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                  <text>Rook ie Cato
gets first win

B eat of Bend

Family Medirin.-

Pav 6

Page3

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Vol:32 ,No.44
Copyrighted 1983

enttne
'2 Section\, 14 Pag&amp;t
20 Cen h
A Multimed ia Inc. Newtpa pe t

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wed11esday, June 15, 1983

Democratic attempts to trim tax cut faltering
WASHINGTON (API - In just over two weeks,
American workers wlil start collecting the !Ina! stage
of f'resldent Reagan's tax cut . It now appears every
taxpayer wUJ get a full share o! about 10 percent
regardless olincome.
Efforts by Democrats to limit the third phase of the
tax reduction to $nl per couple and $637 per
lndlvldual are flzzllng .
Rep. Dan Rostenkowskl, D-Ill., chairman o! the ·
House Ways and Means Committee, has ra ised the
posslbUity the panel might not even vote on the blll.
Althoygh the Democratic leadership ls calling for
the Umlt, Rostenkowskl said several Democra ts on
the committee ronllded that they could oot support It .
"Getting a bill out of the Ways and Means Committee
bY a narrow margin means It's always hare! to get 1t
passed on the floor. of the House. " especially when

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The Saving Place•

there ls no Republican support , Rostenkowski said
Tuesday.
He said he would confer with othe r Democrats
before deciding whether the panel should take up the
bill. But winning a House vote on the Umlt would
represent only a temporary victory ; the Republican
leadershlp of the Senate and ?11!sident Reagan a re
adamantly against tampering with the tax cut.
Rep. Sam Gibbons of Florida, No . 2 Democrat on
the conunlttee. cautioned that such tampering would
only Increase public dls!llusiorunent with the
government . It is " mainly a symbolic gesture that' s
bound to fall ," he saH
Chances for the limit were damaged further when
79 Democrats said in a letter to House Speaker
Thomas P . O'Neill tha t such a move. without a

similar restriction oh spending, " is flawed policy."
Treasury Secretary Dona ld T. Regan told
Rostenkowsld 's committee the limit would damag&lt;'
" the Amer ican dream of the middle class .
'"There's no use try ing to earn m ort' - Congress
wUI tax it away ,"' Regan Imagined taxpayers saying.
"That's not fair to the middle class. It 's not ·soak the
rich.' It 's drown the middle class." he &gt;ald .
In other action, the Sena te ovetwhelm lngly
a pproved a bill that would replace loca l cabl&lt;'
television regula tions with a single nationa l standa r
P-proved on jn 87-9 vote. the measure would not a llow
municipa l offici als to cont rol cable television rates In
localities whemleast [our conw nt tona l tPIP\ision
stations werP opera ting.
!}ate control· by local gowrrunenls wou ld tX'

West Virginia
has highest
jobless rate

~97.· APTII
Pitc~ ··-:··

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Ea.tiiATI

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Bonds to car's finish for waterresistant shine. 16-oz.' liquid,
18-oz. • sprQY or 14-oz. • 'paste.
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cooler with efficient urelntulatlon. Color choice.

WASHINGTON tAP ) - West
Virginia posted the natlon 's highest
jobless rate for Aprll - 19 percent despite a 1.1 percentage point from
March, according to state-by-state
figures released by the Labor
Department.
West Virginia, where unemploy ment stood at 20.1 percent.in March,
was oneof22stafeswlthdouble-digit
jobless rates during April, accordIng to the figures released Tuesday.
Unemployment lnMidtl!;anstood
at 15.5 percent In Aprll, 13,5 In
Alabama, 13.0 In Pennsylvania and
12.8 percent In Olllo.
The month ly s t a t e a nd
metropolitan-area employment sta tistics are based on ra w ligures
gathered !rom state employment
otfices and are not adjusted for such
seasonal variations as weather and
school closings.
Hard-hit by layoffs In its depressed mining Industry. West
Virginia's unemployment rate Is
still much higher than the 12.5
percent rate posted In Aprll, 1982.
1be govenunent report sa id the
national unadjusted jobless rate In
Aprll was 10 percent , whUe the
number of sta tes with joblessness a t
or above that level increased from 15
to 22 over the year.
Unemployment among variou s
metropolitan areas showed signs of
easing somewhat in Aprll , accordIng to the figu res. Johnstown, P a .,
held steady at 24.4 percent,lollowed
bY Duluth-Superior, Wis., 20.4;
Kankakee, ill., 17.9; Stockton,
Calif .. 17.1; a nd Wheeling, W.Va .,
16.9.
The lowest levels of joblessness
among the c ities were recorded by
Austin, Tex., 3.8 percent; RaleighDurham, N.C., 4.2; Stamford.
• Conn., 4.5; GainesvUle, Fla .. and
Lawrence, Kan.. 4.6; Nashua, N.H .,
5.0, and Richmond, Va ., 5.2.
Unemployment ra tes fell two
percenlage points or more over the
year in a dozen metropolitan areas.
The largest of. these declines
occurred ln-.Anderson, Ind.. whe re
the Jobless rate fell !rom 18.3percent
to 12.6 percent; J anesvUie-Belolt,
Wis. , 1U-12.3; Medford , Ore ..
15. 7-11 .7; ' VInela nd -Millv ille Bridgeton, N.J .. 17.6-13.0.
The nation' s seasonally adjusted
clvtllan unemployment rate declined !rom 10.2 percent to 10.1
percent lroin Aprll to May, but'
state-bY-State ligures are avaUable
only throughAprll.'Ibegovemment
reported In May that there were
approximately 11,192,001 Americans offII: Ialiy listed as unemployed,
some L16,001 fewer than In Aprll.

Weather forecast
· Variable cloudiness tonight and
Thu1'81lay with a 40 percent chance
of shoM!rs and thunderStonns. Low
fllllllhl Ql to 65. High Thul'9day
IU'WIIIIIl. Winds westerly around 10
mph tonl&amp;ht.

EwJ

HOMoF~

lfirouP

f1'rlday
!!mdar:
~r.lr~lheperiod.

....... lhe upper 'lllllo mid . .
iAn,ltllhellpper . . Co . . . . .

lnC'rease pqual to thP n7&gt;gion's infl at ion ratP.

On the other sidP of Ca pit ol Hill. tht' HouS&lt;' dPfPa lE'd
252·171 a proposa l to stop lhP Air F'orcc fi'Om signing
m ult i-year contract&gt; to pun:-has&lt;• the R-18 bomb&lt;'r.
The bom ber 's cr it icS sa v mulli-yf'a r C"'n traC't s woul d

m ake it harder for Congress to scrub the proj&lt;'&lt;'l at a
la te r da tf'. Supporters argued t he agr ('{'ments a re thr•
m ost efficient way to do busint'ss.

Tll(' Howit-' also r0fu SC'd on a 2-:1:\- \71
$1 ~ .4

\'Ot f'

to ctriP!('

$JS7 .~ billion clefenS&lt;'
aut hor lzatioe bill !"or an- s&lt;~ ! PII ll e \\'Pa pon favor rd b;•.:
l:X'f('ll Sf' SPf' tT'ta r:v Ca s par Wf' \nlx'rgt'r.

billion from

r hr

Textbook purchase
receives approval

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The Souther n Loca l School District Boa rd or Educa tion m""tlng in
rl'!(U iar session Tuc•sday night
purc hasro rn.001 worth or '""

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tx:&gt;oks for thC' nPw school year .
Thr pu n ·hasc wa5 mad!' in

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conju nction w tt h thf' OOard 's prom -

IS&lt;' to taxpa yers lo the efft'&lt;'t Iha l th&lt;'

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l.C'Xtbook s llua tion would lm pmvc If
voter s w ould approv(' a 1 &lt;~ x levy and

voters did a ppmve a levy .
The boa rd a C&lt;'('ptcd the rcslgnaJion or Roget· B . HiU as a mt·m bi•r of
the board.
In his l'I'S ig na lion. ll ill
gave out of sta te ('m ploy m en! as tlu·

rm son lor hl' !(lvlng up th&lt;' post
ThC' rC' mainlng board m pmlx'rs

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have.10days to na m~~ a.rc~lace m('lll
lor Hill. The rPp la&lt;,•me nt would
st'rv(~ only the remainder of this
yrar on the two and onf'·half yf'ars
r r ma inin g on thl' tr rm w ith votf'rs 111
self'Ct som m ne to fi lllh&lt;' n •st or tho•
unexpirr'd term at lhP Novf'mbt •r
eli -c llons . lf lheSoulhl'rn Boa rdd()('s
nul a ppoint a replaePment wit hin : ~ 1
days the n the replace would l••
named by the Meigs Cou nty llo; m l
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TAKING A BREAJ( from the heal, these kids
at the Pomeroy levee Tuesday

look to the river

nf F.d urH tlon.

The boa rd approved pa rticipating
in thf' Sf'rv it't'S of l h{' So u t h ra~ t c rn
Ohio Va lley Education Conference

in At hrns for til(' nf'xl yr•ar ancl

a ppm vNl Pnm lfmm t wllh

F~I'S l::o .

£'Ciueational l&lt;•lf'vls ion. for thr llf'X!
schoo l yt&gt;ar.
V\Li lli arn llob.:tc k \o \'asP mp loyt'(l a!'

jun ior high footba ll c·o;Je h for ih&lt;'
ll&lt;'W school ycar and tht' huarcl
approvf'd l hl' purchast•of tt•xtbooks.
Ca r l WolfP was nanwd transfX_)r ta

1ion suJ&gt;rtvlsor fo r Ih() Iqg:I-H-1 school
to srllt hrf"l..

yPar . Ttu• board ag rM

ultl UuSf•s not nrlf:'ftf'Cl &lt;~ nd w ill accep t

bid:-. on

t ht~

V(' h k lf's at ;my tim c·. t\
ttisa bility lt'a Vt' w as gm nf('(l to lb~·
P ro f1'll t.

ThP board ;u ·cppt('(l lhr l'f'Signa
lion ofMrs . l ·~ tlna

Prlct'. a u•ucl tn a t
tlw Hacint• l&lt;lt•ml'll l i tt ) ' ~ · t10o l .
Thf'

board

; t pprovr'CJ a

dc·scrlpt ion of languagt•

nPw

~L· rvit'l' .

du t ic-s of spt'f'(' lt, and c rltPr !; t fo r
pmgr ;rm pl; lt't 'llH •n I as pl 't'S4. •nlr-c.l by

Pa ula Ctx hra n . SIJ('I '('h t hl'l'apis t.

·nw

19X:l-X4 sa lary sd l&lt; '(lul&lt; ' a ~
p rnvldrd in f'nnt rat ·ts \.V&lt;I:-. &lt;tdoplt'fl .
Afldrd to lhP substll uh • t•m ployf'
llo.;t WP I'f' Mary Sm lt h.. lo:-.TI' ManuPI
and Pa tricia Ilrow n, cu s ~t)(l\o tn s,
nnd J ll.VC' I' Ma nud . .lunf' As hil •y,
W a nd~• T f'a ford . T1 •n•sa V;tn M!'tf'r
otnd [)on.Ji hy. Johnso n, e&lt;x) ks.

afternoon. A froUc In the cool water ws just the ticket
as temperatures sm•n.t into the 90s, a trend expected
to continue
the

Improvement··funds available
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff
Funding for soU preservat ion and
land Improve ments through the
Department of AgriCulture's Buckeye HUls Resource Conservation
and Development •Program ls now
available to Meigs County.
That development was made
publ_lc through a letter read at a
meeting of the Meigs County Board
of Commiss ioners Tuesday which
ad\llsed the county now qualifies to
rea!lve assistance .
County Eilgtneer Phil Roberts
e:Xplaikd theasslslailcerequlres 25
percent In matching funds, but that
"doesn't necessarUy mean cash."
He said matching funds could be In
the form oflabor or materials . Identifying the areas to be
Improved Is the llrst Step In getting
assistance, Roberts notes that
besides seedlllg, the money could
probably be used for repairing slips,
rrovlng dirt, • driVing pUing and
cribbing aljd perhaps even for
helping to improve and seed some of
the 17 dumps Ut thecountynowl;leing
cleaned up.
Roberts saldhehascOIItactedBob
First of the Melia County Soli
Conservation Service who ls workIng with the cOunty on conservation
aDd de-velopment programs.
ED,\ worlaillop let
. Plana for a Meigs County €COnomic deve!oPrnent workshop to be
held. on JulY 25 at tile LaSaDe ·
~were~byJames

Jl!lllllngs of Jflllllllp Auxlates,
COIIIUitants 1D the counly.
Featured at the l1li!i!tlng to which
about :ll county1 townShip and
Vlllaae oiDclala Inti bullneasmen.

Will be taWed. Ml.bl! Wb by tho!
au...ntc ~ill!ilt apecta1tsts
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reta ined in less rom petttiv£' m arkets, but cablr
opera tors would bP gua ran tt&gt;ed an annual rJ1f'

of the lour major utility companies
o~ration and m a1 ntcnanee of the
serving Meigs County -- Buckeye
sewage system a nd said while thPre
Power. Inc .. Columbu s and Southls no dispute. there remain s a
em Ohio E lectrtcCo., Columbia Ga s
question as to the best way to
adminis ter the innovative program.
oWhlo, and Ohio Power .
The program wUI follow a socia l
A proposal lor a n indepepdenl boa rd
hour and dinner beginn ing at 5: lJ
to administer the progra m Is under
with the program to start at 7: :n A
r onsldera lion, J ones 1.-eport ed .
suggested agenda and mailing li st
Food allocation
were presented by J ennings.
Inlmmatlon on the county's $ti,OJ()
He a lso discussed the county' s
food emergency allocat ion was
presented to the commissioners by
$23,450 Utter control program and
sever al appropriation revisions
Sidney E dwards of the Me lgs-Ga lila
w e r e a pp rov e d b y !h e
Community Action Agency .
Edwards adv ised tha t the funds
commissioner s.
The first pu bile hearing on
are targeted towa rd m ass feeding
proposed projects for funding from
and emergency hou ~lng and at-e
1983-84 block gra nt monies was set
available only through Sept. 30. He
lorJune29at 7p.m . with the placeto
said the procedure to ~lve the
fu nding Is for the comm issioners to
be arinoun.IY'I.
Frank Davis of Buckeye Hills
a ppoint an advisory task Ioree
meeting with the com missioner s
composed of representatives from
advlsecl that the county can expect
religious a nd civic o rganlztlons,
to receive approximately the same
business, and Industry , wbo would
amount as before, $!1!,001, and that determine the "grantee'' whose
the deadline for project application
responsibili ty would be to adminisls Aug. 12. Two public hearings are ter the funds . The fee for handling
required this year, with the second the funds would be one percent of the
total allocation .
to be scheduled In late July.
Davis suggested that the county · It was noted that a representative
move toward closing out the current of the Environmental Protection
block grant projects before June 30. Agency wW be here today (Wednesday) to check the closing of the old
Sewage sylll&lt;!m funds
Possible additional funding for the landfill and the \)pet atlon of the new
Tuppers Plains sewage system facility.
The need for more lUI dirt a long
upgrading projl'Ct was discussed
with Davis. The E PA proj ect now the landfill road was noted as well as
has 8!5 percent funding.
Housing the need lor signs Identifying the
rehabilitation program funds was sanitary landtlll along the highway .
Davis' only suggestion and he · It' remains questionable as to
whether · these can be obtained
qileStjoned whether Tuppers Plains
throllgh
ooor.
would &lt;-II~ since ellgtb!llty Is
1be
corrunlssioners
discussed at
~on a high percentage of low
length
the
plan
prqiosed
bY GaU!a
and moderate inrome familles.
County
for
renovating
a
collage
on
· ConuniNollef Richard Jones rethe
GaUlpoll$
State
lnltltute
ported on hiS caftl4ots with the EPA
'( Continued on paae 14 )
oftlctais. and others reaardlh&amp;
the
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PET VACCINATION CLINIC ~ The Meigs County Humwte
Society, In conJu!'Ctlon wllh the Melp Health Department, held a pet
vaccination cUnlc Tuesday afternoon oo the MelpCounty Fairgrounds.
Dr. Carol Osbome, Meigs County veterinarian, pictured kneeling
above, wu on hand to adrdlnle&amp;er rabies, parvo, lepw, IUid d181emper
sbota to !lop; and rhino, ciWemper; and rabies shcMs lo cats. Pictured
with Dr. O.bome are David H81gerty, -!Mant sanitarian oflhe Health
Deparimeal, and Arlee Abboit, Rock Springs, owner of VanLoy, the Irish
!letter recftvlnllblaahota at the cUnlc, Another !le!l!lion 1.!1 planned lor the

r.u.

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(:ommentary

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Ill Court Street
PomiProy, Ohio

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DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETI'
PubiiNher

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

General Manaser

1\.Msl~ta.nt Puhllfih~r/ Conlroller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New!' Editor

A MEMBER of The i\lt80Ciaied ~. Inland DaDy PmtH i\.'fiOClaUo• ud 'he
A.Jtworican New.11paper Puhll!ther!ll .bltoclatlon.
I...E"'n'ER..~ OF OPINION lll"e wek:omed. 'lbey fllhould he leM duut !011 wor'dR lonlr\llleite"' an! MJbjec:llo edltln,; and mtl'll. be Mlcned witt. name, addrt!8'l and te~phoM
nunber. N&amp; uMiped letterH wU.I be pa~. LetlerM Mould be ln 1eod t.tte,.Jillklrert..
ftln1 ~ not pmt?nalkle'l.

'T he front-runner
·has more to lose
When somebody looks like a turltey In the straw poll on presidential
candidates, It Is most likely to be the front·ruMlng entry. He has more to
lose.
In theory, at least, the front -runner Is supposed to win and kl!ePwinnlng.
In fact, !halls virtually Impossible. The theory works to the advantage of
candidates playing catch-up, who can pick their spots, winning here, losing
there, and gaining headway In the process.
That used to be the pattern of the early season presidential primary
elections. But the process no longer watts for the voting that pays off in
nominating delegates; straw polls on the 1984 ·Democratic candidates
. began six months ago.
They are preliminaries to the preliminaries, but they pay dividends to
the outsider who upsets the big guns.
So far, that would be Sen. Alan Cranston of California, twice a victor,
· once a loser In matchups with form~r Vice President Waiter F . Mondale.
He won In Mondale's own neighbOrhood last Saturday, at Wisconsin's
· ·· Democratic state convention. Cranston said that established him as one of
:. ·· the big three Democraitc candidates, with Mondaleand Sen. Johft Glenn of
Ohio. Glenn stayed away from the Milwaukee convention, got scant
support, but benefltM anyhow. Any setback for Mondale Is a boon to the
others. ·
The straw polls are getting to be a habit, and while they are easUy
. .. dismissed as political show business, they count for more than that
:: ,:: ·Former President Jimmy Ca rter shed his •arly anonymity with a
·· · · hard-eariled, surprise l~ad In a straw vote of Iowa Democrats In the fall ol
·
1975. Sen. Ho..,ard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee thought he liad a lock on lltst
. place at a Maine Republican conv.,.,tlon In the buUdup for the 1!181
.-· campaign, so he chartered a plane and attracted a crowd of political
.' reporters- who saw him lose.
Those lessons don' I seem to register. Mondale said he eK'p ected "to do
very well" at the Milwaukee convention. His managers said he'd win. He
lost. Cranston got 38.8 percent, Mondale 35.7 percent.
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Special thanks
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My mother, Mrs . Allen (Mattie
Keiser) Ball , wishes to publicly
"THANK" Gerald Rought and the
American Legion along with Hugh
Custer at the Veterans Service
Office for Iheir concern and action
taken, by placing the nags and ww
I nag holder at the sycamore trees
In Kerr's Run, In time for Memorial
Day.
It 's been quite a lew years since
anyone has taken an Interest in that
area .
Since my last article we have had
a great response from friends and
relatives and schoolmates about
the serv1ces that used to be held
there , and were able to ttnd out who
the plaques were placed lor. They
were: Lewis Daniels, Charles
Bumgardner
and
Kinney
Thompson.
My mother talked with Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews and has
obtained his permission to do some
cleaning around the area of the

trees and also to circulate a petition
to get the former "VIllage Green"
restored.
Sometime In the next week we
will have the petition ready and
hopefully be able to place them at
different area merchants for
county-wide signatures.
Also In the near future we're
hoping to get all Interested persons
together to form a committee to
restore the Park.
Since things have been 10 beetle
with Memorial Day and all, will all
the people who called my mother
please call her, 992-2314 again, or
me at 247-4811. She was keeping a
list of names and numbers and
seem&lt; to have misplaced it. We'd
appreciate hearing from you au
again, along with anyone i!lse In
Meigs County who would rather see
a beautiful park at the entrance of
Pomeroy instead of weed!!, briars
and broken beer bOttles. - Mrs.
Barbara Stahl, Letart.

Thejoy should not be confined to
Great Britain, tt there ill joy tD be
got from the exerctse by a plurality
of mature political sense. The
reverberations of Mr.!. Thatcher's
victory wiU be beard In great and
small echo members up and down
the chanceries of EW'Qpe and the
United States. What happened on
Thursday ill by no ·means of
parochial Interest.
You remember AntbOny Wedg·
wood Benn.' Vtscount Stransgate?
He Is the highly educated gentleman who was In the forefront of the
left wing of tbe Labor Party. Over
the years he did a kind of
aristocratic striptease, In his effort
.to achieve an ·ada mite austerity.
First he dropped the title. Then he
dropped Wedgwood. Then he shor·
tened his Christian name and was
no longer Anthony, just plain Tony.
Somewhere along the line I re·
marked t_hat his march toward
proletertanlzation lett him only the
ellmlnatton ol the second " n" In his
surname. Well, on Thursday, the
voters took Tony Benn's seat away
from htrn, afte&gt; 33 years.
Oh, how certain the dashing Benn
was that socialism was the way of
the future for England.
"It ill widely predicted that In the
next feW years tbere might be three

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Mark Flynn was pastor of the
Southern Cluster, United Methodist
Church. He was so dtfferent! He
looked so young! Dark haired, not
muscular, somewhat frail, In fact.
Quiet in speech and manner. I
t:l'member my first Impression of
him at the Rrst Pastor-Parish
meeting, was one o! a studious
nature, very Intelligent, as tt the
research for education had been
handed down to him through family
ienerations. The longer ourconversatlon, the more you came to
realiZe that though he was so young,
his Immature, boyhood days had
passed lOng ago.
So he came to us; to replace one
whO had been so special to us all. He
Is so dttferent! Look at him! He
doelin'tjog dall ! Pia g ball is oot
one of his best accom
ents.
He doesn't runaround the neighborhood with a T·shlrt and sweat pants

.

Oil.

So different! Well, maybe not oo
'.
.; different! Unmarried - terrible
., houlekeeper, loves to eat, play
·. cheea, trtendly, not moody, llleepe
every paper he has ever acquired,
• haa a ftle system only he can
·• comprehend but can ftnd anythlna,
• keep. a schedule that would
·, exhaust moot people, )"!t ll8e8 his
time tor others more than hlmaelt.
•.

ieft-spll\. a trade union party,
devoted to the reprlstlnatlon of .·

socialism. Is this a .fair analysis of
the trend In British politiC~&lt;?
I was In London, on television,
exchanging views with Mr. BeiUI.It

'1\o('l(lf~

was September 198J. ~ leader ol
the left forces of the Labor Party
replied.

@otU _ . _ , . ....l ''II'IA!&amp;-"--F.:rrA

"Somehow It's just not the way I envisioned the Arch of Triumph"

Volumes of nothing _______Ja_ck_A_nde_·_rso_n
WASHINGTON - You wonder
why the, Environmental Protection
Agency Is In trouble? You should
read "Project Stream," an Inc!!·
thick document produced by the
EPA's Denver regional ottlce at a
cost ol abOut $1 million In money
and empioyee-hoUI1!.
It's supposed to be a blueprint for
Increasing efficiency and lrnprov·
lng management. As It turned out ,
It's a testament to exactly the
oppil!llte.
Fourteen full -time employees
lpent tllousands or hours InterviewIng the Denver region's 340 employees. The end result should be
titled "Dick and Jane Meet Mr.
Bafflegab."
Where the report lsn 't contusing,
It Is simple-minded. Much of It Is
just tncomprehenslble. It confirms
the maxim that the less the
bureaucrats have to .say, the more
words It takes to say it.
M~. associate Indy Badhwar
labOred through a ropy of "Project
Stream." He extracted a few
examples of the nonsensical nater-

lng that coet the taxp;lyers a million
bliclu.
Bureaucrats seem io have a
compulsion to cletlne everything,
for example, whether It needs
detllolng or not. Here's how the
relx&gt;rt explains the word "budget"
to employees who may have been
itvlng on Mars:
"A budget may be .seen as a .
prediction. It the requests are
granted In the amounts requested
and It the moneyh Is spent In
accordance with instructions leadIng to a sattslactlon of e preliminary
needs, then the purpose of the
budfg~t wiU be abcleve. The budget
then becomes a link · between
llnanclal resources and human
jJehavtor to accomplish policy
objectives." Uh huh.
The detlnltioq of "mail" requli'es
a tun page and reads ltke a Boy
Scout flr:st-ald manual:
"The movement of mall Into,
through and out of the regional
office ill akin to the flow or blood In
the lluman body. To keep ~althler,
t~ flow must continue unabated

nad unhindered - moving In the
new and taking out the old. If the
pace ot a man quickens to a trot or
brealu Into a lull run and the blood
flows faster, the heart Involuntarily
pumps faster.
"Interpolated and conversely
stated, by keeping the mall flowing
quickly through the regional office,
we can maintain a reasonable staff
word pace In our mandated
activity."
Possibly this means that jogging
can be practiced right at our desk,
without sweat or showers.
The topic "Rotational Assign·
ments" calls forth an environmen·
tal metaphor: "Implementation of
rotation equals vigorous circulation
present In fresh-water streams with
accompanyiJ\g lite forms. Non·
rotation • equals stagnant waters
and the Inevitable DECAY which
accompanies them."
I hope the rotation has been
implemented and the dead fish
have been ellmlna ted from the
Denver ottlce.
In the bureaucratic tra&lt;;lltion of
makln(l even the overstpilflcations

By .,""'cla!ed l'reM

Rusty Staub wants a regular job
. ,_and not as a pinch hitter.
The problem Is thateverytlrnethe
New York Mets call on him, he
delivers.
Staub poked a pinch-single to lett
with two outs In the bOttom of the
lOth Inning to drive In Bob BaUor
from second base as the Mets
· slipped by the Chicago Cubs 4-3
Tues&lt;lay night.
1n other National League games,
St. Louis nipped Philadelphia 54,
Clncinna t1 got by San Diego 4-3, Los
Angeles held off Atlanta 4-3,
Montreal crunched Pittsburgh 7-3
and Houston edged San Francisco
3-21n 121nnlngs.
The Mets had taken a 3-2lead In
the eighth on Danny Heep's pinch·
homer before the Cubs tied It In the
ninth on Ron Cey's double and Jay
Johnstone's single off Doug Slsk, 2-1.
Staub's game-winner carne after
Ballor began the lOth with a single
off reliever Lee Smith, 1-4. Mookle
WUson sacrltlced Ballor to second
and Hubie Brooks flied out. Daryl
Strawber&amp;J' was Intentionally
walked, bflnglng on Staub, batting
for Mark Bradley.
Staub has 2,666 career hits and is
the only major leaguer to ever get
500 or more hits with four different
teams. Staub got his with Houston,
Montreal and Detroit. In addition tn

A week or so ago whUe In a local wouldn't know a dJng(ls· from a
store I bOught a garden hose. Just a thlng-of·a·bob or a what-cha·ma·
simple garden hose such as Is found ·calf.lt. When the manager gently
In most of the back yards In reminded me they went to a great
America . Or so I thought. It was not deal ot trouble locating the dingus I
until I connected It to the water knew I would have to take it or
faucet that the horr'tble truth reveal my I&amp;Jiorance.
dawned. The damned thing Is alive!
Now I have a creepy hose to add
It Is apparently some kind of a to my collection of things that are of
cross between an ordinary garden no earthly use to me. There Is the
hose and a boa constrictor. It can exerciser that' Is 1111aranteed to
writhe Itself In knots which &gt;Wuld remove excess weight and help
battle Houdini and when you illY it soothe the discomfort ct arthritis. H
down continues to twist Usett Into ali Is a weird contraption of ropes and
manner ol weird shapes. The thing pulleys designed to put your legs,
Is absolutely uncanny. No matter arms and b8ck against each other
how much you attempt to and guaranteed to assure future
straighten It out, it automatically health and com!ort. Just fasten end
begins to twist itself Into what I can (A) to the doorknob, put your feet
only lmagtne Is some .s ort of reptile ar,d hands In loops (B) And (C) and
nightmare. I would have taken It you are In the go6d health business.
back to the store and demanded my The nrst t1tne I use u 1 pulled the
money back but I am afraid to get In door down so It went Into the
the car with lt. It would probably collection. Then there Is the foot
throw a loop around my neck and bath which we added to our
strangle me before we were collection last Christmas - after
halt-way there.
using it twice. Without doubt it Is a
I know there Is not too much to
write abOut a garden hose, even a
So he came to us, to be a part of hose as headstrong and stubborn as
our Uves, to uplift wr spiritual lives. the one I bought, but I am sure It 1
He has dwelt among us, shared
would unleash It from the faucet at
fellowship, com!orted us, taught us,
night I would have plenty to write
sang with us, (though not one of his about. The yard would be littered
best talents). and through the years wl!lutrangled rabbits and rats and
he has seemed to become older,
God knows what else, causing mr
physiCally, (thinner · now ) and his , no end to disposal problems. So I
· voice no longer changes during hill I keep lttirmJ?"·:MtCI!tothewater ~
sermons! He has grown emotion· faucet and let the other eild~lo
ally, and spiritually, knowing that
twist ltsett Into even more grothough he baa not reached everyone tesque J)atterns. I thought a few hot
In the Lord's work,' he has had a
days .would bake out some of the
great impact on those whom he lias tanglE!ll but no such luck. Now, I am
ministered to.
looking for another sucker to buy It!
Now we are com!ortable with
Perhaps it. Is my general appearhim. We know what to expect ot him ance of Innocence and 11\llllblUty
and what he wants for us.
that makes me such an easy mark
He baa performed marriages for for anything that Is sure to cost me
some of us, baptized some ol us, and trouble or money. Last spring 1
burled some ol our dear ones. He Is walked Into a store and I Imagined
a part otus! To some, a dear friend,
the managl!r said to the clerk,
to some another son, a brother, a
"H~ he comes i&amp;aln. Get that
pal, a buddy.
dingus with the stripped threads we
A mlnl5ter to .o ur faith! Now he 1s have been stuck with for !he laSt a1x
leaving . us! Returning to his months." To me he IBid. "Good
beloved West VIrginia (always In IIIOJ'IIIni, Mr. Wiaptt, We finally
his ~art), to begin hla worlt .,_. 101 that d!Jilllll you \WI'I! 111111111
for anot11er churcll.
about last year. I'm hlvtJw one r1
But what will we do wlthoul him? the boys wrap It tor you." Not being
Who can take his place? It won't be mechanically Inclined, I wrack my
the same! The new pastor wtU be so ·m emory In vain. hope that I wtU
dUrerent - but then Mark was too. remember ivhat ll dlniua Ia, what It
- Jean Truuell.
Is u&amp;ed tor and why I ordered It In ·
the t1nt place. I draw ..a blanll:.' 1

worthwhile Investment if you have
a bathroom with a cement !loor. It
has an electrically operated vtbra·
tor which Is supposed to be fine lor
relief of tired, aching feet but on the
wood floor of our bathroom It shook
the whole house and did fantastic
thlnp to radio and television
reception.
It Is the millions of prople like me
who kl!eP the rest of the country In
business. Don't tell me that Weight
Watchers and Cambridge Dieters
could make It on their own merits.
Even the stock market and the
nation's hanks couldn't get along
without us. We are the people who
keep the money circulating. Years
ago P . T. Barnum claimed there
was one bOrn every minute. With
the vast Increase In population
since Barnum's time, his claim has
jumped considerably. We are the
people who buy those fabulous
diamond bargains advertised on
television for $19.95. WltbOut us
those famous cutlery bargains and

theMets.
New Yorlt Manaaer ~'rank How·
ardIs weU-awareofStaub's®slreto
play t'Veryday .In tact, Howard said
Staub might be In the starting lineup
real soon.
Cubs Manager Lee Ella, mean·
·while, bemoaned his decision 1!&gt;
walk Strawberry, a btg rookie
hitting .194, tnordertopltchtoStaub.

DocJ«en 4. Bravea S
. Mike Marshall's two-runllprner In
the second Inning and Dusty Baker's
two-run double In the third gave Los
Angeles the lead and the Dodgers
then hung on.
The Dodg~rs roughed up Cratg
'McMurtry, 7-3, In- going ahead.
Atlanta scored In the fourth when
major IeagJe home run leader Dale
Murphy belted hlsl8thoftheseason.
Bob Horner's 12th hOmer made It
4-2 In the seventh and Homer's
run-scoring single narrowed the gap
further In the eighth.
Can!lnals 5, Phlllles 4
George Hendrick laced a lone-out
In thebOttomofthen,lnthlnnlng tolih
St. Louis.
Joaquin Andujar, who has lost
eight of his nine decisions and has
not won since May 18, took a 4·3lead
Into the n)nth. He left after Joe
Morgan hit a two-out double. Bruce
Sutter was then summoned from the
bullpen, but pinch hitter Bo Dlaz
singled In Morgan .

1n the bottom of the ninth, Tom
Herr singled and was sacrificed to
second. Keith Hernandez was
Intentionally walked before Hen·
drlck's hit.
Alllro8 3, Gbmls 2
PhD Gamer opened the top of the
12th inning with a double, went to
thlnl on Jose Cruz's groundout to
first and scom:l when Luis Pujols hit
a chl)Opper to second. The vlc!ory
wasHouston'sllth In 14games.
Dave Smith, 1-1, got the win as
Astros pitchers did not allow ahit In
the final six Innings.
.
Houston took the lead In the top of
the sixth on consecutive home runs
by starting pitcher BobKnepPfr, his
first, and Bill Doran, his second. San
Francisco tied It In the bOttom of the
Inning, one of the runs coming on
Joel Youngblood's fifth homer.
Plrales 7, Expos'3
Tim Wallach cracked a two-run
homer and Tim Raines and Andre
Dawson added solo shots for
Montreal.
Steve Rogers upped his record to
8-3 by pitching 61·3 IIUIIngs . He left
after giving up two runs In the
seventh. Jeff Reardon pitched the
final two Innings for his eighth save.
Raines, who scored three runs, hit
his third homer In the third Inning .
One out later, Dawson hit his lOth.
Wallach's eighth homer came In the
sixth.

hit two-run homers, and Mike
By JOHN NELSON
combliled with Bob Stanley
Brown
AP Sports Wrller
Back In spring training, CharUe on a four-hitter to give the Red Sox
their second stalght victory after
Hough was hobbling around on a
newly reconstructed knee, and losing seven In a row.
Brown gave up the four hits In 72-3
joking that he was. "just a Utile off
Innings, and Stanley held Detroit
my mile speed."
1bree months later, he may hitless the rest ofthewayfor his 12th
save.
actually be at lull speed.
Kirk Gibson accounted for both of
Hough, the Texas Rangers knucDetroit's runs. One came on a
kleball pitcher, had lost three
straight decisions untO beating · fourth-IIUiing homer that he hit
some600feet out of the park over the
Detroit 5-2 on June 4. After a start
right-field stands. It was only the
last Thursday In Sea ttle that he lost
14th
time a hall was hit out of that
3·2 In ll,Jnnings, Hough came back
part
of
the park.
Tuesday night with a three-hitter to
The
Tigers
other run carne In the
beat theMarlners ·7·1.
sixth
when
Gibson
hit a long shot to
Larry BUttner sparked a four-run
center
with
Lou
Whitaker
on first.
Texas third Inning with a two-run
Whitaker
was
thrown
out
trying
to
double.
Hough gave up Seattle's only run score, but Gibson came all the way
around - with what wu ruled a
In the third on a single by Todd Cruz,
double - to score by bowling over
a fly bail that moved Cruz to second,
homepiate· umpire Larry Barnett .
a s ingle by Steve Henderson and
who bOunced Into Boston catcher
Manny Castillo's sacrifice !ly. That
RJck Gedman.
was the Inning that his locatiOn
Gedman dropped the bail for an
faUedhlm .
error, and Barnett was taken from
The victory was Texas' filth
the field on a stretcher, althOugh he
st ralghl, moving the Rangers within
was conscious.
two games of California, which
Indians 9, Yankees 6
leads the American Lea(,!Ue West.
Franco drove In the final
J
ulio
Hough said he now ruuld see no
three
runs
of C le~eland' s six-run
. weak spots In the dub, as long as U
First
Inning
with a home run,
· keeps winning.
helping
hand
New
York It s fourth
Red Sox 6, Tigers 2 ·
straight loss and ninth in 12 games.
Jim Rice-and Dwight Evans each

sound complex, the report offers
these marvelous meaningless
words In . sections devoted to
"Geography · Topology" and "Demography · Priority":
"While It ill true that geography
changes over eons lnst!Nld of days,
It does magnify any changes In
s tatutory requirements of
priority."
Having struggled with the Idea,
the authors had to admit they
couldn't quite make the connection
to EPA rules and goals. n..,y
confess:
"Although the ceograpy alld
demographic pattern of the regions
are well Ingrained In thi! EPA mind ·
and process, the aftect (sic .. of
statutOry ""'!Uirement reform alld
of prlonlty changes In the workload
are not clear."
Then the report gives this tip to
management: "Conduct all Inter·
nal briefings with blackboard visuals to eliminate resource strain
associated with 'one-upmanship,
dog and phony shows."' The
troublemakers can presumably be
made to dean the erasers.

fancy vegetable slicers which call
tum a radish Into a decorative rose
would be rusting In some lonely
warehouse ratber than In our
kitchen drawers. It we weren't
around neither would be Jerry
Falwell and Oral Roberts and
others of their ilk or the poDtlclans
who keep our mali boxes filled with
supplications tor campaign contributions. Without us, America would
be a sorry place Indeed!
Since I began writing about the
hose, my brother-In-law an&lt;! a
couple of our husky nephews came
along and took the t:l'(.'alcltrant
monster firmly In hand. '!bey now
have It anchored, lore and aft, lri the
back yard. They even menaced to
get out most of 1he loops. Wlloen I
saw that It took all three of them to
do It, I could understand why my
puny efforts faDed. Tbe only trouble
Is, I forgot to ask how long 1 must
keep it staked out.
Until the fall rains, no doubt!

/

-'l'uesday In San Diego. Even though the runner was
sufe at first , second ha.'U' umplrt• Tt~rry Tnt a nded a
doubl&lt;&gt; play "'"'"""'' Bonlllu's hlo&gt;&lt;·k WIIS Illegal. (i\P
r• .-e.,hoto ).

ILlEGAL BLOCK - San Diego Padres' Juan
BoniUa throws a rolling block Into Cincinnati Reds'
second baseman Ron Oetiler whlle trying to hre1lk up
a double play In the third Inning of their gam&lt;•

·Rookie gives bullpen big lift

-.Texas corrals fifth straight victory

In defense of suckers______L_ow_e_ll_W_in_ge_u

A different pastor
,•

parties of which youn- or what's
left of yours -would be a kind of

1983

Staub has game winning hit

Weclneu• y, June 15, Ita

Our darling_.,;_______-'-"-_~--~w_ill_iam_F_~B_uc_k_''ey-Jr.
T-he Daily Sentinel

June I

2-The IWiy Siallt..

Pomel:v

.

•

Lary Sorensen pitched 6 2·3
Innings for his first victory since
May 1. while New York lefty Bob
Shirley gave up eight runs In five
Innings.
Jerry Mumphrey, with an Inside·
the-parker, and Steve Kemp ho·
mered for the Yankees.
Blue Jays 13, Oakland 7
Jesse Barfield homered twice and
drove In ftve runs to lead Toronto's
lS.hlt attack, which also Included
homers by Buck Martinez and
Barry Bonnell. Barfield came In to
the game In a -4-for-35 slump and
without a n RBI for 25 games.
Martinez had a 4-for-4 night with
three RBI, Including an RBI-slngle
In Toronto's five-run,. third Inning
against Tom Underwood .
Jim Clancy started for Toronto
but lasted only three Innings before
giving way to Roy Lee JacksOn, who
pitched 3 l -3 1nnlngs for the v ictory.
Twins 8. Royals I

Minnesota scored five runs In the
fourth Inning, backing right-hander
AI Williams to his first victory In
seven decisions. Williams scattered
six hits while striking out six to eam
his first victory since April '1:7.
John Castlno's two- run double
was the big hit In the '!Wins' fourth ,
and Gary Ward hit a leadoff homer
In the seven! h Inning.

SAN Dl:EGO lAP)- Desperate
for relief pitching, Cincinnati Man·
ager Russ Nixon decided to take
chance on a rookie right ·handerWho
wasn't even listed on the Reds'
s pring training roster .
Keefe Cato, who started the
season at the Class AA level In
Waterbury, Conn .. picked up his
first major league victory Tuesday
night with 21 -J Innings of shutout
work In a 4·3 triumph over thP San
Diego Padres.
"I was very relaxed out there,"
sa id Ca to. 25, who made his major
league debut Monday, pitching an
Inning against the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
"i just wanted to come In and
throw strikes ," said Ca to. 1·0, who
spent a week with India napolis of the
Class AAA Amer ican Association
before joining thr Rf'ds last week .
He replaced starter Bruce Bere·
nylln the seventh wit h the game lied
at :J-3, one out, a runner at second
and a 2-0 count on Tim Flannery .
Ca to walked Flannery but got AI
Wiggins and .Juan El&lt;Jnllla to fly out
a nd end the threa t.
In the eighth, h&lt;' retired threl'
bailers. a nd In lh£' ninth he struck
out Slxto Lezcano a nd Luis Salazar
before Nixon brought In Bill
Scherrer, who fa nned Ruppert
Jones lor his fourth save.
"Our bullpen ha' been so muc h of
a problem la tely, I figured II was
time to gtwCato a shot," said Nixon.
"I had no ldra what hr could do. I

a

was just hoping hr could do
som ething ."
Cato's rookie ba l!e1yma te. Dan
BUardello. cont r ibuted the game
winning hit wh&lt;'n he du nked a single
over second base to S&lt;'OIY· plnchhll·
ter Gary Redus. who had singled
and was sacrlfl&lt;rri to scocond.
" It wasn' t a bad pit ch," said
Bliardello, referring to the two
strike cUiveiJall served up by loS&lt;•r
Gary Lucas, 2-4. " I just golfrei it .'
Bllardello, the ,.Reds' apparent
ca tcher of thc fu ture, has only eig ht

1-u·ns

The slumping Padres. losl'rs of
thre&lt;' st raight after winning nlnr of
12. managed just four hil s. Bonilla 's
two-run single In the third Inning
broke a 2J.Inning scoring fa mine
and tlc~l th&lt;' game at 2·2.

CLEVELAND ( AP 1- N!'w York
Yankees Manager Billy Ma rtin,
enraged a fter h l• team lost tu
Cleveland 9-6 Tuesday night . took
matters Int o his own hands afi PI' the
game.
Martin grabbf'd a bat and
smashed a u1ina l behind the New
York dugout following the Yankees'
fourth straight lo'S.
"None of the players did 11 ,"
Martin sa id . " I broke II. I called
Gabe (Indians President Gabe
Paul ) and offered to pay lor it. "
Paul is a lso a former president of
the Yankees.
Martin also ordered, during a
pre-game me&lt;'tlng, that the televl·
slcm In the team 's c lubhouse not be
turned on foiiowlng New York
losses .

· -- -••

~uVU· A.llleJ"8 AII'"A\JI'IIRtOft

slams Into Boston' Red Sox' calcher Rich GediiUIII
(lelt) after bowHng over plate umpire LaiTy BameU
In the sixth lnniDg of Tueoday nlght'l pme at 'nser

Stadlwn. Barnett waa carried from the lleld on a
!~~'~'etcher 11Dd taken lo Henry Ford H08[&gt;ltalln Detroit
for X-rays. (AP Laoerphoto).

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC•
VETERANS ME,..ORIAL HOSPITAL

,f

•

• ' '•

DEALER'S COST
CASH &amp; CARRY
6,000 BTU thru 18,000 BTU

Gallia Refrigeration
152 3rd lve .
Galli o1is, OH.

r lf~j•Uj
·

•

YAUNA M.AlOM
IJ•IO N IOIAIDI
00".\LD lltTIIIl..U.C

\ s t I-l EEK : ! : \0 &amp; 9 : 00 P. "l .
SAT &amp; SU N MAliNH S I : ID &amp; J :

Padrc.-,;' Manager Dick Williams
said th&lt;' ll'&lt;liTI apJX'ar s to bt•
prt•sslng.
"'!111' midci l&lt;' of lilt• lineup hasn't
donf' a thi ng lat r ly," tw said . "Wt"'
have togPtthl' tlmr\y hit. Maybc wt •
WP

GOOD AGAIN

~~ i'MAX DUGAN
'I ~ RETURNS

scvrnth whf'n plnr h hiltrr Jonr•s
stnglrd In LPzl'ano from Sf'&lt;.' oncl.

should t.akP wal ks \.l..'hC'n

IT'STIME TOI'I!IL

~·

s ingle gav&lt;' Cincinnati a :\-2 lead In
thP fOUiih . S..tn DI('J;O li«i It In the

f'iln .

We' 1Y' sw inging at too many IJitd
pitches."
1n tonight' s Sf'COnd gam&lt;' of llw
series. thl' Padresscnd Ec.l Whit son.
().4, agains t ('(wrllt• Pulm, 'l ·2.

C()IING SOON :
" J([TU~ N

or

TH E JED!" &amp;

" Hill IGHT ZONE "

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Ron ()psfrr's nm-scoring infit'ld

Upset Martin
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·- -

)

ADMISSION EVERY W ESCMY Sl.OO

balled in. bu t four an• gamr
wtnnf'I'S.

AMANA WINDOW UNITS
OVERSTOO&lt; SALE

. ..

BARGAIN MATINEES SAr &amp; StJN
AU SEA TS S Z DO

COMMON 8's &amp; 16's

NAILS

Off ~

�- - - - - - ----'-- - -Page

w.dt

4 The Daily Sentinel

Bowler
Weber
returns

Moore defends title
~gainst Roberto Duran
NEW . YORK (AP ) - Davey In Tokyo on Feb. 2, 1!*12. " But that's
the only edge he has. I 'm stronger,
Mpore, a student of boxing history,
quicker."
laster,
thlnl&lt;s that's exactly where Rnberto
After
Mihara, Moore defended his
DUran belongs - In boxing history.
crown
against
South African Char·
So he'U try to send Duran Into the
lie
Weir
and
ex-champ
Ayub Kalule
~t tense for keeps Thursday night
year
,
and
Gary
Gullden in
last
wl!eo·he defends his World Boxing
January
.
ASsoclatkin junior m iddleweight
Duran, meanwhile, was battling
title In Madison Square Garden
back
from the controver sial " No
against the Panamanian who Is
Mas"
loss
of his w elterweight crown
shooting for h l~ third world
against
Sugar
Ray Leonard In
championship.
November,
1900.
Moore was 13 years old , still
After that defeat, there w ere
twnlng jabs from hooks, when
victories over unknowns Nino
Duran won his first crown in 1972 by
knocking out K en Buchanan in the Gonzales and Luig! MinchJUo. Next,
Gdrden. That w as Ugh! years ago for . Duran tried for the World Boxing
both of them and now Moore is the CouncU Super w elterweight crown
but · lost a 1:&gt;-round decision to
champ and Duran Is the challenger,
Wllfred Benitez. Then, when he
fighting for another crown and, at
dropped a 10-round decision to
age 32, his boxing lite.
lightly-regarded Kirkland Laing, It
This is more than just another
looked like he might be finished .
fight for Duran, who m ay be running
"He came to me and said he felt he
out of time and chances. But Moore
could
still win the championship, "
seem s unimpressed with Its
said
promoter
Bob Arum, president
urgency.
Top·
Rank.
"I said I would
of
"r put an end to four career s, " he
promote
fights
for
him but he had to
said. suggesting th at causing one
be
serious.
No
fooling
around.'·
more retirem ent wouldn 't make
Duran
agreed
and
In
his first fight
much difference to him.
for
Arum
he
beat
Jimmy
Batten in
The champion is unbeaten in l2
Miami
in
the
walkou
t
fight
on the
professional fight s wit h nine
Aaron
Pryor-Alex
is
Arguello
card
straight knockouts while Duran has
last
November.
won 75 of 79 hou 1s in a career that
"I w alked out after the third
bfoaan in 1967, w hen M oore was 7
round,
" sneered Moore.
r s old.
Then came Pip! no Cuevas in Los
" E verybody I' ve fou ght has b&lt;&gt;&lt;' n '
i\pgeles last January and Duran pu t
more experienced than me, " ~aid
him away In fou r rounds. Thai
Moore, who won his tit le In his ninth
earned for hjm the shot at the crown .
bo~ l. knocking oul Tadashi M ihara

CHESTE R LlTl'LE LEAGUE - Members of
this year's Chester Uttle League are, front row, 1-r,
Tim Tom Michael, Dean Mays, Billy Johnson, Shaun
Bush, Mony Wood, Matt Flnlaw, Mickey Bauer, Eric ·
Slm. 'Back row - Asst. Coach Steve Flnlaw, Tom

Schlichter feels he can still
become regular quarterback
C'')LUMBUS, Ohio I AP 1 - Des·
plte his gambling problems that cost
him an Indefinite suspension, An
Schlichter believes he can stU!
become a regular quart erba ck in
the National Football League.
It 's something he could not
achieve in 1982 as the Ba lllmorc
Colt s' first -round dra ft choice .
Instead, fellow rookie Mike Pagel
won the No. l job.
"' I have no doubt I can bec:'ome a
start er in !he NFL. I didn't prPpar r
mysel f w ell befor'!'. I have a clear
mind now," he s~ ld Tuesda y night.
· " I was n't playing up to m y
potential -only abou 1 .10 per cent of
m y abil ity."
Schlichter returned to hl s pmr nt s'
farm home 4.1 miles soul h of here in
Bloomingbu rg, Ohio, Friday night
after 28 days In a rehabilitation
program at Sout h O~ k s Hospital in
Arn!tyvUie. N.Y .
The former Ohio Sta te quar ter hack helped the PBI ar res t four
Ba llirnorearea men aft er he admitted losing SP.l,!XXJ in sport s betting
between January and March this
yem·. Commissioner Pete RozeUe of
the NFL suspended lhea thlete fora !

Tennis tournament set
The Meigs County Chapter of the
American Cancer Society Is sponsoring a tenni s tournamen t, to be
held June 23·2H al !he Syracuse
Cou rt s.
All mat ches will be best lwo out of
three sets, w ith com petition In
m en 's dou bles, ladles' doub1£&gt;s, and

m ))&lt;cd doubles. AI least eight
entries must be received In each

category to have a draw. and
entries are ctuc by 5 p.m . Monda y .
Entry fee for the tournament Is
$12 per doubles team and one new
can of tennis balls. Checks shou ld
· be made payable to the Meigs

County Cancer Society , and ma y be
mailed to the tournament director,
Beck y Anderson , R oute 1. Snowball
Hill Road , Racine, Ohio 4&gt;771.
Participants arc to report to thH
Syracuse courts one-half hour
before t he start of their firs! match.
S!Ll rtlng times w ill be ava ilable
after 5
WPdnrsda y, .June 22 , by
calling 949·2534 , 949·27!\4 , or 992·
50!i7. Players will be limited to a 10
minute warmup berore each
match, and a 12 point tie-breaker
will be played at 6-6.
All decisions of the 10urnarnent
dir ector will be fin al.

p.m

Meigs County Cancer Society
Tennis Toumament Entry Bhmk
Please enter me In the following events:
Men's Doubles
Women's Doubles
MlxL&gt;d DoublL'«

least one year aft~r

a leaguP

Invest igation.
Three of I he four Mary land men.
pleaded guilty in late May to federal
charges of tryin g to collec t lhr

Name .. ........ .. .......... .... ...... .............. ..... .. ....... . ..... Telephone .. ..... .

()oubiL'S partner .... .. ... .. ....... .... .. ...... .. ..... , ... , .... .... .. Telcph&lt;me ...... ..

ROCKY RfVER, Ohio tAP ! Cleveland Browns' li nebacker Tom
Cousineau says he'srelievcd;mdnot
bitter aftrr bt'ing r iParPCI in h.ls
second tria I on a drunk£'n-d r iving
charge.
Cous lne-d u wa~ a rqult tffl ' l'uPsda y
night. Hi s firs! Ilia! Pnded in a
m l"rtal Mny 14 aft er a Ju ry was
dPad lockod 6- 21n favor of acquittal.

Address .. .. .... .... ... .. ... ..... ... ... ..... ... ..... .. ... ..... .. . ................. .. .... .. .. .
Mlu..t doubles partrwr .. .. .. .. ... ... .. .... .... ...... .. ........... Telephone ...... ..

i\ddress .. .. .... .. .. ,. ... .......... .. ... .. ..... ... .. ..... ... ... .. .......... .. ... .... . ,.. .... .

On Tuesday, a Sf'vf'n-woman .
onr-man ju ry dPiibera ted aboul 2'~
hours befon• rpl u ming t he vPrdiet to
Municipa l Court .Judge Millon
Holmes .
Cousinea u, ~ti . or L akewood . was
arn&gt;s!PCI In Mall'h after his Je&lt;c•p
&lt;'oli idr &lt;l wilh a pollrr car, causing
minor damage. Pollet' a llei!ed tha i
Cousineau did poorl y on field
sobr iety tests and refused to take a
Breat halyzer test.
Couslnmu sa id he 11ad no wr for
about three hours befoJ"C' his ar rest
allhough he had been dr inking

Tickets on sale for Olymp-ics
at Sears, Roebuck and Co., which is
disI rl butlng t hf' ttckCJ...ll ppllca lions
nallon•Uy.
A Sears employ('(' In Omaha,
Neb., said , "P&lt;'Ople have been
streaming In here and we' ve had
phone ca Us."
I n I he Denvpr area, Liz M ahjuv of
Sears sa id, " We arc having a gt'l"HI
number of people come ln. About 7!\
jJ('rcent more people than usual tal
!he customer servi ce desk) just to
pick up !he applications."

earlier lo relebratf' St. Patrick's
Day .

TONIGHT
THROUGH SATURDAY
FOR YOUR DINING
AND DANCING PLEASURE

'Tm definit ely r elleved, " Cousi ·
neau sa id aft er the verdict was
announced. " li 's been a long time
since the 17th of March. There was a
lot of emotion involved and a lot of
hard work."
As juror s were leaving, Cousl·
neau shook hands with one of them.
.Judge Holmes sa id after the
verclict, "Congratulations Mr. Cou ·
sineau. Good luck to you."
Cousineau was found guilty and
ti ned $25 and court cost s on another

CAll 992-3381
992-2342

Cousineau, who was an AU America player at Ohio Stat e and
now Is am ong the highest paid
players in the National F ootball
League, wa s ar res ted the day after
. t11r sla te's beefed·up drunkendriving law look effect.

·~

.

~

"!7 ,
,J. ~

CASUAL SHOES

FROM 7-11 EACH
EVENING

HARTLEY SHOES
STORE HOURS
Mon.-Thurs.-Sat. 9-5
Friday 9-8

POMEROY, OHIO

PHONE 992-5272

•

AMI?.XIC'N LFAGUE
USTDIVEION
W LPc.t. GB
Ball ln'llrf!
.'IIi
fill
Thn&gt;nlo
~2
!i .!'B.! :'1
Do&lt; roll
:rl 'II
-~
,l lh

RICHFIELD, Ohio IAPl - Ed
Badger has been named assistant ,
coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers of
1
the Natio n a l Baske tball- .
Association.

&amp;tlton

r-:::==========~

MIIWllulu&gt;P
ClPo.IPI&amp;Dd

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.. JUNE 18, 1983

MIXED

Fryer parts .........L~-

••

Stewing Hens.... !~.

OUiand

"'''""
"'"""""'

Pu bli s hed t&gt;VI'f)' a fternOOn, Monday
th rough Fr iday, Ill Court Street , b:v the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company - Mul·

SPank&gt;

m eroy, Ohio.
M C' mb('r : ThP Asso~· i atPd Pres s. Inla nd Da!lv PreSs A .~ soclaton and the
Amf'T ka n" New spaJX'T Pu b li s hE-rs As~od arion , Nallonal Ad vP rli s ln ~ RepreSf'nlntlvC' . Branham New spaper Sa le s,
7.13 Third Av£' nur. N€'w Yor k. New

:12

.ft

R!-j

31

16
'11

"
:m

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'll

2'1
ll

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,.~'7

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2

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.ft 61.&lt;j
.til "'
.111 II

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Oalcbmd !~ 4- ~ l &lt;~I Toron lo rleal

Boston 1 &amp;~ H 1 a t Df"trolt tRo3-01 , 1n1
Nl1W York 1fUiw1Py fi.-~ 1 Ill Cif'Vf'laJJd
:1-.11 , I'll

ARMOUR'S COLUMBIA

Callfomht t.kW! ll--2 1 al Ollr'agu tH~· I
fi.7t. 1n1
Kansas O ty iSpllltortl H I ~ ~ M in·.
IM"'I!a IVIollt 2-41 , lnl
SPank&gt; t8.Sicd.:lant &lt;1-MI Ml T~~" !Ta nana 'l·l 1. tnt
,_.,IIGIIMS

SURSC IUrTION RATES ,

On r Y£'a r ................ .... ......... $52 .80
SJN!ii.F. C.OPY

P KIC:Jo:S

Ollkland

.. .. . 20 Ct&gt;nt s

Sliced Bacon ...... ~~.

u t Toror!to. 'lnr

NNo York at C'lf'Wi and. 1111
lbstorlal Olotrok, t n t
MtllJINiiJia al'f'f"t&amp;a~ . 1n1
Onlv ll~ !lrhf'dulf'd
NA'I10NM. LI'AGUH

S uhM" r lhfo r s no t d c&gt;s lr l n~ to pa y the ca r-

r lr-r m av rr-mlt i.n adva nC'(' direct to
Th f' Dal i y Sr- nllnr-1 on :t. ti or 12 mon th
ba!' ls. Cn •dll w ill!)(' ~ iv£'n ca rr ier ea r h
mon Th.
'.,

EASTDI'WUON
W LPc.'t. Gl
Sl. lwl~
Mon!IT'Ill

No ~ ub SC' I' Ipll o n s by m all permlltt&gt;d In

.l l
2!1
'lti

PhlladE'Iphla
Olk """

is

avai lab l(&gt; .

-n :n

Plnsbui'J!:h

1'\:(VI York

MAIL S UBSCR IP'r iONS
ln11ld t- Ohio

~T
All~

:II
'l1
'II

!'i.'lti

.-t.rl
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¥1

1!1

.11

~

HOU~toil

.11 ~1
.l l ll
'l7 ~
'l7 .'W

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.om

7l .t1
t.l .l'l
01\'"MION

Fr«nMsro

S.n OW 'fil'O

Clnl'lnnall

-

.'11~

Allanta

LoH

1.1 WPC'ks ...
. ....... $14 .04
2ii W£'f' ks ............................. $27.30
!\'l W£'1'kS ....
. ..... . $.'ilA8
Oul"ldt' Ohio
1.1 Wet&gt;k s .. .
SI~. 21
2+i W£&gt;l'k ~ .... .
.. ......... 129.64
~2 W£"£'ks .. .
.. ........... $56.21

I
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~

.116

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1J1

7Y..

!l-1-(,

.f\17

,ll.~j

.~
~~

W%

,-1.-.!.

.W.1

wv,

1.1
1-1

~'11G.-wt~

Nt"W York

~.

l'hk'WlO ."1. 1111nnlnlr."

MOJIII'Pal 7, PUTsburata .1
!'! . Lou.ls ~. Pl\lld&gt;lphiH ~
C'lrrlnn.all ... San Dk&gt;$lO .1

l All'l

Where Customer

FRESH

-1. A.tiMia :1
.1. San F'I'M&lt;'IJW'() :l. l2 lnnJ!liS

A.n.Qr~

HDll ~ klfl

W~ 11G~

uSarMati~JnctConionclsem

Hc.~~lon

Tomatoes...........l~~.

t~ra nri!IC'O

1I.aCofis -l-'11 111 San

r8nolnln,l ~ ~
.
(llif-ll,lfO i .lf'flkins l-.11 HI Nf'\Oo· York

tSwan 1-'i! L 1n1
Montn&gt;al t8unis 1-'lt at
I Bibb)' :.!-61, 'tn •

R

Pltt ~bura:h

Phllact:iptllH tC"llrl loo 7-li t at St. 1.311s
tStuP"f 1~1 1 . tnt
t'lnl'l nRIIfl tPull&gt;o 2-'ll HI l.:,aa 1lk'o!ro

'PARKAY

I 'Milt~ !HI. !n l
1\tJafttu ti '.Nirkro :EJ-!'1 1 al !_.or; 1\nRNN;
1 RI'\ISII i-~l, till

..,..,....,.•• GMJe~

Tufted comfort
beyond belief that '
will put you to sleep
every time!!

REG.
1559

Hw~ton 111 San F'ranM.~. 1n 1
Atlanta at J..(M An~. 1n1
Only Jl~ llrtntltk'd

Give Dad
What You

Really
SALE Wants .•.
A Genuine
LA-Z-BOY

399

__............

...._

'•
•

•
'

'

'\

.,,_,

SEATTLE MARINERS- st,nrd

•FREE DELIVERY

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

PH. 446-3()45

OPEN DAILY TO 5 R.ll.
liON. &amp; FRI. TO I P.M.

CORNI:R OF THIRD AND OUVE- GAWPOUS

De,,.

_..._

N~ . pllt'l'lrl'a .

••
•
''

EXP'C8-S1Pfd

Gary

Dog food... !;~~!-!~ ·

"""'· """' , _ .... '""'Sloll. ~..-.

Ttm 't'ram Mel Don Mont~. '"'"'
buemtn. AJaR OPVaU 111\d Howard l...opN,

W('(Jrld ~ . MkiiM'I Rufl'. t'•l&lt;'hPr.
Jl.lllll Batllta, stvnlltOp. and Shlfwo Rrill;v.

l••

thlrd~skp

NEW YORK ~ Kl'nnfoth
Rt'f'd 1ftC! Jtffnoy C'1Ritiowlkt, plirln'l. IIMI
E.'W110n Jofi'IIGft. Qt.lfftridl!r, .... ..tlll'lfod
nwm te s.r.. of tlw Gulf C'oalt Lf-..,w-,
PT1"''SBURGH PtftATES- 1'rldfd Jllnlor Ortlz.l:'atdfr, Mil lttfrM' Ra.v. pltt'ftrr,
to thP NfW York Mrtl tDr ~ W)tM!,

••

;'

outftfldl'r,

..........
----'I ~
...........

~

•
~

·

•••

tllip

HUNTS CATSUP

P.ntk' eo.t

,,

32

C1.EYE1AND c:AVAI..IER&amp;- NIIIWd Ed

.,.,..u..o.,·· s

• tn1Rz. D a - - crt

·
·
z
za
P1 •••••••••••••••••••••
LARGE 15 OZ.

oz.99¢

RAVORITE SUGAR

OM--,... t't~MI'It'ft.

'

,¢

·.

·.·•.••.
•

¢

.,

-·•''··
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PON· .
ARMOUR TREET

LUNCH MEAT
120Z.

99¢

Limit Ont Per Customer
At POWIII's

'DIInyiTal!y.

I

.'

JENO EXTRA PEPPERONI

~~Yn~~~~~~

and...,. Srtmtnly, plk'hfor. !Ifni

l!ntlftfY to lllwd af

t

$ Cheese Slices.:~~;~ .

VETS·

Htnll'Pl out&amp;iclr'r. and Bob HIMOrlltld&amp;"oft
ONTR£AL

JUMBO ROLL

Paper Towels....

IA'W\1. p6trtlrr. lrun 'J"okkctt of t llr' Tnt(lt'NI·
tbnal Li&gt;I¥0M'- !iront Gl'\"fl ~- sl"urtltop,

;.

•

slaal

VANITY FAIR'

lnll"'rMtlonal iA'¥U(" and rr 1K'11Yalrod .Jlm
Pa iiT1f1' . pllctn, from !hi' d i5Mblro r ~t.
Slrnt'd Rk'l\ani RlC'P. pltC"tMT .
"
KANSA.~ C m' ROYAl-S- C,.Ilrtlup (11ff
PH~t&lt;rnk'ky. lhtrd bf.w'm ttt\. fromOmahHof
thl' Arnfort-Hit AMOt"iatlon.
MINN~A TWlNS-Oiitrod up .1\m

••
•

jREaJNERS, Starting as low as

SANDWICH MATE IND.

BALTIMORE ORJOLES-Oprlonn:l 1\lllitl
R11mlmz. plk'ht'r. to Rnrhl'IIIM" of thf'

RECLINER! -'•

INVEST IN THE VERY BESlLA-Z-BOY® CHAIR

¢

Tran88Ctions
..

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Lifestyle

Margarine.....:.... !!.

('lnrlnllllli at S...n Dllltn

Know He

12 oz. PKG.

Frankie Wieners ..
BU
$ 49
Cube Steak........ ;8~
BATTER DIPPED
¢
Fish Portions......l~-.

61,1

W~'IGIIni!R

Hy Currier nr Mntnr Route
OnC' \\l('(' k
... .. . .. .. .. ... ....... Sl.OO
On C' Month . .. ..............
.. $4.40

-

1\lf.!

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tE !ctJeol~

scrv lc~

~

ElaltlrriOI'f' ID11Vts 4-:'l l a! Mllwauktt'
rWai!Ji G-11

4 ~J7 ti9 .

wh Pre hom£' car r ie r

~

.-19'2
.49:1

TOI"Of1to 11. OakllUid 7
C"Jco\o-Mand 9. Nrw Vork 6
lbton 6, DrtroU :l
l'P:Ilas 1. seaniE&gt; 1
MinnPSCJta ' KallSilS City 1
&amp; ltlmlf1" a1 Mllwauk«', ppl, r&lt;tln
Callfurnla at llllc,.a. ppd.. rain

llmt'dla . In c .. Pomeroy. Oh.lo 45769. 00221 56. &amp;&gt;co nd class pos ta ~ t' paid at Po-

-

"

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kansa !i C ity

I USPS 145·960)

t o wn ~

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211
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Caltt&gt;rnta

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Dail y ....... .

SUPERIOR

!miT DIVIIION

The Daily Sentinel

O hio

:ll
:.!9
28

N4"W Vork

~

'r

POMEROY, 0.

We Reserve The l!ight To
Limit Quaniliea.

u

••
.'f

298 SECOND ST.

Majors
.

GENu INE LA z BOY®
RECLINERS ON SALE

20o/o OFF ALL·
AND

"'

Badger joins Cavs

SHOWCASE

...._______,[ I c1rr~! I

KAREN MILLER

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Scoreboard

fURNITURE

.

MEN'S DRESS

•

Four Meigs High players, one
Southern eager, and an Eastern
eager head the 10 man squad. From
Meigs are Mike Chancey, Rick
Wise, Donnie Becker, Huey ·Eason.
Todd Adams represents Southern ,
whUe Eddie CoUins represents
. Eastern. Players !rom Trimble,
Logan, and Athens round out the
squad.
Other team members are Lee
Moniso~ . Trimble; Kerry York
and Keith Meyers, Logan; and
Steve McCombs, Athens. Mike
Kloes of Meigs Is the manager.

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

L1 nst l

SlUR£ HOURS:
Mon.·Sal 8 am·10 pm

!92-5298.

1i'm8

~T

KEYBOARDEST

local basketball
!Jilent bas teamed up to form the.
Southeast Art'a All-stars basketball
team which will compete In the
AAU Tournamen.t at Columbus
Friday at 3 p.m.
Art'a youth, ages 15 and under,
will compete In the AAU Tournament lntei"m!!dJate Division. The
local aU-stars are roached by Rusty
Bookman and RDn Drexler.
A v}ctory by 'the all-stars would
mean playing another contest at 5
p.m. at St. Stevens Community
Center, 1500 East 17th Avenue.
According to coaches Bookman
and Drexler sponsors are needed
tor the team, Including businesses
or private donors. All donations are
tax deductible. FO!' !urtber Information call Rusty Bookman at

POSTMA STE R: Sf&gt; nd add ress to Tht&gt;
Dai l.v St•ntlnl!l. 11 1 Cour t S t .. Pom('roy,

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

Ohio

contlnient of

Schlichter says his ordeal yas
brought hi slmmediate family
kloser. "I pu them throughsa I of
palnsand f stratlon. But they have
been very supp tive all of this, " he
said.

MULLEN INSURANCE

M a,·ch 17. but he l ater produced a
license and that charge was
dropped.

.LJO.)'

A

~ ~ \. In I

AND

been cit ed for not havi ng a license
w hen he w as stopped by pollee

.

f

!

Y ork 10017 .

DOWNING-CHILDS

improperly
also lanes
had 1
charge
of . Cousineau
using traffic

1h J• "'- 15, 1983

I

concentra t~. "

Ioom I

/

•

tubes," Kirk said.
sChllchter will work as an
Instructor at the Ohio Stale football
camp this wPek and then help his
father , Max, with farm chores this
summer w hen he's no! Involved in
his daUy workou ts .
The 6- foot -2quarterback says he's
shed 18 toW pounds to around 200
pounds since being hospitalized for
his compulsive gambling. "I'm in
the best shape since before my
junior year at Ohio State," he said.
"But thP biggest thing now Is that I
have a clear mind. I can

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

a switchboard
opera
sa id , " Ev· 1
At a Stamford.
c onntor
.. Scar5'torc.
ery other call is for lheOlymplcs... "
ln Southrrn Californla,lllerewere
~~~~~vely long lines at a number of

APPEARI~G

faU. beginning with a Labor Day
tournament. ' 'J'U be the quarter·
back . I bring the footballs. He'll play
offensive and defensive end, " Freiburger says of the touch football
rookie.
Gil Kirk, a Columbus business~
man, Is in charge of Schlichter's
physical development . He has him
lifting weight s and running 2 1-2 to 4
miles a day.
"The kid's atntude Is great . His
&lt;'yes arc on ftre. You'd hate to see
tha t kind of tSient go down the

Jury finds Cousineau not guilty,.=========;!

Address ... ... ...... ... .. ..... ........ .... ..... ... .... ... .......... , .. ., .. ........ .. ..... .. . .

LOS ANGELES i APl - The
Olymplt•s ar't' more than a ymr
away , at tending lhP top event s can
bP quite expensive. and getting
tickets 10 the most popular spot1 s
will be mostly a ma lter of luck .
SHU , hopefu l fans across the
nation lined up Tuesday lo gPI a
chance to buy tickets to the 1984
Games In Los Angeles.
i,\Jihough therP was no mad ru sh ,
bu~iness apparently w as br isk In a
number of locat ions around the
country where free Olympic bro·
chures ('()nt alnlng applications for
tlci&lt;{,ts- which w ill be sold only by
ma ll - bt'Camc avallable Tuesday.
In PhO!'nlx , about 100 brochull?s
wo:re handed out !he firs t two hout ,;

player' s gambling debts. They are
awaiting sentenclitg. A U.S. attorney has recommended the charges
the fourth man be
against
dismisS€\1 .
Two of his volunt eer adviser s,
both m embers of a national cham·
pionshlp touch footba ll team from
Columbus, are more certain of
Schlichter's future.
Chuck Freiburger, a Co lumbus
att orney . who has thrown 776
touchdown passes in leading teams
to two national touch football titles.
spotted two flaws in Schlichter' s
technique when he video tap€&lt;1 his
deliverit&gt;s about two months ago.
" He was taking the ba ll back too
low. from around his waist," the
39·year·old Freiburger said of
Schlicht er. 23. " And. when he threw
exceptionally hard, he was moving
the ball away fr om his head, causing
wobbly passes. Now he's throwing
spirals."
Frelburg&lt;O"r lms Schlicht er on a
daily routine of throwing 300passes.
HI' will video tape hisdellveryoncea
week to check its progress.
"H e's got unlimited potential.
He's very strong, b ig and has a live
ann. He ca n throw the football R5
yards. It just takes work, " the
a ttorney sa id.
Schlichter w ill play for Frei·
burger' s touch football team this

--'--

Area team
:will play
•
mtourney

One of the most Illustrious names
In bowling will make another ·
appearance at the Dave Diles golf
outing.
Dick Weber Is fiylng In !rom his
St. Louis home to tee It up once
more In the ev~nt. Weber has won ·.
25 PBA tournaments, has been an
all-star bowler four times, and
three times has been named bowler
of the year.
In addition, the veteran Weber Is
a charter member of the Profes·
slana! Bowlers' AssoCiation Hall of
Fame and mal&lt; .&gt; frequent appear·
ances on ABC Television as bowling
commentator
alongside
Chris
Schenkel. Schenkel also has announced he.ls returning for another
tee up at the local event.
Weber Is one of the most popular
athletes ever to perform In bowling
circles.
The Diles tournament, oow In Its
fifth year, kicks off with a hillbilly
supper at 6 p.m. Wednesday, June
22, at Royal Oak Park . Contestants
and their wives will be feted at the
dinner, and several "Good Guy"
awards will be presented. The
18-hole golf tournament Is set for the
following morning, with a shotgun
start at ten at Riverside Golf Club In
Mason, W. Va. thereareafewspots
stUI oilen · In the field at $150. All
proceeds go to charities In the
Mason-Meigs area .

Hunter, Derek Yonke,., Mike Frost, Jay Reynolds,
Chad Sinclair, Robbie Hawk, Brinn Bailey, Coach
Bob Bauer. 'Ibis year Chester has purchased new
unllorins with the help of local bwllnesses and
donations.

----

KOOL-AID
2 01
:UNSWT.

•

: '"""'.

10I '99¢ ~~~ ~ ·• .
1

Per Cu;tomer
At Powell's
i:;.i,o.;.; June 18, 1983

j

·~ ' ,. :
:;[ ' '··

t::.

�Wednnday, .1\,!ne 15, i983

.

.

,

The Daily Sentinel

'

By The Bend

Pae•

In

Beat of the bend

t

Awards of Distinction

\.

Woodmen of America, Camp 10900.
By BOB HOEFLICH
The camp ·Is staging a publlc
Awards of Distinction were given
on the final day of school to seniors benefll supper to raise !unds for the
at Meigs High School - Anita CoolvUJe Volunteer Fire DepartHarmon, Wendy Tillis and Penny ment, the Chester Volunteer Flre
Department and the Tuppers
Wandling- for a
Plains Volunteer Fire Department
bulletin
board
Rescue Squad.
and
display made as
The
event has been set for
a part of the Ohio
June 25, at the Coolville
Saturday,
Educa tlon AssoFlre
House,
5 to 8 p.m. The cost? A
ciation's competfreewUI
donationgoing to several
Itive events ln
.good
causes.
Region 2.
The students placed fourth In
The ''Building Doctor" Is corning
competition from 20 bulletin boards
which Included those made by to Pomeroy next week at the
students !rom schools having ap- request of the Pomeroy Chamber of
proximately 500 enrollment In 12 Commerce.
The" Building Doctor Clinic" will
Southeastern Ohio counties taking
part In the competition. The display be conducted by two members or
was the original and creative work the Technical Preservation Serviof the three Meigs students who ces Department of the Ohio Histori followed specific guidelines and cal Preservation Office of the Ohio
Historical Society. The program Is
specifications. .
The three students were in the designed to educate and assist
Stenographic II BOE Block Pro- property owners and tenants In the
gram at Meigs High School. Mrs . maintenance and rehabllltatln of
.Emily Sprague wa s their teacher older buildings .
There will be an evening lecture
and advl,or.
monday a t 7 p.m. at the Meigs Inn
Big, big congratulations to Sean followed by a lull day or schedule
E. Mullen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don slle vlslls on Tuesday atci diagnose
(Mike) Mullen, Middleport, who a nd discuss special problems.
graduated from the Ohio Univer- There Is no charge for the evening
lectu re or an n site visit. If you are
sity Medical School Saturday.
In 1971, Sean graduated from Interested contact Henry Cleland,
Ohio State University wllh a degree 992-2259.
In pharmacy. He served In the U.S.
Reunions for several graduating
Air Force for seven years coming
out of the service to attend medical classes of Kirksville College of
school. He graduated fifth In his Osteopathic Medicine were held
class with a 3.477 accumulative .June 9-10 at Kirksville, Mo.
John R. Ridgway, D.O., and R. R.
grade point average Saturday. He
Pickens,
D.O., both or Pomey
wllllntern in Massillon and then wil l
attended
the
reunion for the class of
go into the Army for three and
198.1.
A
family
picnic held at the
one-half years. Sea n, his wife,
Campus
Center began
Thompson
Katye, who ls the daughter of Paul
reunion
activities
and on th&lt;'
K. and Maxine Russell of Middle·
following
evening.
June 10. a
port, and their children, Kellle,
Kerrte ahd Courtney: reside In reception and dinner· were held atJ.
R. 's Westside Restaurant. RidgSyracuse.
way and Pickens took advantage at
The Big Bend Regatta Is coming the opportunity given reunion
up and preparations are gong In lots classes which was to parilclpate In
of directions. The Eastern High a continuing medical education
School Band will get together from seminar, a general practice upda te,
7 to 8 p.m. on Friday, June 24, a t the "The Aging Person." Kirksville
the old&lt;'st School of
high school to prepare for the College
Osteopathic Medicine In the United
annual regatta parade.
States, having been founded In 1892
How does an unemployment ra te by Andrew Taylor Still.
Pomeroy's Carl Moore under·
of 19.3 percent strike you?
went
anot her . major operation
According to Ohio Labor Market
Information published by the B~ ­ Monday at University Hospital In
reau of Employment Services as of Columbus. He's doing well and the
April this year, Meigs County's post surgery report Is good. Cards
civilian labor force was an esti - may be sent to him at Room 984,
mated 12,200 persons based on Rhodes Hall, Unlvef'l'lty Hosp!t a I.
place of residence. Of this total. Columbus, Oh. 43210.
approx imately 9,850 were employed and 2,:150 were jobless . The
Some things you just can't resist.
unemployment ra te stood at 19.3 l found myself tn that position at
percent . Shouldn't we lx&gt; ma rching Nelson's Drug ·Store. Would you
believe they had an engraved key
or something?
ring which reads - what else but
A nice gesture by Modern " KEEP SMILING''"

Is

Carmel communtiy news
Mrs. Allan Grtswald. a former
resident of thP Carmel community,
pasS&lt;.'!! away on Thursday. Friends
were sony to hear of her death.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
called at the Grlswald home in
VIenna, W. Va . on Friday.
Recent visitors at the Douglas
Circle home were Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Hat'den of Wes ton, W. Va . and
Roy Bookman of Buchtel, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom O'Neil and
boys and Evelyn Ingram from
Columbus were In the community
at Decoration time and went to the
cemeteries of loved ones.
Angela Dawn and sister. Jenntfer
Lynn Carelton of Racine spent
Saturday afternoon with Sheryl
LeAnn Johnson.

Lula Circle and Sandy Harden
went home with Dixie Circle and
spent two nights with Dixie at
Lakela nd, Ohio then went to Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle Mutt! and family' s
home to visit with them at
Mansfield , Ohio.
Mrs. Ethel Orr of Chester vlsiled
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
I~ and family .

Visitors
Recent gues t• of Bessie and
llarold Graham of HarrlsonviU&lt;'
were their daughter and son-In-law,
June and Kenneth Newhouse of
Scuth Carolina, her sons, Harold
and Darold, and Arley Price and his
.wife or Caltfornla.

GROUP OF MEN'S

.DRESS SHOES

Jon Jacobs, Deputy Health Commissioner of Meigs County Health
Departmeni tn cooperatiOn with the
Accident PreVention and Product
Safety Unit of the Ohlc Department
of Health, says that some deaths
attl1buted to automatic garage
doors closing on people could have
been prevented tt parents had
stopped children from playing with
automatic garage door openers.

6

e servtce
Ury

or remote control switch, then race
out of the garage to beat the door
before It closes. ACCidents have
occurred when the ctescendlng door
strikes the child, often pinning the
vlcllm to·the ground. Even garage
doors with an automatic reverse
feature have been Involved in
deathS.
CPSC said parents can prevent

gl)rage door accidents by locking
the remote control switch lp the
glove compartment of the car and
by ·relocating the wall-mounted
switch away lrom the reach of
children. Youngsters should be
prohibited from laying In the
garage unless there Is adult
supervtsfon .at all times.
In addition. the agency said the

II

INSTALlATION - M1111dy HUI, center. front,
was Installed 88 honored . -qu~ of Bethel 62,
lntematlonal Order ol Job's i&gt;aupters, Monday
night. Other omcers Installed were, lmnt, lelt, Bety
Mayer, senior princess; front right, Carol Smith;

Enlistees
Dewhurst
Baker
second row, Terri Roush, recorder; ' Drema Bentz.

guide; .'a nd Kim A&lt;latns, tourth messenger; and back,
JUJ Nease, . Dbrarian; Cheryl Hoosh, second me.isenger: and Dixie Dugan, retiring honored queen l\lld
first messenger.

Job's Daughters installation conducted
Mandy Hlll was Installed as
Honored Queen at the seinl-annual
Installation of officers Monday
night at the Middleport Masonic
Temple, by 8ethel62, International
Order of Job's Daughtei:S.
Other officers Installed were }3eth
Mayer. senior senior princess;
Carat Smith, junior princess:
Drema Bentz, guide; and Sherry
Sisson, marshall.
Appclnted officers Installed were
Zandra Vaughan, chapialn: Terri
Roush, recorder: Dixie Dugan,llrst
messenger: Cheryl Roush, second

messenger: Melanie Arnold, third
messenger; Klm Adams, fourth
messenger, and JUJ Nease,
librarian .
The installing consisted of Miss
Dugan, Installing officer; Mandy
Sisson, guide; Amy Sisson, marshall; Cat hy Workman, chaplain;
Brenda HUI, senior custodian ;
Dollie Mees, junlorcustodlan; Pam
Diddle, reconler; Kathy Johnson,
musician; and Debbie Roush, flag
bearer.
Peggy Hill and Crestlyn Hlll
presided at the guest registrars.

Mrs. Wilson
·celebrates
90th birthday

and Bonnie Boso was soloist.
Kathryn Hlll and Jan Norris had
charge at refreshments.
The guardian council Is composM of Linda Mayer, guardian;
Kenneth Wiggins, associate guard·
ian; Sue Starr, guardian ~retary ;
Ruby Vaughan, guardian · treasurer; and Mary Bentz, directress of
mustc . Making up the associate
council are Bonnie Smith, promoter
of sociability: Barbara Dugan,
custodian of paraphernalia; Carol
Sisson. promoter of hospitality; and
Joyce Sisson. director of finance. ·

Slinderella
meetr.
.

The 90th birthday of Mrs. E llen
WUson, Pomeroy, was observed on
June 5 with a celebration at the
home of her daughter, Mrs. Vergil
C. Hayes, ColumbUs. Mrs. Ted
Fisher, a granddaughter, co-hosted .
the celebra lion.
Approximately 65 friends and
relatives attended the observance
wllh cake, Ice cream, punch and
coffee being served durtng the
afternoon followed by a 5: lJ buffet
dlnner.Gt!tswerepresented to Mrs .
Wilson .
AllendlngwereMr.andMrs.Sam
Ullom, Mr. and Mrs. Theron Brown,
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Brown, Mr. and
Mrs. Ellis Wilson, and Mrs. Tracy
Wilson, Zanesvllle: Doris and Sain
Marlon, Robert and Mabel Cramer,
Raymond and EllzabethLohn. Paul
and Louise Johnson, Dr. ahd Mrs .
Lewis Linder and sons Robert, Paul
and Scott, Mrs. Arelene Henderson,
Ertc Henderson, Reed and VIrginia
Masse, Mrs. Margaret Backman,
Jlm and Gerrte Pace, Ray and
Helen Brown, and William Detrick,
all or Columbus.
William and Nanna Harrah and
Brenda Harrah, Vandalia; Mrs.
Betty Wilkinson, Dayton; Mr. and
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Mrs. Marlene
Harrison, Jodie Harrison, Mrs.

Mary Roush lost the most weight
and Wanda Stallard was runrier-up
at the Monday night meeting of the
Slinderella Five Points Class. At the
Thesday c lass in Mason, Grace
Welch and Shirley Thcker Wf're the
top losers, while at the Wedliesday
morning exercise class, VIcky
Abbott lost the mcst weight.

Mrs. Ellen Wilson
Frances Scholl, Ottle Scholl, Vlrgll
andNellleBrown,Pomeroy; Myron
and Helen Altstaetter, and Amy
Allstaetter, Wapakoneta; John and
Barbara Weeks, The Plains; Bruce
and Faye Scholl, Chillicothe; Ed
and Audrey Henry, Jackson.
Irvin and Marilyn Berkshire,
Lancaster; Mrs. Sharon Miller,
Jean Ann Miller, Martetta; Mrs.
Vera Ohlinger, . Bud and Joane
Magie, Sara Magie, Logan; George
Staats and Mrs. Charlotte Wilson,
Springfield; and Ted 'and Sue
Fisher, New Richmond.
Others presenting gifts to Mrs.
Wilson were Hlrlm and Grace
Fisher, Wllllam and Joan Childs.
Mrs. Evelyn Miller, Mrs. Naomi
Arnold, Jack and Betty Messerli.
Miss Rhonda Wilson, and Mrs. Jan
Skavdahl.

•ook and
feel

TOT 4l SA TtSf4CTIO'N GU4RANTEE
harr•hlng you buy ot lhovar '"' l"orontead for yowr total
totlsfo&lt;llon ravordlan of monuloct"'•' . If yov 010 not
totltflad , ltrogar will raplac:a rour ltam with tho ••ma
brand or o com porabla brond or rafvnd yo"' p~o~rchota
pric:a .

CO'Y.IGHT ltll . THI KIIOGU CO . ITIM$ ~NO 'IICIS .
GOOD SUNDAY . JUNE 12 . THROUGH SATUIOAV . JUNI

11, '"'· IN GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY STO RES.
WE IUIIV'I THE liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
!iOlD TO DlAliiS.

Springdale
2% Milk

....

JJ59

Del Monte
Catsup

Kroger
Gladly Welcomes
Your Federal
Food Stamps

32·01.

8tl.

.AT THE REGULAR PRICE

GET ONE

58

2

Diet Coke
or Coca Cola

Freezer Pleezer Twin Pops

667-6485

Krover Easy
Dmners
-lb.
Pkg.

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE ,
SPRITE . TAB ,

12·CT . PACKAGE

Old VfW Hall
Tuppers Plains

Jar

LIMIT I WITH AI;)OITIONAL PURCHASE

fROZEN SLICED TURKEY .
SALISBURY STE4K OR CHICKEN
4ND DUMPLINGS

BUY ONE

Route 7

32·01.

Ctn .

~j~son ·~:·$} 09

CHillED

Minute Maid
Orange Juice

28

12 -CT . PACKAGE

Make it a
Family.affairI

REE!

Sl II /\f I I

'h -GaL
Ctn.

Kroger
~.~J29
White Bread

Everypocty chip in and
give Dad d genuine

WHERE NEW
IDEAS COME
TO LIFE

LYI.

SPAM

LA·Z·DOY®

Luncheon
Meat

Recliner this FJ\THE~S DAY

12-o~ 1 -19
Can

~~:1~~

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Holly Farms
Mixed Fryer Parts
~

... the one

great
gift

of his

.

lifetime!

U.S.D.A. GRADE A 10-U -LB. AVG .
FROZEN

BuHerball
Turkeys .. .. .. .. ... ..

r~

Fresh
Glazed Donuts

Puffs Facial
Tissues ....... .. ..
KROGER

Multi-Grain
Bread .

H;~~Ydew

ns .... . .. .. . .

99C

·$J49
Eoch

lb.

U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED

Cost Cutter
Gro.,nd ·Beef

Targa by Sheaffer· ... created for
those who cherish the look and
feel of tine jewelry. Available
in a wide variety of finishes and
designs. .. choose from ballpoint,
fountain p~n, rolling ball pen,
I
sets.

)

175-CT . WHITE OR 150-CT. PRINT

White or Yellow
Sweef Corn ... .6L:~~.·

lb.

luxury

in ::ets.

Miracle Whip
Salad Dressing

..,

of

singly or

.

Freezer Pleezer Twin Pops

r;=:===~~~~==~~==~~=====::===111
Jl

Atrrsctively
gih boxed,

KRAFT

purchat.d

ANN'S
CAKE DECORATING
.

•

40VERTISED ITEM POLICY
IEoc"' ol '"'••• od•artltad Items It r~vlrMt to IN r..dllr
e~wallablo fo r tolo II\ .-c:l'l ltrogor l'oro , ouopt ••
tpoclllcolly nct.d. ln thl1 ad . If wa do run. GVI of an
adwartltad itam . wa will oHar yow ,evr cholu ot a
comporabla itaf"' , whan awallabla . 1aflectlnt tho ••m•
IO• int• oro rolnchaoe:l.! whkh will anti!W. f0\1 to pwrdiDID
tha c11tvar11tad llam at tha ad.. a,.,ltad prlca w l thlr~ SO
dayt . Only ona •andor coupon will ba occaptad par tt..,.

Young men from the area have
been enlisting In the United States
Alr Fotce..and amoQg.them are jay
A Dewhurst and Richard L. Baker,
according to SSgt Michael Stormer,
Alr Force recruiter In Athens.
Dewhurst Is the son ·Of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Dewhurst, P.O. 8ox98,
Rutland and Baker Is the son of Mrs.
and Mrs. Larry 8aker.l7 E. Locust
St., Pomeroy.
·
The two men wUI allend The Alr
Force's six week basic training
program at Lackland AFB, Texas,
and folowlng that, Dewhurst wUJ
trd!n In Security alid Baker In
General Aptitude.
Both are graduates of Meigs Hlgh
School, Dewhurst In 1982 and Baker
... In 1981, and wUJ be earning credits
toward accssoclate degrees,
through the Communtly College ot
the Air Force, dul1ng basic and
other technical training.

'

CHECKlHE

.,,_,.,,

Whole, Red Ripe
Watermelons

$

.,

Each

CHAPMAN SHOES
NIXT TO

There have been at least nine
I
deaths In the last three years .
According to the U.S. Consumers
Product
Safety
CommisSion
(CPSCI. children playing games
with garage door openers have
contributed to deaths and Injuries.
With the door In the raised pcsltlon.
youngsters activate the door by
means of the wall-mounted switch

.

automatic reverse mechanism
should be adjusted periodically for
sensitivity, In accon;lance with the
owner's manual . Commission records Indicate garage door deaths
since 198J have been reported In
California, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York and
Ohio. For further Information.
contact the Meigs County Department or the Accident Prevention
and Product Safety Unit , Ohio
Department of Health.

Airman First ClAss Jeffrey S.
Ury, soli of M•ry L. Keeler of 2418
Monroe Ave., and'WIIIlam T, Ury of
1105 Meadow Brook Drive, both of
Point Pleasant, W. Va., has graduated !rom the U.S. Air Force
electronic communications repair
course at Sheppard Air Force Base,
Texas.
Graduates of the course learned
to operate alid repair specialized
comrnunlcallons equipment, and
earned credits toward an assoclate
degree In applied science through
the Community College of the Air
Force.
Ury wllJ remain at Sheppard,
with the ni4th Communlcattons
Squadron.
He Is a 198:&gt; graduate of Point
Pleasant High School. ·

•

All OTHER MEN'S DRESS
AND CASUAL SHOES

.

Garage door ·accidents are usually preventable

•

Wednerdny, June 15, 1983

•

The I)Qily Sentinei-Page-7

Pameroy--Middlepart, Ohio

••

liED RIPE, CUT WATERMELONS . .. LB. 19(

· IN pOMEROY

-~ :__;::_.:.____::,,:..-:=--1

-

-

...

I

�"

"·

-V~~~~d~n~I~I~~,~~~~1~5~1!913!!--------------------------~· ------------J~~m~MN~~!lJ~~~·l~d~d~'a~p~•~rt~,~CN0!:'~--~----------~--------------~------~The~~Da~i~ly~Se~n~ti~·ne~~==Pag~!":'::9~
'

•I

•

Wednetday, June 15, -1983 ••

Papa 8 The Daily Sentinel

Family Medicine

~k~r

WEDNESDAY

MIDDLEPORT-TheMld- ·
dleport. Child Conservation
League wiil hold a family picnic
Thursday, June 16, 6:30p.m. at
the home of Susie Soulsby. 'Each
member to brtng covered dish
and table service. Beverage will
be provided.

RliTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department Ladles Auxutary
Wl!dnesday, 7::.! p.m. at the
firehouse. The annual July 4 ox
roast will be discussed. AU
members are asked to attend.
Opal Dyer will have the travel·
tng prize.

MIDDLEPORT - The
Golden Rule Class of the Middleport First Baptist Church wiU
have a covered dish dinner at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Manning
Kloes at 6 p.m. Thursd ay.

POMEROY - A special
meeting of Pomeroy Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, will be heltl at 7 this
evening at the temple. Work wUl
be ln the entered apprentice
degree. All Masons•are Invited.

TUESDAY

THURSDAY

POMEROY - Meigs Local
Chapter 17, OAPSE, will hold a
special meeting Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Meigs Junior High
School.

POMEROY - The Meigs
· County Democrat Executive
Committee will meet Thursday
at 7: IJ p.m. at the Carpenters'
HaU, Main Street, Pomeroy.

Happenings
FlatwOOds plans ·
Bible School·

Homecoming set
POMEROY - The Second
Annua I Homecoming of the
Hysell Run Holiness Church will
be held Sunday all day. Lunch
will be served at noon, and the
speaker for the day "111 be David
Wiseman. Special music will be
provided by Mark Watson and

The F1atwoods Methodist
Church will hold vacation Bible
school. June 20-24 with classes
!rom 9:IJ .to 11 :~ a.m. Classes
tor chlldren, nursery through
eighth grade, wUl be held.
All chUdren of tile community
are Invited to attend. F:or more
Information residents are asked
to telephone 985-3540 or 9&amp;';-3891.

The Harmonies, Racine. and

Pastor Theron Durham invites
the public to a rt Pnd.

Hysell Run sets
Bible School

Hill teu n.ion set

Descendants of the late Albert
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
'
and
Llza Hill wlll hold their
School at the Hysell Run Hall·
reunion .June 26' at the
annual
ness Church wUl be In session
Portland
Park with a basket
June 20 through July 1, 9:30a.m.
at
noon.
All relatives and
dinner
to noon dally. All youth of the
friends
are
Invited
to attend.
area are Invited.

,

common ones are pl!enobarbttal
and diphenylhydantoin (Dilantln) .
Most of these drugs control only
certain types d seizures; therefore,
It Is lrtlportant that a doctor 'know as
much about the speclflc type of
seizure as possible before prescribIng a drug,
After detennlnlng which drug to
use, the work In controlling epileptic seizures has just begun. Correct
blood levels of the anti-convulsant
drugs must be maintained. It the
blood level d .the drugs drops too
low, thepatlentbeglnstohavemore
seizures. It the drug level is too
hlgh, the patient often will have
undesirable side effects like drQwst.ness, rashes and Irritability. Only In
the last six tD 10 years have we been
able to monJtor accurately the
levels of these anti-convulsant

ENTRY DEADLINE JULY I , 1983

Rutland VFD seeking
entries for 1983 parade

statlonthlsSalurday at Nehonvllle. The rlhhon t'lllting ceremony will be
at It: 00 a.m., prior to the fil'!lt train departure.

Entries are being requested tor
the annual Rutland July 4th
celebration sponsored by the Ru·
!land Fire Department.
Dan Edwards, chairman of
promotion of the parade and
celebration, states that the Rutland
group is hoping participants In the
Big Bend Regatta Parade will hold
their entries lor the July 4th parade
In Rutland.

NELSONVILLE - The Hocking
Valley Scenic Railway plans a
dedjqation of Its new passenger
depot Saturday, June 18. Local
officials wlll cut the rtbhon at 11 :30
p.m. to the first train departure.
The station, designed to reflect
tum -of-the-century railroad style
architecture and patterned after
stations on the original Hocking
Villley Railway will feature a
waltlng room, a souvenlor shop and
modern Indoor rest rooms. Citizens
of Nelsonville engineered the pro·
ject with native Poplar board and
barren siding being donated by a

and auto insurance premJum rates

that are often much higher than
standard rates. The American
EpUepsy Assocla:tion Is helping
alleviate this burden by offering
policies to Its members. People

Twelve trophles will be awarded
In lhe Rutland event with catego·
rles Including antique cars, horse
entries, bicycles, commercial, rell·
giOUS and nGn-religiOUS fioats.
The parade will form at 10: 15
a.m. on Depot St. and will move at
11 a.m. Advance registration Is
requested and participants are
asked to complete the registration
form In today's DaUy Sentinel.

way's own trckagl'.

This year. the railway Inaugu rated rides on a track sp!'eder lor
walling passengers. Steam engine
.1:1, fresh from the boiler shop after a
qalntrr rrtublng, will he In service
the day of the dedication. Inquiries
to P.O. Box 427. Nelsonville, Ohio
45764.

Poet's Comer

Phone No. of Person In charge ............. ....... ............. .. ............... ..

Vacation Bible School scheduled
Vacation Bible school wUI be held
at the Rutland Church of Christ
beginning Monday and continuing
through June 24, 6 to8: 30 p.m., each
evening.
Theme Is "Jesus, Lord of PromIses. " Classes wlll be offered for
nursery (ages two and three)
through juniors , (grades six
through! eight) . Crafts classes will

and angry
With ttE burdens ol ltM' world

inside

NOW 50°/o OFF

tying, '"" ""''-·
thetlle
f~r or being caught and ~\111(&gt; the hope of tx&gt;tn(t caught.
of aettlng It over with Kept IJI' !rom enjoying myse~ .

lnot""CC yoo whispered

Lovt&gt;'
So~ I was lookJI\fl for
bul '""'dn't lind.
UntU ~ showed me.
YO\!~ )UII God.
o
When
creeled me
Yoi.J !We me IYH)I ChOJCe In the WU'ld. ..
Y011 ~ me too IIIIICit
• to "\PP 1 robot ol Ill&lt;!·

p the cho6ce 11 mine,
but ThaW madet II .
,

·I

LIST
PRICE

With Gas or
Electric Ranee For
*Kitchen includes 4 wall cabinets
eq~aling 66" w~h 66" double stainless
steel sink. 1·18" &amp; 1·24" base cabinet
with tops, 1 Coloric range.

$}199

317 N. 2nd

Middleport

PIMENTO LOAF .......~~·~ SI.89
SUPERIOR 1-LB. PACKAGED
WI ENERS.•••...•••...•.. ~~~~ s1. 69
CUDAHAY CANNED HAM

LUN.CH MEAT. ......... J~~ Sl.79
HOMEMADE

12 OZ. KRAFT AMER.
SINGLES W/19' OFF

CHEESE ........... r.~~-. 11.79

APPLES ............. ~.~ .. 11.39

The affe cted Ohio Bell
Telephone Company tariffs
arc:

NEW GREEN

CABBAGE ... ........~ ... 29'

Exchange and
Network Services (P.U.C.O.
Tariff
No. 1)
Message Toll Tc le(P.U.C.O.
phonc Service
Tarifl
No. 7 )

.

(Proposal to witl1draw general manual service from thi s
lari fl.)
Any person, 6rm, corpora·
lion or association may file,
pursuant to Section 4909.19
or the Ohio Revised Code,
objections to the proposed
increases and adjustments in
rates and charges, and to the
proposed chang11s In regula·
lions and practices affecting
the same. 'The objections may'
allege that such Application
contains proposals that are
unjust md cllicrlminatory or

46 OZ. DOLE

PINEAPPLE ·JUICE ...~~~. S1.39
48 PACK DIXIE GOLDEN GARDEN
9" PLATES ..............~~~·. s1. 59
16 OZ. DELMONTE
SLICED PEACHES ~~~.s 2 /$1.59

992-2635

·PORK &amp; BEANS ..........~~~ ..8·9¢
15 OZ. DELMONTE
CATSup ...........
~!~·.. 79¢
16 OZ. VLASIC
··
,
SWEET PICKLES ..... !~~. Sl.29
BETSY ROSS SOFTY 8 PACK
BU

OHIO

Lord .. their Sovtout.

, ------~----------~--------------~r-------------------------

(P.U.C.O.
No. 2)

Mobile Telephone (P.U.C.O.
Service Tariff
No. 3)

unreuonable. Recommenda·
lions which differ from the
Application may be made by

the staff or the Public Ottlittes

I ••••• I ..

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT

PH. 992-6342

40 OZ. TEEN QUEEN

EY~m

Thl'wltJ&gt; your ~nat •!"! )UIIk.'f
!.bait- mado tr;o.
. !!Y R.ty Doom, ~land, ~
Dedijated to: , _ l"ho dt;in'l lati&gt;w Ihe

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

HOTDOG SAUCE .....~~~. 2/89¢
24 COUNT DIPLOMAT PLASTIC
FORKS
&amp;
SPOONS
....
!.~~-.49¢ ·
100 COUNT LIPTON
.
TEA BAGS .............. ~~~~·. S2.89

CITADEL OAK
BORO 8'6" STARTER KITCHEN

In love.

NOTICE OF
APPLICATION
OF THE OIDO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
FOR INCREASES AND
ADJUSTMENTS IN
RATES AND CHARGES
Pursuant to 'the require·
ments of Section 4909.19 of
the Ohio Revised Code, the
Ohio Bell Telephone Company hereby gives notice that.
on March 31, 1983, it filed
with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio an Applica·
tion (P.U :C .O. Case No . ·
83-300-TP -AIR) for authority to increase and adjust its
rates and charges for tele communications services and
to change its regulations and
practices affecting the same.
This notice contains th e
substance and prayer of the
•
Applicatinn. However, any
interested party desiring
complete , d etailed infor mation with respect to all
affected rates , charges, regulations and practices should
inspect a copy of the Appli cation and all attached
schedules'at the office of the
Commission , 375 South Hig,h
Street, Columbus, Ohio. A
copy of the Application and
the proposed tariff sheets is
also available for inspection
during normal business hours
at Ohio Bell public business
offices. 1n uddition, the proposed tariffs were mailed to
the mayors and legislative
authorities ol all municipali·
ties in Ohio on February 25 ,
1983. as part of the Company 's notification of it s
intent to file.
This Application :tffccts
rates and charges for teleco mmunications services to
all cuslofners of the Ohio Bell
Tdephone Company and. in
addition , affects the rates and
charges for certain services
governed by mncurrences ol
other telephone companies
serving all other subscribers
in Ihe State of Ohio .

10 OZ. VIENNA WITH

give them their special warm gow.

tradftlon, qalnst all right.
I callejj mysetl '.' Uboral&lt;d"
But YQtll dktn't shake rile, l"'tlle me,
fOil ~e. or Jtrtng me up.
You d~n't knook rrw down with llghtnlns;:
Or tbrJeten with flits upraised.

Se&lt;oQnd grade - Ni&lt;;k Adams, Matthew
Grccgel., Kfl'lny Rizer . Rachel ReNo. Shawn
Wolfe.

'Third grade -

,.

..,

Codner-, Michael

"'

M~lanl e Adams. JunJe

:::

Joshua

Hill. Glenda Holter.
F'ourth grade.&gt; -

Jle.egle, Jayson Codner. Chris Hannoo, Terrt , ..

HUI.

,_

'•
Fltth gradE&gt; - Ray Lynn Dally, Nancy .
Hunt. J . J. LaWl"E''lC'e, Tanya MeaOOws, Jason ...
Qu1Um. BK-ky Rou~h. Sherrt Roush, Sus! ,.
Sprouse, Dian«" WUlbarger.
Sb:th grack&gt;- Becky Evans . Ryan Evans. ·

Debbie Gl'f'at~ . Dawn Johnson, Tl1da .
Roush, Timmy TMford. Sabrina Mahlman.

•.
'.

,.

Private Lin e
Se.r vke Tariff

•F.ac h cabinet is made fro m seect pieces or solid oak.
•Boro naftsmen hand -rub and hand -sand [hese cabinets to

rebeUed against authortty,

val:~-

A ldck-off caravan will he held
Sunday at the church, 11: 30 a.m. to
noon and wUI travel through
Rutland.
Additional Information may he
obtained by caUing Kathy Stewart
at 742-2648or Kelly Brown, 742-'I/77.
All children In theareaaretnvttedto
attend.

KITCHEN CABINETS

I tl1ed a little of everything.
But ltw' parties,

with the calrn811

be offered for each class . .

BORO
.
CITADEL OAK

I could never rid myself nf you

I

-holt.

PICKLE &amp;

COTIAGECHEESE.~~( 11.39

INGELS FURNITURE

· • on one !lhouldt...--r
and a C'hlpon lh eo ttte~·
I was running Running even Uklugh I kJW&gt;W

.,-o1.

-ot.

Mall to: Rutland Volunteer Fire Dept.
Larkin St., Box 254
Rutland, Ohio 45775

Jlart at

~as ('{]nf'usltd, Lord,

detop

Type of Entry .. ...................... ........ ..... .. ....... .................... ......... ..

O@eau!j/jl ~lichens

THEJUDGI!
Not IOR!Zll20. l...crd,
I I'NIIl.ed just how fair
you an&gt;. ·How'!
1 neerly ruined myst'IJ.

I

Name ........ ....... .. .......... ............................... ·· ........ ·.. · .. ·........... ..

friend of thC' ra ilway and construe·

lion fu nding provided by the Baird
Stuart Foundation of Nelsonvute.
The volunt e&lt;•rs of the non-profit
corporallon secured temporary
running righ ts to · the north over
Chesslr System tracks after spring
floods severely damaged the rail·

'

FOW'!h grade - llolltJk&gt; Barre&lt;t. Stephanie
Bam!n. Lefeh Eas111dtle, Mlcttaet Jacks,
Brtclllet Lambert, Jeanette M&lt;Oonaltl, '!'Ina
Molden. Jelley l't'yt&lt;ll, Rl&lt;bard Peyton,
Carrie Scorbeo'ry, Mtc:hoel l..o&lt;ke, AprU
Napper. •
11le ... grodlng period hom' '
Fifth grade - Wtn&lt;\Y GUkey, Mary Hale,
roll ot tne Sakm Center Ellmmary School
Dale Johnsti», 1'arnmy Lambt'l1. Natalie
h• IIIIIOWl&lt;ed.
MAlllnc a grltdt or B Ql' abovo tn all t1te1r - u.,~. Anne wtlllams.
Sixth grade - Cin~ Maynanl. Jody,
subJects to be named to 1he rdl were:
Levlngstoo, Renee YO:Ung, Cathy HolYitf"tter.
First !!fide- Jasm Ervin. Jason Geo!'i&lt;.
TAra Oark.
Kevin Jewell, UWe Lamllert, Alldrts Mrllonold, Jt!n!f!IY Methat~. llonlse Sone111eld.
f1na1 six Weeks ~adlng period hooor
- .... de - Nell Bamn, Allison rdlThe
of the fu'tland Elementary ~OOol ha\0
Gannaw03&lt;, Robtn!Wl, Tena.JoweU, Randall
.... 8JU100n&lt;ed.
Jotmtcn. l.aena Oller-, Ricky Prn-, Tara
Making a grad£' orB or aoovr In all their
Shephonl, vtrgtnla Lucas, Michell e Young.
Third grade - Syane Aspin. Katljy subjects to be named to the roll werr.
f'lrst grad£' - Ryan Adams . Chr1stlc
wun...... An&amp;-e. hale, Tony M&lt;Gutre,
Bed\Y Octrt'J'IT\M, Beth Clark. Matt Haynes. Cooper.

David Smith, Mark
Smith. Mel1ncla Smith. Ractttt Steele, Donald
Stetn. Mickle Stewan, JenniiB" Swanz, Bntin
Tllllnehlll, Denny Welsh, Cltlp Weny.

~

Rutland July 4 Parade Registration

Scenic railway dedicates
new Nelsonville station ·

has-

Trlcla-.

Racine VFD plans fest
for town July 4 parade

Telehone No ..................................................., ..... .... . , ....... ...... ..

NEW STATION- Hocking VaUey ScenJc RaUwuy wUJ open a new

Tho llaal stx ......... portod limO'
SbeUy Arnold. Cllrlstl .
roll ol ttl@ Me!p , . _ HlP SciOli
Bur-.
Gary FH&lt;maD.
...IIIJUIICOd.
Cllrlo SIPolut.
Maldnc a
B Ol'a~ tn au thEir
Slxjh . . . . - ~~-Brion
S\lbf«'tt to be lW'N!d to thP rdl weft:
WHWr, Ou'1l SI:(Jit, Sarah P'tdlloft, Kr11B
Sownth p'OCio - ""-' AM Batley,
~.'l'Ddtl~
Marjarlo
Mldlaol BlrtNn. David
JlHPo, Dreoma BID Brotllen. Laura
Cot1b. Kim 111mm, Scott IIIJUIII1C, Audra
~!Ina! stx .,......, portod roll o1 tii@.Brodbury E-ary Sct.&gt;ol hu
1'ema Joltnlal. Kmn v. KinK.
been annoonced.
·
Dma Manley, ~· Sloan, Carloo Stepp.
M.aJdnc 1 p o1 B or ·~ In all tbelr J"""' WanE&lt;, Tunmy Wr1cftt.
subjerts to bf Ml'll!d to tbf roll were:E\olllh p'OCio - ' Erin Andon&lt;xl, Kim
FII!h ..-•- Eddie eraoa. Jtm Dint P .
Annst..,..; Jr!f Arnold. Jr!f Basham, '(1m
J . Gltaj Sbanfllll Newscme, Heath R1ctlCassell, Atrll Clark. M.rty Cline. Todd
mond. !RIIt Daniels. Ryan· Harper , Amy
CWNmo, '!'trn Durst, HUI!)' EOsoo, !&lt;mil
Epple.
Haynes, ShanrdllllnciY. ChrtsHyseU, Darcie
Sixth p'OCio - Char""" Cade!, Stephanie
Hy,.u, Phil Ktng, Susan KinK. Eddie Kit&lt; hen.
Pede, se.n Gtbbl, Amy Luc~ Elise
Mike Lewls, Judi Mf!es. Stew- Musser.
Meta-.
'
Michelle Pet~ Scott Powell. Cheryl

drugs In the blood stream. This with epilepsy also sometimes have
advance fl'l!lkes It much easter for problems bei)lg allowed to partlct. ·
ol Family Medk:lne
physicians to treat epilepsy · pate In organized recreational
programs because dtrec!Drs are '
Ohio Unlvenlty C01Je1e
effectively.
of Ooleopalhlc Medicine
For any anti-convulsant drug to reluctant to deal with possible ·
QUESTION: How Is epllepsy
work properly, however, It must be seizure!;, or have difficulty getting '
treated?
taken exactly as prescribed. Fre- adequate Insurance coverage. .
ANSWER: Last week I talked
Epileptics who d.rtve also face
quently an epileptic patient begins
about the many fonns of
to experience fewer seizures, and restrictions. Many states require
By far the most ..
proof of a specified seizure-free
then starts adjusting his or her
common method
medication schedule. This can lead period before (hey will Issue a
of dealing with
to problems and .should be avoided. d.rtver's llcense. This usually remost kinds of epl·
1n a very small .number 1of quires a physician examination and
lepsy ls using
epUepsy cases, brain surgery can verlflcatlon. People with epilepsy
medications .
be used as a treatment. This Is· also are .automatically exempt
These are called •
&lt;#4,
successful only If physicians are from military service and usually
anti-convulsive drugs and are
able to find the exact locus of the discharged should epllepsy develop
effective ln controlling .seizures In
seizure. Unless a specific site of the during their enlistment.
more than :;o percent of epUeptics.
seizure Is pinpointed. surgery Itself
For the chUd with epilepsy, life
There are about 14 "flrst-cholde" or
can cause brain damage that would sometimes Is even more .difficult. It :
"first-line" antl-eplleptic drugs on
result In an epileptic condition even Is lrtlportant that parents dtscour·
the market - two of the
If one was not already present.
. more
age an epUeptic child from thinking
QUESTION: What are some of himself as being different. This
problems faced by epileptics In can be accomplished by letting the
their dally lives?
child live an active life and resisting
ANSWER: Probably the biggest the temptation to overprotect or
problem that people with epUepsy shelter hlm from people and
have Is still the generally held activities. Most chlldren can attend
misconception about the disease. school if they are under reasonable
The myths and misunderstandings seizure control. It they are hav1ng
about epilepsy have led to both open extreme problems with their epl·
The Racine Volunteer F!re De- biggest In recent years, and the 1983
version
hopes
to
he
even
better.
All
and
silent discrimination against lepsy, they may have to a !tend
partment Is again planning a full
entries
are
welcome,
Including
epileptics. Restrictive or dlscrtmJ. special schools. However, In many
da9 of activities for the Fourth of
natory legislation against eplleptics cases this may be an undesirable
July Weekend Including a chicken t))ose from businesses. organizastU! exists. Although the fejlerat alternative because these schools
barbecue, parade, fireworks and tions, or Individuals.
Prizes will be awarded'to the first government has made It ·Illegal for are often designed for the mentally
variety show on lndependence Day.
companies that receive federal retarded, and do not meet the
Parade chairman Scott Wolfe Is three places In two divisions for
funds to discriminate against peo specific needs of epileptics.
seeking entrants lor this year's float entrants.
For fUrther Information call ple with epilepsy, the American
parade, which will ldck off a full
For more Information on epl·
schedule of events from the South· 992-2045 or 949-2520. Parade entries Epilepsy Association estimates lepsy, write to me at the College of
ern Junior High school grounds at should complete the following entry that approxlamtely 25 percent of Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio Univerform and send to Fourth of July controlled epileptics with normal sity, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio
lOa .m.
Last year's parade was one of the Celebarallon, Box 181, Racine, Ohlo Intelligence are ('hronlcally unem· 45701 or The Epileptic Foundation
45771.
played. Apprehenslon on the part of of America, 1828 L Street N.W ..
. the employer, discriminatory Suite 406, Washington, D.C. 20036.
workers' compensation laws and
TYPE OF ENTRY : .... .... .. ........... ..................................... ..
lack of proper training, counselling, . - - - - - - - - - - - - and placement of employable ·
Name or Organization .... .. ..................... ......, .. ...... ........ ...... ..
Going Out of Business
epileptics. all are factors hlndl'rlng
Solo Con.tin""'
employment.
Address ....... ................ .... .................... ...... .. .. ............. ............. .
Most Items 30% to 50% OFF
Epileptics also face health, life

.

_ _;

------Honor Rolls-------~-------_;.__--------/.
·
- -SinClair.
Fifth .... - - KM&gt;

·Epileptic's. treatment, problems ·outlined
By Edwar!l Schreck, D.O.
A1111e"' Prote.or

'

'

I

'

Commission or Ohio or by
tniervenlng partie~ and may
be adopted by the Commis~n.

LOCAL EXCHANGE SERVICE
Ohio Bell is asking to increase local service rates ~ause it now
costs more than $25 a month to provide basic residence service , bui
the Company is collecting only about $12 a month for thi s service.
The difference has traditionally been made up by a subsidy from long
distance and other ·discretionary services, but these sources are rapidly
disappearing.
The introduction of competition in the te lephone industry and
changes in public policy over the past 15 years have brought about the
reorganization of the Bell System. This reorganization resulting in the
divestiture of Ohio Bell and 21 other Bell telephone companies from AT&amp;T.
scheduled for Janu"')' I , 1984, has put a deadline on the need for replacing
the revenue lost through the e limination of this hi stori~al su bsidy.

RESIDENCE SERVICE
The increases proposed in monthly rat es for res iden Ce cus-tomers.
for 1-party unlimited , 2-party unlimited, ! -party message, 2-party message
and !-party measured rate service access linBs are shown b elow. Monthly
usage allowances and the charge for additional local messages over the
allowances for message se rvice will not be changed, nor will the time
a"nd mileage charges for measured rate service.
!·party'
lllhl~lti

2-party"
..til1illll

lillrtYt

-~~~~

2·party"

t ·partyt

measured
S5.80

message

Present
$12.95
S10.30
S 8.25
$ 8 tO
PrlliiOsed
18.80
14.90
12.00
tt 85
8 50
Note: Prices 00 oot inclutle monthly cnatges tor teased tetepnones or tne ptoposed S4 mootnty charge per
· line lor all customers e•ptainoo in the LOIIQ Oistance Section·ol thiS notice
.
•untlmltetl Stivtce
Ptice im:lutles tine ood unltmiteo usage.
""2-Porty Service

·

PRIVATE LINE
SERVICES
(SPECIAL CIRCUITS)
In creases are propos e d
in the service co nnection
~ h:'trg es. non -recurring
charges and monthly rates for
most special circuit s'. for e ign
ex~han!(e and foreign central
office se rvi ce as we ll as for
privutc line c h annels and
associaterl equ ipm e nt . Mnre
de tail ed inform a ti o n about
these it e ms ran be found in
Ihe propused tariff sh('dS .

TOUCH-TONE
CALLING SEHVICE
Cu rr e ntly th ere is a
c..: harge I n change from ro tary
dia l to TOUC H-TONE " &gt;L' rvi&lt;·e or back again . Oh io l:le ll
is a s k in)!. to. in c rl'a~e th e

, charge for changing to t•illwr
TO UC H -TONE or rnlaq·
dial se rvi ce-. ll owc'\'L'r, th e·
Co mpun y i ~ a.b o a:-. k ing l o

Service
·
Price ~ctu&lt;tes 30 outgo1ng tocat calls monthly Each addtttooatlocat call wtll conunue to be 7 cents
:(:Measured Service
.
The price is tor tne line only The charge lor eaCh ootgo~ng local call depends upon when all! where the call.

TOL'C H-TO N 1·: "" ttL'\\· in ·
&gt;l allations l.ty in cor por itlin ~
it inln ih L' ha, ic \1'1'\'il'l' :ttul

v in: conn l' l'lion L· haq.!,l ' for

NON-RESIDENCE SERVICE
The increases proposed in monthly rates for non -residence customers
for individual line message and measured service , rotary line me ssa!!e
and meas ured ·service, PBX trunk message and m easurecl serv ice anti
semi -public coin service arc shown be low. Thc..monthly usage allowa nce
and the charge for additional local messages over the allowance will' not
be changed, nor will the time a nd milea~ e charl!,es lor measured raiL'
service .
lldlvlttuatltne
Rotart Iiiio
PBX '""k
Semi-public coin
•
t
•
t
•
t
Ptesent
122 85 $22.30
126.05
125.60
$29.40
125.60
$19 95
PrlliiOSetl
28.55
27.80
32.60
31.90
36.55
3190
25 55
Note Prices 00 not include monthly charges lor teased telephones 01 too ptoposed $4 mont~ty c~arge pet
line for all customers e~plamed in the Lon!J Otstance Section of thrs ootrcc

'Mess1111• Sel'ltce

Tne price !Of message non·resrdence servrce mcfudes 90 outgomg local calls Addrlronal local calls are •7 cents

each. No cnanoes are PtOPilsed in the allowance or t~e ottce oet call
tMoasured Service
The price is 101 the ltne only The charge tm each outflOt ng local call depends upon wnen and wnet e 1nc
cal Its placed aoo its dUiallon No changes are ptoposeo tor anv oltnesc usage tatcs

Monthly rates for opl ion a I one-way Extend ed Area SL·rvice and Com mttttil \
Calliug Service would getterally be ittcn.:ase&lt;l in proportion to th e ove rall
increase in basic exchan ge sl'rvice. 1n addition . Ohin Be ll is asking to '"tab·
lish 2-way. ntHHlptional Extended Area Service between 36 ctJ ttliguou s Ohio
Bell co mmuniliL" over the nex t few years as e lec tronic switc hing syslc tt"
arc installed in cettlral offices .
Service rates nul proptJsed to he changed itt lhi.s Application indud L· :
• The n10nthly cl tll allow a nl'c fo r loca l calls under mes.sa~c rate sc rvic\.·
anolhe charl-(c for additional local ca ll s ovt" Ihe &lt;.tllow a ncL'S, as we ll as
time and mileage char)(es under measu red rat e service .
• The monthly allowance for ca lls to Directory Assistance .
• The dwrge for local coin tclt•t.thott e c; tlls tlol rcquirin~: an "ill"r;tlor.

CHARGES FOR INSTALLING SERVICE
FOR RESiDENCES AND SMALL BUSINESSES
Line

Aesitlence

Present

Pro~so&lt;J

15 00
1000

3300
1100

$3165
5450

Non·restdence

'Milk Done 011 Custonoers' Premises
First 15 minutes
Eacn addtttooat 15 minutes

$2 00
32 00

CHARGES FOR INSTALLING SERVICE FOR BUSINESSES
WITH MORE THAN ONE LINE AND CENTREX
Lilli

Business 14 line BlampleJ
. WDrt Done 011 cusr-.· Pr.,.tses
Cltltrll

Prese1t

$148.00

:;o8(}t

Proposetl

$128.00
33.00 - lost 15 mm•
It .00 - eacl1 aol. 16rrttn.'

.

. Each service ordef

wrn ~ 111 cat_,·Prttt11111
t&lt;:haroe lor work oo customers· premises.

'Tile PliliiOStld Cllarqt! WOUkl lie basetl upon
atlllll It extra matenat ts r~iretl .

53.00

2Uot

59.00
33 00 - !ItS! I 5 mtn.'
It .00 - each aol. 15 mirt.•

now tono It lakes to COmplete this.*Oik. Atltlittotlat charges may

• Certain Tl'lt•pho n&lt;' 1\n "'\" l'rin).!. SL"rvin ·:-.
• Din":lnry A~sist:uwt• ( :ails
• Opl'r:tlor ll:tnclll'd L&lt;K':tl
( :.. in ( : :~li s
• Tr:111sft·r ,,f li 1ll C h:t rgc·
Sl' rvicc · (a!"'

kno\V Il

· LONC DISTANCE
CALLS WITI-IIN 01110
Ohiu Hell

j.., prop11 , itt ).!.

.1

%4 lllOttlhl y t: ha q ..!;l' pt r \itw lo

all ni.'- IOt tit ·r-, and In dt ·t ·tr: ht ·
pri ce.s on dir cl'l diall'd Inn ~
di\ lann· ct\1.., will tin (&gt;hiD : 111
avl'ra gt· nl ·tO pt· rct•ttl . Bntl t

wh it"\1 an· pnlpll...,t'd to hl'
!'hanged attd Iill' r&lt;w tl:tlioll'
a1HI pr :wt in· :-. affvrling ti lt'
..;a rt ll.' an · tmitl "t. unrl'a 'inll ·

a hit• :ttld it i'u ll it·it •llt to vit •ltl
n·a..,ottaltl t· t:ttlllfK.'ll':tli ! tll for
I hl' 'l' l'\ in .. , rvndl'rl'd ;
I h i Find th:tttlu· ralt· s :tt lt l
dtargt'\ and n •g trla tion .. awl
pradin·-.: whirlt !hl' ( :ontpan y

Ill tht '\1' dt: tttg&lt;'' \\ill :tpph

p ropo.'it.'s \u c ltangt· a rt' ju' \

(o aJf Clt \ IOJIIVI" \ td nlht •r

:u11l n ·asoll:thil' :md will prov id t· uol r11nrc tit an a fair and
rc a.\onaiJi v r:ltt· ol rl'ltlf'l t on ,
th l' v:tlttL' of I hi' Con tp:ttt y s
prO jH•r l) Ht'lll:tll y ll.st'd arltl

'll·ll'pltnt tt· C.o tHp: t tti t·\ \\!tic h
&lt;&gt;hin l'kll '" ~Jt ...,...,:,gc·
'li 1ll Tl'il' plttlltt · Sl'n'il'&lt; ·' I: tr iII .
The prupu..,l' d dt:tiJ.!t' \uHdd
l)l• in additiot t to !lw pro pn ..,'- ·d
tlt'W llHHtlhh- ralt ·.., lor lt wa l
t'\cl tttll.l.!t : \ t'J"\ in· , Tltt' t tHtll.tiued &lt;'I le-d 11l Ihe rcdud it " t
inlottg_di ... tatwt· rah '\ and tlw
l ll 'W ~4 t'hargt· JH'I' t'll ,lftttwr
l illl' will tlnl illtTI.':I'l' ( )\titt
fkll rt'Vl'll llt 1•

DIBECT INWAHD
DIALINC SEHVICE

(PBX CUSTOMEHS)
inward dialiug se rvic&lt;· lur
PB\ c u ... tomer' to a r11n n·
l l ..,il).!.e ..,l' ll.\ ili ve h:t"i ' . Th e
( :om p:lll )' i.., propo&gt;, i ttg a r :t I('
lor each ~:r11u p •If 20 ttttlttl X' rs
attd ""add it itll t:tl ralc l.ta &gt;c·d
ott the nu111hcr ol trutt b
ci:tlt•d with stll lt utnttl.tt'" .

;L'""

CUSTOMER
OPERATING CENTER
SERVICE
Ohio Bell is &gt;ee kin g to
esta blish a new servi ce for
Telephone Answering Services and Alarm Co mpani es
called Custom e r Operating
Ce nter Service. Thi.&gt;&gt;c rvi ce
would provide a dedicated
com ple me nt of cable tlairs to
these businesses and allow
them to su bscribe lo bulk lines
instead of having to .~ubscribe
to single lines. The service
would include a rule for the
ca ble and a cbarge for cad~
line activated.
~

lt.'&gt;t.'ft rl for IIH" ronv t · nit. 'rH'l'

of till· pttbli c
ft-l App rmt· il w fi liu).( of
till' fli'OI:HI \l'd \dlt'clult: \ lt t'L'h .
l'!llliai tH •d ill Sdlt'd ule 1-:-1 ol
1111' Appli cali"" · mod ifit·d lo
n· flt·ct . . udt n ·vi , iolt'.... if :my.
a o, rn:t y lu •t·ttiiH' t•llt •r tivt •.
pu rsu:tttll tlt&gt;nl&lt;'l'' of thl' Cotu ·
r11i ~:-, ion , durill.l!. tltL' inlvrint
hL· I w~L' Il the· filing of th e
i\pplicatio11 antlih l' datt·up"" wlt iclt tl1e scltL·d ttlt• sl!l'ets
hl' ct&gt;nll' cffcd ivt· ;
id )Ordt:r that the prot""""
slll'l)l ' l~ ·mmt• dl&lt;·&lt; 'li w forth with :
(e I Approve the withdrawal
of Ihe sche d u lv shee ts wh iclt
arc proJK.tSed lo he c lta11~ed
contained in Schedul e E-2of
th e appli caliott , modified to
rl' flect Sl n.:h revisions , if any.
as ma y heeorne.effecl ive . pursuant to orders of ih l' Clintmi ssion . during th e itlll'rim
bet wee n th e filing of iht •
Application arnlllw d ale tip·
on which said schedule sh · cl&gt;
are approved for withdrawal :
( f) Grant' ' uch oth e r and
·further relief to whi ch the
Compa ny is reaso nabl y entitled .
The form of this noljcc ha~
been approved by th e Public
Utilities Commiss ion of Ohio.

THE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY

.' '

...,

•

----·----

a '\

pn ''( ' t tl raft ·, and c haq.~t'.\

ere a~(' in t hl' n..·cu rri II}!. rnot ~I h ·

I'L'\Irul'lu rc the rall·.., lord ircd

Some clements of the basic charges lo install , move and change sL·rvict·
ami equipme nt would he incrca.sed and so me wo uld he d ec rcasL·d . !low·
ever, residen ce and individual lin e non- rc s idc n~e c ustomers would he able
to avoid some of the charges h; nbiainin)llhcir equi pme nt a! an O hio Bell
Service Center or by providing th eir ow n equipme nt . More detailed information al10ul these items can l.te founrl in 'the proposed tariff sheeh .

L istin~s

~L· rvtn.• .

cu."i lo n u: r

Ohi11 Be ll i' scl' ki ng to

INSTALLATION, MOVE AND CHANGE CHARGES

Thl' follow in~: ar e illuslra ·
ti v&lt;' of Sl' rvit•t•s for whi ch ilw
C ompan y is p rnpo :-. in).! in nease.s of aboul 20 pt•tu !nl :
• C ustom Calling Se rvin·s
• Nott· Publisltcd Servil'l'
• i\ddiliottal Dir&lt;'c tory

ly chargc·ltlr'l'()l l( :tt -T(lt'\1-:

;t

pays at th e tinw of itt.,ta ll :t ·
lion . Th L· Comp;ut y i' al"'
n .:qliL'.\ I in g a 20 JII..Tn.: tll i11 ·

l 'Cll ll'lll' in

GENERAL

re!:1tecl ~L' rv ires s uch as

thl' t..'Xt'hangl' ill'Cl'SS porti on 11f Ct•nlrL'X littl'S.
ail')•ll·f fitll'S and L'Sitif.titioll hall lines a., wdl as

t•:n lt•rpri .st• St•r vil'l' ).
T lw prayt·r of ihe i\ppli cation n·qu c ... h tit(' Publi c
ll tililic,., ( :onulti ,sio n nf ( &gt;hio
to do tbl' follo wi ng:
(a) Find thai the ( &lt;Hiljlitny'

equip lll t: lll c har)..!.\'

·.

n.:rordin!!. trun k~ .

t•lilllinai L' the SL'paralc SL'r·

is plac~ and rts duration. No changes are proposed lor any ol these usage rates

The following items arc
illustrat ive of changes in rates
a nd chargl's for so me mi scellaneous services. More de tailed informal inn about these
ite ms can he fout1d in the
propose r! tar iff shl'els.
• lnrrl'aSl'S in ex.r han~l'

dormitory . ; lations. jojnt
li ~L· r Sl'l'\ ·in• and "~ Pl't'ial

Subscribers with 2-parly unlimited or message servrce can retam the serv1ce al therr presentlocatrons, but no
new e-party service wtll be installed
·
tMemtiB

MISCELLANEOUS
SERVICES

•' ' • ,./
' .

'

\

�1G-The

-- -------- -

54Hitinel

The Daily_Sentinel

PHONE
992-2156
a.••_, _
__
Ill C..rt si.. ,_,.,, ~ ·~

lUMBER, honlwora' .....,

J&amp;F
Public NotiCe

Public Notice

PUBUCNOnCE

2

and prov1de wnnen or oral
commen ts ~m poss•ble uses of
S2 7 53 and the amo unt CJf

"---.
Pl.,..-u.
IWtng

1:========:
In IIMnc lllnory of
ORIS GAUL IIIIo (IIUid _ ,
.btrll5. 1966.
.Aitlloulll it is 17 YNfS • •

revenue shar•ng fu nd s ex-·
pected by thf! tow nsh•p dunng
•ts 1984 f1scal yea r.

On Jutv 2. 1983 at the Clerk's
nome_ th e trustees of Bedford
Twp Will hold a Revenue
. Sh'aring proposed use heanng .
All cttizens lesPectally Seruo r
Ctt1zens) are 1nv1ted to anend

In Memoritim

0

Aa, Ts1t111 _.~orp~.
Litt1t did I t.. it would

Helen Swartz. Clerk

Bedford Tq_wnsh1p

161 15. Ire

be the ell!'
1'lllt Jesus IIIOUid all our
kMdOM-,.
lllitlw do .. know tho., '
Of tilt lieu
Whtn Jesus in clouds of

Beautiful Brick Ranch H.ome
ON TWO ACRE lANDSCAPED LOT
IN BAUM ADDITION

&amp;lory will come.

All who .. ...ty, Wllchinr. and •itinr.
JISI IS He Slid when He

Liilina room, dinina room, den with woodburnina fir•·
place, ~·4 bedrooms with lora• closets, •itchen with dis·
h!IIShtr, built·in ranae. oven and cabinets plore and
breoUos\area, 2\\ tiled baths, bmoom. laip covered pa~
bo w1th charcoal fireplace, lull efficient heat pump and
11r conditioned. Pnce $1251000. Owntr will finance.

wont..,,

He I will like with him
forw. to stay,

Public

Notice

PUBLIC NOncE
PROPOSED UIED
HEARING I
On June 27. 1983 a1 7·30

..~RI, liAS 111d

SEW£1LIIES

WOK
.
-LAND CLUIING,

P.M .. Chester Town Halt the
Chester Townshtp Tru:stees w./1
hold a RtNen ue Shanng Propos ed Use Heanng. AJI cilizens
(esp ectally Sentor C11izensJ are.
ln'&gt;~ lt ed to anend and provide
the trustees Wit ~ wntten and
oral comfTlenls on the POSSible
uses of the funds The tov.msh•P
w1ll have no unappropnated
funds. and about $7 .000.00 of
Revenue Shanng Funds . are
expec ted by the townstup
dun ng 1ts 198 4 F1scal Year .
John R1ebel. Sr,
~ h es ter Townsh 1p Clerk

•=~~'Wwmo
PIIOIIE Jll CLIFFORD
992-7201

161 5 Ire

·Our low Everyday
Prices Until Stock
Is Sold.

Fatriilv.

BAILIY'S SHOES

MOBILE HOllE - Wrth large add-on

buildin~

asphalt driveway.

FOR

tocated on quiet street out of higtt water it Racine Thehvmg room

At

~extra

RETURNING - Ambassador Richard Stone,
right, President Reagan's envoy to Central America,
faces reporters on his retum to .Andrews Air Force

Base, Md., outside Washington Tu~\s=e Is
accompanied by John Gavin, the U.S. am •
or to
Meder (AP Laserphoto).
'

MOSCOW lAP) - The Commu.
nlst Party Central Commlltee
announced today thaI two members
of the ruling Poll1buro had been
· promoted, nam lng one of them to
replace the late Arvid Y. Pelshe as
chairman of the powerful Party
Control Comlsslon.
The moves came as the commll·
tee ended li s rwo-day sprlng session.
11re first official report gave no
Indication that the comrnltt.ee had
added to the 11 !"II members of the
Politburo.
Party General Secretary Yuri V.
Andropov closed the session with a
long speech that Inducted an aturck
· on "ullra·reactlonary forces led by
U.S. Imperialism" and a discourse
. on the strength of Marxist Ideology.
The official news agency Tass
said the Central Committee made
. Politburo member Grigori V. Ro~
·manov, the Leningrad party boss, a
. secreta ry of the Central Committee
In addition to his other titles.
Russian Federation Premier
.:Mikhail S.-8olomentsev, a candidat e
or non·votlng Politburo member,
was appointed chairman of the
.Party Control Commission. Pelshe,
who died May 29, ran the commls·

AQUARIUM rABlE .. .. ,..... 11S.OO
IIOVI£ CMERA KIT 8 :. SS9S.OO
lndtldos ....,., saund

$J295
Good

Selection

·s

TIRE SALE
LOWEST PRICES
IN AREA

INSTALLED
WITH PAD

o;t:vJfEHrs~~O~y

Good Selection Of
GRASS CARPET

~SEAL

POMEROY
LANDMARK

C.sh &amp;

CONGOLEUM

Eas tem Fl ight 414 returned to
Mtamllnternatlonal Alrpm1 at 2: OJ
a. m. aft er the 4().mlnute night from
Ji avana , said Eastern spok~s man
Bob Christian.
At3: 45 a. m., after the passengers
were debriefed by the FBI , the
jelllner took off again for New
York' s LaGuardia Airport wllh a
new crew and a ll but about three of
the original passengers aboard ,
Freeman sa id.
The hijacking, the second for an
Eastern flight in two months. began
about 30 minutes after the
European·made jet departed !rom
Miami at 9:45p.m, The pilot radioed
"and said hewas golng toHavana,"
Christian said.
The hijacker was taken Into
custody by Cuban poBce, Freeman

RUBBER-BACK TWEED

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell'l

FREEZER SAUl
CHEST MODELS
5 Cu. Ft. ..... '235.95
8 Cu. Ft. .... sz85.95
15 Cu. ft. ... SJ55.95
20 Cu: Ft. '418. 95 .
25 Cu. ft. ... '472.95
00 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

11.

j

•5.
6.

1.

H.
Y.

14.
15.
16.

and equipped ki1then.

•

n•£- Nire 6room c.-(letlld

!rome Formica birth. ete.

~d

. _~

f)llil.

-

. -

JS.

Mail Thi~ Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.

~

I

·I

1
•
I
I

I

-----~::::~~:~~-------1
.
'

heat, pon;h and

llfW)IURY - NN1 loo~ng '
one berfrr "" horne

*

~4\"~~~~~ ·

looo..

Call: George Gum
Ph.

Vinyl &amp; · Aluminum

SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

COMPLETE

From he Smallest Heller
Core to the Ltrpll Rldil·
tor.
Radiator SpKiaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. hperltllcl

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Addono and - -...
-Coa
-..
IICIIIIand
woftgultol' -

.......... _.

$275 PER TON
MIN . 6 TON
PHONE

304-273-5655
304-273-5303
5·11•1 mo

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Pomeroy, Ohio

PARTS •nd SERVICE

li· 26·11C

FOR SALE
18 FT. WILD CAT
TRAVEL TRAILER

No Suftflay Calls

PH.992·3005

$2,700.00 or Best Offer

3- 11 -tlt

·S&amp;W TV
AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
Ph. 986-4289

Oewayne Williams
8t Scottie Smith

All Makes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available
4·?? I mo [111

5-16·1 mo

Trencher &amp;
Backhoe Service

BOGGS

S.ptic s,stems
W1ter, Gas, Sewer
&amp; Eleefric

~uthorized

Cable Lines

Custom Weklina-Certified

John Dear,

Small Plumbina Jobs
(Bonded &amp; Llconsod)

992-2834

Roger Hysell

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

GARAGE
St. Rt.' 124, Pomeroy, OH.

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re-'
pair aarvice and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Call 742-3195

Porner,or. Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmiuion

PH. 992-5682
or

992-7121

H ·lfc

6·2·1 me Dd .

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

OHI0
VALLEY
. ROOFING

1 couple.

Ontj

Housinq
Headqu,lrlt•rs

"Lowest Rates
~round

AND HOM£ MAINTENANCE

'Roolinr ot ott typos

•friendly Servie

Rnidtntill &amp; Corl!'lercial
'Gullors &amp; Oownspquts

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPEOALTY

'Storm Windows &amp; Doo11
FREE ESIIMATES

20 Years hptritnce

742-2328

TOM HOSKINS

~

Ph. 742-2134
or 949-2160

5·2n- l

m~ pd.

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We~

..... lind,.
core radiar...,. 8ftCI ._.
la'CONa.We·....,lliiD

edd boillfld rod out ....

dllton. We lliiD nrp11r
O.Tenka,

PAT HILL FORD
.992-2196
Mlddlepert, Ohio
l· IJ.Ifc-

•· tl -t1t

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING .
All types of roof wort, new
or ttpair, .prttm 1nd
downspouts. prtter cleanina and painli", stofAI
doi1IS and windows.
All Work Gu111nteed
"Free Estimatd'
I

Call: 949-2263
or 949-309 '

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

- Dozers

- Backhoes
- Dump Trucko
- Lo ~ Boy

- Trencher
- Water

Ntw. Homes .-. Extensiv.
R1111odolinc.
,
ol nsu11net Work
.Custom Polt Bldas.
l GlrlltS
•Rootltla War•
oMIIoi- &amp; Vinll

s-..

15 Yoaro bporlenc•

GIEG. IOUSij
I

··

IJ -11·11t

p.m. 493 Ook Dr .

I would like to thank all my
relativu, neighbor1, and

YARD SALE, Thun. and
Fri., 9 to 6 . Bunce road . 2
chain .aW1 like new. gal
cook atove, kitchen cabinet.
glea-were. miaC.

flower~ ,

friend• who sent

gave sympathy and words of
~t;ouragement during the

audden death of my brothlir;
Harry Joe Deniaon·.

I would alao like to thaok
Rev . Grimm. the Hunter
Fu,eral Home, and the Eli

Garage Sale 17th, 18th. 9· 7
776 just off 1 41 , Chil~ren
thru adulta clothing, toys,
misc.

Deniaon legion Pon .
Rutland.
Your thoughtfulne11 will
never be forgotten .
Jim Deniton.

8
3

Auction avery Tuesday
night, Krodel Park Club
Hou1e . Pt. Pleasant WV .
Auct . Lonnie Neal . Call

·SWEEPER and oewlng ma·
chine repair, parts, and
auppliet.
Pick up end
delivery . Devil Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

George• Creek Rd .
446·0294 .

814 · 387~ 7101.

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Ettate. Farm. An·
tique &amp; liquidation salet .
Ucensad It bonded in Ohio &amp;

Call

Auction every Fri . night It
the Haitford Community
Center. Truckload• of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
uaed merchandlte alw•v•
welcome . Richard Revnolda
Auctioneer . 275 -3069 .

Oh. 614-992-6342 .
The Meiga Co. Flah &amp;: Game
Club will have a cleanup
work aeaalon Sat .. June 18
at 9 a.m . All members urged
to attend and help . Bring
grass&amp;. mowing equipment .

OPENING

Juno

Complete . Auctioneer Ser·
vice . Al1o do apprelsals .
Licenaed &amp; bonded to sell.
Houl8holds . farm furnlth ·
lngs • Real estate. Over 26
yean a.w:periencein buying &amp;
selling new. used 6 antique

13th .

992-2478
5·13· 1 mo pd

furniture . 814 ·192 ·1370 .

876·441, ' .

Otby A . Martin

Urgent meeting of Heirs.
female children of Hugh
Ross -Hannah Moore, Ra chel Adklna, Polly Maynard,
Della Warrick. Eliaah Fry.
Kenova City Hell. Saturday,
June 18, 1 :00 p .m .

4
ANY

AUCTION every Saturday
night, 6 p.m . Mt . Alto
Auction· Barn . Contign mentl taken avery Saturday
1 :00 till sale time . E(nma
Ball Auctineer, 304~ 428 -

8177.

Giveaway
PERSON

9

who hu

.

chlflll to the odvenltor.

WANTED TO BUY Old turn!·

3 Puppiea, 2 male, 1 female,
amall breed. 8 weeki old.

ture and Antiques of all
kinds. call Kenneth Swein ,
or 266· 1987 In

Coli 388-6900.
One Irish Satter, three pups,

to good home . Colt 614·
258· 1749.
Call

1 cat medium k&gt;ng brown
hair, 2 kittens, 1 black &amp;
white. 1 white
orange .

Coli 446 · 3732 .

a.

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

Buying Gold, Silver, Plati num . Gold end Silver prices
are the higheat In two vearl.
check our prices on gold 6
.Over. acrep jewelry. Buying
Old coine, scrap rings &amp;.
silverware . Daily quotes
available . Alto coint &amp; coin
supplies for sale - Spring
Valley Treding Co .• SprinQ
Valley Plaza. 448· 8025 or

448·8026 .
we p.ey c11 h for late model
clean uaed c.rs.
Frenchtown Cer Co .

2 Guinea piga. 1 short hair, 1
'

long holr. 814·247 ·2135 .

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

Slzn lllrt from 12'11&amp;' .

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PERSONALIZED
POOLS
*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel
'
PH: 1-304-773-5634

si... '••• l's&amp;' Up
"Yto 24'13''

lnsulatd Doc Houses
'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

C. L. Kitchen

111~11~3-5191
10·6-tlc

6·9·1 mo.

GHEEN'S

PAINTING INC.

lnd'ustrlll, CHl-cill,
:luldentlll. lntsrlor end .
Etltsrtor,

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY
CHAIN LINK FEN~ING NEEDS

' Pelntifltl
l•nclblloetlng

.Weterbteatlng ·
: Perttlng Lot Stripping
lpnry Pelnlifltl

,..,, ,,_,b

..I.., ...

c;Ail 614-....'2616

'

"FINO NO PIIOVIDIS ,..,)ACY l't.US
JIIIOTIC110N 1'011 CHILDI. . &amp; JilTS"

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION
PM. (304 88,2-2276

S.IS.fmo..

8111 Gone Johnoon
441 ·0089

3 klttena, 1 pure white , 2 - - -- - - - - CIIIIico. All female . 614- WUI pay top price for to·
992· 3847 .
bacco poundage. Call 614·

379-21115 .

16 month old mhled breed ~~-------­

.,

\

&amp;Vicinity
4 -family, Wed . Thurs . 6 Fri .
Juno , 6. 1e. t7th. 2 mil••
paat the Y. Pt, Plea11nt.

Uniforms, clothing, jeana.

22 Money to Loan
GARAGE sol•. 1001 Simp· l - ----,--- - -son Place. June 11th .. t7th. HOME LOANS 10'1J% fl•od
It 18th. Pt . Plea .. nt -g:&amp;'
fit&amp; . leader Mortg,aga.

E.
State, Athens. Ohio. 1-&amp;14 ·

CARPORT sale, Wadneadey
• Thuraday, 30 Burdette
Addl1ion, Pt Ple11ant. WV.
SWeeper, household itema.
mite.

592 ·3011t. or 12 to 4PM

YARD a81e, clothes, g1l11·
ware, toys, mite:. June 17 &amp;.

18. 9 to 5. 208 locust St ..

BEAUTIFUL block kltton, 7
WMkt old, 304·6711·2474 .
REGISTERED molo, PMk·• ·
poo, vood whh chlld10n.
304-878-71i2t .

2, 13 .1-38 or 14.9·38 uMd
rur tractor tiree. 30•·882·

2et2 .

CLEAN ocrop otumlnuni, 30
oemelb. oloo buying cono 20
oentir lb. Tri·ltot• Stl•,v•
304·823·11872 .

FOUR vory ployful ktnone. 'Wontod: Song Booko Rod
oight weoko old, 304·a711· Iliff-beck titled Voughn '1
2511 .
Revtvol by John D, Voupn,
w .. lnb'oducod on tho leon
ME Circuit obout 1112 . •
8 Loat and Found
304·871i·11t8.
. FOUND " ' of koys ot
Rlwrfrollt bolt romp . Coli
446·Dt70.

-n.

PIANO TUNING $5 oil pluo

YARD tale. June 16. 17 •

'::;~43~2a.rd'a

Family yard •ale. June 16th
and 11th at 243 Pearl St .
Middleport . Clothing, dithea
and etc .

- - - - - -- - ·1&lt;-

Pie~tent, acron from Good
Shepherd. Baby cloth.. .
coleman stove; lantern, new
itemt, good cloth... oil
fumece parta , moton .

Keyboard .

-

PIANO TUNING -LANE DA NIELS . Reliable service
tinea 1985. Associate of
Brunlcardi Muaic Co. Phone
814-742-29&amp;1 .

FIVE fomlly vord oole. t310

Large yard aele. 3 family , Viand St. Pt. Pleasant . Fri- IPERMANENT hair removal
Pricet reduced for quick day&amp;. Saturday .
ule. Something tor eve· I- _:___ _ __:___ _ __ Profenional Electrolyais
Clinic . A .M .A . approved. Dr.
ryone . 26" color T\1, ep- Thurtday and Fridav. 7 ~ilea referrals. 304- 876 · 5&amp;88 .
pliencea 10 much to men- out Sandhill, some furniture , Bonna Handley-Elect.
tion . Rt. 681 W . off Rt . 33, 1 boys and adult clothing end
0
mile, 1st trailer on left. Rain · misc .
PIANO &amp; guitar le~tonl ·
or ahine . Phone 614-992teacher with maater' t de6341 . June t5,16,t7
THURSDAY. ~~~~~~n~~d;~~· gru. Accepting 1 limited
Addition, Pt. P
number of atudents. 304Jean Stout Res .. 7th St .. Several i18ma
882-2782 .
Syr•cute. June 16- &amp; :11 . ap·aed 'bike. girl I cloth•• e .
10·11.
1 0 , Ladies 6,9 , etc .

- - --------1

238 Condor St ., Pomeroy .
Behind landmark . June 1415- 16. 9 -6 each dey.

9

11

Wanted To Buy

Gold. tilver. tterling . jewelry. rings, old coins &amp;
CU.rrencv . Ed Burkett Barber
Shop. Middleport . 992 ·

3476
Wanted to buy . New . uaed &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete houaeholda. Call Otby A. Martin

614·992· 6370 . .

Help Wanted

Friendly Home Toy Parties
oow in our . 28th year, It
upending and has openings
for manegen and dealera .
p1rty plan uperience helpful. Guaranteed toyl and
gifts. No c11h Investment.
no collecting or delivering.
no Mrvlce charge . Car and
phone nece11ary . Call CQI -

Iect 6t8 ·489 · 8395 or 618 ·
489 ·4429 .

1978 Fairpoint Mobile
Home. 2 bdrm .. air. tire ·
place. den . Located on Rt.
315 next to state patrol. flnt
trailer. Call 44&amp;-4402 or

448 ·1428 . Aok or monoger.
HOUSE FOR SALE In Mid·
dlepo" . Newly remodeled
home with fireplace, po ..l·
ble woodburntr, clo•e to
•chool• and thopping. Cell

6t4·992 ·e941 .
Hou .. 4 rooms, bath. 21arge
Iota . Long St. , Rutland, Oh .

Phone 814 · 742 ·3118 .
Woman to care for eldertv
lady in Pt . Pleaunt from 4
p .m . to 7 p.m . during week
•nd from 7 a.m . to 7 p.m . on
Saturdav and Sunday. 304-

676-4671 '
Commercial air conditioning
and refrigeration man
wanted . Experienced only
send r.. ume to P.O. Bo~~;

370, Gollipollt . Oh 46631 .
'
Sec retarv -Recaption I at .
Qualification• high school
degree, formal secretarial
training beyond high tchool
helpful. bulc knowledge of

typlng

and

bookkeeping .

Availability immediately . .
Phone or write Galli a County
Board of MR -00 , P.O. Bo,;
14. Cheshire . Ohio 45120 .
Applicants pleate Include
work history, current re su nie and three reference• .

POSITION AVAILABLE . Su ·

. Situations
Wanted

1- - - - - - - - -Chain saw and man for hire.
Will remove lreea, logs, etc.
Reasonable. Darrell. 304-

8B2· 2429 .

1- - - - - - - - -1- - - - - - - - -13

24 acres with 300 ft. river
frontage . 4 room house whh
bath . 48 ecru letart Town·
ship, crHk bottom, wood• &amp;
paature. 9 room houee In
Recine with fire pleca. beau·
tlful wood work, 1toker coal
furnace . &amp;14 -949·2288 or

6t4 · 692 - 24t9 . Storkor

Insurance

1- - - - - - - - --

Realty .
THREE bedroom, bath and a
half. located In Pt . Pleasant .
Call after 8 :30. 304-175-

8840 .
TWO years old, 81ft percent
auumable mortgage, c:all
for more Information . 304-

875-6758 .

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
1urance Co . has offered
aervlces for fire lnaurance
coverege in Galli• County
for almost 1 century . Farm.
home and personel property
coverages are avalfabla to
meet Individual needa . Con tact R1y Wedemeyer, aiJent .

perlntendent . Gellla County
Board of Mentel Retardation
and Developmental Oiaabili- Phone 38B· 8249 .
ties . Ouallflcetiont : meet
certification standard• for Are you p1yiny to much for
Superintendent . Ohio De- your hoapital-heafth inaupartment of Mental Retard a· ranca . Cell Carroll
tion and Developmental Cia- Snowden. 44e-4290 .
abilities . !Muter degree
euential) . Responsibftitiee :
Adminiater dey to day opere· 16
Schools
tlon ot servlcet provided by
I
nslruction
the Board . Salary nego_tia ·
--------ble . Aliallable immediately . 1
Contlct Mr. Jem11 Holley.
Vice Chalrmtn . Qaffle PATHS Institute no.w using
County Board of Mental computer• tor tutoring meth
Retardation and Develop· 1tudent1 K-8 . Call 2415-

32 Mobile Homea
lor Sale
TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
448 ·7872 .
CLEAN USED MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35 . PHONE 448 · 7274.
2 loti &amp; 1 mobile home

t2•80, 2 bedroom,

a••

w~~

rural water,
heat. Ha•
tome turnltura . price
e12 .500 . Or 41olo &amp; mobile

114.800 . Cott44a·1240.
19ee

unfurniahed

12x80

mental Diaabilitiet, P. 0 . , :::
95
:::1
:::7:::,= = = = = ==
Bok 14. Cheshire , Oh. 814·

Vlndale. Coli 441 ·3119 .

387 0102
'
.

Nice Schultz motNie home
near Pomeroy . 1.22 aer•
almost level. Garage. metal
building. Coritect Rev . Cecil

18 Wanted 10 Do

Frlendlv Home Toy parties
now in our 28th year. 11
e•panding and h11 openings
for managers and deal•rs.
Perty plan eaperiance help·
ful. Guaranteed toy1 end
gltta. No c11h inv11tment,
no collecting or delivering.
no tapVIce cherge . Car
phone nec11aary. Cell col -

a

lect , 51 8 · 489·8395 or 1118·
489·4429 .
Bus Mechanic· The Melga
Local School District Is
currently ..eking application• for 1 but mechanic.

General Hauling and Trash
ramovel Service . Reliable

and dop.ondoblo. Call 448 ·
3 USB between 9 and

r.L

Experience houM painting
1nd lswn mowtrrepalr. Vary
r111onable r1t11. Call 448 -

We have a permanent pert·

Wloo, 742 ·2430.
1980

1~x70

BAYVIEW

Datu...

2 OR C I A, fireplace,
garden tub , applianc:ea. un-

derpinning.
446·121 1.

t14 ,00 .

Cou

8188 .

1976 SCHULT, 14•70, 2
BR . 2 bathe. C/ A . Good

COLLEGE Student wanu to
do houae repairs end paint ·
ing . Excellent worker. 448 ·

cond . On rental lot near
Goodyear plant. Ataumabll
loan, low down peyment.
French City Brokerlng Servl·

2914 .

CIS,

WILL CARE lor aldorly per·

814·248·8111.

448·9340 ,

1973 GRANVILLE, 14•70 2
BR . gat . Unfurnished, A / C,
skirting, ewn·lnga and
porches, 2 utility bldga. Sat
up on choice lot. Quell Creek

M. H. Pork. he. Cond.

French City'Brokerlng Strv~
COl,

448·8340 .

:14 acre lot with 10llll50
trailer, outalde building.
along Raccoon Creek .

112,601.'. Colt 814 · 2118 ·
1446.

''""' poohlon ""•ll•bl• In tho
PornM"Oy 1,.1. We need
eomaont who 11 aaccurete

ond offlclont In tholr hoblto ond tnjoyo woot.lng
whh tho public. Thlt condl·
doto nftdt to hove flulblo

21

Buelnelt
Opportunity

14•85 mobllo homo
lumlohod lncludoo
bock

houre and good communlca·

tlon oldllo. lorfd rnumo to
INOTICEI
Nenna Devil. lo• 1110 THE OHIO VALLEY PUI·
Athono. Oh . 45701 . Wo or• lliHING CO . recommondo
an Equ.-1 Opportunity lliot you do buolnne whh
Emptoylf .
pe;ople you know, and NOT
to •nd montY through tho
mall untH you have invetti-

La•Nvicinity
loyNe Hordwore. 7 month
bul Ienior. brindle, fomolo.
304·112-23411 .

Professional
Services

18, 9 to 7 At . 2 Nonh. Pt . I - - - - - -- --

leatt (3, yean mechanical ton In their home. Have
experience. pt"eferably e,;pe. trlntportatlon. Hours ftekl ·
r11nce on b,u 1111nd trucka. bl• . Ph . '388 -93154 .
Applicants mey pick up - -- -- - - -application form1 at the Will clean houM or paint.
Superintendent' 1 Office In Colt 814 - 248 · 9414
1he Meig• Junior Hi~h anytime .
School. Reaumn, creden·
tlala, certificate• and refer· Will do bobylltttno onytl""'
encee will bl required . .
ln my home or vourt. Call

Oh. Or 182· 7780 .

23

Hendenon .

furniture. gold. allver dollart. wood Ice boxes. ltone
jars, antiqu11, etc .• Com·
plete houaaholda . Write :
MD
. . Mill er, Rt . 4 • pomeroy,

klttono, 304;

1·800-341 -811154 in Ohio .

diacountt to eenior citlzene churches-schoolt . Call Bill

watch dog. to good home to
run looM. 176· 4234.

882·3188 otter 3:00p.m.

n

Gibbt.

Appllconto ohould have ot

kitchen tlbie. 59"•35¥.1 ...

• 100 Per wHit pan time at
home .. Weblter, Amtrice' a
r.vorite dictionary company
neld1 home woricers to
update local mailing li.ts.
Eesy work. Can be done
"fhile watching TV. AI age-1,
uperlence unnecauerv .

Colt 1-?U-842 ·8000, lo 4-lomilr 11 1500 Ohio St. •luding Sunday, Ext. 8977 .
Pt. Pl. June 111 • t e. 9 ·4.

BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old

gotod tho offering.

71 StorUng niobll• ham•. 2
br. oM oltctrlc. conttoloit.un,
derpinned, exc. cond. 304-

1711·11838.

1 - - - - - - - - --'

71 Storllng mobile home. 2
br. oM -Irk:. c.,t,.lelo.ut'l·
derplnnld, exc. cond. 304~

1711·1631.

,
\

-

dog, oll•ctlonot•. good

!~~-~~f~~k

Mason, W.Va.

· .Riclnt, Oh.

Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY Slide In
telf -contained camper for
pickup truck Under *1 .000 .
Phone 388·9364

anything to 9_
i ve away and
do81 not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for ule
mey place an ad In this
co,umn. TheJe will be no

- Septic Syotemo
PH.

&amp; Vicinity

WV1 . 304 ·773 -5785 or
304 · 773· 9 t B5 .

Going out of butinaaa sale .
30 to 60 pet . oft . Cake
decoration•. candy malting
6. pany auppllea .. Caroutel
Confectionery ., Middleport.

obout 8 Wkl old .
8t4·245 ·5453 .

LARGE or SMAU JOBS

Public Sale
llo Auction

Announcements

Kitten•. Call 441-4944.

T..Nre CINitl?•

,H, 992-7513
or 992-2212

1 DAY ONLY. 4 Fomilr
Garage Safe . Some anUquea, children's clothea.
doll clothes, bedspreads,
drape•. many other items.
Thurs .. June 16, 8 :30· 6 :00

3 kitten1, 2 female, 1 male,

- Sewer
- Gas Una•

'

ROUSH ·
CONSTRUCTION

power mower, recliner ,
children '• clothing.

Hampton ' l Garage , auto
repair, tire repair, mufllera,
brakes &amp;. batteries . 1061/t
3rd. St . Pt . Pleasant, 304·

Pomeroy, Oh .
Jlh. 992-2174

Williams Trenching

GARAGE SALE, 239 Third
Ave. 9 -l'o, June16. 17. 20 "

·

Middleport

123-ttt

985-3561
Makes

oo.oo 'f,.cim&amp;r; ·~·ooooooo

HSO al!oout 2 mi. North of
Holzer HospiUI. Thurs. &amp;
Fri.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

V. C. YOUNG II I
992·6215 ar992-7314

BIG YARD SALE on St . Rt

AT

All

(FrM Estimates)

A TON

NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

•We•h·e r• • Dlahweehert
Rano8•
•R efrigeratore
· •Drvera •Freliz•r•

Built ·Garaaes"
Call tot free siding estimates. 949-2801 or

949-2860.

SMITH NELSON.
MOTORS, Inc.

614-882·7183 ,

Yord Sole 17th &amp; 18th, 9 to
6 . Stoll Rt . 279, ohlrly
Arrowood. 682 · 7183 . 9 pc.

7, Thura .• Fri ., June18. 17.

U-PICK-UP

-Pivmbinttand

Carpeted. bathroom w~h
shower.aas or elect. rei ria..
furnace, &amp; tot. Water heater,
ranae. sink, &amp;IS. elect .. or
battery li&amp;ltts, SIHPS 6. excellent condition.

"Beautiful, Custom

goeo. 428 Hedgewood. 9 ·

FINAL MOVING SALE . lool

DRIVEWAY SLAG

V.W. INC.

446-9800

mlnuta, itema. Everything

5-16-2 110.

llovinr lips and iMIIIII1Ct

~IVERSIDE

COAL
PH ~ 992-2280

992-5433

pd.

YOUNG'.S

12-20.11c

Nationwide road servict

DORCAS - 6 ielel acres. Will
~Mde. Trailer setup or A·frarne
will! 2 acres.

JI

15.
16.

NOITlt - Ill
acres; mostly level, IJIOd j
bedroom home. bath, -.mace

n.
n

31 .
33.
..34 .

Rialrl ..... rialrl ..... . HIIId lntdts. fumitun !lids

'

ON RT. 33

19.
30 .

13.
14.

Route I
Lona Botto111, OH: 45743
915-4193 or 992-3067

Tot&gt;tlllir111itred tniCis

~r .

IIIDDL£POIT- Good 7rocm
I'-\ bath home Gas lwl, ely
water, carpeting and lt!vel kJI.

18.

10.
II .
11 .

local llld one.wly low litiS

REIITO

APPLE GROVE- 3 acres with
traier setup. On~ $6.000.

17 .

'Sidin'
'Roofing
"Gult8f &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodeling
20 Years EKperience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

l ·.J.tfc

k1

_ t_

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

DNIIr

POMEROY - 6 rooms I ~
carpeting gas ' FA
lumace, full baSement and I~

1¥,

10

Ryd.1 Truck R.,tii-Ont-Wiy

baths,

17.

Pomtroy, OH.
Greu &amp; Pony Gibbs·Ownors
PH. 992·2178 "''"'

Thura. • Fri . Antique furni:
ture, doolt, bicycles. eurteina. mite.
1 -~-----Huge Garage S•l• aid 180
EvergrHn. Thurs. 11tif•ofd.
Furniture. clothing . guna.
tithing Jlnd cemping equip·
ment, microwave oven , '
doora. wlndowt, Iota more.

living room euite, chin•.
cupboard. ceramics. 2 bar
stools. kitchen counter top,
Avon bottles, clothing. C•fl

.$3000

"Free Estimates" ...

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

NEW LISTING - 58 acres,
lar~~t banh bam, silo, cnb and
sir«!. 3 bedroom farm home.
!his yoo will like for $69,500.

1.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

firm Equipment

NEW LISTING - 12x60
fum~hOO motile home with
rec room added. Central air
and heat. lar~. garage near
coal mores. Jus1 $7,500.

1.

·~

New Hoi~ Busl1 Hoe

1-(614)·992-3325

0

81rns.

RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Phone

IH.

Ptl. 446-7126 5-2~1 '!" :

U.S.

-·

VIRGIL B. SR.

OSP cites youth
after minor w.-eck

2400 W1o!rr A,.,

SALES &amp; SERVICE

~ 614·992-2181

These cash rates
include disc ount

CATALOG MERCHANT

Kitclten Cablntts- Roof·
Ina - Sldina - Concrete
Pllios - Sidn1lks .lltw Constructio~ - Relllodtiina - Custo111 Pole

VALUE WIIIU : :

.~PF:OAL

EAFORD

! Wanted
) For Sale
l Announcemen t
J For Rent

aDEll TRUE

15 Cu. ft ..... S325.95

21b r . 1nd

ISears I

000

• Helpful ~oe

:

2·26-tfe

Prices Good tltru June 15

Wri1e your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon. Can cel your ad by phone when you Qet
r esults . Money not refundable _
,

Repairs

5-2·2· mo

RADIATOR SE1MCE

$499

sa id.
He sa id Betancourt waf Cuba.
"He said he thought this was the
only way," to see his famlly,
Freeman sa id.

A l4·year-old R.j!clne youth was
cited by the Gallla-Melgs post of the
State Highway Patrol after a
single-car wreck on a Letart Twp.
road.
Terry Foster was charged with
driving without a license.
According to the patrol, Foster
was southbound on Twp. Rd. 102 at
7:50p.m. when he lost control of his
vehicle, went orr the right sldeolthe
road and struck a fence.
Answers 58 calls
His vehicle was
slightly
damaged.
Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst
A car driven by Ramona Yonker,
reports that his deparlment . ans·
55,
Racine, received mocterate
wered a total ot 58 caBs durlng the
damage In a mishap on County Rd.
rr,~oth of M•;·. !ilcludlng s!!Ven fire
and rescue, and 51 Emergency 28 at! p.m. Tuesday.
Medical Service caBs.
Troopers say Yonker was south·
Middleport Fire Department baund when she struck a deer which
vehicles were drlven a total of ran Into her path.
1,103.1 miles.
,There were 00 Injuries.

SERVICE STATION
992-9932

-

For "All" Your Home

By eppoin(ment only.

00

1---- - - - --

STRIP

a.

·-·-·.P1.Pie8ii8'rit'-

AVe.. Oalllpoli•. Come to
reer.

Fri. . June 11, 17. 1at house
qn Uttle. Kyger Rd. acroas
from K'y ger Creak Pl•nt.
Topper for JHp pickup,
antique dishee and furnit"re.
dolla~ clothes, flowera , exerciee bike. coffH grindet'.
coffeemalcer, boys clotheaa
size 6 and
mite. items.

RUN

Down Spouts
Windows - Doors

•Palntina

ahoea, somethi ng for
Rain cancele. 1
GaHipolit on Rt.

YARD SALE o Thuro . . and

T!OUihS,

Call 843-5425

Galli oli1, Ohio

~

• c.ry

Hijacked plane returns to U.S. soil
, · MIAMI (API - An Eastem
Airlines jet carrying 95 people flew
back from Hava na today aftPr being
ltljacked by a man who shouted
''Cuba! Cuba!" and threatened to
blow up the plane with a bottle or
ijquld, officials said.
. The hijacking Tuesday night by a
shipyard worker who said he
wanted to be reunited with his
lamBy In Cuba was the fourth on a
·u.s. alrllne In two months and the
'flr~t since armed SkY marshals
were ret\Jrned to some commercial
flights last month.
None of the 84 passengers or crew
pqlon thefllghtlromMlamlloNew
YorkCUywnshurtandthose aboard
the wide-bodied Airbus treated It
like "a lark," one passenger said
later.
:. The hijacker. Identified as New '
erleaps resident Nelson Betan·
rourt. had run down an aisle
&amp;houttng. then locked himself In a
lavatQJ'Y after pulling from a red
flight bag a small vial that he said
contal.ned explosives, FBI agent
Jim Freeman 5ald after Interview·
lng pljSsengernln Miami.
• "I&gt;Qn't lake me to Miami. U It's
not Hfvana, I'll blow the plane up,"
Freerpan quoted the man as saying.

El£C. GIILL.. ........ ........ 'lO.OO

·

Roofing - Siding

•Chain Link Fenca

Yotd Solo Frldoy &amp; Sot. June
17 &amp; t8, 9 to 5 . 333 3rd .

18. 9 :00 -8 :00. Clothet, YardSaleon1801tVInton .

1-304-773-5634

• A1t.:hmen11

BEAR BOW. 4 ARROWS ...$~. 00
' ll' GUIIItHA KNIFE ....... •20.00
9" GURIIHA KNIFE ......... '15.00

•
-· ··· -········
-· ···········---

HOME REPAIR

FREE
ESTIMATES

..

&amp; Vicinity

mo.

ISearsI

ovolloblo. 304-75?·8787 .

00

YARD SALE. JUNE 17 &amp;

C. L. Kitchen

.:

--· ~ GiiiiiJ;oifis" ...

PHONE:

• MaintenanCe'

camera CMVirW: case.

. STARliN~ AT

Of

tractcn.~

· tJo;;.t«. oditor,
scr.... flood lilhl,

L,l!ql~ :; l :it~ll Ill_ ~llllllll:,.,;l"lll IJIIIIJ

CARPET

PLAQUES· .
ENGRAVING,

I:Oti&gt;~b
Headque
lor
'

(Boll &amp; H-11 Super 8)

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO
CARPEr SHQfl

Trophy

Glllipoo

• (llltlr Pu~ &amp; fiHor)

CALL US TO BUV OR SELL
NANCV JASPERS - A.~!iiiCIAlE
. PHONE: 843-5175
Or 992·2751 To Leave Allessap

mannequin used for pracllce.

Castro, a JJ.year·old San Fran·
cisco resident, was scheduled to
appear on "A.M. Sa n Francisco"
- A Manh(ltlan cour1room was
with a doctor who runs an AIDS
cleared of spectators and uniformed
clinic and the director of the AIDS
court officers wore surgical masks
and Kaposi's Sarcoma Foundation.
Tuesday during a court appeara nce
The program was part of a series
by a prlson lnmat&lt;' diagnosed as
on th.e disease diagnosed In more
having AIDS.
than 1.500 people slnee 197!1, killing
nearly 600 of them.
- In San Francisco, AIDS suf.
When one TV technician said she
fcr er Andr f'W Small sa id a1 a new s
was afraid or catching the disease
conference Tuesd ay tha t when he and threatened not to work If Castro
appeared for ju ry duty In Municipa l stayed on the set, the TV crew
Court . other jurors wouldn 't sit with
refused to put a microphone on hJm
him .
or allow him on stage.
- In Co ronado, Calif., the fire
Alter discussion between man·
department l'eCenlly dropped a
agement and crew members,
cou rse on cardiopulmonary resuscl· · Castro finally spoke about the
tatlon because or lear AIDS would disease from a telephone In a
be ll'ansmilted from contact wllh a
separate ro61n.

1-6144464782,
lis, Oltio.

2 BEDSIDE TABlES ........ $10.00
" ' 8&amp;111 ZERilli TV .......$55.00
2S Got. NJIIARIUM ........$,.00

Ill.••••••••..•••••••••

Th&lt;' studio incident is among
sPvcra l f'CC('ntly In which people
have be&lt;•n afraid to associate with
victims for lear or catching the
disease:

John's Auto Sales
we sell q111lity USid can.

DRESSER ...................... $25.00

3 ACRES - Racine, owner w~t help linance.

sion, whi ch enforces pa rty ruBng circle for political or health
diselpBne. ·
reasons.
Both day~· meetings were closed
The Centra I Committee also
to
the public. But Radio Moscow and
promoted Vil a ly Vorotn lkov ,
former ambassador to Cuba and a
central
SovietChernenko'
newspapersexten·
.all
slvely
reported
s speech I'
member of the committee, to a
today.
candidate, or non·voting, seat on the
The 71-year-old Chernenko, bePolitburo.
II elevated fi ve alternate Cent ra l lieved tohavebeen a po!Uicalrlvalto
Andropov, delivered a lO.OOword
Commlltee members to lull mem·
address In which he quoted An·
hershlp on 1he committee.
dropovwarmly and extensively but
Tw o Ce ntral Commill f.'e
members, Nikolai Shchelokov, pre- · was not limited to pa~rotlng the
viously dismissed as minister of . Soviet leader's pronouncements.
Discussing U.S.·Sovlet relations.
Internal affairs, and Sergei F .
Chemeriko said President Reagan
Medunov, a former Krasnodar
was a "class enemy" who has
regional party leader, had been
resorted to "psychological war·
dropped from the :JOO.member
fare"
In a bid to destroy
commlltee for "mistakes they had
communism
.
made In their work."
Before
the
sesslo~ . Soviet sources
There had been widespread
rumors of corrupllon In .Shchelok- with ties to Andropov said Cher·
nenko might be ousted from the
ov's administration of the unl·
secretive body. They also specuformed pollee as Interior minister.
The plenary session of the Central lated thaI Premier Nikolai A.
Tlkhonov laced the same fate.
Committee, which was to be
But after Chemenko's strong
follow~;'&lt;~ by a · meeting of the
prcsentat ion and the a ttentlon
Supreme Soviet or Parliament,
began Tuesday wl th an address by dev()(ed to It In the ofllclal press, It
seem unlikely tha t either he or
Konstanlln U. Chcrnenko, the top
Tlkhonov, his ally, were slated for
Kremlin Ideologist who had been
demotion.
··
rumored to be on his way out of the

TROPHY
KING

3 typea, 2 colan

•II.

•Vinyl liner
*fiberclass
·•Stainless Steel

992-3326

oCarpotina

Now 10,000 oq. lt. buMdlng,
location- maitt highway .
Mult
owner financing

POOLS

Ma10n, W. Va .

~ 1 3· !

buslne11 in Putnem County.

PERSONAUZED

At Our Now Phone Nu111ber

EUGENE LONG

ARROW FLASHING
.
SIGNS

CHEST of DRAMRS ....... $20.00

Technicans refuse to hookup victim .,--------------------.

. SAN vRANCISCO lAP ) - Mo·
·ments before a live TV talk show
Intended to "demystify" AIDS,
tearful technlctans refused to hook a
microphone to a victim of lhP
\ncunrble disease, forcing him to
participate off-stage by·telephone.
. ''I'm hurt and I'm a 111Ue
fright ened about being isolated, "
Paul Castro said alter Tuesday's
Incident at KGO·TV. "I feel wc' r&lt;'
being shunned and put Into a leper
colony and kept away from the
public."
. AIDS - acquired Immune dell·
"clency syndrome - des lluys Ihe
;body's ability to fight Infection and
-leaves victims prey to a variety of
rare diseases. Thr mysterious
plsease predominantly afflicts ho·
mosexuals, drug abusers, Hall inns
and hemophiliacs. but has been
"found among heterosexua ls.

SALE ·

Ganguly's

Syracuse, Ott.
Rustle Hill lee Circle

SACRIFICE -QUICK SALE - 2 bedrooms. bat~ living room. &amp;
eat·in kitchen on.fim fkxlr. Basement has 3rd bedroom, laundt'f
area &amp; extra room. Concrete floor wrth shed at too end of drive.
Convent~nal and FmHA financmg possible Aslting $27,500. Make
your offer, ownees loss can be yoor gain. located in Racine

Two Soviet leaders promoted

Senices

•

large. There~ a cement walk and large ooverlll porch, a~o
a metal storage building You can be in tho one 1n two weeks lor
on~ $16,900.

322 flo. Second Sl
Middleport, Ohio 45760
5-25-1 mo. Pd.

Business
Miac. Merchandl ..

TERMINIX
INTERNATIONAL

.....

GOING OUT OF
B.USINESS SALE
ALL SALES FINAU
20% OFF

PHONE 985-4270

CENTRAL REALTY

CALL:

oPOIIOS. IECIA.ATIOI

Dilly llld ID¥iiWIY missed
by his wife, lucy- Gaul, and

54

FOR PROFESSIONAL
TERMITE AND
PEST CONTROL
SERVICE

'

0

•

�--~~

-·

Sentinel

32 Mobile Homes ·

They'll Do It Every Time

for Sale

154

KIT 'H' CARLYLE '•
by Larry Wright
_s_e_P_•_t_•_fo_r_s_•l_•_ _ 1-l r - - - - . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

MISC .

Death In flmily mu81: ~1.

Cell 446-n13 cell before
3 :00M, eftor 4 cell 4467847.
home and lot In

Rutland . A.C .. large porch,
nice c:heln link fence, good
neighbor hood. Priced to

selL 614-742 -2864
12x60 Cardinal trailer ,
partly furnished . New .gas

furnace , porch, underpin·
"lng, equipped for wood
burner. f4 .800. 614 ·247·
4655 .

35 lots &amp; Acreage

1 .4 acre lot in Bradbury .
Good loca~ion , trailer hoo-

kup, all utilities. 1eptic •v•·

tom Call 614-992 -2602 .
Building lot . Rockapringa
area . 614-992-2719 .

41

Houses for Rent

Nice 2 bdr. house with
fireplace &amp; basement neer

Crown City $276 mo. Call
The Wiseman Reel Estate
Agency . Call 448-3843 .

5 R M HOUSE. Ref. 8o pep.
required. No pats. Ph. 2681991 , Crown City, Ohio.

Furnished 2 rooms and bath,
Downstairs , Clean . No pets
Adults only. Reference required. 446-1619.
f. ARM HOUSE, no bath, rear
Thurman . 8100 mo. 860
deposit . Pol_a barn storage
for la(llse , 8100 mo . 6.000
sq . ft . near Thurman .

Meigs Co .- Cheater Township. Beautiful, new. 3 bedrOom cedar home with 2 car
garage 19 milu from
Athens. 8300 month. 814592 -4471 daya. 614 -592·
4624 evenings.
7 room HOUSE. NP..BATH.
Apple Groll'&amp; near Goodyear
Pl8nt 81 60. deposit and
required . 675-1894
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Mobile homo for rent . Call
446-0766 .
12x60 2 bdr. mobile home
all utilities paid , el!:cept
electric . Oep. Req . Call
446-8568 .
Mobile Home space in Galli·
polis. 920 F.ourth Ava. 170.
Water paid . Call 446-4418
after 7 PM .
FOR RENT Mobile HOme. 2
BA , turn . w / wcarpet. 19 ft .
lR, nat .' gas heat, air con d ..
prlv8~e lot . Ph. 448 -1409
from 4 to 8 p.m.
Nicely furnished mobile
home in city. adults only , no
pets . Call 446-0338 .
12x62 2 bedroom trailer.
Aduitl only . Brown 's Trailer
Pork. 614-992-3324.
- - - - - - - --lc 2 bedroom mobile home In
Roclne . 614 ·367-0288

2 bedroom furni1hed . Oeposlt. No petl. Adults preferred . 614 -992-2749 .
12 • 60 2 bedroom mobile
home for rent . Approx. 6
miles from Middleport or
Pomeroy . 992 -5858.
Mobile home. 20 ft . living
room . No pets. drunks or
•dope . 1 child accepted . John
Sheets, 3 % mila• aouth
Middleport Rt. 7 .
·2. blldroom furni1hed . a.c.:· 1
:child, no pets. New Hell'en .
-304-882·2466 .

44

1 bdr. with stove &amp; refrig.
near HMC. water furnished .
no peta. IS1 69 mo .. $60
d,pos,it . Ca11446-3617 .
Apt . for rent . Half double-2
bd .room Apt. Adults pre·
ierred . No peta. 6·1 4-992 2749 .
1 bad room Apt. 8196 . mo.
including utilities. Equal
housing opportun~ty . Contact Village Manor Apu.
614 -992 · 7787.

Apartment
·for Rent

:2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apart·
mentt e200 per mo. or if
income ia *10,000 or leta
HUD ovolloblo. A·One Rool
Estaia. Carol Y1.1ger, Realtor. oil 304-878-5104 or
304· 711-7388.
Furnl1hocl opt ., 1 S 1 Y.o 4th
Avo ..! Oolllpolla. 2 bclr ..
t18e mo .. wltor polcl. Coli
U8'f'l111oflor 7PM .
Furnl,hed efficenov •ft. In
town, t1!0 mo. Col Tho
Wlt~mo~ Rool Ettoto
AOO"fY· Coli 4411· JII43.
furnJ,hed ept. 3 rooma.
prlvoy. 1 ot. fl,or, rolf .
profeartd . Ctll448 -2211 .
fu.r nlitlod opt .. . 1228. udll·
t .. o ptld. 1 bd; .. 2nd . floor.
tduMt. 607 2nd. !lvo, Oolll·
poJia. Coli 446·44111 oflor
IPM.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
· washera, dryers; refrigerators , ranges. Skaggs Appliances. Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Croat Motel.
446 -7398.

In town Apts. Also nice
office space . • Call Cleland
Realty at 61 4 -992· 2259.

Rooftng, IIWn~. ~~
ond olumlnum okfing ·- lnsurM. Fr• Eetlrnet•.
814-848-2818.
Hi p-..ro ~ng. Alum· .
lnum eklne. enolllil homM.
wood, brick, . MndetCH'te
building ond• · l,.l.oo
hlovy tqu.......,t. fully ln.
turtcl, Frw MtlffNitft, 814·
949-21186.
.
.

&amp; Vegetables

7:00 G (}) PM-M_" 'I!!i!'e
Ill GJ P-Ie' s Coort
Star Trek
7 :30 G (}) Ue Detector
(lJ Bonjl at Work
CIJ Dobie Gilllo
IJl ESPN SportsCenter
Cl) Andy Griffith
(I)
(I) Fomily Feud
(I) Buolneso Roport
® You Asked For It
(fil Computer Programme
Ill GJ Entertainment

e

a

..,.•u••••.&lt;.

THI!f FAMilY PARICI!P
THEIR CAP: AND W.ENT
IHT'O T~&amp; ~OPPI~

1----------

Apartm e nt s . 304 -676 6548 .
APARTMENTS . mobile
homea, houses. Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipoli1. 614 -446 8221 .
ONE bedroom lilpartmenta
for the elderly. All utilities
paid . Tenants pay 30 percent of their adjusted in·
come in this HUO subsidized
apartment buildin'g . Twin
Rivera Tower , phone 304·
675 -6679 . Equal opportun IW housing .
ONE bedroom apartment.
402Vl 24th . St. P,t . Pleaunt,
phone. 1 ·61 4-992 -6868 .
ONE bedroom apanmant,
$2:26 month. all utilities
poid . 304 -675-2695 .
Furniahed one br apt. in Pt.
Plea1ant . Extra nice, adulta
only . No Pets. 304 -6761386 .
1- - - -- - - - - Furr\iahed 2 br apartmoRnt.
located in Ripley . carpeted
throughout , clean . 304 273 -3078 or 304- 372 6778 .

1- - - -- - - - Wedge Apts. no children, no
petl. 304 -876-2072 .

EFFICIENCY apartment .
private home, private entrance. 304-675-3220 .
Furnished

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light hOU"IB keeping
rooms . Perk Central Hotel.
Coil 4411-0766 .
Sl8eping rpom 1126. utilties
paid, single mele. Share
bath, 919 Second Ave.
Oollipollo. Coil 446-4416
after 7PM .
Furnithed apt. adults. No
Peta. 304 -676 · 1463.

47 Wanted to Rent
A nice unfurni1had homp or
lerge apartment. Must be
Inside city cloee to-or in
downtown Gtlllpolia. Must
heve at leaat I rooms. Will
get excellent care by lady &amp;
13 yr. old eon. ltese or lease
with option could be po,ssl·
bllltlea. Ple..e do not cell if
requntt given herein ctnnot
be met . Ell'elyn C. KnottaYoung. 4411-2548 {homo).
448·9010 · (Oocors) , 448·
9545 (Oocora).

Troy Built rototill era new
and u1ed. Swisher lmple·
rnent Co ., Sr. R1 . 7 Nonh.
Gelllpolit, Oh. 446-0475 .
MASSEY HARRIS. trtctor.
Front end loader~ 'dis"-. ptow,
mov.rer. wagcin,"*2.900 . Rt.
82 South through leon, WV
to 2nd road on leh Waterloo
Rd . 2nd rood ' on loft off
Waterloo last hou•.
For aat,. Uaed J 20 Ditch
Witch Trencher . 1 · 114 694·7842 .
NEW &amp; Uaed Hanieatore
S.t ructurea. Automated livestock feeding · computer
foedero . Cell collect 111!4·
686·2260. John L. .Botto.

New Oak Furniture, tables.
chairs. cupb_oards, pie aafe,
dry sinks. Paul Conkalt
Antiquea. Tuppers Plains.

OpiOBO
Caae 1030 farm · t)actor~
runog~od 14500. 304-876·
7421 .
.

63 ·

8 :00

livestock

Horse, mare. 8 yelrt old.
toddle end bridle. f300 .
304·1176-5335 .
Horta. mere. 8 Yiara old,
uddlo • ond bridle . UOO .

_3;0;4=·=8~7=11=·11:3;3:5:.====:·

-:

Hay &amp; Grain

STANDING HAY for oolo.
Coll 246-9315 .
Hoy for ule . Coli 446-8381 .
New big FILE ERROR
MIXED hoy. 304 - 878 ·
2254 .
CONDITIONED mixed hey,
never wet . large balea.
11.50 par bolo, 304· 675·
2902 . .
Mixed hey 11 .26 bole in
field . f1 .50 bolt loodtcl on
wagon . Floyd E. Rayburn .
304·876 -3668.
66 Seed

S.

Fertilizer

TOBACCO planta for 1111,
Kentucky 14.17. Callfrom
4 untlll9:00 p.m., 304· 882·
3295.

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

71

F • K Tree Trlmmlrig. llump
·romovol. Cell 878-f331 .

RINGLE 'S SERVICE oope·
.,-ianced roofing, Including
hot tar applicatk»n, c"pen1974 Monte Carlo. Excel. 78 Chevy truck, Scottsd1le , tar, electrician. maeon. Cell
cond. f2,000 . Ph. 446· 20, loaded with extras. 304-8711-ltOBI or 17!·
45110.
4630.
304·875·4444.
1979 l''lmlforblrd uc . 78 Chevy truck, Scottsdale Water Wollo. Commorclol
cond. 46,
mi .. 14,000. 20, loaded with extras. and DornHtk:. Tett' holea.
Purripil Se'- end Service. ,.
Coli 814-367·7238 .
304·675·4444 .
304-1Bfl·3102.
1978 Chovy .lmpolo 4 door 1;:;:=:;::=::;:::;:;;=;=
Get · your carpet In ahfp
low mileage, good condl· 73
V•n• • 4 W.O.
llhtpo. Wttorremovol. FREE
tlon. 11 .576 . Coli 448· l- - - - - - , . - - - - ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
1569 or 446· 31147 .
'70 FORD Window von. CLEANINO . CAPTAIN
·1 9.7 6 Plym.X.th . Dutter. 5 Cleon. f600 . .'84 I.H .C .. STEAMER 814' 448· 21lJ7.
cyl .. runs O,o od, ·autO trana, PiCkUp. 8% ft. bed , need a
clutch. e300, Rt. 82 South E li R Trw Sontlco.' fully
make lllixc. 2 nd . cer, •1.000. through leon. wv to 2nd insured.
free eatlmat1s : · ;
Coli 4411· 4 294.
rood on left Wo!orloo Rd. Phono 614·387-0131. coil ·
1977 NOva. good cond . Call 2nd road on left off Waterloo ~tt·.r 6 .
614-246-5668.
loot houoo.
SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Dno .
·1972 NOVA 350. 2 dr. 1979 Jeep CJ 6, 6 cyl., 3 piece custom fit your home: .
sp_d ., new soft top, AM· FM Guo'rontttcl. Advanced Out· . .
t800 . Ph. 448-1028.
tape. exci . cond. Cell 441· tor, (Doy 1114-892-iloe&amp;.l ·:
(night 814·1198·82011.)
, ,
1982 Oldt O·mege 0616 .
Brougham, fUlly equipped, I·C-o_m_p_le_te--d-ri-ve--tr-a-in-f-or
Roofing and Carpent i t '
low mileage. Must .-n. Call Dodge. %ton 4 wo. frame &amp; work, generel repairt, call
OVOI, 448·4277.
wheels incJuded. 1800 firm. Anthony Wllll1mson, e1·4 ·
1979 Pinto otatlonwago.n. -6 _c_._l_l_61_4_·_2_6_8_·1_2_5_6_._.:...._ 387-0194.
1
cyl .. auto .. PS. oir cond ., 1974 FORD lronco, 302 CALL 304-67&amp;; 1293 for
exc. cond. Cell 814-388843&amp; .
auto.. good cond.. 304· concrete and black top ntl~
675-6115 eftor 4 p:m.
mates. metel building end ·.
fence erection costJ. Aleo .. _:
1982 Chevette
teke PU
buying end oelllng hlovy " · :
paymenta.
1971 Datsun
equipment. Hor• ·• .atoclf, ~ ·
ooklng f1.200 . Call 446· '~----'-'----- treiler aalet. Furni1ure, elec- .. :
3101 .
r
trlcal • itlectronic ·1upplin ' ~
Firoblrd, 1975 Model. 350 198t Suruki 850 8L, full and equipment . Pleae~nt ·"
engine. 4 barrel, alum . slot dress, shah drive, low ml- Meadow• Diatributora •nd
whoolo , 85 , 000 mileo . leege. $2.!00. Call after 6. Soloo.
et295 . 614·742 -3063.
614· 256-1141.
'Minimum .11 c equar• foot
1973 Dodge Charger . 318 1978 KAWASAKI 100. Dirt to aluminize vout mobile
homo rO&lt;&gt;f. 304-878-t293.
engine, runa good. 1600. Bike . Coli 448-0854.
814-992-2707.
1--------1977 Toyota Carollo, 4 HOme lmprovementJ. paint- .!
1973 Ford Pinto outo . apeed. new peint, very good ing - exterior ·• Interior •
·mobile homea. C•U after 6
73.000 milea. Exc . interior. condition . $1900 . 814 - p.m. 304·11711· 1128
good body. runs good . 992·11763 .
'
1700. 614·986·4349 .
!:~~@~~~~:::
2 helmets.
82
Plumbing
Foremena Used Can. For
len e•pen's ivt cars. On S .R.
• Heating
124 In l.ongovlllo, Oh. 6t4- 1981 Cutladd Suprema
742·2734.
Brougham, loaded . Low
m11e•. 4 · 1 cond. 1978 Ka·
CARTER'S PLUMBING
1978 Ford. Elite, 2door.air, w ..akl 110, tllltrea. 614AND HEATING
p.t ., p .b., radio, ••e. runQing 992-7382 .
Cor. Fourth an&lt;f Pine
condition. Price negotiable .
Phono 448, 3888 or 448 ·
814 · 992 -2963 or 992 · 1974 HONDA CS 360. 4477
6241 .
1400, 304·676·1800.
JIM'S PLUMBINO 8o HEAT·
1981 Oldo . Dmoge, 2 door. 1972 YAMAHA 380 En· lNG . Fom·e rly Dewitt'•
one owner. p.e., p.b., tinted duro , good condition, Plumbing. Cell 814-387·
wlndowa, air. 21,000 milet. f260 .00. 304-675-11966.
0576 .
f4 ,800 . 304· 882 · 3~85.

BORN LOSER

ANNIE .

14E? I'IAVI-t'f MUST
0' HAD A LA5T oA~
LEFT IN
CRAWLED
Hlfi5ELF,1

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

3 year old stud part quarter
horH. No papers. 614-9492674 .

64

1979 GMC lfMvy lfolf. PS.
PB, good 1111 mil•ege,
cruloe. A/ C, btcl liner, llld·
ing blck 1:1111. ~ running
boards. Exc. cond. •4&amp;00.
Cell {614)·256 " 6~44 .

G (l) ClJ Real P-1• To·
night' s program features a
couple who teaches ho rse·
back rid ing to cerebral palsy
victims, a pair of g ; yearold tWll'l s and a beauty pa·
geant for pigeons . !RI !60

Autos for Sele

1978 Chevy Coprlct Cloosic, 4 dr. Mdan. one owner.
f2.600 . Coli 446· 18111 or
448-1244.
1978 Grond Prix , p.o.. p.b..
cruise control. A.C .. good
cond. Coli 446-0109 oflor
6 :30p.m.

1

1978 Col1cord Dl -e .c ., 75
Boats and
cruise. tilt whHI, em -fm
Motors for Sale
ttereo. e cyl., auto., 47,000
mlloo. be. cond . 1114-9926238 .
17 ft . Mercury Marquia
new interior • c•nii'U
boa1.
USED CARS , 77 ,98 Oldt
Lux . aeden . 73 Coupe De- cover, cuatom ptint on boat
ville Codllloc . 71 Sodon &amp; trailer, trirnllne style, 1150
Dovlllo Codllloc. 72 C-20 HP Mtrc.ury motor. •3.600.
Chov. Von. 304·876-3099. 304-875-1493.
71 Chevelle. 350 engine,·
automatic trentmluion,
good condition . •1400 .
304-875-!393.
73 Okta 91;1, loaded with
options, low mileege, new
tlree, good condition. 3048711· 2278.
71 Chovollo. 380 onglne,
automatic tranamluion ,
good condition . 11400 .
304-8711-11393.
73 Oldo 98, loodod with
optlono. low mil-t. now
tiret, good condition. 304·
87&amp;·2279.

1977 DODOE Aapon &amp;to·
tlon Wagon , ·PS, Pl. good
ccnd. Coli 448· 7489 .,
448· 5508.

1978 Monio Co~o ; gOod
running car•. high mlletgl.
f3,000 . 304·578-2101 .

1977 OLDSMOBILE Stor·
tire. V-8, A/ C, 4 apood, now
pelnt, lliiC . cond. •1850.
Cell 448-1724.

1974 CAPRICE Eatoite. Can
bt 10on ot 20 Moln St . Pt.
Plei•nt, WV.

1972 NOVA 3&amp;0. '2 Dr.
taoo. Ph . 4411-1028.

72

76

• a.

Auto Parts
Accessories

TOP. PER for 8' bed, atend up
holght, phono 304-875 ·
2408 bttweon 9 o.m.-8
p .m. or HI It Bordmen
Furniture. Pt. Pleeunt.

83

14000BOYY"V!!

AEROBATICS?
~~~

....
GA~OLINE

ALLEY

Mr. Bic~er, GOTCH builds
no factorl.j in this town
aslonq
as that

40u put KiH4'5 box

where it

bloc~

th' door,
Rufus?

\~natic

E~tcevating

ln-

cred'ible!
'The
woman

DOZER WORK By Tod
Henna , pond•. ditches.
baetmente, etc. C11l 441·
4907 . Corter li Evon•
Trlntponttlon .

keep
shov in' it aroun'!
Kitty

Lonnie Bogga Excevating.
Do:zer, backhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or lob. Coli
448-7903 .

WINNIE

J .A.R . Conatruction Co.
Wetar Linea , Footera .
Drllint. All klndo of Ditching.
Rutlond, Oh. 814-742 ·
2903.

FOUR chrome 1 &amp;x7 inch
wheels. fit a G. M. cars,
f711 .00 . 304-875-8888,

Mtiga Excavating. Bulldozer
• btckhoo eorrico. a•••.
menta, foot~o' lllndsceplng,
driveweya, feim ponda.
814-742·2407 or 814·· 742·
2088 .

78

84

JANIE, I DON' T
KNOW WHAT TO
[)()-ABoUT eiRDIE.

l TRIED DROPPING
HINTS, IW1' THEY GO

a

OVER HER. HEAD.

Electrie~~l
•

Lough'
(lJ MOVIE : 'Ohl Heavenly
Dog'
(]] I Spy
(!) ESPN/Don King Boxing
Special: WBC Cruiser·
weight Championahip
Cl) · MOVIE : ' Winchester
' 73'
(I) Gl GJ Fall Guy Colt.
Howie and Colt 's nephew
are kidnapped and forced to
play on an Army football
team . (R) (60 m1 n.)
Q (J) ®I Small and frye
Nick employs his partner to
1nfil1rate a blackmail r1 ng .
(I) {jj) World of Jameo
Joyce The life and career of
literary rebel J ames Joyce is
exammed . (90 mi n.)
f!ll MOVIE: 'Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn·
8 :30 Q (J) ®I Filthy Rich
9 :00 G CI1 ClJ Facts of Life Mr s.
Garre tt 's car is s tolen when
the g1rls go to town to s hop
fo r her . IAI (Closed Captioned]
(]] 700 Club
()) Ol llli Tales of the Gold
Monkey Jake tries to beat
the Ja panese to a downed
plane carrying a revolutionary ne w gunsight . (R) (60
min .)
Q (J) iJll MOVIE : To Be
Announced
9 :30 G (lJ ClJ Buffalo Bill
Woody the stage manager
quits forc1ng Bill to hire areplacement .
(I) {jj) Taj Mahal The
beauty and history of the Taj
Mahal is exami ned . (A)
10:00 •
(lJ
IIi owl is the
News
(}]
Vanished :Missing . ·
Children Five true stories of
missing children are presented .
(]) MOVIE : ' Htte wa
Bullet'
(I) TBS Evening News
()) Ill lHi Dynas ty Blake
tries to ftnd Steven and Mark
e• presses his love for Krys tle !AI (60 min.) [Cl osed
Captioned]
(I) East 103rd Street Ta nig ht' s program looks at a
family addicted to hero1n 1n
New York ' s Spantsh Harlem. (60 m1n.)
® Newswatch
flliNN Nows
10:30 II (f) Taxi S1mka has a Cltlze ns h•p tntervtew at tho
lmm1gra tio n Department
(]] Star Time
([) Major league Baseball:
Atlanta at loa Angeles
{jj) Man of Letters
fl) In Search of..
11 :00. (lJ ()) Q (J) ® Ill Cl21
News
(lJ MOVIE : ' Polte rgeist '
(!) ESPN SportoConter
(l] News/Sports/Weothor
(]) Dall'e Allen at Large
f!ll Bonny Hill Show
1 1:30 G (lJ C1J Tonight Show
J ohnny 's guests are JOurnallSI Dorothy Fuldhe•m and
gum-blower Tom Noddy .
(60 min .)
(]) Another Lifo
(J) Soap
(J) Polic e Story
(I) PBS Late Night
® All In the family
Ill GJ Nlghtllne
fl) Honeymoonen
12:00 (]) Burno Ro Allen
C!l 1983 College World
Series :
Championahip
Game from Omaha, NE
(J) Nlghlline
® MOVIE : 'Kill a Dragon '
f!ll Mary Hartman, Mary
Hanman
12:15 CII MOVIE : ' Lion of the

rn

AI.:LEY OOP
Ot&lt;AY, oi\LLE.V! l'HE &amp;IFF'S ALL
SEr loJDW! DO 'lOll 'THINK YOU
CAN HII.NDI.E SOME SIMPLI'

Refrigeration

Oesen '

Stercraft c•mper sllepe six,
three burner atove. sink, ice
boJII , exc. cond.
I 1800.
304-875-11493.

79

Motora Homes
S. Campara

Trucks for Sale
1873 11 ft . Trovtl Moto
cemping tr.. ler. Self contalnod. Sloopo 8 . Eloctrlc.
1101 • 12 w•n tVIItm. A.C .,
nlco towing. f2 .200. Hitch
li trll .. r btr lncludtcl. Seo or
call Gtry Hyooll 814-912·
11311.

DEPENDABLE WASHER ·
DRYEII ·REPAIR. Guoron·
teed work. Call 1nytlme
814· 2118· 11120 or 514·2118·
1207.
'

1 2 :30 G (lJ (l] Lllte Night with
David Letterman David's
guests are l Richard l ewis
and TV psyt h1c Morns
Fonte . (60 min.)
(]) Jack Benny Show
Ill 1D ABC Newo Ono on
One
Ill Twilight Zono
1:00 (}) MOVIE : 'Roggedy Men'
(]) I Married Joan
(I) ABC News One on One
Ill (D NoW11
1 :30 D
(lJ
NBC
Now•
Overnight
(]) My Little Margie
(() MOVIE: 'Dawn Petrol'
(l) Newt/Sign Off
• GJ CNN Headline Newt

BARNEY

MAW··THROW ME TWO
MOAE LUMPS OF THEM
M~HED TATERS

SEWINO Mllolllno ropolro•
MrVIco. A u - Slngor
So... • · - · .......,_
Scluoro. Fobrlc Shop,
Pomeroy. 112•2214.
ED'S APPLIANCE REF!AIR
SERVICE coli CMy Furniture
304·871·2801 or 4411·
01131 .

86

Generel Hilullng

2 :00

·

JONEI lOY I WATER IER·
VICE . Coli 114-JI7·7471 .• :
... 81 4 ·367·01111 .

A nice unfurnished homt or
l1rge apartment. Mutt be
ln1ld1 city cloH to-or In
downtown Galllpolia. Mult
have et le111 I rooms. Will
get exc•M~t cere by ledy.&amp;
13 yr. old ton . L111e or le111
with op_tlon oould bt po11l·
billtiea. Pf.. •• do not call if
requHta given herein cannot
be met . Evelyn C. Knotts·
Young, 448·2848 (homo),
448·8010 (Oocoro), 448·
8845 !Oocoral.

. . -....
81
1171 Chevrolet 380 qlno,
iiOOd cond. Coli 114· 211-

1071 .

Extra nice Mayttg weaher
1110 othar uted Waahere •
dr'(tlro, fully guoronto&lt;td 30
tloya. Coli 814-28&amp;· 1207.
1 Ltgocy 3.000 wood • ooal
htlttr. UHd 8 montho.
Orlglnol coat t478. 1300.
lncluclet blo-r. 814-143·
11380 oflor II.
I

NICE prlvoto troller lot, to
put 1 4• 70 mobile home.
Coli Burger Chof • leovo
..._ • • 304-878·4830.

1170 Chevy. f180. HoMo
10""' work. Coli II 1 4·241·
1891.
I

DO
NOT

ENTER
WRITE

Tt-!f: -"""PS?

-

Horne
lmprovemem•

ITUCCD
tuturwd

a:=oo-·
PLAITIIIINO

aiol ind - . t l o l ; frH
CaH 814·211·

Nood oomotltlng houltcl

PEANUTS

•-v
or ~~-• movoc11
Wo' l do M. Colt 441·31 Ill
bat 11n I Md ,I .

•.

I WALKEO ALL ~E WAV

JIMi WATER IIIIVICE.
Coli Jlrn 1.8niof. 304·11711·
7387.

87

DOWN 10 WltERE

AI'PI.IAHCE STORE 15

Upholatery
I

1171

Ford truCk '4 ton
hoa¥y duty, tlr ooncl" 11-. p .b .. p .a., outo. tnna.
.11 4-812' 1130.

,P,AINTING • lnt- - . , , plulnlllnl. - • ·
..,. rema
10 yn.
.. p. Coli 114:MU.

••tt

I

l
;
j

TIIIITATI
UPHOLITIIIY IHOP

1113

a.. Aw.,

a

"IJalla.

441-7Uior - - l U I.

•

- - ,--

\
.'

TAAT

•

9EIN6

OUTSIDE

All

AFTERNOON WASN'T
AS SAD,/J.S I THOU6HT
IT WOUI.D BE

ULIPP

tiJ

I ARVEG
() I

TJ.IE APPLIANCE STORE

I-lAD A TV IN_.
ll!E WIND0\1) !-

[j

JOLTES

WHAT 'THOSE. 00551P
REP'O~E~ OFTEN
GIVE. 'rOll THE
~OWDOWN ON.

I KJ

Ton~ht

· CENTER. 5-0M!iiBOPY
STO L~ THE CAR,IIUT
PIDN'T RI!ALI%E THE
, GRANDMOT~ER WAf&gt;
.
. IN IT!

Set of Zenith Allegro speakers , like new, 1200 new sell
S100 . Cell 614 -367·0394 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa , chair, rocker , ottoman , 3 tables. (e»~tra heavy Back window 1976 Chevy
by Fi-ontierL 8686. Sofa. Truck S20 .. lavatory 816 ..
chair and loveseat. 8276 . medicine cabinet $16 ., bab_y
Sofas and chairs priced from dretaing table10. 614 -992·
1286 . to S895 . Tabloa, S46 7473.
and up to $126. Hida-a beds., IS440. and up to DELl EQUIPMENT- 8 fl. doll
•&amp;26 ., Recliners. t176 . to casar, TEC digital acelea,
•a&amp;o .. lemps from 828 . to Hobart slicer &amp; refrigerator
$76 . 6 pc. din&amp;ttas from unit . All like new, 304-876·
t99 ., to 1436. 7 pc .. 5189 . 5843.
and up . Wood table with six
ct"lairs 8426 . to •745 . Desk REPOSSESSED SIGNI No·
•110 up to •226 . Hutches, thing downl Take over pay·
•IU50 . and up. maple or pine manti 868 .00 monthly .
finish. Bunk , bed complete 4 'x8 ' flashing a'rrow aign .
with mattr&amp;sles, 8260. and New bulba; lat~era . Hele
up to 15396 . Baby . beds, Signo. Coli FR!E 1 -800·
8110 . Mattre11e1 or bol!: 826 -7446. anytime.
springs, full or twin. 868 .,
firm , $68 . and 878 . Queen Tobacco plants. Kentucky
sets. $196 . 4 dr. chests. 14, enough for 37acret. One
•42 . 6 dr . chests. 864 . Bed Hundred Dollara.304-B96·
frames. 820 .and 826 ., 10 3879
gun • Gun cabinell, ' 836~
dinette chairs *20. and *25 . Four 26 " bicycles. •36 .
Gas or electric rangu. 8 32~ each or $126 . ior all .
up to 8376 . Baby matreaaes . 304·676·6493.
126 &amp; 135, bedfr1me1 120,
•$26 . &amp; 830 . king frame 160. 1978 KAWASAKI1400.00 .
Good selection of bedroom 1970 Mevorlck 1400.00 . A
suites. cedu cheats, camper top -flu small
rockers, metal cabinets . truckbod'. 304-675-1553 .
swivel rockers.
Used Furniture -- bookcase, AIR conditioner, 66 BTU,
ranges, chairs , end tables. Cold1po1 . needs repair ,
washers, dryera, l'efrigera - t65 .00. 304 -676-1484.
tor t and TV' s. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
&amp;pm , Mon . thru Fri .. 9em to 56 Building Supplies
6pm. Sat .
446-0322
Building materiel•
block. brick, sewer pipes,
COUNTY APPLIANCES , windows . lintels , e1 c .
Inc. Good used appliances, Claude Wlnten, Rio Grande,
washara. dryers, refrig .. ' TV 0 . Coli 614-245·5121 .
aeu·. &amp;271ft 3rd . Ave .. Galli ·
poll a. Cell 446· 1 699 .
6 6 Pets for Sale
1983 White tawing machlhe
$76. free arm, .:ig zag, much
more. Rag . price $369 .96 . HILLCREST KENNEL
demo price 876 . Call 814 - Boarding all breeds . Selling
386 · 8678 c ollect . Fro Happy Jock Oog Food. AKC
Dobermtnt: Stud Service.
delivery.
Coli 446·7795 .
Grey Contemporary bedr .
suite, Including fulf-slu bed DRAGONWYND CATTERY
with bookclle he1dboard, · KENNEL. AKC Chow puptriple dre11er with mirror, piea, CFA Hlmalayen, Percheat of drawen. night sian and Siamese kittens.
stand, mattreas and bol!: Coli 448· 3844 oftor 4PM .
apdnga, UOO . Coli 448·
WEEKS WESTIE KENNEL
0123 oftor &amp;PM .
AKC Woot Hlghlond. whlto
Good aelection wa1her, dry- terriera. puppies and stud
era, refrigerators 190-$130, service . Call 114 - 38730 day guaranteed . Call 0824 .
446· 8033 . .
UKC Rog . Eoklmo Spllr 2
00'00 SELECTION of male 1 femele . Had shot and
washen. dryen. refrigera · wormed . Coli 446-7230 .
tort. etoves. 190 up. 30 day
10 month old Rog . bl.ock
warranty . Call 446-8033 .
ftmlll lab. Ill lhOtt •
Moving : Selling iurnlture, papora . no. Coli 448 ·
dinette Itt, bedrm .. etc . 3486.
Inquire 11 trailer behind C.J .
AKC Reg. Ooldon Rttrltvor
Bar on Rt. 7 .
pupplet. Ready' to go mid
July . 5t4-742 ·29117 .

Nice large 2 room efficiency
apt. Furnished . ln Lengaville .
f!OO . mo.nth . 614 -9925692 .

:~3 Farms for Rent

·44

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
82 Olive St .. Callipolis. 6
piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch tlat arms 1399,
bunk beds complete with
bunkies $199; 2· piece antron llvlngroor'n suites 1199.
antron recliners f99. other
recliners fBO , maple dinette 9x12 new carpet, IS86; 2
seta 1179, love seats '70, end tables &amp; coffee table
hide - a -bed 6260. box $1ELOO; hanging wrought
springs 8e mattrees twin or iron lamp •30; Sears elec .
full $100 set regula• Plrm stova. 8176 ; refrig .. 8176.
$129 , maple dinene chairs 448-1323.
$36. w•sh stan~• •34,
maple rock8rs - $6~ . .7 .pill!ille Umestone , Sand, Gi-~vel. ·
chrome dinette aet 8149 , 6 ·Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
piece dinette set 689, uMd Gallia or pick up at Richerd a
bedroom 1ult81, rsfirgera- 8o Son . Coli 446 -7786.
tora , rilnge1, cheet, dressers.
wringer 'Washers. TV's , Wood storage building good
drvere'a. &amp; shoes. Call 446 - cond . 1200. Call 614· 367·
0406 after 6PM .
3159.

1 bedroom apartment for
rent. Coil 446-0390 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Perk, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lott. Cell
992 -7479 .

6/15/83

~;6.oot~. " ; ..-· "':··

78 Plymouth Valera Premier
4 dr .. elr coOd., one owner.
Call 448· 11115 or 448 ·
1244.

APARTMENTS !EHO) one
bedroom rent atarts at 6167
per mo. two bedroom s1arts
at 8 193. Deposit 8200 (no
pets\ near Spring Valley
Cinema . Call 448-2746 or
leave mauaga.

46 Space for Rent

•
•

min .)
(lJ MOVIE: ' Only When I

2 bdr. apt .. 60 lincoln.
Retired couple only. cell
446 -3069. '

46

58

a ' - t·

Polrnlnl ln.....,, • . - . •
- 1 - 'honolnl.l.....,...., • •

Apartment
for Rent

:Adults only . Or iemllywith 1
.child . Furnlohld with utlll1iet paid . Deposit 8t referen'ces required . 814 · 992 :~&amp;47 . No P•!•·

:Melgl Co.·Chetter Town·ship. farm land &amp; pasture for
'rent reatonable . 1 · 692 ·
.447t cloya. 1-692-4524
·evenl"ga .

I~~~::;=.~~~f====

18 CU . FT. Frost FtiH Aefrig .
Hotpoint . 39 " ,.u·- •uto .
Hotpoint alec . range, like
new . 9 . windows with
matching ttorms. Call 448·
2605 .

USED MOBILE HOME.
576 -2711 .

-Home
lmprGventents

ll)g. 30 - - . ...,...,.....
_.elbing 1ft built .... ·
CoH 814-JII--87.
.

For,... metel culll'ert 6 inch
thru
Inch in stock. Stet•
opprovod 11 iPugo 12 Inch
lnatruments
f5 .36 por fl.. 24 inch l- - - - - - - - - - f10 .10 por fl . 38 Inch
•16 .60 per ft . Alto pleotic For Sale-Spil'let·ConiOie Pi·culven in ltock. 6 inch thru ano Btrgai.-a. Wanted: Re·
18 inch, 8 Inch 11 .80 per ft., apona.lble J)llrty to take over
12 inch 83.60 per ft . Ron low monthly ,;&gt;tvmonll on
Evens Enterprises, 4 mi. Spinet Pi•no. C1n be ...n
South of Jockoon on 9T. RT. locolly. Write Crtclll Mon.'
93, 614-286-6930.
oger: P.O. Boo 137 Shelby·
Yillo. IN. 4111711.
276 GALLON fuel 011 Tonk
and ltend . Call 246·9200. !;;:==::;=:::===

eo

.81

Morcum R - .

ON~ AKC rog'-tored lemolo
8ooglo! pup. It out of - d
hulritlng lloclt. fiO .OO 304·
8711-1187.

1976 14x70 Windaor, 3
·b edroom. 1 1/1 bathl, furniahed, 8•1 0 utility building.

Mobile

Ohio

J

r

1

Now arrange the drcled l..ttera to
tonn I~ surprise answer, as sug·
gested by lhe above cartoon.

X. I I I I)-[ I I]

Mswer: THE(

. I Answer:
Jumb&lt;os · KNE EL CATCH
How a barber

Yesterda-ys

(]) Ufo of Alloy
3 :00 CI1 MOVIE: 'True Confoo·
•ion a'
(1)700 Club
I]) ESPN SponsCentor
3 :45 (() MOVIE: 'Tho Ptcl end
H-tou. . It'
&lt;l:OO I]) ESPN't Horse R..:lng
Wldy.
4 :30 CII
Vanlohtci:Miulng,
Chltdren Five true stories of
milling children are pre~
tented.
Cil Roos flagloy
I]) 2nd AnnUli! H811 of
F - Bowling Toumom - Budwoiool Bud Light
preoontt tha 2nd Annual
Holl of Fame Bowling Toor·
namant. 190 min.)

ABOUND

BOILEO

usually nkes to talk-

BEHIND Y.QUR BACK
Jumb.. Book No. \9, ~ne paa:Ma, Is awallabl&amp;lor S1 .95 postp1ld
do tNt. ,.......per, Bo x S4, NorwOOd, N.J. 07B.a. lnclutM yQUr
from

Jurma..

name, tlddreaa. zip c oelt and makl

c~•

payabl&amp; to N•wapaparbooh

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A difficult guess
•
NORTH
+Q7 3

took full charge. He started
with a n all-purpose cue bid
and settled for game when I
rebid just two s pa des. Ea st
won the first tric k with the
jack of diamonds and after
some study returned the
deuce of hearts.
" [ could see his pla n.
Obviously. he held K.J · x of
trumps and planned to try to
put his partner in with the
diamond 10. Of courl!e, he
wasn't certain that West
held tha t card, but he was
willing to gamble and give
me an overtrick If I happened to hold that magac

11-IO·IS

9 A K J tO 6

tu

+A

J8

WEST

EAST

.2

+KJ 2

+4
.9H4
• 10 7 4Z
+96 4!

tAKQH

+ Q tO 7 2
SOUTH
+A lOIII!
•Qa3
t83
+K!

Wett

Pass
Pass
Pau

•

card.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
Norlb

Easl

2t
4•

It
l+
Pass . 2•
Pass
Pass

"Anywa y, I led dummy 's
queen of trumps. East produced the king a nd I took the
trick. Now I had a simple
play to ma ke five-odd. I
could flay a c lub to my king
and
inesse against th e
queen , but it looked as if
East he ld a ll missing face
cards and that play would
leave me two down. So l
played king of clubs, c lub to
lhc ace and jac k of c lubs.
"If East ha d played the
queen. I would have discarded m y losi ng diamond and
made it imposs ible for West
to gai n the lead, but East
ducked s moothly. I fe ll for
it. I ruffed and Jed a spade to
East's jack. Back came that
diamond to the 10, a heart
rurr and down one."
We do sympathize with
the U .E . this time. East had
made a fantas tic play .

Soutb

Opening lead : +2

By O.wald Jocoby
aod Jameo Jocoby
Everything happens to the
unlucky expert. When his
partners get a chance to do

him wrong, they usually are
successful in that task.
Whe n his opponents ha ve

a chance to do something
super-brillia nt, they do 11.
Let's listen to him today.
" After my rather weak
s pade overcall my partner

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIS"E ASSN .I

5-23-83

tl~t·~·,(

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
t1 Detail
I Bulk
s Proclamation DOWN
10 Greek river

11 Transcribe
13 Pianist
Peter
14 Conductor
Fritz

IS United
II Gas station
give-away
17 Duffe r's

need
18 Furnl lure
style
%8 Caesar's
comedy
mate
Zl Vouc her
Z% Cornp&lt;JSer

I Lord's
abode
2 Sport
setting
3 Not conlonn
4 Portuguese
for saint
5 Wandering

· Yesterday's ADBwer

I Profound

19 I said so'

30 Woman

7 Here,
in France
8Gymnast,
at times

2t Stone

in white
31 Energy

9 Paradoxurc

121lemused

Z3
24
25
27

II Domestic

landm..rk
Greet
Di 's mate
Attire
Barely
enough

33 Spanish
title
:W Ave rage
:J7 Me
(Fr. )

Khachaturian
Z3Yeamed
Z5 Amusing
%18W1l
Z'! Betel nut
%1 Ann or Cod

zt Churchmen
3% Gold ,
to Cortez

33 Patriotic
group
34Cashew

35 Don,
as clothes

3'1 B&lt;Jg down
38Inhablt
31Greek
mountain

tiLose
one's way

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

Cil

Bachelor Fother
~ C8S Nowo :r:twatch
2 :30 CII MOVIE: 'W
n'

(Answers tomorrow}

II

how to work
AXYDLBAAXIl
LONGFELLOW

It :

One letter aimpl)l otanda for another. In thio umple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sincle leiters,
apoetrophel, the lenllh and formation of. the word1 ore oil
hiDII. Eoch day the code lelten oro different.
CllYPTOQUOTES

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