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                  <text>Aaron, Robinson, ,
Chandler inducted

Chlld found dead;
teenager charged

.

Pageville project
nears completion

••"' .

_..

(~

;

'

'

bv Dick Cavalli·

~-:WINTHROP
}It(

Page 6

Page 4

FA"THER AND I

HAD A

!5~

•

F!Eftr'T

'TI·Ue NORNI~.

•

at y

e

Page 10

enttne

VoUI,No.62 ·
' C:.f'l'flthted I 912

1 SMtlon, 10 Pote.
U Cenh.
A Multimedia Inc. New•e•p•

Hundreds killed!

.,,. ANP It;) NE-VS'&lt; eE:T
FGOI IN IT ~AIN.

Israeli troops
take airport

'

By 1be Alllloclated Press
Plowing through Palestinian defenses, Israeli troops and tanks captured
Beirut airport and declared a ninth cease--lire after a 14-hour bombard·
ment of west Beirut In which the Lebanese pollee reported at least 200
people ldlled and 400 wounded.
Correspondents said sporadic firing continued Into the night, but generally the cease-fire mediated by U.S. presidential envoy Phlllp C. Habib
was holding.
PLO spokesman Bassam Abu Shartf saki the Israelis rained more tban
150,(0) shells on west Beirut, and Israeli jets made more than 170 bomb
runs on the city. But Israeli o!1lctals Insisted the attack was not the start of
the long-threatened Invasion to wipe out the PLO guen1llas in west Beirut.
Israel said Palestinian violations of the earlier truce prompted the
massive alr, land and sea bombardment thatbegan at dawn Sunday.
Observers said it was the most devastating Israell oru;laught since the
forces of the Jewish state rolled to the gates of the Lebanese capital in
June.
Predominantly Moslem west Beirut, besieged stronghold of Yasser
Ara!at's Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas, was wreathed in
smoke from raging fires kindled by the bombardment. There was little
firemen could do to quench the flames since Israel cut off water and
electricity to west Beirut a week ago.
In addition to the police report of 200 dead and 400 wounded In the
thunderous bombardment, the Voice of Lebanon, the Lebanese Christian
radio station, said 14 clvillans were kllled and 40 wounded when PLO
forces fired rockets, mlsslles, mortars and artlllery into Christian-held
east Beirut and the Christian port city of Jounieh, 12~ miles north of the
capital.
Syria said two of Its soldiers in west Beirut were ldlled and 14 were
wounded tn the IsraeU shelling. Israel reported three of Its soldiers ldUed
when their armored personnel carrter took a direct artillery hit in the
Beirut area. The Israelis also reported nine soldiers wounded.

...

OLD ...: 'lill8 old atradure iD Pomeroy llaa seen better days but hlp
well~erved u

'

PO!neroy Village HaD. It peulbly will be put on the market
iD the near t.ture when It Is abaudoned aa admiDistraUon Is moved to the
former Pomeroy iugh Sebool. .

-·- -Sullivan

''''""

There was no word on guerrtlla losses and no Independent conlirmation
ol··any casualty claims.

Village faces $28,000 action
A $28,000 damage suit has been
filed by Barbara Ann Arnold of
Pomeroy against the VIllage of
Pomeroy.
Plaintiff asks the amount for
damages to her property on Wlllls
Hill which she alleges were caused
durtng the process of road work being performed by village employes.
Plaintiff charges that in late
June, 1982 and early Jhly, 1982, the
vtllage, without her permission

REALITY- Mayor Clarence Andrews stands lnslde a double door at
the Pomeroy High Sebool,.bullt iD 1914, which will soon become Pomeroy
VIllage HaD.

came onto her property for road
improvement and maintenance
purposes, and removed dirt from a
bank along Wlllis Hill Road which
runs In front of her house. As a dl·
rect result of removing the dirt,
plaintiff says the lateral support for
her house was removed causing th(
soU In front of her house to sllp
away, thereby damaging her house
and lot In the amount of $28,!Xll.

Poll says GOP's Brown trails Celeste ·

DUSTY C.HAPS,.
· "}HAT;~~' s~~~IAL

·a~:fORSST a.OO&lt;'lH)\T w

. 'c.oJJSaOR

By Tile Associated Press
GOP gubernatorta! candidate
, Clarence J . Brown says he's not
concerned about a recent Republl·
can poll that shows hlm trailing Democrat Richard F. Celeste by· 16
percentage points. ·
"We came from further behind
than that to win the primary from
Seth Taft," Brown said after hear·
ing the results of the Market Opin·
ton Poll, commissioned by the
Republican Party.
"I bad anticipated we would be
pretty well behind at this stage,"
the Urbana Congressman said.
"After all, the Democrats outnumber us in voter registration in
Ohio 42· percent to 28 percent, and
Celeste Is probably better known
statewide than I am because he ran
for governor last time."
But other Republicans were a blt
sbocked by the results, ' which
sl)OWed Brown tralllng Celeste 53
percent to :rr percent statew;lde,
and 52 percent toJ8 perCent In heaV·
Uy Republlcan Hamilton CountY.
Celeste lost Hamilton County to

Republican James Rhodes by
about 50,(0) votes In the 1978 guber·
natortal race.
In this year's primary In Hamil·
ton County, Celeste garnered only
7,(0) votes to 34,000 for former Cin·
cinnati councilman Jerry Sprtnger,
and also finished nearly 3,000 votes
behind William J, Brown. Clarence
Brown led all Republicans in Ha·
milton County with more than
32,(0) votes.
Despite the apparent big lead, Celeste was far from ready to claim
any type of advantage.
"I feel very uncomfortable being
a front-runner," the fonner lieutenant governor said. "I think this race
wtll get much closer. You'll see
polls later in the campalgll where
Dick Celeste and Clarence Brown
wtll he separated by only three or
four percentage points."
· In other political news:
-Brown saki Ohio should learn
from the mistakes Massachusetts

made by raising taxes after World
War n. He told 50 members of the

Franklin County Forum on Friday
that Celeste Is proposing higher
taxes on business, which would
drtve businesses from the state.
Brown said It wasn't untll Massa·
chu.setts encouraged the development of businesses dependent upon
high technology and lowered the
business taxes that the state made
an economic recovery.
A positive economic future for
Ohio Is guaranteed no rna tier who
Is elected governor because of the
state's natural advantages, Brown
said. But he added that recovery
can be slowed If voters make the
wrong choice.
"If we have leadership that says
'Tax business' ... we will set ourselves back. If we make the rlght
choice, I think we can come out of
the doldrums rather quickly,"
Brown said.
He said the test on spending money shOuld be: Is It good for economic development or Is it bad for
economic development?
Atty. Gen. William J. Brown says
he "absolutely, positively" won't .
run against eight-term U.S. Rep.

Chalmers P . WyUe, R-Columbus,
despite a poll that shows he could
win In November. "If the poll says I
was~ (percentage) points up or~
points down, It doesn't make any
difference. I'm not running,"
Brown told the Columbus Citizen·
Journal. "They can push me all I
want, but I am not a &lt;!andldate for
Congress.''
Dennis Concllla, a pollster and
district aide to Rep. Bob Sha·
mansky, D-Columbus, conducted
the survey to gauge Brown's paten·
tial to unseat Wylie. Brown was defeated in the Democratic
gubernatorial primary.
-PhlllJp Herzing, the LibertarIan Party candidate tor the U.S. Senate, has challenged the two major
party candidates to debates. HerzIng, of Worthington, said the Metropolitan Club of Columbus and the
Cleveland Qty Club haven't Included him in plans for debates between Democrat U.S. Sen. Howard
M. Metzenbaum and RepubDcan
challenger Paul E. Pfeifer, a state
senator from Bucyrus.

OSP checks -two wrecks; deputies kept busy
At least 21 people, lr\Cll!dlng five
in a slng!e acddent, bave been
ldlled In traffic ICCidlmts on O)l1o
b!gliwaya tbll
accordiug

waw...,,

to the Hlgbway Patrol, ilowever. 110
fatalttlel ' recorded in the

Glllla·Metas area.

Tile patrol COUDIIW ! 'Wd fatalllli!li Dan • p.m. ·~ lllllll mJd..

' ldgllt flan'l'ly.
' .
Tile Galllli·Melp pial the Olllo

lltate Hlpway Patrolll·lnvelllpt..

1DJ a blt..adp IM.lCidem on U.S. 351D ·
Gall'- Co1111ty at 12: 28 a.m..
sa~.

.

.

. • Acwtd!Di to reporta, a.ane. B.
!k:ooltBI, 4'.' Ge!!Jpnlls, was. west·
.
'

bound on U.S. 35 when hi$ car was
struck in the rear by an unknown
vehicle. The car continued on after
the coUlslon.
Scouten's car sustained moder·
ate damage.
A car driven by·a Michigan man
received light damage in an aa:l·
cll!at on ()tJio 7 at CR 32 in Meigs.
Couftty Su!lday.
· Tlmotlly C. Adams, 22, South. field~ Mich.; was. southbowld on
Ohio 7 at 3: 15 a.riL when he lost
cimtrOl of his
went the right
llde al the rOad and struc:k !l

car.

flllll!dralt.

rtt
"

.

There were no injuries and no
citations.
Meanwhile, damage to a dozer
owned by W. H. Blausey, contractor working on the reclamation project at Pagetown, Is under
investigation by the Meigs County
sheriff's department.
AcrordiDC Ill the report, a rock
was tllmwn tbrou&amp;h the rear glass
on.the dozier aomet1me after 7 p.m.
Friday · and noon Saturday. A
number of bicycle tire tracks were
seen in the area, It was noted.
WIUTell Molderil, Route 1. Ru·
tland. reported Saturday afternoon .

he found one of his cows had been
shot. The animal was found lying In
the creek just off the roadway on
McCumber Hill.
The department also reported
that Doug Lowther, Route 1, ~..anp-·
ville, notified it tbat shortly after
mldnlght Sstunlay, he investigated
a noise'&amp;nd found a penon sta~
at his truck dralnlni guollne bilo a ·
five gallon can. The intr'uder 1'l\ll. ·:
after Lawther fired several times
Into the atr with a pistol. ,
. ·:
The intruder ROt Jnto a waltl.DI
truck whlcll headed west on Cow!ty
Road 27.
'
'

�'

.

--- -- -----Monday, Auglllt 2,1982
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pome•oy -Miclclleport,lOhio.
Monday, August 2,1982

Commentary
Their problem••.

The Daily Sentinel
II I Cuurt ~ 1rn•1

Pumt'f'ny, Obkt
llt-tt%-2151
IH•:\'fYfF.OTH niE INTF.RE.''Tfllo' Tfll•: MF.Ir•.'&lt;t· MASON AKfo:A

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubUtohrr

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.

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~-~li lin..

Truth, packaging
Ronald Reagan, should anyone need reminding, is a superb communicator.
He is a genial master at getting points acr05S and winning over audiences, as witness a visit earlier this year to the Voice of America offices on the
occasion of the govenvnent broadcasting agency's 40th anniversary.
Regaling the staff with an account of his own experiences as a young
radio announcer reconstructing baseball games from telegraph reports, the
president demonstrated how effectively imaginative language could lrat)sform a routine out at second into a heart-stopper for the listening audience.
.• The tnith was there, he said as the laughter subsided, but "attractively
packaged."
Packaging is also the point of a report the president has received !rem
1\le United States Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy. This is an
autonomous bipartisan group set up by Congress to report annually to the
president on the VOA and its parent organization, the International Communication Agency, and it is concerned that accuracy and objectivity may
give way to "stridency and propaganda."
.
While endorsing the need for boldness in programming, the conunlasion
w~med that credibility is VOA's most precious asset. It could be seriously
«lam&amp;ged by "actions and policies which are easily misinterpreted and cast
doubt on the organization's commitment to truth ... "
The actions and policies to which the report referred have been \he
cause of external criticism and internal dissension for the past year. lt COiild
be a problem of oversell, but they have been interpreted as seeking to
change VOA's focus from information to propaganda.
. Precisely that was the point of an internal memo, leaked to the
Washington Post last September, proposing that the VOA ceue behavtng as
a journalistic enterprise and regard itseH as a propaganda agency in the
business of selling U.S. interests to foreiJ!n audiences as advertising sells

The Jll!litical developments in Connecticyt outline a national dilemma,
but fidrt a reminiscence, the telling
of whi~h always gives joy.
In tils memoirs, Professor John
Kenneth Galbraith recalls that when
President Kennedy appointed him
ambassador to India back in 1961,
Galbraith secretly doubted he'd be
confirmed. But then one day,
arriving at the classroom at Harvard where he would give his
scheduled lecture, he found
newsmen and television cameras.
He learned that he had been
unanimously confinned by the
Senate Foreign Relati0111 Committee, "Sen. Frank Lausche abstaining." Galbraith, whose
mischief gives pe1'801181 deuMht
(even though it causes wars,
depressions and inflation) at this
point dropped a footnote. "In 11168,
Lauscbe was defeated for
renomiftatlon. Ask~ to COIIIIpent; I
hazarded the guess that it was the
result of the lingering resentment ol
the people ol Ohio over this action.
The explanation was not wictely accepted."
Well, Sen. Lowell Weicker o( Connecticut declined in 1980 to endorse
James L. Buckley (my brother) for
senator or, for that matter, George
Bush for vice president, whence it
might be dedueed that I write out of
fraternal vinclctiveness, like the
Dennocrata of Ohio voting against
Lausche. Accordingly I note that 10
years before Mr. Weicker declined
to back James Buckley, I wrote
about him in this space: "(Weicker)
is young, extremely ambitious and
wildly independent. Now independence is a prized characteristic in the American temperament, but it is a mistake to suppose that one should automatically
reward Independence in a man
whose exercise of it Is at one's own

Today is Monday, August 2, the 214th day of 1982. There are 151 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On August 2, 1934, Adolt Hitler became dictator of Germany.
On this date:
In 1610, English navigator Henry Hudson entered the North American
body of water now known as Hudson Bay.
In 1824, one of the nation's most famous thoroughfares was opened New York's Filth Avenue.
In 1m, the United States said It would supportseattngCommuniStChlna
in the United Nations but would oppose the expulsion of Nationalist China.
In 198&gt;, a powerful explosion ripped through the main railroad station in
Bologna, Italy , killing at least 55 people.
Ten yea~ ago: Egypt's Anwar Sadat and Libya's Moammar Khadaty
tentatively agreed to merge their countries within a year.
Five years ago: A bUI to establish a federal Department of Energy was
approved by Congress.
year ago: Northern Ireland hunger striker Kieran Doherty died in
the 73rd day of his fast at Beltast's Maze Prison.
Today's birthdays: Actress Myrna Loy Is T1. Writer JamerBaldwln Is
58.
Thought for today: A rich man's Joke Is always !wmy. - TI)omas
· Brown, Engllsh writer (J830.1897).

Interior Secretary James Watt did
his bit last week to dim the luster of
the Republican party. He tried a
spot of political blackmail to win
support for the fire sale he'is holding
on the assets of the federal government.
Secretary Watt wrote Moshe
Arens, the Israeli Ambassador to the
United States, informing him he had
better get American JeWll to favor
the leasing of a billion or so acres of
offshore land for oil and gas drilling
if he expected furthef aid to Israel
from , Uncle ·Sam. Watt's message
was clear. Either help me diddle
future generations out of their
heritage or go elaewhere for
military aid. The Ambassador made
the letter public and the White House
lost no tinte In disclaiming responsibility. Watt was not puniahed,
either.
1
Now, iii the worst recession tO hit
the country since the Big One In 1929,
Watt is trying to sell the family
jewels: He is holding the biggest fire
sale in history. Anything that can be
drilled, chopped, pumped or mined
is on the auction block. Govenunent
· land waa aecured u an Insurance for
damages that 'might be done to 'the . the future and to
It for the imnew building as a result ol a tor- mediate purpose of ridding the ad-

~ town)'.

aen

nido;
fire,
placement,
etc. temporary court· ...._ ......__ _ _ _ _.;....,
Job abulisluneota ..., employees
let. IS THAT
are not being fired thus if one'
A I&lt;JIT71il)
quaiHies for a position that Ia 9IJell or
lli1JIII I ·
in one's lateral clullification or has
Sf/67
bumping righta and this is the policy
that should be followed.
Anyone agreeing with my commenll could send I letter to Rndy
Maanone, Department ol Admlniltratlon Service, II Eut Broad·
Ill, Collllllbal, Obloml&amp;.

RubyHIIIt
G.D.C.II:mploJtt
Bidwell, 01110

We~t

title picture

after Phlladelph!a scored twice.
The ylctor.r was Noles' first over
the phUIIes in two starts since being
traded by Phlladelphla to Chicago
last December.
Durham's homer oft Dick
Ruthven, 8-9. provided the Phlllles
with a 3-0 lead in the first and gave
the Cubs all the runs they actually
needed.

Pirates 4, Mee. 3
Btu Madlock's tie-breaking home
run with two out In the lOth Inning
lUted Pittsburgh over New York.
Madlock's 11th homer of the sea·
son came oft rellever Terry Leach,
1·1, and made a winner of KentTekulve, 7·5, who pitched ll.Jinnlngs.
Rod Scurry got the last two outs tor
the Pirates, gaining hts eighth save.
The Pirates had tied the score 3.J
with two runs in the seventh. One
run scored on Dale Berra's ~nd
double of the game and another on
an RBI single by plnch,hltter Wlllle
Stargell.
Giants 4, .wro. 2
Jack Clark hit his m home run
of the season, a two-run shot in the
lOth inning, to lift San Francisco
over Houston.
Joe Morgan drew a walk from
loser Frank LaCorte, 04, to lead oft
the lOth. MUt May sacrttlced Mor·
gan to third and Clark followed with
hts homer, making a winner of
Greg Mtnton, 74.
Houston's Nolan Ryan allowed
five hits, walked four and struck out
six ,tn nine inntngs to move wilhtn
six strikeouts of second·place Gay·
lord Perry on the all·time list. Ryan
has 3,407 strikeouts.

INVERTED ORDER - Atlanta Braves' cal&lt;!her
Bruce Benedict Oallll backwards Sunday after tagging
out Los Angeles Dodgen' Ken Landreaux, left, in first
inning when be tried to score from second on an error

at lirst base. Umpire Randy Marsh shows the verdict
on the play at Atlanta Fulton County Stadium. ( AP
Laserphoto).

Padres zap Reds again, 8-6

vance to claim a spot and walt there
until showttme.
·
But that's not the case in the~
c1a1 roped«t area In front at the
stage where admlaslon Is by tree
ticket ind there is no need tD come
early for a seat.
The 210ne was origlnally establlslled at the request of entertainers
who wanted a security butrer between the stage and over·
enthusiastic tans. Fair ot11ctais
complied but decided a controlled
group would be preferable to empty
space.
"The fact of the matter Is the
area had to be ·reserved, and we
saw no good reason lor It to be com·
pletely empty," satd David Bran·
ham, fair spokesman.
Tickets for the area are distributed by the general manager's of·

nee. Some. ·go tD guests of the
entertainers, members of their ent·
ourage or to fan clubs.
Others may go to members of the
commisSion, fair management or
their 'guests. The governor and
other state om~ may latch on to
some of them, too, oftlctals said.
Access to the special section Is
also given to newspaper, rildlo and
television reporters and photograpbers who are there to review
the shows.
Branham said the policy has produced only a few questions or com·
plaints ·rrom falrgoers.
Obtaining the·special free tickets
apParently Is not·only a matter of
who you knOW but who you are -or
were.
For example, one former state
leg!slator who showed up at the
StatehOuse last suinmer was over·

Selling the family je)fels

Upset ... ?

· One individual in a grocery store
· C8UII!d so mtiCb cl)aoe, the ernploy.- threatened to call the pollee.
. 8Gille of the older bullcllnla ..-Jly
)hould be tom down; however,
wlldom leldl 111 to kpow thlt at
)eut one or .two of the 'better
. bulldlngllhoulcl be remodeled and
..kept up ff!l' emergency returlll; l

percent of the convention volell,
necessary to qualify him to figh~,
Welck:er in a primary, But durilll!
the last 10 days of the p~ventiorl
campaign, the rlational brass moved'
ln. We had Gerald Ford, imd Howanr
Baker, and Paul Lllxalt, and Qarry'
Goldwater coming out for Weicker's
renomination.
The question now in Connecticut is
of the sort faced in other states by'
voters who favor the positions ,
associated with a national parly, b~
whose enthusiasm is rather for these
positions than for the party. If, aft,er
considering the voting ~ord an~
the behavior of Lowell Welcker, the
Connecticut Republican feels that tO
vote for such a man would be to risli
he!Hire for hypocrisy, what is IN! to
do? The alternatite is Toby Moffett,
a Democratic organ-grinder. Which
is to be preferred? Does truth il)
labeling figure? Worth thinking
about.
·

Carlos ~. 2.·1, gave the l)odgers
a 54 lead and t&gt;edro Guerrero im·
mediately followed with another
homer to provide Los Angeles with
a two-run cushion.
'
Baker came back with his seCond
homer of the game ,and his m of
the.$ell90n In the eighth, a tw.o-run
shot that followed Ken Landreaux's
RBI single. The victory went to
Dave Stewart, 6-6, who worked the
final lour inntngs without yielding a
run.
Expo~~ I, Cardinali 4
AI OUver capped a three-run
rally '!Ythe seventh· Inning with a
ruri·Scoring single ' as Montreal
cametfom behind tnbeatSt. Louis.
The Ex:pos trailed 4·2, but tied it
on a two-run triple by Jerry white.
One out late,r, Oliver delivered his
big single off reliever Jeff Lahti, 2·
2• .
The Cardinals had goneahead4-2
In the sixth on Ozzie Smith's sacrl·
'ncefly.
Reliever Jeff ·Reardon; 4·1,
earned the victory but needed help
from Woodle Fryman, who pitched
the flnall2·3 innings tor hts seventh
save.
Cubs 7, PhiDies z
Leon Durham's two-run homer
highlighted a three-run first and
Chicago went on to beat Phlladel·
phla and snap an eight·game losing
streak tetore a crowd of 57,652 at
Veterans Stadium.
Chicago starter Dickie Noles, 7·9,
worked T.!-3 innings and, with the
help of reliever Lee Smith, ended
Philadelphia's !our·game winning
strl1ak. Smith relieved in the eighth

CINCINNATI (AP I - Don't
bury the San Diego Padres' pen·
nant hopes. They're not ready to
play dead yet.
Four straight losses to National
League West·leadlng Atlanta last
week temporarily dropped the up.
start Padres out of shooting dis·
tance of the Braves.
But outfielder Sixto Lezcano
breathed new life into the strug·
gling second·place team, which
completed a resurrection from the
near-dead Sunday with an S-6 vic·
tory over the moribund Cincinna tl
Reds. The Padres' third victory In
two days moved them to just six
games behind Atlanta, which lost
its fOurth straight to third· place Los
Angeles.
"I think we've gotten straight·
ened out," Manager Dick WUI!arns
declared Sunday, after his club
bullt a 7·1 lead In the third Inning
and survived an error· fueled Reds'
rally in the ninth.
"I think we've done one terrific
job that nobody has expected us to
do," WUI!arns said. "Atlanta has
done a terrific job, too, a little better
than what we've done so far ."
Although he played only three In·

Governor's friends have ·free grandstand seatS

Letters to the editor
• G.D.C.: upset over job abolish: menta, destruction ol landmark
: building and concern for individuals
· of facility being placed in various
&gt;communities?
·
; I think if an individual is placed or
·:returns to the community this is
wcnderful and some will do well and
.'some won't (observing in my home

elected, In part llll his promises to
rejuvenate· the party, ancl the time
he made this observation.
And then, In Washington, Lowell
Weick:er's votes put him somewhere
lh the moderate-left wing of the
Democratic Party. He has voted
against the Reagan administration ·
more consistently tha!1 any other
Republiean senator, In !he company
of Mac Mathias and Mark HaUield.
Now a group of Republican
layalists a year ago persuaded
Prescott Bush ( brotlier of George)
to enter the race, in order to give
Republicans the opportunity to vote
for a convincing Republican. After
all, the state ol Connecticut· had
voted overwhelmingly for ReaganBush in 1181. And the latest poll
shows a positive dissatisfaction
among 3S percent ol the state's
Republicans flir Lowell Welcker.
Prescott Bush waged a valiant caJDo
paign, and won far more than the 20

By Associated Press
While Hank Aaron was having
hts day in COOperstown, N.Y.,
Dusty Baker was lui'vtng his in
A~lan.ta . .
"That's sort of my tribute to him
on the day he was Inducted Into the
Hall of Fame," Baker said after hit·
tlng two home runs in Aaton's old
stompmg ground at Atlanta sia.
dlwn to lead the Los Angeles
Dodgers to a 9-4 victory over the
Atlanta Braves Sunday.
Ironically, Baker's game·
winning blast In the seventh Inning
almost landed on a sign commemorating the spot where Aaron hit hts
715th homer in 1974 to break Babe
Ruth's record.
"I wasn't trying to hit a home
run, blil It's Iunny I almost hit his
sign," Baker said. "Hank's a close
friend and he was like my father
figure when I was with the
Braves.''
The Dodger victory, by the way,
Completed a !our·game sweep of
the Braves and put Los Angeles
within shooting range of the Na·
tiona! League West leader, 6~
games behind ilt thlid place. It left
San Diego six games back in second after the Padres beat Clnctn·
natlll-6.
In other NL action, the Montreal
Expos trimmed the St. Louis Cardl·
nals 5-4,.'the Chicago CUbs whipped
the Philadelphia Pbillles 7·2, the
Pittsburgh Pirates beat the New
York Mets 54 tn 10 lnnln~ and the
San Francisco Giants topped the
Houston Astros 4-2 in 10 innings.
Baker's' seventh·lnnlng shot off

Braves, still in, NL

Here, then, is the situation in Connecticut. A lwlge nwnber of Con-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It
you'd like a close-up, reserved seat
A recent replacement is VOA Director John R. Hughes, who took ~ver tor some of the free grandstand
shows at the Ohio State Fair, It
the job July I saying he intends to increase the editorial opinion content of
might be well to become a friend of
broadcasts. He has signed on an editorial writer assigned to articulate the
Gov. James A. Rhodes. .
govenvnent's view on issues in daily contributions to VOA programming.
Or of John F. Evans, the fair's
The editorials will, however, be clearly identified as such and will not in- general manager. Or a member of
trude upon news content.
the Ohio ,Expositions Commission.
Or the entertalne1 s themselves.
Meanwhile, those involved in the Washington wrangle over truth in
Those are some of the folks with
broadcasting might give some thought to a recent lesson from London.
' access tD the coveted tickets for the
The British Broadcasting Corp., which set the standanis for objectivity up tD400 seats available on the race
in broadcasting back in World War II, drew criticism during the Falklands track between the grandstand and
war by not taking a more decidedly British line.lt reported both British and the stage.
: Argentine versions of developments.
The Ohio State Fair books big·
name
entertainers for the expos!·
: The British experience is proof again of a basic truth about truth: It is
tlon
whose
shows are "tree" to
·best served not by packaging but by being kep~ simple and straightforward.
fairgoers once thi!y have paid the
main gate admission price. Since
there are no reserved seats In the
grandstand, fans in many cases
show up two or three hours In ad·

Today in history

·•

I

Willitim F. ~uckley Jr~ .

necticut Republicans can't stand
Lowell Welcker: Thia may sound like
an exaggeration, but really, It isn't.
H.e is tmquestlonably the most pompous and self-righteous human being
since whoever wrote the lateSt
editorial in The New York Times.
His role in Connecticut politics has
been to badmouth any . Republican
who seeks political parity - accordingly, he refused to campaign
for two Republican candidates for
governor.
His courtship of left-lobbill5 went
so far as to have him urge Connecticut union leders, this past
April, to take over the state's
Republican Party. "With a llWe bit
ol effort on your part, we can control
the GOP in the state of Connecticut,
because it's so goddamn small."
Right; and Welcker failed only 1to
note that the number ol registered
Republicans In Connecticut hardly
increased between the time he was

~weep

Dodgers

expense."

soap.

One

'

The Daily Sentine~"'-3

Pom-v-Micldleport, Ohio

heard to have been asked the pur·
pose of his visit.
It was to pick up some tickets for
the Statler Brothers show.

Major authors
NEW YORK (AP) L The U ·
brary of America has begun an ef·
ron to publish the collected works
of America's major authors in a
uniform series of hardcover
edlt~ns.

The tlrst four volwnes have been
published, one each of MelvUie,
Stowe, Hawthorne and Whitman.
The library says they aretheflrstof
an eventual 100 or more.

Lowell Wingett

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

ministration of the embarrassment the continental sheH to oil and gas of many such letters sent out ~killg
of il huge deficit is definitely not an drilling, he claima, will relieve the to turn public opinion in favor of the
emergency. The governnnent assets United States of ita independence on a!fministration. 'rh\l , Reagan ad·
should only be parted with in case of foreign oil. Bqt he falla to aefine any ministration has proved 1that it
a war time emergency or when the · emergency .that would prompt the leaves no stone unturned to achieve
demand materializes and the price selling or leaaing..of natural resour- ita objectives. ~ television apis right. Right now there is no such ces. The only emergency is a severe pearance has proven Watt an able
attack of Reaganitla on our economy salesman even if his ~tlst!cs are o(demand.
The administration plans to leue which makes the administration te~ drawn from his ili\aginatl~n. As
offshore oil and gas tracts at an lOok bad to the electors who will go he pointed out in one , TV apenonnous rate-IOtimeseach year · toUie polls in threemonthatoelecta pearance, he is the CHIEF. He says
he is chiefforester, chief stripminer
the acreage that. has been so far new Congre!IS.
leased in the entire. history of the
At best, the administration can chief oil driller, chief everythin~
United States. EconomiatB say the hope to raise only $1.3 billloil next· else in the Interior Depa~nt. It i1
Reaganauts are swainplng the · year and f4 billicin in following years a wonder to me that the deparbnel¢
market and thatleaaes sold now and by adopting the Watt plan. This is has . survived the last 200 years
in such' excessive large amounta.will only a drop'in the bucket to the $140 without him!
bring ridiculously low prices. They to $180 billion d,eficit that · the
Neithilr Watt nor his bolls, Ronal~
cited the recent lease of 2.4 'bllllon Congreu!orill Budget Office is Reagan, give a clamn for oUr natural
tons of Montana coal at in ex- . predicting for .1983 and succeeding resources as a heritage for future
tremely low price as. an eumple. years. That Ia the eistimate arrived. generations. Back in the l)l'e&amp;ldert;
States that border the tracts to be at last wei$ by Allee ~ivlln of the tlal campaign Reagan dismissed 11
leaaed fear damage to their shores. non-partiaal Coilgressional Budget question on the danger a( Iwnberin!i
Envtrorunentalists fear damage to • Office and puaed on to the in the redwood forests o( Cslifoniia
· fish and wild life in the 22 states Ieglslatora. It is lille the .wino 'iYho · · "Well, if you've seen one redwood
wboee borderS will j)e affected. , sells his shoes to buy a bottle. He tree, you've ·seen 'em all." What
Already, two states, Cilifomia and geCuid of thl! llhlllel momentarily they are intefe!lted in Ia ·the fasf
Aluka, .have filed suit In federal but
the boUle ill gone he still money they cim make by coiD;
courts to halt the leaaing.
.hastheli)Ueaand Ia barefoot! . . . merciallzlng the lancis they hold in
Watt hu been appearing on
It II nat clear to me jlllt what trust.
.
.
national television frequently to Secretary Watt' ezpect,ed to gail;l by
111&amp;t's selling the family · jewe~
_ defendhisselllngblnge.Byopening his letter to an ambauaclw ol a whiletheiJWill!riBIJtillivlng! ·
·
.foreign Country. Probeblyitwaaone
· · "'
'' ·

r--~=:15~55~

""*"

D

I

HOUK GEl'S HACKED - Iktston Red Sox
manager Ralph Houk berates third base umpire Tim
McCiellaod after McCiellsod threw Houk out of the
game against the Chicago White Sox In Chleago Sun-

.LeFlore returns, ChiSox win
By Assoclated Press
with a double and single and Gor·
Center •!Ieider Ron LeFlore re- man Thomas added a two-run sin·
turned to action and had a head in gle as Milwaukee broke out of a
Chicago's·4'2 victory over the Bos· hitting slump in the nightcap. The
ton Red Sox. Luckily lor the White Brewers had dropped eight of their
Sox, he had a hand in It, too.
previous 13 games and had scored
· After sitting out two weeks be- only 11 runs in the last live. The
cause of (1) a suspension for report· Indians won the first game as Ed
tng late to the ballpark and (2)'his W)lltson and Dan SpUiner com·
wife's Ulness, LeF1ol'e was back in .btned on a !our-hitter and Rick
the starting lineup Sunday and Manning rapped a two-run double.
made his presence felt.
Jim Slaton came out of the bullpen
But what had the crowd in Chlca, to start the second game for Mil·
go's Comiskey Park ~ was waukee and scatter seven hits over
ohci ball Boston's Gary Allellsoq hit seven Innings. The $Pill enabled
in the sixth toning which appeared MUwaukee to taki! a one-game Jead
to bounce otr LeF1ore's head and in the AL East over the Red Sox.
1'911 to the wall as Altenson cirCled
Anpla t, Mariners t
the bases.on the !our-base error.
Fred
Lynn
drove tn four runs with a
Royals 4, Orlolell !
'"nle
and
double
Do DeC
Lee May:s ptnch single triggered ~""' . ·
and . ug
ln·
ces
slammed
a
three-run
homer
a four·run etghth·lnnlng Mlly that
' a
California maln'tained Its one-game
enabled Kansas City to' ,sweep
lead
over Kansas· City In the West
!our·game serl~ Baltimore's Jtnn
Palmer took a 2.0 lead · into the
Division. 1be Angels scolt!d Ove
elgltth but .was relieved by Tippy
runs In the-first lnnlng agatnst Rich
Martinez after AmoS Otis singled
Bord!. making ljis first major
8nd Hal· McRae dllubled. May, a league start, 011 consecutive singles
by Rob Wilfong, Reggie Jackson,
former Oriole, sillgled Otis home
and Jeny Martin followed with a · ·Don Baylor and Lynn and DeCin·
ces' 15th ,horner. Lynn rapped a
single that Ued the game, with
pinch . runner Greg Pryor taking
t!lri!e-run double In the second.
~.

'

'

'

Ttm Stoddard relieved Martinez
.and Frank White greeCedtlm with
a ~crlflce ~that put t!Mt~on

'

"

day. Houk disputed a called strike on Iktston's Carl
Yastrzemskl during tbe sixth loalng and was
antdlnatically ejected. ( AP Laserphoto).

top and

stl!YI! HBmnicnd•s

staeJe IIC'Ol"ed

piDdl

another nm u the

Orioles, who bad a II!W!ItPftll!

Wblafrrl,ltrellt wla tbll-- belllat tbelr foUrtlllli • ""' llld
the alatll Ill Qlelr lilt :10 ...... Ill

gaD,

~-:-.,r'm•
&gt;

7

7

.....;; ... 1-1

.

Doll ifaneY drove bl'tlne JIUIIII

Tigers 8. Blue Jays 5
Lou Whitaker highlighted a 17·hlt
attack with a three-run homer and
Lance Parrish hit a solo shot as Detroll snapped a f?tJr·game losing
streak. Winning pitcher Jack Mor·
ris allowed 10 hits In 82·3 Innings,
including solo homers by Hosken
Powell, Ernie Whitt and Wtllle Up.
shaw. Morris has yielded 25 home
runs this season.
Twlnll 8, A's 7
Home runs by Tom anmansky
and Gary Ward in the seventh In·
ning and Gary. Gaetti tn the nln.th
helped Minnesota end a five-game
losing streak. Brunansky's two-run
homer and Ward's solo shot came
ott Dave Beard after the A's scored
four times in the sixth for a 4·3lead.

I

aU the Texas nmawitbaaolo homer
tn the fourth IDnlna and a tlebrealdlll UJree.nm lhot In the ilxtll

while Rlclllfooeycutt lllld Joo Matlack beld tile y ......... lo DIDe lilts.
Matlack, ~noted to the buDpen
Jlllt afll!r the All.starbrelk, al'1ll!d
his flrat - I n lO relief appearan-

altllouib be -

alclred for a
nm tn the ninth·before ri!llr1na WIJ.
~ RaQIHph OD a fty ball wltb the

cell

buet~ .

'

.,

I
•

I USPS 14r.-9601

A DIYIIIion uf Multlmrdbi, ln&lt;'.
Published t'll t'ry afh•rtluun , Muntluy lhru u ~-: h
Frithty , Ill Cuurt Slrl'l'l , lly Lhc Ohiu Yalh-y
Publlshln)( Cm ntl&lt;tny • Multiml•t.l ia. lnt·..
Pu nwruy , Ohto 4a769 , 992·2156. St·t·uild l'hlss
J}llslc:n!l' Jlald al Pom~n1y . Oh1o.
Member : Tht• Asst.~e:iHlt'tl

WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) -All
It took was one blow to destroy
months of painful rehabilitation for
cornerback John Simmons.
The Cincinnati Bengals' second·
year pass defender dislocated his
shoulder tor the second time In as
many years durtng a 'Weekend in·
trasquad scrimmage and wtll un·
dergo surgery within the next few
weeks. He should be out of action
for at least 2'h months.
Simmons was examined Sunday
by an orthopedic specialist in Cin·
cinnati, .and the surgery was decided upon.
"It probably hurts more men·
tally than physically," said Slm·
mons, who was expected to be used
as a filth defensive back by the Ben·
gals this season. "It's kind of disap.
pointing for It to come out on the
first hit of training camp."
Simmons, a third· round draft
choice from Southern ·Methodist
last year, injured his left shoulder
on the last day of rookie camp last
year. He missed training camp and
didn't resume practice until the
week after the season-opening ·
game against Seattle.

IN GO

the shoulder.
"I fell on it a few Urnes. It got a
little sore. but I didn't have any·
thing major (wrong)," he said .

Pn·s.~. lnlan'-1 Dat Asso..:ia lion ami tht· Alltt'rtntn
Ncwspaj)('l PuiJhsht!r:; A.-.sut'tHiwn, Na llun&lt;:tl

ly

Pre~

Ad vcr Usinl!

Rcpn•st•flt il tl\'t',

Bri!nhcuu

Nt•wsJ)tif)t•r Salt•s, 733 Th1rd Aw nut•, Nrw
Vurk. Nt•w Vurk 10017.
POSTMA.'iTF. R: Send addrt.·ss lu The Dally
St•r•twl'l . Ill CuurtSI. , Pu111cmy. Ohto 4ri769 .

Simmons lifted weights In the of!·
season to strengthen the shoulder
muscles. He said he had forgotten
about the injury.
"I wasn't thinking about It at all . I
was thinking It would hold up, " he
Sj!ld. "The last thtng on my mind
was the shoulder."
. The Bengals, too. thought the
shoulder problem was no longer a
concern. At an advance camp last
month, General Manager Paul
.Brown predicted that Simmons
could play a larger role this season.

SUBSCRIPTION RATF..'i
Hy C.trrlrr ur Mntur Ruutc
UnP Wt'\'k . .
Ont• Munlh
Ont· Vt 'ill

. . . .. $1 .00
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S. ·tllmd 11 n a :1. R ur 12 monlh il&lt;lSI .~ . Cn·dlt
~o~· t ll ])l' 1! 1\'t· u t'lt iTit·rt•ad

l rHunth.

Nto .,uh.o.t·nplutiiS by 111a1l (ll'rlllllll•tlin tuwnJ;
horllt' ,.arrtt·r .~ t'f"\'l o ' t' IS IIVl:u lablt• .

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ln.'ddt'Ohln

J:\Wt •t•k.o..

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. . . . . $27 .:1()

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"By now. he has forgotten he
ever had that dislocated shoulder,"
Brown said.

.

,Menon Volunteer Fire Dept.

$~2 .80

SINGt.t: CfWY

S~l

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( luls id1• Hhin

1:\ WoTk:-.

$15 21

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52 Wn· ks

1:.1\.11

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EVERY WEDNESDAY
AT 7:00 P.M. At
1

'--:==========:::::;

Simmons dislocates
shoulder, lost again

The Bengals"actlvated Simmons
Gaetti hit a two,run homer oft Tom on Oct. 9 and used him inll regular·
Underwood to thenlnth!orthedecl· season.games, mostly asafl!thdef·
slve 1'\lns, ottsettlng a two-run s)lot enslve back in passtng sltuatloils
by Oakland's Tony Armas In the
bottom of the ntntb ott Ron Davis. · and on special teams. Simmons en·
r--~----;-..__..__ _ _ _co_un_te_red...,.n~o-se_:..rlous_
. _._P_ro_b_le_ms_wt_th-1

Jlutl!n"'. v..u.!
Rookie Dave HoetetJer drove in

rungs Sunday, Lezcano managed to been patient at the plate."
The Padres scored once in the 11
take a starring role for the second
consecutive day. Lezcano cracked first Inning, and a throwing error
a two-run double In the third Inning, by .Reds' catcher Alex Trevino
then scored on the first of Terry fueled a three-run second. Lezcano
Kennedy's two RBI doubles to give and Kennedy combined for three
more In the third to chase starter
the Padres a 7·1 lead.
Charlie
Lelbrandt, 3-7.
Lezcano, who asked to leave the
"I
had
to keep Charlie In there
game after the third inning because
hoping
I
could
gel five innings out df
he felt weak, was 9·!or·l3 In lhe
him
,"
said
Reds
Manager Russ
!our·game series with three h&lt;&gt;mers, three doubles, nine runs bat· Nixon, missing disabled bullpen
ace Tom Hume. "But that got
ted In and three walks.
Lezcano, obtained by the Padres blown out of the water ."
The Reds mounted a threat In the
last December lor pitcher Steve
sixth,
scoring one run and loading
Mura, raised his batting average to
the
bases
with one out to chase star.
.299 and his RBI total to 0/ with the
ter John Curtis, 7·6. Floyd Chiller
weekend splurge.
"I've had sorne off·years, ups retired the next two batters to preand downs like any other bail· serve the Padres' 8·3 lead.
Chlffer worked into a bases.
player," said Lezca no , who
loaded
jam with none out In lhe
struggled the last two seasons. "I
ninth,
and
needed help from reknew I had some bad years behind
liever
Luis
DeLeon.
One run came
me. I knew I had to go get some
In
on
a
fielder's
choice,
and third
good ones for the team and lor me."
baseman
Luis
Salazar's
tw(K)ut
Lezcano attributed his Improvethrowing
error
let
two
more
score
ment to an added measure of
before
DeLeon
retired
Paul
Housepatience.
"I've always been an aggressive holder to post his tenth save.
hitter. Patience Is the best lhlng
I've had working for me," he said. I
"I've had 5().some walks (56) . I've
The Oaily Sentinel

COMMUNITY
MENTAL HEALTH
CENTER

�r

I
/

MondGy, August 2,1982

Pomeroy.:_Middleport, Ohio

.Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Jaymar golf

Sports World

The ladles of the Jayrnar Golf Association dl.scussed an Aug. 311nvitatlonal during Ladles Day
Tuesday.
Several members plan to go to
Ox Bow Country Club at Belpre on
Aug.4.
High scores for the day were:
Maf,iaret Follrod, low &amp;'J'(lss·
katll~ !:lard, low !let; Pea;!
Welker, low putts; Nellie Brown,
Pearl Welker, low net team.
Ladies Day Is each Tuesday at
8:30a.m.

By WW Grlmlley
AP Corrapoadell&amp;

COOPERSTOWN. N.Y. (AP)- Under a blazing sun In thebaclcyarif of
Its refurbished National Museum, baseball made some restitution SUnday

for half a century of Injustice and Insensitivity to its black·sktnned
hopefUls.
·
It was almost as lf the game was laying bare Its guUOy conscience for the
whole world to seE'.
It wasn't by design butamatterofhappenstancethaton thlsday-lpthe
15th anniversary of Jackie Robinson's breakthrough In the majors_ the
sport chose to honor two other oflts greatest black stars. Hank Aaron and
Frank Robinson, and the once-maligned former commissioner A B
"Happy" Chandler, who helped make the occasion possible.
' · ·
They became the latest Inductees In baseball's Hall of Fame, as did the
78-year·old peerless shortstop of the pre-World War U New York Giants
Travts Jackson, who appeared miscast In the day's developln~
melodrama.
When Jackson was roaming the Infield, making his miraculous stabs
and rattling the outfield fences with batted balls, the game was IUy white.
It was all right for black men to lay the railroad ties that Unked the
con linen!. work on the levees, create the only true American music (jazz
and blues) and even die In the war, but they had no right to pick up bats and
gloves and play with their white brothers
Not In the big leagues. The door was cl~ to them.
.
There Is an apocryphal story that President Lincoln on his death-bed
called one of his Civil War generals, Abner Doubleday,' to his side and, ~
choking gasps, told him:
"Abner. our country has been spill by this terrible war. We need something to bring the people together. Invent baseball."
Doubleday, reportedly a West Point graduate who Ioughiin the Mexican
War and fired the first shot for the Union side In the ClvU War at Fort
Sumpter, was said to have played a rough version of the game In his native
Cooperstown as a kid and had even used a stick to mark out a diamond and
set up rules for what he called "baseball ...
ThaI s how this sleepy, lakeside fishing vUiage became the recognized
blrt.hplace of the game and site of tts Hall of Fame.
But the principles which Lincoln espoused were ignored until a crusty
old Dodger exec named Branch Rickey, with the help of Commissioner
Chandler, defied baseball's establishment and tore down the racial barrier
in 1947.
Thus the spirit of the late Jackie Robinson, who died of diabetes and a
heart condition in 1972, pervaded the 1982 Hall of Fame ceremonies
Jackie's widow, Rachel, and their children sat on the front ro~. In
another ceremony today, prior to the Mets·Whtte Sox exhibition game, the
U.S. Postal Service will issue a Jackie Robinson commemorative stamp.
Frank Robinson, manager of the San Francisco Giants, referred to the
sacrifices that Jackie and other early black pioneers had made.
"Without Jackie, I don't know lfthedoorswouldhave been opened up for
a long time, " said the man who became the first black manager In the
majors with Oeveland In 1975. Brilliant playing careers with Cincinnati
.and Baltimore earne(l him Most Valuable Player honors In both leagues.
Aaron, whose 755 home runs made him the greatest home run hitter In
baseball history, said he never thought about Babe Ruth, whose record he
. shattered, when he was breaking Into baseball.
"None of the black kids had any Interest because they knew there was no
hope for them," he said. "But after Jackie came along, everything
changed.
"There was a new, fresh spirit among young blacks. Jackie became a
t~ero, just as Joe Louts became a hero In the ring."
Chandler, a former U.S. senator and twice governor of Kentuclcy, related how word seeped out25 ye trs ago that Branch Rickey was plotting to
bring a black player, Robinson, Into the majors.
·
"The owners met at the Waldorf·Asloria In New York and I presided "
Chandler said. "A vote was taken on whether Robinson would be allow~
to play. There were 15 'nos.· one 'yes.'
. "Later. Rickey came to vtstt me at my home In Versailles, Ky. l assured
him of my full support.
. "For .24 years, my predecessor (Kenesaw Landis) said If a man was
black he couldn't play In the major leagues. I thought that was wrong and
. acted accordingly.''
Four years later, Chandler was kicked out of hts job by the owners. But
.he landed on his feel - In the Hall of Fame.

Ritchie anniversary

Albert (Happy) Chandler; Frank Robinson, and Hank Aaron. lAP Lagerphoto).

NEW MEMBERS OF THE HALL OF FAME- Tht: four new memben el the BaMblll U.U of Fame poee with their plaques Sunday after
they were IDdueled. Tirey are, left to rildlt. Travla ISionewalll Jackson;

Aaron, Robinson, join baseball's Hall of Fame
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP)On the day they both were Inducted
Into baseball's HaD of Fame, Frank
Robinson Sjlld he finally was
through chasing Hank Aaron.
"It seems like I've been chasing
him for a long time," said Robin·
son. "It seems like I've always been
one step behind or one year behind
him.
Aaron was named on 406 of the
415 ballots cast by 10-year
members of the baseball writers
group, while Robinson received 370
votes. Only WWJe Mays, who was
Inducted In 1979, received more
votes than Aaron with 409.
"It's been a long, winding road,"
said Aaron, who was the last man to
make It to the major leagues from
Negro I,.eague baseball. "I've been
extremely blessed In my lifetime."
Aaron, whose 755 career home
runs erased the revered record of
714 by Babe Ruth, said he wanted to
pay particular respect to Jackie
Robinson and Roy Campanella,
two of the men m06t responsible for
breaking baseball's color barrier In
post-war America.
"A man's abWty is limited only
by his lack of opportunity," Aaron
said, addressing the crowd of sev·
era! thousand. "Twenty-three years ago, I took tt.e tsie'nt God gave
me and developed It to the best of
my abWty, but I never dreamed I
would be standing on the same
steps where Robinson and Campa·

nella stood."
Aaron, now director ol player
personnel for the Atlanta Braves,
joined the Braves as a player In
1954 in Milwaukee. He remained
with the club when It moved to
Atlanta In 1966 and played the rtnal
two years ol his career, 1975 and '76,
with the Milwaukee Brewers.
Among the many llf.eUme major
league records be holds are career
' runs batted In (2,297), at-bats
(12,364) and games (3,298) .
Robinson, who became the first
black manager In the major
leagues when he became player·
manager ol the Cleveland Indians
in 1975, started with the Cincinnati
Reds In 1!fl6. In 1966, he was traded
to Baltimore, where he played for
six years before short stints with
the Los Angeles Dodgers, Callfor·
nia Angels and Indians.
He was named MVP o! the Na·
tlonal League in 1961 with 37 homers and 124 RBI for Cincinnati,
then was named MVP In the Ameri·
can League In 1966 with 49 homers
and 122 RBI for Baltimore, becom·
lng the only man to earn the honor
In both leagues.
Jackson,' 78, was one of the best
shortstops of his era, revered especially for his powerful throwing
ann and vast range. Jackson also
had a cai'Et'r batting average of
.291, Including a .l'l9 average In
19:1l.

Chandler became the oldest man

Scoreboard ...

-·-

Majors

Us AfiRPk&gt;S l Atlanta o

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Only a•~ !i('hf'dllk'd

Browns trim roster

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Transactions
BMEBAU.

N..loull.a...e
ATLANTA BRAVES - Actlvatf'd
Tl'rry
.
Ha rpu, O\ltfleldf'r, and aent Kf'n Daylf'y,
l)ilc hl'r, to Rlchmo~oflhl' lnt"matlonal
leaRIIE' .

O'OOIIIAU.

NaUeuJr..utdiA.,..
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Walv•d

Chl&lt;" a~ at N1&gt;w Yortc, 2, 11-nl
~ton al Bal!lmore, :1, U·nl

Phil
DaviJ, runnlna back: K•at O.vls, Daryl
John10n, sn«! Und Murray oorrwrb.eU·
Na~u• McKinnie, .S.feiltivt' b.ck: RociMY Tfw;II'NIS, fullb~ek; Eddk! Cole, \lflt'.
backer : 1nd Crala Chrest, wide
rK'Piver.
·

Trxas at C\E"\1'Iand, 2. il ·n )
Mllwaukf'f' a tTotonlo, !nl

Ortroll at Kai1Sil5 L,ty, 1n1
Mlnl"lf'Sllllt Ill CaUfornla. tnl
Sl-ottW al Oakland, rnl

.....,

DENV[R

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NA'ftONAL LEAGUE

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BRONCOS-911111Pd

Evan1, IIMbaclu!r, to a OM-year eontracl.
NEW
ORLEANS
SAINTSAcqulr&lt;d •
Whitney Paul. llaeblckfr. trom the Kan·
au City Chltb for a 1M3 draft clloice.

Nnntna 'bJ.dc,

Terry

Qulrtl, c.nttr.

TAU.ADEGA WINNER _;_ Darrell Waltrip bolda tile trophy and
sllllleJr iD vlclorJ !ue ~r wialliDg tile 1'a1ladep 511 aato raee SUDday at
title AlaN- latenau.al Mot.or Spet!lhnry. He Wal title lint driver ID 1'
I'UIIIIIq G1 title nee to wJa !t t'wlce. At ript II lila wile Stevie. (AP Luerplloto).

HOUSEC()Al
Pittsburgh, Nl I

aDd

·

Mine Run (Strip)
, . 4 TON MINIMUM

SAN PRANCIICO fillli-Tra.W '

•••

...

chit Rftlf, 10M ta(Ut, 10 U• K...

.

City Cllllllh loral•dratt plcll:. WawM
Crola PllrJ and Joltft GlaJa, JloOI&gt;odero,
'"" ltl}'f!lllloll. l'llrrnlil ......
WASHINGTON
REDSKINS-

Nol!lld

Charla Callfrly IU*-tllt arieral mil·

aaer.

'

CLEVELAND (APl - The
Cieveland Browns have cut eight
players, bringing to 82 the number
of men sun batUlng for positions on
the final 45-man roster.
. Those cut Sunday were: running
back P~U Davis; cornerbacks Kent
DaviS, Daryl Johnson, and Lind
Murray; defensive back Marcus
Mci&lt;Innle; fullback Rodney Thomas; linebacker Eddie Cole, and
· wide receiver Craig Chrest.
. Veteran offensive lineman Henry
'Sheppard sun has not reported to ·
camp and team officials said he Is
being fined $500 a day until he
reports. '
.
Cleveland must have Its roster
ll'lmmed to 6!l players by A!lg. 24,

Not just for young

EAGLES-

PHILAD~LPHIA

Waived
Sttve Dlldall.

race.
TENNIS

CAP D'AGDE, France (AP) -Tomas Smid defeated Uoyd Bourne
6-3, 6-4, 5-7, 6-2 in the final of the
$300.1XXJ WCT tennis tournament.
NEWCASTI.E, England (AP) Buster Mottram defeated Richard
Lewis 6-3; 6-2 to win the Northumberland Tennis Championship.
NORTH CONWAY, N.H. (AP)Ivan Lend! defeated Jose Luis
Clerc 6-4,2-6, 6-41n the semifinals of
the $200,(XX) Volvo Grand Prix Ten·
nis Tournament.
Jose Htgueras of Spain beat Peter McNamara of Australia 6-3, 6-1
In the other semifinal.
SOI.J'TII ORANGE, N.J. (AP) Yannlck Noah defeated Raul Ra·
mirez 6-3, 7-6 (7·2) io wtn the
$125,1XXJ Mutual Benefit Life Open
at the ,Orange Lawn Tennis Club.
In the women's final, top-seeded
VIrginia Ruzlci downed Leigh Ann
Thompson 5-7, 6-2, 6-2.
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) Chris Evert Lloyd hea 1 Bettina
Bunge of West Germany 6-3, 6-0 tn
the final of the$200,1roMcDonaid's
women's Indoor tennis
tournament.
RANCHO BERNARDO, ~11.
(AP) - Top-seeded Tracy Austin
defeated second-seeded Kathy Rl·
naldi H. 6:3 in the championship
match of the $125,1ro Wells Fargo
Open women's tennl~ tournament.
SPEEDBOAT RACING .
PASCO. Wash. (AP) -Dean Chenoweth, 44, a four·Ume national un·
limited hydro champion driver,
was killed when his boat flipped
backwards at a speed of 175 mph tn
a quautying heat Cor the Columbia
Cup race.

r----------

Nf'W Yort at Chleaao
!\an F'ranriAro at Al\anta, tnl

K ; ansu~

•.

GOLF
OAKVILLE, Ontario (API Bruce Lietzke struggled to a 73 and
held on for a two-stroke victory In
the Canadian Open Golf
Championship.
The triumph, his second In this
national championship, was
Lietzke's first of the season and
marked the sixth consecutive year
in which he has won at least once.
DENVER lAP) - Beth Daniel
fired an 8-under·par · 64, equalling
the tournament record and over·
taking Sally Little to ·capture the
$200,(XX) Columbia Savings LPGA
classic.
Daniel, 25, of Seabrook, S.C., fin·
ished with a four-round total of2276 ·
12 ·under par, which also tied th~
tournament record Daniel set Inwinning this tournament tn 1980.
AUTO RACING
MU..WAUKEE, Wis. !AP) - Mi·
chael Andrettl, the 19-year-old son
of longtime racing star Mario An·
drettl, roared to an easy victory,
leading all the way In the Robert
Bosch· VW Super Vee race at Wls·
constn State Fair Park.
MU..WAUKEE, Wis. lAP) Tom Sneva, getting a break when
Rick Meal'!!' car brokedown331aps
from the end, scored an easy vtctory In the Provtnl Veal-Tony Bet·
tenhausen 200 Indy-car race at
Wisconsin State Fair Park.

tJ Nk'kro 10.71, l n l

St•atllt• 9. Cal!fomlu .1

Aostnn 1R.ulnry 10-:h
1M('(i n ~OI" 12-7 1. I nl

Sports briefs....

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)- Dar·
rell Waltrip kfought off a challenge
at the finish Une by Buddy Baker to
win the $377 ,(XX) Talladega 500 NASCAR Grand National stock car

tPastOI't'~1!, tnl

Sa n

Inducted Into the Hall at age 83. He money to live on," Chandler said In
succeeded baseball's first commls· explaining his fight for a pension.
stoner. Kenesaw Mountain Landis. "It just wasn't right."
Vln Scully, veteran Los Angeles
after Landis' death in 1!!44 and
broadcaster, won the Ford
Dodgers
served six years. He fought lor the
C.
Frick
Award lor baseball an·
desegregation of baseball and
nouncers.
Bob Addle, Washington
championed Brooklyn Dodgers
Times
Herald
and Post baseball
General Manager Branch Rickey's
writer
for
:ll
years
before his death
slgntng of Jackie RQbtnson .
•
last
year,
and
4J\en
Lewis, veteran
Chandler also .helped Institute the
Philadelphia
Inquirer
sports wrt·
players pension and was voted out
ter,
were
named
recipients
of the
of office in 1951 by owners who fell
Taylor
Spink
Award,
named
In
J
.G.
he sided too staunchly with the
honor
of
the
late
publisher
of
Tile
players.
"I saw Grover Cleveland Alex· Sporting News and given lor baseander and Dazzy Vance playing for bail writing.
the House of David to get enough

DELIVERED .

PRIGE

Pomeroy •...•••••.•• , •.•...••...••• , ••. S26 10 Tim .
Middleport &amp; Racine .........•......•.... , 517:00 Ton
MtiiiS•CcNllty •••.•..•. : ... , ; , .•..•. , , •.. 121.10 Ton

C.O~D.

'.

PH; ttl-2211

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Ritchie,
Columbus, celebrated their 58th
wedding anniversary at the Royal
Oak Park on July 11 wilh a gathering
of family and friends .
Attendinc were Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Kuhn and son, Richard, Canton; and
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Mark SUer, Matt, Brian,
Mickle, WesUall, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Ritchie, Eugene and Kathy Rit·
chie, and Patrick and Mlchella Ritchie, Pataskala; Mr. and Mrs.
Forrest Rhodes and son, Lee, and
sollS'in-law and daughters, Mr. and
Mrs. George Bennington and Mr.
and Mrs. John Bucker and Eric,
Navarre; Mr. and Mrs. Elton Rit·
chie, Beth, Kenny and Jayne,
Coolville; William Ritchie and
daughter, Brandy, Cindy Ritchit:,
Rector, Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. H.
Ritchie, Kathy, Melissa, Arelene,
April, Wayne Earl, Long Bottom;
Joe Ritchie, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Alvin Ritchie and grandson,
Mike, Cardington; Mrs. Zana Hall
and daughters, Juanita Paxton,
Shawna, Jeff and Ex Paxton, Mr.
and Mrs. Brian Steele, Mr. and Mrs.
David Steele, Lee and Michael, Mr.

Calendar
MONDAY
LETART FALL'i - Letart
Twp. trustees will meet 7 p.m.
Mon(lay at Letart Falls.

·in Meigs County area reporteP

and Mrs. James Schrlnk, Mike and
Randy, ColwnbWI; Teresa and
Brandy Rontello, Carl Matlack, Mr.
and Mrs.: Richard Hall, Carolyn
Jones, Carrie, Catherine and Riehle,
Hillard; Lennie Crary, ·Josephine
Ritchie, Marcia Keller, and Enna
Cleland, Chester.

Gooch, Gallipolis; Helen Hart, · Mind."
\
Shade; Harold Parker, Jhonda
Virginia Edward&lt;! began the
Parker Collins and sons, Tyler and evening's program with a reading
Joshua, Coal Grove; Leland and. "My Lord and I" with the topic
Margaret Parker and family, being "Uving Together as a Global
Kathleen, Jam•,, Joseph, Michael, Family." Mr8. Edward&lt;! said that
Charles and Chris, Route 3, most people are deeply involved in
Pomeroy; Tom Dorst and Unda preventing the disappearance of inFreeman, Pomeroy; Martin and . dividual cultures and therefore have
Grace Dorst and son, Craig, Shade; created barriers which result in a
Jerry and Tammy Foster and son, widening gap due to the lack of comPlans were finalized for a borne
Silane, Shade; Fern A.. Dalhee, Em- municaUon.
garden show to be held on Sept. 13 in
rna Adams, Mary Virginia Eaterday
She said that alienated people tend
the basement of Hemlock Grove
and John Esterday ,•Racine.
to reject all others who are different
Church when Walk·ln Garden Clu!J
Rose DeBruhl. Middleport; Wen- · but pointed out that through the
members me.t recently at the boem
dyWhited,GallipolisFerry, W. Va. ; spirit of the lord, Christiana should
of Mrs. Leota Smith.
Albert Parker, George, Frank and become reconciled to communicate
Mrs. Smith opened the meeting
Mary Parker, Virgil, Kathryn, with those of different cultures.
wit,h a poem and roll call and then
Brian, Becky and Blair Windon,
She spoke of breaking down
gave devotions Wling a poem by
Barbara Jean, Alvin, Rodney, and barriers and accepting others as a
Helen Steiner Rice, "l'!ot by Chance
Todd Tripp, Rodney and Debra part of a world family where each
or Happenstance."
Chevalier, Sybil Dorst, the only member has personal freedom. She
111ere was an open discussion on
living daughter of the Smiths, all fl concluded with a meditation and
gr;owtng roses with the topic being
Pomeroy, Route 3, and the host and prayer. Dorothy Downie was pianist
discussed by Ola St. Clair, Helen
hostess, Fred and Bertha Smith.
for the evening.
Carper, Belva Willard, Jessie CUr·
Ruth Moore gave the secretary's
Us, Ruth Francis, Mildred Ziegler,
report. Floral arrangements made
Mrs. Smith and Yvonne Young.
by Bernice Carpenter were used on
111en Mrs. Curtis gave tips on
Making sunshine boxes for shutthe tables for a salad course served
propagating roses by inserting a ins WBll discussed at the recent
by Mrs. Carpenter, Ruth Barnitz,
rose cutting into a potato then plan- meeting of the Pomeroy United
and Alice Struble.
ting it with a portion of the stem Methodiat Women held at the chur·
being exposed above the earth with ch.
peat moss around it.
Betty Baronick presided at the
Flower specimens were displayed meeting during which time It was
Mr. and Mrs. David Haggerty,
by several members and these in- decided that each person will make Athens, are announcing the birth of
cluded cosmos, daisies, lilies, and and take a sunshine box to the an eight pound 13 ounce son,
several varieties fl roses and August meeting. Each person selec- Johnathan Robert, born July 2S at
gladioli.
ted a shut-in and will make a sun- the Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
shine box for that individual.
Plans were discussed for raising and Mrs. John W. Biaettnar,
money with the proceeds to go to the Pomeroy, and the paternal grandDescendants of the late Asbury
and Emma Batey Smith held a get· roof and furnace repair. An AugWit parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert
together Sunday, July 11, at the picnic was planned Shut-in visits Haggerty, Middleport. Maternal
home of Fred and Bertha Smith, reported totaled 187. Mrs. Ada War- great-grandparents are Mr. and
ner gave the prayer preceding the Mrs. Jack Satterfield, Sr., Mid37395 West Shade Road.
taking
of the least coin offering. dleport, and Mrs. Margaret Blaett·
Fred Smith is the youngest and
Polly
Eichinger
gave · devotions nar, Porrreroy, and the paternal
only living son of Asbury and Emma
using
scripture
from
n Corinthians 1 great-grandmother is Mrs. Nora
Batey Smith. Fred E. Smith,
poem,
"Rest 'l1lou My McKean, Gallipolis.
and
a
prayer
Racine, a grandson, gave the ·
blessing preceding the dinner.
Attending were Carol and Roger
Patterson anti son Keith, West
Chicago, Ill.; Raymond, and Esther

Walk-in Garden Club

Pomeroy UMW

Haggerty birth

Smith reunion

Announcements

Is mild alcohol use
dang~rous to health?

Tile following reunions will be held
Aug. 8: Denney, Gilmore-Knotts
resident on Kerr·Harrisburg Road,
noon; James Wolfe, Carroll Norris
residence on Ohio 124, Syracuse, 1
p.m.

"may be," or qualify "con·
By HELEN BOTI'EL
swnpUon"
by saying "The overuse
DEAR HELEN:
of
alcohol
is dangerous to your
I note that several of your
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
health."
H.
correspondents have advocated
School will be held at Hysell Run
"warnings" by the Surgeon General
Holiness Church 9:3G-11 :30 a .m.
· on liquor containers, similar to th06e DEAR HELEN :
Monday through Friday. Pastor
I'm ashamed of you for condoninK
Tile Carmel Homecoming usually on cigarette packets.
Theron Durham invites all
the
"camouflaged, dirty-word
held
the
second
Sunday
in
August
As a long-time proponent of such
children to attend.
will not be held this year becall8e of health. warning labels, may I call ceiling" that a tile manufacturer
a congregational decision.
your readers' attention to Bill No. had in his den. (You could see the
MEIGS Fair Board meeting
1543 now pending in the U.S. Senate. four-letter word only in certain
will be 8 p.m. Monday at the
The
Meigs
epunty
Garden
Club
Its present problem is the wording lights on the bamboo design. l
secretary's office on Rock
I suppose you think it ill just fine
members
are
iilfonned
the
county
which is so long and ambiguous it
Springs Fairgrounds.
that the movie "E.T." a fantasy
contact chairman needs the names negates the value.
and addresses of next year's new ofThe bill is presently in committee which appeals greatly to children,
POMEROY- Eight and Forty,
ficers.
Send
names
this
week
to
.
chaired by Sen. Bob Packwood. In includes several obscene phrases ut·
Meigs Salon 710, will meet at 6
830
E.
Main,
Pomeroy,
Marge
Fetty,
an attempt to have the wording shor- tered by the child actors - NOT A
p.m. Monday at the Ohio 33 roador
call
992~.
Spoon
favors
for
the
tened before it is released to a sulr PRUDE, BUT ...
side park. Members should bring
needed
by
Monday,
convention
are
committee for hearings, I have DEARNAPB :
a covered dish. New officers will
Those so-called "obscenities" 1I
Aug.2.
suggested the following statement to
be installed.
thought
at least one was highly
Sen. Packwood:
Tile next blood pressure clinic to
"Warning: The Surgeon General imaginative) make "E.T.'s" kids
TUESDAY
be held at the townhouse in has detennined that the con- real, not Disney stick figures.
But I suspect there is another
Harrisonville
will be Aug. 10 from 10 sumption of alcohol is dangerous to
POMEROY Chapter 186, OES,
reason
for including in this movie
a.m.
to
noon.
Ferndora
Story,
R.N.,
your health."
will meet 7:45 p.m. Tuesday to
two or three words you abhor,
will
have
charge
of the clinic to
It
would
then
be
comparable
to
the
honor Masons of Eastern Star.
NAPB. They elevate "E.T." from
which the public is invited.
label now on cigarettes.
All officers should wear chapter
You needn't be a teetotaler to ap- "General Admission" (usually a box
dresses.
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Virgil prove a warning label of Bill No. S. office kiss of death) to 'P.G." and
that means millions more dollars in
(Geraldine) Parsons is a surgical 1543. - Hollie
'
MIDDLEPORT merchants incompany tills.
Holzer
Medical
Cenpatient
at
the
DEARHOLUE:
terested in the August
(Not that "E.T.," a solid hit, needs
I
ter,
Room
503.
too
favor
a
warning
on
alcohol
promotional program should at·
this
added insurance, but as with
containers, but aren't your words a
tend the planning session at 5
''Annie," which escaped the dreaded
The
Feeney-Bennett
Post
128
of bit t~o simplistic? Where is it writp.m. Tuesday at LaSalle Hotel.
the American Legion has scheduled ten than one small glass of wine (or "G" by one seven-letter phrase,
a post picnic for Sunday, Aug. 15. the equivalent) per day is a health producers like to play it safe.) - R
SU'ITON Township trustees
Got a problem? An adult subject
Committee
Chairman Fred Hanel hazard? Doctors often recommend
will meet 8 p.m. Tuesday in the
for
discussion1 You can talk it over
reports
that
the
picnic
will
be
held
at
such mild stimulanls for certain fl
Syracuse municipal building.
in her colwnn if you write to Helen
the Legion Fann on Bailey's Run. their )ll!tients.
All members and their families are
My suggestion: Chane~ "is" to Bottel, care of this newspaper.
CHESTERffiLL CHurch of the
invited.
Nazarene will have a gospel Holy
Tile post will furnish hamburger
Land sing 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
and buns with the members to bring
the church. Speaking .will be
a covered dish. Tile shelter house
George and Charlotte Dixon, full·
will have electricity. There will be
Wouldn't it be nice to have health sign.
time evangelists In the Church of
How long has the company been in
afternoon
games
such
as
hor·
insurance for your new car' In a
· the Nazarene and are recording
business?
Is the company insured?
seshoes, softball and volleyball. In
sense, you can. A good auto service
artists and gospel singers. Also
It
is
part
of
a larger organization? If
the
evening,
there
will
be
a
hayride
contract can help. protect your
preaching will be Rev. Lawrence
the
company
that offers the service
8lld a wiener roast with the post fur·
budget when your new car comes
Walker (Billy Sunday), another
out of bWiiness you
contract
goes
nishing the wieners, potato chips, down with the "clanks.''
full- · e evangelist
will
probably
be
unable to get your
· pop and mar!ihrnallows.
To help you know how to shop for a
good . auto service contract, the bills paid If your dealer has a serThere wlli be a revlv al at
Federal Trade ·Commission has a vice company administrater the
Kent Church of Christ, Aug. 5·
new factsheet. For a single free copy contract, you should find out if that
QJEPORT - Bend area
8, 7: 30 p.m. each night. David
of Auto Service Contracts, write to company will honor your contract if
ater and Snow Ski Club meets
Tysinger of Tennessee will
the Consumer Information Center, the dealer goes out of bWiiness.
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
- ~peak. Everyone Is welcome.
Other points to considet include:
Department 636K, Pueblo, Colorado
LaSalle Hotel in"Middleport. All
Do
you have to pay the bills and get
81009. I
interested in learning to ski are
Chester Methodist Church
reimbursed,
or does the company
While all new ~ars come with a
welcome.
will have an Ice cream social,
cover
the
costs
directly? What hap"free" watranty provided by the
Aug. 7 at 6 p.m. Pie, soft
pens
if
your
car
breaks down out of
manufacturer, a service contract is
RUTLAND - Skating will be .
drinks, cake wlll be available.
town?
Ellllctly
what
is covered and
different. It pMvides a specific time
held at the Rutland Civic Center ·
It Is sponsored by the Chester
under
what
circumstances?
If a par·
during which the service contractor
7:31).10:30 p.m.' Wednesday. No
UMW.
ticular
repair
is
not
listed
In
the conagrees to repair or maintain your
admission will be charged and
tract,
it
is
probably
not
covered.
Eugla johnson, Middleport.
car for an agreed-upon price. You
participants should bring their
Is In tile cardiac care unit at
purchase It separately from the car Just be sure you understand
own skates.
M.J. Carmel ~ast, 6001 E .
and don't have to get service from everything before your·sign.
111en call the local Better Business
Broad St., Columbus.
the dealer either. You ITJiiY be able to
SYRACUSE Church of the
Bureau
or cOIIS)Uiler office and ask If
tailor the service contract to cover
Nwrene NWMS service will be 7
they
have
any. complaints about the
all repairs or to pay only for routine
p.m. W~y. There will b,e
company
aod If past complaint&amp;
Inspection and maintenance.
inatallatjon of new offiCers. All of.
have
been
successfully
resOlved.
Your warranty coverage and your
ficers are expected to be there.
When
you
order
a
copy
of Auto
service ccrntract coverage may
Service
Conltactl
(free)
you'll
also
overlap for a year or so if your car is
MIDDlEPORT - Rev. and
ccrpy
of
the
Consumer
Inreceive
a
brand new. If they do, you should
Mn. VIctor Nelson will be at Mldformation
catalog
free.
published
compare the coverages and decide
lfiet)clt IndependeJi Holinesa
whether the addlu-1 expense for quarterly by the Consumer InCllureb at 7:30 p.m. Wedneaday
the added coverqe of the service fonnation Center of the~Ser­
for a apeclal aervtce. 1be coaple
l vice Administration, the free
contract Ia worth it.
will be leavtna-" do .milliOn
Before you decide on a service Catalog llsta m:er 200 aelected free
wolt In the llablmU. Rev. Odell
contract, read it carefully. and be .and ~rately PJ;i~ federal conManley, pastor, invite. tbe
sure you undel'lland II. Here are swner bocikleta.
Pllblk·
-aome...qustiio~uk before your.

Contracts· made for cars

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

.,

The Daily SentiMI-Page 5

Pomet"Oy-Micldlep,rt, Ohio

f;lt&amp;ppetring~

Today's

Mllw;IUkl't•

MondaY, August 2,1982

""·-··

.\ .

Dixons
Rev. Walker
Chesterhtll Church of the Naz·
arene wlll have a gospel Holy
Land sing 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday
at the church. Speaking will
be George and Charlotte
Dixon, full -time evangelists In
the Church of the Nazarene
and are recording artists and

gospel singers. They travel
the country and Canada doing
engagements.
Also preaching wlll be Rev .
Lawrence Walker (Billy Sun·
day}, another full·time evan·
gellst who travels around the
country with his wife . Both
are musicians.

Stoll says best to blanch
By DALE M. STOLL
Meigs County
Extension Agent
Home Economics
POMEROY - The Extension Of·
fice is a beehive of activity this time
of year and a large nwnber of my
phone calls are food preservation
questions . I' ve chosen a few of the
problems tn share with you as I
imagine that quite a few people have
similar questions.
QUESTION : I've heard a lot of
people say that they don't blanch
com or l(reen beans before free-Lin g
any more. All you have to dtl is put
the vegetable in the freezer without
washing it or doing anyl11ing to it at
aii.JsthisOK'
ANSWER : Blanching in food
pres.!rvation is the heat treatment nf
fruits and vegetables in live stearn
nr bniling water. This prncedure
inactivates enzyrr •es sn that they no
ltlnger produce undesirable changes
in the ft&gt;ld. If ynu dn not Inactivate
the enzymes. vegetables will
becmt1e coarse or woody atld flav11rs
will change.
I wonder about the quality of fmlds
frrrLen without blanching. I ~uess
that if ynu like tnugh vegetables nr
don 't mind nff flavors, then
elirninating the blanching step
would be acceptable. Hnwever,most
people freeze fo•ld ntlt only to save
rnnney but also to have high quality
f&lt;Hld. My conclusilln is that the blan·
ehing step, hot and steamy as it is, is
necessary to insure quality frnzen
products. After eighl tlr 10 months.
unblanched frrrLen food may end up
in the garbage rather than tm the
table.
QUESTION : I have a wondHful
slaw recipe that rny fan •ily loves.
It '::; ahnost the san1e as frozen
coleslaw recipt.~ . My recipe has smnc
oil in it. Clluld I use rny recipe?
ANSWER : Oil dnes not freeze
well. Oils tend tn becnn•e clnudy and
to separate when frn·tcn. Free'lin~
oils also hastens rancidity. Fro-Len
cabbage becmnes watery. Watery
cabbage and cloudy llil creates an
unsightly and unappetizing dish. It's
best to use a L11ieslaw recipe
especially designed for freezing.
QUESTION : My pressure canner
is working just fine and the ~a uge is
in perfect condition. Why should I
bring it in In be tested'
ANSWER : Even t hnu g l1
everything looks OK. your pressure
~au_ge 111ay not be registering an accurate reading. You need tn know

pressure up on it. I had my ~reen
beans in the canner for over twn
hours and I never did get the weight
to jiggle. What's wrong~
ANSWER: Check the ~askct on
the pressure canner. It should be
firm and pliable, not brittle or
cracked. If this is OK, and if there is
nn nthcr damage to the canner, then
ynu need to examine your canning
procedure.
First, find your use and care
guide. II usually gives specific directions for preparations for canning.
Generally, after addin~ water
i about two quarts ) In the canner and
placing the jars in the canner, you
place the cover on the canner and
lock s.!Curely. Use masimwn heat.
Be sure petcock is wide open (nr in
I he case of weights, leave then• nffl.
Watch for steam tn cnme from the
petcock or Iron• the vent where the
weights go.

Reduce heat sufficiently tn allow
steam In flow freely at a moderate
rate fnr seven to 10 minutes to
eliminate all air frm n cooker and
jars. Then close the petcock or place
weights on the vent.
Proceed with the normal canning
process. The weights should jiggle at
a rate of three to four jiggles each
tninuk. Check your use and care
book for specific instructions.
Allowing stean• tn flow irom the canncr is a critical step in preparing tn
t·an under Pfl'SSUrl'.
QUESTION : Everybody is giving
rne advice on canning and freezing,
but their advice is not all the same.
Who knows the correct ways to can
and frel!ze?
ANSWER: The Cooperative Ex·
tension Service offers procedures
and recipes for food preservation
that are hacked with re~earch from
The Ohio State University. In Meigs
County, this information may be obtained by writing or calling Mrs.
Dale Stoll, Mei~s County Extension
Horne Economist, Box 32, Pomeroy,
Ohio (992~96).
I will send a packet of infonnation
tn yrm on many aspects of food
preservation. If you have problenls
that you're wonderin~ about or any
questions, contact me. We try to
track down answers for all questions
ranging from how to pickle
chicken's feel i who's want to? ) to
hnw to can

lfltH)Se.

Most nf my

questions are a little tamer, t110u~h!

for sure how your gauge reads so

that you can can correctly. Cannin~
without adequate temperature is
dangerous! Bring your pressure
canner inln the Extension Office tn
be tested. We willies! the gauge and
check the canner lid . There is nn
charge for this service. Testing is all
day, every Wednesday.
QUESTION: I have a weight-type
pr~ss ure canner and I cannot v.ct the

f'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

ABed and a Bedroom In One
With Two large Drawers Underneath Bed

sP£C\lll1
pQ\C£0\

�/

~The

Page

Pomeroy~lclclleport,

Dally Sentinel

Ohio
Monday1 August 2,1982

17-year ·old faces murder .ch~ge ,
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ali auto- . and you were braced torlt. But now
Indicates tbat 3-year-old Jason this happened and we weren't
41sa.ppe11rance from really prepared."
a playground
The IJoY's disappearance atsparked a massive search In tracted wide attention. Two differsouthwestern ~~ sets of composite sketches ot a
Ohio, died shortly kidnapping suspect were circuafter he was last lated In the media, on flyers and
seen alive on several hundred thOusand advertisIng circulars delivered door-to-door.
June 18.
In an eight-county area. Volunteers
A 17-year.()ld suburban Clncln· combed the area around the Evers
nail boy was charged Sunday as a home In several searches.. A re1uvenUe with aggravated murder, ward fund )Vas established, wi~ at
pledged.
kldnappinli and extortion In the least
"The hoUrs turned Into days, the
boy's death.
Pathologist Charles Hirsh said days turned Into weeks and the
an autopsy Sunday on the badly d~ weeks turned Into months," Ron
composed body found tbat "the Evers said. "We were all hoping,
time of death Is coru;lstent to the and then we come down to this.''
Springfield Township pollee reday on which he disappeared." A
fused
Sunday to release the Identity
cause of death has not been
of
the
teen-ager charged In the
determined.
case.
A
decision was expected toJason's body was found burled
day
on
whether
there will be a juvebene.a th brush and stones In a heavnile
court
hearing
to declde
Ily wooded area of suburban
whether
he
will
be
bound
over to a
Springfield Township less than a
grand
jucy
for
trial
as
an
adult.
mlle from the playground where he
The teen-ager was arrested at a
was last seen In the company of a
suburban Norwood shopping mall
young man.
"Why Jason?" said Ron Evers early Saturday after Jason's par·
Jr., the IJoY's uncle. "Why would he ents, Bob and Kim, received a telekUI him? For what reason? It' s just phoned ransom demand,
reportedly for
so unbelievable.
" After all these weeks, you fig· · Pollee and Federal Bureau of Inured there might be some foul play vestigation agents said the juvenile

no,OXJ

·• ·

PROGRAM GIVEN - Forked Run Park naturaliBt Dale Anderson
gave area cblldren a program recently on reptiles common to Meigs
County. Bringing In turtles, toadl and otber animals to Wustrate.bls talk,
wblcb also Included tbe formation of coal, Anderson answered curious
questions from bot, but Interested, mini-Meigs counllans.

no,OXJ.

was arrested after attempting to
pick up a ranaorn drop.
Even, a mall sorter for the U.S.
Postal Service, said his . wife w~

under sedation

suilday and his s.

pasled "withlri 100
makelhlft grave:

feet"

ot

The boY was last seen at a play-,
few houses ~rpm hJS;

ground a

MILLER ·

home. Witnesses told police theY,:

year-old daughter, Amy, probably ·· saw a young miln Clli'J'Yini' Jason
didn't know yet that ~r brother on his shoulders out of the~
playground.
•
was dead.
Searchers
later
found
one
ot
~
Jason's body was discovered beside a white picket fence In the side boY'S. tbongs and a fisherman's hat:
yard of a vacant house. Ron Evers, believed to belong to the young
who led numerous searches ot the accompanying the )loy.
area, said a search In late June

plalntlft who had charged the defendant with gross neglect ot duty.
The custody ol Marla Wilson walj
granted to Ella Norma Mae Wilson
In ait action by !Jer against Jolul.
WUsoo. The custody agreement
also provides for support ot the ml·
nor child.

3·7-tf

Pales for foreeloeure
A decree ot foreclosure on a
mortgage held by Pai'k Firuinclal;
Inc. In the amount ot $26,960.47 plu5
Interest ot $2,9'7.72 on ~rty In
Rutland Township owned by ~
bert P. Dlvletro and Marie Dlvletro
has been rued 1n the Meigs

j

' ~'

'

5 Happy Ads
6 Lost and Found
7 Yard Sat e ( paid lnridvctn ( l ' )

-----&amp;ea• estate

8·Public Sale
&amp; A uction

J l ·Homcs tor Sa te
32 Mobile Hom es f or Salf:'
33 Farms for Sa le
34· Bu siness Buildings
35 Lots &amp; Acr eage
J6 RP.al E state Wrmted

9-Wanted to Buy
I '"

...

53 Antiqu es 54-Misc . M erc handi se

302 Mechanic sr.
Pomerov, OH .
PH.99HS06

5S·Build ing Supplies
56· Pets for Sale
57-Musc iall nstruments
58 · Fr~ i ts &amp; Vegetabl es
59-For Sa le or Trade

76-Auto Parts &amp; Accessori es

77 ·Auto Repair
78·Camping Equipment

Rentals

"

11 Help Wanted
12 Si tuati on Wanted
13 Insurance
14· Business Tr ai ning
15·Sc hool s Instruct ion
16 Rttd io, TV &amp; CB Repai r
17 M isce ll aneous

...

'

41 -Houses tor Rent
42 M obile Homes for Rent
43 Farms for Rent
44 Apartment for Rent
45·Furnished Room s
46· Space for r ent
47·Wanted to Rent
4A ·Equipment for Rent
49·For L ease

18 wanted To do

l ocilted

at Brown's
TtlXidcrmy, cO. Rd . 2S
n~01r Chester .
T. V. and' R.,dioRepair
AIso other Electronic
F quipmcnt.
Terry Brown
Technician
Associate dewee and
1st clilss FCC license.
Phone 985·3364 Ave .
or 985·3833
. 7·16· 1 mo.

81· Home I mprovem·ents
ft2. Plumbing &amp; Heating
83-e.cavatlng
84-Eiecrical &amp; Refr i 9eration
85-General Hiiuling
86·M . H. Repair
87 ·Upholslery

61 Farm EQuipment
62 Wanted to buy
63 Livestock
64-H ay&amp; Grain
65·Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Mason co .. wv
Area COde 304
67s-Pt. Pleasant
· 458-Leon
576-Apple Grov.e
773-Mason ··
B82~New Haven ·
89s-Letarl
937-Bulfalo

Meigs County
Area COde 614
992....;M lddleport
·446-Gallipotis
Potlleroy
367-Cheshire
•as-chester
JIB-VInton
343-Portland
24s-Rto Grande
247-Letart Fans
256-Guyan Dlst.
6-43-Arabla Dist. · 949-Racine
742-Rutland
379-Watnut
U7-Coolville

Up to lS Word s .. pn&lt;' ciny insP.rtion
.Up to 15 Words . . Three dny 1nsprt ion .

Up to IS Words .. Six day

EUGENE LONG
·Superior Siding Co.
Vinyl &amp; Mutlln•m

.Sl.OU

Camplelt

. ' .$4.00

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
Mary Hobstetter ,
Clerk
" 181 21 ltc

( 7)

19. 26. ! 8) 2, 31c
Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Apri l 20, 1982, in the
M eig s County Probate
Court, Case No. 23712,
Terr~ Lee . Fetty, Sr ., 282
Red Bank Dr., Fairborn,
Ohio 4S324 was appointed .
Administrator of the estate I
of Terry Lee Fetty, Jr ., 1
.d ece as e d ,
la t e
of
Langsv i lle, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/ Clerk
(7) 19, 26; 18) 2 3tc

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTt'CE
The Ohio Bureau of Em·
ployment Services, Qffice
of Manpower Development
, !OMD) has presented a
• preliminary CETA grant
application for Fiscal Year
' )983 to the Department of
·-..:abor to provide eligib.l e
ind i viduals
with
em ·
ployment and train in9 ser ·
yi ces in the 56 count1 es of
; the Balance of State.
The planni ng allocation
IS $20,145.824.
' ' The Comprehensive Em·
~ pJoyment
and Training
Plan and a comparison of
performance against fhe
prior year' s pla n t hrough
.: .the most recent quarter
· ~ may be reviewed betwe~n
t 6! 00 a.m. and 5:00p .m. 'n
the OMD Library , 1160
Dubl in Road , Columbus.
Ohio. 432tS, phone 614-466·

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On March 19, 1982, in the
M eigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 23709.
Yvonne Deni s. Rt . 1, Box
274, Cheshire. Ohio 45620
was appointed Ad ·
ministratrix of the estate of
.....,8806.
L.
Chapman. ·
' Written
co m m ent s Dan iel
~ should tie directed to Ms. deceased. late of Rt. !,
I
• Cher~l Enslen at the same Cheshire, 4562Q.
Robert E. Buck .
11ddress by August 13, 1982.
Probate Judge/ Clerk
~-l'flterested
group s,
.organizations or in · (7) 19, 26; 18) 2 3tc
·~~lvlduals niay notify the
· rime Sponsor of their -----,~-__.:
Public
,( ~I re to review anv sub· - - - Notice
.. ,~e .auent
modification
PUBLI C NOTICE Public
•·liii·r lng the grant year .
Notice for Dark Diamood.
Coal Corp.,. Shade, Ohio
• ( ~) 2, ltc
45776. An application Is at
r.,.:- -piJtiliC. Notice
the Meigs County Rec9r·
, ;~t ... ·~--· - -· -~ . ·--· -·
der's office for a strip mine
·•• e
NOTICE TO
operation, Frac. 3; T·2N_;.
Bidders
The Board of Education R·13·W; Salisbury Town·
. of the Meigs Local School ship, Meigs County; Ohio .
1" 0istrict desires to receive . Interested people can see
.:Jiealed
bids for the these forms and ,niaps at
ufollowlnjl :
·
,
the Meigs County Recor··
1)(;1 1. St~dent accident
der's Office anytime.
surance
2.Fieetlnsurance
· 3. Tires and tubes
. .. o.-. Gasoline, oil. and anti ·
•freele
,(,.· 5, Fuel Oil
6.Coal
.
7. 1',\ilk and dairy produc·

1r·

~

1$

&gt; 8. Bread

and

bakery

0,aroduds
.
. 9, Meat
10. Produce and · dry

goods

1

6

~-, tnordeedrtob~dsc nshiderebed,
..'atl
' sea
'
s a 11
~ ~ ~eived in the Treasurer•s.o

.

wart,

Calll43-3322

I , J

'

lfllltl

.

complete remodtlinr. ruaf.
Ina of II typa. Wcrled in
home ... 20 JISIS.
Fr" estimates

insertion .............. 57.00

· !Average 4 words per line)

7· 16·2·mo. pd.

Public Notice

Public Notice
54
Misc. Merch•ndice
NOTICE TO'
• NO~tCETO
BIDDERS
CON RACTORS
400 METER TRA CK
STAT OF OHIO
FACILI TY
OEPARTMENT OF
I
IN
TRANSPORTATION
MEIGS LOCAL
Columbus, Ohio
SCHOOL DISTRICT
Juty 16, 1981
Sealed proposals wil l be Contract Sales Legal
rece ived by the Board of
Copy No. 82-799
Education of the M eigs
' UNIT PRICE
Local School District ·of
CONTRACT
Middleport. Ohio at the
Sealed propouls will be
Trea surer's Office until received at the office of the
12 :00 Noon on August 13, Director of the Ohio Oepar·
1982, and at tnat time tment of Transportation,
opened and r eady by the Columbus, Ohio, until10:00
Tr easurer imm ediately A.M., Ohio Standud Time,
ther eafter . tabulated, and Tuesday, August, tO, 1912,
a report thereof made by for improvements in:
the Trea surer to said
Meigs County Ohio, on
Board at its nex t meetinQ roads and facilities- MEG
on a dOO Meter Track - Forked Run Stale Park
Facility.
and Shade River State
Description of th e facility Forest, Ohio Department
will be located at Meigs of Natural Resources,, by
High School,
42091 resurfacing with aspnalt
Pomeroy Pik e. Pomeroy, concrete.
Ohio.
Pavement Width
Detailed ' specification$ '
"''
·k:J:.~rt
and instructions to bidders Varies.
Protect
may be obtained at the - Various
Treasurer's Off ice, 621 miles.
South Thi rd Avenu e. Mid·
"The date set for com·
dleport. Ohio 45760 .
pletlon ot this work shall be
A Certified
Check as set forth In the bidding
pav.aQie to the Treasurer of proposal."
the above
board of
Each bidder · shall· be
education or a satisfactory 1 required to file with his bid
bid bond executed by the a certified check or
bidder and the surety com · cashier' s Check lor an
pany . in an amount equal to amount equal to five per
five I S) percent of the bid cent of his bid, but in no
shall be submitted wllh event more than lift~
each bid .
thousand dollars. ot a bond
Said board of education for ten per cent of hiS bid,
r eserves the right to weive payable fo the Director .
informalities •. fo accept or
Bidders must apply, on
reject any and all , or, parts the proper forms, for
of an~ and all b!ds.
qualiflcallon. at least ten
No bids mar, be with· days prior to the date set
drawn for at east thirty for opening bids In ac·
P~.992·2259
130)
da y s after the cordance with Chapter 5525
scheduled cloSing tim e for Ohio Revised Code.
receipt of such bids.
Plans ~ and s~cific,atiom~
NEW LISTING - Fantastic house - Fantastic
are on file in the Depart·
Meigs Local Board
Price I· Eastern district. A five year old ranch house,
ment of Trans'p(!rtatlon and
of Education
the office of the District
three bedrobms, 1'h baths, patio, triple Insulation.
Jane Wagner,
Deputy Director.
Blended rate available of 12% With SJ.990 doWn
Treesurer
The Director reserves ' payment, 1395.« monthlY, lor 20 year term. Total ·
610 south Thi•d
the r~ht-to reject any and
price 139,900.
Avenue
alibis.: ~AVIDL. WEIR
Middleport, Ohio
~5760
NEW LiSTING- POMEROY AREA- Five acre
DIRECTOR
(614) 992-.1650
and four bedroom home. Fully Insulated, storms,
Rev. 8·17·73
,two WOOd burners to cut heating costs, two car
(7) 19, 26, 181 2, 9, 4tc
(7) 26 (8) 2, 2tc
oar age, outblilldings., garden space. All •this for
$27,000.

Curb Inflation
Pay·Cash for .
Classlfleds and .
SaveiJJ
.

' .

NEW LISTING- RICine- Throe rentals in oneunits with two bedrooms, one unit with three' '
bedrooms - S500 monthly rental potential. TVfO
units fumllhed, Aluminum siding , Stora~ building
ASking $10,000.
,
"
"

two

,
REALTORS:
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRt ........ .... ......1t1
JNn Truuell ........... .' •.. , .......... Ht-Htt
oonle Turner ..... . .. , ......... , .... tft-Jttl
Office ..••• . • • , ..••• • •• _. . , •... • ...•••. ....._

s.

I

AU ICES

*FIELD Till'S \

7· 1~· 1

. •Electric wOrk
•Custom Pole Btdgs.
•Roofing work
I~ Years Experience

Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
or 992-2282

1 female Beagle dog. Call
61067·77d.

NEW LISTING - Coun ·
try home and 52 acres .
Ma.tly wOOds, tresh air,
quiet, small barn, fen·
ces. minerals and 3
bedroom remodeled
home. Near Pomeroy .
For quick sale will toke
$23,500.

POOdle puppies.
245.5811 .

TUPPERS PLAiNS - 2
level lots, I room home,
3 or~ yrs. old. Has both,
gas furnace, equipped
kitchen, 2 liv ing rooms,
carpeting and some
thermopane windows.
Really nice for only
$31,500.

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy, On.
Ph. 992-2174
2·26·tfc

' St. Rt. 124 Pon~troy, OH

I

~II

614·

Adorabl e kittens. Four
black, two blue-gray. 614·
992-5265.
Newspapers .
To
any
organization that will pick
them up. 61H85·ol327.
6

Lostand Found

LOST balck &amp; white pony
vincinity of Teens Run·
Providence Rd. Reward.
Call 6tn56· 1~73 or 256·
6805.

CAR WASH- and land.
This will supplement
your Income with very
little time needed to run.
Only $15,000.

LOST Orange &amp; white cat
in vincinitv of Roadside
rest,
Upper Rt. 7.
REWARD . Call 614·388·
9994.

COUNTRY - But not
too far o~t on gOOd nard
road. Has 2 bedrooms,
batn, and new addition
with full basement and
new chimney for 2 wOOd·
burners. Asking$30,000.

FOUND Blue Heeler at Bob
Evans Canoe livery . I den·
lily and pay for ad. Call

AUTO&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

NO KIDDING, CAN
YOU
BEAT THE
ABOVE PRICES? ALL
REALTORS OFFICE.

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Housing
Headquarters

3 - 2~ · tfc

7 wk. old EngliSh Setter
puppies to gOOd home. Coil
~- 2510 atter ~ : 30.

61~ · 245 · 5047 .

STOLEN Stolen bicycle at
822 3rd. AVe., Gallipolis.
REWARD. Stanley Payne.
Call ~ · 7162 .

- - ----·- - -

Lost-2 Eastern H.S. class
rings. 1977 boys initials
NRH inside. 1979 girls
initials PKH inside. $20.
reward. 949·2461. Paula .
Female springer spaniel
lost in Traffic Circle area .
Reword ! 30~· 67S · 5630.

S&amp;W

SAI:ES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rt. 5G Eul
Guysville, Ohio
Aulhorlrld John Deere,
Ntw Holland, lush Hogo
• 1'arn1 Equipment
Dultr

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·1fc

7

Yard Sale
---·----·--- ·-

GUNSMITHING

FLEA Market Dpen ·air
Chillicothe Mall Shopping
Center, Chillicothe, Aug. 6·
' 7-8.

AIID CUSTDMIZIIIG
Ph. 992-7656
Re-Biue and Re-Finish
restock, Parts, Etc.

6 Family Yard Sale Monday &amp; Tuesday , 9 to4. 11/2
mi. out Georges Creek RD .
All size clothing &amp; mater·

STUART W4YNE
PULLINS.

S&amp;WTV
' AND
.APPLIANCE
Chester, Ohio
Ph. 91~69 or!IS-4312
Dewayne Wlttlams
&amp; Scottie Smith
AILmokes an&lt;! models
Antenna Installation
calls and shop
l•.,r•i•oe available.
7·8·1 mo. Pd.

All new. Buy direct.
48x72X14 $1 .99 sq. ft.
. Other sizes available

INSUlATION
VIIIYL &amp;

COIIOI'-1-&lt;WNO

ALUIIIIIUM SIDIIIG

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
. Windows
•New roofing

-· -

Public Notice

--·- -· - - - - -

NOTICE OF
APPOINMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On May 26, 1982, in the
Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 23768, Vic·
tor A. Bahr, 38814 TR 404,
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743

Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Combined Yard Sale . 500
Oak Dr ., Spring Valley
Est., Gallipolis. Furniture,
clothes, baby clothes, ap·
pliances. Aug . J,.t,S.
Yard Sale Sat. July 31 thru
Aug. 1, 2, &amp; 3. At Jack Neal
residence on Old R:t. 160 at
Evergreen. 3 miles from
Hospital, 1st rd to your
right past Kerr. Watch
signs. Men's &amp; womens
jeans, sizes 6 on up &amp; men
large size. games, jewelry,
all kinds of dolls, CB an ·
tenna and othe misc. items .
Sale cheap .
Yard Sale Monday fhru ?
1939 Chatham Ave . ,
Gallipolis.

,_c :. =

tiilp}'Yaiit'tcl

-::::

Director of Nursing for 136 .
Miller res. 34705 Whites hill bed, tong term car.e
Rd. Rulland · Ohio. Clean faclllt~ . Five years ex·
clolhlng·new weave rugs, perlence. two years of
toys, elec. range with new which must be In an ad·
burner and new wiring also minlstratlve capacity . BSN .
some glass wares and other preferred . Extensive
misc . If rain cancelled. benems . Salary com ·
Tlme9 a.m. to~ p.m .
mensurate with training
and experience. Call Per·
8 family yard sale·Aug . sonnet Director 130~) .675·
3,4,5. I mile New Lima Rd. 3230 or . write Lakin
Clothing, household.
Ha.pltal. Lakin, W.VA.
25250.
~family yard sale · Aug . 3 · ~·
5. 10·4 daily. S65 N. Front JOBS Overseas. Big money
Middleport, Oh . 61~ · 992 · fast. Job offers guaranteed
1-716·842-6000. Ext. 28.43.
- - - - - -- - - - - 8
Public Sate
R.N.' s· L .P.N.'s NEEOEO
&amp; Auction
NOW to fulfill requlremen·
- - -------...
Rick
Pearson , Ex · ts of I.C .F. Certification.
perlenced AUCTIONEER. Salary c&lt;&gt;mmensurate with
Estates, antiques, farm. training and experience·
household. Licensed Ohio· Extensive benefits In·
paid
wv. Buying antiques. 304· elud i ng
hospltalllation. retirement
773·5785, 773·9185.
program, no penalty sick
leave, 3 week vacation to
Auction every Fri . night at start. More. Contact Per·
the Hartford Community sonnet Director 30~ · 675 · 3230
Center. Truckloa-. of new or write Lakin Hospital,
merchandise every week. Lak in, wv 25250.
Conslgments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome .
Richard DIRECTOR OF NURSING
Reynolds Auctioneer. 275· for 136 bed, long term care
facility . Five years ex·
3069.
perience, two years Of
which must be In on ad·
- wante~ ! ~!!_ul'_ ::-::_ ministrative capacity . BSN
Extensive
WANTED TO BU'I' Old fur · prefered .
niture and Antiques of all benefits . Salar~ com ·
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, mensutate with tra ining
and experience . Call Per·
~ · 3159 or 256· 1967 in the
sonnet Director 304·675·3230
evenings.
or write Lakin Hospital,
Lakin, WV 25250.
Buy ing
Gold.
Silver .
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware . Dailv WAITRESS, maids, bar·
quotes .available . Also tenders &amp; clerks wanted.
coins &amp; coin supplies for Write qualification &amp; phone
sale . Spring Volley Trading number to : Job Placement,
Co .• Spring Valley Plaza, P.O. Box 102, Henderson,
wv 25106.
446·8025 or ~46 · 8026 .

... ----- -·---- -

C

We pay cash for late model
c lean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson
446·0069
BEDS· IRON , BRASS. Old
furniture . gold. silver
dollars, wood ice boxes.
stone jars, antiques, etc .•
Complete
households .
Write : M.D. M iller . Rt . 4,
Pomeroy. Oh. Or 992·776IJ.
Gold, silver, sterling ,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, M iddleport . 992·
3476 .

nity, toys, m isc .

CLIPADANDGET20%
OFF ON RE·BLUING
OFFER EXPIRES B·ll:
82 ·
7·26·1

estate of E:xecutor
Wilma V.
wa!r appointed
of
~=========~=========:l~=====~~=::J the
Bahr. deceased. late of

J&amp;E
CONTRACTING

ROOFING

OLD FURNITURE , bed,,
iron, brass, or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards oi all types.
Tables, round or square.
WOOd ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Wi II buy
complete household. Gold.
silver, old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and
etc . Indian Artifacts of all
t~pes . Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin 992·
6370 .

Receptionlst·clerk . Local
physicians office, full lime.
Write P.O.Bo• 276, Pt.
Pleasant. WV 25S50 .

12

Situations Wanted

- -··

-------

Private room and board,
and laundry for elderly
only. 6 14·992·6022 or 992·
6748.

13

Insurance
..

-·--

--~-

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a centur~ .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in ·
dividual needs . Contact
Kail Burleson, agent .
Phone 446·2921 .

15 __S ~ hOOlS_I~!!'U_t!!O.!' _
Karate tne ultimate in self
defence all private lessons,
Men, women, &amp; children.
Instruction thru black belt.
Also available Karate
uniforms puching and
kick i ng bags. and protec·
OLD wicker furniture, old tive equipment . Jerry
qu il ts&amp; linens. caii6104S · Lowery &amp;
Associates
94-48.
Karat e Studio,
143
Burlington Rd., Jackson,
Oh . Call614'286·3074.

.. .. _=

18 _-- ~~!.~~~~-- ­
Lawn Mowing no yard to
big or small. Reliable and
dependable. For estimate
call ~46 · 3159 alter 6PM 256·
1967.

R MASH
CONSTRUCTION

H. L WRITESEL

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

licensed &amp;Bonded
PH. 992-7201

. . . .. . . ..
.....................
~

BACKHOE
·•'·poR.HIRE

. CANDlELIGHT INN

_
Dtlfl._

........... tar-.,

742·2328

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

NEW Lt5'1'1Nta- POMEROY A"EA - A really
nice thret~ ~room t~ome with a new chain link fen·
ce for play area for the kids. Appx. 1'1'&gt; acre lOt. ·
Range- Ref., carpeting. $27,000.

~ - 20· 1fc

~ · d61.

v·lrisale ·
-----------Aug. s th and 6th at Artnur
.

H¥waiiiecC~ :_
Barn Yard Sale Aug . 2-3·4, HIGH
SCHOOL
2 miles off 325 on Roy GRADUATES / SENIORS.
~-.,..-------it! 38814 TR 404, Long Bottom, Holcomb Rd. Childs You can earn over SSSO.OO
Ohio 45743.
1,.------""""'iil;,...----...-. rclothes. bedroom furniture, per month while learning a
Robert E . Buck · antiques, misc .
valuable ski ll like com· Trash collection &amp; hauling.
•
Probate Judge/ Clerk
puler repairer, sheet metal Call446·4o480 .
m 19. 26; 18) 2 3tc
Yard Sale 834 !St. Ave. worker, or refrigeration.
Gallipolis . Aug. 3 &amp; 4. Tue. Plus vou will have a secure Carpener
Work.
part time job with the Ar· remodeling or repair. Wall
&amp; Wed . 9tos .
CU5tom kitchens and
my National Guard after paneling and ceiling tile.
•backhoe
schooling. Benefits include
bathrooms: Remodelina,
•G~tters
Yard $ale 2002 Chatham St. a . $1 ;500 .00 enlistment Phone 992·27S9 .
• excavating.
add-ons,
new
homes,
•
Downspouts
Aug.
5·6·7.
Mini
bike,
new
• ~epflc· systems "
bonus, $35,000 life in·
pl~mbing, electric, siding.
• Ne.w or Repair
tricycle, clothing, dishes, surance and free tuition to Will do daytime babysit·
*A water, sewer
ePainting
toys. jars, Avon, misc.
&amp;eas lines
any college or trade school ting for children over 2 yr.
•dump truck
FREE ESTIMATES
in West Virginia . In· old age. Call ~ · 6248 .
• limestone
terested persons may call
Yard
Sale
Wed
.
&amp;
Thurs.
Ph.H2-2791
lOAM to 5PM. 5 m iles out !30~) 675·3950 or in west Will do babysitting in my
or Mf.2263
St . RT. 218 . Third Trailer Virginia call toll free t-800· home. Prefer children un·
on rt. after passing Bull 6-42·3619.
7·14-ttc
der 3 yr. Sl.OO per. hr. Call
3·29·1fc
Skin . Baby bed, video
~ · OS17 .
game, c lothes. shoes. misc . Mature women to stay with
..
_.. . "
,..
elderly . couple, room. Eaperienced person will
Yard Sales on 588 in board, .plus salary . Call614· paint houses, roofs, barns,
3
Announcements
beautiful downtown Rod· 379·2609 or 6 14-379·2593,
etc . Call ~ - 7504 .
SWEEPER and sewing nev Tuesday thru Friday.
machine repair, parts, and
Mature,
responsible Backhoe &amp; dozer work, W.
supplies.
Pick up and 18S S. Front St. Middleport, babysitter needed in my H. Lowman, 304-882·2844 or
delivery, Davis Vacuum Ohio. Aug . 2·5, 9· ~. Baby home for 20 and 5 month old 882·2004 evenings.
Between Cheshire &amp;
Cleaner, one half mile up clothes size 3 to A. Womens girls. Flexible hours. own
Middleport, Obfo
Georges Creek Rd . Call large sizes clothes. Whet· transportaion, references.
~- 029~ ..
..........d..-iftl
PRESENTS
nots and many other items. Call ~·6256. 9 to 11 week·
Or r anylhing else
. , _ _..llljjlt
days.(C)
want to do, because
M llttttll . . . .
IIOik
live with a carpenter.
~nnt•
hunger and lose · Sale· 2·3·4.
Pearl
St .,
21 - - - - euS"i~esS -· ~--'His name is At Tromm.
New Shape Racine. Toots, log chains, RN ·Ful time straight day
tlo&lt;t•iclllllllk
M
II Pm
·- _~pporlunitL ·- and Hydrex binders, stereo, coltec· shift available. Apply at
(ftll Ellilllltnl
Fri. I Sill P.M.-10 P.M.
. Fruth Phar· tibile•. bOOks and pain· Ohio Job Service, 45 Olive LOOK lNG lor people WhO
MDlitfti \1 Ptlct
· Rutland, Oh.
want to earn· between $500
tings.
St, Gollipoll•.
IllS IIOITif'l lAIII
7· 15·1 mo. pd.
and
S50 ,000
monthly
992-6215 or 992·7l14
IW.·Sil....... l through
this
"newest
and
Pomeroy,Oblo
olf
Lessons
.
John
4 family. Aug. 3 and 4. 2 Attention RN' S· Pomeroy
Drillt . . . . [ado
fastest growing company
miles
from
5
Pts.
on
Flat·
H
.C.
C.
now
has
opening
for
llilftllflht*
swoods Rd. Womens-38·40 full and part time RN for 3 in the nation". Call30~· 675 ·
eon, ...... , ... ........ ll~======9=·30=·=11~cj Teaford. Chester, Ohio.
clothes.
Antiques, stone lo 11 and 11 to 7 shifts. 1293.
O,. ....fri.
PUBLIC NOTICE Public
jars, dishes. tires, and Upgraded salary and shift
Z:eiJ&amp;.Uut.
Notice for Dark Diamond
dllferenlial. Contact Nancy 2.2 _ _ -~ney to Loa_n __
SillS.. .......z-JD L •.
Coal Corp.. Shade. Onio wheels.
VanMeter director of Nur·
VInyl &amp; Aluminum
45776. An application is at
REFINANCE
PHONE 992·9913'
the Meigs county Recor· Smal l effeciency Apt. 1 sing. 614·992·6606 .
or purchase
SIDING
your home. 30 year fixed
' •
ll-1 ....
der'solflcefor a strip mine working person only. 614·
rate. wva. &amp; Ohio. Leader
operation, Frac e 3; T·2N; 992·5738.
Immediate opportunities Mortgage, 77 E . Stale St.,
R·13' W; Salisbury Town·
for Avon representatives in Athens, Oh. 614·592·3051.
-Dozen
ship, Meigs County, Ohio.
these neighbors···Middlep·
-Backhoes
Interested people can see Car port sale·Mon., Tues., ort, Pomeroy, and the
-Dunlp Trucks
Aug.
2
and
3.
9
a.m.
till???
ll - -Prolesslonaithese forms and maps at
1
-Lo-loy
GOOd and used misc. Items. Township areas in Meigs
"Buutlfui, Custom ,
Servlcll
lite
Meigs
County
Recor·
Co.
Also
Addison,
Cheshire,
-Trencher
Tyree Blvd. Racl~ Ohio.
Built O•rttll"
der'sOiflce anytime .
SprlnglleiS,
Racoon.
Hun·
-Water
LH Lee Res.
C&amp; L Bookkeeping
Colli lor lrH sldlnt I
,I
•
tlnglon and Morgan Twp.
-Sewer
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
esll!ftAIII, Ht-2111 ' 01'~
In Gallla co. call collect for all'types of businesses.
-Gas Lines
94t-:1160.
'
41amily yard sale. 3 and~ 614-698-7111.
-S.plic Systems
Carol Neal
446-3882
No Syllday Calli
of Aug . on Salem St.
l _______________
Laree or
Jobs
Rulland .
Companion for elderly iGUNSMITH, " licensed",
PH.
3·11-tlc
woman. Live ·in, light ·complete
repair,
Several family yard sale· housew9rk.
Send ex·
Boso's, Great Benet Thurs. perlence, salary expected refinlskhlng &amp; hot blueing.
Aug. 5th thru. Sunday 8th. to Rober! Wlnn. 27«l.,Crone 304·576·2505.
_ _ _ __ _ _.:__,
10 a.m. till dark.
Rd., Zenia, Ohio -15385.
•

MID SUMMER
SAVINGS
ON
REMNANTS
ENDS OF ROLLS
GRASS CARPET
AND SAVE $2 - $5
N SHAG CARPETS

·=w=r .

TOM HOSKINS ·
Ph. 949·2160 or 949-2322

5·9 week old kittens. Call

NEW LISTING
Duple• In Mlddlep_ort .
Live In one, rent lt'le
other.' All utilities arti
separate . Convenient
location and gOOd tax
shelter. Only S27 .000.

STEEL BUILDINGS

\
........._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;.a

.• ~
_
P_
Ub-_
li_
c N_-ou~==-=_ -_
- ~Ubli C Notice- .&gt;
LEGAL NOTICE
Olf ice. 621 South Third
The Ta)( Budget for Avenu e. M iddleport, Ot1io
Meigs County , Oh io, for the on or before 12 :00 o'c lock
•~·fiscal year 1983. was adop· noon on Augus112, 1982 .
.. ted on July 13, 1982, by the
The Board of Education
·' .Meigs County Board of reser ves the r ight to accept
. or r ejec t an y and a ll bid s.
commissioners.
A summary of said Ta x
Budget may be reviewed in Jane Wag ner ,
the office of the Meigs Tr easure r
Countr Commissioners bet· M eigs L oc al
ween he nours of 8:30AM . Sc hool Dis tr ict
and 4:30 PM on or after 621 South Third
J August 2. 1982. at the Cour· Avenue
i t house, Second Street. M iddleport. Oh io
~ ~'omeroy , Ohio .
45760

Dooltp,

BOGGS

SERVIC_E
BARN

Galtia County
Are,, Code"4

MocGrtltr,

s,,.,, r...

. .Jensive remodeling

; 1' '''"" TCOVERS
•VINYL TOPS
,
•CONVERTIBLE TOPS
•CARPETS
•A Complete Line of
Automobile Upholstery
7·1· 1 mo. pd.

following telephone exchanges. . .

w. .,,.,

And Hollie Maintenance
• ROOflnt of all types
.Sidlftl
e Remodetlne
• Frq tsllmatts
e 20 ,Y rl. exjoerltnce

Roger Hysell
CONSTRUCTION I
GARAGE
· New Homes - ex-

I
I

•PRO SHOP

Phone
1-(614)-992·3325

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the smallest
Heater Core to the
L.1rgest Radiator.

$$ Hole-tn·One$$
•JOHN TEAFORD
Chester, OH.

CountY

Common Pleas Court.

~

nAutos for Sale
n- Trucks for Sale
73-Vans &amp; 4 WD
74·Motorcycles
IS· Boats &amp; Motors

KLUB

7·28·1 mo . .

Classified pages cover the
51· Household Goods
52·CB, TV &amp; Radio Equipment

· LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM

61~ · 915-4345

..... .....
..- ................
l ·Ca rd of Thank s (prtld 1n itdvan ce)
2 Car d of T llanks ( pa 1d 1r'l ,ldvilnce)
3 A nnounce ments
4-Giveawa v

KOUNTRY

j

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classtfied Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

21 Busi ness Opportun i ty
22 Money to L oan
23 P r o f ess i o n ~ I Scrv •ces

QUAIL

Ctelt La Bonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
Lotlg Bo!lom, Oh. 45611

The Daily Sentinel

·~

• washers
• Dllh ·
WA.IMrl
• Rantll • Rtfrlgtrat·
ora
eDryera
PARTS

Quail of all ages
available up to 8 weeks
In any quantity,
Mature Quail Available.
Ready to'TurttOut

,~------------------------------------------------------------------_.~

.._ .

• •

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
Installation.
Resideiltla I
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing fqr
sale may place an ad In this
column. There will be nO
charge to the advertiser.

VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E.2nd U·

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

US£"

. KEN'S
APPLIANCE

SERVICE

Divorces granted

charges

FOR

~LECTRIC

man

Two actions • for divorce were
flied, one divorce was granted and
a custody agreement on a minor
child was reached In the Court•.
Tonya E. Davis, 39515 Keebaugh
Road, Pomeroy, has filed for dl·
vorce from Jason J . Davis, Pomeroy. She
grOss negl!!ct of
duty and extu eme cruelty and asks
tor custody of two minOr clilldren.
Anna Jane Stater, Route 1, AI·
bany, has rued for divorce from
Marshall Allen Slater, Route 1, Box
147, Albany .• Shealsoclwgesgross
neglect of duty and extreme cruelty
and asks for custody ot a mlnlor
cblld.
A divorce was granted to Laura
Dellavalle from Michael Dellavalle
and custody and support of three
minor cblldren was granted to the

4

Business senrices

the

The Dally

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I lWinted
&lt; lForSale
( !Announcement
( lForRent ·

17.

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_ _ _ __

·CARPENTER
SERVICE

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==~...r""

_,.,.Iii.. ""'

V. C. YOUNG Ill

\ ,

1I

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

32.

u. ~------u. - - - - - , . ,jjj..l34.

""DillY ........,

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

. BISSELL
SIDING CO~

~1.

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YOUNG'S

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UtilitJIIIIdlnp

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weed llulltll... Md6.

:

PU IUIUNICS

111C.rtlt.

Pomeror, Oil•..,.,

- -:::::=;:===

KIRBY
SWEEPER
PARTS&amp;
SERVICE
PHONE ·

'(314) 273-4191

DUGAN'S
ALIGNMENT

&amp; ELECT~ON,IC
SPJNWHEEL
BALANCE
Belr Frant-End •
Service
•
De~enlhtble, • guar·
1ntHc1 WorJ&lt;. ' yra. E•·

Ifill._ Oh.·

per1ence. •
SR 124, !I

P:or Appt. 74~·21157

7; 1·1 .~.

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'·

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

I

.PERMANENT'
HAIR REMOVAL
Ptof~tona(
Electroly'sls
CentW. A.M.A. approved,
Doctor referals, by aponly. 30H7s-

Yard sale-Tues., and Wed.,
the ..3rd and 4th. Mary
Layne
residence .
Cheshlre,Ohlo.

~ ~.'

s•le -~ - ·----

. . Helmes for

]I

-~

-·- ...

1n ground concrete pool on
2 acre lot. Alto has a 3 bdr.
olr condllloned houllll with
full ltasemenl, 2 WB
tlreplaces, · new carpet.
would consider lower
valued property In tro~cle 'or
will finance with low down
payment ancl 10'6 Interest.
Located 123 Garfield Ave.
Call ~ · 1546.
For sale by ow~r. small
house on 1/2 acre lot, $6,900
with reasonable down
payn~6nr will consider land
contract. 5 miles from town
with electric and rvral
water, must Install your
own bath room. From Rt.
218, first house on Kriner
Ridge Rd. Phone number
In window If Interested.
House 7 rm . 1 1/2 stories,
woodburner, 1 3/~ acres,
Ewlngton , Oh . Large
garage ,
several
outbuildings, 523,000. Land
contract 10~ Interest,
$5,000 down. Call 614-388·
8595.
2 bdr . fully carpeted,
fireplace, over 1/2 acre,
city school,
9 1/2,.
assumable loan, S28,500.
Call ~·8681.
Middleport-525 Broadway.
s rooms, basement,
garage. Robery Wlnn, 2740
Crone Rd., Zenia Ohio.

45385.
3 bdrm . ranch, clOse to
Meigs H.S. with full
basement, 1 11'&gt; bath, family
room. fully carpetep.
Garage, over 1 ec~e
ground . Blended rate 1..,.,
Call 61~· 992-5438 or 992·

2064.
Large home situated on ,a
nice lot in Syracuse, OhlO.
Good neighbor hOOd, wtll
accomodate 3 or 4 Slnglt
men or single women.
Private rooms with COif\·
mon lounge and cooklllg
areas plus l'h bath's.
Available before school
opening Aug . 15ore SChopf
th. $450. per mo. plus
utilities. Call614·992·6284or
992-5732 or 992· 7671.
•
2 bd.room. 80 x 100 lot. 1
small building. Garden
space . In Mason behind
laundry mat. S8000 down,
take over payments or
$26,000. Call77l·5089 .
FDU R bedroom, excellent
neighborhood, huge family
room, bar &amp; wet sin~. 30467S·3779 between 5·9 p.m.
Beautifully restored Vic·
torian, 5 bedrooms, four
fireplaces, ornate carved
woodwork, air condition,
insulated, owner financing,
304-675-6999.
ONE bedroom home, Hart·
ford, on two lots, phone 304·
773·5215 .
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dition, 3 bedrooms, family
room with firepalce, cen·
tral air, basemen!, phot:le
304-675· 1542.
Lovely remodeled · 3
bedroom home, basement,
fenced backyard, carpeted,
sided, storm windows, near
schools. 30H75·ol338 .
New l bedroom home for
sale near Krodel Park.
$2S,OOO . 30H75-6230 . No
Sunday calls .
32
.

Mobile Homes
•·

Sale
--·-·for
--·---

TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED-MOBILE
HOMES, CARS, TRUCKS.
GALLIPOLIS . CHECK
OUR PRICES. CALL ~7S72.
CLEAN USED MOBI'LE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLI POLIS, RT
3S. PHONE ~ - 3868 .
1980 Windsor 1~x70, new
cond. Deluxe kitchen, largt
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hidden utll . room.
379·2310.
New Moon 1970 model,
12x65 with 12' e•pondo, 11111
up in local park with sklr·
ting &amp; steps. Reedy to
move into $6,500.' Call 446-

3W .
- --

--·--·-·- -

10x55 Great Lake 62 model,
eir cond., washer &amp; dryer,
fu lly lurnlshed . Call 4463783 .
1980 Nashua 14x70 expando
dining &amp; living room, 3
bdrm .• 1 1/2 bath, central
air. Would like lo sell on
land contract. Caii446-831S.
1980 BAYVIEW OELU)SE
cent. air, fireplace, garden
tub, underpinning with• or
without applla. Call 4466211 or 61~·388·9916 .
Ux65, 1911 2 bdr., Ventura,
ex. cond. Moving must Mil,
S13,000. Call 446-4719 or 614·
256·6265.
- ~·

1978 Regent 14•70 totel
electric, 3 bdr .• In Will AIC,
new carpet &amp; pannellng,
skirting Included. SI,SOO.
Call ~-0511.

p.s114x.52 Falrmont2 Bdr.,
.bay window, make en of·
27 acres with house near ; fe~. will sacrifice. 2&lt;15-9213
VInton for sate or trade. 1 or2~H06~.
Call ~- 8615.
1977 Festival Trailer. u x
10.
t1 lnternt.d,
Two bedroom. IOX100 101, 1 call 992·7710.
small building, garden
space, Mason, behind taun·
MOBILE HOMES MOVED
dren~at, .SI,OOO down and
Licensed
Insured. Call
t~ke over payments or
:10-4'576·2711.
$26,000, 304·773·5Cie9.
31

Homtt for Sa.l e

'-----------------sn,ooo..
a.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
ll

They'll Do It Every Time

Mobile Homes
for Sale

CLEARANCE SALE OF
1982 MODELS! SAVE
S1000.! ! 14&gt;70 Mansion 3
bd.room . 2 full baths,
upgrade turn., total elec .,
delu xe m etal exterior, bay

Sl

VACATO'II

~····

-------

16'&amp;AN
t..AIM;I(···A

BEMCO mallre"es or box
spri ngs, full or twin. S58. 6
Piece N&lt;lugahyde heavy
wood li ving room suite
$595. Pillow arm sofa &amp;
chair $295 . Roll top desk,
dark &amp; light, $189. Bunk
beds, complete. include
mattress, $t99. Complete
water bed snap with 10
bedroom suites on display,
starting pr ice 522'1. Up lo
$2500. Big daddy coc tail &amp;
end tables SSO. Wall -A-Way
recliners $169. and up. La Z·Boy rec li ners in stock .
USED FURNITURE 5 pc .
a. 1 pc . dinette sets,
bedroomsuite Hollywood
style, bunk beds, Flair' Furniture &amp; Design . GallipoliS
Ferry , WV . Open 9·6.
Phone 304-675·1371 .

~·.-et···.AH'

windows front and rear,

Hli SttTAT H
H&amp;ltT T.QUi-M
'1lfS 011&amp; IS A

$13,950 . 14 • 65 Mansion 3
bd. room , fron t kitchen with
banana bar, upgrade fur·
nitur,e, deluxe metal, bay

~~116

~e~

windows front and rear.

roulJC&amp;s•-..

S12,950. Above prices in·
elude delivery and set-up.
See at Kingsbury Home
Sa l es.
1100 E . Ma in
P om e roy or c all 614-9927034.

12&gt;60 Buddy mobile home
, E xce llen t cond .-washer

and dryer, stove,

new

refr if., ni ce furniture. patio
built on utili ty room . $8500.
614·992-2684 or 992·2717 .

MONDAY
8/2i82

M etal sheets for all
bui lding purposes. Flat
porcelian enamel coated.
4x8 thr u 4 x 12. Prices, $7.00
to $9.60. 6t H6,7_·.:.
308
::--::5·,----S6
Pets for Sale

EVENING

1973 14x70 Grandville has
large rooms plus laundry
room, must be moved, 304882·2820.

42

Eureka : 20x60 mobile
home, 2 bdr., riverfront lot,
ref . &amp; dep., adults. Call614643-2644.

1973 HOLLYPARK , 14x68,
2 bedroom, set on half acre
lot, all electric, central air,
6&gt;10 metal out building,
many extras, call 304-6755576.

2 bedroom trailer. Real
nice, adults only . Brown's
Trailer Park, Minersville.
614-992·3324.

LOT CLEARANCE SALE,
all priced as wholesale.
0nly 2·1982 models left. 12'
wfde, 2 bedrooms, all electric , $7995 . U' x70', 3
bedrooms, 1&amp; baths, 2' x6'
outside walls, best Insulated
home
made,
$18,900. Low down payment
or trade In, bank financing
available. Used 2 bedroom,
12 'x55', mobile home,
$4500. All State Modular
Homes, half way between
H'untlngton &amp; Pt. Pleasant
on St. Rt. 2. 304-576-2711 .
USE D

MOBILE

2 bdrm unfurnished mobile
home . Cheshire 304·7735882.
2 bedroom mobile home in
New Haven. Adults Only ,
No Pets. 304-675·1452 after

3.
-----~--­

3 bedroom trailer with two
car garage $250. month
plus deposit. Kitchen furnished. 304-576-2682 after 7
p.m .

-;===;:==:::=:;==::::=:

HOME .

44

4 room unfurniShed apt. all
carpeted, utilities paid,
adults only no pets. Call
446·3437 .

Farms for Sale
40 acres, 6 rm. house and
barn, tobacco base on St.
Rt. · 218, 7 112 miles from
clly . Call 61045-9222 after
6.
FARM for sale, 65 acres on

Fees

Branch,

District, Mason
call304-576-2568.

Apartment
for Rent

- - -'-"'--='--'----- -

576-2711 .

Hannan
County ,

Furnished
apartment ,
adults. Call 304-675-2257.
Mason · four room apt.
$215 . includes utilities,
Mason 2·story house, 4
bedroom. 2 baths, Iaroe
back yard.304· 882·2405 or
304·882-2447 .

RATLIFF'S POOL CEN·
TE R Pools sale, supplies &amp;
installat ion. 403 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipolis, Oh . Call 4466579. tn ground· Ablove
ground.

In Middleport one and two
bedroom furnished opts.
304-882·2566.

ADDITIONAL DISCOUN·
Tl
LIMITED
TIME
ONLY! THE BIG, NEW
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY·
SIZE POOLS WHICH INCLUDE DECK , FENCE,
FILTER &amp; WARRANTY
ARE NOW AVAILABLE
FOR . ONLY $999 . IN •
STALLATION &amp; FINANCING AVAILABLE . FIR·
ST COME, FIRST SERVE .
CALL 1-800·624-8511 (OhiO),
1-800-642 -3053 (WV) .

45

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping
room,
5125,
utilities pd, 919 2nd. Ave,
Gallipolis. Single male,
range &amp; refrlg, 5200. Call
446·4416 after 7PM.
Rooms with cooking, cable,
air, S40 a week. 304-773·
5651 .
Space for Rent

46

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.
Small trailer spaces .
Mason. 304-773-5651 .

..... . . " ...... .
o .

I

o

.,

._ ,

•

"

..

Efflency apartments 1st
floor &amp; 2nd. floor . Call 446·
0957, 729 2nd
Ave ..
Gallipolis.

51

Furnished efficiency, $135,
uti Illes pd, share bath, 701
4th . Ave., Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 alter 7PM.

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gallipolis. 9x12 linoleum
ruo $22. 3 piece living room

Household Goods

suites

FARM for sale by owner,
beautiful 143 acre farm
located on black top Tribble Rd. 'h mile from Rt. 62.
Arbuckle,
WV
ap ·
proximately 70 acres
ti llableland, 8 room house,
barn· &amp;
other small
buildings, mineral rights
included, 304-458-1078.

o

couch-love

seat-

lsi floor furnished apart- chairS199. Call446-3159 .
ment, adults preferred. ref.
&amp; dep. reQuired. Call 631 GOOD
USED
AP 4th Ave., Gallipolis.
PLIANCES - washers,

dryers,

refrigerators,

Skaggs
Ap Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath, ranges .
clean, no pets, adults on tv, pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel .
dep. req. Call446-1519.
446-7398.

Furnished apt., 7 tteil A.ve. ,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
SOfa, chair, rocker , ottoman, 3 tables, (extra
heavy by Frontier) , $685.
Sofa, chair and loveseat,
Furnished efficiency, $150, $275. Sofas and chairs
lS
LOIS &amp; Acreage
utilities pd, 919 2nd Ave. , priced from $285. to $795.
One and on.&gt;-half acres ap-· Gallipolis. 2 rooms, single Tables, $38 and up to $109.
prox., 600ft. road frontage, male. Call 446·4416 after Hlde-a-beds,$340., queen
near Centerpoint. $3,000.00. 7PM.
size, $380. Recliners, 5175.
Phone 614-682·6944.
to$295., Lamps from $18. to
Small furnished house for 1 $65. 5pc. dinettes from $79 .,
Two acre lots-150 ft . road or 2 adults only . Call 446· to $385. 7 pc .. S189. and up.
Wood table w ith 4 chairs,
frontage,
city water, 0338 .
$219 up to $495. Desk $110.
behind 84 Lumber. Call304Unfurnished apt. In Crown H~tches, $300. and $375.,
675·6873 or 675·3618.
City . Call 446-7838 after ma61e or pine finish.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
28 acres. tobacco allot· 5PM.
Cherry, $795. Bunk bed
ment, mineral rights, no
complete with mattresses,
buildings , $9,500. Call 304- H'UD available 2 bdr. 5250. and up to $395. Cap·
deluxe, kitchen furnished, fain' s beds, $275. complete.
675·6851.
good location, utilities par· Baby beds, $99. Mattresses
tially paid . 5 rm house for or bOx springs, full or twin,
rent. Residential and com- $58., firm, $68. and $78.
eeatals
mercial properties for sale Queen sets, $195. 4 dr.
or tease . A-One Real chests, S42. 5 dr . chests,
Estates, Carol · Yeager, $54, Bed frames, S20.end
41
Houses for Rent
Realtor. Call304-675-5104 or S25., 10 gun - Gun cabinets,
House, 120 3rd . Ave., 675-5386.
$350 ., dinette chairs S20.
Gallipolis. 2 bdr ., gas heat,
and $25. Gas or electric
dep. req . The Wiseman
$325 .
Baby
Furnished apt. 3 rooms &amp; ranges,
Agency, 446-3643.
bath, newly furnished, matresses, $25 I $35, bed
$185. Call 446-1615 or 446- frames S20, $25, I $30. Used
Furniture -- bookcase,
1243.
Unfurnished house. 3 bdr .,
ranges and TV' s. 3 miles
Rodney Vi llage II. Ref.
req ., $200. Call 446-4416 af- 3 room furnished apt. $250. out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
ter 7PM.
month includes utilities. to 7pm, Mon. thru Fri ., 9am
Inquire at Meigs Inn in tospm, Sat.·
446-0322
Pomeroy .
Large n ice house . Call 61A·
388-9909 .
3 bd.rooni apt., Middleport. Gen. Elect. 2 spd., avacodo
nice .
$150. mo. and Security dep. washer. extra
Whirlpool apartment size
For sale or r ent attractive 4 992-5692.
washer. $90 each. Call 614brd . home in city limits.
256-1207.
Full basement, FR, DR ,
fully carpeted, assumable 3 room furnished Apt. in
loan, low down payment, Middleport. $225. per mo. Early American floral LR
$325 mo . rent. Call 446·1323, Utilities inc . 614-992-3190.
suite, brown swivel rocker.
after 5.
maple Ethan Allan dough2 bedroom furnished apt. in boy end · tables, coffee
S r'm house, new Doxol fur· Middleport. $205 month, table, lamp, hard rock
maple dinette set, dry sink,
nance, newly redecorated, inc. utilities. 992·7177 .
desk. Call614-245·9132.
close to Rio Grande. Cali'
Pomeroy, $75 . deposlf.
614-245-5329.
S125. mo. rent. Walk to
Very nice 2 bd.room fur· Powells. 592-5991.
nished house. overlooking
the river . Adults only . Apt. In Pomeroy. Convenient to shopping. $125.
Minersville. 614-992·3324.
mo . plus utilities. Adults.
No
pets . 614-992 -3201.
'2 ~d . room house In Meson.
Fully carpeted. Big yard . Lorenzo D. Davis.
$175. per mo. and utilities.
Small effec lency Apt. 1
614·949·2619.
working person only. 614MODERN one story, two 992·5738.
bedroom house located 21h
miles from downtown 2 bedroom apt.ln Mason.
Gallipolis on route 141'. Fur- Adults only. No pets. 304nace . heal and air con· I 675-1452 after 3.
~!Ilion,
·range
and
refrigeratOr. $275. 1month, 1
$100. deposit. Reference.
304-675 -3655.
Gallipolis . 3 rooms, $200,
water paid . Call446·4416 after 7PM.

c amper 26 foot Air stream.
gOQII condition. 304-6755279.

11

BAR size pool table w ith all
equipment, $500. Call 304882-3134 in the day, 882·2A81
after
5.
1978 22' TERRY travel
trailer, self contained, air·
conditioned, sleeps 6, new
condition. 304-882-3951 or
882-2811 .

18,000 BTU air conditioner,
8 HP riding mower,
gravely tractor, electric
stove, l CB's, 304-882·3104.
TIRED of being "all gum-

-·-- - - - --

6} _ Far!!!_~qulp~~!. :::Montgomery Trailer sales.
614·669-4245, Farm trailers,
see you at the Mason Countv Fair.

A KC German Shepherd 1978 TRAILMASTER 4·
puppies Dame Is a grand- horse 16ft. gooseneck stock
daugther Of US &amp; Canadian trailer. Plywood lined,
Grand VIctor Champion slats, two tack boxes,
Lance of Fran-Jo, Sire $3,000.00, 304-882-2632 .
solid black grandson · of
Grand VIctor Champion Gravley tractor w·mower,
Carolons
Phantom
V sulky - and rototiller $875.
LeBarland . Puppies $100 304-675-2119.
each. Call614·675-7771.
AKC REg. Cocker Spaniel,
small toy poodle. Had all
shots, wormed, has health
record . Your choice for
$125 ea . Caii30H75-7569.
Young Rabbits for sale.
$5.00 each, AKC miniature
Schnauser. male, for stud
servl.ce. Call446-4680.

-........ ......
_.. . ... .

For sale-Used R 40 Ditch
Witch trencher. 614-694·
7842 .

&amp;

61

··· ~

tluestaell

Farm Equipment

'SUMMER SHOWDOWN'
JIVIDENS FARM EQUIP-

M

E

N.

T

446·1675
Long tractor, Vermeer
balers, &amp; Hay equipment,
bale movers, rotary tlllers$1039.00, wagons, disc, post

diggers &amp; drivers, seeders,
rotary cutters, blades,
gates, cultivators &amp; front
end loaders.
And see us to get your parts
&amp; complete service.
USED EQUIP :
IH Hydro 70, Ford 2000,
Ford Jubilee, 165 MF,
Massey Harris Pony, 70
Oliver, 185 A.C. D4006

Duetz,

plows,

disc,

JD

med up" from the symp- manure spreader. Ford 501

tons of such things as · mower, 19 ft. camping
headaches, constipation, trailer.
arthritis, allergies, and We buy used eQUipment.
obesity? Call 304·675-1293
for herbal assistance froln Small utility trailer, cast
wheel type, 1952 Ferguson
Natura life.
30 farm tractor with 511.
1 roll barbwire, chain link brush hog . Calf eve. 446·
fence gate, chicken ·wire, 0254.
woven wire with parts
scrap lumber, old air con· Riding lawn mower, SHP
ditloner, 14 bales hay
Huffy, good cond., $290.
304-675-4624.
Call 614·379-2?29.

sso.

Ruger no. 1 338 Winchester Ford mower. GOOII cond. 6
mag. with 2x7 Redfield. 11: cutter bar. 3 pt. hlli:h.
Phone 304·675_-5335.
614-985-3538.
'

I

Autos tor Sole
•
1971 VW body, 3&lt;' '-675·3626.

71

HARTS Usea Cars, New
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 tess expensive cars In
stock .
1973 Gremlin. Runs, needs
bodY work $100. 304-675..
7349.

Moving to Florida, must
sell, 1975 Pinto, 2 dOOr
sedan. Book prlce$1425 will
sell for $750. See at 2625 JefLivestock
63
ferson Avenue or calf 304·
11 month old Pallmeno 675-7176.
stud, broke to ride. Call61•·
388-9025.
1967 Slant six Plymouth,
could be an antique, 304Reg. Polled Hereford bull, 675-1237 or 675-6663.
1 steer, 3 heifers, 1 very
good milk cow. Call 614-256- 72
Truck's for Sate

Home.
Improvements -.

1348.

Registered and grade horses, excellent 4-H project.
English and western sad·
dies ·
everything
Imaginable In horse equi p·
mont and supplies, also
riding lessons and trail
rides and horse training.
Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow.
614-698-3290.
Pigs, call304-882·3448.

64

Hay&amp;Graln

Hay for sale. Top quality .
1st. cutting and 2nd. cutting, alfalfa mixed . E .
Holton 949-2631.
Hay. $1.25 bale In field . 304675-2254 or 304-576-1302.

....... .. .....
... ... .
- ~ ··~

·

merclal
and Call614·256·
fFSidentlal,
free
estimates.
1182.

----~.----

a

PAINTING
interior and
ex te rl or, ·p·fu m bt·ng.,
roofing, some ·~emQdellng.
20 vrs. exp. Call ~14-388965,2.
•
..'

'

Marcum
~ooflng
&amp;
Spouting. 3(f 1, years ex·
perlence, SJ)e!;ializlno In
buill up roof ! C~!l . ~l ~-3889622 or 61 4-388;9857_. ,.
· ;-F~., f.

'

"~f..

a

'·

'

French CitY " -!Painting
residential &amp;• ~ommerci'al, .
lntet:lor, ext~rdOr(!' .paper '·•;
hanging,
&amp; , "'t~&gt;xtured
ceilings. Call 6U367-7784
or 614·~7-7160.' &lt;, \,

ANNIE
~ \'IHAT

1975 Ford Ranger 1/2 T, VB, auto., PS, PB, exc. cond.
Calf 446-0515.
1974 Ford Rancharo truck.
Runs good. Good tires,
radio, SSOO. or best offer.
614-992-2374.
1979 Chevy 4x4 loaded,
54200 or S500 and assume
payments, 304·458·1833 or
458· 1052.
1980 Dodge pick up, good
condition, new tires, 3 speed
with overdrive, 6 cvl. Take
over payments. 304-8822279 or 304-882-2578 .
vans&amp; 4

73

15 IT, SAMOY? A BIT

TltiCIW i'EOOTIATIN' TH'
5TEP6? JUST TAKE
YOU~ TIME~ YOU C'ti
DO IT ..

CHRIST lA N''!S.I, CON -.
STRUCTION·. '- 'constr., '
rooflnQ. ~I ding,' ·spcjuiing,
fencing, painl\ng, repairs &amp;
cleaning. 446-2000, call '
before 8 and alter s·:30.
:

1979 Delta 88 Rcyale CPE
loaded, V-8, 350, 4bbc,
$5,200. Call 446-3314 after
5PM, 446-2747.

w.o.

1974 Datsun 260·Z, 6 cyl., 4
AM· FM, sunroof,
52.500. Call-146-8050.

drive, AC, PS, PB, AM-FM
8-track. Call 446·1024 after
5:30PM.
8:30

1976 Ford van, excellent
condition, $4,995. Can be
seen 2608 MI. Vernon, Point
Pleasant.

spd.,

81 chevette, 9 mos. old,
10,000 miles, 11. blue,
deluxe Int., $4,850, firm.
Call446·7053.

-- ----- - ·

1979 112 Plymouth ·Duster,
slant 6, 3 spd., &amp;onomlcal,
37,000 miles, PS, PB, AMFM stero, ziebart, new
radials, air ~and ., super
clean. Call 446-2847.

74
1975

-,·u-": -

Motorcycles
G T750

Suzuki,

dress, 6,500 miles, $1,300.
Call 446-0935 or 614·2566694.

9:00
GASOUNE ALLEY

RINGLE!'S1' SFRVICE experienced mason, roofing,
~arpenter',

starir~q

2597 .
1982 450 custom 1,200.miles.
Call 446·2350.

1974 AMC Javlin. Auto.
trans, $350. Cell 446-75!)4.

1968 Honda CB 350. GOOII
cond. 1425. 614-667·3085.

1973 Chevv station waoon,
350 engine, PS. PB, AC.
Call after ~:00, 446-4260. ··

1976 Harley Davidson
Super Glide, - recently
. rebuilt, . fat bob tanks,
many extras,304·895 -3326.

I jes' has

t' Qit awaij

4earsl

from it

all!

ADVANCED . Sear,nless
Gutter· Doors . ·· Offering
conllnouse
guttering , ·
seamless s_idJng, r,ootlng, ,
garage
doors, · tree·
estimates. 61~'698·8205 .

.

'

PAINTING interior. &amp; -ex-.
ter19r. free ~&lt;Siimates. 304-•
675; 1128.
az

Kawasaki, . needs
work, best offer, 304·8822658.

Sum'times

Water Wells. commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps 'sates and Service.
304·895·3802.

_197S XR75. 304·675-4049.

- - - - - - - - -··1 KZ650

at tne

same four walls
for a zillion

electrician,

11eneral repairs and
1979 C B 750K Honda, like .remodellng _.fa11 30H75·
1
new condition, 7.000 miles, 2088 or 675·40011.
.
&gt;extras, S1 ,4SO. Call 61079·

1971 XR·lOO Honda. Used
approx. 7 mo. Call 367·7150.
$500.00.

197• FleetwOOII Cadillac'.'
Needs a few repairs. $500.
992-5692.

'

full

75 VW Dasher, 2 dr., GT,_4
spd., excellent cond.,
$1,575. 76 VW Rabbit, 4 dr.,
4 spd., Sl, 100. Call446·7322.

1980 Special Edition Trans
Am, has everything, $8400
or best offer. 446-8093.

Tr i mming,
. Call 675·

WINNIE

Plumbing '
&amp; Healing ·

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEA TINv .
Cor. Fourth and Aine
Phone 446·38811 o• 446·4477

.

'

'1980 Suzukl, .llke n.W, . · . 13
' Excavating
'
...
,, ' '
.
1978 Ford L TO 11 .. $2Sa9: miles, 550 4·cyllnde'r; nice
Call 614·992-:»73 allier · 6 .b ike. 304·675-1780 If no an- GaiiiJIOIIS Dlverslfied .Con- ·
st. Co. Custon\"' doz~r &amp;
swer call304-675·2354.
p.m.
.
backhoe work , · 'Special ,
farm rates. Call us'for tree
a.,.tund
1972 V.W. Beetle. AM·FM' 75 .
estimates. 446- ~- .
Motors for Sale
stereo cassette, e~CJiile~t
' ~
'
body. All new tires. Runs. 1978 - Chrysler
Lawrence ,Sidenst'ricker
1·304·882-2393.
trailer, 85 · HP •' Cihrv:•l~r Backhoe Serlve: ,Call 675motdr 78 model, I10od
5580 .
:.
17 Pontiac Vent~ra ~J vl! , everything Included.
'
.
auto., p .s.• alr·.cohd .•. am· 446-6290.
fm . s2200. 61H92-7562.
79 Baha 150 Mercutv 19 1/2
If, conv.· top, Tennessee
trailer, extr~s. 54,500. Call
6U·388-9713ilr67H392. ·

.

'

-.

--------,---.

'

Saturoay·a j Jumbles: CLOUT BOUND KITIEN BEDECK
Answer: what you might got when an Icicle falls on
your head- KNOCKED COLO
Jumble Book No. 19, containing 110 puz:zltt, IIIVIIIIDII IDf $1.95 pottpilld
tram Jumbte, cJo thla newap11per, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. 1ndudt your
n1me, tddretl, ztp code and makt checks p.yabll to Newspaperbookl.

BRIDGE

A frustration attack
By Oswald Jacoby
ud Alu Soatal
Alan: "Weat'B doubll! of
four spades wu out of frus·
traUon. He bad looked for
great th!np wtth a magnlfl·
cent band and was now
reduced to trylns to pick up
a few polnll &amp;y beaUog four
spades."
Oswald: "He waa a lot
more frustrated when the
band was over and South bad
chalked up a doubled game."
Alan: "West had made It
for South. He bad start·
ed with three heart trlckll.
Then be led his kl~s of
diamonds. South took biS ace
and ran off all Ills trumps.
Weat had to make six
dl8cards. The flnt five were
1111 last two hearts, the I 0
and nine of diamonds and
the I 0 of clubs. The sixth
waa Impossible. If he
chucked a club, dummy's
ace and jack would be goOd.
If be threw the quoon of
dlamondaL,_~ummy'a jack
would be WJD·"
,
Oswald: "West should
have led the king of clubs at
trick four. That play would
kill th~&gt; aque~&gt;Ze since North
would have no entry. Note
that only a club lead would
save West. A trump sblft
would not break up the

(J) II ® Major League
Baaeball: Teamo To Be
Announced
CJ (I) ()J WKRP in
Clnclnlllltl
D
(]) (!) MOVIE:
'Movlola:
The
Silent

HOW WOULD 'IOU
LIKE TO GO TO TH'
MOVIN' PITCHERS
TONIGHT. /it''&lt;\/
MAW?

GOODY!! ME AN'

TH' FELLERS . ARE
PLAVIN' CARDS

HERE TONIGHT

ACROSS

Lov...'
(]) 700 Club

just

()J M•A•S•H Tho
4077th suffers when Clin·
gar is stricken with a severe fever. (R)
(I) lfil GrH1 Perform·
ancea
'Three
Cheever
Stories: The Five Fonv·
Eight.' Tonight's progrom _
presents Cheever's story
of unrequited love and revenge . (60 min.j
9:30 llJ (J) (]J Houoe Callo
Gary needs an operation
which his family can't af·
ford . (R)
10:00 (]) MOVIE: 'Friday the
13th' Part 2
·a Cll ()J LDu o..m The
Trib axplores the plight of
refugees alter they hire a
Vietnamese photographer.
lA) (60 min.)
(I) Criele to Criele with
Barbara Jordan 'Ponrait of
an American Zealot.' Tonight's program follows
the activities of modem re-ligious loadar Ed McAteer .
160 min.)
(JDNewa-ch
1 0:16 (])
MOVIE:
'Shogun
Ao111uin'
(I) TBS Evening Newa
1 0 :30 (I) Sing out America

(I) MOVIE: 'Drumo In

DMplouth'
12:00 (I) lliunie • AUen

·

I

deserts

5 Lessened
11 Japanese
code word
12 Tranquil
13 Asseverate
14 Immediately
15 Be revenged
17 But (Lat.)

t A4

+e

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
Wnt Nortb
So alit

1.

Obi.

Pan
Pua

~·
Pua

4+

Pua

Pua

Opening lead:

•K

to decide whether to throw

his lut club or to unsuard
the king of diamonds on
South's last trump."
Oswald: "It would be up to
East to help out by chucking
1111 five, six and eight of dla·
monda as quickly as possl· .
ble. That would locate the
diamond four In the South
hand and solve West's
problem." _

' 1Puton
Z Inamorata
3 Mountain

rldse

4 Shave l'ff
5 PhaSI!

I Swiss city
7 Nigerian

8 Mental strain

'Start

u Before

1t Himalayan
cedar
UEKpert
ze Man's name 11- ~tears
21 - standstill
Z1 Hgt.

zz Secure

24 Leghorn

29 Cut off,

native
25 Money-

30 Speechify

as branches

making

petals
coUectlv~&gt;ly

27 Caretaker

ZZCrazy

25 Director
Delbert

Yesterday's Answer

place
26 "Olildren
of a
- God "

za Flower

za Quote

31 Even
32 Undersized

35 Bavarian
river
370ne kind
of iron

Mlndlan

water
vessel

Z7Tease
28 Gay Nineties, b-+--+----1e.g.

29 Write
30 Danube
tributary
33 Musical note
:W One on
pension
36 Failure
38 Except
39 Cabby in

()J • !D
Newa
(I) Nealwflle RFD
(]) ESPN 5portll Carner
(!) Newa/Sports/Wellther
(I) Dave Allen 111 Lllrge
11 :16 (I) All In the Family
11 :30 D (f) (!)Tonight Show
(]) Lllugha Four young
comics are followed both
on and off the stoge as
they loam their craft .
(J) Another Ufe
(I) Benny Hill Show
D (I) Quincy Quincy
learns that an elderly
mao·s suicide was due to
abuse from his son. (R) (60
min .)
(I) Capdoned A_BC Nawo
aD MOVIE: 'Four Ctowna'
• Gt Nlghtlfne
11 :411 (I) MOVIE: 'Cheaper to

K'"P Her'

• A KQ 103
t KQ 10 9
t885
+KQIO
+17 1412
SOUTH
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• 7s4

DOWN

I Masher's

D (I)

:

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., 3

t!&amp;Hot
.."trl
by THOMAS JOSEPH

a

B..tRNEY

1·1-12

EAST

WEST

+8

squeeze."
Alan: "After that club
lead, Weal would sUll have

lfil Hitchcock
11 :00 • (I) (I)
(J)

'

NORTH
+AS 2
.982
• J 7 32
+AJ9

eaay

BenJamin

' ""

Autos for Sale

(Answer~~ tomorrow)

(J) Evening Ill Popo 'Ethel
Mermen.' Ethel Merman
belts out her apocial brand
of music with the Popa in
this encore performance.
(R) (60 min.)
(JD Odyuey 'Franz Boas .'
Tonight' a program takes o
look at the man singularly
responsible for shaping tho
source of American anthropolOgy. (R) (60 min .!
[Closed Captioned!

Chevy Surburban
AT, PB, PS, $1,600 OBO.
Call446· 1927.

XI XXX)

Print answer here: (

Thief
(I) •
!D Beat of the
West Elvira and Doc con·
coct a story to save Sam
embarrassment
over
woundlf!9 himself. IR)
D (J) (]J Private

•-wo

Now arrange the circled letters to
1o1m the surprtBO answer, as suggested by tho above cartoon.

()

K) I

Champlonahlp
Tennla: The Medhern·
nean Open Final fJOm
Cap D' Adlle, Fr11nce
(I) MOVIE: 'To Catch a

BINGS CONCRETE ClONSTRUCTION Specializing
In concrete d,rive~ays, ' '·
sidewalks, fiOQrs, patios,
etc. 11 yr. exp. Call 614-3677891.
••

A !!Jt6 WHEEL. IN

THE AMUSEMENT

!5U511'&gt;JE55.

- ~GEDDUR!

~orld

79 Jeep Wagoneer, 4-wheel
71

IFARFAY
I K) .I

(JD Ullaa, Yopa end You
7:00 • (I) P.M . Magazine
(I) To Climb • M911ntaln,
July 4, 1981 Eleven han·
dlcapped people attempt
to climb Mt. Ranier.
(I) 8ull'e Eye
(]) ESPN'a lnalde Baae·
bill I
(I) Q..., Acrea
(I) Entertlllnment Tonight
(!)HappyDaya
(I) Tic Tac Dough
(I) (JD MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
()J Newt~
• 1Bl Muppet Show .
7:30 • (I) You Aaked For It
(I) Another Life
(]) ESPN Sports Center
(I) Andy Grlfflth
(I)
(I) Family Feud
(!) Leveme and Shirley
(I) 8uainen Report
()J Richard Simmon•
(JD Were You There7 'The
Facts of Life.' Blues musician Willie Dixon is spotlighted. (R)
•
IBl
Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 D (I) (!) Uttle Houae on
the Pralrte Sam returns to
Walnut Grove to win Heater Sue back . (R) (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned)
(I) MOVIE: ' Eye ol the
Needle'
(I) MOVIE: 'The Fixer'
(I) National Geog..phlc

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com·

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

I I· I

(J) My Three Bona
(J) Elecuto Company
(JD Over Euy
1:30 • (I) (!) NBC Nawa ·
(I) .-50.000 Pyramid
(J) Fdler Knowa Beat
(I) • ()f ABC Nawo
• (I) aD CBS Newa
(J) Dr. Who

'

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy T avlor at 61i·3677220.

I SOGEO

(J) (1!1 •

IBlNewa

•1976 Starcrat't star master
8, $1,500. Caii'«&lt;·2240.•

Grooming services for
pets. Will clip English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Schnauzer's. Reasonable.
GUNS : Colt, Ruger, S &amp; W. , For appt. 614-992-7342.
Pistols and
Riffles .
Reasonably priced. Call afAKC Collies, Sable and
ter s, 614-367-0482 .
white, wormed, nad first
shots, Inc . Parvo. Ready
Special Raven 25 Caliber Wed . Aug. 4th . 1-614-667·
auto, $45. Riverside Gun
3815.
Shop, Rt. 7, Athalia, Oh.
Caii614-886·S194.
PUPPIES for sale, '14 Rat
AM-FM stero with record Terrier. Cell 304·895·3926.
player, 2 speaker . Call 4467060.
Fruit
58
&amp; Vegetables
Uti lity trailer, heavy duty, Pick Your own tomatoes.
lights, good tires, side half runner or lima beans,
board. in good cond .• $250. $6.00 bu, corn $1.00 doz .
Call 446-9265.
Raynor Peach Orchard,
Rt. 7, Lower River Rd.,
Sears 12 Inch radial saw &amp; Gallipolis, 446-4807 .
jointer, like new. New 8
foot bed liner for Ford Silver Queen sweet corn .
truck. Call 446-1288.
Charle$ McKean Farm,
446-9442.
2 rooms of nice used fur·
niture, reasonable price. Fresh picked green beans,
Call 446·3224.
Tenderettes and Blue
Lake, S7.00 bu. Call 614-256·
36' lawn roller, 26 112x42 In 6278.
lawn cart, Early American
lamp.
large
Early Canning tomatoes, S.. bu.
American picture. Call 614· Already picked. Canning
245·9132.
corn, .90 cents a dozen.
White. 614-247-2192.
Clothes. 50 L incoln St ..
Gallipolis.
·
Freezing corn tor sale.
David Yost, Gt . Bend. Call
Over 1,000 ceramic molds, before 8 a.m. or after 9
kilns. and supplies. 61H42- p.m. 614-949·2853.
m5 or 742-2085.

WOOD for sale, 304-4581833.

~ t~; &gt; l ~I

M1 .

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg. Dobermans pups and
Doberman Stud Service.
Call446-7795.

-.

1:00 • (I) (I) (!) •

1973 Alia 23ft. pUll camper, :
good cond. carr 6Ui388·

AKC Reg. Doberman Plncher exc. Pedigree, $100 to
$150 ea., 6 wks. old. Call
614-256·1425 or 614·256·1169.
t975 Case 450, dozer ·
tractor, 1,800 hrs., very
good cond., 514,900. Call
446·4537 .

.

'

ORAGONWYND
CATTERY - KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies . CFA
Himal ayan, Persian arid
Siamese kittens. Call 44638" after 4 p.m.

AKC
Reg . liver
Engl ish
Springer
Span iels,
and
white,
ell shots, $95 . Call446-8234.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Television
Viewing

1'"" ~~It~
'14~ eat Gtec:Yr " 111
. . YtAA- a.lrl bU.

- - - - - - --

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9 "

Pom4KO - Middleport, Ohio

'N' CARLYLI:"'

Household Goods

Building materlalsblock.
30 i n. electric range, $85. brick, sewer pipes, win·
Ge. Automati c washer $75. dows, l intels. etc. Claude
Sears wr inger washer 575. Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
614-742-2352 .
call614·245-5121.

'r----

Monday, Aueust 2,1982

'

TV's '•Taxi"

40 Egyptian
solar dlak
41 N.Y.

hockey pro
4% 1'n1st

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia L O .N G F E L L 0 W
One letter almply atanda for onother. In tbla sample A Ia ·

for tbt three L'o, X for the two O'a, ~~ - Sln&amp;Ie !etten,
apoatropbea, the lenctb and formaUon of the word• are all
the . hlnll. Each day the eocle letters are dller~nt.
uaed

GD

E8PN 8~: 1982
tW1 af F - Induction

Ceoemonlea fJOm Coop-

... IUWn.NY

~~=Night

•
()f MOVII;: 'White
Dllwn'
,.
•12:30 • Cll (!) Lite Night with

Devld Lettermln .
(J) ...... Benny Show
(I) 8olld Gold

.

~·~

.,

.

SIJ Z

KYU
.

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·

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K L JV W

,
~ord~~~OVIE: 'The Yeatntay's ~: THE COURSE OF HUMAN
12:45 tD HBO TIIMml: The ' HISTORY IS DETERMINED, NOT BY WHAT HAPPENS IN
· Deedly o,.;...
TIJE :;KIE.'&lt; Btl'I'r ' WHATTAKESPLACE INTIIEHEARTS, ,,
. qF~N .-SIRAR'I'rlUKIG..iTH
" •
'

-..

�Monday, August 2,1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel

Area death s
Shop In Pomeroy. He was a
member of the Pomeroy Masonic
Lodge
which wW conduct services
Raymond L. (Jack) Jewell, 59,
at
7:
ll
this evening at the Ewing
~Pike St., Coal Grove, Ohio, forFuneral
Home.
merly of Meigs County, died SunSurviving
are a 'daughter, Mrs.
day at St. Mary's Hospital In
Raymond
(Judy)
Jewell, PomeHuntington, W. Va., following a ·
roy;
two
grandsons,
Tony and
brief Illness.
Randy
Jewell;
a
sister,
Mrs. ChaBorn Feb.15, 1923atDownlngton,
rles
Zalusky,
Dayton;
several
he was a son of the late Leonard
aunts
and
uncles
and
several
nieces
Jewell, Jr., and GOldie Jewell who
and
nephews.
survives In Columbus. He served In
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
the U.S. ArmydurtngWoridWarii
Tuesday
at the Ewing Funeral
and was employed at Ford BrothHome
with
the Rev. WUllam Mid·
ers In Coal Grove.
dleswart
officiating.
Burtal will be
Surviving are his wife, Ruth
In
Beech
Grove
Cemetery.
Friends
Brickles..Uewell; a son, Jeffrey of
may
call
at
the
funeral
home
at
Wlllow Wood; two daughters,
anytime.
Nedra Kearns, South Point. and
Kathy Truesdell, Coal Grove; his
mother, G&lt;ildle Jewell, Columbus; Esta David
six brothers, Lennie of Pomeroy;
Esta David, 31 StOnewood ApartPearlie of West Columbia, W. Va.;
ments In Middleport, died Monday
George, Paul, Cecil and Richard,
morning In Akron. Services wW be
all of Columbus; two slstets, Irene
announced by the Ewing Funeral
Burrttt of Albany, and Anestlne
Frazter of Columbus; six grand· Home.
children and three step· Roxie Oiler
grandchildren.
Services will be held at ll a.m.
Roxle (cq) Oller, 78, formerly of
Tuesday at the Phillips Funeral Middleport, died Saturday at
Home In Ironton. Friends may call Mount Carmel East Hospital In
at the funeral home from 6 to9 p.m. Columbus.
this evening.
Mrs. OUer had been living In Columbus
with a daughter, Violet Ba· .
Harry A. Miller
tey for the past three years.
Born In Gall1a County on Dec.lB,
Harry A. Miller, 00, 115 Kerr St.,
1903,
she was a daughter of the late
Pomeroy, a Pomeroy business·
John
and Julia Yeauger Lewis. She
man, died Saturday at Veterans
was
also
preceded In death by her
Memorial Hospital.
husband,
David OUer, six brothers,
He was a son of the late Thomas
sisters
and a grandson.
three
and Berntce BrookS Miller.
Surviving
are two daughters,
Mr. Miller was operator of the
Mrs.
Batey
of Columbus. and
Associated Television and Radio

Mildred Milurons, ReynolcJBburg,
eight grandchildren, 20 great·
grandchildren and seven great·
great-grandchildren. Several
nieces and nepllewS also surviVP.
Mrs. oner was a member of the
Middleport Church of Christ In
Christian Union.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with the
Rev. Lawrence Manley officiating.
Burial wW be In Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may cl!ll at
the funeral borne from 2to 4and 7 to
9 ·p.m. Monday.

Raymond L. ~ewell

- .-

~

... ' .

.. ...,
DISCUSS ENGINEERING - SCS Technician Reid Young, left,
discusses engineering plans with job foreman Chuck Paulus.

Albert G. Blackwell
· Albert George Blackwell, llli,
Route 2, Racine, dled Saturday at
Holzer Medical Center.
He was a son of the late James
. and Cora Bentley Blackwell. He
was also preceded In death by a
brother, WUllam.
Surviving are h1s wife, Agnes
Backus Blackwell; a stepson, Gregory Eben, at borne; a brother,
Charles Preston Blackwell, Stratford, Va.; a sister, Anna Mae Alley,
Racine, and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Wednesday at the
Funeral

Home with the Rev. Florence L,
Snllth officiating. Burial wW be In
the Letart Falls Cemetery. Frlenda
may call at the tuneral home !lilY;
time after 7 this evening.

82;

Clltford C. Cuckler,
former
Meigs County realtor who made lila
hOme with Tony and Shirley Jones '
In Tuppers Plains, died Monday
morning at St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg.
Mr. Cuckler was a son of the late
Franklin and Katie Mae Smith
Cuckler. He was also preceded In
death by a sister, Edith Cuckler
and a brother-In-law, Charles H.
Bryson.
Surviving are a sister, Weltha
Mae Bryson, Pomeroy; a niece,
Betty L. Blackwood, Mlnersvtlle; a
nephew, C!Uford H. Bryson, Pitts-·
burgh, Pa., and cousins, Gladys
Moore, Parkersburg, and Leo DeU:
DavidSOn, Pomeroy.
Mr. Cuckler retired from h1s real
estate business In 1965. He was a
former member of the Odd Fellows
Lodge.
Memorial services will be anoounced later by the Ewing Funeral Home.

Page6

Because tough
customers come In all sizes:·

Made for Action ....

Soft, pre-washed,

Pomeroy-Middle~rt,

By CRARi..ENE HOEFLICH
The bid of D. V. Weber rt Reeds·
ville totaling $36,914.96 for construe~

tlon of water 11nes In the Kerr's Run
area w8s accepted at the Monday
night meeting of Pomeroy VUlage

Barnick, but Mayor Andrews assured that any damage will be repaired to the owner's satisfaction.
In other action, councu requested
clerk Ellen Rought to provide a
breakdown of lund expenditures on
the Kerr's Run proJect
Discussed during the meeting
were several road sUps In the vU·
!age Including_the one on Union
Ave. Mayor Clarence Andrews reported that a representative of the
state highway department will be
here Wednesday to look over the
slips and make recommendations.
Councilman Bruce Reed reported the SoU arid Water Conservation Office h811 adv1Bed blm that
the Ohio Division of Reclartlatlon
felt there was Insufficient evidence
that the sUp on Union Ave. Is m1ne

ALL THE KENTUCKY .FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN .· EAT

•,.....•... .
Pre8e~ce won'~ bring children back

FOR JUST

$325

CREPY-EN-VALOIS, FranCe- President Francois Mltterrand
and Premier Pierre Mauroy'lead the mourners today at the funeral
of 44 children killed In the fiery bus wreck last weekend. But "their
presence wW not bring back the children," said the mother of four of
the vtctlms, her face swollen by tears and sleepless nights.
A f!tth child of Montque and Jacy Syx, 13-year-old Eric, returned
to h1s parents' arms at1w111ght Monday outside their rundown hOme
In a housing project In this ancient town 40 miles north of Paris.
Th.e bodies of h1s four younger brothers and sisters·- Christian,
12; Valerte,ll; Patrtck, 10, and Natalie, 9- were with those of the ·
other dead In plain pine coffins In a nearby gymnasium. Only six
were Identified, and the Syx children were not among them.

.Selwd Witli . . PO!Itoes,
Chicbn Gravy, COlt Sllrlr. Hot
Roll, lluttlr lOCI Coffel.
Sony. llo subltitutls tXCIIJ( be¥. , . wlllt:ll 11M • ICiditiOIIII
prk.e.

Every Wednesday Night ·

BAKED STEAK DINNER

The reclamation project near
the
first ofis October.
gra!Jing,
Pageville
slated forFinal
completion
by
spreading of topsoil and seeding and
mulching are all taking place at this

DllliiiG 1001 DilLY

$335

Kentuckians face murder charge

ELBERF_ELDS
·
IN POMEROY

cfOW.. S Fami"Iy Restau•rant
.' ·
J.

picnic is planned for this coming
Friday at 5 p.m. at the borne of Dr.

I

,

'.

Water control structures such as
rock chutes, rock waterways and
temporary diversions have been installed to handle surface water
runofi. By handling runoff water in a
safe, nonerosive manner, it will give
the seeded areas a good chance to
establish without getting washed
away, says Robert First, District
Conservationist.
The reclamation work should help
the whole area, in that land with
erosion rates 2ro-aoo tons soil los per
acre per year will be graded and
revegetated to end up with a threefive ton soil loss per acre per year,
says First.
Money to fund the 100 acre
reclamation project was provided
through the Rural Abandoned Mine
Program (RAMP) and ad·
ministered by SCS. The money is
gathered from a severance lax on ·
surlace and deep-rniqed coal. There
are approximately 600-300 more
acres of acid, bare grouhd that
needs attention in the PagevilleSnowville reas," First said.
Once reclaimed, the area will be
classes as wildlifeland for a period
of five years. After the five year
period Is up, the land can be used for
hay production or light grazing, FU··
stS8id.

Meets tonight

-

Racine Village Council will m~t
In regular session this evening at
7:30p.m. at village halL A meeting
of the Racine BOard of Public Affairs will be held at 6: ll p.:m.
preceding the councll meeting.

·

.

f~Ra~y~P~Ic~k~e~ns~.~~~~~~J~~U~B~W~-~M~Ieln~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f

time.

Individual Retirement

AccountS?

For some of our customers, Individual Retirement Accounts have become a confusing sub·ect. So to clear the air. our FUU SERVICE
BANK would like to offer a simple invitation.
An Invitation to come talk to our IRA professionals. You won't get a sales pitch, you ·u get
the facts on what makes an IRA at our bank a
no risk, high-yield, tax-free investment.

/

Get the IRA Answen
You Need

Person to Person Contact

tJons you have abOUt the new IRA Accounts.
Questions about Interest rates, tax benefits,
anything I
Bring your questions to our IRA professionals.
We'll gl-.ie you a clear picture of the new IRAs
and help you select the retJrement plan that
best suits your particular needs.

But at our bank you have a choice of doing
business over the phone or over a desk-face
to face with a member of our staff.

lnvestJng In an IRA will lower your 19B2 tax
bill. Because IRA plans are tax deferred, you can
deduct up to the allowed annual investment
from your yearly ~xable income. So you'll pay
no federill taxes on your-IRA tJil you start withdrawing funds (minimum age 59'/z; penalty for
early withdrawal). ·
Your Retirement
Jhle new tax deferred IRA accounts at our FUU
SERVICE BANK let you build a slzeab~ retirement fund from a modest annual Investment
(up to a maximum of $2,000).

For example, if you deposit Sl ,000 at the 'start
of eai:h year. for 30 years. your grand total with
earned Interest could be $27(),]!12 (based on
12% Interest compounded annually-a rate
that can not be guaranteed): Years from now. ·
your iRA will give you the added security of a

retirement nest egg.
'

.

''

Speclai·IRA Bene,.b

ASHLAND, Ohio - Two Kentucky men were being held today on
charges of aggravated murder In the shoOting death of an Ashland
County law enforcement officer.
Detective Sgt. Glenn,Sturglll,ll, Of the Asbland County sheriff's
office, was shot to death about 9 p.m. Monday as he pursued "persons whO had attempted an armed robbery minutes earller," •accordlng to a joint statement released by Ashland County Prosecutor
Arthur M. Elk, Police Chief Don Townsend and Shertff Kenneth S.
'
Etzwller.
David Mull1ns, 21, of Pikeville, Ky., and a 17-year old Pikeville
yolith were In C\IStody and a third person was being sought for
questioning, according to the slatement.

Turnpike income ·shows increase
~ • 1

The staff at our FUll SERVICE BANK are not
' '
11
commissioned sales peop,le. They're salaried
·,
professionals. So instead of pressuring you with · ~ , '·
a sales pitch. our staff will give you sualght
. ~,. : ·
Ji:
answers to your questi.ons about an IRA
Account
~·

Ask Us A~ Our

J'IEREA, Ohio -The recession Is reducing the number of trucks
traveling on the Ohio turnpike; but Income on~ toll road Is up due
to Increased fares .
()
Allan Johnson, Turnpike Commission executive ~r. said
Monday that Income for the highway rose 29 percent after tolls went
up 40 percent for cars and·50 percent for commercllll vehicles. His
report covered the first six months rt1982compared to.thesame 1981
periOd.

. • Although passenger car traffic lias remained fairly ronnstant on
the 24lcinlle highway from Pennsylvania to Indiana, truck traffic
bas slipped 3.6 percent. And Johnlon said flgul'I!S from May and
June show the decline Is getting worse.

If these IRA. extras are as 1mpon.1m to you

as they Me ,tC! us, cOllie talk to an IRA

'.

professioN! t~

At our bank your IRA account is insured by an
agency of the US. Government (FDIC) for up to
$100.000. Many firms can give you High-yield,
tax-free interest But no investment firm or insurance company will Insure your IRA like our
bank.
·

Don't Wllli. The sooner you open an IRA
Account. the sooner you'll start eaming interest
·
'

.

.'

.

ProfessiONII Expertise and a Hlst9fY ot

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn In the Oblo Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 855.
Tbe !Q\tel'Y mx&gt;rted earnjngs Monday of$1m,T18from theW&amp;&amp;ft'·
1111 oa the game, EarntnP came ,on aa1e11 of $1,i;*l.IJI2 "'· wbtle
bQidels of winning tickets are entitled to share~. lottery
omdala aald
'
.
,.

Weather foreca8t

PMnagement

Saine companies promoting IRAs are just now .
getting into the bUsiness of savings planning.
IM!'re proucfto say that we've been managing
. saving~ plans for years:
'Our IRA P,.ofesslonals are knowledgeable and
t~enced. They can crea~ a plan esptelally
fQryou.
. ·
, -~ -- ·. ·
••
. . ·

....

!IOU'lll CENTRAL

~ugust

1 Section, 10 Paget

3,1982

Young.
The move to the new village hall
in early September was discussed.
It was decided to request a ullllty
cost profile from · the architect.
Plans for dispositiOn of the old vU·
!age hall on Second was also dis·
cussed, and qne councilman said
that the first option for purchase Is
from the United Methodist Church.
He Indicated that the village had
earlier accepted a bid from the
church. The clerk was requested to
check Into the status of the proposed sale Insofar as the church Is
concerned.
It was decided that a representa·
tlve of council will contact the Columllus and Southern Ohio Electric
Co., the telephOne company, and
cable television to ask its coopera·
tlon_wlthRonAshoftbeOhloPower
Co. In efforts to remove power lines

'

.

.

\

e · om~~naty Owned. Bank

I ..

Bl!ll «o'OIIIi,..... , ·
21
" ....
' i 17:lie.S I _.,._,.,_.,.. •
Q l'rrlrr
I lllllcJ£~

ft!'

.

a_., a 14.--. ............ .,. ......
'

Officials said InCreased pay, In·
eluding one 10 percent boost .and
more recently a 5 percent hike,
caused the patrol's budget to come
up short.
The patrol slatloned 99off!cers at

firm.

Jeno' s Is expected to employ
about 175 people to boost the de-

Ferguson's probe
reveals welfare
fraud in Ohio
dence of welfare fraud, Ferguson
said.
The infonnation was part of a
speech the auditor made to members of the Rotary Club in Martins
Ferry. Ferguson, a Democrat; is
seeking reelection in the November
election. His Republican opponent is
Cuyahoga County Conunissloner
Vincent Campanella.
In his remarks, Ferguson said h1s
examiners found only 81 people In
downstate counties illegally received $70,215 In welfare benefits.

Southeastern Ohio counties
which have been Investigated for
welfare fraud have .come off much
better than their northern counterparts, according to Auditor Tho- ·
mas E. Ferguson.
Ferguson revealed Monday
that his investigators uncovered $4.2 mUUon In welfare fraud
statewide. The most frequent Inc!·
dents have been detected In CUyahoga County, where $2.3 mUllon
was taken from the state by 1,252
people.
However, Gall1a County bas had
only one case appear In h1s Investigation, In which the siate was
b!lked of $270. Meigs County recorded three cases, costing $3,458;
Jackson County, one, $183; Lawrence County, five, $5,402; and
Athens County, seven, $5,612.
VInton County showed no evi-

15 C.nh

A Multimedia Inc. NewtpapiM

oft Main Street.
Approve resolution
Counc!l passed a resolution cal·
ling for an Improved highway route
for U. S. 33 from the Ravenswood
bridge north to the Interchange of
U. S. 33 with State Route 124 near
Rock Springs.
The problem of broken and van·
dallzed parking meters was dis·
cussed at length by Patrolman
Steve Hartenhach and Chlel of Police George Stitt. Stitt noted that the
meters can be "fixed one day and
broken the next." He suggested
checking with officials of other villages to see hOw they handle the
problems. The chief of pollee's report showed expenditures of $739.00
lor gas during July with 5,691 miles
being driven and 51 arrests being
made.
Cruiser repair was also dis-

cussed with council authorizing the
transmission seal repair at the
Main Street Garage. Repair on the
other cruiser was postponed untU
the tlrst one Is back Into operation
and the quality of work can be evaluated . The cost estimate for the
transmission seal repalr was $90 to
$110.

The mayor's report showed receipts of $2,578. Hartenbach reported parking meter receipts of
$1,474. Bill Quickel met wlthcouncU
to submit Ills bid tor village
insurance.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Andrews, Baronlck, Larry
Wehrung, Reed, Young, John Anderson, and Harold Brown, council
members; Rought, clerktreasurer. Chief Stitt, Hartenbach
and Krautter. An executive session
was held following the meeting.

pressed economy In the southeast
Ohio area .
Sen. W!lllam F. Bowen, [).
Cincinnati, and two other board
members voted against the development department grant, calling
It an outright gtft of taxpayers'
funds to a private,!Jidustry._
Actually, the money. from the department's lndustrtal Inducement
fund, goes to the lmprovemen t cor·
porat!on, which will pay for theremodeling and then lease the facUlty
to Jeno's.
The Improvement group earlier
this summer obtained a $1.6 mUI!on
loan from the state to purchase the
plant from the Del Monte Co.,
which formerly operated it.
Under the agreement with Jeno's, the firm will pay $100,0Xl a
year In rent untU the state loan,
along with 2 percent Interest. Is
repaid. ·
Bowen contended Jeno' sand the
community group were or should
have been aware of the need to remodel the plant at the time they

entered Into the rental agreement.
The state should not be asked to
absorb that expense, he said.
He proposed without success that
the money be loaned to the lm·
provement corporation "rather
than giving them an outright
grant."
In' other business, the seven·
member board authorized the edu·
cation department to relmllurse
the state colleges and unlversltUes
for training and retraining supervl·
sors and administrators of voca·
tiona! education. The total amount
Is $3.89 million.
The board authorized the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
to provide $:.nJ,axJ of the cost of a
new sanitary sewer project In
Warren County.
Officials said the project, also beIng paid for with federal and local
funds, is needed In part to prevent
pollution of the Caesar Creek Reservoir. The state leases the reservoir and surrounding park areas
from the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers.

"The difference Is extreme," be
said. "That's 55 percent oftbe problem In Cuyahoga compared to 1.6
percent In Belmont County and the
other 28 do~&gt;11State counties."
Because of Cuyahoga's problem·,
Ferguson urged that "concen·
!rated action" be taken to solve lt.

Gavin Plant ordered
.to redu·ce emissions
500n as CUITI!IIt stockpUes of coal at
the plant are buf)led. Coal now
St!JCkplled at·tlfe plant bas not been
washed.
omctals said that due to the low ·
demand for. ielectrtc power at this
time. the curtent stockpile could
last for a relatively long time.
The EPA lias ordered Gavin to
reduce sulfer emissiOns at the plant
from 9.5 pounds per m!lllon BTU
lllllfer to 7,41 ppunds.

duce sulfer dioxide emi.Sslon levels,
the U:S. Environmental Jlrotection
Agency bas ordered.
.
:rile order Is the result of a law11\ilt flied qalnst the Ohio PoWer
eo.; owners of the GaVlllplant; IJY
the Northem Oh1o Lung Assocla-

tlollo:J:~t Oblb Power said they
.wm not'bave. to 'lnstaliiiCI'Ubbei'S 11t

'lbe Ohio Leque of Women Vo-

COil~

,

.

last year's exposition, but the
number would have had to be reduced to 70 wlthou t the emergency
funds, the controlling board was
told .
In other business, the board debated at length but then authorized
a $225,0Xl state grant for the Jackson Community Improvement
Corporatkln.
The money Is for the refurbishing
of an Idle factory In Jackson which
the local group plans to lease toJeno's Inc., a nationally known pizza

CXJLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -State
controllers have been forced to dip
Into emergency funds to assure normal levels of highway patrol securIty at the Ohio State F)llr.
The seven-member board released $ll2,584 Monday. to dell:~
the costs of 99 officers- who wW be
stationed at the fait, which Opens
Friday.

tbe ,plallt to meet the Dt!1Y E:P~
,..,.
.•_w the

Moltly clear toalght Lows near 70. Wlndl !ipt lind variable.
W..._.y, 1111111111!1' beat and bumldlty with haZy •msbtne Hlflbs

I,

Th ;C ·

related. However, he noted, core
drilllngs are planned for a final
determination.
Meanwhile, the vUlage authorized the street department to purchase rei!ector stgns to be placed at
that sllp.
Rejlalr of stfe!!ls was discussed
by Jack Krautter of the street department who noted that several
holes on Lasley, Vale, Lln&lt;:oln Hill,
Butternut, Mechanic, and Second
had been patched and a curb rebUilt
In Monke-J Run. He also noted that
several other streets need re;&gt;alr
and the work Is continuing.
Council approved $85 for repair
of a Gravely tractor u!led In the
cemetery. 'The need tor cutting
weed9 In thevtclnlly of the Pleasant
Ridge and Rock Stneet Intersection
was noted by Councilman Blll

The James M. Gavin power !W)t
In Cheshire bas three years to re-

W~ing Ohio lottery..nu~r

Security

sm,.

'

No Commission Charges

Consider these advantages of an IRA
Tax BenefiU

'

Many IRAs involve long distance communicatJons. Your only contact with the people managing your IRA could be over .the phone or by
mail.
·

Spcr"' 2 ..... "'1::::.:::~ writing down any ques-

Ohio, Tuesday,

$225,000 grant authorized for Jackson

Every Tuesday Night

Reclamation . Slide
presentati.on
At the Middleport-Pomeroy RGproject nears ~;;n:e:~e~~~~:'::!~::
.
on a golf tournament recently held
COmpIelton
In Columbus. In other business, a

enttne

Reedsville firm given Pomeroy job

regular and slim.

1

•

at y

Vol.l1.No.63
Copyriyhtod 1982

Page 6

Page 5

•

classic western
jean in boot cut,

CREW READY- Area that has been graded, shaped and ready for
seeding and straw mulch Is shown above .

Page3

e

CouncU. '
Theilew lines, apartofPbase3of
the Kerr's Run Sewer Project, will
extend along Route 124 from the old
water works to the White House
Cafe. qtller bids on the project
were $38,104.36 and $46,346.
Council voted to secure a permanent easement from the C&amp;O
Railroad for a strip of land In the
Kerr's Run area needed for laying
sewer lines at a cost of $1DI. The
concern of residents In the Kerr's
Run area abou~ damage to driveways and'other personal real estate
was voiced by coundlwoman Betty

Just Like Dad's

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

Soto hurls 5-l
win .over Dodgers

Clifford C. Citckler

1-;;;;;;;;;:;~~=:~~-=-------;~~-----:-

WATER RUNOFF - StonNentered waterway carries surlace
water runoff away at non-erosive areas.
·

July meat prices
force bills upward

Entry 'blank for
Meigs Fair pretty
baby, little Miss,
Mister contests

·will' wuh coal mlbed at

Souther!~

otdo

In Melp

Coal CO.'s

mJDes

Courlly.

Allllol!8b the

. . . . tlnl

• I I *' 1lwll, CGitillllf ~l't
~ IIIey will bella ~ - - iadl1tla at ' the rniJillli·u

..

-

EPA fl!lllliatJons as not'belng

.ltr!Jiaii!Dt f!!IOIJP

·~ .

,_..to llllltpvetileEPA

ters lias' reportedly crltlcll:ed the

Tl)e ~ w8JIU the EPA to
Older · ~ .lnltalled at the

plant. Wu!dDI the C!l8l wm notreduce tbetidler emllllloaa etiOUih to
J)lqtect the public, the II'QUP II!YS.

MADE BACIDIOABD8 FOB EMS - Alex May, a ~ Iii liM!
~ llllldor VM ' - J'l'ulram, reoeatJy made eight lw*"oll'dl .

lor- bfllte!lliiiPEMS. MaJCidtlte . .._.from blrdt~
llllla
trl tlllm Ill a _,._ lbdiiL IHI• wttlt
were
Melnt IArl I II . . . l:GIDI
MaJ 4DaA'ted 118llourl ol Ume Ill
Clle WOO.S11a!dltjj..., M 1J1e Melp M~ 8elllor Celller,

t1te.......,

'11iua....,.,

.. ,

t'

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