<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14324" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14324?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T04:51:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45430">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/0e141def1987f10716fe3947a7fbe841.pdf</src>
      <authentication>98e17343b1bb1370936c61e1ecc2df24</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44733">
                  <text>'•

PUCO. election may beco~ecostly, dirty
COLUMBUS,, Ohlo (AP) - A has llfm' seen before. Maybe lt'U · He said Michael Del Bane, cur- termtne whether the petltlo111
campaign to require election of the · help IWVIve the economy of this rently a member t1. the PUCO, has contain the 28Ul6 valid slgnatuN
no business on the pi!I1E!l. "Jie'a a needed to~ tor a spot 011 till
Public Utllltill Commlaslon will be state."
.
•
Edllart, state ~udltor Thomas disgrace ... he's a pu!JP!!I r1 (HQUse . November ballot. '
fought. wtth mllUons of dollars and
Eckhart 11J1C1 Ferguson saJd It II .
"an onstaii&amp;ht of deceit," says an E. Ferauson and former Cleveland Speake!-) vern Riffe,',' Eckhart
time to.end what they said wast.
011ranlzer of the direct election Mayor Dennis Kuctnich were sali1
amcinc !hoee carryJnc 19 boxes of .
Ritfe, D-New Boston; asked PUCO's rllbber-stamP approval tl.
movement.
The Committee tor Direct Elec- pettt*lntotheStateOftlceTower about Eckhart's statement that utruty requests for rate tncreues.
'"lbere IS no utility regulation In
tion tiled Initiative petitions bearing from • armored car that delivered utrutles own the Legislature, said.
Olllo. It's a fraud, It's a farce, It' aa
"Let's get realiStiC."
(:!O,Inl names with Secretary of them.
Gov. James A. Rhodes would not sick joke," Ecllhart said '"I'be on))(
SIIDitures W!!l:f! collected by
State Antllony J. Celebrez22 Jr. 011
Tuesday to place the matter on ·the · paid c:lrcillators through a ~ say whether he supports the prop- way we are going to clear out ~
coordlNted by HW, Zootr and SliD· osal. Commlasloners are ·now ap- poUtlcal hacks and the utility yes.
November ballot
men IS to make PUCO commlsslolj;.
Co-chairman Henry W. Eckhart, zlano, a ColumbuS Campaign COD• pointed by a gQYernor.
.
a Columbus attorney who was ooce aultln{ftrm. CUvanen a11o took • "We have!Dwalton some facts,' ' era cllrecUY accountable to t~
.
.
a member t1. the PUCO, saJd oppo- In ablit $«»,1m In contrlbutlons.
Rbodes s&amp;id Tuesday. "111 stat~ people."
here to say .:;
Edlaart, at a neWs coafere!ICI!, where they elect they have not al- · "I'm not
nents would spare no expenae to
fight the proposal. The PUCO seta crltlctilld Coosumera' Counsel Wil- ways been the truest repre8f!S!ta· that you're automaticallY going tO
have lower utility rates simply ~
Ham Spratley, Wllo oppcm .the tlvi! of the con.sunler."
rates tor public utDltles In 01110.
"The utilities are going to IPe!ld · electll!ll r1 utrut.v ~!bra. ·
· He said he might take a stand on cause you haw direct el~" be
mllUons r1 dollars ... to Ue to111," he
''Hell owned and operated by the the Issue "a couple of weeks before said "I say direct election will ... In
all Ukellhood, provide lower utru~
said. "It Is JOinc to be an 0111laught ~re. The LePiature Is ihe election."
of deceit, the likes of which the state OWIIIland opented by the utruty
It Is expected to take elections 11- rates In the future than we would"
~
compUJes.'' Eckhart 'said
.
ftclals unto mid-September to de- have otberwtse."
-~

prepared

.

' 'tl2 llale fai,r

COUNTV-BY.COUNTY COUNT- Myra Baker aDd Fred Shoemaker
sort through petltloaa coatalnlug about UO,GOO siiiJIIItures favoring a cODsUtuUonal amendment requiring electloaa of Ohio utillty commllalonen.
Tbe peUUoaa, aubmltted TUesday, were being sorted Into pOes acconiiDg
to county. (APLIIserphoto).

Lyons named acting
marshal for Racine
Harry Lyons, Sr., was named acting marshal for a six months leave
t1. absence ·granted Charles Shain
when Racine VIllage Council met In
regular session Mondsy night.
Mayor Charles Pyles administered
the O@th of office to Lyons who will
work varied hours In the commlmlty.
During the meeting it was agreed
that mayor's court will be held at 6
p.m. each Friday; 11 p.m. was
voting as the closing time for the
viltage park, and It was agreed to enforce ll no parking regulation on the
. beach at the old ferry landing.
It was voted to authorize James
Jennings and Associates, Columbus,
to continue working 011 the village
application for a new water tank for
the conununity water system. It was
agreed to purchase a used patrol
cruiser if one is available and council voted against vacating an alley

~ayors

as requested by Dewey Smith.
Due to Labor Day, the September
meeting of the gro~p was set for
Sept.13 at 7 p.m.
.
Frank Cleland reported the street
deparlmept advised him by letter
that the Ohio Department of Hlg~
ways wlil pave the berm on State
Route 124 frqm Tryee Blvd. to
Southern High School. The village
will be responsible for painting the
linea marking a walkway along the
road. Cleland also reported that he
checked with the county treasurer's
office and has learned that a 1.7 mill
levy in effect for current operating
expenses will be up for renewal in
1983.
Attending the meeting were
Margie Wolfe, clerk-treuurer;
Glenn Rizer, street conunlasioner;
council membtirs, Robert Beegle,
Ben Petrel, Janette Lawrence and
Scott Wolfe.
•

finish cases

Mayors' courts were held last
night In Pomeroy and Middleport, ·
with a number rA fines and !orlelts.
Pomeroy, Mayor Clarence
Andrews-Robert Rlflle, Pomeroy, filled $63 and costs, no operators' Ucense; James Laudermllt,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs. no opera·
tors' license; Kenneth White,
Pomeroy $46 and costs lor speed
and ~ and costs, no operators' Ucense; Cynthia Childers, Mt. Alto,
W. Va., forfeited $45, speed; Mark
Casto. Pomeroy, forfeited $43, assured clear distance; Clarence
McDaniel Jr., Middleport, forfeited
$163, ·reckless operatiOn; Carol Russell, Columbus, forfeited $63,
passed on a double yellow line;
Franklin Wolfe, Racine, forfeited
$411, speed.
Middleport ,, Mayor Fred
Hoffman-forfeits-Roger Nelson,

c,.•cau.

I

. t

Area deatbs
~ aervicea will be held at 2

Andrew Toler

p.m. l'ttday In the McCoy-Moore'
Fwwtl Home, VInton. .Friends
may ..U ·at the funeral home from
2-4 IIIII T·9 p.m. Thu~.
In llill of flowers, donations may
be l11lde to the John P. Minton
Canctt'
Reeeareh Foundation, In
care Gl the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Ho1111,·· MaiD Street. VInton, Olllo
45816.

Andrew Toler, 571 Rt. 1, Bidwell.

died at 9:30 a.m Tuesday In University H01pltal, Columbua, after
an exteilded lllaess.
Born Oct 18, 192(, In Wayne
County, W.Va .. 1011 ct. the !me l&gt;e'
wey and Clara Goodmall Gee
Toler, he wsa a Worid War II veteran, worked u a route salesman
for Covert Blltery Co. IJid wu employed tor 19years by Heiner'1 Bakery Products. In l!MII, he started the
Toler IJid Toler Insurance~·
He attendtd C&amp;mpalp Free Will
Baptist Church and was active In
various community affairs.
He married the former Dorothy
'Thomas, who aur.vlves, on May31,
1946.
Also sUMvlng II a dallll!ter.
Janet Brow111n1; t11ree SOIIB, Mau·
rice, Ra1 and Michael; a step.
mother, Mra. Dewey Toler; Uld a
sister, Marte Dodrldge.

Florida, $375, OWl; David Jenkins,
Racine, $375, DWI, and $100, possession of marijuana. FinesClinton Zlngus, Carbondale, Oh..
$250 and costa and three days In jail,
DWI; Terry Clark, Rutland, $250
·
and
ts d three da In jail
Joan Tewbbary, R.N., ·Melp
cos an
ys
' . Co. tuberculolls nurse, will be li!V·
DWI; Carolyn Neece, Pomeroy,
lng . tuberculin sldn tests to all
$250 and costs and three days In jall,
·
DWI; Harry Pettit, Ppmeroy, $250 school ~SDIIIlel who ha~ 11Dt yet
and costs and three days In jail,
received their testa tor the J9ID.&amp;'i
DWI, and $100 and costs, possses
school year·
slon; Tom Scally, Middleport, $250
Testa will be 8lven 011 Mollday
and costs and three' days In jall, ·• and 'I'IIescky• Aua. 9 and :W. from
DWI, and $100 and costs, driving 8:30-ll:ll a.m. and from 1-4
under suspensiOn; James Thomas
and on Wl'dnMtay, Aug. U. from
Middleport· $100 costa auspim~ 8:30a.m-4:30p.m. only. Testa are
no tall nghts; c:krgory Ferguson,
from the Multi-Purpoee bulldiDc.
West Columbia, W. Va., $50 and Mulberry ~ta. ThiB aame date
costs. dlsordderly manner; Paula appUes to perDII handling food tor
Stone, Rutland, $50andcosta,dlsor- theservlceMelp fair. 1bl.s 11 a tree

lng a

Buckeye briefs

TB le&amp;t! slated

Veterans Memorial Hospital had
ftve admissions and five discharges
Tuesday.
.
Admissions-Holly Friend, Syracues' ·Jame Braley, Middleport;
DOris Haynes, Pomeroy; Wallace
Hatfield, Pomeroy. DischargesWilma Eynon, Beatrice Donohew,
Wllllam Asbeck Jr., Fanny Phll·
Ups. Sadie CarL ·
'

wANTED TO IUY ·

St'A""IIDING
PINE JIUBER
.
..A.__,UR WMBER
!Kftnln
'

1

;',

.

•

lib. Kraft 20 Individual
Slices Velvuta

Bluegrass show

sea _

"*'

..

I

i;

•

'i-

I

•

~

try II decllnlni. especially
. Kroger manufacturers.
'

I

Auditor co~s a~crepancy ·.
.f'OR'l'SMOlJ'l'H, Ohio - Portsinouth Al!di!Qr 'David Wilson says
he hal CODflrmed a discrepancy In his oftlce of perhaps as mooh as
$10.\D).'.
l
..
'·'There have been trregularjtles In this omce,'' Wilson said at a
news confereilce Wednesday. "There are definitely so!lie funds that
•~ uil8ccolinted tor and have dellnltely been mlsplacl!d or

2.39

'• .

1.39

1

;

~''

25'

I

'

'

.

••

0

I

I

\

'

~ - The wlnnlng number drawn In the Ohio Lotlottery· reportM
t!it1t1J1p Wertneeday cit $06,48)J!O trom ille wagerlllg on tht pme.
Ia dlip came 011 sales rA Sl.021,tn.50. while holders rA wtiudng
tleketa are eiltltled ~ IMre ~.6!1(1. lOttery dftlclalli 8i1l

.,.. cl8llY _p me "The Number'' was 4f!l. The

''

~--~~---- 1Veru:neJ~~-------.

e

I

Aunt Jemima BucWwheat

_PANCAKE MIX ~ ••••

Teenager dies, roof torn off motel

• • • •

14 oz.

By •maclated 1".-

Stotms cauaed the death of a 15-year-old boy and his dog In Alexan-

.,

DEL MONTE KETCHUP

SiiEPWEAR
1, S'ALE

harl1
candy 'and gum drop&amp; that
1

&lt;

DONALD 'DUCK ORANGE JUICE , ·. , , 2/Br
lib. BQOTU PERCH fiLETS • , , • , , , 51.99

. -.,oz.

In· the

Winning Ohio lottery number

~ ~1 •

I Ohi 0 '

dria, Ky.,_Wednesday afll!moon and tore ille root off a hotel In
Richmond, Ind., saii! James Wolfe, assistant pollee chief of
Alexandria.
Dr. Mori1l ~ !ISslstant camplleu County coroner, said he
thlnkB the youth was l'8edlng the dot under li tree when struck by the

• • • •

46 or. Dole ·

PINEAPPLE.JUICE

.'

Can·

FRUIT COCKTAIL

, I.

l1&amp;lrtnJDI.
'
~ '-1 r~ WIOOmflnned reports of a tornado touchdown

• • • • •

17 oz. Del Monte .

Ml!lgs Co. EMS reported some

• · 'Ibere wtU be a Bluegrass Plckln'
at Portlaild Elementary School, Rt
Ut Friday, Aug.. 6 from 6:30-ll
p.m. 1'be event Is sponsored by the
PortlaDd Pl'O, I .
Featured wm be Sundown. west Truateee to meet
VtriiJI!a Mountain Bays, Ron
SalisbUrY 1\vlp. trullal will
RlllbY 1111d ODe Way Track, Brook
have
a resutar meellq Friday,·
Over BnJthen, Uld Chuck aDd
Aua.
&amp;,
at 7 p.m. at tile IIIDt al
Frlllllld tile lllueli'auStalll~
Cerk
Wlllda
EbUa, Latarel atll
A4M1111011 II S3 tor siiJIItll, f5 for
AU lll"'&amp;p are open to tile
eonp!M, $1 for children 5-12, and
.
public.
SUI for lll!lllor cltlzena.

"relatively quiet" durlnc the night
apart from sporadic Katyusha
rocket fire from Palestinian units.
It said lsraeU' soldiers exercised
"restraint." but did not say
whemer they ftred back,;, .,
..the '.commiuld ' '~d· 19 JsraeU
soldiers had been killed In the Belrut area dOling the previous 24
hours, Including one who died ln a
Palestinian bazooka ambush east
of the city. Seven o~ soldiers
were wounded In the ambush, It
said.
The PLO has not announced any
casualties among Its estimated
8,1nl ftghters, trapped In Beirut
since the early stages r1 the Israeli
Invasion that began June 6.
-Alarmed by Israel's new often.
slve, which apparently was aimed
at Isolating the Palestinians In
southern Beirut camps, President
Reagan said he wrote Israeli Prime
Minister
Menachem Begin ID tell
distriCts.
A pollee spokesman said many r1 him a striCt cease-fire Is !Ill "absothe wounded were expected ID die lute necessity."
Sources In Washlngton said the
SOlin because the Moslem sector's
administration
was considering
hospitals are suffertng' drastic shor·
ana economic
miUtary.
diplomatic
1a1es r1 plasma, water and fuel beIf
Israel
doe!!
not stop the
penalties
cauae of an ll-day Israeli blockade
that has fnade fruit, bread and ve- offensive. The White House
avoided mentioning sanctions In Its
getable&amp; ac&amp;rc;e.
The Tel Avtv lill1ltary comtnand public staiements.
'nle U.N. ~rtty Council voted
lsiUed • communique ear(y today
aayJni the Beirut war frOnt was 14-0, with the United States a1olle

Kro&amp;er I!JiOkeswomail Audrew McCafferty said the cabdy Indus-

I

REi{RMHSHES : !'~'~

CHEESE .•••.• !"!' '2.49

$UMMEl
'

~

\Vinlam ~ executive secretary-treasurer of the Clnci!IJiatl

8

PANCAKE SYRUP

day with a carnival planned for
kids on Saturday. There will 1Je
games. It Is not too late to l'l!giater
children for the schooL

j'

around ~· lJid. Wedneaday afternoon. No one was Injured
when Wlnds.tore the root from the Spirit of'76Motel, at Insterstate70

'
,I

I

I

'I

. ll!ld.u.s. «) ~;u~. .
.
In 110i'thenl KelituCIIY, the ~·pniluced scattered power out-

I

ROYAL
PRINCE YAMS
•

Can
I

I

I

1501. Armour

CORN BEEF HAsH ·•

Can
e

•

•

e

•

I

gg•

$1 og·
.

I

CHICKEN &amp;DUIIP.UIICS
.

. ~'tliBR li'ORECAST- Tile Naa-1 Wedter llertlee f--.u
, •••MFndaJiertllell«lia.watllilrr. ... caa ,.., ........... ·
...t•...-PIIIIL ~ -tllerllht1e &amp;hr ~hdlle etat
.... lleM11lenlllllfal ... tt71).(APhl fli~ll)

1

• •n

.

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

I uS I r.:=·=',,illiMI

QUEEN - Usa CoUiaa, left, daugbter ol Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Coillns, Route 1, ReedsvUie, was crOWIIed Meigs County Beef Queen at
the Rutland Civic Center Tuesday night by outgoing queen Brenda
Calaway, daagbter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Calaway, Reedsville. Miss
Collins will reign over beef cattle oriented events at the county lair and
other events In the county over the next year.

Thunder.storms prevalent in nation
·

. · Jftfteh cia~~-~

Tlru~$tllll Jlllllld frolh~ Into PelmSylvanla on WedDelday, IIIII a . . . . flw'
tibiA watch wlll ISsued for parts of
- t i n K-•1•'\Y aDd ........ Oblo. .
Otber lllllla.a. . .....,
L lbowei s over the eastern half of
l'larlda . . . lilt lilly ttl n In tl!l D&amp;tlon.
,
- •••t«t
d
to
atleet
the
soUthern
Plains aDd
-.-I
5

abstaining, to approve a JordanlanSpanlsh resolution demanding the
prompt return of Israeli troops to
positions held last Sunday when the
council unanimously called lor an
Immediate cease-fire.
But Begin and other Israeli ofllclals refused to be deterred from
their goal of forcing the PLO out of
Lebanon.
"Nobody Is going to bring Israel
to her knees," Begin said In a
speech In Jerusalem that replied to
a call for sanctions by the chairman
or the u.s. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Charles Percy,
R·lll.
"You must have forgotten that
Jews do not kneel but . to God,"
Begin said
Israel's ambassador ID the Unl·
ted States, Moshe Arens, !Did ABC
News that "Israel would be ready
to sacrifice economic assets, If It
came to that, ln order ID protect its
security lnterests ....The military
pressure will be cranked up until
the PLO leaves."
Reagan said he also contacted
the PLO through Intermediaries
and urged It to withdraw !rom Bel·

rut right away. ButArafat Issued a
radio appeal to all able-bodied Palestinians to take up arms "to delend what Is !ell of your nation's
honor unto death because martyrdom Is the key ID victory;'!
•.
\ , ~ .....
The Israeli military command
said the attack Wednesday did not
signal the start ol Israel's longanticipated llnal push but was
launched to show Israel "w began
at midnight Tuesday, was concentrated In three areas- the mid-city
no-man's land on the Green Line
that bisects Beirut, the port on the
northern fringes of the PLO enclave, and In the and the airport.
PLO communiques and Leban·
on's state radio said the brunt olthe
nighttime air raid fell on the area of
the abandoned Kuwaiti Embassy
- just ahead of an Israeli tank column that charged out of the Beirut
airport early Wednesday Ill within
sight of the Sabra shantytown,
which houses a major PLO
redoubt.

Salem parents,
attorneys discuss
possible actions
Patrons of the Salem Center Ele- making more room for the other
mentary School met with their at· three grades at the schooL Morris.
tnrneys, James WaUace and Susan however, has stated that no such
Gwinn, to discuss possible actions actiOn would be forthcoming lor the
to be taken regarding the status of upcoming school year.
The parents planning to take a cthe Meigs Local School Dlstlict
tion
unl¢ss the addition material·
school Wednesday night.
lzes,
are now scheduUng a meeting
The consensus was that deconsol·
·
of
parents
not only ol the Salem
ldatlon Is more dlfflcult that transSchool.
but of the HarrisonCenter
ferrng out ol the Meigs Local
ville
and
Rutland
Schools. Date of
District. However, patrQns have
the
meetlrig,
to
be
held at the Ruthreatened to take action In one dltland
Civic
Center,
has
not been set
·recuon or another If two rooms are
PosslbUitles
of
deconsoiidatlon
wUI
not added to the school. They
he
discussed
ai
that
time.
charge that the addition to the
The Salem Center parents have
school was promised by the former
sent
a letter to the Meigs Local
administration upon passage ill a
Board
asking to be put on \he
mUUon dollar tax free bond Issue In
agenda
at
the August meeting. The
the district.
regutar
meeting
ol that board wtU
HoweVer, earlier p~t Supt.
be
A:ug.
17
although
there Is a speDan Morris SUI!IIf!Sied _that . the
cial
session
tonight.
upper three grades at Salem Center
be transferred ID Rutlalld thereby

., .

5

IWib' cli.udy lml&amp;bt and Friday. ~ lilllllbliS-'10. HIP! trt.

.... WIDdl tonJP.t lllll'tllelllilly . . ~ lO •
,
"B ltn' • Oltltl'l'a«&lt;Mt
· '
•I Ill .. pi' 'I•

'

a.

Weather foreoost
-

•••••

·t.

..J

1$1ii 01. LUCk'S

.

a.m.,;,

llttJe
The Natlpllal Weather Sery1ce said hallstones lieU about 10 rnlk!s soutll d. the Ohio Rlver, .and temperature
ell: opped 10.15 !leirees.'
.
. .

,agi!l bOt

24oz.

''

ground

By The Mtod•ed 1'1'11111
· Lebaliese poUce reported at least
250 clvUiana killed and 670 wounded
In the devastating 20-hour bom·
bardment of west Beirut by lsraeU
jets;gunboa(4 and~rybacklng.
' tank Cluir(p!S lluit CaiV~ OUt new '
~ltlons 011 thtee fronts around the
PLO's tiattered enclave.
Israel suspended the push after a
strongly worded message from
President Reagan. But Israeli olflclals vowed to continue their drive
to crush the Palestine Uberatlon
Organization, ana guerrilla chief
Yasaer Arafat exhprted his followers to tight to the dl!ath.
· lJraell w8l1llaJles ~mbed south
and west Be!ruttor90mlnutes after
sundown Wednesday, capping a
daylong rain of shelHire that collapsed city bloCks and gutted apartmeilt . buUdlngs In west Beirut's
residential and commercial

~0 Labor~. also criticiZed what the company has done.

~RAP£FRUIT ••• ~~

15 Cenh

250 civilians killed in devastating battle

tloJW picket lines at till: plilnt.

24 01. Aunt Jemima Light

The Middleport Church of Chrtlt

.

~.

lib. talllornla Long Whiht ·
8
~! 1

FRUIT DRINKS ••• ,. ~·.1 99'

"!" 1~2~:1':.
Outof State Ca!l '
614-596-5180

Is having Bible school througll Fl1-

..

' CINCINNATI- People who want an Izzy BUilrer at Pat's Cafe
wtU have to ask tor a Leglll Battle Burlier !oilOWing a court-ordered
nanie chan&amp;e, •
Izzy Kadetz, owner of a deUcatessen bearing bls name, tiled suit
earUer this week alleging that Pat's Cafe was Infringing on the
restaurant's name with the Izzy Burger'hamburger. Tlle _Kadetz
establishment also serves an Izzy BUilrerFranclne LaPille, owner ti.PafsCafe, toldHamlltonCountyCom11)011 PleaS CoUrt Judie Fred Cartolano Wednesday that her nick·
riame,was Izzy, shortened ~m Dizzy, and that the hamburger was
named alter her.

•

Sib. Pink

&amp; POST CO.

~•II T II F

.

· Name . cau~ burger court battle.

Lb.

Broughton

.M

LADIES

activity avernlght Tuesday.
At 1: 54 p.m., Tuppers Plafna
squad went to Rt. 124, near ~
ville, to take Harold Calgary to St
Joseph'sltospltal, Parkers!Juqr. at
8:43p.m.; Pomeroy responcled.to a
calla! the In~ t1. Rta. U.
and 33 and took Wally aDd Doua
Hatfield to Veterans MemorlalHa.
p!tal; at u:lllp.m., Pomeroy'nnlt
went· to Second AV81ue aad took
Christy FeUure to Holzer Medical
Center.
'

I

• ••

POTATOES •.••

·en tine

1'be withholding provision approved Wednesday night would go IDID
next Jan. 1. Banking Institutions and corporations would withhold
tor the eovernment 10 percent of Interest and dlv~ . just as taxes are
. now withheld from wages.
.
. Exempt ·from withholding would be any account earnjng less than $100
Interest a year; people 65 (llld older who In the pmolous ye«r paid $1,500 or
leu total taxes ($2,500 for a couple); and people or any age whose tax
uablllty was $ml 'or less ($l,lnl or less for a couple).
111e withholding provisiOn would produce an estimated $11.7 b1111on &lt;:Ner
the next three years, maln1y by coUectlng taxes on a good part of the
estimated n percent of Interest and 15 pel-cent of dividends that now
illegally escape taxatiOn. It Is part of a package of changes to toughen
• compUance with the tax laws.

· ~t ~lOre U'lion, charged Wednesday that Kroger hal "the
cold ~tallly of 1111 earlb!.uake" as he threatened to set up lnforma·

MARGARINE • : • •~~· 79'

•

*'

~l!ll'~*Jiiii~-~ .WithPut~ ..~l" . . . . ·, "
Rol{l.rt .Reuter, preslden~ ~I:.ocal:«lof the RetaU, Who~ an!!

r-::.::·_ _..;__ __;__j_~~~~~~=~~~ ·--~~~~~-··-~·------111!!1••••••

Emergeney runs

• rA a man
MIDDIEI'OWN, Ohlo- The 1Bill murder conviction
hired tO kDl a Plckaway County woman has ~upheld by the state
12t1i DIBtrlct CQUrt Qf Appeals.
1
Teddy Dingus, 29, or'_Mount StetUng, was convicted of aggravated
murder ln'.the death ~Linda Timmons, who was shot at her hom!!
AJhvl1le In Februai-y l!llli.
Jametr KJnpley, who was Plekaway County prosecutor at the
time. aald that the victim's former: busbancl, Wayne Timmons, liad
peld $l,JXI to have her kiUed. The couple had been Involved In liltter
~ and,chlld CUJtody p~ prior to the shooting.

Eckrich

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

Will flush hydranlll

Veterans Memorial

. Court upholds murder conviction

-

lib. Kraft Parkay

Page 6

WASHINGI'ON (AP) -Spurred by President Reagan's renewed call
tOr a tax InCrease this year, a Senate-House conterence committee has
agreed to require tO-percent Income tax withholding on ~terest and
dividends.
The withholding plan Is a major element of a bill passed by the Senate
that would raise a record~- 9 biUion OVI1!' the next three years In an effort
tO cut f•al borrowing and reduce Interest rates.
Conference negotiatorS also agreed WedneSday night ID reduce the tax
deduction for uninsured personal losses, such ~ from fire and theft.
. Beglnll1ng next year, a deduction would be permitted only tor the portion of
· such losses that exceed 10 percent of adjusted gross Income; the only llmUt
now 1.s that the taxpayer bear the llrst $100 of loss.
The 15-member panel took Its first votes on the compromise tax·
Increase bill after Reagan met with members of Congress to urge Ita
approval. The meetlll(lll were prompted by warnings Congress would not
raise taxes In this election year unless prodded by the president.

' "CINCJNNA'l'I -A Uioon oftlctal lias aecused the Kroger Co. of
wilon-~ alter tile comP.B!!Y ~·It will ~ a candy

Meigs County happenings•••
The Racine Village Board of
Public Affalr.i reports that beginning Sunday eviming and again on
Monday evening hydrants in the
water system will-~ flushed.
Water may be cloudy and the
patience of water customers is
requested.

operation In the near future."
C8&amp;SOE ·has a 78.5 perrent Interest In the $1.5 billion laclllty Wider
coilltnlctlon at MDicOw, on the Ohio River east of ClnciJinatL
~man llruce Stilecldln sali1 CASOE hopes the plant' wtQ be
placed In opes:atlDn In 1983. Gretchen Hummel of the Ohio ColiBU- ,
men' Cou~~~telaays tllerels Uttleevldenceltwlllbereadytogenerate
poWer next·year.
' ·

twllllbt motorcycle accident

vehlc:ltt

._m.

derly manner;
Larry
Cundiff,
Middleport,
$50 and
costa,
disorderly
manner.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A spokesman for the Columbus and Soytll-

ftln Ohlo Electric Co. says a federal waiver of further hearlnp on
construction at; the Zlmlr1er nuclear power plant means It "call be In

KrOger to close candy plant

0

.

1 Sectton, 12 Pae••

gain~

Plant ean be in." operation. 800n

Peraons were Injured follow·

0

n,.._..._.._
tltO...tl14

a1 y

1

'

Meigs Fair,
canning-baking
division has
87 classes

, ;"~tl.!l~l...._:·-~~~~:1 m!:::;:.:;;;:;:;;~:±=======:r~r;;p~j~·~~F~:!Y=:~::::id:d:::l•~;;.~~:;_·
.::O:,:h;~:_:·~T.::~:u.:,:Re::d:ay!:~~·~.u~~~u:~!.~~S~,1~9;::1:!2----:-----:~.-----~:.•:M•: :;I';:'m:od: ,:I•:,:'":;,:';.,;N~•,; .w•;:;P•: ;P~"'-

"extremely bur- Industry.
'
' ·
clensome" federal regulations, be- · He cited regulations on bolldlni
comes one of the laSt states to have opemtors pending restoration - ~
Its surface mining program mine-damaged land.
,
approved.
The $2,500-per-acre pertorman~
Final· approval Is needed from bond Is to be refunded In stages, bUt
the Legislature, but S!le!:k said he thestatewlllholdthelastl5percent
sees no problem there. Speck Is t1. the bond tor nve years from the
chairman t1. the Senate Energy, date rA seeding the restored land.
Natural Resources and EnvironCall said that If an area has to be
ment Committee.
reseeded alter a couple of yearS,
Since the Reagan administration the ftVe-year period starts all over
took aver 18 months ago, the Offtce again. 1'be requtreme!ll ID put \lp
of Surface Mining has rewrtttlln 00 bond tor such long periods could ·
percent of the regulations, Watt pose hardships, he said.
·'
.said.
Approval t1. Ohlo' s program
Environmental groups unhappy won't have much Impact on cdal
wtththewholeilalerewrttlngotf~
mlniJia employment as long as
era! regulations under Watt haW fouah cte.an air laws limit the burnlaunched court challenges to some lng of Ohio's. high-sulfur coal, ~
of t11oae changes.
said.
CaU wu not completely happy
"Weburn'IOmllllontonstl.coal;t
with the regulations, which are to year In Ohio. We now produce~
become effective with publlcatldn 35 mUllon tons. We've got ID tum
In the Federal R.egls'ter Aug. 16. He that around,'' he said
' said lie will PJqJOtte amendments to
Speck saJd Ohio has received $3.6
some of the regulations, which he mDlloa from the rcclamatlon fund
considers unnecessarily burden- since l9'T1 tor emergency work and
· some for regulators and the projecta Involving severe damage.
.-----------;---' _...:,._'---··-.-..:~-~.,

SMOKED ·sAUSAGE
Eckrich
OLD
FASHION ~OAF
Homemade
HAM SALAD

~J.

•

~hat~~

last nJpt In Pomeroy.
wan.ce Hatfield, southbound on
Nye Avmue, clrovtthrough the IJI.
tel section at Rta. 124 and 33 and
I'8IIIJIM Into a power Pole and a
road • • throwing him and hiB
pal...... Donna Hatfield, off the
cycle. Pomeroy EMS was caUed
and tluaported the Hatflelds to
Veteraa Memorial Hospital. Hat·
fteld ... admitted; Mrs. Hat:fteld
wau I' ased.
·
N~101d police the brakes~
Tltert JrU moderate damage to the

_
,
.~.~~·

'

· '

toe

Is""'"'-··
\ _77 ·· ~08
.

P.apl2 .

Two hurt in
motoryele aooidena
Tw$

1oa

.

I

Ohio's reclalnati.ln plan 'gains approval~~
/

Hendenoh sets
new theft record

a...Iehapterin
Rhodes -love affair

'

. WASHINGTON (AP) -Ohio's of ~vDle said one of the ftrst
plan to salvaae land gutted b)&gt; strlp pro~ probably will be $2 mllUon
mining has f1naUy aalned federal · In ~lion work at New Lexapproval andatateof!lclals~eye- lngtoll. Where drainage W11 aban·
lng projecta on which to spesld mil· cloned mines hal sent poUutanta
Uons of doUara In reclamation Into tilt city reservoir.
funds.
"111e city water supp!Y Is In jeoInterior Secretary James Watt pardy," Speck said.
said approval Tuellday t1. Ohio's
Ohlodlreclortl.recproaram mea111 the state will aet 1arnalaD. aald then! are more than
$12.5 mWlon Immediately, die first 00 ~ areu belni conInstallment 011 more than S11 mil- slderel for reclamatkin pprojects.
lion du41 from the reclamation fuJ1d. . Spa$ and cau were 8IIIOIIi Ohio
The fUnd establllhed under the ofllclallllld conaressmen present
19Ti strip mining law Is ftnanced by u Wattalped a document turning
a charae of 35 cents per ton r1 coal strip ltdnlni regulation IJid rectaproduced by strip mine operators.
matloa over to the state. I
RepubllcanstateSen.SamSpeck
01111, which tor )'l!&amp;rS battled

'

•

I
'Ill'•
..............
, • • na ....

'

Begins prison sentence
POMEROY · A WestVII'f'~ woman was transported to the SUite
Refonnatory for Women Thursday morning to begin her sentence of'
six nionths to five years tor wt!lfare traud.
Tammy Hayer, 26, i'oiDt Pl8uant, wu tallen ID the state facility .
• by Melp County deputlee. Sbe·elltered a guilty plea tO a charae r1
theft In a bill itlnfonnatlollflledbytheproeecutlngattomey's-offtce. '
.:; ;

r

.

1:;
I

�'

, ..

Page--2-The Dally Sentlnll
Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh!o
Thunclay, Augwt 5f1912 .

Commentary

.~

Pomeroy- Middleport,

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page--:3 ·
I

Grant,
coaching staff talking
.
strike .at Hall of ·F ame ga~e

..: .'.

'

The Daily Sentinel

.1

Ill f nurl Slrt't'l
P•Lfht'rt~}'. Ohiu

614-992-2151
HF:\'CJTiiU TI ITJt r. INTF.R E.i;jf OF TJI E MEI(iS.MASON ARF.A

ROBElRT L. WINGE'IT
Publillwr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

i\ ~s istalll l 'ubli li h t'r/Cmtlr ull t• r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NI'WII Editor
A ME MBER 11f Tttr AIQi tM ' illt~ Pretuc, lnllnd Dally l"n'1i!i AI'NOdMiitHt a nd tht•
Amr rirun Nt"oU plllprr PubliM ~n AIIH!Ic'laltun.

I,F.TI'ERS CW OPINION Ill'\' \lo't'lromrd . 'Mlt•y llb.Nid b.· InN 1h11n 3tO wnnb illlljt. All
lrllt' rN Hrr NUbjed ltl ecJilln~t lind mutl fw Migbfd WIUI nMMt', ilddl't'"ll IUd lt'il'phlll'lt'

numbt'r . Nu UDIIJi ned ldltn: will br pubUibrd.lrUI!n 11 ht1Uidlw in f!nlld bu; W. auldrt'!Ui in~

lll!i\U!N, 0111 ~r!!luRIIIIII~ .

"

The graduates
You can t~ll a lot about a society by the values it places upon its members.
And you can tell a lot about that from the salaries offered those members
who have rea~hed the end of the educational line and are begiMing
professional careers.
The College Placement Council is out with its mid-year report on that su~
ject, and it contains no surprises. Technologists again are corrunanding the
fattest paychecks.
Petroleum engineers, alllll average $30,468 per year, are receiving the
most In their first jobs, followed by chemical engineers at $2'1 ,072. The
figures for the two specialties are up 14.3 percent and 11.1 percent respectively over the previous year, gains that take on added interest when compared with an inflation rate that, as measured by the Consumer Price Index,
trailed at 8.9 percentfor the year.
.
.Beginning !l{llaries in the sciences are less but still comfortable. Degrees
in physical and earth science specialties are worth the most, an average
$23,760. Computer science is the runner-up at $22,896 but this year drew the
most job offers in the field.
Moving on to business majors, newly qualified accountants are being paid
the most but, at an average $18,540, far less thant he technically qualified.
The College Place~nt Council surveys salary trends three times a· year
- in January, March and July. Its findings are based on offers tendered by
company recruiters to four-year graduates at selected colleges and universities ~ 161 institutions in this case.
While the salary figures may be largely good news, less so is another
aspect of the economy reflected in the survey. The number of offers has
declined significantly from last year, by more than 15 percent, reflecting the
impact of the recession. Even in the technical skills, the job market has contracted after six years of steady expansion with the demand generally exceeding the supply of graduates.
Missing from the survey are specifics on salaries for liberal arts
graduates. The council does not collect data on this group In detail because,
it explains, the bulk of graduates obtain jobs - at least the lucky ones do a~r leaving school. The figures for them are necessarily less complete and
dependable.
,
But information avaihible elsewhere indicates that job~! are far fewer arid
starting salaries much more niggardly. A similar study, the Endicott
Report, conducted by Northwestern University at the end of 1981, projected
similar salary levels for this year's graduates in technological and business
fields. Abachelor's degree in liberal arts, however, could be expected to be
worth $15,924 - if a job could be found.
The unequal opportunities characterizing today's professional job market
are of interest and concern not only to this year's graduates. They alSo raise
problems for the institutions that produced them.
~ unwelcome consequence of the strong demand for e0gineering and
scientific personnel is the difficulty many schools and departments are encoUntering in their own staffing. The lure of high salaries in industry is emptying classrooms of the teachers essential to training the next professional
generation.
The problem is somewhat different and more ominous for the liberal arts
schools. With the slack demand for their graduates coinciding with cutbacks
in government aid, 1hey are in a tightening financial bind. Many snialler
private schools are having to confront the question of whether they can hang
on imtil better times.
Final note on the class of '82: With very few exceptions, average salary offers to women are lower than those to male graduates in the same fields.
It appears some things will never change.

Short Majority Leader
takes perch on issues
WASHINGTON (AP) - Some
Senate Minority Leader Robert
crt'tlcs are suggesting that Senate C. Byrd, O.W. Va., entered the fray
Mljjorlty Leader Howard Baker on Ford's side. spend more time on the floor, but
"We (should) have a rule In the
his feet don't always reach.
Senate that we preclude the leaders
And that's the problem, accord· from.sltUng on the tables In the well
1ng to Sen. Wendell Ford, O.Ky., because when I see Sen. Baker sit·
who ctatms Baker's habit of sltUng tlng on thai table, If he Is facing to
nonchalantly on a table at the front, the west, I know we are goillg to
..Dr :·well,'' of the chamber, feet dan· lose. I think If we had ·a rule that
~.Is driving him crazy.
would preclude that, we Ini&amp;l\t win
The 5-foot-7-inclt Senate leader Is a few'."
fond of taking that perch when a
Baker, meanwhile, says he's tak·
wte IS being taken. It gives him a lng it, all very personally - espechance to chat persuasively with cially Ford's Crack about his
senators on their way to vote.
vote-counting techniques.
Ford, wbo has been battling
"He shbuldn't have said that
Baker for the past several weeks on about my foot," Baker said.
l
the Issue of a balanced federal
budget, said he ooted that Baker
During the House Appropriations
has a way of keeping track·of votes Committee deliberations on a
·
with his foot.
multiblllton-dollar supplemental .
"Everyfime he moves his foot, I .spenatng 'bill. dlleUIIlal turned to
lose another vote," Ford government aublddles.
Rep. Silvio 0. Coall!, R-Mass.,
Compwried.
Baker suppOrts the budget prop- ~ ~ Republican oo the
panel, decried moves \0 l.ncbw!e
osal; Ford IS agalnat it.
llllf
more IIUblddles, l8)'llla aucb
Ford even took his gripe to the
amendment&amp;
could doom the enUre
Senate chamber, telling colpal:kqe
to
a
pretdclelitlal veto.
lequel: '1 understand wben the
He
I!YI!II
drew
011 pefuw . . .
(roll call) lheet II put ob the tables
r1ence
to
make
biJ polllt: "Tbll
In tbe weD and the leederl ltart
beat
1111
caUII!d
my tomltoel to
taildDI to IJIICIPe and telilDI them
bow to !/ole, I enjOy that lll!l'y,IDIICh. ripen all It IIU - I'm not uldnir ·
However, I wllb tbey would not sit for any sublddles."
thefe !Jut liVe ua a chaDce."

lame~

Bureaucratic wetlands
WASHINGTON - Bill Lambert is
a stubborn man. The U.S. Anny's
Col'!ll\ of Engineers can be stubborn
too, These adversaries have tangled
in legal proceedings down in Florida
tha¥~provlde one e mote demonstration (/f what can happen when
bureaucrats and judges run amo!c.
ThiS is a complicated story, but it
is worth your attention because
there is a moral to it.
Back in 1972 Congress adopted
certain amendments to the Federal
Water Control Pollution Act. Among
these amendments was a paragraph
known as Section 404. The purpose of
Section 404 was to renew the
jurisdiction of · the Corps of
Engineers over navigable waters.
Neither in Section 404 or In any
provision of the act was there the
slightest reference to "weUands."
A few years passed. In 1979
Congress passed the Clean Water
Act, giving the Environmental
Protection Agency a piece of the action. The EPA was to look after
"waters of the United States." The
1979 legislation did· not amend Section 404 - the Corps of Engineers
retained its authority - but then
some ~rious things happened.
ThrougH a combination of court
dec~ and adnUnlstrative ~
terpretations the definition ·of
"navigable waters" was extended to
include all waters and the weUands
adjacent thereto. The moral here is
that the judicial hand-is quicker than
the congressional eye, for Congress
never had Intended any such thing.
The result was that by a process of
bureaucratic OlllllOIIis, every puddle,
every pond, every lake - ever rtll,
run, brook and tributary stream every swamp and marsh and potentially every lrrtgatioo ditch becune
subject to Section 404. Any person
wishing to affect such wetlands by
dredge or fill operations must apply
to the ·Corps of Engineers for a pel'mit.
Very well. Enter Bill Lambert. He
is a highly successful entrepreneur
In Cape Canaveral. Eight years ago

he Invented a machine for
separating scallops from their
shells •. His Southern· Seafood COIIlpany became the largest p~
of scallops In the nation. Now, it is
one of those ineBC&amp;pable facts of We
that once scallops are separated
from their shellS, the shells inust be
disposed of. In 1 1977 Lambert
acquired a 37-tract of land - a tract
that certainly appears dry to the
ilaked eye - and for the next three
years he tidily buried four millions
pounds of shells a week on· this
property.
Enter the bureaucracy. ln 1980 the
Corps suddenly decided that ~;am­
bert's dry land was weUand; a small
part of it was subject to inundation
after extreme weather conditioos;
besides, the tract contained such
common plants as sea daisy, leather
fern and sea purslane. For more

than two years, with the help of the
Washington Legal F'!!UJdatlon, Lambert has been fighting bureaucratic
demands that, In a word, are quite
simply abaurd.•
Lambert it not alone. The town of
Alma, Ga., has to struggle for four
years through the swamps of Section
404 to create a 1,401).acre lake. In
Cameron, La., a construction ·colllp8ny fought for two years for a permit to fill 10 acres of marsh;. the 10
acres represented five tenthousandths of ()Jle percent of the
"!!~lands In the area. Near Appleton,
Wis., a fellow named Thomas souglit
to fill an eight-foot Btrip ot wetland In
his backyard · adjacent to Lake
Shawano. He wanted to build a
garage and to plant a garden. After ·
three years, he won a partial victory: garage, yes; g11rden, no.
William R. Gianelli, assistant

]..Kilpatrfck ·

secretary of the army for ' civil
worlls, agrees tllat Section 404 has
become a bureaucratic nlghtmire. ·
Last year, with solid suppOrt from
tlMl Whi!A! House, he set about instituting procedural reforms. Within
.the next few weeks he will publish
new rules that will abolish the
Mickey Mouse requirements·of the
past. Once In operation,. the rul~
will provide final action 9fl permits
~thin to days from appl}c!ltion.
Rationally I n a· lllkl enforced, the Clean W
Act mates
selllM!. All of us
bly went to
see our ecosystem iQtected from
wanton damage. The Juatice Depar.._
bnent provided an example Of such
enforcement last mont)!, wh'en it
won a consent decree restoring 8,000
acres of genuine weUands off the
Florida
panha~dle
near
Apalachicola Bay. .splendid!

r

h··-

schools.
But the degree to which the shor·
tage of nllrses Is a problem differs
In various parts of \he state.
"It varies throughout the state.
There are sections of the state defl·
nl!A!Iy when! there's a nune shor·
tage," Dorothy A. Cornelius,
association executive director,
said.
But In other lll'llas the hospital
census iS down, and In one City
nurses work a four-day week.
Why do nurses who have Spejlt
considerable tlme and money train·
lng for the profession leave it? ·
"I don't think there's one rea·
son," Ms. ComeUus said. ''The
causes are very complex, and they
are Interrelated."
and

1

She said starting salaries and dlf.

ferentlals have lOIIi been cited as
contributors to the turnover rate.
But pl'Qfesslonal working coiid.l·

Hiding the

'
.
Not an the revelations In the
Woodward &amp; Bernstein version of
Nixon's last 100 days are unsympathetic to him. For example,
one thing that struck me was an Item
that the fonner President wast a
wine buff and preferred·a very e11- .
pensive Chateau MargaUJ:. When he
went cruising on his )'acht Sequoia,
he instructed hll stewards to serve
the Margaux wrapPed in a towel to
obscure ~ label, wbile they served
his guests on board a cheap vintage .
Bordeaux.
Some might think that Mr. Nixon
·wa~ being petty, . but anyone who
knows the pleasures of a great wine
like chateau Margaux can appreciate .why the fonner President
wouldn't want ,to waste it on' the
people he invitetl aboard the
' .• .
'
SeqU0!8
.I have always felt t1\e aame way
about my good wine. Several years
.ago, I was given a gift by' ~
Philippe Rothschild - a case of
Chateau Mouton Rothschild 11155.
1be nectar. at that tlme sbld for
about f40 a bottle. (T11e rule of ally

.Lois Da'1,~ Kim Stewart; Julie Hysell, Kristl Rlcbmpad, LeaJma Plants, Sherry Cooper, aad TeresalJt.
tie: SeconcJ I'OIIJ - Collcl! Harry Rowlh,. Laara Fry,
Ruth Porter, Cfady Holley, Samantha Roush, Angie
Cundiff, Julie RWJII. Cindy Rllfle and team spoDllor
Ciluc~ RlfRe' of Swisher and Lohse.

Henderson .sets theft record
OAKLAND (AP) - If Rickey
Henderson, with 100
·
L~ ~·
~·
nas ,Jlls way, he'll
the majorleague stolen'
base record
before his hometown farii In Oak&gt;
. land ·tl11s month. 1
Henderson
broke his own
Amerk!an League rec;or4 ~ lQO
Wednesday With .three sfeals bi
Oakland's doublelll!ader split ~
Seattle. And he sah:U!e'd llke to·be
well .on his way· to passing Lclu
Brock's major leape markd 118'
by the time the A's ~ from a
slx·game swing through ~mesota
and Si!attle Aug. ~· to .start a 12- .
game home stand.
"l'ni hoping for five steals In
each of the t])ose series," said
Henderson. The A's play three
games each on the artificial sulfaces ct Minnesota's Metrodome and
Seattle's Klngdome. "I'm faster on
artlfl"cia.I tulf than grass," said
Henderson. ·
"So If I get on base, getting the
steals should be easy for me. That's
what I want -10 steals·oo the trtp.
Then I can come home sbootlng for
the record."
Henderson broke .hls' own 191il
' ,record
'
T
American League
by swtpptng his lOlst bale in thi! first Inning
ot O&amp;kland' s first-game 5-2 loss.
n-.)11:·'tole twn ~es oq consecu·
ti;1;1fcfies ~·~k!e rlglit!banda; .
Rich Bordlln the opening Inning of ·

Investigaiive panel will hold heari~gs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
House-Senate panel created to ln. vestlgate a shortage of nurses In
Ohio plans to hold a series of hearIngs around the state as part of Its
study.
· Leaders of both chambers have
completed appoin~lll to the 10.
member select committee, and
Rep. John D. Thompson, Jr., Its
chatnnan, said he Is eager to begin
work as soon as possible.
"It is my Intention to bold statewide hearings In order to obtain a
thorough understaDdlng of the different problems facing the dlfte...
ent areas of the state, the first of
which Is to be in Columbus,"
Thompson, D-Clevetand, said.
The Ohio Nurses A.uoclatton reports there were 18~ nurses regIstered in thestateasofMarchl981.
Most work In hospitals; others ln
nursing homes, physicians' offices

TOURNAMENT CIIAMPII- Clalm!wg !list pll!ce
boaors ill the Metp.Muon Junior SoftbaU Les'gue
T41!11'111meut aud lleCeDd ill the ieague wu the Mlddleport Brave1. Tbe Swilller and Lohse spyO.Ored
team reeently elalined 1 hard fognht tourDameat
championship over top challenger Sallslil!ry. Pictured
are, front, 1-r, Doozle Stewart, Coach; Darla Hawley,

~ine. ·.

lions and job satisfaction also play
a role.
"Actually, nurses' salaries have
Improved tremendoualy bi the past .
few years. And we thlilk that has
attracted nurses back 'Into the
lleld," Ms. CorneUus said.
She is urging the legislative panel
to e~rnine' a federaliy funded
study on the.subject cooducted by
the Ohio Department of Health.
Thompson conceded that legisla·
tors can do Uttle to resolve parts of
the problem.·
"However, there are a lot of
areas that the committee (can)
study and make I'I!COmmendatlons
to belp ease the burden that the
health care personnel and the Ohio
clinsumer are feeling due to this
shortage," be said. ·
"Potential areas of study areedu·
calional programs, financial assist·
ance for prospective nurses,

•

salaries and llcenslni programs," '
TholllPIIOn said.

House members oo the commit- ;
tee, In addition to Tllompsc)n;·~ '·

~:~;:ro~ ~~!:~. ·g:

,

Cleveland; Jo Ann Davidson,
R-Reynoldsbu!J; and Charles Ash. f
R-North Industry.
,
;
Senate members are Thonia5 F.
Walsh, R-Canton, tbe vlc:echalrman; Paul E. Pfeifer, RBucyrus; Ben M .. Skall, .;
R.cleveland;· Wwtam F. Bowen, 1). '
CincbulaU; and .. Ms,rigene Vallquette, 1).ToledO.

Risk before profit

. ..

'&lt;

so

today

.-o

~M

. •ti

I

· QUality Print' beat Clelland Realty '
67:.s9. V. Smith was the'!iigtr"scorer
ft)l' Quality Print 1with 28 points. K.
S'l!ith had 14 and R. Wise 13, F'or
Clelland Relllty, G, ·Cole was ·the
higha~corer with 34 pointa. M. Miller.
hadll.
'
'
j
Brogan-Warner defeated Quality
Print M-62. N. Knight was the high
scofer for Brogajt-Wamer with ~~
po.lnts. s. Little . scored 12 and :J.
Cremeans 10. v, Smith scored 18 fgr
Quality Print, Feurgeson bad 14 and
K.Smith10.

'

.•

'

.

I•
Smith-NelSon defeated Vlll8ge
Phiirmacy 52-46. P. "'Orrison · was .
the high scorer for Smith-Nelllln
with 14 points. B. Ashley iiCOI:ed 12 .
!xillts. High acore~ . for Village was
I

..
I

,

,
~

1r \ "'-'
I

(

Playe~ ·leave

camp

1

'I iJEIST0R, Ohio (AP) - The ,
' Cleveland Bnowns preseason Iql-'
'
1.1!1' bit two more players Wednesda)t. wben 'Veteran llnebjlcker
Bt1b Hutit and rookie guard
Ml$ P&amp;ui.en llift tr$lJ!g camp,
BroWns' of!lc!•I• said.
•

llatber, ·

w8s a five-year Na-

tJII
1111981 trcm the

( o;J

:_I!:!
;I~
'W

·...;:·

--~-

NEW YORK YANKEES-Called up
Rodney Scot!, tn&amp;tdtr, from c0Jumbul ~
the IntenaUonal J..eli\U'. Destanattd
Butch IWlltm, btrlthi!r, b' autanment .
,

_._

-

ATlANTA BRAVES-Renf!M!d ltr ~

'

£11!0" ualltant coacq.

SANDALS-tENNIS SHOES
WHfTE SHOES ••••••• 1/2 PRICE '

Ber·

.

DETROIT RED WINm-Named Nk.'k
Pblano ~ad coach and uslltant general

"

. . ALL. KINDS ........... From '100
1GROUP-

OIL ER S- Na med

Muckier aulstant. mach Md slped him

to a two.)'tai' c»ntraCI.
PHII..ADEU'HIA

I!AIIIIti'IIALL '

n

N.aao..a •Nwbe11 ~

OM-)"t C'OI11~-

DENVER NUGGEi'S-Anna.nred the

Md.Ambl ~ S.n Anl:cnio. Texas.

'

FOirNALL •
I

BUFFALO BllJI..S-.Reieued Daryl WU·
kenon, ne. tackle. ud . .nm Corcoran .
defen~tve back. Announced that E'lu
· ,.. comp.

CLEVELAND BR,OWN5-:-Bruce Huther,
retlred .Mark Paullel prd,

1~.

181: cemp.
~
.
SAN FRANQSCO t9ERS-Siped Grant
Hudlon, dettiUIIVe&gt; lineman. Cl.i Rufus
Cradrd. nmablg back. arur Charles Ua-

\UI\11

•

1'1,

'

II

'

I

/r
1•1

I

•

\
'

THE SHOE ·BOX

ST.LOU'S BLUIS-Tnded Rick LaPointe, defmtein.n. 10 the Quebec Noc·

diques tor Rat Hickey, left wlng.

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

"""""'

M¥r ..... 8oooer Leape
WlOitT.\ WINQl.-OSlsned Jor&amp;efl Krbttamen, midflelder, to a one-&gt;"ar con--

'""'·

GljNEIIAL

£NOlANA BASEBALL COMMTM"EEHired Pelf!' Bavasl 81 a COIIIullant.

,

OOW'Jillt
WAKE FOREST- Named Herb KNII!n

part· time aubt.ain Wketball o&gt;aciL ·

.

Andrew Toler died ·
after an extended · il·
Jness · . on Tuesday,
August 3rd at 9:30
a:m. in ·osu Hospital
'i n'Columbus, Ohio.
Andy was born to
t~~ lrte Clara Goodman Gee and Dewey
Toler on October 18,
1924; in · Wayne · County, w. Va.

,, ET

\I \1\11 II \
Ill ...

Pay Your Colum~la Gal lllla At:

YERS-SI Ifled Ml·

rc.llv Dvorak, ~enwman . to a sern 01

saM! or tbe club to bullne:Qnan B.J.

Gomp,L -

BUFFALQ SABRES-Named Red

the fairgrounds track, she would
challenge the fair 's pacing record
of 1: 58 1·5, set by Jay Time In 1972
and equaled by Fritz the Cat In 1918.
Also on the opening card is the
$87,000 Director of Agriculture pace
for 3-year·olds.
WWow First, the winner of the
Ohio Sires Stakes championship a
year ago In 1: 59 2·5, wlll head a
strong field thai Includes Mike An· ·
gel, the winner of seven of 10 starts
this year, and Slapdash, a 1:591·5
Winner In 1982.

CLEA RANCE SALE

......... ._

tackle'.

EDMONTON
John

NEW YORK M~Tiaded Joel
Ycundblood, wt11elder, 10 lhi' ·Mootreal
Expos b' a player to bP named later.

Nll&amp;loalll FleltW (ape

_

BOSTON-Named Tom Marb!o dir«'tor
of ....... penomel.
110011:\'
Nlllltul llde LI!ICUI!

manacc.-r.

tract or Bob WatJon. nrst baHnwl.. for

"~"

.......

said. "Tile players get paid. But we .
get nothing. Coaches get paid in the:
playoffs and In the Pro Bowl, but:
not In this game."
:
The Hall Of Fame Game Is spon·.
sored by the Pro Football Hall o!:
Fame In Canton. Ohio. The Hall of:
Fame has no legal connection with •
the NFL.
•
Elsewhere In the training camps:
Wednesday, Atlanta wide receiver •
Alfred Jenkins Is reportedly closer :
to a contract with the Falcons. Pre- :
ntlss Yancey Jr., Jenkins' agent, '
satd he and the Falcons are "mov· l
lng closely ' together and. In !act, ,
hopefully we're there (at an:
agreement) ."
:
The Falcons are without star run·.
nlng back w·nuam Al)drews, who Is ;
holding out in a contract dispute. ;
Philadelphia's Charlie Johnson,
an Ali·Pro noseguard, asked to be
traded to either San FPanclsco or
Houston

.,

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domest!c subsidiaries of the
)

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK .
in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1982 published in response to call
rnade by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
National Bank Region Nwnbcr4

Charter number 9815

--+

Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Thousands
Cash and due from depository institutions .... .. .... . .. . ..... . ......... . ..... ~94 ,000 . 00
U.S. TreasYry securities . . . .. ...... ...................... .. ........ ..... 1,886,000.00
ObligatiOns of States and political
suQI.livisions in the United States . . ...... ... . .......... . .......... .. ... . . 1,169,000.00
All other securities . .. .. · · · .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · . ..... .... · · .. . · · · · · · .. · ·
167,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to re~ell .... .. .... .... . . . .. . , .. . . . .
. .. 1,200.000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned 1ncomel ..... .. ... . . . .... . 11,347,000.00
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses . .. . ..... . .. .. ... ... . ... 91,000.00
Loans, Net ........ ... .. .. .. .. ........ . . . .......................... . . 11 ,256,ooo.oo
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ..... ......... 184,000.00
AI) other assets.. . . ........... . .... .. .. . .... .... ... . ..................... 1,000.00
TOTALASllETS ....... . . . ... . ........... . ........ . ...... . .. ..... . . . .. 16,757,000.00 - - - •

.,

Demand deposits of individuals.
......... . ..... 2,271.000.00
parinel'l!hips, and corporations .... . ... .
Ill
Time and savings"deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ...... 12,027,000.00
,!: ,Deposits
United States Government. . . . . . . .... .. ........... . ......... · · 47,000.00
::! Deposits ofof States
and political
subdivisions in the United States . . . . . . .
. ...... .. . . . ....... . .... 780,000.00
~rt!1iooand
officers'
checks
...
..
........
.
..
.
.
..
....
.. . .. .... . ....... . .. . . 81,000.00
::; TotafDeposits .... ..,. .... . . . ... .. . ... . . ... . ... ................
.. ...... 15,206,000.00
Total' demand deposits . . ........... . ... . . . ................. 2,890,000.00
Total tiine and savings deposits .............. . ............... 12,31,6,000.00
,:TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordmated notes and debentures) ...... ;.· 15,206,000.00
Common Stock
a. No. sh8red authorized 5,000 (par value)
&gt;-C b. No. shares outstanding 5,000 (par value) . . . . . . . .. . . . ... ... ........... 125,000.00
SUrplus.. .. . . .. . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. ... . .. . .... . .. .. ... 125,000.00
:lA. Undivided profits and reserve for contingendcs
and other capital reserves . ... .. . ..... ... ........ . ...... .... . . ......... 1,301,000.00
IIIU
TOTALEQUITYCAPITAL . ... . .. .. .. .. .. .......... . ... .. . .. ..... . ..... 1,551,000.00
TOTALUABIUTIESANDEQUITYCAPITAL . .. . ... . . .. . . . . .. .. .. .. . .. . 16,757,000.00 _ _
--"--+- Amounts outstanding as of report date :
. Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of $100,000 or more . : .. .. . ....... . . . ... . ..... . . .. .. ... ... . ..... .. ....... 761 ,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month ) ending with report date:
Total deposits . ......... . ... . ... ........ . .. . ... ........ ......... . . .. . 14,958,000.00

-

..c

...

......

--

oc

·We the undersigned directors ·attc•t the correctness of this statement of resourct·s and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowl ed~·· and
belief is true and correct.
.

•

John T. Wolfe
Albert Hill, Jr. - Directors .
Clarence V. Price

I, Gary P . .Norris, ¢ashier of the aboVe-named bank do ·
hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and
correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. ·
·
Gary P. NOfl'is
July 26, 1982

..'
•

"

I

.• !
.I

. ....

!Zl

.•

':')

"!

("kl '·1
I'

'

~KY . defeMIYf

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

newspaper syndicate is thatl cannot woujd recognize it for what it was, fprgot all aboutml' wine cellar.
·•
accept any gift that I can't eat or and become so enthused I'd have to
Bill one day in 19'13, 1 went up to ,
drink In 24 hours. Since I figured I . open a second bottle 'l'hich would the attic to find a suitcase. 1 toot a •
COiild drink a case iii 24 hours if I· · deple!A!mytreasure.
fluhlight .and as I was ,llhlriing it .,
really tried, I never bothered to • Once I was working on atelevision around, I saw a pile of glasi in the ;
,
show w'ith an important HollyWOOd corner of the attic. I went over to it. ,;
return it.)
But I didn't drink ~ I stashed It producer and writer.in my home.'M"y There were nine empty bottles with
away In the cellar, carefully placing wife fixed us a sandwich l!lllch. Chateau Mouton Rothschild labels
each bottle on its side with the labels When we walked inl9 the dining lying oo .the floor. A~t!y,' 1
face up so I could go down at night room 'I discoyered to my horror that during one; of my abeencea, the
and stare at my treasure.
t
she had..opened one of the.bottles of flower children had bad 11 wine party ••
The"trouble with having a .~ of · M~ Rothsctdld. ,
-.
in the attic.
; :;
rare wine is that you don't know
Without thinking, I screamed at · I let out a scream and my wife 1 1
anybod¥worthyofservlngitto. .!.
her, "HowcoUldyouopena bottle·of rushedupstairs.tShefoqndmeonmy j,
Every time someone ~ to me Mouton Rothllchld for thele burna?'' knees ~ and polllld!ng on the
house for dinner, I would gteet him
TbeTVshowwentdownthedrain. .floor. "What have I done?'Wbathils
at .the door .and mentally say to
I did open a bottle- fot my · happened?"
·
myself, "This bum wouldn't know a
daughter's 18th birthday, and '
It's been yeara, but J still haven'~ l'1
Chateau Mouton Rothschild from a another ~ a Frendl friend from gotten over il•Every once In a while "!
bottleofManischewilz." '
' ·
Paris visited me.
that left me rn break down and sa)', "U 1 had "'
. As th'e .years ,went by my wine With ' nine bOttles to coUnt before I only "put the Blue NWI in the .m.; •n ·
became more vBiuable, but harder went to sleep.
rack, I wuuld be 1 rid! man
.~;l
to open. My biggest fear was that if I
Then the Vielnam WI' riots IIIII'- . So when I tead about Mr, Nixon C
served a bottle of it and my guests ted and all discipline broke down 1n tryJnc to protect hll Ola~u !
made no COIJU!IeRt, I would go bei.-- our hoUse. Our c:hllclren ~d turned. MlrpUJ: from hll heathen l!l*ls,
aerk 8JI!I scream at them, "Do you ·rebelllous and IIObcllb' was talldng to my heart went out to him. He cou1a t
fools reallze )'ou're drlnktng an
any~. Strilltgen In blue jelnl · •vuhlred It with thenl, but,18 he " 1
bottle of wine?" My se«.''nd fear was with beardll and dencbed filta kept told.llllm Dean, "It would have been bT
thattberewoaldbeiiOIIIegualawho walklnc In 81111 aut of ihe baule. I WI'OIJII,"
.,':J
lfl '

'(

I •.\,

. IIMI!II.\LL

. .

KC's Club ' beQt Smith-Nelson
52. For_KC's Clpb P, Harrison scored
?J and .T; Walters 1~. F?r SmithNelSon, B, Ashley . was the higli
~er with 18, \}. Becker had 14 and
T. Snowden 10.

' Art Buchwald.

.'

,

In sluriiner league basketb!iu ac-~ .R· Feurgeson wi~ 18 poinll;. . · · .1 bEAGVEsrANDJNG
tion Jast Thursday's game ·between
CleUanA
Realty beat KC's Club 73- Clelland
Villa~c Phar~nacy
, .
~ . r
Rclt)'
Village Pharlnacy and' Brogan- 52, Hjg~ scorer for Glellarid Realty Smlth-Nclol•n
W~rer Insurance for forfeited to was M. Moyer with 21 ~ints and ~C!';(!;',~"'""'
Village"l?harmacy.
,Col~ and Brauer had 18 pomts.
Quality Print

.!

i

Tango Abnahurst' favorite

Scoreboard ...

Vtllage ,~harmacy_ team leads
su~~er ,lea~~ .;~e action

NEW YORK (AP) - Followel'!l ·r
of business believe an en!A!rprise 1
traces Its roots to an entrepreneur,
no matter what the present size of
the business. .
,
The entrept:eneur Is the wson • .
who has the Idea and who takes the ~
risk in the hope of inaking a profit. •

;.

i

By The Associated Press
"My position remains the same toAn &amp;reltthat has IO!ely belonged day as It was yesterday. The Vlk·
to the players In the National Foot· . lngs coaches may not participate."
ball Leagtljj is ,now being consI·
VUIIJigs General Manager Mike
dered by the, lo®mesOta coaches.
LyM said the coaches have no gua·
Coacli Bud Grant and his assist· rantees about being paid for the
ants are talking strike.
game. "I don't know anyone who
While it doesn't reach the dlmen· can make that decision," he said.
sions of the playel'.l' threatened
"I don't think·there'sanyoneper·
walkout If the owners don't turn son In the league who has the au·
over 55 percent of gross:revt:nues, thority to make that decision. This
the Issue remains money for the game is controlled by the 28 owners
VIking coaches.
'
In the league and It depends on
Grant artd his assistants 'have them. Any changes in the rules that
threatened to boycott Saturday's have been made would need approHall of Fame Game against the val by 21 of the 28 owners."
Baltimore Colts in Canton, Ohio, If
The owners don't have that much
they aren't assured of getting a time since Grant says the league
paycheck.
has until gametlme make a
"Nothing has been resolved," decision.
Grant said Tuesday at the VIkings'
"They (the NFL) have unW Sat·
tralnlng camp In Mankato, Minn. urday to decide to pay us," Grant

the A's 8-3 nightcap victory. '
no trouble pnuslng Henderson's
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) . On Monday, Hen®rlon became. base-stealing accomplishments. · Tango A:lmalwrSt, the fastest Z.
the first player iJ\ baseball his\00' "If there's a better base-stealer, I year-old pacer on a five-eighths
to achieve two lOo.steal seasons. .• hjlven't seen him," said Sweet who mlle track this year; wlll be favored
"The lOOth .steal was tl)e tough fallecl to throw out Hender~n In In the $U1,000 State.Fair Manag.
orie," Hendersal ' said. "I was fourattemptsdurlngthefour-game er' s FillY Pace, the opening day
pretty t)ght for that ,Afterthel(pstl series. Henderson was on base only harness raCing feature Frklay at
figured they would S\Bfl coming four times.
the Ohio State Fair.
'
easily again. I'm not really feeling
"He put meln tM record books "
Ten races are scheduled bothFrl·
anY. pressure. I don't think the pres- said Sweet. "Who·was the catch~ day and SAturday, wltb !JOOn postsurewlllstartjohltmeuntDigetto for ·Henderson's lOOth and lOlst? times botH days.
116 or 117." .&gt;
,
Me. 1;11 be a ' tt:tva question
Tango Almahurst has won
MariJ1t1!r c:atcber.Rick
Sweet
had
forever
."
$63,8l0 with four viCtories In six
'
.
starts. Her best effort was a 1:58 4-5
mlle. If sbe can race tliat fast over

Trtyl&amp;aclioris

.

"'"

�'

.'

· ~Ill
.t

4;-The Daily Sentinel .

Pomeroy-;-Midclleport, Ohio

'

'

'

•

i

•

'Braves ·flound~r at home, Dodgers· dp~p ·Reds .·

...

Ohio
.·Sportlight

~

.

8

' .... '

"

1

.f.

.•

tor

CINCINNATI (AP) - When but roth said Milner's suoertor
Cesar Cedeno campaigned to be speed would be helpful In • .•ller.
traded !rom the Houston Astros, he
Knee and ankle su[):ery has
said he wanted to play center field slowed Cedeno In recent years. He
regularly and he's doing that now Is catching one less ball every two
with the Reds. But It's not certain games than he gral!bed In 1974.
how long he'U be there.
That year Cedeno recorded a
Before he was !Ired as manager career·high and league-leading 44ti
or the Reds, John McNamara said putouts In 160 games, an average of
he wanted Eddie Milner to play 2. 79 pet: game. His !Ieiding average
center field. New Manager Russ dropped to 2.51in 1976 (3711n 150
Nixon said he, too, would Uke games) and tills year stood at 2.29
Mllner to move to center. Nixon (1831n 80 games).
saldhetalkedtoCedenoaboutltthe
Milner, who has played all the
day he was named manager.
outfield positions but spent most ol
"I told him I didn't want anytblng Ills time In lett field, had made 173
else on his mind but playing center putouts In 86 games (2.01).
!leld. I didn't really say anytblng
Milner's fielding average Is low
about left field except that he think because he has been a late-Inning
about It, He said next year In spring replacement 10 times and because
training he would think about tt. I left fielders generally allow center
want Cesar to have an open mind," fielders to catch balls tbal both can
· Nixon said.
reach,

a

after

(Milner) can really move."

•

:=!~~. ~·!:~ :~~ ,........----------!

(move to left), I wouldn't have lett
HoUston."
I
N~ther
McNamara nor Nixon
h
ave been cr Ittcat ofCedeno'splay,

Youngblood,
fonner Red
makes
. . history
·

r

PHii.ADELPHIA (AP) - Joel
Youngblood started the day as a
New York Met, ilot a game-winning
hit, hopped on an airplane and
wound up playing for the Monteat
Expos before the night was .over.
It enabled !11m to become !be
third man In major league baSeball
history to play for two teams In the
same day. The others, Max Flack
and Clift Heathcote, were traded
between games of a doubleheader
!Jetween St.rLouls apd the Chicago
In 1922.
Jet travel made It possible for
YoungbloOd. who was trad41d Wed·
nesday afternoon for future consld·
erattons, to become the only player
ever to achieve that feat two cities.

IUSPSIII-1111
AOI,uloaofMulllme4to,la&lt;.

1'

Racine UMW

••

The Dllll)'
S.:ntint•l un 1 J, 6 or 12 •nonUI b.ahl. Crcdll

Parts Plus

69

1

·

'

' •

'

l

'

~

wht•n• hunlt! l'll rril'r aervll~ iiiVIillble.

Chick on IZ .Qt.

'.I
•

'
'

·HoM1lnE'

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
t ..ldeottlo
" . . '" .... ' ' ..••.. ' "" .. 114.04
... ......... ..... ........ 127.30
, l ... .. . , ....... , .... .. .. SSUI
Outllidt• Ohln
..... , .. • ..
. . . . .. 115.21
.
. ... 129.&amp;4
...... ..... ......... , . . . $56.!1

1;:::=.=================:::;-t

I

'''
I'

20%

QT.IOW40

I'

PRODUCTS
· ,. · OREGQNrh. ·g·,
PARTS PLUS
Oa• Filters

PARTS PLUS
Air Filters

Si99

$·2 99 '

I

lf2 Pr.i.ce •
~HAl" SA.LE .·

\1mtta

Riverview
Garden Club ·

Weight dubs

. Calendar

.'''.
.'I' '

'••

,.I

•

'
I

I

•i

'

;

'

Astrograph

- .-.

, FRIDAY

'
I

":11:'
'
"
:CHESTER Metho!list Church,
ice cream social, Friday, 8 p.m.
P.ie, cake, soft &lt;!rinks. Spollsored
~the United Methodist Women.
,.

. IN$TALLANIW

...........

MlluleneftM ,,..

PH. M2-2210

a·ATTERY ·

STOP AT ;THE· G&amp;J ·BOOTH
'~GALLIA ·oouNTY JUNIOR FAIR'~.·
'

GIIOUPim.aoi.MPan

.$2995 TRW,.~IN.
c...l~=·" 34.t5 Elch. ·
.IINit ...,. .... JUS bell.

M MONTH QUAJIANTII

NIVIJI NIIDI WATIR

U...,'NMtill Dlhlnt CIIMIIIIIII

I&gt;

.

.• ~

'• ;(

,Jy,

'
'' *' ' "'
. ·, ·Jf
SIGN-UP FOR ·FRE~ PRIZES·
,·
DRAWINGS EVERY DAY ·
'

.-T •

,

'

~

.

:J•

' ...

1

'~

\
'

50 MONTH GUARANTEE '39.95 ·Exdl.

.

.

..

·)~

T

..,

. :. 'i'l
•'J"':~'

' '

.

; RUTLAND - Dance, Rutland
Civic Ceil\er, Friday, Aug. 6, a.to
11:30 p;m. with Music Unlimited.
Singles, $2 and couples, p.
•

•j

GRAND PRIZE-:-HOMBITE $AW~SAT. 4 P.M.

~ ,.

• 'MEIGS COUNTY Fox Chasers
Association, 7:30 Friday at !be
Eagle Ridge cabin. 6n Saturday
tl\e Ohio State Fox Jlunters
A)!sociatiQII will bold a sununer
bench show at 1 p.m. at the Galli&amp;
county Junior Fair.

--·-

•

' ,SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
Trustees, 7 p.m. Friday, home of
clerk, Wanda E;blin, Laurel Cll(f
Road•'·"'
- J

s 19

1

REM~NUFACTUREO

*27

--

.

·

00

IXCHAlllill

SYRACUSE - Bicycle pafl!de,
1., p.m. Saturday . starting · at

·'

·.

to make the final decislon yourself.
LIBRA ~Sept. ZS.OCt. !3) Work &lt;loubly hard today if you see the
pouibilities for making dollars. Lady Luck could intervene to help you
generate larger reiUJ1111 than usual.
.
·
scokPIO (Oc!t. tf.Nov. !2) If you've met someOne recently to whom
you are attracted, don't walt for the chance to set up another meeting.
Taite the Initiative. Gi!t something started.
. SAGmARrus ~Nov. za.nee. Zl) It will make you feel you're a better
person If you ylel&lt;lto yOUJ"'compa~~aionate Instincts today ,'to help those for
whom you're responsible. Be a good guy and see for yourself.
CAPRICORN (Dee. ·zwan. U) Hopes and willhes can become a
reality today If you do something about !bern. Be a dreatner, but don't
stop there...: be a pfOIIucer as weD.
AQUARIUS ~Ju. -.Feb.U) Bold, prompt action is called for now if
you see ways to further your Interest and ambitions. Self-imposed delays
will dilute your opportlJilities.
PISCES (Feb. -.Mareb zt) Others can be swayed to your way ol
thinking today if you present y~ur ideas with convincing words and en' thwJiasm. Don 'I use waterelklown phrases.
· AiuEs ~Mareb Zl·Apri119) YOII could be extremely lucky today by
· partaking in thtj benefits frOII'\ something initiated by another, just
because you happen to be In the right place at the right time.
TAURUS ~AprD -.May !e) Uthere's something important you h¥
to pull off today !hat you feel you can't do on your own, go to an ally who
hu good contacts. He'll be able to help you.
GEMINI (May %1.Jtme 10) Focus your efforts and energies on
meanlngtul objectlves' today. Yow: possibilities for succeS!l are good,
' especlillly If aometblng large is at stake.
CANC!lll ~JuDe Zl.Jaly !2) Rather than stand tbe sidelines today,
become actively Involved in matters which you feel need your
or'ganizatlonal touch and direction.
· 1 ••

oo

the townhouse in Harrisonville will
be on Aug. 10 from 10 a.m. until
noon. Mrs. Ferndora Story, R.N.,
will have charge of the clinic to
which the public is invited. At the
July 13 clinic, 32 came for readings.
During a recent meeting of the
Harrisonville Senior Citizens it was
decided to dispense with the August
meeting in view of the Ohio State
Fair and the Meigs County Fair. Bir·
thdays will be observed at a supper
set for 6 p.m. on Sept. 28 at the
townhouse.
The 4-H club members of Meigs
. County will hold a flea market from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Pomeroy parking
lot-stage a.r~a on Saturday. Those
with items to contribute and cannot
get them to the sale are asked to call
the Meigs County Extension Office
at ~!Ill or Jean Spenct;r at 667·
3096 or Cindy Pitzer at 94&amp;-2083. In
the event of rain, tbe flea market
wiD be cancelled. All Meigs County
4-H Clubs are urged to participate in
the sale. Please bring baked goods,
flea market
etc., to the sale
site by 8:30a.m.,

.

SATIJRDAY
•

STARTERS&amp;
· ALTERNATORS
AILOWAI

'

•

.

EVERYONE·WHO STOPS:,&amp;,REGisTERS·
·, . · .. GElS •.AFREE'GIFT . ·, · ·

•
movtes

tl \ .

'

c c· n¥ERSE

rr;;::========~=====::=~;;;;;;;;;;,

~ Thuracl~ at 8 p.m. at !be
bM1 which wtu be vacated at that
tJine tor !be Meigs &lt;:ainty Fair.

'

and sli'd es
developed

WMPO 92 FM

.RocK sPiuNGs Grange will

I

DELIVERED
PRICE
Pomeroy ... .............•••.. • .....•... $26.00 Ton
, Middleport &amp; Racine .•••...•••. , .••.••••. $27 .oo Ton
Meigs County •••... , .•.•...••.....•••••• $28.00 Ton

County happenings

TIIURSDAY

Fair 1Specwl

~·

Alllr ..,...
,._

'
No :~ub:sl:rlptiorw by n.. il pt!flniltal \n l~

C.O.D.

'

NAMI IRANDS '!'::" COMf'RITIVI PRICfS
FACTORY TRAINID PIR~NNIL
.

ciutostc,r•

will Ill•l!iVt'n c1 rrier CWL'h 1nt.111\h.

Pittsburgh. NR I
Mine Run (Strip)
4 TON MINIMUM

'1

•

r

nuCdt&gt;Mirinw to pay lth: •CIItrlc•·

HOUSE COAL

'

~·

. . . l~ Centtt

lrw)· remit in advance llira1 to

13W1 '1'k.'!
26 Wt•lb
~2 Wt'\-M

'

.· :AUl·O · PARtS~

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ByC1rrWror MoWr Roulf
0nt'W~k ... , ........... ,,
... $1 .00'
On&lt; Month .. .. . .. .. • .. .. .. . .. .. . lUll
Ont! Ye11r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... SJUO
SINGI.E COPY
PRICES

S2WI&lt;t.'k.~

' ,·.,

.

POSTMASTER &lt;S.nd •ddro.,lo The Dolly
Sentinel, Ill Court St., P\)fllt!I"Q)', Ohiu~7&amp;t•.

13.Wl't!k.~

. . . . , . . .,.

.,

Nt!Wspr,~~per Publishers Association, National
Adv~rtl tlnM Repreeentatlve, BranNun
· Nc"~npeptr 'S.Ics, 733 'MllnJ /went.te, New
YO&lt;t, New Y~ 1111117.

M WL&lt;t•b

"'

The annual reunion of Chester
with Mrs. Marlene presented a RUt !?f appreciation by
High
Sehool class of 1931 was held
Putman, Mrs. Marilyn Hannum. !be UMW and \1} resiJ&gt;nse, InVIted
Sunday
at Chester firehOUse.
Tl)e Adult Claas of Pornetw
and Mrs. Nola Youna being a~ , ~ the members ·to visit her In ReyEleven members of the class,
ChU.!tih of Christ lii!ld a plcntc Sat· polnted lei .the nominating cOmmit· nOldsb\lrJl Wbere she will be TOOV·
several teachers, classmates and
urday .at BuiT·Oak Park.
tee. New olftcerswlll be elected and 1ng later this month.
othe~ guests were present for the
Betty Spencer pre~lded at a brief Installed at the September meeting
Louse Stewart presided at !be
reunion. John Balley had the blessbusiness meeting during which to lake place at !be Williams- business meeting during which
Ing
for the picnic dinner and Irene
time several church proJects were Baldenon borne.
time plans were made for a family
Parker
gave the tr~Yasurer'sreport. •
discussed. Olive Smith aave the
Mrs. CathY Spencer,: ..11. ·Janet picnic at the farm hOme of Gordon
It was decided to donate $5 to the .
treasurer's repoJ:t, and LaDOnna Connolly, Mrs. Mary Allee Blse, and Margaret West.
Chester firemen. The class gave a
Clark, the secretary's r.eport.
and Mrs. M11xlne Whitehead
vote or thankS 10 Opal and John
There was a re8dln#, "To God
agreed topreparetheprogramstor
Wickham for hostlna tbe meeting.
with Love," by Mrs. Clark, devo- . !be next year Ulldei- ~chalmlanThey served homemade Ice cream
lions by Frances Eskew, and shlp of 'vice pre~ldenf, ·Mrs. .Ruth
Two members o1 the American
In the afternoon. The 1983 reunion
prayer by Elizabeth Duffy. Attend- Anne Balderson. Program siJII8es.
r o1 Drew Webster
was set for the last Sunday In July
Ing were Elwood and EUeen Bow· tlons and . hOstess changes were Legion Auxl18ry
Post 39, POIJ!eroy, have been named
at the same location.
ers, Trudy Andrews, Miss Duffy,
made.
district chainnen of committees.
Attending besides those namtd
Melvin ·QJtd OUve Smith, Charles
Members and their IUI!sts at· • Announcement Of the apwere Earl Knight, Henrietta Bat·
and Frances Eskew, Mrs. Spenc:er,
tendlng were Mrs. F'qmk Blse, poinl!ftenls was made at tbe recent
ley, Lucille Smith, Herbert Parker,
Conrad Obllngel", and Lawrence Mrs. Don Putman and Keith, Mrs. meeting of the local untt. Mrs. Loret·
Fred and Bertha Smith, Lenora
and'LaDonna Clark.
Donald Myers, Mrs. Gene Young ta Tiemeyer, was named junior acBetting, Mary Buck, VJrgU McEI· ' .
Next meeting will be at !be Clark and Mikel, Mrs. Walter Brown, tivitles chairman, and Mrs.
ClASS OF 1m - Tbese memben of the 1931 gradutlng cla~~a of
roy, Martha and Will Poole, :
home on Nov. 4.
Mrs. Denver Weber, Mrs. Roy Catherine Welsh was named chair·
Chester High School attended the 198! reuulon held Suuday at Chester.
Thelma
Hayes, Pauline and Buel
Hannum and Susan, Mrs. Tom man of veterans affairs and
'
Pictured, lett to rlgbt, ileated, are Mildred Colllaa, lreae .Parker, Betty
K.
Ridenour,
WUber and Nellie
Spencer, Jartd and JaheU, Mrs. rehabililations.
Davluoo, Earl KDlgllt, leacber, Opal Wickham and Lenora Beblq; and
Parker, all of Meigs County; Ken·
A report Qll !be recent party at the
Ladles day was ·observed Tues- Olu!y Connolly, Mrs. Ernest Whitestanding, Nellie Parter, Fred Smith, Pauline Ridenour, Vlrgll McElroy,
neth and Betty Davisson, Mecha·
head
an!J
granddaughter,
Sarah
ChiUicothe
Veterans Hospital was
day at !be JayMar Golf Club with
Either Gooch and Jobn Bailey.
nlcsburg: Elma and George Ben ·
Frydman.
given by Mary Martin. It was noted
the women paying 18. holes of golf.
Reuter, Akron; Esther and Ray·
Prizes, were awarded to J?eggy
that, Mrs. Jed Webster, Sr. is
mond Gooch, Gallipolis; MUdred'
.
·
• hospitalized. A bu!lget report was
Moore tot low gross and low putts,
Collins. Canton. Afternoon callers,
A farewell tribute to Mrs. Alleyne given and it was noted that dues are
DeiJble Sayre for low net; Jane
were Robert and Bobby Alan
payable now and should be sent to
Brown and Penny Compton for low flees who Is moving to ReynoldsParker, Marietta.
Beulah Oehler, surgical patient at
POMEROY - Dave Lucas of
net team. Special hoDOn were burg highlighted !be Jlily !fleellng Mrs. Ellen Jane Rought, 158 Lincoln
University
Hospital, Columbus, will
'RIIld, Pomeroy; Mrs. Welsh, 106 · Operation Evangeflze will be the· ,
given !fl ~thy Gard for her eagle of the United Methodist Women of
be
recuperating
at the home of Mr.
speaker
4t
homecoming
planned
Ebepezer St., Pomeroy, or Mrs.
on· holi! number eight. All lady the Racine Wesleyan ChurCh.
and
Mrs.
Uoyd
Wright, 100 Beach
for
Aug.
15
at
the
Zion
Chureh
of
"Friendship" Wll9 the !berne of Gerrl Hamilton, 120 Laurel St.,
go~erS'are Invited to attend !be ev-street,
Pomeroy.
She expects to he
Christ,
Route
143.
The
Watchmen
eTY, , ~ ladles day at !be !be program presented by Frances Pomeroy.
returned
there
on
Friday. On Satur·
wlll
present
speclalll)uslc.
Quartet
Roberta and Ruth Wolfe aand dedi·
A program on Americanism was
~l'!le. ...
day
Mrs.
Oehler
will
observe her bir·
Services
will
be
Sunday
!~Chool
at
C!lted to Mrs. Rees. Several read· given and Slizan Lightfoot gave a
9:30,
communion
hour
at
10:31,
po.
lnp and acrtptures relating to
report on her week at Buckeye Girls
thda;v
of at
remembrance
may beand
sentcards
to her
the Wright rr.===:;~;;::===r
friendship was given. Maxine·Win- State. Inlrodilced was Laura Smith, tluck dinner at noon, and a program at 2 p.m. The publlc · Is home:
gett had prayer and there was !be 1981 delegate.
The ~nual pJcnlc 'ot the River·
IPWP singing.
.
.
At the Aug. 23 meeting Mrs. Invited.
Mrs. )Uice Freeland, Syracuse, is
view Garden Club ·was held reMembers of the Handmaidens ot Rought and Mrs. Welsh will report
MIDDLEPORT
The
Duncan
confined
to Camden Clark , Room
cently at !be BeUevUle Locks and
the Lor,d were present to express Qll the state convention held in Cinramny
of
Tampa.
Fla.,
will
sing
at
309A,
Parkersburg,
W. Va.
thelr thanks to Mrs. Rees tor help- cinnati. Conveotion awards will be
Dajn Park.
Ash
Street
Freewill
Baptist
Chureh
~ans· tor the year's program
lng orpnlze the group. She was presented at that time .
In Middleport, Aug. 14 at 7: 30 p.m.
The public Is Invited to attend.
Lots Ann Reltmlre and Barbara
I
POMEROY - The Roberta Clr· Roush were recipients of 20 pound
cle of the Order of Eastern Star, weight loss ribbOns and certificates
· MEIGS COUN'IY Fish and
will meet Aug. 19 at the Belpre at Tuesday's meeting of SllndereUa
Larry's Grocery Store In
(}arne Club, baked ham and corn
Shrine Bulldlng on Blennerhasset at Mason. Reltmlre lost the most
Syracuse, eoncludlng at Syracuse
roast, 8 p.m. Saturday, preceded
Avenue. A covered dish dinner will weight for the week with Helen
: POMEROY - Revival, Keno
Church ol the Nazarene. Kickoff
by all. day work session on patio,
be served at noon.
Grimm and Sharon Wyatt being
GJ!urcli of Christ, Thursday, 7:30.
for Vacation Bible School.
starting at 8 a.m . Members urged
runners·up.
p.m. David Tysinger Df Tento help with the work.
Paul Wise Jr., son of former rest·
~reshments.
At tbe Chester Class, Candy Mil·
dent Paul Wise Sr., who graduated
hoan
lost the most weight and Ca·
. nessee to be !be ~er.
.
from Meigs High Sehoolln 1950, rerole Dalley was runner· up .
ceived an award from Crestview Registration for the new fall classes
:·POMEROY - Organizational
Middle Sehool for mustc and get·
are now being taken by Jo Ann
rheeting for Meigs High School
ling straight A's.
Newsome, lecturer .
.girls interested In playing ·
AU8lill l.lt8Z
VQlleybaU this fajl, Thursday, 7
otriees of tbe Meigs County
Things
which
affect
your
family
and home life will undergo favorable
HEAR THE Rl=DS ALL
p.m. at !be high schoOl.
Courthouse will close at noon on
SEASON L.ONG ON
~hanges this coming year. What will occur will draw everyone closer as a
Thursday, Aug. 19, so that em·
unit.
' MIDDlEPORT ~ EvangeUne
ployes may attend the annual
~ I _
LEO ~Jaly :D-Aq. !2) You could be rather fortunate today in
Ghapter 112,prder ~!be Ji;astern
~elgs ,Cqunty Fair.
sltuatlons-:!flth
persons..wlth
whom
you
have
strong
emotional
ties.
Each
S,tlr, Middl~P,Glt ~ Tem- ·
will be lu~ for !be other.
·
pie, Thursday, 7:30 p.rn. Officers
VIRGO
(Aq.
D-sept.
!2)
In
evaluating important issues today, your
tt wear ~pter dresses.
HARRISONVIlLE
Tl\eheldnext
blood
pressure clinic -to be
at
®
Judgment is extremely keen. It's OK to seek counsel, but reserve the right

JayMar Golf

'f,

Mt:rnkr: The .bliodatl'd Pr~. Inland Dai·
I)' Preu ~hillun and Ult Al{1eriC!In

J)ryi)y ' ··••••••••·•••

~

.

.

Publillhl'tl ev~r; ant!moon. Moodily lh~b
FrldMy, Ill Court Slrt't!l, by lht! Ohio V11lk•y
Publlllhlnl( Company • MuJUrntt.lia, Inc. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio •6768, 992-2158. Sl'l'OOd t'lau
~llllt paid ut Ponw.roy. Ohio.

SubtR'r ibt•n~

1

.' Depend . ·(lo · U~ - ~ . .
,..
we:'re.. .1.p A•RTS'·PLUS' · ~
. .

&amp;

The O..ily Sentinel

Chester class of 1931 reunttes

Drew Webster

Eddie' sis and that makes him
~~~~!be-~ what
··~·~~~~ls~r~~~~~~~~;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'iijiij~~~~~~~~~~~~
that much better," Nixon said. "He

I asked to be tradec)," Cede!.tosald.
"I thought I had proved myself
over the .year as a good center

•

~e dlscuSied

-

By A-elated ~.
. nlnwlntnhlnglnnruinng fo rg·~tG
• ~tsBlnra}!! byreltllYer Joe,Beckw,ltl). ,vho (ave . qou~ ~ two Wlll'l!. out 1n. the
Is there life for the Atlanta
...... me
· - up two hits over 21-311lnlnP. Beck• llttli1 Ji1adlng Plttsburllh C1Vfft St. ,
Braves after playing' dead In Wednesday night wltb aft RBhln· · with ' J9st-•bl.s edge during a' * ' LouiS.
• . ,'
·'
Atlanta Stadium•
gle of1 Steve Bedrosian, 5-3, follow· minute rain delay and walked Dan
t
·\
"We'~ not playing as well as we
lng a 1 tw&lt;HJUt plncll lingle by · Drlelaen and .plnch·hlttel- Duane
C8ndelarla, 9-4, ~ when
can, but It's time to find-out what Champ Summers, a stolen base by ' Walker when play re~umed and ml!lllfeJI In Ills lett toreerm tlaht·
we're made of," says Torre. "It'll pinch runner Max .Venable and il '. was.lltled
TerfY Forster who ,tinl!d ~ st. Louts scored •In )he
be good showing .up at a different walk to Chill Davis.
'
• · ftntshed up.. ,
·' ' •
sixth. 'lie gaye way to Rod Scuny,
ballpark, not the one that has frus·
The victory, went to Gary La·
. ' 1'1111111111, Expo~4 '
who posted hls ntntb save after gtv.
traled us this week."
velle, 5-5, who allowed one hit lnorie
Steve Carlton p)tcbed ·his lOth lhg up an RBI singleto &lt;&gt;eorae Hen· '
Wednesday night's 3-2loss to the inn.tng of work. Greg Mlnt\)n . straight cqmplete game and drlck In !be eighth, • '
San Francisco Giants was the 'I(Orke&lt;j the final Inning for the Manny TiiJio slngle'home two runil
Caildelarla 11 rebowlillngtrom el·
Braves' fifth In their last six games ~!ants and gained .I lls 18th save.
, In the '.slxtl\ as Phllpdelphla beat row problemS last Year·
at home. It trimmed their National
. ·. ~ 8, Redsll .
Montreal.
• .,
.
·'
.
,
'·
League West lead to 5~ games
· RJeky Wrlih\ held Cincinnati to
Montreal thlril ' ·baserrlan Tim
'
Padres
s,
Allrol %
over the Lils Angeles Dodgers, who two hits over six Innings' In his fh:s.t Wallach accolinted tor ~ ~ExJohn MontefusCo went all !be .
beat the Clnclqnatl Reds 8-2 1Jl810r league start an&lt;l doubled In a pos' runs wltb three-run homer In
way
for his !lrst compll!ie game of
Wednesday.
••
run, and Steve Garvey slugged a the fourth and a solo soot In ihe
tbe
sea5on
and Slxto.Lt!zcano and
And It set up a dramatic four- three-run homer as Los Angeles . eighth·.
TerrY
Kermedy
knocked In two
game series with the onrushing crushed the Reds.
· ,Carlt&amp;nallowed ,elghthlts, struck
iuns
each
with
sixth-Inning
bits to
Dodgers at Los Angeles starting
Wright, appearlnglnonlyhls.se- outfiveaildwalked!ourashewon
lead
San
Dl~
over
H!JIIstons:
tonight.
cond major league game, gave up a . llie istb oihts tas't IS deCisions
Montetuaco, 9-6, allowed five bits ·
"They have to decide themselves leadOff single toToniLai\Ciess In the losing hiS first tour games ~ '!be
wlWe
striking out three Bn«&lt; walkwhether they ·want It," said San !lrst Inning and didn't allow another season. He boOsted Ills rectird to 15Ing
f!JUT.
Francisco's Joe Morgan otthefaU· hit untO Dave Concepcion hit Ills 8, and Is !be ttrst major ieague
lng Braves. "If they tblnk !bey are second home run of the season wltb pitcher to wtn that many ·games.
good enough to win It, they will. It two out In the sixth and Rafael Lan·
, P1ptee 5, C...dnlllll 4
J,.oslng pitcher Don Sutton, 10-8,
just d/!pends on·how .good a team des toy on base after. a walk.
· John Cilildelarla p(tched !I !our· ptip!lsd 61-31nnlngs; atlowiJw'aeven ·
!bey think !bey ·have." ,
Wright struck out k .r and 'hitter over !be first six lrullngs,and hits and one walk while striking out
Morgan delivered the game- walked four before he.was replaced Ignited a two-nul uprising with a eight.
'

By George Strode

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Thunday, August 5,1982

ThursdaY, Aug\llt 5,1912 •

·'

'

..

'

.

·.

.

High Tops Available In:
Maroon, Purple, Natural

Low Tops Available In:
Red, Blue, Maroon and
Natural.

N . .lQd

'

II

I.

lmm ••
· suplfl

MOV
.· i85'

's,,.

1 II ·

or .~;. Slides
:
: r;&gt;eveloped · .
· :.
I
.
I
1 36 exp. Slides .. $1.99 ,

I

lim&gt;l onnOlt Couoon must accompany order

valid Aug. 5 thr.u 12, 1982

I

L--------------------J
'

Vil~ge

Pharmac,y ~

PH.992~

Ml DDI._t;: PORT

SUMMER DEVON ' 'r~~~~:"v:~K
. an~

TOP~~ ·

' 1703 FASrERN AV,l
GALLIPOLIS•.oHIO ,.
PH.44&amp;.uot

BEACH
·TOWELS

.....,LADY, ,;;;;;D~~~.......s_u_M_M_ER_P_J_'s-t~Y:-:zP-R-IC_E-.11

AILEEN
and RED-'EYE

SHORTS and
TOPS
SALE
·'. PlliCED

'.
..

AUG UST CLEARANCE

- ·~ "

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

,

Y2 PRICE RACK
GIRLS' ROMPERS,
TOPS&amp; PANTS

81.99

38

I

All Sta... Pro Laather HI·Cut

8MM, SUPER 8 OR
21F-EXP. SLIDES

E)(P.
SLIDES

.

MEN'S
.SHORT
SLEEVE
KNIT
SHIRTS
'

LADIES'
PURSES
%PRICE

�.

-t·

, Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Thunday, Augult 5,1912

Pome~ay-Middleport, Ohio

·Thullday, Aupst 5,1982

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Show what you grow at th~ fair :
,
both days • by a certified Ohio abstract design.
In the junior division, thefll ar,e
Association of Garden Clubs judge.
The Wednesday show carries the . classes for artistic ~lgn iJicludlng
theme 1'¥a cations You Remember" "The Art .:f Dance," interpretive; .
aJKI the classes and schedule for that and the "Science of Mathematics,"
traditional geometric design. Horwere aMounced earlier.
ticulture
classes for junillr!l are ziJJ..
The Fl'iday show theme is "Ex·
nias,
dahlia
flowered and cactlill
ploring the Al'ts and Sciences." In
flowered,
marigold,
large tyPe, and
the artistic division, there is an in~unnower.
vitation class open to anyone enThe adult horticulture divlaion has
titled "The Art of Communic,lion"
classes
for roses, hybrid tea,
featuring black and white.
The artistic classes open to club Doribunda, grandmora, and cum.
members and county residents are ber; gladiolus, zinnia, dahl~ and
cactus flowered; dahlia, decorative,
as follows:
"The Science of Alitronomy," cactus type, and pompon type;
blacklight; "The Art of Sclllpture," marigold, large type; sunflower,
chrysanthemum, celosia; other anfeaturing treasured wood;
"The Science of Geology," in- nuals, arid other pereMials.
Both shows will include the awar.
cluding rock or rocks;
"The Art of Dramatics," foliage ding of four top prizes - the beat of
show lind reserve beat of show in ar·
design;
"The Art or Music," showing tistic arrangements, the hor·
ticulture sweepstakea 1rid the junior
rhythm;
"The Art of Pai~ting," a mass gardener award, both arrived at
through a point system on the basis
design;
"The Science of Engineering," an of ribbon awards.

Meigs Countians are encouraged
· to show what they grow by
displaying in the flower and plants
show at the Meigs county Fair, Aug.
17-21, on the RockSprings fairgrounds.
• Stre:.oed by Mrs. Joe Bolin, show
chalnnan, all classes of the show are
open to all residents of Meigs County
and to all members of a Meigs County Garden Club. She emphasizes that
one does not need to he a member of
a garden·club to enter.
Ali in previous years, the only
· requirement lor entry Is the purchase of a membership ticket. ThOlle
plaMing to exhibit mUBt prepare
~heir entry blanks and have them in
the hands of the fair board secf!)tary
no later than 4 p.m. on Friday, Aug.
13. Entries can not be made by
telephone.
Two shows will be staged, the first
on Wednesday, Aug. 18, with entries
to be In place before I p.m., and the
second on Friday, Aug. 20. Oral
judging will take place at 2 p.m. on

'

Baking, canning prepared for fair
OPENS SHOW - ComedlaD-ventrlloquest Eddie
Jaye will be lbe opeDIDg act for popular country singer,
Sylvia at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 18, lbe grandstand
show at the Meigs County Fair. Before entering sbow
business as aa entertaiaer Ia 1976, Jaye was a
television writer and director working Ia biB budget

commerclall. Since ealerlng the bum-• as an eDtertalner Jaye bas become aa opealq act f.- such
stars as Loretta L)'WIII, llllrllllra MaadreU and BObby
Goldlboro. Appearlns wllb Jaye at the local preseDtatioa will be bls puppet, C!trleloa D. Crow.

What's -cookin'?
By DALE M. STOLL
Meigs County Exteuion
Home Economist
It's too hotto eat!
Pop, cheesy ~wists, iced tea, and
potato chips are often foods eaten
during hot sununer weather when a
full meal seems like too much. The
nutritive value or these snack foods
is very low and the calorie content is
very high.
'So what is there to eat that is good
for you and cool, too?
Try salads for cool sununertime
eating I Cool, crisp and delicious,
aallids are perfect for hot weather
eating.
Choose salad greens that are tender, crisp and dark green In color.
These greens have the !jest flavor
and most vitamins. Try spinach,
dandelion greens, mustard greens,
turnip tops, escarole and romaine,
not to mention lettuce. Wilted
greens, even 'when crisped in ice
water, have low citamin C content.
Bruised veggies have lost much of
their vitamin A and C. So, for the
moot nutrition, keep your greens
crisp and unbruised. Wash the
vegetables and keep them in a

plastic bag or other covered container in the refrigerator until you
are ready to mix the salad.
A perfect salad .has thoroughly
clean, crisp, cold salad ingredients.
Nothing Is worse than gritty spinach
or wormy lettuce! Raw veggies
should be very dry. Water on
vegetables makes a poor salad. Be
sure to cut or tear greens or lettuce
i.nto bite-sized pieces just before ser·
ving. Cutting lettuce with a knife in
advance of serving will cause the cut
edges of the lettuce to turn brown.
I try to plan ahead for salads. I
prepare all the Ingredients, dry and
place in plastic bags in the
refrigerator. Just before serving,
put salad ·Ingredients in a salad
bowl. lUke to tOI!II my salads without
fear of a mess so I use a big wooden
bowl. Sometimes I rub the Inside of
the bowl with a clove of cut garlic.
This step imparts a subtle flavor to
the salad.
Add dressing to the salad, about
one-fourth cup fo~ six servings, and
toss lightly untU each leaf Is coated.
Here's an interesting note: use
tomatoes with the skin on to cut in
wedges for a garnish for salads. If

Davis family reunites
The decendants of Orlando and
Kathryn Davis held their reunion at
Forest Acres Park Sunday, with 61
present.
Mrs. Edith Hougland gave grace
and Teresa Molden was honored on
her eighth birthday.
Mary K. Holter, president. presided at the business meeting. 01·
fleers were chosen for next year:
Mrs. Holter, president; Belva
Shuler, vice-president; Susie Travers; secretary and treasurer. The
19&amp;'llocation wrn be the same place
the first Sunday in August. Gifts
were given to: Worley Davis, oldest
man; Glada Davis, oldest woman; .
Adam Walker, youngest boy; Carrie Lambert, youngest girl; Ronald
and Paullne Davis, traveled the
farthest. .
Visiting were Mr. and Mrs. Andy
Smith and daughters, Eleanor WU·

Hamson, Gary White, Circleville,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schuler Jr.
and sons, Cheshire, MR.a dn MRs.
Rick Travers and sons, WUkesvllie,
Greta Riffle, Mr and Mrs. Don
Kennedy, Pomeroy, Ml'. and Mrs.
Paul Walker and son, Mrs. Worley
Davis, Dexter, Mr. and.Mrs. Glen
Davis, Doan Molden and children,
Langsvllie, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Hugland, McArthur, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Da·
vis and sons, Jim Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. John Miller and children, Rutland, Bill Frederick, Waterford,
Vona ·Gillenwater, Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce D!lvis and sons, Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Holter and children,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Davis, San·
dusky,, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Lambert, Darwin.

$500

NON-WASHED

'13.H

LEE T-SHIRTS
Adults

Chlld'l.OO OH

' · U~OOOH

Now ·

NOw·

'4"
LEE STUDENT BIBS
·sAVE 't.OOOn.Pr..wa~

Save '7 .00 On Non-Washe~
. I -~N:.::o:.:;
· w~•1~.;~4~"--...,

f.ADIES P~ST'-L f.E. _JEAN$ .

~25%

Off.

Now'14"~·

DAN'S lOOT SHO!
MIDDUPORJ ·Oft

classes are apple, cherry, berry,
pecan, peach, pumpkin and raisin.
Entries must be registered with
the Fair Board secretary on the
Rock Springs fairgrounds ~ce
either Aug. 12 or 13 ·rrom 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. furchase of a membership
ticket Is the only entry fee. .

r;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;!;!!;;==;.
SUMMER
CLEARANCE
CONTINUES
.

PRICE
*Health Tex
·*Carter
*Don Moor

/

I '

SUMMERWEAR
MON.~AT.
OPEN
9: 30·5:00

'

,.

Boosters plan· food booth

r;==;;:==================t
On All Summer Merchandise
Prices
Are

place of vinegar. Add 1/2 cup honey,
I teaspoon celery seed, I teaspoon
grated lemon rind, 1 teaspoon grated
onion.
Tropical- Add 2 tablespoons confectioners' sugar, 2 tablespoons lime
juice.
For your free copy of four recipes
for low-calorie salad dressings, contact Mrs. Dale SIOU at the Meigs
County Extension Office, Box 32,
Pomeroy, Ohio 41i7$ (99UII86).

'
PRE-WASHED

lind sauces, tomato and chili sauce.
In the canned fruit division, there
are classes for applesauce, &amp;llced
apples, blackberries~ peaches,
whole, half, spices, ancl sliced, and
pears, sliced and half, plums, raspberry_and cherries.
The canned vegetable classes are
for brussel sprouts, beets whole and
sliced,. beans, she!Ue, shelled, snap
and whole, cabbage, carrots, com,
gree,ns, kraut, lima beans, kidney
beans, peppers, stuffed 11111ngo,
sweet potatoes, tomatoes, whole,
Qlljlr!ered, green or juice, vegetable
soup, and canned squash. There is
also a class for canned polatoes.
In the baking division, breads,
ca~es, cookies and pies are Included
in the classes: For breads there are
classes for whole wheat, white,
banana nut, biscuits1 muffins and
yeast rolls. In cakes, •the classes are
for sponge cake, butter cake, pound,
chocolate and loaf, while in cookies
with an exhibit of six, the classes are
for oatmeal, brownies, chocolate
chip, fudge brownies, drop,
molasses, and drop orange. The pie

you peel the tomatoes, slice, and toss
with the salad, the sal!ld Is more apt
to be watery.
What are some different ideas for
salads? One of my favorite salads
has rilixed greens, drained, canned
mandarin oranges, crumbled, crisp
bacon, and thin, purple onion rings.
Toss with Italian dressing just
before serving. It may seem a little
strange, but it is really wonderful!
We like to add chopped, h8J'd..
cooked eggs, garbanzo beans, kid·
nef beans, crispy bacon, ham,
olives, cheese, or pickled beets to
garnish a green salad. or course,
cucumbers, radishes, green or sweet
onions, green peppers and raw
mUBhrooms perk up any salad. Gar·
nishing the salad with these foods
The Meigs Athletic Boosters wW
Membership tickets are tor sale
wiU help keep the salad crisp and have
a food boolb at the Meigs now. Those purchasing their tickets
fresh.
County Fair, Aug. 19, ~and 21, in
Here is the excellent basic salilll the victnlty of the grandstand -this before Aug. · ~ ~ haY~! their
dressing recipe with sorne year as a special fund raising names printed In the football programs. Memberships are available
variations.
project.
from any c#. the athletes or coaches.
Four By Flllll' Dres11Dil
Combine in a glass jar ...
4tablespoons catsup
Workers
are needed
·booth
and anyone
willingtotostaff
workthea
4tablespoons salad oil
morning or afterooon is asked to
4 tablespoons vinegar
contact
Clnda Harris, 992-2451;
4tablespoons sugar
Sandy
Iannarella,
992-7039 or Jl!dy
Shake until the ingredients are
Crooks,
992-2704.
well blended. Chili.
Also to help finance the athletic '
Variations: For variety, try one of
programs
at Meigs, sport schethese with the recipe above:
dules
and
calendars
are being sold
Garlic - Add one peeled, q~r­
for
50
cents
each.
They
wW be avUa·
tered clove of garlic. Remove before
bleat
all
booster
meetings,
the next
serving.
,
one
to
be
Tuesday
night
at the
Herb- Use lemon Juice instead of
school.
vinegar. Add 1/4 teaspoon thyme,
Again this year the "200 Club"
1/2 teaspoon oregano, and 1
will
be continued. Those who WISh
teaspoon parsley flakes.
to
'become
members~ the club and
Roquefort - Add 1/4 cup ci'UITlwant
the
same
number as they had
bled Roquefort cheese
last
year
are
asked
to contact MarFor a fruit salad dressing, add one
garet
Edwards,
742·2535,
or Mrs.
of these to the basic recipe:
lannarella
before
Aug.
9.
Celery seed - Use lemon juice in

MEN'S aoc7r... CUT

LEE JEANS

Whether your interest is in pies or
preserves, you'll be able to see it all
ai the Meigs County Fair in the
baking and caMing division headed
this year by Mrs. Barbara Fry,
·
chainnan.
There are 87 cla8ses in the divison
which again this year · will have a
"closed" judging on the opening day
of the fair. Exhibitors are reminded
that each entry must be labeled and
in place by 12 noon on Aug. 16.
Premiums will be awarded in
three places $1.50 for blue ribbons,
$1 for red ribbons, and 75 cents for
white ribbons.
The classes under preserves are
peach, , cherry, strawberry, red
plum, and tomato; jams, black raspberry, grape , peach, and
strawberry; jellies, apple, crabapple; blackberry, elderberry, grape
and peach; spreads, pear honey,
peach honey, peach butter, and apple butter.
Pickles, sweet cucumber, dill
pickles, and bread and butter;
relishes, chow-chow, end of the garden and sweet pepper relish; catsup

r;::=========~
vour "Extra Touch"
Florist Since 19S7

'~t:;RIST

Drasti~ally .

Reduced!

· MARGUE~ITE. SHOES
"The Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Block"
'I'()MEROY OHIO

PH. 992-2644

352 E. Main, Pomeroy

Your FTD Florist

. TRUCKLOAD .SALE
ALL -PRODUCTS ARE lo·, ~UALITY
'
'

.n ·

'

_Only 6 mg yet rich enough to be cal1ed deluxe.
· Regular and Menthol.
Open a box today.

FRIDAY AUGUST 6th • 12 noon • ap.m.
SATURDAY AUCUST 7th • 12
a~.m.

FRENCH CITY MEATS
BOLOGNA.

I I I I I I ••

SLB.

'

~~~

.89LB.

I I I . · · ·· · · · I I I . $

WIENERS ·, , , , , • , , , 6LB, aox, ; , , , , , , , , , $1, 29LB •

~ · .. .whenonly·lhafiilastwilldo."

SMOKE SAUSAGE ••• 6LB.BOX •• , •••••••. $1.59LB. ,
SLICED BAcoN .... 6La.Box.......1 .; .. ,$1.75Ls • . '
Bm PATTies., .lOLi.Box ••_••• ,,,; •. $1.39LB.
.RJBEYE -STEAKS,,, 5LB.aox ..... ,, •• ,,,
$3 .OOLB,
.- .,
•

\

•

'

\ ·

I

I

'

N.Y., ~TRIP

..

Srui&lt;SS~~ao~.;; •••• , ., .S2.75LB •

•

Cuae STEAKS ••••• 5L8.aox ••••••••••• s2;09LB.
3 PIZZAS

&lt;fRESH) .... " ..... " "

I: ,$6.50
~ ·

'

.

Werning: Th,e Sul'geon G~neral .~as Oetermined
That Cigellttr Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health..

·'

6 1119 ;'tar;' 0.6 mg nicotiaiiV.IJI(cigarene. iw FTC rnetllbcl.

..

'

�•
/

I

Pag 1 8 The DGIIy Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

.,

Ohio

Thullday, Augwt 5,1982
5,1912

.acine Social Events.___......;.;--:.:--:;;;·==.~. . . :;.:~;::.='ti=CXJ-....:.,_;-=~;:.:·:..;-~___;;·-~. .·;...____;:....~-The hymn, "We've a Story to Tell
to ihe Nations" opened the meeting
of the Eathet Missionary Circle held
In the fefiawsliip rooms at First Baptbt Church for the July meeting,
hc6ted by Mrs. Dorothy Badgley.
1\frs. Mi~dred Hart, president, had
devotional program with the topic,
"Missions and the Military" and
scripture from Mark 16. Communications were read from Bacone
College with thanks for money gift
and Kodiak Baptist Missions. The
~te Cross quota was discussed. A
plc,nic was planned for tl1e meetin g
·August. "He Is So Precious to
Me~&gt; was sung by the group and
meeting closed with prayer by Mrs.
~rie Roy. The refreshment table
WfNI centered with a floral bouquet

for the group to enjoy the lovely
refreshments served by Mrs.
Badgley.
Fourth of July guests of Mrs.
Edison Johnsen were Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Johnson and sOilS of Morning
Star road; Mr. and Mb. Loyd John·
son and daughter, Sandra, of Mid·
dleport ; Mr. and Mrs. Art~ . J ohnson, Bashan Road; Mary .iilson and
Marie Green of Colwnbus; and
Laura Circle, Dorcas.
'
Bob Gill,ain of Hannibal, N. Y.
visited an afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Mr. and Mrs. Solon Butcher of
Spencer, W. Va . spent a day with
Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
The Booster class of Racine First
Ba ptist Church was entertained at

m

,.

,.

the home of Mrs. Manjorle ~rimm,
teacher. Mn."Ora Hll~~prfl&lt;llderit,
open~ th~ m~tin~ ,.iith Yln'glng "1In
the Garden" by the group. Prayer
was by Mrs: Grella · Simp~~on. Mrs.
Hill read scripture from Genesis 2
and a reading; "God and His Garden." During the business meeting
the president called for various
repcrta. Fourteen members answered roll call with a Bible verse. A
program by Mrs. Margaret Wolfe
followed. She had a reading entitled
"Heavenly Anticipation." Scripture
was from Ephesians 5 and prayer by
Mrs. Grimm precedtiil a Bible quiz.
The meeting closed with singing
"Blest Be the Tie That Binds."
During a fellowshi~ hour, delicious
refreshments were served by Mrs.

Grimm.
. Mrs. W. N. Brammer. of €1eveland
and
alint~Mr
•n~,r.
visited her un~•
I l&lt;:. ·T
I
"t't ~ ~ ' ..,,.,
,'1;
Mrs. A. C. 8r ford WtlC~.n Satw:,,•.·
day afternoon.
,,;-,.. ~,~. I. n-:r'n
Mr. and Mrs . Steve Badgley and
'daughter, Amy Jo, spent a weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Badgley. Their daughter,
Kelli, returned, home with tbem af·
ter spending two weeks with her
~randparents.

Mrs. Kenneth Swart of Akron
spent a week with her stster·in-law,
Mrs. Marjorie Crow and visited Mrs.
James Swart in Holzer Medical Center.
Henry Roush celebrated his 90th
birthday a recent Sunday afternoon
at the Racine First Baptbt Church

Curlt Inflation

'• .
I •

, F:~ RW IIIII Uncoln · ·
Russell were'l'&amp;ent Friday evening : ;
visitors of Mn. fva Johnson .
:
Mrs. Mar~te Boyce of Colum- :
bus was recent weekend visitor of •
Mrs. Bertha Russell and Earl : I

Russell.

. ;I
..

·~

.

··classlflecil and
Savell··l
.
oWn
•

Q

Found-Rocksprings area,
pUPPY. approx. 6 mo. old.
11rown with while. Black
from eyei to nose. 61-4-992·
5225afler6p.m.
...

Write your
ad and 'order by malt with this
coupon . Cancel yaur ad by phone when·· you get
...~ults. Money not refundable.

Bryan Reeves of Chester spent a : •
few days with Mrs. Dorothy Reeves. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed were ;
Tuesday evening visitors of Mr. ·and :· '
Mrs. Guy Sargent and family.
~
Jane Shaffer and Gabriel of Mid- ,
dreport visited recently with Mrs. ~
FayeGwn.

Planned Parenthood announces
tbe Monday evening cllnlal for Au·
gust. They will be Aug. 9and23. The
Thui'lday afternoon clln1cs wm continue. Call 992-5912 for an
appointment.

FLEA Markel Open-air
Chlllicoll\e Mall Shopping
Center, Chilllcotlle, AYg. 6·
7·8.

PaY. Cash for
I

.,

Monday clinics

The Daily Sentinel

..

t...::::.::YiniSili- - _:_

I

social room with 110 friends ,anjl
relatives. Those from out of toWII
were John and Viol"' Fisher, Jact
and .Glenda Fisher and liOn, O.n of
UnloritoWn, Ohio; Don and Sahdy ·
Fisher, Jennifer and Matthew, d
Mogadore; David and Cheryl Roush,
and Lorelie and Benny of Columbus.
Mr. Roush w!U accompany hls
daughter, VIolet, to Uniontown and
Wltsonrs Beach at MBrblehead, Ohio
for a few weeks.

YARD SALE. Aug. 6and7,
off 218 on Neighborhood
Rd. Baby clothes, braided
rug, exercise bike .

•Yard Sate. Aug 6. Peggy
Lawrence, MaIn sr ..
Racine. 9·2. Items-Include

PHONt 992-2156

, go-cart.

1

,.
~

,

' '

~-

l ·Ct1rd of Thank s Cpn1d in rtd va flce)
2 C;.rd of Tt1ank s (p a1d rn Advrtncel
3·Announc emenl s
~

'"

SI·Househoi&lt;f Goods
S2·CB, TV &amp; R'adio Equipment
SJ·Antlques 54-Misc . MeFf hand!Se
· ss·Bulldlng Supplies
S6·Pets for Sale
S7·Musclallnstruments
58· Fruits &amp; Vegetables
S9·For Sale or Trade

23· ProfessionAl Services

4-Giveawa v

6·L ost and Foun d
7 Yard Sale ( paid 1n odvanrl')

8· Public Sal e

,.

&amp; Au c tion

9·Wanted to Bu v

' ..

,,

'

'

71 ·Autos for Sale

n Truqks for Sale
73-Vans&amp; 4 WD
lA· Motorcycles

Galfl1 County
Are• Cocle 614
4*-GIIilpolll
. :U7-CIItshlre
JII-VInton .
l45-RioGnnde
lst-Guy1n Dis!.
H2-.Arobla Dfst.
37t-Watnut

81 -Home improvements

Meigs County
.Area Code 614
"2-'Middltporl
Pomeroy

Wanted

13· 1nsurance
I4· Busines s Tr aining
IS-School s Instru cti on
16 Rfldio , T V &amp; C _
B Repai r
17-Miscellaneou s

83·Excavaling
84:Eiecrical &amp; Refrigeration
8S·General Hay ling
86·M.H. Repair
87·Upholstery

61 -Farm Equipment

62·Wantea tdbuv
63 ·Liveslock
64·Hay &amp; Grain

4J·Farms for Rent

· 44 -Apartment tor Rent

· 65-Seed &amp; F ert i l i zer

4S·Furnished Rooms

'

MSJ-CIItster
JU-Portland
241-Lttlrt FillS
t4t-Ricl ...
742-RU!IInd
667-Coolvllle

.Are1 Code 304
675-Pt. Ptenanl
458-Leon
57t-.Appfe Grove
772-Muon
112-New Hnen
195-Let•rt
937-Bu"-!o

Up to 15 Word ~ . . Onr n 11 y insf"rtion
Up to 15 words ... Thrcl &lt;I&lt;W .nsi·p •o n .
&gt;

Up to 15 Words... Six day

46-Spaae for rent

47 ·Wanted to Renl
48·Equipment for Rent

18·Wanted To do

MasD., Co .• wv

insertion .. ..

•'

',.~

,$3.0U

,.

.54.00
...$7.00

'

(Average4words per line) ·

49-For Lease

Publit

.~t

dlJring

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
VILL.AGE OF
POMEROY, OHIO

horma·l

Working

The Village reserves th e
[,ii~~~ to reJect any and all
C. Andrews.

hours.

August 3, 1982

Contrad Sales
Legal82
UNIT PRICE
·.. CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the offic e of the (81 ~· 12. 2tc
MAyor
. Ohio
Villag
of T
Poliieroy,
yntile 10:00
AM AYgust20, 1982 for im·
~iovements In Ohio Meigs
Cq.unty. Village .of

t~::::::::::::::::~~~::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::~~;:~~~~========~~::::=:::::::::::~jf~~~~~~~~::;
J&amp;l BLOWN

Vlt~g~~i
Pomeroy

1._---------1
Be~nner-Easy!

Pomeroy, by resurfac.ng

wllh asphalt concrete :
Project work length vaflous feet .
Project width - varies.
The date for complelion
of this work shall be as set
fQI:th In the biddin g
prdpasat .
-Each bidder shall be

.t-~

MILLER
ElriCTRIC
1:.'
SERVICE •'

For all your wlr Ing
needs; furnaces
repair ser'lllce and
. t II t• n
'
tns a I tO •
Residential
&amp; commercial
Call

FOR FUTURE USE"
K'

EN'S
AP-PLIANCE -

AU Ma IS .
• wuhtrs
• Dish·
Wllhtrl
• Ronges • Retrlgerat·
ors
·~ • F reerers
e Dryer.·
P.ARTSond SERVICE

requ ired to file with his bid
a r certified c heck or
cashier'S' check for an
amount equal to 5 percent
of his bid, or a bond for 10

!)freon! of his bid, payable
to 1The Village of Pomeroy .
Ohio.
Bidders must apply , on
t~e
pro~er
forms for
quallflcahon by 10 :00 A.M.
AYOUSI20, 1982. '
,. Plans and specifications
afJ! on file In the Mayor's
Q[fice, VIllage of Pomeroy,
and mav be reouested

' .

Business services

!'~ bJi~~'!?~.i~ ---­

Noti~e

Qyaif

of

all

ages

available up to 8 weeks
in any quantity.
Mature Quail Available

Ready to Turn Out

Clell LaBonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bollom, Oh. 45631
614-985·4345
7-28·1

We

ClfiJ

VifiJI 1 lalllfli•
Clt!nplelt pttlr .n,
CGIIIpletl 1111d1~fll, lllllf.

inl o1 •IJpa. W.WIR

hGrne ... 20 JMIS.
FrH_.._.._

.....,._
Ca11143-33l2

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949·2110or149·2322
, ~· If
.-.uc

APP=, Qli'
'
' 10

I'll. t1S-4Khrll5-4312

DewayneWillllms .
.&amp; Sconle smtlll
.AIImakesandmoclels
.&amp;ntennatnstotlltlon
calls and shop

7·16·2 mo. pd.

7 8 1 · Pd
.. mo. ·

Squrt

lltcGr1101, Dunlop,
8ooonin1lquipmtnl.

J&amp;F

, Si;RVICE

r~ffll'n

. nus

•PROS\IOP

e20Yr~.uperlence

~UGENE LONG
Superior·Siding Co.

~AOIATO,R

KOUNTRY
QUAIL FARM

.Siding
• Remodeling
• Frte estimates

S&amp;W
·, AND

'

'.

INSULATJON
· Vlln &amp; ·
•tn~~~:'~·~~~f
•Storm Doors

He.1ter

lilrqest

Two,

I

*GOLF LESSONS
!lUGES

•FIELD TRIPS

ss Hol~~ tn· Onen
JOHN TEAFORD
Chester, OH .

7· 14·1 mo.

the

Smallest
to the

core ·

R~diator.

CO~TRACTING

35 Y rs'. F. )I pt!rienr.€!

•backhoe
•••cov1tlnt
* 18PIIC·IYI1tml

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

• &amp;gnllnes ·
•dump truck
•limestone

·- p,,diator Spccialt st

NI&gt;THI&gt;N I' IG GS

Pomi!&lt;oy, Ofi.
Ph. 992-2174
2·26-lfc

ROOFING ·

.•.

•Storm Windows
•Replacement
•Nwewlndroat&lt;Wt1s...;
.••
Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph. 992. 2772

.

• H; l WRITESEL
- •
•
•
•

• Awater, sewer

Gutters
Downspouts
New or R~pilir
rainting

FREE ESTIMATES
orMt-2263

PH. 992-7201

7·14-lfc

J·29·1fc

j

CONSTRUCTIO~
•itc~lfts

'

and

batiKoomS: Rttnedtlill,
add-ons, new ~DIIn,
plumb!nl, llietbic, sldin&amp;.

. ' FREE
ESTIMATES

Ph.ttt-27t1

Ucensed &amp;Bonded

'

'

Custom

PH. 992-6011

'IIRIII Elllto - Gonoral

DAN'S
AUTO.TRIM
302 Mechanic St.
Pomtfoy, OH.

PH . 992-6506

e SEAT COVERS
oVINVL TOPS
e CONVERTIBLE TOPS
oCARPETS
eA Complete
Automobile ijj;ili'oi,iteo•y

LISTING
in Middleport.
In one, rent the
All utilities are
r.... o,.,ate. Convenient
and good tax
l:atlell•er. Only $27.000.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Ho,.,es - ex·
~nsive remOdeling
. •Electric work
•Cu.stom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofing Work
H Ve~,rs Ellperience
Greg Roush
Ph.99N583

or992·2282

·,

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH!

AUTO I TRUCJ(
REPAIR
Also Transmission

BACKHOE
FOR HIRE
Or anything else you
want to do, becouse )
live with 1 carpenter.
His name Is .&amp;!'Tromm.

742-2328

PH. 992-5682
. or 992-7121
3·2A·Ifc

Oh.
7·15·1 mo. pd .

RYtla~d,

Vinyl I, Aluminum

SIDING

.
Near
11'or quick sate will

BISSELL.
SIDING CO.

~3,500.

I

TUPPERS PLAINS - 2
lew! tots, 8 room home,·
3 or 4 yrs. otd . Has bath,
gas fYrnoce, equipped
l!lfchen. 2 living rooms·,
·c,arpetJng and some
Uiern\opane windows.
Really nice for . only
$31,500.
.

'fAR w,.sH -

and land.
yiots will supplement
yoiJr Income with very
1
llftle time needed to run.
~111Y $15,000.
But not '

:tOo far out on good hard •
road. , Has 2 bedrooms,
6.11), and new addition
wflll •full bawmenr and
rwwchlmney for2wood·
au•ners. Asking Ul.OOO.

NO KIDDING, CAN
.otOU BEAT TH!=
,UOVI PIIICES? ALL
fiEAL TOllS OP:FICE.

Housing
•
· Head£/lldr

:i

..

· ·

. •1

.

,...

'

YOUNG.'S
CARPENnR
SERVICE -

Cfleshlre &amp;

m~ttpilrt,

Ollto

PRESEI\ITS

·'I
.I

~.

'I

' MDIIIIII ...... Iso._

....

I

M--~~~~~
lhlliool!l'ric•
ftUSII.H.I.·IH,I.

Mllllll:t II'*'

TIIS...WSIIIill

..-sa...... ,...
llillollllllllot

3

:t:OUNTRY -

B~!Wftn

Drllll ..... lldl

NEW LISTING - Coun·
trY home and 52 acres.
M0$1ly
fresh air,
qYiel,
len·

ces.

CANDLELIGHT INN

C..,lllltsllllill~ ....ftl
.
. Z:tl ....·l:lh.IL
Sll.. Sto. 4:tt

,.._.,,Jh..

I'HON E 992·"13 ·
S.l-1mo.

Ill ...
"H2U or m-7314

,.om troy, OhiO

'

____

PH.992-2259, ...

COMPLETE

r•

LaBONTE'S

OHIO VALLEY
ROOfl NG
And H~m• ,..:~lnten 1 nce
• Roatlng of 111 types

9·30-lfc

PUU.INS .
EXCAVATING .
I•

-Dolen
-B1clclloes
-oumpTruch
-LO'Ity
-T....,cller
-Wiler
-s-r ·
-OuLines
-sopite Systems
Larte .;.. Sm•tt Jobi
PH, ff2-2471
8·1·1

.

Monty to Loon
22,
REF! NANCE or purchase
WANTED TO BUY Old IYr· R·N·Ful lime stralghf dav your
home. 3D year fixed
nllure and Antiques of all ' shift available. Apply at
klndl, call Kenneth Swain, Ohio Job service, ..S Olive rate. WVa. '&amp; Ohio. Leader.
Mortgage, 77 E. State st ..
.IA6·3159 or 256·1967 In llle SI,.Gallfpolls. .
Athens, Oh. 614·592·3051.
evenings.
MATURE
responsible
Buying Gold, Silver, babysltrer needtcl In my 1
Platinum, old coins, scrap home MOnday thru Ftl.
rings &amp; silverware. Dally Call 446·9260 after 3pm.
.Quotes available. AlSo
c~tns &amp; coin supplies for
.wte. Spring Valley Trading 12 • Situ1tlono wanted
Co., Spring Valley Plaza,
room ancj bOard,
-146-8025 or -446·8026.
'
and laundry for elderJy
We pay cash for late model only. 614·992·6022 ,or 992·
67-18.
31!,_....!~~=='!....:',.!
clean us&lt;!d cars.
ln grOIJnd concrete pool on .
Frenchtown Cor Co.
Will c~re for elderly men 2 ~ere tot. Also has a 3 bdr.
.Bill Gene Johnson
and women in our home. air conditioned house wllh .
446·0069
lull basement, 2 WB
Also have rooms for
wllh or wllhoul board. llreptaces, . new carpet.
BEDS-IRON. BRASS, old Trained and experienced. Would consider lower
v&amp;tued property In trade or ·
furniture, gold, · silver 614-992-73•14.
will finance wllh low dowri
dollars, wOOd tee bOxes.
slorie Jars, antiques, etc ., . Will care for elderly men payment and 111"6 Interest.
Complet~
households . and women in our home. Located 123 Garfield Ave.
Y{rl)t: M.D. Miller, Rt. A, Also have rooms for rent Caii.IA6·1SI6.
wllh or without board.
Pomeroy, Oh. Or~7760.
Trained and experienced. House 7 rm. 1 112 stories, ·
.~
~
614-992-7314.
wOO&lt;Iburner, 1 3/4 acres, ·
OLD FURNITURE, beds,
Ewlnaton , Oh . L.arge
Iron, brass. or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards of all types. I would II ke to do house garage. several OYI ·
Tables1 round or square. c:eanln~ In the Five Points· buildings, $23,000. Land
contract .10% Interest,
Wood 1ce boxes. Old desks Chester· Tuppers Plains $5,000
down. ·CJII 614-388·
and bOOkcases. Will buy· area . Call Sharon 614-985·
8595.
complete household . Gold, 4143.
- ---.silver. old money, pocket
HOUSE
al2011 Chestnut St. ::
watches, chains, rings, and 13
1nsUr1nce
etc; Indian Artifacts 'of all
Price $15.000. Call 446· :'
types. Also buying baseball SANOY AND BEAVER In· ~4 .
cards. Osby Marlin 992· surance Co. has oftertd
services for fire insurance
6370.
HOUSE In Vinton. Call 388·
coverage in Gallla County 8823
after 5pm.
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are 1 WOUL.D like to trade a available to meet in· small farm for house and :
divldual needs . Contact lot or mobile home and lol, ,
11
Help wanted
Kall Burleson, agent . in or near Gallipolis. Write 1
to Box 600, c/o Gallipolis ' ·
Phone 446·2921 .
HIGH
SC~OOL.
Daily
Tribune, 825 Third
GRADUATES/SEN tORS.
Ave., Gallipolis.
You,can earn over $550.00
per month while learning a 1:,::5_ :::.
S&lt;::.:h:::oo
=tsc:l.:.:n=:•l:.:.r=:u&lt;::.:t.:.:iO:.::.nc_ - - - -- - - valuable skill like com· Karate the yltlmate In self L.arge home situated on a
puler repairer, sheet metal defence all private lessons • nice tot In Syracuse, Ohio.
worker. or refrigeration. Men, women, &amp; children. Good neighbor hood, 111111 .•
Plus you will have a secure Instruction thrY black bell. accomodate 3 or 4 single •
part lime lob with the Ar· Also available Karate men or single women. :
my National Guard after uniforms puchlng and Private rooms with com· ~
schooling. Benellls inciYde kicking bags, and protec· mon lounge and cOOking
a $1,500.00 enlistment tive equipment. .Jerry areas plus l'h baths.
bonus, $35,000 life in· Lowery &amp; Associates Available before schOol
surance and free IYition to Karate studio, 143 opening Aug . 15ore school
any college or trade school Burlington Rd., Jackson, th . S450. per mo . plus
utilities. Call614·992·6284 or
In West Virginia . In· Oh. Call 614·286·3074.
terested persons may call
992·5732 or 992·7671.
(:104) 675·3950 or in West
Virginia call toll free 1-800· 17
Miscellaneous ·
2 bd.room . 80 x 100 tor. 1
6-42·3619.
Ruger 22 Caliber. New small building. Garden
model . Single 6 MAG . or space. In Mason behind
laundry mat. 18000 down,
Mature,
responsible regular. Other Guns. 614·
take over payments or
bapyslller needed in my 7A2·2282.
home for 20 and s montn old
S26Al00. Call773·5089.
girls. F lexlble hours, own
transportaion. reference-s. Ruger 22 Caliber. New
Three bedroom hOIJse In
Call 446·6256, 9 to 11 week· model . Single 6 MAG. or Pomeroy . Nice location:
regular.
Other
Guns.
614·
days.©
Carpeted, vinyl siding, ·
7A2·2282.
fireplace . Priced to sell
$22,500. 614·992-7446.
PROFESSIONAL COUPL·
E desires full lime babysit· 18
ter for two young children Lawn Mowing no yard to 3 bd .room house In
In our home.
Variable big or small. Reliable and Pomeroy . Nice location .
hours, own,transportation. dependable. For estimate All carpeted, vinyl siding,
Call .IA6·6256 weekday mor· call 446·3159 after 6PM 256· and flre·place. Priced to
\967.
sellal$22,500. 614·992·7446.
nlngs.

AYg. 6 &amp; 7. 10 a.m. 12 GARAGE SALE. Console
Legion Terrace (2 houses
radlq console, car 8·
from Pomeroy L.egion stereo,
players, speakers,
1•. - ---'-----:-Hall). Avon decanters, track
B/W T.V., bOOks, yprlghl
R&amp;
R
8·1rack
I
apes,
2. ~--.....,-PERMANENT
honey, glassware,
tapestries,
mandolin, freezer,
HAIR REMOVAL
clothes, misc . Fri. and Sat.
3. - - - , - - - ·
clothing,
misc.
Professional Etecirolysls
lOam to 5pm, James Neal,
Center, A.M.A. app,roved,
Riverside Drive, Cheshire.
5. _ __..._ _
Doctor re,erals, by ap· Carport &amp; porch sate. 1643
polntment only. :104·615· &amp; 1642 uncotn Heighl1,
6.
FOUR FAMIL.YYardSale,
623-4.
.
Pomeroy. Aug 5 &amp; 6. 9·4. 7/10
7.
mi . from 141 on Neigh·
I
Bonle collection, table &amp; borhOO&lt;I
Rd .
·a.
chairs, tools, whaf· nots,
I
linens &amp; misc .
1 4
Gtyuw1y
..~.
'
YARD SALE . Old 35 belOw
ANY
PERSON
who
has
·
10.
Bob Evans Canoe Livery .
Yard
Sale.
Thurs.
&amp;
Fri.
anymlno ·to give away and
Furni(Yre.
CB. antiques,
11.
does not offer or allempt to 288 Main St.. MiddlepOrt. tires, clothing, misc., Fri.
·'
12.
offer any other, lhlnil tor Oh .' Sweepers. tables, and Sal.,9am to~pm.
sate may place an ad In !Ills cha irs. lamps, diShes &amp;
13. ·--~--=- column. There will be , no m,lsc.llems. Some jewelry.
14,
GARAGE SALE. Frldasy,
charge to the advertiser.
6 only . 6«l KriSII
15. - - , . - -..,-- Yard Sate. Fri . &amp; Sat. 133 August
Dr ., off u.s. 35 Galllpglls.
Butternut
Ave.,
Pomeroy
:
SHEPHERD PUPPIES.
16. - - - - . , . - - - 35. ..-~ ---Crib, 9x12 rug, bltycte, Three Families.
Call,l79·2721 . '
dlnefte, coffee table, utility
cabinet.. dishes. free stan· BACK TO SCHOOL Yard
TWO
CATS.
1
black,
1
gray
Mall This Coupon.wltit Remlttanca
ding fire place &amp; scrtefiS, Sale, 662 Fourth Avenu~.
and white. Call-446·6632.
chairs. luggage. 1amps, August 7, 9-A, children,
The Dally Se.n flnel
twin bed 1 toots, (8,000 BTU adult clothes, coats, shoes,
111 Court' St. .
air conaltionerJ belfdlng. b"aby items, TV, reference
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
shelf units, ches.t. books .
depression glass, en·
lertalnmenf stereo center, 4 family . Jim L.ouks
typewriter, Coleman tan· residence. Below Eastern
tern. new kerosene heater, H.S. Friday, and Saturday!
gas f1eater, much more,
Good items.
.
.
Porch ,Sale, Thurs. &amp; Fri., 3 family. Tues., · Wed .,
&amp;qaE.
Ayg 5 &amp; 6. 719 Broadway, Thurs. AYg . 3,A,5, 10 1111 A.
435 Headley St. Middleport.
PART COL.L IE puppies, Racine.
PC)MEROYl OH.IO
wormed, 3 mo. old. Call
Anention RN'S·Pomeroy
~
--- · Rain cancels. ___.__
.
H.C.C. now has opening for
256·1505. .. '
Co:Rd. 3A behind Memory
Gardens Cemetery. FYr· Thurs. - and Friday . 6 full and part lime RN for 3
"
I
nllure, quills, spreads, fomilys, corner of Co. Rds. to 11 and 11 to 7 shifts .
POODLE. Call 446·771.1.
hand tools, Ayg ,. 7, 9 a.m. 28 and 32 in Bashan. 10 a.m. Upgraded salary and shift
NEW LtSTII\fG. - Fan,tastlc house - ~ari!asllc.
1111 ????. 614·"2-77A7. .
. till A ·p.m. Clothing, toys, dllferentlal. Contact Nancy
FREE. 3 Beagle mixed
Price! Easter:n district. Afive y~r old ranoh hOUse,
1970 Clsdlllac, ceramics, VanMeter director of Nur·
puppies. 7 weeks old .. Call
·. three bedrQQms, 1'h batt\s, patio, triple lnsuta.tlon.
sing. 614·992-6606.
misc. RAin cancels. ·
Yard
sale·nice
clothing,
992 · ~.
r Blended rate avail!lble .of 12% willl $3,990 down ;
baby
Items,
selling
cheap.
---P&lt;IYmtnt. $395-•.IA monthly for 20 year term. Total
Third and Cherry St., Yellow freezing corn. Don R.N.'S. ·L.P.N's needed
price S39,'ll0, ,
·
TO A GOOD HO~E . Calico SyracYse, Oh .
Houdashell, 61A·992·3003 or now to fulfill requlrments
mother' cat and 5 klllens,.7
01 t.C.F . Certification.
992·2200.
NEW J.ISTI!fO - ·PoMEROY ARE.&amp;' - Five acre
weeks old. Call-146-33-41.
Salary commensurate with
and four beilroom home. Fully insulated, storms,
3 family sale. Beside Post
two wood burners to cut healing costs, two car
office In Tuppers Plains. Saturday Aug. 7. Guns, training and experience·
TWO black female · pUps, Fri. Aug. 6. 9 till Ill.
Extensive benefits in ·
garage, oulbYIIdlngs, garaen space. All this !Or
•tools, knives, country and ctydlng
paid
part Border Collie, part
$27,000.
western
tapes.
Misc . ~ to??
hospllallzatlon, retirement
Irish Setter, 9 wks. old,
good with children. Call Carport sate-Aug. 5th and Rt.7 beyond Beacon St. program, no penally· sick
NEW LISTING - . POME~OY AREA- A really
6th. Joseph Connolly Rain cancels.
leave, 3 week vacation to
379·213~.
' nice three bedroom home with'a new chain link fenresidence above Eastern
start. more. Contact Per·
ce, for play area. lor lhe' kids. Appx. 1'12 acre tot.
H.S. mile ppsj1·20. Clothing
R'Mge- R~f ,., carpeting. $27,000,
Wanted-good home for 3' for Sc:hool, eans; etc. Fuel 5 family . Aug. Sand 6 from sonnet Director (:104) 675·
S~ate · A· Way Roller 3230
or write Lakin
lovely kllfenst 1 Ttver· oil tank with ljfuet·, fuel oil 9·5.
rink, Chester Ohio. Fur· Hospital, Lakin W.VA .
I l'tiEW LIS'I'ING- Racine.,. Three rentals in bneMale. Two snow white. one . fyrna~e . Ashley wood nilure.
small ,appliances, 2.5250.
two units with two bedrooms, one unit wllh three
female-1 .male. Heres .two ' stove. Starts9a.m.
toys, baby Items, a trailer
bedrooms - S500 .nionlhiY rental ,potential: Two
lillie snOWflakes for YOIJ In
door, clothes, misc.
units furnished . AluminYm siding. Storage bYildlng.
a Augyst. Mrs. Anna
Director of Nursing for 136
Asking $40.000.
·
·Mohler.. Leading Crtek , NEIGHBORHOOD yard
bed, tong term care
sale,
124,
123,
128
South
3 family . Tues.. Wed., faclllly. Five years ex·
Rd~ Middleport, Oh. 61A·
REALTORS:
Park Or. Children, men Thurs. AYg. 3,4,5, 10 till 4. perlence, two years of
992·3911. 1)
Henry E. Cletooid, Jr., GRI .. . ........... 992-6191
and ,womens clothing, an· 435 Headley St. Middleport. which must be in an ad·
'Jean Trussell ..... . ....... , ..... ,• . .. ... 949·2660
dishes, toys, and a Rain cancels.
mlnlslratlve capacily. BSN
Wanted-good home for 3 ttques,
~ttle; S. Tumer ;··......... ............. "2·5692
tot of lhls and a lot 01 that.
preferred . Extensive
lovely
.
kittens,
1
Tiger·
·
Office· .. : . ..·... .. .. .. ... , .. . , ..... .... "2·2259
Come and lee. Wednesifay, Thurs, and Friday. , 6 benefits. Salary com ·
Male. Tw~ snow white; 1llle ThYrsday, Friday SIO.OO·?
farnlly.s, corner 01 co. Rds. mensYrate with• training
female· I . male. Heres two
28 and 32 in Bashan. 10 a.m. and experlenco. Call Per·
little snowflakes for yoiJ In
till A p.m. Clothing,
sonnet Director (30A) 675·
a AugYSI . Mrs. Anna
MO!Jier, Leading Creek YARD sa(e, 4th, 5th, 6th, if 1970 Cadillac, cei;an~-lcs~ j3230 or wrtte Lakin
Hospital, Lakin, W.VA.
Rd:, Mlddleparl, Oh. 614· rain · next days, Jertc~o misc. Rain cancels'. .
~
Rqad. Dishes, books.
'
25250.
9J2·3911.
bicycle, knives, toofsi etc.
npt responsible for ac·• Satur~y .Au.g. ·7. GYns, AVON. Need extra money?
Two, cats and two klll~ns. t18en11.
roots·· knives, countr.y and
pick up at 1501 Kanawha
western tapes. Misc . 9 to?? Set yoyr own hours. Sell
Street, Apt . .i, Polnl G~rage Sate,.Augusl51h to Rl.7 beyond Beacon St. Avon. (Must be 18 or over) .
Call now 614·698·7111
Pleasant.
,August 7th, at 2923 Map!~ . Rain cancels.
collect.
Ave. Point Pleasant.•
' - - ·
ONE male, 2 female, part - - - - - -sale. 5, 6, 7. 9-? 113
German Shepherd puppies, Three Family yard sale, l'loiiAitnut St. behind Hecks, R.N.'s·L.P .N.'s NEEDED
~OW to fulfill requiremen·
:104·675·23AA.
Aygust fr7, !Otill 5, tapes,
Is of I. C. F. Certification.
records, couch and cha;r,
Salary commenSjJrate wilh
FOUND cat-while hips, quill tops, ,clrapes and ' 1
training and experience·
Public
Sate
face and ring around netk, clothes, real c-p. !.leon
Extensive
·benefits in&amp;Auction
rest for him blue, :104·675- Baden Road. PhOne· 304·
ciYding
paid
458·1823.
5019,-.
Rl~ll
Pearson, Ex · hospltalizetion, retirement
pertenced AUCTIONEER . program, no penally sick
34os' Franktrn, Pl. Pleasant, •Estates;. anflqyes, farm, ' leave, 3 week vacation to
baby ct·othlng, car ' hOusehold. L.lcl!nsed Ohlo- start. More. contact Per·
~t,ceramlcs, Etc, Friday, WV. BUYing anllqyes. 30A· sonnet Director 304-675·3230
or write Lakin Hospital,
773-5715. 773·9185.
9till o, Five F•mllv.
Lakin, WV 25250.
Glgaritjc yarp sale, .,i~?, A~ctlon e.Jery F.ri. night at
H~rson, w. Va. l'h f!\lle· tile • Harlford Community
up lh,' '35, Thursday 1nd Center;. Trucf\loads of new
Fri~a)l, LOll 01 cfurnlturt. • merchandise every ;week.
GlassWare anllqu\!5, brass' COfiSigments of n,ew and
bed, brau and Iron ,bed, I used J11erchandtse always
w•fcome. ·
Richard
!Of! ol tveryttiing,
. '.
ReynoldS Auctioneer. 275SA'LE
Burger Chef 106t:
p,rktng~:r. lot.
Lots 1 of
' '. wanted To Buy
everY!IIInv. Frlct.t!Y 6111.. ·

·•· - - -'--'---

1

82· Plumbing &amp; Healing
4I ~ Housesfor Rent
A2 ·Mobile Homes for Rent

the

following
telephone exchanges
.
. . ..

75· Boats &amp; Motors
76·Aulo' Parts &amp; Accessories
77 ·Auto Repair
78 ·Camping Equipment

__
-, ........... ..... . .

c~ver

Claaified page.

__
. ..........
_,, ......
.... .'.

35 Lots &amp;Acreage
36· Real Estate Wah ted

11 Help Wanted
12 - Situ~t i on

31 ·Homes tor Sale
32·Mobile Homes for Sale
33· Farms for Sale
34· Business Buildings

EmpiDOfltht
&amp;er 'lEes

'

••

21· Business Opportunit1
22 ·Money to Loan

5 Happy Ads

......

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

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

.:':':. :::~!;! :.!:..1 •• ::.:. ~~

100 PIECES of = e
glastware, 7 piece
n
qlnelle sel, 1 man boat, bat·
tery and troll moll"', 1877,
Smith and ,Wesson pistol,
mYch more to numerous to
mention. AI yellOw hOIJse
by red light In Cheshire.
Friday only. 8 to 1
1
YARD SALE . 84 Garfield
Avo. Fri. and Sal. ' to
Spm. Jeans, all sizes; Kids
clothes and mise llems . •

Yard sale at Marge Fe!·
ty•s, 830E. Main, Pomeroy .
THREE FA.MILY Yard
Ayg5&amp; 6.
sate, Aug. 5 lind 6, 9am till
dark, 7 mi. East Ill Por~r
and West of Chi!sht•eon Rt.
554. Bedspreads, cyrtatns.
dlsnes. plants, wicker,
radios, nice clothing, sub'
mergabte pymp. tots Of
misc.

Or Write Dally Sentinel Classtfiecl Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 4~169

,,

The Dally

Ohia

.IB

__ _

11

Trash collection &amp; hauling.
Call-446·4-180 .
·
Carpener

.

Work,

remOdeling or repair. Wall
paneling arid ceiling tile.
Phone 992·2759.
Ex'perienced

person will

Paint hoYses, roots, barns,
etc. Caii-446·750A .
BABYSI TTl NG

in

my

home, days only . Georg'es
Creek area . Preter 3 yr .

old child . References. Call
446·7668 .

CARE FOR elderly or
disabled in my home. Have
.references. Call-446·85-42.
Bac~hoe &amp; dozer work. w.
H. L.owman, 304·882·2844 or
882·2004 evenings.

BABYSITTING, Meadow
Lane Estates . During
school months, 2 ex ·
perienced
women,
reasonable rates, 304·615·

2332 or 675·6184 .
Remodeling &amp; Carpentry.
Electrical &amp; Plumbing. 304·
576·2989 .

'.

on

Htlp Wlntecl

t IRaHEI II
21

Business

---· Opportunity_ _ _
OWN YOUR OWN Jean·
Sportswear, lntant· Pretee·

n or Ladles Apparel Store.
Offering all nationally

known brands such as Jor·

dache, Chic. Lee. Levi.
Vanderbilt, Calvin · Klein,
wrangler over 200 other,
brands. $7,900 lo$16,500 in·
eludes beginning In·

Rental properties for sale·
HoYse for sale· Pomeroy . 2·
Apt. bulldlng·Middlei)OI't.
Trailer-Syracuse. 614·992·
6059 after S:30 614·992·7511 .
New Haven Rental Properlies for sate -3 apt .
bYild ings. 5 houses for sate.
614·992·6059. 614·992·7511 af·
ter 5;30.
Beautifully restored Vic·
torian, S bedrooms, four
fireplaces, ornate carved
woodwork, air condlllon.
insulated, owner financing,

304-675·6999.
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dillon, 3 bedrooms, family

room with firepalce, central air, basement, phone

304-675· 1~42.

Lovely remodeled J
bedroom home, basement,
fenced backyard, carpeted.

sided, storm windows, near

schools. 304-675-4338.
Two bedroom, 80x100 lot, 1
small building, garden
space, Mason, behind laundramat, S8,000 down and

take over payments or
$26,000. 30.073·5089.
2'h STORY house &amp; double:
garage. Optional·2'h acres·
to 4 acres ground. City'
water available . Con flnan·
ce one half purchase price.
304-675·1076.

OWNER flnancin~ on this
modern 6 room home. AlSO·
a Holly Park mobile home ·
double car garage and srt::
ling on u acres, (all
level). Qu ick possession.
Pr:ced to sell. 30H7S-3230
or675·3431 .

ventory, airfare for one 10

Fashion Center, training,
fixtures, grand opening
Call Mr.
promotions.
Kostecky 501 ·327·8031 .

- - -···- -

HOUSE &amp; lot for sale in
Mason, 30-4-773·5846.

---

--,- - - · ~--

-· .

THREE bedroom house s·
miles from Pt . Pleasant :
nice neighborhOOd. Owne;
finance, 10% or rent $300.
month, phone 304-675·4506.
- -

32

-- - ·- ·---- ·-Mobile Homes
lor Sale

L.OT CLEARAN&lt;;E SAL.E, :
all priced as wholesale. ·
Only 2·1982 models left. 12' :
wide, 2 bedrooms, all elec· •
!ric, $7995. U'x70', 3
bedrooms, 1&amp; baths, 2'X6'
outside walls, best In· .
sulated home made, •
$18.900. Low down paymet)t •
or trade in, bank financing :
available. Used 2 bedroom, .
12'x55'. mobile home, '
21, .f
BuslnHS
$.1500. All State Modutar : ·
Oppor!!!nlty '
Homes, half way between 1
OWN your · own Jean- Huntington &amp; Pt. Pleast~nt
$portswear, lnfani·Pretee· on St. Rt. 2. 304-576·2711. . ,
n or l:.ldlts Apparel Slpre. ---- -·
'
Offering all 'nationally USED MOBILE HOME. ;
W~ brands sUCh aS 'Jor•
576·2711.
.
. ' ..
decile, Chic, Lee, t.:evl Van·
derblll, Calvin Klein.
Wrangler over \200 other MOBILE HOMES MOVED ;
·
brindl. 17,9110 to S16;5ito In· Licensed &amp;• Insured. Cllli &lt;
•' 1
chides beginning In· JOA-576·2711.
ventOry, atr flrt for one to
---~:...___,...
Fill/lion Center, training, Mobile HOJOft 14 )( 5110
fiJiurts, grand. opening X 70. from
11
pro~o.tlons. . CaJI Mr. 12 . models, •. K 1o ·
Kostecky 501·135-0439.., ·
Mobile Homes. 3114-675-

..

"·500 .,;,

�. The

Page~lO-The Daily Sentinel
32-

MiibliO Home-s - - ·
for Sale

ftf)~r.\fl ,li}ft

Aupt5,191t

They'll Do It Every Time

TRI -STATE MOBIL E
HOMES. USED-MOBIL E
' I,IOMES, CARS, TRUCKS .
GALLIPOLIS . CHECK
OUR PRICES . CALL .u6·
7572.

~~

;~~E~~~n~i=::~,-~-.~~~~;.c-,Piastlc septic T ~nks . state
and county approved. 1,000
oal. tank, price~- Other
sizes in stock, haul In your
pick up truck. Call 611·286·
5930, Jackson', Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
-- . - - - - - - - - - : 1975 c;ase 450, dozqr·
tractor. 1.800 hrs.. very
good cond., $14,900. Call
4A6·4537.

CLEAN USE D MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBI LE .
HOM E SA LES, ~ MI.
WEST, GA LLI POLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.
1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond. De luxe kitchen, la rge
liv ing room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hidden ulll. room .
379-2310.

RATLIFF ' S POOL CEN·
TER Pools sale, supplies &amp;
Installation. 403 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipolis. Dh. Caft · ~6579 . tn oround · Abtov~
ground.
·

New Moon 1970 model,
12x65 with 12' expando, set
up In local park with skir·
ling &amp; steps. Ready to
move Into $6,500. Call .u6l547:

____::.r:ijil~ siTe-:::=.

by Larry Wrlglll

'N' CARL'(LE'"

'

jO

\

~tH43· 29 1 6oim·643·2

....,._. ,.

___ ,

'·

&amp;\1,·

~

HILLCREST KENNEL ·
$oardin(l all breeds. AKC
Reg . Dobermans pups and
Doberman stud Service.,
Call.u6-77?5.

_ _ ___;_-:T

mo.

record. Your choice for

S125ea. Call~:675-7569:

81

Itt

FMherK- 'IIett

II.~:=
Y1t
Y011

'

-~

1974 KIRKWOOD,12x 60, 2
bdr., partially furnl$.hed.
all electric, central ;Hr ,

with 8 x 16 porch, 2 storage
bldgs. Lot 92, Quoil Creek .
Call245-5612.
l977 Fesrlval Trailer. 14 x
70. $11,000. If interested,
call992-7780.

TWO BDR . mobile home
with expando on Rt. 35
West. Call ~- 4229 .
TWO BEDROOM furnished
trailer near Ewlnoton.
$125. per month. Call 614388-9926.
12 K 65, 2 bdr .• S2SO. per mo.
water and gas paid. Call
4A6-6583.

CLEARANCE SALE OF
1982 MODELS! SAVE
$1000.1! 14x70 Mansion 3
bd.room . 2 full baths, f. bedroom trailer. Real
upgrade turn. , total elec .. nice, adtJifS only. Brown's
deluxe metal exterior, bay Trailer Park. Minersville.
windows front and rear. 614- 992 · 332~ .
$13.950. 14 x 65 Mansion 3
bd.room, front kitchen with
banana bar. upgrade tur- 2 bd. room unfurnished
plture, deluxe metal. bay mobile home. Cheshire,
windows front and rear. Oh. 304-773·5882.
$12.9$0. Above prices_ Include delivery and set-up. 2 bd. room unfurnished
See at Kingsbury Home mobile home: Cheshire,
Sales . 1100 E . Main Oh. 304-773·5882.
Pomeroy or ca II 614-9927034.
3 bedroom trailer with two
car garage . S250. month
12x60 Buddy mobile home plus deposit. Kitchen fur, Excellent cond. -washer nished . 304·576-2682 after 7
and dryer, stove, new p. m.
refr if .. nice furniture, patio
bu ilt on utility room. $8500. TWO b ed room mobile
614-992-2684 orm-2717.
home, kitchen furni shed,
couples only , 304-675-1076,
1971 Skyline 12X60. Very Also tWo vacant trailer
good cond. Recent interior lots.
work . Roof repainted .
===;~==::;==
S6SOO. 594-4253 days or -98544
4377 evenings.
Apartment
tor Rent
Owner financing 1980 14x70
Mobile Home. $12,000. 12
pet. Interest. S2.QOO down.
614-9~9 - 2639 ,

Three room furnished·
apartment, adul,t s, no pe!s.
Point' Pleasant. Call 304675-2453 .
THREE room furn ished
cottage, util ities furnished,
adults, no pets, 3~·675-2812
or 675-J580.
45

Space for Rent

46

TRAilER SPACES.
4A6-4684.

Call

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Laroe lots. Call
992·7479.
Space for Rent, Mobile
Home Space In f'ont
Pleasant, Free Water and
sewage. Phone 3~· 675 1699.
--=:::::;;=:=:;=:;~:;:==:==

:.:___..:.:.:===='-TOBACCO BARN near

47--

wanted to Rent

Harrison Twp.
_1156.

Call 256·

I

•

1 J

I

CANARIES.' male · and
' female, call .u6·9478. Also
Zenith Stereo Console, call
4A6-4089.

AKC: Collies, Sable and
white, wormed, had first
shots, Inc. Parvo. Ready
ROLLER SKATES, black Wed. Aug. 4th. 1-611·667·
shoe, sizes, exc. cond. , S3S.· 3815.
C811446-320A:

-------

HOUSE COAL for sale,
summer rates. Mine run
coet Pittsburgh No. 8.
Oellvert!d io Gallipolis, $30.
a ton; Pt. Pleasant, S31 . a
ton. c .o .o . Call~· 1411 .
SEARS coat and wood bur·
ner. !Jsed 3 weeks, $200.
Call ~- 9487 .
Over 1,000 ceramic molds,,
kilns. and sUpplies. 61H422925or742-2085.
For sale-Used R 40 Ditch
Witch trenc her. 614-694·
7842.
Yazoo. h igh wheeler
mower. 20" cut. $300. 614992-380-1.
Dinino room suite, ovat'
wood table, 5 chairs and
buffet, Good cond. S400.
614-992-6537'

,,
WOOD tor sate. 30A· 451-

... .., ..., ..0- ." '' .....

4' room unfurnished apt. all
carpeted, utilities paid,
adulls only no pets. Call
446·3437.
Efflency apartments ht
floor &amp; 2nd . floor . C~ll 4A60957 , 729 2nd Ave .•
Gallipolis .

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOM. 919
Second, Gallipolis. S12S.
utilities pd. Range, refrig ..
share bath. Single male.
446-"16 after 7pm.

51

Beverly Manor 1970. 2 bed,
partially turn., good cond.
614-985·4136.

Hay &amp; Grain

II

0

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St .,
Gallipolis. hl2' 'linOleum
ruo S22, 3 piece living room
suites couch-love seat·
chair $199. Call ~-3159 .

1833.

- --- - -

BAR size pool table with all
equipment. $500. Call ~882· 3134 In the day. 882-2481
after
5.

TIRED of being "all gummed up" from the ' syruptons of such things as
1973 Ux70 Grandv ille has
headadles, constipation,
large rooms plus laundry 1st floor furnished apart·
arthritis, allergies, and
room, must be moved, 30~· me n!, adults preferred. ref.
obesity? Call 304·675-1293
&amp;
dep.
required.
Call
631
882-2820.
for herbal assistance from·
4th Ave., Golllpol ls.
GOOD
USED
AP - Naturallfe.
33
Farms for Sale
PLIANCES • washers.
Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath, dryers,
refrigerators,
100 acres farm In Meigs Go. clean, no pets·, adults only, ranges . ·Skaggs Ap · BEDROOM suite $60, 1 lot
of yard sale goods, S20. 30425 acr es bottom, rest d_ep. req. Call.u6·1519.
pllances, Upper River Rd. ; 675-6535 before 3:00p.m.
pasture &amp; limber. 3
beside Stone Crest Motel . ,_
bedroom· remodeled house.
.u6-7398.
Large barn'ioaflng shed. small furnished house tor 1
NEW
Whirlpool
Double garage. $65.000. 614- or 2 adults only . Call .u6microwave, 304·675-5822 af0338.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
667-6227.
ter4 :3jlp.m.
Sola, chair, rocker, ot·
loman, 3 fables, (extra
FARM for sale, 65 acres on HUD available 2 bdr
heavy by Frqntler), $685. BABY bed &amp; chain-link fitnde
luxe,
kitchen
turnlsMd,
Fees Branch, Hannan
Sofa;
chair and !oveseat. ce gate, cal1304-675·4624.
good
location.
utilities
par·
District, Mason County,
$275. Sofas and chairs
tially
paid
.
5
rm
house
for
call304'576·2568.
rent. ~esldentlal and. com· priced from $285. to $895. Baby bed $55.00, 2110 Shore
merclal properties for sale Tables. S38 and up to $125. Street. Point Pleasant.
34
Business Buildings
~r
lease , A-One Real Hlde·a·beds,$440. and up to Phone 675-7679.
For sale · Small
11ar Estates. Carol Yeager, $525., queen size, $380.
business In P9meroy, Ohio. Realtor . Cai1304-675·5104 or Recliners. S175. to S325 .. Used Windows with
Lamps from S18. to $65. 5 screens, good condition.
675-5386.
614-992-9905.
pc, d inettes from $79., to Phone 304-675·1444.
S385. 7 pc _, $189. and up.
FURNISHED
EF - Wood table with six chairs
35
Lots &amp; Acreage
FICIENCY . 2 rooms, $145.
Lawn Mower, Riding Sears
4'h ACRES across from ' Utilities pd. Single male. $395. to S650: Desk $)10. Ct aftsman, 26'inch Electric
$300.
and
S550.,
HutchesrGall ipolis Dam on IIIII by 919 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
maple or pine finish . Start, 7HP. S4$0. Phone304·
water tower. Call 313-291 -, .u6-"16 after 7pm.
'
'
suites- · Bassett 675·2468 .
Bedroom
:9463 .
•
Cherry, $795.
Bunk, bed
FURNISHED
EF · complete with mattresses,
THREE LOTS on Tycoon • FICI1&lt;NCY. 607 Second, $250. and up to $395. 'Baby
Lake, 150 fi. irontage, 100 Gellipols.. $145., one per- ~s. $99. Mattresses or
11. deep. Calll!J-291-9463.
son. Share' bath. .u6-"16 box springs, full or ·twin.
alter7pm .
$58., firm , $68 . and $78.
Queen sets, 1195.
Two acre lots-150 ft. road
frontage , city water, ONE BEOROOM1urnished
be hind 84 Lumber. Call~- apt .• carj&gt;eted, air
5 dr.c.
675-6873 or 675-3618.
S225. plus utilities.
dep. req., no pets or 13_~- ·-~~~n~tre
'l8 acres, tobacco alldl- children .. Call ~- 1788 .
.ment, m ineral r ights, no
14,000 BTU air conditioner,
-Buildings, $9,500. Call 3~ - THREE ROOMS and b.ath,
$100. ~- 675-2835 .
-~75- 6851 .
.ne~ty. furnlshed:· Corner dl
Court an~ . Second, $185.
References. Call 446-1615
O( 446·1243.
.
.'

!~~=~~

.,

1915' TON TRUCK with

utility bed. PS, PB, exc .
cond. $800. Call.u6-9487.

HAY. Call ~· 2650.
Hay . S1 .25bale In field . 304·
675- 22~ o.r ~-576- 1302.
'--

.
•

"• •'

..... . .. .... .
'

4

'

•••• "

·
•
1966 Chevy l'h T. truck,
flatbed. Call 388·8701.

7:00 • Cll P.M. wa ~.
(l)liill'. Eye
()) E8PN lpo;tafCMum .
(I) a.-tAcNa
(]) Entea tllllwwtent Tonight

•

i3

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

FOUR

Wi1EEL drive
Chevy Suburban, auto., PS,
PB, great shape• .$1600. or
bestoffer. Call.u6-1927.

Ill~ =-Dough

--------,-

Marcum
Roofing !&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ~·perlence, speclaHzlng •In
built up' &lt;oof. Call 614~9622 or61~· 388·9857.
· '

115

~,:_

•

•

..V.monev.
(I) AnDihlt

~

-

'

41

Houses for Rent

House, 120 3rd . Ave.,
Gallipolis. 2 bdr., gas heat,
dep. req. The Wiseman
Agency , .u6·3643.
Unfurn ished house, 3 bdr.,
ROdney Village II. Ref.
req ., $200. Call .u6·"16 af·
ter7PM.

For $ale or rent attractive 4
brd. home in citv limits.
Full basement, FR. OR,
fully carpeted, assumable
loan. low down payment,
$325 mo~ rent. Call ~- 1323
after 5.
FIVE ROOMS and bath.
Adults only. no pets. ·on
'Bob McCoimlck Rd. Call
~-:i65o.

.

LARGE FARM HOME, 5
bdr, , I m i. s . of Vinton on
51. Rt. 160. S2SO. per mo.,
securitY dep. r"'). Cal131891119.
You'll love this 14 acre
farm In the country wjth a
POnd and small bef,n. This 2
·bedroom briCk
Is
only 2 miles from dawntown Pl. Ple8NIIf, Will
Slon a yur lenelltN!OPff
month. 30H75-627f.

nom.

Pomeroy .

Pomeroy, S75. deposit.
$125. mo. -rent. Walk to
Powells. 592·5991.-

te set.
pels or
Hyth, Wellston,
6309.
Small effeclenc~ Aph 1
working person only. 614·
992·5738.

one

In Middleport
and two
bedroom turnl~hed apts.
~- 882 - 2$46.
.

•

·~lahtmwe'

&amp;r:oviE:
Cll N8llonlll Geog,..,nic

np~ ~Golf
Preuntatloil: 1 982 PGA

Champlonahlp
from
r.-, OK • Ftm Round •
Cll MOVIE: 'The Wackieet 8hlp In tht Annv'
(J) • (JI Molt&lt; • Mlnctv
Mortc tr1ea to dazzle Mindy
with a Moroccan feast . (RJ
• Cll ()It M.gnum, P. l.
Superatltion and marine ar-

chaeokigy leada Magnum

8:30

to one of hla moat daneroua asalgnmenta. (RJ (60
min .)
Cll 8riMk Pihiewa CoHoata Gene Slake! end Roger Ebert look tt whet's
hlp~ at the movtea.
()) • (JI Botom ludell•
Sonny and Amy go to a
tattoo parlor to prove their
love. (R) [Cioaed Captioned)

()) Good Neivhbors

(JI) Moneyrnebn
Cll 1D DlffNnt
Stnlkaa When Mr. Drummond' a company plana to
demoliah an apartment
building, an elderly resident
agreaa to leave only H at.
can move In with the
Drummonds . IR) [Closed
Captioned!
()) 700 Cub
Ill Birney Miner
Wojo promotea an inveat~
gatlon when he nicks a
robber who ahoota at him.
(R) [Cioaed Captioned)
• (J) ()It 81,_, • SlrMn
A.J. and Rick become entangled in a countorfaltticket acam. (RJ (60 min.)
()) To tht M_, 8om
® 8neek PtaW'ielN8 CoHolts Gene Sisl&lt;el and.
Rog« Ebert look tt what'o
happening It the- movieo.
11:30
CIJID GIIIIIM A llreolk
The chief kllla a man in the
line of duly end experiences ~raonal consequenceo. (RJ
Ill Police Squad
Frenk 1earchea for a kidnipped heire11. IRI
()) Up PomPaa
(JJ) Thla Old Houae Host
Bob Vila e1M118&amp; the efficienqt of the houae'a heelIng plant. (R) (Ctoced

9:00

~---"'\

Phqllis I

bq six! I ~romised

If ye'r late you ·
kin always use ih'
ol' "ferQOt fwind

m' watch' bit!

I've used it

twice

1

already!

BRIDGE

Make your own luck
NORTH
.AQJ

apiD. lie start·

eel out wltb, "1 ouaht to qult
brld&amp;e IIIII take up 101ne·
Diller pme, bat with my
luck oilier pme1 would
DI'Obtbly be wone for me.
Look at WI baDd."
Be ICrlbbled It out aud
eoatiDued, "I wu In three
DO-trump, don three trlcu.
AD,- elM would bave
made four or five odd."
We looked the ICrlbble
I1Vf!r In admlraUoa. Not of
bla lkill, but ratMr the swindle Dlfl)ltrlted ap!Dit blm
by W11l. It wu euy for us
to work out liDee there wu
ODly ODe lopcal way for blm
to Wind up that deep In the

uM:aa.
Wilt mtllt

•as

eAQH
.KQJ 3
EAST

WEST

•uu

.IQ10114

.$eu

•to s
•u

7

U7U
• •U76
SOUTH

•Ku

.AJ8

eto $3
+I08U

Vulnerable: North:.SOuth
Dealer: North

. Wesl

Nortll

Eul

Soalll

2\'
Paa

1•
2\'
Pw

Puo
Pm
Paa

INT
3NT

bave opeoed
the tiD&amp; of lleartl. Needless
to uy.~,.the U.E. let It bold.
.'1'11111 wilt caref~ ablfted
to the m of dlllllOIICII.
A toup pla:r to mate, bat
U Wilt ltUdled

IIIWDe

t SOUtll ailllt bold the
_.jack of beartl aud either
the kiDI of 1~ or the ace
of clubl. Sbilald South hold
the club ace liOthiD&amp; could
hart him. But look w~t did
baHfJD wileD Eut held that
lmportaat card.
South dlda't dare try a
d1amood f~. He baa to

cuhed the diamond king and
four hearts for down three.
Unlucky Indeed, but normal for our friend.

qlllteC'
!cilu.. West could
an
•

Opening lead: ft

that West held the
ace of clubs. So South took
dummy's ai:e of diamonds
and played a club. East took
bla ace and cleared hearts
for bla partner.
Now our unfortunate
friend led a diamond. West

a .

()) a

a

()) a

~CIM~·ft'
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
ZCity In Iraq
l Coanle fUe 3 Up to one's
5 Claulfy
llmlt
11 Chinese port 4 Famous
U Britllh
engraver
bobby
5 Affix
U Blatro
t Ego
14 Toast
7 Obeerve
U Time period 8 Good attempt
Yesterday'• Anawer
lt Ship clock
9 Raiment
17 Prelerve
lt Showed
24 Causing
31 Moroccan
U Coni), city
a tendency
cheer,
city
old
style
• Betrayed
lt Tidy
33 Fruit
11 Rclmanlan 19 Actress .
decay
25 Spanish
city
Papas
dining room 38 ConunoUon
Z2 Closed,
Zll Eltra
!1 Spectacle
37 Salvador
u wtnp
23 Slenderized
30 Winged ·
or Juan
23 Adjlllt anew
U Dieter's dish
N Esau's

father-in·iaW
!1 Trim

za Hamlet, e.g .

!I Malt vinegar
Captioned) .
'
3! Colorado
10:00
(I) ID Hill Street
Indian
Bluea
Washington ,33 Bikini part
unearths evidence to clear
a bigoted narcotic• officer HOld note

=

a

while' Copt. Furlllo end
Joyce ~ the~ romantic
plan1. (R) (80 min.)
~e..=IE: Under tht

_,....._eliCirieit__,_,:

(JJ ~VIE: '8uml'

WHEN

())T88Ev.nlngNewa

005tATER
START

• (D 20/20
a())
(J) ()It Knota lAnding
Karen·a· former cOllege

TH' FIRST

roOmmete offers her • job
In New Yortc. IRI (60 min.)
Cll Auatln City Umita
(JI) NewaWIItllh
10:30 ()) Bing out Americl
()) Mejor IAatilll'. BlaIMII: Atlllnta -' Loa

GRADE?

:

Allgtlea

llJ) Mattera of W.
Deeth

f

~-~ethlng h'ai.ol.d f.
away OI'.IOINthlng moYed? r
we•n del tt. call . . .3ls. 01""

.

61A-256- 1967 .tl8r 6.

·

()) NtehviMe RFD .
(I) E8PN Sparta

c-

. !15~:

.

'' (JI)Hitdaa'*

11:30

WE I-lAVE a.IE Pl.MR
WHO Ci\N'T TEl.L 'lliE
FIRST INNIN6 FROM

~

NICE' furnished 3 . roOm
apartment, private 411'
trance, adultS, 7th. St. 304675·3811.

\

'

3$1Aicust .
(ltal.)
nPierce

SIShunned

31 Greek river
48l!llnlfy

41 Russian "no"
DOWN
1 Accelerated

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

a

11:oo a Cll Clla Cll CJt • &lt;11
Newa

1li~LA5T

. . '.

II

AXYDLBAA:Xa
LONGFELLOW

One letter limpll' ltanda for another. ln thia sample A II
ulad for the three L''- X for the two O'a, etc. Slnale letters,
apof!rophet, ~be lanlth aad formation of the words are all
~Inti. Bach da, the code letterure dllferenL ·

e ClJ ID T~ BMw
~=-~

a

Cll Oulnoy A l..a1in

American cllcllltcir, who
hi• come for llllidlcel treetmem, iMml tt.t mer. ie
an ettlltln in !Ill holpi181.
(R) (80 mln.l

.. -~ =~MIAICill~ .

RFOJ

OJ

IUQSG

FMJ

lOSS

AX

RFX

AXJR

GMB

RFX

RUEUQQUI
•
AXRRXQ. - ·Q. M. ZMELAXSS
XPXQ

JXXT;

.~1:lll',.~. . ,__y..-...y~=le; MAY YOU)LWAYS HAVE MORE

One bediiiiOIII apartment,
all utilities paid. Phone 30467~1897.

ONE bedroOm epartmenl
l.n Henderson, 11~• . per
month, ~-675·1972. ,
:'

.

Ia nKJnlted with en old
love. (R) (80 min.)
(I) MOVIE: 'Coaat 111

....,...,!

am.

ent.rt.lloment

Tonlgln

·i

1972 GMC jlminy ~ris
'CienderitnJ-' Refrlgerati bij, ,
1\110 4 lS"lCI'' wide
, Air ~pndltjonl 'ng, &amp;•
wtlftls, 6 jugs, 11$. ·ellch. , H~tating sei:vlce .. fall 6U· l,
31U·.c51·JQI6,
I
• '•
i ' 256·1~, 1 •, '"
&lt;
,.
1967 Slllnt 'six Plymouth,
.
~·'
- .; '!......_f.::_--.:....;~r-- ~ could be an antique, ~77
lllltQ R.,.lr , &gt;.
SEW IN~ Mkhlne rep&amp;jrs, • ,
675-1237 or 676-6663.
'
service. Alltllorized Singer !
SPECIAL
complete
sales &amp; .service sliarpe
-FOil 5111e or rr~. 1~ enamel paint&gt; lobs tram
Scissors. Fabric . Shop, :
Lincoln Contl~tel Mark 1300. Sunroofs lr~Jfalled
Pomeroy. '192-2214.
, 1
IV. Nllw paint, , _ tires: from
Auto Trim Cen•I
st,:ws.oo. 31U·67HM.
ter. 446&lt;1,...
~e ~ ~·~ H•~•!!L.J
DODGE _..._,., SW, 6
'J ONES BOYS WATER '
SERVICE . Call61.367-7471 ~
cyl. auhlnl4ttlc, rv~!lood,
_o r611-367-CIJI'l.
.

&lt;II

8:00 •
(]) (!) . F.... Leroy
triM to rlile money to
bring hla mother to New
'Yortc whle Mr. Shorofaky

back

' ---- to-

Tile UDluc:ky expert bad

c-...

lmust

~~~!=•,'::O-'~S::.:;:1e::-,.:;l
l II

001 nered 111

•.!-=.=.

(It RJoht;;d ....._.
(JJ) All
Orwt
IIICIBnwll

..........
-......--····.
.. ...
- .

i

w.

(I I I I I) THE D
(Ar1lwn - - )

Clllualn 111 11111ort

"s ·

I

how to

Now lft'll!lll the clrdtd itlt!lrl to
form
thebyIUiJII1tt
· .. ouggested
the .....
ctrtoon.

Ynllfday'a l Jumllin : BOINB FLUKE BEFALL CORRAL
~= Will! vamDirn onen tw at midnightA COFFIN' BREAK
·

By Ol'traltl Jaeolly
udAiuS.III

---·---.

---~----.

IPRAUPE~
.
I I I 1]
IENFLOYj
() (

(1) ~Grtftllll

~~

.

.

voo

()).E8PN 8po;ta c -

spol(i

3 room furnlshed 'apt.
month Includes utili
Inquire at · Meigs Inn

())

..,.a.! lhowa

French City Paint;
residential &amp; commerci '
71
Autos lor Sole
Interior. exterior, · pa
.
1979 Dodge, hallton ~wheel · hanging.
&amp;
textur
1979 112 Plymouth Ouster, drive ptck· up truck with ceilings. Call 611-367-7
Registered black male toy slant 6, 3 spd., economical, topper, 7,poo mil~ $5,200. or 614 3677160
•.
- ·
,
"
poodle pup. $150. Also 37,000 miles, PS, PB, AM· 614-992-7062after 6 p.m .
Cocker Spaniel female, sso. Fl{l stero, Ziebai11 new
radials, air cond. , super
Masonary work, Logue
• years old. 614·992·7102.
halfton4wheel •Contracting ,
Rt . •1·
,•
clean. Call446r2847.
truck with
Ewlngton. Call 614-381,AKC Registered Brittany
miles. $5,200. - 39
Spaniel, '3 years old, SSO. 1965 MUSTANG, good
alter 6 p.m .
" ·
cond.
Call
~
6595
after
~- 675'2749.
'
4pm.
CHRISTIAN'S CO ~­
74......,-- MotorcyCles
STRUCTION ,
Constr.,
roofing, siding, spoilllng,
1910 MERCURY CAPR 1982 HONDA Custom 450,
•tenclng, painting, repairs 1&lt;
Hatchback, 4 cyt-.,, 4 spd ., 2 13,000 miles. Call 4A6·23SO.
1cleaning .,
Fruit
51
A46· 2000, c.ll
dr. Sell or trade for' .lr~jtk
&amp; \lttetablei
before8andafler5 :30. ~ ·
of equal value, $4000. Call
AMAHA MX 250. runs
' good, good cond., $300. Call
Fres"velietabtes Open 3:00 446·2151 .
BINGS CONCRETE coitto 6:00 dally , 2 miles west
256·6215.
~--- --- STIWCTION • Speclallzlti!J
of Gallipolis on Rt. IAI . Call 1972 FORO TORINO,
4A6·1!)80.
~ower sleeting, ro;wer 1981 HONDA CR &lt;ISO. , ·used :in concrete drlvewa~ t,.
sidewalks, floors: pat101,
r a kes, 302 V-1, 07,000 a_p prox. «l hrs.• good cond., etc.
-- -------- ~11 yr,exp. Call614-367Pick Your own tomatoes; m 11es, 5 new ~ecaps. new $1200; negotiable. Call ~7891
.
.
half runner or lima beans, front brakes. new · rear 8342 or 245·~78 .
S6:po bu. corn SlOO doz, exhaust, new plugs and'
---.,.------Gene's Steam ' Carpet
Ravnor · Peach Orchard, tune up. Some rust, one Clean-Scotch Gourd-Free
Rt. · 7, Lower River Rd ., quarter panel rough, In- 1979 HONDA CBX 6 cyl.,
terior nice, would make 6,000 actual miles.
Ex·
estimates-spring speclatsGallipolis. 446-4807.
good work car. $350. Call cellent condition. Call 614- qene Smith. 992·6309.
446-4145.
318·9809.
Silver Queen sweet corn .
-~---··
-~--Charles McKean Farm.
suz'u.KI
ASOG ' StARKS Tr~, Trimming
1981 F.,IRE BIRD ·FOR ·
and Lawn• Service. Shrubs
·. u6-9442.
MULA, 4 'spd. trans .. AM· touring bike, black, shaft trimmed. Phone 304-5l6
---r------:
drive,
vetter
equipped
with
FM cassette, PS, PB, AC.
20,10.
extra low miles.
Exc. windjammer, di!tachable
'
t
'"
CANNt'NG , TOMATOES . . cond.
~----'-----+
.'
bags, trun~ and other ac$5.00 already picked. bring, evenings, Call 256·1512 cessoriUJ Asking SlSOO.
RON' S ~1elevl.slon · Service,:
containers. Call416·4599.
S!&gt;eclalltmo In Zenith ant(
Call 416·75~ after 6Pm.
Motorola, • Q_uazar, anti
i
,,
'
1975 DATSUN 280 Z, 2 plus
house caJia. Ca11576·2398 o1:
CANNING tomatoes1 bhtng 2. Call ~- 1723 after 6pm.
1974 YAMAHA 350 \ tre.et.
446- 2~ .·
.!'
own containers. across
Borecj 30,000, exc . • cond.
,.__ , • • + .,~•
r~
----~-- -!rom Stauffen at Gallipolis
S450.
,call
643·01~ :
•
197,2 V,. W. .eeetle. AM-F M
IF &amp; K Tree Trlmmjng;
Ferry,WV.,
'
stereo- casSittte, excellent
stump removaL Call 675body. All new tires. Runs. 1978 SUZUKI TS 100, on or
1~31 .
' :;
Yellow freezing corn. Don 1·~·882-2393.
off, 1400 mi. ; exc. cond.,
Houdeshell. 992·3003 or 9921500. l974 Bullacato Alpine
RINGLE--:rse:Rvt_CE e'X!'
good cond., 5250. Call
2200. '
77 Pontiac Ventura SJ V6 , 350,
perlenced mason, rooting,
~- 8111.
auto., p.~ . , alr· con~t, am·
carpen_ter , electrician,
Yellqw freezing corn. Do~ fm . $2200. blA-992·7562.
general repairs anp
Houdashelt, 614-992·3003 or
.t968 Honda CB 350. Gobd
remOdeling. Call 304· 67~992·2200,
'
'2088'or 67.5'A560·
• 1
1977 Plymouth Volare Stat. cond. ~2~. 614-667-3085_.
&lt;
''
Wagon. 4 door 'nice~ Accept
~-~
Canning tomatoes S4.o0 trade. $1495. 1976 Ford LTO 1976 Harley DavldsOIJ.
Water Wells, CommercFal
bushel, already picked. 2 door hard·top. ,alr· cond,. .Supl!'r Glide, recently
and Domestic. Test holes.
canning corn. SlOO dozen, p.b., p.s., very clean, 1low .-ebullt, fat bob ·tanks,
Pumps Sates and Service.
white. 614-247·2192.
mil ., accept trad~. l1695. many extras,304·1'15-3326:
:JC\.c-895·
3802.
"
j
-:---'-· -...--:'---- 1976 Chevy ilnpala, 4 door,
---------~--~
66,000 mi ., accept trade. ·1979 HONDA CB)(.
ADVANCED
Seamless
$895. 1975 Mercury Comet, headers, e~cellent con·
Guiter·Doors,
-Offering
4
door,
goOd
~ond
.
,
accept
.
·dillon, phone ~-675-32...
contlnouse
gutterlnll,
trade.
S995.
1975
V.W.
" .'
., ............
. .'
~amlen siding, rool)n,,
Dasher Station wagon, 4
1972 650' garage .,doors, . fre F
door, runs good, accept Motorcycle,
Triumph, $700. PhOne ~8$1lmates, 614·698-8205. 1 ,
trade. S995. Call661·301f.
61
Farm EquiPment
1494.
'
-----'---+ALLIS·CHALMERS Com- For sale-1976-Chevy Nova.
PAl NTING interior &amp; exbine, 60 Alcott, good cond. 6 cyl. Has nel!f tires, batKAWASAKI . -400 K2;.
terior, free estimates, 304Call ~45-56~2.
615'1128.'
tery and exau~l. Very good excellent condition, priced
beiOW$400. ~-882- 2762 .
cond. $3000. Call773-5089.
Montgomery Trailer sales. - -~---:'--82
614·_669-4245\ , Farm trailers, 1973 C!lrysler Wagon. Fair 1978 KAWASAKI-400, 34,000
See you a the Mason Coun' ·cond. ~ateor'trade. 304-773· miles, $900.00, 167 Lane St.
CARTER'S PLVMBI,I'IG' 1
tv Fair.
·
New Haven, Jo.4·882-2636.
~13, after 5 p.m .·
~NO HEAT-ING
I
-- ~~:=.=;::=
cor.
Fourth
and
Pine
GRAVELY
JEEPS, cars. trucks undir 75
IO'!tsilnd
Phone _
-(46·38M or ~·44l7, ,:~
$100.' available at JOc:al
,MotonfC1rS!1e ·
.
•.)'
goy•t sales In your area. 1978 Chrysler boat·
13
---r.--cavalillt
Call (r,efundable) 1-714-56?-. treller;o as HP Chrysler
GalliP,OIIS Dw~lfled Coo•;
0241 ext. 1855 for directory motor 78 model, good'cond.
on . how 10 pUrchase. 24 -vthlng Included. Cell ,st. Co. Custom dOzer ·~ ·
backhoe work. Spec!~ ~
hoUrs.
·
· ·
446-6290 •
•
.-{''' ' ·&gt;"farm rates. Call us for f~
es11rpet.,. 446·44-40.
,•
.
HARTS Used . Cars, New ~· -=;=A:r.u=:;~~,.;;:.~rts~-:~.?'
' _, _ __._,__
I I
._
Haven West Virginia.
I 'AC-ies •
20 less expensive cars
Lawrence -Sidenstrloker · ·
2 Gurnsey family
4 bt.and ,_ Unllug Wire
stock. ·
Backhoe Serive. Call 675-o
cows. One with calf .
5580
~
. ....
spoke Jftltl with 4 brand
choice, $600. ~-6134. ,
!le?l' Sftri lUper ·wide 10 . ---~- .
_j~
fires. Lllllnuts and washer i4
Included. Call446-1523·. ·
__a ••trlli!!'!, o11_ _:.~ ''-

,-9eo

Mec:Ntll·~

•e"~h
M-.. Thla

7:30

CAPTAIN STEEMER Clpet Cleaning featured
Haflelt Bros!hers Cust
. carpe~. Free estimate :
"
•
1'Call.u62107
;

(JJ)

I I K I

,PmtllllwerhM:

.nd

(JI) Llllee,

PAINTING : l('lterlor a~
e )\ lerlor , ,j11umbln!f,

WESTER · Pleasure Hor·
""' Call ~-675-2098.

64
Grooming services for
pets. Will clip Envllsh
Sheepl dftos, poodles• &amp;
Schnauzer'S. Reasonable.
For appt. 61H9H342.

~~=

11:30

,

20
yrs. exp
. Call
614·~·
grev~i~~~~~~~~n~§~~~~~§~ 9652
roolino.
some
remodeling.
.

REGISTERED American
Pit Bull puppies. Call ~7~.
'

i£~ (!) • Cll ()It •

eo......,

~

,Htme
1mprovements

STUCCO PLASTERING ;.
textured ceilings COilJ·
mercia! and r~lidenllal,
'free estlmat". Cal1614·2~1182.
-·
l

mlnature
poodle for stud
REG . SILVER
service. Call ~· 1023.
198114x52 Fairmont 2 Bdr .,
bay window, make an offe r , will sacrifice. 245-9283
or 245-5064

s

Mylhleellane
•• Dtrla

AKC Reo. Doberman Pin·
cher exc. Pedigree, $100 to
S150 ea ., 6 wks. old. Call
614-256· U25 or 61~· 256- 1269 .
AKC REg. Cocktr spaniel,
small toy poodle. Had ·ali
shots, wormed, has ' health

a

(() MOVIE: 'Nww, Nww
• IM!d'
.(() MOVIE; 'BIIIIIiswwe
Bullet'
Cll UilllmltM ltydrapl••
Redng: Thunr der en

. -·--·......-

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor al'614-367·

I

e:oo

1973 22Ft. starcraft Trav 1
Trailer, self-contained, e cellent condition, sleeps · ,
$3,250. Phone~·675-61~.

I0

LNOVEM

' 'THlJASDAY

Camper 26 foot A!r Strea,.,.
good ·condition. 30H7J5279.
. •
. _.

~HtnrtArnolcllndBobLea

u...... ._ tour~
ont . . . . . . . . equn,lo lllrm
tour ordlnlry waida.

:·!vi~wmg

1 Camptn ·

~7 It covered wagcj(l, 12.501!. ,
Office trailers- 79 &amp; 10, ce tral air, $3,500 each. C . I

DRAGONWYNO
CATj
TERY · KENNEL .• AK,_
ChOW puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persl~n' ancl
Siamese kittens. C~ll 4A6'
3844 after 4 p.m .
'

fjaTHATICfi-1 10 WOWDGAME

Q£11,!!1 ~~·

·79 -.---MOtW Horne

Sentinel Pag• ' 11

•

.

'1/:i'- .:
;or·· • -

,1 do Cll ~1: 'Mil a .,. ·

- . "-•w
lunie
•
I
, ,,

.•H~.'-''-,.!Oil · j
....=...~-

.. .-"--··-,-...

Allell
.r:t

.&gt;. •

1 •
I

./

'

.

-·-

USE POl\.
&amp;~I

•,

~'

11IAN FOR 1liE OOCl'OR.-AN OLD
'
. ,
.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Ri~bon cutting final c,.apter:to long love ~·ir ·~
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- When
Gov. James RhQdes sntps the ribbon Friday morning for the 1982
Ohio State Fatr,'tt wUI openJfle last ·
chapter of a long love affair'.
'!be affair began during Rhodes'
first term as governor In ihe early
196ls. It continued through two decades -even during the years that
Rhodes didn't occupy orflce as
Ohio's chief executive.
State Fair attlclanados CIID remember clearly that Rhodes, a Republican, made himself h,tgbly
visible on the fairgrounds during
the Democratic administration of
Gov. John J. GUitgan, 1971-1975.

Veterans Memorial
Veterans Memorial Hospital announced the following admissions
and discharges Wednesday:
Admissions-Ralph Frank,
Pomeroy; James Nelson, Middleport; Terry Barrett, Dexter:
Paulette Cundltt, Middleport; Mar·
tha Roush, Rutland. DischargesPauline Derenberger, Ronald
Staats, Crystal Manley, Julla

ENGINEERING THE OPENING- Ohio Gov. Jaatet flbOIIIenlltJIBill
to sOUDd the wblsUe of a model railroad ellhlblt at the Ohio State Fair
scheduled for opening Friday morning In Columbus. Rllodesled a tour of
the fair Wednesday highlighting the $200,000 model train txblblt (AP
Laserphoto)
'

( Area deaths

Barton.

polltlcal observers pointed to
Rhodes' presence at the fair as a
key factOr In hill narrow viCtory
'
r Gllllftan
ove
.....
1 Thestatefalrtssynonymouswlth
people, and his aideS say Rhodes
knows how to work a crowd. Over
the years, traditiOnal talrgoers .
have learned not to be surprised to
find themselves standing alongside
the governor at a concessloDBstand
or walking beside him' as he picks

_State Fair General Mana~r
· John Evans stU! hils a photograph
of Rhodes, perched on the top ran ol
a wooden fe11ce bordering one~ the
tairgrliund,9' bl!slest pedestrian tOO:
rougbfares, ~ttng talrgoers and
generally acting gubernatorial despite his being out of office.
The photo was taken In 1975 wheQ
Rhodes was campaigning to unseat
GUitgan and return to the governor's office.
It was no secret that GUitgan did
not share the same gusto for the
fair as his opponent, and several

0

.,

1
Wom&amp;n escapes injury

hill way througb the ttOildtd . ·
midway.
· 1
'~'
. !J'be, governor, on other OCC&amp;· •
slon•, can b e - speed!tla jii"'OIiid 1l
-~
lher-fringes m
the- 360ilc'n ·-·..,......'
graiilds In a golf cart, 11-'lY ac&gt;
' companied by his wife ancl
grandchildren.

•

"He's done 1119rethanall thenst;
of the goyernors put together for't
the state fair," 881d Ev11111, wbollu
·knOWn Rhodes lor abOut~ yeera, •
Evans credited the govel'nor wltll
.· committing the rtloileY aec:eaary
to make a variety of lmproYettM!IIts'

The GaWa-Melgs post or the Ohio r;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~
State Highway Patrol tnvestl&amp;ated
threeaccldelltswectneSday,tnctucttng a stngJe.car wreck In Meigs
rft
County.
.
. SHO
.
The Meigs accident occurred on
Letart Twp. Rd. 96, north.of Ohio

Investigates B&amp;E

The Meigs County sheriff's department Is Investigating a break·
lngandentertngofacablnonJoppa
Road owned by Orville Blake. The . 338 at,6:~ a.m.
door was kicked off the Jill)ges.
According to the patrol, .Connie
'!be department is also Investi- Kaiser, 23, was southbound when
gating batteries stolen from . a she reportedly liacked out. lost con· county road grader parked at the trol of her car and overturned on
Nease SeltJement over the wee- the roadway.
kend and damage to a mallbox and
There was heavy damage to
newspaper tube owned by John and Kaiser's car, but she was
Carolyn Chapman, Rt. 2, Albany.
uninjured.

YOUR·raM' ILY .·
E. .
-HEADQUARlfRS

I

DEMIM JEANS

MEN'S BASIC
DENIM JEANS

DESK SALE

Siles 29 to 38 In voung
men's stvles and 32 to 50
in fuller cut denims. Good
selection of stvles.

FASHION JEANS . • . 114.96
fASHION JEANS •••• 117.21

MEII'S '25,95

FASHION JEANS . • • 119.46
M£11'S '32.95

Funeral services wUI also be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday mornIng at the Baptist Providence
Church at Topmost, Ky. with the
Rev. Bert Hall officiating. Burial
wUI follow In the Dry Creek
Cemetery.
The body w!ll be taken to the
church one hour prior to the
service.

FASHION JEANS

...

24.71

1

BOYS DENIM lEANS

By .JEFF GRABMEIER .
OVP -~taft
GalllpoUs Developmental Center
employees have always ~!fen offered opportunltes to redress grlevances, according to GDC
Superln te nde n t Rober I
Zimmerman.

BuU.e t removal may min case

BOYS'l4.95 DENIM JEANS
BOYS 'IUS D£111M JEAIIS
BOYS 'IUS D£NIM JEANS
BDYS '21.95 D£NIM JEANS

·.
.
.
.

'11.21
'12.71
'14.21
'16.46

All weather and vlnvl jackets··
in waist lengths. , 31• lengths,
polvurethanes, cotton/poly
blends.
'
.
Some hooded stvles, snaP. and
zii&gt;Per fronts.
'

Rt~- '5.00 ·• • • S. '3.75
Reg. '8.00 • . ·. Sale '6.00
'23.00 .. $a,le '17.25
Reg. '32.00 . . Sale '24.00'

MEN'S .119.95
CORDUROY JEANS . • • • 114.99
MEN'S-125.95
CORDUROY JEANS • • • . 119.46
Wrangler S2, ss or sio Re-·

ie«.

CORDINATE SPORTSWEAR

Sizes 10 thru 20 - Ideal for school
wear. Good selection.
Reg. $9.95 to$2~ . 95

lf2 Price,
..

CWIAIIC£ SlA£ PIICESI

MEN'S AND BOYS WEAR
{'an Heuson s. 5. Drtsl $hll11 .

·

· '"'Price.
Special Group Men's Dmj
slacks
'Ia Price.

Men's S. S Sport Sliil11 , Knit
Shirts
''
IIJ PriCe.
Men's summer Caps. • Strew

Hats

,...,......'"

,,

~

'

.

lia PriCe.

'·

~

,Reg.

hln1 to a 1976 murder, probably

caae,.oftlciaiHald. ·

ruining 'the prosec~tlon's

·

.

Hamby McCaskill, being bekj In the Escambla County JaU whlle

serv!'ng a lour-year sentertce for an unrelated robbery conviction,
app&amp;rel\tly fiushed the bulle! down the totlet after cutting It out,
Assistant State Attorney Ron Johnson said Thursday.
The prosecutor sought the bullet !O detennlne It It could be l1nlted
to the death of Felton Robltzsch; 66, a gas station QWII!!r shot and
ldlled during a June 25, 1976, robbery. Officials believe Robltzsch .
.fired at- and hit - his assailant.

Feds abandon condor project
SACRAMENTo, Calli. -The federal government may abandon
Its ptogram to save the endangered Calllornta condor now that the
state Fish and Came Commission has voted to sharply limit human
handling of the giant vultures, a federal biologist says.
The project "Is less secuie, less llrtn that It was before,''-John G.
Rogers Jr. of the U.S. Fish and WUdllfe Service said after Thursday's .wte.
•
·
The commission voted to allow federal biologists to take from
condor nests only one egg, one cblek and one adolescent female, and
prohibited any trapping of adu)t birds.

Senate
favors Metzenbaum bill
'
WASHINGTON - The Senate has adopted a resolution by Sen.
Howard M! 1\{etl.enbau~ . D-Ohlo, which favors ari extension of
unemployment benefits to at least 49 weeks.
Metzeiabaum ~ the langua$1! of the ~Iutton calls for extended
Jobless benefits as part Of ·a liew tax bUI being drafted by HouseSeJU!te negotiators. The House has given Its approval to such a step,
Metzenbaum said Thursday. · .,
.
"lp Ohio, 43,(XX) workers have ~usted their 39 weeks 9f benet· ,
Ita," Me12enbaum saki. He said, the resolution recognizes that unemployed people need more IInne to find Jobs and
their means of
support wUI not be cut ott ·wl!lle they are stlll searchlilg.

S2.~toS16.00

WHILE THEY LAST

assures

Regular price $11.95 reg . sizes, $12.95 extra
sizes. Not all waist sizes and lengths YoUr
· choice.,
, .
,
'
,

WOMEN'S

JACKEtS

·--+-,ruoi' !IIW to 'CUt open bls(leg and'l'I!ITiove ·a-bulle\'that might haw

Special
group · of
necklaces. . earrings,
rings, bracelets, charms,
watches, kev chain$ and
belts. .

MEN'S WORK TROUSERS

BOYS' LIGHT WEIGHT

Jt&gt;..EN$ACOU. ·F la. ;;- A 25-Y~I!J'Old prlso111!1'luJef;l a smuggled

sale

Final Clearance/

'

lf2 Price

Summer Jewel~.
Junior Jackets Clear.an~e Sale·

Basic and fashion styles In a
wide range of colors. Sizes 27
to o42 waist, S, M, L and . XL
length.
·

'·

Sizes S', M, L ahd XL. Ex·
cellent style and color selec·
tiorl. Some are llgtitly lined.
Regular $11.95 to$3.U5.

IIACII-JO.SCHOOL SALE ·

CORDUROY JEANS

these

JACKETS .

REG. 16.00 . . . . SALE '4.50
REG. '9.00 • • • • SALE '6.75
REG. 114.00 ... SALE '10.50
REG. 121.00 ... Sf(.E 115.75

· SAUl
MEN'S &amp;YOUNG MEN'S

fund applies . to
prices.

MEN'S LIGHT WEIGHT

CLEARANCE
.
.

,'

Ohio senators oppose cuts
WASIDNGTON - U.S. Sens. John Glenn and Howard Metzembaum. D-Ohlo, voted against the $12.6 billion:package of spending
cuts which the Senate apprQVed In 73-23 roll call Vote 'lbursday.

a

•

.Even greater reductio~s on our remaining
stock of qualltv sportswear in misses and e~­
tra sizes. .
Famous makes like Devon, Dotty Mann,
Bonne Petit( and Bra&lt;JieY.

Reg. '15.00 " • . ·Clen1ce S.le '6.00
Reg. 121.00 . • . Clearance S. '8.40
Reg. '21.00 • : ~ ~ '11.20

Rea. •n.oo .. a..~s.·tuo
Rei. '49.00 .• Clatwt S. 11UI

0

'

Winning Ohio lottery number

'

Sizes'18,19and20. ~eg. S1l.95L. S.
WORK·SHIRT ........... YourChoice$4.00

..

'

CLEVELAND ·- The Winning nljillber drawn Jn the Ohio Lot·
tery's dally lame "The Number'' waa 41!5. In tpe semiweekly "Pick
4" game, the winning number was '1698.
· 1l)e lo~ reported eanilpgs 'lburaday
d. $721,3119.50 on the

•t

ptne.Eamlngacametmsale&amp;of$1,117,"ii,wblleboldenor~

'tlcicets 8re entitled to' share $337,U13.50, lottery qtl1clala laid.
UCK·10-Ia400L lALII

BOYS' ·CORDIJWOYJDIIS

' Mill 1.111 Mllctklll 111 colors alld 11y...
our
Be* l!lld fNNtn. Reg. hllll&lt;y · 111m anci
lludlnlllzd.
.
.

"".,.,,. c~ J•• .......... stur 1
hY1 116.tl Clll'llllnY Jtans ... . .. -. • , "UI'

~n17.f1Conlll••• Jtana ......... , SlaM
..,. "'·" CIN1rov J~t~ns · 114.11

:,:s.:i':a.~."::.i.··-·-~-=
NM~
.
I

.

Total ·employment held steady at 99.7 mlliton In
July, down from the 99.8 mUJton reported for June.
Those ttgufes ·were all adjusted by i\)Vernment
economlllts to discount. tor normal seasonal varia·
ttons, such as Increases In the labor force that typically occur each summer. The adjustment Is aimed
at making the figures more useful In analyzing longterm trends In the economy. ,
Before such adjusiment, employment rose about
I!OO,tm, but department economists said that Increase was ~!)most exactly In tine with what would
normally be expected at this time of year.
Without such adjustment, July's unemployment
rate would have been 9.8 percept, the sanne as the
figure for June.
The labor force Increased more than would usually
be the case In July, accounting for the rise In the
adjusted rate despite the fact that the unadjusted rate
remained amtant. .
On a se8SOII8lly -11&lt;11~\1111 basis, the department's

•.

Bureau of Labor Statistics reported, the labor force In
July rose about 330,&lt;m to 110.5 million.
The department reported these detaUs of July un·
employment rates:
-Adult nnen, 8.8 percent, up from 8.7 percent.
-Adult women, 8.4, up from 8.1.
-Teen·agers, 24.1. up from 22.3.
-Whites, 8.7, up from 8.4.
-Blacks, 18.5, the same as In June.
-Hispanics, 13.9, up from 13.5.
-Full·tlme workers, 9.5, up from 9.4.
The government reported Thursday that flrst·tlme
claims for unemployment InSurance In late July fell
to the lowest level In more than five months.
But the biggest sign that the economy's health Is
Improving was last month's government report that
overall economic activity - as measured by
lnllatlon-adjusted gross national product - rose
sllghtly In the April·June period alter falllng sharply
In the two previous quarters.

Zimmerman denies complaints ignored

'14"

Light weight lin'ld jackets, sweat·
shirt jackets, terrv lined· jackets,
ra in jackets, bubble jac~ets and
denim jackets. Children's sizes :
months thru size u .

Oliver Landers

1•.

Unemployment rates rose 0.3 percentage point to
8.7-pl!rcent fQI' whites jtnd to 8.4 percent for adult ·
women of all raa!S.
'!be currentoveralljobleel rate Is already the h,tgh·
est stncethe9.9percentfor all c119ll at theendofthe
Great DepressiOn. Unemployment hasn't been over
10 percent since the 14.6 percent or 19t0.
In advance o1 today's report, economists cautioned
that unemployment could· well climb even higher,
despite some encouraging signs that a modest recovery from the reces1on ts beglnntng - or IS about to
begin. Employers, the, economlllts noted, are typl·
calty stow to rehire laid-off workers until a recovery Is
well under way.
The nuntber or people who Involuntarily !lccepted
part-tlnnework for lack or full-time Jobs roseby48,1m
to 5.5 mUJion. '!be number ol such workers rose
sharply earlier In the reces,'llon, which set In last
summer, then declined In May and June llefore last
month's gatn.

YOUR CHOICE

CHILDREN'S
JACKET SALE

Reg., .slim, and husky size!1 B
·to 18. Student sizes' 26 to 30,
wpi'st, lengths 30 to 36 Inches.
Basic styles' in straight leg
.ano boot flare - plus fashion
looks. Excellent s~lection
Save25%.

Mrs. May Vanlnwagen, 88, a rest·
dent ol the Pomeroy Health Care
Center, died Thursday atVeterans
Memorial Hospital.
·
She was born March 29, 1894, a
daughter c1 the late Oish and Myrtle Adams Jacobs. She was also
preceded In death by her husband,
Harry; a daughter, Allee Wince,
and sons, Harry E., Roger, Bob and
Edgar.
Surviving are three sons, Ernest,
Middleport; Theron, Columbus;
Sam, New Jersey; three daughters, Natalie Sigler and Mrs. Car·
roll (Barbara) Smith, both of
Rutland, and Mrs. Paul ·(Sue)
Marr, Racine. Twenty·slx grand·
children, 24 . great·grandchtldren
and several nieces and nephews
also survive.
Mrs . Vaninwagen was a
member of tqe Church of ChriSt.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. A1an Black·
wood officiating. Burial wUI be In
aeech Grove Cemtery. Friends
may call at the funeral home anytime after 7 this evening.

Mr. Landers was retired from
the Columbqs Pollee Department
on which he had served 14 years. He
was a 32n&lt;l degree Mason being a
member of Magnolia Chapter :1!,
Free and Accepted Masonil, Colum·
bus. He was a life member of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars and the
Fraternal Order rl Eagles. ,
· Services Will be held at 3 p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funer8J.
Home with the Rev. Wlutam Snider
otflctattng. Burial wUI be In Rock
Springs CemeterY· Masonic rltel
will be conducted by the Shade
• River MasOOic l.od&amp;e at 7 p.m. Friday at the ~ ~· Frlendl
I1I!IY: call~tt , ihe• tuneral borne anytime after 7 thlll evel)lna.
'·
'

-

In·

FINAt. C&amp;.IARANCI

f SediGn, 12 Pag"
U Cents
A Multimedia Inc. New.aper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 6,1982

C)) Straight leg - pre washed
denim. Slles29to42.
(2) , .Boot liar~ pre ·washed
denim . Slles 29 to 42.
(3) Stretch· denim - pre washed.
Sizes 29 to 42.

BACK-TO-SCHOOL

•

at y """"' e n t 1n e
:U nemPloyment hits 41 year high
e

'

SALEI

May Vanlnwagen

Ollver Landers, 66, Route 1, Ra·
cine, died Thursday at the Holzer
Medical Center.
He was a son ol'the late John and
Fannie Terrell Landers. '
Surviving are his wile, Bonnie
Biggs Landers: a sister, Fannie
Lane, Caledonia; two brothers-In·
law, Homer Biggs, Unionport, and
Dewey Lyons, Pomeroy, _

I

Regular price $19.95 and

lEG. '119.00 I"IIIE S1UD£NTROIJ..TOP ..........•.• , • . SALE '95.00
REG. '139.00 MAPLE S1UD£NT DESK .•..... .. , . . . . . . . SAL£ 'llZ.OO
lEG. '159.00 MW IIUHDI.E DESK ..•..•... , . . . . . . SALE '121.00
REG. '259.00 PillE IIEEIIOI.E DUll , , , . •. .. • . , . . . • . . SALE '201.00
lEG. '219.00 S1UD£11T D£$1(, HUTCH, CHAIR .. , •. , , , • . . . SALE '231.00
lEG. '372.00 PillE TRESTlE DESK , • , . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . SALE '297:00
REG. 1398.00 PECAII KIIEEHOL£ DESK· , .... • , . , •. , . . . . SALE '311.00
. REG : '529~ DAI ROLl·TOP DESK •• , •.....••.... , , , • SALE '423.00

' MEII'S '22.95

.

Page 3

•

eludes:

MEN'S '19.9$

Ky.

'

UCK TOSCIIOOLSAL£1

BACK·To:SCHOOL

Pages ·

WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's unemployment rate pushed ckilier to lh\! 10 percent level In
July, hitting a 9.8 percent rate, the highest In 41 years,
the government reported today.
.
'!be Jobless rate had held nearly steady as the recession continued through the spring - rising only
from 9.4 percent In April to 9.5 percent In May and
JWij!. But today's Labor Department report was
ftlled with newly dtscouraglng figures.
In July, the report said, about 10.8 mtllton Amerl·
caDB were officially \u)employed - a:ctlvely' looking
for jobs but not tlndlni them - about 3&amp;1,tm more
than In June. About 1.5 mlUton more have given up,
the government reported last month.
July's Jobless·rate for adult males, who make up
the bulk of the nation's blue-cOllar workers, rose to 8.8
percent, a poit:worid warn reeoro. Unemployment
for blacks held ~teady at 18.5 percent, although the
jobless rate for ·lllack,lel;!n-agers declined slightly to
49.7 percent from June' s ~.6 percent.

.SALE BEGINS FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 AT 9:30AM. ··
MEN'Sf~ION

.

led 1982 .

Martha W. Hopkins

BACK TO SCHOOL SAL£!

'

Page 12

Dodgers get closer,
·Seaver tops Padres

High humidity
affects et1eryorie

YoUI,N~.66

I

Martha Wireman Hopkins, 89,
EstUI, Ky., died In New Haven on
Wednesday evening.
Born May 25, 1893, In Topmost,
Ky., to the late Unsey and Flora
Cook Wireman.
She was preceded In death by her
husband, Ballard Hopkins, In 1900
and a son, Charles Maynard.
Surviving are one daughter,
· otxle M. BlevinS, New Haven: one
daughter-In-law, Mrs. Maynard
Hopkjns, Waverly, Ohio; eight
grandchlldren,21greatgrandchlld·
ren and six greal·great
grandchlldren.
FUneral services wUI be held at
the Foglesong Funeral Home In
Mason on Friday at 9: ~a .m . with
the Rev. Cass Hutchison official·
lng. Friends may call at the Foglesong FUneral Home on Thursday
from 7 p.m. unW 9 p.m.
The body wUI then be taken to the
Ballard Hopkins resldehce In EstUI,
Ky., Friday evening by the Hind·
man FUneral Home In Hindman,

Fair memberships
still q-vQilable

· In the semiweekly, p¢mutuel "Pick 4" game, sales totaled

-~·~·

0

Weather 'otecast
I

'

'

!!&amp;tur·

~ 65-70. Wtnda llgbt and variable.
cloudy with~ pea cent chance d.llaiweta or tbuisder·

Moltly cloudy to!dgbt.

day, tllllltiY
llOrml. Btpsll).85.

.

-.sat! Ollld'artNIIII&amp;

'r.
.
a n ul •naur n • 1 w a • r • rt '

1 .' I IlK . PTII

"There are several different
ways In_the chain of command to
get problems resolved,'' Zimmermail said. ·.
•· ..o, ..~&gt; ,
0rre mall! i::&lt;ilnptatnts ·~by GDC employees at the l1'leetlng
Tuesday with state ·otflctals was
that the admlnlsiratlon has Ignored
their complaints.
Several employees alleged that
the labor rights clestgnee at the centerhasbeenlneftecttveandthatthe
adnilntstratlon would not Usten to
complaints.
One woman said at the meeting
she had been ttred and could not
flnd out wily. Administration offt.
clals "won't even let me In ·their ·
offices," she said.
Zimmerman did not attend the
meeting, but In an IntervieW after.
ward, disagreed with the charges.
, He said employees have always
had at least five aveniles to pursuecomplaints.
Employees can go through the
formal. chain of command or

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

« ,,._,......

5 , . .,

Meeting In 8pf,!Cial sesslol) Thiii'Bday night at the Meigs Junior High
School In Middleport, the Meigs Local Board of Education spent three
and one-hall boui's In executive session discussing flriances, negotlatlons; penonnel and'legal matters.
FolloWing the lengthy session,
the board amended 1!182'appropriations making necessary transfers
within the appropriations.
The·restgnatlon of Mtck Childs as
Junior high school football coach
was accepted. The board j11Y1ployed
Margaret BOokman aa an elementary teacl)er for the new school
year and hired her also aa high
school cheerle8der a4vllor, ll!ld
hired Mary HaiQIIli'ly aa a spectal
education .teacher for the new
school year.

c.

ent them to Rudy Magnone,
director of the Ohio Department of
Mental Retardation and Developmental DlsabUitles.
One, headed by former GDC employee Johnny Russell, will collect
charges of unfair treatment, especlally as they Involve Job
aboltshments.
Magnone said priority wUl be
given to charges by employees
whose Jobs have already been
abolished.
Charles ,Crockrell, organizer for
the Communications Workers of
America, a union whiCh represents
someworkl!tsatthecenter, Is head·
log a committee which will present

Israel won't forfeit new gains
Israel refused to give up Its new
gainS In west Beirut despite pressure from the United States and the
U.N. Security CouncU and sent jets
on mock air raids over the battered
Palestinian redoubt whtle ground
forces traded sporadic sniper and
shell fire.
At an emergency meeting of the
Security CouncU that started at 1: 52
a.m. today, the Soviet Union calleq
for an arms embargo against Israel
as punishment for rejecting the
counctl's demand that It withdraw
to the positions It held before Its

tank charges Wednesday .
The proposed Soviet resolution
did not Invoke the provision of the
U.N. Charter obliging U.N :
members to honor an embargo but
said they "should refralnfrom
supplying Israel" with weapons or
other military ald.
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin and his Cabinet received a
strongly worded message from
President Reagan Thursday that
State Department spokesman Alan
Romberg said called on Israel to
observe a "strict cease-fire In
place."

from plans of the district. The pa·
Irons of the school and their attor·
neys are scheduled on the board
agenda at the regular meeting on

Aug. 17.
Attending last night's meeting
were Supt. Dan E. Morris; his assistant, James Carpenter: Clerk-

Treasurer Jane Wagner and board
members, Dick Vaughan, Robert
Snowden, Arland King and Robert
Barton, board president.

It w~ agreed tq pay Jamell
Miller, the tteW high iCbool principal. 8 consuli.t wqe lor tbe peo '
rtod he worlred In Jllly UllUI the
start or hla, pt1Ddpal'a CIDract

which begBJi ~. L tialhlll J!oi.: ,

trlillt, d. tbe: EMtern l.oca1 OJt.
trlcl,. wu accepted ... . tjllt1oD
stildelit .~ illlb ii:boolleftl.

Several patrala d. tbe Saleril
Center School were oa baDd. but
were not heard 1t1 tMW 11 .,
what will be takll!a pl.- at t11at
schooL The 8Cbool hal become a
center d. c:wtwvwtq *-lt-:na
propoeed IIMI'8ll-all liD ...
' liudeatl d. die UllPII' 1JaNt .....
be traDipartld ., Rtitd I tar

..,,

,

po!lSibM!:" •
• - ••., ..
In order to examine employee's
charges, two ad hoc committees
were tonned at the meeting Tues·
day to collect complaints and pres-

Oakley Collins, R·Ironton.
Zimmerman said "they didn't
find anything wrong'' with the operation of the center.
· Employees at the meeting Tuesday claimed the Inquiry was not
fair.
"They (the administration) just
lets you see what they want you
too," one employee said. "Theycertalnly didn't talk to any
employees."
G:olllns asked employees at the
meeting If the DAS officials had
talked to any of them. None said
they were contacted by the offlcla •

Meigs board a~ends 82 appropriations

.u4 t11e cxitllltrld•• ar ..,.
1.1'111r .
· dltlollalf\1111111 ID tilt ICIIoal iD 81&gt;
., ................ " . . ! ,,, ..............,
5,
. . . . . . . . . . . . .[

charges Involving cllents at the
center.
several GDC workers said Tuesday that voluntary cllents had been
forced out of GDC against their will
whtle others who have been released Into the community are IIV·
tng under bridges and eating out of
garbage bins .
Several of the employees'
charges have been examined by an
official of the Ohio Department of
Administrative sei'VIces, Zimmer·
man said. TheofttctalcametoGDC
after a ·meeting June 22 between
GDC and ODMR officials and Sen.

through the grievance procedure,
Bald. They can also
bring problems to the employees'
rights designee or the labor review
comriltttee.
He said admlntslrators are also
assigned to be available to answer
questions or hear complaints on eventngs and weekends.
Zimmerman said he also tries to
walk through the cottages and talk
to employees "as often as

Zlmmenn,n

'c:ommoclafll
tile II~
···~
wlt?lollt tilt ....
t I tp 'bcllf
1 .,
' Rutlanll . . . . . . ..........

.

.

J1111NG8 JM)IIB AW,&amp;P'W Jlelp 8IJae apt A
lodJ lito
tile reellll
~we.-,

pt..._._.,.,......_
r aar·: r LettlilriP'-III?Iy .

· . M1 k I , _ . . ,.. ;

flU eta? ...... IIII*JVID

Meter, lint deml, Lula Hampton, lncotniDJ cb•peau.
Marp Fetty,..., Cblpe!UI, Pearl Kaapp, ,.,.all
eluiPrmu, Iva Powell, L'arcblvllte. Tile lldlea .

ba5d'nl the awards lbe ·cllaplft: anct' lndlvlilua1
n•nben - It lbe ~ventlon.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="176">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2766">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44735">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44734">
              <text>August 5, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2823">
      <name>hopkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="975">
      <name>jacobs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2369">
      <name>landers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1528">
      <name>vaninwagen</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
