TROUTWOOD travel
trailer and camp site on
Raccon Creek . Close to
Ohio River . $500 down.
Owner will finance. 614·2561216.

AKC red -rust Doberman, 7
months, boxers, fawn ·
black mask $100. Shots and
wormed . Phone 304-7.43·
8002.

cream
pulled
NEED several items of fur· AKC
bloodline poodle and pup·
n i ture ,
app l iances,
$75. -up .
Shots
televisions. Big discounts pies
wormed, Beagle female
for quanity purchase . registered . Phone 304-7-i3·
V i llage Furniture 2605
8002 .
Jackson Ave . 675-1773.

77 GMC pickup topper,
slide in sleeper, also large
hutch . 206 Smith St. Hen·
derscn. Phone 304-675·3333 .
Electrolux carpet·shampo·
oer, floor polisher, 6 box's
flea market . 1971 Yahama
175
good condition for
$175 ., 1 electrical guitar
and amp solid state GA-410.
Pnone 304·675· 1179.
10' aluminum boat, flat bot·
tom, 10 speed trolling
motor forward and rever·
se, oars, life lackets $175.
Phone 304·675·5017.

57

Building Supplies

Building materials, block ,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call245·5121.

t-=========:J-=========:.J

Musical
Instruments

Elegant Baldwin piano
being picked up in yo.ur
area . Responsible person
may assume low monthly
payments . For information
call collect 614 773·5125.
Ask for credit manager .
WANTED : Responsible
party to take over low mon·
thly payments on spinet
piano. Can be seen locally.
Write Credit Manager :
P .0 . Box 33 Friedens, PA
15541 .

s8

Green beans, pick your
own $6.00 bu. Raynor
Peach Orcnard, 5 miles
below Gallipolis on Rl. 7.
446·41107 .

.J .... ., .
---·.........
-~

••

,

.. . . .

Farm Equipment

Farmall F20 tractor, $350.
Massie Harris with front
end loader, $650. In·
ternational 18 fl. flatbed
1966, S900. Phone 256-9303.
s Charmers w.c. trac·
tor, good cond . Riding hor·
Alii
ses. Call379·2761.
Four 15.000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens. Ohio. 13,000.00
eocn. Phone 1·304·422·2781.
Farmall cub tractor with
cultivators . •Has new clut·
en, pressure plate, throw
out bearing, transmiSsion
over hauled, megento
overhauled, new starter,
new
battery. battery
cables, new voltage relev~
runs good. 247·2092.
John oeere No. 7 mowing
machine. Fair end. $45.
Call after I p.m . 992-5956.
International tractor, 3 p1.
hitch, John
Minure
Spreader on rubber; hay
rake on rubber, 2 bolllhTt
drag plow 14 ln.
rubber,
1·22·250 rille will\ scope.
Oonald Weaver, Harrtmn·
vllle; 992-2015.

Deere

on

1980 Kawask i KE-100 ex .
cond., 500 miles, S-199. Call
446·7381.
1975 HONDA XL 350, 3000
actual m i les. ex . cond .
Phone 367·0397 after 5:00.
1980 KawasaKi 550 L TO.
Please call 992-3093 after
5:30p.m .
1974 Honda 350. needs bat·

63

Ridden very little. Phone
304-675-5085.

Livestock

.. .i .

••
•

wt. 1200 lbs.

Due last
August. Sired by Sire
Power bulls. $1200 each.
304-882·2575.
2 milk goats, $60. each or
both lor SlOO. Freshened
June. snade, Onio (614)
696· 1234.

2 kid goats, 5 weeks old,
males . $25 . each .
Nubian. Shade, Ohio 614·

•;,

696 · 123~ .

2 R I Dl NG horses,
each 675·5851 .

$500 .

. . . ..
...............
................
~·~ ,··

71

Autos for Sale

71 Ford L TO, 4 dr. station
wagon, very good running
shape and tires . New
exhaust system . Priced to
sell at Si!OO.oo . Call 388·81-10
after •PM weekdays.
78 HONDA ACCORD 33 to
35 MPG. 5 spd .. std . trans ..
hatchback, ex . cond, AM ·
FM. new radial. Call after 6
446·2055 .
1975 VW Rabb it very good
cond ., $2000. Call245·5077.
1977 AMC Hornet station·
wagon . Caii4A6·7109.

1974 aids, extra good cond .,
new tires, $895. Call 256·
6582 .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

76

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto pllrts, auto repair.
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. ~ - 7717 .
For sa le car for parts, 72
Duster slant 6, $125. Call
U6·7835.

"l
• ·1

. ,,

-7:01
7:30

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 nr. wrecker
service. "Big or small" we
tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave .• Gallipolis, Ohio . Day
- U6·2445 or Nignt - 446·
4792.
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
S175, any color,free pickup
&amp; delivery in Gallipolis
area, Hammond Body
snop, 221 Mill st. 379-2782.
E &amp; v Body Shop want
your car looking new? Call
446 9304 Georges Creek Rd.
78

Camping
Equipment

1976 Fold up Apacne cam ·
per. Call388·8132.
1969 Camper trailer, 20 ft .
long. Ca ll 446·0941.
14 ft . TRAILER camper ,
sleeps 6, 304-675·2267.

For sale 1975 VW Rabbit.
Call «6·7022 or U6·8122 .
1972 Chevy Caprice good
cond ., S/00 .00. Call245·9492.
1969 FORO L TO, 4 dr., 429
auto., PS,PB, air cond.,
62,000 actual miles. Runs
good . One local owner . Call
388-9996, evenings.

FOR BEST In Car~t
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway . Call 614·446·
2096.

1969 Dodge Dart G T S,
asking$1 ,300. Cail949·2123 .

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
U6·4208

MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV . Phone 675·
1574 or 675·2881.
1977 Olds Brougham, ex ·
cellent condition. can be
seen at 2307 MI. Vernon
Avenue .

'-LUUL-V

73 GRAND Torino, for par·
ts, $150. 304-675-6219
59 WILLIES In good shape,
rag top, 4 chrome wheels, 4
cyl. engine with low and
high transfer case; Sl,OOO.
Serious callers only 304·6756219.

75 DODGE carl, 6 cyl .• air,
power brakes,
power
steering, automatic, priced
$1600. 304-~76-2535.
71
Toyota
wagen,
automa11c transmission.
good condition Si!OO. Phone
304·451·1609.

76_Volare sport, new Kelly
tires. Excellent C!Ondlllon,
phone 30H75-4143 aff&lt;ir
three.
\
.. ~·
·
·
79 FORD Mustang, 4 cyl,
air concllll~, , _ , siHr.lng, aun tool, . may
COIIII~ lflcle 1'n Of Older
model, 304•675-3971.

'biJ 1 '

ANNIE

-ff08(}(JY FEElS
- BUT Y' I'I~NA
I'400E AI!OOT WHOT
l(liQW HOW
HAPPEtiED AT WAR.BUCK.5' l' NEVER MA~E
CHEMICALPLANT TH~
AMIGTAAE,
HE
~&lt;]:~~ ~NY? NEVER
TRY T' {)()
AfWTHIH&lt;l! ..

··MAN CAIN'T EXPECT 1'11YBE IT'5
THIG TEEHY PLAHET TEiti!.ITORY
T' K.EEP 5/JPPOflTIH' Mrt-1 WASN'T
HIM WITHOUT q()IN'
SUPPOSEP
INTO UIICHIIRTEP
TO VENTURE
TEIUUTOilY!
INTO!

HEY..,HEY, 1-l HEARD Y' TELL
1'101'1TH' AGP 110~ YOU'Ll
l'iHAT'5 Pll.OS'LY 00 8/l.O/tE* AN'
ALL IT'G ALL MY F!IULT FOR
THt5? INTROOUCIH' YOU T'
IIH6EUI, AN'...

AUEYOOP
THANKS FORTH'

oaed · Captlonad)

~ IJ2l.

I SURE I-lOPE I CAN CATCH UP WITH 01!
DINNY BEFORE SOMEBQI)'( ELSE DQI::S!

Il)O_CLU8

CHARLES AND
DIANA:THEROYALWEDDING
Peter Janninoa and Barbara
Waltera co·anchor thia ABC
Nawa Spacial which feat urea
an edited replly ol the royal
waddin;_ceremony . (60 mine.)
0(1)11W CBSWEONESDAY
NIGHT MOYIE 'C,amplono : A
love Story' 1979 Stare: James
Vln~t McNichol, Joy LeDuc.
8 :30 Cll•ffilliEFACTSOFLIFE
Accompanied by Mrs . Garrett,
Jo vi ails her father in prison, but
aha becomes upset when aha
leamathat he ia to be released
andwantstovialt her at school .
(Bapeat)
C1J NATURAL HISTORY OF
THE WATER CLOSET In a
creative combination ot
documentary, animation and
original music . this musical
documentary aHara a survey of
man's inganioua attempts over
the years to deal with human
wasta.
WJ MARK RUSSELL COMEDY
SPECIAL 'Ma rk Au as ell' a
Washington' America ' s
tivorlte political satirist takes
viewers on an amuaing
sighteeeing tour of little known
adificea. monuments. and
oddities 1n the natlon' e
£!Pita!.
·
tO:OO lVGCD ROYAL WEDDING
REVIEW A summary of the
day's events at the wadding or
His Royal Highness, Ch8rt8a ,
the Prince of Wales. to Lady
Diana Spencer In London. NBC
New a corr11pondenta John
Chancellor, Tom Brokaw and
Jane Pauley report . (60 mlna.)
ilJIJ2la DYNASTY The threat
of linancialdlaaater diarupta
Blake and Kry aile' a global
honeymoon when foreign
rebels taka over his company's
oil tankera, and"aughter Fallon
make a a deal with one ol
Blake's biggest competitors
that a he may live to regret.
tSepeat: 800 mins.)
C1J MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Duchess of Duke Strael: The
Outaiden ' Charles Tyrel l
diacovara that a meek new
guest at the hotel, Mr. Parker ,
haa onl~ montha to live, and
vowa to give him the time ot hia
lite. (60 mlna )

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

0. C. Contractors Plumbing, electrical. healing.
roofing, aluminum, vinyl
siding, and home painting.
675·3376 or 675·12AO.
Excavating

BACKHOE Complete ser
vice. Frenc~ City Mobile
Homes Inc. call.wll-93..0.

GASOUNE ALLEY

DITCHE R Comp lete ser·
vice. Water and sewer
lines, drainage ditches.
French City Mobile Homes.
Inc. call-146·9340.

Whos them,
Joel?

i

Three caboozers an'
one carl;'
Gimme a
han' up!

How much
t'tote us

ftown,
of' man?

Dozer work . Small iobs a
specialty. 742 _2753 _

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding_ 30
vears e)(perience. Free
estimates . Remodeling.
Call 388·9857.
STUCCO PLASTERING ·
textured ceilings, com·
mercia! and residential,
free estimates. Call 256·

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. S~&gt;&lt;:clallzlng
in septic tank. 675·1234.
BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . Larry Slden stricker. 675-5580.

'

.''
WINNIE

Electrical

&amp; A elriperatlon
Fuller Electric co. complete rewiring, conimercial
or residential, and elec ·
trical malntalnance, also
on call. Pn. 446 ·2171,
Gallipolis.

,.
WELL , THAT '9

.
'·

Qualtly Cooling and
Heating Service Call 388·
9698.

SOME7HIN6,
8UT R!:MEMEIER

... YOU C'AN'7

Faitow rwo
~£AI7£R5/

.'

SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING, Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446·2787.

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; service. Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet Cleaning' featured by
1-!affell Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call U6·2107. ·

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service
commercial, lndu'strial:
Phone 882·2079.
•

~DODSHOP. · Cabinets,
picnic
tables.
porch
swings, most wood produc ts. 101 Court
Gallipolis.
Call U6·2572.

st..

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and service, call 675·1582.
PAINTING · Interior and
'!XIerlor, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling,
20 yrs. otxp. Call 311-9652. ·

85

,·
•

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways
Call for estimates 367-7101 ·
Jones Boys Water service
Cell 367·7471 or 367·0591
·
'

'

'

N

• " •I '' "• '·•"· • !

'

,,. • , '

'•• •

BARNI!:Y

·,

·.

..f-..

Gener•l Hauling

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery. Call 256·
9368 anytime.

.,. .. ,

•'

THAN~ GOODNESS,
l.O.I..J.... VOl) WASN'T IN

TH'BARN

~~:: ffirw"~Ardl~~.
NEWS
(]) Till IS THI! LIFE
(])MOYIE ·(COMEDY)"

'

_i. . .i

ok•;

•'
•'

'

.,·:

11:o1
11:2i
11:30

'

:!"

.

NtGIITG4LUAY
UPDATI!NEWS
llii!TONIOHTIHOW
Guull: Robe" Klein, Johnny

i

ll!illiY NLj.' 8110W
(J) CH~TJIIOVII 'The
Four Feathera' 1877 Stare :
ou Bd~gu, Robert PoweR.
AIC CAPTIONED' NI!WS
THI!MONI!fCMANGI!RS
Two m.n vie rorthe pr&amp;~idency
olalarge.ma,ropolltan bank.
Sto,..: Klrtt Douglu, Suun

l

~~------~----~ ·
Mobil~ homes · moveb .t
llcenlld, and bonded. 576·

·.

::;:T:::~

"'·~~;r."".."lie

:;

2711 or 675&gt;&lt;13911.

NEWS

TBS !Y!NING NEWS
RACE FOR lliE
PENNANT
10:28 ~ CBN UPDATE NEWS
t0:30
LARRY JONES
OUTER LIMITS

... ..".
'

~

10:05
10:t5

'

la7icNIWJNIQHTLINE
Mc:horod by Ted Koppel.
11:311 (J) IIOYII! -(lf.DYI!NTUIII)' 1\
11

11:00
•

.

()ne ....,._

v...

B.C."

~~SACIUY8110W
~

.

0

l8C NI!WS
~

NIG~TL1NI!

.,

'
,•

Playing it by the book

AGE OF lliE ROYAL WED·
DING CBS Nawa correspon dent Dan Rather and David
Frost. along with author and
hletorian Lady Antonia Fraser
providing commentary. report
on the h•ghtighta of today' a
~oyal Wedding of Pr i nce
C harles and Lady Diana
§Rencer. (eo min a.)
llJ WJ FOUR DAYS OF THE
MASAI A film a hot in Kenva .
close to the Tanzania border ,
follows members of the Maaai
tribe for four daya as they go
about their daily Uvea in a style
virtually unchanged aince the
time of the Pharaohs. (90
mine.)
8:58 (I) CJ!.N UPDATE NEWS
8:00 ill U ffi OIFF'RENT
STROKES Arnold participates
in a voluntary inter-cultural
busing program In a Long laland
town, but the white suburban ilea don't exactly welcome him
with open erma . (Repeat)

Plumbing

83

BRIDGE

80 mine .)

(I) SPECIALS
(])MOYIE -(DRAIII.Al ' "Mtd-

&amp; Heating

1182.
@1976 FORD Granada,
good condition, phone 304·
675-364.5.

~UP

-·

(BeJ!!at· 60 mine .)

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or U6·4477

. ••..

ttl•m REALPEOPLEAtour

IIJliJimJ CBSNEWBCOYER·

T
and
R
building,
remodeling, also papering,
carpet Installation, ano
general
home
im ·
provemenls. 675-5689, 675·
5304.

r xJ

THATK

,$,•~N UPDATE NEWS

The angela discover that a
awlnglng nightlife may be
haurdouato thalrhalath when
they become regulars at an
unuaual nightclub to nail a
m urderou apeychopat h .

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

_,

_

Now arrange the cird ed letters to
form the surprise anawar, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Vesterday·s f Jumbles: MOCHA ADAGE INDI CT THWART
Answer: Not a vehicle to drink on-THE ''WAGON "

U'L 197&amp;

wv

MAR:S WHEW THEY
DO THI\5,

(Answers tomorrow)

liJilJ). CHARLIE'S ANGELS

Ser·

~

WIL-L. L-AND ON

ol a haunted house In Santa

IUS J.IOTI.IeR'

.•.

..·l

OU~ A~T~ONAUT~

1)
Armr. "t I xI xxr

{f) BASEBAU Atlanta Sravea

HARPER Halstead, lawn
mower repair and sharpening service, 10 a.m. -6
p.m. 675-5868.

82

I K]

~ir FACE llll! MUSIC

'- '"~ lie s,t.JD;SlltFf:

...•-.

·f.

IHAPNORt

Barbara, a vlalt to a wax
museum In Pacific Palisadaa,
and a vi all with the ' official '
witch of Salem, Maaa. (Repeat:

7&lt;2·2903 .
Home
Improvements

IIUU8EYE
ANOlliER UFE
NBO SNUK PREVIEW :
AUGUST Jerry Sillier and Anne
Meara highlight the upcoming
moviea, eporta and apeciale on
HBO In Auguat.
JOKER'S WILD
HOUYWOOD SQUif.IIIS
tiD DICK CAVITT 8110W
RICHARD SIMMONS

7:58
8:00

I

/ .I J

I I

•

vaSt. Louie Cardinals (If
players' strike c ontinues ,
alternate programming will be

Dltcher work. Charles R.
Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe.
Gas, electric, and water.
81

l

":s
A!,LINllii!FAMtLY

;

BORN LOSER

·t

NITIVE ~

eW

7 :3&amp;

'

I tr

• • FAIIILYFI!UD
t!JWLoKINGDOM 'Eiephanll
ofAmboaall'
e(l) TICTACDOUGH
(I) tiD MACNEtL-LEHRI!R

_.,.1

.

' l

NEW 8181.1! BAFFLE

(])

2 NEW tires &amp; rims for
small picKup, 304·895·3441 .
77

· '111

.

CONTINIOUS no leak gut·
terlng, custom made for
your home . For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR . 614·698·8205.

COOK ' S Television
vice , Henderson ,
Phone 67 5· 2250.

'"

EVENING

'
. 7:00 (]). PIIMAGAZINI!

·~

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

RON'S Tele'Vision Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Qualar, and
house calls. Pnone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

'
..· "
.- :.

JULY29, tll81

'·
'·
'·
·I.

~

'4

I

Mobile Home roof pointed
for winter, $35 you supply
paint. Will also do pipe In·
sulotlng. Call Ken Mannon
at U6-5577 or 256· 1932.

2 Holstein Springer heifers,

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

)979 Honda lOth An ·
niversary, 750. $1,900. Call
379-2133 after 5.

tery . Excellend condition .

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

SMITH &amp; Wesson model14,
38 calliber, new, $200. Set
Bradford Centinnial case
kn ives. $200. 304·675-6439 .
55

SUPER C Farmall with
fast hitch rear mower,
good tires, good paint, runs
good . $950. 304·895·3689.

Dachshund ,
Pomeranian an Poodle
pups 895 ·3958.

Registered
Australian
Shepherd. Blues and solids,
excellent cattle dog and
pet . Phone 304·586·4367 .

Portable welder 225 amp
Hobart . 1949 Chrysler, 5
window coupe . 18 HP out·
board engine . Call446·9638.

INTERNATIONAL Far·
mall Cub with mid mount
bailing mower, 5 ft . cut.
$2,500 . 304·675· 2835 .

AKC

Low slung utility trailer.
Excellent tor hauling
mowers. 992·3904.

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

C tra c tor.
plows, disc, drag harrow.
hay rake , cultivators.
mower, wagon, 30-i·5227577. Ail $2200.

Motorcycles

...-, ,

.

,)

. ·'

Ashworth fnslallment Ser·
vice . Carpet, vinyl,
ceramic tile, floor tile, for·
mica counter tops, all work
guaranteed. Call-146·8019.

74

••

T e1~VISIOD

,.

'

The Daily Sentlnei- Pa e-11 ·

·~1

IDJatTRACY

;j.

1562.
FERRELL ' S
WINOON
GLASS SERVICE Home
malntalnan ce
and
remodeling. Phone 388·
9326.

.

rt, OhiO:

'

Household Goods

APARTMENT for rent, FirewOOd for sale . Call 256·
furnished or unfurnished, 6574 .
very reasonable, 30-4-882·

45

r

304·675-1506. .

11om•

Wednesday, July 29,1981

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free estimates, reasonable
rates . Scothguard, 9'12·6309.

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER ·
VICE, Complete sales, ser ·
vice, supplies and in·
SMALL furnished apart· stallation . 446-132•.
ment, no pets, references
r equired, 304·675·1365.
' HAY FEVER ' HOME
remedy, tradition tor cen ·
2 BEDROOM, unfurn ished turies, it works. For com ·
apartment and 2 bedroom plete into and receipt send
furnished apartment, 30-4· today self addressed stam 675-5571.
ped envelope plus $1.00 to
S.R.A . Co., P.O. Box 21M,
VERY clean &amp; nice 2 Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
bedroom apartment in New
Haven, lof5 of room, air Lowest prices on Bemc o
conditioning &amp; complefly bedding in the area . Call
furnished, $250. a month, for prices. Villiage Fur·
SlOO. deposit . Call 614·U6 niture, 2605 Jackson Ave .•
7526.
675· 1773.

3356.
2 BEOROOM apartmen t in
Mason. adults only, no
pets, 304·675· 1452 or 675·
2'196 alter 3.

KIT
'N' CARLYLE'" ____..::,.:::.:!,..:::,::::;
by l.a:ry Wrlgh1; j1972 CHEVROLET Mlllbu
-;....~;,;;.;.::;:,_..,.

11

4:.:.9_ __:Fc:o::r..:L::e::•:.::•:o•_ __
1400 sq. ft . r eta i l space, air
conditioning &amp; carpet. Pt .
Pleasant, 675·3788 after
5:00 .

53
Furn ished effi cienc y apt .
Air condit ioned &amp; TV .
Adults only . 992·530-4 .

Wanted to Rent

54· Misc. Merch•ndlso
Port able welder, 225 Am
Hobart. 19.c9 Chrysler, 5
window couple, 18 H P out'
board engine. Call -146-9638.

_..

July 29,198l

Ohio

,1

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

.

•'

'l

N ORTH

There is an easy way to
play today 's hanu . Declarer
plays a few round s of
trumps and takes the club
finesse . West wins the king
of clubs and cashes the ace
of heart s and on to th e next
hand.
.
Can South do any better ?
There _is a book pla y to gain
one trick which will produce
the slam.
It is a book play . In other
words, it is similar to one
that continually appears in
bridge writings.
It is up to South to dec ide
which opponent holds the
ace of hearts. It would be a
tough problem if it hadn 't
been for West 's unrortunate
decision to bid two hearts . It
is the sort of bid that is real ly pointless. Once in a blue
moon it helps West. Most of •
the time it doesn't affect the
final result m any way ,
shape or form. This time it
gives an alert declarer a
sure thing play for the slam
that might well have failed
without West 's overcall.
South knows where the
ace of hearts is . He take s his
queen of diamonds, draws
trumps and leads his deuce
of hearts.
Poor West 1s on the toast-

7·29 -81

_,
'•

+Q7 5 3 2

"K 9 6
t A K2

..

'-

+ 75

WEST

E4ST

.AJB74
• J 10 9 7
4KJ 8

• 10 53
• 8 6 43
41096 3 2

t9

'
....·'
....'•

'

SOUTH

..
••

+ A KJI 08 4

,. Q 2
t QS

+AQI

· ··~

Vulnerable: North-Sout h
Dealer : East
North

West

z•

3.
4+

Pass
Pass

s+

East
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

-·

1. -·. ,·
,.
SouU
44

.,_

' -'

Pass

· ..'J

.

Pass

,.

. - ··ti'

Openmg l ead :+J

'• . !I

••

·-i

. ::.

.

,,•

ing fork . If he rises with his
ace of hearts, South will get
to discard one club on the
king of hearts and the other · ":
on a high diamond . [( West · ducks. South will get to discard his queen of hearts on a
high diamond .

••

·,.jl

t!S~.,."

•.t

by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
42 Italian
I GW1 the motor
lava source
5 Phoney coin
43 Snarl
9 Not written
44 Horse color
10 Ceylon
DOWN
animal
I Dean Martin
12 With
TV offering
competence
2 Pergola
13 Edna May
3 Vivify
or King
4 Tarzan in
15 Old
TV reruns
French coin
5 On an incline
16 Brazilian
6 "Damn
tree
Yankees"
17 Umbrage
temptress
18 Extra-base hit 7 Tell's
20 Beak
canton
21 Require8 Causing
ments
11 Peaceful
23 African
14 Confute

Yesterday's Answer
16 Vigilant
27 " - been
19 - Dec
harl 1 "
(river in 30 Bleacherite
·~
N . &amp; S.
33 Dors or Ross. ' l
' •#
Carolina I 34 Pipe, barrel ·
22 Canyon of
or reed
the
36 Star in Cetus
·~
comi cs
39 Calaboose
.)1
!4 Kayak
40 Minister's
-~
25 Fertile
talk (abbr. )

"

.

......

beast
!4 Service
an affair
Z6 Asian

..·•

" ;:.('

.-

. :l

country

';

28 Nigerian
!l! Rome's
foWltaln
31 Catch
32 Exaggerate
35 Greek clan
division
36 Partner of

...
'f

'

Larry
Curly
37 French
and

.

... -J•

shooting

~

match
3S Bring oul
10 Pipe tobiiCCO
U Finnish lake

"'

•J

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Is

Here's how lo work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFI!LI, OW

..

One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A ts .

us~ for the three L's, X for the two O's , etc . Single letters

' S
epostrophes, the lencth end formation of the words ore eli ': ~~
hints. Eoeh day the &lt;ode letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

GR

. ...

l
,: ~

. ...~
OWDDYH

BXIIYB·R

HAWH

BYER
. . i•7 1l

E RD .:.
HAJB

A

WU R

W

GYQCT,

QJLAH
WDT

HY

SR

Y~QB

JD -- ~
'• .II&gt;

oy '

..r

QJLAH .
ARDQV
LRYQLR. ";!
Yesterday'• CrypiGquote: SOME PEOPlE ARE SO SEN· "'!It

~ THAT. 111EY FEEL SNUBBED IF AN EPIDEMI~ ·'*'
OVERLOOKS 'i'dEM.-KIN HUBBARD
.
..,,.,

'

�'·
Page--12- The Daily Sentinel

Terminate 28 cases
Eighteen defendants were fined
and 10 oChers forfeited bond in Meigs
County Court recently .
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were :
Donald Hebeler, Dayton, speed,
S22 and costa; Harold Sedgwick,
Tuppers Plains, speed, $24 and
costa; Gary McKinney, Delaware,
Charles 0 . Lisle, Syracuse, John
Kerr Jr., Athens, and Troy Short,
Crown City, aU for speeding, $21 a nd

costs.
Donald Sedgwick, Tuppers Plains,
speed, $22 and costs ; Helen
Wiessner, Yonkers, N.Y., speed, $27
and costs; Joseph Hettinger, Colum·
bus, speed, $25 and costs ; Nancy
Lewis, Elkins, W.Va., speed, $22 and
costs; Mildred Karr, Bonita Springs,
Fla., speed, $23 and costs.
Dale Little, Pomeroy, speed, $23
and costs; Michael Averion,
Pomeroy, speed, $22 and costs ;
Robert Parker, Middleport, speed,
$23 and costs; Stephen A. Cox,
Columbus, speed, costs and ordered
to repair automobile; Clyde J .
Ingals, Middleport, no valid license
sticker, $10 and costs ; Billy J .

Wllllarns, Rodney, assured clear
distance, $25 and costs.
Phillip Fisher, Racine, was found
guilty of criminal trespassing. A
$200 fine and a JG.day jail sentence ·
were suspended. He wl1' be on one
year probation during which he will
go to Veteran's Hospital.
Fisher was also found guilty of
disorderly conduct. He was fined
$100, but $75 of it was suspended.
Forfeiting bonds were :
Charles R. Walker, Crown City, no
valid license plates, $35.50; Kurt
Miller, Marietta, disorderly conduct, $100 ; Delbert R. Sanders,
Albany, no operators license, $60.50
and no valid license decal, $35.50.

Alan Mills, Rutland, no operators
license, $60.50 ; Gregory Johnson,
Racine, no cycle endorsement or
permit, $3!i.50; Stephen J . Fields,
Hartford, stop sign, $35; Christine
PuUins, Pomeroy , speed, $40.50.
Clark Searfoss, E. Palestine, Ohio,
over wide load, $38 ; Danny Parsons,
London, Ky., speed, $30.50; Bruce
Everling, Fairfax, Va ., speed,

e

MIS-

Beautiful group children' s smart cool
summer dresses reduced 50% f or quick

sale. Shop Early .

FRIDAY '

·SICRALII SAU·
1

-SIOaDALK SAL£·
VALUES TO SS.99
CLEAN UP LOT

CURTAIN PANELS
Specia l group of asst _ cu r ·

lADIES IDPS

VALUES TO 3.99
SPECIAL GROUP

go_ You r

c ho ice.

Be

here

earl y .

1 Section, 12 PilteS

Pomerov

WASHINGTON (AP) -A historic
three-year tax cut hai~ed by .

· VALUES TO 11.25 PR.
LARGE GROUP

President Reagan as the path to
prosperity now carries the resoun·

IJDIES UNDIES

Values to $1.25 in this lot of
ladies' better undies. All sizes,
wide select ion of colors and

Close
out
group ol child·
ran't knit tope.
Lond and ...
mako . Slzae 6
to t 2. Regular
to $3.119.

styles .

$40.50

styles .

2~~ $}00

Area deaths
Michael C. Redmond
Michael C. Redmond, 32. Mason.
died Sunday in Huntington. He was
born October 17, 19411, in Chi cago,
IUinois .
He served in the U.S. Air F orce
and belonged to the DA V Chapter in
Huntington .
Surviving are his father , Russell
K . Redmond, Waukegan, Illinois:
his mother, Mary Walker Work·
man, New Haven ; one brother,
Robert A. Redmond, Parkersburg;
and one step-brother, Danny Joe
Workman , New Haven.
Services will be held Thursda y,
July 30, at I :30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with the
Rev. Bennie Stevens officiating .
Burial will follow in the Evergreen
Cemetery. Calling hours at the

funeral home are 3 p.m. until5 p.m.
and 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. on We&lt;J..
nesday.
· ;~ I

Jwwph F. Roush
J oseph F . Roll.'!h, 31 , Mason, died
lhis morning in St. Mary's Hospita l
m Huntmgton as a res ult of a swim·
mi ng accide nt near Ga llipolis Ferry
on July 15.
Roush a pparently dived into
sha llow wa ter in an abandoned strip
mme p1t and struck his head on the
bottom . He as transported to Holzer
Med1cal Center and unto St. Mary's
Hospital by the Point Pleasant
Emergency Medical Service.
F uneral arrangements are in·
complete a nd will be announced
later by the Foglesong Fune ra l

and struck the rear of a car driven
by Bria n D. Facemire , 18, Gallipolis .
Moderate damage was done to ·
both cars a nd Young was cited for
ass ured clear distance.
Troopers said a car driven by
Harry L. Pugh Il, 20, Gallipolis, was
northbound on Buck Ridge Road at
2:40 p.m. when the car went off the
right side of the road , bounced off a
fence and into a ditch , causmg
mode nde dornage and no injury.
The pat rol reported no inJury
when James A. Steele, 17, Gallipolis,
lost control of his car on wet
pavement on Rt. 7 at G: 40 p.m., went
uff the right side of the road, struck a
road sign a nd we nt into a lawn .
Hi~ car was mode ra tely damaged
and there was no citation tssued .

Four couples applied for ma rnage
licenses in Me1gs County Probate
Court recently.
They were: Stepen D. Browning,
19. and Carla C. Chichester, 18, both
of Reedsville; Charles L. Spires, 50 ,
and Anna M. Hatfield, 38 , both of
Rutland ; Dwight D. Hill , 20 , Raci ne,
and Lorna J . Grindley, 20, Minersville ; Robert A. Venoy, Jr. . 21.
Pomeroy , and Vel vel L. Swisher, 20,
Middleport .

ROMPERS

Va lu es

or at home. Fln1l

1 GROUP • lADIES
ASSORTED SAMPLE

R£MNANTS

SPORTSW£AR

Wholoeale umplea
of ledlea oporlt·
wear . Pante, lopa,

15~

In
tebrlcs .
Prlntt and IK&gt;Id col·
ort. 8uv now I

•••orted

tlonal valuea. S.m·

pie elzea.

-SIO£WALK SAL£-

lrom

-SIOfWAUI SAL£-

SHEETS

PILLOW CAS£S

EA.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
OHice Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614)-992-2104

or (304)-6'75-1244

SPORT

ol
summer
lncludea
knl!a , perma·pfees,
et c Good range of
IIIOCk.

I!IIZII!I

REMNANTS
of b ettN p1ece good
remnant s. Stock up
now .

ELBERFELD$ IN · POMEROY

SIDEWALK SALE
THIS FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; MONDAY

CLOSED THURSDAY, JULY 30th

FOR INVENTORY

Out they go, clean up

'

'ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

ONEdLARGE TABLE
CLEAN UP LOT

SOUD COLOI

FULL BED Silt

...·. ~. ·

)

.

One large rack of
clean· up ladleJ' ,shcir·,
, ts al)d fops. Volues to:
SJ.1'9 and SU9. Yes,
1

you save big now.

-~~=~t:,lb!~~~~~~ fl"3
'...~,··9"
..
.SIOfUJALII ~- ·

. · LADIES SUMIIEI .,
TUBE TOPS MD

.

TOPS AND SHORTS:
.
.

8LA'NK~TS

bl·ndlng . In your
choice of ooiiO col ·
ore. Hlghar price
later .

.

1L .~~~. '
7~2 PRICE

Shop

·51DlWALK SAL£-

VALUES.TO 1199.14,99
CLEAN
.- . UP LOT lADIES'

FOOTWEAR

of

-SIMUJALH SAL£·

-SIG£UJALK

'

lot of children's bet·
ter footwear . Save
50% now. Broken
sizes and styles.

Tank · Tops .

Shop early tor best
buys.

CLEAN UP GROUP'
' "
CHII,.DREN'S BffiER

$4 .99 .

lot

~

~

sley had arranged to meet Mayes in
Chesapeake where both men were
residing at the time.
Wamsley and Mayes, Morgan con·
tinued, drove in Wamsley's van
from Chesapeake to Gallipolis,
Where Wamsley dropped Mayes off
and agreed to pick him up later.
Wamsley, Morgan said, then
drove to Point Pleasant, went back
to Gallipolis to pick up Mayes, and
drove back into Mason County.
wh~re Wamsley gave Mayes a .25
automatic pistol, $300 and ~ pair of
gloves.
Mayes then shot Wamsley,
Morgan hypotesized, threw the gun
into Crab Creek, drove Wamsley's
van to Huntington where he aban·
doned it in a MarshaU University
parking lot, threw the keys to the
van and the gloves into a sewer and
burned a testimonial book which
Wamsley had given him in an alley .
He then, Morgan claimed, spent
the $300 on clothes, a motorcycle
payment, beer and food.
Nibert, who gave his opening
statement following Morgan's

New vehicle tax

children's summer
sportswear. l'ops
Shorts · Knit Pants ·

One large table of
sample odds and en·
ds. Save 50% · 75%.

-SAU-

to

Cleanup

SAMPLES

9~.

ShOll. GOOd IIJIOrt·
ment ol a1ylee and
etzee. Save One haU
now I

CHILDREN'S SPORTSWEAR:

,ShOp Early .

VALUES TO 59'
PIECE GOOD

PR

Cle1rence group of
lldlel
summer

Values

Values to $2 .99 and
$3. 99 yar d
Wide
selecton of colors.
Quilled fabric . Sale
big now for fall

-SIOfWALK SAL£-

Buy now and savfll

VALUES 13.99 &amp; 14.99
LARGE GROUP

QUILTED FABRIC

Off

00

•

REG. '2.99 &amp; 13.99 YD.
LARGE TABLE

1/3

Valu es t o 59 c. On e lot

'17,!

-SIO£UJALK SAL£-

RTS

etvtee end elzee
Slightly Irregular

CLEARANCE GROUP
LADIES SUMMER

SPECIAL GROUP
FANCY PRINTED

$300

s

Ladlel populer blue

denim jeeno. Good

-SIOfUJALK· SAU·

FULL BED SIZE
FANCY PRINTED

Spectot group or
assorted
laney
prlnled
pillow
Cll!lfiS . Seve during
our llnll aummlf
cleerance.

1r.

JEANS

'3'£~

of

1/2.

LADIES POPUlAR .
BLUE DENIM

-SIOfWALK SALf-

CLERANCE BOY'S
SHORT SLEEVE

Entire
boy's
alllrts

Lou

By Judy Owen
and La~e Oliver
Johnny D. Wamsley, killed by a
bullet from a .25 automatic pistol
last October, asked Dexter Ray
Mayes, the.lili-yeai'-old "Branchiand,
W.Va. man on trial (or his murder,
to shOot him, according to both
Mason County Prosecuting Attorney
Damon B. Morgan &lt; and Defense
Attorney David Ni.bert.
During opening statements to the
jury Tuesday morning; Morgan read
the murder indictment against
Mayes, handed down by the Mason
County Grand JuTy in January, and
said he expected the state to prove
that Wamsley, 35, fonnerly of Point
Pleasant, was killed during the early
morning hours of Oct. 15, or shortly
before midnight on Oct. 19.
Furthennore, the prosecuting at·
torney presented his hypothesis as to
tbe events leading up to the shooting,
which be claimed was done by the
defendant, Dexter R. Mayes, for a
$300fee.
Prosecuting Attorney Morgan said
that on the day of the murder, Warn·

-SIOfWALII SAL£-

BLOUSES

ladle!
aummer
lopa and blouaee
Aasorted et~lll ,
fabrics, etzee 1nd
colots to choose

77~.

Aeaor!Bd laney
printed full S ize
aheel i!l In both llat
and fitted stvtas .
Stock up now at
lhll low

Save nowl

lADIES ASSORTED
SUMMER TOPS AND

UTILITY RUGS

broadloom aree
ruga, 18 x 27 Inch
size . Good solid col·

ment of elzea .
atylll and colora. ·

-SIOfUJALH SAL£-

lARGE 18X27 INCH
BROADLOOM

Aeeorlment
of
wholetllera eam·

SPORTSWEAR

Clearance of all
ladles eprlng and
aummer •porte ·
wear . Good aaeort·

ding endorsement of Congress, put·
ting hinl on the verge of the most
sweeping economic policy change in
half a century.
Reagan whipped the Democrats in
their own House on Wednesday, win·
ning on a 238-195 vote that was even
wider than rvagan's earlier budget·
cutting victories. Forty-eight
Democrats defected to the president
and only one Republican strayed the
other way.
Only a fonnal vote today by the
Republican-run Senate, which en·
dorsed a similar bill 89-11 earlier
Wednesday, was neceasary to send
the biU to aSenate-House conference
committee to work out the relatively
few differences in the two versions
- perhaps as early as this weekend.
One possible obstacle remained
there, $47 billion worth of special tax
breaks for the oil industry over the
next 10 years. That was the biggest
deal Reagan made to convince
Democrats to bolt their leaders.
Reagan's bill would reduce taxes
more than $753 billion over the next
five years - the largest tax cut in
American history.
It features a permanent 25 percent
cut in tax rates over 33 months, with
rich and poor alike getting the same
percentage reduction.
The first cuts would take effect
Oct. I, averaging about $2 a week for
·a typical four-member family in the

last three months of this year .
Larger reductions would foUow in
1982 and 1983. Starting in 1985, taxes
would be adjusted automaticaUy
each year to offset partially the
higher taxes caused by inflation.
Reagan, who had spent much of
the last few days personaUy per·
suading House members to accept
his plan, was·jubilant.
"We have made a new beginning,"
he told reporters. "We're back on
the right road and we're making
progress. And if we keep working
together, we can reach that new era
of prosperity we all want. "
Senate Finance Committee Chair·
man Bob Dole , R-Kan., said House
and Senate conferees should be able
to resolve their differences quickly.
They probably will start work Satur·
day.
The oil provisions will be tbe
biggest issue, and there's a chance
- though unlikely - that they could
delay the entire bill.
The Senate bill includes $20 billion
in oil-tax cuts, and liberals have
vowed to filibuster any compromise
that increases that figure. Such ac·
lions, however, often fizzle quickly
when Congress is ready to take a big
recess, as it is preparing to do now.
The House bill has $47 billion in tax
breaks for the oil industry, and
reducing those could alienate some
(Continued on page 12)

Mayes: Wamsley wanted to be killed

CLEARANCE GROUP
LADIES SUMMER

·s~~

blouaee, etc. Excep·

WINS ONE ON TAXES- President Roaald Reagan makes a
slatemeollo lhe Oval Office of the Wblle HOWle Wedoesday after leal'"
Ding lhe House pa18ed lhe tax cut proposal be endorsed. Tbe sign on
Ibis desk reads: "There Is no Umll to what a man can do or wbere he
can go Ube doom' I mind who gets the credit." (AP Laserphoto I

-SIO£WALK SAI.£-

MILL ASSORTMENT
1/1 TO 1 YARD

-SIOfWALH SAL£-

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

end eave!

clear1ncel

-SIMWAII SAL£-

remnants

'3'p~

colora . ShOP Slit·
llere SIOewalk S•••

GreOI tor Ihe beach

-SIOfWALK SALf·

Mill al!utortmenl of
VJ to 1 yard length

F our runs were rnade by
emergency umls Tuesday according
to Meg is Co unt y E mer ~e n cy
Medical Se rvice.
Middleport at II 56 a.m. for Renee
SlOne. Middleport, to Holzer Medical
Center ; Middleport at 4:04 p.m. for
Ha rold Wil son , Bradbury, treated at
the sce ne.

~111 popul1r one
piece etyle terry
romper• In 111orted

Ladlee heewy &amp;ole,
assorted
etyle
surfer aendlll .

fo
$7 .99.
$8.9 9 Specia l
group of la di es' be t t er k ni t t ops. Al l fi rs t
q ua l it y
Shop ear l y
f or bes t sel ec t ion

$6 .99,

. plat ol high quollty

MJddleport at 5: 13 p.m. for Lisa
Ma nley, Middleport, to Holze r
Medical Center; Rutland at 12: 15
p.m for Roger Hoffman, Ma in
Street, tre ated at the scene.

LADIES TERRY
ONE-PIECE .STYLE

IJDIES KNIT TOPS

Home of Mason .

Enwrg-Pncy runs

Marriage licenses

lADIES ASSORTED
SUMMER SURFER

VALUES TO '5.99 AND '6.99
CLEAN UP GROUP

OSP cites Middleport man
A Middle pori man was c1ted 10 a
two--car acc ident on the junction of
Rt. 7 and U.S. 35 nea r Ga llipol is
Tuesday night.
The patrol sa•d a car dn ven by
E mmett W. Bostic, 28. was northbound a t 8 p.m. when he reportedly lost control on wet pave ment
and struck a stopped a uto driven by
D.W. Steinberger, 93 , Huntington ,
W.Va
Slight damage was done to
Bostic's car and Steinberger's was
moderately damaged. jlostic was
cited for assured clear distance .
The patrol cited another d r ive r 1n
a two-vehicle accident on U.S. 35
ea rlier in the day .
A car driven by Mic hael R. Young,
21. Point Pleasant, was eastbound at
5:20p.m. when he was unable to slop

31st, 1st &amp; 3rd
-SIO£WALH SALE.SIO£UJALK SAl f.

-POMEROY STORE ONLY

-SIOfWALK SAL£·

1S Cefttl

A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Middleport, Ohio, Thursdav, July JO, 1981

.

OFF .
REG.
PRICE

.S18£WAII SAU·

One large group of ladies'
spr ing and summer kn it tops .
Good selec tion of sizes and

tains . Va lues to $5 .99 . Out they

enttne

Reagan tax cut plan
gets resounding vote

GIRLS SUMMER DRESSES

SATUtiDAY •••••

•

at

vot.:JO,No.7S
Copyrlghled 1981

VALUES TO '5.99
FROM OUR STOCK

1h

•

'

fA. .

By JEFF GR4BMEIER
A new law recently passed by the
Ohio legislature will mean individuals who buy an auto, mobile
home or watercraft !rom another
person may pay more in sales and
use taxes.
Beginning Aug. I, vehicles pur·
chased through casual sales 1those
sold from one person to another, and
not through a dealer) will be taxed
on their book value rather than the
actual purchase price.
That means lf you buy an auto for
$2,000, but the National Auto Dealers
AssOciation "blue book" says it is
worth $3,00o, you will pay tax on
~~pile the f•ct you .paid
$1,000 less (or it.
Meigs County Clerk of Courts
Larry Spencer said be, as wen as the
rest of the Clerk of · Courts
AssOciation opposed tbe biU.

presentation, said that while $300 in
cash was exhanged between the victim and the defendant, that $300 was
money Wamsley owed Mayes,
anyway. "He (Mayes) did it,"
Nibert confessed, "but he didn't do it
for $300. He did it Mealise he felt he
would die if he didn't.
" The defendant may have been
justified in doing what he did.''
While Morgan claimed that Mayes
had, at Wamsley's request, agreed
to "kill someone," weeks before the
shooting, Nibert told the jury that
when, on the day of the alleged mur·
der , the defendant was told he was to
kill Wamsley himself, he said he
couldn't do it. Wamsley, the defense
attorney
then
hypothesized,
threatened to kill Mayes if Mayes
didn't kill him .
" Nibert said Mayes, who had been
friendsnwith Wamsley "for years ,"
was "scared ... didn't know what to
do."
During his opening remarks,
Nibert also charged that the
deceased was a homosexual who
used drugs and "lusted after young

la~

· "I'm very much against the law,"
he said. "It's going to make things
much more complicated for us . I the
clerk's office.)"
"It will cause mass confusion' for
the next two or three months," Spen·
cersaid.
"I'd jll.'!t like to tell the people that
it is not our fault. We have to follow
the law, even if we don't like it," he
said.
Spencer said It was auto dealers
who pushed for the law to be passed.
When a person buys an auto from
a dealer, he explained, the person
pays tax on the new car less the
amount be receives for a trade-in.
Thus it will now be more at·
tractive to buy a car from a dealer,
since tbe tax is likely to be less,
Spencer said.
. He said he thinks the law is not
likely to stand up in court.

boys." This, the defense attorney
submitted, created a conflict in the
victim's mind. "He (Wamsley) felt
the only way to resolve this conflict
was to leave the world' '
Nibert also claimed that a third
party, a still unidentified 'blonde
man,' was also at the scene of the
shooting. Mayes, however, did not
know the man, who allegedly
remained silent throughout the
event, and efforts by both the state
and the defense to locate him have
proved unsuccessful.
Preswning that Wamsley did ask
Mayes to kill him, Nibert asked,
"Why not suicide'
"We may never know. But he (the
victim) did have strong religioll.'!
beliefs. He did have a troubled
mind. And there may be another
reason- an insurance policy .
The state, Nibert cautioned the
jury, bears the burden of proof in a
murder trial. "We have to prove
nothing to yay. The burden is on the
State. "
And the state, Nibert
claimed , will not prove "bPyond
(Continued on page 12)

effective Aug. 1

"It will be found un·
constitutional, " Spencer predicts,
because he says it discriminates
against casual sales.
The new law, which was signed in·
to law bY Gov . James A. Rhodes on
July 17, will affect the clerk of courts
in the following ways:
-Requires the clerk to collect
sales tax on casual sales and Iran·
sfers according to the average base
price of the vehicle as listed in the
NADA blue book. Exceptions to this
requirement are applicable if the
purchase price exceeds the base
orice.
If the vehicle is more than seven
years old; If a salvage certificate of
title has been issued; or, U It is transferred between members of the lm·
mediate family.
- Requires the clerk .to collect
sales tax on watercraft (boats and

outboard motors) . This places a Uix
on casual sales of watercraft, where
in the past there was no tax.
- Tax on house trailers ; in cases
of casual sales or transfers, the purchase price Ll.'!ed to figure the
amount of the tax will be detennined
by the most recent value as assessed
by the county auditor for the yearly
taxes.
- Dealer sales: In cases of the sale
of a motor vehicle in which another
auto is accepted as a trad,..in, the
taxable amount will be considered
as the price of the vehicle redJ.!Ced
by the credit given the conswner by
the dealer for the trad,..in.
- There will be an increase in the
charge the clerk collects for cer·
tificates of title, memorandum cer·
tificates and notations of lien. The
new charge for each of these will be

$2.

Board·· defeats motion to hold salary
A. , motion · made ljy Robert · Dec. 17, 1979, 1fU not a\]Propriate
• Snowden that the sUperliltlinden••s , and:tllat the ~~~perlntendent'ualary.
• ·CUJfnictsalaryfor1981~beheld at be~dallhet37,mflgure.
. $37,"27$ ·WBB defe~~ted -toUowlng"an . , 'Dick· V~fllhan secondrJ ~
· exeetJ~~ve llelllon ' !II a ~ · moUon.-bonver; lt.wudefeated by
~ ot Melp lAldll Baor'd · of
the 110 yolel Of Carol Pierce ' and

The motion was seconded by
Vaughan with~~~ voting, yes except
•
Pierce.
Jn other business~ the ~rd hired
~ follwlnll -teachers for ·summer
schOol ·· through tbe Youth Em-

. Eliu&amp;Uon Wedl!elday nflibl.
' ' Ufi'Y PqWell, • ' •
. . . . ployment ' Training Proilram :
·~ tnforinauon WBI reiWf\111 · Snowden mil\e a lleCC1IId l)lOtlon $tephanle Ash,~ Ash\liY1John
. todly . bf 0.0 M~ ~

c.,..

whmby be lllked thal the~

Bentley, Jeanne Boweri, JUlies
-~ who' ~ the ~ reljllflt tbi prllliecuUDc •~-&lt; ' penter and John Redovlali.
• boilrd t.d ll&amp;feed at Ita lflll· ~ ~ to In~ st'c&amp;te the IUp8rjn- . Tbe "boMu ·~ ~ hiring of
. - · to
Ill ....CW. · ~ Well- ~ende~Jt'a ¥bat to dltermlne If It Slllillll Bevan u TIUe I teacla' and
an eJementary
, 1eiclaJnilk
. . - 1a a lepl.~ bla11111"' the ~
; . Slwden, In his motion\ lild the • varljltlon qr the. ~ 'If June 28, . -..-.. • tj.bl;d hlrlrig
~""
·. I : ....._.
.... ' ...,.,. ldledule, •adopted~ · It'll,~
'
· Pl'ftWI'' '81 home ~conomlcs
Q~ A
.
.
.. .
'
. - "'
'•...,
'
l
.·
wt·
'.
'
"
'
t ...
7 ~
..
i

n.

a...n ..

•

)

~

wn

vocaUonal job training teacher and
Don Eichinger as physical education
"teacher at the junior high.
The board hired Advance Door
Conll'!lL to repair doors locks and
hardware on building~ in the

distriCt .
The board requested financial
state support for the purchased of
eight b~. approved accident in·
surance for football only, vlewe&lt;l
painting that baa been completed at
Middleport Elementary, and agreed
to ~t- in 5peclal sesslon .on ·Aug.'6,
at 7:30p.m. todiscussfOO(bids.

ALL OVER - House Speaker Thomas P. O'Nelll Jr. of
Massachusetts reaches to hang up the telephone after a conversllon
with President Reagan Wednesday in Washington. The House voted
238 to 195 ln favor of President Reagan's tax cut package, which
O'Neill opposed. I AP t.aserphoto I

TooAv

mm.IN THEW

Vapors burn eight firefighters
WARREN, Ohio - Eight firefi ghters were burned, three of them
seriously, when gasoline vapors collected Inside their coats and
ignited following a deliberately set fire, officials said.
The Wednesday blaze at a west side house was listed as arson by fire
officials.
Zoba sa1d the firefighters were injured inside the house, when
vapors from the gasoline whi ch had been used to start the fire drifted
inside their coats and ignited.

Firefighters threaten sickout
ELYRIA, Ohio - Elyria firefighters have threatened a sick-out for
Sunday because the city is delaying payment of retroactive wage
hikes ordered by arbitrators, union officials sa1d.
About 15 of the 21 firefighters scheduled to work Sunday will
probably call in sick, said James Heginbotham, president of Local474
of the International Association of Firefighters.
The firefighters have worked without a contract since July 12, 1980,
and sta ged a three--day sick-out last Dec . 24-26 to protest stalled talks .

Reverses ruling in death
COLUMBUS, Ohio - After 3()-year-&lt;Jld Linda F. Marsick was found
dead in the closet of her Columbus apartment , a scarf around her neck
and a towel stuffed in her mouth, Franklin County Coroner William
Adrion ruled her death a suicide.
Now, nearly four years later, the office of Ohio Attorney General
William Brown has concluded that the young woman was actually a
homicide victim . The decision could mean payments of more than
$42,000 to the victim's two daughters under the state's Crime Victims'
Compensation program.
Mrs . Marsick 's mother, Ruth Walkup, found her body on Sept. 23,
1977. Adrian and Columbus police decided she took her own life
because she couldn't cope with the death of singer Elvis Presley the
previous month .

Columbus couple files action
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A coup!~ who fled from a fatal fire at the Cam·
bridge Holiday Inn in 1979 have filed a $3.8S million lawsuit in federal
court against the hotel and three other compames.
Donna and Jerry W. Carringer, of Columb~. filed the suit Tuesday
against Holiday Inn Inc. of Memphis, Tenn.; J .P . Stevens and Co. Inc .
of Aberdeen, N.C. ; Celanese Polymers and Specialties Co. of New
York ; and Midwest Rug Co. of Springfield, Mo.
The Carringers say they suffered smoke inhalation and injuries to
their wrists, ankles and legs in the July 31, I971J fire, which left 10
people dead and injured 82.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery 's daily game "The Number" was 146. The lottery
reported earnings of $333,963.50 on its the drawing. The earnings came
on sales of $848,557.50, while holders of winning tickets are entitled to
share $514,594, lottery officials said.

Weather
Clear tonight and sunny Friday. Lows tonight in the upper 50s to
near 60. Highs Friday in the low to mid-80s. Chance of rain near zero
percent tonight and Frldsy , Winds easterly around 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Fereeast
Saturday through MOIIdlty:
Fair Saturday. ChaliCe of sb-en allillhanderstonns Sunclay and
Monday. Highs to the low to 11114-8ei. LOws lo the low to mtlf.tlls.

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