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                  <text>Area deaths
Helen Jeffers
Helen Jeffers. 69, Rt. 2, Albany,
died Tuesday morning at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital Parkersburg.
She was born at Waverly the
daughter of the late Lester and
Beulah Hibbs Cordray. She was also
preceded in death by two brothers,
Herman and Cliffton Cordray, two
sJsters, Pauline and Ethel Cordray,
three grandchildren .&lt;~nd one great
grandchild .
Mrs. Jeffers was a housewife and
former school teacher . She began
her teaching at the age of 17 and was
one of the last teachers at the Center
Stake one room school. She also
taught in the Columbia School and
Albany School systems. She was a
member of the Carpenter Baptist
Church and Columbia Grange 2435.
She was a fonner advisor of the
Columbia Make-It Gir ls 4-H Club.
She is survived by her husband,
Reed Jeffers; three sons, Gene Jeffers, Albany, Lee Jeffers, Waterford, Calif., and Richard Jeffers.
New Boston, Ill.; two daughters,
Mrs. Lavern (Mary i Jordan,
Albany, and Mrs. John (Janetl
Dunaham, New Boston, Ill. ; 24 grandchildren, and 20 great grandchildren; two brothers, Robert Cor·
dray, Westerville, and John Cordray, Fullerton, Calif.; one sister-Inlaw , Leola Cordray, Athens.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the BigunyJordan Funeral Home, Albany, w1th
the Rev . Cecil Cox officiatmg . Bun a I
will be in Alexander Cemetery
friends may ca ll at the fun eral
home at anyti me.

Wednesday, Auaust 12,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pape-14-The Dally Sentinel

Reunion set

Will meet Thursday

Friday deadline

The annual Jacks reWlion will be
held SWlday, Aug. 16, at Rutland
American Legion Hall. All relatives
and friend!! are invited to attend .

Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will
meet Thursday, Aug. 13, at 8 p.m. at
the lodge in Chester.

Residents are remiJided that the
deadline for open cl!las entries ol the
Meigs County Fair Is at 4 p.m.

1

Center.
Mr. YoWlg was the son of the late
Joseph and Dessie Stewart Young.
He was also preceded in death by a
sister, Venedia Knight in March of
this year.
Mr. Young was a veteran of World
War II.
He is survived by his wife, Rose
Young; five daughters, Floretta
Barton, Syracuse; Helen Heaton,
Chester ; Vinedia Kearns , Mason;
Sharon Roseberry, flashan, and fjn da Powell, Pomeroy; three sons,
James R. Young, Rutland ; John
Young, and Bryant Young, both of
Mason; 14 grandchildren; four
brothers, Charles Young, Cheshire;
Darrell Young, Port Williams, Ohio;
George Young, Delaware, and
Dallas Young, South Charleston,
Ohio.
Funeral serv ices will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev . W. E.
Curfman officiating. Bunal will be
in Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call a t the funera l home after 7

,-.

SUPPLIES

nt'\'l'r

CRAYONS
PENCILS
BINDEJtS
NOTEIOOU
SCHOOl BOXES

• YDur first nallH' ·\'our init ial ur srhoolmonog-ralll
t•nnu,.lt'd in rlw ~ lorw • Ynur inir i;d . mttS«.'O I or b\'fwitt'
s_\1llhol scr hc ·nc ·a rh t/J(' srone ·\'our fiJI! na m e t'llhi'T'tln'd
insidt• tlw ring· \'o ur choicl' of'f"irt'hursl o r su nlill ' storw

RULERS

Brlnl( in 1hls ad for chis sp&lt;'&lt;'i"l ofler.

21 l E

MAIN . POMEROY

SCISSORS
PENS
GLUE
PENCIL SHARPENERS
PORTFOLIOS
MARKERS
PAPER CLIPS
CLIP BOARDS
TYPING PAPER

AND MANY, MANY MORE

1/ - ,'\ ~. l

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Kiug,\ , / t i C.

3
BIG

I

~OMEROY

BIG

DAYS

Freddie G. Plott, 58, Rt. I.
Guysville. d1 ed Tuesday a t
O'Bleness Hos pital Hosp1ta l.
Athens, following a brief illness
Mr. Plott was the son of the late
Wallace and Lake Erie Plott He wa s
also preceded in death by his wife.
Sharon in 1980.

t

LAYAWAY

NOW

t

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DAYS

STARTS , •t 6
URSDAY ·~~~~~
AUGUST

Freddie G. Plott

t

YOUR EASY SELECTIQN

'
'
'
'
' ELBERFELDS IN
'-

losl'!&lt;o irs lusler.

Free custom features
included:

@1!~

NGED P:OR

NOTEBOOK fllP£Jt
SCHOOL IIIGS

(hi sode. SIL\1Jil 1;'\l"' dass rings. T raditional s tylin g'.
f :rtlfi t•c ) fi·cnJI _ j~·\\'t'lt • r's fim • Sla illll'SS flll'l:tJ . :'\JCH'l'

't

SU OUI NEW SELECTION

.t

p.m . this evening.

\

ELBERFELD$

t

d urable rh;m !-{old . T lw finish

Friday.
.
The fair board. office, located ~
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds, will
be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. both
Thursday and Friday to receive entries.

e
vol.l(), No.85
Copyrighted 1981

Coast guard recovers bodies
CINCINNAT.l.- The Coast Guard recovered three bodies from the
Ohio River by Cincinnati Wednesday. All were presumed drowned af·
ter the small aluminum boat they were riding in was hit lly a tow of
barges early Tuesday.
The body of 19-year-old Linda Messer of Cincinnati was f011nd near
the Suspension Bridge Wednesday night by pleasure boaters, the
Coast Guard said.
A Hamilton County Sheriff's Department spokesman said 48-yearold Douglas A. Moore of Cincinnati was found in midstream near North Bend. The body of 21-year-old John Donald Sizemore of Cincinnati
was found floating across from the Licking River.

ASHION JEA

KNIT SLACKS
r ''"'

c: ~ o o ce

ol soi•O las hoon colo•s

on po lye s ler

m·~ se s 01n&lt;J liiO&lt;f!S srzes
8 ..,.; ~ to SC h OOl S ale '

Stewart. Friends may call at the
funera l humeafter3 p.m. today .

Officials seek collision cause

Speciill group of IMiiea ' popul•r blue denim lashron

)eans m a11oned alzM ar~d styles Sl•ghl 1ttegutars
values to S12.9ll. SIOCk up no. •nd sa~e dur•ng Stil
Iter 's Back to School Solie!

d o ull lf'kfl ll S I!'I C k S Wtlll e lii S II (; wa• S I Go od r ange Ol

wiiJ be in Wye rs Cemetery near

Spec r111 ro w P" Ce 101 o ur

BEVERLY, Mass. - Officials studied records from a demolished
freight train Wednesday, hoping to learn why it collided with a commuter railroad, leaving four men dead and 27 people injured.
"Somebody got the wrong train orders," said Roger Bergeron, a
Federal Railroad Administration inspector. "One of those trains was
given the wrong information."
Boston &amp; Maine officials and state and federal investigators were at
the crash site Wednesday and were studying dispatch records to deter·
mine how the two trains operated by B&amp;M wound up on the ~me
track.

Jamt';; H. YoungJames H. Young, 58, Mason , died
Tuesday evening at Holze r Medical

GetAnA+Q
In Savings
Sew Your Back-to School Fashion s
with il Singer'''

-8AtK TO StHOOL-

TO SHtOOL-

FANCY COTTON
BLEND CALICO

MEN 'S &amp; BOY'S
CANVAS GYM

PRINTS
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fl l flndPCl

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fJ
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Spec•al purc tlase o l Mo ~s es

"''"~:;.,
so!es and

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-BACK TO SCHOOLVALUES T0$3.89

SPECIAL PURCHASE
MISSES NEW STYLE

SN~AK~RS

Pr.

.____

ASSORTED
JUMBO SPOOLS

36 INCH WIDE
QUALITY BLEACHED

Elaborate cleanup effort begins
PENINSULA, Ohio - As an elaborate cleanup of a massive oil spill
oozing from a pile of burning scrap tires proceeded, city officials in
nearby Akron took steps to prevent similar fires from erupting
elsewhere.
The fire , which began early Aug . :; at Parker Tire Co. near Peninsula, resulted in the release of about 10,000 ~allons of oil. It was still
.
ablaze Wednesday and was expected to burn for weeks.
The three-acre lot is in a rural area between Cleveland and Akron
near the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area.

' ""''""""'' "'50

srll'!aker s m whrte
and colors. Sturdy
uppers
lc;,;h ~n rn soles

-~~~i'ii

3' X 5' SIZE
BROADLOOM

THR£AO
a n&lt;1

Values to
Specfal
clean -up group of Girl!.'
Better Tops . Wide asst. of

$}99

-8AtK TO StHOOL-

C o .11 s

SPECIAL- LADIES
CANVAS SPORT

styles and colors .

Each

'" " "

SPECIAL GROUP

GIRLS'$3."TOPS
.

FANCY PRINTED
VELOUR KITCHEN

TOW~LS

•

BERUN - "Do you remember•" says the TV announcer's voice.
Shadowy l(lm clips show thin, elderly women leaping from secondstory windows to the upstreched anns of a crowd below.
With such programs and with speeches, parades and memorial se,...
vices, Gennans both east and west of the Berlin Wall observed the 20th
anniversary today of the communist barrier.
As they do every year, thousands of workers were to parade in East
Berlin and hear a celebratory address by Communist Party chief
ErichHonnecker, who supervised the construction of the wall .

Cla r~

8

p o 11 eS i e r

FOR
StHOOLMT. MIST 81"x96"
QUALITY COTTON

Leaders call for end to strikes

POSTURE FOAM
NON-ALLERGIC

WARSAW, Poland - Heeding the Communist Party's back-to-work
call, national leaders of Solidarity called for an end to strikes and
street nulrches protesting Poland's food crisis.
They also urged the workers to improve the economy by working a
six-day week for Ule next two months, giving up the Saturday holidays
they won through strikes six months ago.
But the independent labor federation threatened to call out its 10
million members if the goverrunent doesn't stop trying to blame it for
the wave of demonstrations against the reduced meat ration, food
shortages and the govenunent's proposal to hike the prices of staple
fcixls as much as 400 percent.

60" WIDE MILL ASS 'l
TERRY DRESS

Winning Ohio lottery number
.

-IACI Te SCIIIII.,MILL LENGTHS
ASSORTED KNIT

·•A Tnulem.11rk 1•f The S•nMer

C(lfllJIIlftY. CM t-.inct~tOO Uf'I"Yifll(

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welt;~ "it . '
ilJ, II cnol•·ce ol cotors. .

8LANK,TS

MILL ASSORTMENT
PIEC~ GPOD

FABRICS
R~MNANTS
~·.~~_1;;:~:·tW5 ') f E~~.~.~~-.~~.~~~·e·.
f

tom

'SPARTA' FULL BED SIZE
SOLID COLOR .NEEDLEWOVEN

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colors. Stock up now tl this

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· , MILTON BR.,.DLEY

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tow price.

' •

,

.

CLEVELAND - The wltming nwnber dral\'11 Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily gwhe "The Nwnber" was 730.
The lottery reported earnings of $461,582 on the drawing. The earnings came on sales of $876,438, while holciers ·of winning tickets are
entitled to share $414,856, lottery oHicials said.

Weather

GAM£S.

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·

Proceeds from the Dave Diles Golf
Classic totaled $a,909.89 Tom Wolfe,
chairman, announced today.
Wolfe pointed out that expenses
were up this year but the entry fee of
$12:&gt; remained the same. In 1979
profit totaled $6,000. In 1980 there
was a $9,000 profit. Proceeds from
the events are donated to non-profit
organizations in Meig.-; and Mason
County.
Serving on the committee for fund
distribution were Wolfe, Ted Reed
and Paul Burnett.
Money this year was distributed
as follows; Dave Diles Ohio University Scholarhsip FWld, $1,000, (any
student from ·lhe ·MeipMaion ~~~
who ·wisbes to attend O.U. in the
school of communictions may apply
for a scholarship by contacting Tom
Wolfe at the Racine Horne National
Bank, Racine); Wahama Golf and
Meigs Golf Teams $200 each; Meigs
Boxing Club and Big Brothers, $300
each; fire departments at Middleport, Racine, Syracuse, Rutland,
Tuppers Plains, Bashan, Sal,m Center, Chester, Mason and New Haven,
$1:&gt;0 each; emergency squads at
Racine, Mason , Syracuse, Pomeroy,
Middleport, New Haven, Tuppers
Plains and Point Pleasant, $150
each; Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club, 200.
Next year the event will be held
June 9-10. The golf classic will be
played on the lOth at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason.

,

. ~

. ..
~

~~/

'

'

.

DEDICATED - The new Middleport Community
Park ball field lights and an electric scoreboard were
dedicated Wednesday night. Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman turned on the field llghts provided by the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. and the Unlted Mine Worikers of
the Southern Ohio Coal Co. Lights and scoreboard are
valued at approximately $80,1100. However, the 1mprovement cost Middleport Village nothing. L.abor was

donated by miners and volunteer laborers. Turning on
the lights from the left were David Baker, Southern
Ohio Coal; Gene Oiler, Southern Ohio United Mine
Workers; Mayor Hoffman; John Hood, president of the
Middleport Youth League ; Benney Denl. who wired in
the lights, and Charles Cassell, president of the Middleport Recreation Commission.

SCOREBOARD - A modern, electric scoreboard
featured at the Middleport Community Park for the first lime, was dedicated Wednesday night. The im·
provemenl was donated by The Farmers Bank and

Savings Co. and the Vinton County Bank at Wilkesville.
Shown with the new scoreboard are Don Roush, left,
and Harry Roush, right, who donated endless hours of
labor towards the park projel'l which also ineludes
lights for the ball diamonds.

.

New teachers and other personnel
were employed and the resignations
of several people were accepted at
Wednesday's meeting of the Eastern
I..ocal School Board.
Employed were Wendy Haller,
head teacher at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School; Scott Wolfe,
assistant football coach and
assistant basketball coach; Donald
Eichinger. assistant basketball
coach and high school EMR
leacher; Jan Eichinger, elementary
teacher, and Carolyn Tripp,
cheerleader advisor.
Accepted were the resignations of
Michael Abraham as high school
special education teacher, Ralph
Wigal as athletic directdr, Suzy Car·

.

,~

penter as elementary teacher, Donna Chadwell as art teacher, and
Leonard Gwiazdowsky as head
teacher and fifth grade teacher at
the Chester Elementary School.
Other personnel hired included
substitute teachers, teacher aides ,
study hall rnoniters, secret.Hries, and

cooks.
Substitute teachers are John Coffman, Helen Caldwell, Betty Roush,
Kathryn Bawn, Nathan Robinette,
Martha Graves, Pauline Mye~s.
Robert Shaver, Mildred Hite,
Lavonia Brannon, Linda Brock,
.Tames Wright, Kathleen ManicKe ,
Joseph Myers, Barbara Mathews,
D-dvid Weber, and Kathy Simpson.
Aides employed were Dorothy

Ca laway , J iII Holter , Nan cy
Mornssey. and Pat Martin. Hired as
study hall moniters ' were Dorothy
Ca laway and Barbara Young.
Employed as secretaries were
Martha Durst, Donna Reed, E leanor
Leonard, Barbara Young and
Dorothy Calaway; as cooks.
Dorothy Ca laway, Shirley Johnson,
Eileen Swain, Mamie Headley,
Elizabeth Lyons, Joan Scarbro~~gh,
Nettie Young, Mrs. Emmell Hemey ,
and Fonda Ritne; bus drivers , Gary
Dill, Archie Rose , Darlene Cassady,
Donna Jean Ritchie, Ruth Masters,
Flossie Dill, Angel Ruck er, and Nick
Leonard; and custodians, Grace
Chevalier,

Mary Keste rso n . and

Sylvia Causey.

Changes tn job descnpt1ons fo r the
lunch room !-iupcrv isor , lleC:Id cook,
bus mechanic and custodians wer e

adopted.
Approval was given ln making

a~

plica tion fo r new school buses and
changes in bus routes we r e ap-

proved.
The Board C:t pproved six se niors
for mid-term ~raduation . T hey were
Alison Ca ut ho r n, Carrie Cheva lie r ,

Wendy Elkms. Crysta l Jacobs, Debbie Pooler, and Renee Heibel.
Next meeting of the Board will be
on Aug 25, 7::10 p. m. Board members present at thl· meeting wcrr
Ruger Gaul. [")residen t, Dorsal
Larkms, Dcryl Well. Rc rnurd
Shive rs, and .hnnes Caldwell .

Commissioners sign option agreement
wedliesctay the Meigs Col!lliY
" Of all the land we have looked al
Conunissioncrs signed an option to
this is the only one that EPA will
purchase approximately 114acres of · consider and by taking this option
· landinSallsburyTownshipforanew
the county can begin to take core
drilling samples and hopefully gain
county landfill.
The option w~ . signed with final approvalfrom EPA.
Olarles, Avery,and Albert Goeglein
"U approved this area will serve
at 8 purchase price of~ per acre.
Meigs County's solid waste problem
Henr)' Wells, president at the
for many years" Wells concluded.
board lilted, " The licnlnl ol this
Charles Blakeslee, executive
aptlcilll the flnlt 11ep In the developdirector, of the Meigs County Planment qf 1 new .ianclf!ll for lbls CUUD- nlng Commission and James Jenty At p1etelt we have ap- nlnga dlsw88ed the possibillty of the ·
· ~Y 30 dlya left at the f c&lt;mmi,alon hiring Jennings as a
pr It lite.
cotutty _planner f_o r Meigs County . .
· "The land on which·we are taking
Jenrungs outltned ways m which
an · tfP.llG!I Ia located IIGI1beut of he felt his services could be of value
Hon'n Hill' Ctillttety, · ap- to the eouilty such as writing grants
il'ilP!IIlllltei1 mile fram ,.lind ~ slate and federal
Pi a ent laht!fi!l.llte.
,,
~ !~· The board agreed to
'

·· ~

lS Ce nts
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Board· employs, accepts resignations

Berlin crisis 20 years ago

Tru Se ,... 225 ya•d
SP OO l

Announce
classic
proceeds

mm.IN THEW

-IACII Tt SCIIML SAL£SCHOOL DAYS SPECIAL
MISSES BLUE DENIM

-8Atll TO StHOOL SAL£LADlES NEW FALL
PULL-ON POL VESTER

'J Section s, 14 Pag e~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Augustl3, 1981

TooAY

Y·FRIDAY

He is survived by one .son. Bria n

en tine

By Associated Press
the lanes stay open, we should be U.S. air traffic system unsafe. Many
Overnight flights to Europe went
down to a nonnal schedule" across flights were canceled and there were
off close to schedule from New York
the North Atlantic, U.S. Tran- lengthy delays on others.
after Canadian air controllers retursportation Secretary Drew Lewis
The Canadian controllers agreed
ned to work and officials on both • said Wednesday. He said delays of on Wednesday to end the boycott, in
sides of the Atlantic predicted a
only a half-hour are foreseen today.
return for an inquiry into the safety
"normal schedule" today .
The flight zone "has opened up question. U.S. authorities deny that
Meanwhile, members of the Inagain and it is our feeling that we the system is unsafe .
ternational Federation of Air Traffic
will be getting things back to norJean·Luc
Pepin, · Ca nada 's
Controllers Associations were
mal ," said Gerald Fil2gerald, minister of transport, had begun acmeeting in Amsterdam to discuss
operations manager at Kennedy In- tions that could have led to $a,OOO
whether action should be taken to
ternational Airport, the nation's fines, job suspensions and firings
support striking controllers in the
busiest handler of international against the Canadian controllers.
United States.
nights. On a normal day, 120 jets More than 2S controllers were
There were some delays Wed·
depart over the North Atlantic from suspended.
nesday on flights from Europe to the
the airport.
Lewis said domestic air service
United States and hundreds of
Trans-Atlantic travel was thrown remained at about three-fourths of
would-be travelers spent the night
into havoc Monday and thousands of nonnal as the strike by members of
sleeping where they could at Lon· passengers were stranded when the Professional Air Traffic Condon's Heathrow Airport, but the
Canadian controllers refused to han· trollers Organization over wages
problems were expected to clear up die flights to or from the United 'and working conditions entered its
·quickly.
State•, claiming that a strike by llthdaytoday.
' 'By tomorrow morning, asswning
America n controllers had made the

13th

Ke1th Plott, Colu mbu s ; two
daughters, Valerie Lake Plott and
Pavlo Lynn Plott, both at horne.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev . David Lyons officiating. Burial

at

Travelers face
normal schedule

He wa s a painter e~ n d uni on
representative for the P a int ers

Union, a former maintenance man
for the Federal Hoc king School
District and a farmer.

•

\

study the proposal.
Phi l Roberts, county engineer,
presented specifications for a new
dwnp truck. The board agreed to advertise by bids.
Roberts reported on brush cutting
and patch work presently being

done.
It was announced that the 1982
budget is avatlable and may be in·
spected at anytime during regular
working hours at the office of the
commissioners

'M' motorists may get tags
Sarah Gibbs, deputy registrar for
Meigs Couhty, reminds the public
whose last name starts with " M~ ',
that they have the month of August
to obtain their new stickers for their
vehicles.
To obtain their stickes they must
take their vehicle title and
registration. Also whoever owns the
vehicle must sign for the new license

or have someone stop in and get a
power of attorney slip to sign the application.
The office on Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, is open on Friday
evenings between 5;3ll and 7 p.m.
and also on Saturday mornings as
extra hours to accommodate the
public.

I}

�Thursday, August 13,1981

Pomeroy

•

Commentar

()utstanding------------------------------------~Wi~i=llM=m~~~B_uc~k~ley

GRIFFEY TWISTS KNEE- Second base llmpire
Ed Vargo motions for assistance after Ken Griffey of
the Cincinnati Reds twisted his knee rounding second
base in the tblrd inning against the Dodgers Wed-

Define cen so rshiP-----~Ja;;,:,::m:.::.:;es;,.,:,./.,;.,.,;;.K;,;_i,,;,..lpa_tn_'c_k

•

Letter to the editor

Sad situation
A sad and distress1ng situation 1s
in the making here in Meigs County .
For many years, the county has
provided a home for the md1gent and
those without families who can sllll
get about. But now, this longstanding record of dis tinguis hed service
for many years is about to end. Or at
least this is the feeling of some
residents
Meigs County, without a doubt,
has a need for a County Home such
as we presentl y have on Mulberry
Heights next to the hospital m
Pomeroy. Surely there are other
ways the comm1ss10ners and the
county ca n econurruz e without
depnvmg these folk of a home. After
all. for some , 11 is the only home they
have.
It 1s not a polillcal 1ssue nor a n
econom ic issue. It is an 1ssue of mer·
cy a nd compassion Are you
listening, Meigs County Com·
nusswners' The Good Book offers
wise counsel when it declares:
"To do rtJ,.!hteousness and justice

is more acceptable to the Lord than
sacrifice."- Proverbs21 :3
Citizens of Me1gs County : Please
tell your elected corrunissioners how
you feel in th1s matter.
Mrs. A. K. Bradley

Growing pains...
What are we going to do? I was in
Pomeroy last Friday afternoon, and
traffic was bumper to bwnper and
the food stores parking lots were all
full. there was no place to park .
Well, I am surely glad we have the
prospect of a new store going in
below Jones Boys. As th1n~s
progress here at hom e th1s will happen and as It does we just have to
Lake the growing pains. However,
the city better be planning ahead so
traffic doesn't get any worse.
Because we don't want to wait to get
to our favorJte store and then have to
wa1t for a parkin~-: place. then wail in
long check-out lines . We ll , that's
America .
Floyd H Cleland

The Daily Sentinel
Ill ( ourt St rt•t•!
f'umf'rn y, Ohiu

61 ..99?·~ 15o6
J)E\"(ITEil Til THF INTf:RF_"iT 01; Ttl F. I\I Eif; ..... ,\USII~ ARF.A

ROBERT L. WTNGETI
Publishn

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

J\Jo;!'i isl.an t Puhlish('r/( 'nnlrnllt•r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NtV~s

F:ditnr

A MEMHJo:H ol Thr i\sul('lalt'd l'r~s. Inla nd Uail)'
Amninn Nl'\ll"!'ip&amp;pt"r Publishtn AufH"ialion .

~s

Assodatinn and lht'

I.ETIEKS OF OPINION art' Wtkomf'd . Thf')' should bt- ll"ts UUID 300 words long. All

lt'ltrn art !ILlbjrC't htrdltln~t and mu:rit br slpnl vdth namt", addrt:u and tdt"phmlt' !lumbt-r . No urui~ned h•ttrrs will hfo ptJhllthed_ Lt&gt;u~n daoold br In flood taslr . addrt-sslnJ'l
iSIIUI'S, DOl prrsonaliUn.

-

Today in history.

• •

Today is Thursday, Aug . 13, the 22lilh day of 1931. There are 140 days
left in the year.
Today's hi~hli~ht in history :
On Aug . 13, 1980 - one year ago - President Jinuny Carter was
nominated by the Democratic Party to run for a second term.
On this date :
In 1521, Spanish Conqueror Hernando Cortez captured Mexico City
from tbe Aztec Indians.
. On 1624, France's Louis XIII named Cardinal Richelieu as his first
minister.
In 1792, French revolutionaries imprisoned the royal family .
And in !961, East Germany sealed ofr the border between East and
·west Berlin, closing the Brandenburg Gate, to halt the flight of refugees
·to the west:

jection is tha t a diclionary includes a
definition of " bed" as a verb. Opposed to these oppressive forces is a
school librarian , clad in robes of virtue, defending our freedom to read
whatever we please.
Well . it doesn't always work that
well. It appears that not all the
would·be censors are local yahoos.
"One of the most startling findings
of the survey was that librarians
named school personnel (teachers,
administrators and librarians) as
initiating over 30 percent of the
challenges cited." In some cases,
res pondent s to th e s urvey
acknowledged that acts of " censorship" were educationally valid.
For example. said one respondent
of a particular book: " It was a piece
of adult porn - purchased by
mistake, by a teacher. We agreed parents, librarians. t~achers. ad·
ministrators - that the matenal
was not suitable. No question .
Junk ed it."
ln another reported instance, a
superintend ent . acting on his own.
had purchased a certain program .

" ll was viewed as worthless by
teachers and principals - too difficult for pre-hi~h schoolers."
Were these two instances Bets of
··censorship" ? They figure in the
swrunary totals demonstrating that
" efforts to censor the materials
school children may read appear to
be on the mcrease." Yet the
decisions in the two cases a~
parently were wise decis ions.
Evidently not all censorhsip is bad

censorship .
The study was conducted in the
spring of !980 by the Arnencan
Library AssocicJtion in conjunction
with the Association of American
Publishers and the Association for
!lupe rvi sion and
Curriculum
Develornenl.
Nearly
1,9 00
librarians, principals and superintendents took part. They reported
scores of .challenges U1at were
plainly ludicrous, such as the
demar.d that the Amencan Heritage
Dictionary be removed because its
seventh definition uf to bed," citing
J ohn Steinbeck. is " to have sr•uat
intercourse with ... If the dictiona ry
had cited Williwn Shakespeare in-

stead, perhaps the objecting yahoo
rrught have been mollified. But
probably not.
Another challenge, this one to
Philip Roth's " Portnoy's Complaint," may strike some of us as ~ot
so ludicrous at all. The novel's
theme is masturbation. It's dirricult
to believe that loth-graders would be
intellectually cheated, and their
precious First Amendment rights
grossly violated, if they were
deprived of having the work immediately at hand in the school
library.
My thought is that the opprobrious
term "censorship " ought to be used
WJih greater care. What we are
talking about, as often as not, ais
simply the informed cntical
judgment of a librarian. If a
librarian agrees with a concerned
parent that a particular book is too
salacinus for adolescenLii and should
not be kept on the s helves, their joint
decision would be termed "censorship," but that's not what is is.
It's something else . It's common
sense.

By Associated Press
The San Francisco Giants have
seen Dennis Walling bat just twice in
the last three days, and must feel by
now that it's more than enough .
Walling laced a run-scoring single
Wednesday to lead the Houston
Astros to a 5-4 National League victory over the Giants. On Monday he
delivered a tw()-run double to key a
1&gt;-5 victory' by the Astros.
The recent successes have given
him new life as a pinch-hitter, he
feels. He was 1-for-9 without a run
batted in during the first half of the
I
season.
"I can accept coming off the bench
if I can get mentally prepared to be a
pinch-hitter,"
Walling
said.
"E verybody wants an identity . We
made some moves and my role is
more defined now."
Luis PuJols opened the Houston
eighth with a single and Kiko Garcia
ran for him. After a wild pitch and a
sacrifice by Terry Puhl, Greg Minton Peplaced AI Holland , 3-3. Minton
walked pinch-hitter Harry Spilman
a nd Walling, hitting for Joe Sambito,
3-3, lined his gam~winning hit.
In other NL action, it was St. Louis
11. Philadelphia 3; Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 2; New York 7, Chicago 4 in
10 innings; Atlanta 4, San Diego 3 in
11 and Los Angeles 8, Cincinnati 5.
The Astros chased All-star Game
winner Vida Blue with three runs
and six hits in the third inning .
Dicki e Thon doubled home one run ,
and the other two scored on base hits
by Tony Scott and 'Jose Cruz. The
Astros added an unearned run in the
fifth off Fred Breining, staking Vern
Ruhle to a 4-1llead.
The Giants scored four times in
the sixth to lie the game . Enos
Cabell doubled with one out and
scored on Jack Clark's single.
Darrell Evans followed with a tw()run homer, his lOth of the season .
One out later. Jerry' Martin belted

Oath left out of Reagan's remarks
lesson.
He told interviewers he wished he
had left that segment out of his
prepared remarks.
Rather, he said, he should have
" kept the piece of the fonn that they
have to sign in my pocket and
dramatically brought it out and read
Il . "
" lt might have gotte n more attcnlion ," he sa id .
The photo opportunity has become
a hall owed traditiOn in the Whi le
House, brought on whenever the
president's news media advisers
determine it would be to his advantage to have his picture l&lt;tken .
As the appointed hour for the

session nears, photographers and
reporters. who are summoned to the
Oval Office or Cabinet Room to catch any chit-chat loud enough to hear,
gather at a door of the White House
press room.
The more likely the event is to
produce an important picture, or
commentary by the president, the
larger the horde and the greater the
pushing and shoving that always accompanies it.
When a visitor to the Oval Office is
from another country, the mob is
doubled by foreign reporters and
photographers, television ca mera
crews and radio sound engineers.
And so it was a £ew weeks ago

nesday in Los Angeles, Dodger
looks on. Griffey was advancing
single to light when be fell. He
but did not return to the rield
Laserphoto)

when Pierre Elliott Trudeau, prime
mimster of Canada and for years a
hit with photographers, visited
Reagan at the White House.
Among those in the Oval Office
were Richard V. Allen, the
president's national security "dviser, and Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.
Both seemed amazed.
As a
second wave of
photo~raphers trampled into the
Oval Office, Allen turned to Haig
and asked : " You never let them into
your office, do you?"
Haig shook his head and pronoun- ·
ced judgment on the entire event:
"It's absurd."

his third homer of the year .
Cardinals 11, PhUlies 3
George Hendrick hit two home
runs and knocked in three runs and
rookie Orlando Sanchez singled
home the g()-ahead run in the fifth inning as St. Louis clobbered
Philadelphia.
For the second straight night at
Veteri'ns Stadium, the attendance
was well under the pre-strike
average of 32,684. A crowd of 23,566
turned out for the third of the fourgame series between the top two
teams in the rirst hall of the of the
NL East sees on.
Bob Sykes, who pitched 31-3 innings and gave up four hits and no
runs, earned a victory in his first
decision of the season. Seven pitchers gave up 17 walks in the game.
Expos 3, Pirates 2
Andre Daws on hit his 15th homer
of the season to back the combined
eight-hit pitching of Ray Burris and
three relievers, leading Montreal
over Pittsburgh.
Burris, 4-5, yielded five hits in five
innings, including Mike Easler's
leadotr homer in the fourth .
Following Burris were Stan Bahnsen, Jeff Reardon and Bill Lee, who
gained his sixth save after giving up
an RBI grounder to Tim Foli in the
ninth.
Mets 7, Cubs 4
Dave Kingman and Ellis Valentine drilled consecutive triples at the
sl&lt;trt of the lOth inning, leading New
York past Chicago for the Mets'
third straight victory since the
reopening of the season.
But center fielder Bobby Bonds
and right fielder Hector Cruz both
backed off the bsll at the last
moment.
Valentine then drove home
Kingman with with another threebagger to right center for the gamewinner.

Prophets of doom ______---&amp;...:!,.]i=ulra='n:..::B:.::.:on~d
"The voters have to see some power closer to horne.
The men and women who sit under
blood."
" We anticipate difficult times the domes of the 50 sl&lt;tte ca pitals
had looked forward to playing a
ahead."
" I think we're all in some major role in the distribution of
federal funds within their slates.
trouble ?"
These prophets of doom aren't They relished the notion of directing
defeated Democrats still srnartmg spending for health, education and
from their lale.t licking at the hands welfare without federal regulation .
Today the anticipation has soured.
of the new Republicral majority in
The
legislators who gathered recenthe U.S. House of Representatives.
in
Atlanta for the National Contly
They are. instead , slate
ference
of State Legislatures are
l e~ islators,
Republicans and
beginning
to wonder what will hapDemocrats al1ke, who believe that
pen when they propose raismg taxes
President Reagan and the Congress
to replace the money that Congress
have placed them - in the words of
and the president have taken away.
one - " between a rock and a hard
Under the Reagan-Stockman
place."
Eight months ago, many state · theory, federal l&lt;tx cuts to individuals and corporations will
lawmakes happily anticipated the
stimulate economic growth and
shift in power from Washington to
produce an increase in state and
the state capitals. The new
federal tax collections. But many
president's " new federalism "
stale officials fear that this will not
promised to reduce taxe and return
happen fa st enough to prevent a
government to the people by placing

fiscal cris is.
Nu fewer than 27 of the 50 stales
have a !981 reserve of less than 3
percent of their current generalfund spending. More than half of
these are close to deficits. Only 10
states have surpluses of 10 percent
or more .
These fragile state economics wiU
have to compe~te for the 25 percent reductions 'lit many federal aid
programs that have been mandated
by Congress.
"Our surplus is $22 million," a
New Jersey legislator said, " and we
face $1 billion in rederal aid reductions in the next three years. We
have not made provisions for that"
" There's no way the economy is
gomg to reverse itself in time," said
a Florida state representative.
"I couldn'tsleep nights if I had my
job in one of the 40 states with less
than a 10 percent surplus,"
remarked a state senator rrom

relalively well-to-do Kansas.
These legislators - and others also fear that the voters' costs consciousness will be redirected toward
Albany and Sacramento and the
other state capitals after
Washington has been squeezed dry.
Many sl&lt;tte and local lawmakers
are understandably worried at the
prospect of being caught between
those demanding cuts in state spending to match those just passed at
the federal level and those expecting
sl&lt;tte governments · to continue
highly valued education, health and
social service programs.
· A Republican state senator from
Ohio must have spoken for many of
the legislators when he said : "The
voters have to see some blood sl&lt;tte workers being laid off parks
and schools and hll!;pitals cl3,;ed .and even then it will be tough."
The state lawmakers are hopin1
that the blood won't be theirs.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
AMERICA N LEA.GUE
EAST
W I.
Prl.

7HI5

7l1JEL A5 A
'ffP?I{Klt£r. .
Jfli71E /JlHI)fN6l//(t A

!i17l(]( PIG ..
\

'''
'

M!IWIIUkt•l'
~ - Nt• w

York

T uronlu

BH ililrWrt•
lktrui t

I
I

WF.'iT
2
2

Cll t C H~II

Houston
x· l .os Anj.leles

GB

750

I

BolihJn
rlt&gt;WI;IIld

I

Cincinnati

-

G(ii

'~

667

'7

667

·~

.33.1

Jl 2

JJJ

P~

.25&lt;1

2

.667

-

St!att!e
1
.667
x..OHkbmd
I
I
.500
'2
Minnesnla
I
1
.500
'2
Kcutsas City
I
2
.333
Cu lifomia
I
2
.11.1
Texas
1
1
2
333
x-Fitsl-htdf di\1sion winner
.
Wl"&lt;h.racbty 's r.amrs
New Yl.lrk 5, Tex~ s 4
"t:alifomiu 4. Seattle I
Ka~.s City 10, Ballinmrc 0. 1st .,:arne
B&lt;lllunure 4, Kansas Ctty J, 2nd t(llllte
Huston 8, Chicago 1
Clevel.Hnd 9. Milw.HukN&gt; 4 '
Toronto 4, Detroit 3

\

Thunday'sC.mea
Chicai(U 1Lamp 3-11 at Boston !Eckersl ey~~
Karv:N~ s
IFht~tagHn

Cily

!Gille

4-4 I

at

Baltimore

at

Ocveland

7-41, I R)

Milwaukee

by Garry Trudeau
NlfR&amp;,, /J5e

•SDillner l-31.

1Lerch

J.-51

Seattlt&gt; 1Parrutt t..'il at

Mill )(1'/ 6eTfR 7NAr;
IJREiilel! I nP &gt;a;
I 71DJ!iHr iOU liP&amp;

Minnesota

New York 1Guidr )·

~31

at Dflroit tPet·

Only t(ames scheduled
Frldly'• GaOMa
Seattle at MiMeJOta, 2.

/

1 n1

Chica11o at Baltllpore, 1nI
Milwaukte at Toronto, 1n I

Kansas Cll)' at CleveLand. 1nl
Boston at Texas. (nl
New Ytrl at Detroit, In I
California' at Oakland, 1n 1
NATIONULEAGVE
EAST
W L Pet. GB
! 0 1.000 New York
.681 , I
2
I
Montreol
2
I
I
.1111
St. Laull
.!!3 2
I
I
a4'1111odolphla
I
2
.33S
2
Pltllllurlh
0 3
.000 3
Olico&amp;o
WEIIT
3/ 0 1.000
AUanta
I

San Diegu

x-r irst-hlllf div1.:~ioo winner

Wnlnnday'•G•m~fi

N~ York 7, Chicago 4, 10 inninto:s
How;to11 .&gt;, Sen Fronci3cu ~
St. Lnui~ II, Philadelphia 3

Mol'\treal 3, Pittsburgh 2
Atlahta. 4, San Diet~o J. 11 inninao:s

l.us An~rle~ B, ·cinclrmali ~
Tbandly't Game•
New York 1Harris 2-11 at

Chicago

cC;nxJill 1-5 1
HOWilon

cWelsh 3--tl

1Knepper

St.l.ouis t Shirley
cCarilon 9-11, 1111

Montnal

&amp;In

Hl

Phib1deJphia

'

4-3 1

1&amp;nder.~oo

cTiant ().(1 \, r nl
Atlll.nll:l r BoJU.ls
tHuoton 7·31. IR)

at

H 1

&amp;-21

at

Diego

at

lAI:I

Watch Frichy's Paper!

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Philadelphia at New Yorit

AUanta at Los

Honest Day In August Sale

BIG FISH - Chad Sinclillr, son
of Mr_and Mrs. Charles Sinclair,
Pomeroy, enjoyed an excellent
fishing trip whlle on vacation
with his parents. He is pictured
with one or the 16 catfish that
were caught. This one measured
over three feet In length.

Aru~eles,

•

Efleclive August ll thru Augu stl7
Annual
Yield

Current

Rate

15.37%
15.80%

Pittsbuq~ h

Only ~tames scheduled
f'rkLiy'1Gimca
Plttsbur~h at Chicago

Sl.LouiJ at Montreal, (nl '
Hooston at San otego, l n 1

knocked out Seaver in the fourth,
handing him only his second loss in
nine decisions but his first since
April 18 to snap a six-game wmning
streak.
Pinch-hitter Jay Johnstone started the rally with a bloop double to
right and Lopes singled him home to
tie the game . Lopes, who had taken
second on an error, scored the g()ahead run on a single by Ken Landreaux, who also had three hits .
Landreaux eventually scored on a
sacrifice fly by Ron Cey .
Lopes then finished the Dodgers'
scoring with his homer to center in
the seventh.
" I can'l let the booing get to me,"
said Lopes. "I have to much pride 1
my ability . I know I'm not domg a s
well as l should, but I'm not loafmK,
I'm giving it my best."
The Dodgers begin a four-game
series tonight at Dodger Stadiwn
against Atlanta with Burt Hooton , 73, opposing the Braves' Tommy
Boggs, 1-10. The Reds were 1dle
today, then begin a weekend scnes
at home against San Fran cisco.

Tom's Stereo Center's

A substanllai 1nterest penally 1S requ1red lor eat1, wrthdre*81

1-101

he was according a standing ovation
and then tipped his cap to the crowd
of 36,494 .
"I'm not bitter," he said. "It just
pushed me harder . I know I can hit.
" But I'm not denying, t!le boos
hurt. But I heard them boo Mike
Schmidt in Philadelphia and Joe
Morgan in Cincinnati , so who am I to
complain?
"After my second at-bat, Reggie
I teammate Reggie Smith l pulled
me aside and told me what I was
going wrong. And Danny ! Coach
Danny Ozark) told me to relax, that
I was an important part of this club.
That made me feel good, to kn.,.
that my peers and my coaches
believe in me. That really helped ."
The Dodgers jwnped out to a :W
lead in the first inning against Cincinnati starter Tom Seaver. But the
Reds quickly got even when George
Foster slanuned a three-run homer
in the third inning , his 15th, on a :W
pitch off Los Angeles starter Bob
Welch.
After the Reds took a 4-3 lead In
the top of the fo urth, the Dodgers

COMING!

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Cash Bonus otter expires August 31, 1981

tAr·

ry 4-51, IR)

MCCOON!

San Franciscu

LOS ANGELES (AP)- As Davey
. Lopes stood at the plate Tuesday
night, boos deseended upon him
from a Dodger Stadium crowd of
almost ·46,000. A puzded Cincinnati
catcher Joe Nolan wondered what it
w11s all about.
" I guess it's my batting average, "
replied Lopes, who sank to .165 after
going hitless in five at-bets.
On Wednesday night, the Los
Angeles second baseman was booed
again when he failed to j!et the ball
out of the infield in his ftrst two plate
appearances.
But the boos turned to cheers after
the top of the fourth inning when the
31&gt;-year-old veteran toolt a hit away
from CinciMati's Dave Collins.
Then, more cbe€n came when
Lopes singled home the tying run in
the bottom of the fourth, singled and
stole a base in the rifth and cracked
a tw()-run homer in ·tile seventh as
the Dodgen posted an 11-5 victory
over the Reds.
Lopes knocked in three of the
Dodgers' runs Wednesday night and
also had three of their ll hits. After
his homer, his fourth of the season,

•

1 nl

roytl .f-.41, ln l

j,

shortstop BUI RUSiell
on a Dave Coneepdon
played out the innlDg
the next inning. I AP

Wailing., s hit
defeats Giants

;:

WASHINGTON JAPI - While two
tele\·ision networks broadcast his
remarks live, President Reagan
stood in the Rose Garden and told
the nation 's striking a1r traffic controllers that they would be fired 1f
they did not return to work within 48
hours.
For dramatic effect, he read a
paragraph from the oath that each
had signed promising not to take
part in a strike. But when the
president's remarks were broadcast
that evening on the television news
shows, he was dismayed to find the
oa th had been left out of the reports
" I didn 't see it played much. "
Reagan reca lled .
From that, Reagan learned a

Page-l

Lopes snaps streak;
Dodgers defeat RedS

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 13,1981

weapons to cope with the
wrote, "Give !bern the means, and
There is a cool savoir faire in our
devastating
ss-20s
deployed
by
the
these
dear friends, that noble Third
boy Reagan, and it is beginning to
Force,
will cut our bloody throats.
Soviet
Union
.
have an impact even abroad. Some
If
Jimmy
Carter
had,
in
!978,
As
people,
they are stronger than we
of us get more impatienl with
followed
the
reconunendation
of
are,
and
they
know it - I mean as inEuropeans than others, and some of
General
Haig
1
and
the
surreptitious
dividual
people
amounting to a
"us" includes many Europeans.
recommendations
of
many
mass.
they
are
stronger.
In the mass
Last fall, vtsiting America, Harold
E
uropean
leaders)
to
deploy
the
they
loathe
us.
At
another
level their
Macmillan said in accents intended
neutron
bombs,
we'd
have
got
at
the
disdain
for
us
is
withering.
At their
to reach all of Europe that he simply
matter
of
reamung
Europe
in
a
most
understanding
or
comcould not understand why the United
more
orderly
way,
with
priority
passionate,
they
neither
hate
or
States should be held responsible for
·
given
to
defensive
weapons,
backed
loathe;
it's
just
that
they
cannot
help
the protection of an area which, in
only then by offensive weapons.
being conscious of a ditrerence that
its totality, is richer than we, and
Ideally
the
chronology
would
have
superior
breeds feel in the presence
more heavily populated. That,
been
•
of
others.
Often they show it most by
however, is a moral judgment.
II
Europe
deploys
neutron
bembs.
their
effort
not to show it. Give these
We need - and if in order to
21
Ru.ssia
removes
or
does
not
superior
breeds
the economic power
remember it it is necessary to tie a
remove
its
S-20s.
If
not,
to
see
us
at
eye
level , and they will
bow around the little finger, do exac31 Europe deploys the Cruise and see right over us . They have be€n
tly that - to remind ourselves that
·seeing throug h us for years." Yes,
Pershing missiles.
however s luggish the Europeans are
Reagan has sa1d to his European
but the latent stength of America,
in the matter of their own defense,
brothers:
Genglemen,
we
shall
see
which
bailed Europe out twice in this
the United States i• far worse off 1l
that
we
have
the
arms.
Although
century
, is ready to do it again. But
to
drastically worse off - with an
NATO
has
formal
authority
to
deloy
this
lime,
Deo Valente, by avoiding
Europe satellized by the Sov1et
al
ready
war,
rather
than merely winning il.
weapons,
and
indeed
has
Union than with a free Europe. One
deployed
tactical
nuclear
weapons,
end 1satellizatJOill to the other I inwe recognize that you have a veto
dependence 1is, however, an arc, not
power over what weapons squat
a di chotomy; and R~agan's position
down
on your own soil. But the
on the neutron bomb brilliantly
question
before the house is whether
recognizes this.
the
Soviet
Union, through you, has a
The unique nature of the neutron
WASHINGTON A massive
veto
weapon
over which weapons the
bomb is that for a ll intents and purstudy
of
book
"censorship"
in the
United States can manufacture,
poses it 1s a weapon only useful in
public
schools,
released
July
31.
coneven weapons which are only useful
E urope . Sure, the Afghans could
tained
much
useful
infonnation
and
tu you.
have used 11 w1lh s mgular effect. But
some
alanning
information,
but
it
Within the memory of all
primarily it is lhe natural weapon
had
a
threshold
Oaw
:
The
stud
y
Americans over 50, Winston Churfor Europe . Natura l because it is ut·
chil l asked America to give Great never tells us what "censorship" is.
terly inoffensive, non-provoc(Jtive A contemporary definition of the
Britam the tools , and she would do
because it 1s defens ive in nature.
the job. We are taking the ancient te rm truly would have be€n
The Enhanced Radiation Warhead .
pretaution of moving so that our ar· helpful Offi cial censors have be€n
positioned m artillery instrwncnts.
senal will be ready when you call on at work since Sparta was in power.
launches less than 100 nules and kills
il. If in !935 we had had, im- Roman censors sought to protect the
only personnel , preferably those
mediately available to France and morals of the empire. In our time
driving huge Russian tanks lwn·
Great Britain, 500 bombers and I ,000 and country, stale movie censors
bering over European sot!.
fi ghters, you could have stopped had been snipping away until
Now Reagan 's shrewd step lay
Hitler by raising one index finger Maryland's board gave up the ghost
precisely in not talking about any
pointed warningly at Berlin. When of the praclice a few months ago. We
deadline for pustl!Oning these
the tune comes to deploy the neutron still have a raft of sta le and federal
warheads _ on the matter of theater
weapons you will not need to wait for laws prohibiting traffic Ill "obnuclear forces. the agenda i.s
them over what could prove a scene" mate rials.
already crowded. By the end of 191!3
It's a prejorat1ve word, this "cenwe arc su pposed to hcwe Pershing critical period.
sorship
." The term conjures up the
Europe's final response ? There
and Cruise missiles in Western
most
unpleasant
images. We enare grounds, great grounds for
EuropC' of far greater consequence
vis
ion
the
public
official,
gaunt and
pessimism. In 1959, writing from
than the neutron bomb in terms of
blue-nosed
,
his
ma
tches,
razor
Europe. Whrttaker Chambers 1the
strategic equ11ibriun1 . The former
blades
and
rubber
stamps
at
hand;
m ust eloquent prophet of our time I
&lt;Ht'
des igned as counterforce
his purpose is to burn. excise or condemn material that offends hun . Or
we see the village yahoos, stunning
a school board meeting; their ob--

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohjo

Tournament sel

ASA

The rirst annual Meigs Inn
men's slowpltch softball tournament, classes C and D, will be
held Aug. 22 and 23 at the Middleport
Community Park. Entry fee Is $70
and two red dot softballs_ There will
be first, second and third place sponsor trophies and Individual trophies
ror the top two teams. There wW
also be a · sportsmailsblp team
vaphy. '
Tho6e wishing more Information
should contact Bob J.ohnaon at 992-

2866.
•

~ANDLOO.N
ACC!Xiltlll!'lkUtCIIO 1100.000 ~ ,:SliC

216 W. MAIN, POMEROY
M·W 9-4; Thurs. &amp; Sat. 9-Noon ; Fri. 9-6

' '

.

'\

'

"'

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Thursday, August 13,

Middleport, Ohio
t,"' ,•- ~

Rudi blasts two homeruns zn 8-1 romp over White~

portunity ve ry much in ret·ent years.

After joming California as a free
agent m November 1976. Rudt was
plagued by injunes and slumps. He
made 11 mto only 64 games in his fir·
st season as an Angel, batting .264,
his lowest average as a full-time
major leaguer .

In 1978. Rudi knocked in 79 runs
but hit only 25G in 133 games, then
appeared in just 90 contesl.'i in '79
and 104 games 1 .2371 in '80
The Angels. fed up wtlh Rudi 's
decltning etverage each season. dealt

him to Boston last winter , but it's

been more of the sa me for the outfielde r this year. He's batting a

miniscule 169 in 22 games.
That made Wednesday's per·
formance even m ore gratifying .

.. He's an old pro who can help us a

lot down the stretch," said Boston
Manager Ralph Houk. " He had
trouble with his legs at the start of
the year, but now he's in excellent
shape. He's been through U1e
pressure a lot during his career and
I just hope he stays hot."
Also hot Wednesday night for
Boston were Jim Rice, Dwight
Evans, Dave Stapleton and Gary
Allenson. all of whom homered. The
six hom ers set an American League

high fur the year.
Bobby Ojeda, called up from
Pawtucket of the Internationa l

c innalt

Bengals'

de fens ive

co-

ordinator Hank Butluug h is coaching
from a golf cart.
" [ don 't hke, but 1'111 happy tube
back." he sa id.
It might be cozy havtng lhc leg
propped up on a crutch and knee
nestled softl y on a pillow. but it' s not
Butlough 's style .
The golf

ca rt wa s

1ssued to

Bulluugh when he returned to the
practice fi eld Wednesday so he
won't put wei ght on the leg.
Bullough entered Christ Hospttal
in Cincinnati Aug. 2 with a feve r of
104 degrees ca used by an infecti on in
his nght knee . The knee ha d been a
problem for him since it was
operated on in 1958. h1 s last year as a
player.
The 47-year-old master of the
Bengals 3-4 defense took some of his
lineback ers and drove off to the side
for individua l ins tructi on from time
to

time

during

the

workout.

Throughout most of the team drill .
he shouted instructiOns from behi nd
the line of scrimmago .
But coaching from a golf cart "
better than coaching from a hosp1ta l
bed. which is what Bullough had to
do dunng last Saturday's preseason
opener agamst the Bucs in Tampa .
He called Dick Modzelewski and
D1ck LeBea u, the other defensive
coaches. before the game. at halftime and after the game

Yankees 5, Rangers C
Graig Netues' tw&lt;&gt;-run homer and
a two-run d_ouble by Dave Winfield
keyed the Yankee attack.
'
" I looked at the calendar, and it
said August, so l knew it was time to
get going," said Nettles, who sixthinning blast lifted New York from a
4-3 deficit. Nettles has two homers in
the Yankees' three post-strike
games, with both shots providing the

in early June. The second baseman

winning runs .

hardly missed any games. even

Indians 9, Brewers 4
Rick Manning drove in three runs
and scored three with a home run
and two singles as the Indians snapped a seven-game losing streak.

Leag ue Sunday, sca ttered seven

though the cast was not removed un-

hits. in cluding three by Ron
LeFlore, in his 1981 major league
debut. He had a 1-1 record with
Boston last year.

til three weeks ago. Grich did not
pick up a bat until the ftrst workout
after the baseball strike ended.

Rice a lso threw out two runners

for h1s sixth and seve nth assists of
the year.
Elsew here, it was California 4,
Sea ttle I: the New York Yankees 5.
Texas 4; Clevela nd 9, Milwaukee 4;
Mmnesota 4. Oakland 3; Toronto 4,
Detroit 3. and. in a doubleheader ,
Kansas Ctty bombed Baltimore]()..(],
then was edged by the Orioles 4-3 m
the second game.
Angels 4. Mariners 1
Bobby Gnch, who signed wtlh
Cali forma as a free agent a week after Rudi in 1976, a lso pounded a pa ir
of homers Wednesday as the Angels
down Seattle 4-1 for thetr fi rst victo ry since the resumption of play
follo wing the 59-day layoff. which included the5(kla y str ike.

Bullough coaches from cart
WILMINGTON 1 AP I - Fo llow ing
a liJ.-day stay in the hospital. Cin-

Grieb has !aired much better than
Rudi with the free agent-laden
Angels. In 1979, when California won
the West Di.,sion - and Rudl was
stumbling through a .242 campaign.
with 11 homers and 61 RBI - Grich
had a spectacular season, batting
.294, with 30 homers and 101 RBI.
This year, as Rudi once more has
wallowed on the bench, Grich has hit
.287 with eight home runs. He was
one of the beneficiaries of the strike
after breaking a bone in his left hand

" [ talked to the defensive coac hes
Cit halillme . There were a couple of
thmgs I saw there on instant replay.
" !don't thmk it had an)1hJn g to do
with our winning . It wa s probably
more fo r my benefit th a n
anybody's," he sa id.
From his hosp ita l bed. Bullough
watched ft hns of the game 20'times.
"There was nothi ng else to do."
l.mebacker Reggie Wtlliams sa id
the tea Ill missed Bullough.
"Naturally yo u're going to miss

the a uthor of the defense. You
always need that final authon ty m
terms of fin alizing specifics . It
probably hurt lhe young players
more than it dirl the olde r ones,
becau.s~ Hcmk's a great teacher,"
Williams saHI.

His three-run blast in the top of
II th won the game for California.

in Work and
Western Wear

~;.

":;

l'. •

.

the cou rse record of 2().-under-par -

He knows that many people e&lt;pecl
him to do well, if not win, this year's
$300,1100 Sammy Davis Jr.-Greater
Hartford Open.
Last yeM, Simons nearly won the
$54.1100 top pme, but lost a six-hole
playoff to Howard Twitty on the
6.534-yard Wethersfield Count ry

set by Billy Caspe r in 1973 and tied
three years ago by Rod Funseth could be in jeopardy this year.
This season's best score for 72
holes was Ha le Irwin 's 23-under-par
that ca ptured the Hawaiian Open.
·· It's in better condition than last
year." Simons said of th e course.
.. The scores are going to be better
than last yea r.
Twitty . who won with an 18-under
266, agreed that "the course is in
gou rgeous shape." predicti ng that
"somebO&lt;ly is going t~ shoot 18undcr or better .··
" The folk s ore going to see a lot of
birdies ... s:~id Hubert Green. who
lost in a 1975 playoff for the GHO
ti tl e to Don Bies. Green said the

Cl ub cou rse.

The person. however . applytng the
most pressure w the 72-hole tour-

nament that was to begin today was
Si mons hlrnst•lf.

"' I havl' a tendency to say yes that
I"rn pressunng myself." Si mons
s&lt;oud. ·· It would be unrea lis tie not

because of the course's lack of
length.
The tournament has failed to attract the name golfers. Among those
oosent, in addition to such stars as
Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and
Torn Wal.'ion, are Larry Nelson, Ray

Simons ana otner golfers indicated

WETHERSFIELD, Con n. t API J i.m Simons is feeling the pressure.

. . .

Mrs. Tim Wilkinson, Shawn and
Kevin, Colwnbus, and Johnny Wells,
Okeechobee, Fla., spent a week with
Mrs. Fannie Wells and other
relatives .
Debra Bryant, Mlle Barber and
Kent Varney attended the Ted
Nugent concert at Charleston Civic
Center on Wednesday evening.
Mrs. Ada VanMeter and Mrs.
Mike Evans and so119 spent a week
with Mrs. Geraldine Northway,
Grand Rapids, Mich., and attended
the wedding of Mr. and Mrs. John
Sage. Mrs. Sage is the former Kathy
Bissell, a prior resident of this community.
Leota Birch attended the annual
Singer reunion at Royal Oak Park on
Sunday.
Bob Ritchie, Belpre , Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Durst, Pomeroy, and Jim Ritchie, Minersville, called on Mr. and
Mrs . Robert _Durst recently .
Janet Middleswart, Sam Perso~

Uleft;
:::i:.'· ·

Floyd, Lee Trevino and 1979 victor
Jerry McGee.
Only two of the top 10 m~ey winners on the PGA list were at the
suburban Hartford course. They
were Craig Stadler, eighth on the
list. and Curtis Strange, 111111.

Addi ng to Simons' conce rn was

Mr . and Mrs . William Russell of
Minersville were recent visitors of
Mrs. Bertha Russell and Earl
Russell.
Iva Johnson spent a recent
weekend with Mrs. J. R. Murphy
am;! Peggy.
Mrs . Brenda Haggy, Stephanie
Brad and Mrs. Robert Russell were
recent visitors of Mr . and Mrs. Tom
:summerfield, Crystal, Wendy and
:candi of Medina.

r--------------------------'-

was nursing bee stin g on his right

hand that ca used some swellmg and
il'fl him with a grip " that doe"1't
feel right."
" Mentatly , l'd feel better if I made
the 1 PGA I c~t." he said.

-MITCHELL
Across From Posl Office
Gallipolis

Mr. and Mrs. Haley Johnson,
Tammy and Terry, recently spent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Watkins and family, Massillon and
Mr. and Mrs. John Slack and family
of Sandyville, Ohio.
Mrs. Margaret Boyce of Columbus
spent a few days with Mrs. Bertha
Russell and Earl Russell.

Enioys picnic
MASON - The Mason Historical
Society enjoyed a picnic on Saturday
at the Lewis historic home on Brown
St.
Attending we re Rev . and Mrs.
Kenneth Watkins, Mr. and Mrs . Lee
Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Barton
and grandsons, Mike and Kevin Bar·
tun, Mrs. Joyce Carson, Mr . and
Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Sarah
Spencer, Mrs. Hazel Smith, Mrs.
Alma Marshall and Mrs . Bessie
Ingels.

Announce birth
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Van Vranken,
:Memphis, Tenn. are announcing the
-birth of a son, Andrew Scott, born on
July 24. He weighed nine pounds, six
·qunces.
· Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
iiarvey Van Vranken, Pomeroy;
:and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Oxley,
·A thens. Mrs. Grace Whaley,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. John
Reuter, Clifton, N.J. and Mr. and
:Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken, Asbury
-Park, N.J. are the paternal greatgra ndparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Van Vranken have
two other children, Amy , four and
Clay, three.

FAIR BOOTH
SUPPLIES

CORRUGATED PAPER
&amp;TRIM
STREAMERS
POSTER BOARD
CONSTRUCTION PAPER
ALL IN MOST COLORS

VILLAGE PHARMACY
Ph. 992-6669
N . 2ndAve .

Senior Citizens Day will be observed at the Meigs County Fa1r on
Thursday.
Tickets for the fair are available
at the Senior Citizens Center for $1.
each and must be purchased in advance. They will not be availabl e at
the gate for that price.
Again this year sack lunches will
be prepared by the nutrition
program. Those desiring a sack lunch to be delivered to the tent on
Senior CitiZens Day are asked to advise the Center.
A variety of homemade craft
items will be on sa le at the tent
during fair week . On Senior Citizens
Day special entertainment is planned.

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wessell of
New Hartford, Iowa and their
daughter and her husband, Prof. and
Mrs. Bob Lodge, Urbana, Ill. were
house guests of Mrs. Purley Karr for
several days last week. While here
they visited friends and relatives in
the Bend area. Mr. and Mrs. Wessell
are neighbors of Mrs. Karr while she
spends her winter months in Bradenton, Fla. He will celebrate his 91st
birthday on J Aug. 16.

f~'ub l1.~heJ t" l"t•ry afh'ntwu. Mumlay thr oug h
f nde~y . II I f uurl St r t'l'l . tl}' tlw Oh1o \! allt!y
Put:Jii.'&gt;htu~ Cnmpany . Mui!JIIll'tliil , ill(" ..
l'&lt;~lll\'f""~ . Oluu 45 169 . 992-21~ ~Tund tlds."

p&lt;11 d ;1l PuJta·ru ~. Ohw

Mt'trrt&gt;o.•r Tht· A.,~uo.·r;Jted l 'n · ~:-.. lnlantl Dal 1_\ f'rf't.~ A~ -~ ·~ · 1 1 1 \I&lt;HJ il ll l \ till" .'\ i i lt'llrall
!'Ot·~o~ -' lhl~r PuL!J.\Ill"r" 1b~o •
A tht•rtt'&gt;Hl~

Iilli&lt; IIl,

Rt• p rt•~t'll\&lt;Jllvt.'.

Na \Uijll:ll

Hr&lt;~nh;u n

.'lit•w s p;&lt;pt.•r S;,k., _ 7:\J Tlunl t'l t·uue . Nt·w
\'ork . :--;, ..,.,. Vork 100\ i

Dr. Margie Lawsdn, Racine dentist, and Dr. Wilina Mansfield
Pomeroy physician, were speaker~
at the final session of cancer
education classes held at the Senior
Citizens Center Tuesday.
Lawson showed a film on oral cancer noting that the leading causes
are smoking, hot fooda and
beverages, alcohol, and too much
sun light on the lips. She listed the
symptoms as a sore that doesn't
heal , change in the color of mouth
tissue ~ and any chronic irritation. It
was noted that oral cancer strikes
approximately 24,000 persons in the
United States each year and causes
about 8,000 deaths . The disease is
most frequently found in men over
40 years of age and the incidence is
three times higher in males than in
females.
In her talk on colo-recta l cancer
Mansfield noted the disease h1ts me~

. SCOUT JUDGING - Danny Wood, front, and Bob Workman
JUdged the 122 crafts which will be displayed at the Meigs County Fair
next week.

.

and women about equally with 6,000
cases expected in Ohio this year
resulting in approximately 2,900
deaths. She said that about 90 percent of those with colo-rectal cancer
will be over 40 .
Mansfield emphasized the importance of ea rl y diagnosis
suggesting that those over 50 have a
quaiac slide test once a year to
check blood in the stool, a digital
rectal examination once a year
which detects approxiiJiately 15 percent of all col-rectal cancers, and a
proctosigmoidoscopy examination
which can detect about two-thirds of
all colo-rectal cancer.
Mansfield also showed a film with
her presentati on. Both speakers
were introduced by Pat Arnold,
public education cha irman for the
Meigs Unit of the American Cancer
Association.

Church plans evening service

Judges release results

the St. Luke' s United Methodb1
Church Choir of Hamsville.
Rogerson is the Ritchie County Coordinator of Title l and is the
organist and choir director for the
St. Luke's Umted Methodist Choir.
Mrs. Rogerson is the daughter of
Rev. and Mrs . Kenneth G. Watkins
of Clifton a nd they invite all persons
of the area to share this servi ce.

of Scout fair crafts
The results of the judging of the
Chester Cub and Webelo Pack 235
and Boy Scout Troop 235 crafts for
display at the Meigs County Fair
have been announCed.
The 122 crafts were judged by
Danny Wood and Bob Workman .

Senior Citizens
Day at Fair

Middleport, OH.

tUSPS 145-960t
A U i\"is io n of Multimt•dia . lnt•.

,,. ,.., ld~t·

and Kathleen Ward visited Mrs. Neil
Middleswart on Friday.
Mrs . Clyde Close, Beverly, Oh.,
visited her mot~ . Mrs. Audrey
Brewer and David o.. Friday.
Sammy Cozart, Colwnbus, and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith and
family, Reedaville, visited Mrs .
Goldie Clendenin on Sunday.
Mrs. Gladys Bryant and Kenneth,
Dunbar, W. Va., and Mrs. Myrtle
Lewis and Brenda, Buffalo, W. Va.,
were guests of Mr. ;1nd Mrs. Bill
Bryant and family last week.
Mrs. Kathryn Rollins, Letart, W.
Va., and John Euler, Cottageville,
W. Va., visited their cousins, Sidney
Durst and Freda Carpenter on Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Penny Middleswart and
children and Mrs. Lois Barnhart
called on Mrs. Jackie Hendricks and
1'!lrs. Faye Davis, Washington, W.
Va., and'' 'Mrs. Regina Osburn,
Belpre, on Thursday.

WolfPen News Notes

to...
But the 31-year-old gol fer was
asked Wednesday whether he felt he
wu uld bt• able to match the opening- greens were smooth and fast. Putround score tle shot last ye ar, a 9- tmg has been the key to victory in
under·par 62 that gave htm the early the tournament in rece nt years
lea d.
" I th mk that I'd be unrealistic" to 'lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~tl
hope to repeat such an opening sror e I
Sununs sa id. expla ming that "good
ro unds JUst ha ppen."
tha t he failed to make the cu t at last
week's PGA champi onsh ip, which
he blamed on a long layoff. He also

A rea doctors speak at
cancer education class

Stiversville News Notes

dered intenu-1 A . . ( W
tter
ahead of Garcia. --~ Jaya
second basellllll I
I bunted
home a run,
Wftied a
sacrificefly.
The loss waa till~· April
29 for Detroit startlr.'JillfMorris
who had an ~$ t · /~
sveak halted.
•. •..• '-~ .
Royals lt-3, N tar H
Frank White's (1111114' ..... homer
and Hal McRae's IIWt . .. paced
the Royals' will, tha.- ttillftl hitter Terry Crowley'~ ...... fly
won the nightcap for ........ .
Rick Dempsey antfli:INie Murray
homered in the second !!*De for
Ba ltimore. Amos Otis and Willie
Wilson countered for the~1

Simons feels pressure in tournament

Red ribbons were awarded to
Mike Hoffman, four ; Rod Newsome
and Jason Ridenour, three; Billie
Johnson, two; Scott Justis. three;
Tom Hunter: five ; C King, three;
Tim Tom Michaels, one; J eff Hawk,
two; S. Laudermill, one ; Brian
Bailey, seven; · Floyd Ridenour,
three; Eric Sim, five; Del Laudermilt , four : Andy Hawk, three; Mike
Sim, two ; Jay Reynolds, one; Scott
Starcher, one; and Te~ry Newsome,

lurl

C. D. X.

Sl• ii[llw l. Ill

······Y.'
$845 '

.

SL;RSCRIPTION

TURI\~~

two.

BUILDER®
g r8 du~IIV

Original Pomeroy Bend CB Club meets

RAT t:~

o&gt;~e•

ao·

Half·Price! CompaCt"·
Car Stereo Casseue Player

Sull.~ · nbo.·rs 11"1 t.l t·.~t rLil ~ to pii} tht· t"i:lrrtt•r
I!M .&gt; rt"lllll 111 ; t r ~\'&lt;1111"1' d rrt•d tu Tht• Oat!)'
S..•ntrno ·l n 11 a I. ti " f 1:? rnullt/ I I J,; o '&gt;t~ Crnlt l
~tvt • n

The Original Pomeroy-Bend C. B.
Club met at the home of Mr . and
Mrs. Eddie Wells Wednesday night
for a weiner roast and potluck dinner with 14 members attending.
Plans were made for the September 12 meeting which will be ·
held at the home of Mr . and Mrs .

$-1 ~O r
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,·.trrr•·r t•adr rrwn tlr

c1 a 1 b ien(!

~~ · '&gt; llh'&gt;t 1"1111111 11.' IJ} 111&lt;111 pi'rllillll'i l lll l n\\1\:'-,
i.' oll 'i td.J IJk

gril$5

Robert Hardin in Syracuse and a
camporee to be held Sept. 18, 19 and
20 at the campsite of Mr . and Mr.
Jame!o' Buchannon in West Virginia .
The anniversary dinner of the club
will be held on Oct. II at lhe
Downund er
Res taurant
in
Gallipolis, I p.m.

48-lnch WORKSHOP LIGHT
Co mes comp letely assembled and wired.
Wilh hanging chain . Opetala• wilh two 40 ·

WHITE

rwo

(Oats
ovts rd&lt;'

~ 1 LIIl \ li

:t M"11lh

.and

Announce birth
Snodgrass
Jim and Lois Snodgrass, Rutland,
aiUJOunce the birth of a son, Kevin
Michael on July 29, at Holzer
Medical Center. The infant weighed
sixpounda.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Lawrence Rupe,
Langsville. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. James Snodgrass,
Racine .
Paternal
great-

( IU l!iidt I )hiu

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WI'~ I \' ir~ i ni&lt;~
$11 I)(}

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WHY IN THE WORLD
WOULD ANYONE GO
TO A STEAK HOUSE
FOR BREAKFAST?
When tt's a Bob Evans Steak House
that s rea son enough 1
Beca use at Bob Evans we &gt;erve great tas! 1ng
farm breakfasts you can· t get an)I'Nt1ere else
Fresh, fluitv ho t bt SC ultS w 1th our own
sausage gravy
f rted mush made from wholesome c or nmeal
and se rved wtth dei1 C10us warm syrup
How about an o rder o f del tc 1ou s farm fresl1
Bob Evans' Sausage wtth you lldrne 1: eggs
hot c akes, waff les. french toa st
'
An d everythtng ts served w 1th all I he good
co ff ee you can drrnk
Of course, tf you ·ve got the appet1te you can
dlways order steak and eggs
II you want a real hearty old-fash ioned farm
b reakfast come to the Steak Ho u se It s so good
you 'll want to stay for lunch and dtnner

~evtAMS®
SYIAKHOUSE
EASTERN AVE NUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•fl51de'

ef"I.Jm €'1
Alfract."e

surfa ce won' t blr~ r ~r crare
crack or p('('l Sa v !.'; vou r,m p ,\nd

$:1: :JO
$ 1- .)0
$].I ll()
Halt-~

af"ld

VINYL SIDING
GAF VANQUARD

b a ~€'d

wt&gt;olc-

MA II . SI:B.'if' RII'TIO NS
Ohio a nd Wt&gt;~l \ 'irl':illia
J

ol du ra ble

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grandmothers
areAlbert
Mrs. Snodgrass,
Ona Ariy,
Racine, and Mrs.
Branchland, W.Va .
The couple are also the parents of
Jamie, age seven and Usa, age 19
months.

Radio
Cut 41%
Bv Reotlatlc

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Entertains Sunday
An "entertaining companion" that goes
wHh you anywhere. Slide-rule tuning, sidemounted controls , 2W' speaker. Wl1h earphone, wrist strap. 112-635 Bltl..-yutr•

Mn. Roy Snowden of Rutland enwith a dinner Sunday in
h~ of ,h er daughters, Phyllis Simpkins and Joan May , and her son,
Caroll, whose birthdays are the 7th,
9th lind 11th of August.
te~ined

Drive Safely With CB Thll
Summer and Save 43% · ·

Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Caroll Snowden and daughter, Annette of Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Simpkins, Charla, Melissa
and Chuck, Columbus; Mr. and Mn .
Gregory McCall, Athens; .Homer
Parker, Suzy Carpenter and son,
Jay,-and Mr. and Mrs. ·Bruce May,
Rutlllnd.

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The decorated cakes for the occaalqn were made by her ~
daU!Ihteri, Debra McCall and

UlbOfeiOflet· ltw::

Charla "'Slmptills.

May
received 1 long distance Clll in tile
atter.noon from her sen, l\ll~ha~1. 1
~ eilgloeer for the Tenneco
Oil co. In Llfliyelle, Ll.

~C"I !980808EVANS ~ARM f OOD'-. li\I L

Mrs.

money on

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..

The Daih Sentinel

MM; I.f-:t "OI'\"

In Middleport

a 17-hit Cleveland barrage and Len
Barker struck out five and didn 't
walk a batter in eight innings.
Twins 4, A's 3
Minnesota rallied from a' M hole
with seventh-inning RBI singles by
Hosken Powell and Mickey Hatcher
providing the tying and winning
runs. The Twins trailed 3-2 before
bunching five si ngles . against
reliever Bob Owchinko, l-2, in the
seventh.
Wayne Gross hit his sixth homer
for Oakland .
Blue Jays 4, Tigers 3
Toronto's Damaso Garcia spoiled
the strategy of Tigers Manager
Sparky ,Anderson, who twice or-

I

Visitors here

IIIIo• Yt•ar

Dan's
Boot Shop

• Nts to
MIJ!e l:fllrgrove added four

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Meigs correspondence

•

By Associated Press
It's been a long time since Joe
Rudi was a hero. Wednesday night,
he proved he hadn't forgotten how.
The ll-year veteran outfielder
belted a pair of home runs Wednesday in leading a stx-homer blitz
by the Boston Red Sox in an 8-1 romp
over the Chicago While Sox. Being in
the spotlight again felt good to Rudi ,
a star with the World Champion
Oakland A's in 1972 through '74, but
something of a bus! since then.
"[ feel as good as ever, just
great, " said Rudi, who will be 35
next month . " I can hit as well as I
ever did. I just need the opportunity
to play."
Rudi hasn't gotten that op-

m1

•3•9

END OF SEASON CLEARANCE

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.I

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...

�.

Thursday, August 13,1981

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

I
6

II
A

R

,. . ...

.•.
')' :

Your e ,.,.
' ,..
Libraries
L

L ,.o"&lt;•o'
~

,,

•I

R
A

R

by Ellen Bell
Ubrarlan
Are you all set for the Meigs
County Fair? The OVAL bookmobileis.
The bookmobile, which serves
Meigs County under a contract
with your libraries, will be at the
Fair on Wednesday ·and Friday.
Bob Pickett and Louise Brewer
will be on hand from 9 in the morning till 9 at night. They'll have a
contest , movies, music, monsters, and air conditioning.
This year's contest is pretty
much the same as last year's guess how many books are on the
bookmobile. If you remember
last year's answer, you're ahead.
But keep in mind that there may
be more paperbacks this year.
There will be four contest
categories: under 6 years old. 7 to
12, 13 to 18 and over 18. The winner 10 each category will receive
a brand new paperback book.
Winners may choose to receive
the books on the bookmobile or by
mail. Na turally, the contest is atr
solutely free - but you must
rome on board before you can
make your guess.

-

to be staged on Wednesay and Friday of ned week.
Deadline for entering arrangements Is Friday at 4 p.m.
All entries are to be made in the Meigs County Fair
board office by 4 p.m. where " unloading tickets" wiU
be availa ble for exhibitors.

Mrs. Janet Bolin. the general chairma n rur the shows

Shade Valley Council hears Rice
John Rtce, Meigs County Extension agent , ta lk ed on t he importance of soil testi ng at the recent
rne~ting

when mulching with sawdust.

The spea ker. introduced by sheila
CurtiS , noted tha t sa wdust from

of the Shade Valley Council

wal nu t logs ma y even stunt growth

of l' lora l Arts held HI the home of
!\Irs. Alice Thompson.
Ri ce sa1d that sod should be tested

of plants because of the tox1c
ma teria l.

every three yea rs to mea s ure the
soil ability and to deterrnine nutrient
elemelll'i which arc needed fo r good

plant growth.
changes

a~ ·

Questioned about wood

ashes dumped on garden so il , Rice
said that whether it is helpful or harmful depends on the type of wood .
He discussed the lime, mtrogen and

He noted that soil

a result of leechmg .

erosion, and t he addition uf fertilizer. manure or compost. Rice
discussed trace elements in the soil
such as iron, cooper and zinc aml
warn ed against nitrogen dif1cency

Racine,

and the new OhiO project. " GROW"

A goal of 30 by the end of the year
was set for attendance when the

l...('wis gave out Meigs County Fair

material
ticipa tion.

For r oll call members named their
favorit e perennia l. Renee Stone was
welcomed as a new member. Donna

stra tion on hyd raculture by Mrs.

encouraged

par-

Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Pat Holter following a demon-

confe r e nce expenses of Mrs. Mck

dedicatio n" using " In Everything

Give Thanks" with scripture from
First Chronicles.
Attending the picnic besides those
named were Shirley Coleman,
Freda Edwards, Lil lia n Demoskey,
Betty Denny, Sarah Owen. Eva Hartl ey, Helen Bodimer, Gwinnie White.
Beulah White. Texanna Well .
Elizabeth Searles, Freda Hood, and
guests, Mary Beth Brewer, Kelly
and Jared Douglas, Amber Well .
and Keith Darst.

the Middl eport F trst Ra pl1 st Church
held at tht· hnme of Mrs . Clarabt•llr
Riley
Mary Ann McClung, AI wilda Wt&gt;r·

Mrs

was

planned

and

new

Jun e Kloes .

Kines

had

the

precedinj; the picni c.

prayer

Devotions

by Clarabe lle Riley we re on
lhe theme "Let 's Practice What We
Preach" with scripture from
Romans. M1ss l-lall reported on
white cross and diStribut ed quotas to
given

ner , Cathy Ri ggs and Katheryn \1l•tzger atte nded the confe re nce a nd
gave repo rt_.; a t the llleeting Rhoda

Hall noted that the new state pr&lt;&gt;Jerl&lt;i prov ide for !2&gt;00 for a tramtng
fund for Oht o BaptiSt Women, $2500
for a development fund. $1. 000 for
the Ohi o Baptist Fe ll owship Guild,
and $1.000 for an Esther Byu

LEE JEANS

FOR YOUR
BACK TO SCHOOL

lWO'S CO.

BURLINGTON TUBE SOCKS
IN YOUR SCHOOL COLORS!

Service Sunday

Thompson.

Clung.
A dish towel shower for the church
program books werr distributed by

SOUTHEAST OHIO Junior
Miss. Inc., invites all Meigs County high school senior girls to informal get-together. 2 p.m. Sunday at Meigs Inn .

~V~e~n~oy;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;~

by Betty Dean and Janet Koblentz.
Jackie Frost discussed the 198!-82
yeabook schedule and Addalou

phos phonc acid content a nd recom-

k1tc hen

Darwin,

I

SUNDAY
REUNION of John and Johanna
Bailey descendants, Sunday. Twin
· City Shrine Park, Racine. Basket
dinner at noon.

Ohlinger, Roge r Alkire, Judi
Grogan. The closing prayer w•s by

Koinoniaof Christ
Class met
of recently
the Pomeroy
Church
at the 1
home of .Joan and Dano King.
King presided at the meeting with
Annabelle Davidson g;ving the
secretary 's report and Cha ddine
Alkire, the trreasurer's report.
Games were played and refreshments served. Next meeting will be
at the church with Craig Venoy as
the host. Peggy Murphy was a
guest. Others attending were Naomi

displayed along with rose spec imens

mended that gardeners applymg
large amou nt of ash, sample test
their soil every two years

or God Rene ws Oh1o Women, were
g1ven at the annual picni c of the lJ
H. Sanborn Miss ionary Society of

Syracuse ,

•••••

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37. White Shrine ·
of Jerusalem. 8 p.m. Friday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Potluck
refrestunents will be served. Practice for ceremonial will be held Monday at 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
ICE CREAM Social, 4 p.m. with
songfest at 7 p.rn. at the Cheshire
United Methodist Church, Saturday.
heirs of Christ, Maranatha Singers.
and Chuck McPherson to be
featured. Public welcome.

Koinonia Class meets with Kings

There will be a spec ial one night
service at 7 p.m. this Sunday, Aug.
16, at Rutland Church of the
Nazarene. Featured will be the
Hallelujah Holy Landers, Rev. a nd
Mrs. George Dtxon and Rev. a nd
Mrs. Bill Crane. They will present
the Holyland in song, elecric
Hawaiian guitar, trwnpet, sax and
organ. There will be many original
songs. Also there will be a gospel
message. The public is invited . .

Sanborn Society hears report on GROW
He purls on the Women· s Confe rence held at r ;ra nv!l le recently

,.

'\II•"'.

NEEDS AT

Jean Sm1th was a guest. Mrs. Thompson dis played severa l varieties of
lily blooms and told how the bulbs
An
s hou ld be ca red for .
arrangement of summer flowers
made by Mrs. Melanie Stethem was

and

. _..~ \ ':1

Harrisonville, New Lima Road,
Long Bottom, Baum Addition,
Riggscrest Addition. or Keno, be
sure to stop at the bookmobile to
pick up the new schedules.
Remember that the bookmobile is a service provided for
you by your libraries. We are aU
working together to give you the
infonnation and fun you want,
when you want it. Let your
libraries. including the bookmobile, know you care. Stop and
say " Hi! " to Bob and Louise on
Wednesday and Friday at the
Me1gs County Fair.

The movies and their sh!)w

FAIR FLOWER SHOW
Four-foot-high noor
arrangements and summer door decorations are
among the ne"· designs included in this year's Meigs
County Fair flower shows. The two arc shown here by

THURSDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453 F&amp;AM
Thursday at 8 p.m. at lodge m
Chester.
JACKS REUNION Sunday at
Rutland American Legion Hall. All
relatives and friends mvited to attend .
MEIGS MARAUDER Band
Boosters meeting at Rock
Springs Fairgrounds, l p.m.
Thursday for cleaning fair booth;
all members asked to attend and
take buckets and cleaning rags.

{'l·~"f

couple of exhi bits or a good way
for the whole family to get out of
the heat and enjoy something
together.
The music will be Margaret
Newnan's wonderful calliope
music, which she taped a few
years agD, and " Box Car Willy,"
the new Willy Nelson tape. Bob
assures me that he and Louise
will gladly play any tape you
bring as long as it Is safe for the
conservative listener.
The monsters are part of the
Swnmer Reading Club, which
has been going on all summer.
Children (and grownups) are invited to Make a Monster on the
bookmobile. You may take your
monster home when you're done
or ask Bob if it can go on display.
If you live in or near Carpenter,
Dexter, Danville, Rutland, Portla nd. Success Road. Reedsville,
Tuppers Plains, Letart Falls,

limes will be posted oul&lt;iide the
bookmobtle, which will be parked
near the animal shelter. As you
pass the bookmobile on your way
from the parking lot, look to see
what times the shows start. Then
come back in time to see the films
of your choice. This could be a
great place for a tired children
while Mom and Dad check out a

'.

1

ol-\.to'-

'1

y

'

SOCIAL
CALENDAR

We Also Have
Meigs Marauder
Gym Bags in
2 Sizes.

White
Maroon with Gold Stripes
Navy with Red Stripes
Purple with Gold Stripes
Royal with Gold Stripes
Orange with Black Stripes
Red with White Stripes
Kelly with White Stripes

\
I

~

Announcement
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star.
The Past Officers Oub of Racine
will have a family picnic at 6 p.m.
Thursday at the Shrine Club in
Racine.

the CJrcle chainnen . David Stone of

Trumbell Neighborh ood M1nistnes

~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~~g~~~~~~

wJII be- the horne missionary aga in

thiS year. and Dr. and Mrs . Roger
Gelz and family of Thialand, will be
the for eign miss ionanes .

scholarship. It was voted to pay the

Mary Brewer had the Jove gift

198~·~~'H
~YS&gt;TI/1\li\\!
25" CONSOLE

"'

'•

Hush PUPA!!§'
rough and
ready casuals

··'~· ·

wtth TRI -FOCUS PICTURE TUBE
TRIPLE-PLUS CHASSIS
CO LOR SE NTRY
and now NEW(I'RP] CIRCUIT
PPdK Re sotut, 0 n P•c ture .::: u c u1t acntB\IeS max.tmum ptc l ure

rcsolui•Ori oy rep10ducmg all the deta•l be•ng tran sm itt ed
Result a ptCi ure wtlh 25'\, gre ater deta•l . 25% more sharpness
than pr evtous Zen•th mod els

RIVER VIEW

Rely On Our

ExPert AdVice
N~ed

h~lp

scl erlln!( an nve r rhr -coun rer medtcine! A, rhar macists , we may h.: ahlc '" help
you choose w hat 's b~ .&gt;t . Ask us!

oevelo~;

•

SWISHER LOHSE

I""'"•'"
-+--I

L

I1

'

speciallY
sensationally prrc
1

.

·

$69

9 95

A GREAT~f,!f lJ/: QUAUTY

Pharmacy

Ingels Furniture
. &amp; Jewelry

McCvllovtll, lt. I'll.
C,..rle.s It •lfll, R. Ph.
lton•td "'""'"'~· It Ph
Mon. thruS•!I :OO• .m tot~ . m

Su nclll~lt : •toiJ : M•nCittafp . m
PR ESCN tPTIONI
PH n1 HH

t_~_:.: __

'(

• EVG - Eiectronlc: VideO GuarcllUNnQ
• One -Knob 12 VHF and fl UHF Chlnnel Se6eclof

• Illuminated Chllnnel Numbers

i -- - - - - - - - - - - ·-- -~
I

Tho SIENA • S2558P
Pecan hmsh applied to du rable wood products on
too and ends w•th hardwood solidS framtng top Decofat•ve
tront and base ol stmU!ated wood 10 matchiflQ limsh Casters

•Eieetronlc_Senl"f_R_

Drugs, Sundries

-=:='
~i .... t'l'

,.,...,,c•

~&gt;om•rov. o

I

J

FOODLINER

. MEDITERRANEAN

"The Two-ln..One Store"

M

OHIO
,,

Mom
Hush Puppies" are the va lue
answer tor your c hi ldren 's ba ck toschool shoes. Breathin ' Brushed Pig skin' leather makes 'em durable Ready
to take it. CleanablE! . Lightweight. too.
w1th steel shank support for grow1ng
feet and cushioned com fort instde. Plu s
kid-pleasing style: A pleasing an swe[

THE

SHOE.

LOCATED ON THE BUSINESS LOOP!
AT 786 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�•
12-The Daily Sentinel
L.ots&amp;Acmp

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

LAFF - A - DAY
- :;_.r - -

LOTS • R"l nice campsite
an Reccoon Creek, ell
utllltl• available, $300.
dpwn, will finance,
can after 3 p. m., 256-M13.

by Lllny Wright

mlln. $3.250.00. Phone 256·
1113, l!luller Hereford
Farm, Lower River Rd.
1972 Chevy pickup. short·
bed, 3 speed, 350, 62,000
miles, good running condition, $1150. 304-895·3559
after 5 pm .

10* off l!luck Knives. Spring
Valley Trading Co .• Spring
Valley Plaza. ~- 11025 .
9 pc. Duncan Phyte style
dining room sul1e, antique
stand table, secretary,
solid cedar bedroom suite,

73

1979 Super Van Econollne
250, ex. cond. Phone 379·
2196.

2 metal wardrobes. Call
day or evenings 446·0521 or
675· 2079.

Kimball

3112 acre on L.incoln His. In
Pomeroy. $7500. Beautiful
building sl1e or trailer lots.
R.C.S. Realty Co. Bill
Childs mgr. Phor'le992·6312.
BY owner. 3 apartment
house on approx. 1 acre.

Live in one, rent others to
make your paymen1. Can
be converted single home.
City water, will consider
land contracT. 675-1883 9·5
p.m .
20 ACRES on black 1op
road, timber . Phone 1·6U·
263-1322 or 263·2669.
Real Estate
wanted

J6

wanted: Nice~ bdr. nome,
close 1o town. Call olol6-lol23.

41

Houses far Rant

For ren1 with option to buy.
4 bdr home. bo1h and half.
lg. living rm., fireplace,
basement,
gas
heat,
garage wltn auto. opener,
nice yard, good loca!ion In
city. See by appoln1ment.
Be vacant Sep1. 15. Rent
S375, dep. $200. no pets. Call
~- 2573 or ~-1171.
House for rent In Eureka.
Caii256·119B .

S rm. house in Eureka, full
basemen!. Call256·65-47
Small furnished house in
the city, adul!s only . Call
~-0338

-4 bedroom home, large lot,
close 10 schools. 992-6309.
l bedroom home in country
on b lacklop road. Phone
30-ol-882·2575.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Two, 2 bdr .• turn ., mobile
hOmes. ' Gas and water
furn., $225. mo.. $100
deposl1. no pets Call ~ 4745 or 446·1630.
2 bdr. mobile home near
Porter. Furn. Call367 ·7101 .

2 bdr., J bdr ., mobile
homes. Call446·0175.

2 bedroom mobile home, 1
bedroom apt no pets,
sleeping
room.
John
Sheets. 3112 miles sooth
Middleporl, Rl. 7.
Two bedroom hou~ trailer
on Ash1on· Upland Road.
$150 p lus utilities and
damage deposit . 615·4088 .

OR RENT ~ almost new 14 x
70, 3 bedroom, 1 1/l baths,
sifting on nice lot, ready to
move into. Phone 30-4· .5762711 .
Two bedroom mobile home
In New Haven. adul!s
only.no pets. 675·1452 or
675-2996 afler 5.

FURNISHED small 2
bedroom trailer, 9S Bur·
dette Addition. Air conditioned. phone 304-675·-'600
between 9 a . m . and • p.m.
deposit required .
$175 plus utililies and
deposit 675·6512 afler 5 pm.
2 bedroom lurnisned. $150
plus S50 deposit Also
available Augus1 24, 3
bedroom furnished $165
plus S50 deposi1. Gallipolis
Ferry, WV. Phone 675·6851 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
675·3885.

Apartmenl
tor Rent
2 bdr . unturn., apt. in
Crown City, On . Call 256·
6-474.

2 bdr. apar!menl, parlly
furn .• S175 mo .• close to
park, dep. req. Call 4-46-

3919.

Enclosed

Furnished apt., adul1s, S190

12-ot3.

3 bdr. house for rent and 3
rm . apt. utilities paid. Call
675-510-ol or 675·5386.

1100

Apartment for rent J
rooms, furnished, utilities
pard. adul1s only, $195.00
per month, !160.00 deposit.
94 Locus1, Gallipolis. Call
446· 13-40 or 446·3870.
Unfurnished apartment. 2
bedrooms, carpeted In
Pomeroy. Has stove. $150.
month
plus deposit.
UtiliTies extra. 992-6678.

Call

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PL.IANCES
wasners,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances. 1918 Eas!ern
Ave., 446·7398.
Case Knives·20% off all
case knives. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, ~- 8025.

OPENING SOON . .Senior
Citizens &amp; handicapped
apt. community opening.
Featuring 1 bedroom un- Used sofa. gold &amp; green
furnished with wall to wall tapestry, Heritage quality
carpeting, wall -tex walls, built. Also a pair of chairs,
built in bookcase, ap- like new, in rose nylon
pliances, smoke detectors, damask fabric . Call 446·
air conditioned, private 2419.
plltio, storage facilities,
sing I.e story_ with no stairs Four used dinette chairs
to_cl1m~, ~r!vate entrances and 3 used living rm.
w1t~ .. •nd1V1dual , laundry • ·tables. Call-446·1423.
fac•llf1es on prem1ses with•
recreation &amp; meeting
rooms.
Professional Household goods. Call 245·
resident
manager on S858.
premises. Stonewoods Ap1s .. Rl. 7, Middlepor1. For USED brown and while
rental information phOne living room chair S15. See
614·843·23.. 1.
a1 769 Brownell Ave .• Mid·
dleport .
For rent. 2 bedroom fur ·
nished apartment . All Washer and dryer . $50. 675 ·
Uti lilies paid. S200 a month. 21168.
No pets or children . 2
bedroom uniurnished aparCB,TV, Rildio
lment. $150 a month. Call 52
Equipment
Cleland Rear1y 992·2259.
Fender Super twin amFurnished apartment . 3 pif ier with external
rooms and bath. Newly speaker cabinet, Peavey
pain1ed . No pels. Deposit monitor sys1em. Call 388·
8436.
required. Phone 992·2937 .
Apar1ments.

675 ~ 5548.

19• Magnavox color TV.
Portable. $175. 992·6196.

2 BEDROOM. unfurnished
Antiques
apartment and 2 bedroom 53
furnished apartment, JO•·
ATTENTION:
( IM
675 ~ 5571.
PORT ANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
1, 2 &amp; J bedroom apart· for antiques and collec
ments now available at Pt. tibles or entire estates
Pleasant Scottish Inn. Also Nothing too large . Also,
a honeymoon sutie. All guns, pocket watches. and
utilities paid . Apartments coin collections. Call S57 ·
as low as SUO. a week. 3.. 11 .
Honeymoon sutie W . a
nighl Call304·675·6276.
54
Misc. Merchandice
2-bedroom all electric,
Henderson S150. deposit, Like new, warm morning
$150. per monlh. No Pels. gas heater, with blower, a II
auto. 87 Vine St .• Gallipolis.
Inquire 614·367· 7257 offer 5.
2 bedroom apartment, fur ·
ni•hed. 675·6020 or ~ - 2200

45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
lioht housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel

Myers water pump, 275
gallon fuel oil tank . Phone
446~ 3341.
Now in Stock S&amp;W mcxfel
618 newest L irame Smith
in stainless. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.

Space lor Rent

46

Mobile home lots, -4 miles
from town . Call 4-46-4999.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Roure 33, Nor1h of
Pomeroy . Laroe lots. Call
992·7479 .
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park. Cheshire, Oh.
992·395-4.

TRAILER space 3 miles
irom town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y. Pt . Pleasan1, 675 ~
J248 .
For rent trailer space tor
small trailer weekly and
monthly rates, air con·
ditioned rooms by week,
cable TV. Mary R. Trailer
Park, Mason, WV. Phone
304·773-5651.

Trailer lo! for ren1. 30H95·
3486.
47

Wanted to Ron!

tt2'7721.
Alilrtment for renr. Call

ff2·5POI.

1 a;

.

2 bedf'O!IIll lurnlshecl
992-.5434 or 992-

.,.rt~.

51114 or 112·2546.

utility

1975 VOL.KSWAGEN Van, 7
passenger, Interior and
body In good condlllon.
runs well,new heater boxes
and exnaust svsrem, new
clu!ch, $2500. 30~·895·3652 .

trailer,

Remington

Remington Thunderbolt 22
LR Ammo. $1.39 per box,
S13.00 per carton. Spring
Valley Trading Co. Spring
Valley Plaza. ol46·8025.

Eclipse 12 ga. game loads
N6·shot, 20 shells per box,
$3.95 box . Spring Valley
Traind Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, ol46·8025.
Crossman B· B's 'Milk Car ·
ton' box oi 1500 · Specia l
$1 .09 box. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
PL.aza. «6· 7025.
Compound Bow Special
PSE SIZZler laminated lim ·
bs, magnesium handle, 50
lb. pull. Special 139.95.
Spring Valley Trading Co .•
Spring Valley Plaza, 4468025.

Wall to waif carpeling,
12x12 green plush. $100.
1Sx18 green and brown hi·
low mul!i color, SIOO. Call
388~9807.

~-9733.

1 standard qui tar, beautiful
tone, practially new, cost
$300 will sell al $225. 1 ex·
cersizing bicycle, almost
new. cos1 $90, will sell at
$40. 1 electric roaster·
cooker, large size with fire
king cookery bowls &amp;
roasting pan, used very litlie. cos1 $129.95. will sell
S.SO. For more information
call 388·9893.

SWiMMING
POOL.S :
PRE SEASON SAL.E:
$999.00 INSTALLED!!!
Above ground pool COM·
PL.ETEL.Y INSTAL.L.ED
starting at S999.00. Price in·
eludes pool, deck, fence,
filter,
liner, and in·
stallation under normal
ground condition. Free
shop at home service. Call
1800·624·8511.
EASY credit available now
to purchase furniture,
televisions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave .. 675·1773.
Yellow Freestone canning
peaches. Now thru Sept. 20.
Any quan!ity available.
Re1ail &amp; wholesale. Bob's
Market, Mason. Phone 7735721 . Open dai ly !ill9 p.m .

For sale. Used R·40 and R·
100 Ditch Witch Trencher.
Calll-614·694-7842.
Half runner beans. Cecil
Maynard
residence,
Racine. 9-49·2602.
For sale, 1 heavy duty
utility trailer Very good
condition.
Dandy
ior
hauling wood. Carl Kloes.
99no1•.
Ladies large antique bar
pin, 14K
yellow gold.
European cut Amethyst
and natural Pearl appra ised at $985. Will sell for
$400. Papers included. 992·
3283.
Ladies e)(quisite 27 pt.
white gold diamond pen
dant. Appraised at $649.
Will sacrifice for $.4SO.
Papers included. 992·3283.
Goosneck lifestock trailer.
Complete with truck plate.
448· 2619 or 4-48·2612

-

----

--~- --~

Th

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
Call245·5121.
S6

Pels tor Sale

.......... ... ... .
0

0 . 0

I _.

..._ .

&lt;

.... '

-1563.

Electric stove. «l Inch top,
side broiler, Norgf.
Frlgldare Ice bOX. l!lofh In
good condition. 30-ol-7735135.

HAY for sale. 304·675·2254
&amp; 675· 1302.

POODL.E GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow puppies.
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. New
Siamese are here; Lilaic,
blue, and cho. Chow puppies Sept. 1. Call ~~384-4
after~ p.m.
HIL.L.CREST KENNEL. ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call 446· 7795.
BR IARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
A K C Gordon set1ers.
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call ~ - 4191.
Reg. Cocker Spaniel pups.
Call ~ - 1262.
AKC registered Doberman
pups . Red &amp; rust. black &amp;
rus1. Call446· 1562.

71

Auto for Sale

1977 Ply·Volare st•1ion·
wagon, 6 cyl., power
s1eerlng, 4 new tires·
Dayton, 4 new shocks·
Sears easv riders, new cluTcn. new Se•rs 48 month ba1·
lery. $2,200. firm. Call 367·
0417.
68 Chrysler 1mperia l, 2 dr.,
all power, new exhaust.
new brakes, and new tires.
Call ~-1749.
1976 Buick Limited tully
equipped, One owner, low
mileage, good cond .• S3,495.

57

Music.al
Instruments

Used cornet, in good cond.
Call 379·2425 .

us

containers.
Roadside
s1and. ~houses below pos1
office, Gallipolis Ferry,
wv.

1911 3.50 Honda street bike,
excellent condl11on. S501l.
304·882·2683.

1975 650 X5B chopper,
Harley. low rider style.
Paint job in flames. Runs
good. $1200. Phone 30-ol-882 ·
2066.
75

Boats and
Motors lor Sale

Pontoon boat with 2 motors
and trailer. Oars I life
jacksers included. $2,500.
Call 388·9924 between 8AM
and 3:00 PM weekdays and
anytime weekends.

nerm i"I"IO\ilho;l htltttr nlth
tan. Off Rou1e 7 on Eagle
Ridge Rd. Basnam Rd.
Dora Hysell . 9~9-2566.

Call 446·1546.
79 CUTLASS Brougham,
loaded with e)(tras com plete. Call675·4087 .
1978 Honda Accord na1 ~
chback. New tires, e•.
mileage. Call 4-40·2055 after

Jeanie's Pet Shop 1 mile 6.
wes1 of Gallipolis on R!.
141. Open Monday lhru Sa!. 1975 Grand Prix model L.J,
9·5. Call ~-7920.
loaded. Call 446· 6313 afler
4PM.
MOVING
TO
NEW
L.OCATION. Fisn Tank and 1979 Thunderbird loaded
Pe1 Shop 2413 Jackson witn extras, ex. cond.,
Ave., Pt. Pleasant. Across $5,200. Call245-5077.
from Western Auto. Cal l
675 2063. Closed Friday and
Saturday. Open Monday 1978 Phoenix, PS, PB, AM ~
August
17th
at
new FM r•dio, good cond. Ca ll
256·6826.
location, same hours.

AKC
Dachsnund.
Pomeranian an Pood le
pups 895·3958.

1980 Kawaskl K OX 175
$950. Phone 304-675·5350.

Two XR80 Hondas. One
new condition $500. One
good condition $375. 675·
2622.

For sale 1979 Buick Rivera
completely loaded. Ca ll
446~7497.

1977 P rymo1h Vol are, 6·cyl.
PS, PB, Au!oma1ic, AC,
Stereo. Many new parts.
Very clean. No rust. $3350.
Call aifer 6 pm week days.
9'12·3798.
1973 Oldsmobile Delta
Royal. $650. 992~3111.

Yard sale. Thur and Fri.
964 S. 3rd Ave. Middleport.
Items to numerous to list.
Rain cancels.
3 family garage and yard
sale. 1 mile on Storys Run
mile below Middlepor1.
Sat. and Sun. We have
everything.
4 fami ly garage sale.
Rowleys on Bailey Run Rd,
Pomeroy . Clothes. school
and adults. Misc. items.
Sat. Aug15.
1 man bass tracker boat
with motor. 304·576 2013.

Pon1oon boar wi!h 2 mo1ors
and trailer. Oars &amp; life
lackse1s included. $2,500.
Call 388-992~ between BAM
and 3,00 PM weekdays and
anytime weekends.
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

CHARL.IE'S SAL.VAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker
service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 446·7717.

77
Truck for sale. 1980 Toyola
pickup with topper. 5speed, customized paint
and interior.
AM· FM
stereo, all-season radial
!ires. snarp! $5900. Benny
Wi lson. Racine 949·2322.
1975 El Camino Classic SS.
PS,PB,AC,1il1
w heel,
cruise control, air shocks,
trailer hi1ch. Very good
condlllon. $2295. 742 ·2734.
1976
Granada 6· cyl.
Automatic. very gooct con·

dillon. $1895. 742 ·2734.
1977 Mustang 2. V·8
automatic. good condition,
6 good tires. $1950. 949·2212
afler 5 p. m.
MORRISON'S Au!o sales.
Henderson. WV. Phone 6751574 or 675·2881.
78 Ford L TO II, air conditon, am-lm radio, low
mileage 13.800. Phone 30~·
675·6-429.
1'167 Ambassador. $175.
Good condl!lon. 304-675314-4.
1977 Gran Prix, air, cruise,
8 track, good tires. $2200.
Phone675·5075 before 5 pm.

77

__
.. .... ... .
.. . . ..
,

61

1NIN-II'f ~ICAUY NO 7'H1E
ArAI.J.,$VeSS WHArS ON 7V·" ·
......l:t;.o!-cotWN.

....,. •. soc .. ..,.,

C:•IICN.IO ' ~l.L •

Cabinets,
Ideal
lor
basement, shelves, or
refinishing. $20. 2303 MI.
Vernon, P1. Pleasant, WV.

STRAW FOR SAL.E Phone
256·1113, Buller Hereford
Farm, Lower River Rd.,
Gallipolis.

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker
service. "Big or sma ll" we
tow !heni all! 2332 Eas!ern
Ave., Gallipolis, Onio. Day
· ~ - 2445 or Night · ~ -

...

WEATHERAL.L. CON ·
CRETE - quality and lief'
vice, call675·1582.

PAINTING · Interior and
exterior,
plumbing~ .
rooting, some remoelellng.
·
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.

,,,
,,

Trucks for Sale

~-0939 .

Farm Equipment

1972 El Camino, ex. cond.
W.C. Allis Chalmers 1rac· 1980 1 Ton dump rruck Ford
1or. For sale or 1rade. Call 350;. ex. cond. Call olol6-3100
or· ~-7122 or see a1 861
379-2761.
Second Ave., Gallipolis.

so

1965 MF
series, new ~:-:;.--::-:-~--­
engine, new ht!lland hay 1'169 FMd F-100, ~~4, exc.
blno 7ft., John ·DHre 2~ T fOr fl~ewooll or larm truck,
nay baler, all equip. In exc . . Sl,OOO. Cai1 2.56·Uil,
cond. Call 318·9060.
·
1979 JEeP truck, illcerlow
Four lS,OOO gallon tanki mileage, ~- -1977 )&lt;5750
l,o w 'm'llti!lf,
located above grQUnd ot 'yamaha;"
,
Athens, Ohio. S3,ooo:oo $1000. ,c.JI. i104-675-3-436.
•
.
each. Phone 1·31W·G2·271.1.
·,
'
·
,
\979 Ford ,plcku/!'nhl" ton,
I!IACKHOE, cill after 5, excellent·condlt
·Call at-;
Oak HIII;Ohlo, 614-682-7332 . . 1er 5pm304-.,5-3378.
'':.

Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
S175, any color,lree pickup
&amp; delivery in Ga ll ipolis
area, Hammond Body
snop, 221 M ill 51. 379·2782.

78

CAmping
Equipment

Rod &amp; Reel Combo · Zebco
600 reel, Pfleuger S·250 rod
Special 5'1.99. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza, 446·8025.
14 ft Timberlake trailer
camper. Sleeps tour. In
. good condition. Will sell
reasonable. Call667·6164.

report sandprol1le s. Host David
Brinkley IS tamed by cont••but·
ing reporters Gamck Utley,
Jack Perkms. Douglas Kiker
and Betsy Aaron . (60 mms.)

BORNWSER

t"'/JI;: \IJeF£ ~ BleMY "q
~RITCJR'( IJOVJ,
Rf)..O'{ TO AA"'-K&amp; OUR

V...W....IT\IJ0llJ l-IlT 11-lt:-1

(;) ,., to,..r o '"'

r.. "'"'a

U ~

POi I , .. 010

SILK ~D Fff.\...11-lbAS
IF 51/ra&lt;,'{ MOME::t-IT

why peop l e goss1p. reveals

some InSide scoops when he
sho!NS and tells all about h1s
friendswh •l e subbmg tor Mindy
asnosto1elocaiTV sllow called
'Rumor~ It '(Repeal)

C!ICJl Stl&gt;.TE FAIR, PRIDE OF
KENTUCKY

(Jl(jj) VOYAGE OF CHARLES
DARWIN 'MyM1ndWas a Chaos
of Del ight' The H M S Beagle
contmues •Is exped•t•on and
Darwm embarks on a mu l e trip
throug h t he Andes . (60 mins)

®J THEWALTONSAcharming

ANNIE

L001t!H6 Fat

BUT IT WAG MY
IMPR.ESSIOO
THAT MISS PEASE
'liAS LEAVING TO~y ..,

CHUM NO HAK.M "'JIJGT--· Eft ...

TO SI'()T lliE IIOTE
WHEN f£ COMES

1'\AII.Ii-16 GORE Sf-fE 6ET5
IIOME GI\FELY! YOO CAtl

ilMNIE '"

COME AlONG AW "'" "'
~II.E

young lumberjack ua lvamzes
Erin, arousing a tenderness she
held on ly 10 memory, but when
another s1de o t her suitor's
personality is revea led, Enn's
fervent romance turns mto a
f.!.!i~hlmare (Repeat, 60 m 1ns )

5t1E DtD NOT SAY,

EA5Y, FELlJ\ '" l i'\EAH YOJK LITTLE

-~S 155URE

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or ~-2-154.

8:05 WMOVIE ·(WESTERN) ••• hi
"Magnificent Seven" 1960
8,30 C!J MOVIE ·(COMEDY)"\;
"The Bluaa Brothers" 1980
Cil !l2l CD BOSOM BUDDIES

G!JR.E ...

.

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

RINGL.E'S SERVICE·exp·
erienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
e l ectrician,
general
repairs
and
remodel ing. Phone 30A-67S· .
2088 or675·4560.

Kip and Henry's long lnendsh 1p
undergoes a severe test when
K1p speeds Into the fast -lane
style o1111e w1th an old buddy

ALLEY OOP

who has become a flamboyant
rock s\ar. (Repeat)
9:00 IIJt) (!)' THURSDAY NIGHT
ATTHEMOVIES 'March Or Die
1977 Stars Gene Hackman
TerenceH1 II .
13 ) 700 CLUB
ill (ffi CD BARNEY MILLER
Harns has been ass 1gned to
wr 1te, produce and direct a
pomo fil m lor use in an o!f1C1al
po ll ee 1nvesl1gat 1o n . b ut h 1s
Qrand plans to create an ep1c
prod uction dn\l'e Barney crazy
(Partone of a 1vJo part presents·
lion;
Repeat)
(Cioaed ·Captioned)
liJ(Jl~ MAGNUM, P. l. Under
ord t nary c .rc umst a nc es,
Magnum goes all out to hel p his
clten l s. but entennga marathon
sw1m-run ·b1kerace 1s too much
(Ree.!tat. 60 mms.)
({) [!!] SNEAK PREVIEWS
Co-hosts Gene S1ske l and
Roger Ebert rev 1ew the new
mov1es and show l ull -length
scenes from 'Victory, · starnng
Sy t\l'eslef Stallone and Mtchael
Ca1ne. 'Ndbody'sPerlekt, 'with

·

Dave's Appliance Repair.
washers, dryers, plum
bing, electric, general ha11·
dyman. Phone 30•·576-292-1 ·
or 675·5689.

WHERE YOU BEEN, Y'OLD
SO· AN'- SO? I BEEN CHASIN'
ALL OVER AFTER YOU/

IT'S GETT iN' TOO CROWDED AROUND
HERE, D INNY~ LET'S MAKE TRACKS!

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PL.UMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourtn and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or ~-.un
J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heatl~g.
Rt. I Gallipolis, 367·7853.

•

D . C. Contractors Plum·
bing, electrical, heating,
roofing, aluminum. vinYl
siding, and home painting.
675·3376 or 675·12-40.

GASOIJNE ALLEY

Ii !I.e
-!;hey's hit
th' river!

So~n·

Excava11ng

Gabe Kaplan, AleK Karras and
Robert Klein, and lwo other
films

9:30

Dozer. loaded, and ditcher
work. Basements. lan: ~ ·
dscaping, gas, electric, and ·
water lines. cnarles · Ro ••·.
Hatfield, Ru11and, 0~1o: ._' ·
742·2903.
- . •• -

EDWARD'S B,ackhoe and '
Dozer service. Specializtng in septic tank. 675-123~.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

I KN'OW WHAi 'lOU'RE
TALKING ABOUT... AIIIP
ONlY ONE WHO
CAN HELP YOU 15

WELL, I'VE GOT THIS
MOBLEM. I'M ON A
ST/fiCT PIE! .. AND l 1-iA.VE

Fuller Electric Co. Com·
ptete rewiring, commercial
or residential. and elec·
trical maintainance. also
on ca ll. Ph. ~~6 · 2171,
Gallipolis.

NO ENERGY AT ALL . 11\1
AFRAII7 I'LL BLOW THIS
NEXT A5516NMENi IF I

KATHY/

ctlH'T STRA16HTEN uP!

Elec1rlcal, Air condition,
Heating, Hot water tanki: : 4 f
Service all makes. Phone ... ~
379·2196. Charles Kieslln~. ::

u it. camper, sleeps 6,
good condition. $1500. Call
675·2267.

15

Home
Improvements
FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway. Call ·61,4'·446· ,
~- .
,
. i ~
. . _., .
JIM MAR~UM ' Rootlrijj ,_
IIIOUtfnG ..• nd ·, IICII!!fl. ,30

iJU66Y!! "

1

PEANUT BUTTER
FUDGE COOKIES ARE
OUTOF
OVEN

General H1ullng

JIM'S
DEPENDABL.E
water dellverv. Coli 256·
9368 ony11me.
., '•
NOW t,jAUL.ING nou"' c;)..l
&amp; llmeslone lor driveways.
Call ,l or estimates 367-7101·
Ot;;L.IVERY
Calf~·7.roc.

WATER .
SERVICE.

.-

•·

I

JON ,ES I!IO,Y S WATER
S,E R.VICE . Call 367;7~71 ·or.
. ~7-0591.
-;;--,-~----.,.-,,
.v...ta .. ~.,.-l*ft!:,t,'r p~ Mobile hom~s mov~d. ·
.est.lmat,e s • . ,.emOllellng, . licensed, end tloncled:. 576· •
Call·-~·
' ·
· · 271lor675·4398. .
; 1·•

.. ' '

(H). AIIC NEWSNIOHTLINE
.~chored by Ted Koppel.
11:35 \JJ MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE)

IF TI-llS WERE,11-IE
COUSEUM,.WOUL.DN'T
11-IERE ~ A LON6 LINE

1

'{OU RE AT lllE WRONG
PLACE! Vqi!'RE IN
. MV SUPPER DISH!

ST_ U'CtO . p~
· STER.ING.' .
-••xturecl alllng!ll com' 17 ,., Uphots•--.'
••••
merclliJ and ' rftlclential, · · ., · TRISTATE : ·
.
free estlmotes. Call 256uP~oL.· sr~ ER
·· •
1182.' •
... ·
" ·
Y SHQP'
116:1 Ste. Ave., . G'l!lpofls.
,.
.
~-7133orU6-1133 ·
SA'I'IO.E•RS.
' CON ·
. .
·~ .
' .
TR~crtNG, ca.r pentr.y 'MowRexs· uphoisiery Rt.
,..I&lt; &amp; Rlintlng, concreie ' 1Box12oli .P t. Pleesant, 39,4·
'•liclacaplng, ~2717.
_' . 675-_4154.. ~
•• ·
. :·. ,
:::-

' :!';.;...Cfoouto'-~·-··

.. '"'

J

(J I
I FUALEDj

r

II

~P'OI&lt;EN SOMEWHAT
COLDLY.

I BINNEGj

cJ r

Now arrange the Circled leners to
form the surpnse answer. as suggested by the above canoon.

Print answer here:

"aJ- rXX)-D ..
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterday s

Jumbles JOLLY

I Arlswer ·

•••• "S.•H•wk" 1840
12:00 (]) ROll BAGLEY SHOW
(j) ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
Ancl!gred by Ted Koppel.
(H). CHARLIE'S ANGELS

OF·Si'EOI"AlatS ~TIN6
TO 6ET IN?
.

....... ,.,.,,
.,....;··

~

,,,~..

~

. ' ,,

•'
·\.

.

,,

Oreaaed aa Keyatona cope and
driving a modei-T Ford,
Sabrina, Kelly, Krlaand Boeley
infiltrate an •ntlque auto rally to
track down at olen aamptea ot a
new ap•.c• ag• fue l worth
million• to a foreign pO'Wsr .

SHEAF

CAUG HT

BUBBLE

The horse trainer had no trouble getting a

bank loan because he had this A STABLE JOB

Jumble Book No. 18. containing t 10 puules, is available tor S1.95 poatpatd
from Jumble, cJothis rrew spa per , 8o11 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648 . 1nclude your

nama, address, zi code and make checks a able to News a

rbook1.

BRIDGE
Point counting aids East
By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alan Soalag

NORTH

The delensb started off
rapidly. Wesl opened the
king ol clubs and continued
with the queen and deuce.

East was in with his ace
Then came the pause that
falls to refresh . East had a
problem and even the s1m~
plest problem caused th1s
East to take plenty a! time
East had something to
think about. Normally 1t IS
really silly to give declarer
a rull and discard Thus if
East led the last club.
declarer could rull in his

own hand and discard a
loser from dummy.
Then East started lo figure il there was any possible
East started to count points .
West had shown live. Dummy held II and East held
eight lor a total ol 24 that
declarer could not hold .
North anti South played nor ·
mal 16-18 no trUIT'llS. F&lt;:~st
now counted jacks and found

t hat he had seen all four .
Hence, South could not have
shaded his no trump to 15
points and surely would not
shade il all the way to 14
when vulnerable.

fl 13-8 1

• QJ 72
• KJ B4
t A9
t 10 6 I

WEST

EAST

+K H 6

+9

.107632
• 95
• 10 8 53
• J 742
tKQ 2
tAB 7;
SOUTH
tAI0543
.AQ
t KQ6
• J93

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer . South
West

North

East

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

'

South
I NT

z•Pass

•K·--

loser outside the trump smt.
Opening le•d

Finally, East led his last
club South discarded a diamond and West rulred with
his nine.
Dummv had to overrurr
with an h-onor and now East

was sure of a trump trick.

6iruaW"W
THOMAS JOSEPH
by

DOWN
1 Garbed
2 Rhode Island's
5Fools
motto
10 Ear part
3 "Green
II Customer
Manswns"
121mitator
hero
13 Come out
I Film not new
14 Italian
5 Before mater
novelist
Yesterday's Arulwer
6 You (Ger. l
16 Political
7 York
18 Convert
24 Madrid
monogram
19 Get off to a
or Preston
gallery
17 Grassland
8 Overfill
28 Gennan title
18 Prehistoric
(mess up)
29 Oh joy'
9 Treeless
mound
21 Wise
30 Soprano
plain
19 Part of a
king
Moffa
boilennaker II Fragrant
22 Rind
31 Birth a lamb
20 Frenzy
wood
15 Fawn
Z3 Recite
33 Zuider 21 European
,.-,-;--,.-;--u;-ACROSS

I Burn

river

22Glass
section
2!! Carew
and Taylor
24 Closely
confined
25 Different
26 Matter (law)
27 Destiny
28 Partially
32 Stupefied
34 Without
(Ger.)
35 Corrida
perfonner

:!6 Rockfish
37 Put ill a
diary
:18 Signify

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Is

Here's how to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Oae letter simply stands lor another . ln lhis sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single lellers,
apostrophes. the lencth and formation ol lhe words are all
hinls. Each day the code leiters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

1117~

r

~

en\I'ISions htQh t•mes w1th his
b udd 1es sp1ced b-y romantic
even1ngs w11h Elame 1n his
bachelor pad now that h1s Ma
has moved oul (Repeat)
(Closed-Captioned; U S.A .)
ill GOOD NEIGHBORS
li1l NATURE OF THINGS
10'00 cil (H)
2Q-20 Hugh Downs
anchors this weekly magazine
prolilmg noteworthy events Ill
news, science and entertainment . (60 mms.)
OCil KNOTS LANDING
Karen 's 1mp1 1c 1t trus t 1n S•d IS
shaken. as Abby, lme tuned to
in fide l ity, has forewarned,
when S•dput s mlongmght hours
w11h L1nda Stnker, anattractill'e
employee . (Repeal . 60 mms .)
IT! TO nlE MANOR BORN
rfor THEJIOOTSOF ROCK AND
ROLL, I'AAT Ill
lifr NEWS
10:28 (}) CBNUPDATE NEWS
10:30 r3i
JOHN ANKERBERG
SHOW
cj ) UP POMPEII!
r'\l) OUTER LIMITS
10:35 i~] T8S EVENING NEWS
ID·58 m CBN·UPOATE NEWS
11 :oo r!lo m m C!l m ilQJ I!Zl m
NEWS
W THE LESSON
11J MOVIE ;(DRAMA) 00 "
"Great S•ntlnl" 1970
Ill DAVE AL.L.EN AT LARGE
11 :28
CBNUPDATENEWS
11:30 rlJOffiTHETONIGHTSHOW
Guests . Richard Bentamtn,
Paula Prentiss. (60 mins.)
(}) ANOTHER LIFE
(f) A~TER BENNY
C!lm CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
JEFFERSON$ : The Camp Out'
The bl1nd teed the blind when
George introduces his new
clerk, Marcus. to the joys of
camping 9!'d the pair discover
JUSt ho'vw ,must 'rough' the'e 1s
.nvo lved 1n ·roughing 11
(Repeal) 'MADiGAN: ne
Lisbon Beat' Madigan. while in
tranaitlothaU. S. with a prisoner
loses him in Lisbon and must
d,epend on local police to help
h im. (l'!epeall
(]) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@JMOVI~ -(HISTORICAL)*' \'o
"A..u.inallon Of Troloi&lt;Y"

m

BAIWEY

" ......

D&lt; ~!-ARDS

ffi(fi)m TAXI loUie gleefully

m

BACK HOE and Sep1ic 1ank
Service. Larry Sideli·
s1rlcker. 675·5580.

JACK'S REFRIGERATIQ·
N. air condition service: •
commercial, lndustflal.
Phone 882-2079.

I [)

Mark, who doesn't understand

IJJAS ... ~~

L.OCKSMITH
Service. ·
Residential, automotive'.
Emergency service . Call
882-2079.

1973 25 ft. Trou1Wood cam ~
ping 1raller wl!h A.C. Per·
fec1 tor river bank. $1800.
992·7727.

TACUE

CIJIIDCD MORK AND MINDY

IA.OJI.D Be; M'i ~')(T

JlJMP, MID li-16R£ I

GEORGE
GUM,S~:.:Roollng,
paln!lng . ·
remodeling, experienc;,d,· ·
tree es11ma1es. 992·5-433.

84

tour ordinary words.

ClJ PUBLIC ENEMIES

SEWING Machine repairs, . ' '
'
· service. Authorized Singer
10 bv -40 Skyline mobile Sales &amp; Service. Sharllfin
home. Furnished. $2500. Scissors. Fabric ShOp, : ·;
Pomeroy. 992·2284.
:- !·
992·7685.

'
(

current news stones, topical

-

11

66 C hevolet 3/ ~ T,
mechanlcaly OK, S300. Call

weekly seri es offers a blend ol

Gene's Carpel Cleaning,
deep s1ream ex!rac!lon.
Free estimates, reasonable
ra1es. Sco!hguard, 992·6309 ..

83

Unactamble theH four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to form

director. Part I.

(H) 01 FACE THE MUSIC
7:35 CIJ GET SMART
7:58 Cl) CBNUPDATENEWS
8:00 IIJIJ (I) NBC MAGAZINE
WITH DAVID BRINKLEY This

Home building, home
remode ling and repair.
Custom work from start to
finish. Cai1388·8711.

87

'fti}~NliDft ~THATSCRAMI!IL~WORCIGAIIIE
~ ~ ~~·
byHenri""-andBoblH

Guest : Steven Spielberg ,

FERREL.L.'s
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
maintainance
and
remodeling.
Phone 3889326.

4792 .

1972 Nova . $300. Coil 675·
Canning tomatoes. Eugene 4365.
Davis. 247·3263.

Two chairs $35 each. One
wnite and one rusr. Call
675-2267.
Beige 11.5 x 13.9 carpeting,

Hay &amp; Grain

Motorcycles

7:00 CIJe PM MAGAZINE
Cl) WEEKEND GARDENER
(I) (H) 01 FAMILY FEUD
(!)BACKSTAGE AT THE
GRAND OLE OPRY
C!ICIJ TICTACDOUGH
I]) (llJ
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
@J NEWS
7:05 CIJ ALLIN THE FAMIL't
7:30 CIJO BULLSEYE
Cil ANOTHER LIFE
(!)
WORLD'S GREATEST
ESCAPE&amp;
(J]IiJClJ JOKER'SWIL.D
(!) HOU.tWOOD SOU ARES
I]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
UDJ
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW

-------:--::-"-'

64

Building Supplies

L.ivestock

EVENING

WOODSHOP · Cablne1s. ,
picnic
rabies,
porcn
swings. most wood prod.u c·
ts. 101 Court 51 ., Gallipolis.
Call oloi6·2S72.
• .

74

Nice Refrigerator, $90.00.
Call ~-8181.

63

1978 Ford F150 A wheel

AUG. 13, 11181
•.

Hoover sweepers repalrell ·
at Empire Furniture, ro"
Second Ave. Gallipolis, Gli. ·

Misc. Merchandice

For sale, air conditioner
7500 btu, like new. Storm
windows 4 25X63 1h . 1 Lowry organ . Like new.
23x 43. Pncne 992·5171.
Double keyboard . Full
rythm selection. $1500
firm.
985·4197.
Wood
cook
stove,
refrigator, avocado gas
r•nge. 773· 5619 or 992·2952.
For Sale. Bargain. Wan fed: Responsib le parly 1o
NEED several items oi fur - •take over low monthly
niture,
appliances, payments on spinet piano.
televisions. Big discounts Can be seen loca ll y. Write
for quanity purchase. cred it manager: Box S37,
Village Furniture 2605 Shelbyville, Ind. 46176.
Jackson Ave. 6751773.
2 Hammond Spinet organs.
BIG discounts for cash and One has Maghony cabine1
carry at Village Furniture !he other light cherry . Ex·
2605 JAckson Avenue, 675- cellent condition. Ideal for
home or church. 992~6235
1773 .
week days or 949·2118. Ask
lor Pe1e.
Standing timber. Contact
Ruth cnapman, Rt. 1 on
New
Bundy
trumpet.
33 on lop of MI. Arlo hill.
silver, nickel finish, never
been played. $250. 675·3943
Large antiQue mahogany
dresser with mirror $75.
Fruit
Burnside po!l)elly s!ove, 58
&amp; Vegetables
like new $100. Phone 675·
2508.
Golden &amp; Si lver sweet corn.l
Call256·6338.
Clean boy's clothing, size
14. 446· 3375.
CANNING tomatoes, 55.00
per bush• pnone 30~·675 ·
Armv boots, [fatigues - 6729.
camouflaged! surplus ren·
tal clothing Sl up, call in or· Canning tomatoes. 675 ·
ders. 675·3334 P1. Pleasant, 3308.
wv.

ey'll Do It Every Time

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Halfell Brothers Custom
carpets. Free estimates.
Calf ~- 2107.
.

Guernsey milk caw and
calf, just fresh $625. Phone
304·882·3326.

54

Cl,.,..,.,.. ..~re

-· . . _

WON 1T YE BE OUT
OF PLACE AT
A STATE FAifi;.
IRONHEART·r

~-~

locking hubs, Sliding back
glass. am radio, 8 track
1ape under dasn, 2 new
1ires. woo. Phone 675-6662.

•

Television
•
•
VIewmg

'

drive
pickup,
39,000 miles,
rI~==========;::=========~ smisslon,
400 mo1or,
automatic
!ran·
above 22 MPG,

~

l.,:::::::::::::::::::;;;..l.,________:_:::.,. bushel
Canning tomatoes S6
couple wants ~
. Bring your own

Professional
to rent 2 to 3 bdr . home.
Callaf1er 5 :30 PM.c.16·ol338.

IDICKTRACY
I

I!IING'S CONCRETE CON · .
STRUCTION · Specializing
in concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio-, ·
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11 ·
years experience. Call 347·
7891.

auto.

shotgun, new never shot.

Garage apartmen1. 3 room
and bath, washer -dryer,
clean, no pets, dep req.,
adults only. Call.c.16-1519.

good condition. Call 675-

1 ·bedroom apts. avalloble
•t Riverside Apts. Equal
()pp'o rtunlty Housing. Call

console,

e)(c . cond, will not leak.
Call 388·11-06.

Furnished Ap1., $160, water S~1--'-'
H-"-ou~s,e:.::h.=.ol::d:..:G"-'ood=.=.•_
pd .. 2 bdr., one cnlld ac·
ceptable. Call .c.I6·.U16aller Automatic washer SSO.
Electric dryer 150. L.arge
7PM.
upright freezer 535. All In
good condition. 675-692~ .

per mo. Coll.c.l6'1615 or~-

76 Ford Chateau van, a -c.
am-fm radio, deluxe seats
$3600 . Phone 304·675·6429.

Kenmore dishwasher, and
Bundy cornel. Call 256·
674-4.

Firs1 floor apl. por11ally
furnished, ref . required.
Call at 631 ~1h Ave ..
GallipoliS.

1 bdr. furn. .apt., no
children, no pets, $175, uti I.
pd., dep. Call olol6-3667.

artist

VlnS&amp;4W.D.

HOIIM

lmprovemtnts
,
STANL.EY STEEMER ,; : :
Carpet Cleaning

tires, excellent c:ond., 48,00

1025.

2571.

11

76 Datsun pickup with good
camper fop, good radial

While metal detectorsOpening Special 20* off on
all white metal detectors.
Spring Valley Trading Co .•
Spring Valley Plaza. ~-

,...., acre ground for nome,
mOdular, or doUbl-lde.
$1000. 1M!. down. Five
Points. Paul Simon. 992·

Trucks lor Salt

72

NG
HC

KDI

Nl
(IJ

K

LKHLSK

F

GH

OK

GHSKZDAG

'

HC

LZNAVNLSKI

NC

FHE

HGJKZ

AHAK

JDQK

HMA -- JKZOKZG

HC

!DUEKS

FHEZ

Yesterday's Cryptoq...,e, .REGRET IS I.N APPALLING.;.
WASTII: OF ENEMY: YOU CAN'T BtnLD ON IT; IT'S ONLy
GOODFORWALU&gt;WINGIN.-KATHERINEMANSFIELD

...... ··:tta.

_~,

~~'!!""~'!'

�•
•
ust 13,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wholesale prices decline in July

Meigs Countians £!onate 97 units of blood
Ninety-seven llllits of blood were
received at Wednesday's visit of the
American Red Cross Bloodmobile
held at the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center.
One hundred and seven persons attended. There were :i5 replacements
and 18 first time donors.
Robert W. Smith was a two gallon
·
donor.
Doctors at the Bloodmobile were
Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Dr. James
Witherell and Dr. Jolmie Brawner.
Nurses assisting were Ferndora
Story, Jackie Frost and Beulah
Ward. In charge of the canteen was
the Chester United Methodist Church.
Clerical workers included Jean
Nease, Macel Barton, Etta Mae Hill,
Grace Drake, Joyce Hoback,
Virginia Buchanan, Gladys Walker,
Lura Swiger , Frances Roush, Shelly
Clark, Lois Walker, L. B. Vaughan
and Vernon Nease.
In charge of setting up chairs and
tables were members of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program
(R.S.V.P.) and senior citizens.
Making up the group were Thelma
Dill, Myrtle Sisson, Clarence
Struble, Alice Struble and Bernadine

FLAG - Members of Bradbury Brownie Troop W52 raised a new
American Flag at a new flagpole at the Middleport Community Park
Wednesday night when ne"· lights and a new scoreboard were
dedicated . Several men 's softball games were featured. Brownies
from tbe left are Kim Hanning, Calioa Wolle, Stacy Duncan. Nikki
Meier 1 and Lisa Poulin.
·] ·

Area deaths
Alma 1\'1. "lrCI:m·y
Bonnie Bart on. Middl e port.
received word of the death of her
aunt , Alma M. McC!arey , 59, Ma rion
County . Ohio on Tuesday, Aug. 8.
Mrs. McCiarey was a former Middleport resident.
Mrs . McCiarey . was preceded in
death by her husband . Wilfo rd m
1965. She was a member of the
Oakland United Methodi st Church

and was a volunteer at Marion
Gene ral Hospita l. She was also a

retired depa rtment head a t Bargain
City.
In addition to Mrs. Barton. Mrs.
MrCla rey IS survived by one son.
Harold McCla rey, Marion ; two
grandchildren, Heidi and Julia McClary : three brothers. Bill Durst,
J an Durst and Melvin Durst, all of
Middleport : four sisters, Delores
Scott , Marion: Ruth Davis, Florida ;
Hilda Smith and Betty McDameL
Middleport, and several nieces and

new to the district and intend to

enrpll should schedule on Aug . 24 ur
25 between 9 a .m. and 2 p.m . School
in the district will begin on Sept I.

Gedfrey A. Wilson, Yifl!il K. Windon. Mary L.
Voss, William w. Radford, Ansela .seu~rs, Ed E.

Sellers, Ida Mae Martin, Howard P. LoRan,
Jacqueline Brickles, Carolyn G. Thomas, Robert
W_Sm,ilh, Edgar A. Abbott, Steve J. Blackwell,
Piul A. Rice, Beck)' D. 'Dlotnas. Patricia Warner, and Michael Swiger, Pomeroy; Clarence
Roy, Re1 Roy , Da\lid A. H.ensler, Ll_rry J . Ball,
WiUiam M. Hoback , Pttyllis E. Hams, Mal')' A.
Fowlttr. PaW E. Harrt, Vickie CUmmins, Jaei.
CUmn\ins, Ronald Soll.lser, and Dorothy M. Sayre,
R.adne; Jon J . Gulnther. Belpre : Judy Anspad,
Unda L. Haley , Eric Diddle, Joyce V. Bartnun,
Julia Qualls, Patricia J . Vallf8W\, Leafy M.
0\tisteen, Steve Bamey, Sarah J. Fowler. Freda
Durham, Kenneth E. Imboden. Debra J. Carder,
Judith HW'IIer, Sc«t Saltsman, Flllrt'nce Bearh'l,

Memonal services were held on
Aug. II a t Snyder Funeral Home .
Burial was in Marion Cemetery .

Siophon

Rllhr , Howard E . Parker and Clinton R . Pitzer,
Jr .. l...l::lng Bottom : P~ttri c ill lmiJuden, Robert L .
ImbOden, James C. Birchfield, Mary E. David-

No.

2.

Name

Address

County

) ury deliberates slavery case
WINSTON..SALEM, N.C. - A jury is deliberating in the trial of a
church leader charged with holding eight teen-agers in slavery and
conducting forced marriages, beatings and theft.
Jimmy Conyers, described by witnesses as a "deacon" in the Church of God and True Holiness, conspired to help hold the youths in
"child slavery ... all under the guise of working in the name of the
Lord," prosecutor Richard Roberts said during the trial.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio - There were 'l/,795 newly unemployed Ohioans
who filed initia~ claims for benefits under the state Unemployment
Compensation Law last week, up 9.2 percent from the previous week.
Albert Giles, administrator of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, said 25,449 people filed for initial claims during the week ending
Aug . I.
Nearly 6,900 of the initial claims represented one-to-four week inventory-taking and new model-changeover layoffs in the auto and auto
parts industry, Giles said.

3.

4.
I'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FINAL CLEAN-UP SUMMER CLOTHING
BEGINS FRIDAY, AUGUST 14th AT 9-.30 A.M.
ALL SALES FINAL - NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS

Having fun in

Armadillos

Get a "Free" Fun Flyer
with any pair of Morgan Quinn ®
casuals for guys and gals.

LITTLE BOYS'

TOPS AND SHORTS
Reg. '3.50 ....... SALE '1.39

POMEROY,OHIO

Reg. 18.00 ......_,SALE '3.19
Reg. 111.00 ...... SALE 14.39

Reg. '12.00 ........ Sale '4.79
Reg. 115.00 ........ Sale '5.99

that picks up the
mostmpg.

,_ _ _ f~ -

Reg. '8.00 ........-Sale '3.19
Reg. '14.00 ............ Sale 15.59

F;INAL CLEAN -UP

195 ~ ?.95
1
10.95 ~ 11195
1
14.95 to 115.95
1

16.95 ~ '20.00

I 1\ 11' ~•' 1 ~ , 1! pu ~ ,. •..: 'o,,l . t P'• " .Il l
I'

, '·' 1,

•.,

• ' 'I ' ,

I 1II • VII • •I I '

" I I , •, 1~: 1 • I'

'

,,, . .I (11 1

t
~

,.

1 II' '·,

IJ , If ' l h ·• '

' I• ·
' I ' I I' '-·.' \

o

' , I 1 Il l•

'' ' j ' l)o\ . [),, •.._, .
'/;I '

1' I

'I"

1' '- I 10 '

,. , ' , I • ' 'I wit

', I

tr1 l, t•1 , l~, ·: ... . ll ' f P /\ ·"1• · ••, !1! \I
h to.!IW,. , t~ t· '&gt; ! tl11, 1 ! ~ '

jUo.. o'

~ .''' I ' ~ - l ~ ·'ID~

o''&gt;IP1L, I IE'•1 '' LI Il;

f t• f t rl'''

o.t ~' "l''' Mrf "· ~' ' + '" .,.,. , tt l "J)l't'•l !ttn lt·,t~tll wt · o~ t tlr''
lo 1 l q, l : IH ~I I W .t ~ ttlp !-: 'lll til p ttt lld\ U\ l lt I t ·'&gt;~ 1

1/z

MEN'S
SHORTS

to

PRICE

Reg. '8.00 .......... Sale 3.19
'2.00 Reg. 118.00 ......... Sale '7.19
IJ.OO Reg. 124.00 ...... ... Sale '9.59
'4.00
1
'5.00 Reg. '34.00 ....... Sale 13.59

JUNIOR
DRESSES

ERFE

.

WOMEN'S
BLOUSES

WOMEN'S
SHORTS

Reg. '13.00 ........ Sale '5.19 Reg. '8.00 - ..... Sale 13.19
Reg. '17 .00 ......... Sale 16.79 Reg. 110.00 .. ,.... .Sale 13.9~
.
.
Reg. 121.00 .. ...... Sale '8.39
Reg. 129.00 ....... Sale 111.59 Reg. '12.00 ....... Sale '4.79,

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR

'20 m'28 .. . .. .... SALE '7.oo '8 to IJ.2... " ..-... SAL£ '4.00
'29 ~ '34 .. ·~ .. •.. SAU. '9.00 '13 ~ 116...... ;.. SALE '500
'35 m'42.. ....... SALE '1Z.OO '17 ~ , '20..... ;.,. ~SALE '600
'43 ID '49 ......; .. SALE IJ.5.00 '21 ~ '24 ......... SAL£ '8.00
'50 ~ 1511 .. .. .. .. •
'20.00 '27 ID '42.. ...... SALE 110.00

JR. SPORTSWEAR

FINAL CLEARANCE

'8.50 ~ 112 .......... Sale '4.00 BOYS' SHORTS
Broken Sizes 8 to 18
'13 m'16 ............ Sale 15.00
Final clearance remaoning
114 Ill "0 ............Sale '7.00
stock .
'17 il ~ .....~ .......sile '6.00' '3.95 ............... Sale '1.50
'30 il '34 ....... ' .. " Sale '9.00 '21 m'25. ............ ; SM.£ '1.00
'9.95 il '12.95 ....... Sale '4.00
'35 il '42 .......; ... Sale '12Jl0 '27 ., '32 ........... IJ.O.OO '5.95 .. ,...... ., ... Slit 12.00
1
15.95 ~ 117.95 ..... Sale 15.00 '43 ., '44 .......... Slit 115.00
~ ...... ........ Sale~
..

.·.·· EN I:_RID~f TIL 8

.•

CHILDREN'S
JEANS

Reg. 14.00 .•. ~· Sale '1.59 Reg. 14.50 ........ Sale '1.79 :
Reg. '5.50 ......... Sale '2.19 Reg. 16.00 ..,.: ..... Sale '2.39
Reg. '8.00 ......... Sale '3.19 Reg. 1 11.~ .......Sale 14.39
Reg. 114.00 ........ Sale '5.59 Reg. '17 .00 ...... Sale 16.79

WOMEN'S
DRESSES

1

Solids and paTte rns , knit shirts in

c lu d Pd .

IntrodUcing the 1981 Volkswagen Diesel Pickup.

Regular pri ces $1 .69
$3 .95 . One size fits all.

WOMEN'S
SLACKS

MEN'S SHORT
SLEEVE SHIRTS

1

11

MEN'S SUMMER CAPS
AND SUN VISORS

Reg. '18.00 .. ; r,., Sale 17.19
Reg. 124.00 .. ..... Sale '9.59

The~ickup

GIRLS
TOPS

Reg. '5.50 .... .. .. SALE '2.19

Ulforgan Quin~~;
MARGUERITE SHOES

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR
Reg. '5.00. , ....., .. Sale '1.99
Reg. '9.00 .......... Sale '3.59

WOMEN'S
TOPS

27,795 file unemployment claims

Date

614/992·2133

r

at

Board reinstates Scioto deputy

.

'

&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS, Ohio - A Scioto County sheriff's deputy was reinstated to his post after a Stale Personnel Board of Review ruled his
discharge was based on conduct that occurred while he was not an employee.
The Ohio Civil Service Employees Association said Sleven D. Jewett
was fired May 6 because he had a conversation with the defense attorney in a murder case involving Jewett's role in taking pictures at
the murder scene.
The sheriff removed Jewett effective March 27 on an unrelated
charge after the second mistrial in the murder case, said John J .
Gideon, a staff counsel for the OCSEA.

·Hundreds applaud rescue effort
MENTOR, Ohio - Hundreds of swimmers and sunbathers applauded and cheered the daring efforts of those who rescued four deer
from Lake Erie at Headlands Beach State Park.
The rescue Thursday afternoon was not a simple task, as the
frightened animals tried to flee as hwnans approached.
Volunteers, park workers and the crews of two U.S. Coast Guard
vessels participated.

Officers confiscate porn movies
BLUE ASH, Ohio - Federal and Blue Ash officers have confiscated
movies, photos and magazines of what they said were nude young girls
from the home of a Blue Ash security guard.
Police Chief Ron Sturgill said they arrested Larry J . Prather, 29,
Thursday and charged him with pandering obscenity involving a
minor.
The raid concluded a year-long joint investigation by the Blue Ash
police department, post office inspectors, the Federal Bureau r¥ Investigation and Cincinnati police.

By ROBERT L. SHAFFER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Appalachian Regional Commission,
seeking to delay its elimination by
an economy-minded administration,
is preparing a proposal for a three-to
five-year "finish-up program."
Supervising the preparation will
be a Management Committee composed of five governors, including
· Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes.
The Reagan administration wanted to axe the commission this year,
putting the ARC's 16-year-old highway program under the Department
of Transportation and eUminating
its health care, educational and
conununity development programs.
Congress spared ARC from a

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Thursday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game ''The Number" was 348.
In the weekly "Pyramid" game, the winning numbers were 98; 463;

'

In the weekly ''Pick4" game, thewinningnumberwas8469.
The lottery reported earnings Thursday of $486,806 on its daily game
"N Number." The earnings came on sales of $912,518.50, while
holders of wil!nlng tickets are entitled to share $425,712.50, lottery of•
ficials said.

Weather
MosUy surmy today. High in mid 80s. Variable cloudiness wlth scattered showers and thunde~ tonlgh\ and Saturday. Low tonight
in uppe~ 60s. High Saturday IIO,to • · ~nee of rain, 10 percent'today,

40 percenttonighlandiiO percent,Saturday. ·:.
.
·
, · ..
'011!0 EDeadedl'ereeut
'
Exteatled foreeut- Salldly lbreu&amp;ll'I'Delday, chlace of abewen
~y. Fair weather MoDday u1 Tueltlay. llllbiiD upper 'ltl ud ·
low ... Lon IIi upper ... to lllld . .. .
·,

enttne
2 secti on s. 14 P a ges
15 Ce nts
~Multim e d ia Inc . New spaper

OPENING THE FAIR- Go•ernor and Mrs. James A. Rhodes gel
a helping hand from their grandson, James Rhodes Markham as they
cut the ribbon to open the 1981 Ohio State Fair In Columbus Friday.
Looking on are the governor's children and grondchlldren. I AP Laserphoto)

ARC phase out plans due December I

GUATEMALA CITY - Leftist rebels, besieged by government
troops at a hideout west of here Thursday, killed kidnapped American
executive Clifford Bevins before the soldiers stormed in and kiUed the
five guerrillas, the govenunent said.
Bevins, 56, of Portland, Ore., was the manager of Ginza, a
Guatemalan subsidiary of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. He was
kidnapped Dec. 7, 1980 and had not been heard from in months.

'

While inflation ma y be bottoming out after months oi
moderation, it could surge again in the last half of the
year, economists suggest.
Private economist Donald !Ultajczak , conunenting
before today's report was released, said not to look for
improvement in the m onths to come.

•

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP ) - The misslon price.
1981 Ohio State Fair officially
Besides extending the fair to three
opened at6 : Hi a.m today when Mrs. weekends for fairgoers ' conJames A. Rhodes, wife of the gover- venience , fair officials hope to surnor, snipped a four·inch wide red • pass the nation's attendance record
held by the State Fair of Texas at
ribbon .
Gov. Rhodes stood next to her, Dallas. The Texas fair drew 2.9
surrounded by his family , and million people last year. compared
holding his grandson, 21-month-old to Ohio's 2.7 million .
New to this year's fair is a
James Rhodes Markham.
"This is a fair for the whole nationally sanctioned bicycle motorfamily," Rhodes said. He introduced cross race Aug. 21, 22 and 23. An anhis family as a group, including all tique tractor show, a first-time
eight grandchildren and asked his event, is set for Aug . 28, 29 and 30.
A miniature horse show will offer
wife, "Mrs. Rhodes, will you bring
the brood up?"
something a bit out of the ordinary
Cassi Shover, 10, of Powell , Ohio, Aug. 24. Seventy-five entrants will
was chosen in a drawing to be the compete in this new division. The
ceremonial first fair visitor. Ac- horses are less than 34 inches tall.
companied by a friend, Lori ThomAlso new will be the nation's
pson , 10, also of Powell, she was largest amateur wrestling tourpresented a large stuffed animal by nament Friday through Sunday,
Walter Byrnes, chainnan of the Ohio with wrestlers from Ohio and neighExpositions Commission.
boring stales competing. Preceding
The annual Crippled Children's the tournament Friday will be a
Day outing at the fair is organized three-hour clinic led by Chris Ford ,
by volunteers, said Robert W. Ohio State Umversity's wrestling
Teater, the program's honorary coach. Fourteen other top Ohio
chainnan and director of the Ohio coaches will teach different
Department of Natural Resources.
techniques .
The tractor pull eve nts have been
"This program was initiated 30
years ago by the late Judge William upgraded to a Grade A contest by
C. Bryant of Columbus, " he said, the National Tractor Pullers'
"and it has continued because of Association. Four days of comstrong volunteer leadership and a petition, Aug . 17-20, will display the
best-known and most successful
commitment from Gov. Rhodes."
For the first time, all amusement tractor and foor-wheel truck pullers
rides will be free, included in the ad- on the natioiUII circuit.

Rebels kill American executive

7201 .

said.
All the increases are adjusted for nonnal seasona l
variations.
The unadjusted index stood at 271.3 in J uly, meaning
that goods that cost $10 a t wholesale in 1967 would have
cost $27.13lasl month .

Rhodes' wife opens fair

••• IN THEW

5.

•

The July decUne included 2 percent drops in the
prices of gasoline and fuel oil, although the price of
natural gas rose 3.1 percent. It was the third consecutive monthly decline for gasoline .
Economists have credited an ample world petroleum
supply for the lower-than-expected energy price increases this year.
Agriculture Department officials have predicted
food prices would rise 10 percent or more this year, but
increases for food also have been far below the expected levels.
Big food price hikes in July included 10.1 percent for
pork and 3.8 percent for beef and veal, the new report

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday , Augustl4 , 1981

ToDAY

We, the undersigned, concerned residents of Ohio, being aware of the urgency m
controlling multiflora rose, request -that
appropriate funding legislation be om·
plemented to proceed with action to ~on·
trol this
problem. Reasons bemg :
Valuable acreage is being rendered
unusable due to soil .erosion and dense in festation, making land in accessible to
people. livestock, a·nd equipment.

LEASING
....EQUIPMENT

Junior Miss, lnc.

VOI.JO,No .86

PETITION

BANK ON E O F POMEROY. N A

to 0.4 percent while July was rounded downward.
Labor gives only the rounded monthly figure.
·
Whatever the ezact monthly numbers, they have
been comfug in far below last year, when the index for
the year rose 11.8 percent.
The new inflation report said, " Although consumer
food price increases accelerated from 0.5 percent in
June to 1.5 percent in July, prices for other finished
goods edged up only 0.1 percent, far less than in any
month since last fall. "
In fact, the prices of all finished energy goods feU I
percent after rising slightly in June, it said.

e

POMEROY, OHIO

son, Donna M. Davtd:Kln, fred H. Georwe.
Karolyn K. Black and Lois A. Walker, Rutland ;
O tarlcs W. Searles, Joseph W. White and Rodney

. . . .TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY.
. . . .AND THE PROFESSIONS

dlcating that May's rise was probably rounded upward

MEIGS SOiL &amp; WATER CONSERVATION •
221 W. 2nd ST.

Deborah D. Brown. Mlrlersville; Deborah A.
Piclens, Arletta Vanover. Paula Barnett, Earl
0 . Pickens and Betty Curfman, Syracuse; Oris
L. Smith. Cl)·de R. Smith, Grtta Suttle, Henry E.

1.

Alll982 Meigs County High School
srnior girls a re reminded they are
invited to a n infonnal get-together
Sunday , Aug . 16. at 2 p.m . at the
Meigs Inn banquet room.
The Junior Miss program for Oct.
24 will be discussed . The event is
bemg sponsored by Southeast Ohio

WASHINGTON (APl - Food price inflation accelerated in July, but declines in gasoline and other
energy prices held overall inflation at the wholesale
level to an annual rate of 5.5 percent, the government
reported today.
'
The Labor Department said its measure of wholesale
prices - the Producer Price Index for finished goods
- rose 0.4 percent in July, lying May for the lowest
monthly increase this year.
If inflation rose at July's rate for 12 straight months,
the rate for that year would be 5.5 percent, Labor
Department officials said.
Labor reported a 4.6 percent annual rate for May, in-

•

Copyrighted 1981

--BANK ONE .. _

lnfurmal ses ~ ion set

WoUo Jr. ()&gt;eller ; Mary K .
' U Vito:
' 1a' ~ Athens, and
'or• . calli.
0008,
005

C

The following Petition, sponsored by
the RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
is being circulated around Meigs f':ountY.
If you have not had access to this petition
and are concerned about what Multiflora
Rose is doing to the land in Meigs County,
please sign this and mail it to:

sv ill~ .

A stolen car was found gutted by
fire in a strip mine Wednesday morning by the Gallia County Sheriff's
Department.
Deputies found a 1974 Buick,
owned by Thomas D. Mayes, Mason,
still burning in a Nibert Road strip
mlne.
Mayes said the car was stolen
Tuesday night from tl)e Kroger's
store in Pomeroy .
The sheriff's department is investigating the incident.

nephews.

Clarence

MULTIFLORA ROSE PETITION

Deborah L. Sanders and Macil Barton, Reed-

Admitted : Vera Miles, Gallipolis ;
Clara Paulsen, Pomeroy; Maude
Bailey , Pomeroy, Fred Mack,
Cheshire; and Orpha Rouse ,
Rutland .
Discharged : Florence Rhodes,
Evelyn Casto.

The Abraham-Elizabeth Jones
Thomas reunion will be held Sunday ,
Aug. 16, at 12 noon at Tyn Rhos Church.

PortlAnd-

Searles, BidMwe ;

and Pe!o!l!!Y Lewis, Middleport; Richard Barton.

Stolen car burned

Thomas reunion Aug 16

Spirea, &lt;lleshire; iloMle Fronds Edmondll, Son
Antonia, TtUI; Rita MOll, Ft. Myera, Yla; Ann
•-- vi~' •-· • -• • -· Clolr • - ~. Pnil!ltt,
~-Sholly
llotty-···-·
1'..-ter and Mary Starther,

·
.
~=.:.::::.;:::::.=.:;=;.:.:::.::::_~:__:.--~------r­

Donors were Carolyn A. Jeffers, Lura R.
Swtger. RU.!Sell W. Moore , Mary K. Spencer,
Billy J . Spencer, Donna L Evall!li, Debra Mora ,
Mary AM &amp;rOen, Mark S. Riags, Gloria K.
Riggs, LoLs J. Wyant, James R. Dauey, ~
Barter Virgil E . Taylor, Jane V. Abbot.l , Sheila
Cruuch: Kelli L. Clelland. Homer B. Smith, Bennie J _ Wright, Sheila Taylor, Leo B. Vaughan,

Vt'lerans Me morial

May obtain scht'd ult •o;
Students a t Eastern High School
may pick up their classroom
schedules during the week of Aug.
17, between 9 a .m. and 3 p.m. The
principal asks that the schedules be
examined and any changes made
during that week. Studenl' who ar e

Meier.
.
d b Q lit
Donations were ma e y ua Y
Print Sop, The Daily Sentinj!l, The
Athens Messenger. W.M.P .O. Radio,
Veterans Memorial Hospital" and
senior citizens program.

--

.: MI~SING
Karea · Sue
Bogceu; If, daagbeet ~ ~hlrles
ud Evel)'ll hgeu, MIMnvllle,
his been mlutq fnm ber home

siDce Sltaday, aecol'llllli· to ber

!!be

cUAppeand from
.• ber ~t !Maaday ~ ille Pllmlll
have IIOt -belnl,from liei-1I!Dce.
~
lllf ..,.,.lion
or bow Where abe '! lllgbt be
lqcated are ulled tci et111lllel tile
pereall. 1'be moiber reported
that ·her dlu&amp;hter Is not
JIIRIIII.

.u&amp;c

Jlflydcally weU,

quick death, however , authorizing
funds for its programs at a reduced
level for fiscall982 .
Kentucky Gov. John Y. Brown J r.
was among those urging Congress to
delay the execution. Although
Brown said the states can go it alone
with help from the region's coal
resources, he pleaded for a three-to
five-year finish-up program.
The House Appropriations Committee told the ARC to submit its
proposals by Dec. 1.
Richard Hausler, director of communication's for the ARC , said the
congressmen asked for an analysis
of how Appalachian coal exporis can
be used to further economic develo]r
ment of the region.
Since the commission, composed
of governors of the 13 states and a
"federal c&lt;H:hairman," meets only
twice a year, the governors decided
during their meeting in Atlantic City
this week to set up a Management
Committee to authorize and act on
staff reconunendations. Others on
the committee include Brown,
Mississippi Gov. William F. Winter ,
Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander
and West Virginia Gov. John D.
Rockefeller IV.
At the meeting in Atlantic City on
Tuesday, the commission allocated
$163 million in federal funds for highways and $57 .8 million for nonhighway programs in fiscal 1982.
The allocations, based on the
amounts in the congressional budget
authorization, compare to 1981 totals

of $214.7 mi llion for highways and
$112 9 million for non-highwa y
development projects .
ARC Executive Director Henry H.
Krevor said those fi gures may have
to be adjusted after Congress makes
the actual appropriation of funds .
Ohio's 1982 allocation for highways and access roads was set at
$5.2 million. About $4 million wa s
allocated for other programs in
Ohio.
Pennsylvania received the largest
allocation - $33.2 million for highways and $7 .5 millioo for other
programs .
West Virgima' s allocation wa s
$2e.7 million for highways and $5.5
million for other programs. The idea

for the regiona l conunission came
from concerns expressed by the late
President John F . Kenned y, who
viewed the economic and social
plight of remote Appalachian comrnumhes during the 1960 election
campaign . Since 1965, Congress has
appropriated $2.5 billion for an ambitious lughway program designed
to penetrate isolated sections of the
region .
More than hall the 3,02f&gt;-mile
system was completed by Dec. I,
1980.
About $1.85 billion has been invested in the area's development
plan, im:luding rura l clinics , sewer,

water

and

other

community

faciliti es.

Pontiff leaves hospital
ROME (AP) - Pope John Paul II
left the hospital today, pale and
walking slowly, bl essing hundteds of
patients, doctors, nurses and nuns
who burst into song as he returned to
the Vatican three months and a day
after he was shot in St. Peter's
Square.
The 61 -year-old pontiff shook ha nds with doc,ors and nurses in the
Gemelli Hospital then stepped into
his black Mercedes for the lf&gt;.minute
trip home. After a few days ' rest at
his apartment overlooking St.
Peter's Square, the pope will go to
his summer retreat in Castel Gandollo in the Alban Hills south of
Rome.

The pope was discharged a day after his doctors said in a medical
bulletin he was completely healed
and could leave the hospital any
time he wished. They prescribed six
weeks of convalescence.
" He has to act like a man who is
waiting to return to the man he was
before," Dr. Francesco Crucitti ,
who performed the two operations
on the pope , told reporters .
About 300 people - doctors, nurses, nuns and other patients pressed against barricades in the
lobby of the modern hospital to get a
glimpse of the pope. They broke into
applause and sang the hymn "Christ
Reigns As King.'·

Problem's beset Cincinnati travel
CINCINNATI (AP) - Conunuters
in the Greater Cincinnati area
awoke to a triple whammy today
when an unauthorized bus strike, a
fatal truck ac:cident and fog combined to slow traffic and force them
to scramble for rides.
Northbound lanes of Interstate 75
in Covington, Ky., were closed more
than three hours during the morning
rush hour when a tractor trailer rjg
carrying frozen , chickens overljlrned, killing the driver and one

other person. Neither of the victims
was identified immediately.
Queen City Metro buses were idled
by an unauthorized strike by
mechanics and drivers, after the
alleged dismissal of a mechanic .
About 300 members of Local 627 of
the · Amalgamated Transit Union
met Thursday night and voted to
strike, despite being warned by
union leaders that the move was
illegal . They were told they are
public employes who are forbidden

by state law to strike.
About 40 bi•ses scheduled to begin
morning routes between 4:30 a.m .
and~ a.m. remained in the gara ge,
as drivers supported the mechanics
walkout and shut down the entire
city bus ~ystem .
Commuters who turned to cars
had to drive through heavy fog that
blanketed the area and slowed traffic , and · then found full parking
garages when they arrived downtown.
'

'

\

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