<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14307" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14307?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-10T01:13:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45413">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/4e0d4e0a0623568e19e5f90ef97fd068.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4cf55771c6529b2abb9009ec59ac44a0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44682">
                  <text>•

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••

..,.!lie

I

,

.

••

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

�-·-

·-----

·--·------------·-- Friday, July 16,1982

Commentary
lllt '••uriSin•d

l'unwru 1, llhiu

61._!192-m;e

Ill· \Ill Fll T1 I TIIF

l~n: RF:.ST Of'

THE MEtf;S-MASO\ , HF.A

ROBERT 1.. WINGET£
l'uhiiKh••r

PAT WHITF:Ht: AD

BOB HOEFLICH

\ 'si~IJi nll ' uhlisllt'r/l "••utn•lh · r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
"'' t'IH

t :dltur

A ~n: MRER ul Tht• As.ou•dult'd J•n-n., lnhwd Dailv Prt't!l! At.~twl»Ut~n wnd tht&gt;
,\nwri• ·au N • • to~ K pup!· r l' uhli,.ht•rs AHsud~:~tlun .
·
u ·:n t:Ks lit' Of'I NJnN uno lh' ll'llmt·•1. Thr~ shuuld bt'le!iti thMq300 wur!IN Inn)( , "''
l••th·rs art· suhjt·rt tu t•di!inJ( and muKI ht· sh!.m·tl wllh Rllmr. 11ddrt'MM wnd lt•lt•phunt'
uum~·r . Nn unH iJ(JWti ll'tlNs " ·illlM· publlsht•d. 1-t•ltt-nl • huuld bto in l(tHid laHir. Mddn'l'KIIIJ!
I~"Ut'~ . nul pt'fSIIIIUiitit't. .

Effect may differ
·from ·the goal
Each day In some way the theme Is repeated. The goal or economic
policy, It Is said, Is to transfer power to the private sector, where risktaking businesses wlll Innovate and create jobs.
For the time being, the Immediate effect may differ !rom the goal.
The private sector Is hurting. As Terry Daniel views the situation, It Is
hurting because or high Interest rates, a blg national debt, .and the unwll·
llngness of Congress to correct the problem.
.
· Daniel, head of E ·Z Pak Inc., P.O. Box 12, Dickson, Tenn., felt the
situation was Intolerable and so, In a few hours, he won approval or 26
small businesses to close down for a day of protest. It might not correct the
problem, he concedes, but It might call attention to lt.
_
Daniel now seeks the help of the National Federation of Independent
Business, which claims a membership of 54C,OOO, to publicize the close
down day on a date yet to be set. An olflclal of the group, Joe Shalran, says
It "might put out a little note "ln.U.s magazlne"Mandate," published every
six weeks. but he declined to have the group committed beyond that.
Daniel Intends to press on.
Six years ago he founded E -Z Pak, which makes packaging machines
tor snack food producers, selling hls,home to obtain the Initial $5,000 and
borrowing $5,000 from a local bank.
He fell confident. Having worked as a machinist and In maintenance for
another machine company, he observed that Improvements suggested by
customers and maintenance men were Ignored. He felt that by IncorporatIng those suggestions he could produce a hetter machine.
He dld. Sales doubled each year until last year, when volume shrank.
Sales were lost. he said, because potential customers worried that If E·Z
Pak went under, as dld 17,000comp\mles last year, they'd he unable to get
parts. They liked hls product. They feared the future .
The machine, which would sell for $40,000 or so, about $Xl,OOO under the
competition, Is more efficient, he said. A prototype now at Moore's Potato
Chip Co., Bristol, Va.. proves that, he said.
Other companies, too, made business plans over the past year on lorecasts of an Impending upturn. They believed, he said. "They tried to hold
on; they took out more debt." And when recovery didn't come, he said,
"they went under with a blg splash."
Under the Circumstances, he said. It wasn't hard to get signatures In
Dickson, seat of Dickson County, about 40 miles west of Nashville. An
o!flce supply company, a carpet company, a well driller, shoe store, car
dealers, and a Realtor were among those who signed.
Of 31 small-company executives and proprietors lo\'hO were approached,
they said, only the auctioneer flatly refused to sign. For him. business Is
good. said Daniel.

Letter to editor
Accept responsi_bility!
Wt• are writing this letter con·
ft•rnin.l! a very true) inddent whieh

&lt;&gt;e.'currL'Ii

recently

at

Por11erny

Sunnt.'tl.

A unknown individua I placed
st•vt•ral ynung kittens In a brown

paper sack, then put the sack in nne
nf our trashcans. We rt!alize that
~nplt•

have their likes and dislikes

.,r all animals, but what kind nf sick.
wort hless

per~on

would do
son 1e thin~ like this to kittens that
wt•rp so youn)! th&lt;:~t their eyes

weren't even open? Penple whn do
this kind of thin~ must bt&gt; so ignorant
thai they dn not realizdhat this area
has a Humane Society to take care "f
things like this.
II peoplt' take the responsibility of
havin~ pets, they should act'L•pt the
responsibility of them bt&gt;cm11ing
pregnant. We feel that a sign recenily in Middleport stated it bt&gt;tter
than wt• ever could, "DON'T UTTER, NEUTER." - Employees nf
P!li11CrtJY Sunnen.

Myths &amp; wisdom

Atlanta ~oils Over Cubs, 11-4

Page--:.2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Mietdleporf, Ohio ·
Friday, July 16,1982

.Court still

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - A year ago, at
the end of the 1980 term. a concensus
developed among observers of the
U.S. Supreme Court : The court wa•
drifting among observers of the U.S.
Supreme Court : The court was ·drifting. With the end of the 1981 term,
that view remains unchanged: The
court is still drifting.
Thb past term saw no new landmarks. nn great beacons of the law. ·
We had nothing to rank with the
Brown case on school segregation,
or the Miranda case on the rights of
an accused, or the Miller case on
pornography. The cotirt never painled with a broad brush on a big caw
vas. We wound up with small etchings, tightly frll!lled.
A simple explanation -it is not in-.
tended to be cynical' - accounts for
the situation. We pride ourselves on
saying that "ours is a government of
law, not of men," but the boast' is
empty. It is a myth, a shibboleth, a
sham. At the level of the Supreme
C&lt;l!lrl, ours is emphatically not a
government Of abstract law, but a
govemrnent of eight very mortal
men and one woman.
As always, these nine human
beings brought to their opinions the
accumulated
convictions,
prejudices and attitudes of their
lifetimes. Members . of the court
detest the journalist's practice of
putting them in ideologic~!
pigeonholes, but the custom gains in
understanding more than It loses in
precision. With few exceptions, the
three conservatives · (Burger,
Rehnquist and O'Connor) came
down on the side of judicial restraint
and narrow construction. The three
liberals fBrennan, Mar!lhall and
Blackmun} tended toward activism
and expansion. The three centrists
rWhite, Powell and Stevens) titled
the teeter-totter first here, then
there.
•
·
In a recent column , my brother
pundit Joseph Kraft discerned a

CHICAGO · It looks as If the
Atlanta Braves have found bir.tlpark they like even better than
their own homer-happy stadium.
"With the wind blQwlng out, It's
even better than Atlanta," said
Dale Murphy atter hitting a tworun homer Thursday in"the Braves'
114 victory over the Chicago CUbs
at wind-swept Wrigley Field.
Aided by a 13-mph wind blowing
out to center field, Murphy, Bruce

Th~

thrl!t' eonscrvatives collectively
rL'Corded 91 dissents, the three
liberals 99. Nothing in these fi~ure.;
sugg.sts a tle&lt;'isiw lilt orie way or
another.
A word of Justice O'Connor: While
she wrolt• only 12 "Pinions for the
court. con •!"'red In 17 for Rehnquist
and 20 for Whit e, she pulled her
weight in "ral argwrtenl and in
chambers . Though not a gifted
writer, a trait she shares with . the
other eight, O'Connor put together
"pinions M darily and good
nrganization. Because I expressed
much skepticism a year ago about
her nomination, I would make
amends. The court's first woman
justice cannot be id~ntilied f•lr'ever
as a woman justice; she is quite
sirnply an associate juslil'e, and a
~ood

une.

1

., · ·~

DIAZ DOUBLED- Bo Diaz, Philadelphia Phlllies, Is out at second
base to start double play In fourth innirtK of game with San Francisco
Giants Thursday night. Joe Morgan makes relay to first to reilre Garry
Maddox who had grounded to third. 1AP Laserphoto}.

therefore want some balance res·
tored, he says.
Republican analysts argue that
people accept Reagan's argument
that his tax cuts 'aiid spendlllg
changes will take stU! more time to
work.
Richard Wlrthlln, the president's
chief pollster and head of Decision
Making Information, says hls surveys show a remarkable reservoir
of patience among Americans for
the results of the Reagan policies.
One key to a good showing among
GOP candidates this fallls "an extension of that patience," he says.
An aspect of this public patience
Is the COI)Ilnulng refusal of Americans to blame Reagan sol«,&gt;IY for !he
nation's economic troubles. The
policies of the past Democratic ad·
ministration and the Democrats In

electoral Impact ·of the Issue wlll be
Congress may share the blame In
the public's eye.
spread between the parties as well.
However, If the public comes to put
The reasons for this mixed public
view are easy to see. The Intricate
the responsibility for the economic
squabbling over the budget In Controubles on Reagan, the fall elec·
gress has complexities that few out·
tlons could lead to much greater
side of the nation's capital can
GOP losses than are now forecast.
While both parties' pros agree
fathom. With a Reagan budget, a
Democratic alternative, a bipartithat the economy will he 'the Issue,
san bill and the Federal Reserve
they split on w
,!mJ aspect of the
economy wUI be 'tl~ key.
Board all Intertwined In the economic ballet, It Is no wonder that
Democrats, naturally, mention
lhe public lacks a clear Idea who to
the recession and unemployment.
blame for what.
Republicans, In contrast, talk about
That hesitancy to blame Reagan
the blg drop In the rate of Inflation
has defused - for now - what
since Reagan took office and the
could be a critical political problem . big "anti-Inflation constituency"
for the president and for Republl·
that will appreciate that change.
can candidates running as supporWhich as peel of the economy will
ters of hls pollcles. ·
become critical to the voters may
As long as the voters spread the
be shaped by the reports In the In·
blame for econom ic troubles, the
tervenlng weeks on the rates of na·
tlon' s Inflation and unemployment.
I ,

Pray .for a miracle
For centuries nations facing
economic ruin have had two options,
pray for a miracle or provoke a war,
Now we don't even have these!
,
Miracles are hard to come by
these days. Times have chaned since
Moses parted the waters of the Red ·
Sea or Joshua fought· the battle of
Jericho. Hope for obvious miracles
seems dim and only a madman
would provoke a war as an option.
The miracle would be a change from
our course .which will inevitably lead .
to war to · a course that pursues
peace. If V(e would spend the same
money, effort and dedication toward
peace as we are spending towrd war,
prosperity and plenty would certainly follow.
· For yean; our government has
been influenced by interests that
make war their busintss. The high
profits of war or preparations for
war have ruled our ecoqomy and affected our reason. It Is much more
profitable to manufacture the ~oods
of war than the goods for pea~.
Huindrum items such as cars,
refrigerators, washes and dryers
mw."l be built to withstand competition while missiles and bombs go
thorugh no such tests. Who knows
whether a binary nerve gas bomb
will ever explode ·when to release

NEW YORK 1AP) - Having "just come through a long and lonely walk
through the valley or the shadow of death," Lee lacocca has It In for the
proponents of myths and protectors of conventional wisdom.
"We were lectured, scolded and preached to. We were held up as an
example of everything that Is wrong with American management," the
Chrysler chairman told an audience at Alma College In Michigan this
spring.
lacocca, who of late has shown a propensity for drawing lessons for the
en.Ure nation from -his experience, had the Alma address published as a
booklet and distributed to the media and others.
·
Myth number one, he says, Is that "Chrysler went running, hat-In-hand, '
to Washington for a bailout -a handout !rom the federal government that
·
constituted a reward for mismanagement."
The fact, according to Iaccoca: "We dld not get a gift from the government o!$1.2 billion II\ a brown paper bag." The money was only a guarantee for loans to finance new products and new technology.
He calls It another myth that Chrysler did not deserve to be saved
because It was gliUty of mismanagement. "The management of Chrysler
rn8de some mistakes," he concedes, a conclusion to which most Critics
would add something. The probem, he claims, was "strilclul'al." Energy
policy changed "once a week," and emission controls and safety Items
were "Increasingly ou"trageous" and costly.
11 1s a myth, he continues, that Chrysler misread the demand for small
cars whUe the Japanese accurately picked up tJie signal
It was a myth that Chrysler was king of the gas g\12Zlers.
It's a myth that American workers are lazy and shiftless. "American
workers.'· he declares, •'are just as dedicated, and just as hardworking. as
any workforce anywhere In the world."
·
The preachlngs about JaiJmtese buDders cutting expenses thr011gh more
efflclencles Is mytholofly too, 'Says the chajrman. He gets verY, bot on this _..
one, although the!'e are stlll many people wllo wUl dispute him.
•
Iacocca's moral: Broaden the mind, challenge conven~lonal wildolll. !II! -;·
·reCeptive to jdeas C(IUnter to accepted tracl!tloll!', ·''and abov~ all,' consider .
a11 :the facts before decisions are m!!de."
·
.

.

\

save.

Pirates 5, Astros I
John Candelaria and Rod Scurry
combined to pttch a five-hitter and

Dave Parker drove In !our ruu...
three with a homer, as Pittsburgh
defeated Houston.
Candelaria, 54, struck out six
and walked one, allowing five hits
before giving way to Scurry In the
seventh. Scurry finished up with 22·
3 Innings of hlt less relief to earn his
sixth save.
Parker singled home a run tn a
two-run Pittsburgh first off loser
Don Sutton, 9-5, then walloped a
three-run homer In the ninth.
Expos 6, Padrl!l 2
Gary Carter singled In two runs
and Chris SpP'f'f doubled In a pair
to key a five-run fourth Inning and
Charlie Lea pitched a three-hitter
as Montreal beat San Diego.
Lea, 7-5, hurled his third complete game of the season, giving up
just one hit through the first six Innings. He struck out five and
walked three In ending a personal
three-game losing streak.
Luis Salazar's sixth homer gave
the Padres a 1-0 lead In the third,
but the Expos knocked out John
Montefusco, 7·5, with their fourth· ·
Inning rally. The loss snapped the
right-hander's six-game winning
streak.
"I was just lucky tonight," said
Lea. "They hit the ball on the
ground, and the fly balls were right
at somebody."
PhlBles 2, Giants I
Gary Matthews' two-run homer
In the eighth Inning helped Phlladel·
phla overcome a night of futillty at
the plate and beat San Francisco.
Matthews' homer, his 15th, was
only the fifth htt off Giant starter
Rich Gale, 3-9, and came atter Pete
Rose reached base on an error.
Rose led off the Inning with a
ground ball In the hole that shortstop Johnnie LeMaster tried to
backhand. but dropped.

Berenyi bows neck, defeats Cardinals

Will patience last through fall elections?
WASHINGTGN (AP) - Americans have thus far waited patiently
for an economic recovery spurred
by Ronald Reagan's policies. A key
political question Is whether their
patience wlll last through the.
elections.
The state or the nation's economy
wUI be the overriding Issue In the
House and Senate races this fall,
both Republican and Democratic
party professionals agree. But they
don't agree on what the voters·
judgments are.
Democrats say the voters wlll
judge Reagan's policies a failure In
light of the recession and IncreasIng unemployment. "I call this a
mldcourse correction election,"
says pollster Peter Hart, who usually works for Democratic candl-.
dates. The voters have judged that
Reagan's policies are unfair and

Benedict and Larry Whlsenton wal· 6-10, who was hammered for five
loPed homers as the Braves got the runs In 11-3.Innings and made his
second half of their season off on the quickest exit of the season.
right root.
Cub reliever Blll Campbell
Atlanta may not match Its record ·ytelded two more ru~ In the third
13-game winning streak at the start to gtve Atlanta a 7-1lead, and the
of the season, but Manager Joe Braves hlt Dick Tldrow for four
Torre hopes hls team can establish more, Including Benedict's two- run
some kind or a foothold at the top or shot.
'
the National League West.
Atlanta's Phil Nlekro, 7-3, went
The homers by 'Murphy and Whl· the distance for the second time this
seitton came off Ferguson Jenkins, season, scattering nine hits. And
.when the Cubs Issued an Intentional
walk to No. 8 hitter Rafael Ramirez
In the third Inning, putting runners
on first and second, Nlekro crossed
up the strategy with a two- run
double.
"He's become ·a better hitter, "
said Torre of Nlekro. "He used to be
the All·American 041."
Mets 5, Dodgen 2
Dave Kingman and Mookle Wll·
, sonhlt two-run homerstopaceNew
York over Los Angeles. Charlie Puleo, 7-6, and Terry Leach combined
to scatter elgtrt hits for the Mets.
Loser Jerry Reuss, 9-7, retired
the first 11 New York batters untll
George Foster singled with two out
In the fourth . Kingman followed
with his 22nd home run.
Puleo singled to lead off the sixth
and Wilson followed with his third
homer. John Stearns then doubled,
took third on a passed ball by
catcher Mike Scloscla and came
home on Foster's sacrlflce fly .
The Dodgers scored In the second
on singles by Ron Cey and Scloscla
and added a run In the seventh
when Steve Sax reached on an In·
field single and eventually came
home on a single by Cey. That
brought Leach out of the bullpen,
and he gave up only one hit over the
final 21-3 Innings to record hls third

a

drifting~·_
· ______Ia_m_es_J._K_ilpa-triC_·k
predominantly liberal tilt 'during the the' court divided. The temi saw 30
term just ended. I think his eye cases decided by :&gt;-4 divisions and
tlecieved hlm. Two or three of the two others 4-3 . Twice the court
criminal cases may have echoed the deadlocked 4-4.
solicitude dispaycd by the old
Patterns developed. Rehnquisl
Warren Court, but most of the and O'Connor participated in 140
decisions in this field were made of cases. (She recosed in six cases).
sterner stuff. One decision. in- They disa~reed 14 times, for a harvolving the children of illegal aliens mony rating of 90 percent. At the
in Texas, was long on compassion other end of lhe speC\rurn, Marshall
and a little short on law; other cases and Brenn11n participatein 144 cases.
with a paticularly hwnan anl(le, (Each recused once). They
such as a case testing the disagr&lt;!ed only six times, for a hilreducational rights of handicapped . mony ratin~ of 96.
children, went the olher way.
Look at the clusters of three:
The statistics, tenuous as they are, Burger, Rehnquist and O'Connor
indicate the drift. By my count, the participated in 139 cses. They voted
court handed down opinions in 146 alike in 102 of them, or 73 percent of
cases that had been fully heard. of the time. On the other side, Brennan,
these, 26 were by unanimous vole; Marshall and Blackmun partiicpate
another 20 saw no dissen!B from the n 142 cases. They voted alike in 105 of
actual jud~ment; an even 100 times, them, for an identical .73 percent.

Pomeroy-Micl&lt;lleport. Ohio

one in a test would be too horrible to
contemplate? Who knows for such
whether missiles in our silos will
ever explode or even travel through
space? Today the United States and
Soviet Union have 17,000 nuclear
war heads stockpiled, equal to 8,000
pounds of TNT for every man,
woman and child on earth, n1aking
hultlans the most endangered
species. We will never know which
are duds!
We are submitted by the Reagan
administration to spend more than
ONE BILUON DOLLARS PER
DAY for weapons, men and
materials over the next four years
for human annihilation. The United
States and the Soviet Unon are now
increasing the stockpile for four
warheads daily. How 1118ny times
can either country destroy the other
or the world? We are doing all this in
the misguijled name of defense,
risking the future of hwnanity. Have
you ever tl}ought what a billion
dollars a day spe~t for a peaceful.
economy wou do? Economists tell us
that a dollar spent in peaceful pur- sui!B will retum to the ecimomy
three times the purclwipg power as
a cklllar spent to blow hole . in the
-sky.

tear'n."

By Associated Press
Several National Football
Leaguedratt picks, free agents and
already-signed players found the
urge to pick up a pen and sign a
contract -just as the league's collecttve bargaining agreement with
the Players Association was
expiring.
Among those so Inclined was Jim
McMahon, the All-American quarterback from Brigham Yo~ng. who
was orie of five flrst-rouqd pickS
reaching agreement hefore the
midnight Thursday deadline.
McMahon signed a three-year contract with the Chicago Bears and
"''Ul report totralnlngcampJuly24.
"We're delighted to have him .
under contract and glad to havehim as a Chicago Bea,r," said club
spokesman Pat McCaskeY.
' Other first-round pickS Coming to

11 1nney.

Rt;ag~n

tc1change!

lack of offense."
Following hls teammates' burst,
Berenyl worked around two one-out
walks In the fourth and gave way to
Jim Kern after walking Ken Oberkfell and Ozzie Smith atter two were
out In the St. Louts sixth.
Kern Inherited a 3-0 count on
Steve Braun, eventually walking
the Cards pinch-hitter to fill the
bases. But the tall reliever Induced
Lonnie Smith to htt Into an Inning·
ending forceout and atterward weathered two singles In the St. Louts
ninth.
~
Berenyl, who had dropped hls
previous three pitching decisions,
said he was distressed at the outset
by neither hls own problems nor
Cincinnati's lackluster record.
"I can't go out there with a negative outlook, I'd only be hurting my·
self," the 27-year-old hurler said.
"We all know what we've got our-

selves Into. It's a tough thing we're
going through."
McNamara admitted the34-53 record of the Reds, tallenders In the
National League West, ranks as an
embarrassment which wlll he hard
to overcome.
"We're just going to do our best
and wln as many ballgames as we
can and try to get to .500," the manager said. "We're not going to start
conceding anything."
Concepcion's RBI double In the
opening Inning and Driessen's runscoring double In the seventh
rounded out Cincinnati's ll·hlt
attack.
The Cards, meanwhile, were hlt·
less from the first until Tommy
Herr singled ' with one out In the
ninth. Willie McGee, George Hendrick and Oberkfell· singled home
St. l.ouls' runs In the first.

Several draft picks sign contracts in final hour

association money and New Right
This year may decide the future of
America. Congress is the only check
the p.eople have on an administration that seems intent on
trusting us oloser and tloser to a
worldwide conflict which no one can
win. Polls show that more than
three-fourths of the people are in
favor of a freeze on the production of
atomic weapons but the minority
one-fourth. have the money and the
ear of the president. It is a shame we
can't say to the hawks in government. '.'Go your way and we'll go
ours." But the bombs and missiles
will fall on hawks and doves alike. Is
this all there is to Reagan equality?
We are on the edge of another
Great · Depr"cssion. When administration bi~ shots promise
recovery next spring or next fall, I
can't help re.memberin~ that
another president, Herbert Hoover,
promised us much the same thing in
193().31. Bot~ presidents used the
same economic theory of "trickledown". Nothing trickled then and we
hav?. no reason to hope that it will
triCKle now.
The miracle we need would be for

duced a 3-1lead which, as It turned
out, held up for less than two In·
nlngs behind rookie John Stuper, 42.
Eddie Milner led off the Clnctnnatl third with a single. hls second
hit, and made It home on a single by
Dan Driessen after Dave Concepcion walked. Cesar ~edeno doubled
home Concepcion to manulacture a
3-3 tie, then Jeff Lahti wlld-pltched
Driessen home in relief of Stuper.
Ron Oester' s RBI single and a
double play grounder by Alex Trevino soon atterward capped a fiverun rally, one o!the Reds· biggest In
recent weeks.
"That's been a problem," said
Manager John McNamara, refer- .
ring to prolonged previous absen·
ces o! an attack. "Our pitching has
been decent. but Inconsistent. Our
main problem has been RBis and

The Cards' early uprising pro-

Lowell Wingett
I must adJnit I c~n no longer follow
the twisted reasoning of the leaders
of the United States and the Soviet
Union. Every day they pil~ error on
~rror even as they stockpile bomb on
bomb. The two greatest issues of our
time, .the . economy and the
probability of survival in the nuclear
age, are intertwined. If we build all
the annaments the administration
plans, we will impoverish our
economy, the Russian economy and
eventually worldwide economy.
There has been much talk in this
election year about the efficiency of
the Reagan administration and the
disarray of the Democrats. But are a
swelling deficit, a bloated am1s
budget and the worst uneinploymentm in 40 years a measure of
efficiency? The real "efficiency" of
the Reagan adJninib"lralion comes
from the skillful and deceptive use of
money and the technology which
money buys. In the last four y.ears
the nwnber of Republican Political
Aciton Corrunittees (PAC) has risen
from 200 to ·more than 2,000. 'This
year, an off year election, the GOP is
prejrared to outspend the Democrats
by more than 9 to I. This upsurge of
money has pol com~ from grass root
support but is an insidious combination of corporate money, trade

ST. LOUIS lAP) - As flrtlle as
judging a book by Its cover, Bruce
Berenyl discovered, Is trying to de' !ermine a game's outcome by Its
·first Inning.
"I was out there thinking It
wasn't going to be my night," the
Cincinnati right-hander said Thursday night following a 7-3triumph by
the Reds over the St. Louts Ca•dlnals. "Luckily, I was able to keep
my composure."
Not only did Berenyl remain In
control, he soon experienced a rev·
ersal ol fortunes en route to hls first
victory since June 13.
"They had two or three of them
off the fists," said Berenyl, 6-9, In
respect to five singles St. Louts
complied to score ali its runs In the
leadoff lnnilrg. "That's going to
happen. They're a good-hitting ·

·
·

·

terms w~re a pair of running-backs
-Michigan's Butch Woolfolk and
Richmond's Barry Redden- and
guards Roy Foster of Southern Callfornla and Sean Farrell of Penn
State.
WooHolk signed with the New
York Giants, while Redden came to
terms with the Los Angeles Rams.
The guards joined up with the
NFL's Florida teams - Fo~ter
with the Miami Dolphins and Farrell with the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers.
"It's a relief," WooHolk said at a
news conference announcing hls
signing . "I feel like two tons are off
my shoulder."
Several other teams announced
signing of lower· round dratt picks.
But there are many choices from
the Aprll dratt wh&lt;i remain out of
the fold. Among them Is Stanford

running back Darrln Nelson, the
first-round pick or the Minnesota
VIkings.
The unsigned rookies are In
limbo. The Players Association
maintains that no player - be he
rookie or veteran - can bargain
Individually now that the collective
agreement has lapsed.
Thus, like therookles,lree agents
were In sort of a hurry to get their
name on the bottom line.
Among the bigger names to sign
was Harold Jackson, the leader In
career pass receptions among active NFL players. Jackson, who
was released atter playing last season with the New England Patriots.
signed a one-year agreement with
the San Diego Chargers.
Other free agents returned to
their old teams. Chicago wide receiver Brian Baschnagel re-signed,

as did four Denver Broncos veterans - cornerback Aaron Kyle,
defensive lineman Barney Chavous
and offensive linemen Paul How·
ard and Keith Bishop.
Some veterans took theopportun·
ity to sign contract extensions
Thursday. Leading the way was
Atlanta Falcons quarterback Steve
Bartkowski, who added two years
to his current pact. Terms were not
disclosed, but the Atlanta Constitution reported that Bartkowski
would be paid $1.35 million over the
next three seasons.
Three Minnesota players - run·
nlng back Ted Brown, linebacker
Matt Blair and tight end JoeSenser
-agreed to contract extensions. So
dld three members of the Denver
Broncos- linebacker Randy Grad·
lshar, running back Dave Preston
and center Blll Bryan.

FIRST OF TWO - St. Louis Cardinals' Tom K~rr leap• tn make a
rday throw to first base to rompletc a double play durin~ tht•third inning
Thursday niKhtat St. Louis against thr Cinrinnati Reds . Cincinnati's Ron
Oester is lorred by Kerr alter Alex Trevino tapped to Q-aic Smith at
short. Smith tossed to Kerr for the fun·c and the relay throw to first was in
tim~ to get Trevino. I AP Laserphoto ).

Movie viewing pays
off for Angels' Lynn
CLEVELAND IAP l - Struggling to regain the swing that , . - - - - - - - - - - - - brought hlm 39 home runs and 122
RBI In 1979, California AJ!gels cen·
ter fielder Fre!l Lynn pulled out
some old home movies.
" I looked at the films and found I
should drop my hands a little. and
531 JAq,_~ PIKE · Rt. 35 WEST
~4.46-4524
with that, I hit with more of an upBAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT I SUN
percut," said Lynn, who poked hls
All SEATS JUST $2.00
AOMISSION EVERY ri.JESOAY S 2 0&lt;1
first career grand slam while Dave
Goltz held the Clevela nd Indians to
three singles in an 8-2 victory
Thursday night.
The films Lynn watched dated
back to the 1975 Boston-Cincinnati
World Series.
'
The grand slam, which highlighted a six-run third innmg, prov ided
a cushion for Goltz. who is 3-2 since
signing with the Angels as a free
agent in May. He was released by
Los Angeles earlier In the season
MiiHHH '"
IUS I
after compiling an 0-1 mark.
'\11Jl.ll•
•
'" ""'
IIII I \lin
" If we get the job done, Goltz will
p(;
be an Integral part of it." said
,.,/ill/'/9'-/ H/\1
Ma uch , who (ormerly managed the
right-hander In Minnesota. "l'veal·
ways been a Goltz man. and It gives
me a blg kick to see a smile on his
face. Over the la't few years. the
few times rve seen him . that happy
face wasn't there."
Goltz walked three and struck out
one while pitching his fir st com
plete game since 19!'0.
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

. . ET.

-~

Houston puts Stabler on waivers
··

·•
:,
· ·'
·,
,·

_,

HOUSTON (AP) - Houston
Oller Coach Ed Blles, recognizing
quarterback Ken Stabler as an lndl·
vlduallst who likes·to do things his
own way, gave the 13-year veteran
a chance to make bls Own exit from
the Oilers.
Instead, Blles sal(,! Stabler dill nothing and forced the him to place
the former Oller starter on norecall waivers" Thursday and end
the-stonny relationship that ha4 exIsted since Biles became •head

coach last year.
BUes said he told Stabler on J uly
7 that he no longer figured In the
OUers' offensive plans. Biles gave
Stabler the option of retiring or try·
lng to peddle his services to another
team. Blles said repealed efforts to
get an answer from Stabler failed.
Blles~ decision also shed the 011·
ers of another problem- Stabler's
alleged lnvolveinent with a convicted gambler that led to a·league
-Investigation.

CHECK .SOME OF THE SUPPLIES WE
STOC.KFOR RIDERS:
Cattle Halle~ - Horse and Pony Halters - Whips - leads - Stock
Canes - Blankets - Fortex Tubs and Buckets - Galvanized Tubs and
Buciels - Shampoos - Fly Sprays and R~p~ll~nts - Brushes - Curry
Combs - Grooming Supplies - Veterinarian Supplies - Saddles Rabbit Feed and Supplies - Purina Feeds and Animal Health Aids for
all Farm Animals.

i976 AMC GREMLIN ................................ $1495
Auto. PB. PS. Air.
·
$
19n LTD· ·······~ ..... ~. .................. ........... 1995
4 Dr, Auto., PB •. Air.

1976 COMET ... :..................................... $1695
4 Dr., Auto., PS, PS.

1976 GRAND PRIX .......................... -....... $1795
' 2 Dr., Auto., PS, PS, Built in CB.

·"1975 PONTIAC .•••.••. ~ •.••••• ;•••.•..••..•......•.... $995
Runs Good .

SIMMONS
. .-

!

OLD~CAD~-CHEf{,,., l'nc~~
- · · .;,..; ...
: ~·v.otlr D!tll~r on the River"
'

PHONI: ,.Mt-661•
. .

JOI E. Main St. Pomeroy. Oh.

OPEN:
Mon. thru Fri.@ to 9
·saturday 9to
''·
. s

.

'

. , : -·

·

•

MODERN
SUPPLY

1978 AMC ·••••••••••••••• ••••••• •• ·••· •• ·•· ··••••• ·•• $1895
.
'
'
1975 TORINO STA. WAGON ......................... $895

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-2164

·

.

StOle With ..All Kinds ol Stull..
- Pels. Stables. tJIIO 1nd Smitt
Animals, t..wns and Ga1dtns

___________.......

....,.

,

'

-&lt;')

�•

Friday, Juz 16,1982
Po~eroy-Middlepcirt,

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July l6,1m

Ohio

I

Scoreboard ...

,..._..._

outlelder. to thl&gt; Thronto BilK' Jay1.

NA.TION.U. I..U,GUC
I!'.Mkn'Dtvw.

Majors

W

By ne A.~MaM'

rw.

i\MflUC'!"~ 1.&amp;\GUE

l!'.all&amp;em DMM011
w L ' I'd.

.~

8o&lt;OM

••

Baltlmorr
Df'frolt
C1PVf'lilfld
Nrw York

&lt;I
41

"

Toronto

...1

SPattlfo

Oa1ttand

ll

Min~

8-~.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIO'J"S-Siptd
Culc» Pf'nrt;M'Il. wldr r1'Cftvfl', to 1
mulli-yNJ" ronlrtct.
NEW YORK GIAN'T'S-SIRJitd BLI!ch
Wooltrik, Nllllnj~: Daek ; 8Ul CiuTtfr, .
qfety.

l'f'

tln!ml!nl al Randy: Rasmu.'L.-a, d'frnstvf&gt;

·u.eman.

.

MIAMI OOLPHINS-!UAN'd ~ Fa.tfl',
oftenllw lineman, to a lri'lr'lt of onr-)'('ar
COnii'ICtl.

ST.LO U IS CARDINALS-SIJn.d

R"'ty

GuUbfau, tldensiYf' end and Tod:k' ~
blot. tiU:'kle. ek'h IG a APrk!l ~ Ol'lf'.)'far

Oieto

contrvta,
SA N DIEGO CHAft(jERS-~
ANn Young. W'.ty.

Lol AI\Ql'les

SAN FRANasco 49ERS-..~ WU·
to 1 .,.In ol tour

llam Par\1, tackk',
oae-~ar CXllltncu.
llolletl-

r-.. ._

f!MirMJ'•G~ma

OOSTON-Namt"d Dk:ll: Coury hr8d
coadl ud aeneraJ mana&amp;fl'.
OOIUXlE
ll)WI.JNG GREEN - Narmd Jolr\ C.
G~. dlr«'tor ct atrue.k.'l.
HA•NOVER COLLEGE-Named
way ..
Amy, uslltant foott.ll lWCh to ht8d
coadl.
SOUTHEAST
MISSOU'I
STA.TENamed JOfY Hllnel brad (.'!)l('ft of men·,;
and wonvn's track and aulstaftl athlfotlt"

Philwtphla at San FranC'IJCO
Pllllbu!'Rh 11 Houston. tnl

New York. 11 Los Ani!VIl"S, tnt
Monlml at San DWRo. 1m

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

Transactions

.... EIWL

BALTIMORE . ORIOLESRracUvated
Sammy Stewan . pttcher. and piac'N Don
S1ant-oow on unconditional walven.
1'EXAS RANGERS-Sold Lion ROOms.

Drtrolt at Minnesota, tnl

'

NQ\' YORK JETS.-,f,,ud.lncl"cf lhr

Atlanta at Chlcaao
ClnctMatl II St. louiS

DilcllfO at MilwaukeE&gt;. tnt

lllr«t..-.

WASHINGTON

STATE- Namtd

01"'

Br«trw!r usbtant athittlc dirertcr.

NFL's five year pact ·ends;
negotiations still stalemated
NEW YORK (AP) - The fiveyear contract between the National
Football League Players Associa·
lion and team owners expired at
midnight, and nellher side seems
·overly concerned at this point.
Three days of negotiatiOns ended
without much progress and without
a settlement Thursday, but neither
the union nor the NFL Managi&gt;ment CouncU Is threatening any lm·
mediate job action.
But the contract expiration
throws about unsigned 90 rookies
Into Umbo.
The union contends none of those
rookies - Including Hetsman
Trophy winner Marcus Allen of
Southern Cal - can sign contracts
until an agreement Is reached with
the council.
No unsigned players can attend
training camps, which began with
the opening today· of workouts by
the Baltimore Colts.
Jack Donlan, the owners' chief
negotiator, meanwhile, has told ail
28 NFL teams they can stW sign
rookies, provided those players accept offers made before July 15.
Donlan said he understood sev·
eral unsigned rookies would rue suit
against the union, claiming it was
blocking them from signing and
working out.
Union chief Ed Garvey contends
rookie contracts signed after July
15 would "be voided by the courts."
Several top draft picks- such as
Walter Abercrombie !Pittsburgh),
Butch Woolfolk (New York Giants)
and Roy Foster (Miami) - signed
contracts In the two days before the
deadllne, perhaps worrled about
the Indefinite status past July 15.
Unsigned veterans, about 71, of
time
percentatof anylast
caneither
sign 110
a contract
them,for
year's salary or by accepting a
team's best offer made before July
15. No further negotiations between
the players and the teams can take
place.
More talks are planned for next
week In Was htngton, D.C., but despite the apparent lack of progress,
and the expiration of a "no-strike
pledge" In the contract, there was

ttttle talk of players walking out
soon.
"There will be !ootball," said
Gene Upshaw, president or the
players association. He added,
however, a strike Is "a real
possfblllty."
Donlan said he betteved "there
wUI not be a strike."
Much of the discussion Thursday
focu!jed on a drug and personal·
problem counseling program proposed by the players and rejected
by the council.
· The program would have been
run by an Independent agency,
would cost owners s:x&gt; per player,
and Included a clause that no
player could "be required to submit
to any chemical dependency test or
Donlan has already sent a letter
to teams telling them they could
conduct spot checks - Including
urinalysis - to Indicate drug use.
"We feel urinalysis Is a valid
fonn of testing," Donlan has said,
adding that such tests would be con·
dueled for the good of the player.
The players union , has strongly
opposed urinalysis.

r;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;P!!~~

· ''We !eel It Is an InvasiOn of pri·
vacy," said Upshaw. "First you
give away some privacy, then you
give up more."
No new contract proposals were
presented. The only saUd offer of
the three days, presented Tuesday
by manllgement, was rejected
Wednesday by the players, who
called It "Insulting."

!:'ho_l).~m.-ms

New Spring&amp;

Summer Hours
Mon.·l"ri. 9:00 to 5:00

--

Court St., Pomero)', Ohio45769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C.nin" ur M....... Ruuk
. . 11 .00

....... .. $4.40
. , . . $52.10
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
... IS Ct'nl:i

Subs.l.•ribt•B not desiri~ to P¥Y the CMrrit!r
•n~~y remil in ltdYMnt.'t! dired lo The D•ily ·
&amp;·ntlnt•l on a 3, 6 tM· 12 tnonlh buis . Credit
will bt• ~iven t.'lllrr~r l!Mchmonth.

,

13W... ·k.~ .
2fi Wt•t·k.~ .
52 Wt~·k.~

SJUI

129.64
l!&gt;l.21

Open 9:00 Till ,B:OO
Portland, OH.
From Pomeroy: Take 124 East

POMij:ROY 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 itelft for
on auction.
·POMEROY - The annual
reunion wW be Sunday,
'July. 18 ' al Lancaster fair·
lgioundS. .All ' me111bers of the
~ -family ana frlepds areweleome.'

MONDAY

, TUPP~I\8' PLAINs'_- Little
, ag'141 '' Baseball Toiii'IUIIllent
~onday at' l)lppers Plains sporr
~ ·ored ~ by ·. Eastern Athletic
Boos~.rs ..
~dditional irr
~formation contact Jim Caldwell
t 667-'3644 or George Collins at

.

'

_utu:· ... •

•TOMATES •CORN •POTA10ES
•GREEN B~ANS (% Runners ·or

BunQh} . . ,.,

-SUGAR
RUN MILLS
'
'
.

AYe.

992-2119 .

'

t

.

,,. . ---

~ : ,~

'•PEPPERS"~ABBAGE .

' ic of the Middleport Blll!iness
nd Professional Women's' Club
, will ~ he~ at 6 p.m. Monday ljt
~ hclrne It ~· Alwllda Werer. ~~ J!iay take guesbl.
. c6 one II to take a couple fi
:• r1zes fot games, a covei-ed dish,
~4 ~ own ra~le se~lce.

.

~ RACINE

Amerbn Legion
wW meet at the Le~on-hall Monday at 7:~ p.m.
~tonja Salser, Girls' State repreli tat!Ve, wUI report. ~
~lixllfary

.CUCUMBERs •SQUASH

'

Now 29% off! 24 watts total output for the best sound around .
Auto-Stop in all modes, separate
bass and treble controls , locking
fast·f~rward/rewind . Compaci
DIN·s:ze for easy in or underdash mounting in most cars

01,111'1,11

@
• c ,,.,G ..

Save $6.07 and complete your
workbench! 4" meter with mirrored
scale for sure readin9s. Measures
AC/DC volts, DC mill:amps, resist·
aniS, d89ibels. Handv single-knob
futfction switch. With leads. #22·202

~
Dl t ()O•

.@ @
- ".,.
@. @

• V· O •

#12·1888

-

OTHER PRODUCF
· •PEACHES •WATERMELON 1
•BANANAS ·

: a~~

Tt.ere w111 be &amp;

~=
at the Rutland li'reewiJI
lfl
· tChurehJ~l~l8at7:~

.·II night: ~· Paul Taylor
speaJr,' Pastor .Donald Karr .
tes evsyQDe.
'I

"•

.

Metal Mini-Speaker Cut 10% ·

·for

i

'

Automatically Switches to
Batteries If AC Power Falls

By Micronta®

1 MIDDLEPORT - Annual pitc

Bird Speds · Oyster Shells and Grit ~ Fertilirera ! Lime · Citmen! and Mortar • stock Salt · Water S~r • Relllllllea • Sill •
' I itters ; Vaccine · Roofing ·, Points · Red !Jirancl Fencl.. : .I•'!" aMI
Binder TWine· Sprays· Gates ·,Hay· Sfraw

Priced low , but built to lasl! Rotary
tone control, AFC on FM , 3" speaker,
large slide-rule tuning dial. telescopic
FM antenna. With earphone . # 12·668

34.95

Save on This Handy
25-Range Multitester

SJ]NDAY

"

Seed~ ·

290fo
.4, ~'

Only 7" long, yet has Auto-Redial,
pleasant tone ringer with silenVhigh/
low switch , and a mute button for
privacy. Works on all telephone
lines . No rental fee-saves money
on monthly bills. FCC registered.
White Mist, #43-284. Dark Brown,
#43-285

· MASON, W. Va. - Meigs
Rellred Teachers AssociatiOn will bolt.l a picnic Saturday at 6 p.m. at Lewis Hertiage
House, Mason. Members are to
take a covered dish and their
own table service.

114 .04
121.30
l:ii.oil

(Bril1 Your 11M! ContJiner)

tiiiLLINO DIVISION

Cut

···."Hangs Up" on
Any Flat Sur:face!

Co~omty

By The Bushel
For Freezing
and Cannit1g

@natton @npany

NEW LOW PRICE!
'

SATUiU&gt;AY

• .

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

By Realistic®

1·Matiack

SEED AND MILLING
., HEADQUART.ERS

Scioto results

Save 510.07 on
Feature-Packed
AM/FM Portable

ET-100 by Radio Shack

·, POMEROY - Fourth annual
Ice cream soeial 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,
pot:at9 salad, macaroni salad and
baked bj!a'ns. There will be live
music a~d games.

M~ILSUBBCRIPTJONS

13 Wl&gt;i!lol .
.
52 Wt•t.·k.~ .

least a 3.5 ~ra de point average on a
4.0scale.
Sisson is a junior majoring in
dietetics a nd is a 1980 graduate of
North'Gallia High School.

Personal Mini-Phone

wlll

by mail ptonniltal in towN!
whl•rt• tH•mt.• t.•an·it•r servil-e i.!IIIVMihable.
'
ltltlltkOI!itJ
"" ." . "
" .. " "" .. "
"
nut.llid.-Ohlu
.. ... .. ...
" " " " . .. " " " . "
" ."

dean's list

to

Cindy Sisson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sisson, Bidwell, was
named to the dean's list at Ohio
State University for Spring Quarter.
The honor is ~a ined by achieving at

Nusubsniptiun~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~ji~ij~iiiiiiii~~
Ph. 843·2693

Named

trlna and Barbara Donohue, Harrisonville; Gloria Manuel and Ailsa
WOlford, Racine; Gina and Derek
Javlns, Canton; Dwight Spencer,
Pomeray; Linda and Jimmie AI·
lman , Albany; and Newton Ice of
Amesville.
The 1983 reunion wUI be held on
July 4 at the Royal Oak Park.

s1o Off! One-Piece

, MIDDLEPORT - Rev. J.
Wnll!dt!e of Wales
he
speaker at the missionary servtt;e at 7: ll p.m. Friday at United P!.'ftecostal Church,
Middleport. Rev. Clark Baker,
pastor. Invites the pubttc.

~·..,~~ '
POOTMASTER' Send ........, lo 'lit&lt; Doily

26W~-ks

LV

Shirley, Lori and Diana Simpson,
Racine; Pat and Keith Smfth, Bea
Cllne, Tony and Tina Forester, Clr·
deville; Jan tee Herdman and BW
Scarberry, · Columbus; Pamela,
Jimmy and Jimmy Jude, Jr., John
David and Tabitha Purez, Dunlow,
W.Va.
Dolores, Raymond. Kenda, Ka·

18/h

RUTLAND- Dance Friday at
Rutlarid Civic Center from 8 p.m.
to .11:30 p.m. Singles $2 and
couple~ $3. "Mil.sic Unlimited"
~ill provide the music.

Membtr: ~ A.s$oclal.@d Pre~~~~, lnl•nd Daily PreaS Auoci1tlon 111nd lhi! Amnlt::Mn
New"IJIIper PublbheB Assot:iation, Naltional
Advertiain~
Repre"ent111live, Br•nham
N~.-per S.le:s, 733 Third Avenut, New
Yurlt, N•" Yorlllll017.

.........

BEAVER FAMILY TWINS - These five sets of twin boys attended
the July 4 reunion of the dCllcencia!lts of the Fannie and Charles Beaver.
Tbey are, left to right, front, Kevin aitd Keith Gillilan .and John and Jay
Holsinger; and back row, Carol W, and Carl M. Cline, Joe and Jack
GUIIIan, and Toin and Tim GIUilan.

FRIDAY

':

Published every 11rtemooo, Mondaly throu~h
friday, ll1 Court St,...l, by !he Ollio Vollry
Publillhiott ComA"")' • Mu.Jtinwdht, Inc ..
Pt~tneroy . Ohio 45789, 982-2151. Sei.'OIId clb6
pOO.iKe pt11id 111t Puntt-ruy, Ohiu.

Ont.&gt; w~k . .
an. Mootlt
Ont' Y.:Mr

July 17.1982
Your financial picture should bermnc more, stead~ .nd secure tht s
coming year. Your growth won't be ~ i ga nti c, but you will move ahead
before your next birthday.
CANCER (June ZI·Juty 22 ) You will be hclpfultu others tuda y. but
you wiil preler that it's your idea ra lhl'r than thei rs. HllWl'Vl' r. wht·n
asked you'il reluctantly assist them anyway.
LEO (July 23--Aug. 2%) You could su£fl'r some milll •r incum·cni t.' IIL't'S
today when another holds you lo a pronlise y11u 111akl' in l:l wrak ll l tm lt ' Jt l .
Smile and carry on .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) You ca lt accum plts h yuur purposes '"'"Y·
but perhaps not on your first effo rts. However. if you waul smnd hill c
strongly enough you 'il try again and succeed.
LffiRA (Sept. 2,3-0ct. 23) Take serinussituatt nl!s se rinusly I ntla~· . bul
don't let th~m overwhelm you . You Cilfl handl t• wiH:Ht!VI'I' m•t•ds lining,
provided you don 't ~et uptight.
SCORPIO (Oct. Z4-Nov . 22) Conditions l'tlUid bt.• .s11111l~1 r lnday lu I llnst•
whirh once caused you a problem . Howt' Vt'r . if you tll1nk ~ t 1UI' 11 un.'s
through carefully you'll not repeat the mistakt· .
SAGmARIUS I Nov . 23-Dec. 211 If you arc in\'ol\'t·tl "' "" '"· lt\'lt~·
with friends toda y where shared expenses arc an eil'll'cnl. tlnll 'llt'l pl'lty
points become issues. Pay the extrt~s wi th a grin .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Z.Jan. 19) Tht&gt; is a nut her o11c of I ht "'' " "" wltt•n
yuu may not be ~ble to rely upon anyone but yourself. Hat htT I han seek
he lpers, do what needs doing alone.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19 ) If you arc worki ng lutlay pul ~· , ur full
attention on your work, but if you a rc plcty 1ng t.kvnle yo ur lllllld tn ha\'1111-!
fun . Don'ttry to mix one with the other.
PISCES tFeb. 20-March 201 Should ynu ft• t• l irlt'linetl In ga tnblt• "''
situations today, don't take ehant•t.·s on thmgs which ot hers &lt;.'tllll rPI. t• nl y
on that whi ch you personail y direct. Even then. be ca rl'fu l.
ARIES !March 21-April 191 lll nnedia tcl y smoot h nul any 11n nnr
disagreements that yo u may have tnday w1lh your IJ ICllt.• . If attcndt.·d tn
prumptly, nnthin~ mnre will come of l hl'll l
TAURUS !Aprii20-May 201 F.vt·n lhnugl1 )'IIUJnay bt• tTiudanllo lin
so, this is a gonll day to square·up &lt;H 't·o unt s with S\HIIt'Oil t ' whu ts indt •blt'd
tn you. It can be handled tactfully.
GEMINI !May 21·June 201 Yuu·r .. guutl at Sttrting l ll u t~s nul fur
others today. but you may nut bL' ClS l'1~! 11 pl'll'lll in ll li:Hial.!llll!. YtlUJ' pl' rsonal affairs. Usc the same skills i11 bnt lt areas .

HARRISONVILLE
In·
spect ion, Harrisonville and
ColwTtbia Granges, 7 p.m. dinner
to precede the meeting. Ruby
Halliday, 75 year member, to be
honored. All grange members
urged to,attend.

' IUSPSlll-. . 1
A Dl\tlalft ut MIIUmtdla.lat. .

SenU~I , lll

Astrograph

HARRISO.N\'ILLE and Cblum~ta 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 .

The Daily Sentinel

D.tily

204 ,..,~~~~\,.
Pomeroy, Oh.

Five sets of twin boys were Black; Carroll; Charles, Lois, Chaamong the descendants of Fannie
rles II and Steve Cline, Moun~­
and Charles Beaver at the annual
vtlle, W. Va.; Grace, Junior, Brad,
reunion held at ~ai Oak Park on John, and Jay Holsinger, Reeds·
July 4. A total of 136' persons
vrne; ·John and But Baumgardner,
attended.
Pomeroy. ·
. The twins attendtog were Carol
John and Verllne Sebo, Grafton;
W. Cline and &lt;;art M. Cline, sons ci Robert Puts, Cleveland; Chuck,
~ussell Cline and the late Seva
·Shorty, Aaron and Shaun Oberlin,
Beaver Cline; Joe and Jack Gill!·
Canton; Glorine, Kelly and Kathy
tan sOn of the late Eber and Debra
Cllne, andGregMcAiarney, Water·
Beaver GUIUan; Tom and Tfm Ctl- ford; Russell R. Holsinger, Ches·
ltlan, sons of Mary and Roy GWt· . ter; · Leo Hill, Racine; Mary
Jan, Chester; Kevin and Keith
Gillllan, Canton; Don Manuel, Ra·
Gillllan, sons of Joe and Carol Gllll·
cine; John D. and Qouglas Beaver,
Jan, Canton; and John and Jay Hoi·
Pomeroy; Carol and Seva Cline,
singer, son of Junior and Grace . Reedsville; Earl, Sarah, Tom, Jay,
CUne Holsinger, ReedsvUte .
Mike and Christy Baumgardner,
Rev. Russell Cline gave . prayer East Springfield, Pa. ; Tfm and
preceding the potluck dinner. A Glenda Owens, Mt. Vernon; Leroy
cake prepared by Vickie GUIUan
and Lurenda Forester, Columbus.
was presented •to Cline In obserTimothy, Tom, Roy and Mary
vance ot his 75th birthday.
GtiWan, Marjorie, Bob, Bryan,
Recognized and presented gifts Brandi, and Robbie Reeves, Ches·
were Mattie HW, 79, the oldest at·
ter; Paul and Brenda Holsinger,
tending; Shaun Oberlin, three
Reedsville; Daphne HOLSINGER,
months, the youngest; Mr. and
Crystal Cremeans, and Ronnie
Mrs. Earl Bumgardner and famUy,
Spurlock, Chester; Joe, Carole,
East Springfield, Pe., who traveled
Kevin and Keith Gillllan, Canton;
the farthest. Don Manuel won the
Russett and Freda GWUan and Lorl
door prize.
Buckley, Chester; John and Gen·
Attending the reunion were Carl,
eva Cline, Akron; Jack, Vicky and
Betty and Tammy Cline, Mason;
Victor GOWan, Chester; Georgia ,
Ernest and Flossie. Bush, Racine;
Kathy, Melissa, Arlene, April and
Mattie, Clark, and Betty Hill, CoWayne RUtchte, Emma, Eddy and
lumbus; Mike Wolfe Sr. , Joyce,
R. D. Moore, Belpre.
Paul and Mike Wolfe Jr., ColumHarry Hill, Lodt; Sue and Mat·
bus; Russell and Leona Cline, Syrathew Martin, Lancaster; James,
cuse; Sean Poling, Lancaster;
Margaret and Darla Cline, Bev·
Helen R. and Charles H. Wolfe,
erly, Mark and Donna GliiUan and
Linda, Jim, Larra, Jerri and Jason
Rhonda Phillips, Chester; Mildred,
Freeman and Janella Willltams;

FRIDAY

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

examination.''

Beavers hold. reunion

Daily Sentlhei-Page-5

Calendar

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiil

.--------------1

•

Howard p:uanl
,
HOUSTON OILERS- Piac'f'd Ken Scabler, quanHback. on walvm.

CisCo ll..askt"y 7-61, In\

t Hau ~5 1. mt
Det rolt t Morris 1().91 at Mln ntsa~:a
1VIolaJ.01. tnt
Sabim.y't Game~~
Tl'Xas at Torano
Ca lifornia at Clt&gt;velancl
KaMas City at Bol!lton
Se~t!!lt&gt; at Baltlrnon.". tnt
Oakland at New York. tnl

,

~~ at

BR ONCOS-S iRnf'd

"""'

3

ll7
8
tt2 11
.4.'11 15\1,
.Jitl 19

Philadelphia 1CaQton 11·71 at San Fran·

Chicago 1Kooaman 2-31 at MUwauk«&gt;

COLUMBIJS, Ohio (AP ), - Skirt
I,lfter, driven by Mlke O'Donnell,
won the 8th featured race In 2: 01
Thursday at Scioto Downs, paying
$7.8&gt;, $3.60 and $3.00.
, Money Machine finished second,
paying $2.00 and $2.40, while Strut·
ter Hill was third, paying $3.60.
The 1st trifecta of 3-!&gt;-2 paid
$(1)7.60.
A crowd of 3,440 wagered
$ZI2,967.

J

37
Jf

New Yorll iFak:&lt;IIW

Oakland ILangford 7·101 at~ York
rEiickson &amp;it, 1n1

wa:; caught stealing bdore
Echels s1 ngled, Y oun~ walked, and
Bullnt:k singled for the game winner.
Both clubs plall'd three runs i11 the
first inning for a 3·3 tic, then fnught a
sec-saw battle for the remaindt•r nf
the game.
Echcls poskd thP win for Buehtt'l
wiih eight strikeouts and five walks.
with relief help from Day in the filth .
Chapn •an 'des pite pitching a fine
~allll' .suffered tht:' ln.ss while going
Jhe distan ce. He fanned four al!ll
walked five .
Albany loaded the bases in lht• six·
Jh but failed to produce a score. The
Fanners collected three hits. a
hmt ll' run by J enkins. a lriple by
GibsOn , and a single by Summers.
Bullock led the winners with th ree
singles. Eckels a single and dnuble,
Call a triple., Day a double. and

.m

-

1Valen:r:ue4al2-71. tnt

Karuu Clly IBJUl' G-61 I I Boston tEd: ·
Pnk&gt;y 9-71. tnt

but

.612

IRyu 11-!h.lnl
Monti"Ml IRogeri 16.41 at San
H..oUar J0.2l, In)

rDenny 6-91, tn t

Rae me s Roya ls I J.l m fou r tnmngs ..
Dorst ptl'kl~ up ~he w~n fot
Polllcroy, wlnle hurhng a fnw lit~
Iutter. . . . .
.. . .
.
Dm ~ ~. :;I I m:.k tlUt ~vt_n anti walked
12. . wlule Dtddle regtslercd three
strikeouts and Ju:;t stx walks. .
Pnll teroy surged In a iHl lead tn the
first inning and twver lonkcd back.
l•·ading the winne" were Powell
with a holllc run and Slll~lc. Fields
iwn singles, Brothers a triple and
sinJ;!Ie.

DALlAS COWDOYS--Si~ed Jeff Ron.

rw. lnrblcker.

Atlanta lMihll'r 8-71 11 Chlc-.ro , Noles
IHJ
•
Clndnnat\IBShlrk'y 2-71 II St. Loull
1Mur11 6-'7), 1111
PllllbUJ'Ih t McWUI~ ~~ 11 Houston

Sean It 1f .BanniSter 8-51 at Blll!mort&gt;
I D.Martlnel S-6) . lnl
Ca llbrnla IF onch 8.71 at Ck-veland

Dickens. Nelson each sin~l cs.
In tlw s~C ttnd eontest t:.'verynne gtl\
ht s ll tnney's worth as the Gallipolis
Podres balllcd Nelsonville Hntl'l'
Sanngs and l_.oan tn an 11-9 triutnph
in nine innings.
Gallipolis came up with four runs
in the bottnm ni tilt• ninth to post 1ht•
win on singles by Werry. DeweesP,
a nd Cox. sandwiched around a walk
by Tarbell.
Nelsonville came back with 1wn
run~ of it:; 11Wn but l''IIUilln't ket!p
pan•andfellshortatll·9.
lA'&lt;' picked up till' win for
Gallipolis after relieving Cellics in
the third. They combined for 14
strikt•nuts and nine walks. while
allowing 10 hits. McCa llister suf·
fcred the loss aftor going nine in·
nings as he fanned 19 batters in
lrt• mendous effort.
Leading hitters fnr the winnet·s
Wl' I'C Cox with three singles and a
doubl e. Tarbell a hon1e run and
sin gle . and singles each by
Dt&gt;Wcese. Werry, and McQuaid.
l"'ading Nelsonvilie weft' Russell
with two singles and a double , Parscly three sing les. Speir two singles,
McCollister, and Stanley each a
single.
Pomeroy P&lt;lwell's easily defeated

N.._..1"00'111.U.L
r..m• a.ap.

1Gam•

Chteago H

Texas 1

7-7 1, tn t

SYRACUSE - A complete and ac·
ti n n~parked eveninf{ nf Little l..cag ue
baseball highlighted second round
play of the Bill Hubbard Mcnu}rial
Tnurnantt.mt here Thursday even in~
as Buchtel , Gallipolis and Pomeroy
Pnwell 's posted ha rd-ea rned vic·
11trit•s.
Buchtel cd~ed Albany' s F'amtt·rs
&amp;-3 1n a thrilling opener. Budttel
t•an •e up with the winning run in I he
fuurth inni ng when Nelson s in ~lcd .

47

f'Qi tft'.

DENVER

11
37

42

1
lh

PltU-l)IU~Fri.-. I

TJ&gt;x.u t Hrugh 7-71 a t Toronto tCiancy

·Buchtel, Padres Powell's
·post wins .at LL tourn~ment ..

w....-.otvw.

Uwlfu, tnftfoklr.r, ., ttwlr ma}or INp

"'"""!1111 -

NI'W York 2, Oakland I

CLELAND REALTY - Members of the 1982
Cldand Realty Minor L.ca~ue summer icague team in
Meigs County were front row, left to right, Randy
Robie, Angela Abbott, Judy Smith, Nathan Brown and
Rusty Triplett. Second row, Chuck Young, John

8
It

REOS-Promott'd

Tom

-

.......... ..~Sut Oloao 1,
New Y'oA $, Lol Anadtl 2

~h

Dt&gt;trolt 18, Mlnnesot. 2
f'rldqt Glltlft

Haggy, Joe McElroy, Shawn Hawley, Charles Nash,
Steve Crothers and Ryan Foster. Coaches were Bobby
Fosler, Bobby Juster, Jr. and Bill McElroy. Franklin
Martin photo.

.400

fl
11
n.ftllq'•GIIIW
Atlanta 11, Cbkaao •
Clnctftnltl 7, SLLoull 3

Ga llklrnla S. Cle'Veland 2

Randall Johnston, Walter Barrett, Matthew Haynes,
Richard Stewart, Jamie Barrett and Danny Lewis. Not
shown. Terry McGuire. Coaches were Charles Barrett,
Larry Haynes and Ccri l Juhnston.

.466

~

"""'""'

lbuon 5, K.ansu Clly l
Baltlmort" 3, Sealllt' 2

SALEM CENTER MUSTANGS - Members of tht·
1982 Salem Center Mustangs Pee Wee League entry
were, left to ri~ht. Allison Gannaway, Lorena Oiler,
Andrea Deniels and .leannett McDonald. Second row,

47

l6

Clnctnnatt

ThurM!~ ' • Gama
Toronto ~-

41

·~

318

Mllwaukef

4

:iO
46 ' 43

~

.&lt;27
.&lt;27

512

Ltll "" .....
San Francisco .

.517

Tf'Xa.~

42

·"'

SanOirao

41

Chtcaao

til,

8

-

37

Cl
&lt;M

5.2

"' "'J9 ·-"""' ,
.." " "'" '' ~
.." m"" "~u

Ca l\klrnla
tU lt'JW; Cit y

PlllllJ..U"Rh

Atlanta

" 'ftUnl DtvW..

01

if! Jl
.w
4 8 t 0 M5

New York
a.,.,.,

41

., ., ...
..

Pet.

PhllacW!phla
SI . Lcull

..,.,...,

..""' .,""" ··.:""m''' •'I
... ·~

Ml/l'.' itUkt"f'

L

CI NCINNATI

r he

~

Portable AM/FM
Stereo Cassette

Minimus ®-7

s~:e 449.!

SCFI·2 by Realistic

Save•40

Reg. 49.95 Each
Less than 8" high, ye t delivers superb sound

99!.!

f~[ car or home! Long-excursion 4 " woofer,

1 soft-dome tweeter. D1e-cast metal housing. ·
J/,~ ~ 4'h~ x 4"/•a". Come in today and hear
a patr tn actron! Black· #4()..2030 Si lver
7

#4()..2034

Racord Off-t!W-Air, or "Live"
With Built-In' Electret Mikel

.

•

.

'

Adjustable Mounting Bracket
For Mlnlmus-7

EnjDy your favorite summer music anY'(fflere at 29%-offl Two wide1'88p01188 speakers, Auto-Level, 3-way tuninglrecord-level/l;la)tery
meter. Sleree&gt;-Wlde'" giyel you added Stereo realism. AutO'Stop,
LEO FM stereo lnc;!icator· AC/battery operation. #14-805

.

by Real istic

For Wall, ceiling or mobile use

#4()..2031

.

1495
Pair

.

1eck You'r Phone Book for the lt8d~elhaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
.

•

.

.

•

-

.

.

.

PRICES MAY VARY AT INOIVIOUAL STORES AND DEALERS

�\

,.

I,

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 16,1982

FridaX: JulY. 16,1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Ui

Girl Scouts' summer at ,Camp ·Kiash~ta
Silent, slet•py Ca111P Kiashula, that
plal't' mu nnl for

tht~

Rt•rds vilk . n.tlllt'

~ live

famous Indian
Chrl'f Kia slluta wbtl!lld with George
Waslun gtnn un tlw ri'-''t'rbank at
th is week as

rwarly a hundred grrl scouts and
lhci r

le~dt•r s

l'tHlVl' r gcd nn the site to

set up t'alllp.
Girls frnrn the 81 g Bt'nd District of
Mt•t).!!) Count y

Wt'rt'

joirll'd for this

yJ•ar's annual day camp program by
scou ts frmn buti1 Ma son and Athens
Ct Uillit.'S.

Harold &lt;:~nd RilCi-1 Rnush Hgcun st•r\'t'd as diredllrs fnr lht• camp
LJt:srgncd tn tea ch outdoo r l iving
:;kill!i a!'l well as a variety of leisure
ti rn ~· acti vili Ps. Cri:lfls, hikes, fire
burldin ~. couk1ng, iHiilllC:Ii and leaf

ult·nlifinttinn, eampfire singing and
storyh·lling, folk darll'in~ and ar-

cht•ry were enjnyL&gt;d by the group.
Sandy LuckcydOtJ was storyteller
fur tht:' Brownies at th eir overhiJ,!ht

Tut•sday, and on Wednesday, Larry
Hudson and Tum Wt•rry joined the
~ro up
st' l tit Jr

for a junior, cadette, and
seoul night hikl'.

Traveling about six miles during
tile four hours they were nul, the
st.·oub concentrated. on sounds and

shadows of the woods and slopped
late in the evening for a snack under
the stars.
Thursday night parent.&gt;; were invited tn join the scouts for campfire
singing, an exhibit of craft.&gt;; and
cam p skills, a general talent
display, and a lour of the camp sites,

several of which this year were on
the hillside beyond the newly
repaired swinging bridge across the
Ohio River.
And except fnr a few minor cuts
and sprains, snakes here and there
(one inside the cabin) some bee
slings and bug bites, the scout.&gt;;
found outdoor living to their liking in
the serene setting of Camp
Kiashuta.
Assisting Mr. and Mrs. Norris in
the camp operation were Christine
Norris and Carolyn Reeves, food
buyers, and camp unit leaders,
Marlene Swartz, Janice Haggy ,
Debi Buck, Janet Hoffman, Patti
Pickens, Lila Van Meter, Lynne Arms, Shirley Cogar, Annie Chapman,
Sandy Luckeydoo, and Susie Metzger.
For the leaders a nursery was
provided for Brian Hoffman, V. J.
Van Meter, Noelle Pickens, Mark
and Rhea Norris, Jessica and Paul
Chapman, and Jacqueline Swartz.
Brownies participating were
Rhonda Gibbs, Jody Smith, Jeane
Arms, Anna Chapman, Heather
Bailey, Stephanie Price, Julianne
Buck, Yvette Sue Young, Lee Marie
Lu ckeydoo, Jane;lle Neutzlin~.
Luciana Scott, Carrie Ann Connolly,
Tracy Ann Murphy, Usa Lynn Hoffman, Nichole Pickens, Sarah
Harris, Suzanne Clay, Virginia
Merrill, Ann Marie Vickers, Amy
Herald,' Miranda Nicholson, Michele
Metzger, Mary Jo Reed, Kristina

r

...
'

Pomeroy

;Q' "

OW£
'

·-

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE
~

Ray Riggs
Ph. 91s-4100

Sl. Rl.

John F . Fultz, Mgr.
Ph . 992· 2101

Chester

Pomeroy, Ohio

BROWNIE BROOM MAKERS- After gatherlug 25 nylgs eacb and a
larger branch, Sandy Luc~eydoo, sat down In the center to iastruct the
Browates on h~w to make a bearth broom. Taklng part In the craft session
from the left were Lucianna Scott, Rhonda Gibbs, Lisa Hoffman, Amy
Connolly, Amy Well, Heather Porter, Susan Lynn Francis, AI vena
Van Meter, Barbara Anderson,
Alesha Keney ,'lind April Tannehill.
Junior:; attending were Jennifer
Swartz, Nancy Baker, Jenny Buck,

Julie Vroman, Amy Luckeydoo,
Deanna Haggy, Kristin King, Traci
Casto, Amy Jo Murphy, Amy Lynne
Hager, Beth Arbaugh, Dreama Bentz, Ricky Porte,r Elise Meier, Jenni
Ly,nn Werry, Pam Haggy, Danielle

Pomeroy

992-29SS

-

-J,
f
V/

Darla Norris, Kim Cogar, Rebel'
ca Bauer, Gina Gibbs, and Michelle
Capehart were the cadettes there,
and the senior scouts assisting the
unit leaders were Tammy Capehart,
Sh~ri ~ogar, and Susan Jett.

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

TRINITY CHURCH . Rev . W . H. Perrin .

pastor; Debbie Buck . Sunday school
s_upt . Church School . q:lS o .m.: worshif
service , 10:30 a.m. Choir reheorso ,

GroceriesGeneral Merchandt se
Racine 949· 25SO

Tuesday , 7:30 p.m . under direction of
POMEROY
C HURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE: Corner Union and Mulberry,
Rev . Virgil Byrer, pastor . Glen McClung.

SYRACUSE
FIRST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church . Church School ,
10:15 a .m .; morning worship . 11 :30 a .
m .; Bible Study . Tuesday . 10 a .m .:
Junior and Senior High Youth Group,
Sunday . 6p .m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD. Pastor .
Rev . John Evans . Sunday school. 10
a .m.:
Sunday
worship , 11
a .m .;
Children's church. n a .m .: Sundoy
evening service , 7:00p.m .: Wednesday
evening young ladi es au~~:iliory , 6 p .m .
Wednesday family worship . 7:00p.m.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . Near
long Bottom , Edsel Hart , pastor . Sun ·
doy school. 930A .M .: Worship 10:30
o.m. : Prayer meeting . 7·30 p .m Thurs .

week service. Wednesday , 7:00p.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.
Main St ., Pomeroy . Sunday services Holy
Communion on ttie first Sunday of each

month , and combined with morning
prayer on the third Sunday . Morning
prayer and sermon on oil other Sundays
of the month . Church School and nursery
care provided . Coflee hour in the Parish
Hall immediately following the service.

\

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST . 212W.
Main St . Neil Proudfoot . pastor. Bible
school, 9:30 a.m .; morning worship ,
10:30 a .m.; Youth meetings, 6:30p.m.;
evening worship . 7:30. Wednesday night
prayer meeting and Bible study . 7:30
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
.Ave:, Pomeroy . Envoy ond Mrs . Roy
Wining . officers in charge.' Sunday·
holiness meeting , 10 a .m .; Sundoy
School , 10:30 a .m . Sunday school leader .
YPSM. Eloise Adams . 7 :30 p.m ..
salv'atlon meeting, various speakers and
music specials . lhursday - 10 a.m . to 2
p.m . Ladies Home league. all women in·
vit&amp;d; 7:30 p .m . prayer meefing and
Bible study. Rev . Noel Hermon , teacher . ·
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEL. Route I , Shade. Bible school. 7
p.m . Thursday: worship service. B p .m .
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST , 200 W . Mo;n St .. 992-5235 . Vocal
mu1ic. Sunday worship , 10 a .m .; Bible
study , 11 a .m .; worship , 6 p .m . Wed·
nesday Bible study , 7 p.m .
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHUR ·
CH , Rev .Rolph Smith, pastor. Sunday
school. 9:30 a .m ., Mrs. Worley Francis,
superintendent . Preaching services first
and third Sundays following Sunday
School.
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST .
Pr&amp;aching 9:30 a .m .. first and second
Sundays of each montj'l ; ti'lird and fourth
Sundays each monti'l, worship service at
7:30p.m . Wednesday evenings at 7:30.
Prayer and Bible Study.
SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST , Mulbeny
Heights Rood , Pomeroy . Pastor, Albert
Dltte:s; Sabbath School Superintendent ,
Rita White . Sabbath School, Saturday of·
ternoon at 2:00, wifh Worsi'lip Service
tollowingot 3·15 .. ~ •
RUTLANt1JFIR~ BAPTIST CHURCH Sist~'ft6i'riett Worner , Supt . Sunday
1611'\ool , 9:30 a .m .; morning worship .

10:_.5 o . m ~
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST . Dav;d
Mann , minis ter ; William Snouffer . Sun·
day school supt. Sunday schoo l. 9:30
a.m .; morning worship 10:30 a .m .
fiRST
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
2B2
Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy . Hersh'e i Me -·
( lure. Sunday School Superintendent.
Sunday School. 9:30 a .m .: Motning
~orshtp 10 : 3~ a . m .; Evening Worship
f :30 p .m . M1d ·week prayer service

UOpm ..

seve&amp;yea~ld daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
zger, displays the "find" of her Brownie unit.

"SA·MORES" ANYONE? - These juniors off the
Scooby-Do unit allheir camp site on the hillside across
the swinging bridge reinforced their strength for an afternoon hike with "sa-mores." And what are "samore&amp;?" - a loasled marshmallow topped wllh

chocolate between graham cracten.' In the' picture
from the left with Marlene Swartz and Janice Haggy,
leaders, are Tracl c.asto, Kristin Klag, Aoiy Hager,
Beth Arbaugh, JennHer Swartz, AUcla:Ha«gy, Gina
Gibbs, Jackle Swartz, and Michelle Capehart.

.

MIDWAY COMMUNrfy
CHURCH ,
Dexter Rd ., Rd .. lang sville , Rev. A. A.
Hughes . Pastor . Sunday School 10 a .m.
Services on Tuesdoy , Thursday and
Sunday, 7:30p.m .
·
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bo;tey
Run Rood , Rev . Emmett Rowson ,
pastor. Handley Dunn . supt . Sunday
school, 10 a .m . Sunday evening service
7:30 ; Bible teaching, 7:30 p .m . Thurs ~ 'day.
: : SYRACUSE MISSION . Cherry Sl ..
,• .Syracuse. Services. 10 a .m . Sunday .
•: Evenin~services , Sunday and Wednes·

~ :&lt;k'lit~~L~f!;;;'RT

Story and photos
by Charlene Hoepich,

CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , lawrence Manley .
~star ; Mrs . Russell Young , Suriday.
• school Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
~ Evening w'?rship , 7::30, WedneSday
,· prayer meetmg, 7:30p.m .
,·
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
• Racine- Rev . James Satterfield, pdftor.
'· Morning worship , 9' ;_.5 a .m .: Sunday
school. 10:45 o .m .: evening worship , 7 ,
7:30 p.m., laCiie~ prayer
1 Tu.sday ,
• mHting;Wedriesday , 7:30p.m . VPE .
'
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST. Corner
: Sheth and Palmer, the Rev . Mork Mc11 Clung , Sunday school. 9:15 a .m .: Don
It White , Sunday School , ~uperi ntendent .
,. John Reibel. Sr., asst. supr. Morning
Worship 10:15 o .m . Youth meeting,
' 7:30
Wednesday , including Wee
tots, Nger beavers , 1unlor astronauts,
and tunlor and senior high BYF; choir
, prodtee , 8:30 p.m . Wednes day; prayer
• mHtlng and Bible st udy , Wednesdoy ,
P7: 30p.m.
f CHURCH OF CHRIST , Middltipart. 51h
'and Mclin . Bob Melton, minlster , Scott
r Saltsman, auocipte minister. · Bible
SchOol, 9:30 a . m .; morning w~rlhlp,
10:30."'. m.; evening s-rvlce, 7:00 p.IT) .
• ~· . day Bible .Study and youth
- group ,...ungs , 7:00p.m .
:• ·MIDDLEPORT CHURCH
OF THE
~ NAZARENE Rev . Jim Broome, tpastor;
~ 1111 While. Sun day school oupt . Sund?Y
,. Khool, 9:30 a .m .: morning worsh1p ,
: '0:30· a .m .; Sunday . evangelistic
• mHtlng, 7:00 P·!'l· Prayer meefi'19·
-Wednesdav.7p.m .
UNifED PRESBYTERI~N MINISTRY Of
MEIGS COUNTY. Rev. Wonda Johnson,
: director; Harold Jot,nson, director of

!·

I

Daily Sentinel staff

p.,;,,

WE HAVE EXACTLY WHAT vou·
, . - NEED IN
CHRisnAN
MUSIC
•
Choose From

. ourL.aige·
Sel~onOf

sne our ·

Song Books.

M-.I ddleport.,. Book Store
..

7t~UI

St.

'

ilc,·

RC-100; Nthi, Upt I
per lO, Dllt RItt,

.

Did'S ROot IHr·.
•••
eted
''.

t tt2·2M1

Deeefftlll~ ·

RC , bottle

~forc~~ty: .

.

.

. educallon.

.

'
HAIIRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN, Wor·
, • lhlp Service, 9 a.m.; Church SChool.

.. 10:30a. m.

.

'

' MIDOlEPORT PRESIYTERIAN, Church
• ~1. 9:00 o.m .. Morning worlhlp ,
10:15. Bible &amp;tudv. Tuetdoy, 10 a .m :; Bl·
" bleatUdy, Thur1dCiy, 7:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST. Co' ·
ner Ash and Plum ; leslie Haymon.
pastor . Bob Grubb . assistant past or .
Sunday School , 10 o . m .; Morning Wor ·
ship , 11 a . m ., Wednesday and So tu r·
day Evening Services, 7:30p .m .
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev . Robert McGee .
interim director
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev . Robert McGee
POMEROY , Sunday School• 9:15 o.m .
Worship service 10:30 a .m . Choir
rehearsal. Wednesday, 7 p.m . Rev .
Robort McGee , pastor .
ENTERPRISE . Worship 9 a .m. Church
School 10 a .m . Richard Rothemich .
pastor.
ROCK SPRINGS, Sunday School 9: IS
a . m . Worship service , 10 o. m ..
Richard Rothemich , pastor.
FLATWOODS . Church School 10 o .m .
Worship 11 a . m . , Richard Rothemich ,
Poster .
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH. Church School 9:30 a .m .
Worship 10:30 o .m
UMVF 6 p.m .
Robert Robinson . Pastor .
RUTLAND , Chu rch Schoo l 9:30 a .m.
Worship 11 :00 o.m. Robert Rider.
pastor .
SALEM CENTER , Worship 7 p .m .
Church School 9 :45 a .m . Robert Rider ,
pastor.
PEARL CHAPEL. Sunday School 9 30
a .m . Worship 10:00 a .m .
SNOWVILLE , Sundoy School , 9·30
a .m . Worship 9:00a .m .
SYRACUSE CLUSlER
Rev . Stanley Merrified , Mini ster
FOREST RUN : Worship 9 o .m . Church
School 10 o.m .
MINERSVILLE . Church School 9 o .m
Worship 10a.m .
ASBURY : Church School 9:50 a .m .
Worship 11 a .m . Bible Study 7:30 p .m .
Thursday . UMW fist Tuesday .
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. James Clark
Rev . Mark Flynn
Rev . Florence Smi th
Rev . Carl Hicks
BETHANY . (Dorcas) , Worship 9:00
a .m . Ch urch School 10:00 a .m . Bible
study . 1st . 2nd , 3rd and Sth Tuesday s
7:15p.m .: youth fellowship . 2nd and .4th
Tu~sdoys , 6:00p.m .
CARMEL and SUTTON (Wor~hip , Sun·
day School ond most other events held
jointly.) Su nday School 9:45 and Worship
11 :00 at Sutton first ond third Sundays
and ot Carmel second and fourth Sun·
days . Bible Study second , founh and fif ·
th Thursdays . 7:15 p .m . Family Night
Fellowshi p Dinner third Thursday , 6 :30
p.m .
·'
APPLE GROVE . Sunday School 9 :30
a .m . Worship 7:30p.m . 1st and Jrd Sun·
days; Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30
p.m . Fellowsh ip supper first Saturday 6
p.m . UMW 2nd Tuesday 7:30p .m .
EAST· LETART . Church School 9 o .m.
Worship service 10 a .m . Prayer meeting
7 :30 p.m . Wednesday. U'f'W second
Tuesday 7;30 p.m.
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school
10 a .m .; worship , 11 a .m . Choir pracfke.
Thursday, 8 p.m .
LETART FALLS- Worship service q
a ..m. Church SchoollO a.m.
MORNING STAR , Worship 9:30a .m .;
Church School10:30o. m .
MORSE CHAPEL , Church School 9:30
a:m . Worship 11 a.m.
·
PORTLAND. Sunday Scnool 6:30p.m ..
Evening Worship , 7:30 p.m . Youth
Fellowship, Wednesday , 7 :30p.m .
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev . Richard W, Thomas
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr.
Sheldon Johpson
John W. Douglas
JOPPA. Worship' 9:00 a .m . Church
SchOoiiO:OOa .m .
CHESTER, Worship 9 o .m ., Church
·School 10 a.m . Choir Rehearsal 7 p.m .,
Thur"doys. ~ible Study, Thursdays .
7:30p:m .
LONG BOTTOM: Sunday School at 9:30
a .m . Evening Worahip at '1 :30 p.m . Thur sday Bible Study. 7:30p.m .
REEDSVILLE : Sunday School 9:30 a .m .
Morning Worship 10:30 a .M . EV8ning
Worshp 7:30 p .m. Bible Study. Wed·
nesdays of 7:30p.m.
ALFRED . Sunday School al 9:45 a .m .
Morning Wori hip at 11 a.m. Youth, 6:30
p.m . Sundays. Wednesdoy NIQht Prayer
Meeting, 7:30 ~ . m .
ST. PAUL, (Tuppers Plains) ; 5unday
School 9:00 a.m. Morning Worship at ·
10:00 a. m. Bible Study, 7;30 p.m .
Tuesday.
·~ ·
""
KENO CHURCH OF Ct!RI5T, Oliver .
Swain, Superlntend"!'t. Sunday school
9:30everywHit •
, HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Sunday
School. 9:30 o .m :: evening oer'()ce. 7:30
p.m. Wednesday p1J1yer muting, 7:30

.P.:m.

.

3 : 5 · 1~

Monday
Job

I ger queazy looking at this picture. I'm one of those
people who can't stand heights

28 ·12·28

Yet they ten me that among the men who build o ur
sky!ierapers '"it's all in a day's work" Marvelous how
humaniry rises to every cha llenge 1 Someone is ready to
answer every caiJI

Tuesday

Psalms
37 · 30,~0

Wednesday
Proverbs

God , who crellted us. is the source of man's courage and strength Each of us laces challenges that require all
the boldness and resourcefulness He has g1ven
,

When I worship and when I pray each day I don't ask
God lor the ability ro do another man "s tob, I ask Him lor
whatever it takes to fulfill my own responsibllities And I
bring to Him earnestly the needs of m y famlly-and of aU

men everywhere

Cr··--

Coi&gt;y•o;M 01182 ~ .. ttto•
1' 0 lkl • 11024

....,..,..,,.,~

s.-

'bo-e T."'(M!

~

.~

1·2-9
ThurSI:lay
Proverbs
3"!-10
1
Friday
1 Corinthians
t 17·25
Saturday
t Corinthia11s
318·23

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH O F
CHRIST . Duane Wo rden . min is ter Bible
cl ass, q:JO a.m .: morning wouhip ro 30
a .m ., evening worship, b:30 p .m . Wednesday Bible study , 6:30p.m .
NEW STIVERS VIllE COMMUNIT Y Chu'
ch Sunday Schoo l service . 9·45 om .
Worship service. 10 :30; Evange li stic Ser ·
V1ce . 7: 30 p.m . Wednesday . Prayer
meeting . 7:30. Thursday .
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST , Pomeroy·
Harrisonville Rd .. Robert Purtell . pastor ;
Bill McElroy , Sunday school supt . Sunday
sc hool . 9:30a.m .. worship service 10:30
a .m .: Sunday worship ser..,ice. 7:30p .m .
Monday and Tue~day e'tlen ing services ,
7:30 each evening .
ST . JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH . Pine
Grove. The 1 Rev . William Middlesworth ,
Pastor Ehurch services 9:30 a .m . Sun·
day Schoo l l0:30 o .m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR IST . Je"y
Pingley. pa stor . Su nday school . q:30
a .m .: morning worship . 10:30 a .m ..
Wednesday evening service . 7:30 .
ANTIQUITY BAP11ST , Rev. Ear l Shuler .
pa stor . Sunday school 9:30 o .m .; Church
service . 7 p.m .; youth meeting, 6
p .m .Tuesday Bible Study , 7 p .m .
RACINE CHURC.H OF THf NAZARENE .
Rev. Thomas H. Collier . pastor . Martha
Wolfe . Chairman of the Boord of Chri stian Life . Sunday School. 9:30 o .m .:
morning worship . 10:30: Sunday vven ing wor ship 7:30p.m . Prayer meeting ,
Wednesday . 7:30p .m .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST . Don l .
Walker , Pastor . Robert Smith. Sunday
school sup! .. Sun day schoo l. 9 :30 a .m .,
morning wors hip . 10:40 a .m .. Sunday
evening wors hip . 7:30: Wednesday
evening Sible study . 7:30
DANVI LLE WESLEYAN . Rev . R. D .
Brown . pa stor . Sunday School. 9:30
a .m .: m~ing wor ship 10:45 : youth
service , 6.45 p.m ., e"'ening worship .
7:30 p .m .; prayer and praise . Wednes·
da y. 7:30p.m .
SOUTH BETHEL (Sit ... er Ridge ): Duane
pa stor . Sunday
Sydens tricker . Sr ..
School . q a . m .: Mo rning Worship . 10
a .m .. Youth Service . Sunday at 6 p.m .
and Su nday Eve ning Worship . 6 p.m .
B1ble Study . We~n~e_s~o.Y.:? P.. : m .

Sil VER RUN FNtt ISAI"'II~I . Rev . Mar ·
vin Markin . pastor ; Steve lit!le Sunday
sc hool sup!. Sunday school. 10 o .m ;
morning worsh ip . II a.m. Sunday
evening worsh i p. 7:30. Prayer meeting
and Bible study . Thursday . 7:30 p .m .;
youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m
CHR ISTIAN FEllOWSHIP CHURCH . 383
N . 2nd A 'tle ., Middleport .Sunday Schoo l ,
10:00 a . m . Sun .' Wed . Evening Se rvices
7 30 p .m . p .m .
LIBERTY Chr.stion Church -4 Liberty
Ave .. Pomeroy . Sunday Schoo l 10 a .m ..
Worship 7:30. We.dnesdoy Service . 7:30
p .m
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R. E.
Robinson , pastor . Sunday school. 9:30
a.m.: worship service , 11 a.m .. evening
se rvice . 7:00; youth serv1ce . Wed ·
nesdoy . 7:00pm
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH.
Robert E. Mus ser . pastor. Su nday H hoo l .
9:30a .m .. Paul Muss er sup! .; morning
worship . 10:30. Sunday evening serviGe .
7:00: mid· week se rv1ce . Wednesday 7
p .m
SY RACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE . Rev . James B. Ki ttle . pastor .
Norman Pres ley . Sunday School Superin ·
tendent . Sunday school9.30 a .m .: mor ·
ning worship , 10:30 a .m .; evange listi c
servi ce . 6 p .m . Prayer and Praise Wed ·
nesday . 7 p m .: youth meeting . 7 p.m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST .
Elden R. Bloke, pastor Sunday Schoo l l O
o .m ; Robert Reed , supt .; Morning se r ·
mon . 11 a .m .: Sunday night services
Chris tian Endeavor . 7:30p .m .: Song se r vice . 8 p .m .. Preaching 8:30p .m . ~id ­
week Prayer meeting , Wednesday . 7
p.m .. Alvi n Reed . loy leader .
CHUR CH OF JESUS CHRIST . l ocated ot
Rutland on N.ew limo Rood . next to
Forest Acre Pork : Rev . Ray Clevenger .
pastor : Sunday school , 10:30 a .m .: wor ·
ship 7:30p .m . Bible Study . Wednesday .
7:30p .m .. Saturday night prayer service .
7:30p.m .
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRI STIAN . Koger
Wotson . pastor; Crenson Pratt . Sunday
school sup! . Morning worship . 9:30a .m .;
Sunday sc hool . 10:30 a.m.: evening se r ·
vice, 7:30.

J-

N~ CHICAGO ARCHBISHdP AT C4TIIEDRAL- Rev.
I..
Bemardlli, oe1rly-appv1Died Arcllbllbop Of Chicago, kneels ID prayer
during a visit to Cblcaflo's Holy Name Catlledraf Ibis w~. BemanllD'is
on a tw.Hiay tour of Chicago' and tbe arebdiocese. He will officially lake
offlreAugust%5. !AP Luerpboio) •

'•

Oh.

STIVERSVILLE COMMUN IT Y BAPTIS1
CHURCH. Pasto r Robert Byers. Sunday
School 10 a .m .. Worship servi ce r r
a .m .: Sunday even ing se rvtce 7·30
p.m .. Wednesday evening ser..,ice 7 30
p m.
fA ITH fEllOWSHIP CRUSADE fOR
CHRIST , St . Rt . 338 Antiqu ity . Pa stor
Rev . Franklin Dickens . Sundoy morn1ng
10 a .m .: Sunday even ing 7·Jo p m
Thursday e"'ening 7·30 p m
MT
UNION BAPTI ST . Rev . Tom
Dooley . Joe Sayre . Sunday Sc hool
Suparintenenl . Sunday school
9:45
a .m .: e"'ening worship , 7:30p.m . Pray er
meetlng . 7:30p .m . Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRI ST
Vincent C. Walen . Ill . mini ster : Hermon
Block . sup eri ntendent . Sundoy School
9 :30a .m ., even ing service . 7 p .m .; Wed ·
nesday Bible Study . 7 p .m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev . Herbert Grote . pa stor . Fronk Ritfle .
supt . Sunday School . 9:30a .m . Worship
service . I I a .m . and 7:30 p .m . Prayer
meel tng Wednesday . 7:30p .m .
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST CHUR .
CH . Re\1 Robert Miller . pastor : lloyd
Wright . Di rec tor of Christtan Educolion
Sunday School . 9:30o. m .. Mornm g Wor ·
ship. 10:30 o . m . Choir Proc11ce. Su n·
day . 6:30 p .m . Evening Worsh tp 7·30
p m . Wednesday Pray er end Bibl e Stu dy .
7·30 p .m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRI ST. Charl es
Ru sse ll , Sr minister . Rtck Macomber .
sup!. Sunday ~c h ool . q_30 a.m .. worship
se rvice , 10:30o .m . 6tb1e Study . Tuesday
7 30 p .m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESU S
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAIN TS . Por ·
tland Racine Road . William Rou sh.
postor . linda hans. church school d1r ec·
tor . Church. school. 9·30 a .m . morn1ng
worship ,
\0.:30 a .m .: Wedne sday
evening prayer services . 7·30 p .m .
BETHlEHEM BAPTIST . Rev . Earl Shuler .
pastor Worship servtc e. 9:30am . Sun ·
day schoof . 10:30 o .m . Bible Study ond
prayer service Thursday 7:30p.m .
CARLElON CHURCH . Ktng $bUfY Rood
Jimmie Evans . past or . Su nday school
9:30 _a .m .. Ralph Carl . superi ntenden t;
even+ng worship , 7:30 p.m . Proye r
meeting . Wednesday , 7:30p .m .
lONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN . Tom
Richeson . pastor; Wal lace Damewood
Sunday School Superintendent. Worship
· serviceo t9o .m . BibleSchoollOo .m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH . Rev
Theron Durham . pastor . Sundoy School
ot 9:30a .m .; Morning worsh ip at 10:30
o. m . Thursdoyservicesot7:30p . m .
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ol Bald
Knob . located on County Rood 31 Rev
lawrence G lu esencomp . postor: Re"'
Roger Willfoossistonl postor . Preaching
services . Sunday 7:30 p.m .. prayer
meeting , Wednesday . 7:30 p .m .. Gory
Griffith , leodeVouth groups , Sunday
eveing , 6:30p .m . with Roger and Violet
Willford os leaders . Communion ser·
vices first Sunday each month .
WHITE 'S CHAPEL . Coolville RD Re"'
Roy Deeter . po ster . Sundoy school 9:30
o .r:n .: wo rship service. 10:30 a .m . Bible
study and prayer ~ervice . Wednesday ,
7·30 p .m
RUTl'ANO CHURCH OF CHRIST . Eugene
Underwood . pastor : Herb Ell iott . Su nday
sc hoo l sup! . Sunday sc hoo l 9·30 a .m .
morning worsh ip and comunion 10·30
a.m .
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODI ST CHURCH
Amos T illi ~ . pa stor ; Donny Tilli s. Sunday
Schoo l Supt . Sunday School . 9:30a .m ..
followed by morning wor ship . Sunday
even1ng service , 1 :00 p .m . Pray er
meeting . Wednesday . 7:00p .m .
RUTLAND
CHURCH
Of
THE
NAZARENE. Re v. Lloyd D. Gnmm Jr .
postor . Sunday sc hool , 9:30 a .m . wor ·
ship service . 10:30 a.m. young peopl e"s
servi ce . b p .m . EvongP. Ii stic se rvice . 6 ·30
p.m . Wednesday service 7.00 p.m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Corn er o l
Second . Pastor Frank Lowther . Sunday
schoo l. 9 :45 a .m .; worship service . 11
a .m . ohd 7:30p .m Weekly Bible Study .
Wednesday . 7:30p .m .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST . M;tlec
St. . Mason . W. Va . tugene L. Conger .
minister . Sunday Bible Study 10 o .m :
Worship 11 a .m . and 7 p.m . Wedne sday
Bible Study . voca l music . 7 p .m.
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH 12 No,th
Third St. , Cheshire . Independen t . fun·
datnentol services . Sunday evening 7:30
p .m . Pastor Rev . Or. Robert Persons .
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD . Dudding
lone. 1Moson W. Vo . Rev . ROnnie B.
Ro se. POstor . Sunday School 9 ·45 o .m .:
Morning Wor ship 11 a.m . Evening Ser·
vice 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Women "s
Ministries 9 a .m . (meeting and prayer.
Prayer and Bible Study 7 p.m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION . The Rev . William
Campbell. postor . Sunday School . 9:30
a .m .: James Hughes . supt .. evening ser ·
vice , 7 :30 p.m . Wednesday evening
prayer meeting . 7:30p .m . Youth proyer
service each Tuesday .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH . letart. W .
Vo ., At . 1. Mark Irwin pastor . Worship
services , 9:30 a .m., Sunday school . 11
a .m .; eyening worship . 7:'Jf.J p .m .
Tuesday cottage prayer meeting and
Bible study . 9:30a .m . Worship servi ce.
Wednesday . 7:30p.m .
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH Walnut and Henry Sts .. Ravenswood . W.
Va. The Rev . George C. Weirick , pastor .
Sunday School , 9:30a.m .; Sunday wor ship, 11 a .m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH . now locoted
on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25. near
Flatwoods . Rev; &amp;lockwood , pastor . Ser ·
vices on. Sunday at 10:30 a .m . and 7:30
p.m . with Sunday school. 9:30a .m . Bible
study. Wednesc;loy . 7:30p.m .
INDEPENDENT .HOliNESS · CHURCH .
INC. Pearl 51. , M;ddlepart . Re&lt; .
O'Dell Manley, pastor; Sunday school .
9:30a.m .: Morning worship 10:30 a .m .;
evening won~lp , 7:30 p.m. Tuesday ,
12:30 p.m . W&amp;men 's prayer meeting;
Prayer and praise service , Wednesday ,
7:30p.m .

'

'
'·

Sunday
I KirtQS

day

p.m.

FLAG CEREMONY - Learning bow to raise and . as sergeant at arms, Valerie Baker as the color bearer,
lower the flag, the proper way to fold it, and other flag and DanieUe Scott, Jeanie Arms, Angie Murphy, aad
clique~ wa~ a part of this unit's Oy-up training. Jn- Cbrtsllna Randolph as tbe color guard.
'
1
structor was Debt Buck, with Mayla Yoacbam sef1,1JJf

Ph. 992·2SS1
786 N. 2nd 51.
I

992-5130 Pomeroy

E

.

'

Nationwide In s. Co .
ol Columbu s, 0 .
804 W . M .1 1n
991 -2318 Pomerov

rj

Fire &amp;Safety

Equipment

s.,los .l nd
serv1ce

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

fEJ

214 E. Main

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Rutland , Oh•o4577~
. Wm . " Bill " Brown . Own er
Phone (614) 74 1 ?111

RIVER VIEW

Gl~n McCI~ng , s~pt .; mo~ning _worsh~p .
10.30 a .m ., evenmg serv•ce , '1 .00 ; mtd ·

Kim Cogar, Elise Meier, Julie Vroman, Jennifer
Newman, Amy Luckeydoo, Jennifer Buck, Nancy
Baker, Deanna Haggy, and Amy Murphy, who got help
in their various activities from •enior scouts, Sheri
Cogar and Swlan Jett.

Complete
Automot1ve
servtce
Locust &amp; Beech
992 ·9921 Middleport

The

RNI~!~!RDWAR:tI
Homelite Saws

m

ElliS &amp; SONS SOHIO

Kingsbury Home Sales
&amp; Service : · :

RIDENOUR

Herald, Sarah Harris, Mary Jo Reed, Jennl Werry, Ann 1(1cken, Heather
Porter Michelle Mellger, Barbara Andenon, Tracy Murphy, and Lee
Lucke;doo witb unit assistants, Sue Metzger and Janet Hoffman and
senior scout, Tammy Capehart.
Scott, Angela Elliott, Stade Krebs,
Mandie Harris, Amy Beth Metzger,
Christina M. Randolph, Valerie
Lynn Baker, Angie Murphy, Janelle
Williams, Mayla Yoachim, Michelle
Winebrenner, and Mary Ann Kibble·.

216 S. Second
Pomerov
991 · 3315

Prescriptions

aDIHING lllUSE : •'
KERMIT'S KOII.NER

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

~~~~! g(.

,••. •.&gt;;\

NEW YORK

98S 3944

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

MIDDlfPORT
BOOK SlORE

Cht.ych &amp; Office Supplies
GIFTS
"Mill Sl.
Middleport

" ForA ReaiAuct•on •
Call th e R ea t McCoy"
1. o . '" Mile " McCoy
Rt 1, l?e('dsvilte, Oh .

Pomeroy

out. pastor. Clyde Henderson . pastor
emeritus. Sunday School. 9:30 a.m ,

WHEREVER .Y!MJ ARE- Tbere are clllllell to wu11 llbei6ter yw
are as these scouts aeon louncl oat at eamp. Here Juelle Neallllllc.
Alvena Van Meter; lleather Farley lllld,Amy Well ~oillllle ~
detail as the "Wildcat" unit leader, L)'llll Armel, 10Gb aa.

~

'

The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

This Message and Church

Allee Nease .

HURRAY, A TURTLE!- At camp the first one to
find a turtle becomes a celebrity. HereSheUy Metzger,

-

Daily Sentinei-Page- 7

l fXrERIENCE ·mE JOY Of RELIGION

•

OVER THE BRIDGE - , Camp Klashula's
swinging bridge over the Shade River was repaired so
that scouts could use the hillside camp sites on the
other side. Thjs group of girls had one hllls~ camp,

Th~

Middleport, Ohio

M Hidl ('pon
P ·1m NOV . 0

~ - 'v·:.:;

~

~·~

RUTLAND APOSTOliC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRI ST Eld er Jam es Miller 81bl e
st udy Wednesday 7.30 p .m
Su nday
Sc hool 10 a .m . Sunday n1ght !.erv•ce
7 30 p m .
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOliNE SS
Horm.onville Rood Earl F1eld s pastor
Henry Eblin Jr Sunday Sc hool Sup!
Sunday School q 30 o m Morn•ng Wor
~h1p I I o m
Sunday evem ng serv1ce
7 30 m . Prayer Meetmg Th ursday 7 30
p .m
SYRACUSE FIR ST CHURC H OF GOD
Not Pentecostal Rev George Oil er
pastor Worship serv1ce Sunday . 9 45
a .m . Sunday sc hoo l I r a m . wors h1p
serviCe 7·30 p m
Thu rsday prayer
mee ting 7·30p m
Ml
HERMON Unit ed Br ethre n 1n
Chri st Chur ch . Rev Robert Sander s
pa~tor Don Will loy leader loc at ed 1n
TelCO~ (ommu n•ly off CR 82 Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 a .m Mornmg wor sh1p ser
v1ce . 10 45 om . even1ng preoch1n g ser ·
vice second and l ourth Sunday s 7 30
p.m .. Chnstion En deovor f.r sl and th •rd
Sundop 7 30 p .m Wedne sday prayer
meetmg and B1ble study 7 30 p m
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES 373 19 &gt;la te
Rou te 124 (One 1mde eo!.! o f Rutland )
Sunday Bibl e lec ture 9 30 o m Waf ·
chtow er s!Udy 10 20 a m Tue~doy
Bible study
7 30 p m
Thur ~ doy
Theo cratic School J 30 p m
Sennce
Meet1ng 8:20p .m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTlSl Chu rch
Solem St .. Rutland Dona ld Korr . Sr
posto r . Bud Stewart sup erintend en t
Sunday School. 10 a m cve nmg wor ·
sh1p. 7:30p .m . Wednesday evening ser
vice . 7:30p .m .
CH URCH OF GOD of Pr ophecy . \ocoted
on theO . J. WhiteRoodoH highway 160
Su nday Sc hool 10 a .m Super1ntendent
John Loveday . First Wednesday night o f
month CPMA services . secon d Wed ·
nesdoy WMB meet in9 . th .rd thr ough fifth
youth se rvi ce . George Croy le pa stor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL
570 Gran t
St Middleport ; Sunday School . 10 a m ..
morning worship . 11 a . m evenin g war ship. 7 p . m . Wednesday evenin g Bibl e
~ tudy and prayer meeting, 7 p. m . Af ·
filiated with SOuthern Bopt• sr Con vention
BRADFORD CHURCH O F CHRIST Ricky Gilbert . pastor . Steve Pickens .
~ uperintendent. Sunday School q:30 o .
m .; Ch urch Services . 10·30 a .m
JUBILEE
CHRISTIAN CENTER
George 's Creek Rood . Rev . C. J. Lem ley
pastor: John Fellure. supenntendent .
Church sc hoo l. q :JO a .m .. morning wor ship. 10·30: e"'ening service. 7 p.m . Bi ble
Study Thurs ., 7 p.m . Classes for oil ages .
Nursery provided for worship services .
ST . PAUl lUTHERAN CH UR CH , Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sts . Pomeroy ,
The Rev . Wil liam Middl esworth . Pa stor .
Sunday SchC!ol ot q-45 a.m . ond Church
Ser viceS II a .m .
SACRED HEART . Rev . Father Paul D.
Welton . poster . Phone 992 -2825 . Satur day evening Moss . 7:30: Sunday Mass . 8
and 10 a .m .. Confes~ion Saturday , 77:30p. m .
VICTORY BAPTI ST
525 N 2nd St .
M1ddleport Jomes E. Keesee . pastor .
Sunday morning worship . 10 a .m ..
evening service 7 . Wedne sday even ing
worship 7 p .m V1sllotion Thursday ,
b·JOp.m
TRINITY Chmtion As sembl y . Coo lvi l le
Gilbert Spencer pastor . Sunday
sc hool Q·30 om · morning worship . 11
am . Sunday evening ser vice . 7:30p .m .
mid.week proyer service Wednesday .
7·30 m
MbUNT O l i"'e Community Church
lawre nce Bu sh . pastor : MoK Fo lmer . Sr .
Superi ntendent. Sundoy School ond mar ·
nirtg worship . 9·30 a .m . Sunday evening
service 7 p .m You th meeting ond Bibl e
study Wednesday . 7 p.m .
UNITED FAITH CHURCH
Reule 7 on
Pomeroy bypa ss . Rev Robert Sm1 th S(,.
pa stor : Rev . James Cund11f msi st a ~ t
pa stor Sunday School Q.JO om mer
ning worship . 10 :30 o m E'tlen1ng war ·
~ h1p
7 : 30 . Women "s fellow sh1 p
Tue ~ days . 10 a . m . Wedne ~ day night
prayer serv1ce ., . 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church Ma son meet
at Un•ted Steel Worker s Un1on Hall
Railroad Street Ma son. Mornmg wor ship 9:30 o .m Sunday School ro 30 a .m .
Evening Service 7 p m Proy er meetmg
Wednesday 7 30 p m M1d Week Btble
Study Thur sday 7 p m
FOREST RUN BA PTI ST
RPv Nyl e
Bord en . poster
Cor nel 1us Bun ch
superintendent . Su nday !.chool 9 30
a .m .. second and fourth Sunday s. wor ·
ship service of 7·30 p m
MT . MORIAH BAPTI ST
Fou rth and
Main St. . Middl epor l Re v (a lvm M1n
nis , pastor . Mr s El \lm Bumgardner
suplr Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 o m wor!.h 1p
se rvi ce 10 :4S o m
BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH . Route 1 Shade Po o; tor Don
Block . Atfilioted w1!h So u thern Bapt is t
Convention . Sunday school I 30 p m . .
Sunday wor ship .• 2:JO p .m Thursday
evening Bible study 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBlY
Roc;ne
Route 12-4 . W1lliom Hobock . pa stor Su nday schoo l . 10 a .m .: Sunday even1ng ser ·
vice . 7:00 p .m Wednesday evemng ser ·
vice al7 .
CARPENTER BAPTIST . Don Cheadle .
Supt . Sunday Schoo l. 9 :30a .m . Mornmg
Worship . IO:JO a .m . Prayer Service
alternate Sundays.
.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL , Th;rd
Ave ., the Rev . Clark Boker. pastor . Carl
Nottingham , Sunday Sc hool Supt . Sun·
day School ro a . m. - classes tor all
ages: Evening services 6:00. Wed.
nesdoy Study. 7·30 p.m. Youth services
7:30p.m . Friday .
'
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 12B Milt St .,
Middleport . Pastor is Brother Chuck Me.
Pherson . Sunday School, ot 10 o .' m. Servi ~es Sunday evening at7 p.m . on~ Wed ·
nesdoyat 7 p .m .

�·t
Sentinel

Spencer reunion held

;Friday, july 16,1982 ,

PHONE 992·2156

dt•sn•nt.htn ls of Da vt• emU Man · Fell

Ill

Maunt·t· Orr, Culum bu s. askt•LI the
blt•ssm ~ preceding tlw baskt'l dm~
IH.•r . Tht•n• Wl'rc 116 pt' rsuns i: i l th e
n·union . Musk for tile af1nn uon was
pro\'ldt·U by tht• Kcntur ky Mountain
Bnys nf CniUJ II bus. Starhn ~ Orr,

the Pomeroy Health Care CL·nh•r.
wt:re a l.~w prt'M'Iltcd tn
Clayton Rasp, Jr., the yuungest boy;
Nl&lt;'nle Shen nan , Fostoria . the
Gift.s

youn ~ L'S l

,k!irl; and Nt•ttic Rasp

Slnbe l. Murp hybn ro. Ill. . whn
tra vt1 led thl' farthest.
Officers elerll'd r,,. the 1983
reunion wh1ch will be held at the
se:m lt.' plal'e on fhe last Sunday in
Jun e, Wt-' 1'12 Dayton Spe nce r ,
president , and s~u· &lt;J Spencer ,
Sl'creta ry-t r L•asurer.
Attending the reunion wert• Jean

a nd Christina Fry, Ma rguer ite
Rasp, Mr. a nd Mrs. Jun Sher111an
and children. Susan Rasp and
Clayton. Jr.. Mrs. Sha ron Zi ll l·
11 1en11a n and Gary. Jr. , Mr. and
Mrs. Clayton Ras p and Marla,
Fostona .
Mr. and Mrs . Lawrt•n ee Singer
and chi ldren, Henry McDole, Karen
Maye and Deni se, Toledo ; Bnb
Gaines. Lesli e and Gladys Gill ian,

( ,• .,q

"''"

~

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

·~"'

•••

,...................
.... .....................
......... ,.."

'~~-

'

- ~uo•' ~-"

_.'

, .~

.. 6- ·

11 Cl Tv &amp; ...,,. fn"'""'" "'

~·-~-·

u

..

.......... _.
.." ,,. . .. ..............
.......

\

~

...

.......

. .....,
''...... ... . .,.' ... . .
1 ~ ···'"" .. ... ....

~

u

~

4 .,.,. ...,. ~,

~ rt! l

~

••.... , C.••··
t\ """''h••·· ...

'

OLDEST FAMILY MEMBERS- Ha ttie Frederick, a resident of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, and Henry McDole, Toledo, husband of the
late Vera Spencer McDole, we re the oldest num and woman attending the
l'l'Cent Spencer family reunion. The two were recognlzed and presented
gifl!;,

EQUIPMENT SHOWN - The' Moore Unklrlll no-till seeder was
demonstrated during the farm tour held last night rit the Hamm farm in
Sutton Township.
·

\0\

lM- CkoyMDot t

'"-··-·

............. 0..1
I I " 0""' ,...,.,._,...,

IJ P'"""'"'" . "' "'""

1 1 t " ' '"" ""
•• f .-.•···· ~

...... ...... ~,

~·

-·..,,. ._.__.....
,.,_. ...,_
~_.

,.,_._ .
.,,_c_ ....

\_

u . .... ..... ...

Vinyl&amp; Alumi~um

... . .
,_,
..............

. I

Complete

. ,... .. P1H- -

. ,...

==~::·.,,_.,..,

.

Free estimalts

Call 843-3322

.,""

, ..

110rl,

home area 20 yurs.

.,.

o.. ~ •• , ...... ...,.

pUtt

complete retnGdelina, rool·
ina rrf all types. Worked in

, ....Mf_

.""'"II
. ... "'""'".... ,,,d....,.., ._. . ..,...._

u e .... • ... ... ...
...........
. .,
IIV- "" ''

Pu blic Notice

sealed

bids

fo llowing ;
t'. Bread
2. Milk

Root Eltlte - Gonerat

,,

'·

on

a nd

HF .AT PUMP - Full
basement, 1v, baThs,
tnermopane windows,
one fl oor ranch 7 roo ms
rmd ni ce lot .
42x28 . Asking $49,900 .

office bv 12 o'c lock noon on

Auqust 19, 1982.

Sa id board of education
reserves t he right to accept
or reject any and all or par·

Is of any a nd all bids .
Board of Education
of Eastern Local

1100

School District
Eloise Boston,

AT
Corner of Depot &amp; Main
Rutland, Oh'lo

S&amp;KAUCTION
SHERMAN TILLIS : OWNER
LONNIE NEAL : AUCTIONEER
TERMS OF SALE : CASH OR CHECK
WITH POSITIVE I. D .

House. Members are tu bring &amp;
covered dish and table service.

Approximately 75 interested
people atte nded a twilight farm tour
Thursday night at the Tom and
Virgil Hamm far m in Sutton Town.
Ship.
A wa ~ on tour of the farm showed
snd waterway, contour strips, spring
dt•velopment, and pasture and
hay la nd management.
Hamm explained how his animal
waste holding pond helped with the
111a nage rn e nt of his fa r ming
npera tion.
Tom Theiss, superVisor for the
Meigs Soil and ·Water Conservation
District demonstrated calibration of
the Moore Uni-drill no-till seeder
owned by the district.
Harnm discussed his dairy feeding
program covering calves, heifers
a nd his milk cows.
Following the tour, refreshments
were served by Linda Hanun con·
sisting of cheese, spread san·
dwiches, chocolate milk, c ookies
and iced tea .
Personnel from Soil Conservation
Servi ce
(SCS ),
Agric ultural
Stabilization Conservation Service
CASCS), Far.mers Hom e Ad·
rninistratitlll (FmHA), Cooperative
Extension Service (CES) , and Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation District·
CSWCD) were on hand to answer
questions for local fanners.

7 . room

''

ONE FLOOR - 2 large
bedrooms, modern bath
and kitchen,
large
basement on sloping
lot. JustS2Q ,OOO. '

1
1

l

RUSINfSS DEAL
Personal and r eal
propert y included
s~ J e . Owner may help.
ON TIME - Owner will
finan ce this nice ca r·
l ·c&gt;ele'd, 6 room, insu lated
. Has 3 bedroo ms,
bath, pat io &amp; large por·
ch . ForOnly$32,500 .
FRH PARKING!

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

FREE ESTIMATE.S
Ph. 992-2791
or 9•9-2263

We

s ue Murphy, He len and
Bruce TeMord , .All
Realtors. After Hrs.
992·361 5 or 992·3325.

unr

&amp;

*GOlF LESSONS

Line- Ditches

Sizes start from 30x24"

Utility Buildings

Eg g s Also Availabl e

Sizes from 4 to~ and all
wood buildingsl4xl6.
Insulated Dog Houses

ClelllaBonte

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Septic Tanks

36061 Bashan Rd .
Long Bottom, OH .
45343
614-985-4345
6/24/ 1 mo.

County Certified

Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph. 367-7560

Hole- In-One U
JOHN Tf" AFORO
Chester, O H .

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - eK tensive remodeling
• f lec,fric work
•Custom Pole Bldgs .
•Roofing Work
14 Yc.1rs ~xpencnc e

'
,·

LaBONTE 'S
QUAIL FARM
Quai l of all ages
available up to 8 Wee ks
in any qua ntity

Water·Sewer-Electric

U

.'•-

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

Water Line Hook-ups

:,..FJELD TRIPS

•'

Cornet Main I S. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT
\II Minor &amp;Major
Auto &amp;Truck Repair
•Free Estimates
•ReasoMble Rates
Open 8 a.m.·6 p.m.
Mon. lhru Sat.
PH . 992-7762
Jack Coleman 6· n
&amp;Tim Roush I mo

Jumbo Bob White
QUAIL

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

All AGES

,,'

COLEMAN'S
GARAGE

Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382
Dewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All makes and models
Antenna Installation
Hous ~ calls and shop
service available.
7·8·1 mo. Pd .

Ph. 949-2160 or 949·2322
4-20-tfc

Gas

N W OPEN

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

TOM HOSKINS

Two,

Squ1re

Dunlop,
lllowninr Equipmeol.

NICf SHADY YA.RD - tha t 'lays well , a p·
proximately one acre, is the setting for a 12'x60' two
bedroom mobile home . With FREE natura l qas,
and FRE E water . A steal ar S13.500 .

,.

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

,.

or 992 ·2282

H · t lfc

Rt. 3, Box 5~
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
6· t 5·1fc

"CU TOUT
FOR FUTURE U~F "

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

- l OH' r S
-

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH 1

1 .1c ~

a

hoes

- l 1•mp 1 ru c._ s

AUTO &amp; TRUCK !
REPAIR
!

-

l O· t&gt;(ly

- T renchf•r

Also Transmission
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121
3·24-tfc

• washers

e Ranges • R efrigerat-

ors

.ugc or Smil ll Job'i
P H . 997 ·2478
6 27 1 mo Pd .

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5 · tfc
ARABQAEtMEAtS

COM f' l

f. TF

RADI ~TOR

'-FRV I(f

th e

fro m

~ m t~ ll est

He.lt{'r &lt;!"Ir e to
t .nqes t Radtiltor.

Bu ild1ng Lots - A little ove r an
acre of ni ce lay ing land with water and e lectri c
ava &lt;l able. Now \5.000.

the

,.-.1d1ator Sp('C1.l l1st
N.Al HAN f, I C.C· ~
35 Vrs . f II'J)er1cncc

AVAILABLE" - With down payment
on th1s six room mobile home with three bedrooms,
famty room, lots of c losets, porch and large lot .
Reduced to$17 ,500.
~INANCING

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Ir~c.

KITCH F. N - With dininq area, two
bedrooms, new bath, wood burner. qarage, and a il
on one floor . J,_. of an acre of ground wi th garde n
.rea . SJO.OOO .

MODERN l

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
2·26·1fc

•backhoe
•exc:avating
• septic systems
*A water, sewer
&amp; gulines
• dump tru.ck
*limestone
Licensed &amp; Bonded

SWEEPER and sewing
mac hine repa ir , part s, and
suppl 1es.
P ick up and
dtdivery, Davis vac uu m
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Ca ll
446·0294 ..

'Addons tnd 11modelinr

::t:i~·::t""

....

-PiumbiRIIRd
ett&lt;triulwe»ll
IF•" EslimJIH)

Sun Da nce Kids 4 H Club
BaKe Sa le July 17, 1982 at
Murphy Mar t in Silver
Bridge Pl aza, 11 : OOAM to
5:00PM .

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-62 IS or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·tfc

PH. 992·7201
3·29 tfc

Shoot1ng Match eve ry Sat.
7PM, Sun . t :OOPM a!
Robert Bur ns home on
Ha rr isbu r g ·Ada msvi lie
Rd. Ca ll61~ - 2 ~5 · 5449 .

POMEROY - Two bed room home 1n good conditiOfl
- ca rpet ed ~ gas heat range and refrigerator, v,
basement. Extra large lot. $17,500.

REALTORS,
ttenry E. Cleland, Jr .. GRI ......... . .. .
Dottie S. Turner ... ... . . . . . . .. . . . .. . __ .
Jean Tru sse ll . .
. .... . ... . .. ...
Office ..... . .. .. . ... .. . .. ..... . .. . ....

..
9VH19,1

CANDLELIGHT INN

992-5692
949-2660

St. R1. 7- Between Middleport &amp; Cheshire, Oh.
PROUDLY PRESENTS
I lll'\ .- ladlfS N1Qhf 1·2: JO

992-2259

' ''

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

NlgiUI·2 : lO

•

-PGGI Tour" 1·2·10
Fr..&amp; S&lt;'i t , LIVE 6AN05

I twr"

,,

(Dr tn t- &amp; Drown eac hn lohtl
I HI S MONTH' S 6A ,.o/0 5
· wea. &amp; Thu n.
MAR SHALL T£NNANTI· I

'

Fri. &amp; SM.
.LONF WOLF
~e

'llloldly

3~8122 12 h.p. Handlift W MoWer &amp; Snowdozer ......... :......'4250 13199 .
1-8123 12 h.p. Hydro. Lift 50" Mower &amp; Snowdozer ............ 14605 13499
1-8173KT (81) Model Hyd. Lift 50" Mower 17 h.p................. mo . 13799
1-8179KT Pro Model Hyd. _Lift 60" Mower, 19 h.p................. 5915
4299
l-8199Kf Pro Model Hyd. Uft 60"'Mower 19 h.p.. ,............•.. 6125
4599.·

-

.;

2-5645. 12 h.p..Harld: ~rt~ 40" Mower .,...::...~ ..... ~ ..... :.. 2915

1-5260 8 h.p. Elec. Start with 30" Mower •.••.••...••...••..•.•.••.•. ~460
2-5240 8 h.p. Hand Start with 30" Mower .••.••...••...•..••...••... 2260
2-5200 8 h.p. Hand Start with' 30" II~ ......................... ~ 1990
'

·GRAVELY TRACTOR SAL3 &amp; SERVIa
MANNING IIQUSH . OWIB
PH. tn-ms
110MB CIY, Cltl

t:oNDoll ST.

•

REPAIR .

~t11m Winl

Key!MNrnl
, Wanl~l
......,n

Yiu

2199
1999
1799
1499 '

PIAN

l\'i'1~ TU ~I NG
~

WALK BEHIND TRACTORS

10.2

of the EJ•nd w f! otter
drtn~ 1 nd drown Some drJnlos
red uced durint Ncnd .
,Our Mrs . Mon.·Frt.2:00·2:JO;
~. 1 . &amp; 'Sun . 1· 2: l0 . Cury Oyt
,ft(!er •na W•ne A¥;ul o~ble a t
Mir\tmum Prices- Th P Lowut.
PHONE "H'U
7 1 1 mo.

'

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio

1----------+----------i
C. R. MASH
BOGGS
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and
bathrooms. Remodeling,
add·DRS, new homes,
plumbing, electric, siding.

U.S. Rl. SO Eut
Guysvllte, Ohio
Authorized John DHre,
New Hottahd. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealor
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1·3-tfc

Giv! aw~y~

6 cats and

8·20·tfc

Master c. H ·tfc

Or anythinf else you
w.ant to- do, becaose t
live wltfi a • carpenter.
His name .ls AI Ti'omm .

Liloc Rex buck rabbit.
Free to gOOd home . 614·985·
4134.
Young male dog. Resem·
bles a fox . 992-3343.

Dollr &amp; bldthoe ser·
VIet, Wlftr, ltWtr, pon-

ds, ' · foundations,
roctarnatton.

742-2328

Licensld &amp; loiM!Id
Pflono f4f.22n
or 949·2417
3-J·tfn

'

.,

Red Irish Setter, male. Call
614·245-5803 or 614·245·5622 .

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND •
CONSTRUCTION

BACKHOE
FOR HIRE

\

6· Fami ly Saturday Ju ly 17,
9:00 to 5:00. 4 miles below
Eureka Dam, Rt . 7.
EVERY THIN G. Lots Of
Bargains .

3 Kittens, 9 week$ old . Call
446·0467 .
as~orted kittens
to good home . Ca ll 614·256·
6628 .

1

MOTHER dog, small &amp; 5
puppies, 304-675.· 1805.
FLOWERS , phone 304-675·
5349.

YARD setl e, 2229 J effer son
Ave Sa turday , July 17.
9:00-am
6

r'ub l1c Sa le
Auction

&amp;

9

W,l nted

To

Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old lur
niture .1nd An t1ques of all
k1nds. ca ll Kenne th Swa in,
446·3159 or 256 1967 in the
evenings.

Two Fa mily Garage Sale
Cookware. Sil verware, bed · Wan t e d Plym outh or
din g, musch more . 525 Dodqe body wi th qood in
Magnolia Dr ive. Fairview ter iOr , 70 to 75 model
Subdivision . Saturday , Prefera bl y 2 dr, et;~gine
can be blown . Ca ll 446 6260
July 17 .
after 1PM

2 kittens for goOd hom e.
Ca ll after 5, 446·7137 .

FREE
'
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

Rutland, Oh.
7-15-1 mo. pd.

/

-.

__ _
ANY PER SO N who has
a nything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing tor
sa te may place an ad in this
co lumn. There will be no
cha rge to the advertiser .

4

Moving sale, 3 miles above
Chesler. July t6and 17 .

Bu ying
Gold,
Silver,
Platinum . old co•ns. scrap
rings &amp; silverwa re. Daily
quo tes ava ilable Also
co1n s &amp; coin suppli es for
sale. Spr inq Va lley Tr adi ng
Co ., Spr inq Vi! lley Pl i!za.
Yard Sa le 911 Thir d Ave , 446 802 5 or 446 8026
Ga ll ipolis Saturd ay, July
17. 9 to 3. Womens, g.rls,
boys, and 1ntant c1oth1ng . We pay cash for la te model
c lea n used Cil rs
hou sehold mi sc .
Frenc htown Car Co
Bi II Gene Johnson
Yrt rd Sa le Frr 9 to .4, Sat
446·0069 •
10 2. Mens and lad1es
clothes al l s12es 1nc luding
X large. LOTs ol blue jeans
Wanted to buy wh('el chair
109 K ineo n Dr
Ca ll614 245 9163

WOULD like to arrange a
ride or ride r to Marshall
thi s fa ll for nig ht c lasses .
Please ca ll304 773 · 5794

3· J.tfc

SALES &amp; SER~ICE

Yard Sa le Sa T a nd Su n.
( July 19 18 1. 1:00PM
6:00PM . 428 L ar~a t Dr just
be yond Ec on o Travel .
Me ns clothes size L XL,
wome ns c lothes srze 2, and
young boys jeans .

PERMAN ENT
HAIR REMOV AL
Professional Electrolysis
Cente r . A.M.A. a pproved,
Doctor refe ral s, by ap
pointment on ly. 304·675 ·
6234.

Caii742-319S

6·27· 1 mo.

..l nnounce that e1c:h

n1qt1t

,,

Call 992-6259

Yard Sa le Friday only.
Spring Val ley Ant ique
l amps, a nt . c narr .
household 1tems, clott1ing,
m1sc 1tems Oak Dr

Go l f Lessons . J oh n
Tea ford . Chester, Ohio

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
insta II a lion.
Residentia I
&amp; Commercial

Wt'ds.- •.Cert ry Orill ll

Sat. 17 . 9 a .m .

Au c tion every Fr i niqh t at
the Ha rtford Comm un1ty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise ever y week
Cons1gmen fs of new and
used me rc handi se a lways
Biq Garaqe Sale Ju ly l S, 1 welcome .
R ichard
&amp; 17 2 - Family Pe tri
Reynolds Auc tioneer . 275
Cadmus Rd. Patio blind 3069 .
cloth furnitur e. washstand,
tools . bicyc le. b~by fur EMMA Bell Auction Ser
n1tu re, dis hes, lawn mowe r vice . Sa te eac h Tuesday, 7
&amp; Jots more
p m Mt Al to, acce pting
cons1qnmen ts Tuesday 10
Back Ya rd 45 Centra l Ave., n m until sa le time
Gall ipolis. Frid ay &amp; Sa tur Buy1ng and set11n g estates.
da y, 10 to 5. Chlldrens Free estate appr.aisal. 304
clothes, toys, etc
418 8177

~----

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Avery Goeg tem's, Old 33.
Below Pome roy Hea lth
Care Center. Fri , J uly 16,

Yard Sale 123 Kineon Dr .,
Gallipoli s. Tues .• July 20.
lOAM JPM . Clothes, d&lt;Shes
&amp; misc. 1te ms.

Old quilt fr ame, in good
cond . Call446 ·3383.
Babysitting in my home, 3
to 6 years old, G-a llipol is
Area. Call4o46·0513.

Dail

Wanted To Buy

Sa le

Carpo rt Sa le Furniture,
shutters. &amp; m1sc. 1te ms. 503
Pe can Dr .. Spri ng Va lley :
Fr1 &amp; Sa t .. 9 to5

3 - - Announce
me nts
- -

YOUNG'S

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

Yard

R•ck Pear s on , EIC
perienced AUC TIONEE R.
ta tes. a ntiQues . far m,
Yard Sa le a nt . radio, Es
househo
ld L1 censed Ohio
typewriter , oil heater. Mit WV Bu ying
an t1ques 30.4
cne ll Rd jusT off 3S Fr i. 773
5785, 773-91 85
Sal .. &amp; Mon .

• Dryers • Freeters

•

FIVE POINTS -

• Dish -

washers

- •.eptic Systemc;
1

Fnday , ut ili ty trailer, air
condi tioner , 2 cha tn saws,
head board , Ch1na cab1net .
toa ster oven, wood stove.
gas stove. t y pe writer .
doors, storm windows, bn c
brae. 1865 Old Rl . 7. 614 367
0461 .

All Makes

- ' .. wer
- r .1.-. L inc'J

7·15-1 mo

IMM E DIATF POSSESSION - of th iS iwo bedroom
tmme with ex tensive remode ling , loca'ted ·near Mihe
No . l "and has 1 1/ B acres of which part 1$ fe nced.
Blended rate loan is available on ttus. Reduced to
$22,900.

•·

1.304 _773 _564
c. L. Kitch en
Mason, W.Va
.
6. ''O . 1 mo.

Au tomobi le Upho1stery
7·1 1 mo. P"- ·

t.Jf

MarGreaor ,

NF W LISTING - NEAR RACINE - A 197914'x70'
mobi le home with two bedrooms, two new concrete
porches, garden bc1thtub, pretty yard, and 3. 1 acres
for cow, horse, etc. S29 .000 .

'

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

=~~~~~~~e Line of

• Roofing of all types
eSiding
• RemOdeling
• Free estimates
e20 Yrs. experience

•PRGSHOP

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

2011

• stainless Stee l
• F •berglass
• Vinyl L1ners

• SEAT COVERS
• VIN YL TOPS
•CONVERTIBL E TOPS

And Home Maintenance

• Gutters
e Downspouts
• New or Rep.1ir
1 • Paintin.g

KOUNTRY
KlUB

608 E. MAIN

-

WTOGEPOOETHERL

302 Mechanic st.
Pomeroy, OH .
PH . 992· ~506

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

ROOFING

7·1·Hfc

'

Ai(red

3· 11 -tfc

:1~=====~6~--~1=·t~m~o~.j~=========i;~;.~;;,;;::~~

H. L WRITESEl

Root Enote - Genonrl

MI·D SUMMER
SAVINGS
ON
REMNANTS
ENDS OF ROLLS
GRASS CARPET
AND SAVE $2- $5
ON SHAG. CARPETS

4•70-tl c

:m:o:.

7 14 1 mo

MONDAY
PLANNED Parenthood, in ad·
dition to the ir regular Thursday
afternoon clinics which are held
from noon until 5 p.m., will hold
a n additiona l clinic on Monday,
July 26, from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. All
cl in ic visit s require
ap·
pni ntrnent.s. Call 992-591-2 to
arra n ~e for an appointment.

247 . 3534

Free Estimates

7

THRE E part Doberman Ai r conditioner, guns, tires,
puppies . 7 weeks old , 304 too ls. Sears weed eater,
675·2041 .
side board, uniforms, x
large SIZe · cloth ing, baby
c lolhes ext ra gOOd cond .
6
Lost and l=ound
Science fictlon books &amp; tots
FOUND sma ll tiqht color of Odds &amp; ends . Jul y 16 &amp; 17 .
fem a le dog . Old Chilli cothe Roger 8 . Hill reSidence, St.
Rd . a rea Call 4ol6·1927 .
Rt. l2A , Racine . Rain can·
___ . __
eels.
LO ST orange &amp; white cat in
BIG 3 famil y yard sale, Me
Uppe r Rt . 7. REWARD . Dermiffs Trail er Court .
Call614-388
vincinity of 9994.
Roadside rest, Ga llipoli s Ferry, Jots of
everyth1n g. Saturday 17th.
LOST Ga llipoli s a r ea
linemans cli mbing belt. GIGA NTI C yard sa le. 823
Reward . Call 446·0939.
30th . St . 4 famili es
glasswa re. c lothes. bab y
LOST Large male dog, clothes, bass inett. Friday
multi co lored, long hair, 161h .
answers by name of Prine.
White fl ea coll ar . Ca ll 614· MOVIN G sa le. Everythin g
36J.0413 or 614 742·3120.
goes . Some th ing for
ever yone . 3 year old
FOUND · Beag le Pup . washer &amp; dryer, couch, 2
chairs. coffee &amp; e nd tables.
Ba sha n area. 614 · ~49 · 2452 .
beds. dressers, buffet.
Lost· medi um lo large ma le what nots , dist1es, pots &amp;
pans. tawn toots, records &amp;
dog . Named Prince . Has tapes.
mens, womens, boys
&amp; girls clothes, ladders.
hair with white markings. croche ted it e ms , used
flea
Last collar.
see n SatLong
. Ju ly brown
9, in 'tires, Dodge rim &amp; hubs,
Cheshire area. Fa mil y pet. boys bi ke. house pl an ts &amp;
367 ·0413 or 742·2830.
much more . 2003 N . Main
St Pt Pleasant. 9 a m to ?
LOST : Wheel &amp; li re tor Th ursday , Friday , Sa tur
trailer . Be tween Letart day, rain or shi ne, signs
Falls &amp; Racine. 614·949 · posted.
2575.
GARAGE sa le, one day
FOUND : Mi )(ed betwee n only! Friday , Ju ly 16, 9 00·
pood le &amp; terrie r. About 7 5:00. 29 Wa rcicK Rd Pt.
months old. Gray . Found in Pleasant.
Rutland a rea couple of
weeKs ago . 614 742·2545 .
YARD sale Baby items,
misc. Jul y 14, IS, 16. 2208
Nort h Main, Pt. Pleasa nt.
7
YardSale
10 unfill?
FLE A Market·Open ·Ai r .
Chillicothe Mall Shopping
Center . July 16 , 17, &amp; 18 No YAR D sale, 4 fa mily , July
15, 16, 17. Dwight Say re's,
c loth ing Sa les
Leon· Baden Road. 9 .00
4:00 .
Yard Sale Corner of Jrd &amp;
Olive. Ga llipolis . July 17th .
9 to 4 Un iforms sizes 9 &amp; YARD sale Fnday &amp; Satur
10: women clothing sizes 9 day. Lol 34 , K &amp; K Mob&lt;le ,
!o 10 and 11 &amp; 14 , Pt . Pl eas.=tnt , F trst time
glasswa re, hal l tree, ever .
woman medium SIZ£' down
coa t, k1 tchen mi sc. Plus YA RD sale 108 S Park
come to ou r Bake Sale.
Drive . Lots of baby
clothes 1 Friday &amp; Safur
3 F amily Yard Sa le Rf 141 day,9 :00 '?
in Ce ntenary , Br own
house. Friday &amp; Sa turday
Yard Sale Burger Shef
9 to 4.
Pa rking Lot. Pt, Pleasant.
9 to 5 Fr rday . Clot hes. toys,
Yard Sa le 37 Evans cu rtains, &amp; bedspreads .
He1ghts . Wed. thru Ff1day
Jea ns, good school clothes .
Yard
Sale
290 -t
Ya rd Sale 611 4th Av e , Meadowbrook Dr , Pt
Ga ll iPOliS . Thursday &amp; Pleasa nt Ju ly 15 thru 18 10
Friday , 9 to 4 Clothes all AM to SPM All drlferent
s1zes of c1omes .
sizes. toy s

"Boaullful, Custom
Built Gar1ges"
Call for free siding
estimates, 9~9-280 1 or
949·2160.
No s unday Calls

•Industrial
Racine, Ohio

BIBLE SCHOOL
SUPPLIES
Pac-Man Party Packs
·1 bl
an d Ca ke AVal •a e

~~::::':7:·4:·:1

on ly St7 .50 per monthS46.000 .

Public Notice

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•Residential
•Commercial

Bear Front-E nd
Service
Dependab le , guar ·
anteed Work . 9 yrs . Ex·
perience.
SR 124, Rolland, on.
For Appt. 74 2-205 7
7·1·1 mo.

CHECK OUT OUR

ames eesee
Ph. 992·2772

chen, large basement
w1th ga ra ge. Hea t for

Reedsv ille, Ohio ~577 2
t71 16, 23,30 Jtc

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

16YEAR~EXP .

Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992•
2063

~Jree E sKtimates

r anch, 1111 baths , large
modern equi pped k1t·

38900 SR 7

7:00 P.M.

1

so. FT. -· Ni ce har

dwood floors,

Trea~urer

NOTICE OF
FILING OF
PETITION FOR
TRANSFER OF
FUNDS
Notice is hereby given
that on the 13th day of July,
1982. tne Undersigned
petitioner, filed a petition
1n the Court of Common
Pleas of Me igs County.
Ohio, being Cause No. 18254
on the Docket of said Court,
asking? that Sl.SOO.OO be
transf erre d from the
Ge ne ral Fund 10 tne Gas
Fund, as provided by law,
tor the reason s set forth in
said petitioin ; and that said
-petit1on will be for hearing
on !he 23rd day of July,
1982.
Don R. Hill
Walter H. Roush
Harry Hill
Trustees.
Letart Township
Me igs County, Ohio
t71 16. ltc

:
;:
11
''
''

&amp; ELECTRONIC
SPIN WHEEL
BALANCE

DABBLE
SHOP

.• M.UMINUM ~IDING
,41nsufation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
•New roofing

1-(614)-992-3325

all sealed bids shall be
received in the treasurer's

SATURDAY, JULY 17th AT

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION
.
YIIIYL I

VIRGIL B: SR . :
216 E. 2ncl Sf. '
Phone ,

Dairy

O'Brien Elect~ic :
·Service

4

~=========j~=========j~======~==j~=========~

th e

Products
In order to be consi dered

AUCTION

Myers, Louise Myers, Tracts, Scipio.
.
Pomeroy.
•
William' A. Watson, Nancy L.·Wat·
Vernon R. Little, Sheryl 'L. Little son to Carl E . Smith Petrotewn
to Raymond G. W. Cwtdiff, Janice B. Right Of Way, Orange. "
'
Cundiff, Parcels, Chester.
'
Melva L. Eblin to First Freewill
Raymond E. Myers, Louise Myers Baptist Church, Lo~, Rutland,
to Steven R. Barnett, Kathy Kutsko-Roy L. Sigman, deceased,. Juanita
Barnett, .784 acre, Scipio. •
Si~n, Affldayit, Rutland.
S\even R. Barn.e tt; Kathy· Kutsko . GeOrge
Wo~e, Faye Wolfe
Barnett to Raymond E. Myers, to Richard L. Bear!ts, Jr., June A.
Louise Myers, 3.895 aeres, Scipio.
Bearhs 44 11 A Chest
W'lli
TH
, ·' '·'
er.
.
omas, .by l!dm.-· to.
Ernest Newlwt, Virginia Newlwt
1 am B.
• to Blauser Well Service IrtC Lea
(:lyde F. Nau, Parcel, Qhve-.
·Floyd Vincent H!lw~. ·~·ru111fe, to · Olive. ·
· ·
''
se,
Calvm Hawk, Parcel, Orange. ·
CharleS A. Smith, Barbra S. Smith.
L&lt;lla . E . Clark to General ' to Man8fieltl Building 111c1 Loan
Telephone· Co, of OhiD, Easement, Assoc., ,rarcel, Salisbury:

\

~­

--&lt;-.•v
AtN~*

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS ·
The Board of Edu ca tion
ol Eastern Local School
District desires to receive

.' I

Meigs C~unty property transfers ..
Thoams M. McClure, Dorothy L.
McClure to Virgil B: Teaford, Sr.,
Helen L. Teaford, Parcels, Sutton .
Marie Dailey to Wilbur Dailey,
Parcel, Columbus.
Leroy Treailway, Bev~rly Tread·
way to J ohn Harvey Ridgeway,
Margaret Jean Ridgeway, 1.01
acres, Chester.
Leona Hensley to Harold Brewer,
Ri~ht of Way, Olive.
Leona Hensley to Columbia Gas
Co., Right of Way, Olive.
·
Eldred K. Grimes, M. Kathaleen
Grtmels to·Robert C. Ellis, "Dorothy
J . Ellis, J;6i acre, Orange.
M. Eileen Brown to Raymond E .

::::~
___ v..,,..

.........

• •

7·16·2 mo pd.

75 people
• •
participate
in twilight
farm tour
Robert First, District Conservationist,
Soil Conservation Se rvice, speaks to farmers abtJut the sod waterway and
tile that Tom and Virgil Hamm ha ve lnstalh'll in this particular field ,
during the farm tour held las t night.

It( ' ""'""" ( """'"~··

.-·.. ,_.....
_c:_

DUGAN'S
ALIGNMENT

EUGENE LONG
Superior Sidine Co.

l l ~ ...

Mr. a nd Mrs. Elson Spencer , Ike
Spencer and son, Mr. and Mrs.
1
David Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Spencer and son, Mrs. Clara Powell ,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs . Wa idSpencer ,
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Bin!(, Mae a nd
Vance Spencer, Mr. and Mrs . Ha rry
Lee Spencer and children, Mr. and 8
Public Sale
_ _ _ &amp; Aucti ~--Mrs. J erry F rederi ck and children ,
Mr, and Mrs. Randy Bing and son,
Gary Holter, Mr. and Mrs. Arvil
Holter, Mr. and Mr~. Dayton Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Holter a nd
children, Long Bottom.
Dayton McE lr oy, Eug e n e
McElroy, Virgil McElroy, MinerTOOLS- RJRNITURE
sville; Mr. a nd Mrs. John Argabrite,
COOKWARE
Regina Hoy, Belpre; Mr . and Mrs.
MISCELLANEOUS
Patrick Medley, Tuppers Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes, Chester,
were afternoon callers.

Calendar

SPEAK~ TO FARMERS -

' l ~ o "' &amp;&lt; *D

LAFF·A·DAY

vieve Guthrie, Mrs. Clara Follrod
Mrs. Ernest Taylor, Mrs. · An~
Thomas, and the honoree's mother
Mrs. Mildred Thomas, ZALESKI.'
It as noted that Rev. Carl Htcks
wUI ~guest speaker at the chu rch
on J uly 18 and 25.

f•lllu•U.• tttlf'p,.olte ,_.C..~f'tl.

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

, ,"M.,..... ,
"........
a..,.,.
,....... ,

;~ ~::':J.:"..~.::. ·~. ,.
.. ' ...

SATURDAY
MASON, W. Va. - Meigs coun·
ty Retired Teachers Association
will hold its annual picnic 6 p.m .
Saturday a t the Lewis Heritage

, ~

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

'' "',.. .,,.~
" " '"""""'
••
•~oo

c hard Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Dtllinger, Mr. a nd Mrs. Danny
Spencer a nd son, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Randy Dillinger a nd children, Todd
and Marta, Mrs. Kat hy E ssm a n,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard F landers.
Mrs. Ntna Robinson, Mrs. Gene-

... .......
. "'

,," "'""'''"-......
....., IQ&lt;
" '~·" ,... ~ .........

·~···

Ed and Betty Samons, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Dav id Harber, Brad
Phil lips, Mary Douglas, Alisha
Tyree, Tiffin ; Mr. and Mrs . Way ne
Skobcl, Gale Gladson and children ,
Murphyburo, Ill. ;.E llen Groves and
sons. Oa k Ha rbor ; Esther Mays and
snns. Mrs. Manlyn Spencer and
l'hildrt.•n. Chester; Mr. and Mrs .
Star ling Orr. Ga ha nna ; Mr. and
M" . Maur1ce Orr, New Albany;
Kermit McElroy, Syracuse; Murrel
R. Smith, Eula L. Smith, Delaware;
Mr. an d Mrs. Bill Whoberry, Kentucky; Mrs. E lsie Stahl, Mar·k
Bishop, Hel ena ; Hattie Frederick ,
Mary Buck, Viola Rumfield,
Pomeroy .
Mr. a nd Mrs. J ack F rederick and
r hildrcn . Frances Roush, De bbie
Dndri ll. Jack Bra ley. Middleport ;

..., . ..............
..... _..,
" ......... . .

!1 &gt;&lt; ......... ..... ,

t\ \&lt; - · . ,.. . , , ,,..
•• ~ . . . 0 ·· ~ {!\ ~ .....

!&gt;#llfo .. l t -

_,...

.Tr-. .

,_ ~' •' l \ '~ '• "' ~"''"

"""

~~

... ~ ..

l•h••"''"
""'"''"'"
1\ ·"" ' .....
_

''

' "'OCI"'"

)OM olol ...... " ...... ' "
111 ~•111"'"~"'·

""'•-•oo
h•
IJ . .... . .... .... . .

Giveaway
Adora bl e, eigh t week old
fema le! fawn and wh 1te
puppy,
part
bceg le
available for someone who
w111 commit to provide a
good home. Wormed and
vete ranarian inspected .
Hoeflichs, 614 992 ·5292 .

Business senices

CJ.Pi(N!d , ,.,.. ~~rer ~~~~

.. ..__d,_

""''"'"" ~
·~ ·· ··
"'' ...
..................
,,
........... .

. . .....

" '"""""'
•' '''"
,.., r...,,..

Methodist pastor honored at potluck
The m e mbers of Alfred United
Me thodist Church held a potuck
dinner Sunday following worshtp
servtces honoring Rev. a nd Mrs.
Richard Thom as. Rev. Thomas
has begun his seventh year as pastor of Alfred Chu rch.
Grace was given by the pastor.
Lloyd Dillinger on behalf of the
chu rch presented a card a nd gift of
money to the minister a nd his wife.
In response Rev. Thomas thanked
the group for the ir continued prayers and support.
Attendtng were Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Hender son, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Hobart Swartz, Mr. a nd Mrs. Ri·

·~ . ...

'''"
... "" '"""""~'""''
••~""""'""n'

r.ahanna . 1s a nu:111bt&gt; r of tht.· .!.!roup .
Orr. prTsuknt. ('OIIdu r ted the
businl's.s rm·el!ll l.! wr th Rt·grn a
Argabritt· Hoy , Bt•lprt', grvtng the
St'tTt'tary-1re.c~ sun.' r 's n •pnrL

Grfts we n• pn•st•nlPd In ~IL'nry Ml'·
Dnl e, husband nf tilt' lall' Ve rba
Spencer McDole, Tokdn. th&lt;· nldcst
rnan a ltending . cwd Hatt 1e
Frt't't•ril'k . 91. the uldl'sl wnrwm
pn.:•st·nl. Mr::i. Frcdcnt •k residt!s at

Dilly lll'll&gt;nt l CIUIIIIH Dut.
CourUt.. ,,.... , . Oitlt41P6t

()!' W't~tl

Spt•ncer was ht.•ld recc.'nll y ~~ the
Twin Ci ty Shnnt•rs P::~rk in R cH ' IIlt'.

The

, Ohio

Th t' 51st an nual r'Pitllinn nf ti ll'

BEDS ·IRON , BRASS . old
furnitur e , gold , Silver
do ll ars, · wood ice boxes.
stone jars. anllques. etc ..
Complete
househo lds .
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt 4.
Pomeroy, Oh . Or992-7760.
Standing l1 mber 10 a cre s
or more. 614 992 3705
OLD wicker furn iture, old
QUilts &amp; J1nens., ca ll 614 245
9448.
Small busrness, send rn
formation to 832 Sum mi t
Drive . Loqan , 0hr o 43138
6 lb bowl•ng ball 304 675
5370

Sentinei-Page- 9
H elp IJ ta nt~d

II

AVO N Th ree people to sell
AVO N. Call446 3358
Tt? tephone soi 1C110r must be
dependable. Call 614 698 ·
6284 or 614-6987172 Work
out of your own nome .
Midd le age person to do
11ouse work for e ldery man .
Call 61067 74 11
BABYS ITTE R Mothe-rS h('
Ipe r must bf' able to l•ve •n
14 days ·niQh!S a month I
wil l suppl y room and
board. sa lary ot SJOO a
mon th plus tr iln sportat10n
to and tr nm my homf'
Prefe r someonr nver 30
ye Ms of aqf' Wr tte or ca ll
M R Huffmr1n , P 0 Box
207 St Alb.1n s. WV 25 177 or
I 304 71 1 4840

WAITRESS . nl illd~ . bar
te nders &amp; clf'l' ks wan ted
Wr 1te ou~1rf1 C aT10ns a.
II
H ~ ~p ~an t ed
phone number to . Job
HI G H
SCHOOL Pl acemen l. P 0 Box 107 ,
G RADUAT ES ISE N IORS . Hender son, WV 15106
You can ea rn over 5550 00
per month while learn .nq a
Situat10ns Wa nted
va luab le skill like com 12
puter repairer, sheet metal AUTO MECH ANI C · New
worker, or refr igera tron. res •den t fr om Fl orrda .
Plus you will have a secure Honda , auto. cert ifi ed
pa rt time job w1 th the Ar mechanic with own metr ic
my Nat iona l Guard .1 lter tools Have 6 yrs standa rd
schooling . Benef1ts •nc lude auto re pair and body work
a $1,500.00 e nlis tment (' )lper 1ence
BOB
bonus. S35,000 lif e in l AY LOR 6149492766 .
surance and free tu ition to
any co ll ege or trade sc hool 13
Insurance
in West V1rginta
In
terested pen.ons may ca ll SA NDY AND BEAVE R In ·
(3041 675 3950 or in West surance Co . has altered
Virgi nia call toll free 1 800 ser vices for fire insuran ce
642 3619.
covera ge 1n Ga 111 a County
fo r almost a cen tury .
Repossessed SiQn! NoThing Farm , home and personal
down! Tak e over payments property coverages are
$58 .50 monthly . 4' x8 ' avai lab le to meet in
flashing a rrow s 1gn New d1V1d uat needs . Contact
Kail Bu r le son , age nt .
bul bs &amp; lette rs . Cal l 502
Phone 446 297 1
529 2721. AsK aboul Repo .
HE LP WANTED
Ex
perienced teachers needed
for after school chi ld ren ' s
programs dur1n g sc hool
year Cra ft s, music. drama
for e lemen ta ry
ag e
children will be emphaSIS
Ap pl y at the Ga ll ipoli S
Recrea t1on Depar tme nt .
518 Second Ave, 446 1789 by
J uly 23
r

u

lmmcdli11e e mp loyment
oppur t un1ty full t ime
position secre ta ri al skill
ond light bookkeepping .
MusT be ab le to deal with
pub l1c, prior job related e&gt;&lt;
pereinced necessary . All
inQu1res wdl tr ea ted con
fidentia lly. Send resum e to
Box 800, 1n care of t he
Gall •pOIIS Daily Tr •bune
825 3rd Ave. Ga llipoli s,
Oh 45631
He lp care for ha ndi ca ppied
woman 1n hOme . Must l1ft,
cook, light housekeeping, 8.
nurs1ng Ret required . Ca ll
614 367 7549 .
Bu ild i'l 1ncome for your
tu rur e w1fh th1 S op·
portuni ty. No investment,
unlrmlt ed
ea rning .
Distributors needed tor this
area. Blue Fountai n Mote l,
July 17, 1982 3PM
Now hirinq grill cook &amp;
char broil operator . Apply
i'n perso n Bob Evans Steak
Hou se

'

Student Paqe needed for a t
leas t 12 mos . at Bossard
Me mor 1al L• bra rv aft er
sc nool,
weekends,
&amp;
holidays $2 .35 per hr ln
terest m books &amp; libr a r ies
helpfu l. basic duti es m ·
e lu de se lving books,
cneck1 nQ 1n books &amp; e rr an
ds. Must be 16 yrs. old .
St r1ct a wk s proba ti on
pe r iod . Caii446 ·R EAD
Position Avai la ble Sc hool
bus driver Qua l1f1cat1ons ·
must pa ss p hysi c a l
exami na ti on a nd hold
cur re nt bus drivers lrcense
for school bu s operator .
Res pons1bt e ro dr1ve
ass rgne d bus route Sa lary
S3 65 to $4 .70 per hou r .
Available Aug ust 23, 1982
Contac t Mr. David Ra t liff,
Pri nCIPal. P .O. 80&gt;&lt; 14.
Cheshi re, Oh 45620 . 161 41
367 ·0102

15

Schools Jnstruct1on

Kart'lle the ult rma te 10 self
defe nce all private lessons.
Men, women, &amp; children .
Instruction thru black be lt .
Also availab le Karate
unifo r ms puc hing and
kick1ng baQS. and protecl• ve equrpmen t Jerry
Lowery &amp; Associa tes
Ka rat e St ud i O, 143
Burl1ngton Rd ., Jackson,
Oh C"ll 614 786 3074
W.1 nted to Do
Lawn Mow10Q no yard to
b •Q or smct ll Re liable and
d£&gt; pendable For estima te
call 446·3159 after 6PM 256
1967
18

TriiSh COlleCTIOn
Cal l.446 4480

&amp;

.hau trng.
~

Inside &amp; outs1de pa inting
free est1 miltes Ca ll 4.46·
9499.
Jnter •or &amp; C)(terr or pain
ting. Reasonab le rates .
Ca ll for free es ttma le, 446·
4173
Ex perienced woman ro
house clean References.
Ca ll61 4 388 9976
Will tudor your child for
Htstor y, Natural Sc1ence,
biology or Soc1a1 Stud ies.
Wr ite Karen Kidd, Box 57
Eureka Star Rt . Gal It polls,
Oh 45631. Fee negot1b le.

- ':A!Jantfiii ;:: ~-----·--~-

21

Business
Opportun ity
Bus1ness oppor tunity in Pt
Pleasant, Pomeroy area . 1f
yo u ' r e profi cie nt at
prepar ing individual m
co m e ta&gt;c returns,wi ll inq to
undergo ex tens1ve train'ing
and wou ld l1ke to conve rt a
small investment into a
healthy income, se nd your
resume to DanTa x Inc. in
ca re Pt Pleasant Register .
Pl . PI WV25550.
Moneytolo.1n
REF INANCE or purchase
your home 30 year li J~:ed
ra tf' WVa &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortqage, 77 E. State St .,
Athens. Oh 614-592 3051.

22

Professional
ATtention RN ' S· Pomeroy 23
Ser vices
H C. C. now has opening for
full and par t t1me RN tor 3
C&amp; L Bookkeeping
to 11 and 11 to . 7 sh 1ft s
Bookkeep1nq &amp; ta x se rvtce
Upq raded sa la ry· and shdt tor a ll types. of busines!les
differenllal CQ.ntact Nancy (MOl Nea l
.d46 3862
Va nMe ter d•rCc tor of Nur
s 1ng 6\4 992 ·6606
cRS! alatE~ :... ·

,

Look1ng lor women 1n
Atlle ns, Gallra , a nd M:- ,qs J l
Homes tor ~n l e
or others who would l1k e to
qc t free thin gs or who HOME FOR SALE or
would like to becom e a Trade for farm 3 BR , com
dea ler for Fn endl y Home pl etely modern ho me Car
Par ties, Or have parties at peted, ~tots, ou tbld q Barn ,
home a t no cost . Ca ll Frien · OMdC' n, cha1n lrnk lence.
dly Home manager at 614 tw o porches C1 ty sc hools
992 3561 for more info.
Ph 745 5034
1mmcdii! fe opportun1t1es 3 bdr br1ck . qreat l oc r~t r o n
tor Avon rep resenta t iVes in 1 1/ 2 bl fr om pa rk , lu ll
these neighbors ·· ·Middlep· btl sement. Lower Second
ort, Pomeroy , and the Ave , eiC tra lot , f1rep1ac e.
Township areas in Me igs mod k1tchen. c ~r p c tPd
Co. Also Addison. Cheshtre. Ca ll 446 4826
Springfie ls, Racoo n, Hun
t1n oton and Morgan Twp. For Sa le Hou ~c r~t 20 11
in Gallia Co. Ca ll coll ec t Chestnut Str cf'l PMnc 446
614·698 ·7111 .
4684 before 2PM &amp; after
OOPI;JI

Hea lth care
Go ld, silver , ste r ling , fa cil ity is in need of the 3 bdr
hO Mf' ne wly
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp; fol lowi ng personne l. Oirec
redeco rated, mrn1 c on·
currency . Ed Burkett Bar- tor of Nursing , Reg . dilio
n, city schoo ls Many
First Time Ever Yard Sate ber Shop, Middlepor!. 992· Dietician, Social Work Con
('xtras. Ca ll 4&lt;16 ·3897 or 446·
July 16 &amp; 17. Pleasant 3476 .
sulfant . Registered Nurses 23 16.
Valley Rd. at Rio Grande.
Apply Arcadia Nursing
Oh. 9AM til ? Book~, recor·
Ce nte r , E . Main St ..
OLD
F
URNITURE,
beds,
ds, old dishes, AM· FM 8·
Coolville, Oh. or Hickory Nice home, 3 bdr .. or trade
·track pla yer for auto, lots iron , brass, or wOOd . Kit· Creek Nurs·ing Ce nter, 51 tor smaller home Located
chen cubbards ot all types.
of misC . Watch for signs.
Tables, round or• square. E . 4th St. The Plains, Ohio. in Crown City, Oh. Call614·
- ·- -·-----". - - - Wood ice boxes. Old desks Do uglas L izo n Ad 756 ·6744.
Air conditioner, guns, tires, and booRcases. Will buy min istrator 667 ·3156 or 797 ·
tools, Sears weed . eater, complete household. Gold, 4561 .
By owner·3 room cottage
side board, · uniform&amp;, X sliver, old money, pocket
with bath . Also 3 bd .room
Iaroe size ctolhlng, baby watches, chains, r ings, and Wanted someone to s ta y doub le wide Tra11er with 2
clothes,. extra good cqnd. etc. Indian Artifacts of all wllh eldery lady a nd do baths. All on one large lot.
Science flct ipn books &amp; lots types. Also buying baseball tight house wor k, S days a Located in town at Letart
of odds I ends. 124 Racine. cards . Osby Martin 992· week, must give reference. F"lls, Oh .. 614-247 ·3615 afler
Rain cancels.
4 p m. Ruth Circle .
6370.
Catl446·3548 .

'

E xpand1no

�·---------

- -·---"-1982 ·~
l1

They'll Do It Every Time

Homes for Sale

8 room house, large barn &amp;
corn crib, on 40 acres of
land. On Rt . 1 18 Call
James Copeland 614 742
2991 .
8 room house Doubl e lot,
double garage. 680 S 2nd

St ,
Mi dd le p ort.
Oh
$16.500
614 992 -260 2
HOU SE M ea dowbr ook Ad
d1f1on. 3 bedrooms, fa m lly
room w1fh f1r epl ace, cen
tra l a1r, base m ent , phone
304 675 1541.

5 r oo m ho use. ba th ,
f1 r e pl a c e .
1n
P o 1nt
Plea sanl 206 9th Sf S9,000
f.r m 304 675 5652 Ca ll of fe r 7 p m
3 bedroom 2 and on e half
bath, bn ck, double lot, air
cond1t1on ing, b ase ment .
2423 M t Vernon, 304-6757723
ON
mr lc outTra
of ce
Glenwood
on EHannan
Rd 3
PIus bedroom s,
large
11v1ng room. cathedra l
ce i11ng, wood beams, stone
firepla ce, stone &amp; cedar on
out side, pond and 3lf?
acres, garage Phone 304·
576 2587 .

Mobile Hom es
- - - -''"o,_
r _,_S,_
a ,lec___ __
TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . USED·MOBIL E
HOMES. CARS, TRUCKS .
GALLIPOL IS .
CHECK
OUR PRICES. CALL 4467572
32

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HDME S
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES , 4 MI .
WEST , GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 PHONE 446-3868.
1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond. Deluxe kitchen, large
livi ng room &amp; bath , 2
bedrm . H1dden vtil. room .
379 2310.

1980 BAYVIEW DELUXE
centra l ai r , fireplace , gar·
den tub. underpinning w1th
or w 1tt1ou t appliances. Ca ll
446-6211 or 614-388-9916

---------197112x60 Kirkw oOd a lmos t
one acres lot with com
mercia! garage. Call 614
256-6640

41
Houses for Rent
Homes tor Rent, Lease or
Land contract In town or
co untry .
Ca ll
Str out
Realty , 446-0008.

44

Apartment
for Rent
1 bdr . turn1shed apt , car
peted , a1r cond ., $225 plus
utilities . $100 dep. req ., no
pets or childre n. Ca ll 446
1788

2 bdr. apt, HUD excepted .
A One Real Estates. Ci~rol 1 bedroom garage apt at
Ye ager Realtor . Ca ll 304- 514 s 4th in M•ddleport .
Has stove, refrigerator &amp;
675 5104 or 675-5386.
dinette
set . Newly
decorated, no pets or
House. 120 3rd . Ave .. children . Ca ll Ruth Haylh ,
Ga llipOl iS. 2 bdr, gas heat, Wellston 614-384-6309 .
dep. req The W1seman
Agency , 446 -3643
2 bd room furn , Apt
Utilities inc No pets S205 .
For rent or sa le 3 bdr ., per mo. 992 7177 after 6
water front home , 112 mi. p .m
off Rt 7 on Raccoon Creek
Ca ll61 4 256 6413
Apartmen ts. 304 675 5548
Nice clean 2 bedroom
house 3 miles from town 1 APARTMENTS , mobile
homes ,
hous es ,
Pt
mil e ou t 216 . Call446 9686
Pleasant and Ga l lipolis
614-446-8221 or 614 245 9484.
2 bedroom house, un ·
furnished , nice &amp; c lean .
Some
carpe t 1ng ,
full Three room furn 1sh ed
basemen t
D e posit apartment, adults, no pets,
Point Pleasant Phone 304
required . 614-992 -3090
675-2453 .
3 bd.room house 1112 baths.
Fam1ly room and fire SMALL furnished apart·
plac e,
s tove ,
and ment. refer ences, 304·675
1365
refrigenttor furn
Car
petong _ $300 . mo. dep .reQ .
No pe ts 1nside. 6U·992 2362 3 room furnished cotta ge,
after 4 p m .
utilities furnished , adulfs,
no pets 304 675 28 12 or 675
3 bd.room turn1 shed house, 1580 .
wood burner, washer
dryer
$275
mo. plus TWIN R1vers Tower now
utilit ies 614992 3408
renting to qua I if ied ap
pllcan ts, age SO and older.
Nice 2 bedroom Large Phone 304-675 6679. HUO
Yard S175 month 614 985 - assisted project.
4244
=-=-== ~ ===---- -

4_5__~r nis!!e~~!~~~ ~

SEVE N
room
house ,
M ason, WV . L arge yard,
carpeted , $225 month plus
ut ilities. 614 949 2619 .

Rooms with cook 1ng, ca ble,
a •r. $40 a week 304-7735651 .

42 ==::"~ob1fe H~~e~==

4~--- s;a~~~-==R~J~

3rd &amp; Che rr y, 1 bedroom .
N 1ce insid~ Will have to
move. $2,400. 614-992 5249.
Pa rt•a iiY furni shed .
USED MOBILE
576 2711 .

HOME

MOBILE HOMES MO VED
L1censed &amp; insu r ed Ca l l
304 576-27 11 .
1973 14x70, 3 bedroom
mobile home, large rooms,
304 862-2820 .

Jj

=-

~F'i~i[or saie-

1.42 acre far m near Rio
Gra nde. Good 'house,
bu1ld1ngs and ba rn s. tobac ·
co base &amp; live stock . Ca ll
446-2599

40 acres, 6 rm . house and
barn , toba cco base on Sf
Rt . 218, 7 1/ 2 miles fr om
c• IY Call 614-245-9222 af te r
6

34 ~=B~~ni~ ~0~~•.!t9~_=-

R~nt

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33. North of
Mobile Home. Eureka, 1 Pomeroy . La r ge lots. Ca ll
Bdr., tu r n., river front lot, 992 -7479
ref &amp; deposit. Adults, SIOO
m o. 1·643-2644
Sma ll
trailer
spaces .
Mason. 304-773-5651
12x65, 3 bdr , mobile home.
Clean. a~r cond .• furn1 shed,
good location, ref . req . Sec . ~~ --- For Leas!_ _ _
de p req . Call446-8558.
For lease 2 bdr, ceda r ran ch
b eau t•ful
s ton e
FURNISHED m obi le home fireplace, wrap around
in c1 ty Central air . One or deck, lov ely 6 acre sett ing,
two a dults only. Call .t46- nea r Green School Call
0338
Wiseman Ag ency, 446-3643.
for

1979 Nashau t4x70 $8,500,
1979
Fairmont
14x70
$10,500, 1977 Ho m e fte 14x70
$9,500, 1974 Sherton 14x70
$6,500. Kanauga Mobil e
Home Sales, Kanauga, Oh,
«6-9662.

2 bdr. furni shed. wall to
wall carpet, in Ga llipol is,
private lot Call 446 1409.

'8erebandase

between .. to e.

s~ == Household ~~o_!l s-

2 bedroom tr ader.

Real
niCe, adults only Brown's
Trail er Pa rk , Miner sv ill e.
614-992-3324 .
bedroom mobi le
home, part•ally furni shed,
S200. month 304-675-4154
TWO

bedroom, a ll elec tri c,
14x70, $200. monthly plus
e lec-tri c. Gle nwood . 304-5762441 or 304-576-9073

3

6 room unfurn iShed mobile
ho m e , SIX and one half
m iles on Redmond R1dge .
C1 ty wa te r $125 . month 304675 3377

Por table Off 1ce Build1ng
12x40 ft $4,000 Built by
Sturdi House. E&gt;&lt;c cond. 3 TWO bedroom tra iler , k itoff 1ce spaces, gas hea t. air chen furnished , marri ed
conditioned, commode &amp; couples on ly. 304-675 1076
s1 nk Located 2nd &amp; Brown Also 2 trail er lots, fur ·
St 1n Mason, w v cont act n1shed sewer &amp; water.
H &amp; R Block , Pomeroy . 614992-3795 or Call even ing 304- THREE -FOURTHS mile
773-5535 after 6
out Sa ndhi ll Rd 304-6753834 .

Js - -LOtS&amp; ACreage

On Raccoon , two lots 9/10 44
Apartment
acre. 26' tr a 11er an d a 26' ------ ~~n_!____ _
Concord camper . Countv.
water and electric on lots ~ Furnish 2 rooms and bath,
c lean, no pets, adults only .
$8,000.00 614-256-6780
Dep. reQu.red. Call 4461519
15 25 acres on Friendly
R1dge 1n Clay Township.
Camp1ng, hunting, 50 yr 4 room unfurnished apt. all
wood supply , no budd1ngs. c arpeted, utiliti es paid,
$350 per acre. Land con· adults only· no pets. Call
446·3437 .
tracl. Ca II 614-256-6260.

SWAI N
AUCTIDN FURNITURE&amp;.
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St ,
Ga llipoli s . 9x12 linoleum
rug $22 , J pi ece l iving room
su ites couch · love sea t
chati' S199, 2 piece living
room su1tes from SUO up,
love seats l rom $70 up,
maple dinet sets from $99
to $199, wall hu gge rs $100,
r eC liners
$80,
mapl e
ro cke r s $49, bedroom
su ites $150, variety of table
la mps , marbl e lop s tands
$30 and up, twm and full
box spnngs &amp; mattress
(new ) $100, severa l u ti lity
ca b.nets, k 1tchen cabine ts
woOd &amp; meta l, baby beds,
chests of drawers S25 to
$60, J·way recl.ners $100,
gas &amp; elec tn c ranges .
refrigerators, wash stands,
bunk beds com pl ete with
bunk ies $170 , se vera l
dressers, hall trees, beds,
brass head board bed s $35,
bookcases,
smokers,
Hoover spin dry washer,
wringer typ e wa shers, hut·
ch, coa I &amp; wood heat ers,
televi si ons, fans, new too ls
of all k inds, variety of
silverstone cookwa r e. Call
446-3159.

2 lots in Ohio Va lley De lu xe 2 bdr . apt. Parltally
o ff
St r eet
Memor y Gar de ns, S300. furn•shed,
parking, Second Ave.,
Call446 1391.
Ga llipolis
Call 614·256·
6506.

Pnme 2 acre residential
lot. Utilities. Overlooking
riv e r
in
Pomeroy .
Panoramic view Will consider land contrac t . 614·9926254 .

TWO acre lots· 150 ft. road
frontage , city
water.
behind 64 Lumber, call304675-6873, 675· 3618.

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
toman . 3 tables, (extra
heavy by Frontier), $6ll5 .
Sofa, chair and loveseat,
$275 . Sofas a nd ( ha irs
pri ced from $285. to $795.
Tables, 538 and up to $109.
Hide a ·be ds,$340 ., queen
SIZe, $380. Recliners, $175.
to S295 , Lamps from $18 . to
S05. 5 pc. din e ttes fr om $79.,
to $385. 7 pc , $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 c hairs.
$2 19 up to S495 . Desk $110 .
Hutches, S300. and $375 ,
maple or pine fmish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Cherry , 5795 .
Bunk bed
complete with mattresses.
S250. and up to $395. Captaon 's beds, S275 complete.
Baby beds, S99 . Mattresses
or box springs, full or twm,
SSB .. lirm . SOB . and $78
Queen sets, $195. 4 dr .
chests, $41 . 5 dr . chests,
SS4. Bed frames, S20.and
$25 , 10 gun - Gun ca bi nets,
$350.. din e tte chairs $10 .
and $25. Gas or e lectric

~;;~;;;~~~;~:;:;~;~;;;;:~~range
s,
matresses.

3 bdr . house good locat1on,

M INI ATURE estate! New
Haven I Bnck home with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, fami l y
room with firepla ce on 1st.
floor 2 Bedrooms, 1 bath.
fami ly room , storage, wood
room. utll1ty, fruit cel lar 1n
basement 2 Car garage,
fenced in yard, swimming
pool. built in gri ll on pat1o
Doub le lot, $96,800 Call
Corinne Stone 304-273-3671
ICe nlurv 21 -Fred Shipley ,
broker 30072 8200) .

51

S325&amp;. SJS.
'Baby
S2S
bed
frames $20, $25 , &amp; $30. Used
Furnitu re
bookcase,
ranges and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to7pm , Mon thru Fn.,9am
to5pm , Sat.
446-0322

M avtag auto. washer A·1
$90, Maytag dryer coppertone $100. Guaranteed .
Call614 256-1207.
For sale Kelvinator heavy
duty washer &amp; dryer, 2 yrs
old, exce ll ent condition .
Call446-6559.

---------

--·~

30" wide elec tnc stove
$45 ; G .E electnc dryer
$15 .; Kenmore automa t ic

washer $65 ,
Maytag
automati c washer SSO 614 ·
742 2352 .

s~-=. Misc. Me ~haOdice =Piastlc Sept1 c Tanks State
and county approved 1,000
ga L tank. price S340 Other
sizes in stock. haul '" your
p1ck up truc k. Ca ll 614-2865930, Jackson. Dh RON
EVA NS E NTERPR ISES

1975 Case 450 , dozer tra ctor, 1,800 t1rs., ver y
good c ond , $14,900 . Call
446 4537
RATLIFF ' S PDO L CEN TER Pools sa le, su pplies &amp;
installatiOn . 403 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipolis, Oh Call 446
6579 . In ground -Ab love
ground .

Ward gr a in buster hammer
m1ll, belt dnven, 7 sc r eens,
good cond . $100 Call 614388 8280.

19751 or w1nler quarters .
App ly
at
th o· C•ty
Manage r ' s Office, 518
Second Ave, 446-1789
Repossessed Sign I Noth1ng
down! Take over pa y m ents
SSB .SO
monthly .
4' x8 '
flashing arrow s1gn New
bulbs &amp; le tters. Ca ll 502 529 -272 1. Ask about Repo .

455 Olds eng ., \ se t chain
blocks, \ vi~, 1 drill press.
Call614-245-9564.
2 112 ~r . old Whirlpool 30'
e lec . range $150, 2 1/ 2 vr.
old Basself c hest $50, 1 yr.
old Bassett bo&gt;&lt;spring and
mattress 1/ 2 s1ze SSO . Call
614-245-9502
Over 1,000 cera m1 c molds,
kilns, and s uppl 1es. 614 7422925 or 742 2085
For sal e Cabin ets. gas
water heater, doors, inc lud ing slid ing oak door,
m1sc. 1tems. Call 614·992
6254.

1980 Kawasak • 750 LTD
12 ,000 m• . $1 ,500. or best of fer A lso, cast ~r o n church
bell 614-742 2380
Live Ba 1t, minnows, night
craw lers. mea l worms,
wax worm s . Special this
week River Sh1ners .60 doz.
~a pi e Wood Lake. S. R 124,
between
Sy r ac use
&amp;
Rae me.

1

Concord
Trove!.
Trailer. 32 fl . $2,500. orbes
offer. 614-742·2009.
:::

=== ====···

79

Se ar !:
fr ee standing
firepla ce, black grate, two
section s stove pipe in
el uded . Call614-992·3916 af·
ter S

'

I

"':

.,W:·,.

Campers

26' Concord completelY. •:
equipped Including shower: -~
S2,200. Call61H56-6780.
•·
3x19 ft . cam ping t ralle,, .:
Call446-8286 or «6· 1675 .

Remington 870 12 ga uge.
614-992-1747

For sale or trade a ca mper, •
self contained or will rent ·
to one person . Ivan Fife, .• .614-256· 1291 .
,.

36 in Hol low core exteri or
d oor with loc k set S30 . 614·
965-4175.

We' VE GOT TO FIND HIM I w•'LL ~ ••on
VO LUNTEER~: Wf' VE BOT TO
~OOit

,,-,

I 'M

6 011\16

O UT THI; R: E ALON E TO

LURE- HIM OUT. 'r'OLI FOLK S FOt.

LtTTLS TUifiJS.!

AT A D1SiAPIJ CE , JF I NEED
I'LL CA L L. ..-----'~

- - - - - - -··

3611 . GM motor home. Bath · .:
&amp; kitchen area, s leeps 61 ·
seats 9, $1.200 ca ll 6141379' ;
2631.
.

12" Sears band saw. sa n·
der, motor &amp; stand . s.«&lt;I.

value. $200 614-992-3196
CALL Robert Harper,
distributor of Meadow
Fresh PrOducts, 304-6751293 .
WOOD for sa le, 304·4581833
Troy -Bill Rototollers. All
models, 0iSCOU11tS. I m ·
medi ate shipment. Trade·
ins accepted. Last chance
for Free Squeeze Strainer
woth Toller purchase. 703·
9A2 -3871 or write Hi ckory
Hill Nursery ; , Rt . 1 Box
390A , Fosherville , VA
22939
Cid er Press, 1 bushel hard
rock maple basket, shredder attached, never used.
304-675-5057 after 5.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Apples. Excellent for sauce
and pie. Hrs. 9-5 p.m . Fitzpatr icks Orchard S.R. 689,
Wi lksv ille. 614-669·3785.

1970 vw Super Beetle . 614985-4111 . Ask for Art.

........ ......
.-...................

LA -Z-BOY Rocker-rec line
r, needs recovered, best of·
fer . 304-675 1474.
LOWERY organ, new, used

5 times, $300 and take over
payments, call304-576 29 11

51 =::.[uiiditiii supplies =
Bu•ldong materoalsblock,
brick". sewer pipes, wm·
dows. lintelS, etc . Claude
W1nters, R10 Grande. 0
Ca ll 614 245 5121 .
M et a l sheets for all
building purposes. Flat
porcelian enamel coa ted
4x8 thru 4 x 12 . Prices, $7 .00
toS960 614667 -3085
_f'_~s_f_or

Sa le_ _

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KE NNEL. AKC
Chow p uppi es,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 4463844 after 4 p. m .
HI LLCREST KENNEL Boarding all br eeds, clea n
i ndoor-outdoor facilities .
AlSO AKC Reg . Oobermans . Call446-7795 .
PDODLE G ROOMING .
Call Judy Tay lor at 614·367 7220.

------!1-.-----

Sonia's Professional Dog
G room.ng . Call614-368-8547
and ask for Sonia.

AKC Registered Doberman
P1ncher pup, excellent
pedigree $100 thru $150
eac h. Availab le July 26.
Ca ll614·256-1425 or 614-2561269
Grooming ser vices for
pets Will clip English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Sch na uzer's. Reasonable.
For appt 614-992 7342

DWA RF &amp; giant rabbits .
AKC mal e pood le for stud
servi ce, 304-882-3672.

-- ------- --

PAINTING
interior and ex t et ior ,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodelingJ"'l"'
20 yrs . exp . Call 61~ -

1971 DOdge Charger, excellent condition, 304-675-

Morcum
Spouting.

4638.
75 Mus tang II , V-6 eng1ne. 4
speed trans. $800 Call 675.o90.

I Ll, gSIQEII
1977 Grand Fury $1600,
Sears task handler tille r , 8
HP ,
$80 0 ;
On e - Step
came r a . SIS. 304-675-4684.

JEEPS, cars, trucks under
S100 available at local
government -sales in your
area. Call (refundable) 1714·569-0241 ext. 1855 for
directory on how to purc hase . 2• hQurs.

61 __ _!:
F..._a~rm~E=:q~u~l!fp:!!m:!!e;!:n~tReg . American saddle bred
mare with foal. Call 614·
256-6750 or 446-2107 .
6N FORD tractor, $1250.
Used gra der blades, $125. 3
Pf. carry a ils, $85 . 2 Row
cultivators, $150. Portable
a1r co mpressor, $800 .
Chevy 3;,. ton truck, $1000.
Gehl gnnder &amp; mi xer,
$1000. Old time dinner
be lls, $50. &amp; S75. Riding
lawn mowe rs, $150. &amp; up .
304-576-2328 or 576-2606 .
-

--- - - - - - --

63

Livestock

REG . QUARTER HOR SES
Training,
showing ,
breeding, sales and boar
ding. Contact, Dan Beam .
Gall opolis, 446-0183.
Registered and grade hor
ses. excellent 4· H project.
English and weste rn sad dles ·
every th ing
imag1nable In horse equip·
ment anG su pplleos, also
riding lessons and trail
rtdes and horse train.ng
Ruth Reeves , Hoof Hollow .
614-696-3290 .

For Sale. 2 Arabian Ma res.
Full sisters. Partially
trained. 614 992 6584 after
9 :30p.m .
1 registered BGiack Angus
bull.
14 mont.hs ,
1
registered Black Angus
BullS m_onths, 1 J;. Angus &amp;
11• hereford 4 year old cow.
1 white face &amp; Angus heifer
calf 8 months. 614-247-2641 .

7A EL Camino with topper,
350 aulomalic transmission, factory air,
power steering, power
brakes, 59,000 miles, new
exhaust, front tires, front
brakes, $1500. 304 675-2296 .
78 FORD Fairmont,
condition inside &amp;
opeed, 23 to 25mpg. 72
Volkswagen
van ,
9
passenger, •body good,
motor runs but needs 'work,
reasonable , 882-3145.
72

CHICKENS,
Bantams,
standards and laying hens,
phone, 304-6,5-1920

6~ ~=-_::: ~Iy~Eral~ "-=Hay for sa le . Call 61•·379·
2315 or 614·379-2766
Hay $1.25 bale in field. 304·
675-2254 or 304-675-\392 .

-.........
. . . ...............
- ....

a.:

'

Roofing
30 years ex· ·.
pe~ience, specializing II).~
built up roof . Call 614-368- •
9622 or614-388-9857.
. ;;
CAPTAIN STEEMER Ca r :-5
pet Cleaning feature d by
Haffell Brosthers Custom
~:rt':1:: ~;•e estimates. !:

21

'IOU SEE, Tl&lt;E
~S

,.

Fre nc h Cttv Paint ing :
residentjal &amp; commercial, ,.
interior, exterior, pape~ ~
hanging,
&amp;
te x ture a"'.
cei lings. Call 61067·7784:;J:
or6U -367 -7160
-•

--- -----~--- ::

Masonary work. Logue --:
Contracting,
Rt .
1 ; ~:
E w.ngton . Call 614-366 -- ,.
9939
&gt;
,.

We'll do the
shootinq here
in my pad!

GOLLY/ WE ,
CAN'T JUST
LE1 HER !'lE
1&gt;1!~1'1!P/

--s;a~le~~

ADV-d.' ' D
1979 CHEVY 4x4, loaded, Gut~~ oo" . Offering.
36,775 miles, excellent conc o n ! us
guttering,
dition, $4,200. Call 304-458- se a . fe ~ siding, roofing,
1833 or 458-1052.
gar
tM.. doars,
fr ee
614-696-8205 .
:. =-=-==== ===--- esll
7~ ----~~~cycles__ :::
: ::;_~.Plumbing
= ===-===-=~·
81 Suzuki 850 L full dress . 82
&amp; Heating
Shaft drive, like new. Call
614-2.56-1141 after 5.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEAT IN G
Cor. Fourth and Pine
1980 Honda Odessv
Phone 446-31188 or «6-4477 ·
S850. Consider
in trade. Oaii6J.4-2•15 -' I

atiis.

~eni~telev~~nl~ti~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' 7/16/82
B_:OO •

for sale. 614·949·2488
me after 4 p. m.

Cil !'fly Three Sonl

Cll Electric Company
(fi) Over E..y ,..

a

8:30

",
' '

C1J Or. Who
® Ulloo, Yoga and

.. ,

([) Buff' • Eye •
~ 1AII -Star SportaChallertge

·• ·

(I) Winner.
I]) Entertllinment Tonight

·'

Ia Cll Tic Toe:

""'
~

· (]) Buaineu Repon

~~ Rfc.t.c! Sfm[JIC)no
UJJ Woman Who Kaptj

....,"

•Stc:ret
1Gl Entertainment
Ton!Qht
8:00 · . , (I) (l) ~· end Cieri&lt;
'
Stu'a son 1S beaten up and
Stu wants to defend the
family 'hame
(I) laUghs Four young
comits are followed .both
on end off the stage as
IJI-t ,
they learn ~eir ciaft.
&lt;:, . ~'!"OVIE: ' Oh HoiiVonly

ii.:

llf ' 1

([) Nlltionllf Ooogrephfc

~r~

~PN Special Got!
~: 19&amp;2 Britlaf' 9Pen from Troon,

':Su'1·
·"'' '• ·

~

II&lt;Odend - Sec:ond Round
(J) MOVIE: ' ll&lt;e: The War
Part 'J
,(J)
IB ...._, Gov.
lletling lolls In· love With
the daughter of a former
~ - IRI JCiosed ca~
donedl
.
"
a ,' Cll Ill Dulcea of
~ A fortune in dilmoncft. Jani;l \ at So and
Luko'a· ltlet. (A) 160 "*&gt;.1
ClliHl WllllllngDI w.-;
. . _ Paul Ouh hoatt
•• top WeaNngion joumll-

v_.·

a

----

1970 . -~ ------'
JIMS Water Service. Call·
trim
JJm Lanier, 304·675·7397.

" "'.:

• -· --~--- · -· · ---, · - 1

. .t ---- •.-.- ----·-'

Dough
MKIIIoii-Lohrar
, •

.,~"

Now Hauling lt'meitone-f ill
dirt· top soll ·gravel. Free
estimates . Call 614-3677101.

c.,.

Happy Doya

...

'
I
. ---·
-r' - ----·
-"1 •· - ·-

Coftlplete
lobs from
Installed · MOWREYS Upholstery Rt
1 II$OX 12A, P.I\ ·Pieeiant _ ..;_
Trim
675-4154. . '
., ' -

You

Cil P.M. Magazine

·I])' Ill&gt;
, Rilport
ill) NoW.
• IBl Muppet Show
e ,'(f) You Aokod For It
(l) V1dpo Jukebox
([) A&gt;Mrther Ufe
I]) ESPN Sporta Cantor
Cil Andy Griffith
, (J}g Cll Family Feud
;•
CD ~ and Shirley

--

T'ftl STATE --UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 SK. Ave., Gallipolis
446-7833 or446-1133.
·

a

CD

Need something hauled
away or something moved?'
We' ll do it. Call 446-3159 or
614·256-1967 after 6. . .

Upholstery · - ,-

Cil CD NBC News

Clll60,000 Pyramid
Cll Fethe• K110Wtt Beat
Cll a llJ) ABC Nowa
II Cll ill) CBS Nowo

7 :00

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call614-367·747-1
or614-367 ·0591.

17

CZl Ct Cll ® •

(I) (I)
Newa

(I) MOVIE: .'Loavo Yes terday Beltlnd' '·

- - -------

Ram Charger trl haul, 19
110\N, fiberQljiSS ,
Mere. OB &amp; trailer,
Call614-367-77.15.

Major League
Baseban Friday Night
Edition: Teams to Be
Announced
(I) ()]) Wall Street Week
Lou1s Rukeyser analyzes
the '80s wrth a weekly reVIBW of economiC and mvestment matters
9:00 (]) 700 Club
0 (I) em Dallas J R 's
absence from the bus1ness
and Ray 's 8pathy toward
runn1ng the ranch have
Bobby busy tryu"'Q to keep
Ew1ng 011 and Southfork
runmng smoothly {R) (SO
mm .)
([) Next Question
® Herod. Indira Ghandi
Th1s documentary offers 8
candid film portrait of thiS
powerful Chief of State as
she oversees her son RaJIV's election 10 Parhament.
150 mon.j
9:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Kramer va .
Kramer'
(J) lnalde Busineas Today
'Turning Your Job Into
8
,Business.· A consultant, an
owner of a secretanal service and 11n e•pert 10 the
conversion of your JOb Into
a busmess talk about the
'how ' s' of becoming your
own boss.
10:00., Cil CD McClain's Low
McClain I&amp; under close
scrutiny while he conducts
a~ investigation of a rapist
fAl (60 min.)
·
Cil MOVIE: 'Buml'
(]) TBS Evening News
0 Cll ® Falcon Crest
Lance · s scheme to trick an
til-reputed wine distributor
. backfires. (R) (60 mtn.)
Cll Edword the King
® Newowlltch
10:30 ([) Sing out America
® Me~terpi..,. Thwtre
'Pride ar\d Prejudice· Mr
Collins, who 'will In ti111e 1 n~
hertt Longbourn, seeks a
reconciliation wkh the Ben·
tt familv . (60 min .)
I osed Captioned!
11:00
CI&gt;CilCDIICil®.
llJ)_Newo
(f)Noohvltlo RFD
I]) ESPN &amp;porto Center
(IJ AH In the Family

Gil
~
Cil MOVIE: 'Crosobar'

-

-· - ··- - - - -· -

CD Ill &lt;D

EVENING

1976 Pontiac Firebird For.1978 Harley Davidson _ 614mula metalic brown, beige
~--- , ----949-2145.
velmJr Interior, very clean;
Lawrence Sldenstrlcker
ex. cond ., 4 new t ire~. 5th
Backhoe Service . Call 6753 Wheeler Honda 90 AI TC 5580.
Conn organ, new Caprice ltre with rim plus spare,
S500 614-985-4175.
model, $750 . Call 614 256- $5,200. Caii614-367·01B4.
84 --= =-=Electrical ===
1216 .
15 Chev rolet stationwagon, XS 750 SF s pecial Yamaha
____ &amp; Re!r~!!~~l! _ _
58
Fruit ----81.000, good MPG, good 1979. Exc. cond. New paint .
Clendenen
Refrigeration,
!.res, good cond. Call ,bet - 843-4715. J im.
___ &amp; Vegefa~ -­
- - ___ _ _ _ _ __.! _ _ _
Air
Conditioning,
&amp;
ween 4 and 5, «6·4229.
Heating Service. Call 614Home grown sweet corn .
1974
XL
' 125, $200. 1977 XL
Charles M cKeon Farm,
256·1446.
Fairfield Centenary Rd . 1977 Chrvsler Cordoba. 1971 75,$325. Call30H75-4628.
Chevy Pickup· 6 cyl., auto.
Call446-9442 .
TOTAL
ELECTRICAL
1963 Commac he tr~vel 1980
YAMAHA
650 &lt;:§E RVICE Heating, air con·
trailer, 14 fl . Call446-1552.
Ma
xi
mum,
bla
ck
&amp;
ditioning, wiring, equip·
Fresh vegetables. Open
chrome, driveshafl, ex - ment trouble shooting I
d a ily 3:00 to 6:00. 2 miles
commercial.,
west of Ga ll opolts on Rt . 75 Plymouth Fury hardtop, cellent condition, $2150. repa1r ,
good condition, good gas Call after 3:30,304-675-4849 . residential I industrial . E x141.446·1080 .
mileage, Sl.OOO. Call 614perienced, certi(ied. Free
367-7755.
1978
HONDA
Hawk,
mOdel
Estimates.
Terry
112 runner beans pick your
614 -446·
CB400T, 6320 miles, pho'n" Thoroughman,
own. bnng containers.
304-675·667,,
2930.
SO.OO bu.. Call 446·4807. 1974 International travel all
very
roomy
,
good
cond.,
Closed Sundays and Wed·
S1,250 . or best offer. Call IS:::= :-:~~~.-;;; -SEWING Machine re pa irs,
nesday evenings
614-245-5017.
Motors for Sale
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
1980 Sears 12' fiberglass Scissors . Fabric Shop, ·
flsh.ng boat, 7 112 HP
Pomeroy. 992 -2284.
motor, trailer, oars, life
- -~ ~ - - -· ~- ... -· _':.J:
jackets. $900, Call «6·4782.
8~ ~ :::~_ene~!l:B!uli!i_g·- -.
14ft. Larson fiberglass boat
and trailer. Boat custom
painted and carpeted . call
~ - 0932 or614-U5-9135.

innoc:ent man, Dutton helps
a boy JOin the B1g Brother
program and Carson con51.
ders gotng mto pnvate
practice. (A) (90 min ) •

FRIDAY

'&amp;
1=--~ EK~Vati'!L_ _

Ba c h trumpet sl•ghtly
used, 1 concert season,
$550 . Ca ll675-5644.

. •/

DINICES CAUSED MOST

w.o:;:=

_l!!_s!_r~f_!__ __ _

HARr'S Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less· expensive cars In
stock.
·
·

V£S,BUT 1\NTI· MISSILE

M~

HAP HIDDEN

'tliE FACT THAT THERE
Wf'RE NO AlOMIC
SlOCKPILES SO

Galli.polis Oivp~Sified Con·
. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
wo·r~t: .
Spec i al
rate$ . Call us for free
estimates. 446-&lt;1440 .

71 Olds for sale, UOO. Call
614-256·123S.

DAYG, FOR
PltACT/CAL REA5~ I

------------ -

,

1979 vw Rabllll, 36,000
miles, good c411111. Call 614·
245·9551. .

1&gt;\AG~

CHRISTIAN'S CON STRUCTION.
Constt . ,1976 Ford 1 ton truck . Good roofing , si d i ng, spouting,
cond. 614-247-3895, after 6 fencing, pa inting, repllirs&amp;
p .m .
cleaning
446-2000, call'
before 8 and after 5:30.
,•
76 FDRD F250 '~ ton with
,.
Lear tapper S2,000. Truck
camper, 8ft., many o.fras. Gene's Steam Carpet ·
Clean-Scotch Gaurd·Free ,;
sleeps 6, excellent condition , $850. Both for $2800 estimates-spring specials:
•
Call 304-937-3382 or 304-895- Gene Smith, 992-6309.
3942.
RON ' S Television Serv•ce.
Specializing in Zenith and
71 :::_::__ :-:_vans&amp;}
Motorola , Quazar, and
BUS FOR SALE 1957 GMC hou se ca lls. Phone 576-2398
4104 Coach 32 passenger, or 446-2454.
good bOdy, good tires and
seats. Runs good. Rio F &amp;. K Tree Tr imming,
Grande College, Rio Gran· stump removal 675-1331.
de, Oh ~56n 614-245-5353,
exl .217 .
RINGLES'SSERVICE ex perienced mason, roofer,
1976 ~ - wheel drive GMC carpenter,
electri cia n ,
pic kup Call.u&amp;8296 or 446- general repair s a n·d.
1675
remOde ling . Phone 304-675·
2088 or 675-4560.
1973 Chevy Blazer with
37,000 mi. Radio, a.c., p.s., .Water -tis- C,gmmerc ia l
p.b., auto., lint glass, 10 in. and Dom(i'.s.ficlii J esi holes. '
rallv wheels with 10 x 15 Pumps iSirl~iind Servi ce .
Land trac ti res . $1,700. 614- 304·895:3j!02..:

1

'

FOOUGH? MAH I\IID
006 GOT 1D&lt;iETI£K
'MY BACK IN CR()-

...

992 -7539 .

STANDARD bred mare,
phone304-458-1917 . ,

GEE- I 6UEG5 I
T' llC SO UI'SET A~OUT A
OQii, CON51DE~IN' All Tit'
1'11'4FUL THINGG GOIN' ON
IN TH' WORLP. ~UT -

Truck's for-Sale

57 - -- MuSiC:a~- --

-- _

9652

For Sale or Trade

GE automatic washer, real
nice, $90. Call «6-8181.

B EMC 0 mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58 6
Piece Nauganyde hea~y
F1rst f loor, 2 bdr, un- wood living room suite
furnished apt , downtown $595 . Pi II ow arm sofa &amp;
Gallipolis.' Call at 631 4th c hair $295. Roll top desk
Ave., Gallipolis.
dark &amp; light, '$189. Bunk
beds, complete, Include
Effiency apartments 1st mattress, $199. complete
floor &amp; 2nd. floor . Call 446- water bed shop with 10
729 2nd Ave., bedroom suites on display,
startmg price 5229. up to
Ga llipiOi is.
$2500. Big daddy coctall &amp;
end tables S50. Waii·A·Way ......,."'
re~linera $169. and up. LaZ-Boy recliners In stock.,
USED FURNITURE 5 pc.
&amp; 7 pc. dinette sets,'
bedroomsulte Hollywood
effiency $150, style, bunk beds, Flair Fur·
single male. 919 1 nlture &amp; Design. Gallipolis
Gallipolis. Call Ferrv, WV . Open 9-6.
7PM.
Phone 3!)4·675-1371.
·

Motor Home

1

56 ___
2 S 1/2 ff l1ghted cab•net
$125 ea , Russe l Stover 3
glass - she lf tab le w1th
s torage underneath $100, 2
Hall mark tables, 2 glass
shelves and four drawers
$75. ea ., 2 3 un it sta i r step
up -stuff Hallmark oak &amp;
glass $115 ea .. l ·S unit oak
&amp; glass Hallmark up-stuff
$375 These can be seen at
the Full House of Cards,
Sliver
Brid ge
Plaza,
Ga ll ipoli s

llr---;=::::::=====:::~by;.:.L;.,I rf.,;.W;.,rlgh.:.l
;. I 1971
'N' CARLYLE"'

Repossessed Sogn! Nothing
down! Take over payments
SSB .S'O
mo nthly . 4' x8 '
flashing arrow sign . New
bu lbs, leiters 502-529-2721
Ask about Repo.

'

•

4 .

.M
,

,..._,.
lstl ~. ""' -

1110 ' . , ~ (!)
~!0

~

··

a..- '~torr
.

Cll .,... Allen lit

1 I :30

~

a(I) (I)
CD Toitfeht SMw
MOVIE: 'Only Wh.n I .
~Ute

-.
Cil MOVIE: '0., of the

T-·
(J)s-tv'H·a (J) MOYIE: ' 1 -·ln-.
,.,.._.

.

trte;e to ftn 1 an ·

1 \

Cll MDVII":•.........~ ...,.
!It MOV1I:- '"*'Y Pol-

IIJ (JZ) Solid Gold

son·

CD (i}l Nightline

J :30

12:00 (]) MOVIE: ' Rules Of The
Game'
(l) Bums
Allen
(]) CFL Football : w1nnipeg at Montreal
(I) Nlghtllne
D GJ FridaYs' Tonight 's
host IS Valene Ben1nellt
wnn mus1cal guest Btll
Champhn (R) (90 mm)
12:30 I I (])
SCTV Network
CD Jack Benny Show
(I) Fridays Tonight' s host
IS Valene Bertmelh With
musical guest Bill Champhn. (R) (90 m1n)
1 :00 (]) I Married Joan
1:30 (])MOVIE: 'Raginp Bull'
CD My Uttle Margie
([) MOVIE : 'Chinatown'
(IJ
MOVIE:
The
Indestructible Man '
Ill (H) News
I
2 :00 11
(I)
NBC
News
Overnight
(2) MOVIE: 'Boulevard
Nights'
(I) Bachelor Fetl\er

s.

rn

CD News/Sign Oft
2 :30 (I) Ufo of Rllay ,
3:00 (l) 700 Club
·
(]) ESPN Sports Center
3:30 (2) MOVIE: 'My Bloody
Valentine'

3:46 CD MOVIE: 'Oh Heaventy
Dog'

4:00

CD ESP.N Special Golf
Presentation: 1982 Britlah Open from Troon,
Scotland • Second Round
4:16 Cil Ml ..lon lmpooalblo
4:30 ()) Rosa Begley

SATURDAY

7/17/82

D CD 17 Going Nowhere

ill American Trail

(D To Be Announced
ClD Sneak Previews Jam

ftlm cnt1cs Roger Ebert and
Gene S1skel as they tak e a
look at the new summAr
8 00 movtes
D (}) CD Here's Boomer
·
Boomer helps a bhnd man
who 's seemg eye dog has
died (A)
CIJ MOVIE : 'North Avenue Irregulars'
(I) MOVIE : 'The Stars
look Down'
CIJ Kristofferson Special
(]) •
&lt;D Today' a FBI
Agents go undercover 10
fmd evidence aga1nst laboratones that are defraud1ng
the government (A) (60
mm I
0 Cll ® Walt Disney
'Duck for Htre · An angry
Donald Duck leaves the
st udio to fmd more meantngful mnployment .
(I) MOVIE. 'Penny Serenado'
. ® Clossi&lt; Country
S:30 IJ Cil CD Harper Valley
Cass1e IS swept oH her
feet at a h1gh school reu10
" " (R)
0
(j)
® MOVIE:
'International Velvet'

Cil

CD

Nashville

Palace Hos t Roy Clark 1s
JOtned by Tom T Hall , He-

len Cornelius and Larry
Gatlin and the Gathn Brothers (A) (60 mm )
(]] Georg1a Area Emmv
Awards
(j) ID (ill Love Boet Three
men frnd t hev have stmtlar
ta stes 10 women. th e captam undergoes a personal
1ty cha nye and a man gets
reJeC ted b y h1s mtst ress
(A) (Ciosed-Capttonadj
® Matinee at the Btjoi.l
'lost Ctty of tne Jungle·Wrth Love and Ktsses ' (90
mm)

Orahge'
(!) Best of Notre Dam e

Football #2 19 72 Ftghtmg
lnsh vs USC
(I) OJ (i}l Fantasy Island

A wmdow dresser brtngs
h1 s favont e mannequrn 10
life and a ltbranan falls 1n
love w1t h a storybook
character Guest starrmg
Bob Denver and Brtll Ek land (A) (60 m1n ) {ClosedCaptiOned}
([) ' Danger uxe· From
Masterpiece
Theatre

l

tJ

([)

Pro

Celebrity

Golf •.

Serie•

Cll •

(H) Nowo

Q Cil Conc:om
7:00

~~~F(l) Mumbo Jumbo,

lt't
intarn.tjonal·
ca1t of illuatonlets perform
tflelr ITIIgfc. Hooted by •
Tom Boofay.
·
Cll Ju6y Lynn Show .
I]) CFL - 1 1: DtWw•

f!hllle

PAELIF

--

111 H....,.'o Aol&lt;

DOWN
1 " War IS - "

cash

2 Moldm g
! Poet 's
23 Lukewa rm
3 Can't
lime of day
29 F rench
be found
12 Telephoned
pa tnte r
for
3i Contend
4 Blunder
5 Confuse
16 Finnosh lake
1woth 1
6 Devtl
19 French n ver lJ Indian e1ty
(Scot )
20 Cheek-bone
34 Pe rfectl y
1 Rutherford 21 Blunder
36 Make lea ther
8 Vanished 22 Bank eamtngs 37 - secret

17 Remnant
18 One , m
Essen
20 Trumpet' s
muffler
21 " She doesn't
- trick"
(2 wds )

23 Nocturna l
animal
24 Sptritual
2S Omit a
syllable
' 6 Accwnulate
27 Fitted
With

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

AXYDLBAAXII
L 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

'

One letter aimply atanda fo r an other In th11 umpt• A is
used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc Smgl e letters.
apo1trophel, the length and formatiOn of the wo rd1 are all
hints. Each da)' the eode lett ers arc d1R'erent

CRYPTOQUOTES

Anawerl!-re:
,

Yesler d I)'s

CIJQCIJH•-

(I) Labr81toe Welc
,
Cll CINM bflwoy. Jour·.

WHAT HAPPEN510
YOU WIIH THE:
P'lltl~e OF' FUEL
IHEe&gt;e 17AY5?

FLITUE

An

lit Hemlt1on

(]

I I I

Japanese
admiral
38 Wrigg le out
J9Gumbo
40 Pnnciple
41 Turf

28 Head (Fr . )
Z9 Czarist
townships
30 Time..fJ!ble
abbr.
31 Fish
32 Under-fool
product
35 "Annie Hall"
actress

tUng
,
CD God Hal the Anawer

Cll Clonic CountrY
® MOVIE: 'Setty Boop'
6:30 IJ (I) CD NBC News ·
(I) MOVIE: 'Barry Lyn·
don '

37 Famed

windows

UnacramtM thfie four Jumb'es,
one~- to each squ1re, to form
lour ordinary words

8 ·00 D Cil Q Cll ® Nowo
CD Traveler'• World
I]) ESPN Sports Center
Cil Champoonahlp Wru·

by THOMAS JO,SEPH

ACROSS
I - card
5 Maxim '
10 Czech river
11 Anew 1Lat )
13 Noted TV
producer
14 Main meal
15 Bulgartan

m~J sure

(f) MOVIE 'A Clockwork

'

~~4M" .. ,f

16 Draper's

I 0 .00 0 (I) CD NBC Magazine
Cil MOVIE · 'Wollen'

. ftfl~~m&lt;;} ~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME
~ ~ ~~ s
byHenrtAmoldendBoblee

I YO~

EVENING

9:00 0

(J I) GET ( I I l I )
(Answers tomorrow)

I

j umbles: AUDIT BULG~ DURESS CAVORT
Antwer, How meny are sold at tho~ big auctlona7(,
• L9TS
,
..I
No. ao, conlllnln(ll110 pualn, Ia •••fY~Ior S1.N ,._..ld

\ , .,.,._Jumble, CIO lhiii.Wlptpi'J, lllloz 34, Norwood, N.J. 07$48. lrtefucle 10Uf
~,,"""~ :~ ,.~~and male chedll p~~yab~ ~~~·
•·

.

~

~
·~

.

.,

' .

TYCR

ZCP

OCR
RAOO

HC

O AEHSY ,

QX C V A H

S F SY

LY K

vx c w

HD CES ROC HLOT N L KOZ - QO P HLXBD
Yestem.y•s _Ctyptoquole: IT IS IJETIE R. pF COURSE, TO
KNOW USELESS THING S THAN TO KNOW
NOTHING.-SENECA

�~

Page

Friday, Ju!y116, 1.982

· Pomeroy-Middlepof!; Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel

·Judge O'Brien terminates 30 · court· · cas~~ ·
Twenty·one defendants were •
fined and nine others forfeited
bonds In Meigs County Court
Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Raymond Lalrlnere, Athens,
failed to display valid license
plates, $10 and costs; Roy Bailey,
Racine, shooting or attempted to
shoot a wUd bird from roadway, $00
and costs; Wesley Clark, Racine,
DWI, $150 and costs, one year pro
batlon, sentenced to 20 days In jail,
17 days suspended, Improper han·
dllng of a llrearm In a n\otor vehi·
cle, $225; Ronald Shields, Tuppers
Plains, reckless operation, $50 and

costs; David Sands, GaUipolls,
speed, $25 and costs; James Jones,
Middleport, S~ and costs, speed;
Glenda Rutter•. Nelsonvllle and
EmestWhltehead,ReedsvUie,flsh·
lng without license, $25 and costs
each; Alan Vandall, Parkersburg,
speed for unreasonable conditions,
$10 and costs; Edward Hensch,
Cuyahoga Falls, fishing without a
llcense, $25andcosts; DavidEollln·
ger, Gallipolis, speed, $25 and
costs; Stephen Allen, Ironton,
speed, $24 and costs; Walter
Hensch, MassUon, fishing without a
license, $25 and costs; Catherine

~ng

~U~blrd trorrf'al

Wood,
Bottom, taUure to yield
hall of roadway, $10 and costs;
Larry Hysell, Pomeroy, falled to
display valid registration, $10 and
costs; Scott Hill, Pomeroy, speed,
$75 and costs· Harry Barton Syra·
cuse, no valid operators llce~se. $75
ana costs, one year probation; Guy
Schuler Rutland no eye protec·
tlon,
and costs; WUialm Eakins,
Racine, DWI, $150 and costs, five
days confinement, llcense sUspend
90 days, no valid operators license,
$50 and costs, five days confinement, one year probation; Randy
Wheeler, Racine, shooting 0 ~ at·

·tempting to shoot a
roadway, $50 and eol!ts; W. ~:
zant~ Macedonia, s~. fll
costs.
'· '. t
ForleltlngbondswereNoelLam· ·
bert, Gallipolis, overwldth, ~-50i. ~
Roy Buchanan, CoolvUle, tlflvlngi
whlle Ucense suspended, ' $70.50;,
speed, $00.50; Ivan Bowman, WU-:
kesvjlle, .lohn J . Davis; Columbus,:
Lynn McDowell, Elkins W. Va .. :
Kenneth R. Cain, Kent, speed, !
$50.50 each; WUllam Kllutz, Pomeroy and Mark Norton, ,Pomeroy, I
unlawfully discharging llrewo,rkslt
$72,55 each. , :
• ~~¥

anqf

$10

Rav·e nswood ·River Festivai... A-7
Inside .. .

casts continued hot and humid conditions for Ohio~ •• A-4

Art Buchwald. explains how war while bad for people - .is good for
business •••A-2

!

.,.

'

Earthen dam · coll~pse leaves fo·u r dell(!,-~·
ESTES PARK, Colo. (AP)- An
earthen dam gave way Thursday
and unleashed a bolllng brown wall
of water up to 30 fret high, leaving
at least four people missing In •
Rocky Mountain National Park
and clogging this vacation city with
a sea of mud.
The water poured through the 80year·old dam at Lawn Lake,
scoured plants from the banks of
the Roaring River, engorged Fall
River and sent 5 to 7 teet of water
down Estes Park's main street,
said Glen Kaye, a public lnforma·
tion officer lor the park.
The water knocked out street

signs and plate glass windows,
twisted door frames and moved
cars and a truck when It hit Estes
Park's main street of Elkhorn
Avenue, which Is U.S. 34.
There was no official word on the
&lt;;ause of the collapse.
. 'The fiood washed out power lines
west of Estes Park and several gasoline pumps and propane tanks
were ripped loose, but Gene B.
Rough, a volunteer firefighter, said
there were no reports of fires.
Up to 200 businesses along Elk·
horn Avenue were reported
damaged .
"I'm just sick," said Estes Park

Sharp energy
other commodity prlces wUI move
at the retail level, as measured by
the · Consumer Price Index. The
CPI, though, checks costs for a
broader range of Items, Including
housing and medical care, than
does the producer price measure.
The Consumer Price Index rose a
seasonally adjusted 1 percent In
May after a 0.2 percent advance In
AprU. Figures for June wUI be released next week.
lnfiatlon at the retaU level was up
8.9 percent last year, In comparison
with the 12.4 percent rise of 1900.

Meigs emergency squads kept busy
Meigs · Co. Emergency Medical
Service was kept busy Wednesday
and Thursday answering a number
of ·emergency calls.
Wednesday-At 12:46 a .m .,
Tuppers Plains squad took Martha
Bailey from Success Road to Veterans Memorlal Hospital; at 10:37
a.m. Pomeroy EMS took Harry
MUler from Pomeroy Health Care
Center to VMH;. at 10:47 a.m.,
Tuppers Plains unit transported
Addle Baker from SuCcess Road to
St. Joseph's Hospital; at12: 44 p.m.,
Middleport.took Kay Ferrell brom
Beech Street to VMH; at 1:39 p.m.,

Racine took Connie Morris, Buck·
town, to VMH.
Thursday-At 1:28 a.m. , Middleport squad took John Smith to Veterans Memorlal Hospital; at 10: 13
a.m., Middleport EMS took Rl·
chard ·Gukey to Holzer Medical
Center; at 2:43 p.m., Pomeroy
squad answered a call at Dlamo~d
Savings &amp; Loan to take blcycleaccl·
dent victim, Shirley Jones, to
VMH; at 2:50 p:m,, Tuppers Plains
went to Alfred Road to take Allie
Stamper to VMH; at 3:58 p.m.,
MiddlePort unit took Scott Edmlns
from the Middleport pool to VMH.

The Board of Trustees of Area

Stx Health Systems Agency, Inc ..
wUI meet for the final time July 21
a! the Hotel Lafayette, Marietta. at
7:15p.m.
Items to be discussed are approval of financial statements, executive director's report, distribution
or awards and agency dissolution.
The mretlng Is open to the public.
For more Information. call 374·
2200.

Veterans Memorial
Veterans Memorial Hospital announced the following discharges
and admissions Thursday:
Admlsslons-AprU Ferrell, Galli·
polls; Fred Crow, Syracuse; Joan
Varnaham, Long Bottom; Allie
Stamper, CpolvUie. DischargesRobert Price, l::len St1&gt;ne, Jeffrey
Bradbury, Lynda Adkins, PhyUis
Clay, Ray Wining, Ricky Hauber.

Marriage licenses

Family 'picnic set

Marriage licenses Issued In pro
bate court Wednesday were Danny
R Karr. Racine. factory worker
and Terry L. Ross, Circlevllle, student; Timothy D. Fry, Mlddle(Xlrt.
carpet layer and Tammy Jo Ward,
Rutland, student.

The Howard Star famUy picnic
wUI be July 18 at 4 p.m. at Dodge
Par.k, Beverly, Oh. Family
members are asked to bring a covered dish and something to auction off.

I

1be Winding Trail Garden Club
. wlll hold a picnic at the home of ·

Addalou ·Lewis Monday,' July 19, at .
6:30 ~.m.

Richard Dean Fink
Richard Dean Fink, 61, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, died Thursday at O'Bieness Hospital, Athens, following a
lengthy Ulness.
Mr. Fink was born Aug. 9, 19211n
Meigs County the son of the late
WUllam Herbert and 'AIIce R. Hy·
sell Fink. He was also preceded In
death by one brother, Johnnie Fink.
Mr. Fink was employed by the
Coca Cola Bottling Co.. tor 32 years
retiring lh 1976. He was also man·
ager for Coca Cola Co., Meigs area.
He was a member of theSUver Run
Baptist Church, served with the U.
S. Air Force during World War II
and was a member of Fenney Bennett Post 128, Amerjcan Legion,
Middleport.
~

t

. HER HOME
- 'l'hll PaleltlldU
baby cirlllllneklDI a.bottle Frllhly beside the rubble
remaiDI o1 ber ~ome In the RaBbadlya refucee camp

Paul Taylor wUI be the guest
speaker at the Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church, Middleport, Sun·
day at 11 a.m.

The 46th annual B\!ckley reunion
will be Sunday, July 25,at theBe~e,
vUie Dam Park, Reedsville, begin·
ntng at 1 p.m. with potlUck. AU are .
welcome.

.

•:
;.

By JOBN'W. CJIAU;ANT
"
~ p.._ Writer
·
'COLUMBUS, blito (AP) - A Senate panel is tentatlvely set to decide thls week whether Ohio law deal·
1ng with criminal a~fendants , ~).to plead Insanity

should be changed.
·. A blll creating the plea and verdict of guUty but
~tally WIs one of a hall-dozerrmeasures on which
votes may be taken by the Senate Judiciary Commit·

'

.
tee ThUI'Iday.
Interest In the leglslattori, Sponsored by Sen. Ben
M. SkaU, R-South Euclid, was renewed by the verdict
In the federal court trial of John W. Hinckley Jr.,
He was found not guilty by reason otlnsanity In the
attempted assassination of President Reagan.
Although It touched off a clamor among Senate and
House backers of bUls changing Ohio's law on the
subject, others have raised questions about the need

•

SUMMER CLOTHING FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The

She said there Is no evidence of
any significant rate of transition
able-lxx!led welfare recipients to Into private employment as a result
-wotk and an official of a welfare of the job assignments usually of·
lfoup have clashed over the merlts fered underworktellef. In addition,
of the 'program.
she said the program wouldn't pre
Rep. Michael A. Fox, R· pare participants for the kinds of
·kamllton, said the measure, which jobs that would make them
'·ts to begin Jan. 1, 1983, wlll replace employable.
.i Wl!lfare system of despondency
"Typically In wotk rellef propos)..nd despair with a chance to break als ... there Is no real funding for
,Pie cycle.
training on the work sites," Ms.
~The current system offers no Blong said. "Where wlll this tra.ln·
," he saki. "(This wUI) give lng come from? The history Is that
pl!ople something better than they no one wlll step forward and un·
In the past."
derwrite these costs."
:. But AMie Blong, associate dlrec·
The fervent-speaking Fox and
~of the center on Social Welfare the softspoken Ms. Blong debated
J'ollcy and Law, Washington, D.C., the Issue Friday In an appearance
:clisagreed.
sponsored by the Columbus Metro-

Y2 PRICE
.

SHOP TONIGHT TIL 8

ELBERFELDS IN POM·EROY

:w

________

,.

; . "rhe current system offers no
:::hope," says Rep. Michije} A. Fox of the
~ 'Cup-ent .welfare system.·"'This (work·
.fare) give people something better
,: than they had in ·the past." .

•

'3995

'·.

a-c, p.s, p.b, vinyl roof,
sttt'to assette, rally
wluels, beautiful
Ytllow-tan Int.,

SAVE
WAGON
Sh1rp I

speed

4 ql. 5 speed trans. am.
fill , lliot rack, new
· redlels "ll!ull ,.. and
tlrlvt"

· ~)1549~ 0

BAUM TRUE.VALU
985-33.01

m-1-m aoss., v.tap, nNid
whHIS.

4

cyl. aui!D ·

'P.s,

sport stripes, roof rack,
•poke style whlell, new
•. •y••• Hres. ~-· ; : ~·._"

•

LeMAN$ COUPE
a-c, p.s, p.b, r
· . Int..
rear •niflect r, price
reduaid.
'·

.

.

commander of Lebanon'sChrlsttan
mUitta and a key Israeli ally, ac·
cused Arafa ~o l stalllng and warned·
him to get his gu errillas out of Mos·
lem west Beirut b&lt;&gt;lore it was too
late.
No violations of the latest ceasefire were reported Saturday In
either eastern Lebanon or the Bel·
rut area .
Arafat reiterated he was wUllng
to pull his guerrUlas out of the Leba·
nese capitaL
" I have declared many times
Beirut Is not my residence," Aralat
said. "Beirut Is only a passage lor
me to my country," which Aralat
has previously sale! Is a Palestinian
homeland.

' '

·

PG,A, iS a regUlatory mechanism In

By THOMAS RIZZO
As8octllted Pre. Wrtter

which FERC reviews natural gas
prtces on a flasls of twice a year,
~· Bptler said.
·The case marks the first time
that FERC members wtil consider
Whether or not specUic gas costs
Inclusions In a PGA fllli1g can be
determhied excessive due to
•"fraud, abule,or almllar grounds." .
· Thehl!arlnp~·lliWa.ehlng· .
ton on Feb.' 2 this year.~ com*al I:Df!rly fteculatll:y Comrnls- .•• ml d77t1111R trawled to CGiumbus
naturalps costs to foraMarchllllearlne, wlllebdrew
cmtu•li!ill of Columbia Gas of OhiO several h~Dldi'e\l ~ ct.the
lllc. by 23 jll!lcent last tan. '
' public and ~COIIIUllllll'~ ·
• "C4iilunbba applied for another cates and lo!:al, ~te aDd federal
lib HI '·lllout March aDd wOl aQYemmellt.,...•
..,llruodllroaeiiiAuplt,-..-.- MI. ~said maay lnWve.... IC.IIutllr.iald•frlciay.
lion In t1ie ~ reu_ed heavilY In
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A deCllloD on ' the CC)IItrover:'stal .PuJ'
elwi!d Gas Adjustment case fUed ,
. , Cdurnbla Gas ·t.ransmlasion'
Ia expected sometime this
~ lic;cordlng to a spokeswoman
for. the Office of Consumers'
a.m.eL
'
'111e Purehue&lt;f.Gas Adjustment
coasldei'ed by 'the Fed-

ti.tl.

.-:.bliJW
-.lncreeaed

• Ptarelwed

Gas Adjustment,

'or

poUlan Club.
Fox said the program would be
Initially financed with $17 mUllon In
state money and $14 million In fed.
era! funds . He conceded that It may
not be possible to find jobs for all of
the approximately 130,1XX! people
expected to be ellglble In the first
year. But he said jobs for even
20,1XX!of them would result In asav·
lngs of $64 million for taxpayers.
· There are three parts to the program being Implemented In Ohio:
-A job club to train recipients of
aid to dependent children and
general·rellet benefits In the skllls
needed to obtain employment;
-Subsidized employment, In
which recipients are placed in pri·
vate sector jobs with the goal of
ending the need lor public
assistance;
"·
-Workfare, under which a recipIent works for a public or non-profit
agency In exchange for thi! cash assistance they receive.
There are exemptions for certain
people In l!ll ·three categories, In·
eluding those with mental or physl·
cal Impairments or those caring for
chUdrerl under 3 years old.

=

By DEB FOX
'ftmes.Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - At first and
even second glance, J .C. Critter
appears to be a typical dog. She
looks llke a typical dog and, llke
most dogs, she has even learned
a few tricks; Including rolling
over, begging and barking at
command. But J .C. not only
barks with her bark, she counts
with It
When gtven an addition or subtraction problem that has an
answer between oneand10. J.C.
answers with the number of
barks that solves the problem.
The five-year-old cross between a Dachshund and Chihuahua Is owned by Gallla County
natives Mr. and Mrs . (Mary )
Pearl Kemper. of Prospect
Church Road. They have had
J.C. since ihe was a puppy and
raised her on their farm with
their rabbits, chickens and
doves. But they can't remember
exactly when they noticed J. C.
could count.
"I don't remember teaching
her," Mr. Kemper said. "But
she's been doing It for three or

:'f~e::;~~~:~dm~:u~og

add and subtract."

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

submitted by an expert witness for
the Ohio Office of Consumers'
Counsel, George 'L. DonklnOfExeter Associates Inc.
.
"Mr. Donkln .made some really
stroag pt)ints about tbe.(Columbla)
Transmission Co!'POJ'Btlon's praclice of purchasing'large quantities
. of deregulated gas at.excessive pH·
ceulnce 19'29 - ,when lower-prtceit
gas .wu avau&amp;bie and Wlder:Contract to Colum~" lhe lAid.
Donkln spectlleally .I'I!Yiewed ' a
Wiib•'t betwl!l!ll Columbia
mlsskln and Exxon
which
shoWed that supply cUtbacks made
bfQJiumbialllldertbeonit!contrilct , .
rellllfadlll~
d,Ucomct,at
leutDlmllllillldurtllrtbetlmepel'iod . eWr!llled In tbe ~. Ms.

their final aJialYses on testimony·· BUtler exp~.

Also before the judiciary panel are measures revisIng the public de!eruler law and Increasing the monetary jurlsdlctlon of municipal courts.
It Is one of a handful of committees mreli ng S(Xlradlcally during the legislature's summer recess. They
are working on bills that could be considered when
both chambers return for another voting session, per·
haps In September.

The dog that counts

.C olumbia's -gas adJ· ustment request
will be decided in fall, says OCC
·

SAVE

One plus one

. 1-

autbor Of Ohio's new law requiring

RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC-JEEP

a-1; p.s. 1-c, roaf.
rtlclc. low mlln,
1
owner. Wo sold It newt-

for revisions in the state statutes.
1bey 'JlOint out that In federal cases. prosecutors
have the burden of proving that a defendant Is sane.
But In Ohio, the burden of proving Insanity Is on the
defense.
If enacted, Skall's bill would require a defendant
found guilty but mentally Ill to receive treatment
Once recovered, the Individual would then face a
prison i.erm for the offense committed.

Author of Ohio 'workfare'
Jaw, welfare official clash

CLEARANCE SALE

·cuTLASS SUPREME
. 260 v-e. bucket ...ts~
auto, In tiM f!w, a-c, a-

too."
Habib has been In Beirut lor live
weeks attempting to find a way to
evacuate the PLO. Washington has
officially refused to 'talk to the PLO
directly untU It agrees to recognize
IsraeL AU of Habib's reported dealIngs with the PLO have been
Beirut
through Lebanese Intermediaries.
Speaking with reporters near
Arafat's guerrUias have been
bombed-out buUdlngs In the guer·
trapped for more than a month with
rllla stronghold, Arafat said Habib no country yet agrrelng to take
and he needed no Intermediaries In
them, and his foes were growing
the talks on how, when and where to
Impatient Saturday at the faUun! of
evacuate his followers.
the diplomatic process to yield
"He Is not In need and I am not In results.
need of these channels," Arafat
A lew hoursbeloretheheadofthe
said. "He can talk withmedlrecUy, · Palesllne Liberation Organization
to save time, and to save ·my time,
made his appeal. Bashlr Gemayel.

SeD.ate panel to deal with Ohio insanity plea

JULY

'

11011tb ol Tyre. Mad! 'of the camp was destroyed by
Israeli duriDg their drive 011 Beirut (AP Laserpboto);

46th annual reunion

Guest speaker

,.

.

9 secfions, 70 P il qe s JS Cen ts
A Multim edia , Inc. Newsp ilper

Middleport· Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point _Pleasant Sunda v, July 18, 1982

:

The July meeting of the Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District Is cancelled.
The next regularly scheduled meet·
lng Is Aug. 31.

There wW be a hymn sing at
Rocksprings United Methodist
Church Sunday, July 18, at 7:30
p.m. Featured wUI be the Revela·
tors. Everyone Is welcome.

" ·11 W. Main St.

•

entine

By The ASMCI••ed Press
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
appealed Saturday for a lace-toface meeting with U.S. special en·
voy Philip C. Habib to "save time"
In the protracted efforts to arrange
a pullout of his estimated 8,1XX! guerrUias from Israeli-encircled west

He Is .surVIved by his wile, Ruth.i.
Wines Fink; . two daughters and •
sons-In-law, Judy and Uonel GU- •'
more, Cheshire, and Angela (An· •
gle) and Don Harden, Oak Hill; one '
brother, Owen W. Fink, Mlddle- ,;
port; one sister, Nancy Ervin, Ra· :
cine; ' one auni, Mabel Hysel~ :
Middleport; seven grandchUdren ·
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wW be held Sun- .
day at2 p.m . at theSUverRunBaP:
tlst Church with the Rev. Marvin
Marcum assisted by Eddie BoYer
officiating. Burial wUI be In Cheshire Gravel Hlll Cemetery. ·
Frtends may call at the Rawlings·
Coats· Blower Funeral Home, Middleport, Saturday from 2 to 4. and 7•
to 9 and on Sunday untU 12:00 when
the body will be taken to the church
to lie In state.

'

Maniage licenses

To hold picnic

,.~

tmes

Page C-1

Arafat seeks meeting
with U.S. special envoy

Meeting cancelled

Plan hymm sing

Marriage licenses were Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Danny Robert Karr, .22, Rt. 1, Racine, and Terry Lynn Ross. 18, Clrclevllle; Timothy Dean Fry, 21, Rt
], Mtc1cileport, · and Tammy Jo
Ward, 16•. Rt. l, Rutland.

.

..

liol. 16 i'lo. 22
C.,.;tighted 1982

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

RIO GRANDE- Registration for the second summmer session at
Rio Grande Coll~e and Community College will be held Monday from 9
to 11:30 am. and from 1 to 4 p.m. In the E.E. Davis Technical Career
Center. Openings are available for the Advanced Summer Scholar
Program for graduating seniors and juniors In lhe upper hall of their
high school class from Gallla, J~ckson, VInton and Meigs counties at$4
per credit hour. A certificate from a high school guidance counselor Is
needed when applying. For Information call 245-5353. Ohio residents
may call toll free 1~282-7'lll.

Meigs County happenings••
Final meeting set

t

Area dea th s

Rio Grande registration Monday

CLEANING UP - Inger Lyngholm draws water from a broken
waterplpe to use for cleaning up some of the mud deposited when a nash
nood hil Estes Park, Cul 0. on Thursday morning. (AP Laserphoto) .

did nOt elaborate.

.

(Continued from page I)
cent In each of the three previous
months. Those costs are for. machinery and transportation equipment used by business.
AU the Increases are adjusted lor
normal seasonal variations.
In all, the unadjusted Producer
Price Index for finished goods stood
at 279.91nJune, meaning that goods
costing $10 at wholesale In 1967
would have cost $27.99 last month.
Price changes that show up In the
Producer Price Index are a good
barometer ci how fOOd, energy and

HIGH WATER- Flood water swirls around vehicles at a service
station on the main street of Estes Park, Colo., on Thursday. A dam gave
way at Rocky Mountain National Park triggering a Dash flood that sent a
wall of water 5 to7 feet high through the town. lAP Laserphoto).

r

tng " tmt

•

unha·

When the roar gniw louder, he ·
looked up and saw trees toppling, ;·
then a 20-to ~foot wal) of water,..
coming toward his ·c~~m,pslte.
''His partner was · ~ a sleeping;
bag and was SW8pt away," said•,
Mary KaPaker, a spokeswoman fQrC
thepark.
·
· ·~
The flOOd waslled out tb.• aC!:eSS:
road to the ·Aspenglen Camp-~
ground, she said, ana peciple on¢
higher ground reported two,
campers there had not been able to~
fire.
~
Lt· Gov. Nancy Dick ordered 55;
National Guardsmen Into town to:
protect It against looting and to help~
the pollee. Mrs. Dick said she wasf
told there "some evidence of loot·£

Mayor Harry Tregent, who appeared near' tears as he surveyed
damage. "I suppose It can be
cleaned up, but the damage Is
done."
Kaye said one camper was reported swept away In his sleeping
bag and another thrre were missIng from a campgrou.nd In tlie jlark.
AuthOrities began warning motel
guests and residents at the west end
of Estes Park to evacuate just before 7:00a.m., a rescdent said. A
trash collectot:,_in the park, Stephen
GUlette, was credited with being
the first to notice the roaring water.
A camper near the Lawn Lake
Dam told the U.S. Park Service he
heard a rumbling around 7 a.m.
and thOught It was an airplane.

British Open

Arealkaths .............. . D-8
Along the river ........... Jl..l-8
Business .. .. . . . .. .. .. . .. . . &amp;I
Classified .......... . .. .. D-3-7
Editorial ...... .. .... .... A-2-3
Fann .................... E-2
Local ................. .. A-~8
Stale-National ........... D-1·2
Sports ........ .......... C. l-8

Trw

CQrp.;

frtends' acquaintances from as
tar away as Pennsylvania have
visited the Kemper tarm to do
just that. And, as might be ex·
peeled, the dog has also been the
subject of at least on!! $100 bet.
J.C. Critter seems to know
what Is expected of her and eager1y anticipates an arithmetic
problem while she looks, with
- tall wagging, from her perch on
the noorat tile person asking an
· equatioD. After barklna bet rellpl!nse, she Ia rewarded with a
pteceofcooldeotc&amp;ndy.Accord·
ing'to her owners, she Is rarely
wrong.
· fAs for what they want J .C. to
leilmnext, Mr. Kemper said, "I
doo'tknowwl!llttoteachber."
Mrs. Kemper added, "The

COUNTING DOG - J.C. Crll*er prepares to answer, with barks, the
1101ufiou io an addition problem being given io her by Pearl Kemper and
bls wUe, Mary, of~ Church Road, Gallipolis, the dc]g'sowners.
Ftve-yeaHid J.C. baa heeD .....,.mlinl" for three or four years, BAlCOrdln( to llle Kempen, and .. cleecrlbed as rarely missing an answer.
· .hardest thing to get her to do Is to
lie down and be still. She'll sit up
and ~ sUJI, but she won't lie
down."

Aslllefromthat, herhusband
salcl, "She'll do what;ever you

tell her. II you don't tell her, It 's
your own fault.
"I don't r~member ever seelng a sJog llke her. I'm going to
send her to high school next
year."

L..-----------------------------....1

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="166">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2756">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44684">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44683">
              <text>July 16, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="941">
      <name>fink</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
