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·

PreSideD.t Reagan defends tax-increase bill
By TERENCE BUNT
BIWNGS, Moot. (AP) - President Reagan, defending an 'em·
ba~ $98.9 billion tax•Increase blli, said today the measure pendIng In Congress would have very little errect on the taxes ot most
Americans.
'
In his tlrst major speech on the bill, Reagan arR\M!(l the legislation
was es~~enuano his economic recovery program. If Congress refuses to pass the btl!. the natkln races ~budget deficits, hlghel:
Interest rates and ~rowing unemployment, he Sald.
Despite the bill's .provisions to Increase taxes on cigarettes, telephone services and alrUne tickets, Reagan Insisted, "It wUl h&amp;ve
very Utile effect on the majority of tncllvldual taxpayers."
·
Reagan llew to Big Sliy country to help Bllllngs cele!rate Its liX\!h
birthday and raise money rot the Senate campaign rl Republlcan
Larry WUllall\5, who Is trying to unseat Sen. Johil Melcher, D-Mont.
White House ott!~ estimated the eventS would raise Sl22,5q0.

·e

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~oU1,No.69

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For three hours In Billings, Reagan was spending Seven hours In
the air, flying out and back trom Washlligton the same day.
Reagan has been waging a lobbying blitz from the White House to
recruit ~uctant Republicans to back an election-year tax hike. His
speeches tbday marked a. new stage In the administration's campaign for the bW, and there were Indications Reagan would aak for
network time soon to addi'ess the nation on the subject.
In his speech, Reagan said, "For a conservative president Uke me
to have to put his arma around a multl·bi!Uon dollar deficit ....weU,
It's like holding your nose and em'braclni a pig. And believe me, that
bucjget deficit Is as sUppery as greased pig."
Reagan said his support of the tax biU was essential to win backing
In Congress for $280 bWlon In spencllng cuts over the next three
years. "The ratio ot (educed outlays to revenues Is three to one,"
Reagan slild.
'
.
.
He said the tax hike Is not
tbe
largest
tax
Increase
In
history,
as Is
..

a

•

at

claimed by Democrats on the Senate Finance Committee.
Earller, White House spokesman LarrySIJI!akessaldtn Washing·
ton that a Social Securtty tax Increase approved dUrtng the Carter
administration and a surtax enacted during the Jolmsoo administration SUJWSsed the CUf!'ent bill.
· Reagan argued the bm contaIns only $18lllll,lon In new taxes. Some
S3l bllUon would he raised by collecting taxes trom cltlzerui who are
not paying what they legitimately owe. he said.
And the remainder would be raised by ••correcttngunlntended tax
advantages which have resulted from sloppiness In past legislation," he added.
Accorcllng to administration estimates, the deficit would tre cl05e
to $165 bllUon If the tax bill Is not passed. If It Is passed, the deficit In
fiscal year 19831s expected to be $115 billion, according to the admln·
lstratlon, and $150 billion, according to the Congressional Budget
Ofllce .

en tine
1 Section, 12 Pages

ri hlod 1912

15 Cent•

A Multim.clla Inc. N•wspaper

·rFederal judge
refUJses to OK
settlement
WASHINGTON (AP) - A fed~aljudge refused today to approve
~e antitrust settlement proposing
the breakup of the Amerlcan,Telephone l Telegraph Co., according
to a court clerk.
: Andy Pincus, a law clerk to U.!!.
blstrtct Judge Harold H. Greene,
~d the judge was releasing a
leugthy opinion this morning In
~bleb he declined to sign the proposed settlement as subinltted by
AT&amp;T and the federal government.
: Pincus said the opinion suggests
a nwnber rl proposed modlflcatlons to the agreement which would
i1We It acCeptable. No f)Jrther detaUs were avSU.ble.
· AT&amp;T spokesman Pic Wagner
said I the C0lnp&amp;ny had no Immediate comment.

, 'l'bi! proposed agreement was announced .Jan. 8 by AT&amp;T and the
Justice Department to settle a 1974
antitrust suit filed by the government. The proposed settlement
~uld require AT&amp;T to give up Its
22 wholly owned BeU System operating companies In exchange for
the freedom to enter unregulated
'...
buslilesses.
Greene Is the federal judge who
had been overseeing the antitrust
trtlll. His approval of the settlement
Is required before It can take effect
The Justice Department's anti·
trust cllvlslon and AT&amp;T have
maintained since January that
Greene cannot unilaterally modify
their agreement to suit his taste.
Botti sides have said, however,
(Continued on page 12)
ROUND TABLE SMILES-Israel Prime Minister Meuachem Begin,
eenter, smiles as U.S. Presidential Eavoy PbOipC. Habib, right, gestures

during Wednesday's meeting. Listening at left are, from left, Foreign
Minister Ylzhak Shamlr and Defense Minister Ariel Sharon. (AP
Wirephoto).

Begin ·examines evacuation proposals
area.
Guerrillas fired ground- to-air
Israeli jets and tanks hammered mlssUes but none was seen hitting
guerrilla-held west Beirut again tO- the jets, making their third series or
day and Prime Minister Mena- strikes In three days.
chem Begin met In Jerusalem with
Israeli tanks and bazooka-firing
U.S. presidential envoy Phlllp guerrillas also clashed at the NaHabib to examine U.S. proposals tional Mu5eum checkpoint on the
for evacuating the PLO from Green Line dlvlcllng Beirut Into
Lebanon.
Moslem west and Christian east.
Begin was guoted by the Israeli The city has been under siege since
newspaper Yedloth Ahronoth as the week after Israel Invaded Lesaying In an InterVIew: "If all goes banon June 6 to rout the PLO.
well, the evacuatkln wm get under
The Begin-Habib meeting In Jer·
way next week."
usalem ended with no statement
A major breakthrough In the ne- and another session was set for
,gotlatlons came late Tuesday when later today.
Defense Minister Artel Sharon
Syrta reversed Its earUer stand and
said It would take In all Palestine and F:orelgn Minister Yltzhak
Uberatlon Organlzatkln fighters Shamlr also atlended the meeting,
the PLO wished to evacuate from at which Habib was reported to
Beirut
have preseqted a list of Arab counThe Tel Avtv command said the tries willing to take In the
new air strlki!s followed cease-fire guerrillas.
breaches by the guerrWas that
Israel has accepted Habib's propwounded three Israeli soldiers.
osals In prtnclple but has asked for
The jets swOOjle!l down tn ·rapld a series or amendments centering
dlvebombtng sorties, setting ftres prtmarUy on the Arab countrtes .
and sending clouds rl smoke spiral- ,which wUl take In the guerrtllas,
Ing over the Chatma and Bourj-el- and the multinational force that Is
Barajneh refugee camps - the to secure their withdrawal.
PLO nerve center In the Fakhanl
A senior Israeli official disclosed
By 'Ole AIIIOCiatecl Press

: Find girl dead in
:

:
:

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re~rator

A 7-year-old Rio Grande iltrl died Tuesday, an apparent suffocation victim, the Gallla Couilty Sheriff's Department reported today.
The body of J{lmberly Jo F$C!Or was found trapped In 'an aban·
cloned retrlgerator, a sheriff's department spokesman said.
The retrlgarator was In an out building of the girl's home on Route
1 In Rio Grande. '
.FIIj:tor had beeii {!!POrted missing approxliDately 24 hours before
her body was found, accorcllng to the sheriffs spokesman.
.The girl's body was cllscovered 'a t about 9 p.m. by a woman who
waa helping search ror the mlssiiig girl.
Sheriff's deputies and other law enforcement officials assisted In
the search.

Doubts surrogate parent service

that 9,000 guerrtllas and 3,500-4,tm
Synan soldiers were being counted
Into the group to be evacuated.
This was considerably more than
the 7,100-S,tm guerrillas and 1,1001.~ Syrtans mentioned so far.
The Israeli newspaper Maar!v
reported earlier that Syrta would
take 5,000 guerrtllas, Jordan 1,tm
and Iraq the rest.
Yedloth Ahronoth, In another development, quoted Begin as saying
he planned to retire In two years.
A major hurdle In Habib's efforts
to reach an agreement on the evacuation of the trapped PLO guerrtl·
las was removed late Tuesday
when Syrta reversed Its position
and announced It would take as
many Palestinian guerrillas as the
PLO wants.
Jordan, Iraq, Sudan, Tunisia and
North Yemen had earUer an·
nounced their readiness to provide
refuge to part or the PLO lighters.
In Washington, President Reagan's spokesman, Larry Speakes,
said, "We are hopeful there can be
rapid movement toward the Implementation 'or the run peace plan ...
But Israel said It would not con·
slder giving final approval to the

proposed l!klay evacuation until It
has a list of all guerrilla evacuees
and their Intended destinations. It
added that It still objects to deployment or a multinational peacekeepIng force In Beirut before most or
the guerrtllas are evacuated.
Habib shuttled from Beirut to Israel Tuesday night, and Lebanese .
Intermediary Saeb Salam said he ·
took Prime Minister Menachem
Begin Usts ot guerrillas and the
countrtes they would go to.
Israel, which Invaded Lebanon
June 6 to put an end to the PLO's
military threat to It, estimates
there are 7,100 guerrtllas who must
leave Beirut before It wm 1Ift the
siege by an estimated 35,tm, to
40,tm troops backed by tanks, artillery, warplanes and gunboats.
A major stumbling block has
been the refusal by Syrta and most
other Arab nations to offer the Pa- :
lestlnlan fighters refuge. But lead·
ers or Syrta' s ruling Baath Party
made a major policy shift Tuesday,
saying In a communique that "In
light or the available circumstances now ,., (Syrta) has decided to
receive all fighters the PLO leader(Continued on pa~c 12)

OOLUMBUS, Ohio :_ Franklin County Probate Judge Richard
Metcalf says he Is skeptical aboUt the plans or a Columbus woman to
. estalilsh a surrpgate parenting service.
"I thlnk!Usagood.thtng, a~ thing. But It sounds Uke, 'Come
and plck'up )'QUI' batJr nbw,"' Metcalf said.
Kathryn Wyclcoff, who revealed her plans for such a service last
Wl!ek, aald she would charge ~tm to link chlldless couples with
siiiTOgate mothers. There are only about five such services now
operating throUghout the country.
"I had calls Sunda:t all day long, starting at 7 a.m." Ms. Wyckoff
said after news stories about her service were published. "I was
really lll'll8zed. People are really Interested In this, and they need it.''
MeU:alf·~ted problems tn matching Infertile couples with surrogate mothers.
ClalnW!g brutality and negli- Burger, City Manager Chris Mor- where he was again assaulted by the decedent to Incur a deep and
severe scalp wound. "
"What lf the pr1Qe Is exorbitant? What If the mother would try to
gence, a $17 mOtion lawsuit has
ris, Pollee Chief Garland Nibert Haner and HamUton.
"Together
they
brutally
accosted
blaclanall the natliral rather later on and want more payments?
Then Owen used his service rebeen filed In the eastern division rl
a~~d assorted "John Does."
the
decedent,
therbycauslngByron
These are things we !fY to control currently In adoption," the judge
volver
to shoot Redman In the abdoU.S. District Court's southern ellsIn thesult'sflrstcount, a survival
said. ' '.·
to
Incur
further
lacerao
.
Redman
men,
the
suit said.
. trtct In connection with 11 shooting ~ion, Sharp (who Is Identified In
tions
and
severe
bruises
about
his
Metcaltsal4thestate'sprobatejudgeshaveagreroontbeneedfor
·· Incident and death In the Gallla . the suit as Redman's mother)
The suit ~!alms both the county
legislation before such aervlcell begin. "Until the Leglslatlire acts on
CoUnty Sheriff's Department In claims Redman was arrested by head and body," the suit said.
and the city "failed to exercise
At this point, the suit continued, reas()nable care while discharging
this lsaue, We'~ Jllllng io oppose It," Metcalf said.
~ Ohio· Hlghway Patrol at 12: :.&gt;
,. September 1981,
,
Owen
and Elliott then entered the their statlitory obligations" and In
Helen Sharp, Springfield, admln· a.ni. Sept 12 and taken to the
sheriff's
office as the assault on effect were responsible fo r Red· ,
lstrator rl the estate of the late county jail. As he was being proRedman
continued, "and they man's clvO rights being violated.
Byron D. Redman; Cites liS defend- ces!l!d, the s\llt claims Redman
joined
defendants
Raygo, Hamil· ·- The suit also claims Redman was
ants In the suit three sheriff's de.
was ''verbally abused and physiton
and
Haner
In
brutally
assatilt· not guUty bt any criminal act to pro·
partment
•employees,
two
ctty
cally assaulted by defendant
CLEVELAND (AP) - The winning nwnher drawn In the Ohio
tng
the
decedent."
·
policemen
and
other
rlllclllls.
,
voke the treatment he received
. Raygo without provocation."
~·s dallY. pme ·~ Number" was 216. •
Owen and Elliott then, the suit from.the sheriff's men or the pollt-e
Redman received several cuts
Redman, 22, was B!IDt by Patrol·.
In the aemlweeldy ''Pidl4" pme, the winning nU~~~ber was
and bruises tn this attack, the suit alleges, took Redman under their
man Jack Owen In the iherlfts of.
officers.
The lot!SY repw led earn1np Tuelday Dlgbt of S276,366.SO on the
control,
and
struck
him on the head
flee
adjoining
the
courthoule
said
Redman
was
then
taken
over
In a wrongful death claim, Sharp
game, with eu'IIIDp COIIIIDa on sales r1 S836,525. Holders rl winning
around 1: ~a.m. last Sept. 12 after
io the sheriff's office by Raygo, ~th a blunt lnstnmlent, "causing
tContinu•~ ori pa~e 121
tlda!ta
to 11we _,,15UI, lottery omcta1s l8ld.
Redman was allepd to have lbot
· In the seudwteLJy, pu1mutue1 "Pick 4" pme, sales totaled
and wounded Tony Haner, a disS3'7,128.50. IJolden ot wiiiJdac tlclu!ta are entitled tO «i percent, !ll'
patcher;
lbot Oliver "Bud" RaYJii). .
flU. AJry nuta&amp; ftlliiillht ticket earns $11,112, and any wm.:
1
a jaller,lll4~11aabed hlmwllha
' alii&amp; $1 boxed
InsuranCe coverage on food additional $100,000 Insurance cover- child support provisions and a con1'1IZOil'; and ""'Cip •el Deput,y SJ..
stamps
cllatrtbuted by the Mf1(gs age on food stampe for 81) addi- tract on child support was ap'-lfamlltoa with a 111Dc1pD,
County
Welfare
Departmellt was tional premium of $1513. ·This proved between the
Redmandlld rl .. WCJUIIIIJarly
lDCI
eaud
when
the
Meigs County provides for a total coverage of
t'Wo·llouB later lD Holzer ........,
commissioners, the county proseci cwi-t.,a- cooL I,aw ..... ~· WiDdllllbt 1114 varlallle; ThunCommissioners
met PlQ,OOO at a total annual premtuin utor and the county welfare
Board
of
Caller.
dlly: .....
.,..,..rlnbl: ~...,-t
ot $7,563. The Insurance IS pur- department.
•
Own, lfl!ner. Rayjp;!. H'amllkm ~y.
aid '1111ndq.
..-- - ·
Michael
Swisher,
director
rl
the
chased
throup the Reuter· Brogan
ud Patrolnlaa Keltll Elliott have
I
weJtare
~1,
met
with
the
. bel!ll Jl8lll!!d ..
le•ta, Ia addlThe new contract covers a period
Insurance Agency.
Oltlt I! ' I ' r ( tl , Prtdl,y tllrclulb Sunday - fair with
SwlaberandCanon Crow,asstst- or July 1,1982throughJuly 31,1983.
tloll to!iberllrJ-Mcntw ••, • C(JI1IIIIIsllon to dlscuiS various'
...... Oielllcd . . . . . .
CoiiDir Oiim I I ...,.. Paul Na. department mattera anddurtngthe ant pn•wtor, ·llso dl.salsll!d wltb . The contract Is now subject to ap~~\~Ilion It was qreed to obtain an ' tomm..loners amend~J~ent of ·, provaJ of 111e Slate.
clq, James ........... aDd Loaale

$1.7 million suit filed against Gallians

Ohio lottery winners

m.

are..-..

m

Food stamps insurance .coverage increased .

tlcllet---

State weather, extended forecast

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Commentary
Ill Court Stret•t
P11m~r•1\' , Ohin
IJf.Hi·t iSCi

ot: \ 'OTED Tfl THE I NTERE.~TOFTHf: MEIC.S.I\IASO,\ ' AREA

,.

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl!itwr

'
BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'wl F.Ai tnr

From the ranks
of the unempl_oyed
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Dodgers take over
first·in NL -west loop -

,;

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The Daily Sentinel
~~ ,..,.,_.._......,I'"T"E!I!=t;.,.

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Rebellious .Republicans
WASHINGTON- Politics, they
say, makes strange bedfellows.
Politics makes strange .antagonists
also, and we have been seeing this
phenomenon lately. In Ronald
Reagan, conservative Republicans
have the nearesr thing to a
philosophical ideal they could ask
for. And what ha-ve they been doing
fo~ their president lately? Cutting
him off at the knees, that's what.
The rebellion in ihe House, Jed by
Rep. Jack Kemp ofN. Y., provides a
handy' example. Kemp is one of the
savviest members of the House. He
does .his homework. He knows the
numbers In the budget. As weD as
any person on the Hill, Kemp understands the fiscal mess we are in,
and he understands what It takes to
get us out of the mes.s.
We are in this mes.s for several
reasons, but the chief reason lies In
the high rates of interest required to
borrow money. These high rates
haye Jed to rf!Cord numbers C)[
bankruptcies and buslnes.s failures.
They have bad a cruel Impact upon
farmers. The rates are at least in
part responsible· for a devastating
slump In the housing industry and in
automobile sales. The resulting
reces.sion has Jed to Intolerable
levels of UJlemployment, and these
levels have 'had their own disastrous
impact upon the federal budget:
Every one percent Increase ln unemployment adds $25 billion to the
deficit.
How do we bring the interest rate
down? How do we -bring the deficits
down? There Is but one answer. We
attempt to restore confidence in·the
money markets by (I) reducing
federal spending, . (2) ·tncrea~lng
federal revenuejl or (3) a combination of both. We attempt to
create a ll(lllltlve i!Jiage of fiscal
responsibility, with a view toward
balancing the budget a few years
down the road.
·
Kemp and his rebellious
colleagues know all this. So far as

•.

Ja11Ws 1. Kilpqtnck•

------------~----------~-------------and the largest contraclorl. The

reductions In spending are con- third of this bW Is aimed at .the
cerned, they have demonstrated ex- recovery C)[ taxes that are owed but
cellent leadership. Why, then, pre evaded. Another third CGfllell from
they llalking at the neceasary com- thclle crYm-Jidtirig · fat cats· who
panlon measure? How can they ex- have 'managed to avoid paying any
plain their undercutting opllQIItlon taxes at all.
to the tax bill puaec~ by the SenatePut the question r1 fiscal respona bill that would raise $98 bJillon siblllty to. one side. The bill Is as
over the next three years? The bill Is poUtlcally appeallng as a tax bill
the closest thing to painlesa den- could be. This Is not a biJI to hit the
tlstry since tax wlthholdlng was In- Workingman with another boOIIt In
vented 40 years ago.
his Social Security taxes. It does not
They denounced the measure 811 a / affect the reductions in lrn!orite tax
''tax increase," and In some ways it rates that already have been written
Is precisely that. The doubled Into law. The me811ure willliave ill!
federal tax on cigarettes, for eUJDo primary linpact upon great cor•
pie, plainly Is an Increase. But what poratlons and industries - the in·
is not fully understood Is that o- surance companies, for example,

~
-~

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Spona Wrbr
Here come the Los Angeles

measure lllll hit prolea!Gnall (J IIlii
· among · them) who have IncorpOrated theJrlaG!ves IIC! u to
create Individual retirement funds.
If neW revenues have to be,ra)led and my argument li that they must .
be railed - thele are the leut ·
damaglhg placet to ralae them•
The cl&amp;ulc theory oiiUPPiy-elde
ecOIIOIIlica Is that the way to .
proeperity Ilea in tax reduct!Oil&amp; Tile
lower the rates, the theory holds, the
·more capital will be freed for Investment; the more inveatmenl, the
more jobs; the more jobe, the more ·
revenues. I bappell to believe the '
theory is sound.

• ~ ~1CIII'IA-rllll'r
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~11'111'4\

CHESI'ER T·BAIL TEAM~ Members of the 1982
Cbeller T·Ball team are, flnt row, left to right: •
Cbarlle Brewer, Ryan Buckley, Tyson ROlle, Pelilly
Aelker, Sara PulllmJ, Jimmy Pullins, Joey Coalel, Jeff

•

The rankS ot unemployed governors produced the last two presidents, a
blt ot polltlcal trtvla tantallzlng to the poUtlclans who spent the last three
days at a lakeside resort near Afton, OklahQma.
.
Rare Is the governor who does not tll1nk that being president would be no
more dltflcult than running a great blg state.
Remember J!rnJcy carter?
And during his campaign tor the presidency, Ronald Reagan repeatedly
cited his experience as governor ot Calltornla as proof that he could handle
the job of governing the United States.
Atter all, Reagan would tell audiences, It Calltornta were an Independent
nation, It would be economically, the seventh-largest In the world.
Now comes a new crop ot governors harboring those same national
ambitions that traditionally Infect participants at governors' conferences.
This year, the meeting attracted former Gov. Reublll Askew of F1orlda,
who Is trying to take the Carter route to the White House. Askew has been
unobtrusively criss-crossing the country In search ot $upport for a 1984
presidential bld.
Tell Askew that no. one seems to give him much ot a 'chance and he-ll
PQint out that at thts stage no one took Carter's presidential ambitions
seriously.
But the real veteran ot presidential campaigning to attend this confer·
ence was Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. ot Calltorn!a.
At age 43, Brown has already made two unsuccessful runs for the
Democratic. presidential nomination.
·
He ctalms he bas temporarily shelved his White House ambitions to
concentrate on moving to the Senate, a prospect that so disturbs Reagan
that he has given top priority to helping Brown's Republican opponent,
WASHINGTON - "It's not what theaamepo~~ltlonasapart-tlmecon- dlvlalon leader Frederick toSitzberger.
Mayor Pete Wilson ot San Diego.
you
know but who you know" is an sultantfor almost two years.
Zacharia.eiln, was hired to run the
Loree's official title now Is
Another Brown with White House dreams Is Gov. John Y. Brown of
old,
if
ung~IIJIIITIIItical,
rule
of
thumb
-Susan
Gilmore,
stepdaughter
of
laboratory's
archives
last
Novem"aaslstant
to the director.'' A Loll
Kentucky, the fried chicken mllllonalre who Is married to tormer Miss
·
in
government
career
building.
It
Rosemary
Harris,
the
laboJ:J~tory's
ber
_
1n
the
middle
C)[ a hiring
Alamos
spokesman
lnalsted that she·
America, Phyllis George.
·
seems
to
be
the
operatlng
'edicl
at
associate
director
for
adfreeze.
~
internal
Loll
Alamos
is
more
than
just
. an Interior '
Brown devotes a lot ot time and energy to helping tellow Democrats
Los
Alamos
National
Laboratory,
ministration,
was
first
hired
last
docwnent
showl
that
officials
knew
.
decorator.
Her
duties,
he said, Inraise money, an activity sure to attract polltlcal allies.
the
remote,
super-secret
weapons
year
as
a
$1,500-a-month
the
waiver
might
ralae
some
elude
"aesthetic
long-I'IJIIt!
]llan- ·
And when It comes to money, Jay Rockefeller, quickly comes to mind.
research
facility
in
New
Mexico.
management
trainee.
She
left
last
eyebrows.
"I
realize
we
have
been
ntng,
Interfacing
with
baiJdlng
The West VIrginia Democrat has shown the same wllllngness as his late·
While 45 workers were laid off last March, but later returned to he'r job, admonlahecl by the director'a office designers, organ!Jatlm and coorRe11b1tcan uncle, Nelson, to spend whatever It takes to win. That prompted
Aprilln
an economyo(Jlctated reduc- which was still vacl!nt. Disgruntled to take aerlously q.e hiring freeze," dlnltlon and exhlbttlm !I laboratory
supporters of bls GOP opponent In the last West VIrginia governor's race,
tlon-in·force,
the director's wife was employees said sbe was picked over wtote personnel ' officer Gilbert Or- art diapla)oa and expediting adArch Moore, to distribute bumper sUckers that read: "Make Him Spend It
put
on
the
payroll
in an unadvertised moreq1111llfled candidates.
t!Z. "I believe my dllenuna Is dlf· mlnlstratlve actions for the direcAU, Arch."
posltion. Relatives of other top of.
·"The poslllon was closed for ap- ferent because (we) )lave been tor." 1n other words, she also hang.s
ficials have also been appointed to pllcatlons," one source told my negotiating to hire Mn. Zachariasen plcturea.
·
lucrative, unadvertised positions.
· associate John DIJion. "Many people for the last a1x to seven months.''
Despite offlclaiB' protestations ot
Here are some of the more were turned down. Harris directed
, - Patricia Loree, wife ri depl!ty innocence, another Internal .,
outrageous examples of Los Alamos' that we approve that hire."
division leader Edward Sltzberger, document showl that, at least In the .
"aU-in-the-family" system:
Harris &lt;!enied Pul1ing strings to was hired In Fejwuary 1•1 u an 1n- cue C)[ the aiiOCiate administrator's
- Allison Kerr, wife of the get her stepdaughter hired, bllt leflor decorator. Later she usumed ·stepdaughter, there wis a clear ·
facility's directQr, Donald Kerr, was acknowledged that "the penonnel a threeoday-a-weell position that ~tloo that charge r1 nepotism
hired as an $1,1m-a·IJIOnth librarian division reports to me and the per- · pays almoet 120,0011 a year. Though · fnigbt arlae.
,
'
: CLEVELAND (AP) - Many company that publiShed the report.
during
the
RIF
last
spring.
The
job
sonnel
division
handles
all
of
our
she
began.&amp;~~~
conaullant
before
she
Footnote:
Approximately
840
large Ohio companies reported
"But qnly Ume will tell whether
wu mariiell, Lqree was put 011 the Plllrrled couples wort atlAls Alamos ·
sllles Increases last year despite the thts Is a !rile signal of a turnaround was not advertised. It was given to hiring."
Mrs.
Kerr
after
she
had
worked
In
.
Nancy
Zachartasen,
wife
II
l'egular payroll after her marriage - nearly one-fourth C)[ the facWty's ,
tightening economy, the latest Ohio In the fortunes of Ohlo.companles
Roster report says.
70011
or merely _ a deceptive upturn
; The •Cleyeland·based Standard preceding another and possibly
• ;::;;
OU Co. (Ohio) headed the report In more severe pecllne."
sales for the second straight year
.
'
~
The study said 63 percent of the
with $13.8 bJIJion In 1981. Sohlo also
It would seem that Rep. Claire
followed by public hearings and only ~~ble way fcir the accea8 be llildied for feulblllty for one
ti&gt;ppro aU other study categories companies listed had ' earnings
Ball Is practicing to ~orne a detailed construction plana. Con- road to,io Is directly from Five Poln- year. There are about J!iO wortiiJg
l!flth net earnings of $1.9 bliUon, a 37 gains, up trom 54 percent In 19M.
political artful dodger. He wants to ' · structlon should take' aboUt five ts to a bridge, a dlatance 'of 10 miles. days In the )'ear which figures out to
One In every three companies
percent return on shareholders' eqbe thought of as a political mover ylears, be said. He didn't explain why We found the distance fnm Five 25 days pet mlle. That :would be 11 •
,ulty and assets of $15.7 bllllon.
had lower earnings op Increased
and sbaper as long as those things tq i was l)eCell88ry.lo go to Clevela.nc! Points to the bridge was almost the fair speed If the study wu to be
:: The smallest company on the list sales In 199), while just one ot every
be moved and shaped are far down In the Northeast part o( the state to 88JIIe u · the distance to the In- made by a turtle but Rep. Ball 1111
-was the Clnclnnatl·based Frisch'$ tlve had such activity last year, the
the road.
get an engineering firm for a study tersectlon II Rout. 331 and 124 at the study will be llllld, . by a
Restaurants, with revenues of report said.
Ball, who lives in Athens, .and in the SoutheaSt corner of the state. the Great Bend Church. 'Fherefore, Cleveland engjneerlng finn who can
However, fewer companies
$102.7 million.
hope8 to represent Meigs, Gal)la and According to hls timetable, the ac- by bdllding to the lntersectAJn u hu certsinly move futer t1w1 J turtle. I
: The Ohio Roster, which just raised dividend paymel)ts to shareAthens Counties in that newly for- cess road will not be completell for been.propoeecl wouliladd about five am afraid that ~· Ball must aoholders, reflecting a cautious attl·
~sued Its seventh annual listing of
med district of the Ohio House II slx or &amp;eVen years,lfUien.
miles to the 84!Cellllro.d. The acce&amp;~ celerate the' plans If he nPecta to
publicly held Ohio-based compan· tude, ~ report said. Incr~ased
Representatives is a candidate for
YeGods! Can't we hurry it up?
·. road would lead directly to the make ;poUtlcal hay with hls timely
'es with revenues ot $100 mJIJion or dividends were paid by 67 percent
reelection this 'year. So It behooveilWe're not consider!Jig an Apian brld3e and thus ellmlnlte several 11111101111Ce11t.
·
•more, said 89 percent of the con\. ot the t1rms In 1981, compared with
blm to make like a busy little bee Way or a ~lane bypass around dangerous curves to Route 331.
Why doesn't be go bact. through
:~&gt;antes !lad Increased sales tor 1981, 75 percent the year before and 79
when the access road through Melg&amp; ' Washington, D. C. but only a 12 mile
Since the Route 7 Jlypus wu the dusty .ftlea o1 IXiT and - .If
:rompared with 82 percent the year percent In 1979, t1ie stUdy said.
County to the Ritchje Bridge is men- two-lane ~way on a fouz'.lane Originally Intended to llltei'll!lc! with some sort C)[~ wu made back II
·Jietore.
"The robuat performance ot Ohio , tloned. Last week ·he announced the rlght-Cif-way with a poiiiJible 15. mile Route 7 at Five Polnta, I would ' years ago when a Ra-IJOOd
; · "It Is tempting to conclude from companies In 1979 ~s a dlffl· , Ohio Department of Transportation four-Jane from Darwin to Alhena. UIIIJllll there are alralldY plans fll!' bridge wu thought emtnenl? Fl)le
:these results that the worst may be cult act to follow," Pndner said.
is considering the possible We have a ~lane hjgbway on Jllll1 the remalnillg two ml1el ftml the years for conatructlon o112 m11e1 of
;over for Ohlo companies," said That year, !11 )llircent of the comrelocation of Route 33 to the newly · of the Route 7 bYJIUI and it bali cow puture nar the Meigs High road? The Eberabach ConltructiGn
-Gary PUdner, president of Edward panies reported sales gains and 81
opened bridge. He said a Cleveland proven sufficient. It Is on a four-Jane School In ·Five Point&amp;. 1 never did CM!pany built ~Original Route a3
:lloward &amp; Co., a public relations percent had e8rnlngs gains. ·
firm, name not mentioned. Is right-of-way and the extra lane can know why the byJIIII bliUt about 15 wl!b hone drawn ICI apen falter
'.'
making a leasibility study and will be added If !riffle warr8nts. The . yeanagoendedlnaeowputurebut ·thliithatliztyye~nago. ,
report in about a year.
delays and expenaee the artiw who !*ll'llld the lnllcrulable mindl
It loab too IIIIIch liD 1 po11tic81
~:
Rep.
11811
didn't
explain
why
.a.
dodgers
.can
cream
up
are
wonden
ol
the'
powen
that
be?
Anyway;
I
illlllnllllid
f1!r me to sftlJow IIIII 1 .
t.
•
feasibility study is necessary or why to behold. U the 40,GIO mil~
preaume that ·at the t1i!Je tbey ~ have 110 doubt that maily In Melgl '
It should take. a ,year when the tel'lltate· freeway 8)'8tem had. been ned to, illlb the bypUs lnter~e~:t CGunty feel the IIID!
~.
'
'
faaslblllty of the &amp;IJcesS road hu built at t1111 rate, It would bavetaten with Rolle 7. U IUCh na not~· tlinp 111wen -to 8 -~.1
been completed' and environniental 300 years!
,
iled, wby build the bftiulln the flnt j~ wben e1ectioo dly 1ocm1
docwnents p~epared. He 'said thst
When I vlllted my son In Oblo a plal.'e? Soweeiii-'J~thatno · thnelil!lllllwabead. ·
afUir the feasibility stuc!Y has been couple u1 niontha ago we spent 111 ·feutbtHty lltUdJ wiD be ·IIIC,'eiWy · It 11 moat cwmitoDJy
completed , and environmental ~ wllb a detailed map o1 fllrthiatwomllellrlp.'
· d!!IP&amp;atlcllll
called
dOcuments prepared, It ~ be Melga Ceamy. ~~ foa8d that the
Tbat lllllve~ 10 hillel whlcll must

Gallia's Ph# King close second

lront~n a~.e. Jimmy ·Morri~
top SEOAL male athlet~

AM'I!JUCAN LEAGUE
FAMern DMIIon
W L
Pd. GB
MUwauW
Q5 45
.591 Boston
-~
4',i
6l ~
Balti!Mre
:':6 51
-~
6
Nl'W York
55 54
.!IO!i
9'h
516 55
.505
9~
O..~ond
5ot 50
.495 10~
Toronto
:w :'.18 .482 ~
Wmtemotvldln
. 8348
.MSC.UbnUa
Kansas cuy
63 til
.:168 Chicago
59 51
.5.16
311
Seattk!
~
57
.491
8Y.r
Oeklalld
50 64
.439 14 ~
Texas
4.1 67
.:JJI 1911.!

·

WHaeHa,y'a GlllttGI

AUsnta (P.Niekro 10-31 at San Fran·
cbco tHammaker 811
Orlcago (Ripley '-41 at Monlreal (Lea
8-6), tnt
St Lo.lb (AncNJar &amp;-10) at New York
t l'Mhry 6-4) , (ft)

""""'

ll 73

Min...,..

.301!

'l'ladq'• Game~

Plttab.lrgh (Baumgar1en ()..3) at Philadelphia (Rutlrvt'fl 8-10) , fn)
Houst(l'l IRYan 11·91 · at San DiegO
(Show"9J), (ft)
CtndrtMtl (Shirley 3-9) at Los Angeles
lHOOIOO 1-4), tnJ
'ftlul"'lll,y's Gam•
San Frandsm at Lot Angeles

Atlanta at Sit.n Diego
PhUadt&gt;Jphla at Montr'l'al. 2, (S.nl
Chicago at New York. (nl
St Louis at Pittsburgh, fnl
OnlY games scheduktl

" II

Toconto 4, Bostoo 0
DetroltlO. New York 1
Chicago !t, Baltimore f

Transactions

MIJwauW U, Texas 3

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

MJnnesoCa '· cauromta 2

BASEBALL

Kanw City 5. Cleveland 1

SNtne t , Oallind 2

w....,...Garnel

BASKETBALL

.
Natloaallluketball AIHdMioo
HOUStON
ROCKET5-Signed
El·

9-)0) , {R)

von

New York tRIJhettl &amp;-51 at · Detroit

Hayes , forward, to a tw(l-year con,ract.
PHILADELPHIA 76ers-Signed Mitchell
Anderson. forward, to a muiU-year con-

IM~~~~~ri~M 11:91 at Chk~
tDI:ltJcft ,_m~

,JII

tract .

Minneota

.

MONTR EAL
Named

Gr,.

F ields . defensive end: and Mel Cole and
Tod Simonsen, linebackers.

York at Chicago, tnl

BALTIMORE COLTs:-Walved Rick
PartrlcJie, punter; Jeffrey Postell, w ide
reedver; and William Seidel and Rot.!rt
Shupyi;1, l!nebacken. Kea Du~, tight
end~ l ~h camp. SIJtled Ray Sydnor, light
en d; and Mike Lush, aafety.
.
DENVEft BRONC05-AnnourKed tne

IC'heduled

NATIONAL 1&amp;\GVB
EM&amp;era Dty . .n

WL
&amp;1 411

PbUadelplda

··-"'

Plttllbu$

!t

~

.M2

4

S1

5J

~lB

51!

IJ

63

.432

15

t8

66

.421

16Y..

l.oo AllAtlartw

61
62

a ,

s.a 'Francllc:o

Ill 5J
:!9 ' 55

' .MS

5

62

.646

13

w.eni DtviiiOn

s.. Dle&amp;o
. HCIISion

'

50

J)

retlreme~~t

II

Montreol
New York
Chlc.Stt
l'

'.

Pd. OB
568

63 "

St. Louis

. HOCJll!\'

PEORIA
Glrn n

CbK.innaU
I)
73
.:&amp; • Zllf..
• 1 •
, r..~.,· o~
'Atttburah ~5. Phlllde:lpNa S.i. bt
pme compltllcn ol-...peQdec:l ..,-rw

•.

PRAN CE RS -Na med

UnlvtrlltY of Jlllnols foatball

·11 pc. SHRIM~

'139 ,,
"Lers go (o s movt. snd 'bug 8011'1#1 older PIIOp/6 by sctlflg rwt/tm Bnd le/klng through the
wholt? thing!"
~-

Correction

Summer Ba1keU.U Lape
Mo-NipiROIUllto
,
Village (116) - M. Kennedy (5); B. Dodson
f26); R. Ferguson (t) ; R. Bookman (32); R.
O.xler (Ill; R. Gilkey (13).
Clelland (79) ·- (\ene Cot e (251 : Greg Cole
1141; M. Bissell (16); C. Kennedy 14); D. Hawk
18); C. Brauer (12) .
. Brogan-Warner .reu - M. Meadows l24l; R.
.

Murray (4) : S. Uttle {19); L. Grimes (0) ;

s·.

Rondotph 12); N. KNight (10) .
Sml~Nel»on ( 45) - G. Bed&amp;:er US) ; D. Wallen~
'(101 ; C. Judge 1111; C. Kennedy (4) · 8 . Swann
181: T. Cundirr Ill: s. Hood Ill; T: Snowden (21.
KC'o Club (411)- P. Harrison 1181; P. Blake
121 ; D. Carman .101: E. Ebersblch Ill; T.
Wallen~ fl4 ): M. H1111ly 18).
Quality Prinl (561 - K. SmKh (20);' T. Scott
(41: R. Wise OBI; S. Wise (21: R. Ebenblch Ill:
R. Ferguson(5J.

Team

.

!ape SIADdlap
W.L.
1 I
·I 3

Villa~e PhanTUicy

Clelland Realty

• • •

•

0

•

. $1.79

Chris Wolte, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Wolte, Racine, received a
certificate ot achievement from J..e.
wls Bush, director ot the annual
Elks No. 107 Hoop Shoot at Gallla
Academy High School, GaJUpolls.
He took second place hOnors In the
8-9 year age group. Meigs, VInton
and Gallla chUdren participated.

Smith-Nelson M Gton~

4 I

Quality Print

J 5
3 5
2 6

BrQKa!l-Wamer Ins.
KC'~ Club
Thtlndoy NIKbl Rnullo

l

guided the club slnte , 1975, and
named third base coach Lillis as
the Interim manager. Houston had
struggled to a 49-62 record under
Vlrdon and has lost slx·games In a
row before snapping the streak
Monday night against the Padres.
Ruhle, 6-8, didn't walk a batter
and struck out two before getting
last-out rellef help trom- Randy
Mottltt, who gained his second
save.

r
:

!

,
•

Pirates 9-G,Pblllles &amp;-9

Garry Maddox's three-run ho- •'
mer and two-ruri shots by Mike ~
Schmidt and Pete Rose carried ~
PhUadelphia over Pittsburgh.
I
Before the regularly-scheduled 1
game, Mike Easler's hOmerun, sin· ~
gle and tour RBI U1ggered the PI· ~
rates' 9-6 wtn In the completion ot. t
Monday night's suspended game •
between the two clubs.
• ~
Marty Bystrom, 4-4, who has sut·
fered from various arm problems .J
this season, was the w1n11er In t~ ;
night' s second game, scattering; ·
nine hits In seven Innings. Reliever
Sid Monge worked the final two
Innings.
. The Phlllles took a 5·0 lead off'
Manny Sarmiento, 5-2, In the tlrst
two Innings with Maddox's blast
keying a four-run second.
·.;;

•

....:
''

.,

.,

. . ET

..,,\1\111~

...

FOR GIRL OR BOY, IN THE
EASTERN PART OF SYRACUSE, BY POOL
YOU MAY EARN IN EXCESS OF
$20.00 PER WEEK. INTERESTED?

CALL 992-2156
THE DAILY SENTINEL
'

"good-looking boots
and hardworlling, too!"

IBI : T. CUndl!f 14).
Quality Print (48) - R. Wise (61; B. Wise 181;
R. F ergWIOn (lZ); V. Smith 112); R. Ebersbach

121:K.Smithlll.
Clelland Really (741 - G. Colt! 1221: C. Brauer
(18); D. Hawk (141: C. KennOOy 061 ; M. Thompson {0); M . Moye r 16) .
Brogan-Warner {44) - S. Little flOJ ; R.
Murray (41: B. Rowth 181; S. Randolph Ill; N.
Knight (14 ).

.

KC's (49) - P . Harrbon 114); E. Ebcrsbach

141 : J. Sinders Cil' carman 101 : Hysell IO! ; T.
Watten (20).
Villa~• (171 - R. Bookman 1121; B. Meltoo
(II); R. Dexter 116) ; B. Dodson f ZTl : M. Kcnm-dy
16) ; R. Ferguson(6J .

I've earned
my Wings!

•INDIVIDUAL •MARRIAGE
•FAMILY •CHILDREN -'

COUNSE[ING
•PROFESSIONAL eCONFIDENTIAL
'·
•AFFORDABLE
• INSURANa covERS MOST FErs •
('

ptt. 992-2156
51U.IIIhr~_......
'
.......... Oil"

C~NTER

..._II~EHII­

•

Aduttl..eo«ue

Adolph's Dairy ,Valley
.....,.,__Irlqt..

4

Smllh-Nelson (50) - B. Swann (81; C. Jud~ e
rt2) ; C. KeMedy 18); D. Wallen 1101 ; G. Becker

COMMUNITY ·
MENTAL HEALTH

'

.·.

SYRACUSE ROUTE AVAILABLE

Receives certificate

Summer basketball results
Hardager Parll

..

'

In a recent picture the Middleport
..
Panthers girls' softball team recen111 ... 1
tly claimed the Meigs-Mason junior
\111\11
•
•
I
softball tournament championship,
1'1 .
'
not the Middleport Braves as earlier
;
(I
'
I
'
'reported. In doing so the Panthers,
who recorded an excellent 1~
season record, . defea~ the New
Haven Braves. Absent fnm the r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;
photo were Margie and Becky
Smith.

team ott

· probation.
'
JA.MESTOWN-Announced th e
reslana·
tion otDetuliJ Clftllf'J'. men's bUketball
1
cOach.
LONG BEACH STATE- Named Mark
Waf1on iaulalllnt football c:Nch.

SPECIA( OF THE WEEK!

'Fries

football, Morris was an all-league
pick for the past two years and was
an allo(Jistricl and special mention
all-state selection this year. He was
also an all-league pick in basketball.
His fourtb-place finish in the long
jump at the state meet this past
spring marked the first tlme this
year he had fa1led to win that com·
petition. He holds the league records
in both the long jump and triple
jump.
King lettered in football, basket·
ball and baseball for Gallipolis;
Fenik earned three letters each in
football and track and two in basket·
ball and Bonzo three each in football
and basketball and one each in
baseball and track for Jackson; and
Angle was a three-year letter wmner
in baseball and won two each in foot·
ball and basketball for Logan.
Others who were nominated for
the award and the sports in which
they lettered were :
Rick Gibson (football and
wrestling) and Mike Croci (tennis,
basketball and football of Athens;
Roger Kovalchik (football, basketball and baseball) of Meigs; Ray
Bowman (cross country and track)
and Eric Breitenbach (basketball
and baseball ) of Waverly; and Todd
Montgomery (football and baseball)
and Barry Peters (basketball, track
and cross country) of Wellston.
This marked the third year the
award has been presented. Previous
recipients of the award are Jeff
· Montgomery of Wellston and Brent
Wilcoxon of Ironton.
The award is named in memory of
Willard FitZpatrick, who was a
'l ongtime educator and radio broadcaster in Jackson. He remained active in the SEOAL Sportswriters and
Broadcasters Association until his
,
death jn November, 1979.

PatrJck coaoh.
•
COLLEGE
BIG TEN CONFEREI:iCE-Took the

%
3\!

_.

of Bill Thompson. strong safe-

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

ty.

.561
JM
.&gt;31

CONCORDE S-

,

Rom Rossley o!fenslve coach.
N.-loull"tolhall Leape
ATLANTA
FALCONS-WatveG

Toronto at Mllwaukef. 2, ft-nl
Onty gamee

JI'OOTBALL
Caaadlan FM&amp;ball Leape

OMland ! Whltsm 2-l l at Kansas Clly
(Spltncn! 7~1. (n)
Oakland tLangfotd 8-12) at Seattle
(Bannbttr 10-71, ml
'1111n11Q't Gamet

New

.

HOUSTON ASTROS-F.IrM Bill Vlrdon,
maaaaer, and named Bob Llllb btterlm
mllllager;

Texas (Honeycutt ~13) at Milwaukee
tHa88 !Mil
\tOSton !Hunt 3-ti) at Toronto caancy

cnT' 1
'
Ga!itonU J tZIJIBI ! U.S )
cO'Conn« 5-31. un.:

~

Chicago 5, MontreaJ 3
Houston f, San Dlt'IU 1
San Frandieo 3, Atlanta 2
U. An~ ll , Cinclnnatl3

B1 11ae hMclllted PMu .

Wingett ,

-v.

Stl..ools 7, New YQrk

Majol'8

~espite rece~sion

m:

basiS.
It. was a two-man race for the
award, with Gallipolis' Phil King
finishiilg a fairly close second in the
balloting. Of 56 ballots which were
cast this year, Morris was the first
c~oice on 18 a_nd second on 19, while
Kmg had 17 f1rst-place votes and 12
seconds. .
Mark Fenf!t ~nd Ma~ Bonzo, both
of Jackson, f1mshed th1rd and fourth
respectively ~bile Jim Angle of
Lo~an was fifth. Each of the 12
athl~tes nominated for the award
rece1ved votes.
.
Moms w_as a ha~ck, defensive
back and kicking spec18hst for Ironton , in football, scoring I~ points
durmg the 1981 season on nme toucbdowns and another 46 points 9n extra
points or' field goals. He gained 577
yards for an 8.4 average.
Headed for Morehead State to play

Scoreboard ...

Companies thrive

Berry's World

wl~ points then given on a :t-3-1

Jimmy Morris, who starred ln
football, basketball and track for
Ironton and helped lead the Tigers to
another Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League football title, has been selected as the 1982 recipient of the
WlllardFitzpa\rickAward.
The award is presented annually
by the SEOAL Sportswriters and
Broadcasters Association to the person picked as the top male athlete 1n
the league. To be eligible for the
award, an athlete must participate
In alleast two of the varsity sports in
which league competition is held.
Voting for the award is eonducted
among athletic directors, head
coilches of the eight boys' sports In
which there Is league competition,
and news media representatives
from the Jeagu~schools. Persons are
not pennitted \to vote for athletfl!
froril their own schiloJ. They ·selecl
their ' three choices for the hondr,
-'
·

All. in the family___________Ja_ck_A_nd_,__erso_n

Bridge feasibility study

m,

left to rlptJared Ridenour, Jerrod Van Iowagen, Jeremy
Buckley, IJsa 'Hottman, Jerry Ugbtfoot, ADdy WoU,
Junior Ridgway, Karen Morris. Tblnl row - Coaches
BID Buckley and Terry Hoffman.·

Stetbem, Brian HottmaD. Secood

Dodgers. - oops, there go the .
Atlanta Braves.
."I could feel the momentum
buUding In Atlanta," said Los Angeles first baseman Steve Garvey,
whose Dodgers capped an lncredi·
ble comeback Tuesday night by
taking over !frst place In the Nationa! League West over the fading
Braves.
That development was made
possible when the Dodgers drilled
the Cincinnati Reds 11~ while tbe
Braves lost a 3-2 decision to the San
Francisco Giants. The Braves, who
led the Dodgers by 10~ games as
late 9$ July 29, lost tor the eighth
straight game and for the 12th time
In the last 13.
They got ott to a record 13-0 start
and held first In the NL West virtu·
ally the entire season before their
recent spin, dropping to second
only once on April '11, percentage
points behind the .San Diego
Padres.
The Dodgers, meanwhile, were
part ot Atlanta's nosedive, having
beaten the Braves nine straight
ilmes, Including a four-game
sweep In Atlanta at the end ot July
and another !our-game sweep in
Los Angeles this past weekend.
"As defending work!' champions,
we have something to prove," sald
Garvey, whohlta two-runhomerln
the seventh Inning Tuesday night,
one ot two,Dodger homers.
Rick Monday also homered to
back the slx·hlt pitching of Fernando Valenzuela as the Dodgers,
In their Incredible run toward the
top, gained their 11th game In the
standings In the last 12 days.
Elsewhere In the NL, Chicago
whipped Montreal 5-3, St. Louis
turned back Montreal 7-2, Houston
defeated San Diego 4-1 and Phlla·
delphia outscored Pittsburgh 9-5 at·
ter dropping a 9-6 decision In the
completion of a suspended game.
Glanta 3, Braves 2
Milt May lined a home run ott AI
Hrabosky In the seventh Inning to
give the hot Giants their ninth
straight victory. May's homer gave
the Giants their 31st come-from·

behind victory ot the season and
they moved to within five gjlmes ot
tlrst place.
Bill Laskey, 11-8, shut out Atlanta
over the final eight Innings after
Dale Murphy hit his 29th homer of
theseasonWithLarryWhlsentonon
base In the first.
The.last t!me the Giants won as
many as nine In a row was AprU of
19TI, the year they won the NL
West.
Cubs ~. Expos a
Randy Martz Scattered six hits
over the tlrst seven Innings and
Junior Kennedy drove ln two runs
as Chicago beat Montreal to stretch
Its winning streak to six games.
The Cubs have wpn eight of their
last nine, their most successful
streak since July, 1979.
Martz, 6-7, coming ott a career·
best, two-hit performance against
New York last Thursday, gave way
to WIJlle Hernandez after Chris
Speier opened the eighth wlth his
third home run of the season and
pinch-hitter Brad MUis followed
with the tlrst of his maj or league
career.
Hernandez needed relief help
hlmselt from Dick Tldrow atter giv·
lng up the Expos' third run on AI
Ollver's groundout.
"We have a good ballclub," sald
Martz. "It's a matter of us getting a
few breaks here and there, and
that's what's been happening.
We're playing free and loose because we've got nothing to Jose,
while the Expos have everything to
lose."
Cardinals 7, Expos Z
Steve Mura hurled a slx·hitter tor
his tltth straight victory as St. Louts
whipped New York. Mura, 10-7,
struck out four and walked four In
pitching his sixth complete game of
the season. His last loss was June
28, when he dropped a 1.0 decision
to Philadelphia.
The Cardinals scored all the runs
they needed In the tlrst inning as
Dave Green's two-run single keyed
a tour-run rally ottMets lett·hander
Randy Jones, 7·9. Jones retired
only one batter before he was removed from the game.
"Mura's major problem has
been wildness," said Cardinal Manager Whitey Herwg. "But he has
the abUity to be my ace, along wlth
Bob Forsch."
Astros 4, Padres I
Vern Ruhle scattered eight hits In
82·3 Innings and Phil Garner
cloUted a three- run homer as Hous·
ton defeated San Diego In Bob Lll·
lis' debut as the Astros' manager.
Earller In the day, the Astros
tired Manager Bill Vlrdon, who had

'.,

"My new Pecos · Red Wings arct good -looking
boots and hardworking. too! They give l)le a great

heel-hugging fit My feet feel good all day lol)g.
even on overtime. I really like my Red WinJtS.
Afte! •!!..J've_Lat'llr_!!_t};temr•
.

Hartley Slloea Located In the
Upper lloclc In Pomeroy

HARTLEY SHOES
SlORtHOUIS
llolldltThu,._, Sat. 9·5
Fridlr9-l

POMEROY, OHIO
992-5272 .

�11,1982

Rio grap.ted funds
for forum series

Regional hapPening~ reponoo
and awards' e~~rne!l at cam~
ArJ:O'IVhead, Quntlngton, were given
out.
The scouts-hiked from MiddlepOrt' 1
leaving 011 a Thuhsclay momlilg ate.
the f _._,
a.m. and getting back
o11v~u..,
Mondayabout!Oa.m.

Rock Sprir).t!'S
Granae
P
P

new member. Reported m jwere
Erna Cornelius and Gerry ParBOIIB.
Contributions · were made to 'the
A ........... atd
· to Mr
Ohio state travel fUnd lind the Ohio
uu ,.....,y c
was sent
s.
State youth fllnd durlitg a meeting Of Emma Waytand, and sympathy
·c:ards to Mr. and Mrs. . ~ord
Rock Springs· Gral)ge held at the Christy and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
hall.
Van Inw11gen. At'theAugustmeet·
Mrs. Barbara Fry, CWA chair·. In the B key Girl Stat del
man, nl)ted , that j\Jdujnu
of gates
g, wW ~
IIC
e
e e~ ~
guests.
needlework and the stuffed toy conSoup beans and com bread were
leilta will be held at the September served to the AUXIliary members
Pomona meeting. .
and legionnaires before the
CommunlcatiO!JI' were read from ' meeting. ·
the national secretary, · state
secretary and Pomona secretary. Bo c _
Ruth Ann Fry and Mary Shaeffer
were reported ill.' '
A. 56-mile "hike completed by
Refreahmenta were served by Lotseveral
members of Middleport
tie Leonanl, Mr. and Mrs. William
TrooP
245
was followed by a
Gnaeaer, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
recogrtition
dinner
at the American
Blackston. The Blackstons showed
Legion
hall
in
Middleport.
films rl their trip to the World's
CornJIIeting !be hike were Lanny
Fair. Following the meeting the hal l
Tyree,
assietant scoutmaster, ,.John
was vacated for the Meigs Coljllty
Fink,
Eddie.
Baer, Walter Haggy,
Fair.
Donald ·Stein, atarles Hudson,
BarryColllnsandArchieMcKinney.
Gene Fink started 1\dth the group
Several members were recog· but becarl)e Ill and was unable to
nlzed for field service at !be recent continue. Sherman Mills, scout·
meeting of the AJT~erlcan Legion master, joined the hike the second
Alixlllary of Feeaey·Bennett Post day, and Donald .Lowery. met the
128, Ml41Deport; held at the hall.
scouts· a couple d times with
Receiving field service bars was refreshments. 'Several residents
Enna Hendricks. Pins were pres· along the route to Long Bottom and
ented to Mary Malden, Kenneth back provided fresh water and
Malden, and Robert Cornelius. A places to rest for the group.
report waa gtven ,on the Depart·
At the dinner; the scouts presented
mentofOhioconventlonheldlnCJn. certificates rl appreciation to

'
,p e J;laily Sentinel "

•
•
lied
N
·. ew oxygen equtpment tnsta ·
,

Publilll&lt;d every '""""""'· Moodoy l""'""h
Frkloy, Ill CuurtSI""'~ by' lheOhi&lt;&gt; Vall•y
PubliolllnK Compony • Mvltin,.dlo, Inc..
""'
""I'OY· Ohio 41111, tn-lll6. ~- c....
poot.a~ePIIIdatPonwroy , Ohiu. •'
M&lt;mber: ''!ht: Alliucl•led """"· tnlanol 0.1•
iy . """' """"liliOO. ooid the l\mont1n.
N&lt;WIPIIJier Pvblbhe'l Au odallon, N•U..,.I
Advl!l'tii iniC Reprwmtltive_. Br1nhe1n
Ntw~~p~per Sales, m 'ft\tnl Avt!nue, Hew
York, New York lll017.
!'QSJ'MAS1'Eft: Seoid add,... to'!ht: Dolly
s.nu..l. lll Cuun St .. Pumeroy.OhloOlll.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ByC.nierurMotorR&lt;Ook
Ontlwet!- ......... . :. 1 • •••• ~ ••• ••• t fl .OO
0.. Month .... ..... .. .. .. ....... , $4.40

24 hour basis If needed. It delivers,
he reports, up to three Jitters per
minute, and Is the latest on the
market In ox ygen therapy
equipment.
Weighing only 52 pounds, It Is por·
table and Is equipped with three
alarm systems which react when
the equipment Is maHunctionlng
or,In the case of electrical failure.
M and M will be delivering and ser·
vlclng the oxygen concentrators
within a 60 mne radius ot Point
Pleasant. Service Is on a 24 hour
basis by Marnhout
The equipment Is a new type, ac·
cording
to Marnhout,
having been
on
the market
for only
about six

1- '

Local women win awards
Salon 710, Eight &amp; Forty, re_cently traveled to a state Elglit ,&amp;
Forty convention In Cincinnati and
broUght home several awards.
The chapter was awarded sev·
era! honors at tile convention,
bringing home tile Arree Marshall
cystic fibrosis plaque, the Gertrude
'Moore Award for Child Welfare,
the Maybelle Gamble plaque
tor the best Salon tD the state with a
membership of 10-36.
Ear!Jer this month, the chapter
met to elect new members. Those
chosen were: Chapeau, Lula
Hampton; First Deml, Betty van
Meter; Second Deml, Pearl
J&lt;Dapp; LaSecretalre-Gasslere,Ju·
J1a Hysell;' .
Doris

am

Smith; Ponvolr, ~arjorie Fetty;
L'Archlvlste, Iva Powell.
Chairmen chosen were: advocate, Florence Richards; nurses'
scholarship, Rhoda Hackett; con·
stltutlon and bylaws, Mary Martin;
ritual and emblem, nuby Mar·
shall; scrapbook chairman, Lula
Hampton; partnership, Veda Oa·
vis; parody. Pearl i&lt;napp; public
relations, Mary Martin. Installing
officer was Mary Martin.
Tile salon endorsed Mary Martln
lor a national Office In 1983-84.
After potluck, chapter members
greeted guef!ts. Inez Stewart,' Janet
Smith, Stephanie and Stephen,Mar·
tin, Miles Ket!ls and Cheryl
Johnson.

Mr. and Mrs. David · Johnson,
Pomeroy, announce the birth of
, their second-child, a son, June 10 at'
U, Holzer t,fedlcal Center. The infant weighed eight pounds, six ounc8s 111f1 waa 21 Inches long. He has
been niunedScott Michael
•Maternal grandmother Ia Mamie
.,.~-PGnieroy,
. and
the
~ .... ~~""""''
\
~ler!W 8J'811dprirents ire Mr. and
Mrs. Carl JOhnson, Mason, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. JOhnson have another
soil, Jeremy David, age three.

Property transfers
Huber! ~tafford to Marvin R. s: ·~·
lord, Wanda Stafford, Parcels,
Rutland.
Hubert Staffofd to .Mary V.
111rnm, n.x acres, Sallslluty. ·
Kathryn S. Wilson, George E .
Wilaoh fo Roy A. Holter, Edward J.
Holter, 5.34 acrea, ~ter.
NOI'IIJab L Yost, et;al., T. Jeanne
•Y!JSI, William H. Loy, Virginia H.
Loy, Hoy G. Shingleton, Jr., Sidney
B, Shingleton, Michael 'E. Caryl,
Ka~ S. Caryl to Wallace H. Culley,
Elsie M~Culley, Parcels, Olive. ,·
WIJiiam E. Barlels, Diana L. Bartels to Vis-Tel Inc., 1.3 acres,
SWls~.
.
WWUim E. Bartels, Diana L. Bar·
tels to Vis-Tel, Inc., Lot 299,

I

'************
MAIN EVENT:.
I

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., ~
VETERANS MEMORIAL H()SPITAL
'

6 MAN TAG TEAM, lndu.ll...: FLYING FRED
CURRY, BIG BOB WHITE, I lHE ~ w. HANGI, MNGMAN II (North American T11 ·Tum Cllllnpst &amp;
THE RENEGADE. .
~
.
. .

-

OHice Houn by Appointment Only

CALL (6~4) M2-2104
or (304) 675-1244

.

SPECIAL MAtcH:

EAR, NOSE &amp;THR~T
GENERAL AllERGIST

\

LADY WRESniRS
IPLUI aMORE 110 MATOIII

***·*******,**

TICKETS ARE: Under 12-SI.OO
Gill. Aclm. $4.01
Ringside Sufi SS.OO and ' " on Nle at KtllllY lwalft'i
UUd Furnlturelri Galllpolla, or at tile dNr $aturday ......~. 'II!'·L
at7:00 p.m.
'

Eckr'ch

HAM &amp;CHEESE LOAF . • •lb.• $2.59·
H'o memade

HAM·SALAD

Lb.

• •

tall:

,,.

••

Syracue.

WIJiiam Fred Smith, Sr., Beatrice

t JD. Tet!n Queen

MltRGARINE 2/$1J
12 o1! Krall
Pimento 16 Slice
Individually Wrapped

CHEESE

pkg.

APPI,.ES .. • • . • • • '1.39
113 Counl California

ORANGES • • • • . • 6/89'

89

$}

E. Smith to Michael D. Smith, Sue f...

• Bag

31b.' Bag Winesap

Quarters

,95 Counl Slar Kist

LEMONS
.. • • • . • 6189'
I

•

--~·'&lt;..';·;~:..~---

i

TOILET TISSUE •••• ~~. . Pkg.
. . S}39
.

;

5 oz. Armour

''
'

'4 Roll White Cloud

'

.

·

SAT., AUG. 14th AT 8:30 P.M •.

$ 39
Bacon................. ~!·.. .
.
$ ·29
Ground .Beef....... ;~·.. .
$
·59
'
G
round
Chuck
.....
L!~.
U. S. D. A. Choice . .
$ 19 '
Chuck Roast .......!!..
U.S.D.A. Choice Boneless $
69
.Ghuck Roast ........L:·•••
Bucket.. .
.
$ 49
Cube Steak ..........L~~

Johnson

JUMBO .BOLOGNA ., . • • • Lb.• '1.99

10 oz. Tropica.nil' ·

PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH AUGUST .14,.1982

13 Wtek.'l .............. .. .... ..... Slf.Of'
26Wtt!k.'l .... , . . .............. . . . . P7.30
S2W1'l'k.'l .... ..... . .• · · · · · · · · · · · · • ~J ...a
' O.lllhW Otllll
13WI&gt;t'k.'&lt; . , ,, .. .... ,, ,, , .. , . ,, . . . . 'tJ!t.21
26 W1-cb ...... .' .... . . . ........... $29,$4
52 W~&gt;ck.t4 ; , . , .....• .' . .•. , ... .. .. f56.21

VIENNA sAUSAGE • •w:s~ ~u 2/99!

AT TH~ NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY

.

.

'

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
l .. ldoOhlo

r

WORLDWIDE

I

'

Nll :iublk.'•·lptioll.'l by rnadl ~nn ltll.'Cl in luwruJ
wtl.•n.• hurnr curriCr sc:o&lt;lt-e ilf avllilablee.

a

PH.M2-2342

1

298 SECOND ST. ·
POM~Y, 0.
'

Quality Plus

HOUSE COAL

..

Sunday 10 IJll·lO pm

SuOOt·ribcn nut ~ttirin~ot to J)M)' tht.! carrier
uwy reml( in ildv• l'll't! dired lu .The Daily
St•ntim•l on a 3, I ur 12 month bel!is. Cret.lil
will bt•l!iven l'Mrrll'r l'ICh month.

=~l::m~EU~~w~!f ~~~~~~di;~::~:~~~~:=

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
AGENCY

pill

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
·
Doily .................... : .. ... ) $ C&lt;nlll

Earaches: causes; cures

iial!:N'IrA1.'10l~S..-BeUy VIII Meter, left froot, Is pn~~entl!dlier
~place winning book of prayers by Lula Ham~ who Is lllucllag
bebiDd her. Iva Powell, right froot, presents the book of hlltory to her
daughter Marge Felty, center. The members of Melp Salon 71.8, Elpt
and Forty alteuded the state convention where Ham,eoo won aecond
;place fOr the chapter scrapbook, and Mary Marllo won fOr having the .
bel&amp; TB program.

Mon•.s.t. 8 am·lO

one y.., ...... .......... ......... 152.10

dent, opened till! in'eettng With the
pledge to the OBi and prayer by
chai&gt;taln, Jean Gilmore. Oftlcers'
reports were ~.I!Jid oorreapon·

called an otoscope. This allows him
By Edward Scbrecll, D.O.
to see the eardrwn and at the same
A111letant P.rofessor Of
time to blow a wisp Of air against it.
Family Medlclae
If
the·eardrwn does not move then
Ohio Uulverslty College .
the
phy~ician can be fairly certain
rl O.teopathlc
fiuid
Is behind it.
Medicine
QUESTION:
· Remember there is no way to acW\ly are earaches
curately self-dlagnllllll an eatache 8o
so common in
be sure to consult your physician.
children?
Your
hearing is too preclolls to gamANSWER: A
ble
on
a home remedy or a watch·
frequent cause of
and-wait
attitude ..
eara c he
in
! i
'
children Is otitis . SCJIRECI(
(Editor's
note:
Although
he canexterna or "swimmer's ear" which
not
answer
letters
personally,
involves an infection or the ear canal Schreck wiD dlacUss questionsDr.
rl
and Is generaliy treated with an- general Interest in the colwnn.
tibiotic ear drops. Another frequent Please address correapoildence to:
and more serious cause of earache is ·Ed Schreck, D.O., College , of
an infection of the middle ear (otitis Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio Univermedia). This infection affects the sity, Athens, Ohio 45701.)
part or the ear which converts sound
waves from the ·environment to
mechanical · energy which in tum r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-~
·
stimulates the nerve lor hearing in
the Inner ear. Tbe middle ea~ is composed. of the eardrwn. ll!ld thtee
small bones which are all interconnected. Good h.earing de~J~~nds
on the proper functioning of these
structures. With a middle ear il)lection their free movement is hill-'
de red.
115". 2nd Ave.
Before diagnosing otitis n\edia, a
physician will first check for other
,MiddleporJ. OH.
causes of, the earache. He ·wlll then
look into the ear with an instrwnent

.' STORE HOURS:

Johnson birth

1

program. Johi\Fink received his flrmonthS. ·
st class rank and other merit badges
The oxygen concentrator as well
~;::~=========~=::;;;;::~::;::;::;~;;;:~
as other home health care hospital
equipment Is usually Installed on dence read.
·
recommendation of a physlctan
It waa noted that eight AuxQiary
and many times results In shorter members and two legionnaires at·
Prices are
hospital stays, Marnhoutsal4- Bll· .. tended tiH: Chillicothe birthday
Pittsburgh, NR
effective
ling Is handled directly by M and M party taking 52 dozen cookies and a
thru
to Medicaid or other ~urance as cake. Ten AuxJllary members vi·
Mine Run (Strip)
Sept. 1, 1982
requested.
,
sited the Arcadia Nursing Home at
4 TON MINiMUM
Besides the oxygen concentrator,
CoolvWe last week. Craft day was
thecompanyalsbhandles threedll· announced for Wednesday, 10 a.m
DELIVERED
PRICE
terent types of wheelchairs, regu· to 2 p.m. at which time the group
Pomeroy . •.. .. .. .. .. ..... . , . . .••..... ·.. $26.00 Ton
lar and seml-electrjc beds, traction wUI begin making · Christmas
Middleport &amp; Racin,e . •• . : . · · · · · · · · · · · · · • • $27.00 Ton
equipment, ~alkers, 'COmmodes, wreathes. OnFrldaytheAuxDiary
Meigs County · • · · · • · • • .·: · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · S~S. OOT~n
and tot~~ m=111eou~eq~! wm prepare a dinner tor the Legion
·C.O.D.
PH. 992-2210'
011
men·
a
ess wrented
re "'£
baseball team, and
Sunday the ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~~;·,
~qlpment
can
be either
or annual
picnic wW be held at the Je.
pu~~M Medical Equipment Is glon farm, 1 p.m. Those attending
located at 2605 Jackson Ave. In aretotakeacovereddlshandthetr
own table service.
Point Pleasant.
PhyUis Blake was welcomed as a.
'

j&lt;\pproprlate home health care
eq)lipment can sometimes make
~hi! difference between a patient rece1vtng treatment at home or requtrlng hospitalization or nursing
fadllty confinement.
That'sthecontentlonOfanewdls·
tributor, M. and M Medical EquiP,
ment Of Point Pleasant, who have
juit Installed theb' first piece ot
equipment, an oxygen concentra·
tor, In thehomeofMrs. Audrey Ar·
nold, Spring Ave., Pomeroy.
According to Mike Marnhout
w~M&gt; Js .assoctated 1n the bUsiness
with JiJs mother, Kitty Marnhout,
the oxygen concentrator. turns
room air Into 93
on a

.

JUSPII*'. . I
ADiv-'OIMoiCinl&lt;dla,ll&lt;.

· Middleport Legion

recllulng (JOIIUon, and tbe equipment reeommended by her physician when abe wu dlld!al'lled
from Pleaeant Valley Hotpltallutlweell. It wu M 6
M's first delivery bavtug ooly opelled for bu'- a
weekago.
'

.

'

Rio Grande College and Com-

munity College has been awarded a:
grant by the Oblo HU111811lties Council wassist In the fWldlng rl the tn~tution!s community forum series.
Announcement rl the grant was
made by Richard M. Cheskl, chairman rl the Ohip Hwnanittes Council
in Colwnbus1
•
, Each year,Rio Grand College and
Community. College CHponsors a
community forom series that reflects on national Issues. This year's
series 15 ~ crOSII cultural and contemporary American life.
Speakers and panel reactors for
each rl !00.seven topics will be anIJOUIICed at a later date, a school
spoll~n said.- Each Of the forums ·
Will be held in the Fine and Per·
forming Arts Center on the Rio
Grande campus.
Jean Curtis Is the Director Of tbe
Fine and Performing Arta at the institution.
'

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

y ..x.out 'T roop 245

. DEMONSTRATES-Mlli:e Marnhout of M &amp; · M
J\ledlc8l Equlpmeat, Point Pleasant, W. Va., demoDItl'llln the uae rl an oxygen concentrator lo Mrs.
Apclrey Aruold, Pomeroy. Having au aatbmaUc coDdHioa, Mrs. Arnold requires oxygen when abe Is Ia a

'

·

.1. ,., ,.4~~·'&gt;·

r·:,: ·• .~· · .

'

FRUIT DRINKS

••

•

• • • •

' .

16 oz. van Camp

,,
• •

• • 89~
Can

I

I

I

I

I

.

PORK·N·BEANS
~
'

39i.

!

$t19

Can

• • • • • •

20 oz. Del Mo.nte Sliced

PINEAPPLE . •

'

'

6'12 oz. Chicken-of-the-Sea

TUNA • ~ •·•••. •

'

3/79~

'

Simpeon, Lot 186, a06worth's Add.,
Pomeroy.
Arthur A. Hess, Jane A. Hess to
ColwnbuS and Southern Ohio Electric Co., RtghtofWay, Salisbury.
Evelyn B. Thomas to Colwnbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
flight Of Way, SWisbw:y. ..
I..awrence Vance, Rebecca Jean
Vance, Jean Vance to Deborah L.
Harmon, 2.75 acrea, Salisbury.
Roger P. Daniels, Helena R~
04nlels to Julie ,A. Hysell, 1.9110
acres, Corrective beed, Sutton.
H. C. McKinney, Edna McKinney
to Dennis McKinney, 6 acrea, Salem.
.Hubert Stafford to Donald 'E. UtIle, LoiliJ. Uttle, PBreel, Salis~.
Melvin L Forester, ·Mary E.
Foreater to Melvin L Forester,
MJry E. Forelter, Parcel, Letart. ·
Dwight W. Corbin, Elva Corbin to
DJright W. Corbin, Elva Corbin,
beta, Lebanori.
&amp;JaUde J. 1m' 8Iia. Claud J. Dry,
~en ~. Dry to V~Tel I~ .• P~r.'
qjs, Reedsv111~.
'
j.awrence L. Morarity, Violet I.
,...,arlty, Cert. of Transfer-,

Lettuce .......... ~~A~~
Grade A

large Eggs ...... ~:~ ..
Hyland Chunk

Dog. Food ·············~··'

'
Knlw~.

Sr., BIUle Jo
K~a:wsczyn
to ,Charles Ray
. ferguso~rnartha Jo Ferguaon, Lot
311, Middleport.
. '
,Jobn E. Aei!ler, toulse Aeiller,
Leona JC41Y Roach to Colwnbull and
So!dbem Ohio Electric
Rigla tl
Middleport.

fo··

'

INSTANT
NESTEA
•

.

'

Wagner's

Orange Drink.!!~~.

..

Headley, Mamie Headley to
UbertY' 4)11 and Gas Corp., ~ rl

.

. $ 09
$ 29 Cottage
Ch eese.c!~·~ ..
240Z.

25 LB. BAG

~ ~·'

JOhn

Broughton's

.

'

'

¢

Borden's Elsie

$

· .Ice Cream ......-.. ~.G!; ••

29

'

•

51Count

FLA~ORITE·.

.

SlYROFOAM CUPS
't6oa.

CRISCO OIL

Pkg.
I

I

I

I

I

I

·.· SUGAR

::$149
OM Per Customer
AtPeweiJ!s

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell' s
Expires August14, 1982

• • • ••

�.·
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Wedneeday; Auputt 11,1 «112

Pomeroy..-Miclclleport, Ohio

Meigs County area residents gather 'for. family FeunionSc ~~ •
Burnem
The Bumem reunion was held at
Krodel Park, Pt. Pleasant, recently
with many relatives attending.
Reuniting for a family day were
Mr. and Mrs. Donal Burnem and

son, Matt, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Bur·
nem and Amanda, all of Urlchsvllle.; Mr. and ·Mrs. Harold
Bumem and Jackie· Lynn, John~~: .
than Burnam, Brunswick, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Bumem, Pam and
BUiy, Sandusky, Mlch,; Mr. and

Astrograph
.
Augus112, 1982.
.
-·
__
This should be an exciting year for you socially. Many new acquaintances are likely. Some who might ·not appear too attractive at firSt
meeting will later prove to be friends. ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You could be intrigued by someone you met
recently, but you must be careful not to become too deeply involved
before you get to know this person better.
VIRGO (Aug. 2$-Sepi. 22) The plans you formulate for accomplishing
your aims today have a good chance for success, but Ulere's a possibility
last-minute changes will negate them.
·
'LffiRA (Sept. 23-{)ct. 23) Relationships with persons who can help advance your self-interests will be favorably conducted today but you
might not be as t)10ughtful with those who can't aid you.
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-!'lov. 22) In joint ventures today, more might be
demanded of you than IS reasonable or fair. Be cooperative, but protect
yourself so that everything balances out.
SAGmARWS (Nov. z:I.DeC. %1) You're likely to be more influenced
by your. ass?Ciati~ns than usual today. If they're productive, you'll be
producllve; tfthey re not, you could while away precious time.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) This is not the right day to impose
upoQ social contacts for business purposes. Crossing the line may cause
regrets or embarrassment.
: AQUARWS (Jan. 20-F.eb. 19) Important tasks should be attended to
early. Your Industriousness has its limitations today. Repress impulses
• • to flee frolll that which needs doing .
•
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcb 20) It may ·be easier for you to excuse the
mistakes and foibles of outsiders today than it will be to overlook minor
infractions of family members.
: ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) ·You will operate competently today in
areas requiring a practical approach. However, socially you might not
bandle yourself as wisely as you should.
TAURUS (April 20-May ZO) Think twice today before offering
.anything of value to someone who once neglected something lent by you.
You don't want to repeat your mistake.
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Decisions you make under pressure today
may not reflect your best thinking. Don't let yourself be jockeyed into a
position for quick "yeses" or "nos."
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Because of your desires to be helpful
today, you might impulsively volunteer to take on responsibilities you'll
later wish you hadn't.

POMEROY- AU girls, grades
9-12,
interested
volleyball
at EasterninHighplaying
School
should' report to high school at 7
p.m. Wednesday for short
('leeting .
.

Mrs. BW Strong, Jacklon; ~. aiidl,
Mrs. l)onley Stroq, Jemllca and
Jessica, CoiiUiibUs; 1p!ane Stfllllg, .
and Loren Tretster, Charlell111a. w. ~
Va.; Erma Bradford, MaryiVflle;
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bradford and
David, cOlumiKil; Dllnn, Toby and
Shawn Caldwell, ZanesvUie; Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Reibel ancl Mr.
and Mrs. Doqle)' Reibel, Pomeory;
Mrs. Aletha Strong."and Eve\Yn !)&amp;.
Vault, Wllkesvllle.

John ancl Glha Thomas, Pomeroy,
.. arid Fred. June ancl Lori Thomas,
Cheshire.

Reibel
The Reibel reunion was held Aug.
8 at the Goldcllff park, etrcieville.
Reuniting tor the day were Mr.
and Mrs. Steven Craig and Sara,
MlnersvWe: Harold Bradford and
Clara Nutter, Lancaster; Mr. and

TIIURSDAY

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Youth
League will have a swimming
party at the Middleport pool Saturday. Aug. 14, 6-8 p.m. Uni·
fQrms should be turned in at that

kend revival Aug.13, 14 and 15 with
Rev. J~ Budd, Reynoldsburg, as
speater. Services wW begin at 7: :Jl
p.m. each eventni and 0: ll a.m. on
Sunday. Rev. Tom CoWer invites
the l!Ubllc.

-

.

f

-- ·

RACINE - McElroy Reunion W)ll
be Sundsy at the Shrlners Club in
Racine at noon. 1
I
RUTLAND - Jacks n:union will
be Sunday wi~h 1 p.m. dimer at the
Rutland American Legion Beech

Grove Road, RutlaruL
POfdEROY - Christmas I~
August Will be~ dC111ebrated by
Pomeroy United Methodist Churc)J
Sunday. The holiday tlleme will ,be
carrllld out In the Sllllday School and'
\lioJ'IhlP service and again at ali
evenln~ 8 p.m. carry-in ·ilimer. A
hymn sing will follow the meeting.
The public is being invited to "think
cool" by joining the Methodists in
the celebration of Christmas. ·

.. -

Back-to~

School ina
claSs
·thems ves.

Thomas

~,

.

Service news note

ANN'S

CAKE

SELECT GROUP OF STRIKE-RITE
BACK-TO!SCHOOL SHOES

SUMMER ut\i•RS

. .

0

~ ~-----A~D-VE~R~T~tS~E~D~tT~EM~PO~UC~¥----~

.··-·.........
. . . -Yl!ll-'""""""' .. --. ... ·......will--

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lo fequhd .. ..,
:· ·~-,., .... Wi_K._s..... ......·
sc nrAir nalldln • • tt M do run'qut ol~n.....,
Olt ••.,,,.,..,. -

·

.,ou to putct.e thiN 111- item 11 rht

.r.~·:~·:--=:~=·:=~:··:~:m~~~-~~--~--..J
.~,

'

-~

COP- 1111 • 1111 ·-CO. ITIIMS iUIO PIICII

_.J

U.ltii.IN GALLI POLl~ ANO POMEROY.

_.. "!' WI IISIIVI THI ltGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIII.
iou&gt; TO DIAIIII.

,....,

;, 1

Full Cut
ef Round

0000 SUNDAY, AIIO. I , - SAI'UIOAY, AUG.

Springdale
2% Milk

48

20%0H .

CHAPMAN.·.sHOES·
.

USDA
CHOICE

Dickens. The public is invited to
attend.

His wife, Phyllis A. Davis, is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randell ~
Davis of Route 1, Middleport.
He is a 19M graduate of Meigs
HighSchool, Pomeroy.
·.

KIIOOIII

:::~: Eggs...... ..,. 49C

---

POMEROY - Meigs County
Fair Youth Choit will rehearse
Thursday at 4 p.m. at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church. Me!flbers are urged to attend
this important practice sessioQ.

I

-

POME,ROY -The First Chun:h

or the Nazarene wm have a, wee-

Forked Run State Park, Reedsville;
take a .covered ·dish and own table
service: The·Sonoma Curtis Osborn
family will be 1982 llosts; ail
relative~ and friends are.welcome.
.
. '

Rit~ ·

: POMEROY - Big Bena
Citizens Band Radio Club will
meet at 7:30 p.ni. Tuesday at the
northbound roadside park ·on
Route 33. All are asked to attend
th11 meeting at which a work
session will be held.

• POINT PLEASANT, W. Va.
·- A Mary Kay glamour cllnic
will be offered at Point Pleasant's Scottish Inn Tuesday at
1: 30 p.m. It is free and open to
· tpe public.

•

!le,
Sabina;BenRhonda
WU· ·ana
Mrs. Frank
mlngton;
Sikes, Strider,
Washington
Attending
wereLeach.
Marge and Jerry r~~--------~.:=;;;~;;~~--iiiijj
Court House; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sc)loonover, Eleanore Thomas,
McLain and Tommy, Christie and aru(Becky Thomas, Route 1, OleRyan, Chester; Mr. and Mrs. shire: Jim and Ann Thomas, Route
·Roger Bumem and Clssy, Randy, 1, Mlddll'POrt; Betty and Jason
Sandy and Carla, Brunswick, Ga.;
Hartley, CottagevUle, W. Va.;
Mrs. Gladys McLain and Bob, Jan· George and Maxine Keeter, Leon,
.. - ...
.·.
Ice and Tom, Cincinnati; Mr. and , W.Va.; Charles and Judy Hartley,
,
Mrs. Danny Barrett and Becky, Cottagevflle; Everett and Verdie
I
, Rutland; Mrs. Florence King and Keefer, Eleanore Keeter, Melvin
'
Freddie, Eleanor, W. Va.; Dr. and
Matheny, Hazel Peck, aU~ Leon,
Mrs. James Lockhart and daugl!· W. Va.
•
ter, New Haven; Mr. -and MI:s·
Roo Thomas, Irene Thomas,
•
Isom Holmes, Nitro; Mr. anll Mrs. Wellsloll; Joe, Lisa and A. J. ri1Jo.
'
•Ralph Stanley, EastUverpool; Mr. mas,. Middleport; Brenda, Paula
and Mrs. Danny Humpreys, Wa·
ancl Greg Cw!.nlogl)am, Pomeroy; ·
shington Court House.
, . Daisy, Bnt and Jessica Thomas,
, Cheshire; Mr . . and Mrs. Dennis
Kerwood, CottagevWe, w. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. George Keeter, Jr. ancl
The annual reunion of the des· Kristen, Leon; Darwin and sharon
•Campbell, Ell2abeth W. Va.: ·atf·
tod .KerWood CottagevtUe, W. V11.;
Jan and Jim Gettles, WellstOn;
Ainnan Roger A. Carson, son rl
RU88ell L. and Patty L. Carson Or 747 r----'--------~
Broadway St., Middleport. has completed Air Force basic trianing at
Lacldand Air Force Base, Texaa. .
·
•
,..
: Brooke
The ainnan, who is 'remaining at
DECORATING
Lackland for specialized training in
. SUPPLIES
the security police field, studied the
Air Force mission, organization and
customs and received special innuu
'
struction in hwnan relations.
·
Completion of this training earned
11!ESDAY m.RU FRIDAY'
the individual credits toward an
9 to 5 .
· associate degree in applied science
ClDSEP SAT s·uN M
' ON
.
through .the Community College of
''
· ''
'
the Air Force.
EFFECTIVE JUNE 1, 1982
Nextto Elberfeldsin Pomeroy

rF.~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~

HARRISONVILLE
)larrisonvlllc Chapter 255, Order
·of the Eastern Star, will meet ,
'&lt;7:30p.m. Tuesday at the temple.
Robert Morris Night will be observed with members of the .
Masonic Fraternity to be
honored. All MasQns are invited
to attend the meeting.

Meigs
C6tinty
happeJ;lings

CHESHIRE - Gallla-Melgs
CHESTER- There wUI be a DeComnununlty Action Agency will mocratic potluck and fund raiser
have a Free Clollllng Day Friday,
tor Dick Celeste, candidate tor govAug. 13 from 9 a.m.·l2 p.m. at the ernor, Saturday, Aug. 14, at the
newalencyclothlnllbankattheokl . Helll')' Hunter residence, ~ ·mile
north 01 Chester at Teli&amp;S Road.
' Cheslllre High Scbool bUDding.
Bring a covered dish. All Interested
POMEROY - All llt'Yellth and · !iersons' are welcome.
eighth grade bpy~ at Melp Junior
High interested In playing football '
REEDSVILLE -The 75th amual
are to report to the stadium In Mid- ~ Hoyt and Mary Foster CUrtis family
dleport at 6 p.m:, Monday, Aug.1G. 1 reunion will be Sundsy at 12 noon at

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:

Calendar
WEDNESDAY

cendants pt the late Isaac C. ancl
Rosl! E. Thomas was held Sunday
at the American ' Legion HaD,
Rutland.
Officers elected were Mrs. JanlceThomasGettles, Wellston, pres·
!dent; Mrs. Marte Thomas,
secretary; Mrs. Harry Thomas,
treasurer; and Mrs. Hazel Peck,
Route 2, Leon, W. va., hlstortan.
Special music was provided by the
Hilltoppers, Bill Thomas, and Mr.

Mrs. GLENN· Bumem Jr., Glenn
m and Kenny, Detroit; Mr. ana
Mrs, Jallles Bumem, Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. E(lwln Bumem, Ru·
tland; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Moore
and Tract, Minford; Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Burnem, Stevie and
Jeremy, Washfugton Court House;
Mrs. Kay Oeland and Sheridan,
Greenfield; Dawn Hatfield and
Terry ,Cleland, Bainbridge; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Burnem and Kay·

RAcna; - The McElroy reunIon wW be Sunday, Aug. 15, at the
Shrine Oub In 1;'1aclne at liOon.

THOMPSON

Seedless
· White Grapes

SEE YOU THEREIII

NEW
-SHIPMENT'
ZENITH
·oN
SALE

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON,;W. VA.

your.
.
class ring
made with
jeweler
quality

COM~~ 19" .•'
'l""'
~
'~ __ IU.iE•Nt.-c

.

,

Each

"*39fP..
19"
REMOTE • S3f9S:
. .
.

'.

..

'.
,.,

Each
IN THI HUSK S.W in

YeUow

or

White Corn .........

Ear

USDA
CH.OICE
Kroger
White Bread

ggc
·15°
15

20-oz.

Lvs.

C

tim~.

POMEROY
Eagles
·Auxiliary anniversary dinner
Friday, 7 p.m. for ali Eagle members and their families. Band and
dance at 9 p.m. Everyone to take
~ covered dish.
RUTLAND - Dance, 8 to 11:30
p.m. Friday at Rutl~nd Civic
Center; admission, $1 and music
by Itomic Sounds.
POMEI'l.OY - Ice cream
social, Senior Citizens Center,
beginning at 5 p.m. Homemade
ice cream, pie, cake, sandwiches; entertainment to begin
at 6 p.m. Carpenter's Dance
Studio and Francis Andrews
Band.

!

SATURDAY .

, RACINE - Weekend revlvlll,
:Racine First Church of the
'Nazarene services at 7:30 each
evening, and 10:30 a.m. on Sun-·
day. Rev. Tom Coliler invites the
. public to the Fridsy, Saturday"
•and Sunday services.
..

l

,.,

' ANTIQUITY - A songfest will .
be held Saturday at 7:30p.m. at .
Faith Fellowship Crusade for
~ist, S.R. 338 with the United
,Gospel Singers and the·Herdrnan if'f!mlly. P,a$1' is Rev. Franldio

'

PINT RETURNABLE

Here's what we mean by a
jeweler quality class ring:

1.

2.

Stronger beCause it's cast in.one piece.

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

$99'5

'lllo MAATOIIELL• N23tlf' •
Claalc slyting. Y.llocl and Simulaled WOOd....,..,.
In Peel~ llniSh.'castan.
,
. r· ----·

WITH TRADE

II

.

Deep, bold and fine sculptured details.

3. T~eiuy polishing procedures for extra
"brilliance.
. 4. Rand-picked a:nd precision-cuf stones:

5. Custom made for you alone.

Come in fur peraon8I attention by a jeweler. You'll
get your ri!tg in ~~ instead of months. OUr selec. uon is the bqmest and our"ser&gt;Via: is the best. I'd like
to meet you.
·
.,.

I

'AMihlti'TRACI
'

I -

.. - -

oti~i '29tt.~

•mAL SAmfAmll IIAIAIIII
Evorythlng yo~ buy at Kroger Is guaranieed for your t~tal soriafaction
riQGRIIeu of manufacturer. If you are not oatlafied, Krager will replace
your Item wit~ the tome brand or a comparable brand or refund your

purchaae price.

•YAIIIJY

.. •

.

tn Ev-v o.par!f\'ltlll. You can MiliCI from avet 10,000 ilems and aver 200

klndl and cUll!)! , _ Including Lomb, V10l, ffMh Seafood and 7 kinda of

Ground Meat. You will al10 find on1 of lhe widest Mllldlons of fretl1 frvl11
and ~•gel~ ... piUI o Delt-n, intetnatlanal foods ~lion, l!(!Uflylel
·and,die! foOdi. IIIIIIIUIIonollilft and mor..
.

�8 The Dally Sentinel

P.a aa

W~netday, AUJUif 11,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Execution. marks U.S.'s first since March I 98'uf1
By GEORGE W. WILBUR ; .

rr..

l
~

EXECUTlOn
I

'

l

''

.51/AIl Jto I

;.

Ll d

-l

~

crushed

'

"

SILENT VIGU. - Peeple eueylDg alps ptber In alleat protest
Tuelday algbt outllde tbe state prllon In Rlchmend, VL to protest tbe
e:recatloa of Fr.Dt J. Coppola. Anll Hernandez, left, and Jbn FrallD carry

sips as others bold baDits. Cblel Justice of 1M Un1!11 states WarreD
Burger gave VIrginia permission 14 carry out tbe encudon. (AP Lasel'
pllolol.
.

·Residents of Elgin shocked
ELGIN, Ohio (API - The lOO res
ldents of this farming v1llage are
not used to excitement, but there's
been plenty here since the postmistress disappeared this week In what
pollee say was a kidnapping at the
post office.
Resldenta say Its the biggest
thlng that's happened In Elgin since
Jessie James robbed the trainmaster of the Elgin Railroad. •
Betty Jane Mottlnger, 48; Is described as a cheerful, talkative, petite woman who lived In nearby
Obln City. She disappeared sbort(y
atter opening the door to the post
office at 8:17 a.m. Monday. ·
A search and pollee bulletins In
1Wo states have produced no leads,
ao traces.
van Wert County sberlfr's deputtes, federal agents and volunteers
have searChed the rolling farm·
lands around Elgin for the woman,
with no results. The only clue was a
car spotted by a witness with a
•small·town eye. He noticed the vehIcle because It was new In town.
· "We don't even have a witness

closed, former U.S. Rep. Pblllp
Ruppe declared himself the winner
In the other statewide race: the
GOP nomination for a U.S. Senate
seat. The nominee will face Incumbent Democratic Sen. Donald Riegle In November.

Four-term Democratic U.S. Rep.
James Blanchard was nominated
for governor In Michigan and U.S.
-Rep. Ronald "Bo" Ginn, another
veteran, captured first place but
was forced Into a run-ott In Georgia's Democratic gubernatortal
It was Mlclilgan's first primary
primary Tuesday.
Former Veterans Admlnlstra· . "baUot In :bl years which did not In·
tlon chief Max Cleland led In Geor- elude an Incumbent governor rungla's primary for Secretary of nJni for reelection. Republican
State, but fellow Carter admlnlstra· Wllllam Mllllken, who has held the
tlon aide Jack Wat8on, running for jobforl4years,retlres In January.
the iUbernatorlal nomination with
He has sald he tired of po~tlcalllte.
JimmY Carter's backing, trailed
Wlth1,008ofthesta~'s6,'103preGinn and two others. A run-oft elec- clncts counted, Headlee bid 44,635
tlon between the top two candidates votes, or 39 percent, to 44,428 or 30.
·would be held Aug. 31.
On the DemocratiC ~Ide, BJan.
With 973 precinctS counted In chard, an eight-year ~ of
. Georgia's GOP gubernatorial Coagress backed by labor, bad
primary, state Sen. Bob Bell led 47,'100votes,'mbrethantwlcethatof
wltb U,054 votes, or 53.7 percent, Ids nearest rival In a ~even-man
followed by U.s. Rep. Ben Black- field. .
, In the GOP primary 'tor the U.S.
:burn with 9,530, or 46.2 percent.
In Michigan, subutban Detroit In- Senate -nomlllatloa. Ruppe bad
surance executl\re Rlcilafd Head· 55,!1()3 votes, or~ percent. The closlee led In the Republican
est runner-up In a tour-man field.
·gubernatorial primary, and less former state Sen. William Bal·
than tWo hours atter the polls leng6r, bad 17,113 votes. or l9

percent.
In Georgia, with 1,098of2,:U7preclncts counted, Ginn led with
146,853 votes, or 38.6 percent, followed by state Rep. Joe Frank Harrls with 93,890, or 24.6 percent,
former state Court of Appeals
Judge N9th 40,116, 91" 10.5 percent,
follOwed by state Public Servlc'i!
Commissioner Billy Lovett with
28,865, or 7.5 percent. Five other
can!11dates divided the rest of the
vote.
Georgia requires a candidate to
gain a majority of the.vote cast to ·
win an election. II no candidate bas
a majority, the top two Vote-getters
face eacb other In 11 runoff election.
Democratic Gov. GeQrge Busbee
Is comp)etlng bls second term In
office and llt not eligible to seek re-

election.

·

With l,l75preclnctscounted, CJe.
land led tn'the Democrattc race·for
nomination to Secretary of State
with 156,015 votes, or 47.6 percent,
to 138,945, or42.4pei-centforlnC~~Iq­
bent DaVId Poythress abd 32,528, or
9.9 percent for DouglasvUle auctioneer Jack Baggett.
·

CLEVELAND (AP) -They are

may have glveli to charity as little
as a year ago.
And the swelllnr of their number

111 hunaer ceaten llllllf bi8 managers wor rled tbat tlley may have to

our ~iers as high as 119 percent,
aDd In all the centen at 1eut l50
percent," said Myllon Waite, 41rector ot the Hunaer Tuk Force of the
Interchurch Council of Grea~
Cleveland, wbicb operates

ceaten.

.15

At the 1 buJ1aer center1, lltatf
members call their aew dJefele

tum people away.
.
• "We've ~eenlncreues In 110111e()f .''tile- JXIOI"' -people Wbo I!IYe

.
1

'

•

'

"At Christmas, .• we saw new, .
youui .tam111e1 who ~ ·probably
atwD· to the Salvation Arrrry the
Cbr11tn1a1 'before," :said Ll Col ,
Clareace KlnDett, COilllllander ot

the Salvatioll Aliny'a
Oblo diYtllall.

-IIOI'tllealt

"

5 f~mlly ·sale·Thurs.·Sal.

VIRGIL I . IR.
.2J!.E. ~nell f.

CANDLELIGHT.INN

Phone
1-(614!·992·3325

Far·

NEW LISTING ,- 3.~
acres,
mostly level.
1
Good Fleetwood 12x70
two · bedroom mobile
home. Cellar and water
weii.•Just$20,000.
NEW LISTING - 7
room house, 3 or 4
bedrooms, but not .a
large home. Needs a
bath and some fi•in '. 2
level loh · for only
516,500.
REDUCED - 3 acres
-wllh water tap, eleclrlc
and nat. gas available.
For a qujck sal~ will
lake 54,500.
BARGAIN - Small 3

a

bedroom

vinyl

siding

Between Cheshire&amp;
Middleport, Ohio

-w.,...

PRESENTS ..

r...

-

Ullrlob ....... llrllollol '
!lN.-Droll 1111111
u Dnrft . . li ~rico
Fri. l Soil: I ~.M.-11 ~.II.
llllllolo \ll'ila
litiS IIOIITII'S lAID
IIM.-Sil...... T bell
.
I!PIIIflooloot

Drill'.,...

' c.., oot Moll ..............
O,..lloo..fri.

2:tO ,_• ••t.JIL•. .

Sit l Son. 4:011 p.ro.-2:!8 a.•.

'
PHONE 992·9913
8-1-1 mo.

1

PHONE 992-2156

"'

home in M id·

GoarpS......,.....Jr.
....
PIIOII1742-2003
IOIIIao'l - 2 slory, 2
bedrpom home· with ap·
prox. 1296 sq. ft. living
space. corner lot. Only
~~~~~N D
3
bedroom home, 1 bath,
full basemenl, ·gas furnace. Slorm doors. Sells
for 512,500.00.
PAYMENTS LOW AS
RENTi on . both of these
homes. Either can be
purchased wllh only
10% down and at a fixed
lnlerest rate of 12'1-&gt;%.

home a reality . Both are
••cellent starter homes
al an alfordable price.
Call Today!! I .
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

Headquarters

·Phone 742·3092

1

TOM HOSKINS

AI. 3, lox 54
, Racine, 011.
Ph. 614·i43-25fl
6·15-tfc

3·29-tfc

Ph. 949;~160 or 949·2322
.
4-20-lfc

t";:::::::;::;=:::::;:==;;;J-;:::========~;::=======::j

R• MASH
CONSTRUCTION

uouNG'S
I'

MILLER
ELECTRIC .
SERVICE

CARPENTER .
SERVICE

...... IHIIRI.LUII

'

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
installation.
R•sidentlal ·
&amp; Commercial
Call

Se RVIC E
From the s m.. lesl
Heat&lt;r Oore to lhe
Largest Radiator.
Radiator specialiST
N~TH~N A ICt~S

31Yrs. Experience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

dining room and .kitchen are spacious, kitchen is

fUlly equipped

including dishwasher. Asking
.
3 TRAILERS - Can be used as add·ons, small

$~2,000.

business, or construction office. 2 trailers (asking
$4500&amp; 55500) are lOxSOwilh 3 roomseac~ . Furnace

a. central air . one has 'h

balh &amp; hoi water heater.'
The third is 10x35 (asking $3500) wilh 2 rooms, lur·
nace, cenlral air, 1h bath &amp; hot water heater.
HOME on approx. 2 acres: Basham &amp; Eagle Ridge.
Needs handyman. Asking $25,000.
3 FLAT ACRES - ln ,Racine. Ohio. Owner will help
finance . Asking $16,500.
3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME - Living room has
woodburning fireplace, 1'12 balh, hardwood floors,
well conslructed nad insu laled . Asking$35,000.
RENTALS :
,
Brick home for rent in Letarl, Ohio, $27,5.00 a monlh.
.. .....

CALL US TO BUY ·OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - Associate
PH.

==~""'

-==

Publlc'Sale
Good watch dov, 2 kltten &amp; I
&amp;Aucllon
a cal. Call after 5:00 446·
0730.
Rick Pearson, Ex ·
perienced AUCTIONEER.
s Hamsters. Call 446·&lt;4926. Estates.
arillques, farm .
household . Licensed Ohio·
Regular size bed &amp; chest of wv . Buying antiques . 304·
drawers, good cond. Call 773·5785, 773·9185.
6 14-388·9623.
Auction every Fr i. nlghl al
Free kittens to good home. the Hartford Communlly
Cenler. Truckloads of n~w
614·992-2290.
merchandise every week.
consloments of new and
3 kittens·! block wilh used merchandise always
while-Looks like Kitten welcome .
Richard
Corllsle! II Male. 2 lemale Reynolds Auctioneer.
2753069.
Calico's. 614-742-2328.
2 kittens·! male·l female. 9
Wonled To Buy
614-742·2983.
WANTED TO BUY Old lur·
4 black &amp; while kittens, nlture and Anllques of all
long hair, 6 weeks old. 304· kinds, coli Kenneth Swa in,
446·3159 or 256·1967 in the
895-3610.

CHESTER- Approx. 82.5 acres, 30 acrH tillable,

7·22-1 mo.

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

BACKHOE'
FOR HIRE

· 302 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH . 992-6506

Or anything else you
want to do, because I
\

eSEAT COVERS
eVINYL TOPS
eCONVERTIBLE TOPS
eCARPETS
eA Complele Line ol
Aulomobile Upholstery
8·4-1 mo. pd.

1------------ll----------1
·,....;-------=-.-.;. 1---------tl

BOGGS
.SALES &amp; SERVICE ·
u.s. Rt.'so Eui

Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Oeere,
New .Hollapd, Bush,Hogo
'Farm Equipment
Deoler
~arm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service.
1·3-tfc

17. _ _ _ _ __
18. _ _ __,:__ _
19, _- _
-20.
_-..:.L__
21.--~-22.
_ _ _ _ __

5. _..:.......-------,6. -~..,..;---,---,:7._......::__ _ _ _
.;.....:;::_,:.,___:_:::..._

1o. - .,.:;.,,--.:..:.:,..::,,...::...,__
11. ' _ .,...,_;:_;'-'--"---"-'-12. ..:.......---=:-:.:.:.;;'-.!:...---'13. _ _:_..:.......---.,.___.:.;_
14. - -,:....,.--...,
15. -----~

16.

23.
--_
" -_
-24. _- -_
_
_

1-Good u.. ......
~ .............•100.00 '
2-u.. ~~~Jtt~ Auto....... ...:.:.. :..... ~- 1199.95' '
1-ulilll . . . ..,. ................................,...11..
1 • 22 ~ ...-Sl.. ly Sltlt
.
.'
lllri8IIIDr .-...................1.. •••••••"1'''''"'1219.00

llrf-3 ~ IJIIIRI.._ IIIII .....................'31li5
3 111111 Colar 'IYi....._ ....................;. '100 ll!il! "'
·1--u.. ..... Dill AM Mt Sl 111111 ............1UID.III
2.~

PoltA.Pa

11

Slln,ut ................ aiJUO

,

WAITRESS, maids, bat· '
tenders &amp; clerks wanted.
Write qual \fication &amp; phone
number to : Job Placement,
P.O. Box 102. Henderson,
wv 25106.

Experienced chef lor,
reslauranl . Please send
FOUR , pari Beagle pup·
resume to Box, P .6 In cat e
pies, 6 weeks old, 30-1-675- Buying Gold, Silver. of Pl. Pleasant Register,
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Platinum, old coins, scrap 200 Main St. Point
5829.
992-6215 or 992-7314
rings
&amp; silverware. Dally Pleasanl, WV . 25550.
Pomeroy, Ohio
quotes
available. Also
NO·tfc
6
Lost an~ Found
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale. Spring Valley Trading BOREDI Broke! Bluel Sell
Co .. Spring Valley Plaza. toys and gllh for nations
number I toy company.
PersonIn.who
a Keese
hound
July,losl
please
notify 446·8025 or 446-8026.
Free kil of $300. value. 614·
Humane Soclely, 61H92·
992-70ol6.
6505.
We pay cash for late model
used cars .
LOST-Diamond ring, in clean
DEPENDABLE Babysit·
Frenchtown Car Co.
fer needed in my home, day
viciniiY of Fruth Phar·
Bill
Gene
Johnson
macy . Reward . Call 304·
shift, .call between 4 and 10
446-0069
p.m. 304-675·5628.
SI: Rt. 124 Pomeroy,OH675·1074 after 1:00. Will
AUTO
. &amp; TRUCK • identi fy.
-- - - - - - - to buy old house in MATURE, responsible,
FOUND-6 or 7 monlh old, Wanled
REPAIR
Gallipolis.
Will consider babysitter in our home , 2
coal black. female dog, no home needing
restoration children, fle)(iable ·hours,
collar. 304·675-5201.
transportation. 30-4·
Also Transmission
or one already reslored. M. own
773·5758.
'
.
Call446·2800.
Evans.
PH. 992-5682 •
7
Yard
Sale
or 992· 7121
ua::.:t.:..:io:::n:::s_W
::.:•.:..:n.:..:
ted
,__
3·24·tfc
Yard Sale Furniture, Wanted to buy anlique 12_ ..::S.:..:it.::.
clothes. lots of nice items, dolls . Call446·0857 .
Will care for elderly men
don't miss lhls one. Wed .,
and women in our home.
BEOS·IRON, BRASS, old Also have rooms for rent
Chillicothe
Thurs., andRd.
Fri .. 9 loS at47 furn iture. gold , silver with or withoul board.
dollars, wood Ice boxes, Trained and experienced.
Michigan Sale. SO Nell stone tars, anllques, etc., 614·992·7314.
TUNING
households .
Ave., Gallipolis. 8·10 lo 8- Complete
&amp;
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Will care for elderly men
U.
REPAIR ,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992·7760.
and women in our home.
C•ll Bill W•nl
Also have rooms for rent
Yard
Sale
170
Portsmouth
Ward' a Keyboard
with or without board.
Gold
,
silver,
sterling,
Rd.
Wed.
&amp;
Thursday.
44H372
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp; Trained and experienced.
Moster C. s-9·*
j..:.:=-.:;;;::;:;;::;..:::;..:;_.;;..,1 Carport Sale 24 Henkle currency. Ed Burkett Bar· 614-992·7314.
Ave., Gallipolis. Thurs. &amp; ber Shop, MiddlepOrt. 992·
House palnling·exltrlor
Friday, 9·3. Telescope, 3476.
and inlerior . l ~.sh
games, Hoover vaccuum
culling.
OLD FURNITURE , beds, hauling ·grass
cleaner, scflool clothes.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

· S&amp;W
GUNSMtTHING
AND CUSTOIIIZliiG

Ph. 992·7656
Re-Biue ~n~ Re-Finish

restock, Parts, Etc. ·

iron, brass, or wood . K it ·

4 Family Yard Sale
Card ofThanks
Clothing, men, women &amp;
The family of Charles E. children. Glassware, misc.
White, Middleport. wish to toys &amp; games, Thurs., Fri.
lhank the friends and &amp; Sal. 9 to S . lsi house on
neighbors who senl food, Bladen·Mercerville Rd . off
flowers, and cards and etc. St. Rt. 218 .
during his illness and
death. Gwinnie, Texanna, 5 Family Garage Sale
Howard and Amber .
Augusl 12, 13, U. 9·5, Rod·
ney Village II, 3rd. Street,
2
In Memoriam
6th house on lefl.' All sizes
clolhes , kitchen ap In loving memory of our pliances, sewing machine,
Mother and Grandmolher , air conditioner, clarinet &amp;

Emma D. Johnson, who

Clell LaBont9
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bottom, Qh. 45631
614.·985-4345'
· 7·28·1 mo.

EUGENE LONG
Superior Sidilig Co.
Vinyl &amp;Alaminum
Complete ptter wort,
complelt reiiiCidtlinc, 1001inc of all types. WorUd tn
home area 20 JIIIS.

Fret atimetls
Call S.l-3322
7·16-2 mo. pd.

Ill' memory of James H.
Young who passed away
one year ago August lith .
You are sadly missed by all
your family and friends,
bul God chose you for His
very own.
3

much more .

Yard Sale Aug. 12, Green
Terrace on 1-41. Nice school
clothes, jeans, glassware,

what nots, loys, rugs
misc . Rain date Aug . 13

delivery,

Davis

Vacuum

Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446-0294 .. ·

l

'11111' -llllllliiT 1111111CSCOIII1REALTOR51
_e.·~~nci,Jir.,Oitl ; .......... . .. 992-61fl

............... ....... . ,..,.2Mt

.......... .............. )......... ,.21"
.-.. . ............ .. ..... 992-Mft

~V~TING
-laelllloel
-OUinp Truc~s

-L•Iov

Kanauga .

35 Grape Sl., Gallipolis.
9AM·4PM, Thurs. ·Fri.
Bikes, drapes, clothes, fur·
nllure, household goods,
Odds&amp;ends.
Thursday

and

Friday,

Augusl 12 and 13 at 121
Bastianl Dr., Gallipolis.
Misc . and household ilems,
clolhlng, shoes, living room
picture, kinck·knacks and
great bargains.

-StwW
-GaiLIMI .
-StptlcSys-s
L111111 Dr INII JDIII
...H.tn-2411
• 1-1

WANTED-new hay, call Ed
at 304-743·5915.

painling. 614·992-7419.

Mother will do babysltling
In mv home. 614·992·676&lt;1 or
614·992·5671 .
.
1_3.__ __I nsurance _ _
SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has .offered
services tor fire insurance

coverage in
for almost

Counly
cenlurv.
Farr:n, home and personal
property coverages are
available lo meet lltdlvidual needs. contacl
Kail Burleson, age111 .
Phone 446·2921.
Galli~

a

Set .lEtS

ii - -

Help'Waiiied -

15- s

choolsl nsirucifon-::
----------Karale lhe ullimalo in sell

defence all private lessons,
Men, women, &amp; ,children.

Instructron lhru ·black bell.
Also
available Karate
Mature,
responsible
puching . and
babysilter needed in my uniforms
kicking bags, and prolec·
homo for 20 and 5 month old ti\1e
equipment . Jerry
girls. Flexible hours. own Lowery
&amp;
Assoclales
transportaion, · references.
Sludio, 143
Cal l 446·6256. 9 to 11 week- Karale
Burlington Rd ., Jacksoh,
days . ~~
Oh1 Call6l4·286·3074.·
,
..
FULL
TIME
EM ·
PLOYMENT in your own
home as a Home Service Lawn Mowing no yard to
Worker with Buckeye Com- big
or smal l. Reliable and
munity Services. Provide dep~ndable.
For eslimale
a home, friednshlp, and call
4ol6·3159
after
6PM 256guidance for a 33-vear old 1967 .
'
male wllh menial retardation and earn a salary, - ---------·
plus benefits and room and Trash colleclion &amp; hauling.
board rate. No degree Call446·4480.
required. We will train you
to help anolher person WOULD Ll KE to do
grow and develop.
babysjlting in my home.
FOSTER · GRAND · Call446-8615.
PARENT lor Buckeye
community · Services 10
Will do babysilf ing . Call
work with children with 614·367-0408.
mental retardation .
Requlremenls Include : at -- •--'· - - · - -.,.-- ·-.. least 60 veers of age; in- Will ba~v sil small inlant in
come guidelines: Single, my home day or night. Call
$5,390; married, . $7, 115; 446·3937.
family of lhree, $8,840. For
fulher lnformallon, con- Painting Interior, exteriQr
tract Marie Hobbs at 379- &amp; roofs. Free eslimales, by
2639 between 7·9:00 p.m.
contracl only. Call 614·256·
Equal Opportunlly Em- 1945.
ployer.
.
·-·-· ·- ·- --·-- -· ~- -·
Need mature reliable
babVSilfer. Evening ho.urs
for I yr. old in my home.
Ca 11446-6615 or 446·1780. ·

----------

-------·~.

-

'

-

Remodeling &amp; Carpentry.
Electrical &amp; Plumbing. 304·
576·29$9.

dllv work session Saturday
Aug. 14th slartlng ate a.m.
All members urged to atNne!.
PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
' Electrolysis
A.M.A. approved,
referefs, by ap,' only. 304·675-

---

Chimney re·pointing. Roof

--- --·-- ---!.....-.

The Meigs Co. Fish and

Game Club will have a all

---- ~-

--

____

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

wILL do house cl~aning,
S.t .OO hour , ·can give
reference. 304·675·.a74 or
675·3458.

- Trtneller

• -Wettr

- · -· ---·

Used beginners set ol golf
clubs. Rlght or left handed .
John Tealord, Chesler, Oh .
614-985-3961.

Employment
Family Yard Sale Thurs.·
Fr i. Aug . 12·13. Beside
Gravely Tractor S~les,

POMEROY- Near the grade school, 3-'4 tiedrooms.~ute f.,..llv room. full basement, ni(e level lot.
Good buY at $31,900.
'

watches, chains, rings, and

etc . Indian Arlllacls of all
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Marlin 992·
6370.

4

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies. Pick up and

chon cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or square.
Wood Ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
complete household. Gold,
silver. old money, pocket

&amp;

2 Family Yard Sale Aug.
PUBLIC NOTICE Public 121h, 131h, Wh. NPM. 632
heifer barn. Also a nice 3 beqroom remod~led home· I ~---------+-----~---..;,;j Notice for Dark Diamond 2nd. Ave .. Gallipolis. Bed,
wihgas furance and a woodburner. 589,500.
Coal Corp., Shade, Ohio box springs &amp; mattress,
o6776. An appllcalion Is al bench press, welghls,
POIO\EROY- C&gt;Nner will sell1his wolf construcled
the Meigs County Recor- stero, records, clothes,
3 bedroom home wlm Sol,ooo down and $286.78 a mQil·
der's office for a slrip mine ceramics.
ih for ,len years. interest rate Is 10%. Sare Price Is'
operation, Frac. 3; T-2N;
$25;700.
R·I3·W; Salisbury TownSale Aug. 12 8. 13,
ship, Meigs Counly, Ohio. Carport
&amp;Fri. 9·6, 452 Lariat
MIDDLEPORT- A two bedroom, one story home, .
1nlerested people can see Thurs.
Mills Village, near
new carpeting, utility room; fenced back vard. Only
these forms and maps al Dr..
Hospital. Storm Door &amp;
S22.500. .- .
, the Meigs Counly Recor1
girls clothing.
der's Office anyllme.
POMEROY- Nicely remodele!ll-4 bedroom home,
ievel lot,. excellent neighborhood. owner w~mts
Large Yard Sale Aug. 12.
$5,500 down, balance - 1~ lnteresl, ·20 years,
13, 10·?
Furn ilure,
$257.75monlh. Sale Price$27,500.
bicycles, dishes (some
old), records, wall pain'
I
REEDSVILLE- A mobile home with an extra faclings, clothes, lots of misc.
tory built 2 room, eddlllon and a porch. 2-3
12 miles oul 160 from
bedrooms. family room, lots of clOSetS, ,oll)d a large
Holzer Hosp.
101. f'!nanclng available. $17,500. ,,

~

Need someone to baby-sll
five days a week In our
home, Middleport. afler 5
p.m. 614·992·3937.

evenings.

21 acres in pasture. 2, ponds, barn, several. sheds,

!Wanted
( )For Sale
&lt; )Announcement
( )For Rent

·-----~ ·

Someone lo come dally lo
helP with house cleaning,
cooking &amp; yard sale. 614·
992·2645.
.

lflttlltiOIItej

passed away Aug. 11, 1980.
STUART WAYNE
Thoughts return to scenes
long past, Time rolls on ,
PULLINS
but memories last. Though
CLIPADANDGET20%
absent, you are ever near .
OFF ON RE-BLUING.
Still loved, still missed, and
OFFER EXPIRES 1·31·
still so dear . Sadly missed
82 ·
7-26-1 mo.
by Doughier , Bernice
1------------l---------~ Lavalley and Family.

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Ouail ol all ages
available up to 8 weeks
in ariv quantity .
MalureQuail Available
Ready to Turn Out

PH.992·2259

&lt;

- - - - - -··

Applications are being ao:·
cepted lor the .position .CJ!
Coordinator of the Meigs •
Co. e meroency Medical
Service. Appllcanls should.
~·
background ex-·
per,lence In busln,e~~
manaement, accountlngp
budgetary matters ..nd&gt;
personnel supervision.
P-revious experience .ip lhe
field ot E.M.S. Is desired,
however If successful ap·
pllcant is not state cor·
tilled, provisions for
training will be made. Applicant should have a
working knowledge of slm·
pie vehicle malnlenace
procedures.. The person
selected for the poslllon
musl move lo Meigs Co. If
he or. she Is not currently a
resident. All resumes lo be
cons idered must be
received before August 25,,
1982. Send resumes . 1&lt;1
Meigs Counly E.M.S. P.O .Box 748 Mulberry Heighls,;
Pomeroy, Ohlo. o6769.

t::========~=========t========j

Jumbo Bob White
QUAIL

608 E. MAIN'
POMEROY, OHIO

PHONE
(304) 273-4098 '

Pomeroy, (jfi.
Ph 99
· 2-Zl7~_ 26 . tfc

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

CENTRAL REALTY

KIRBY
SWEEPER
PARTS
&amp;
·
SERVICE

R~DI~TOR

. 742-2328

NEW LISTING - Located in Syracuse. This home
has.ar e•lra large lot and 5 possible bedrooms. The

Phone _______.____

And Home M•lntenance
• Roofing olalllypes
eSidlng l
• Remodeling
• ·FrH esllmates
• 20 Y" ' experience

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

PH. 992-7201

live with a carpenter.

R.. l Eotate - Ginerol

Addreu.---~----------

Sizes st•rt from 30x24"

UtiliiJ Builciinas. ·

;ucenstd a Bonded

COTTON-Holley's Jerry's
Calllcoal molher cat &amp; 1 Run. August 11, 12, 13. ID-6 .
Prices IQW.4 rain cancels.
kitten. Caii61N88·82i7.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Sires from 4 to 6 •nd all
wood Duildlnp 24xJ6, ·
lnsul•lect Dot Houses

His name is AI Tromm.

Howard E. Frank

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

AVON . Need exira money~
Set your own hour.s . Sell
Avon. (Musl be 18 or over) ~
Call now 614·698-711) ·
coli~!.
•

HOBSTmER REALTY
r"jjj;&amp;;rnmfl~m:Ylf;::====;:===:t.;::=======~t;:========j
COMPL£T£

Makes owning your own

Ho11sing

*INCkhoe
• elic•v•tlnt
* sepllc·systems
* Awaterr sewer
&amp;tuNnes
•dump truck
'It limestone

FREE
ESTIMAtES
PH. 992-6011

give 1

2,.a · ACRES 3
bedrooms, basement
, with garage, bath; city
waler, and oas. S25,ooo. ,
Assume mortgage.
24 ACREs - Eastern
school. Remodeled 2
bedrooms, modern bath
and kilchen. Aluminum
siding, basement and
paneling. Offer might
buy. r
•
SYRACUSE - Lovely 2
large bedroom , fur-.
nlshed mobile home.·
Equipped kllcnen, 2 porches, 2 car block garage
and shop with fenced
.yard for your pets.
RACINE SCHOOL
AREA - 2 houes, 2
balhs, nalural gas on
large lol near slore and
schools. Asking just
$37,500.
N.E-~W' "P"'R,:,I CE - Lovely
1

a

J&amp;f
·CONTRACTING

Cntom kitchens · and
bathtooms; Remodelin1,
edd-ens, 1• new homes,
plumbina. tleclric, lidin1.

· home. Bath and. all
utilities. Asking $16,000
but make 4s an offer.
BARGAIN - 6 room
frame home . Walk to
the stores, bath, nat. gas
and olher ulllltles. Want
$17,500. What will you

Public Nollce

(8) 11. ltc

9

to5. 3 mi .N.of Fairgrounds
on old 33. Clothing all sires,·
TV's, games, toys, kitchen
appliances, fuse box, recor·
ds,tapes, air shocks, s~oes .
Watch for signs.

I

9. _

workl!d for 10, :&lt;»or 30 years mJy to
fiDd tbe1r plant or ottlce suc1deni.Y
clolecl.

family car port sale.
,l(ug,l3. Chlldrens clothH,
odds and ends. Law'n
mowers.

1
· •Name·----------

8. -~:-::---"--:--

;'New
poor'
swell lines of -hungry
.
.

~-

Or Wr iM OIUY kftftMI C'-Uitied Of,l,
111 (Wfl ll .. Pltfll.....,, OftiiUJH

1 Curb Inflation
I ~ay Cash for
·1 Classlfleds and ,
II
Savelll ~

Write your own ad and ord.;;t;;" mall with this
coupon. Cancel vour ad by phone when you get
I resulls. Money nol refundable.

.

12·13·14th..a1 w. off 33. 41h
house on left. Loll of Jeans
end etc. washer and dryer ..

In contrast to the the lawyers'
race for a stay of execution, the
statement of Coppola's death was
simple and subdued. Standing In
darkneSs In front d the State PenttentJary w)lere Cojlpoli1 died, Cor,
rectlons Director Raymond
Procunler declare(): .
·"~t to the order d the CII;·
cult Court of Newport News, Fr~
J .Coppola was executed at 11: Z71n
the manner prescribed by Jaw.''
Prison spokesman Wayne
rar said the first c#. two M-IECOnd
charges c#. betwren 2,lXI aild 2.:-ro
volts of e1ectfictty was turned on at
11:21 p.m. and the powet was
turned oft at 11: :U p.m. atter the
second charge. Coppola's body,ln
casket, was sped away tran the
prlson In an ambulance at 11:49
p.m.
'·
At the request of Coppola's fanj.lly, Procunler gave aodetalls of~
execution, but aald Coppola's CO"l'
posure "wa8 fine.I thought he bad p
very good attitude.'' He said the
condemned man had retull!d a special meal and did not want a prles't
present.
,
The condemned man's ex-wUj!
had entered the pr19on Tuesday,
along with the Rev. Joe Ingle, 11
mlnlster of the United Church of
Christ and director of the Southerh
Coalltlon on Jails and Prisons,
Na8bvnle-based prison reform
group.
'
Inale said he was the last persoi1
Coppola saw before be was Jed to
his death.

"A few guys saw some people
who saw her &amp;et Into the car. Just
the car and a description of the
they didn't know, but that's a \IOU tit.
It's a shame. She was a nice lady,
driver," sberlfr's Detective Ralph
Eversole said Tuesday. "All we always lalklng. That's what's a
know Is, she's disappeared and shock aboutlt. As far as little towns
we're treatlnglt like a kidnapping.'' go, thls Is about as little as they.
Mrs. Mottlnger was reported come," he said.
LEGAL NOTICE
Offers will be received at
"Nothing like this. has ever hapmissing by residents who came to
lhe oflices .of Fred W.
pick up their mall .ln the 40-box post pened In Elgin. It thls town were Crow, Ill of CROW, CROW
&amp;
PORTER, Atlornevs al
any slower, It would stop," Smith
office.
Law,
Corner Second &amp;
When Van Wert County Sheriff said. "It's a nice, .quiet, peaceful Mechan .lc
Streets,
Jerry Brlttaan arrived at the'small community, the kind of place Pomeroy ,Ohio, at 10 :00
a.m.
on
thursday,
melal-trame buUdlng, he spotted where yciu think you don',t have to 19, 1982, for the saleAugust.
of the
real estale ol the late Erna
an opened sate, a rllled and empty lock your doors or your car. "
EllzaiJelh Jesse, situate In
Added grain elevator worker Da- lhe
cash drawer and the contents of
Village of Pomeroy,
Mrs. MottiDger' s pune dumped on niel Taylor, 25, of nearby Van Wert, Ohio. Te·rms of sale, cash.
Property cannot be sold !or ·
a counter. PoUcesald they were not "She (Mrs. Mottlnger) was the less
lhan appraised value
'
sure bow much money was sweetest thing you'd ever want to of $20.000.00.
Ramona
K.
Complon,
know. I guess I shouldn't say 'was. '
missing.
Administratrix of
lhe Estale of
There were no signs of a struggle. I've still got some hope; she'D be
Erna Elizabeth Jesse,
Eversole aald pollee have few ' found' alive."
Deceased
About 50 yards from the post of- (814, 11 , 18, 3fc
leads, little evidence.
Davkl Smith Is the Z7-year·old flee, Mrs. Mottlnger' s assistant,
son of the owners of tile Elgin Grain Amy Baker, would bave been get- ,-----·--·-·-,-·-'- 7 --.~----Co., one of two businesses In the tlng ready for work Monday In her
northwestern Obln conununlty. He trame home when the postmistress
and about a &lt;I&lt;JlA!n other employees disappeared. But her falher·ln-law I
were weighing In truckS loaded bad died and Mrs. Baker was takIng the day oft from work.
with wheat early Mondav.

· Results tall~ed for ·Georgia,
Michigan's Tuesday primaries

called the ''new poor," people who
don't kDow what ~ II like to be
among the ileedy. SOme of !hem

Murder."

Sale of I sales-Wednesday,
Thurs., Fri:·Sirublt Res.·
Lee . Circle,· Rustic Hills·
Syracuse. 9 to 4. Greal
clothing. Small aPPliance$,
tires, antiques, radio, etc.

'

•save bls life raced by car to
Supreme Court with a band-wrlttell
1
~a for reconsideration.
~
OUtside the prlllon. meanwblle
.abOUt ~ protesters I8J1i "Somef ·
one' s. Dying, Lord" and ~
slgnB with such messqes as · 'uuu
Sbflt Not Kill" and "Execution U
Notblni More Than Sanctioned,

The Dail~ Sendnel

'

By Tbe AI'Oclelecl Preu

AIIOCialecl
Writer ·
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Q&gt;n-·
vlcted murderer Frank J. Coppola,
a fonner policeman who once studied to be a &amp;man Catholic priest,
asked a minister to "look atter mJ(
family, " embraced hlm and strode
off coolly and willingly to the elect·
ric chair.
Coppola, 38, was pronounced
dead at11 ~ Z7p. m. EIYI'TUesday,61
minutes atter the U.S. SUpreme
Court acceded to his hand·wrlttell
plea for a speedy execution.
The decision ended a day of tran;
Uc legal maneuvering by lawyers
who aoug11t to postpone the sent·
ence' against Coppola's wishes and
sljlte attorneys who foullht to carry
It out.
Coppola Insisted he was Innocent
of ldlllngMurtel Ha~ll. 45, who~
skull was
during a robbery
at her home In N'ewport News In
l9'l8. Testimony said he.repea!edJy
llOIJnded her hea4 IntO the lloor btl'
cause she refilled to say where she
kept her money. Others Involved In
the crime said he was the klller.
But Coppola, who said he was
ready to die to mAintain his dignity
and spare Ids family agony of
turthet appeals, resisted attempts
to have hls execution stayed.
lie was the tltth peraon to be executed In thls country since 1976,
wben the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the
death penalty atter nearly lOyears
of debate. He was the first since
Steven Judy was electrocuted loindiana In March 1981 and the first to
die In Vlfglnla's electric chair In~
years.
His death left 1,005 men and 13 '
women on cleatb rows In the 35
states 'that have capital punishment laws.
Even as . Coppola walked to the
electric chair, lawyers trying to

·Business ·senices

·~~---o-~

LE•••""""'"

WILL babYSit for working
mother In my hom, .
Mason. D~vs only. JOH73·

5155. l! •

•

�•
•

. Sentinel '

111912

21

SWAIN
AUCTIGN FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St. ,
Gallipolis. Couch, loveseal
and
chair .
1199 , :
wallhuggers S125.: bunk Colt 45 A.C.P. Combat
beds with bunkles, 1170.;
box spring and mettress, Commander. C~ll446· 9355. •
$100 .
F i rm, S120.;
recliners, sao.; 9 x 12 Maytag automatic washer,
linoleum rugs, S22.; maple S95. GE dryer, 190. Both
rockers, SA9 ., wringer real nice &amp; gueranteed.
washers, refrigerators, Call"-46·1181.
dinette sets , chest,
dressers, bunkie mattress, Little buck stove, fireplace
$40. Call"-46·3159.
ln~rl, $.100, good shape.
Call446· 1570.
GOOD
USED
AP · ~-~---------PLIANCES · wasliers,
ton PU. priced .
dryers.
refrigerators.
yr. old quarter
ranges . Skaggs Ap·
4 yr, old Palamlno
pllances, Upper River Rd.,
Homemade small
beside Stone Crest Motel.
trailer. Call after
4-46·7398.
61079-2761.

Business
Opportunity

LOO!{I·' NG for people who
want to earn between S500
and· ·$50,000
monthly
throo(ill this "newest and '
fastest• ·growing company .
In I~ nation" : Call 304-675·
1293.

2-2 ---M-on:::e:::y~to:o
Lo
=-=a=-=
n-­
REFINANCE or purchase
your h'ome. 30 year fixed
rate . .VfVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 17 E . State St.,
Athens, Oh . 614·5?2·3051 .
• • Professional
services

-~-,....:===---

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Bookkt!@plng &amp; tax service
for all types of businesses.
Carol Neal
446·3862

31

32· - -Moblte Homes - ·
for Sale ·----·-·

•i--

1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond. Deluxe kitchen, large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hidden util . room.
379-2310.
·

2 bdr. beautllul)y fur·
nlshed. wall to wall carpet,
large living room, air
cond., gas heat, private lot.
Call446·140'1. 4 to 7PM.

Moblfe"Ho;;;e-, _ -----~r Rent__ _ _

1980 Bayview deluxe, cent.
In ground concrete pool on air, fireplace, garden tub,
2 acre lot. Also has a 3 bdr . underpinning, with or
air conditioned house with without applla. Call 446·
lull basement, 2 WB 6211 or614-388·9916.
fireplaces, new carpel.
Would consider lower
valued property In trade or 1974 New Moon Trailer.
will finance with low down Total elec., new carpeting,
payment and 10% Interest underpinning. 614·992·7406.
Located 123 Garfield Ave .
Call446·1546.
1973 Ux70 Grandville has
large rooms plus laundry
MODERN 3 bedroom room, must be moved, 304·
hou~, , Patriot Star Rt., 882·2820.
Green
School.
Full
USED 'MOBILE HOME.
basement. Call446·3040.
576·2711 .
Attractive 4 bdr. home in
city full basement, family MOBILE HOMES MOVED
room, &lt;dining room, fully Licensed &amp; Insured. Call
carpeted. Assumable loan, · 304-576·2711 .
low d.Wn payment. Call af·
ter 5, 446·1323.
33
Forms for Slle

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

142 acre farm near' Rio
Grande. house, buildings,
mineral rights, with or
without livestock and
eQUipment, 614·4-46·2599.

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

basement,

extra

lot,

fireplace, walk In closets,
large pbrch, carpeted. Call
4-46·4826.
GOT'TA SEE IT to believe
all thiS· and price to sell, 4
bdr .
Colonial
on
fiedgewood Dr ., large
countr,y kitchen, living
room·, dining room. formal
entrance, 2 car garage, full
basement, family room, 2
wood burning FP, lots
more. Call 446· 7802.
1 would like to trade a
small farm for house and
lot 01' IT.'oblle home and lot
IN or NEAR Gallipolis.
Writ., to Box 1001 In care of
Gallipolis Dally Tribune,
82.5 3rd: Ave .. Gallipolis, Oh
45631 .

15

Lots &amp; Acreage

1/2acre lot on Mitchell Rd,
rural water, city school,
nice for building or troller.
Call446·3933.
2 acres. Panoramic top of
the hill view of Big Bend of
Ohio River In Pomeroy.
Utilities, new 2 car garage.
Extras. Will consider land
contract. 614·992·6254.
Two acre lots-150 ft. road
frontage, city water,
behind 04 Lumber. Call 304·
675-6873 or 675-3618.

28 acres, tobacco allot·
men!, mineral rights, no
buildings, $9,500. Call 304·
2 bd.room . 80 x 100 lot. 1 675·6851 .
small building. Garden
space. In Mason behind
laundry mat. S8000 down, 20 ACRES, water &amp; timber,
take ,over payments or black top road, call
evenings, 304-675·7541.
$26,QOO. Call773·5089.
Three , bedroom house In
Pomeroy. NIce location:
Cerpeted, vinyl siding,
flrepl~e. Priced to sell
S21/500.'614·992·7446.
~ j I

I

3 . 'bd, room house In
Pome~oy.
NIce location.
All,tdn&gt;eled, vinyl siding,
anrf flre·place. Priced to
se!lat,S22,500. 61H92-74-46.

4:.:1_...:.:
H::::
ou::.:s:.::e:::.
s :.:
fo:.:.r.:;R:.::e.:.:nt:......_
House, 120 3rd . Ave.,
Gallipol is. 2 bdr., gas heat,
dep. req. The Wiseman
Agency, 446·3643.
NEARLY NEW 3 bedroom
house, 3 miles from Holzer
Hospital on Rt. 160.
Deposit required. Call 446·
0157.

Rental properties for sale·
fiouse for sale-Pomeroy. 2·
Apt. building-Middleport.
Trailer-Syracuse. 614-9?2·
6059affer 5:30614·992-mr. • Attractive 4 bdr. home in
citY full basement. family
room, dining room, fully
New fiaven Rental Proper· carpeted. $325 per mo. Call
ties for · sale -3 apt . after 5, 446·1323.
buildings. 5 houses for sale.
614·9?2·6059. 614·992·7511 af·
Sr. house &amp; bath, adults
ter 5:30.
only, no pets, on Bob Me·
Cor"llck Rd . Call446·2650.
3 roorit house with bath.
Mason, w. VA. Large lot.
Owner will help finance. House in Crown City for
rent, $200 per mo., $200
614-992-7352.
deposit. Call'614·367-0242.
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
c(ltlon, 3 bedrooms, family
room with flrepalce, cen·
ttal air, basement, phone
304·675·1542.
4 ovely remodeled 3
t(edroom home, basement,
fenced backyard, carpeted,
Sided, storm windows, near
Schools. 304-675·4338.
·

.

.

HOUSE &amp; lot for sale in
*ascin. 304-773·58-16.
fh iiE room house wllh
fuel oil furnace, on
one acre ground, $8,000,.
~ath,.

2 bdr. , 1 bath house, gar·
den, out buildings, In
Patriot, Ohio. S150 mo. plus
deposit. Caii1 -30H23·4588.
Large home situated on a
nice lot In Syracuse, Ohio.
Good neighbor hood, will
accomOdate 3 o~ 4 single
men or single women.
Private rooms with com·
'mon lounge and cooking
ar'eas plus. 1'12 , ba!hs.
Available before school
opening Aug. !Sore school
Itt $450. per · .mo. plus
utilities. Caii614·992·62B4 or
m-~32or992·7471 .

3 bedroom Mobile Home,
furnished , util ities paid.
Also for renl·'h of apt.

house,

furnished,

1

bedroom . No pets, no.
drunks or dope. For more
Info. call 614·367-0611, John
Sheets, 3'12 mi . South Mid·
dleport.
··

44

Apartment
- --'fo"'-r. Rent
4 room unfurnished apt.•all
carpeted, utilities paid,
adults only no pets. Call
446·3437.

-·-·-- - -- --·-

floor

lsi
furnished apart·
men!, adults preferred. ref .
&amp; dep. required. Call 631
4th Ave., Gallipolis.

- ~·675-2130 .

£w~ER

Tables, S38 and up to $125.
Hlde·a ·beds,U40. and up to
$525.. Queen size. $380.
Recliners, $175. to $3~5.,
Lamps from $18. to S65. 5
pc . dinettes from $79 ., to
$385. 7 pc .. S189. and up:
Wood table with six chairs
$395. to $650. Desk S110.
Hutc_hes, $300. and 3550.,·
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett .
Cherry, $795.
Bunk bed
complete with mattresses,
S250. and up to $395. Baby
beds, $99. Mattresses or
box springs, full or twin,
S58., firm, $68 , and S78.
Quten sets, S195. 4 dr.
chests, 142. S dr. chests,
354. Bed frames, S20.end
S2.5. , 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350., dinette chairs S20.
and $25. Gas or electric
ranges,
$325 .
Baby
matresses, S25 I $35, bed
frames S20, 125, 1 $30. USed
Furniture .. bookcase,
ranges, chairs, end tables,
recliners end TV's. 3 miles
out Bulevllle Rd. Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am
toSpm, Sat.
446·0322

msor742·2085.
99 Pi eyer plano rolls. GoOd
cond. Old fashioned songs,
Caii61H49·2110.

Small furnished house for 1
or 2 adults only . Call 4-46·
0338.
HUD available 2 bdr.
deluxe, kitchen furnished,
goOd location, utilities par·
!Iaiiy paid. 5 rm house for
rent. Residential and com·
merclel proP.Ortles for sale
or lease . A·One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager,
Realtor. Call304·675·5104 or
675·5386.
EFFICIENCY APT . at Rio
Grende. Available Wed.
Call"-46.0157.
Furnished efficiency. $145
utilities paid, single male,
919 Second Ave .. Gallipolis.
Call 4-46·4416 after 7PM.

Hide-A· Bed. 614-949·2568.
REPOSSESSED SIGN I II
Nothing down! Take over
payments S58.50 monthly. 4
x 8 flashing arrow sign.
New bulbs, letters. Hale
Slg~s. 1·800'227·1617, Ext.
667.
TIRED of being "all gum·
med up" from the •ymptons of such things as
headaches, constipation,
arthrltl,, allergiK, and
obellty? Call 30-1-675·1293
for herbel esslstance from
Naturallfe.
Tometoes, by basket or
bushel. »1·675-1981.
Refrigerator. stove. Atarl
game with cartridges and a
compound bow, Call 304·
675-6777.

18'x3' SWIMMING pool,
RAY'S USED . FUR · filter &amp; fence, SlOO. Call
NITURE Chest of drawers 304·675·6809.
S22.50, 2 pc. liVIng room
suite sso, breakfast set $30, HOMELITE XL·12 chain
metal wall cabinet $8, high saw, 304-675·2032.
chair SlO, oak rocker S25, 4
oak chairs 112 ea .• lawn
mower S30, 20' bicycle 10" Radial Alarm saw·
Craftsman. Wood lathe·
$22.50. Call614 ·367· ~7 .
Craftsman . 304·576·2644.

- - - --·- - -

~ ____ _Pets

for Sale_ _

STERLING Upright Piano,
2 bd.room, furn . Upstairs. dated 1891 . All original.
$150. per mo. You pay Call256-1642 or 256-1932.
utilities. 1 child accepted.
. - -·- - - - - HILLCREST KENNEL 614-949·2875.
54 Misc. Merchandlce
Boarding all brt!@dS. AKC
~- - - - - - - - - Reg. 'Dobermans pups and
1 bd.room Apt. In Mid· ~~~s~~~;~'!~:r~~~~- ~~~ , g:lj",.r:.~~ stud Service.
dleport. 614·992·3590.
gal. ta~k. price $3-10. Other ..
sizes In stock, haul In your POODLE GROOMING.
Apartments. 304-675·5548.
pickup truck. Call 614-286· C·all Judy Taylor at614·367·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON 7220.
APARTMENTS, mobile EVANS ENTERPRISES
homes ,
houses .
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·4-46·8221 or6U·245-9484. RATLIFF'S POOL CEN·
TER Pools sale, supplies &amp;
Three room furnished l,nstallatlon. 403 2nd. Ave., Grooming services for
apartment, adults, no pets, Gallipolis, gOrch,..lnd~AIII"-46•i&gt;ve. •lpets. Will ~lip Englls~
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Point Pleasant. Call 304· 6579 . In
ground.
Schnauzer's. Reasonable .
675·2453.
For appt. 614-9?2-7342.
THREE room furnished ADDITIONAL DISCOUN·
LIMITED TIME TWO registered, 8 WO@k
cottage, utilities furnished, T!
adulls, no pets, 304·675-2812 ONLYI THE BIG, NEW old, Bluetlck, female pups.
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY· Phone 304-675·3328.
or675·1580.
·
SIZE POOLS WHICH IN·
CLUDE DECK, FENCE, ·- Musical_ _ _
1n' Middleport one .fnd two FILTER &amp; WARRANTY S7
bedroom 1\Jrnished apts. ARE NOW AVAILABLE
Instruments
304·882·2566.
FOR ONLY 1999. IN ·
STALLATION &amp; FINAN- Baldwin Catiaret organ
with • fun machine,
ONE l&gt;edroom apartment CING AVAILABLE. FIR· praclally new. Has 2
in Henderson. S150. per ST COME, FIRST SERVE. keybOards. Call 614·379·
CALL 1·800·624-8511 (Ohio),
month, 304-675-1972.
2623.
1·600·642·3053 (WVJ.
NO!jTH Myrtle Beach,
Fruit
South Carolina, Sand Piper HOUSE ,COAL for sele, 5I
&amp;VtpllbiH
Condo. $385.00 week. Sleeps su(nmer rates. Mine run
8 to 10, pool &amp; tennis court. coal Pittsburgh No. 8.
CoMing tomatOes. $4.00
one block to beach. Cell Delivered to Gallipolis, $30, _bli. Already pick~ or may
a )on; Pt. Pleasant, .$31. a pick your own. R'aymond
803·272·5943.
ton, C.O.D. Call446·1-!88.
Lowe. 614·247-2192.

95

I

,t

•

WEDNESDAY

8/11/82
· EVENING

s:oo •

(I) (J) !Il g (J) 1D •
()JNewa
(I) " - for tiMi Pennant
Berry Tompkina and Tim
McCaiver host this look at
the peat week's baseball
action.
(I) MOVIE: 'A Utde

HIS BATTISRI~
' HAVE JU9T

'
.. - - - -- - - - - !

RUN POW"'·

PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, plumbl·ng~ ·
roofing, some remOdeling. ~:
20 yrs. exp. Call 614-388· ··
9652.
i:
.,

71

Lower
River
Gallipolis, 4-46· 4807 .

1975 FORD LTD Landau,
new paint, new tires, runs
good, Sl.OOO. · Also ·1970
Chevrolet truck, needs
work, $300. 304·882·2052.

Peach Orchard,

Rt. 7,

Rd . ,
•

Cornfield beans, $5.00 bu.
Caii6U·245-9587.
Canning tomatoes, ·beets,
S8 bushel, bring own con·
talners, 30-1-675·1288.
GOOD THINGS TO
EAT: :': CANNING PEAC·
HES. Yellow Freestone
canning peaches now
available while tne supply
lasts . . ~PBS MAflKET ..
Masch vv .vA: n3·5721 open
1 daysa Wtek.
Pick your own half runner
beans. SS.OO bu. and can·
nino tomatoes. $3.00 bu.
Andrew Cros.s farm , Letart
Falls. 8 a .m.·noolt. 614·247·
2852 or 9?2·3734.
Cennlng tomatoes. Bring
own containers. U .OO bu .
Wayne Rowe, E . Letart.
Call614·247·270ol.

.. --- -- ----

·-·- -

-. . -..... ... .
............
--···
... .
. -. ........

Autos for 5ale

·tofY'

()) $&amp;0,000 Pynnild
(I) Father Knowa a.tt
(J) • ()I ABC Newa
D (J) ()I CBS News
(J) Dr. Who
(fiJ Ullaa, Yoga and You
7:00 • (I) P.M. Mag~~Zine
(J) BuH'a Eye
.
(J) ESPN Spoo .. loium
(I)ONenAcro
(I) Emeneinment Tonlght
!Il H8ppy Deya
(J) Tic Tee Dough
(J) (fiJ MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
(JI Newa
• ()J Mupp.t Show
'7 :30 • (I) You Aaked For It
(J) Another Lila
(J) ESPN &amp;porta Center
(I) Andy Orlfftth
(J) • (J) Family Feud
(!) .:.Verne and Shirley

~!v~~SW~s~lr~~~~ ~:e~ --------l.,.......;r;~·

20 1
1
.
I
ess expens ve cars n
stock
·

- - -·

--- -------72 PL YMO.UTH Dust~r. 340

·automatic, runs good, S500.
304-458·1679.

-------·- - --

67 CAMARO. call 304-675·
6335 or 675·32-16.
1980 DODGE Diplomat
statlonwagon, »1·675-5867.
1977 CHEVY Vega, 4 cyl. 4
speed, excellent condition,
no rust. SlMo.OO, 304·576·
2866.

CAPTAIN STEEI,.IER Car "
pet Clean,·ng featured t;• •••
Hafiell Brosthers Custom-

Carpets. Free estimates.
Call"-46·2107.

·•

French City · Painting·
residential &amp; commerci ~l. ,
Interior. exterior, paper
~anglng ,
&amp; texturell
ceilings. Call 614·367·7784
or614·36HI60.
•

•
~
'

- - - - - _,.

(
}

•·
1

1•
'l

- · - - - -·

CHRISTIAN'S CON · ;
Constr .. 1
STRUCTION .
roofing, siding, spouting, o
0
fencing, painting, repairs .&amp;
cleaning. 446·2000, caTI
before 8 and alter 5:30.
., ~,

.,
,....

Montgomery Trailer sales.
614·669·4245, Farm trailers,
See you at the Mason Coun·
ty Fair.

Holstein call, 3 mo. old,
priced 1160. Call 614·256·
6540.

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

2 Gurnsey family milk
cows. One with calf. Your
choice, $600. 698-6134.

CARPENTRY·DOORS,FL·
OORING,WALL PANEL!·
NG,CEILING TILE AND
PAINTING. 614·9?2·2759.

ner'

-~

STARKS Tree Trolmrnin;Q' ~
and Lawn Service. Shrubs
trimmed. Phone 304·576· '
2010.

7) -- - vaiii-i.4w:-o-. - 1979 Dodge van. p.s ., p.b.,

auto·trans. , alr·cond.,

cruise cont.. a.m .·f.m .
Privacy glass. Some
c~stom 'work. 614·992·6330.

J ·'

1974 Yamaha 360 · endre,

~~lrt bike. Call458·1997.

l i9765~~i.i5so.;;;;·bi;;.

Water Wells. Commercial
and. Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps SalK and Service.
304-895-3802.

A cl~o~bhouse for the
~ids? M.Ast be cosi:inq
401.1 apile of douqh!

ADVANCED
Seamless ,
Gutter· Doors . · Offering.
contlnouse
guttering;
seamless siding, rootir\g ·,.
garage · doors,
Ire&lt;&gt; '·
estimate~. 61~ · 698·8205 .
, • ·...
'

'tes.Slim, b1.1t for
once in m~ life I
feel rm finally
ctoinq somethinq
worthwhile!

::. =-= :::=-===-====---:!

WINNIE,·
BUT UNTIL THAT Tl~f,

'

YOU

~U5T

KEEP OUR

LITTLE TRANsACTION

'SECRCJ:' OKAY?

64 -=-H;;aG;ar.=:.=.

-- --------

_______ ,j.

-·- . . .

_________

a4

BA~EY

I.
J

WHAT ARE 'IOU
DIGGIN' FOR,
JUGHAID?

WORMS!!
I'M GOIN'

WHY
'IOU
TAKE TATER?

FISH IN'

:" ;- :-::•-::::.-....r----·-·-·-··

_!!!!.'~!II Haul~., :

.

full m~te.
etc.
for

or 6f-4-367-0591.

:JEEPS, cars, tru~k• u...,_r

1100. available at local
itov't salel In your ai'H.
. Clll &lt;r:efundlll•&gt; l-7U·W'
0241 ext. 1155 tor directory
on lklw to purchiiM. 14
hOUrs.
71

3114-675-5162.

17111. 304-

(I)
•
()J
MOVIE:
'Renegades'
8 (J) ()I Mr. Mel11n Zoe
and Lao are suckerad In by
a concert promoter. (RI
())
Annand
t1ammar
COllection
(fiJ
HoWard Nemerov:
Collected Sent...ce• Tonight'• program profiles
one of America's premier
outhoro and poets. (60
min. I
8:30 Ill ()) ()I AltrOrllluts
Three astronauts· lives are
disruptad when they discover they have no privacy
in their earth-orbiting vehi·
cle .
11:00 D . (I) (!) FICII of Ufe
Blair upsets Natalie when
she reads her diary . (R)
(I) MOVIE: 'It' a My Tum'
(1)700 Club
(J) Auto Racing '82:
IMSA GT Race from Ume

Rock, CT

D

.

Ice'
(H) Evening at the
Symphony Special: Arnold &amp;c:hoenberg' a Gurre·
lieder The Boston Symphony Orchestra presents

())

FISH WON'T BITE
ONE THAT BIG

ing Schoenberg' s Gurrelieder. (2 hrs.)
9:30 D (I) (!) Love. Sidney
Sidney tries to stop Lau·
ria' o love affair. (RI
10:00 D (I) (!) Quincy Quincy
tries to help a nuree who
was'charged with negligent
homicide. (R) 160 min.)
(I) MOVIE: 'Young Joe,
the Forgotten Kennedy'
(!J Beat of Notre Dame
Football 117
(I) TBS Elianlng Newa
(I) •
()J Dynaaty Doctors try to save Fellon's
baby while a confrontation
between Krystle and Alexis
ends up in a fight . (R) (60
min .! .•
10:3D (I) HBO Special: Flash·
back: Wall Street Crash
1929 Eric Sevareid hosts
this dramatized look at four
survivors of lhe great
stock market cresh.
Cll Sing out Amel1ca
11 :00 D (I) CIJ D CIJ &lt;II 8 ()J
Newa
(J) Nuhvllla RFD
(]) ESPN &amp;porta Center
. (I) All In the Family
(!) Newa/Sporta/Weather
()) Dave Allen at Large
(fiJ Hitchcock
11 :30 D (I) (!) Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE: 'Maaoacre at
Central High'

"'

TN .

... ,..,

aJ~r~Night
(II MOVIE:

HOT QUITE :JHE
'~Yfllllll:. 'Jl10116tl, IS IT?

,•

'llun Wild,

--No.
. . . -.. . . - -- -to

tt, cantainin111t0 ~
lo . . -"""
NofwoOd.
N.J.D1141.

from Jumbte,dO ... IIIIW=Ir, lOIII 14,

BRIDGE
'Rectify' to se• up squeeze ·
He WIIS lookiDI It ; 11 tclp
trlcu and wan~ to rectify
the count for a pollible
squeMe for the 12th.
West cootiDued with the
queen of spades. Soutll'look
hll ace and kinl of burta.
and ran off five ·cllamoad"
trtcu. He dllcarded two
clubl and hll lut Jpade.
Eut dllcarded hlllut .~

1-11-tl

.AK

• A K lOti
+K 10 5
EAST

WEST
+KQJB

•su
HIS

+763

•Hu

.742
.J74
SOUTH
+AH
• Q 10 8 7

+QU

on the fourth diamotlcf but ·
bad to cbuck a club 011 the
!Uth one.
.

South came to hll band
with the ece of clubl iDd
cubed hll queen of ~
West, wbo bad dllcarded the
elpt of 1pades and a heart
on the dlam011dl, bad to
throw eway a club to buJc
011 to the jack of · ~padeJ. SO
South wu able to · throW
dummy's 10 of spades llld
make the lut two .trlckl
with dummy's kine end 10 of
clubl.

.QJ
.H83
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
Wost Nortlt Eut

••
24
&amp;NT

Pua
Pua

Pua
Pua
Pua

P111

Opening lead : .K

Tbe term "rectifY. the
count" In par&amp;IJ'&amp;IIl! oae II
bride• Jarcon. It meaaa. tbat
you .may concede 'an .early
trick to set up a squeeze at
the end.

By Oswald Jacoby
ud AJu Soatac
South let the king of
spades hold the fint trick.

(IIBWBPAPERIIM1:IU'IIIII-.j

t!iu ••~•rf
by THQMAS JOSEPH

1 Appease,

as pride
I Embrace
11 Repeatedly
12 Luxury

41 Barbara and

Sir Anthony
4% Plait
DOWN
1 Marqulll de

13 All the way

%Attica's
marketplace

through

3 Grassy plots

vessel

15 Sea bird
1STunneric
17 Pithy saying
18 Direction
on ship
20 ''Where

-thou?"
21 Radiation
unit
22 .._Misty
for Me"
23Waste
allowance
25Crooner
Columbo

Yesterdly'l MIWer

t Coq au 5 Beseech

s Tidy up

2% "The
zt "It Godfather" · old

Uke

author

times ... "
3t
IncorreCt
8Zoo
Z4 Bring back 31 Worries
denizens
9 Caballeros' Z5 Take back 3S Private ·
wives
za Part of a
and pubUc
10 Sitting sentence 37 Convent
14 Flock
27 Lawyers'
woalan
7 UkeAbner

23 Ensnared

19 Comer

charges

;,:....:.;,~"""'1"!"'~

38 Gibbon

%&amp;Manitoba
Indian
nRedcap

28Spanish

article
29Cauae
to explode
3%Ukely

33Always
(poetic)

:14 "All the
Things

You-"

3t Pleasing (sl.) 1=+-+-+-i--

stAntltosln
to Social
group

&amp;·It .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: ;
II

AXYDLBAAXa
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atondl for another. In thla aarnple A Ia
used for the three ),.'1, X for the two O's. etc. Sln11e !etten.
1po1troph81, the lenllh and formation of the wo)'dl are aD
hlnll. Eleh dar the eode letters are different.

canTOQUOTES

~

&lt;ll

The Lon aa.t A
'lRI,J·
GAQV
SIR
profesiO' IIIII a student
KAZICA
G II M
for romantic ,..,.._, II' •
VQO
NOUI
- givel a outlook to
ZCSNOL
UYA
I Z
a former foolbel pWyer
'
IIIII a wonwt hitting 40
U'Y A · Z N C A . - X N E A F . X AU QV Y I 0
plana to '""' a hue&amp;end.
1R1 (!hr., 10 m!O.J ,
Ywteutate DJSI ; llle; 'DIE YO\JNG,...~ 'IURNI:D TO
12:30 • (I) !Il ._ Night with
'HIM
A DISARMING CANDOR wnaat INII'l'AJm.Y·

DINid LatC.IMn

~~:.....~
'

1

Jumbles: LOVER OITIO VERSUS MOHAIR
.
Answer: What a souped-ul) car that broke dOwn
was-A "SHOT" ROD

ACROSS

(I) (1J MOVIE: 'Thin

(I) MOVIE: '.Dodsworth'
(I) After Benny HUI
D (J) MOVIE: 'Parts ..
the Clonus Horror'
())Captioned ABC News
()It Plenant Mt. Boya
• &lt;ll Nlghtllne
1 1 :411~ MOVIE: 'Hoildo
. .'
12:00
lumtl • Allan
SMra AAU Junior
otymplca From Mtmphla,

.

1965 Mustang, fair lllape,

-

()) Another Lila

SSO. B. Front JONES BOYS
Rear end, SERVICE. Call614·3611·7471
1m Ford Mustang · fast·
back 351 CJ, ex. cond.,
oradlll tires. AM·FM tape
,couettw, .radio with power
·amp. C!all451· 1997.

-~·

an evening of music featur~

··· -·--·- · ·-----i ~ :·

PAINTING. interior &amp; ex· J
terlor, free estimates, 304··-·
675·1128.
.....

REGISTERI'D
Alpine jCall458·1997.
dairy goats. Gentle, show t-------------Quality. Star M does, DHIR ·1975 KAWASAKI -100 KZ.
~
records, ADGA classified. excellent condition, priced 12 .
Plumbing
·.
Nice selection of doe kids. below UOO. 304·882·2762.
__ __ !!!!!'!!nt
, "'
Stud service from
CARTER'S PLUMBING, .
classified bucks. 304·458·
1978 KAWASAKI 400, 3,400
ANDHEATING
• ·
1763.
miles, S900.00, 167 Lane St.
·
Cor. Fourth and Pine
New Haven, ~2·2636. \) Phone 4-46·3i88 or 4-46·4477 " ~
Two registered polled
::·- - - - Hereford bulls, yearlings.
Phone 304-675·3030 or 675- 1976 HONDA, motorcycle, IJ _ ~~&lt;..!~'!L_ - '
'750, 15,000 miles, excellent
4232.
'condition. 11,000. Call 304· Gallipolis Diversified Con· ;
st. co, Ct!stom dozer &amp; '
675-4210.
backhoe work. Special :
farm rates. Call. us for free -•
;~
::=-=:=:
B
od~-.~==
Hay· Round &amp; square bales.
estimates. 4-46•44-10.
&gt;'•.
First &amp; second cutting . 614·
•Motors for Sale
,_
-·- · --~----· -992-7:106 ..
1• fool Starcraft aluminum Lawrence $idenstricker
---,-....,·--:::-----,
v hull f~lng boat with 10 Backhoe SerJve. ' Call 675•
HP, Johi1SOfl 08 motor, tilt 5580.
:.:- ~.~~: :..:.· ~:: :.
~·
trailer, condition, 304I
67~·2651.
=·::=. =e1.~iri~al - =. 7· 1
._..,....__.._
Autos for Sale
71
___ ~ Refr!t!!~":.- · :
1975 DATSUN 280 Z, 2 plus -1978 ,Starcraft 15ft. trl hull Clendenen Refrigeration, .!
190·HP Mercury motor Inc ..
2. Call446·1723 alter 6prn.
car, hitch llrld 1raller, I set Air Conditioning, &amp;
Skis, 1 slalom ski, 5 .life Heating .Service. Call 6 14· •
74 Mustang II, $.100. can jac~ets, anchor, 3 gas 256·14-46.
oloi6-0ol6l Or 245-9-405.
tanks, convertible top, ne.., -·------·-·-·--··- ···- -~
'condition, $3,5011. lll4-m- .SEWING M~chlne repairs: ,,
1977CAMARO,PS,PB,tllt 5184
afler
4:30 .' service. Authorized Singer \
wheel, air, · good cond., .
~:;::=== Sales &amp; Service Sh~rpen '
$2700. Call367-o632.
76
Auto Ports
Scissors. Fabric Shop,• 1
.992·2284,
.
.
&amp;Accessories
,
- ·-----;;~~ -;;,, .
'

I

,

(-iomorrooo)

NORTH
+IOU

()J Ent-lnment
Tonight
1:00 • ()) (!) Reel People Tanight's show features a
reunion of POW's from
WW II, a look at a profes·
alonal roller skating team
and a woman who makes
custom-made bikinis. (R)
(&amp;0 min.).
(I) Yeatery-.. . 1947
(I) MOVIE: 'FIHh Gor·
don'
(I) National Geographic
Special
(!J
Auto
Reclng'82
French Grand Prtx
(I) MOVIE: 'Junior Bon·

_
For sale 81 pickup 4x4, exc.
cond., Low mileage. Call
446·2706 .

1982 Honda 450 custom,
1,400 miles, like new.' Call
,446·2350.
- ·-- - -- - - --- 1
78 Honda mlnature 50, S200.
Cell614·256·1487.

XI I I I)"" r I I I)

NrMr. ro"(
Yesterdays

'.

II

K

e

~ =j:!}l~_·.·;;,~ ~_I!_

67 FORD truck, F 100 half
ton. 64 Ford Falcon station·
wagon, 6 cyllnder; Cali304·
675-6130.

] I

til aum.u RIPOrt

'

6_1 __1'_•!-'!!.~men_
t _
SUMMER SHOWDOWN
JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
4-46·1675
Long tractors, Vermeer
balers, &amp; Hay equipment,
bale movers &amp; · ft!@ders,
wagons, rotary tiller $1039.,
disc. seeders. rotary cut·
-ters, blades, gates, &amp;
cultivators .
And see us to get your parts
&amp; Complete service.
USED EQUIP:
IH Hydro 70, Ford 2000.
Ford Jubilee, 165 · MF,
Massey Harris PoMy, 70
Oliver, Long 460 4x4
w/lront·end loader, 185 AC.
spreader, 501 Ford mower.
We buy used EQuipment!

II

I

()I Rklhard Simmon•
(fiJ Vlc:tofy Genlen

1980 TOYOTA Corolla, ex·
ceilent . condition, air con·
dillon, $5,600. 1979 Flat X· 19
Targa top, U,SOO . 30H75·
2517.

1967 Chev. truck 327·400
tubo, engine, automatic,
short·wlde bed, 112 ton.
Call458·1997.

)

a

o,

o'

Masonary work, Logue
Contracting,
Rt.
1,
Ewlngton. Call 614·388·
9939.
.

tKEENA~

Rom.nc:e'

30Roofing
years ex·~·
&amp;
perience, specializing ln. 0·
buill up roof. Call 614·~- ~
9622or6U·388·9857.
' •.,

S8
Fruit
__ .....,! Vegela!!!~L-NEW BEAN PAH~ H
OPEN Pick Your own
tomatoes, lima beans, $6.00
bu, corn SI .OO doz. Raynor

_rrr

(I) My Th- Son•
(J) Elec;trlc "Company
(fiJ Over Easy
1:30 • (I) (!) NBC Newa
(I) MOVIE: 'Wily Wonlul
and the Chocol8te Fee·

Spouting.
~~::::=::;:~::==T==:::e=;:§~~~ Mercum

A. ~L

NICE mobile. home -space
for rent on Jericho .Road,
call304-675-4190.

'

Television
Viewing

;

-SAM
Somervlll ' s
Warehouse 7 miles East
Ravenswood old Rt. 21,
(New Eral open as usual,
BEMCO mattresses or bo~ Fri., thru Suh. 1:G0-7 :30
springs, full or twin, S58. 6 p.m., Mon . evenings, Sur·
Piece Naugahyde heavy plus
new
army
wood living room suite camouflage, combat boots,
SS'/5. Pillow arm sofa &amp; denIm. used rental
chair 1295. Roll top desk, damaged clothes $5.00
dark &amp; light, Sl89. Bunk dozen call In orders 675·
beds, complete, Include 3334 Pt. Pleasant.
mattress, Sl99. Complete
water bed shop with 10 bedroom sui teo 011 display, t!......._ Bulk!!nt Sueplles
starting price S229. Up to Building materials block,
$2500. Big daddy coctell &amp; brick. sewer pipes, win·
end tables SSO. Waii·A·Way dows, lintels, etc . Claude
recliners $169. and up. La· Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Z· Boy recliners In stock . Call614·245·5121.
,USED FURNITURE 5 pc.
&amp; 7 pc. dinette sets,
bedroomsulte HollywoOd Metal sheets for all
style, bunk beds, Flair Fur· building purposes. Flat
niture &amp; Design. Gallipol is porcellan enamel coated.
Ferry, wv. Open 9·6. 4x8thru 4 x 12. Prices, S7.00
I0$9.60. 614-667·3085.
Phone 304-675· 1371 .

AIR conditioner, 18,000
3 room furnished apt. 1250. BTU. 1125.304-675-5684.
month includes utilities.
InQuire at Meigs Inn In
Antiques
Pomeroy .

You'll love this 14 acre
farm In the country with a
pond and sm'all barn. This 2
bedroom brick hOme Is
only 2 milK from down·
town Pt. Pleasant. Will
sign a year lease at S-450 per
month. 304·675·6276. .

financing on this
modern 6 room home. Also
a Holly Park· mobile home,
doUbl~ car garage and sit·
Moblje Homes
'tfng on I.A acres, (all 42
for Rent
lievel). Quick - ~~:}'~~i
Priced t6 sell. 3
.or 675·34:11 .
3 tidr. mobile home, com·
pletely furnished. Call 446·
' '1669.
32
•·'Mobile Homes
l ·
. for Sale
,
12~ two bedroom, gas &amp;
TRI·STATE MOBILE weter paid, 1250 par mo.
HOMES. USED-MOBILE Call448·6583.
HOMES; CARS, TRUCKS.
GAt.LH•OLIS.
CHECK
OUit PRICES. CALL 446· 12x60, 2 bdr., ynlurnlshed
mobile hom- on Rt. 35. Ref.
7S12.
.
,
'
j.
&amp; dep. required. Call 4-164229.

Over 1,000 ceramic molds,
kilns. and supplies. 61•·742·

Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath, Dining room set, 4 ch.airs
cushio.n ed
clean, no pets, adults only, and table,
chalrs,$100. Call458·1997.
dep. req. Call446; 1519.

~aii30H82·2371 .

t!louse for sale, 2201 oak
SK Craftsman table saw,

3 house trailer axles and
lounge S175. Call -158· 1997.

:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ S275
. Sofas
and tochairs
priced
from S285.
1895.

Homes lor Sole

Priced ' reduced . 3 bdr.
house, 106 2nd Ave,
Gallipolis. 1 112 baths.
modern kitchen, full

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rpcker, · ot·
toman, 3 tables, (extre
heavy by Frontier) , $685.
Sofa. chair and loveseat,

.

.(

'Ohio

---·---....,---

LOOK i N.G FOR people who
want tQ earn between $500.
and $50,000.
monthly
lhro~gh this •newest and
fastest growing company
In the nation.• Call 304-6751
' 2
9
3

23

p

11,1982

Sl - - Ho~_i!iiOid Goods

They'll Do It Every Time

.'

/.

wrm

PUTIDMON HIS GUARD. --SAKI
011111 K""

,_as.,-. Inc ..

. '"

�Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

$1.7 million...

.j Beat of the Bend
'Charlie' Gibbs returns home
By BOB HOEFLICH
Acouple of people you will want to
know about ... Charlie
former
superintendent of Porne!1oy ~icho10ls,
has ~ri returned
to his home from
the
Holzer
Medical Center
where he has been
. confined for the
•past six weeks
• following surgery.
·"Charlie," as he
• is affectionately
known by his many friends in the
conununity, is getting along fine. He
. appreciates all of your concern expressed for him. Cards may be sent
.'io him at Vale St. In Pomeroy, of
.: course. And about Fred Crow. He's
• now In University Hoopital following
•a period of hoopitalization at
.Veterans Memorial in Pomeroy.
Fred's address is Room 1143 Rhodes
Hall, University Hospital, Coiwn• bus. His phone number is 421-65117.
~

The 6tth annual reunion lor
, veterans cf the 37th · Infantry
Division of World War I, World War

II and the Korean Conflict has been
set for Sept. 3-5 at the Quality Inn,
4900 Sinclair Road, Columbus, Ohio.
·Those wishing more information
~may contact Headquarters, 37th
:Division Veterans ~n., 65 S. Front
:St., Room 7f17, Columbus, OH 43215.
• Leave it to Alice Nease to be there
when It happens. She recently was
')lttending the Tri.chem Convention
. -this Is a paint product used for artll!tic pllrpOIIes - In Indianapolis. A
atyle revue featuring clothing with
painted designs was the closing
event of the convention and·was held
following a luncheon at the hotel
where the event was being held.
The show had barely gotten off the
ground when some 100 people
became ill. Emergency personnel
began pouring in, doctors, health
department personnel, the media
·representatives including television
cameras and others nef!!led at the
scene. Four hoopitals were needed to
take care cf the sick. It was a really
frightening situation. Lucky Alice
escaped the ~llness. Since the in-

cidcnt, ·the Marion County Health
Department issued a statement that
the paint was not responsible for the
situation.
By the way, Alice durin~ the talent
portion of the convention presented
her fabulous Sophie Tucker nwnber
- and many of you have seen the
costumin~. She got a standing ·
ovation. Alice is a fentastic perfanner - that's for sure.
In the photography competition
for the annual Meigs County Fair,
there is a rather nondescript
cateHory entitled "pictorial." The
category covers a wide area and if
your photo~niphs do not fit Into
other categories of judging, then slip
them into the pictorial category. It's
going to be kind of a miscellaneous
category.
Someone will be at the fair board
ollice on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds from 10 am. to 4 p.m.
both Thursday and Friday to accept
all of your open class entries Including those in the photography
field. Mter Friday, it will be too late
to enter.
Dave Diles is spending some Ume
at his attractive residence
near Racine and piecing things
together since he has not renewed
his contract with ABC.
Dave maintains a great sense of
humor and has a number of offers so now, it's just a case of deciding
whicJl he wants to accept.
Yesterday, Dave graciously accepted the chore of serving as one of
the judges for the selection of the
Mason County Fair Queen. You can
COUJlt on Dave lo pitch In on the
home front any time he can rriake it.
rela~ing

. Probe mishap
The Gallla-Meigs post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol Investigated
an accident on Ohio 124 east ot Lebalion Twp. Rd. ps In Meigs
County at 12:~ p.m. Tuesday. ·
1be patrol said Randall R.
Moore, 27, Racine, was westbound
on Ohio 124 when he struck a deer
which ran Into his path.
His car sustained light damage.
An 3-year-old Bidwell girl was In·
jured Tuesday when she was struck
by a car on U.s. 351n Gallla County
at milepost 12.
Leslie K. sawdo was treated and
released at Holzer Medical Center
lor head trauma and abrasions.
According to the patrol, Sawdo
ran onto U.S. 35 at about 2:35p.m.
lnlo the path d. a car driVen by Rufus RuMion, 71, Thunnan. Runnion
reportedly braked but could not
stop In time to avoid hitting the girl.

(Continue-d from page I )
alleges she sutrered financial as
well as other loSses because of Red·
man's death.
The first claim seeks $500,CXMl,
plus $lm,CXMl In compensalory dam·
~es and SI,(XMJ,(XMJ In punitiVe
damages.
Allegations made in the suit conmet with reports at the time of Redman's death. Redman was
am!Sted by thepatrolfor"lntoxlcatlon charges" and while he was beIng processed In the jaU, It was
reported Redman assaulted Raygo
with a razor Redman Is believed lo
have concealed on himself.
Raygo took Redman 1o the sheriff's office, overpowered the jailer
and got his gun. Redman Is alleged
lo have then shotRaygoand Haner,
who dispatched a call for
·
assistance.
Hamnton responded and found
Redman holding Raygo's gun to
Haner's head. When Redman released his hold, HamUion rushed
Redman. Redman shot Haner ·
again and clubbed Hamnton on the
back d. the head with the gun.
Owen ancl Elliott, dispatched 1o
the scene, entered the bulldlng and
found Redman wielding a bUJy club
he'd picked up_during his struggle
with the other officers. Redman
lunged at Owen, who fired one shot
and wounded Redman.

Begin•..
(Continued from page I)
ship wtsbes 1o evacuate from
Beirut"

.

. . lumblft Gas annoUnces price·hike

...
,

I know some of you must be
curious about my "keep smiling." I
thought I ought to explain that
sometimes if a colllffill Is long my lit·
tie "keep smiling" message to you is
flipped inlo oblivion because of the
lack of space. However, I do want
you to know that above all, 1 do continue to keep smiling - very thank·
fully - and I hope you're doing
likewise.

roy, $250 and costs and three days
In jail, DWI; Rhonda Wright, Leon, ·
$15, costs suspended, expired license; Martha Elrb, New liaven,
$25, costs suspended, failure lo obey
a traffic light; Bill Reeves, Pomeroy, six months' probation, disor·
derly manner; David Fisher,
Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly manner; JeH Laundermllt,
Middleport, $500 and costs and 90
days In Jail, harrasslngphonecalls;
Richard Richmond, Pomeroy, 20
days In )all, DWI, and 10 days in
jaU, driving under suspension.
Pomer~y, Mayor Clarence
Andrews-Forfeiting fines were
BasU Haynes, Langsville, $363,
DWI; WOllam Dawter, Dayton,
m. Ulegal left tum; Barbara
Doczl, Middleport, $43, assured
clear distance; Candice Tope, Bidwell, $45, speed; Terry Sayre, Long
Bottom, $46, speed.

• 'CqluT~ ,Gas, Of~ ~ been nottfled of a price lnerE8Se ,lot
:Mia~ltJJUtopaytor~turalpssuppUei,wblletheflnn'stransmls·•Io,n C01ftP11!Y ~been slammed by a COIIBIIIIU!I'J' group tor seeking

ithehllte.

'

, .

·

·

AColuiillhapokelmanaaldthein!!feasewUl,beaboutfl!lcentsper

tlxi!•Mnd cubit teeld.ps, or about$'1.!19 a month, effectiVe Sept. lO,

~

·'

IMeigs County happenings••• , FederaJm
·
· 11Je

Meigs Coun'ty Emer"""cy
.....

.Medical Service had a relatively
slow night Tuesday. responding to
only three calls.
At 8:52a.m., Pomeroy EMS went
to Eagle Ridge Road to take David
~{ester to Holzer Medical Center;
at 5:44p.m., Racine squad went lo
Racine beach tanding for G)na
Fleming, taken to Veterans Memortal Hospital; at 11: 20 p.m.,
Tuppers Plains transported Steve
Cremeens to VMH.

-

VISION EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT lENSES
CHILDREN'S VISION

u;

DUe to a di!lay tral18pol'ation, Sylvia, country•weitem star
IICI)edaled to. perlqrm at the·Meigs Cotinty Fair, will not appear until
8:30p.m. W~y. Allflust 11, rather than 8 p.m. Her show will be a

COLUMBUS; Ohb - Columbus Safl!ly Director Bernard T.
, Chul*a has lind a pollee otrlcer cbargl!d with having !feXU81 rela·
dons with a woman while on duty.
'
· . Chupk&amp; said Eric Annbrust, 29 was named in a departmental
char,e that said the Incident occurred when he responded to a
dlstwbance complaint at a bar july 3. He also was charged with
Conduct UnbeComing a pollee offiCer, Chupka said.
' An!! a city tln!inan who, was dlsmlsaed lalt year on cll8rp d
l!etDa ~ ciD di!.IY. but later relnatatecl.
liu been flted wain':
'' Reaina1d i.. ~mb, l), was1flred IIY.Ciwl*a In ~ber. tor
reporting tp work Intoxicated. The city clvll service collll'lllllslon
. reinstated him.
.
.
He was fired again Wednesday.
·
&gt; F1re Capt. Clarence Galleller said he tOuoo ·Ltpseomb 'asleep on
duty J.une 28. Chupka said Lipscomb was charged with being drunk
on duty, gross neglect d duty, sleeping on duty and oot being able to
'perlonn his job.

Examinations bv Apl ·
PH. 992-6545

DO

. Bicycle tour begins this wee~end
COLUMBUS, Ohio...:. Dan Dawson, 46, and Jan Fo~rg, :.&gt;, wUl
begin a 10,®mUe back roads bicycle tour around-the Untied States
Sunday.

.

~have an Itinerary designed locarrytl\ernaroulld thepertme.

ter d. the cOntinental United States. They ptan to head up through

®

WUIIarns.

Mlchl&amp;ari, then tum west at a schl!duled·ll).rnlle-per-day clip.
'~'bey

hojle lo clear thi! upper tter cf states before winter; spend a

few lilonths working around Lake Tahoe and resume the trip In the
spring.
•· ;I}aw1011 h;ls 'closed his bicycle business In Delaware and Ms.

I hereby notify all my patients that 1 am physical·
Iy unable to return to practice at Meigs Surgeons, Inc.
.All Medical records are left with Dr, Ridgeway,
cop1es for transfer to any physician of .choice may be
obtained by signing a request in liis office.
I wish to thank all who supported m(! during my
tenure here in Pomeroy. You are too numerous to thank
individually. Your loyalty, encouragement, cards,
prayers, and advice will always be remembered . .1
thank each of you sincerely and wish you good health.

N. J. EHLINGER, .D.O.

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

JEANS .SALE
Special back·to·school sale prices
on denim: and corduroy jeans for
men, young men and boys • .

fiGIIIIII.y

FOR BOYS:
Denim Jeans ..••.•.
Corduroy Jeans • • . • .

'

. FORYOU

YOUR BABY'S COMFORT BEGINS WITH

JiAW· .

Casdes added to historic register
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Mac-A-Cheek and Mac-A-Chee - Ohio's

••

•'
&gt;

famous Platt ~ties near West Liberty - have beel1 added to the
National Register of Htsiorlc Places. .

· 1be reglstel' Is an otflclal list of his~. architectural and archaeolollcal ~lfl!s preserved lor local or natiOnal stgnltlcance.
, The~ dw~. about a rnlle apart in west central Ohio, were
buDt In the fnid.and late 19th century by brothers Abram and Don
Platt, omcers In the Union Ai'my during the Civil War.
Their descelldants now own the'houses and regularly open them to
public tours.
'
·

,Ohio lottery wimien '
\

14.96
14.99
1
. 14.99 .
1

1

=."=
'i1.21
:&amp;: ' '11.21 · ·

•

.,

I

c1.EvtLAND -

'

'

.
'

~·

w1nn1n1 ll1llliber drawn In the Ohio Lottery's ~ pme '"lbe Number" 'wu 862. 'lbe iOt1ay repol1al
Ml'lllqiW....,...ycttMI•from• a ln&amp;dlepme.Tbeeara~~ Clllllel d. n#l. willie ladaart w&amp;dlc tk:bU ere
tll1ltled to'8bare . . . lottery of!ld•li 18111.
'

..

WATER PROBLEMS OF WEST BEIRVT- Two young Lebanese
glrla were 11i!en Wednesday carryblg water at Cornlce El Mazra, on the

Green Une of West Beirut. The city has no supply of electricity causing
acute water shortage problems for the population. (AP Wirephoto~

Lebanese leaders seek halt to bloodshed
reported more than 100 buildings
destroyed In at least 92 dtvebomblng raids by the howling jets.
"These wholesale massacres and
mass obliterations of Innocent lives
and clvillan casualties by Israeli
warplanes must be stopped," Lebanon's Clu'tstlan president, EUas
Sarkis, said \D telf!8I'ams he dis·
patched lo Reagan and Fahd, the
state radio and television reported.

By 1be A..OOa•ed PriU

Israeli Jets today launched their
heavieSt strikes on west Beirut In
the 9-week-old war. Lebanese leaders suspended talks with the United
States on evacuating the PLO and
appealed lo President Reagan and
King Fahd of Saudi Arabia to illtervene to stop the bloodshed.
Lebanon's state and private radio stations said a cease-fire was
negotiated to go lnio effect at 5 p.m.
Lebanon's Moslem prtme minis(11 a.m. EDT), but there was no
ter,
Shafik Wazzan, and Sarkis met
official confirmation. The air
for
one
hour with U.S. presidential
strikes i:ontlnued after more than
envoy
Philip
C. Habib In suburban
10 hours, and ihe radios claimed
Baabda,
then
sbspended the talks.
more than 300 people kllled or
·
Wazzan
saldil'ie
"unwarranted and
wounded.
unprovoked"
air
attacks were a
They said the·operating room In
"clear
proof
that
Israel
was deterthe Berbir Hospital In west Beb;'ut
took a direct hit and that patients. mined to destroy the Lebanese capwere evacuated. The stations also Ital anyway."

"I have told Philip Habib that I
cannot carry .on in Ithese talks while
these thousands of Ions of explo.
stves are wreaking mass destruc·
tlon In my city, my capital. I did not
break up the talks. But I have iold
him I cannot carl)' on and hold htrrl
as well as the United States respon·
slble for the consequences."
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin told hili Parliament In Jerusalem altbough "a great deal of progress" had been made In talks 10
get the Palestine Liberation Organ·
lzatlon out of Leban(ln that U.N.
and French partlclpatlon In a proposed peacekeeping force remained the m!!!!t obstacle to a final
settlement.
Gunships, tanks and artUlery
joined In the jet strikes, which con·

tlnued without letup after more
than eight hours, ~d the chlf! spokesman for the invasion (!OIJili1Bnd
satd all preparations have · ~n
completed for a final assault into
the PW enclave If one Is ordered.
There were also mounting fears
that Israeli and Syrian forces would
clash anew lo the north and east of
9stlnt;m cBJTips and dlvebombed
densely populated districts, where
It said no Palestinians live. PW
spokesman Bassam Abu Sharif
said at least 250 people were killed
or wounded In Verdun and Atsh
Bakkar alone.
~banese police said Israeli jets
dlvebombed areas surrounding the
Soviet Embassy compound and
oceanside residential
neighborhoods.

'lust supporting, not pushing... •

Mrs. Joyce Brown
ca~paigns

Ferguso~
... . cites toW118hip clerk

, I

FOR MEN:

=.

SAVINGS

her •job.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson says
lonnerTwtnsbllrg'J'Qwnshlp Clerk Clerk John L. Jo111111 paid himself.
$2,6211n 1981 and 11182 without perm1sston r1 townshiP trilllteel·
He lssUI!d a finding d. recovery for that liJMUI!t against :Jonea. He
said the paymeilts, In six payroll eheckl, were fouDd after trustees
aslcl!d lor an audit
' ·
: ,
. ·F~ ~ Jones quit last ~urij!2and that a Cfl.P)' at t!Je audit
was - t to the Summit County p!'OIII!CUior for Wbatever action he
!l!e1s Is needed.

MEN'S AND,IOYS'

. Fash'1011 Den'1m Jeans . . 'SMf
fiOiPIIC£0
1111.r
Basic Denim Jeans •.. r,
Corduroy Jeans , . • . • w PIICEP

Foilberg Is oli a-leave of absence from
.'

COMFORT FoR
YO{)R 'BABY,
, ·. . . . . .

1 S.c:tion, 12 Pag.. 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. N•w•pap:

Thu_rsday, August 12,1982

City fires officer, rll'eman

443-C Locust St.~ MiddlePort

NOTICE

.'

~om•rr-MI~Ieport, ~hio,

·t C:.,rlfhteol 1912

grandltlnd eVent.

'

Veterans Memrolal Hoopltal ad·
missions and discharges Tuesday
were:
Admissions-John Wells, Racine; Mae Kelchka, Middleport;
Ruby Halliday, RuUand; Florence
Hannay, Middleport. DischargesPaulette Cundiff; Bronwyn ·

'

Vti.",Ne.70

en tine

Meigs fair show haJf-hour'later

JAMES L SCH.MOLI.:; O~D.
Doctor of Optometry

Hospital news

e

Ph. 992-6342

.

...

....

cAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~;;ji

WED.
1-S

Sprat)ey said Columbia Transmtss!On,ln Its request, Is asking the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission lo waive some regula·
ttons, "the result of which would be io Increase and accelerate the
pass-throughofgascoststoconsumers,andtoallowfortherecovery
of some speculative rosts."
.
·
Columbia also Indicated It intends !II Increase the price It cl)arges
ror gas produced from Its own wells, Spratley said.
This action Is premature, he continued, as court action on this
prtclng procedure Is stUI pending In the U.S. Supreme Court.
"Thlslncreasecomesbeforethelnklsdryonbrlefsweflledintwo
previous cases In which Columbia Increased consumers' bills by 23
percent," Spratley ,said. "W~'re still fighting In those cases: This
kind of Increase could result In great hardships for Ohioans this
winter, particularly for the elderly, for whom the Increase would
offset most assistance they night receive through the Ohio Energy
Credits Program."

FOR All OcwiONS .

The Middleport Fire Department
answered a total of 48 calls during
~he month of July including six fire
and 42 emer~ency runs, Fire Chief
Jeff Darst repOrts. All vehicles were
driven 803.4 miles during the month.

•·12
1-S

provide serVIce to ~ustqmers, not on 'the·cost of gas Itself." ·
\
Due to p~t economic dlUicuUles,.Columbta has offered Its
. budget payrne11t plan 1o help lower·Income !amllies with their heatlng bills. 1be plan spreads the annual g~ btlllnlo 12 JIIOIIthly
payments:·
·
·
In the meantinle, the InterventiOn or the Office of the Consumers'
CouhCti inio "another massive Increase" In purchased gas adjuSt·
mentcosts bY Columbia Transmtsston Corp. has been announced by
i=nsel WW!am A. Sptatley.
.
.
Spratley satd Columbia Transt:ntsston has fU.ed a request for a
$1)2-blUion Increase aver the next six months.
Appl'O!Iimalely ~ per&lt;:ent of this Increase would be passed on to
OhioanS servlce4 by ColUmbia Gas and other companies. This In·
crease w111 be reflected In the porUon of the consumers' bllls known
as the "gas cost recovery" charge, nearly 80 percent of the amount a
cuslomer pays for gas uWity service.

CAKES

Answers 48 alarm8

TUES.
THURS.
FRI.

.

..

(Continul)dfrornpagel)
· that they would be w1lllng lo con- ·
Plans for holding a Friday, the skier any changes suggested by the.
13th weekend promotion were made judge.
. •
when Middleport Chamber of CornH AT&amp;T aiid the Justice Departi. ·
merce members met at the LaSalle ment cannot agree on chan&amp;es SUi·
Hotel. The merchants wiU plan gested by the ju(lge, they face the
special sales-.for the weekend with prospectdafeflllllPIIondtheantl- '
some to feature Sidewalk mer- trust trial.
chandise. Businesses 'Will · be open
from 9:30a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday and .----..,--11...1!:;;...,~;;;.;::.....__ _
from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Satur·
day.

·MON.

'to. ~1,111 ~rho lJ9!!S an average ofll,(nlcublc feet ol
1'gas~- 1
~ 'me P~ lncreue results primarily from higher prices cbargi!d
.b.Y IIU producers under the Natural Gas Policy Art (NGPA),
enacted by ~ four years ago to stimulate production by
aJ1ooWIJII m9re aalurance' d.,recovered proouc;tloo expenses.
·, 1beap01resi'I\BnaaldColurnblaGasot0hlowUlearnooaddltlonal
~t ·rrorn this lnef!!Ue•
·
,
It reflkts, penny-for-pe1iny, the amount the company PllYB to
~ley ~uloi' lqcustO~," the spokeSman said. "Columblfl'searn,lnp are based on Ita Investment In ptpellneS and other facllltlello

!

Weekend p~motions

Squad has 3 calls

Syria, which stationed more than
20,CXMl troops In L.ebanon after the
'
.
1975-76 clvU war, Is expected to be a
Show delayed
staging point for guerrtllas going to
other countries and to gtve asylum
Dile to a delay In transportation,
lo Saiqa, the PLO faction that the
SylVIa, country-western star scheSyrian goverrunent controls.
Tunisian Foreign Minister Bejl dulEd' to perfonn at the Meigs
Cald Esaebsl said his goverrunent County Falr, wUl begtil her show at
would receive some PWevacuees, 8: :.&gt; p.m. Wednesday, August 18,
and U.S. officials In Washlngtpnap- ra!her .than the scheduled 8 p.m.
peared optlmtstlc that other Arab "The performance wW be held at the
countries would aCCEpt some. One grandstand stage location on the
official' said Jordan and IrB.q al- ROcksprings fairgrounds.
ready "are lined up solidly."
The United States Is believed negotiating with Egypt to take In a
Ad.Utional location
large number cf guerrUlas. But the
Egyptians demanded Israeli con'Meigs County Fair membership
cessions In the talks on autonon!y
tlcltets may be purchased at the adlor the 1.3 rnllllon Palestinians In
ditional location of Phyllis Larkins'
the Isnieu-occupled Gaza Strap
Beauty Salon at Long Bottom. The
and WestBankoftheJordanRJver.
tickets, which sell for $6 each, InA senior Israeli official indicated
Clude dally fair admission and free
lo reporters In Jefusalem that
parking on the grounds.
agreement might be reached on the
deplgyment of the multinational
"peacekeeping force If Israel was
satisfied that It would evict the
guerrUias If tl)ey balk at leaving or ·
allow lsrael _to finish the job.

Pomeroy, Middleport court news
Mayors' Courts were held In
Pomeroy and Middleport Tuesday,
resulting In the following forfeits
and tines:
Middleport, Mayor Fred
Hotrman-Forfeltlng bonds were
Douglas Young, Cheshire, $375,
DWI; $:00, driving under ~uspen­
slon; and $125, possession ot mari·
Juana; Sharon Icenhower,
Pomeroy, $42, speed. Fines were
Richard Harmon, Middleport, $250
and costs and three days In jail.
DWI; Llaa Gibbs, Letart, $250 and
costs and three days In jail, DWI,
and "$100 and costs, possession of
marijuana;.Thomas Roach, Pome-

WW•Iday, Aup 11,1~ .

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

By CHARLENE HOEfUCH

in .Meigs

Stz4heel 8&amp;81 Wrler
, "aehlnd
' every man,., there's•' a
' ,..
Woman
But, equipped' the personable
Joyce Brown after healing the old
cliche, ''illSt supportink, not
.
..
pushlng.
•
Mn. Brown was In Meif!l County ·
Wednesday to , promote the . candidacy of her hllllland. ClarenCe J.
"Bud" Brown for governor of Ohio.
One d. her atopa was the the Meigs
County COUI'Ihouse ~ meet the folks
there and be taken on a IAIIIr of the
· hlltoric bulldlnc. She noted dull It
' ... the . 58th eouru- lhe ...
villted since atarUng Gil the cam- .

···.

palgn trail for her husband.
Accompanleil by Georgene Hage,
~ husband is the Republican
chainnan cf Warren County, the two
left here for Lawrence, Scioto and
Ross Counties before heading back
to Urbana for the weekend.
Enthusiastic and energetic in her
husband's campaign for the goverIIOI'llhlp, Mr~. Brown concedes that
theY,re traveling In different direeti0118 most cf the time now.
She knows that's temporary and
as for now the importanl thing is to
get out and meet and greet, and ·,
hopefully, influence votert as she
rflOVI!S about the state,

I

&gt;

Souttaem

names band instructor
'

Tile 'bi'IJei,a l«al 9ctiool Ole'
t11ct Boercllt Dntm Wedlle_. alab* E!fttllo1ed Vu Reetll •
Soutbml Dlltrlct lutrumental
-A*..,.,.,
IDitnlcinr. ' '
crl Oblo Utlllwssll:y
. ...S 1111111 IDitrue1nr at Walldlr4
... Ill ~ -~ yura, Reels '!'AS

liVen a oae year contract. 1be
board also named Pamela Boso to
an 8111atant to the jllstrict
treuurer, Dennie ijlll. Boso was
liVeD a two yeai contract. ·
'lbe reauJar meetlni d tlie
bollrd wllhe beld at T'p.m. Auc.17
•• tlie blgh lchool ~1erve •

.

'

'

.

ae,...a.' ,
'

IIING'A-l.ONG - Mn. Clarellfe J. Brewn, wife ol tile
• • 11 1 te fer ••..._, plllled pMrialle _ , lbeell • pm1 .. lhe .
I*L&amp;IU.-1 lhlratlre f• ller lgllllld'l -..Jpl dartq ller W•
Deiday .tilt ba Melp l'Aimlty.
•. •.

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