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                  <text>1982

Ohio

~iti~~(i()Jl ______________~I~Co~nt~in=ue~df~ro~m~pa~~~el~)-------'-----

PACKJNG UP - Workers at Scotten Dillon Tobacco
Company, Gallipolis, this morning were busy loading

tobacco on a tractor-trailer Inside tbe plant's warehouse on First Ave. Due to decUnlng sales, the business has ceased operations.

Sign of times

Gallipoli's firm closes doors;
declining sales being blamed
GALLIPOLIS -Officials Tuesday
at Scotten DUion Tobacco Co., Inc.,
here verified the plant has ceased
operation because of declining
sales. The company's doors wUI be
closed when Inventory sales are expected to be completed within the
next ll days.
About ll persons employed by
the local tobacco manufacturing
company will be jobless once the
matter Is settled.
Officials would not confirm who
bought the company's Inventory,
but a well informed source s~id the
Con wood Corp., based in Memphis,
Tenn., plans to make the purchase.
When contacted Tuesday, Conwood Corp. President William M.
Rosson declined to verify the transaction was In process, yet he said,
"We will probably have an announcement next week, I would
anticipate."
A further association between
Scotten Dillon and Conwood was

d iscovered Tuesday a fternoon
when a Lear Jet, reponedly carryIng passengers from Conwood
Corp., departed from the GalliaMeigs Airport for Winston-Salem,
N.C.
Taylor Bros., a tobacco manufacturing subsidiary of Conwood
Corp., is located In Winston-Salem.
Scotten DUion's real a nd personal property a t First Avenue Is
up for sale and a few potential buyers have expressed Interest, according to Wlllia m E. Mooar, vice
president of finance a t National
Home Products. Inc., the corporate
office for Scotten Dillon.
Mooar would not say I! any of the
potential buyer's are loca lly based
or from other areas, but he added
the property will be sold for Its
wonh and not at a profit.
"We have no joy in doing this,"
Mooar said, regarding the sale of
the company's inventory. "We realize . our significance as an employer. but with sales declining in

A one semester leave of absence
was granted to Debbie Davis, first
grade teacher at the Middleport
Elementary School, and the reslg, nations of Martha Graves as a substitute teacher, Nancy Radosevtc
as a teacher at the Rutland E lementary, Thomas Edwin Harkless
as assistant band director and
drama coach, and Rita Slavin as
girls' softball coach were accepted.
The board rejected the bid received from the Shelly Company on
June 14 for construction of a track
facility at Meigs High School since
the bid was over the projected cost
!tgure, and authorized the treasurer to readvertise for new bids.
Arrangements were also made to
advertise for bids for a replacement roof at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Norris noted there are
several leaks and that the roof correction needs to be made prior to
interior work at the school.
The treasurer was also authtorized to advertise for bids for student accident insurance, fleet
insurance, tires and tubes, gasoline, oil and anti-freeze, fuel oil,
coal, milk and dairy products.
bread and bakery products, meat
and produce and dry goods. -11
Professional leave was granted
to Suzy Carpenter, Rebecca Ann
CotterUl. Bennlta King, and Leda

manner; Heinz Coats, Pomeroy,
$150 and costs, giving false information to a pollee officer.
Forfeits- Georg e Nlci nk y,
Pomeroy, $45, speed; George
Hayes, Vinton, $45, speed; Melvin

Area deaths
Vada F. King
Mrs. Vada Florence Lewis King,
83, of Henderson, died Tuesday afternoon in the Pleasant Valley Hospital after a long illness.
Born March 26, 1899, at Beech
Hill, W.Va., to the late Jesse Lewis
and Hannah Downs Lewis.
A member of the Church of
Christ in Christian Union and spend
her entire life in Mason County .
Preceding her In death was her
husband, Revna Curtis King, Sr ..
on Nov. 8, 1957.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs. Catherine Smit h, Mason;
Mrs. Velma Luckeydoo, Letart ;
Mrs. Emogene Bailey, San Antonio, Tx.; Mrs. Patsy Shinn, Leon;
four sons, Revna King, Jr. , New
Haven; Charles R. King, WoUort,
Tx.; James E. King. St. Louis, a nd
Nichols B. King, of Racine, three

sisters, Mrs. Julia Brabham, Akron, Mrs. Daisy Leport, Hender~
so n, Mr s. Sylvia L e port,
Henderson; one brother , Charles
Lewis, Henderson: 22 grandchildren and 19 great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Thu rsday morning at 10 a.m. at the
WUroxen Funeral Home with the
Rev. George Weirick officiating.
Burial will follow in the Lone Oak
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 p.m . until 9 p.m.
today.

The board agreed to enter Into a
contract with the Meadow Gold
Dairies, Inc. of Beckley, W. Va. to
process government donated dry
mUk into ice cream products to be
served In the cafeterias. Assistant
Superintendent James Carpenter
explained that this would result In
reduced cost to the district and
noted that both Gallia and Athens
Counties participate.
It was also voted to enter Into an
agreement . with the Southeastern
Ohio-Kentucky-West Virginia Ad·
mlnistrators Association for personnel workshops at a costs of$150.
Arland King was named delegate
and Larry Powell, alternate to tbe
annual business meeting of the
Ohio School Boards Association to
be held ori'~,&lt;.. 8. No nominations
for candidacy were made to either
the Ail Ohio School Board or the
Southeast Ohio School Boards
Association.
Treasurer Jane Wa~er was

authorized to borrow $400,(XX) to
solve a cash Oow problem. Her financial and activity lund statements were approved.
Tuition was waived for two foreign exchange students, one !rom
Egypt and the otber !rom Israel,
who will be here to attend Meigs
High Scltool this year. Both, it was
reported, will have sponsors In the
community.

New Haven youth
seeks normal life

Attendance down;
Reds analysis given

P&amp;@e 3

Page 6

Page 6

Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 15,1982

MICROWAVE
COOKING SCHOOL
are

While many employees are being
called In as needed to help clear the
Scotten Dillon Co .. premises, most
have already applied for unemployment aid.
As for a few of the top company
managers , General Manager
Roger Peters said he wUl be an employee of Na tiona! Home Products,
Inc. , until ail the Inventory Is sold.
He said he did not know what he
would be doing a month !rom now,
but he would probably move !rom
Gallipolis.
Scotten Dillon, Co., Controller
Dennis Ritchie is seiling his house,
but he alsc said he did not know
what he would do once the company's Inventory is sold.

231 E. 2nd Sl in Pomeror on July
15th from 1:00 p.m. till 3:00 p.m.
Sponsored by the Women's Committee of the Meigs County Farm
Bureau.

WE GLADLY
REDEEM FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

YOUR HOMETOWN
SUPERMARKETS"

Oliver Jr., Library, Pa., $47, speed;
Irvin Smith, Nitro, w. Va., $48,
speed; Paul Parsons, no address,
$63, failure to obey traffic signal.
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman conducted Mayor's Court
last night , fining the following:
Wliliam Fltz, Beverly, $250 and
costs and three days In jail, DWI;
Tom Kerrwood, no address, $SO and
costs, disorderly manner; Jimmy
Morrison, Middleport, $50 and costs
on each of two charges, disorderly
manner; Don Hood, Pomeroy, $SO
and costs , disorderly manner; Leonard Van Meter, $200 and costs, selling Intoxicating liquor to a manor;
Julia Simpkins, Middleport, $25
costs, paid old fines.

w. Aa'lll Ftdlrll Fa r r w. .... '1111111(111 ro lilt 1lt ut'

LOCALLY OWNED
AND OPERATED.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOUBLE COUPON DAY

AT MARK V

e Redeem your m;~m · l~lch • r e rs monf'y -~ .winq
COI!pons ,1t Milr~ V ,1nd rcc ciovr doubl e the v.1luc
when you pttrcha sc thr s pcciticd item. One
cot tpon per item . No (')I' pi red cot•pons ,lCccpted.
Om• bl (' ~l'dcmphfln Offer does not .1pply tro

DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP TO
49' IN FACE VALUE.

available at v~ Memorial HospitaL 11\4! un11
wiD eaable local ~teart patients to 1et treatment ltere
they ~ had, to travel to Columbus - or
farther - to receive. '

N£W' CARDIOVASCULAR UNll' - Tedmlcaan
man-

" r rc(' MNcha ndi sc" co• •pons or cot•pflns over
49c 1n f,uc v.1hw . No c.1sh rclt •nds when dm•ble
c01 •pons v.111 •£' N crros price of item . Cigilrettes
.lnd ccrt.11n ot hf'r itl'ms .1rc (')'eluded by liiW . To
m ~ •·rr prod11ct t n .111 our customers, we .ue
limitinq rwr " Doublr Co11pon" offer to one iM of

~ Weruer, llandl'lg, 1111d Breuda Elmer,

Ill* fl Mld'll'est DlaptOI!Uc Services, IDe., demO&amp;

strate llle bulovulve new cardiovascular service now

·.

By Sallyanne "Hob
Meigs County residents no longer
have to leave town to receive so,phlsticated cardlac testing, Scott
;Lucas; iilmlillstrator of Veterans
~Memorial Hospital, announced
today.
• As of Wednesday, a new service
is available to local residents
tllrwgh VMH which provides non:mvaslve CIII'diovasculartestlng and
~evaluation. "Non-Invasive" means
. slnnply there·are no Incisions, lnjec-

new

lions or other sources of pain or discomfort used In till! tests. In other
words, the procedure ts. painlessand close-by.
The tests - which prior to Wednesday were often only available as
far as Columbus- include a slnnple
electrocardiogram (assessment of
cardiac anatomy), romp~ echocardiogram (assessment and anal-ysis of wail motiOn), cari!iac output
determination (quantitatlon of
blood flow), stroke screen lean

,------------1
CAKE DECORATING

SUMMER HOURS

Eastern Local School Board has
called a special meeting tomorrow
night at 7:30 p.m. at the high school
to discuss personnel matters and
budget.

TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY

Prime farm

f()r

is damaged

damaged by logjams, sUt bars and soU erosion along till! Scioto

River in Marion and Hardin counties, officials say.
Larry Adams, Marion County cornmlssioner, said the situation
11U become Increasingly serious over the past several years. Even
small rainfalls cause the rtver to overOow, Adams said.
He iald he intends to ask the "Ohio Departm&amp;nt of Natural Resourceil, for 'emergency help in breaking up the logjams.

CLOSED SAT., SUN., MON.
EFFECTIVE JUNE 1, 1982

FOR MEN, CHILDREN, WOMEN, BOYS &amp; JUNIORS·

Ian~

M.\RION, Ohio- Thousands of acres of prlnne farm land are being

-

'

9 to 5

ON SUMMER CLOTHING ·

forewarn of stroke), peripheral venous studies (rules out thrombosis
- coagulation of blood In certain
vessels), and systolic time intervals (evaluation of left ventricular
!unction). The tests will be available on an out-or in-patient basis and
are only offered through a physician's referral.
"The most lnnportant thing about
this equipment," according to Dr.
James Witherell, chief-of-staff at
VMH, "is the service It offers to our
community. It's excellent for diagnosing vascular heart disease lnnpairment of cardiac valves
between the chambers of the bear!.
It can also evaluate patients for posslbillty of stroke or a lack of oxygen
to the brain." Scott Lucas calls the

new service, "A major step in medical history for our-county."
Tl\e moblie lest unit - which
travels about In a bright yellow van
-will be In Meigs County on a regular basiS, which wtll be determined
by the hospital's volume of patients. Right now, Lucas predicts
tbe equipment will be at VMH
about every two weeks. Wednesday
- the first day - three patients
were tested.
The test unit, provided by Midwest Diagnostic Services, Inc., Columbus, is operated by two skilled
technicians who travel with the
equipment. The two go with the unit
to hospitals ali over central Ohio.
And now they're traveling to

dlcations are there is a real danger
of a major conOict."
According to the U.S. inteutgence
specialists, who asked to remain
anonymous, the immediate Iranian
objective appears to be to cripple
Iraq's oil-based economy, with a
possible drive to cut a critical military supply route Into Iraq from
Kuwait.
Iran' s basic goals, the sources
said, probably are to shatter Iraq's
fighting power, already badly
shaken by previous defeats, to undermine Iraqi public suppon for
the Baghdad government and to
topple the regime of President Saddam Hussein:
"The Iranians not only want their
pound of flesh In revenge for Iraq's
Invasion of Iran 22 months ago, but
they obviously want to humiliate
Hussein and perhaps see him replaced by a !undamentaltst regime," said an Intelligence analyst.
Alter some initial setbacks, the
Iranian army rallied to push the
Iraqis back and the momentum is
now with Iran, the analysts said.
They predicted the outcome will
tum on whether the Iraqi troops,
whose weakness in leadership and
fighting qualities were exposed in
previous battles In Iran, will now
"pull up their socks" and fight effectively on their home ground.
Up to now, they said, the Iranians

have had a clear edge In motivation, Including what was described
as the "fanatical fervor" of revolutionary guards who hu rled themselves at the Iraqis in human-wave
attacks.
Despite political divisions within
Iran, the analysts said, the Iraqi invasiOn had a "rallying effect"
which enabled the Iranians to tum
the balance agai nst the Iraqis.
Both Iraq and Iran are hostile to
the United States.
But U.S. analysts said the American stake In the war lies in the Impact its outcome will have on the
security of U.S. -supponed Arab regimes In the area, including Kuwait
and Saudi Arabia.
U.S. officials worry that a victorious Iran might tum on Persian
Gulf countries which have suppaned Iraq. Even I! the Iranians
withheld any overi military action
against Kuwait or Saudi Arabia, it
is feared that their victory could be
followed by Iranian suppon of fundamentalist Mo&amp;lem groups In proU.S. moderate Arab countries.
Alter the shah .was overthrown
by fundamentalists and other opponents in Iran, U.S. military officials
believed that the resultant cutoff of
U.S. arms, spare parts and training
would reduce Iran's armed forces
to virtual impotence.

VMH.

He~vy trucks bl~med

ANN'S

Special meeling

WASHINGTON IAPl - About
200,(XX) Iranian and Iraqi troops are
locked in bloody battle that could
have long-range consequences for
U.S.-backed Arab countries in the
oil producing Persian Gulf, U.S. intelligence analysts say.
An esilnnated lOIJ,(XX) troops on
each side are concentrated on the
Basra area of southern Iraq, which
the Iranians have Invaded with the
apparent aJm of overrunning that
key oU industry center, according
to these analysts.
"It looks Uke this may be a blood
bath," said one specialist who rompared the scale of fighting to World
War II combat.
At the White House Wednesday,
deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes said the United States is
urging "an lnnmedlateend to hostilities and a negotiated settlement."
Senate Majority Leader Howard
Baker of Tennessee a !tended a
briefing by a national security official and tben said, "It's a very real
danger the war will spread. The in-

Cardiac testing ~quipment now a~ailable

tnSfo1nt cnllf 'f' ;Hl d nne• c.1n nl qr n10 nd C" llf'l' llf'f
~ h n ppiflQ folmii V. ,- n1·h lf' cn t ·pr' ., nftn QMd J• ·l v
15, 1981 nnl v .

THURSDAY ONLY
JULY 15, 1982

15 Cenh

A Multimedia In c. Newtpop ...

Iran-Iraq battle
may affect U.S.

invited to a special

microwawe cauting school to be held
al the S.int Paul Lutheran Church,

IIMm - CW£1 . , • 10 10.p.II.
SUIIDAY .9 10 10

enttne

at

1 Section, 12 Paget

.YoU I ,No.50
·Cepyrithtod 1912

You

•

•

e

A special meeting ws set for 7
p.m. on Aug. 5 to amend the 1982
appropriation.

SUPPLIES

PUCO approves rate increase

I here's nothing .
under the sun.

· There's nothing like the fresh brewed taste of new Nestea~ 100% Tea.
Because new improved Nestea 100%
Tea is slow-brewed IG give you the natural. fresh -brewed "taste and color you~e.
looking for. Or enjoy Nestea" lced Tea
Mix. with the perfect blend of tea,
lerTKln and sugar.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Public Utilltles Commission of
. plllo 0!1 ~ednesday_ authorized an 11.3 percent Increase In revenues
fill' e~ serviCe for the Ohio Power Co.
The Increase of$121,169,(XX)was about twcrthlrds ofthe$181,5ll,(XX)
that Ohio Power had requested.
The PUCO found the utility's rate base to be $2,108,651,(XX) and
authorized a rate of return of 11.97 percent.
The rate base includes an allowance of $64,719,(XX) tor consti'Uctlon
work In progress, representing Ohio Power's Investment In the ·Raclne hydroelecttiC plimt being built on the OhiQ River.
Ohio Power serves 'about 6l5,CXX&gt; customers in 53 Ohio counties.
Tile new rates become effective upon PUCO approval,of new tariffs
· ·nClectlng the rate hike.
·~
·
·

. And the best time to try them ,is
nghtnow.
Pick up some today. New improved
Nestea 100% Tea. There's nothing like
it under the sun.
'
· Also available in convenient
ready-to-serve dairy cartons and
6 -pack cans.

·•

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •!• •
· $TORE COUPON

SM8

'

I
I

CLEVEI.AND (AP) -The winning number drawn Wednesday
nllbt In tile Ohio Lottery's daily g!lffie "The Number'' was 697.
The lottely reported earnings of $183,017 from the wagering on its
~ game. 1'he earnings came on sales~ $885,957, wblle bolders ~
wlJUiiDc tlc$eU are entitled tQ share $71Jl,!Mil, lotterY offk;lall Said.

•

I

ALL SALES FINAL, NO EXCHANGES OR LAYAWAYS
,

.

Winning Ohio lottery number
•

•

.. · Wea~r .fo~st
~ ...,y aDd cOotmued hot .airel ~ ·tomlbt IJido Frldiy.

.

IMI . . . .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY.

•

:E

,.

II W

-.n.

Wlndl Dahl 8lld ICU111111y. BJcb1 Fridl!f arowd
'

'

Clltlo FOWJCialt&amp;

k

........, ....... Mollday.

'
Wll'lll ....llamltl . . wllll ""'""' ~·
40 1 ib ' I - ...... llle ...... 1M ... W IIi.
........ dl.... fllellw'lll.
.
.
'
•
'

......, flit,_,

- '•

·•

Rev. Albert Dittes
journalism major

11

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

(

Meigs Legion posts
impressive victory

Introduced at the meeting was
James E . Mtller, new principal of
Meigs High School

the past few years, it's no longer
economically· viable.·'
National Products, Inc., is based
in Buffalo, N.Y., and also owns a
food packaging plant, furniture
company and peanut company In
various U.S. locations.

Village mayors complete cases
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews reported several fines and
forfeits in last night' s Mayor's
Court.
Fines-Debbie Brown, MinersvUie, $63 and costs, disorderly

Mae Kraeuter to attend the Ohio
Vocational Home Economics Conference In Columbus on Aug. 16 and
17. Expenses to the board, It was
noted, will be the registration
charges, travel round trip for two
cars, and lOdging for two rooms for
one night.

•

-,

.

a-

highw~y

c()llditi()n

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) A
class of vehicle.
The Ohio Trucking Association
new study conducted for Ohio legislators shows that heavy trucks are
had no Immediate comment, sayresponsible for most ofthe highway ·ing it wanted Iinne to review tbe
rehabilitation and resurfacing
highly technical study. But Thomas
work needed in the state.
D. Cashman, coordinator for
But the Ohio Department of
MOVE, greeted the repon as being
Transportation report doesn't
consistent with logic and with fedanswer questions about whether
era! studies.
the share of taxes paid by commer"I think that they are certainly
cia! trucks is In proportion to the showing that in that attributable
damage caused. T)lat is to be adcategOry ... the heavier a vehicle
dressed la~r in a follow-up study
gets. the more It damages tbe
by the Ohio Department of
roads. Weight is the prlnne factor in
Taxation.
highway damage," Cashman said.
The research was ordered by the
His group says that heavy trucks
General Assembly last year when It
that rumble across Ohio don't pay a
raised the state's 7 cents-per-gallon
fair share of highway costs romgasoUne tax to its current rate of
pared to the damage they cause.
11.7 cents. It lS expected to reach its
"If they're causing 87 percent of
cap of 12 cents peq(ailon next year.
attributable costs ... then vehicles
Legislators rejected a bid from
In those classl!icatlons ought to pay
MotorlstsofOhioforVehlcularEq87 percent," Cashman said
ulty, a raUroad-backed group, for Wednesday.
an Increase In !be axle-mile tax
Supportforhlsgroupcomes!rom
paid by commercial vehicles. The
the Qlessle System and N&amp;W railtax hasn't been increased In the al·
roads as well as the Ohio Environmost 00 years since its adoption.
mental Council.
Results of the transportation de-.
In their study, transportation repartment study show that 87.7 persearchers focused ' on the 19,(]()().
cent of the cost of highway
mile state highway system · rather
rehliWltatlon and resurfacing can
than all 110,(XX) miles of county,
be attributed to heavy trucks. Tbe
township and city streets. In addlrest :was split among automobiles,
tlon, higbway costs were defined as
~ and buses, and llgbt .. department expenditures related
trucks.
·,
- -·
to the ~te higbway
Fed.When other collllilOn .highway era! funds were not included Ill the

DOWN AT THE LEVEE- What could be more refreshing than a dip
in the coo~ cool water of the old Ohio! As temperatures climbed, Lisa
Oiler aod Connie Grimm divided thei{ time between getting into the
water to cool off and getting out to work on their tans.

---

-

"t"6i

'

.....

'

_..,

~

.

system.

coa'tl ,- ·111cb .aa snow removal, study.
· ··
·
~-of-wa,- . purcbaaes, tratitc '
Althoulh amblplUs. 1111! report

IIIIiS -

1ft COIII"W ed, heiiYy
tnlCks are it!ijljllillble tor ~-6 per, cent of overall expenses. Automo·• tilles are peaect at 54.8
in
th&amp;t category.
- But the study points qut thllt ~
2!1 percent ot all !dgbway costl cu

lhDnd that veldde welibl Is the
cbar'actei1stlc thlit · plays a domi-

-nant 'role- In either pavement or
bridge. design .
"Generally, the )leavler the vehl~ expected to 1l9e the faC\llty. the
greater the ltruclural tequlrebl!cllndl)' attrlbutabletoaspeclflc J.ments'tor the filculty," It said.

wcent

HOW GOOD I:1' IS -Ice ereiml,~- 8lld 81Uilly attei'IIOOIII~eem to ~ ·
go toether. Here Lori Engle of Mlcldleport reluel tmder a vee with lief ·
chorolate~ '
.

�•

- - ·---·--

Commentary
Toward a foreign

The Daily Sentinel
Ill CuurtStl'ftt

Pumtny, Ohkt
61 ..9tMU&amp;
DEVOTED TOTifE INTERF..IiT OF THE MF.IC&amp;MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publltiltt!r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
AsllltilaPI rublltihe r/(:unlrulh-r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nrwli Edllor
A MEMBER uf Thr AAtM.' Ui~ Prn~. ln.liuld O.lly PrnN A~sociHtkM'I 1nd lht&gt;
Amtrk'tm Nt'wtpaptr Publhlhtn 4»1&lt;i1K'iatlun.
LETTF.RS Of OPINION Ill'\' "·tk'umtd. Tht'y 1hould bt leM!I lhln 301 wurcb hiOJI, . All
It-urn.: 11rt' IAibj~t tu t'ditlnl( a nd miJllt bt' ~ ll(nt'it with Rllmt. addno1u' and ldt'ptl'.w
uumbt-r. N11 tnlllJ(rwd lt'llt!l"'l will -,. p..~bllt ht'd . Ll'llt&gt;n 11huukt bt I• I( !)Old ta~lt' . »ddrn!ll~
hlsttetl. nut pc111t11111lltln .

Little firm proof
President Reagan's $22,444 Callfornla pension hall been questioned by
critics who contend It's an unconstitutional "emolument. " But the Justice
Department says It's a perfectly legal arrangement.
Elthei' way, the on-again, ott-again debate centers on one of those often
overloOked sectloJIS·of the Constitution offering little firm proof of which
side Is right.
The head or the Sacramento (Callf.) Urban League, for one, no~ that
the Constitution bars U.S. presidents from getting any state or federal
emolument other than their salary.
All emolument, says Webster's New Collegiate Dlctlonary, Is a "profit
from o!tlce, employment or labor; fees or salary."
But the Justice Department, In a legal opinion, Insists the Intent of tile
men who drafted the clause In the 18th century was to bar payments that
could Influence presidential decisions.
And that problem Is absent, the department says, because Reagan will
get the pension money from his days as Cautornla governor regardless o1
what he does In the Oval Ottlce.
A1973 Ubrary of Congress guide to the Constitution lists no disputes over
the presidential "emolument" clause.
Major law school textbooks do not probe the true meaning of the provl·
slon, which likely will remain In the ranks of some of the other obscure
partB ot the Constitution.
Federal officeholders need the consent of Congress to accept any "pres·
ent, emolument, office or title" from "any king, prince or foreign state."
The Justice Department says It has received Inquiries about Reagan's
pension trom House Speaker Thomas P. O'NeUI, 0-Mass., and at least two
other rongressman.
.
And George.Dean, president o1 the Sacramento Urban League, says he
Informed Attorney General Wllllam French Smith by letter that paying
the pension as long as_Reagan Is president Is unconstitutional.
Dean, whose group advocates the rights of minorities, says he's asked
Callfornla officials to stop payments, now set at $22,444 annually, pjlnding
an Independent legal review.
The debate over tbe pension may stay just that - a war of words.
Court challenges may be Impossible. If, as Is likely, the president keeps
on receiving the pension In addition to his $200,000 salary there's a major
question of who could go to court to try to stop him.
And In the absence of any ccurt challenge, the Justice Department's
· approval of the pension arrangement last year Is almost cenaln to stand as
the Ialit ottlctal word.
''The pension Is not an emolument within the meaning of the Constitution
... or within the meaning of the laws of Calltornla," says Justice Depart·
ment spokesman Mark Sheehan.

Pulling ~he plug
Pressed by their own special problems and by the general weakness of
the economy, bankers are talklng tough these days. Even to the point of
discussing when to let businesses die peacefully.
"As lenders, we have a responslbUity to our banks to recognize when a
business should be taken ott the monetary lite-support system we've provided," says Mike Newell, an Alabama bank vtce president. 1
:1n his opinion, ccmmercal borrowers whO look as It they won't make It
"$bould be allowed to die with 'dignity,' rather than ccntlnue a slow
d~terloratlng existence supported by an-Infusion of extended credit."
· Newell's advice carries weight. He Is chief loan officer of Ftrst Alabama
Bilnk of Montgomery, and his suggestions were offered to fellow members
of the National Association of Bank Loan And Credit Officers.
:To survive the recession, he wrote In the association's newsletter, many
businesses must alter their operations. Some won't make It, and will "try
tci stay afioat by borrowing more of your bank's money."
:When that point Is reached, he says, the dread moment or reality Is upon
tile loan officer. U the officer Is to be responsible to the bank and to
depositors, he says, he or she must consider pulling the plug.
: He otters these criteria for establishing when that time has arrived:
-The lnab!Uty or management to recognlze it has a problem.
-FaUure to realign and reform a decllnlng business In the belief tbat
soon everything will return to 'the good old days.'
: -A disorganized management who never knows where It stands- and
constantly has a protltabUity and cash crtsls.
: When those three crtterla are met It's either bank or busi~sman.
: "A declining equity position can put your bank In a situation where It bas
more to lose than the owner," he S{lys. "No matter howsolldyourrelatlon·
slllp has been In the past, your borrower may recognize this fact one day
and pay your back by going bankrukpt."
: It Is happerdng with Increasing frequency. Last )lt!ar, according to Dun
~ Bradstreet, at least 17 ,!lXJ nonfinancial compardes tailed, more than
double the number of !allures In 1979. The rate has speeded up this year,
With an annual rate to 23,000 failures In the first four months.
: Lendlni Institutions- credit urdons, savings Institutions and iargecom·
l)lerclal banks - also have had problems with !allures and forced
mergers, sometimes with tl\e failure of one seriously damaging others.

rroday in hist~ry
'· Today Is Thursday, July 15, the 196th day on982. There are 169 days left
Jn the year.
Today' s hlghllght In history:
On July 15th, 1945, Italy declared war on Japan, Its former Axis partner,
Jn World War II.
On this date:
: In 1948, the U.N. Security Coui1Cll ordered a truce In Palestine.
• In 1963, the Urdted States, Britain aDd Soviet Union opened talks In
]dOfJCOW on a treaty to forbid nuclear testing.
·• In 197'. Greek. army offlcers In Cyprus ousted Archblsbop,Makarlos
I
from the presidency.
. ,
-: In 1975, an American Apollo spacecraft and a Soviet Union Sayilz b1aBted ·
jnto orbit for a rendezvoos In space.
• Ten years ago: More than 1.000 women aDd children fled Rmlan Ca·
.lhouc areWi of Be!l8st, Northern Ireland, as violence between Catholics
:and Protestants Jnteasftled,
. • Five YMn ago: It was 8llliOIIIIced that 1!1,000 llldochlnese refugee~
:Would b8',admltted to the United States IIi the next two YeaJ'S.. . · ··
: One year 8&amp;!1: Tile Polish Colnmunlst Party decided to elect Ita entire
11!adersblp by ~rna' a &amp;I~ for a Soviet bloc natiOn. ,, .

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.

Page 2- The Daily Sentinel .
Pomervy-Mic:lclleport, Ohio
Thu!Sday, July 15,1982 • .

1/'

Meigs Legion pounds
Parkersburg club, 8-1

policy"---~-i-llia_m_F_._Bu_ck-Ley_..;..J_r.

George Shultz the public s••r\'anl is has concrete grounds for believing
express a new re lationship with a
well-known. George Shullz lht· that the Su~it!l Union is willing to General Assen,bly which, as Mrs.
forei gn policy architect, less so. And emba rk on genuine disarmament
Kirkpatrick has so cloqucnlly
any effort to decoct from the and a gradual relinquishment of its shown, following similar demondismissal of Alexander Hai ~ exactly aggressions a~ainst Poland and strations by Senalnr Moynihan and
what it was about his own foreign Afghanistan, the United States will others, has evolved into an inpolicy recommendations that Mr. suspend all economic activity with strwnent of tonncnt to the United
Rea~an found unacceptable is difthe Soviet Union. A part of our defen- Slates and other Pacific powers.
ficult.
se budget will be reallocated to com· !U.N. fractiousness Wll.'l probably
We have arrived al a flloment pen sa te farmers for their responsible for lhe sundering w-dr
when a studied reforn•ulation of agricultural losses in trade. II is, af· nver the Falklands. l Accordingly :
foreign policy would tJe most helpful. ter all, a part of I he general defense The United States ambassador tn Ihe
If that word strikes the White Holl!le effort to'!.. me the Soviet Union, and
United Nations is instructed hereafas t"' severe, lhen use the gentler conceptually one ~hould view all ex- ter not to participate in any vote uf
word: a studied reiteration of penses aimed at doing this - frow the Gener~l Al!Seff'bly. T11 parfo reign pnliL'y. Because it is Vnice of America to agricultural ticipate in the debates, yes; bul n111
unquesti onably true that much that boycotts to B-1 bombeni - as in the vote. The distinction efhas happened has not appeared . coming out of the S8Jfle. budget. Ef- fectively ren •ovcs whalevcr
coherent .
forts will be 1r•ade to discourage the authority the General Assembly has
Lunching wilh Willian • Safire the shipment of Canadian, Argentine when dl'CI'eeing, fnr insta nce, that
day before he was ousted. AI Haig and All!ltralian wheat to the Soviet Israel is a racist state nr that Puerto
confessed that he thought the Union, which exports we would nOt Rieu is an Allle rica n cnlnny .
decision a year ago by Mr. Reagan distinguish from the export of ani's
4l With respect to hw11an rights:
to cancel our agricultural boycott of to the Soviet Union inasmuch as, un- Our policy will be recunslructed,
the Soviet Union a grievoll!l error, der the new vision, they are iden- and will be l&gt;asc~ un Ihe distinction
the ripple effect of which has been tical.
years agn articulaled _by Sen. ·
the furious resentment of the
31 In the United Nations: We will William Fulbri~ht, namely that the
Europeans over our subsequent
restrictions on the gas pipeline. So
that what is needed during the next
few weeks in particular, when
~CIQUarc.
George Shultz and U.S. foreign
policy reify, Is the assertion of a U.S.
~~TKE10'11T OlJT
foreign policy distinctly American .
"S n-'1~ ~C) 'lt)U
This does not mean a forei gn policy
that relies any the less o~ our allies.
But a foreign policy that states exactly what it is that the United States
seeks on behalf of Itself. A few
sugge~ted planks:
I) With respect to the Mideast:
Until the ~overnment of Mr. Bel(in 1
reaffinns his willin~ness to cede the
territories in the West Bank and in
Gaza to demilitarized Palestinian
rule, the United States will sll!lpend
future commitments to Israel's arsenal. The United States should
stand by Israel in any threat to its independence, but a line mll!ll now be
sought between ~ uaranteeing its Independence and arm in~ it su
profll!lely as In undcrwrill- cxpan sio ni sn• and per petuate
Palestinian hopelessness.
2) With respect to the Soviet'
Union : Until the U.S. government

~overnrnent (as
distin~uis hed fn•~ the American

United States

_people l has nn proper quarrel with
the dowestic policies of any
soverei~ n country so long as that
country does not seek to export those
polides.
The American petJP.Ie are correct
in any social boycott they wish to
organize against.
And 51 The Uniled States guaran·
tees not to display nuclear weapons
in any country that votes agai~st
such deployment, while reserving,
derivatively, the right tn adjust any
overlapping military cmnndtrnents
to any such country. If Gem•any
voles

an

elflphalic nrl tn

the

deployn•ent of taciical nuclear
weapons, we in turn reserve the
right to withdraw our forces frow
Germany and any comm itment to
Gen!lan independence. '
N~ perfect, the above. And, in
diplowacy th~re are always improvisations. Bul a manifesto is,
really, in order. And this is the tinll'

POWELL'S SUPER VALUE PEE WEE TEAMMembers of the Powell's Super Value Pee Wee League
entry this season were front row, left to right, Wesley
YOUDg, Todd Smith, Bracy Korn, Dennis Booth, Cary

~..---~-:.;.;;.--7'1.

o~.~. S~a

C\.\l..

I

No betting along economic recovery line·
\

NEW YORK (AP) - Perhaps
the best evidence of an impending
economic recovery Is when people
are wUllng to bet their money on it.
There Isn't an awful lot of betting
going on these days.
There's a lot of talk of recovery
thOugh, wl)lch costs only the breath
to make a forecast and the possible
embal:rassment ot explaining why
it went wrong. But money In sizable
amounts Isn't backing up tbe talk.
And that suggests that It the Income tax CU\ now In effect doesn't
spur more economic activity, tben
the talked-about recovery might
amount only to getting the patient
out of bed and Into a wbeelchalr.
The best supporting· evidence to
date has been the Indications that

consumers might be willing to
spend more at retail outlets. But
that evidence Is hardly conclusive,
as any automobile salesman can
tell you. For four consecutive 10.
day periods aut91'f10bUe sales were
Indeed stronger than In the same
period a year ago. But then came a
reversal ot fortunes, a mid-June
slump that dropped sales to the low·
estlevel of the entire recession, just
4.1 rniUion units on an annual basis.
Some merchan&lt;Users, such as
Sears and Penney, say tbey have
evidence of freer spending habits
by their customers, but there has
been no strong Indication of any
general, nationwide enthusiasm to
buy. Many or the same ret.allers
who viewed the tax cut as a poten·

tlal spur to sales are now wonderIng It a real Increase,
lnfiatlon-adjusted, will come.
Big business otters little encouragement. Scores of big-name companies have cpt or frozen salarles,
dismissed white collar wor\(ers, lowered capital expenditure programs and In general taken to the
trenches.
Some Industries, such as steel,
autos, farm equipment and !loosing
haven't had It s0 bad In decades.
And the suspiciOn Is strong that the
borrowing companies are doing Is
merely to get their bUis paid.
Adjusted ror Inflation, capital
spending Intentions, which have
been $teadlly iowen!d over recent
months, show a decided hesitancy

among cash-starved Industrialists
to spend much at all.
Just last fall, the McGraw-Hill
suiVey of big spending plims suggested a 10 percent Improvement
for 1982 over 1981. The percentage
Is now down to 3.9; adjusted for In·
fiatlon, It ineans a decline rather
than advance. ·
Increasingly, talk Is heard that
recovery has been oversold, just as
were the quick benefits o( supplyside economics. Understandably;
there have been political lmpera·
Uves tor raising expectations, but
equally so, there could be a letdown
when benefits· aren't ~- Which c
ls'l't to ·say supply·s\de economics
eventually won't work or recovery
won'tccme . .

One small dividend_________A_rt_Buc_h_~a_ld
When Neil Annstrong landed on
the lunar surface many moons ago,
and said, "One small step for a man;
one giant leap for mankind," I'll
have to admit I was worried. I
couldn't believe that the United
States would invest all that brainpower and money just to find out
what made the universe tick.
I recall turning to my wife, or
110111ebody like her, and saying,
"There's got to• be a military
dividend In all this."
My wife, or whoever it was, is a
romantic by rature. "Why does
there always have to be a military
dividend in everything?" she
demanded. "Why can't we use scientific achievements for peace instead

of war?"
"We cciuld if THE.Y would," I told
her. "There is only 011e reason the
Soviets wanl to get into space and
that's so they can conquer us on earth."
"So, why did Nell Annstrong just

say what he did?"
be able to send them hurtling down one. What better deterrent than a
satellite bristling )With atomic
"Because the military never tells o~ us at the speed of light."
an)'&lt;lne the real reuon they send
· "Is that your dream world?" she weapons flying over the Sov1·et
someone up in a rocket. If they had asked.
•
'
Union every 24 hours. It might
Annstrong say, 'One small killer ·
"Of course not. But we have to finally bring about the dream for
satellite for a man; one giant killer face reality. The nation that peace that all mankind h8s' been
satellite for mankind,' it would have dominates space will dominate tbe waiting for, Once we have parity in
jll!lt tipped off the RIIMians:ft'e knew _, world. Do you think we're going to the heavens, we can all sleep better
that they were planning to use the I' continue to spend billions of dollan on earth."
sky for military purposes. This ny on a program which doesn't have
"So that's what you think this
they think we just landed 011 the any strategic defensive value? space program i~ about? " .
moon, becaUJe no hUIIl8n on earth We're not idiots. Mark my words. In
"They may not have had it in mind
had ever done it before."
a few years from now we're eoing to when they started it. But now that
" Maybe we do plan to use space send up a space shuttle with a tiny we know what we can do in space,
exploration for peace," my wife military package in it. Then the we've got to ' make it pay off
Soviets
going to send up one with militarily, or it won't make any
said.
"Women live in a dream world. a larger Jmilltary package. 'nlen scientific sense."
•
Even It that was its original purpose, we're going to Bl!nd one up even
And so the' other day when.[ watoo milltary establlalunent wurth its bigger than a brellll box, And before cbed the space shuttle land, and
salt would Ignore the opportqnitielJ yQU know it, the ~ly thing that will knew the tiny military package on
of space for waging all-out war. JWit be allowed on space vehicles will be board was safe, .1, like . all
think, In ov lifetime there•will be military equipment."
. Americana, ~atbed asigh of relief:
weapons poised 'II&gt; in the heavens .
"Hi~p-boora~,:Omywifesald.
l~dtomywife,orwhoeverwas
aimed at any tal'l!et '011 the globe.
''Of cou~ we wo11't uie ours with me, "Fast~n your seat belt,
Man, by Just pressmg a button, will IIJ!lesstheyusethelrs. WI! don't want ~ baby. It'sa whole new !&gt;all ~arne."
to start a war. w~. just ;vant to deter

a , rii:~;1~~~
D

Betzlng aDd Jobn Aodenoo. Second row, left to rigbt,
Daany Robhuoo, Trvy Yallkwul, Joey Roush, Hank

ClelaDd, Chase Clelaod aod Chris Neece. Coaches were
George Kom aod Roger Young.

Rutland, .Racine post wins;
Cheshire shells Bidwell club

------

I

.

,n

are

'OJ flO IT RR

~.willA ~lfl:t~F.l•lf
MJ.H7l*e!

\

collected the only two Tiger hits.
The second game of the evening
proved to be one of the best games of
the tourney as two fine teams in
Racine and Tuppers Plains hooked
up in a great battle.
David Amburgey dialed in on a
five hitter, going the distance for 8
strikeouts and just two walks
enroute to the triumph. Bryan Durst
started for T.P. while Eddie Collins
came on to finish the game. That duo
combined for eight strikeouts and
one walk.
Racine took a I~ lead in the first
inning on a home run by Brian Diehl.
The lteds opened their lead to ~ in
the third on a double to David McMillian and back-t&lt;&gt;-hack triples by
Mark Porter and Diehl.
Tuppers Plains hung on to tighten
the score in the fourth frame when
Brent Bissell started things of( with
a home run. Jamie Myers singled
and Scott Fitch, who reached on a
force play, cam home on an error.
Despite a threat in the fifth by T.P.,
Amburgey buckled down to strike
out the side in the sixth inning.
Brian Diehl carried the big bat for
Racine with a triple and home run,
Shannon Riffle tripled, Mark Porter
tripled, David McMillian doubled,
and David Amburgey singled. For
the tough Tuppers Plains Tigers

"I know when they left, there
were no plans on either part to talk
between now and then," Brown
said. "We talked most of the day
(Wednesday) . We weren't able to
come to an agreement, so they've
left and gone on. The numbers are
different on both sides, but we're
still some distance apaut."
The NFL Management Councll
has Instructed clubs to cease negotl·
allons with unsigned pla)lt!rs when
the union ccntract expires because
the PLayers' Association has said It
will no longer waive Its legal right
to negotiate the Individual con·
tracts of Its members.

Bissell hit a home run, while Bryan
Durst, Eddie Collins, Jeff Caldwell
and Jamie Myers each singled.
In the finale, Cheshire outslugged
unbeaten Bidwell 15-8 as both clubs
brought out the heavy artillery with
a total of 19 hits.
Cheshire broke away from a 7-7 tie
in the fourth inning to post the win.
Mike Bradbury and Elmer
Spaulding combined for the victory
with seven strikeouts and five walks.
Callihan and Edwards teamed up
for Bidwell to register nine
strikeouts and 10 walks.
For the winners Loveday had two
home runs and a triple, Spaulding
had a triple, home run, and single;
while Bradbury singled twice.
Lucas, Reese, and Hodge each added singles for the victors.
Callihan hit a home run and
singled for Bidwell, Smith doubled
and singled, Boggs singled twice,
while Glassburn and Edwards each
singled.
Tonight's second round play continues with Buchtel meeting
Albany's Farmers; Nelsonville
taking on Gallipolis' Padres; and
Pomeroy Powells lakin on the
Racine Royals. The first game
beginsat6:15.

to come to a head untU September.

SWIMMING
MOSCOW (AP) -Vladimir Sal·
nlkov of the Soviet Union swam the
400-meter freestyle In three min·
utes, 49.57 seconds to equal his own
own world record In the event atthe
Sovtet Championships In Kiev.

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The Jaymar Golf Club held Its
weekly ladles day Tuesday wtth 14
women attending. Following a
short business meeting, 18 holes of
golf was played with prtzes going to
Grace Elch and Donna Jean, low
net team; Mrs. Elch, low net;
Peggy Moore, low gross; and Jane
Brown and Peggy Moore, low
putts.

l
II

!USPS 145-9101
uf MuiUmt"dl•. In&lt;'.

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1\

r~,l:~~~~~~~~~

•

:

•.

The Daily Se ntin el

Two softball tournaments for girls Team trophies will be awa rded for
have been scheduled by the Wellston first, second, third and fourth places
with individual trophies for the winRecreation Department.
A double-elimination tournament nin~ team . Also, a "Most Hits"
for girls up to age 12 (not 13 before trophy and an "MVP" trophy will be
Aug . I) will begin Sunday, Aug. I. A
team. lo members of the winning
double-elimination tournament for awarded
For further information ca ll Sue
girls 13 to 15 (not 16 before Aug. I)
will begin Sunday, July 25. Drawing Oths 384-2642 or Carrol Dixion 384for the 13 to 15 year old tournament 6965.
will be Wednesday, July 21 at 7 p.m . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
at Blamer Field in Wellston.
Drawing for under 13 year old
tournament will be Wednesday, July
28, at 7 p.m. at Blamer Field in
Wellston.
Entry fee is $40 plus two softballs.

Henderson said he will probably
call a news ccnference sometime
next week, but he would not
elaborate..
U the NFL Players Association
does not extend the waiver, Collins
and the unsigned rookles could
have to walt untU the league and the
union settle their labor negotla·
lions. Those talks aren't expected

!

(

..I..

with Nelsonville. Game time for
both twinbills is 1 p.m.
Friday Meigs enters the American
l..&lt;gion Tournament at Athens for
first round play.
Linescore :
023 012 000-8 15 2
Meigs
000 010 000-1 4 I
Parkersburg

in the second inning when Terry
Wayland singled , Jeff Wayland
walked, and Roger Kova lchik
reached on an error to load the
bases.
Southerner Tony Riffle quickly
responded with a tw&lt;&gt;-run double
that gave Meigs the first lead.
Jeff Wayland's back-breaking
home run over the left field fence
with Jerry Field and Terry Wayland
aboard via walks came in the third
inning. That particular blow forced
the wind from Parkersburg's sails,
while Meigs built up a head of
steam.
Meigs went on to score a si ngle run
in the fifth and two more in the sixth,
while its foe scored its lone run in the
fifth .
Meigs hitters were Terry Wayland
with three singles to pave the way,
Jeff Wayland a home run and single,
King, Fields and Wolfe with two
singles, and Tony Riffle a double .
Joe Bob Hems ley, Roger
Kovalchik and Steve Skidmore each
added singles. Parkersburg hitters
were Kiser and two singles and
Wilson, Gibbs a single each.
Meigs travels to Lancaster Saturday for a double header, then returns home Sunday for two more games

Wellston Recreation Dept.
sponsors girls' tournaments

First round choice hopes to sign
CINCINNATI (AP) - Bengals
first-round draft choice Glen Col·
llns says he stUI has hopes of sign·
lng with· the team despite today's
deadline tor signing of rookles and
free agents.
The defensive lineman !rom Mls·
slsslppl State said In a telephone In·
tervlew that he Is not discouraged
after the failure of a Wednesday
session between his agent, Harry
Henderson, and Mike Brown, Ben·
gals' assistant general manager.
"At least It (the Bengals' offer)
did Improve. Any sign of improvement Is good,'' he said.
But Henderson satd It' s not good
enough.
"We came up ~ere today to make
a deal with the Bengals," the New
Orleans attorney said. "We're just
extremely disappointed It didn't
workout. We'remuchchoser (than
before) but we're stU! pretty tar
apart."
Neither side saw much chance of
a breakthrough before tonight's
deadline.

-~

w1l l llt ·~:t \' l'll ntrncr l'iH 'h month.

!

,

\

SYRACUSE - During exciting
second round action of the Bill Hubbard Memorial Little League Tour·
nament Wednesday night, Rutland
and Cheshire scored decisive victories over their opposition while
Racine's Reds edged Tuppers Plains
3-2.
Good hitting, pitching, and defense highlighted the . competition,
although a combination of the three
formed the foundation for the night's
second game between Tuppers
Plains and Racine.
In the opener Rutland scored an 89 run-away victory over the
Gallipolis Tigers, scoring all eight
runs in a lengthy second inning.
Near perfect pitching played the
biggest part in Rutland's victory as
Michael Bartrum and Norman combined for 16 strikeouts and only three
walks.
The duo fanned all but six of the
batters they fa ced enroute to post
the win. Thomas and Hansen shared
pitching duties for Gallipolis.
Hansen came on in the second inning to put out the fire and pitched a
fine game the rest of the way.
Rutland hitters were Michael Bartrum with a perfect night including
two doubles and a single, Norman a
triple, Sisson two singles, and Hutton two singles. Hansen and Sigman

By SCOTT WOLFE
PARKERSBURG ·- · Meigs'
American Legion base)lall team continued Its late season victory march
with an undisputed l-llriwnph over
the highly acclaimed Parkersburg
North team hereWednesday night at
City park.
Alengthy stri'l!l of Meigs victories
runs Meigs' record to a fine 17-7
overall.
Meigs hurler Phil King hurled a
four-hitter, while tearrunates backed
his fine pitching effort with a potent
olfensive punch. King slammed the
door on Parkersburg hitters, besides
pulling the plug for 7 strikeouts and
only two walks.
Good control and placement kept
the defenders off guard most of the
evening.
Meanwhile, Meigs was having a
field day at he plate with I hits.
Meigs' aggressive hitting-style emptied the Parkersburg bullpen in an
attempt to cool off the winners' bats.
West started for Parkersburg,
however Shoemaker came on in the
fourth. Later Stanley was called
upon in the seventh and Foggin in
the ninth. The quartet fanned sill and
walked seven.
Meigs broke a scoreless deadlock

-

tr

(I( aJ/1/e(Hff! 01/.Y

.\

The .Daily Sentinel--¥age 3.

P~y-MidcllepO.t~ Ohio

Thu!Sday, July 15,1982

Prilflrfty'Wwie•

PM. m ·ttSI
'

.......,..,..o.

3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

'

..

I

�•.

Thursday, July 15,1982

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CINCINNATI (AP ) - It hasn't
been decided who_will replace Infielder German Barranca, who was
sent down to the Indtanapolls Indians of the Amer ican Association,
the Cincinnati Reds say .
Barranca, '1fS, of Mexico, batted
.'1fS5 In 46 games for Cincinnati this
season with two runs batted ln.
Barranca came to Cincinnati In
Jan11ary 1981 in a trade that sent
outllelder Cesar Geronimo to the
Kansas City Royals of the American League .

•PI&amp; 65•

~.

CT.

'The second roimd of swimming
lessons at London Pool in Syracuse
will get underway Monday Paige
Cleek, mamiger announced ($y.
·Ten lessons wDl be given for $l2
and perSons are to register at the
pool Saturday from 9 a.m. untll
noon .

IIIi'- - :·

·&amp;EIERIC

'

ILlIIIII

2 QT•.FOOIIIlL
•

*6'!

I LIVES
•

•

67! ·

Former major leaguer Jensen dies

PLAY SUITS
$499 EACH

BAILEY'S SHOES

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All UGALIMUGES SOLD .

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Prices Vtry By Applicat ion

Pw Plul Aulc•car,n·~-------~

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Point ·Pieasa~t Auto P~rts fi.~uto:=

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Lessons being offered are basic
resuce, age 11 to 15, from 9 a.m. to
10 a .m.; advance beginners, 10
a.m. to 11 a.m.; beginners, age 5 to
7,11 a.m. unto noon; mother-chlld,
newborn to five, noon untU 1 p.m.;
adult les,!IOIIS from 7 p.m. to 8 p.r_n . .

I

12 Qts . of Valvollne

12

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Llmlt

WE.ARE COMMimD
TO

UTEI , .,

City and given the starting left field
job. Hurdle never hit, forcing the
Reds to resort to backup players
and rookies to flU in.
They hoped center fielder Cesar
Cedeno. acquired from Houston for
Ray Knight, would assume the
clean-up role vacated by George
Foster. Cedeno Is hitting .302. best
among the regulars, but he's driven
In just 36 runs and Is only 8-of-11\n
stolen base attempts.
Rookie right fielder Paul Householder also has failed to live up to
expectations so far, batting just
.188.
Then there's third baseman
Joluiny Benet\, suffering through
one of his worst seasons. Without '
the rigors of catching taking a toll
on his body. the Reds hoped Bench
would Increase his offensive production . Instead, he's batting just
.227 with fi ve home runs and 18
RBIS.

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

)

UIIES'

whelming pitching start, the Reds
have only one winning pitcher 18-5
CINCINNATI (AP)- How could
Marlo Soto) on the roster.
Instead of a team with [mproved
one of the best teams In major
speed and better defense against
league baseball become one of the
baserunners. the Reds have a
worst In just one year?
It's simple. The Cincinnati Reds
worse stolen base percentage than
of 1981, which compiled the best rea year ago. (They've stolen 52ln 85
cord In major league baseball, as ;- attempts, compared to 58 of 95 In
they' re fond of reminding eve1981.) Meanwhile, opponents have
ryone, bear. little resemblance to
stolen 82 bases In 111 attempts.
Instead of a team \hat wins close
the Reds of 1982, which have the
second-worst record In baseball.
games, the Reds are just 10-15 in
President Dick Wagner over· one-run decisions.
hauled the ba llclub last winter,
Instead of a team that's a contender In the National League
trading two All-Star outfielders and
an AU-Star third baseman, .and a l- West, the Reds are mired In last
towing his leadoff hitter and prime
place, ~ games below the .500
base stealer to leave as a free
mark on a pace that would have
agent. What he had In mind Instead . them finish the season 62-100.
was building a team thai relied on
What went wrong?
pitching, defense and speed.
To start with, Reds managemem
Halfway through the season, the took several gambles that have not
experiment has failed.
panned out. First, outfielder Clint
Instead of a team with an over- Hurdle was acquired from Ka nsas

SCOTI'SVll..LE. Va. (AP) York Yankees in 1950, was traded
Cornia , a nd h~ later became a radioFormer outfielder J~c~ieJensen , a to the Washington Senators ear ly In
TV sportscaster. He also coached
member of three American League the 1952 season a nd played with the
baseba ll at the University of
All-Star teams and the league's Boston Red Sox from 1954-61.
Nevada-Reno and the University of
Most Valuable Player In 1958, Is
In his MVP year, Jensen batted
California, where he had bl'en a
dead of a heart a Itack at Ihe age of .286 with 35 homers and 122 RBI. He
football star .
55.
drove In more than 100 runs five
Jensen's wife Katherine. said her times .
Goes to Kent State
husband complained of feeling W
Jensen was plagued throughout
Tuesday evening when he returned
his career by a fear of flying, which
CHILDREN'S
KENT- Meigs High baseball star
from the s ummer baseball camp contributed to his retirement In 1959
Terry Wayland ha s decided Ill at· he operates at nearby Fork Union a t the age of 32. He returned to Red
TERRY QOTH
tend Kent. State, head coach Bob Military Academy. During the Sox In 1961, hit .263 with 13 hom ers
Morgan announced Wednesday .
night, she said, he woke up with
and 66 RBI, then retired for good .
Wayland, a catcher, was named to chest pains and died en route to the
Jensen's death came two months
6 . 12 - 18 Mo.
the SEOAL All-League team as a University of VIrginia Hospital In
after he had participated In the Red
juninr, the last season batted .377 in Charlottesville.
Sox' Old Timers Game a.t Fen way
~game~ .
Jensen had also suffered a heart
Park. He was also scheduled to parLast season the Golden Flashes. in attack in 1969.
tlclpate In the Cracker Jack Old TiMorgan's first year as head coach.
In an 11-year major league camers Classic In Washington, D.C.
set numerous records enroutc to a reer, Jensen batted .279 with 199honext Monday.
35-23 recnrd, but best in the schnol 's mers and 929 runs batted ln . He
After he retired, Jensen was a
,M ID D LEP OR T OHI OI
history.
began his career with the New
part-owner of a golf course in Call,-----------------------------------'---------'----

Swimmiilg lessons will begin Monday

BURGER
BUIS

ICE .

Barranca
dropped

mates a ,c hance to get together and talk about how an lmpetuous shipbullder ttom Tampa, Fla., had affected their respective baseball careers.
George Steinbrenner's ears had to be stinging.
"Sure, I miss New York- I miss the fans, my friends, the guys," said
Reggle Jackson, whose home run bat and crowd appeal gave sparkle to
the New -York Yankees before Steinbrenner, by default, let him slip away
to the California Angels.
"Now 1 am happier and more relaxed than I've been in years. The
controversies and needling from upstairs kept me always tense while I
was a Yankee."
Tall talented Dave Winfield, whom Steinbrenner hoped would fill the
Jacks~n void, needect less than two years to learn that even a $22 mutton
contract couldn't save him from slmllar pressures.
Last month, after Wtnrleld accused Steinbrenner of balking on a written
pledge to provide funds for the Winfield Foundation's underprivileged
kids, the boss lashed out at his highly paid lefttlelder. ·
"I am disappointed In Winfield," Steinbrenner said. "He Is not a superstar but just a good player. He can't carry a club the way Reggie could."
Wintleld appeared more amused than chagrined by this crltlclsin when
he suited up at Montreal's Olympic Stadium Tuesday night for baseball' s
one-day, midsummer spectacle.
"That's funny," he said. "!remember when Steinbrenner told Jackson
when he was still a Yankee: 'Why can' t you be a ballplayer like Dave
Winfield?' Reggie remembers that, too."
After Steinbrenner's upbraldjng, Winfield went on a hitting tear on the
Yankees" recent road trip, hitting six home runs in six games and breaking
a perilous Yankee skid.
,
·
Some baseball observers insisted that Winfield was responding to an old
Steinbrenner trick - embarrass a guy In public and he'll take aut his anger
on the b3n.
.
"That's stupid," said Jackson, who was one of the top yote-getters
among outfieldlers. "It never workelithat way with me. In fact, It had the
reverse effect.
' ·
.
·
"! only recall one exception. George yelled at the ball club and the next
day I went out and got a home run.- I think 1~ was sutx:onsclous."
Winfield sflld he did not hear about George's statement untU he returned
East from his recent West Coast trip -after he had gone on his home run
spree.
r
·
"I don' t worry about what he says," the 6-foot-6, 220-pourxf millionaire
said. "I am a damned good ballplayer. I do my job. I don't create problems. I get my numbers."
Big Dave's numbers are better than creditable In view of the fact that
the Yankees have been fiounderlng in the American League East
Through the All-Star break, he was batting .295 with 15 hOme runs and 47
runs batted ln.
.
Meanwhile, Jackson, who seems to have a faculty fm: lr!spiring championship performances (tbree World Series crowns with the Oakland A's
before joining the Yankees), has been a motivating force for the Angels,
strongly j,n contention In the AL West. Although batting only .'1fS7, he has~
home runs and f7 RBI.
1
"I got off tb a bad start," Reggie said. "I think I was pressing too much. I
wanted to show everybody I could stlll play. But Gene Mauch (manager)
kept me in there and Buzzy Bavasl ('Angel president) kept calling and
assuring me t)Ml team had con1ldence In me.
"If I had got.off to that bad a start with the Yankees, ttley would have
]1randed me. E"'Uer this year when I gol'a home run off Ron Guidry,
George called me an aging lett-handed hitter who can't hit fa.Stball
pitchers."
Reggie ~dmitted that he had counseled Winfield not to be discouraged
but to remain patient.

EXTRA
ACTIO I

TIDE

GERMAN BARRANCo\

MONT~AL (AP) -The 53rd All-Star,Game gave two former team-

.SOllER

FOOTWEAR SPORTSWEA

fJ

By JOE KAY

••
"
••

CIILDREI'S

.

AP Sports Writer

Sports World

•

.

.

Today's

..•

LUIICH

pitching, speed have
not panned out for ·C.incinnati

CINCINNATI (AP)- ThelmageoftheClnclnnatl Reds lmproved
steadily during the 1970s as they became known as the "-Big Red
Machine," and attendance grew with the Image.
But, the l~ge Is gone, and so are ma!ly of the fans.
Attendance. peaked at an average of 34,795 per game through the
first .35 home games In 1976, the year the Reds won their second
stralgh~ World Series. The crowds dropped an average of about 2,000
per game during the next two years and have fallen steadUy since.
This year, an average of 18,857 fans watched the Reds during the
first 35 home games. That's about the same average number of fans
who watched the club during the early part of the 1971 season.
In a recent series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Reds drew
crowds ranging from 27,236 to 17,901. A 5erles againstthe Dodgers in
1977 drew three crowds of more than 50,000, close to sellouts.
Roger Ruhl, vice president of marketing for the Reds, said the rise
and fall of ticket sales Is the nature of the business.
"I don't know of any business that Is affected by as many variables
as ours," he said. "The economy and the quality of the product are
variables. Add to those the weather, winning and losing, and the
things that affect your performance, such as injuries ... balls lost In
the lights. We're kind of a unique Industry In that respect. 'We're a
unique kind of product with hlgh highs and low lows."
The Reds' fortunes in the middle 1970s was a high high, he said.
"We enjoyed some huge attendance success over the years," Ruhl
sald .."When you say our attend.ance Isn't as good as It was In 1975and
1976, you have to realize that that team was one people talk about in
the same breath with the '27 Yankees and the '55 Dodgers."
Ruhl said ll the· Reds can turn around in the second half of the
•
season, ~ fans wW return.
"Fans love a team that comes from behind," he said "We feel
we're on our way to putting together a hUstling, exciting ball club."

FilS.

C COLA

Trad~s,

Image now gone
fans missing too

20 IICI.
2 SPEEI'I,

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

POMI;:R()Y
119 w. 2nd

MASO"N

.992-2139.

773-5511

.

.

Route 33
•

Parts Plus autostor.a. ... Thlre'l
, one.- voul

515 Main St.
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SALE ENDS 7 18·82

�.'
'

Thu11day, July 15,1982 .

master's

Albert Dlltes, minister of Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventist Church, plans to have his master's degree
lrom Ohio University In journalism by Augu!il of 1983.

degre~

By SALLYANNE HOLTZ
Sentinel staff
Albert Dlttes hopes to· have his
master's degree from Ohio University by August of 1983.
That In ll~lt Is not unu sual. What
Is unusual IS that Albert Dlttes has
been pastor of Pomeroy Seventliday Adventist Church for the past
five years and an Adventist miniS·
ter for the past 11 ~ years. And now
he wants a degree In joumallsm.
But the Devil didn't make hlm do
It God dld.
"I think public reltlons has been
the strength of my ministry, both
Inside and outside the church,"
Dlltes says. "I want to get the gospel to the blg media and believe I
can be even more effective with a
degree."
So, In June of thiS year, Pastor
Dlttes packed up his belongings
and hls five years with the
Pomeroy-Athens conference, and
went off to graduate school at OU,

program
is thattothe
can be
reprogrammed
do brain
the things
it
was supposed to do in the first place.
The Ords arrived at the Institute
on June 14 and in just one week learned more about their son's disability
than they had in nearly two years.
Reid is blind, but hJs eyes are sensitive to light. Candy explains, which
means that the cella are there to he
used, if Reid could only learn how to
use them. The same holds for the
rest of his body, which is strong and
healthy, despite hJs brain injury.
"Reid doesn't do. anyihing now,"
Candy says. He.can't craw, let alone
walk, and he can't cry, let alone talk,
because - as d~ and staff
members •t the lntltltute have told
, hill Jlllrenta ~ he hils never learned

hoiv.
While at the Institute, Reid was
given a ' progrun which the Ords
hope will teach him these things.
The two-year program, which is
persOnalized for e~~ch child ac-

cording to his or her specific needs,
is "very long and very strict," Can·
dy says. "You must follow it completely.
Reid's program involves five dif·
ferent exercises which must be
repeated a number of times
throughout the day. Candy has
calculated that the daily routine wiU
lake over 12 hours and at the first of
this week, when Reid started the
home program, she had determined
that if they began at 7 a.m., Reid and his mom - should be able to
take a well deserved rest at 8 that
night
The exercises involve several
pieces of equipment tha the Ords
constructed themselves from
diagrams given to them by the Institute, hence the living roomturned-gyhl. Furthennore, the exercises require that three · JJ!!Ople be
with Reid at all times. So far, tOO
friends and neigh~rs in the Bend
Area have signed up for shifts and if
enough volunteers are found, Candy
hopes that no one will have to donate
more than several hours a week.
The exercises include patterning,
which involves moving the child's
arms, legs and head to simulate a
crawling motion. The eKercises,
which must be repeated 15 times a
day, is designed to teach Reid to
craw and walk .
Masking is done 63 times a day by
placing a breathing mask over
Reid's nose and mouth . This process
sends increased doses of much
needed OKygen - "food for the
brain" and blood to the brain.
The Incline Plane is used as a
motivation tool. Reid is placed at the
top of a slide of sorts and the incline
makes it easier for him to "crawl"
to the bottom. Because of Reid's
visual problems, he cannot see the
hottom and his mother, the other
workers and whomev.er else has
stopped by to visit, must stand at the
bottoma and verbally encourage or cheer on- the hoy. This exercise
is repeated 20 times a day.
The sound box - referred to by
neighborhood children as "Beulah
the Buzzer" - is a contraption
which features four 1,000 watt bulbs
under a piece of plexiglass and a
loud buzzer which is activated - in
total .darkness - _every five seconds
over a three-minute period. Reid is
place on the box which not only helps
his pupils dialate but teaches him
the emotion of fear as well.
"We don't want to scare him,"
Candy says, "but fear is vital to life.
Right now Reid has a startle reflex,
he jumps at everything, but he
should cry to let us know he is
frightened." The sound box exer·
cise, like the other, is repeated
throughout the day, and Reid clearly
does not like it. In six months, Caridy
·says, the startle reflex should have
stopped and he should be
proclaimingtheirritationloudly.
The fifth exercise involves a
checkerboard · square crawling
bo;trd. The squares are black and
white, Candy says, because when

Reid does begin to see those ar,e the
colors he will be able to distinguish
first. The hoard, which has sides
about six incheshighallaround it, is
where Reid does his own work with
no help, but lots of ·encouragement,
from his friends. Not only is he put
on the hoard six times a day, but he
sleeps there, under a pulsating light,
as well. The idea, Candy says, is that
if he wakes up in the middle of the
night, he has the opportunity to
crawl if he wants to.
Throughout all of the exercises,
the Ords and the volunteers who
work with Reid talk to him and tell
him everything they are doing. And
he is constantly rewarded with much
love and companionship.
In additon to the exercises, Reid
has been put on a n~trition program
- no salt, no sugar and only 20 ounces of liquid a day.
There are a few more "don'ts," as
well. Reid is not allowed to sit up or
lie on his back (he is place in an anti·
roll jacket at night) because the InJ&gt;titute believes these two functions
are simply side roads on the straight
pathfromcrawlingtowalking.
But for all the hard work, the outcome will be worth it many times
over.
The Ords return to the Institute in
September where staff members
will determine if Reid has met his
three-month goals:
- To see outline in some details.
- To,craw 19 feet.
- To understand words.

Your ' 1E:wtra Touctl "
Florist Since 19S7

)lAo/WU..~
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PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pomer~;~y
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r---;;::;::;::;::;::;::::;::;::;::~======~~~~;:::::1

CARPENTER - Central
executive committee, Meigs
County Democrat Club, 8 p.m.
· Thursday evening , Carpenter's
Union hall.

I

POMEROY - A microwave
demonstration by Bob Miller,
Hotpolnt representative, will be
held Thursday from 1 to 3: 30
p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church, 321 E. Second St.,
Pomeroy. The demonstration Is
being sponsored by Meigs
County Farm Bureau Women
and the public Is Invited to at·
tend, There..will be light re(reshments and a door prize will be
awarded.
POMEROY - Guest speaker
at the Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church Thursday will be
Steve Shover of Glouster. Rev.
Earl Fields, pastor, invites the
public to attend.

.f•

FRIDAY

as
and Reid,"
ds. for
"Heourselves
wonts a brother
whoshe
canadbe
a friend, not a br:other who lies in
bed, or in a nursing home, all day
long."
What Candy and Dick Ord have in
mind for their younger son is that he
become the best he can be. They are
optimistic, but they are also

cautious
in their
expectations.
.. don't
want
to put Reid
1
someplace,"
Candy
"I want
be able to take
caresays.
of' him,
and toI
want him to be able to take care of
himself.,
"I want him to be the best he can
be, whatev.er that might be. If he can
be even two y~ars better, it will all
beworlh
Candy it."
wants other parents to
know what she and her husband
have discovered _ that the Institute
for the Achievement of Human
Potential offers hope for children
such as Reid, who at 19 months has a
neuralogical age of 2 months, but at
two years could surpass "well

'·BUY
SQUARE
YARDS
OF
CARPET
AND
RECEIVE
A
MAN'S
OR
LADIES'
WATCH
FREE!!

POMEROY - Meigti High
School Class of 1978 will ineet
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the Meigs
Inn to plan a fifth year reunion.
All gradliates are asked to at·
tend.

II,

Pastor Robert Byers and Family
INVITES YOU
TO ATTEND

STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Co. Rd. 28
(Bald Knob-Stiversville Rd.)
Stiversville, Ohio

HARRISONVILLE and Columbia Granges will be holding
Inspection on Friday preceded
by a dinner at 7 p.m. Ruby Halll·
day, a 75 year member, will be
honored. AU Grange members
are Invited to attend.
CHESHIRE - Free clothing
day for low Income persons will
be held by the Gallla· Meigs
Community Action Agency Friday from 9 a.m. to noon. The
agency's clothing bank Is now located In the old highschool build·
lng In Cheshire.

REGULAR WEEKLY SERVICES:
Sunday School
10:00 a.m.
Preaching
10:00 a.m.
Sunday Evening
7:30p.m.
Wednesday Evening
7:30 p.in .
For further information or if we can be of help to you
ca II 949·2673.

INDEPENDENT-FUNDAMENTAL-EVANGQ.ISTIC-MISSION MINDED

-Andtolethisparentsknowwhe~ ,....!:!!!.!!l!!:!!::.~!llJL..-------lL-:.....;.-------;============~===

he is frightened.
If Reid meets the first goal, to see
outlines, he will be put on a reading
progam, according to his dad, Dick.
In two years, Candy and Dick hope
Reid will be walking and talking and
eventually, according to Candy,
"There is no reason in the world that
he can't lie perfectly normal."
The Institute, she says, does not
make promises, but of those
children who have completed the
course, very few have failed. She
cites the case of a man they met who
was on the staff atthe Institute.
"He seemed as normal as you and
me - he was as normal." Later,
they discovered that he h~d been
brain injured at birth and after
receiving therapy at the Institute for
the Achievement of Human Potential, went on to gradllllte from high
school an!! go to college.
The Institute, she says, does not
expect their "graduates" to be
average, it expects them to be
superior.
The Ords are already excited and
encouraged by what Reid has

NEASE; SEITLEMENT
Rev, Audie McKinney will preach
at Nease Settlement Church at
7:30p.m. Thursday.

"The opportunity was there and I
had to take It," Dlttes concludes.
''If I hadn't gone back, I would have
always regretted It.
"But It was something I never
dreamed I could do," he adds
shyly.

re axmg more n e ever . s.
. E~~·~ ~di/vho ~!~{ ~~e first~
1 a _e PIa a~
15?P,Dren t'
lR
·:Ha~ Reid been ~~ed yet. 1 ~hge ·
t~n~ lR on~he act Cha~t~~wsd er~
IS somct mg wron~ WI
el an.
although he d~sn t ~ders~~ ~~
~m!,'etely, .~~ 15 aruuous toR
h .~ y: y \· e e:~~ragdestel~ 1h ....
e s ow lm a
an
lm
what
it is."
"We'redoingthisforChad,aswell

1

THURSDAY

~tors.

acrie~ed. He istl~;;a~ling fu~er and

Pomerey-Middlepor!, Ohio

Calendar

Master's degree, Dlttes plans to do
just that.
HIS long-term goals are currently
rather "u~ In the air," In more
ways than one. He hopes to go Into
church conference publlc relations
(AdventiSt churches are organized
Into conferences), Adventist hospl·.
tal PR or, "If all else falls, go back
Into the pastorate." He has not d~
clded If he will remain In the area.
Meanwhile, Dlttes says he's right
at home 'm,his classes. "[ rnay be
older than some of my fellow students, but I don't feeltt:" He spends
his weekends - ·at least tor nowdoing guest sermons for other

New Haven youth fights for normal _life
By JUDY OWEN
'
Special to Sentinel
Tile Uvlng room In Candy and Dick
Ord's home in New Haven Is more
suited to workouls than casual convel'lilllioa.ll resembles more a mintgymnasium thana.slttlngarea.
And from the cheers drifting from
that room, you'd think someone was
training fora fight.
.
If you know the Orcis, you know
that someone in their family Is in
training. Nineteen-month-old Reid 18
training for the fight of bls IUe -the
rtgblfor We.
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - When
Reid Ord was one month old, doctors
at Children's Hospital in Columbus,
Ohio, pulled the plug on the
respirator which had sustained his
tiny body since his brith on Oct 29,
1980. And then they told his parents
to "pray for him to die."
What happened neKt, according to
his mother, was just short of a
miracle. The baby who had suffered
a stroke as a result of asphyxiation
during the birth process - the baby
who doctors prediCted would never
be able .to do anything on his own,
would never even live without the
respirator - took a breath. And then
he took another, and another.
The doctors changed their chant,
but it was not much more en·
couraging. "Don't take him home ...
d9n't get too attached. There is no
hope."
'That was something Candy Ord
just could not believe. "Where there
is life, there is hope," she says now.
"I wasn't going to give up. I could
see a drive and determination intu
R,eid and I knew he wasn't go in~ to
give up either ... So far he hasn't."
:When Candy and Dick Ord did
take Reid home from Children's
Hospital, they began a year-and-a·
half long search for something- or
someone - to help him. "We went to
doctors everywhere," Candy says,
"and they all said they couldn:t help
Reid. We didn'tknow what to do."
What they did do was give their
son a lot of love and attention and
when, just by chance, they heard
about a brain-injured child in
Wisconsin who had been helped at
the Institute for the Achievement of
Human Potential in Philadelphia,
they packed up the family, int luding
Reid and his older brother, Chad, 3,
and headed for Pennsylvania.
What they found there has given
them the hope Candy has always
known would be found .
The Institute for the Achievement
of Hwnan Potential, an organization
which for 20 years has been
dedicated to helping brain injured
people, children in particular, is
rarely recommended by medical
doctors, but Candy feels that if her
son is going to get help, its going to
come from there. The Institute's
founder, Glenn Dorman, authored
"What To Do About Your Brain Injured Child," a book Candy says she
felt at once "was written just for
Reid."
The theory behind the Institutfs

Thunday, July 15,1982

in journalism ·

where he's already started accumulating hours toward his goal.
"A graduate degree had always
Interested me but I decided not to
go back to school while I was pas-'
torlng. I just couldn't putthe church
on a back-burner," Dlttes says.
But, Dlttes admlls, he couldn't do
II alone. HIS wife Is a teacher at
Hocking Technical College and hiS
children, ages 9 and 11, help out at
home. "They (the children) are
older now. My famlly responslblll·
ties aren't as great as they once
were, " Dlttes noted. "Even at that,
ll' s been a great adjusJment,for ail
of us.'' The support he gets from hiS
family, Dlttes says, Is Immense.
· Several things about IVork In pubHe relations were attractive to
Dtttes. "Communications has always been where my goals lle. I llke
to write, I like meeting people, and I
llke getting the . Adventist gospel
Into the newspaper. " And with hiS

.....

HARRISONVILLE
Inspection, Harrisonville and
Columbia Granges, 7 p.m. dinner
to precede the meeting. Ruby
Halliday, 75 year member, to be
honored. All grange members
urged to attend.

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Dance Friday at
Rutland Civic Center from 8 p.m.
to 11:30 p.m. Singles $2 and
couples $3. "Music Unlimited"
will provide the music.
MIDDLEPORT - Rev. J .
Wlllhotte of Wales will be
speaker at the missionary ser·
vice at 7: 30 p.m. Friday at Unl·
ted Pentecostal Church,
Middleport. Rev. Clark Baker,
pastor, Invites the public.

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Fourth annual
ice cream social at Salem Town·
ship Fire Department Saturday.
Serving will be from noon until 8
p.m. The menu includes
homemade ice cream, pie, cake,
roast beef sandwiches, hot dogs,
potato salad, macaroni salad and
baked beans. There will be live
music and games.
MASON, W. Va . - Meigs
County Retired Teachers Association will hold a picnic Satur·
day at 6 p.m. at Lewis Heritage
House, Mason. Members are to
take a covered dish and their
own table service.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - District 25
Howard's Stars annual picnic will
be held at Dodge Park, Beverly,
Sunday at 4 p.m. Bring covered
dish, table service and item for
an auction.
POMEROY - The annual
Matlack reunion wUI be Sunday,
July 18 at Lancaster fair·
grounds. AU members of the
farnlly and friends are welcome.

Astrograph
July 18, 1982
Although you may be tempted to go into other areas, your best luck
this coming year will be in fields with which you're familiar. Your base is
stronger than you think and will be enlarged upon as time progresses.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Sometimes you work very well under
pressure, but this is not likely to be one of those days. Keep your environment as calm as possible.
LEO (Jaly 23-Aug. ~t Your image is a trifle fragile today . Be very
careful how you conduct yourself, especially with those who might like to
see you trip.
·
VIRGO [Aug. 23-Sepl22) Try to steer clear of competitive situations
t&lt;iday,I(Specially where your work or career is concerned. You may find
you have ll'ore opposition than allies.
·
· LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23t Attempt to solve your problems today using
the same methods which were successful heretofore .. New techniques
could really gum things up.
SCOitPIO [Oet. 24-Nov. 22) Unfortunately, business cannot be con·
dueled today on a verbal agreement or handshake. Everything should be
. spelled'out in writing down to the smallest detail . .
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) If you wanl to make changes today
regarding things which affect only you that's OK, but be extremely
careful with alterations which could complicate matters for others.
CAPRICORN (Dec; 22-Jan. 19t Co-workers will not readily forgive
you today if they feel your work is holding up theirs or you're not meeting
your responsibilities.
., ,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2&amp;-Feb. 19) Don't step. lJl and try to manage
situations today uninvited. First, you may be out of your element and
. second, you might make everybody mad:
PISCES' (Feb. 2&amp;-Marcb 20t Try to be a factor in keeping everyone
calm at home today. Don't be the one who stirs things up. Family mem·
· hers could be a bit more tense than usual.
.
ARIES (March 2l·April19) Be careful about introducing changes intll
financial situations which are presently rupning smoothly. Your
.t: alh!rat:ions C(JUld worsen, not better them.
.'
TAURUS (Aprll2fi.May20) Be eJC!ra-careful',with your resources and
prized possessions today. Both money or,objects.could slip through your
fingers if you're reckless.
• .:
. .
GEMINI (May 21·June 20t Outsiders could cause you comphcahons
today if you permit them to pry into your perl!ooal affairs. The mess
they'd leave behind could proye costly.
'

..

The ()oily Sentinel--'y- 7 . .

Meigs area organizations hold meetings
Ente,.rprise
Youth Group
A potluck famlly picnic was held
recently by Ente ?rise Youth Fellowship at the home of Joyce Davis,
Rose Hill.
Charles Warth tended the grill
and Frankie Hunnel gave the blessIng. During the evening games
were played under the direction of
Darrin Warth, president, Including
a badminton tournament organized
by David Warth. Prizes were
awarded to the winning badminton
team, David Warth and Randy
Roble.
Attending were Art and Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hunnel, Darrin, Amy ,
David and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Warth, Chris and Mr. and Mrs.
Dale DaviS, Jo Ellen Crane, Val·
erie and Teresa Simpson, Randy,
Erica and Mrs. Jeanie Roble, Amy
Beth and BUI Brothers, Carol and
Phil Ohlinger, Helen, Emma Lou
and Joyce, Davis.

Rock Springs
Grange
Inspection was conducted by Mr.
and Mrs. Mendal Jordan, co-

deputies, at Tlwrsday night's meet· preparation for the Meigs County
ing of Rock Springs Grange in the Fair.
hall on the fairgrounds .
The first degree and obllgatlon of
the second degree was given for In·
spect!on with Lucille Leifheit, past
The Middleport Garden Club met
master, conducting the degree
at
the home of Mrs. Jenetle Haponwork.
stall
Monday, July 12, wtth Mrs. ArBarbara Fry gave a report on the
thur
Skinner prestdtng.
toy contest and needlework to be
Mrs.
Grace French read an art I·
held at the September Pomona
cte
entitled
"How to Grow Your
meeting. The legislative report was
Plants
Inside."
An invitation was
given by Pat Holter. Contributions
extended
for
the
club to attend the
were made to Pomeroy and ChesOhio
Garden
Club
Aug. 3,4,5 at
ter Fire Departments.
Columbus.
A display of ;;mall antiques was
Refreshments were served by
.on exhibit In keeping with the lee·
Mrs.
Skinner and Hallie Girkle beturer's program, "Progress." For
side
the
lighted pooL The group
roll call several meml;lers ans·
went
swimming
later.
wered with comments on progress
The
next
meeting
wUI be at the
In agriculture. Lottie Leonard gave
of
Mrs.
Michael
Fry for the
home
"Progress In Food Preservation"
annual
picnic.
It
wilt
be
potluck
and
and Louise Radford, "What Is Your
each
member
will
be
contacted.
Food Preserving I.Q.?" There was
a humorous reading by Nancy Rad·
ford. Kathy Parker, winner In a
safety speaking contest, gave
"Guns, ·Friends or Enemies."
There was a quiz by Ethel Grueser · Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Mrs.
and Beuna Grueser read "Don't Denver Weber, Mrs. Walter
Hang Up." The closing song was Brown, Mrs. Donald Myers, Mrs .
Roy Hannum, Mrs. Harllss Frank,
"God Bless America."
Mrs. Okey Connolly, members
and
Refreshments were served. The
of
the
Riverview Garden Club, renext meetlngwUlbeAug. 5atwhlch
· time the hall will be vacated tn cently toured the Park of Roses In

Middleport
Garden Club

Riverview
Garden Club

They're

~of

By HELEN BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN :
In our church there is an elderly
married man who engages in a very
open relationship with another
single church member. His wife i ~
loved and respected by all.
The man and the "other woman"
are constantly in each other's company. He takes her to and from
work, also does her household
chores and keeps her financially as
she has a low-paying job.
Because of this triangle, our chur·
ch is the target of much mockery.
People in the coJrununit)' gossip
about "the church prostitute" and

the "soap opera church." Th ey feel
we other members approve since we
let the "couple" hold church offices.
We only tolerate it because of the
work they do. Yes, we've been using
them as she uses him'
The situation is getting even rnnrl!
open, while the wife is left alone .
What can we do , after all these
years, to make our church respected
again?- CHURCH MEMBERS
-,
DEAR MEMBERS :
"As she uses him ... " I lake it ·you
blame only the "c hurch prostitute,"
wish she'd "do the right thing" and
disappear. [Which is considerably
less .Christian than condoning their

Resident observes first year
Andy 0. Doczt V, son of Barbara
and Andy Doczl IV, observed hls
ftrst birthday June 13 at his Syca·
more Street home.
The theme was clowns. Cakes
were baked by Andy's aunt, Mrs.
VIcki Haley. Helping him celebrate
were hJs grandparents, Mrs. Andy
DocziiJI and Mrs. Ronald Young,
great-grandparents, Mrs. Robert
Caruthers and Mrs. John Young.
Others attending were Mrs.
Jackie Searles and Shannon, Todd
and Bllly Doczl, Mr. and Mrs. Ancll
Cross, lleath and Ancle II, Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Haley and . Cortney
Leanne, Kathy Haley, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenny Wilt, Julie Mourning
and Mrs. Fred Giles.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Caruthers Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Laudermllt, Mrs. Betty
Glass, Mr. and Mrs. Eddy Manley

ana Mr . and Mrs . James
Mourning.

oa:

affair. I
Your buard hHs two ehDicc.s:

Either censor both persons and strip
them of their dul ies or a~ree the
dlUrch shouldn't try tu regulate
privatL' lives. I've an idea the wife
would prefer the latter - better

Perhaps the reason Americans
have so many sexual dysfunctions is
that they were largely raised with
fear and loathing of their genitals.
Future generations should have
fewer problems - Jet's hope! - H.

gossip than an open sca ndal. Whn
knows? She may even approve thi :-;

lnng-lasting fri endship.- H.

SHOE
SALE!

DEAR HELEN:
After 25 yearH, my wife said, "No
Jnore sex, ever !" Thinks we're t041
nld for such " fonlishncss," and I
should act my age . I envy the man
whn wrote that his wife demanded
he give up bonze and c1ga rettes and
start helping at home, before she'd
share his bed again . All east he has a
chance for a reprieve. I have none.
What does a man do when he's still
ready but his mate is throug h? NOT COMPLETELY DIMINISHED
DEAR NOT:
He usually looks elsewhere. Ask
your wife if she has considered this.

- H.

$500
AND HALF PRICE

DEAR HELEN: ·
I was brought up to think lllastur·
bation was a terrible sin . New books
and therapists say it's nkay, even in
marriage, and can help the wife
reach urgas11 1 whl're solllelimcs a

husband can't.
Is this true' - TRYING TO
CHANGE
DEARTTC :
True. Masturbation i:, no Jnnge r a
dirty word. Today it's cunsidered a
nurmal part of life, but old

HERITAGE
HOUSE
OF SHOES
Middleport

prejudices linger.

Warehouse-Sale
LAST 2 WEEKS
..
'

':J .'Yo.'ll·..c:.........
.
ill
.. ,

.: li!r/ate
,.·
-.:...
b Nete.
:.
1
.
···
oett&gt;
.
:
==--...;._.-.;.;.,; ...'!te
_. ;

Everythmg ···· ··· .. .:' ·Must
,..".
'-'\.'----=Go.::__-...~/ /A~
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•.
1

&lt;
LADlES AND GIRLS SUMMER
·TOPS, SHORTS and DEE CEE PANTS

A potluck dinner was enjoyed by
members and guests of the United
MethodiSt Women of ReedsvUle
Church held at the home of Mrs .
VIolet Satterfield with Mrs. Sandy .
Cowdery as co-hostess.
Devotions were conducted by
Mrs. Cowdery and Mrs. Satterfield
who played recorded music and
used the topic, "Friendship." The
Lord's Prayer was given in unison .
and scripture was read by Mrs.
Marlene Putman. Mrs. VIvian ·
Humphrey closed with prayer.
During the business meeting con·
dueled by Mrs. Dolly Reed, pres!·
dent, a thank you note was received
from Mrs. Pat Martin for Dowers
and cards received while she was
hospitalized. Seventy-eight shutln
calls were reported. Cards were
signed for several of the shutlns.
A scavenger hunt was held with
Mrs. Barbara Masters and Mrs.
Putman as winners. September
meeting wlll be In the church basement with Mrs. Ericka Boring and
Mrs. Marlin as hostesses.

use' to church so affair overlooked

/ \~'f?'l:-riJ. ~
'+-0 ~ -:..~4' /

.

Reedsville UMW

Helen help us

~....

'

Columbus. A potluck ptcnlc super
wlll be held at the Bellevllle Locks
and Dam Park on July 22 at 6:ll
p.m.

Everything
Reduced

0
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COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER
LIMIT ONE ROLL WITH COUPON
EXCLUDING PORTFOLIO 35

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VILLAGE ·
PHARMACY
Middleport, Oh.

I
I
I

�..J
Page-8- The

• Thur~clay, July 15,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

arr~_sts

DWI cases lead Middleport
Mtddleport Pollee made 76 arrests
m June, 24 of them were for charges
of drtvlng whtle mtoxtcated, according to the monthly rep01 t of
Chtef J J Cremeans
Of the total arrests, 12 persons
were charged wtth dtsorderly manner , seven wtth speeding, four for
dnvmg whtle under suspenswn,
three each for dnvmg while exptred
tags and t-rumnal trespas&gt;rng
There were two arrests each for ru nnmg a stop stgn and assault wtth one
arrest bemg made on each of the
charges
reckless
followm g
operallon, fatlu re to mamtam control, httermg, obstructmg offtctal
bu.'nness, reststm~ a rrest, assured

dear dtstance, leavmg dog unattended, nu oeprator's license, open
contamcr, htgh bwnper vtolahon ,
cxptred dnver's hcense , parkmg on
Sidewalk, spmnmg lu es, left of center , runmng red l1 ght , theft ; attempted theft, trespessmg at

.....

reports Of the toal calls 37 were
emergency runs and SIX were ftre
and rescue mtsstons All vehtcles of
the department were drtven 910 7
mtles durmg the month

Marriage licenses
1\vo marriage licenses were
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Cour1 lo CecU Eugene Johnston, 34,
Rt 1, Langsville, and RebeCca
Jean Smith, 29, Pomeroy, Ervin
Phillips, 45, Rl 2, Racine, a nd VI
vlan Jean Walsh, 7:7, Rt 2. Racine

trustees
thankful for help

•Meigs County Churches of Chris!

Bedford Townsblp Tntstees ex·
tend their tbanlll for the help
given through the Youth Subsidy
Program. The program was
made possible through a $50,000
grant from the state beaded by
Carl Hysell, juvenile officer for
Meigs County.
Seventy-two youths were employed as a result of the program.
The trustees extend thanlut to
Carl Hysell and to those who
worked lD Bedford Township,
Brill King, Ken McCullough,
Hugh McDuralth and Brett Carl.

Veterans Memorial

t
.. ••
'
, I

PHOf1t
1.

New Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling
•Electric work
•Custom Pole Bldgs
•l!oofong Work

Roget Lee Stewart, Middleport,' - )
filed suit for divorce In Meigs ' ··
County Common Pleas Court
against June Ann Stewart, ;
:
Middleport.
John R Jeffers, Rt 1, Mlddlep_ort '
a nd Carol Jean Jeffers, I..outSa, \
Ky , flied for dissolution of •,'·
marriage

Veterans Memorial Hospital ad
missions and discharges Tuesay
Included
Admissions-Melvin Forester
Sr. Racine, Anna Sprague, Dex
ter, Pearl Garnes. Dexter, EstU
Collins Pomeroy; Deborah Smith,
Racine. Lucy McCune. Pomeroy,

The Daily Sentinel

ROUSH

. ,

To end marriages

14 Years li•pertence

EXCAVft&amp;'JING
•ND •
ft
CONSTRucrloN

Or anything else you
want to do, because I
live with a carpenter.
H1s name

•s AI Tromm

J&amp;LBLOWN
INSUI:ATION
VIIIYL &amp;

DUGAN'S
ALIGNMENT

M.UIIIIIUII SIDIIIC
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
•New rooffne
Free Estimatn
James Keesee
Ph. 992· 2772
7 ~ 1 mo

•

''

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~

•,

&amp; ELECTRONIC

------ ----

- - - -GTveaYiay- - - -

the

charge to the advertiser
- - -- - - - - 2 kittens tor good home
Ca ll afler5 4467137

Rad1~tor Spec•ahst

NATHAN BIG GS
35 Vrs. E )l per •cnce

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Pomeroy, Oh
Ph 992·2174
2 26 ti c

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

16YEAR~EXP

Bear Front-E nd
Serv1ce

Dependab le. guar
onteed Work 9 yrs Ex
per1ence

SR 124 , R•lland, Oh .
For Ap'l 742·2057

7 1 1 mo

3 k1ttens. 9 weeks old Call
446 0467
Ltlac

Rex

buck

rabb1t

Free to good home 614 98l
4134
Resem

btes a fox 991 3343
Pupp1es Austral1an Blue
Heeler mother
304 675

2178
Smal! brown hamster 304

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Guages"
Call lor free siding
estomatos, 949·2101 or •
949-ZUO .
No S•nday Calls
3 11 He

675 2040
4 pupp1es. sma ll vanety
After 4 30 p m 304 675

5822
THREE part

Doberman

pupp1es, 7 weeks old, 304

675 2041

675 1805
puppoes, 304dog.
----~::::::"t:::::=====-t=========:t::=========:j MOTHER
small

•

....... .,, ,. ,,, .,,...

Flnanelal

AAABUAEements
1 ( Mdof Thank s tP iW:11n
CMd of T11anks (pa•d 111
3 Announc em ents
4 GIVeiiWtlY
~

Oust ness Oppor t untt~
77 Money to Loan
n Pro fess on ~l l SNV I{('S
~I

~1dv.=a n ce1
r~tlviH1CCI

5 Happy Ads
6 L ost and Found
1 Yard Sa le ( pilt d 1n ,ldV ilnr ,
8 Pub l• c Sate
&amp; Auctton
9 Wanted to Bvy

0

teal
1

J...l

.... .

•

Classified page~. cover the
71 Au tos for Sa te
n Trucks for Sa le

76 Auto Parts &amp; Acc essor•e s
77 Auto Repair
78 Campmg Equtpment

Gal lta County
Are.1 Code614

-

Publtc NOtiCe

-

Publi C Notice

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

61
67
63
64
65

~P~b}~ ~~f~~e ==-=

m

,----------------------,
Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Address,-- - - - - - - Phone _____________

Record No 8 at Page 183.

You'll get better results
of you describe fully

L tne 15, dat ed January 5,
1901 where1n lot 138 of
Lo wer
Pomeroy ,
t he
property that tS the subt ec t
of lh1s act1on was tran
st e rred
to
G r ace
Herrtngton
Defe ntfant
her et o ,
by
Samue l
R1dgway aka Samuel
Ridgeway Sa 1d tr ansfer
was made pursuan t to a tax
cert 1f1cate th at arose out of

classofy, edll or ret ect ---lf--1--11--...:..:+--·t
any ad Your ad wl II be
put on the proper .:.:.~L-l.!!~E~~~~~
classrlocallon II you'll
check the proper box
These cash rates
below
mel ude discount

delinquent real esta t e
ta xes
Pl cunt1ff further alleges
that th e transfer of t1tl e to
Grace Hernngton, Oefen
dant 1S ev1denced by an en
try tn th e M e1gs County,
Oh 10 Aud tfor 1 s Duplicate

Pnnt one word 1n eac h

Each on

t1t1a l or group of ftgures
cou nts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number tf used

--+-+....:.+....:.-+--;
g•ve pnce The Senttnel
reserves the rtght to --+-+-+--1--i

I &gt;Wanled
t ) For Sale
( )Announcement

17
18
19,
20
21

I ) For Rent

21

23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30

Farm Equ tpmcnt
Wanted fo buy
L •ves tock
Hdy &amp; Gratn
Seed&amp; F ertd,z er

7 14 lie

Up to 15 Word s

S1x day

S7 00

•
'

the sa te of sard tot lor

tor tne year ol 1900 at Page

62 L1ne 7 show tn g that
Grace Herr1ngton, Oefen
dant recetved Lot 138 of
Lowe r
Pom eroy ,
th e
proper ty of wh •ch 1s the
sub1ect of th1 s ac t1 on, from
R1dgway aka Ridgeway
Platnt1ff further alleges
t~ t the real estate ta xes to
the lot descnbed herem

for the lot descnbed 1n
paraoraph one of th1 s Com
pla1nt
l1sts
Grace
Hernn9ton as the owner of
th e tot
Pla1nt1ff further alleges
tn the Com platnt th(lt he
has , by h1mself , and h1S
predecessors 1n •nterest,
been 1n ac tu al, open, e&gt;~:
c tus1v e
conftnuo u s,
notortous and adverse
possess1on of the sa1d lot
descnbed here1 n for a

perood of more tha n twenty

one (21) yea rs pnor to th e
f11Jng of h•s Compl a1nt, and

r ods th ence West 133 rods

e1gh t days tor answer 1ng
wtll commence on July 23,

1982 Jn case of Delendanls'

fa1 1u re to answer or other
w •se r espond as requ1red
by the Oh1o Rules of C1vtl
Procedure, tudgment by
default w 11! be rendered
aga mst the Defendant ~ for
the rel1ef demanded 1rt the
Complamt
Larry E Spencer

Clerk of Court s
16) 17,24 t7) 1 8 15.22 6tc

lurther alleges thai the

Pla1nftff has, by h tmself ,
and h ts predecessors m '"
terest, cared for , ma1n
ta1 ned and used th e- lot
descr •bed here1n that IS th e
subt ect of thts act1on, and
has pa1d all taxes and
assessments lev1ed •or
assessed agamst sa 1d lot
for a period of more than
twen t y one (21) years prior
to the f1h ng of sa1d Com
p lamt, Pla1nflff further
says t hat he ha s acted as
th e owner of sa•d lot, such
as he would not exerc 1se

over property tha t he d1 d

not cla1 m , 1n a manner as
such would serve not1ce to

the world th at the Ptaontoll

cla1ms sa 1d lot and has
clcumed sa 1d lot for a
penod of twenty one (211
years pno r to the ftltng of
th1s Compla1nt, Pla1ntlff
says further that he d1d not
have and does not have th e
perm 1SS1on of th e Oef en
dants to use sa1d l ot 1n any
ma nner ,
Piatntltf says further
that he 1S the owner of lot

456 on the Voltage ol Mod

dleport , formerly known as
Lower Pomeroy , sa td tot
ad toonon ~

4l6

the

tot

descr1bed herem that •s the
subt ec t ot th1s act tOn
The P'rayer of sa1d Com
p l a H~ t tS the Pl a1 nf•ff 's t 1tle
to sa 1d real estate be
qu1eted as aga1nst the
t hat Defen
Defendants

dants be requored to set loc

th th e1r cla tm , •f any 1n
and to sa1d real est ate or be
forever barre d from ascer
ttn g the same, that any and
all cla1 ms of t he Oefen
dants wh1ch may be ad
verse to th e t1tle
be
declared vo•d . and that the

Delendants be lorever en

10tned from ascert1ng anv
cla •m whatever 1n and to
sa 1d real estate adverse to

Pl a ml off's lotte

that lhe

Court ca use a deed to lot
138 descr 1bed here1n that ts
the subt ect of fh1 s act 1on,
be executed 1o th e Pla1nt1ff
and for such other further
re ft ef as may be proper
The above menttoned
parties will further take
noflce th~t they hav e been

made parties Oelendant to

sa1d Compla1n1 and they
are requ1red to answer sa 1d
Complamt w1th1n twenty

eoghf days after the last

cat1on of thi s not1ce
that os the subtect of lhos pubh
Sa1d
not1ce
w1ll
be
act1on, are currently Its ted published once a week for
m the name of Grace

Henngton and tha t the tax
card loca ted 1n the offtce of
the M e 1 ~S County Aud,tor

July , 1982 and the twenty

SIX

cons@cutnle weeks

The Ia~! publocaloon will
be made on the 22nd day of

8

&amp; Auctoon

-Public
- Not1ce
----IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PL EAS
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
case No 18214
KENNETH COZART AND
PATRICIA COZART
Pia 1nt1ffs,

vs
MARY

A

CHAS E, The

and 8 lonks to lhe place ol

beg 1nnlng, conta 1n1ng J2
acres, mo ~e or less
You ar e reQUired to an
swer th e Comola1nt WIThin
28 days alter the last
publ1cat1on of th1s not1ce
wh1ch will be published on
ce each week tor s1x su e
cess 1ve weeks The last
publ1cat1on wtll be m ade on

July 22, 1982, and the 28

days for answer w111 co m
mence on that date
In case of your falfur e to
or
otherw1se
answer
respond as requ1red by the
Oh1o
Rules
of
C1vll

Procedure.

CARPENTER ,

The
un k nown
hetrs ,
devtsees, legatees and
ass1gns of Ella R Car
penter, deceased

MAMIE E

tud gment by

default will be r:endered
aga1nst you for the r ehef
demanded 1n the Com
plamt

$4 00

i

I
I

Moddt epor t Ohoo un tot 3 00

PM locrtl ttmc Ju l y 23
1982 .:~ n d ot lhrtl t•me and
piMC' Will be pub l tcly
opened and read
Th e work for whtch b1ds
Me
•nv .ted conststs of
prov•d•ng destqn, all state
and local perm1ts reQutred
const ru c l10n
of
th e
proposed add 1t10n and all
appurten?'lces
Cop1es of the prel mtn~ry
CI£'StQn and speCifi Ca t iOnS
arc rtvr~tlab l e for •nspectton
by prospect1vc b tdder s at
the mayor s offi ce 1n

OIJRS,

1

o•• t' '·

•

&amp;

he~rs,

so Rt. 7-Between Middleport &amp; Cheshore, Oh.
PROUDLY PI!ESENTS
TUII -LJCIIes NitM I Z JO
WHh -

.ctrtry Draft

Hittltl2 30

Tttun - Pool Toum •2 tO

Fr1 I Sill LIVE BANOS

( Dr•nk &amp; Drown ..ch

n191tf)

Wtct 1 Tflurs
MARSHALL TENNANTt 1
Fr• &amp; S1t
LONE WOLF lQ-1

If

Larry E Spencer

,.

I

Clerk of Courts

Me1gs county, Ohto
16) 17 14 17) 1. B. s, 22, 6tc

::

I

Wt tladly anneunce t•at tach
nitht of the Band Wt Offer

dt1nk ilncl arown some
011r

Pubhc Not1ce

Hrs

I

assogns of Ella R

Car

penter
Mam•e E Brown1ng
The un known hetrs,
d evtsees
legatees and
ass tgn s of Mam1 e E
Brownmg
Cyn th1 a E Sm 1th
T he un kn own he1rs
dev1sees, l egat~es
ass1ans of Cynthia E "n"n
An drew Ours
The unknown · heirs,

devosees.

legatees

ass1gns of Andrew Ours

and

Jefferson Chase

Th e unknown he.rs,
•sees, legatees and

gnsof J eff erson Chase

hereby not1fled
been named

a legal ac
Kenneth
rnt)fls. vs
et al,

~:·~~~~~;·~,;[;:~~~~~aaction

l 304·77l-l64
C L Kotchen
Mason, W Va
6 10 1 mo

Blonde
Cocker
male
wearmg a collar In Eureka

area Call 614 256 1291
Lost Reward for any Info

Sco:"' led btds for the co n
stru c t10 n of a m e ta l
bu1ld•ng add 1t1on to the

TOM HOSKINS

Ph 949·2160or949-2322

COLEMAN'S
GARAGE

eor~\:~r'o:r lnd

Chester, Ohio

'II Minor&amp; MaJOr
A 1o &amp;T k R

p•, 98" '269 or 91" '312
"

,...

u
IIC epatr
•Free Esltmllet
•Ruson1ble Ratet
Open 8 am. 6 p.m.
Mon. lhtu Sat.
PH 992 7762
JackColemln 611

,...

o~ws~~~~:~~~::"

All makes and models
Anlennatnstallatoon
calls and shop
,,~,,.;,-~avaolabte
7 8 1 mo Pd

w

TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Lfne Hook-ups
septic Tanks
County Certified
l!oush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph 367·7560
1 7 1 He

Bob Whrte
QUAIL

BUILDINGS

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quail

of

all

Sozes start lrom 30x24"

ages

Utility Buildings

avaolabte •P lo 8 Weeks
on any quantity
Eggs Also Avaolable

Sites from 4 to 6 and all

wood b•oldongs 24xl6.
tnsulatect Oog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Cleft LaBonte
36061 Bashan Rd
Long Bottom, OH
45343
614· US·434 l
6/24/ 1 mo

1!1. 3, Box 54

Racone. Oh
Ph 614-843 2591
6 15 lie

FOUND
Beagle Pup
Bashan area 614 949 24l2
Losr med• um to lirge male
dog Named Pnnce Has

flea cottar

PHONEttlHTJ

711 mo

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St Rt.124Pomeroy,OH

A

REPAIR ,

C. II 1111 W•nl

W•nl'l KIIYIIMI"'I
~12

ha1r w1th w htte mark 1ngs

Last see n Sat Jul y 9, on
Chesh1re area Family pet

367 0413 or 142 2830
Reward 2 lox hounds,
female, black tan and
wh1te,

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmtsslon '
PH. 9 92 • 5682

OUT
FOR FUTURE USE'

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
S[RV__l£[

-oozers

-Bacj( hoes

~

-D•mpTruc&gt; s

=~:r.~~er

All Makes
• washers
• Oosh washers
• Ranges e Retrogerat
ors
e Dryers e Freezers
PAI!TS and SERVICE

-sowe r
-Gas Lones
- se ptoc Systems

Or 992·7121
3 24 He

Large or Small Jobs
P H 992 2478

•backhoe
•••cavattng
*septic systems

.A.-Jil

G"''e S. Hotoslollto Jo
Bollflto
~HOllE 7411003
N E W LISTING
Hem lock Grove Over
2'11 acres, all fenced
wtth 3 bedorom home

and

a

V e ry

14'x25'

barn

prtvat e

(25,000 00

~RICED REDUCEoO
$5,000.00 on thos 3 or 4
bedroom ~ome , bas~

ment, garage and cor

~':!n~~l ~~II M~~~e~ft~
fonanciRg Reduced to
$30.000
ST RT 124 - Just Off
Rt 7 by pass Large 2
story
home.
4
bed rooms, bath, 2
enclosed
porches ,
s1 tuated on p;,. acres
woth strawberry patch
and n1ce garden area

$25,000
BAUM ADOlTIDN Lovely 3 bedr oom brock
home, 2 baths, full
basement w1th tam11y
room and fireplace
Carr,eted,
drapees .
Cen r~l air and equop
ped kitchen OWner will
help finance Call to
day.
LOTS - One acr!! tot
for ho{Tie or tra.ler.
Sl,OOO doWn payment,
balance land contract
Also a '14 acre lot o~ '
Harrisonville with
waler tap for only

"

.

NF W LISTING - NEAR RACINE· .;._;- ,;. 197914'x70'
mobtle hom e With two b&amp;drodms two new concrete
porches, garden bathtub, pretty yard, and 3loacres
for cow, hor se etc: S29,000

NICF

SHAOY

YARD -

that lays well

ap

prox1matety one acre 1s th e se t Ttn q for a 12'x60 two

bedroom mobote home Wolh FREE natural gas
andFREEwater Astea t at$13,500
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - oltb os two bedroom
home With ex tens1ve remodel1ng, located nea r M tne
No, 1 and has l 1/ 8 acres of wh•.,:h part 1$ fenced
1 Blended rate loan 1S ava1labl e on th1S Reduced to

&amp;Ill lines
•dump truck
•llmest-

, VIRGILI.SR
216 E. 2nd St.
Pllone
1-(614)·H2·33:U

Addofts 1nd 1tmodth111

~'::.f'""m
- PIHOitiO&amp;IOd

_

Ucensed &amp;Bonded

PH. 992-7201
3-291fc

HEAT PUMP - Full
.basement, 1'11 baths,

tnermopane w1ndows,
one floor ranch 7 rooms

and noce tot Mouse
•2x28 Asking S49,900.

so.ft;!;rs. N;c~~~

nncn. l'h balhs,

Ia~;:

7
FLEA

I

Buoldong Lots -

A lillie over a n

etcre of mce laymg tand w1th water and etectr•c
available Now SS,OOO
..
, 1

.
FINANCtNq AVAILABLE ....'

I

•

lo

'

Wol~

'

.._-"

dow n payment
on thos S~&gt; &lt;oom moti1t e ho'/16 w\lh three bedrooms,
lamly room , lots ol closels, pore~ a nd t a r~e lot
,Reduced to$17,500
MODERN L KITCHEN -

Wo!h dlnong area. two

• bedrooms, new bath, wood bu11ner. garc:ige, and all
on one floor 31t of an acre of Qround with garden '
area $30,000

POMEROY - Two bedroofTI home on good col)do\\on '
r-

carpeted- gas heat range and r eff 1ge,.ator;, 'h

basement

!:~Ira

large tot $17.500,

REALTORS ·
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI •
.
DoHit s. Turper .
. J ..n Trussell .• .. ,.., .. , .. :.
OHice ......... , ...... ..

••

Yard Sate
Markel Open Aor

Yard Sa le Friday July 16
One day only 402 3rd
Street, Kanauga, Oh

BackYard 4l Central Ave
Gall opol os Froday &amp; Satur
day 10 to 5 Choldre ns

Center July 16, 17 &amp; 18 No
c toth1ng Sales
Ya rd Sale Fn &amp; Sat Jul y

16th &amp; 17th

Gas groll,

l ounge chatr 2 b1k es cedar
shed, books, m1sc 9AM to?
418 Hedgewood Or Mov.ng
so must sel l

Yard Sate Corner of 3rd &amp;
Olove, Gallopolos July 11th,
9 to 4 Un1forms stz es 9 &amp;
10, women clofh1ng s1zes 9
to 10 and 11 &amp; 14 ,
g la sswa r e,
hall
tr ee
woman med1um s1ze down
coa t, ktfchen m1sc Plus
com e to our Bake Sale
Yard Sale Thurs

tlocloictlwooi
.,
lfoH Esllmlln)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

"2Pomeroy,
6215 or "2·7314
onoo

9 30 lfc

1

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

Call 992-6259

275 S,camort St.
Middleport, Ohio
6271 m_9

MIUER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For

all your wrrlng
needs;
furnaces
re,.lr service and
lnst•llation.
Residential
&amp; Commerci11l
Call742-31

games, mtsc

3 Fa moly Yard Sa le Rl 141
on Centenary , Brown

I erMIICE

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
IIIII•-.

FREE

ESTIMATES

Froday &amp; Saturday

Card ol Thanks

He1ghts Wed thr01 Fnday

Yard

I w1 sh to thank all mem

Sate

37

Evans

Jeans, good school clothes

bers of lhe Rulland EMS
squad. doctors and nurses
at Veterans M emor 1al

Hospolal

and

all

who

asststed '" flfe savtng ef

forls

for

my

husband

Please cons1der th1s ca rd of

lhanks as my personal debt
ol gradolude Mrs Elvon E
Thompson

phoned and came to see me

durong my stay on the
hospotal Mochael Grant

Yard Sale 611 4th Ave ,
Gallopotos
Th ursday &amp;
Froday, 9 lo 4 Clothes a ll
stzes, toy s
Fnday, uf 1l1ty trader atr

cOndlllOner 2 cha1n sa ws.
head board, c htna cabmet,
toaster oven, wood stove,
gas stove type wnter,
doors, storm wtndows. bnc

brae 186501d Rt 7, 614 367
0461
Yard Sale 2 m1les N of

Holzer Hosp rtat
3

Anf)ouncements

SWEEPER

and

sewong

mach•ne repair, parts, and

supplies
del1very,

P1Ck up and
DliVIS

Vacuum

Cleaner. one half mite up
Call
Georges Creek Rd
ol46 029.
S•n Dance Kods • H Cl•b
Bake Sale July 17, 1982 at
Murphy Marl In Sliver
Bndge Plaza. 11 OOAM- fo
5 OOPM

BUSINESS DEAL - 1-..:...--~------~..L..-------~
Personal and real
ESTATE SALE , 810 •th
Jiroperly Included on
Ave , Gallipolis, )uly 1~th
sat• own.r may help.
thru 17t!J. AntoQues aM
TIME- Owner will
mfsc otems. Ph. ol46 0337.
flnan.,e this n1ce tar. , ..,...,., 6 room, IMUietetl
~au•e
Match every Sot
Has l-rooins.
~w
Ani
1 OOPM at
&amp; large per·
tnt•
litclltn
••~
on
u.s. at. Ml•st
1
NIIN••s. 1_..."1-·-·
Guysville, Olllo
-~!:~~~~:a:~~:sv
I lie
AuiiMriHIII Jllltl Dftre,
HHits, lltW llolnH,
Ntw Hlll..lld, 111111 Met
......... llictrlc,
,aroa 111111,..,...
PERMANENT
DMIIr
!'lAIR REMOVAL
Professional Electrotysb
Fum IEqulpmenl
Center
A M A approved,
Parts &amp;Service
Doctor referals, by IP'
1·3·1fc
PH.992~U
pointment only 30A·675d234.

BOGGS

&amp; Fn

tuly IS &amp; 16, 9 to 5 I mote
out. Rt 218 Ctoth ong toys,

Plants.

Yard Sate Friday only
Sprong valley
Antique
lamps
ant
c h a1r ,
household 1tems, cloth1ng,
m tsc 1tems Oak Dr

Yard Sate Sal •nd Sun
!July 19 18)
1 OOPM
6 OOPM 428 Laroal Or tusl
beyond E cono Travel
Mens clothes stze L XL,
women s clothes s1ze 2 and
young boys teans
Yard Sa le 911 Th1rd Ave
Gallipolis Saturday, Jul y

Yard Sale Fr1 9 to 4, Sa t

Mens

and

ladoes

X large Lois ol blue teans
FlatswOOds Texas road 82

July 15 16, 10 loll 6 p m
Follow s1gns
Several family, Hunnel s on
Rose
H tll ,
north
of
Pomeroy, T hurs 15th, 9 4,

Fro day 16th. 9 noon
A1r condtf1oner guns, t1re s,
toots S@ars weed eater
s1de board uniforms X

large soze c tothong baby
clothes, extra good cond
Sc 1ence t1Ctton books &amp; tots
of odds I ends 124 Rac1ne
Ram cancels
4 family yard sale Mason
on 4th &amp; Brown St Frt &amp;

Sat16&amp;1795
July 15 16 9 4 Long Hollow
Rd, Rt 33 , Pomeroy Ratn
cancels
Avery Goeg letn's Old 33
Below Pomeroy Health
Care Center Fn, July 16,
Sat 17 9 a m
Mov•ng sa l e, 3 miles above
Chester July 16 and 17

5 14

YARD sale, 4 fam oly, July
15, 16, 17 Dwoghl Sayre's,
Leon Baden Road 9 00
~ - 00

YARD sale Fnday &amp; Satur
day Lot 34. K &amp; K Mob ole ,
Pt Pleasant, Ftrst t1me
ever

YARD sale 108 S Park
Drive
Lots of baby
clothes! Froday &amp; ' Saturday,9 oo•

We pay cash for tate model
c lean used cars
French town Car Co
Bill Ge ne Johnson

446 0069

5 family garage sale July
14, 15. 91o a t3010 Kath nor
Lane Lots of new 1tems
clothmg of all s1zes. bow
and arrows, tupper ware,
camera. toys
tewe try
Avon dolls Not r espons1b le
tor acc1dents

212 Walnut Sf Henderson
New and used bargatns

11

_

Vta_l!l_!d

~e tp

Repossessed Stgn 1 Nothing
down' Take over payments

S58 50

monthly

fla sh1ng arrow s1gn

4'x8'
New

bu lbs &amp; le tte rs Call S01
519 2721 Ask about Repo
_.55 Olds eng

1 set c ha1n
btocks, 1 vt se, 1 drt l l press

Call 614 245 9564
HELP

WANT ED

Ex

per1 enced teacher s needed
tor aft er sc hool ch ild ren's
programs dunng school
yea r Craft s mus1c. drama
f or
e l eme ntar y
age
chi ldren wtll be emphaSIS

Apply

at

the

Recreat1on

Gall opol s

Department,

518 Second Ave 446 1789 by
July 23

Wanted to buy wheel chatr

Call 614 245 9163
Want ed
P l ymouth
or
Dodge body wtth good tn
ten or, 70 to 75 model
Preferably 2 dr , eng1n e

can be blown Call 446 6160
alter 1PM
Old QUtlf fram e

tn good

cond Call 446 3383

lmm ed tate employme nt
opportun d y f ull
11me
postt1on sec retartal skill
and light bookk eepp1ng
Must be ab le to dea l wtfh
public prtor 10b related ex
peretnc ed necessa ry All
1nqu1res w•lt t reateo con
f1 dent1a ll y Send re5umc to
Box 800 tn ca re of th e
Gall 1polts Dally Tr •bune
825 Jrd Ave Gathpol ts

Baby s1tt1ng tn my nome 3
to 6 years old Ga llt polls

Oh 45631

Area Call 446 0513

Bu1 ld a tncome for your
future wt th
t hts op
portun1ty No mves tm ent ,
unl•mtt e d
earnt ng
Otl3Trtbutors needed for th1 s
area Blue Fountatn Motel

BEDS IRON

BRASS, old

turn1tur e
gold
silver
dol l ars, wood •ce boxes
stone tars antiQUes, efc ,
Complete
households
wn te M 0 M1 l ter Rt 4,

Pomeroy , Oh Or 991 7760
Gold
slive r , st er 11ng ,
tew elry, rtngs, old cotns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Ba r

ber Shop, Moddleport 992
3476
OLD FURNITURE , beds

July 17 1982 3PM
A ttentton RN S Pomeroy
H c C now has open •ng for
fu ll and part ttme R N for 3
fo 11 and 11 fo 7 shtfts
Upgraded sa lary and sh• ft
dtfferent1al Contact Nancy
VanMeter d•rector of Nur

song 614 9916606

1ron brass, or wooo Ktt
chen cubbards of all types
Tables r ound or square
Wood tce boY.es Old desks
and bookcases Wll l buy
complete household Gold,
St iver, old money , pocket
wa tches, cha 1ns, nngs and
etc tn d1an Ar t ifa cts of all
types Also buy.ng baseball
cards Osby Martm 992

Looktng tor women •n
Athens Ga llt a and Metgs
or others who would lik e to
get fr ee th 1ngs or who
would like to becom e a
dealer for Fr1endly Home
Parties Or have parttes at
home at no cos t Call Frten
dty Home manager at 614
992 356 1 for more 1nt o

6370

I mmed1ate
oppor tuntf1 es
tor Avon represent a lives tn
these netghbor s Mtdd lep
art , Pomeroy
and the
TownShip areas •n Metgs
Co Also Add1son Chesh1re
Spnngf tels Racoon Hun
t1ngton and Morgan Twp
1n Galh a Co Call collec t

Stand 1ng t•mber 10 acres
or more 614 992 3705
OLD WICker turnttur e, old
quilts &amp; I mens, call6 14 245

9448

614 698 7111
Small bustness send tn
tor m a11on to 8J2 Summi t
Dnve Logan Oh10 43138

6 lb bowlong ba ll 304 675
5370

12

S 1t ua~2_m.

Wanted

AUTO MECHANIC

New

res1dent fr om F lortda
Honda
auto
cer ft fted
mechan•c w1th own metn c
tools Have 6 yr s standard
auto repatr and body work
experte n ce
BOB

TAYLOR 614 949 2766
11

_

!!el p~a.!!J.!_d__ _

H IGH
SCHOOL
GRADUATES/SEN tORS
You can e-1rn over S550 00
per month while learn 1ng a
va luable sktll ltke com
puter repa1rer shee t metal
worker or refngeratton
Plu s you w 111 have a sec ure
part ttme 10b w •th the Ar
my Naftona l Guard after
sc hool•n g Beneftts tnc lude
a $1,500 00 enl i Stme nt
bonus
$35 000 l•fe tn
surance and free tu tf1 on to
any college or trade sc hool
1n West V trg 1n1 a
In
terested persons may ca ll

13

In surance

SA NDY AND BEAVER In
suran ce Co ha s off er ed
serviC es for lire tnsurance
coverage tn Galtta Coun ty
for almost a cen tury
Farm, ~ome and persona l
property coverages are
available to meet tn
dlv tdual needs
Contact
Neal I nsurance Agency
agent Phone 446 1694
15

Schools tn struct1on

--------

Ka ra te th e u1t1mate '"self
def ence all pr1vat e lessons
Bl G 3 I a mol y yard sa te Me
Men women, &amp; ch ldren
Derm1tts Trail er Court
1304) 675 3950 or on West I nstru ct1on thru bl ack belt
Ga ll tpolts Ferry lots of V1rgln1a ca ll toll free l BOO
Also ava 1la b le Karate
everyth tn g Saturday 17th
642 36 19
uniforms pu ch 1ng and
k1 ck1ng bags and protec
GIGAN TI C ya rd sa te 823 HEL P WANTED Th e ttve equ tpment Jerry
30th
St
4
fam11tes
Ga tltpolts RE c Dept 1S Lowery
&amp;
Assoc1ates
glassware, c lothes baby t ak.ng applica tiOns for Karat e Stud10 ,
143
c lothes bass•n ett Fr tday class 1nstructors 1n the Burt.ngton Rd, Jackson
16th
f olt ow1ng ar eas Arts and Oh Call 614 286 3074
c r afts,
n eed t ecra ft s,
MOVING sa le Everyl hong macram e, 1nternat1onal 18
Wanted to Do
goes
Som etht ng
for cookmg , cook•e bakmg
breadmak
1
ng
sew1
ng
everyone, 3 yea r old
Lawn Mowtng no yard to
washer &amp; dryer couch 2 creaftve wnt 1ng chrtstma s b•g or small Re li able and
cha tr s, coffee &amp; end tabl es, cr aft s Interested persons dependab le For est•mat e
beds
dresser s
buffe t, mus t be able to teach ca ll 446 3159 alter 6PM 256
what nots d1shes pots &amp; evenmg co urses of vary1ng 1967
pans. lawn tools r ecord s &amp; durat•on dur•ng fall or wtn
tapes mens, womens boys t er quart er s Apply at fhe Trash coll ec t ton &amp; hauling
&amp; g1rls clothes. ladder s C1ty Manager's Olf1ce, 518 Ca ll 446 ·~so
crocheted .. items, 'Used Second _,._ Ave ... Galltpolls,
ttres, Dodge nm &amp; hubs 446 1789
tns•de &amp; outs•de pa.n tmg
boys b 1ke, house plants &amp;
muc h more 2003 N Ma.n Expand 1ng Hea lth ca r e free es t mates Call 446
St Pt Pleasant 9 a m t o? f ac 111ty 1S tn need of the "'1499
Thursday Frtday, Satur follow•ng personnel D1rec
day, ratn or shtne, s•gns tor ot Nursong,
I nterwr &amp; extenor patn
Reg
post ed
t1ng
Reasonable rates
Dtelt Cta n, Soc ta l Work Con
Call for free es tt mate 446
sul t ant, Reg 1ster ed Nurses
GARAGE sale, one day App ly Arcadta Nurstn g 4173
Mam St ,
onl y ' Froday, J uly 16 9 00 Center , E
5 00 29 Warco ck Rd PI Coolville, Oh or Htckory Exper1encecl woman to
Creek NurstnQ Cen t er, 51 house clea n Re f erences
Pleasant

E 4th St The Plaons, Ohoo

YARD sale

Baby tfems,

mosc July 14 15 16 2208
North Ma1n, Pt Pleasant

10 unto II&gt;

D o u glas
L1z on
Ad
m1n1strator 667 3156 or 797

4561
wanted someone to stay

wr lh e tdery lady and do
Yard Sa te 429 4th Ave, ltght house work, 5 days a

Yard

rad1o,

446 8025 or 446 8026

BASHAN 15th and 16th 10
to ?? Atr cond wall ttl es
drapes, bedspreads collec
tors bo ttles and records
Cloth •ng g tr ls 5 6x Ladtes

end tables, etc
July 15 &amp; 16

ant

Buy1ng
Gold,
St iver
Ptattnum, old co1ns, scrap
nngs &amp; sdverwar@ Dally
quotes available
A l so
CO IOS &amp; COin SUpplieS fOr
sa le Spr1ng Valley Trad1ng
Co. Spnng Valley Pl aza

101 K1neon Dr

Kanauga Cloth1 ng, water
softener , built 1n oven,
small appliances curta1ns

Sale

n1ture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain
446 31l9 or 256 1967 on the
evemngs

17 9 to 3 womens gorts.

books, clothtng of all s•zes
July IS&amp; 16 9 00 4 00

typewnte r. 011 heater Mot
c~ell Rd tust off 35 Fro,
Sat.&amp;Mon

waoiie~rosi:ir_.:.__

clothes, toys, etc

Chllltcothe Malt Shopptng

'· · ~ · ···"'~···.,

U-----------+-----------1 who
I wo•ld loke to thank lhose
sent cards, flowers,

$22.900

FIVE PO IN TS -

CARPENTER
SERVICE
1

•Awater, sewer

1700

and

Yard Sate July 15th &amp; 16th
ll m1tes south ol Gallopotos
on Sf Rt 7

............
-·................
''

YOUNG'S

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
~ -,.5'~

HOBSTETTER REALTY

ma le brown

3419 or 304 4l8 1S6l
whole 304 675 5365, 304 895
- --------FOUND on Letart, 1 mate
Blueloc Coonhound, oden
tofy &amp; pay lor ad 304 882
2573

L.V=Iu:::MI:s:lei'::C:·::S:9:H:c~~=========:~:::====6=2=7=1=m=o:P:d~~=========~
house
9104

;:;:::::::::=:::==~======~ 608 ~~"MAtft · .
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.99f22s'f

n•tUre, d•shes, lawn mower

&amp; lois more

Clostng out sa te 14 to 17 at

Clrl"y Out

~~ TUN11NG
~

Reel Estate - General

Long brown

annu

Betr and Win• Ava1lilble 11
Minimum PrlcH-T tle Lowell

' '

f'UB ll C NOTICE

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Mary A Chase

Th e unknown hetrs,
dev1sees, lega tees and
ass 1gns of Mary A Chase
Ella R Carpenter
The un known he 1r s,
dev1sees
lega tees and

POOLS

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE

MOft Fri 2 00 2 )1,

Silt I S11n 4 2 H

•

legatees and asSigns ol Jet

ferson Chase, d@C:@ased
Defendants
Case No 18,214

Upper Rl 7 REWARD
Call 614 388 9994

rMuclld dutllt9 ~nd

I•

:t,.'

:UO=~':!~l~:tes
Yrs. experience

CANDLELIGHT INN

THtSMONTH S BANDS

l4

And Home Molntenaoce
• Roollng of alllyp•s
Sldl
•
ng

tools, bicycle. baby lur

clothes all s1zes 1nct ud1ng

LOST orange &amp; wh1te cat tn
vmc mity of Roadstde rest,

Ltners

PERSONALIZED

Automobl te7uf~~~e~

The

d ev tsees,

~·nvl

~=====~~~~j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fr:~~&amp;~T;tm~Rou~sh~l~m~o~~
All STEEL

Ju ly 8 15

Smoth,

JEFFERSON CHASE, The

• Fobergtass
•

Lo st and Found

FOUND sma ll toght color
female dog Old Chollocothe
Rd area Call 446 1927

• Sta1nless Steel

PH 992-6506

4 20 tfc

unknown he.rs, d ev1sees,
lega tee s and ass19ns of An
drew Ours, decea,sed
unlol nown

6

WE POOL
TOGETHER

Pomeroy,OH

6 21 1 mo

Chester, OH

The rt oh t IS r eserved by
the Vdlaqe of M•ddlcport te ~
rrjcct any or all bidS, to
watve 1nfor ma l•f•es or to
r~ccept any btd whtch •s
deemed most favorable to
the vtflaqc
Fred Hoffmnn, Mayor
Vtflageof Mtddleport ,

CYNTHIA E SMITH, The

ANDR EW

G11 01

HIELD TRIPS
ss Hole In One ss
JOHN TEAFORD

7332

BROWNING

E

••

Two,

*ALUGIS
=-t'lJ;"sliN$"t

v 111 oqc hal l
De s1gn /
do c uments
and 1
spcctf tcettlons may be pur ~
chased at the m ayors of ,.
ft ce for S20 00 per Get and tl
There wil l be no r efunds
For further 1nformr~tton .,.
;md 1nspect•on of th e 11
proposed s1te conta ct Ftre
Ch 1ef Jeff Darst at 614 992 1

(')( •st.nq vd lrtqe f • r ~ house
wdl be r ece •ved by the
VtllrtCJ~ of Middleport at
VIllage Hall , 237 Race St

unknown hetrs, d evtsees,
legatees and asSigns of
decea sed

I

Publo~NOioCe= ~

_ P•btoc No.!!_~-­

The
unknown
hc~rs,
devtsees, l egatees and
asstgns of Mamte E
Browntng, dece;.sed

Cynthoa

*ItI'RO ""'
SIIDP
S~'"'

•''

Dated June 14, 1982

unknown heirs , d eVIS@es,
legatees and ass1gns of
Ma ry A Chase, deceased

ELLA R

_

•SEAT COVER S
•VINYL TOP S
•CONVERT! BLE TOPS
•CARPETS
•A c omplete Loneol

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

KOUNTRY
KLUB

~

•••
•

Pubhc Not1ce

CHECK OUT OUR
BIBLE SCHOOL
SUPPLIES
Pac-Man Party Packs
and Cake Available

&amp;l

j~===;;::::::~rr~=====~~~~Tr=========~fr~~~~~~~~~~~
N W
EN
chon Ra e one 614 247 3222

•
$3 ().)

Cheryl Lemlll'f, ASH.f·
• P-741-1171 ~
Velma NIC.... Vt·A - .
P_7. .:11H •

•, '

orMt-22N

Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992·2M3

cloth furnl1ure, washstand,

10 2

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM
302 Mechanoc St

Furn 1ture,

boys, and tnfant clothtng,
household m 1sc

Rubber plant stolen off por
on where abouts· of my

onr ct rw tnsrrtton
Thr ee cl.ty tn st n ton

~2GI.

'v "

Ph. M2-27t1

895-Lelart
937-B •IIa to

742- R •ttand
667-Cootville

Vp to I SWont ~
Up to 15 Word s

Public Noftce

Pamtn~!

FREE ESTIMATES

773-Mason
882-New Haven

949- Racrne

379- Walnut

•
I

I Average 4 wc.-r ds per line)

t•on ent •t led Donald H
CALL , Platnttff vs Gr ace
Herrmgton et a t Defen
dant s Thts act ton has been
a ss •t;~ned Case No
181 83
Donald H Ca ll ,
and IS pendtng m the Court
Ptaw t1ff
of Common Pleas M eigs
/ Case No 23831
VS
Coun ty, Oh10 Pla •nf•ff sets
NOTICE OF
Gr&lt;tce Hernngton et a t
forth •n the Complatnt that
APPOINTMENT
Defenda nts
h-e tS the owner 1n fee s1m
OF FIDUCIARY
Case No 18183 pi e by the doctri ne of ad
On July 9, 1982, In the
NOTICE BY
verse posseSSIOn, tn an ac
M e1gs county
Proba te
PUBLICATION
tua l possess10n of the
Court, Case No 23831
To Grace Harnngton follow tng rea l es tate
' Carol Young, 1672 Sugar
S•tuate •n the State of
maple Dr , Colu mbus, Ohto whose last known address
43229
was
appo tnt ed was Syca more Str ee f M id Oh•o County of Me1gs and
dlepor t Ohto 45760 and to V •ll age of Mtddleport
Executr1x of the es tate of
the
unknown
h et r s be1ng Lot No
138 of
Lawr e n ce
M a rt1n
dev 1sees
legatees
ad Bosworth s Add1t1on to the
Wtl co)(en, deceased late of
mtn lsfr afors
executors Vi llage of Mtddleport for
Rac •ne Oh•o
Robert E Buck and as stgns of Grace merlv know n as Lower
Probate Judge/ Hernngton If deceased Pomeroy
Pla 1nf1fl further all eges
Clerk address unknown
You are hereby noflft ed th at sa •d rea l esta te I S
15 12 19, 3tc
tt1at you have been named descr1bed
furth er
as
Defendants tn a leqa l ac follows 1n a deed from Sara
L Bosworth ExecuTn x of
the Esta te of M Bosworth,
R 1dgeway,
to Sa muel
re co rded 1n Vo lume 70
Page 218 of the Me 1gs Coun
ty Deed Records
Lot No 138 , S1tuated tn
th e
Town
of
Low er
Pomeroy now attached to
and become part of the
town of Mtddleport Metgs
County , Oh •o
Pl a tnttff further says
that he has caused an
exam.nat 1on of the Deed
Records of Me1gs Coun ty
Oh10 to be made and th at
the deed gr anttng the
property descr1bed 1n the
preced 1ng para graph , to
Wf-tte your OWn ad and Oroer by mat! Wllh thiS
the Defendant here1n tS not
recorded 1n the Deed
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
Records of M e•gs Count y
resu lts Money not refundabl e
Oh to and cannot be located
ot herw1se
Pla.nt1ff fu rt her alleges
'" hls Comp la1nt that the
own er shtp o f fhe lo t
descr.bed here 1n 1S ev 1den
ced by an en tr y tn the
Mc1gs County Transfer

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIG S
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF LAWRENCE
MARTIN
WILCOXEN ,
j..PECEASED

space below

Pom@roy

985-Ches ter
343-Porttand
247- Letart Falls

2l6-Govan Dost

e New or Repa~r

675-PI. Pleasant
4l8- Leon
576- Apple Grove

99~ - Middleport

245-R 10 Grande

81 Home Improvements
82 Plu mb 1ng &amp; Hea t1n g
83 E xcava t1n g
84 E tecnca l &amp; Retqqerett1on
85 Genero l H au ling
86 M H Rep;ur
87 Upholstery

Mason Co, wv
Area Cod@ 304

Me1gs County
Area Code 614

446-GalllpOIIS
367- Cheshore
388-vonton

Ser+.tiEtS

Hou ses for Rcn 1
Mob ile Homes lor Rent
Fflrrrts for Re nt
Apr~rlmPnt lor RPnt
Furn tshr d Rooms
Sptlce tor r ~ nt
W.:~nt ed to Rent
EQ Uipment tor R£&gt; nt
For Lea se

eGutters
e OOWRSIHfl!tS

75 Boats &amp; Motors

643- Arabla 01st
.41
.42
43
44
45
46
47
Mi
49

H. L WRITESEL

7d Motorcycles

54 Mtsc Mere hand se
55 But ld1ng Suppli es
56 Pets for Sal e
57 Musc 1almstruments
SR Frutts&amp; Vegetab les
59 For Sa le or Tr ade

ser.Jees
II Hel p Want ed
17 Sttua t• on wanfC'd
13 In sur ance
14 Bus1ness Tram•nQ
15 Sc hools tn structt on
16 R~dto TV&amp;CB RePfl tr
17 M sce llaneous
19 wanted To do

ROORNG

following telephone exchangetl.

73 vans&amp; 4 WD

53 Anti ques

Estate

DABBLE
SHOP

•

· - •• _... .

51 Household Goods
51 CB Tv &amp; Radoo Equopment

3 I Homes tor Sole
32 Mobile Homes fnr S~ l e
33 FMms for Stt lc
34 Bust ness Bulldtnos
35 Lots &amp; Acrertqc
36 Rr al Es tate WtlniNi

EMfJIB)1 MeA1

· -·

WANTED TO BUY Old fur

Sale

sale may place an ad in thiS
col umn There w111 be no

O'Brien Electric
Service
• Residential
•CommerCial
•lndustrtal
Racine, Ohto
247-3534
Free Estrmates
4 20 TI C

Carport

shutters. &amp; mise items 503
Pecan Dr , Spring valley
Frt &amp;Sat.9tos

Heater core to
Largest Rad1ator

Young mate dog

SPIN WHEEL
BALANCE

John

c::

ANY PERSON who has
anythong to give away and Bog Garage Sa te July 15, 16
17 2 Fam oly Palrlol
doesnotollerorallemptlo &amp;
offer any other thong tor Cadmus Rd Patoo blind

L)censed &amp; Bonded
Phone949·2291
or94f·2417
3 3 Hn

Rutland, On.
7 15 1 mo pd

~essons

Teaford Chester, Ohto

Datly

----Yard Sale
-------

7

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERV IC E
From the Smal lest

Dorer &amp; baCkhot service, Wlftr, sewer, ponds ,
loundlllons.
reclamation.

7-IS-1 mo.

992~2156

I '- -

C&amp;M

BACKHOE
'
FOR HIRE
742·2328

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
ar 992-2282

-••

Or Wnte Datiy Senttnel Classtftecl Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

Go tt

;::==-=::::=:::r.:::===:rr;:::::==::rr:===:::::~ 4

.• ,•

.

Men's Fellowship will meet Mon
day, July 19, 7.00 p.m at the Ru
!land Church of Christ

- ---- -- 3__ ~nnou_l!«;!rnen!! __

Business senices

Nellie Crisp, Langsville, BUJ Frye,
Middleport.
• •
Discharges-Richard Fink, Bar- ..,.)
bara Smith and Paul Burns
~

Meets Monday

The

Ohio

B~dford

marma and carrymg f1re anns

Vehtcle mtleage for the month
totaled 1,151 mtles and thts was low
because the speedometer on one of
the crUisers was broken
Pat kmg meter recetpl&gt;; totaled
$600 14 and thet e were 70 ltckels
wntten dunng the month
Meanwhtle, a total of 43 calls were
answered m June b) the Mtddleport
Ftrc Department , Ch tef Jeff Darst

~

,- - - P•bhc

446 9584.

siie ~

&amp; Auct1on
R1 c k

Pearson ,

Ex

week must g1ve reference

Estates,

anttques,

farm,

Will tud or you r ch ild l or
H1 story Nafurat Sc•ence
b1ology or Soc tal Studtcs
Wrtfe Karen Ktdd Box 57
Eureka St ar Rt GalltpoltS,
Oh 45631 Fee negottbl e

Call 446 3l48
AVO N Three peopl e to se ll
AVON Call 446 33l8
---- - - - -

21

Telephone soliCi t Or must be

dependable Call 614 698
6284 or 614 698 7172 Work
out of your own home

peroenced AUCTIONEER
hoosehold Licensed Ohoo
WV Buyong antoques 304
773 5785,773 9185

Ca ll 614 388 9926

Babyw1tter wanted for two
children / ages 3 and 6 Send
name, age, ph number and
two ref to Box P ll1 Pomt

Pleasant Reg1ster, PI Pl .
Wv 25550
Moddle age person to do
house work for elderv man
Call 614 367 741l

Bustn ess
_Oppo':.tun__!ty

Bu s1 ness opportun1ty tn Pt
Pleasant, Pomeroy area If
you re profiCienT at
prepar1ng 1ndtv tdua1 tn
co me fa)( r eturns,wtt llng to
undergo ex tens•ve tratn.ng
and would l tke to convert a
small • 1nvestm ent •n to a
healfhy .ncome, send your
resu me to DanTa x Inc 1n
ca re Pt Pleasant Reg1ster,

PI PI WV 25550

i2-

-M~to

Loan- -

REFINIINCE or purchase
your hdm e 30 year f1xed

Yard Sale B•rger Shef
Parking Lot, PI Pleasant
to 5 Fro day Clothes, toys,
curtains, &amp; bedspreads

•

Yard
Sale
290~
Meadowbrook Dr , Pt .
Pleasant J•ly 15 thru 18 10
AM fo 5PM All different
lzes of clothes

EMMA Bell A•ctoon Ser·
voce. Sale each Tuesday, 7
1
p m Mt Alto, accepting
from my home
consignments Tuesday 10
someone over 30
am
untol sale lome . ov~•··• of age Wrote or call
Buying and sellmg estates
Huffman, p o Box
Free estate appraisal. J0.4·
st Albans, wv 25177 or
1 3IJ4 722 AII40

rate Wva &amp; Ohoo Leader
Mortgage, 77 E Stale Sf ,
Athens. Oh 614 592 3051
23

P,rofess1onat
' serv1ces

C&amp;L Bookkeepong
Bookkeepong &amp; tax servo01
lor all types ol busonesse ~
Carol ~ea l
446 3862 ,

�- - - - - - - - - - ----10-The
Real Estate
ll

51

They'!l Do It Every Time

Household Goods

.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refri·gerators,
ranges . Skaggs
AP ··
pliances, Upper River Rd .•
beside Stone Cresl Motel.
u.l-7398 .

=~ _!to m e51o~_ ~ le -­

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Sma ll house, rura l water
and elec tr ic. no ba th . 5
miles f rom t own wi th gar ·
den and storage bldg .
From Rt . 218 first house on
Krin er R idgc Road . For
qui ck sat e $6,900 Includ ing
septi c t a nk permit . Ca ll

___----- ------

FOR

Ph . 245 5034.

For sale-Cabinets. gas
water heater, doors, in·
eludi ng sliding oak door,
misc . items. Call 61-4 ·9926254.

carpeted .

Call 446 4826 .

Hydraulic oil 10 w Texaco
no. 32, Radco 55 gal .
drums . $80.00 ea . 61 H 67.
3085 ·

J bdr . home newly
r edecorated , mint con ·
d1 tion . ci ty school s. Many
ex tra s. Ca ll 446 3897 or 446-

ave .

Middleport,

Oh.

S16,500 . Caii61H92·2602.

By owne r -3 room cotta ge
wi th bath . Also 3 bd .room
double wide Trailer with 2
bath s. Al l on one l ar ge lot.
Located in town at Letart

Falls, Oh . 614-24].J615after
.:~p . m . Ru th Circle .
B room house, large barn &amp;

co rn cr ib, on 40 acres of
land. On Rt. 218 . Ca ll
James Copeland 6l4-742 ·
299 1.
HOU SE M eadowbrook Ad ·
di t ion, J bedrooms, fam i ly
room with fir eplace, centr al air, basement. phone

Pri me 2 acre resident ial
lot . Utilities. Overlooking

river
1n
Pomeroy .
Panoramic view. Will con·
sider land contract. 614-992 Deluxe 2 bdr. apt. Partially
6254 .
furnished .
ofl
Street
parkin g, Second Ave ..
TWO acre loh·150 fl . road Gallipolis. Call 61056·
frontag e,
city
water , 6506 .
beh;nd 84 Lumber, cal l 304·
67HB73. 675·3618 .
First f loor,

room
house ,
fir e pla ce,
in

bath,
Point

Pleasa nf 20B 91h 51 . S9.000
t ;rm . 304675·5652 . Call af
ter 7 p.m ..
3 bedroom 2 and one-half
bath, bri ck., double lot, air
condi ti on in g, ba se ment

2423 MI . Vernon, 304 675
7721
ONE mile out of Glenwood
on Hannan Tra ce Rd . 3
Plu s bedrooms,
large
11ving roomJ., ca thedra l
cei lin g, wood beams. stone
firep l ace, stone &amp; cedar on
out side. pond and J 112
acr es, garage. Phone 304·

576·2587 .

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI · STAT E MOBILE
HOM ES. USED·MOBILE
HOM ES, CARS, TRUCKS .
CHECK
GA LLIPOLIS .
OUR PRICES . CALL 446·
7572.

1st

For sale Kelvinator heavy
dufy washer &amp; dryer, 2 yrs.
old, exce llent condition .
Ca II 4.46·6559 .

floor &amp; 2nd. f loor. Ca ll 4A6·
ONE ac re, drdled well. 0957 , 729
2nd
Ave ..
sep ti c
tank ,
2S&gt;e25
un - Gallipolis.

GE automatic washer. real
n;ce, $90. Call 446-8181 .

ment , mineral rights . no Ave., Gallipolis.

budd;ngs, $10,500 . 30H756851.

f inished

block

$6,500 . 304·675·2949.

Rc:nrals
41

379 ·2310 .
' 1980 BAYVIEW DELUXE
cen l ral air, fireplace, garden tub, underpinning with
or wi t hou t appliances. Ca ll

446 6211 or 614·388-9916 .
19711 2x 60 Kirkwood almost
one acr es lo1 with co m mercia l ga rag e. Call 614·

256 6640 .

..

1979 Nashau 14x70 S8.500,
1979
Fairmont
14x70
$10,500, 1977 Homene 14x70
!9,500, 1974 Sherton Hx70
$6,500 . Kanauga Mobi le
Home Sa les, Kanauga, Oh.
446·9662 .
Jrd &amp; Cherry , 2 bedroom .
Nice insid e. Will have to

move . $2, 400 . 61H9B249 .
r'a rt ia ll y furni shed .

USED MOB ILE
576B 1L

HOME .

MOB I LE HOMES M OVED
L icensed &amp; insured. Ca ll
304 576 271 1.
1973

14x70,

3

bedroom

31_ _

_F~ r_'!l2~~a ~

___ _

142 acre farm nea r Ri o
Grande . Good
house,
bu i ldings and barn s, tobac cO base &amp; live stock . Call
446·2599 .
40 acres, 6 rm . house and
barn. tobacco base on St.
Rt. 218, 7 1/2 m;tes from
city . Ca ll 614·245·9222 after
6.

34

e~S iness Buildings

Porfabfe Office Building
]2x40 ft . $4,000. Built by
Slurdi House, exc . cond. 3
office spaces, gas heat, air
conditioned, comm!)de &amp;
sink. Located 2nd &amp; Brown
51. in Mason, W.V. Contact
H &amp; R Block, Pomeroy. 614·
992·3795 or Call evening 304·
773-5535 after 6.
35 -~L~o~ts~&amp;
=A:::cc:.r:::
ea,g..,e'--­

On Rac coon, fwo lots 9/ 10
acre. 26' trailer and a 26'
Concord camper. County
water and electric on !Ois.
$8,000,00. 6)4·256-6780.

r ·- ...

apartment5

Furnished

apt .,

1

bdr.,

adults, $200. util!;es pd., 607
2nd Ave , GaiHpoHs. Call
4A6 4416 afler 7PM.

H~u~e-~_!i)~ _R~!!.!­

Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land contract in town or
co untry
Ca ll
Strout
Really , 446 0008 .

Furnished elfiency $150.
utilities pd, si ngle male. 919
2nd. Ave .. Gall ipolis. Call
446-4416 after 7PM .

3 bdr . house good location,
2 bdr . apl, HUD excepted.
A·One Real Estates, Carol
Yeager Realtor . Ca lt 30~ 675·5104 or 675·5386.

1 bdr. furnished apt., car·
petect air cond .. S225 plus
utilities. $100 dep. req ., no
pels or chi ldren . Call 446·
1788 .

House. 120 Jrd . Ave .•
Ga ll ipoli s. 2 bdr ., gas heat,
dep . r eQ. The Wiseman
Agency, 446-3643 .

Two 1 bdr . apts . for rent. 1
ground floor . 1 upper .
Private porches with each .
Full use of large yard, very
nice ,part . furn ighed . Call
992·5880.

For rent or sale 3 bdr .,
water front home. 1/2 mi .
off Rt . 7 on Raccoon Creek .
Call61056·6413 .
Ni ce clean 2 bedroom
house J miles from town
out 218. Call 3 miles town
oul 218 . Ca ll446·9686 .
2 bedroom house, un ·
furnished, ni ce &amp; clea n.
Som e carpe ting ,
full
basement.
D e posit
requi r ed. 61H92·3090.

3 bd .roorn furn ished house,
wood burner, washer ·
"dryer . $275 . mo . plus
util iti es. 614 ·992 ·3408 .
SEVEN
room
house.
Mason, W/tk Large yard,
carpeted, $225 . month plus
utili lies . 614·949·2619.
MODERN
2 bedroom
house. references&amp;: deposit
r equired. Phone 304·882·
26B6 .
41

Mobile Homes

1 bedroom garage apt. at
5H S. 41h ;n M;ddleporl .
Has stove, refrigerator &amp;
dinette set . N ewly
decorated, no pets or
chi ldren . Call Ruth Hayth,
Wellsfon . 614·384-6309.
2 bd .room !urn .. Apt .
Util ities inc. No pets. $205.
per mo. 992 ·7177 afler 6
p.m .
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses.
Pl.
Pleasa nt and Galli polis.
614·446·6221 or61045·9484 .
Three room furnished
apartment, adults, no pets,
Point Pleasant . Phone 30.4 ·
675-2453 .
SMALL furnished apan
ment, references, 30-4·675 ·
1365.
3 room furnished cottage,
utilities furnished , adults,
no pets. 304-675·2812 or 675 ·
1580.

~ ~==Fiirn~R~;;,; =Rooms with cooking, cable,
a;r, S40 a week . 304·773 5651.
46

Space for Rent

for Rent
--

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Mobile Home, Eureka. 1 Park, Route 33, North of
Bdr ., turn., riverfront lot, Pomeroy . Large lo1s. Call
ref . 1!. deposil. Adults, S100 99n479 .
mo. H43· 2644.
Small trailer spaces.
12x65, 3 bdr ., mobile home. Mason. 304-773·5651.
Clean, air cond ., furnished, _ _ _ _ _
good loca tion , ref . req. Sec. 49- - - For L=e=a=s
0
dep req. Call 446-8558 .
For lease 2 bdr ., cedar ran beautiful
stone
FURNISHED mobil e home ch
in city . Central air . One or fireplace , wrap around
two adults only . Ca ll .u6· deck, lovely 6 atre setting,
near Green School. Call
0338.
Wiseman Agency, 4A6&lt;1643.
2 bdr . furnished. wall to
wall ca rpet, in Gallipolis,
pri va 1e lot. Call u.\·14119,
between 4 to 8.
-~-----

===-

mobi le home. la rge rooms,

30H82·2820

Effiency

building,

CLEAN USED MOBILE
3 bd .room house. 11f, baths.
HOME S
KESSEL ' S
Family room and fire
QUALITY
MOBILE pla
ce,
stove,
and
HOME SA LE S, 4 MI.
WES T, GA LLIPOLI S, RT refrig erator turn . Car ·
peting. SJOO . mo. dep.req.
35. PHONE 446 ·3868 .
No pels ins;de. 614-992 2362
after 4 p.m .
1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond . Delu xe kitch en, large
l iving room &amp; ba th , 2
bed rm . Hidden uti!. room .

un -

furnished apt. , downtown
28 ACRES, tobacco allot· Gallipolis. Call at 631 4th

304 675·1542 .
5

2 bdr ..

Maytag auto. washer A·l
$90, Maytag dryer coppertone $100. Guaranteed .
Cai1614·256·1207.

2 bedroom trailer . Real
ni ce: adults only . Brown's
Trailer Park, Minersville.
61H9n32A.

BEMCO ma11resses or box
springs, full or twin, $58. 6
Piece Naugahyde heavy
wood living room suite
$595 . Pillow arm sofa 1!.
chair S295. Roll fop desk,
dark &amp; l;ght, $189. Bunk
beds, complete, include
mattress, $199. Complete
water bed shop with 10
bedroom suites on display,
slarting price $229 . Up fo
S2500 . Big daddy coctail &amp;
end fables $50. WaiiAWay
recliners $169. and up. La·
Z·Boy recliners in stock .
USED FURNITURE 5 pc.
1!. 7 pc . dine11e sets,
bedroomsuife Hollywood
style, bunk beds, Flair Fur·
niture &amp; Design . Gallipolis
Ferry, WV . Open 9·6.
Phone 304·675·1371 .

s4 ---M~Me~ha7idiCe 1975 Case A50, dozer ·
tractor, 1,800 hrs .• 'Very
good cond ., S14,900 . Call

u.\·4537 .
RATLIFF ' S POOL CEN ·
TE R Pools sale. suppl;es &amp;
installation. 403 2nd . Ave.,
Gallipolis, Oh . Call 446·
6579 . In ground-Ablove
ground.

--------

ADDITIONAL DISCOUN ·
T!
LIMITED
TIME
ONLY! THE BIG, NEW,
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY ·
SIZE POOLS WHICH IN ·
CLUDE DECK, FENCE ,
FILTER AND WARRAN ·
TY
ARE
NOW
AVAILABLE FOR ONLY
$999 .
INSTALLATION
AND
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
FIRST
COME , FIRST SERVE .
CALL 1·800·624-6511, Ohio;
].800·642·3053 wv .

~

- - -- - - - -- 11
Home
I m provem,.,e,.,
n"ts' - - -

~§~§~::~~::~~~;:~~~~;;~~ textured
STUCCO
50

- · ---- - -=--·--Pets for Sale

DRAGON WYND

CAT ·

2·5 1/2 ft . lighted cabinet
$125 ea .. Russel Stover 3
glass shelf table with
storage undernea,th $100, 2
Hallmark fables, 2 glass
shelves and four drawers
$75. ea., 2-3 unit stairstep
up·stuff Hallmark oak &amp;
glass $175 ea .. 1-5 unif oak
&amp; glass Hallmark up·51uff
$375. These can be seen at
the Full House of Cards,
Sliver
Bridge
Plaza,
Gallipolis.
Ward grain buster hammer
mill. belt driven, 7 screens,
good cond., $100. Call 614·
388·8280.
19751 or w inter quarters.
APPlY at the City
Manager's Office , 518
Second Ave, u.\·1789.

- -·-·- -

AKC Registered Doberman
P i nch~r
pup, excellent
pedigree. $100 thru Sl50
each. Available July 26.
Call 61056· 1425 or 614·256·
1269.
Grooming services for
pels . Wf11 clip Engf;sh
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
ScMauzer's. Reasonable.
Forappt. 614·992-7342.
DWARF &amp; gi ant rabbits.
AKC male poodle for stud
service, 304·882-3672.

5_7 --= ~usica.=-=-==­

36 in. Hollow core exterior
door wi l h lock se t. $30. 6J4.
9854175.

Bach trumpel sl ighfly
IJSed, 1 concert season,
$550. Call675·5644.

-~trument.!_ _ _

CALL Robert Harper,
dislributor of Meadow
Fresh Products , 304·675·
1293.

Conn organ, new Caprice ·
model, $750. Ca11 614-256·
1216.

- - - - --------·-

sa

Fruit: = = =
&amp; Vegetables

WOOD for sale, 304·458·
1833.

--· _______ ;~-;.jtEi~i:f~iorown

sweet corn .
McKeon Farm,
le fd ·Centenary Rd .
u.\-9442.

Troy· BHt RototHiers .
models, Discounts. 1m·
mediate shipment . Trade·
ins accepted . Last chance
for Free Squeezo Strainer Fresh vegetables. Open
with Tiller purchase. 703- daily 3:00 lo 6:00. 2 miles
942·3871 or write Hickory west of Gallipolis on Rt.
Hill Nursery ;, Rt. 1 Box 141' u.\· 1080.
390A, Fisherv i lle , VA .
22939 .
1/2 runner beans pick your
own, bring containers,
Cider Press, 1 bushel hard 56.00 bu., Call 4-46·4807.
rock maple basket, shred- Closed Sundays and Wed·
der attached, never used, nesday evenings
304·675·5057 after 5.
Blackberries for sate. Call
1977 Grand Fury $1600, 614 ·256·1997.
sea r s task handler tiller, B
HP,
$800;
On e · Step Apples. Excellentfor sauce
camera, $15. 304-675·4684.
and pie. Hrs. 9· 5 p.m . Fl!z·
patricks Orchard. S.R. 689,
Ten storm windows Sl50. Wilksville. 614·669·3785.
for all. 30H7B123 .

I bl

63

~--,L-,.
iv_e_
s,toc
-:k ---

REG . QUARTER HORSES
showing,
Sweet corn. S1 .2S dozen . Training,
30H95·3368 .
~br·eeojin!l , sales and boar ding . Contact, Dan Beam,
Gallipolis, 44&lt;1·0183.
LA.Z.BOY Rocker -recline·
r, needs recovered. best of Registered and grade hor fer, 304·675 ·1A74 .
ses, excellent 4·H project .
English and western sad·
LOWERY organ, new, used dies ·
everything
5 times, $300 . and fake over imaginable in horse equip·
payments, call 304-576-2f11 . ment and supplies, also
riding lessons and trail
rides and horse training .
55
Building Supplies
Rulh Reeves, Hoot Ho11ow.
Bu ilding maTerials block,
614-698·3290.
brick, sewer pipes, windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. 0 . For Sale. 2 .1\rabian Mares.
Full ~lsters . Partially
Call614·245-5121.
trained. 614·992·6584 after
9:30p.m.
Metal sheets t.o r all
building purposes. Flat
porceflan enamel coated . 1 registered BGiack Angus
14 months,
1
4x8 thru Ax 12. Prices, $7.00 bull.
registered Black Angus
to$9,60. 614-667·30liS.
BullS months, 1 ~Angus&amp;.
v. . hereford .. v~ar old cow.
Pets for Sale
1 while face &amp; Angus heifer
calf
8 months. 614·247·21141 .
HILLCREST KENNEL

S'

64

Hay&amp; Grain

Hoy tor sale. c,ll 614·379·
2315 or61H79-2766.
2,000 bu. ear corn. Gene
Yost, Racine. 614·9411·2579.

TWO bedroom mobile
home, partially furnished,
$200. month 304-675-4154 .

-· ----~--

THREE ·FOURTHS mile
out Sandhi II Rd. 3().H75·
3834.

-===~~~:;:=~
Apartment
tor Rent ,

44

Ao•~rtn&gt;onts . 304-675·55-48

75 Plymouth Fury hardtop,
good condition, good gas
mileage, SLOOO. Call 61 4•
3677755
·
.

----------

1974 International travel·
a II v.ry roomy, good cond .,
$1,250. or best offer . Cofl
614·245·5017.

614-379·2477.
2·1974 Opel Mana . 1 sian·
dard and 1 automatic . Call
u.l-7832.

72 Nova 6 cylinder, runs

8:00 D Cll Cll (!) 8

Cl2l f\lewa

: .:- :. !- ~ : : .. : ::: : .

I THINK WE ARftiVEP JUI-T
1111 nu;. NICK 01" 11.4\E,

PULL. OVE'R
H~Re, PETER.
WE'~L GeT A
SAUGE ON
WHAT, UP.

.. .•. .
:"f'

~.

· ...

PLASTERING
ceilings com •· · :;:·
....
mercia I and residentiaL
·•
free esfimafes. Call614·256·
'•
1182
·
..
- - - - - --- ------ "i
PAINTING
inter;or and
~\
exterior,
plumbing ,
..
roofing, some remodeling . .. -~~.

~

20 yrs. exp. Call 61088
9652.

-·-

a~Z.ABErn

Marcum

1/&gt;.'/LOR I PlA'IIf.b
. ll\~..\..1~ Ck

'·

'·

....

..•'

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpels. Free estimates.
Call.wl-2107.

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
slock.
JEEPS, cars, trucks under
$100 available at focal
governmenf sales in your
area. Calf (refundable) 1714·569·0241 ext 1855 for
directory on how to pur·
chase . 24 hours .
1971 Dodge Charger, ex·
ceflent condition, 304-6754638.
75Mus1ang II, V-6 engine, 4
speed frans. $800 . Call 675-

4090.
74 EL Camino wifh topper,
350 aulomatlc tran smission, factory air.
power sleering, power
brakes, 59,000 miles, new
exhaust., front tires, front
brakes, $1500. 304-675-22f6.

'

78 FORD Fairmont, good
condition inside &amp; out, A
speed, 23 to 25mpg. 72
Volkswagen
Van,
9
passenger, body good,
motor runs but needs work,
reasonable, 882·3145.
7~ _

_!ruck's fo.!_~~ __

67 Ford J/4 1, 4 ·spd. trans,
faclory stake bed, good
cond., $1,000. Call 614·256·
6574 .
1976 Ford 1 ton ·truck . Good
cond. 614·247·3895, after 6
p.m.

~~::_ -v=a~&amp;4~~o= :::.:::
1978 4·wheel drive GMC
pickup. Call u.\·8286 or 446·
1675.
1?73 Chevy Blazer with
37,000 mi . Radio, a.c.. p.s ..
p.b., auto., tint glass, 10 in .
rally wheels with 10 x 15
Land trac fires. $1,700. 614-

992·7539 .
1979 CHEVY 4x4, loaded ,
36,175 miles, e)(c~llent con ·
dillon, $4.200. Call 304·458·
1833 or 458-1052 .

ly==~~ydes=-=
1978 .WO Hawk Hondamatic
exc . cond. with win djammer, 6,4119 miles, S995.
Caii614·24S.S!I73.
81 Suzuki 850 L full dress .
Shaft drive, like new. Call
614-256·1141 afler 5.
1978 Harley Davidson. 614949·2145.
3 Wheeler Honda 90 A TC
$500. 61H85-4175.

XS 750 SF special Yamaha
1979. Exc. cond. New paint
843·A715. Jim.
1974 XL 125, S200. 1977 XL
75,$325. Call304-675·-4628.
1980
YAMAHA
650
Maximum,
black
&amp;
chrome, •drlveshafl, excellent condition, $2150.
Call after 3:30, 304·675·4849.
Boatsand
Motors for Sate

French City Painting
residential &amp; commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hang ing,
&amp;
lextured
ce11ings . • Calf 614·367-7784
or 614·367·7160.

I •.. I

Masonary work, Logue
Contracfing,
Rl.
1.
Ewingfon . Ca ll 61088·

THINK

HE'LL 6E

OKAY AFTER. HE'5
SEEN F€V Alf ~EGrEQ
iTHERE ARE Galf
!lAGS Cf C/10¥1

9939.
CHRISTIAN'S CON ·
STRUCTION .
Consfr .,
roofing, siding, spouting,
fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
cleaning. 446 ·2000, call
before 8 and after 5:30.

~THERE ~

BREAK OME
OPEN ...

Gene's Steam Carpel
Clean-Scotch Gaurd-Free
estimates-spring specials
Gene Smilh, 992·6309.

-·---

- - -- -·- - ·.

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

F &amp; K Tree Trimm ing ,
slump removal. 675·1331.
R INGLES'S SERVICE ex:
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,. electr i cian,
general repairs and
remodel ing, Phone 304-615·
2088 or 675-4560 .
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-895-3802.
GASOLINE ALLEY
ADVANCED
Soa mfess
Gutter -Door&gt;. Offering
continuous · guttering,
seamless siding, roofing,
garage · doors,
free
eslimates, 614·698·8205.
a'i ==: =ti'1~mbing-- __ _ &amp; Hea!!!!l!_

=-

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446-4477
83

Excavatin."g,___

Galfipolis Diversified Const. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates. Call us for free
esfimates. 4.46·4440.

WINNIE

Lawrence Sidenstr icker
Backhoe Service . Call 675·
5580.
at ==--=Efeciri&lt;al-==
____ &amp; Refrigeration
Clend~nen
Refrigeration,
Air
Conditioning,
&amp;
Heating Service. Call 614256·14.46.
, :·

----

-----~·

TOTAL
ELECTRICAL ·
SERVICE Heating, air.con:
di!foning, wir ing, equip:
ment trouble shooting I
repair...
c'ommercial, · ~·
residential I industrial. Ex" ... •
perienced, certified. Free
Estimates .
Terry
Thoroughman,
614· 446·
2f30.

OL' BULlET!!
HERE, BOV!!
I GOT 'IOU

A BODACIOUS

HAM BONE

:-_:·====:;:::==- ==-=
1_5. __ Gener!f Hau_!il!9__ _

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call614·367-747\
or 614·367·0591.
.,

------·----·

For sale 197• Gremlin runs
well, some body damage,
S1,200. or best offer, Call
614-245·9502.
'•

.

-'llllltl.1m . 1978 Pontiac Flreblrct For·
mula metallc brown, beige
velour lntertor, very ctean,
ex, c0ft4., 4 new 11ree. 5th
tlre with rtm plus spare.
$5,200. Ca11614·367·0114.
75 Chevrolet atationwtriiOR,
11.optl, goad MPG, good
tires, 090d colld, can bel·
weendnd5,446-G29.
•

----------

----- - - - -·-

11
1977 Chrysler Cordoba. 1971
Pickup 6 crl., auto.
Commathe frtvet

JL::::=.,....J:!~~~~~=-~2!~!.;-;.._;::.:;;JJ tre!ler, !4ft., Cell +16-lss::J,

C.mplnt
E!!llp!!!!!!t

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Avt., ·Gaflipofis
44&lt;1·783Jor416-1833.
, ·
~

1971 · Concord
Tr•vel MOWREY$ UPholstery ·Rf
Ttalter ..32 ft, IUIJO, or best ! 8ox 124, PI, Pluaant 1104:

offer. 61H1HIIflf,

'

67H154,

.

'

.·
t

;,
,,
~

u--.,...

four Jumbles,
one ~ Ill eiChsquare , to fO&lt;m
four ordfnlly words.

DITAU

0

I I I

(l)(lUD

(I) MOVIE: 'The Great
Muppet Caper'
Ill My Three Sons
()) Electric Company
(jlJ Over Eaay
6:30 D (I) (!) NBC News
(]) $50,000 Pyramid
(]) ESPN Sportoforum
(]) Father Knowo Best
(I) Ill (J2I ABC News
8 (I) (JD CBS Nawa
(I) Dr. Who
(lJ) Ullao, Yoga and You
7:00 D C1J P.M . Magazine
(I) MOVIE: 'Biow·Up'
(]) Bulf's Eye
(]) CFL From the 55 Yard
Una
Ill Green Acres
(I) Entenalnment Tonight
Ill Happy Deya
8 (I) Tic Toe Dough
()) ® MacNeit·lehrer
Report
®News
1D Cl2l Muppet Show
7:30 II (1) You Asked For It
(]) Another Ufo
CD ESPN Sparta Center
(I) Andy Griffith
(I) 8 (I) Family Feud
(!) Laverne and Shirley
()) Business Report
® Richard Simmons
(jlJ All Creatures Great
and Small
Ill Cl2l Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 D C1J (!) Fame Bruno
confronts a rock composer
who has stolen one of his
songs. (R) (60 m1n.)
(1) Minsky's Follloo Phyllis
Diller, Rip Tayfor and
Stubbv Kaye star in this
adult burlesque show
()) Silent Cr1 0is
(]) ESPN Spociof Golf
Presentation: 1982 British Open f1'om Troon,
S&lt;:otland • First Round
(I) MOVIE : 'Ike' Part 2
(I) Gl (J2I Darkroom
8 (I)® Magnum, P.l . A
recluse. his ghost writer
and a Senator's wife form
an unusual triangle in a
dangerous situation . {R)
160 min.)
()) Sneak Previews Join
film critics Roger Eben and
Gene Siskel as they tak e a
look at the new summer
movies.
8 :30 (J) Good Neighbors
(lJ) Moneymaker•
9:00 . D
(I)
Cl)
Dift' rent
Strokes A disabled girl
helps Arnold overcome his
stage fright . (A) !ClosedCaptioned]
(I) World Championship
Boxing : MaNin Hagler vs.
Fulgencio Dlbemejias
(I) MOVIE : 'Echoes of a
Summer'
Cil 700 Club
(]) Ill (JJ Barbara Walters
Special
I!J (I) ® Simon &amp; Simon
A letter from a dead man
propels A .J. and Rick into
a two-decade ~ old murder
case. IRI 160 min .)
(J) To the Manor Eiorn
l]j) Sneak Previews Join
film critics Roger Ebert and
Gene . Siskel as they take a
look at the new summer
movies .
9:30 D (1) Ill Gimme A Break
The Chief urges Nell to
lose weight , but refuses to
do so h1m self . (R)
(I) Up. Pompeii
(jlJ This Old House Host
Bob Villa introduces us to
a t 950' s Ranch -Style lract
home badly in need of elbow room . [Closed Captioned]
10:00 D (1) ffi Hill Street
Blues Pan one of two Hill
and Renko take an interest
in two toddlers who are
neglected by their mother.
(AI (60 min I
I]) TBS Evening N..,s
(I) Ill (JJ ABC News
Ctoaeup: \/uta in Prison
0 (]) Gal Knots landing
Abby gets her children
back from her ex-husband
and teaches him an unforgettable lesson. (R) 160
min .)
(I) Austin City Um)tl
l]j) Newswatch
10 :30 ()) Sing out America
l]j) Matters of Uta &amp;
Death
11
Cll ® 111 ~
News
(1) MOVIE: ' Children'
()) .N ashville RFD
(]) ESPN Sporlll Canter
I]) All In the Family
(!) Newa/Sponstweather
(I) Dave Allen at large
(jlJ Hitchcook
11 :30 II C1J (!)Tonight Show
(1) MOVIE: 'Wolfen'
()) Another Ufe
I]) MOVIE: 'Gunfight at
Commanche Creek'
(I) Benny Hill Show
8 (]) Quincy Quincy in·
vestigates the death of a
15-year-old
girl
whose
body had degenerated to ,
that of a 70-year-old. (R)
160 min.)
(I) Captioned ABC New.
(JD MOVIE : 'How To
Stuff • Wild Bikini'
ell Nlghtllne
12:00.()) Burna &amp; Alien
(]) Top A.nk Boxing from
ft. WDI1h,

:oo u m (]) o

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

1980 Sears 12' fiberglass
fishing boat, 7 1/2 HP
motor, trailer, oars, lite Need · something hauled, ,,
jackets. StOO, Call ~4782 . , away qr something moved? '.
We'll do ·lt. Cafl u.\-3159 or :•
_ .~
1411. Larson fiberglass~~ 614·2~· 1967afler6.
and . trailer. Boat custom
-----,painted and carpeted, Call Now Hauling limestone-fill
446·0932 or 614-245·9135.
dirt·top soil·gravel. Freeestimates. &lt;;afl 614·367'
26 It, Trojan hard lop 1970 ' 7101.
mint, new canvas, trim· ·-labs, r-"Cy 5500 radio. JIMS Water Servi,e. C~j-::.
dual bllllerles, pressure Jim Ll!nier, 304·675-7397. , , '
water, ·stove, , fc:e, box,
~
hetlvy.duty trailer and .etc,
304-675-3112.

• i&gt;y'Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

EVENING

....•,:;;

Roofing
&amp;
Spo~!ing .
30 years ex·
pertence, specializing in
bui11 up roof. Call 610B8·
9612 or 614-388-9857.

~f}~f.\.(t fi}\1 ~THAT SCRAM&amp;L,ED WORD GAME

7/15/82

good. Call614·388·9034.

75

3 bedroom, all electric,
14x70, $200. monthly plus
elec!r;c , Glenwood. 304·576·
2441 or 304·576-9073.
6 roOm unf urnished mobile
home, six and Olle·half
miles on Redmond Ridge.
City water $125. monfh . 304·
67s.3377.

--

M Camaro for parts. Call
Drawl rabbfls and large
breed mixed rabbits. Three
Beagles $15 each . Call 61438H823.

Remington 870 12 gauge .
614·992 ·2747.

Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Caii4A6·7795 .

7-1 - -- ·A-u-los- ·f-0 r·-5.- 1•

11

~ ~ ~~~

THURSDAY

...

Sonia's Professional Dog
Grooming. Call 614·388·8547
and ask tor Sonia.

German coffee, 2 end
fables, beautifully handcarved scenes from black
forest and glass covered.
30073-5877 .

..
.....,

36ft. GM motor home. Bath ~-· ~
&amp; kitchen area, sleeps 6, • · ..
seats 9, $1,200. call614-3,19· ...
2631 .
~

Live Bait, minnows, night
crawlers, meal worms,
wax worms. Special this
week River Shiners .60 doz.
Maple Wood Lake, S.R. 124,
b et ween
Syracuse
&amp;
Racine.

Sear s free standing
fireplace, black grate, two
sections stove pipe in·
eluded . Calf 614 ·992-3916 af·
ter 5 .

TeleviSion
Viewing

- - ·---· -'------- '·'

Chow puppies,
CFA
HI
1
p
ma ayan, · ersian lind
Siamese killens. Call u.~lUI after 4 p.m .

Repossessed Sign I Nothing
down! Take over payments
S5B .50
monthly . A'xB'
flashing arrow sign . New
bulbs, letlers. 502·529·2721.
Ask about Repo.

. ,
·: :;i.
• ~. ,..
· .•,.··

::!

1973 Dodge mofor home
and a pull camper self con·
tained . Call Paul Smith,
61A ·245·5034.

The

Ohio

For sale or trade a camper, , ., ·
self contained or wlfl rent ~ ~
to one person. Ivan Fife, · .4
614·256·1291 ,

1980 Kawasaki 750 L TO
12.000 mi. $1,500 . or best offer . Also, cast iron church
bell . 61042·2380.

1 Hardwick 5 burner stove.
All hooked up for nafuraf
gas. (While). $150. 61H49·
2619.

79
Motot Home .
~--- J'_Ca!!'J!!rs_ . ~· · _
26' · concord cornpfelely
equipped including shower,
S2,200. Call 614·256·6780.
3xl9 ft . . c&amp;mplng troller.
Call446·8286 or 44&lt;1·1675.

TERY · KENNEL. AKC

13 16.
double garage . 680 S. 2nd .

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved . 1.000
gal. lank, price $340. Other
sizes in stock, haul In your
pickup truck. Cafl 614-286·
5930, Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

by Lmy Wrt.olltl
....;..._;.......;;;.,

Over 1.000 ceramic molds,
k ;tns, and supplies. 61042·
2f25 or 742·2085.

3 bdr br.ick, grea t location.
1 112 bl . f rom pa rk , full
ba semenf , Lower Second
Ave , ex tra lot , f ireplace,

8 room house. Double lot,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'
,-----_:.,_

455 Olds eng., 1 set chain
block s, 1 vise. I drill press.
Call61045-9564.

pe ted, 2 tots, outb ld g. Bar n,
garden, chain l ink fe nce.
two porc hes Ci t y schools .

kllchen ,

.

Repossessed Sign! Nothing
down! Takeover payments
S58 .SO
monthly . A'x8'
flashing arrow sign . New
bulbs &amp; lef!ers. Calf 502·
529·2721. Ask about Repo .

SALE or
Tr ade for farm J BR , com
plete ly modern nome. Car·

mod

s4 .. Mi5c.-M-i(ciiin.iice
·-. - - - .. .. .

15,1982

,

4A6 29 17.
HOME

____

Ohio

Sentinel

.

PEANUTs

,

'

..

\

', ....

IWERE5TJN6 H~!

I I K I I

ISURSEDt

(I) , . . Llt8 Nitht
ell V.... 'Someone is
fremlng Dan's best friend .
Guest starring Richard
Besehart :and Sybil Manning. IR) 160 min.)
12:30 • C1J (!) late Night with
Devld latterman
()) hck Benny Show
(I) V.... Someone is
'framing Dan's best friend .
Guest
sta!Ting
Richard
Basehart and Sybil Manning. (RI
n .. n. )
' .

Prlntanswerhere :
Yestorday·s

I

i

rI

I I )

(Answers tomorrow)

.lumbles GRAVE SUITE PENCIL GRAS SY
Answer Whal actors who want lo play sllpP.ery
characters should use- " GREASE· PA INT

J.,....look No.1$, cont1inlng 111l puzzles, Is aval11ble lor $1 .95 potl~id
froln.lumltll, do this oewsp~p~~r, 8o• 34, Norwood, N.J. 07643. Include your
nlmt, addr'WI, zip codt 1nd m1k1 cheeks payable IG Newsp aperbooks .

BRIDGE
A North-South war?
East's unusual defensi ve
play. They didn't get around
to any discussion of their
NORTH
H$-81
own mild overbidding.
.... 8 6 3
North's jump to four
.Q632
hearts was a slight overbid
•AKQ6
and South's jump to seven
+z
was a decided overbid in our
WEST
EAST
opinion. But with a 3-2
to
+BIZ
trump break the slam would
; 1
.987&gt;
breeze home as it would if
• 94
• J 10 7 3
clubs were just 1· 2.
+KQJI7651
+8
South took his ace of clubs
SOUTH
and
played ace and jack of
+KQ1
trump to get the news abou t
.AKJ 10
the 4-1 trump split. Then he
t8' 2
ruffed a club with dummy's
AIO 3
queen of trumps on the theoVulnerable: Both
ry that West needed eight
Dealer: North
clubs for his vulnerable
three bid.
West
Nortb Eas1
Soutb
At this stage in the pro1+
Pass
1•
ceedings East had to
3+
4•
Pass
Pass
s+
Pass
7.
discard. If he chucked a
Pass
Pass
Pass
diamond, dummy would
score four diamond tricks . If
he chucked a spade , dummy
Opening lead:
would get four tricks in that
•ult, although the spade danger wasn't as apparent.
However, East pla yed
By Oswald Jacoby
sale. He chucked a trump.
1114 AlaD Soatae
This trump discard effectively broke up all squeezes
North and South might · because when South would
•till be fighting about get- get to lead hi s last trump
ting to the heart grand •lam dummy would have to disand going down one trick if card before East.
It weren't for the fact they (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AS.&lt;;N)were so lost in admiration of

:J

+

&gt;+

•K

~'6by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1 Ladd's
co-star
50ahu
greeting

40 Campus
quarters
Aceumulate
42 Fencing sword

n

DOWN

10 Barren

I Dip
2 Seed coating
11 Hinge upon
3 Raise
13 Gaming
Yesterday's Answer
the roof
items
4 Dutch
14 Fonn a
25 Panchen commune 12 Use up
thought
16 Spike
29 Gennan
5 Fiesta
15 Deer
engraver
the punch
farewell
16 Ship's record
30
Duck
out on
19
Pueblo
6 Shelf
11 - tide
chamber
34
English
nver
1 Unclose
18 Autocrat's
21 Craftsman 35 BaU f ilm
8 Fell the
edict
22 Ocean
31 Fuss
20 Blue Hen
stillness
3M " Arti e"
state (abbr .) 9 Civil War
routes
author
battle
Z3 Not stereo
21 Jellied dish
23 Companion
24 Tear apart
!5 Famed

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

1-:-::-+-+--lf--

Yankee
pitcher

28 Uterary
plantation ·
21 Resin

28 Dock·
workers'
group
29 Evil spirit
31 - and Fox
32 Grape-like
fruit
33Sire'smate

b+-t-

36 Turkish city b+--l--l~+-+-

380pera
highUght
39 Required

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR

II

it :

L 0 Pi- G F E L L 0 W

One Jetter simply otandl for another. In 1his •ample A 11

usecr for

the lhr"l! L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Sin&amp;le letter~,
apoetrophes, the length and formation of the word• are all
Illata. Each day tht code letters are different .

e

:ao

Now arrange the circled leners 1o
form the surpnse answer . as sug gested by !he above cartoon

I I K

a

r.,..
(Jj NIJhtllne

HOW MANY ARE
50LD AT TH05E
\!116 AUCIION5?'

CltYPTOQUOTES
QW

QK

OAWWAZ
,
/

wx

FGXJ

NKAUAKK

WX

XP

HXNZKA ,

WEQGTK

WEDG

. FGXJ
GXWEQ G T. KAGAHD
Ye~tenlay's Cryplctquote: MEN WHO KNOW TiiE SAME
TIIINGS ARE NQT LONG TiiE BEST COMPANY FOR 'EACH
OTHER.:_EMERSON

'

'

�•

Page

12-The ~aily Sentinel

!I
·,

Thunday,

I.

Area deaths

Beulah B. Jones

Beulah Burdette Jones, 65, promInent Middleport resident and long
time Meigs County News Bureau
Chief for the Athens Messenger,
died Wednesday evening at her
Grant Street residence.
Mrs. Jones served as bureau
chief for the Athens Messenger for
15 years before retiring In January
or this year.
She was employed by the Dally
Sentinel as Middleport society writer for several years.
Mrs. Jones was a member ot the
Heath United Methodist Church,
Middleport, was a Sunday School
teacher. pianist, past president of
Heath Women' s Society Class 12
and member of the church's Afternoon Circle. She was past regent
and secretary of the Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution,

/.VIy 15, 19~

75 people participate in -Meigs farm tour Thursday P8

Village funds total $45!;,096 ' :
'•

truck, $3,922.41, $3,261.82, $34,1Q4.86;'
general bond retl~en!,___$2,586:26;
$410.08, $16,283.23;' planning CO!Ilrnission, no receipts', $li.Of, 8124.47 i
sanitary sewer eBCrow,_no receipts,
no disbursements, $142,~ .29; water
tank, $5,921.48, _no , disbursements,
$163,291.30; water, - $9,903.80,
$10,294.20, $37,415.51; sanitary
sewer, $6,696.41, $8,084.58, $4,650.07;
swimming pool, $5,&lt;M5.90, J2,861.43,
$2,316;34; cemetery, $1,798.75,
$1,102.09, $458.60; ' water meter
trusts, $480, $196.86, $8,824.15.
Receipts for the ' month totaled
$205,80U3 compared to dlabursements of $179,472.25.

All Middleport Village funds as of
June 30 totaled $455,0!16.88, according to the monthly report of
Village Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.
Receipts, disbursements, respectively, from each fund for the month
and the end of the ,-nopth balance of
each follow: general, $31,466.91,
$25,127.05, $22,211.92; street maintenance $10,746.88, $5,235.07,
$3,727.13; HUD, $116,000,$119,186.30,
$1 ,526.80; federal revenue sharing,
no receipts, $1,773.19, $2,392.40;
street light, $5,379.32, $1,359.78,
$10,108.4&amp;; street levy, $5,379.31,
$154.57, $5,400.33; fire equipment,
$75, $420.18, $455.96, deficit; fire

past president of the Middleport Literary Club and _represented the
Athens Messenger at the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
She was the daughter of the late
Charles E. and Marie Milhoan
Burdette. She was also preceded In
death by one brother, Charles
Burdette.
Mrs . Jones Is survived by her
husband, Walter Emerson Jones;
two daughters, Mrs. Lee A.
(Sharon) Davidson, London, England (Morristown, N. J.) , and Mrs.
James (Barbara) Hegler, Columbia, S. C.; one granddaughter, Eliza beth Davidson, London; three
grandsons John and Charles Davidson, London, and Matthew Hegler,
Columbia, S. C.; one aunt,. Mrs.
Lawrence Milhoan, Rutland, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be announced by Ewing Fune al Home.

Five year ........,.,
expires in NFL

Girl scouts active
at Camp Kiashuta

Dam burst
flood in 'Colorado
Page 1

Page

Page6

•

at y

e

•

enttne
I Section, 12 Pages
IS C•nt•
A Multimedia In t. N•wspap•r

Voi.31,No.51
Copyri.htod 1912

Requests
approved

Meigs County happenings..
..

End marriages

Veterans Memorial

Divorces and dissolutions Issued
yesterday tn common pleas court
were:
Judith A. Wiles, Pomeroy, divorced trom John H. Wiles, PomProy; Gladys S. Davis, Racine,
divorced !rom Mark A. Davis, Syracuse; Laura S. Kirk, Albany, divorced !rom Terry Kirk, Albany.
Granted a cllssolutlon were Henry
P. Price and Naomi R. Price, both

ADMISSION5---Rtchard M. DPMoss, Pomeroy; Therlll S. Randolph, ReedsvOle; Harry A. Miller,
Pomeror: Donna Jean Johnson,
Racine; Herman L. Warner,
Pomeroy; Ricky Lee Hauber,
Mtnersvtlle.
DISCHARGES-- -Doris J .
Haynes, Bill Frye.

Plain~.

Two suits for divorce and an acTuppers
tion for dissolution of marriage
were filed tn Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Ftltng for divorce were LindA
Bentz, Rt. 1, Minersville, against
John Bentz, Sod, W.Va.; and Mary
Trader, Rt. 1, Albany, against
James Trader. Ftltng for dissolution were John R. Jeffers, Rt. 1,
Middleport. and Carol Jean
Jeffers, Louisa, Ky.

Plan river excursion
Royal Oak of Athens Dance Club
members wUI have a riverboat excursion August 13 on the party boat
"Valley Gem" at Marietta.
The boat wUI leave the dock at B
p.m. and return at 11 p.m. There
will be a taU gate picnic at 7 p.m. tn
the parking area near the dock.
Armond Turley wUI provide the
music. The cost Is $16 per couple,
limited to 40 couples. For Information call G. Powell, 992-2622 or 992671Jl.

Man a88aults high court judge

HONORED- Joe Owens, Coolville, was honored recently by Camp .
10900, Modern Woodmen of America for his community services. OweD!
served 20 yean as scout master, Troop 78, Hock-Hocking Boy Scouts of
America and '!1 yean wltb CoolvtUe Volunteer Fire Department, for
which be Is now Dlspateber. He has worked In conservation wltb tbe Ohio
Division of Forestry for 18 yean R~:i'-~ l~tlte~, tbe late Fred Owens,
provided land for a Boy Scout mee
PJBee, and ·community volunteer
erected tbe building. He and his wife, Phyllis Cody Owens, are members
of tbe United Methodist Church, wblch sponsors tbe ScouUng program.
He Is presently Involved with reclamation of land for the Rayle Coal Company, McArthur.

r-;:=====================::l
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

JULY CLEARANCE
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

Mtv

NOT TRADE THAT OlD WATCH FOR
BRAND NEW SEIKO, BULOVA
CARAVEUE. JUST BRING IN THAT ·
WATCH REGARDLESS Of MAKE, QUALITY 01
CONDITION AND .WE'LL A1.UM A TRADE
ON THE WATCH OF YOUR CHOICE.

.WHITE

.$1200
PICK-A-PAIR

SUMMER CLOTHING

a

LADIES'
GOLF SHOES
SIMON'S

~·

c(bl ;J,)1Store

342 2ND AVE.

GAUIPOUS,O.
446-2691

IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

Arvll Holter, Rt. 1, Long Bottom,

Is a patient at Ohio State University
Hospital, 7 Center, Room 751, Colur..t&gt;us, Ohio 43210. Cards may be
5•-fll to him at the above address.

$30,.000 fire hits testing lab

·'

m ooun sr.;
I'OIIIEIOY, 0. ,
992-2054

L1f eS ty l e FURNITURE
SHOWCASE
THIRD AT OLIVE STREET, G~LLIPOLIS

COLUMBUS, Ohio- The Ohio Department of Transportation has
set ground-breaking dates for five high-priority projects !Dialing
more than $47 million.
Director David Weir said the Increase last July tn the state's
motot fuel tax helped provide funds for the state's first new road
construetlon In over two years.
Ground-breaking will be Tuesday for the Ohio approach to the$3.2
million Steubenville bridge project under construction by West ·
VlrglnliJ.
Ceremonies wUI also be held Tuesday for the Ohio approaches 'to
the Moundsville bridge project. Under construction by West VIrginia, the project Is located tn Belmont County on Ohio 872, for $5.7
mUIIon.

ALL
PATIO_and POOL·FURNITURE
NOW REDUCED.

1f2 Price
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Don't meet clear air standards

(Shown Above)
Four Piece Wrought Iron Patio Set with non-scuff nylon
glides. Heavy duty triple coated finish. Settee, ·2 chairs and
table. Your choice of Sand,
nilla or Pine Green.

WASHINGTON- The U.S.'Chamber of Commerce said Thursday that half of Ohio's 88 counties do not meet national clean air
standards for one or more pollutants. They may face construction
bans and loss of federal grants If they do not meet current clean-up
deadlines.
They Include the fo)lowtng counties:
Allen, Ashland, Brown, Carron, Champaign, Clark, Clermont, 1
Coshocton, Darke, Delaware, Erie, Fairfield, Fayette, Fulton,
Geauga, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Henry, Highland, Hocking,
Holmes, Huron, Knox, Licking, Madison, Marlon, Medina, Morrow,
Musklngum, Ottawa, Perry, Plckaway, Portage, Preble, Ross, Seneca, Shelby, Tuscarawas, Union, Warren, Washington, Wayne, and
WOOd .

,OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF RECLINE-RS ON SALE REST OF JULY •.

WHY NOT HAVE THE BEST?
FROM LIFESTYLE FURNITURE

ALL LA~Z-BOY and
ACTION RECLINERS
. NOW ON SALE'

Committee votes for savings

•WALL·AWAY RECLINERS
•ROCKER RECLINERS ·,
•FREE DELIVERY
Our

Action

Wall

Saver'!

reclining

WASHINGTON- The House Ways and Means Committee, meetIng In an l.musual closed-door session, voted Thursday for a package
of Medicare savings totaltng more than $11 billion over three years
and for creation of an addltlonall3 weeks of unemployment benefits.
In a day.long session barred to the public, press and lobbyists, the
panel approved a combination of spending cuts and tax hikes to cut
budget deficits by nearly $21 billion over the next three years.
More than half of that amount- about $11.6 bUUon -would come
from higher taxes on federal workers, businesses and persons rPcelvlng unemployment benefits.

chairs

feature more! More comfort ... more reclining

positions ... more
sty I e .. . more
great
fabrics .. .plos the added feature of being able to
place a reclning chair only •a few incnes from
any wall and still ~ecline . That's why we call
this chair a Wall Saver'" . Come in and get your.

Above:

Deluu

ALL·YOU·CAN·EAT:
0 Freshly scrambled eggs 0 Bacon 0 Link an~
Patty Sausage 0 Homemade Buttermilk biscuits
0 Country milk gravy 0 Home fried potatoes
0 Southern style grits 0 Homemade muffins
0 Choice of Shoney's own special fruit toppings
0 Fresh Strawberries, Peaches and a variety of
other FRESH FRUIT and Tomatoes
$148 CHILDREN

Under12 ·
...

$338 ADULTS

..

Served Monday-Friday 7 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Saturday, Sunday l Holidays 7 a.m. to 2 p.m.

.

at these
'.

SHONEYS
, I

locations:

Pt. Pleasant
Ripley
Putnam Village

'

Slt..SUn
Holldart
'

CHILDREN
UNDER5
F.REE.!
. '

comfort season off to a great start!

~~

BY SIMMONS bJ

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A fire at Battelle Memorial Institute has
caused an estimated s:ll,lXXJ damage to a testing lab, the Columbus
Fire Department says .
No one was Injured tn the Thursday blaze, which apparently began when a researcher left a microwave oven on, Battalllon Chief
Gene Wedenmeyer said. The oven was being used to test a new
heat-absorbing material, he said.
The fire damaged some electronic equipment, but most of the
damage was smoke related, Wedenmeyer said. The fire began at
noon and was contained within half an hour, he added.

ODOT sets groundbreaking dates

ALL SALES FINAL, NO LAYAWAYS OR EXCHANGES

In hospital

SALT LAKE CITY - No pollee, bodyguards or federal security
officers were on hand when man screaming about pornography
and busing "just sUpped through the cogs" at a meeting of lawYers
and pummeled U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White, officials
said.
.
White, 65, suffered only a mtnor abrasion on the cheek before a
half-dozen spectators dragged the attacker away. White went on to
give his speech to the Utah Bar Association at the Marlatt Hotel.
Only regular hotel security officers were present when the attack
occurred, authorities said.

Famous

Shultz confirmation unanimous

_

ANN~RSARY·"

.'

BEAUTYREST

-

THIS YEAR'S BEST PRICE
ON ABEAUTYREST
· ~ ·.
.
r
~

.

EACH

J

,

,

• IJ'Hl

lWIN SIZE •••.•••••• - n
' FULL SIZE • , •...•E~ •• 1179 t
QUEEN SET • . . • •2.~· ~E! '449
KING SET ~ •••.• ).PH£! '599

WASHINGTON - George P. Shultz Is mOVIng Into the secretary
of state's office with the unanimous backing of the Senate despite
misgivings about his business ties wtth tbe Arab world.
The &amp;1-year-old ecooomist, who served In htgh-level po5ts In the
Nixon administration before jotntng the globe-girdling Bechtel
Group Inc., was confirmed by a vote of 97-0 Thul'!lday.
President Reagan prepared io swear In · his newest Cabinet
member, possibly today, saying, "I very much look forward to
having George with us as a member of the team." ·

Winning Ohio lottery nuniber
CLEVELAND - The wtnntng number drawn Thunday night In
641.
In tbe semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the wtniung number was 6325.
lbe lottery reportell
~ $347,013.50 on its daUy game.. The
earnings came on SaleS ~ S961,935, while holden ~ winning tickets
are ~titled to share $614,86i.50, lottery altlclaJ.s said .
·
the Ohio Lottery's daUy game ''The Number" WB$

earnmas

f ~ther forecast

.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - WholP- falls were the first back-to-back dPsale prices, propelled by sharply cltnes since January and February
higher energy costs, took of! tn 1976.
June, rtstng at an annual rate of 13.3
The figure for March was revised
percent, the goverrunent said to- to 0.3 percent today from the 0.1
day. It was the sharpest rise stnce percent reported earlier. FebruMarch 1981.
ary's figure was revised from 0.3 to
Even with ·June's surge, how- 0.2 percent.
ever, Inflation for the first half of
If prices rose for 12 straight
the year was a small 2.5 pereent, monthS at June's rate, the yearly
calculated annually, well under the gatn would amount to 13.3 percent
7 percent'for all of last year and the after seasonal adjustment. The re11.8 percent or 19!11.
ported annual rate Is based on a
Much of the credit for Inflation's more precise calculation of
small gain so far this year has gone monthly price changes than what Is
to the stinging recession and to lin- made public.
gering, large oU stockpiles.
The new report said that over the
But those stocks are dwtndtlng, a last year, rrom June 1981 through
development reflected In the sharp June 1982, prices at the wholesale
4.1 percent gain posted last month level rose 3.5 percent. Economists
by energy prices. For the first five are predicting that, for all of this
months of the year, energy costs y.ear, wholesale Inflation will be 5
had fallen 27.5 percent, calculated percent to 6 perce.1t.
annually.
The department provided thl!'*'
Overall, the Labor Department's detaUs on wholesale price changes
Producer Price Index for finished last month:
-Energy prices, up the most
goods rose a seasonally adjusted 1
percent tn June, the department's since March 1981~ were largely proBureau or Labor Statistics said pelled by higher gasoline and home
heating oil costs, which rose
today.
The Index was unchanged tn sharply after several monthS of
May. It rose a ttny 0.1 percent tn substantial declines. GasoUne priAprU, fell 0.3 percent tn March and ces were up 4.1 percent tn June af0.2 percent tn February. Those twtn ter falling 5.9 percent the month

ertr loalibt.

•

Eij 1

H

CHARLESTON,' W.Va. (AP) _
An Ohio salvage dealer Is appeal-

lng a conviction for which he has
been fined $10,000' and placed on
to his 1 tn
five years probation r
i'O e
an alleged multtstate automobile
theft ring, court officials said.
Johnny "Abbie" Mathews, 40, of
Rio Grande, Ohio, ·was sentenced
J
T eoby U.S. District Ju.dge ohn · ·
penhaver. He Is'appeallng the June
5 conviction, a courtspc)keswoman,
who li!d not want to be ldentWed,
said Thul'!lday.
. Copenhaver also ~ Mathews to pertonn 250 days~ public
service work dUring the term ()f his
directed Mathew5 to
·start
Colli!DIU\ver
an escrow account to cover
c1v11 daJnaaes that might be

I 'v • ... 'l'i rriiQ': .
..
• - ud ...... •
periDd wD .CAt' nell llu ou--' •
I II&amp; ........ lite tr'l . . . . . . . . . . _ fnm llie '.

m"•tu••

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I

,

.

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any

!IOOJI!t

Olllo FareeMi

before. Heating oil costs rose 7 percent after falling 1.1 percent tn
May. Natural gas prices were up
2.9 percent after a l.B percent Increase tn May.
For the first six monthS of the
year, energy .prtces overall were
down 17.1 percent, calculated
annually.
-Food prices rose a modest 0.5
percent In June, less than the 0.7
percent gain of May and April's 1.6
percent rise. Prices fell for coffee.
fresh fruits, eggs, pork and poultry.
Costs rose for shortening and cookIng oils, rice, beef and veal, fish,
vegetables and sugar.
So far this year, fOOd prices have
risen at an annual rate of 8.8
percent.
-Passenger car prices jumped
1.9 percent after rising 0.7 percent
In May, a result, the department
said, of automakers' ending their
rebate programs. Light truck prices also rose, up 3 percent In June,
down from May's 4 percent gain.
-Capital equipment costs rose
0.8 percent after climbing 0.4 perf Continued on page 12)

Board adopts
1983 budget
A $1.5
million budget was
adopted Thursday night during a
special session of the Eastern Local
Board of Education.
The actual receipts and the
amount of money needed wUllel!,.ve
a deficit of $264,695, according to
Richard Roberts, superintendent.
In other business, the board hired
Steven Weber as high school
science teacher and accepted the
resignation of Sherry StoUor as first
grade teacher at Chester.
The next regular meeting of the
board wtll be July 29 at 7 : ~ p.m.

Salvage dealer to
appeal conviction

probation.

PartlY cloudy and CODtlllued hot and muay lllnlghtaild Saturday.
LoCIII'IIDIIIgbt ({1 to 72. lfllbi Saturday ..... WIDds JJpt aDd Iouth-.

working at the site. ·The addition, which wtll provide
space for more salts areas at the local store, Is
scheduled to be completed about Nov. 1.

Sharp energy prices
.ID"c rease In
. flalton
. rate

&gt;

..

.

PROGRESS - Excellent progress is being made
at the Kroger Store In Pomeroy where an addilton Is
being constructed by Dlnlabo and SoDS of Huntington,
W. Va. Bo Wallace and Jack Shepherd are pictured

Meigs County Commissioners
have approved five of the six Community Developm e nt Blo c k
Grants, CDBG.
Ftve approved for submission to
the state were Chester Township
Fire Department, $2,600; Rutland
VIllage, $1,995; Bedford Township
TrusteeS, $5,000; Racine VIllage,
$4,000; Orange Township Fire Department, $7,404.~ making a total
of sa1,999.!1l.
The application of Chesler Township Trustees for the Bas han Fire
Department was not approved. It
was determined that repairs to vehIcles were not eligible costs under
the CDBG guidelines.
The board wlll also Incorporate a
request for funds In the amount of
$59,550.20 for development of a new
landfill site Into the CDBG application. Approximately $8,950 will
be allowed for granttn administration and related costs.
Commissioners met with Frank
Davis, grants administrator for
Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley RPglonal Development Dlstrlt to rPvlew the CDBG applications as
submitted to the board before makIng a determination on the six applications received.
In other business at Wednesday's
recessed session, the board met
wtth Jim Hartzler of John David
Jones Association to discuss the
progress of the Tuppers Plains Sewage problem. . 11 , .;. ,
Hartzler said 'tll!l ptan Is near
completltlon and soon wUI be discussed wtth the Ohio EPA.
Following the discussion with the
EPA a date will be established for
the final public meeting with the
residents of the Tuppers Plains
area.

frOm blm by people who

may bave lolt money through the

allea,eci scheme."Yoo

111'1!

a man

.
of suftlclellt

means and have sluWllsucci!saflll
·tw-.t J\ld8ment and there Ism

reas~n for you to be Involved tn
this, &lt;:;openhaversalddurlng~ed-

nesday s sentencing hearing. The
court Is at a loss to understand It,
save for greed."
Mathews was among 24 people
tncllcted tn connection with the atleged ring, but the· only person to
stand trial. Charges against three.
people were dropped and 20 defendants chose to avoid trial by through
plea-bargain agreements with
PI'OSECU tors.
U.S. Attorney David Faber accused MatheWs of acting In the fall
ahd summer of 1978 as a silent
ll8rtner In the alleged llchel'l)e. 'I:Ie
was Cl)nvlcted on charges of conceallng the theft of tw.o vans and a
sports car by giv"'~
the vehicles
~...
titles and Identification plates from
lunlced CIIJ:!I~
·
Prolecutors said the Indictments
rSuited ·trocn tnvestJgatlopB by
state and federal authorltk!s Into
the theft~ more thaJI!!OII,I!bicll!lln
10 stateS, ~ fr~ Flqrlda to
.· Ohio,
·

LOT - Ernest CarT operates a bulldoZer at tbe new Soatbem Baptlat

ClmrdJ on former Route J3to e~ale a .-rklng lot at the eburcb which Is

sllll llllller COII8truclloa. Sis: vohmteer workers from tbe Grace Bapllil
Cburcb at Ozford, Ala., are In Meip Couaty tbiB week dolq Interior eo...
struelloa work. Tile eburcb 'baa been built with some 80 percent
vohulteer labor, tilt of wblcb baa been provided by tbe vohmleel'
workers of Soutbera BapU,t Cburcbes In the Soutb. Altbeugb tbe clnlrcll
Interior u 110t eompleled Sliaday tervlces aJ"e being C!llldaeted In the !leW
strilctilre and tbe f-et- prlen of tbe cburcb In Pemeroy; Malberry
.Ave., are up lonale.
,. .r

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