<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14330" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14330?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-28T11:52:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45436">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/1f550a786cfc7fe3939940a4be1268f8.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5f45c10719d03852d32743284a0ad1c2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44751">
                  <text>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.
•. •.

�I .

Corn~entary

T.-. Daily Sentinel-¥age 3 :

·Gianls c~pt~re .I·Oth straight w~it, _1;1•6.
'

ROBERT 1.. WINGETT
l'ublldwr
(

BOB HOEFLICH
f~~ · •wnl Muna~t'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nrw!iEdllvr
Prt'l~ 1\~SIK'iHiillll

A MEfttBER II( Thr AlilitK'Itltt'd Pms, ln.hmd Dllh·
Aml'tlc•an NI'WIIpljM.'t Publhthl!n A!llitll'lallnn.

a1Nt lh1•

•

l.F.TfERS 0 ..' OPINION arr Wt'kumt'd. They 11hould br let~!illllm 300 "A·nrtl!i lun ~t. All
II'U•n art' Nubjtrl t11 l'dlllDK and mulil tw d~tn.-.1 with nMmto, addrt'~N and tt•lt'phunt•
numbtr. Nn uNit-.! kiter» will bt· publlldtt d. IKikn ~h1K1ld br In l(u.d lMs k' . lldtlrt,.liln~o:
luuea:,JIIIt ptrtiOnallllt!ti.

Uncertainty is the
enemy.of.them all
"Are high rates attributable to Fed pollcy?" asks an economlst In Cit·
I bank's "Economic Week," a publlcatlon that analyzes domestic and Inter·

national events.
The question, posed In a magazine of the country's second largest com·
mi!rclal bank, suggests how uncertain about Interest rates are the socalled experts, the people wbo are paid to know.
· It Is almost awesome that a good manyofthesesamepeoplesaywlthout,
hesitatiOn that monetary pollcy - Including Interest rates - Is now the
major factor In the economy's direCtion.
·
No wonder, then, that various consumer polls show Individual Amerl·
cans undecided on spending plans. Or that corporate plans lor big ticket
spending have shrunk over recent months. Or that stock prices are down.
Uncertainty Is the enemy of them all.
·
It Is also the factor that makes guessing the direCtion of Interest rates one
of the blgrest games In town. Since nobody has a corner on knowhow,.any
reasonable thesis has a chance of being listened to.
And believed, too. Side by side today are forecasts of the Impending
collapse of the economy and assurances that It Is on a fast track to
recovery. To prove the case Is not necessary. Wbo's to disprove It? ·
~reatlng from the extremes, the biggest question for most Interest
rates forecasters seems to be the Impact of the Treasury borrowing. At the
moment, estimates range around $100 b!Won In thesecondhalfoftheyear,
nearly twice the amount financed In the previous six monthl.
·
Will that drive rates up? Or, will cutbacks In planned business borrow·
lngs leave the market free for the Treasury?
·
Will the Fed ease the flow of money? Or tlghlell It?
.
With those uncertain Ingredients It Isn't likely that any forecast can be .
presented or received with confidence, but there Is not)!lngunusual a!Joot
that, uncertainty being the new way of life.
1
.
Whatever, the consensus - lf any can be spotted - seems to.be that
lnterellt rates might rise a bit lis the year wears on.
As Cltlbank. puts It:
"The near·term Implication Is that rates probably will edge downward
for another month or two.
"But as money growth picks up - and perhaps overshoots In an upward
direction - rates will temporarlly :rJg up again, probably by several
percentage points, later this year or In early 1983."
If that forecast seems speckled with ~ties, well, you must remember that this Is a very uncertain economy.

WASHINGTON - For the past a point In the affairs of men and of through fear of surgery Qr hope of
two months, night after night on the nations when forbearance Is remission, cancer Ollly gets worse.
evening 1V news, all of us have exhausted.
·
.
" The PLO'a fellow Arabi know th1s.
gazed In dismay upon the suffering
Israel has no' quarref With the Who wants the PLO? Net syrle.1'!ct
In Lebanoo - the dead, the woun- Palestinian Arabi as a people. ' JOf(lan. Not _Egypt. Not the Saudis.
ded, the homeless - and night after Israel's rage Is directed at that for- No one.
.
night the same Implicit message has miess, ~peleu nonentity of an en- . Who is to blan\~ for the auffefln8
flashed subliminally across the tity, the Palestine Li~ratlon In Beirut? Who prolongs the agony?
screen: The Israelis are responsible OJ:ganlzation. The PLO has pone of The PLO moved into \!lis beaUtiful
for this.
t1ie trappings of sovereignty IX- and Inoffensive city like a gailgster
It is high time, it seems to me, to $1atehood, but It Is treated as a mob, terrorizing the Inhabitants,
put the lie to this Insidious nonsense. sovereign state, TJ!e PLO's chleftian AJded and abetted by the Soviet
Let us place the blame for the , swaggers to the United NatiDII$ to · Union, the PLO made Beirut a
destruction and bloodsl!ed squarely addreslithe natlona of the ~ld; the headquarters for inter~atlonai
where it belongs, upon the shoulders PLO maintains an 81711Y supplied terrorism. With Its stunning defeat
of that smirking monster With the and equipped by the Soviet Union; at the hands of Israeli troops, the
manic grin on his face, Vasser, here In the United States we talk PLO reacted in the most cowardly
Arafat, leader of the Palestine constantly of "recognizing" the and contemptible fashion: The PLO
Liberation Organization.
PLO.
took the civilians of Lebanon as
From the moment of Its creation
What a fiction! The PLO is not a hostages, and hid behi11!1 them while
as a modem state In 1948, Israel has state. It Is a cancer.lJke other can- it stalled for time.
asked but one. thing of her .,Vab cerous
it must be cut out, . It ,is objected that Israel bid
neighbors - to live In peace. It Is roots arid
the malignancy pron\lsed to. use jta U.S. anns for
irrelevant to the current sltuatiCI'I spreads.
whe&amp;ber defensive
only. One
that In times past Prime Minister·
Menachem Begin and Defense
Minister Ariel Sharon engaged In
their own terrorism; we might with
equal acuity review the hiatory o1
Babylonians, Greeks, Persians,
Romans, Mamelulles and Oltomana.
The isaue at hand has to do with
Lebanon today, Why are the Iaraelil
there? And who Ia l'elpOIIIible for
the sufferlng.tnrucled IJPO'I innocent
civlllana?
The Israelis attacked the PLO fOr
one reaaoD OnlY, - because the '
provocations ol the PLO at last had ·
become Wlbearable. Jn this regard,
we may recall the story of the
Comanche chief who marked each
grievance against the while man by
putting a pebble In his pouch. When
the pouch was full he went tO war.
We . may also recall the story of
another long-i!ufferlng people who
resorted to Bl'lllll when their
repeated petitions were answered
only by repeated Injury. Is that line
faml118r? It should be famlllar. This
was the Jusllflcatloo advanced by
our own forefathers for the
~can Revolution. There comes

Let the buyer beware

legislation was introdUced virtually
WASHINGTON- "Let the buyer American
Society
of
word-for-word by Reps. Tom Luken,
beware" Is a doctrine beloved by "Anesthesiologists and some state
O.Ohio, and Gary Lee, R-N. Y.
conservative champions of free en- and cilunty professional societies.
terprlse. But It's too rsc!lcal to suit
James Miller m, the conservative Similar versions are being puShed
the health-care establlslunent.
who Ronald Reagan named to head by Sens. Robert Kasten, R-Will., and
. Professional medical groupe are the FTC, wants o contiiiue the agen-. James'McCiure, R-Idaho.
If the AMi/s surgery on the FTC ill
fighting desperately to II:!Jep. the cy's watchdo'g role iJ\ thi8 area. But
Federal Trade Commlaalon frclm the medical magnates are deter- carried out, several monoplistlc
stopping their monoj,~c practiceil mined to strip the cornmisaion of its practices would go uncontested. For
example, the eonunission WO\Jid be
or· even telling the public what it power.
,
should beware of when it needs
Last year, in 11 series ol meetings helpless to prevent a doctors'
medical or dental care. Un- here at the U,!l. Chamber ol Com- · boycott of a hospital that allowed a
woman to use the less expensive serfortuna~ly, Big Medicine has found merce, the University Club and the
willing helpers in Congrea8 who are law olfices of Hogan and Hartson, an • vices of a nurse-midwife for
trying to protect the doctors at the AMA-drafted bill aimed at delivery. Nor could it move against
expeiiSe of their patients.
evlsceratirig ~ ~ il'as disc:uaaed a professional boycott of. low-cost
This is big business we're talking by a coalition of professional groups. dental or eyeglass clinics In chain ·
about here: Medical-dental ex- An lntemal briefing paper obtained stores:
A lot of work, for Instance, goes
Here are,some of the pending FTc
J)enses amounted to $1,225 per ' by my associate Tony Capaccio laid
Into the tall, tufting the hair Into a
actions that evidently terrify Big
patient laat year, or a staggering 9.8 · out the coalition's complaint:
kind of bouffant. The styles vary
percent of the gross national
"The FTC ... is attempting by Medicine, and would be killed If the
only slightly, with some going for a
prOduct.
various
methods · to replace AMAbill~:
pear shape, others opting lor some- A proposed rule to curb decepOver the years, the FTC has found professional ethic8 with the 'comthing more like a globe.
that lack of competition - active mercial rule of 'Let the buyer tive clalma and high-pressure sales
Nee! says the main reason for dotactics In the hearing-iiid industry.
Ing up the taU Is to make the animal · diBcouragement of It, in fact - has beware.' "
-Investigations into professional
contributed
to
the
skyrocketing
inThe docwnent also gave the
look taller. A lot of work goes Into
crease
in
health-care
costa.
The solution to the complaint: "Only restrictiofll! that keep dentlsla from
the hind quarters In general, and
commiai!ion has brought reatraint- congressional action can.change t1!e • working for bu.siness finns, and
!'feel spent most of his time tufting,
of-tralje
acUons against · the situation now ... nte eleventh l!our is 1 prevent non-dental per~onnel
combing, trimming and spraying
1
trained to make and fit dentures
Amerlclm Medical Association, at hand."
around there.
..
from offering these services directly ,
Amer'ican
Dental
Association,
Sure
enough,
the
AJ¥'8
draft
"You-get the leg hair up to make
the hind quarters look thicker:· he
saki. While that hair stays long, the
bulk of the body Is trimmed a little
more closely.
The body hair Is combed for·
"The ,Subcoounlttee on Violence
"Gentlemen, can we call this
get off the tra~k."
ward, which makes the steer look
will come to order. Will someone meeting to order? We're trying to
"Well, can we get 011, with it? I've
longer, he said. After the trim, the
please tum off that television set?"
getto the cause ol violence and ..."
gOt' an el~On cornlng. uJ,, and If I
animals are sUcked up with greasy
. "Sorry,Iwas~lnatedbyacom"Listen, before we start, I aaw a
4~n't murder my opponent. in the
cattle stuff.
merclal of two people kidnapping a movie the other night and folmd it
pri~,I'ma~adduck•."
If anyone Is the proverbial hair·
car dealer and stealing the car. It's damned Interesting; It was a cowboy
"Let 's not talk politiCB now. We
drellser wbo knows lor sure, It Is
rather. an extraordinary way to seD picture, and it may have had aliWe . have to think of witnesses we want to
probably Stanley Goodman of Syccars."
· ··
.
too much blood for .eve~y's call."
amore. G(lodman runs a conces·
"Well, we dCI'I't have time to taste, but I never 88\\' anytl)ing so
"I hope we ccme up 'with
slons stand as busy as the food and
discuss that now. We have to get realistic.'.'
,
8CI'Ilethlng concrete beca111e I l!ave
game stands on the midway.
down to the bualnesa ol violence.
"Talk .about realism. Did you see. to glvea grad~on speech and I've
HIS rnerchandlse Includes three
Senator, clo you mind putting down that shot ol the soldier on~ news been beating my brains out trying to
kind&amp; of soap - black, brown and
that magazine? . We're ready to ~~nighton'I'Vjuatashe~othitand thlnlfofsomethingtoaay.''
white· - and Colored liquids with
begin the meeting. Senator ... "
. "U you don't beat your brains out,
such names as "golden glow,"
"HUh? Oh, ucuae ' me, Look at
"Thiameetlngmuatccmetoorder theatudeniiWilldoltforyou.''
"blue set" and "purple on." He also
this. Here Ia a .carbine for sale by inunedla~y. We are here1oday to
'IVery funDy.;'
•
•
has ~ disks 11&gt; trim hOoves.
mall for only t28. How the blazes do discua!l the cauaea ol violetlce In the
"We're ~~ olf the subject
'Qiere's even ilUman hair streak .!hey dOlt?"
·
United Slates:"
r
again, gentlemen." '
"11&gt; touch u11 dUJen!nt spots." '
•
"Problbly some fore~ mike.
"May I ask a question?" WW 'I"!
"rdllketoiNIYODelbinllbeforewe
Goodman warns there IS 110'dye · My coilstltueota are furtoUI at the be done by •~ U I don't. set home . get · started. We 'tan•t. ~ the
allowed.
InSpeetors regu
. Jai'k'
;....,., fioodoUorelgn8WlflcCimlnlllltothls early,myWilewiUidllme.' 1
'
y -"""
'aecretaries (Ill the COOIIlllttee. late
their~ across theentrlel, and
COUJitry."
"Knowinl
yaur wile, lhe would,
Wllesi we can get thepolloeto..m
u any color comes otf, that' a ft.
· "I don't blanle theJil. U you~re an too."
!hem !Mme."
·. · .
"You can tell In the lboW the Alller:lcln IIW1 hlvil\ the least you · "May I repeat, pndemen, ft're ·
"rm not sure the pollee w111 Jl8l'8e
calves that have really been
candoilbuyAmerlcu." ·I
here to dl~e~a~ 1iah ee IAtr;;,'.:.•.:.not~....:~=-"---,
worked,'' he l8ld. MOlt II.JCCIII(Ul
owners start the 'II"Jilftllnlln the
fall before ~ fair.
.M.

•Cattle grooming big
·event at state fair ·
By ROBERT GREENE
AIIIOCialed PreM Wrller
COLuMBUS, Ohio (AP) - High

.

school vocational students set up a
beauty salon at the Ohio State Fair,
but the real grooming was happen·
lng In the barns.
Thesday was the junior division
steer shOw. And all day long
youngsters and their lamDies were
giVIng their prize cattle the kind of
treatment and atteiltiOn you would
be hard-pressed to see at an expen·
slve beauty salon.
A snip here on the beast's hind·
quarters, then a touch of the metal
comb. Then the youngster stands
back, looks Intently, weighing
where next to apply the scissors.
, "We take better care of these
than we do ourselves," said Mrs.
Norman Walker of Pleasantville,
whose famUy raises cattle and Is
shOwing at the fair.
mow dryers, fans and clippers
provide the background noise. But
the thing you notice most when
walking In the midst of the cattle
and other show animals Is the
smell.
Imagine the sweet odors of hair
spray, SOBI! and pol1sh mingled
with manure and hay as the sun
approaches high noon.
.As 16-year·old Brllin Neel of Plea·
santv111e points out, there Is reason
, behind most~ .what to the layman
Is ornamentation lOr Its Owil sake.
Nee! explains as he works away
at an · AnguJ-Chlan1na owned by
·UOiher family In the area. As coofl·
dellt as he appeers with a creatu~
leWI'a1 t1mel his ltl.l! and weight,
Nee! says, ''I couldn't cut people's
balr."

• ~ll'l'bur8day,Aq.J2, the2Mtbday~l91!2. Thereareld-ll!ft ·
Ill the ,...
~·
.
'l'odlly'.. "'lb'Jallt In history:
011 . . . 12, U1B8, the Spa..W...Amerlcal;l War ~.w• ~
c

Ill-

•

•

'

Ill* lint police fcll'ee Ill~~ -;*llillllecliiiNew .Amlll!r- .
dam, dllllll DOW New Yodl aty.
,
,

;:~~dldar.sWirCII.A~~·~ttllestart~'~cnf
•

....

'•

~

"

•

}

!

'

.~t'\j

M!el '

I

Smith.

.
."The Giants will not be Intimidated .by l!J~Yone,'' said the San
Francisco outt1eliler 011 ~ rNe of
an jmportant four-game ser~ with
the Los :Angei![!S Ilodgers.
Smith, of course, was a member
of tile Dodgers for many years 411d
remembers',that the Gian!S iiSed to
be virtual pushovers for them.
"When I first came here, It was a
matter of the Doilgers knowing
they could beat the Gtants," Smith
said. "But there's been an attitude
Change."
·
A big part ~ that has been helped
bY the Giants' recent play, which is
the hottest In baseball. The Giants
have posted the major league's
best record since June 'II, 28-13.
CoWlttng Wednesday's ~ · 12·
Inning victory over Atlanta, the
Giants .have won 10 atralght and
moved right Into the thick of the
National League West battle.
The surge has left the fourthplace Giants four games behind
division-leading Los Angeles and
they hope to make up more ground
as they started their big series today with the Dodgers, who lost 2-1
11&gt; Cln.dniiBtl Wednesday night The
~raves, meanwhile, remained a
half-game behind the I&gt;odgers In second place.
·
The Giants' victory, by the way,
gave them their longest wtnnlng

response is that, given the retentkllli

nature ol the Pl.O'a threat, the ' - ·
Ia a good ctfenae. Jn 0..
~ eight ~ the lmlelil ~
done us a tremendous favor: ~
have ~t,ed, In nya u.
war "games" could never cJemon,.
strate, the superiority ol American
pJanes, Clllb and mher weapons. It
is not only the PLO that hU been
hunilll8ted; It Is the Soviet Ullion
also.
·
It would take a heart ri.llqne ml
to be moved by 11\e pictures we haJ«
seen from l.ebaoolt -the old women
weeping, the Infant ~ am~~
were blown Olf. Every huinanltarian
Instinct cries out for cessation.
. But the smoke from the buminll
bJdldlngs of Beirut should n,ot blllid
us to this fact - that the PLO could
have ended the camage at .any'time
by laying down Its anns and1walklng
out. Arafat

defense

'

..

.

'

·streak since they reeled off 12 In a
row April »~y 13, • ·
.
. Smith, one of tlie hottest hitters In
the Giants' hot . streak, came
through with a two-run homer In
the 12th,!J\ning to Win We&lt;lnesday's
game./'mith's game-winning blast
was his 12th homer rl the year, and
his eighth game-winning RBI. He
has hli safely In 13 of his last 14
games with five homers and 11 RBI
(]Ver l)lat span.
The loss was the ninth straight
for the Braves, who had dropped
out of first place Thesday night af·
ter spending virtually all season on
top.
Jn other NL action, It was PhUa·
delphia 4, Pittsbulllh 1; Montreal3,
Chicago 0 and Houston 3, San Diego
0. Rain washed out the St. Louis·
New York game.
Phllllee 4, Pirates 1
Garry Maddox drove In three
runs with a pair of singles to lead
Philadelphia over Pittsburgh for
the PhiWes' third victory In their
!our-game series with the Pirates.
The Phlllles scored the winning
runs In a three- run eighth Inning.
Bo Dlaz' s. groulJdou I got one run
home before Maddox capped the
rally with a two- run single off Kent
Tekulve, who relleved Pirate star·
ter Rick Rhoden.

.Expoe s, Cubs 0
Gary Carter hit a solo home run

and Charlie Le11 and two relj~.ers.
combined on a four-hitter ail Mont·
real stopped Chicago's slx·gall)e
wtnn!ni streak. .
· Lea, 9-6, allowed only three hits
before getting relief help one out In
the eighth from Woodle Fryman.
Jeff Reardon balled Fryman out of
a jam In the ninth, posting his 17th
save. Lea walked three and struck
out six whUe Improving his 11fetbne
record against Chicago to 4-0.
The Expos scored their first run
In the second off Chicago starlet ·
Alan Ripley, 4·5, on Carter's 22nd
homer of the season and first slilce
July 'II.
Montreal made It 2.0 In the fourth
on Doug Flynn's RBI single and
added another run In the eighth on a
run-scoring base hit by AI Oliver.
Astn111 S, Padres o

Nolan Ryan !Ired the eighth onehitter of his career and singled In a
run, and Dickie Thon extended his
hitting streak to :ll games as Housll&gt;n blanked San Diego to complete
a three-game sweep.
Ryan retired the first 13 Padres
before Terry Kennedy grounded a
clean single to center with one out
In the fifth Inning. The Padres man·
aged only live other haserunners,
three of them on walks.
Sid Monge pitched the eighth In· · Ryan, 12-9, struck out slx In boost·
nlng and picked up his ruth victory lng his season total to 172. The vic·
withOut a loss. Ron Reed finished tory total is his highest In three
up lor the Phlll1es, gaining his sev- seasons as an Astro and the shutout
enth save.
was the 49th of his career.

Eric' ShoW, 9-4, allowed·ait thr119
Astro runs on eight hits oVer sill

lnnlni!!t;, lnclucliAi Th~n· s ,Ieadolt

double ~t' le(l to the Astros' llrs~
run 11n the opening Inning. Ryan
aided his own cause with an RBI
single In the secoild.

· Amerlcall League
When a key hit Is n~ed, the ca;
11fornla Angels almost fall ov~
themselves II&gt;' get Into the batter's
box.
·
It was two outs, bases loaded In
the bottom oftheseventhwhenDon
Baylor got his tum.
"If you take that situation,'' said
BaylOr, "Reggie Jackson would
l(]Ve to be up there. Everyone In our
11neup who can drive the bB1I would
I(]Ve to be up there.
"I love to be up there, too. You do
It or you don't. Plus, Davis doesn'!
trick you,'' BaylOr aald of the predominantly fastball·pltchlng Ron
Davis, the Minnesota Twins' right,
handed reliever.
Baylor got his fastball on a 3-2
pitch and drove It Into the left field
stands for his sixth career grand
slam and 18th homer ol the year,
powering the Angels to a 6-3 victory
Wednesday nlgl\t ovl!r the Twins.
In other AL games, Texas defeated Milwaukee &amp;-3, Toronto
edged Boston 4·3, Detroit outlastedYork 3-2 In 12 Innings, Chicago
stopped Baltimore 4-1, Kansas City
blanked Cleveland s-o and Seattle
toppled Oakland H .

Reds snap Dodgers' win streak, 2-l
Scoreboard ...
cbeU Anderson. forward . to a multl-yur

.. Majors

rontraet.

--

FOOTBALL

8J111ie A . . . . . .fd p,_

NUMMI P'telball Leape
GREEN BAY PACKERs-Annount"fiJ

.WEitiCAN L&amp;AOOit

Jack ·AnderSbri
to the public.
"
:
- Investigation of reslricticxjs
that keep eye doctors from leastrtg
spac:e In retaU stores or woi'king fcjr
lrHiouae corporate health Planf.
Thialnvestigationls'also !OcUsing '
a (l0181ble requirement that e~
specialists give conswners copies ~
the eyegla,. and conlact·lerla
prescriptlonstheypaldfor.
1

'

CONFIDENTJAL FIIE: 'i'he ~
has ICI'Ig had an interest In ZvezdJly
Gorodok, or "Star CitY," the Sovlfl
training center for CG1111l0118uts Jlisl
nO!'Ih4iast of Moecow. Our sllOOiis
have been keeping an eye on .tile
facility using satellites and othdr
methods, and have noted sii!IJificant
expansion of Star City over the
years, indicating the Kre!JI)In's COIJ'I.
mitment to a large and contlnuin_g
space program. .
1
Now the CIA Is hoping to get some
firsthand, on-the-spot lnfonnaticJJ
on 1the spac;e center - from their
buddies in French lnlelllgence, wl\0
will be debriefing Frencp
cosmonauts who trained at Star Cit)'
for the FraJJCOoRussian C().()p spaoe
flight.
.
;
\

()n violence~--~~--~----~~--Ar_t~B~~h~~'~4

TOday in history ..
CJIIIIII date:

AP SporU Writer
It's getting-even time forReggle

'-~~------~------------~----~~

Ill Cuurl SIJTt"l
Punwruy, 0/du
llf...tt'Z-!151
DEVOTED TOntF.INTER~TOF ntF: MF.JC.S·MASON AKF:i\

!!AT WHITEHEAD

py ~ RAPPOPOII.T

• James J. Kilpat.;4

Who's to blame?

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

u)e

"But 11oft' are we going to get
reporloutontime?"
· ''We coUld work,8alurdaya."
"That's no good. I'm going huhtlngonSalw'day." ,
"
j
"We'll face that problem when ,e
come to it."
_
"I llelieve the first
we should
do 'Is write a preface to tlie re!#t
1
depl()fing violence."
· ·
!
"n..t'sa $lipid Idea."
.
"DCI'I't call me ~ untesa y~

I

thing

wanttolllepoutal• .''

,

,"Order, order.! Can't we~ All.
!eeliDilllllderconlrol?" ~ ..,.

"UI'm&amp;olnttoworkontl!la~

miltee, I demlnd ~ '! 1
"Drupad." . '

~
"R loob •If we're,.~~
eet anywhere todly. Lit'~ adJCJU111

-

...._ W ~ L
&amp;\ 46
61 !51
"
~

"'
II

"'
01
58

.000
·~
.til · 10~
.487 11

08
08

.511
.571

00 51
01 57
!10 e
tt 61
"" 14

,.,

w......55_
61
tW

•

Olklact

Tex..
. -

"

9

6
8~

.!il9

"'

CoilKatuas Clly
~...

~

57

' o...lllld

Sottnlo

thf reurement or Buddy Aydrlette, otren·

Pd. GB
.!IIG ~ ·~

I

.«16
.4.15
.. .3M

.315

, ~.a.m.

COLLEGE

COLOR.AOO"'~"'Namf'd Mike McN(ely. l't'crulllng roormnator and wiGc receivers

-

coach.

3%
8\1

· u tn

Leaders

19~

25~

Giants matched them step for step,
the four-game series beginning this
afternoon at Dodger Stadium has
suddenly taken on new meaning.
The Dodgers, despite their 2-1
loss Wednesday night to Cincinnati,
which snapped their winning
streak at eight games, still held a
half-game lead (]Ver staggering
Atlanta.
The Giants are In fourth place In
the division, but are only lour
games behind the Dodgers and
have won 10 games In a row- their
longest win streak In 16 years.
This week marks the first series
of any meaning between the long·
time rivals slncel9'18. That year the
Giants held the diVIsiOn lead In Au·
gust, but the Dodgers triumphed,
ending a six-game losing streak one
afternoon In Candlestick Park be-

hind a rookie pitcher by the name of enemy left-hander who has won In
Bob Welch.
Dodger Stadium this season.
With It the Dodgers began a
"We just tried to take advantage,
seven-game winning streak that to stay aggressive," Cey said of the
culminated In their beating the Dodgers' two thwarted rall1es.
Giants again , this time to take over
first place and, eventually, win the . . - - - - - - - - - - - division title.
On Wednesday, the Reds scored
The Da ily Sentinel
two runs In the first Inning on Cesar
Cedeno's two-run double off loser
lUSPS 11$-ltOl
Burt Hooton, 1·5, who started lor
A Di¥111 lon ol MultJm~b&amp; , Int .
the first time In two months after he
Publisht!d t'Yl'TY l:lrtt'rm)tlll, MunWt y throul!h
was sidelined with knee surgery.
FriW. y, l II Cuurt Stn•t'\ , by tht! Ohio V~al l t·y
Ron Cey crashed his 16th homer
Publishin)( Curn~ny ~ Multim~ll iH, Im: ..
P1Mnt&gt;roy, Ohlu 45769, 992·2 l:i6. Sel,·und d.aS!i
with one out In the second Inning,
posla~e p!lid a t P ornttroy. Ohio.
but the Dodgers had runners
Mt! mhl!r : The Aslioc' il:lll'1.1 Pre~ . lnhHid Dat i·
thrown out at the plate In the second
ly Prt!S!I Association wOO tht&gt; Arnerh-an
and third Innings as Shirley, 4-9, reNt!W!Spii!Jt!r Publi:;hl!ns A:i:!oci~:~tiun , Nationt~l
Atlv t! rli ~ in~ Reprt'iJcnlali w. Branham
peatedly worked his way out of dlf·
N~wspap.:r SMles, 7l3 Third A venu~ . New
flculty. The PhUadelphla Phlllles'
York, N~:w Yurk 10011.
Steve Carlton Is the only other
POSTMASTER: Send a tldrt!!:l!i lo The D•i1y
St!-ntincl, 11 1 Court St. Poln~roy , Ohlu45769.

.WBIIICU&lt; LICAGVE
BATTING (ZIG at bats) : W.Wtlul, Karl·
. . Cll)l, .317; Hlrrah, Cleveland, ~

Tecu ' MOwauw a ·

1U'Oalo 1,"-a:.lt. 3
Dftrott 3. Nfw Ywk 2, 12 lllnlnp
tl!Jcaao f, Balllmorco 1

SUBSCR1PT10N RATES

Cooper, MilwaUkee, .Df.; Yout, t41Jwau·
kef, ..1%1; Pacmek, Ctlict&amp;O, .32L
RUNS: R..K81d!nca, Oakland, 93: MoU.

~~Mltt-.3

Kanoao CI\Y 8, Clowllttd 0
SMnae 7, Oak'-1"

By C.rrlrror Motor Ruult'
Om• we~k . . . . . . . . . . . . ............ $1.00
Ont• Month
..... $&lt;1.40

tor, Mltwaulft, liB; Harrat\ OevdaDd, 83;
Ywlll, MUwaukff, s:J; Evans, B:lltm, 19.

..,.,...,.. a.m.

RBI:

CaUilmla ('J1ut 0.11 at Mlrmttoh

~Rae. Kanu1

Orw Yl.'~r

City, 97; Thornton,

· · · 552 '80

SiNrii.fi COPY
PRICE..~

(Vkala S-.1)

ztnY;i,

CkYf-land., 87; Cooper, Mltwoutft, 87; Lu·
O\k8R(I, 1't. G.tbomaa, Mlwaulft,

D&lt;!lly .

1\:roalo 10ot1 3-7 and Getlell-lh at MD·
waulllit IMeOu~ 8-4 ln4 t..en.-h 7·11, 2,

'"'

S u b:t~: r i l&gt;t·r:; nol dt's inn ~ lu Jl'Y lht• t'ctrril•r
IIICIY remit 111 ~tlvcnlt·c di rt.'l'l l11Tht• D:~ily
S.-ntuwlun a 3, 6 m· 12 n11mth ba!iis. Cred it
will lx· ..:ivcn l'l:lrrlcr t·ad'• monlh.

HITS: Gatd.a, Toronto, 1l50; Harrah,
Oevtlanll. HJ: Cooper, Mil-: McRae,
Kanau City. LW.
IXX.18L.F:): White, Kanu.a City, Sf;
Ywllll, Mltwaukfe,Jl; Lynn, CaliforZI6a,
McRae. Kansp City. 29; Coweu. Seattk&gt;,

In)

New Ycrt fMarpn Ul · at Otraao
IKoolmln
t-51 ,_
(ftl ...,
,..
Gob&gt; _

.......,,_

».

a.Jttmore. at BotkiD, fnl

Kanlu City at Darou, 1n1 ..

se.nr. at~ tnJ

Oewlaad at Tnu,

.t OUlln4.

{Q)

NATIONAL I.&amp;WVE

oa

Pd.

W· L

61

II

.571

-

m

•

... """'

Pltt*tP

" . 19
,.
. 53

.163

-iool
New York
01101110

!18

5I!
15\1

Lol ~
Atlaata

!on

llleto&gt;

Sui Francllro
HWitee
ClndoutaU
•

I

4S

13

523
.132

•

il

.111

11\1

&amp;I
. 6l
00

51

.557

-

50
..

.IH
·""'

:il
f1

62
73

. .Gl
_..

I)

7

:

53

~

.:122

,·.o.m..

""'""'0

St..... at~ YG'k. ppl, rain
Ph!!wWptM I. PMt8qb 1
J, ... Dl!llo 0
Clnc:tnNtU J, Lol I

~·~
Sill l'nmdlco 1u.t• 5-5) at t.c. An-

-111•.,._.1
Atlanhl (Wd: .,.71 at

San D .
Ja.-- 74 and

(tlawkD 1·1) ·

Farnwr 2-411

•t MMINai ICuiHclttM 8.9

Md IJyn1t ..J2), 2, (l·n)
. Qalcrqo {Noiel
f)' 6-f), (a)

HI a t . YorK {7Mb·

PttUbilrP

Sl. Ladl (Siupll' ..2) II

1Biu!1'11111fa 0..11. Ill

......... a...
~·--""
PlttlburltL

St. Laadl at

PbllatelpiU •

IDI

Molllr.a. lnl

Hol-. at CD:iullld. C•l

Q1c1eo at N!w 'ycri, (Ill
"...,. at silo llteFo l•l

OuLildt• Ohio

13 Wt•t•k:;
2fi Wt•t•k:~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

52 Wt•t•ks

3.81i Cluclll Statile, 104, .714, U'J: ZIIVI,
Callbmla. IM, .106.3.18; Pehy,Det...U,12·
6, J17, 3.21; G11111, Kanaas City, 13&amp; .619,

UJ: Barker.

Clev- 11-7. -!11. 3.53.

. S'I'RQ(mtJTS: F .Binniltft", Seattle, ItO;
Bar\8', Cleveland 124: O,attli!. Seattle.
115: Guldr)', New Yodt,lll: Edcer&amp;k!y, Bot!011. 101.

BY TilE TOE - Cloclnaad Red1l catcher Alex
Trevino bas the ball aod makea a fool lag ooSteveGarvey of the Los Aogelea Dodgers, sliding 11118 home plate
lo the aecond lnnli1g of Wedoesday'• pme at Dodger

N~TtoNAL LICAGUE
BAITING (ZIOII bats! : McGee,SU..outl.
Knight, Houttoa, .315; Baker, LOI Anidet, :m: c.rter,

.m; Olive-r, Montreal . .m:

Monlreoi • .Th
RUNS1 Lo.Smttll. St.Loub.. 90; M~ •
Atlanta, I): Sctlmldt, Phllaclelphia. 75; Dlw·
UL Molltreal. 7• : Sandtft&amp; OOOIIG. 7l
RBI: M~. AUanta, 19; (.l&amp;rk, San
Franc:1fcO. ~ OUver. Monlreel, 73; Kili1t
"""· Now York. '12: lfel1ctlok. SU.ouO. ll
HtrS: J.Ray, PlttstluJ'ah, 1J7; Su.. Loa
AnKelet, 136; Knl1ht, Hous ton, 135;
lkrklll'f'. C'tlkaJP. 131; Ollver. Montreal. ~
13L
pouot.ES: T.~. San Diego. 32;
KniRht. Hcuston. 21: Dawson. Man!rPal, 11;
M.adlodt, Plttabuf'lh, 27; Oliver, MontiUl.
. 21: J.ThO- Pltut&gt;u..... 25.
TRIPlD: 'l1lon. H-ouston. 9: Mt&lt;:'.H,
!l.Latto.l: Oontor, H - ~ · 'l'emploton.
SODD..... 7: J.ftOY,...._&amp;:~ Lo.!lmltb. St.Louto. ~ ""hi.

KANSAS CITY (M')· Don Hood
turned :ll and lost his job all in 1he
same year.
Then his wife divorced him. And
then, In the autumn, he experienced the humlllatlon of golllg
through baseball's free agent draft
without being taken ·by one team,,
You might py l9lrl was a rotten
year lor DOn Hood He was a Journeyman pitcher with a 28-32 career
record who had been rejected by
f!Very teani In .the major leagues.
But he got throuil11t, and Sbo1'ed
up at KaJisaS City's' camp the next
spring. Ever so slowly', his luck began to tum The Royals s1gned him ·
and. shipped •hiJJl to tbe Omaha
fann club, where he labored an ~
Iaiit aeason and tbe ftl'st few weeks

If'_....,

'

:frarJBaetlons

__ Sl;_Ptt_

HOME RUNS: -.~1Mta.21: Kltt~
Jnlft, , New y~ •
tdea - . :

Sci••"

-

!ial'o Lol A - 31. .

v--

51: Lo.ll, 40:
•

PITQUNG 114~1: - --

o.- ..._IK
Loo-M

,.., .m, UJ; Cltr!t&lt;ot. ~

~.,.m

:.. 11~

w-.

.1112. 2.&amp;1;
Lao IH .8!0.
117; Knalnw, PH' I \.Wa, U.f, .117, 2.72;'
IU.oulo, 11.._ MI. Ul; Lollar, Sa
~ 11-7, .Ill, ~fl.

c:;:-:u.:
v-.
Loo-m:-.121

- ~ H~
..

•

J'/2:

~this one.

,.

Thbtledown .l'ftiUha
NOR11f RANDALL,

(Jdo (AP)

0b1o (AP) . -

Tllew1 ZW'Itlme . . 2:0L
Ill 111;11111 ... Tabae Bab

~

A\l!ll by G.L. ....

Ulllldl&amp;, ....

'

Tile IIIDth .... tdlillt'la,

als' pitching corps, Hood was
handed the opportunity he'd been
striving tor.
The result has been a personal
and professional comeback that's
gone a long way toward keeping the
RoYals In conlelltlon In the American League West. Manager Dick
Howser ~ used him as a starter,
In long relief, and short relief. When
Paul Spllttor!f s back stiffened In
the second Inning against Clevelamt Wednesday . night, on came
Hood.
. Jn !lve lniJings, he walked one,
sln!ck . out four and gave up only
ooe harmlea8 single as the Royals
pollllded out 8n S.O victory lor a
tlli'el!-gaJ!le 1W1!f:!P ~ the Indians.
Tile VIctory hiked HoOd's record

.HOUSECOAt

- ~··· Gold Wllil t1le taaiiiJal a.y VlctGIY. drl\'81 by Jell Dol8abt'
rat\e at '11111d1!6iw&amp;CII Wed- ~ -lllitW!qred4fllltllliCII
..... co;alqllleltx~lll. at ialaeo Dol!!* Wt t r-.rao MY
.
1:1116.

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

when inJuries sllced Into the Roy·

.._... .

Scioto retulls
OOL~US.

Stadium in Los Angeles. Garvey tried to score from
sec&lt;Jnd base on a Blll Russell base hit to right lield. The
Reds defeated the Dodgen In a close one, 2-1. (AP
Laserphoto)

R'ayals complete sweep over Indians, 8-0

,..._~

SU~atLal~tn)

. . . ... $15.21
. 1 . $29.64
. .. $56.21

25.
PrrctUNG IH Dl!c.1llonll: Bums, Otl ·
CIIQ.\34, .'N5,131; Vuekovtctl. M.UwaulcH,
12-4, .150, :U.; GWdry, New Yor~ lH, .733,

\oi

3%

f
12
2211

su t'rlnltlco 1. Alllntl 6. 12 ~nnt~es
........ 3,

lrudd" Ohln

13 WL'liL~ .... " .. .. . . . .. . ........ $14.04
26 WCt -k;; . .. .. .. ..
.. ... .. , . $27 ,JO
52 Wn-k.~
.. . .. . .. .. .. ..
.. . S5U8

tlty, 7.
HOME Rt.INS: G."nloma. Mltwauhfto,
~ Rt&gt;.Jaclaon. C.llfonlla. 2;: 'lbomton. ·
C1eovcl&amp;nd, 25; HarTah, Otveland, 24; ()g:JJ .
vie, Mllwau._,., M.
~ STOLENBASES : R.HI!ftdl!ral.
Oakl.nd, 10"1; Carda, Toronto. :1k J .CNZ.
Seattle, XI: Watnan, Kansas Clry, 28; 1k
F1o~. Chicago, 25; W.WUson. KaMUCII)I.

(ft)

-AID-~

MA1LSUBSCRIPTIONS

HtrndDn. J)ftrolt, 11; Youat, Mltwaulrife, !t,
Whttlller, Detrok. 7; ~~JqJhry, New York.
'1 : Ber~ Chleaao. 7: Brett Kanlas

NtwY~AI~Cll)

1 5Ccnl&lt;~

No sub.•wriplil)ns by m~il fll'nnillt\1 m town:t

TRIPLES: W.Wibon. Kanaat CIY, 12;

"''tlroMo at Mltwaullee. lnl

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

whl-n• htUllc t'lt rrit••· ~crvi t ·c is avctil~b l c .

~.

Wltil...,.Jow."
·
'l
''Good Idea. It will giVe 1111 chaf..
ce to l'elld up on wily ~*pie aJe
aiWIIJI J'eiOI'tln&amp; to vlolellot/'
:

·

slve tackle.
•
MIAMI DOLPHIN5-Sltned Rn Robtn·
son, kicker.
HOC&amp;EV
NUioul Hctekq l.eape
'
BUFFALO SABRES-SliDtd Paul Cyr,
left wlnJ.
MINNESOTA NORTH STARS--1\gned
Brian Bellows, rla,ht wln,.cent~r. to a
fiv e--year «~nlraQI.

WS ANGELES (AP) - For
some tbne people have been wondering whatever happened to the ol'
Dodger-Giant rivalry, a bitter one
that nourished for years when both
clubs still played In New York and
continued rNen after their shift to
the West Coast In 19S8.
Jn recent years, though, much of
. the zest has gone out of the rivalry,
mainly because Los Angeles has
dominated the series, and San
Francisco has struggled In the Na·
tiona! League West race. Also, the
Ilodgers have had other rivalries to
concern themselves with, such as
with Cincinnati and with Housll&gt;n.
But because of surprising devel·
opments recently In the NL West
race, w)len the Dodgers stormed
from 10~ games behind 11&gt; (]Ver·
take flrst·place Atlanta, and the

~1,· :

palde,ml).

AC!Oiftlol3.l38bet1M1.

PlttSiilu,..h, Nlil
· MineRun (ltrlp) ·
4 TON ~INIMUM ·

18 take part in
ladies day event
Weekly ladies day at the Jay Mar
Golf Course was held Tuesday with
18 women . participating. Three
guests atlt!nded.
· After 18 holes of golf, prizes were
awardt'll ·to Margaret Follrod, low
gross; Pearl Welker, low net;
Elizabeth Cutler, low putt.
· Low net team honors went to
Margaret Follrod and Pearl Welker.
All lady golfers are invited to attend.

NOTICE
,

• ·

&lt;

Prices are
effective
tllru
Sept. I, 1982
'

.

DELIVERED
PRICE
P••rov· •••••••••• , ........... ........... S26.00 Ton
, MlclllleiiOrt &amp; Racine ~ .......... ; .. : ....... S27 .00 Ton
Melli COIInty • , •••••••••• , , •• , ••• , •••••• S21.10 TOll

c.o.D..

11&gt; a glossy 4·0, and lowered his
earned run average to 2.23.

'"· tft.n.·

1 hereby notify all my patients that I, am physical·

ly unable to return to practice at Meigs Surgeons, Inc .
All Medical records are lett with or. Ridgeway,
copies tor transfer to any physician of choice may be
obtained by ~ignlng a request in his office.
I wish to thank all wllo supported me 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 ol you slntert~IY and wish you good health. 1.

' N~ J. EHLiNGER, D.O.

�"
1

I

Ohio

~~un~qp

held at Holiday.

The 58th annual Hayes-Young-_ Cathy and Tom stevers, Shannon
.Holiday &amp;;hool reunion wBB held · star, Theresa Sheffer and Tracy,
Aug. 1 on the old Holiilay School Joy Sauters, Cheri Sautel'li, George
Gilkey, Herbert Gilkey, Hollie and
~rounds.
Martha
Hayes.
A basket lunch was ~erved .with
' Rev. Frank Cheesebrew uking the
bleMin~. The afternoon program
I f1111 AY l Hf
was led by Hollie HByes wit]) the
opening prayer· by Rev.
. . -.. 7' r
Chelisebrew.
Officers elected for the 1913
reunion were: Hollie Hayes,
president; Darelene Hayes,
secretary-treasurer;
Darren and ' ·
I
Jason Hayes and James Boyd,
games corrunittee.
A memorial and silent prayer
were given for ·those deceued
during the past year. Gift&amp; were
1
presented to George Gilkey, ol~
7.98 And~~ .
attending; Stevie Dougan, youngest
attending, and Martha Hayes,
· SALE P!IICE
travelling farthest distance.
And Up
Readings were given by Rev.
Cheesebrew, Fern Cheesebrew,
Manda Eastman and Hollie Hayes.
·SELECTED Tin£$ OF
Music · was provided by Estella
..SHEET
. MUSIC
,.,..,_,.:
Colburn, Manda Eastman, Theresa
Shaffer, Fern Cheesebrew, Hollie
Hayes, Colleen Dougan, Lori Hayes
and Jeremy Hayes.
Allending were J.ucllle Holden,
Tami and MUte Bean, Lynette and
Jack Jordan,. Jason, Jeremtah and
Jerod, 'ltoger and Dea Hayes, Jason
HE CURES HUNGER - N011JING ELBE -All; lboQy ~. · a Cblcago plua mater fer 3'7
• yean, baa been delaged wllll calls lately .- nol lor
: deliveries, llut for Information about herpes dllea~e.

~M-A-S-H',
.
: LOS ANGELES (AP) - "M·A·S.
H" and CBS, two perennial winners
In the prtme-tlme ratings race,
soared to another wtn for the week
ending Aug. 8, figures from the A.C.
· Nielsen Co. showed.
•
. The CBS medical comedy, which
Is going oft the a1r next year after 11
seasons, scored a rating of 21.3 - a
tun potnt atiead of "Too Close for
ComfOrt," its nearest competitor.
Nielsen says that In an average
minute of the show, 21.3 percent of
the television-equipped bomes In
the country saw at least part of "M~.s-H."

In aU, CBS had six shows In the
Top 10. It was another first-place
victory for CBS, which won the rat-

Horse pull weigh-in

Time 11111ga11De prlated a phoae 1111111ber lor fD.
formation oa berpa, bat IOIDe readen faDed to aqtlce
II wu for uae oaly Ia Phlladelpbia. "~ loki tbem I jallt
mate' pizzas," said DICI:ace~~~o, wbo golabouUt caJb
the first week. (AP Luerpllilto)
·r

CBS win in ratings
lngs race for the past season.
CBS had a rating of 13.2, ABC
was second with 12.7 and NBC was
third wtth 10.4. The networks say
this means in an average primetime minute, 13.2 percent of the nation's bomes with TV were tuned to
CBS.
Most of the favorites were veteran series, and ·the only rookie in
the Top 20 was NBC's "Gimme a
Break." The time-tested series In
the Top 10 were "M·A·S-H;" CBS'
"The Jeffersons," third place;
CBS' 60 Minutes," fifth; ABC's
'"Three's Company," sixth; ABC's
"Fantasy Istand," ninth; and CBS'
11

"A.Jice, " lOth.

Other finishers In the front rank
were CBS' "Trapper John, M.D.,"
In fourth place, CBS' "House
Calls," seventh, and ABC's "Hart
to Hart," eighth.
Although NBC failed to place a
single show In the Top 10, the network dominated II¥! Emmy Award
nomlnatlona, Including another 21
lor "Hill Street Blues." The critl·

cally acclaimed pollee drama was
NBC's highest-rated show lBBt
week, placing 14th. NBC's rookie
series "Fame" grabbed U Emmy
nominatiOns. ·
·
Despite the nominations, NBC
had the five lowest-ranked shows:
"Chicago Story," ''Nashvllle Palace," "One of the Boys," and two
speCials, '·'NBC Major League Preview" and "The Game and Its
Glory."
Here are the week's 10 highestrated shows:
·
"M-A-5-H," with a rating of 21.3
representing 17 mWton households,
CBS; "Too Close for Comfort,'' 20.3
or 16.2 mDllon.· ABC; "'l'lle Jeffersons," 20.2 or 16.1 n\llllon, CBS;
•"l'r8pper John, M.D.," 19.6 or 15.6
million, CBS; "60 Mlnutes,''19.4 or
15.S mllllon, CBS; "Three's Com·
pany,'' 19.3 or 15.4, ABC; "Houae
Calls," ~19.3 or 15.4 million, CBS;
"Hart 10 Hart," 18.9 or 15.i million,
ABC; "FantasS~ Island," l8.1pr14.5 .
rnDilon, ABC; "Allee," 1'1.9 or 14.3
million. CBS.

Clanahan, Pearl and Grace Hayes;·
and Jeremy,
WilltamandMabelMcKen
and Darelene
Hayes, Darren
and Lori, Bill and Henrietta O'Brien,
Barry and Robbie, Mary Smith, Bill
Hawk, Willtam Quivey, Mr. and
Mrs. John Hayes, Thehna Hayes,
Kim Frilind, Holly and Rachel,
Chari Sauters, Della Stahl, Cl!lra
and Pearl Gilkey, Grace Richardson, Craig and Kathy Dougan,
Stevie and Kandi, Margery Douglas,
Manda' Eastman, Rev. and Mrs.
Frank Cheesebrew, Estella Colburn,
Colleen Dougan, Audra Hayes,

Wins .ar ·

RtJTLANb- Mr. 11111111'1. 'lflro.
vey Erlewlne spent tllir 'tl'l 'W Ill
Newark with Mr. IIIII IJra. Dlvld
Eskew, Kancll. Amy 111111· Belli. '1'111
family~· day at~ PoiiiL

Don Ha.rris, nine year old son of
Mr. and, Mrs . . Allen Harrjs,
Pomeroy, Route 3, WBB a trophy win-.
ner with his 4-H electricity project at
the Ohio State Fair.
·
Amember of the Five Point Bucks
4-H Club, the youth took outstanding
of the day and then went on to be
top winner after being in.terviewe.J
on the use and
. of his
project and demonstrating it for a
· panel of judges.
·
_He WIIB presented a clOck trophy
by.the Electrlral Power §uppliers of
'Ohio. •
' ·
,
Harrill one of over eo Meigs County
youth selected to participate in the
Ohio State Fair in ~ir •H project
work.
On Youth Night It the Meigs CouJ1,
ty Fair, the Ohio state patdpanta
will be recognized aild .presented
trophies and plaques donated by
local businesses and individuals. •
Also at that tirite, Wednesday, 8
p.m. in the show ring on the hill,
trophies will be presented to the outstanding girl scout, by scout, 4-H boy
and girl, Future Fanner of.
·Amerira, and Future homemaker ol

~!': i. it ~

1'1111

NAMIINGIAVID ..
I , fill
ONANYIIB~,I t

· PURCHASED
..IDAY13th

VILLAOJ'''
HIIITAGI

YOIKTOWN

Rev. Lund

,. BAGs

opens Meigs Fair

OPINPRIDAY

,iVENINO UNTIL~

f·

BOYS'S
. COLORED
........ .
..-JEANS
'

GIRLS' DENIM ·
PAINTERS PANl
or Slim ;

\

· . , SIZE 8·16

,:,

' ' Regular- Slim · :
REG. $10.99 .
. .'

.

:state
:~ibit prepared

;~~!:nc~~~:~~;!:.

.

P.ACKAGE OF 3

JUVENILE

CRAYONS '
(l'q. of 101
·~·ug

'129

· scHOOL
GLUE '

~Mem~rs of the Pomeroy Seventh-

;

....110' 59$- .'

CRAYONS

tar college alter graduation. Scott

Adults
$2.000ff
NOW

Child's '1.00 Off
NOW

'3''

gospel of Jesus Christ to women of
all denominations. Guidelines for all
of the AglO\I' work are taken from
the scriptures.
More infonnation may be obtained by calling 992-7414.

LEE STUDENT BIBS
Sa're '9.00 On Pre-Washed
Save '7.00 On Non-Washed

Now'14"

LADIES PASTEL LEE JEANS
OFF Now

. 25%

'1499

LADIES' PONY
TENNIS SHOES

WESTERN STRAW
HATS

'6000H

Values to 120
Just

MANY OTHER CLEARANCE ITEMS
OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 8 P.M.

DAN'S BOOt SHOP

OUR WAREHOUSE

CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

'SANDALS-TENNIS SHOES .
' WHITE SHOES ....... Y.2 PRICE
1GROUP·... ALL KINDS •..........
'1

T"ESHOEBOX

T.V.

REDUCTION
U..WMrint~uau- · ~
TV'L 0111)' lb: te 1111, ..... DIM

.......... wllr. .. ...

We U.. MU ttaete4 te tiM
cd.... Nt .......... ,.. .. ""'
IMa AYIDIIIIt .. • • ....
.............. 0.'-l Y_.
. .. Eu. ... t iiiWIIIIktdllln
... G" &amp;Mit...... It •".

Wl6 dlt)' . .L

All ............. ....

71t"

.... 1

~""~•k•.-.
,_,.,lilt-.....
_ ..

.-.

19" Color

'39800
OPEN 'UNTIL

I P.M.

, . AND
.
· SATUR~AY '

FREE
-

· PAIROF.

f, With Pu• dNil~ of,
E•ch ,_lr ,

, ,0,.

FRIDAY

ATHLETIC~

20%
OFF BACK TO
SCHOOL SHOES
•

(Athletic shbes not lnclud-·
eel.)
&gt;
''

MIIGS COUNTY
: FJU" SI'ICiAI. •

20%
O,ON

BOOTS

Bedroom
Suite
Bonanza

WI'VE G')T'IM

Juat Arrl•e•' troylilil, 4 "•••
l .u lte. Prlc. . At 'SW'
U•KI4 Otltrl

Save Up to 1 15000
On A Chair.

WI A.RI COYPLBftLT OYIU\IfOCXED OM
IUI1D liND NO WIIUI: ro P11T '1'11D1,
WE BAVIItllft:l rlf OlDER AMD tft TOO !Aft TO
CANatL '1111 ORD&amp;RI. n ARE WIU.DG 10 E&amp;AL
C* ANY IUift llf I'J'Oat, MAD: U1 Al'f (llfta. II)
IIAIOifAIU Cft'D. WilL B! 'I'UIMED DOWN.

Ivery Wall-Away And

'loc:lcar· lacllnar Sella Drl•..l-'
GROUP OF BOYS'

GROUP OF '

. 'JOX'$

l,OUNO MIN'S

SHOES·
,

II'IE MOYIII&amp; niEM OUT TO MAlE
~li 101 lliEM COMIII· II.

DRESS.SHOESi
\

TABU: IAJI,PI' YWIUY 1111,'
'ft'LL OM m1 ~ IIAI-

CBINO lAMP rau1 rJAOa
LAMPl: WUII) Alii) IIAII.

.........
·'29"

An unbtlillllllt iDII )lllc:a
(

PRE-WASHED
'15.M

LEE T-SHI.RTS,

mak~

%Price.

.J,rogram for stUllents plaruling to en-

.,oo.

LEE 'JEANS

school. These plants will
it for the new industry.
y Adventist Church will be 9011- pcJMible to increase student ernBible study classes, which are
buting to the annual offering of . ployment:
·
' open to the public, begin at 2 p.m.
Middleport. Ohio
kwood College Aug. 14. 11)e
The offering ihat will be taken at and the divine worship service
liege, which 15 predominantly the regular worship service will be . begins at 3:15. The church Is located . _ _ _ __:~~---_j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ck, is one of the nine Seventh-day ~ to develop an ·industrial park on Mulberry Heights Rd.
~
ventist Church's senior colleges
'
d two univenities in North
rica. The 86-year-old instituti~
provided the dl!l)~tion,. .
. iness, &lt;tJovernment, and many
' '
'
.
essi&lt;!JIS with qualified penionnel.
Durlngthe past decade enrolbnent
s increased·by' 156 per cent. •The
lle!le has jl)ways made provision
work4tudy, programs. During
past school ,year, the college
· ~1'.122 part-time jobs for the
Every Piece of Merchandise Wo H•v• In Our Store Will 1111 Dr•stlc•IIY Reduced For This
rly 1t00 students. Unfortunately,
00 ·
S.lt. All Appliances, T. V.'o •nd Furniture Items Ant lncludtd. Tills CGukl 1111 One Of Tile
From.
· ~. ,n_ot provide the necessary;
Lartt~f Prlct Rtcluctlon S.l•
The
Of 'Our Store Wlllch Ext..,... Ovtr l2 Yon.
· m:e to counteract the possible
Pay Your Columbl• Gels allis At:
uctloit in student aid from gover. nt 1\'III'Cj!S. •
Sevef¥1 indUstries have expreBied
ZENITH
inter\!st
,.. In building plants at the

TUBE SOCKS

·······················~·····································
ldhaj '
'L77 ~,.

Upward Bound is an academic

.mer Obio State Unlnnlty
Jollotrlag,.....
tioll
I .
'

•

STIFF lACK NOTIIOOK. ...•••.... ~········~ ...••~·!~~.. '1 ~
Mark~A~Lot MARKII ...•.........••.........•.....~.~.. 61'
'
~
-. ..........
STIC

mer·progl'llll. .

NON-WASHED
'13.99

church offering goes to college

41

of Darlene and
Elmer Newell, i..ong Bottom, has
completed his second year at O!Jio
University's Upward Bound Swn-

MEN'$ BOOT CUT

.

.FRIPAY

.

• Scott Justis, son

la.-dl.....,..
ScGU wt11 be' a ll!llkr at ~
Htplcbaol in,the fall 81111 .......

FILLER PAPER
NOTEBOOK
69~
::\s '129
BOX .••••........•.~ ••••.•.•.•...... ~!!:...
I

?rograqt comp~

Friday The
13th Savinus
•

' 3 SUBJECT 120

CO'_LlE,G•E NOTEBOOK. ••••••··~··••••'••••••••••••••••••
' ' . Rea..IIJZ '1 49
70SHEET
THEME BOOK ..........................
'.
••'1.09 aac
.
,....................
..,. -

'

·• werijinlelited to only cme penon

,

f\~,nual

MEN'S TUBE

SPIRAL

Edwards, Judy Snowden, and
. Janet BoUn.

received achievement awards for
the bell writer In the um pi'OIJ'8lll,
ellceptional · · performan'ce · in
Jlllthematlca, nialt Olltlltandlng perf~ In COII.,.tet' ICience and
Outatandin8 effOrt 1M Jlliforn.IICt
:JJya.,mor~
. . . .,
p; esldeQt'Of
Olandl. A.,...._

I·~

.
·~
home since, tho~h he1 ~ails his D~ARLANDH :
We're
inclined
to
al(ree
with
youlMom.
·
I k?ow where he's stayin ~ so I Mother though we hoptl we're
telephone him, but my mothel'll says wrong. Aman who calls hill Mom but
l shouldn't liS he' ll think I'm a pest not his girlfriend isn't exactly panancl checking up on him. It's jUilt tin~ for marriage. - HELEN ANP
SUE
that I in iss him and worry.
P.S.: "Does He know the Way
DO you think he's staying in San
!home
from) San Jose?" - that 1.1!
Jose, to b(vak up with me? Morn
thequestion.RandS.
'·
docs. - lDNELY AND HURT

Bible study ·starts Sept. 7

He completed a 8UiliiOOr unit of
clinical pastorai education at
Joyce Hlad wiU teach an Aglow
Maasachusetta General Hospital tit Bible study program beginning on
Boiton. Following his grduatlon Sept. 7.
from 8eml!larY !It! served four years · "Basic Beliefs, a Primer of
aa paator of st. Paul Lutheran Chur- Christian Doctrine" will be the
chin Pomeroy and during 1973-74, he theme of the study to be conducted
completed an internship in clinical at the horne of Mrs. Joan Wolfe, one
paatOnil educatloo at Fallsview night a week for six weeks.
Mental Health Center, . CuyahOf!a
Other studies available through
Falls. He Jlegan his chaplaincy work Aglow are "Creation", ''God's
as cb!tplain and director of chaplain- Daughter", "Fruit of the Spirit",
cy services at Holzer Medical ~­ "Gifts of the Spirit", "Patterns for
ter, July 8, 1974. He is associated Parents", "God's Answer to
with the Lutheran Social Services of Oyereating", "Ministries for
Central Ohio and. is member of the Women", "The Call of Jesus Christ
College of Chaplains.
in You", "APiaceforGodtoUve."
Rev. Lund ill marril!fl and he and
The Women's Aglow Fellowship is
hill wife, Corrine, have a daughter, an international non-profit
Rachael.
fellowshi_p _ promoting the whole

lOOCT.

.i&amp;net Koblentz. Mace! Barton.
Charlotte wOlford, Slletla CuriJs.
aetty',Dean, Pat H~ter, Margaret

I

'

training he served his Internship at
St. Peter:s Lutheran Church,
Baltimore, !'tid.

ByHeleaaudSaeBollel
yet. A third brother might possibly
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
be named Kydney. - SUE
I waa engage&lt;ttoSydney last year.
~
We had our wedding invitations prin- DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
ted and I'd bought my gown. Then
I'm reeently married to the most
we ~~toke up. We're still friends but wonderful, loving, caring handsome
the romance is I(OIIe.
·
man In the world, and l resent your
Then Syd's brother Rodney came answer to ''Attentive Wife" who
home from the Navy; a"" thill time _ said, "If a woman keeps the horne
it's really love! Our farriilies-are . f1res burning, she won't get burveryopenaboutit. No hassle.
ned." \'ou write, "Nice line, but not
J~ one question: It seems such a always true."
waste to have new fuvitatlons done
Please stop putting worries into
when we'd only need to chan~.e "Sy" wives' heads. If we can't be sure that
to "R~"In the name, and a couple of lots of tender, loving care will keep
numerals on the date, 1111 the new our rne.n by us, what can we be sure
wedding is also planned for October. of? - ATRUSTING WIFE
If we were \lery careful on the DEAR WIFE :
corrections, do you think it would be
You can be sure that TLC will do
oleay?- ,.\LLJNTHE FAMILY
it, if you marry the right man. We're
P.S. I've already decided to weaf sure you have! - HELEN AND SUE
last year's weddin~ !(Own.
DEAR RAP:
DEARAITF:
If "Sy" and "Ro" don't mind, why
My boyfriend, a~e 22, and I (18)
should we? lfappy recycling! - have been ~oin g to~l'!hcr a year and
HELEN
a half, and planned rnarria ~c.
Then he took off to San Jose for a
ALL :
job interview. That was two weeks
But don't make the changes just ago an4 he hasn't called me or com•·

FRIDAY THE 13th

AY THE 13T,Hl
. ...:::-_ SIDEWAL., SA• 'ES
ft.
IIi

: :. Their exhibit consisted of 26 \(JI!'·
:~of grQUJtd cover live ptants.
• Mrs. Shetta Curtis served on the
~rhortlcuture &amp;how Cllmmittee for the
.
•~nventlon.
: • Several memberS of Chester, Ru.iiand, Ruttand.Frlendly,Shade Valley and Star Garden Clubs served
as hOstesses for the convention. In
:Jlle group were Binda Diehl, Ruby
.DieJll, Stella A~. Neva Nlchollon, Ann Eltubeth Turner, Vlrglllla . Chadwell. PauUne Ridenour,

Rev. Arthur C. Lund, former
St. ' Paul Lutheran Church
P~rf~Zu:a;:nd now chaplain of .
12i
Center, wUI be
~iker at the aMuai 9ervices of
•eiRli&lt;··County Ministerial
Mlocia.tlon which open the Meiss
l?,&gt;lmty ,?air ~onday night at 7:30
m.
.
• The sei'Yices will also feature a
nununity y~uth choir which has
~n formed for the evenins by Ed
!Jirkless, Meigs High vocal music'
rvisor. Harkless will direct the
oup.
, Admission to the grounds on Mon&lt;»Y is free of charge and the public
Uiinvitedtoattendtheservices.
!!Ciulplain Lund received his
ljilchelor' of arts degree from Con· ~rdia College, Moorbead, Minn.,
4+&lt;! his Mas,ter of Divinity from
fartburg ~logical Seminary,
tbuque, Ia. l&gt;uring ja seminary

~

: : Weigh-In •for the Meigs County
: Fair horse pull will be 2 p.m. Thur• Sday, Aug. 19, with an entry fee of S5
; )ler team. The pull will be conducted
: pt 8 p.m. that day, and membership
; tickets are not required for entry.
: Two classes will be offered, Mid1
: jlleweight teams, 3200 pounds and
: under; Heavyweight tealll8, 3201
: j,ounds and over. The distance for
: jlach pull will be 'R feet, but distan- . Mr. and Mrs. Harold Vorys, their fatl1er, 'Michael Lawson,
Racine, waaa caller.
: cts Of less than 'l1 feet will be ~ to Columbus, ·visited with her sillier,
Dale Dye and Murl Galaway acMrs.
Ethel
Rife,
in
DyesviUe
and
: detennine placement of winners at
companied
fdr. and Mrs. Clyde
Mr.
Vorys
consulted
an
eye
doctor
in
·1he end of the contest.
Walker,
Thunnan,
to Coshocton
Athens.
•: Prizes will be $125 first place, $115
where
they
were
overnight
guests of
•
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Reece
Prather,
Ketsecond place, $95 third place, $80
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Chester
Baumgard.
tering,
were
guests
of
ber
mother,
; lourth place, $65 fifth place, $60 sixth
ner, then they journeyed on to Hart- r~Am~eri~c~a:._.~---~--_i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• place, $40 seventh place, and $30 Mrs. Lewis Smith, for a weekend.
Ceril Dwelley, · UHIBtlla, Florida • ford, where they helped Mr. and
: !'lghth place.
and ,on, David Dwelley, Orlando, Mrs. Peter Kepnar (Mary Dye)
· were recent guests of Mr. Dwelley's celebrate their 25th wedding an'
sons-111-law
and daughters, Mr.. and niversary. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Er·
Mrs. Clay Jordan and Mr. and Mrs. win, Marysville, were present, also
Granville Stout and George.
Dawn Dye Walker, Lucy Dye
Michael
and
Larine
Lawson,
Baumgardner, and Celia Dye Erwin
: : Mrs. Macel Barton, the Region 11
Racine,
spent
a
day
with
their
granand
sisters ol Mary and da'ughters of
; horticulti,Jre chairman, BBslsted w
dmother,
Katherine
Lemaster,
and
Mr.
Dye.
·
• Mrs. Pauline Ridenour, both of
=j:,'hester Garden Club, prepared .an
; ~qcationa1 exhibit at the recent r,;;;;;:===•;;=;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;.-1

Meigs Correspondence

'

.,

f~~~~~~~=~~"~J~-tM~1~~~~~~~~~~

7.~!4Jiegular

tWaste not ·want
not' 'in invitations ·
.

Meigs ·personal

REG. $13.99

state fair

The

T

,

'

�•·

Page •6 The Da ily
_ S-tine!
-·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

tMeigs County organizations hold meeting~
:,:shade Valley Council
!:

The propagattonanduseofherbs
i ~as discussed by Mrs. Ruth Erwin
: ol Chester Garden Club, speaker at
• the recent meeting of Shade Valley
:Council of Floral Arts held at the
: log cabin of Mrs. Allee Thompson.
•. Mrs. E rwtn noted that she likes to
· )lang dried herb5 but that she often
- ~efrtgeratesor freezesthemlnplas-

he bags. In conjunction with her
: program she displayed herbs and
: discussed their various uses.
: Mrs. Erwin said thatbasilisgoo.1
· In salads, sauces, trutt drinks an-I
:popular for meatloaf and pizza,
· suggested chives for omtets, diU fur
.w ads and pickles, rosemary for
. soups and stews, horehound for
: candy and cough syrup.
: She said parsley Is rich In vitam: Jns, and to be eaten not left on a
_plate since It is good breath deodorizer, that wormwood while not
llsed In cooking, is medicinal, that
,)Iarrow can be a great Insect repel: lent, and that lavender makes good
: sachets.
: She also talked about comphrey,
•describing It a5 a "miracle herb"
; easy to grow, and good as a leaf tea
(lor respiratory disorders. She also
r)iBid that the substance In the stem
; ts treatment for external sores and '
;burns since-It contains the-healing
• llgent, allontoln.
: • Mrs. Erwin also told how to
; make herbal vinegar, mint Jeily,
~and several herbal butters, all of
' )vhlch she displayed, and then gave

=~Ja:r!·Froetonliehaitofthe appreciate
makln~ the donations
tee cream and would
of pies or

as
b
1
c~entedherwithaglft.
on display at the meeting
was an edlicat!Qnal display~ unusua1 arrangement conta~ne~-. by
Mrs. Janet Koblen!Z, The Meigs
County Fair !lower shows were di.scucssed and premium books
dlatributed.
DuriJ!g the business meeting, It
was noted that the chUdren In speclaleducatlonattheChesterschool
had been take11 on a tour of Juanita
Lodwick's il'ee!!holile as a part of
the club's therapy program. Diana
Carr and Carol Erwin accompan·
led the children.
M:rs. Thompson, Mrs. Betty
Dean and Mrs. Pat Holter served
homemade tee cream and cake.

cakes.
Racine firemen . are making
plans for tlle ann~W ,Labor Day
chicken barbecue Sept; 5 at the !Ire
department. The auxWary will
help.
The club held a celebration tn
July and went out tor dinner, sbopping and a movie.
Present aside from those mentlonedwereMaeClelandandSandra
Patterson. Absent were Ruth
Shain, Terri Johnson and Jean
J 0 hnson
•

R
Ga d Qub
ose r en

Rose Garden Club, Tuppers
Plains, held Its August meettog at
· the home of Mrs. Floyd Stout with
13 members and one guest, Mrs.
Laura Damewood.
Mrs. Glen Stout was In Chl!J'ge of
Racine LadleS AuxRiary met
devotions
and read scripture and a
Aug. 10 with Boo Arthurson, vicepoem,
"Another
Day." Roll call
president, pres!dlng.
The meeting opened with the was answered by members anspledge by Sharon Johnson and a wering, "I could eat my weight
ln... "
prayer by Aggie Boggess.
The Gardener's Prayer was read
The auxnlary reported expenses
for July amounted to $485.12 and In unison, then Mrs. James Stout,
that all bills are paid. 1be group program chairman, presented
plans to buy a cew air conditioner "Bulb Transplant Time."
and recently made an expenditure Members were reminded now Is
the time to atlend Ohio State 1111d
for a coffee maker.
The RLA plans to make Ice Meigs Fairs. The verse of the
cream for Labor Day. Flavors will month was read by Mrs. Verela
be chocolate, strawberry, pineap- Stout. The traveUng prize, donated
ple, peach, cherry-nut, lemon and by Mrs. Grace ·Stout was won by
orange-pineapple. They need help Mrs. Rubal Caldwell, and the hos-

Ract'ne LA.

FRIDAY

Maxine Kesterson received her

~ poijnd weight loss ribbon and cer-

tl!lcate at the Tuesday mofl!lng
class of SUnderella at .Mason. Bar·
bara Roush lost the most well!ht for
the week and there was a tie for
runner-up -' be!Ween Pat Mossman
and Shirley Tucker. At the Chester
class Monday night, Karen Smith ·
lost the most well!ht and Beverly
Smith was I'UIIIIel'·up.
Mrs. JoAnn Newaome,lecturer,
advbes tluit new classes will begin
In September and run for eight
weeks at a time. Registrations are
being taken now and payment for
the enUre course Is to be made at
the time of sign-up.
Classes will be held on Monday
night at Chester, Tuesday morning
In Mason, and both Thursday afternoon and Tuesday night In
Pomeroy.

•: All eight of the chUdren of Mrs.
:}'1'.0. Barnltz, Pomeroy, werepres'!!nt for the annual Barnltz reunion

.Meigs area birthdays
and Mrs. Jim Cross, Meredith and
Wes, Jlfrs. Marvin Roush, Bethany
and Bridget, and the honoree and
her parents.

Johnson

.,••

Thomas

•

...

thomas
.

.
•• Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thomas,
Syracuse, entertained recently with
,li family picnic and party honoring
~1r dau~hter, Autwnn Deanne, on
~er first birthday.
: • Following the picnic, Autwnn
~ned her gifts and homemade ice
aeam and cake were served. Atending were Mr. and Mrs. Jim
1homas, Sr., Mrs. Clair Taylor,
~rs. Richard Neutzling, grand~rents, Mrs. Paul Winn, Mr. and
)1rs. John Thomas and Adam, Mr.
•

A SU11lrlse birthday party was
held Aug. 1 for Margaret Johnlon.
RaCine, at ,the home of her 110n and
1
dallihter·ln·law, Mr. and Mrs. Caval! Johnson, Middleport.
Attending the festivities were
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Johnlon, Delaware; Mr. and Mrs. Edwll,rd Ten\pel~n; Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
George Reiber, Mr. and Mrs.
David Reiber and chlldreri, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Wright Jr. and daugbters, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. John
Wright, Gratton; Mr. and Mrs. ~
bert Reiber, Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Reiber and children. Racine; Mark
Mills, Middleport.
A plcnlo lunch was aerved With a
blrtbday cake.
The hono~ ~ed many gUts
and a n.oral arrangement from Mr.
and Mrs. John Wright and another
from Lawton Temple\oll, Leading
Creed • .
The Btternoolj was spent
on Mr. and Mrs. Carrtill Johnson's
boat on the river. A SWimming
party was also held In the Johnson's
pooL

rkl1ni

..

Her grandchlldren and g\'eat·
grandchildren at the teunlon Included Mr. and Mrs. John Young,
Phll, Robin and Lisa, Lancaster;
Mr. and Mrs. James Carpenter and
Jay, Chester; Chuck Young, Columbus; Mrs. BW Young, Cindy
and Julie, Nllel; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Barnltz.. Ma1y . Barnttz and
Brandon, Ellen and Ann Margaret
Baraltz, ~pre; Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Barnltt, ~om and Tim, Kingston; Scott. John and Jell Barn11Z,
Mason; Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Bar·
nttz and TOllY. Clifton, Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Barnltz, and Eric, Mas011.
Ann Parsons of New Haven was an
Invited guest.
On Sunday morning the enUre
family attended church In a group.

Young

Mason.

The 12th annual Yeauger-Cohen
I'I(UJIIon was held Aug. 1 at the
Rockaprlngs Grange Hall. Allen

Yeallil!I'Sr:, Fort White, F1a., gave
grace preceding the basket dinner.
Gerri and Delma Halley were
named chairmen for next year's
reunion.
Delma Halley waa the oldest at·
tending, and Allen and Ella Mae
Yeauger, Florida; traveled the
fartlll!llt. Sue Smith won for the
most chlldren, and Sarah Halley,

•

.

Astrograph

-.

Vour "Extra Touch"
Florist Sin&lt;ol957

,t"!2

~~ ­

August 13, 188%
Organizations and clubs wiU have a special appeal for you this
r:C&lt;Jmlrlg year, but you' must be careful to budget your time and money so
uu.. 1 uu don't spend hours and resources you could util~ better.
(Jllly 23-Aug. !2) You're basically very generous. It's hard for
to understand why others, such as those you might be associating
!:with lilvl••v. aren't equally so.
·
VllllGo (Aug. ~pt. 2Z) Even though you may feel a big superior to
peers today, it's best to keep it to yourself. Associates need pabi on
back, not put-downs.
LIBRA (Sept. Z3-0ct. Z3) Unfortunately, you may find more reasons
;)Vby
should postpone projects today than you'll think of ways to aoPutyourmindingear.
,
,
(Oct. 24-Nov. !2) Unless you have truly constructive
today to offl)r a friend who is trying to sOrt out a problem
1
wisetosaynothing.
SAGmARWS.(Nov. %$-Dec. Zl) Don't be taken in'today by someone
lias all the elrterior trappings and knows how to tallr: Impressively.
substance of what is being espoused may be nil
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jaa. U) Norrrially, wheil you set
mind to
task your .powers of concentration are rather keen. However, today
'your thclll!l~lts may wander and cause ~ou to make miltakea.
. AQUARIUS (Ja. ze.Feb. it) Should unflattering ,reJlllllila ccme
back to Yflll ~Y which were siiJlPOifedl¥ ~d by another, don't .take
J ~ttlellltoheart. OtheruriliCOII!IidertheiiOUI'CI!.
'
·
PISCES (Feb. ze.Marella) Get tGgether with your mate today before
;la)1ng down rules you want the children to follow. If you don't, ~may
I~..,.;,tr••dl..teacb other. .
·.
ARIES (Mareh Jl·Aprll It) Be careful whal )'011 say or write today,
l!l!IM!Ciallywhere your work or career If conce~Wd. llkholen wordl will
be
to erase. •
T~URUS (April .:.11111y a) It's unllb1f yoU'll maki! Jm-ge I!IT1ll'lll!l
. handling your resources today, but you m1tJ1t ~ alllllllber It 111111
.mea which could add up to a
GEMINI (MIJ 11..,_ •l ~
~ -... apt to lib Jour
r.:(ll'omllll!ll far more lll'loully thlll you today. Don'1-.y you will, If
Intend to foDolr tllrouciL
CANCD (~ IWLWI) a) SCI-.! whlll'a t.old to 7011 Vflt'l Cll'llfllll1
10 lhlt
dGII't ~ 011 hllnly lrtOI'fiiiiUOII whleh eciuW . .

your

Calabash, Bill The
Kid, &amp;Healtli Tex
OPEN MON.-SAT.
9:30-5:00

Pomeroy,Ob,

lii!lJWill

SAVE ON CARPET REMNANTS
$x12 BROWN PLUSH
Wa$'99.00
7xi2 BEIGE PLUSH
·•
·
Was-89.00
' 10i12 GOLD SHAG (Rubber
Backl
Was '99.00
121115 SHAG
··
'
. Was 1129.00 ·
10xl2 GREEN &amp; WHITE '
. SHAG
Was 1110.00
91112 BROWN &amp; OOLD
GREEN
Was _'96.00

'6CJ00

'4800

INGELS
KUT-RITE CARPET ·
'

Always

YOUR FAMILY I.
SHOES.
· tHEADQUARTERS
- ...... . . ·

Appreciated~

. SIMON'S

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644

· Pick-A-Pair

........ , Pomeroy ·
Florist

In The HHrt Of

EXPANSION SALE

MIDDLEPORT Business 11nd
Professional Women's Club will
have a cookout and family picnic at
the home of Mrs. Alwilda Werner at
6 p.m. Monday. Beverage will be
provided, Those attending are to
take thelr own table service.

'

We havejult bult a nld neW~. Now we
can buy In large voll!rne; to eerve yoU even bet.-.

ftew 2 pc.
Ulina Room1

Suite · .

Reg. $299.95

·

·
.

.'

;.

$1'9995

. POMEROY . - All seventh and
eighth grade boys ·a t ~ Meigs
Junior, High Set'""! ipterested 'in
playing football are to report to tile
stadiwn In Middleport at 8 p.m. on
A~.16.
'
'
RACINE-Mr. and Mfa,
~. OllUrnbul; vtatted over tbe
" imaJ Day bollday with Mrs.
ar- KrkJir, RIICillle and other
Melp CowltY ~ k

r&lt;ellneth

SA~~-100
t I

;IS

1-84" Tight Back Burgundy Nylon Velvet
1-85" Contemporary Linen Tan in R idl

BEAUTYIEST • QUALITY MAnRESS WITH MASSAGE
FEATURE. CHANGE TO ANY POSITION WITH FINGER TIP
CONTROL

TWIN SIZE REG. '999

Texture Fabric Dynamite look

'799
CLOSE~

.-

SIMMONS

STYLES
AND coVERS

STEARNS&amp; FOSlER

•120 ··u
160 88
400 256

FIRM-twiN MATTRESS•
FULl MAmESS•
. QUEEN SET
MED. FIRM-twill MAmESS
FUUMAnRESS
EXTRA FIRM twill MATTRESS•
FULL MATTRESS•
QUEEN SET
KING SET

150

82

180

122

170
210

112
114

FIRM-1Wlfl MATTRESS•
FUU MATTRESS•
QUEEN SET

'130

288

BEAUTYREST

CLOSE-OUT COVERS

500 J44
740 466

•MATCH! fiG BOXSPRIIIG-SAME PRICE

1-MAPLE DESK, Locks, 2 File Drawers
I-,- TEAK BOOKCASE 30''•36"
I- TWIN CANOPY BED, White
1-6-DRAWER CHEST, WHile
1-5 PC . DINETTE SET, Chromo and Glass
1-5 PC. DINETTE SET. Brass and Glass
.1 -7 PC. DINETTE SET, Oak Form ita
1-S PC . DINETTE SET, Maple Formica
' 1-S PC . DINETTE SET, Bul&lt;her Bloc:k

S44
371
375
328
288
~~

144
144
399
622
599
277

3 PC. PATIO CAFE SET, 29" GLASS TOP
TABLE, 2 CHAIRS, Vanilla, Tan

SOLID PlNE BEDROOM SUITE
Dtltllll DI£SSU 111lllAIIDSW£
MIRIOI, 5 DIAII£R CllfSI, IIEAOIOMO
.AND NIGHISTAND
•
REG.$1,009

'769

'397

1-84" Quilted Navy Floral Design

5749

'372

$754

'3n

With Velvet Rust Welt

30 MORE SOFAS, SECTIONALS, PIT

GROUPS- CLEARANCE PRICES

750 544

RECLINERS:

Sole CltotiOCt

TAN VINYL
'WALLAWAY BROWN
- PEACH VELVET
'GREEN NYLON
'GOLD NYLON
RUSTW/VIBRATO!l'
TAN W/ VIBRATOR
BROWN VINYL
BITTERSWEET VELVET

S410
548
60S
493
49S
315
JIS
169
46S

199
274
299
274'
274
157
157
84
232

~~~~ ~&amp;y2OFF

170

77

OCCASIONAL, RECLINERS
(OVER 100 ON ~LEJ .

Both Formica Top and Glass

•oenotes la-Z-Boy Brand

DINEnE SETS

~13

nao n3a

'

5795

111
166
550 422

20AK END TABLES

',

Texture in Blue, Brown, Beige.

2JO

SlltOomoct
S129
749
749
. 659
439
129
273
297
619
936
762
399
510

S600 · '321

1-84" Traditional Beige, Rust Print

WAREHOUSE CLOSE-OUTS
4 BRASS FLOOR LAMPS, Glass Tray
QUEEN HIDE ·A· BED BrownTe•ture
QUEEN HIDE-A-BED Beige Stripe
FULL HII;!E · A· BED Rust Stripe ,

1-84" Rust Velvet with Diamond Design

'179

twiN•
FULL•
QUEEN SET
KING SET

'

1627 1 29f
1696 1 341

S.le CfHrance

lxtro Plnn

S840 .'2ft.

1--:-83" Flame Stitch Design, Pillowback

88

170 .111

400

-UU·

1-85" Traditional Stripe, Linen

Sale CIHrance

Sale Clearance

--

SYRACUSE - Vacation Bible
School is contiquing at SyraclJiie
~azarene Church, through Sunday, 9
to 11:30. a.m. The Rev. 'aad Mrs.
David Street are the special
workers.
'

OYER 30 SOFAS Y ASTL Y R!DUCIDI
THESE MUST BE SOLD!

SP.ECIAL SAYINGS ON SIMMONS
MOTORIZED ADJUSTABLE BEDS

•

LONG BOTTOM - An additional
location for M~igs County Fair
membership tickets has been
:established at Phyllis Larkins'
Beauty Salon in Long Bottom. The
·.ticket's, which sell for $6 apiece,
cover daily fair adlnisslon and free
parking on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
·.
'
: . MEIGS residents taking tJBI't .in
, the WIC program are to pick up their
September and pctober coupons this
month at Mei~s ·eounty Departmeqt
. of Health. The sclled.ule is residenill
with last names 'A through F,
Friday, Aug. 20; G through K, Moriday, Aug. 23; L through P, Wednesday, Aug. 25; Q througb S,
Friday, Aug. 27; T through Z, Monday, Auf(. 30. pickup hours are 9 to 11
a.m.• only.
'Those who cannot make the appoinbnent schedule are to pick up
colipons on Sept. 8 from~ to 11 a.m.

'-

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S LARGEST
MA nRESS SELI&amp;CTION

·'· Thirty-five persons had their
',blood pressure taken at the free
' cUntc held at the HarrlsonvDJe
•townhall and sponsored by tile Har. rlsonvOie Senior Citizens center.
: Mrs.' Ferndora Story, R. -N. 'had
~barge of the clinic. The next
will be held from 10 a.m. to noon
there on Sept 14.

Sofas ·

'

CLEARANCE

lAND BOX SPRING)

'

OPEN UNTIL 8 ~.M. FRIDAY NIGHT

rriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1

MATTRESS

20%.50%
OFF I

stylin&amp;
button-tufted pillow
loose sut tuslliGn and
kick·illeat skirt. Catered in a
Iabrie;

.

.has been cancelled. Regular
' meeting will be held in September.
•4

TIAE~·" AII'560DBIIOWII

FAMOUS SIMMONS
. AND TOP-QUALITY STEA~NS &amp; FOSTER

The Friday meeting of Mary
Shrine 37, White Shrine of Jerualem,

The Albert Young family reunion
was held Au~. 1 at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Henderson. Mrs.
Edit!) Harper asked the blessing .at
the potluck dinner in the back yard.
Gifts we_re given to Erma Jean
Stout, TelUIII, for traveling farthelt,
to ~ola _Wallet, Clarkabur~. W. Va.
'JfOO.
I NOw,..
for havmg a birthday neareat the
reunion date, to April LliWSOil for the
children's closest birthday. Dave
' NOW.
Williams guessed the colll'eCt nwnoor of candies in a jar and received
NOW
it as a gift.
Others present were Mr. and Mrs.
Jan Parker, Greg and Jeff, Mr. and
Mrs. Rick Lawson, April and Atn'
ber, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Harmon,
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follrod, Steve
and Kathy, all local; Mr. and Mrs.
Aubra Bailey, Zepherhilhi, Fla.; Mr. .:
'•
'
and Mrs. John Hil~ison and Chris,
169 t~orth SecoRd Ava.
and Mrs. Dave Williams aqd Aaron,
Middleport, Ohio .
Belpre; C)arehce Wallet- and Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Harper, Clarksburg,
W.Va.; Mrs. JackNapierandPatty, ~r----.......:-:--+---------......:.--....:.­
and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kni~ht,
Newark; Mr. and Mrs. Bill WOOd,
Zanesville. • •
·
~
..

.

75 OF OUR lEST
SELLERS RIDUCID

REG. 1450
Rust Df Tan

Roomy contemporary style has
thick arms and a soft pillow,Pack, ,
plus a reversible T-cushlon seat.
In a comfortable designer fabric.

Pre?arat1o1111 lor the operation of
the Meigs Band Boosters food boo.th
at the Meigs County Fair are
underway.
' · Y,/orkers are stW needed and
ban~ parents willing to donate tlr!le
are asked to contact Marilyn Ep•ple, ?92-725!1. or Kathy Chadwell,
992-7024. Tbe booth will be cleaned
'I'hursday, Friday andSaturdaybe·gtnnlng at 10 a.m. and workers are
.also needed for that.

•

FRIDAY THE

'399

RACINE _; The descendants of
John and Joanna Bailey will hold a
reunion at the Shriners Park in
Racine. A basket dinner will be served at noon with all relatives and
lritplds being Invited.

.SAVE BIG ON
RECLINERS MADE! WE
MUSt
SELL . 50
RECLINERS THIS MONJH .
TO MAKE ROOM fOR
FALL STOCK.

'

,_....._ Rocker-Recliner or
Wall Saver Recliner
'
.·
YOUR Ct_IOICE .

'· '

20% OFF

w. 2nd ,

...-::----~'

RUTLAND - The Jacks reunion
Ifill be held Sunday at the Rutland
;American Legion, Beach · Grove
Road, Rutland. ·Dinner will be ser-ved at 1 p.m. All relatives and friends are invited to attend.

SATURDAY

·

Y ~uger-Cohen

••r• ••

.SIZES 5 to 14

111

Famous La-z-·.aoy and :· Action Recliners
75 Styles Reduced up to
1/ OFF
•ROCKER-RECLINERS ~WALL HUGGER RECLINERS I 2

are

·JEANS ·

RACINE - Weekend revival;
Racine First Church of the
Nazarene aervices at 7:30 each
evening, and 10::11 a.m. on Sunday. Rev. Tom Collier invites the
public to the Friday; Saturday

-of
'

; Southerii kindergarten parents
to meet Monday, Aug.16at7::Kl
p.m. at the high achool cafeteria.
'AnY chllCI not registered may do so
·at this time. Parents must have
birth cel'llflcates and immunization records.

Back-To-sChoOl

An ice cream social will be held
at · the Senior Citizens Center
Friday beginning at 5 p.m.
Homemade ice cream, pie, cake
and sandwjches will be served.
T1lere will be entertainment at 8
by dancers from Carpenters Dan·
ce Studio, and at 6:45 from the
Francia Andrews Band.

Mrs. Connie BUllock, Clarion, Pa.;
Permelia Cox, Middleport; Mr. arid
Mrs. Carl Stewart, New Albany;
Rev. and Mrs. Clyde Hinton, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Lester Arnold,
WesterviUe, and Charles (Dick)
Karr, Syracuse, have been recent
visitors of Mr. ,.and Mrs. Charles
Mash,

for being youngest. Reva Beach
won the door prore.
Attending wre BettY Mcintosh.
Sue Smith, Ray, Anthony, Laura,
Eric, and Matthew, all Cheshire;
Anita Edwards, Middleport; Doug
and Tina Rosebaum, Pomeroy;
Marvin and Luclile Yeauger, Cheshire; Mlck and Amy Haning, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.. Paul Yeauger,
McConnelsville.

ONSUMMER
.·
...
'
CLOTHING
,J' .• • •..,,.

- -

CORNER THiRD AND O'LIVE STREET
GALLIPOLIS
.

, POMEROY -)lev. Robert McGee
and, Rev. Robefil· ~· pastors
It United MelllOWSt Churches in
Pomeroy. 8111 Middleport, respeoJlvely, Will attend a th,ree day School
'It· Ministries at Ohio Northern
:Untvenilty, Ada, sponsored by the
-West Ohio District.

•1

POMEROY - Ice cream .
social, Senior Citi2ens 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.

'

=l

A SUPER SAVIN~$ OPPORTUNITY AT OUR SEMI-ANNUAL

RACINE- Almll!ll
the
American ·Lecloft AwdliBry of Ractne Poet~ will be held Monday at
6 p.m.' at the Route 33 state P.Brk. ·
The dllltrlct president wW be a special guest for the plcnlc. Meinbers
are to meet !It the teglOn hall at 5: :,Q
and travel to the park In a group.

RUTLAND- Dance, 8 to 11:30
p.m. Friday at Rutland Civic
Center'; admlasion, and music
by'Itomlc Sounds.

Announcement,s

bands atteqdlng were Mr. and Mrs.
Wllsoo Carpenter, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Young, Gallon;
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnltz,
Pomeroy; Dr. and Mrs. Nlcllotas
Kramer, Plainview, Texas; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Nelson, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Mr. . aJid Mrs. 'Bob
Wells, Warsaw, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Hoelscher, Amarillo, · Texaa,
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bamltt,

.

.-

..

?amilies and friends gather for reuntons
held Saturday In the social rooms of
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
Mrs. Barnttz' sons and daughers
along with their wives and bus-

and Sunday ~~ervlces.

MIDDLEPORT Youth
League will have a IWir1U'n1Di • ANTIQUITY - A1011gfest will
be held S.iurdly at 7::11 p.m. at
party at the Mlddleport pool Sat·
li'alth FeliOV(Ihfp Crusade f!ll'
unlay, Aug. 14, 6-8 p.m. Uniforms should be turned In at that · Christ, S.R. 331 with the United
Gospel Singers and the Herdman .
ttme.
Family. Pastor II Rev. Franklin
POMEROY Eagles
Dickens. The public Is invited to
Auxiliary anniversary dinner
attend.
'
Friday, 7 p.m. for all Eagle members and their families. Band and
dance at 9 p.m/ Everyone to take
a covered dlah.

Slinderella classes

Lifestyle

. R.,\CINE - Bailey ~on will be
Sunday with a noon dll1ner at the
Shrlne1'S Park, Racine; -endiants
of John.andJpanna ~-

..

•

•

:~arnitz

Announcements

Calendar ·

tess prize by Mrs. Doris Koenig.
Floral arrangements were shown
by Mrs. v. Stout and Mrs. Mary
Jane Goebel.
'

The

Thun4ay, AUfllt 12,1912

'

SOI.ID MAll HIADIOAIDS:
TWIN SIZE 40"
FULL SIZE SS"
QUEEN SIZE 60"
PATIO COFFEE TABLES
PATIO END TABLES

60

so

79
99
119
43.
33

REDUCED·

20%-40% Off

1

STUDENT and FUU SIZE
FORM!CA TOPS -MANY WITH LD(:KSI

DESKS

LARGE GROUP

TOSS CUSHIONS
lEG. sus" $10.50

.112 PRICE

SIMMONS. STEARNS &amp; FOSTER • ROWE
i

;· HIDE-A·BE·DS
.-tHEsE- ARE)tttMoST eoMroRTML£ FoR.stmNc AND sLEEPING wE couw
FIND. CHOOSE FROM FULL SIZE OR QU_EEN. PRICES START AT ONLY $326.

MAPLE -OAK · PECAN.- PINE
REDUCED UP TO

. . Our Best lverl

.· END AND COFFEE .... ·· '!"Y
WOOD AND FORMICA
I ~tartlng At •nl

mr TABLES

GREAT SELECTIONS At 'MI

ALL IQfA·ILUPUS IN STOCK RIDUQD .% to Jl%- OUR UIT IILLIH

F

=10111.

OIF

.·

'

HOUHitiM-J:M Dally
tlti·IIM
.
Monllllt&amp;f,..y

:&gt; .

·.

�""•• -. System.antitrust ·snit t~pic ·of · Ohio prison. inmate ·wants.

"

Business services

'A:T&amp;'J:, Justice Dep~~qJ ·~.~. to avoid the electric chair · · ·]

,f f~~~:~:; (,.U.) l

The

,

&amp; Tele·. Co. aDd the Justice De-

~~~~, the lli'OIXJ8ed break-up

Bell Sy~m to meet the
~l\elmalldl ci • .federal Judge.
If the lwo sides can IJIOdltY
:their agreement,
District
Judge Harold H. Greene said he
will proceed with the antitrust
,~1. The proposed corpo,..te ,r eorganization Is the largjt!ll 1!1 hlatOry. .
t,. BUt Orielle, who described
tile overall AT&amp;T divestiture
plan as "plainly In the pubUc ln.,terest," said he would resume
.tl\e company's antitrust trial
promptly II the two parties don't
· make the changes be wants
within 15 days.
The trlaltn the 1974 antitrust
1111111 was suspencled tn January
~~AT&amp;T and lederal praJec.
, ulors announced they had
·reached a settlement 1n which
~;AT&amp;T woold give up ownership
~ Its 22 wholly owned BeD Sys' tei'n companlel.
• Inexcbangethetelecommunl·
cations giant would be given the

u.s.

right,to e,t!er ~.~~ted .

Tbe
changes

bus~

llke•data processing
and the
would drop
ltssUltagalnstthecompany.
Whne the Ben companies represent about two-thirds of
AT&amp;Ts assets- or more than
~ bllllon '- l1le settlement

aovemment

~~~ ~~;
~~ ·to guaranlee

wouldl~vethecoll)p3llyltsluc-

c ra es,

:~~:~':e':n~:::l.s:"heu;:

re;!:!1 ~~~tS: :~:;:

w

"Thts pptnlon reflects dear
concern for consumers; lor the
health ot the local operating
companies, and lor the First
Amendment," said Rep.
ho
thy E Wirth ,.,,._,
mo
·
• u-..,wo., w

:n-

"Leonitd

expenSes

tissue dlseaBe untU he cllapmed
cancer tn 19'19 andordel edBIIJ'III!I'Y.
Driscoll testllled be hac! nOt ex·
amtned a breast discharge that he
dlscove!'ed because the test that
could relate such a discharge to
cancer was "Unreliable."

Mrs. Allen went •- ·--al other

doctors between ~" ; ; 1919 lor
bel; ~t aliment, and they ran

tests wtwereunablt!tocletermlne

II she bad cancer, herfamlly'sat·
torney said.
'
. She bad llled suit qalnst DrllcoU
becauae she returned to h1m at Jn.
tervalsthroughoutthi!perild,mak·
tng him the doctor who Wllllld best
be able to determine II It was
cancer, the attOrney said.
WWiamSymmes,anattomeyfor
DrlscoU, said the lsiiU!! Is whethel:
DrlacoU practiced medicine tn Mrs.
ADen's case accorc!lng to prole&amp;stonal standards used by other
pi'(Yslctans.
The defense Is expected to argue
that Mrs. Allen did not use Driscoll
, aa her pbyslclan during a crltlcal
perlocl of her Illness'

Flash floods, high winds

talshootlngOfrookleCievelandPa-

.

., COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - 11
tilere' s a trend or fad allve, you will
.~ about It at the Ohio State Fair.

~ttle· ·

•

!etten Jrtm
him an~ talked lo his
mother His w11 Is

·

wife llld
.
tal etate ?,lncerned about his men s .,
'I1ttle llld an associate publlcre
WWiam Tho.......... plan to

fencler,

••.,....,...

110 to death row at the ~them
.ohio Correetldllal Instltu~ at Lutcasvlllebynextweeklovliltwlth
.Jellklns and to cletei'llllne.hls men·
'talandpbyslcaiCO!Idltlon.

~
. ,__., :

I

'

' tngallcithattesum3
chlng the ~w. It's,;.

;:;~_l!l{!!n::"taak,"'I1ttte~sald; '

C~mm.~n 1

· Cuya= 'County
Pleas- J - tliVkl T. Matla sent=,·
' enceC! jti)Jctns to die In the electric ~
chalt Oct 21, wt Tittle 1111d btber :;
Ia..,._. working tl1e caie bav.e,won •,•
_,__
·
·19 ,...,.,
a stay ci execution to,Jan. , ...,.,., !•
"I can see how being alone on (,
Death Row and In wheelcllatr his ~
r
mental health mlgl)t deteriorate. I'
And bls pbyslcal heallh,h~ been In ~
que.oitlon. I have serious questiOns ~·
. 1n my own mind '11 he . wUI nve •
through the appeals process;:· nt- ~

'

.

,.

Winds as hJgh as 68 mph hit tore
through Boise, Idaho, uprooting
trees and snapping power po1e1 but
causing no ~erlous InJuries. Gusts
measured at Ill niphhltBolae'aalrport, and were described by a NaIlona! Weather Service spokesman
as the second-worst on record
there.
Gusts up to 40 mph hit Salt Lake
City, Utah.
Showers and thunderstorms also
hit a wide area from the Gulf Coast

hi~

'

7·1Hfc

T~e

Daily Se.nti net

PHONE 992·2156

1
.!
:1
I

weight.

w,u. o.u; -~&amp;,.,,.,_;.De".

til

.1

c..rlst., ......_,;Ottt.m.,

. . -..•.__,
.curb Inflation ".
Pay Cash for
Classified• ·cind .
Savelll
oWn

)

...
•'
~

'

,

Mld411eport,' Ohio

Jlilme.

.,., Midway ring toss games offer
- ,~ doUs of both varieties as ·
priZes• There Is a Smurt funhoulll!.
• At a baking competition, an E.T.
cake won a prize. The Smurf cake
') ltd ilot. More orlglnal creations - a
. Jwl88 cheese
mice cake and a
~ stacked cake with ribboned
ldng - won hlgheP prizes. A ptu4 ·
cake sliMed honors:
Pac·Man ol COIJ1Pilter game.
1ami! n)llde his appearance, ioo, In
conjunctloll with another fad: the
~ bobber, those headband'lllleDna comblnatlon8. An ents,l.lrlslng group from Junto~ ·
.~t combined tile two,
.' '!Uid in Just two days halt the In~·
. torY wu IOid.
The II'OWinr lnlerellt.ln computer
~. however. made the ,
~ lholvlna. ancl the Interest
more ~ than frivolous.
,. The Ohio Depattment of ~
:traY s,tety unveUed Its "Know
computer.
· An o!ldal~pollllman J)r the De-

and

llr.._
·--~~~~~~-

. Mllli* ......

....... \!Price
frt. &amp;Ill. I P.I.·II'P.M.
Mllll* II Price
TillS ann IAIID

,p

'!our I.imtti•

c=-:

~uya

' --~bow IINCII
.Pit¥ Clllllll llfeb' couume

2,000

over

..
.... ........ wlllll... kited.
, , ''A ol ...... dad't IIIDw
.

how ,

maeb they'caD drllllt ..., ......
..

~

\,

I

. ·,•·, •

~

\'

. I .. , ,

.·,. ·...... ~

'

~ ~

'PRICE ." ·""'' '

-~

.... ,....2:Jt ....

Sol.' -

Vinyl&amp;- Aluminum

SIDING

PHONE"Htll ·
1-1-1 ""·

BISSEU
SIDING CO.
, '"B•utlfJ!I, Cullom .
&amp;ulltGtri..S"
C111 for lr"
tsllm•tea, t4f·21G1
f49-2NO.
No suna•y Ctlll

YlltiiL l 1llt.
116 I.JI!IIf!•.

3-ll·tfc

'NEW LISTING ~ 3.5
acres, mostly level .
Good . Flee !wood 12~70
two bedroom mobile
·!1\lme. Cellar and water
welL Jus!S20,000.
NEW LISTING - 7

DURACLIAN
by llOIIRTS
Let us cletn your
c 1 rpetorlurniture.
•NoSoaklnt
•No Scrubbing
*No Shrinkage
Durtclean gets your
carpet deep down
thoroughly clean.
flomeor ausl~ess
CALL TODAY
for Free •E stlmate

room house, 3 or ~..

be;rOdm$, but not

a~

large ho111e. Needs • a .
bath and some llxln'. 2
level lots for only
S16,500.
REDUCED - 3 acres
with water tap, e.lectrlc
and nat. gas available.
For a quick sale will
takelol,500.
. .
BARGAIN - Small J
· bedroom vinyl · siding
home. Bath ' and all
utilities. Asking S16,000
but make us an offer.
BARGAIN :.... 6 room
frame home. Walk to
the stores, bath, nat. gas ·
· and other utllltlea. Want
S17,500. What wilt you
give.
2.1 ACRES 3
bedrooms, basement
with garage, bath. city
'water; and gas. $25,000.
Assume mortgage.
24 ACRES - Eastern
· school. Remodeled 2
bedrooms, modern bath
and kitchen. Aluminum
siding, baSement and
paneling.. Offer might
buy.
SYRACUSE - LOvely 2
large bedroom, fur· .
niShed moblle , home:
Equipped kitchen, 2,por,•
ches, 2 car block garage
and shop with fer\(ed
yard for your pets ..
RACINE SCHOOL
AREA - 2 tooues, 2
bathS, natural gas on
' large lot near store and
· schools.'' Asking just

1-767-3361
-ll ·l
8

i1t

V'-' IAIUmiHm

~

r:

Golf
' '

llflll, ·

ptltr

COIII(IIell tttiiMIIIIIL 1011·
a1 111
W.W 111

'-

•••

·

honlt- JUIS.
FrHistllnllts
CIIIM3-33ZZ

small day care

elementary &amp; preschool
teacher. 2,3,4,5 yr. old. Call
614·245-5502.

Superiof Sidiri&amp; Co~
.
m1•
Catftpltte

5 Family Garage Sale
August 12, 13, 14. 9-5, Rod·
ney Village II , 3rd. Street,
6th house on left. All sizes
clothes, kit c hen ap·
pliances, sewing machine,
air conditioner, clarinet &amp;
much more.

In Thurman. Past

EUGE niiE 'LONG

Brown' s

. 4 •F.•mlly . Yard Sale
~lotnl~g. mea, women &amp;
cHildren. G'l assware, misc.
toys &amp; games. Thurs., Fri.
&amp; Sot. 9 to 5. 1st house on
Bladen-Mercerville Rd . oil
St. Rt. 218.

·
1

Lessons .

John

Teaford . Chester, Ohio.

Yard Sale Aug. 12, Green
Terrace on 141. Nice S&lt;hool
clothes, jeans, glassware,
what nots, toys, rugs &amp;

PUB' LIC NOTICE Public
Notice for Dark Diamond
Coal Corp., Shade, Ohio
15176. An application Is at
the Meigs County Recor·

misc . Rain date Aug. 13

4 Family Yard Sale Thurs.·
Fri. Aug . 12·13. Beside

der's office for a strip mine

7_16 .2 mo. pd.

mosphere .

3

out -

buildings, apple trees
and grapes. Located on
Zusplin ttollow Rd.
Asking S15,000.00. .
'ST. ROUTE 143 - 3
bedroom Barr! ngton
home. Family room
w/woodburner. Extra
nice kitchen has double
ovens and Island range.
situated on l .Sil acres.
sells for $36,900.00.
ACREAGE - Approx .
15acres lust off St. Rt. 7.
Dug well and cistern .
Older 6 room home.
· AsklngSio.ooo.oo.
SOLID - This 2 story
home on St. Route 124 is
special . .4 bedrooms. 2
enclose~! porches and I
bath. Located just off St.
Route 7 on approx. 1'1•
acres. Minor· repairs
could make this a real
' show place . Only
$25,000.00.
I
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-l171
Velma Nlcinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092

,f

~:

~

1·

t

MIDDLIPOitT .,.- A two bedfoom, ~story home,
,_carpeting, utility room. fenced back yard. Only
$22,500.
POMEROY - Nicely refTIOdelld l·.i bedroom·toome,'
ltvel lot, excellent nelghbOr~:c Owne,.r .wants
15.JD0 dllwn. balance - 1:1% ln.....est, ~ years,
1257.75 mon!ll. Sllle Prlce$27,500.

" 1

. . .--··-CIIItllftflll
It lA&amp;,TOll I

'

"

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

0. 0 •••• 0 •••••

I

1692

0 .............

. ·······················'-·······~·1211

-

I

Also Transmission
PH. 992·5612
or 992• 7121
3·24-lfc

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Ouall o! al.l ages
available up to 8 weeks
in any quantity,
Mature Quail Available
Ready to Turn Out .
Clell !.a Bonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bottom, Oh. 45631
614-985-4345
7·28·1 mo.

S.&amp;W

GUNSMITHING
Ailo Ciisroltllflil
Ph. 992-7656

==~­

Re-BIUe ana Re-Finish
restock. Parts, Etc.

-==·

STUART WAYNE

clothes,

Carport Sale Aug . 12 &amp; 13,
Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9,6, 452 Lariat
Or ., Mills Village , near
Hospital. Storm Door &amp;
girls clolhlng .

I

Public Sale

a Auction

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new - · - · - - - - - - -.......· - merchandise every week. Will care for elderly .men
conslgments of new and and women In .our home.
used merchandise always Also have rooms for rent
welcome .
Richard with or without board.
Reynolds Auctioneer . 275· Trained and expedei)Ced.
3069 .
6U·m ·7314. .

·------- - - -

f:= wiiiiid To Buy

{

1'

, ---=---·==--"'----==

4.

Glveaw.!'l'_ _
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In this
column. There will be no

13
Insurance :
Buy ing Gold, Sliver . SANDY ANO ·BEAVER 'in· :
Platinum, old coins, scrap
Co. has offered '
rings &amp; silverware. Daily surance
services for f ire lnsura"ce :
quotes available . AlSo coverage In Gall Ia ·County •
coins &amp; coin supplies for for almost a century ..
sale . Spring Valley. Trad ing Farm. home i!nd person~l ,'
Co .. Spring Valley Plaza. property coverages are •
4.46·8025 or 446·8026.
available to meet in·
divldual needs. Contact '
we pay cssh tor late model Ka ll Burleson , agent. :
clean used cars.
Phone 446-2921.
Frenchtown Car Co.
~
Bill Gene Johnson
1~ - ~~1"1slnstrucllon
4.46·0069
Karate the ultimate In seuWanted to buy antique defence all private lessons
dolls. Call446·0857 .
· Men, women, &amp; chlldr;;.;: ,
Instruction thru bl~ck t.eil:'
BEDS-IRON , BRASS, old Also available Karate
furniture , gold, silver uniforms puchlng and
dollars, wOOd ice boKes, kicking bags, and prOII!f~
stone jars, antiques, etc .• live equipment .' Jerry
Complete
households . Lowery &amp; Associates
Write&lt; M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Karate Studio, .143
Burlington Rd .; Jackson,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or992·7760.
Oh . Call 61086·307~. '
Gold , silver , ~terllng , . . -·---------"----·jewelry , rings, old coins &amp; 11
wanted to Do
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
Lawn
Mow
tng no yard tq
ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
big or small. Reliable and
3476 .
dependable. For estimate .
call 4.46·3159 after 6PM 256OLD FURNITURE, beds, 1967.

-==-=--=-=----.

Iron, brass, or wood. Kit-

.

- -·-·---

hay , call Ed

Cut down 2 '11f·ees, have

August 16th, Monday. 9 to

Full size mattress. Call 4.46·
8681.

Olive St. Gallipolis, Oh .

Wood for firewood. Call4.46· 4. Jean, clothes. household,
3147.
hall tree, magazine rack, &amp;

:=:==

C. R. MASH

'

'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

PH. 992-6011

_________ __

PARTS&amp;
SERVICE

•11--

ROOFIIG•

_

................
••u•
•.,..,.,.. .
.... t ....
:;r,r.;'lca · ·

.....
~

...

,., -11·~
'

IURBY

,DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

Trash collection &amp; h~ul,t ng . ,
Call4.46·4480.
•
•
WOULD Ll KE to dO
babysitting In my home.
Call4.46·8615 .
Wilt do babvstllin9. Call
61 06].0401 .

.

&gt;

_,

..

,

I ---·- -

Pllli!lcSIIt
AUction
R lck · Pearson, Ex ·
perlented • AUCTIONI!I!R.
Ettalft, antlq~.. far,m,
IIOuMhQid, Licensed Ohl&lt;l'
VIV. Buying tntlques. 304·
m-!1715. nl-9115.

Painting interior, exteriOr

&amp; roots. Free estimates, by
contract only . Call 614·256·
1945.
.
BABYSITTING
in my
home, days only . ' Georges
c;::reek a rea . Prefer 3 yr. old

misc . corner of Third and

l======~~.~-~tf~c~-========::::~ F;;e-kitl,;~lo_g_ood_h;;.

**

•
·

·-------·-----------

evenings.

An older long haired mate,
white cat, 3 yr . old semi ·
long holred, while male
cal. Call AA6·0728.

742·2328

SWEEPER

I

·
'
,

Wilt baby sit small infant in
my home day or night. Call
446·3937.

1--------+--------1 0~~·---------MIUER
BACKHOE
ELECTRIC
FOR HIRE
SERVICE

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

•
:
•
:

WANTED TO BUY Old fur· and Interior. Trash .
cultlnll . ·
niture and Antiques of all hauling· grass
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, Chimney re·polnting., Rool. ·
4.46·3159 or 256·1967 in the painting. 614·992·7419 . .

chen cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or square.
Wood Ice boxes . Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
From Porter gO 1 114 mi . complete household. Gold,
down Bullaville· Porter Rd. silver, old money, pocket
Thurs: &amp; Fri., 9 to 6. watches, chains, rings, and ·
Drapes. curtains. bed· etc. tnd lan Artifacts of all
spreads, books, clothing, lypes. Also buying baseball
cords. Osby Martin 992·
misc.

V. C: YOUNG Ill

·'

:

I .

'
painting -exterior :

House

:=

Gigantic Yard Sale 13·14· 1_1
!!~-wanJ~-tfrM~
PULLINS
Callicoat mother cal &amp; 1 15. Out W to 775, 3.5 miles Ml!ture ,
responsible
CLIP AD AND GET 211%
on r ight. Pinto parts 174).
kitten. Call614·388-8217.
babysitter needed In my
OFF
ON
RE-BLUING
.
TV,
appliances,
clothes.
"2-1215 or 992-7314
OFFER EXPIItES 8·31·
large &amp; small, lg. women home for 20 and 5 month otd
POll! trOy, Oftlo
Good watch dog, 2 kitten &amp; shoes 10, old fashion flour girts. Flexible hoi)rs, own
82 ·
7·26·1 mo.
·
9-JO·tfc
a cat. Call after 5:00 4-46, bend cabinet, living room transportaion, ref f!rences.
baked goods too. 614· Call 4.46·6256, 9 to 11 week--· set,
days . iC·
379·2464.
t-------...,--.1 5 Hamsters . Call4.46-4926.
Garage &amp; Allie Sate Fri. &amp; Attention RN ' S· Pomeroy
7 year otd spayed female, Sal. 25 Smither ST. 10 ·? H.C.C. now has opening for
medium size dog . Call ~- Toots, dishes, clean full and part lime RN for 3
clothing, lots more. Rain to 11 and 11 to 7 shifts.
0839.
Upgraded salary and shift
cancels.
differential. Contact Nancy
set of full size bed springs.
VanMeter director of Nur·
Yard Sale 379 LeGrande sing.
Caii388-87J8.
Or anything else you
614·992 ·6606.
Blvd. Large Size cl othes,
For all your wiring
want to do, because I
sweeper
&amp;
lots
books,
live with a carpenter.
1 dog female part Collie
needs; ' furnaces
AVON . Need extra money?
His name is AI Tro,...m.
part German Shephard, 9 more . 9 tillS.
Set your own hours. Sell
repair service and
mos. old, exc . disposition.
Avon. (Must be 18 or overl.
installation.
Large sale·Fiorence Sid· Call
Call AA6·9476 after 5.
now 614·698· 7111
ders residence. Rt.33 Dar· collect .
Residential
R ufland, 0h .
win
.
Aug
.
12
,
13,H
.
7·15·1 mo. pd.
&amp; commercial
2 baby kittens. Call 4.46·
Everything cheap.
4243.
Call742·3195
Applications are being ac3 7
cepled for the position of
Sale of sales·Wednesday , Coordinator of the Meigs
Thurs., Fri .- Struble Res.· co. Emergency Medical
614·m ·2290 .
Lee Circle,· Ruslic Hills· Service. Applicants should
Syracuse. 9 to 4. Great have background ex·
COMPL ETE
J kittens·l black with clotping. Small appliances.
perience
in
business
IIADI/'TOII
whlt,..Looks like Kitten tires, antiques, radio, etc .
manaement, accounting,
S~RVIU
Carlisle!!! Male. 2 female
budgetary matters and
From the Smtlllest
Calico's. 61042·2328.
12·13·141h.681 w . off 33. 4th personnel supervi-sion .
~iet1tcr
Core to the
house on left. Lots of Jeans Previous experience in the
Custom kitchens, and ' Largest Radiator.
2 kittens·! male·l female. and etc. washer and dryer . field of E.M.S. is desired,
batlllaorn: Remodelinl,
614·742·2'183 .
however if successful ap·
P.1di01tor !ipeciollist
add:ons, new tiomas,
N.ATH.AN A IG C.~;
4 family car port sale. plicant is not sti!te cer·
lS Yrs. Experience
Puppies mother lrisn Set· Aug .13. Childrens clothes, tilled , provisions for
plumbina, electric, sidina.
ter. father
German odds and ends . Lawn training will be made. Ap·
plicant, should have a
Shephard . 742·2374 after 5.
mowers.
working ·knowledge of sim·
pie vehicle maintenace
6 calllco kittens. Long S family sale·Thurs .· Sat. 9 procedures. The person
Pomeroy, Ofi.
haired.
6U·99H164.
to
S.
3
mi.N.of
Fairgrounds
selected for the position
Ph. 992·2174
on old 33 . Clothing all sizes, must move to Meigs Co. if
' z.26·1fc
4 black &amp; white kittens, TV's, games, toys, kitrt"len he or she is not currently a
appliances, fuse box, recor·
'---------:....jf--------....,~-1 long hair, 6 weeks old. 304· ds,tapes, air shocks, shoes. resident. All resumes to be
•
895-3610.
cons i dered must be
Watch for signs.
before Aygust 25,
..:...
-- received
1982 . Send resumes to
FOUR, part Beagle pup·
pies, 6 weeks old, 304-675· Yard Sale. Friday N . 927 Meigs County E .M.S. P.O .
Box.748 Mulberry Heights,
Brownell St., Middleport.
5829.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769.
3 family . 6th St ., Syracuse.
I
Lost and Found
Need someone to baby·sit
Fri. &amp; Sal . 10.4.
ebackhot
.,
five
days a wee~ In our
e .. CIVIIIng
Person who lost a Keese
home, Middleport. after 5
Yard
Sale
.
Jean
Stout
hound
In
July,
please
notify
....,IC'Ifslems
Humane Society . 614·992· Residenn, 7th St., p.m. 614·992 · 39~7.
AWiftr; Stwtr '
Syracuse. Fri. , Aug. 13. 9·?.
6505 .
. . . . lliltl
Rain c~ncels.
Help wanted. Man or
' •dumpfnjck
PHONE
woman to work In Al~ens,
FOUND
:
Peek·
A·Poo.
·Meigs Co. Direct Sales.
( 304) 213·4098.
Rock Springs Area. ·While Th~rs. o;;i;:-5918~dw~~· High pay, good benefits.
·~a.-ed
St.,
f11iddleport.
1
bidck
with bUick spots; also 6
Excellent training. Call
. '"· 912·7201
montht old dog, brown with from pool. 9·? . Nice 61H9N168 Fri .. Aug. 13. 9·
J.29·tfc
c~ildren:s
clothing
biiCkface. After6·p.m . 61 .
· 12for Interview.
992-5225.
..L~-~~---­
cOTTON·HolleY'S Jerry' s
Run. August 11, 12, 13. 10·6. WAITRESS, maids, bartend@rs &amp; clerks wanted.
Prices low. rain cancels.
Write qualification &amp; phone
number to: Job Placement,
P.O. Box 102, Henderson,
wv 25106 .

OHIO VALLEY

. . . , •• C......,Jr.,l.l .............. 99Hit1
·~

•UJO &amp; TRUCK
REP"•.IR
,
I

"

ESTIMATES

' ..

•,

I ,....

St. Rt.124PO~Iroy,OH

FREE

POMI!I!OY ~ ONner wlll,sell this lllell constructed
3 bedroom nome With Soi,OOO dOWn and S216.71 a mon·
til for tftl years: Interest rate Is Jl)llj,, .Sale .Price Is

:11. ·:--~--- .

1

stero, records,
ceramics.

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
Professional Electrolysis
Center. A.M.A. approved,
Doctor referals, by ap·
polnlment only . · 304·675·
6234.

CONSTRUCTION

CHESTER - ApproX. 82.5 acres, 3IJ acr~s lilla~le.
· . '27 acrea in pasture, 2 ponds, barn. saveral sl!eds,
. heifer barn. Also a nice 3 bedroom remodeled home
wlhgnfuranc~and awoodburner. $19,500. ·

,...... J ..... • "

ouAtL

....... ,•••••u••
COTTAGE - Approx.
2'1• acres with 3
bedroom cottage. A real
peaceful country at·

RMI Eo18te - !J-neral

3\. '"""':'~..,._,__
31.
».
____-..:.'..

Roger Hysell
GARAGE•

· SERVICE

'

S25,700i

rs &amp;SERVICE

CAR~~NTER

~

-~

BOGG'S

YOUNG'S

••

.,

PUlliNS
EXCAVATING

:
,
•

11 _.J~ons Want&amp;e!
WIW car.e for elderly men
and women In . our home. ·
Aliso have rooms for' rent .
with or without board . . •
Trained and experienced. :
614·992·7314.

~====~===4~=======~+:=========-~ charge to the advertiser.

\ PH.992·2259

•••H•nce

Announcements
SWEEPER . arld sewing
machine repair, parts, and
suprlles .
Pick up and
delivery, DaviS Vacuum
Clean~r. one half mile up
Georges
AA6·0294 .. Creek Rd . Call

operation, Frac . 3: T·2N : ·Gravely Tractor Sales,
R·13-W; Salisbury Town· Kanauoa .
7
ship,
Meigspeople
County,
Interested
canOhio.
see Garage Sale Friday Aug .
these forms and maps at 13, 7 mites out Rt. IAl.
r---==~=~--. ·. -------..,;;..:;:.;.1Ill@ Meigs County Recor· Everrthlng ·Cheap. 9·5.
der'sOificeanyllme.
35 Grape 51., Gallipolis .
F inally Opening·Capco . 9AM·APM, Thurs. ·Fr i.
.
t'AI
Antiques. collectables. Bikes. drapes. clothes. fur ·
-.;,
used furniture &amp; ap· niture, household goods,
-Dozers
pliances. Something for Odds&amp;ends.
-lltckhoes
~:ys~:iJ!':~~j~
everyone . 9:30 a.m.· 4:30
-Dump Trucks
Authorlz.,.JOIIn D"re,
p.m. Mon ., Wed ,, Fri.
-!.o-&amp;oy
Other limes by ap· Thursday and Friday ,
..,.
-Trencher
Ntw Hotline!, lush Hot'
polntment. Buy·Seii ·Trade. August 12 and 13 at 121
-water
Fum EqUIRmtnt
527 Fifth St., Ivan Powell Bastlani Or. , Gallipolis.
-sewer
Dtll'r
Res .. Racine. Oh. 614·949· Misc. and househoiCI items,
-Gas Lines
clothing, shoes, living room
Farm
Equipment
2485.
-Septic Systems
picture, k lnck·knacks and
Parts &amp;Service
great bargains.
L~rge or Small Jobs
The
Meigs
co.
Fish
and
1·3·tfC
PH. 992·2471
Game Club will have a all
8 1 1 0
2 Fam ily Yard Sale Aug.
day
session Saturday
Aug.work
Uth starting
at 8 a.m . 12th, 13th, 14th. 9·7PM . 632
All members urged to at· 2nd. Ave., Gallipolis. Bed,
box springs &amp; mattress,
tend.
bench press, weights,
Jumbo Bob White

pd.'

&amp;o8 E..MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

1 lWane,d
1 lForSalt .
I J•nnoynctmtnt
'I l ~or R!'"t
'
w.

_,,
71 1

--~--~------

L

:•

cleaner. school clothes.

- ' " " ' "'"" ' " ' " ' r

l:t==~::::=·===~l r:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:':·. .:';.- :...;.m~=;,;·~,pd~:·:J:========j

Phont
,
. 1-(614)..,·3325

.

k

. . . . . . . . of time~ be- a .,..,... or pat...., the lellal

loC

'

.

. l!li

Phan•-----------------

SHORTS &amp;.KNIT TOPS

or .992·228~

..

.............. .' 1 '1~:=::;::::;;:::;=====~===;:=::·l:6·:l:m:o:.=~-~===:;;===~
......
.,...
,....z.......

Drlol&amp;Dro.bdr

FRIDAY THE 13th SALE

Bj JANTZEN
.&amp;DOG~NITS
.
.
..

l o cM~

_______

ES'SU

I

T,nidermy, Co. Ra. 25
n&lt;nr Chester.
I.V .•lnd R.ldlo Rcp.lir
A I so other 'f lectronic
r. 11uipment.
Terry Arown
Te'chnlci•n
Associate Ge!JI'e• and
lst clilSS F CC hccnn.
f' honc9•5-3364:Avo.
or98S-383J

PRESENTS

.'. Two blg•stars are Smurfs, those 'itloiiiilsiioniiiiiailipersooiiiiiiii'siwelglliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijfl
blue cartoon creatures, and the lj
E.T. a"eBture ot the movie by the
~&amp;~~~e

Ph . 992·7583

JOHN TEAFORD
Chester, OH .

Between CIIH!IIrt &amp;

Nam•--------------~---'-AddN~--~--_.

Greg Roush

SERVICE
BARN

' •
• Publl~ Notice

llll&amp;p

•FIELD TRIPS
ss Hole-In-One ss '

WtDLEuGHT INN

I

ulde

*GOlF USSOIIS

~~~~::;J BOREOI Brokel Bluel Sell
toys an!l gifts tor nations
nymber 1 toy co(npany.
Fr.ee kit of SJOO. value. 61~ ·
992-7046.

CarpOrt Sale ~4 Henkle
Me., Gallipolis. Thurs. &amp;
Friday. 9·3. Telescope,
games, Hoover vaccuum

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

;:=~===:::==~tt~=:::~==j;=;~~~;;;;=~f===::r:=::==:;-1
Starling
' ' t
.
center

c.., .. .., ..........

an

&amp;

..,._,~-~~~~..-. ~~---.:...~~!!£..J!Il,.---·
.-:.7~·~14~·1~m:::,o::;..lll---...1.---~"';:.::=.,tl
~

I,

Sancttons

1

Onlo,,
...... E..,..L ·

.tensive rety~Oclellng
•Eiectrtcwork
oCustom Pole Bldgs.
•RooflngWork
14 Years Experience

~

~

f

I

urrr' S~urt ''"'

•~''"'"·

Ph. "4-t4H5t1

and tum to otber pressing ,matters.

up the Atlantic seaboard states Into ··r-------·-------;...·~-~·~;
southern New EngiUid, wblle 'tog • I
.
settled over areas from Kansas to
Tertnessee and the upper Ohio
Valley.
Skies were mostly fair elsewhere
In the nation.
The National Weatber Servla!
forecast showers and thunderstonns for tjle lower Mississippi .I
Valley, from the southern Atlantic
coast to southern New England.
and from Al1zooa tq the Dakotas.
Write YQUr
ad and order' by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by Phone when you get
.I results. Money not refundable.

cards, which base their calcula·

Recine, Oh.

Aeodated ...._ W1'ler
-· WASHIN'GTON (AP) -1be Senate,' In what Is blUed as !Ill attempt

west

But those cards use Increments
ot ~ pounds. The computer makell
a calculatiOn based on exact

· Rt. 3, &amp;ox 54

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

The b!J1 requtres !)Mi' p~
A similar measure Is plllldiDg beemployer to 11eterm1Jte If an appll•"j
tore tbe House,Judlclary Commit· cant Is In the coiln~~y, ~~l ,
tee. Rep. Romano L. MazmU. by checking his U.'S passport ·
by the l.[nlted States to ~aln con- . )).Ky., Is the llll!ln, sponsor o~ the
two other ~ , 511ch as a :
tro1 ollts borders, Is about to ron- comPm!!on Houlll! bilL
birth certlllc.ate, lirlvets llcelllll!•
slcler tile llrlt major overhaul at the'
In recent years, attempts to reand Social Security card.
naUon's lmmlaratlon laws In
\'amp tile Jmmliratlon law have
The employer Is not beld re&amp;!K"Il- \
nearly a generation.
been c.&amp;uallt In a Cl'OI8ftre between
Sible II the documentS are forgeries
The Setiate planned to begin &lt;Je..
minority groups, organized labor but appear to be legt~te.
:!
bate tnday on complex and contro- · and farm eroups among others. .
But the bUI directs the Pfl!llide!!t~
verslal legislation that would
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, 1). . to deVIse "a se&lt;;ure sytem" for cle- S
establlsh for the first tlme criminal
MaiL, cast the only nepttve vote termlnlng lcleDtlty within three:
and ctvn· pen,a ltles for employers
In the Judldary Committee He )'llars
•'
who ~wlogly hire Ulegal aliens.
said the
'i,alnlt emPloY· . ~ the bUI would grBI!t full an).f
The measure would grant am- en COUld lead, them to automatlnesty to any Immigrant who came~
nesty to mWions ot lllegallrnmlcally reject Hispanic Job
totheseshoresbetol'el978andtem· l
' grantsalreadyl!ithlsciJunt{y,aeta . appllc!lll~porarylegalresldi!licytQanylmml· ~.
ceiling tor annljll Jeeal lmmlgra·
The leglalatlon aeneraJ.Jy bas the
grant arrtvtng before 1982. There~
tlon In the future and set the stage backing ci the~ admlnlstra·
are an estimated 3.5 mt111011 to 6,
for possible creatiOn of a special
liOn, although It contains ~million people UviDg here Ulegally. ~
Identity card to prove legal
tures trom the admlnlstratlon's
The measUre also woold set a )
residency.
proposal• 811Jl0W1Cecltast year.
ceiling ot 425,!m new Immigrants ~
The Senate JUdiciary Committee
The measure WOild Impose clvfl each year. It woold allow, up to;
approved the measure by a 16-1 lines ci up to $2.!m for know1n8IY 40,000 , apiece fnm Canada and:
votelastMay.Butthereare!lumer· ~ hiring
Wegalallen.Itwould81ao ,Mexico but no other natiOn 00\l!d
ous P~ arnendrrients to the create a slx·month Jall term for an
lleDd more than ~.000. , , . . . ,
166-plee bUI and It was uilcertaiJt employer who engaged tn a pattern
The celllng woold not Include
whether the Senate would .flnlah
or repeated practtceotdellberaiely; M (\Igees, )Vho· could stW .~; grallite~ $
.,
work on It this week or set ·It
lllr1n&amp; IIJICiocumepted lmmlgrQts. . asylum on.a sepllfate
...------------"'---,-----_.:_--------~

B;y JAMD H. RVmN

Wt

P&amp;S BUilDINGS

.

Or

said Ross, who designed the program. The department ' had been
~upplylng "Know Your Umlt"

Uti~ Buildinp

SliM .....,. 4 Ia t ·UII 111 '
-llulldinla 21xH.
·11111111'-1 .,.. " - ·

oi'Mt-22N

a

tlesald.

*PRO SIIOP

.

~

-· ----~-

.'New Homes - · ex·

SllH atartfrem 11~24"

·naESl!•ans
Ph, ttl-27t1

rt;"iv'e i

l'ltak

CONSTRUCTION

BUilDINGS

• : .

E icper.lenced 'chef· ·i~
restaurant. Please send
reiumt to BoK, P .6 In c11i'e
of Pt. Pleasant Register,
200 Ma.l n · ~1. · Poi,nt
Pleasant,.wv. 25$.50. .

Michigan Sale. SO Nell
Ave., Gallipolis. 8·10 to 8·
14.
.
ll'ard .$-.le 170 Portsmouth
Rd. Wed. &amp; Thursday .

~

eGvtters
• Downspouts
eNtworllepalr

,

~~
~tlileEtnl'j~ixecu
. liOn
''Cia
tU~ t eL"
"1'

.

H. LWRITESEL

,

Trends
to be fol.i~d at fair
,.
By ROBERT GREENE
A.oolaled Preea Writer

)Yiien I took h1m out ot I!Je roul'
troom.'' nttle said. "I've bad aome

.u..,

J~,27.wasconvlctedMarch
26 ci aggravated mu~ tn the Ia·

........ _,.. •
they ~:--e better meillcal ·f ac

may be needed by competitors.

was

&lt;"

·

r
Ultlel ~

.

i~~~;: ==~;=: s ·e n'a te. considers o~erhaul ,·· !
.of·nati9n
'8 .immi~ation l~l:fS..}
.

CUSII the modlllcatlons.

l!ial

';

tliecleatlllll!l!tence.

want to1'" ·HliT'M: last ttme I saw h1m w.-

Hate
, ...., w waa
a robbery In he!' Newport News,
Va., home. Cqlpola, ·In a wrttten
, ..... he
ted dl
statemen~ -.... wan
to· e to
preserve his dlgnljy llld to spare
bls fam1ly further agony.

ments of--=~~;;"publls~
and cable TV operators that
AT&amp;T should not be aUowed to

restrictiOns set out by Greene.

that , 811~ (~a)

Coppola, :1!, Insisted he waa InDocent ot 'tile 19711 murder d. MW'Iel
beD •• ho
ldlleddu .."w

'ftW

Jenldns'waswwndec!tnthatgun.
battle with poUce llld Is Plu.'81y7.ed
tram the waist down.
nttle tried to 8hoW during Jeil
1
kin{''~ bearllil that the ··
·convlcfedmurclel'erhasthemental"

hlslnjwy, butajuryrecommeacled ·

wanted lt.l.ec:J!Iard cloes iioti
die."
.
•
,,
· I'

!Wn =.

~-~F•••"'ty "'I1ttlesald. "lthlllk

capadtyotasma11chlldandhas~ '·., .~ust ·
limited l1fe expectancy because ot '
IID!I ' · ·

'I1we:

dlffere!ICI! Is

Thelu"-a~•""'thearm•.

::'s':::!~:tr:~~

. SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - A deposition, shown In court TuesWoman who IUed a malpractice suit day, attorneys lor the plalntllf and
contending her doctor failed to dl· defendant questioned Mrs. Allen at
agnose her breast cancer testllled her bedside at S8cred Heart Medl·
on videotape as the case came to cal Center.
Although he!' testimony was
this week. more than a year
sUghtly confused because ol the
after she died.
' Jessie Irene Allen, 58,
on medication, she said she was "ex·
medication and had oxygen tubes
tremely concerned" about breast
Ill her nose when she gave the de!» cancer because her 92-year-old
'iltloll 'trom ber hospital bed live mother, who was Uvlng with the
Aliens, was dying ci the dlseaBe.
days bet11f!! her death. She spoke tn
a 'whisper and had to rest between
She said she was not aware ot the
atatemeqta, said Royce Moe, her avallabUity ot certain testa and
family's attorney.
procedures that rould bave been
Mrs.
ADen
bad
flied
a
medical
•
used
to determine the presence ola
1
malpractice suit against Dr. Jolm malignancy.
F. Drlacoll, claiming be did not dl·
Moe said the case coukl be a test
ignQIIe and treat her cancer before for the Idea of an "lnlonned conli'spread through her body.
sent" cloctme, which woold make
Mrs. Allen's husband, Jack, ol PhYsicians responsible lor teUing
Spokane, and son, Stephen, ol Mls- . patients details about their
ICIU!a, Mont.. have continued the conditions.
sUit slrice she died on May 9, 1981.
In testimony Wednesday, DrisThe suit, being heard by Spokane coll said his patlent'ssymplllmsdld
Cpunty Superior Court Judge ))o. not necessarUy Indicate cancer
nald N. Olson, seeks$'122,00llorlost when she llrst discovered what she
W'qes, medical
and dam- called thickening and drainage ot
for the loss ot wlte and mother. her lett breast In 1915.
~ the 52omlnute edited videotape
He said she suffered from !llrous

lflfl

wants to flabt this,'~
said Donald
the public defenclerwilO has~ Jenldna' pr\1!1arY. Iawyer. ''The most Important

from mar"...
tel~
~......
~
phone equipment to consumers.
Another modlflc tloo 11 aimed
at prev-ttng ·"T,!..__ enter·
~··
,. "'• "'"'"
lng a new bulllness that It has
been . eyeing - electronic
publishing.
pant=

major rate

·

wlth .Ohlo's~cllah\

•

~n videOtape in.malpractice lawsuit

"' B;y Tile A.aclated Pre~~
''FWh llooda and high winds ac·
companied scattered thunderlltllrrtlS from the PacWc Coast
tllrougll the Rocky Mountslnsearly
tOday, and winds In Boise, Idaho,
gusted over 00 mUes an hour.
Flash lloocls In California and
Nevada caused II!W problems, but
near Bonanza, Utah, two men were
InJured -one of them swept over a
'II).foot embankment- during a destonn late Wednesday.

Cllted Tuesday J)llbt Ill VlraiJIIa'•
electrla cbaJr,, ~ Jenkins
bops to avoid hlsJan. l9,.l 983,date

~m~tes0=!'0~~~

Greene said he approved 01
the settlement, but would Insist

Jtiij hears dead woman's testimony

aaes

Ffank

Oniilre
J. Coppola, who waa exe-

might try .to1 baye

moved=~tber~:== ~

la4t Oct. 21•

CLEVELAND (AP) -

System co~~ they
lose Ma BeU'sumlr~. Forex·
ample,GreenesalclbecouJdnot
acct!!pt the Idea ollrlms~g
thepr!nteaYeDowPage.Cijlera·
tlotltoAT&amp;T. Tboaeadyertlsln&amp;'
dln!cto£-teS,wlththe!rrouahJY$2
billion In annual revenues,
shoukl remain wfth the ' local

~·we

•J.Mm&amp;n Anthony Johnson, 22,
dl!rq an attempted bank robbery

A..acialell Pr-. Writ«

the finanCial bejllth .ot the Bell

rattve long-distance , equipment, manufactu r ing and
research operatiOns.

them avoid
Increases.

B~ ~.a. DO~O H

.'

'I

Help Wlinttd

11

or

over

child .' References.

Call4.46-7668.

·

Remodeling &amp; Carpentry .
Eleclrical &amp; Plumbing. JQI·
576·2989 .

.,•

- --- - --- -· ------

WILL do house · cleaning,
U .OO hour, can · give
reference, 304·675·6874 or
675·3458.

- -··---- ------....::...

WILL babysit for working
mother in my home .
Mason. Days only . 304-773::
5155. .
.

--- -·--·-- - --- 21

-·-- BUsines s----a

_ -· _O.P~,!Iu'!!!t_ _ _:.
OWN your ·own Jean'
Sportswear, Infant· Pre lee.,
n or'["L aGiies Apparel store •
Offering alt nationally
known brands such as Jor·
da1che, Chic 1 Lee, . Levi
Vanderbilt, Calvin Klein'
Wrahgler over 200 othe;
b~ands . $7,900 to $16,500 Includes

be.g lnninQ

ventorv, airfare for one

in ·
tQ

Fash ion Center, traininU.,

fixtures, grand openinb
promotions. Call Mr
Bailey 16141 353·5161 .
·;

. -: ==· =-.:: =- === =·

-.j

22 _ _ MO,!I~_r ~_!,~a!!_::._:~:
REFINANCE or pUrchase
your home. 30 year lixeq
rate. wva . &amp; Ohio. Lea~
Mortgage, 77 E. Stale ·St.:
Athens. Oh. 614·592·3051.
23 · · ·
. -·

Pr~f';sil~~al::. =-'&gt;, ,

-·------... '

Services

... -C&amp;L Bookkeeping

Bookkeeping·&amp; tax serviCe

for all types of businesses. •
Carol Neal
· · AA6·3862•

31

.

H·o.nes for-saie --·-

-·.---. . ,. .-.

2 bd.room . 80 K 100, lot. 1
small building. Garden
space. In Mason behind
laundry mat. S8000 d!IWn."
take over payments •or
$26,000. Call773-5089 .
·
GOTT A SEE I.T to believe
al\ this and price_to seu; 4
bdr.
Coloniaj
on
Hedgewood , Dr.. large
country kilchen, llvint
room, dining room, formal
entrance, 2 car garage, full
basement, family room, 2
WOOd bu,rnlng FP, lot)
more. Call AA6·7802.

DEPENDABLE Babysit·
ter needed In my home, day __
__..._.,_"'"-r----.:;..
shift, call .,tween 4 and 10 I would like to trade ..
p.m. JOt675 "6~ .
small farm for ~ aM
lo,t or mobil' 110me •nil lot
~TURE, responsible, IN or NEAR Glllipo( ...
' babyallfer In our ~. 2 Write to Box 1001 1" care of
ldren, flexleble hOurs, Ga!IIP'OIIt Dally 'l'rlbulil
own 1rtnsporfatl0n, 304· ru 3rd. Ave., Gallinotl..
45631.
•nl-57511.

e

Oli

.---·---

�., .

. ,,
Sentinel

31':-tiDiileslor-s.-1( -

Ohio

They.'ll Do It Every Time

IIJ.Oround,concrett pqol 9 n
2 acre lai, _AI!IIl ~· hcfi·.
atr conditioned tidbSf' w11n
full . basenlent, t WB
!!replaces, new carpel.
;Nould consider tower
valued properly In lrade or
Y.,ill finance wllh low down
payment and 10% Interest.
lqcaled 123 Garfield Ave.
~all oiA6-1546.

sr

s4

FINANCE··

PM$101()

US6111i (IICI

lM$5

OF

CMS,Iflf!

----------

Attractl\le 4 bdr. home in
clly full basement, family
t oom, dining room, fully
-carpeted. Assumable loan,
1ow down paymenl. Call af ·
\er 5, 446·1323.

Pomeroy . Nice localion :
Carpeted, vinyl siding,
fireplace. Priced ro sell
S22,SOO. 614·992·7446.
3 bd .room
house In
Pomeroy . NIce location.
All carpeted, vinyl siding,
and fire·place. Priced to
sellatS22,500. 614·99Ho1A6.
3 room house wilh balh.
Mason, W. VA. Large lot.
Owner will help finance .
61H92·7352.
F.or sale by Church. House
on eorner ot Filth and Main
Sts. in Racine. Oh. To ·be

.

3J . _ Lois &amp; Acrea!!! __ _
1/ 2 acre lot on Mitchell Rd,
rural water, city school,
nice for building or 1railer.
Call446·3933.
28 acres, tobacco allot·
ment, mineral rights, no
buildings, $9,500. Call 30~ ·
675-6851.

20 ACRES, water &amp; limber,
black lop road, c all
evenings , 301-615-1541.
- - lioal E.lale- - _____Wa_!!!!d_____ _

l6 -

Wanled to buy old house In
Gatlipelis. Will consider
home needing restorstion
or one already restored. M.
Evans. Call o1A6·2800.

Lovely

remodeled

3

House, 120 Jrd. Ave ..
Gallipolis. 2 bdr., gas neat,
dep. req . The Wiseman
Agency, ~46 · 3643 .
Attractive 4 bdr . home In
city full basemen!, family
room, dining room, fully
carpeted. S325 per mo. Call
aller 5, oiA6·1323.

Sr . house &amp; balh, adults
on Iy, rio pets, on Bob Me·

schools. 30~·675·&lt;1338 .

FIVE room house wilh
bath, fuel oil furnace, on
one acre ground, $8,000.
Call 30~ ·882·2371 .
HOUSE for sale, 2207 Oak
St. Craftsman table saw.
J0-4-675·2130.
OWNER financing on this
modern 6 room home. Also
a Holly Park mobile home,
doub le car garage and silting on 1.4 acres, (all
Ieveil . Quick possession .
Priced to sell. 304·675·3030
or 675·3431 .
3 bedroom fenced yard
walking distance to
schools, shopping, hospital,
exc. neighbOrhOOd, 7 pel.
-assumable loan. 304-675·

. ~.173 -

:.;2

Mobile Homes
for Safe

----'""--="'---·
RI · STATE
MOBILE
• +lOME'S. USED-MOBILE
' ~OMES, CARS, TRUCKS .
:GALLI POLlS .
CHECK
•OUR PRICES. CALL 446·
' ]!i/2.
w

I

·: GLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
JS. PHONE 446·3868.

- - - - - ------

1"'

- - - - -·

·---

J97~ New Moon Trai_ler.
· -Total etec ., new carpeltng,
,_ _ u.nderplnning. 6 U -992-7406.

_

Small furnished house for 1
or 2 adulls only . Call 446·
SWAIN
0338.
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Furnished efficiency . S145 GalliPOliS. Couch, loveseal
cnalr,
S199 . ;
utilities paid, single male, and
919 Second Ave., Galllpetls. wallhuggers $125.; bunk
beds wllh bunkles, $170.;
Catl446·4416 a tier 7PM.
box spring and mallress,
SIOO. .
Firm, Sl20 .;
Unfurnished apl. 2 bdr., recliners, SBO.; 9 x 12
1136 1/2 Second Ave., linoleum rugs, S22.; maple
Gallipolis. Sl80, wafer pd. rockers, $49. , wringer
Catl446·4416 a tier 7PM .
washers, refrigerators,
dlnelle sets, chest,
3 room furnished apt. 5250. dressers, bunkie mattress,
month includes ulllllles. S40. Call 446·3159.
Inquire at Meigs Inn in
Pomeroy.
2 bd.room, furn . Upstairs. STERLING Upright F'lano,
$150. per mo. You pay daled 1891. All original.
ulllllles. 1 chltd accepted. Call 256·1642 or 256·1937.
614-9~9 -2875 .

--- -·· ·- - - · - · bd.room Apl. In Mid·

-·-

1
dlepert. 61~· 992 · 3590 .
. -· _ _ __ ___ ___ _ _
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
aprs. 614·992·SCJ• or 992·
591~ or 304-812·2566.
··- - ·---· - - - -· - ··I bedroom apt. Newly
decorated. Darwin area .
614·992·2807.
Apartments. 30~ · 67S · SS46 .

House In Crown Clly for
rent, S200 per mo .• $200
deposit. Call614·367-0242.
Large home situated on a
nice lot in Syracuse,. Ohio.
GOOd neighbOr hOOd, will
accomodate 3 or ~ single
men or single wpmen.
Private rooms with com·
mon lounge and cooking
areas plus II'&gt; bafhs.
Available before school
opening 1'\ug. !Sore school
lh. $450: per mo. plus
utilities. Caii61~- 992 · 62Uor
992·5732 or 992·7671.
You'll love this 14 acre
farm In !he country wllh a
pond and small barn. This 2
bedroom brick home Is
only 2 miles from down·
!own Pl. Pleasant. Will
sign a year lease al$450 per
month. 301-675·6276.
3 bdr., 2 bath, Riverfront
ranch, S miles south of
Gallipolis. S250 per mo.
Contacl Wiseman Real
Estates Agency, 446·3643.
42

Mobile Homes

_. __ J'!" Ren_! ___

_

2 bdr. beautifully furnished, wall to wall carpet,
large livlno room, air
cond ., gas heal, private tot.
Ca11446· U09, ~to 7PM.
3 bdr. mobile home, com·
pletely furnished . Call 446'9669 .

12x60, 2 bdr., unfurnished
mobile home on Rl. 35. Ref.
&amp; dep. required . Call 446·
~229 .

12x60, 2 bdr., unfurniShed
mobile home In Cheshire.
Ref . &amp; dep. required. Call
oiA6·4229.

:• •. 1~73 U~70 Grandville has
large rooms plus laundry
room. must be moved, 304·
882·2820.
.'

2 bdr. tully furnished, air
conditioned, adults only.

'
USED MOBILE
'-• ,-676·2711.

2 bedroom trailer. Real
nice, adults only. Brown's
Trailer Park, Minersville.

'---~-----

HOME .

---------

• - · 1,10B ILE HOMES MOVED
,. ·'; "Licensed &amp; Insured. Call
--.ao.l·576·2711.
•

Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath,
clean, no pets, adults only,
dep. req. Call446·1519.

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes,
houses .
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
61~ - 446- 8221 or 614-245 · 948~.
Three room furnished
apartment, adults, no pets,
Polnl Pleasant. Cat I 304·
615·2453.
THREE room furnished
collage, utilities furnished,
adults, no pets, 301-675·2812
or 675·1580.
NORTH Myrtle Beach,
Soulh Carolina, Sand Piper
Condo. S385.00 week, Sleeps
8 lo 10, pool &amp; !ennis courf,
one block to beach. Call
803·272-5943.

---- --·--· -- ·~ ___M_!Si,~trchand_!~ ·--

Plastic Sepllc T~nks . State
and county approved. 1,000
gat . lank, price $340 . Other
sizes In sleek, haul In your
pickup !ruck. C'all 614·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

1915 Case ~50 , do~er ­
tractor, 1.800 hrs., very
gOOd cond., $14,900. Call
oiA6·4537.
RATLIFF ' S POOL CEN ·
TER Pools sale, supplies &amp;
Installation. 403 2nd. Ave.,
GalliPOliS, Oh. Call 446·
6579. tn ground·Ablove
ground .
ADDITIONAL DtSCOUN·
Tl
LIMITED
TIME
ONLYI TH.E BIG, NEW
AMAZING •1982 FAMILY·
SIZE POOLS WHICH · IN·
CLUDE DECK, FENCE,
FILTER &amp; WARRANTY
ARE NOW AVAILABLE
FOR ONL!Y $999. IN ·
STALLATION &amp; FINAN ·
CING AVAILABLE . FIR·
ST COME, FIRST SERVE.
CALL 1·800-624-8511 (Ohio),
1·800·642-3053 (WVJ.
.

---- ·---~-- -----

Coli 45 A.C. P. Combat
Commander. Call oiA6·9lS5.
Steep ing
room . $115,
utilities paid. Single male,
share bath. 919 Second Ave,
Gatlipelis. 446·4416 afler
7PM.

Maytag aulomallc washer,
$95. GE dryer, S90. Both
real nice &amp; guaranteed .
Call446·8181.

4_6-_:-~-_sjiaj~ t~r-R!o!i_ ::_-:-__

u

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Par~. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.
NICE mobile home space
for rent on Jericho Road,
catl304·675·4190.

-

---- -·- - ·--- -. _ . ...... ,.
.........-............
_,

'·

Ford 3/~ ton PU, priced
righl. ~ yr. old quarter
mare, ~ yr . old Patamlno
mare. Homemade small
Slock trailer. Call afler
~PM, 614-379·2761 .
l house traner a)(les and
lounge S175. Call oiSB-1997.

used above the ground
swimming pool. 2~ ft .
round, S75. Call 446·0373.

'1980 Windsor 14x70, new

oond. Delu~e kitchen, large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hlqden ulil . room .
379-2310.

'(Ill"'

. f~&gt;_rf!!n.L - . ..

Cormick Rd. Call446-2650.

fenced backyard, carpeted,

sided, storm windows, near

Apartment

44

s_C ::::.= Antlques-=:::.=

Rentals

9514.

bedroom home. basement,

-~

"" ~ ··· ---~----

;··:·1973 Imperial, 12~65. car·
i
peted throughout, 2
:-· bedropms, 2 baths SS500.
;
404 Loousl St. Henderson.

: - ·--- - - - - - - -

'
,
•
•-

l974 Cameron mobile home
14x70, 3 bedroom, one and
one·half balhs, 3 !on cen·
trat air cond. 8x15 porch
f· completely underpenned
10x10
building
Sli,OOO.Shown by ap. 1 r&gt;otnlmenl 304-773·5143.

33

call446 - ~110 .

61~ · 992· 332~.

3 bedroom Mobile Homo,
furnished. utllllles paid.
Also for rent· 1h of apt.
house, furnished,
1
bedroom . No pets, no
drunks or dope. For more
Info. call61~· 367·0611 , John
Sheets, 31h mi. South Mid·
dlepert.

t

::~::::t::':'=.==\-

Nloror Home

. EVENING .

. .... - '- c;_~!!'P.f.!".:-- .. '

8 ft . sliding camper, ~~~
cond,, S40Q. Ca11 oiA6·'¥8· '

. ..

- - ·r~-.-~

(JINewa

.•

44_

RAY'S
USED
FljR ·
NITt!RE Chesl of drawers
S22.50, 2 pc. living room
sulle S50, breakfast sel SJO,
metat wall cabinet $8, high
chair $10, oak rocker S2S, ~
oak chairs S12 ea., lawn
mower SJO, 20' bicycle
S22.50. Call61~ · 367-0637 .
Dining room set • chairs
and table,
cushioned
chairs, $100. Call458·1997.

over 1,000 ceramic molds,
kilns, and supplies. 614-742·
2925 or 7•2·2085.

Hide-A-Bed. 614-949·2568.
REPOSSESSED SIGN It I
Nothing downl Take over
payments S58.50 monthly. ~
x 8 flashing arrow · sign.
New bulbs, letters. Ha.le
Signs. 1·800·227·1617, Ex!.
647 .

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

SAM
Somervlll's
Warehouse 7 mites East
RavenswOOd old Rl. 71,
(.New Era) open~· usual,
Fri., lhru •Sun. I :OD-7:30
p.m .. Mon. evenings, Surplus
new
army
camouflage, combat bOOts,
denim ,
used
renlat
damaged clothes ss.oo
dozen call In orders 6753334 Pt. Pleasant.
~

orewOOd. $15. a pickup,
you get. 304·576·2010.

_____

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, llnlels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Caii61H45·5121 .
Molal sheets for all
building purpeses. Flal
porcetian enamel coaled .
4x8 thru; x 12. Prices, S7 .00
to$9.60. 61~·667·3085 .

-Pets for Sale

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

56

---· -·-----·--·-

DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, F'erslan and
Siamese killens. Call 446·
3844 after~ p.m.

7:00 •

. - .. !.II'.P!:~~·.II'.!!'.!!.. ~ .:.

Une
(I) OIMII Acre.
(I) Entertlolnm.nt Tonight
(l)tf.vt!leya
G (1)·11c TIC Dough
(I) •&lt;Ill MecNeii·IAhrer
Report

- -- ·· -· ·- - ·- ··

1976 Monte Carlo $1,000.
304·675-~173 .

-· ···- -··-.

··'-

-

-.

=

::

=::.

-·-

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

..

=

se,

-

;s:· iin

-- -·

~

1972 Ford Mustang fast·
back 351 CJ, ex. cond.,
radial !ires, AM·FM fape
casselle, radio wllh IIOW@r
amp. Call458·1997.

.. -

--- -~

-- --.:... . ·-· ..

1976 HONDA, motorcycle,
750, 15,000 mites, exconent
condlllon, S1,000. Cal) 304·
675-~210.

-· ::.. ::_-;~:: ::.:::.~::.:.=-====-=

75

Boa!Sond

.. - ·- M'!!_oJ;~..f!!'J~~- -

~ room unfurnished
carpet~d,
Olllltles

.HARTS Used Cars, tlaven Wesl Vlrglnle, Over
20 Je,s expensive cars In
IIOCk.
-~-

-

and Smell

•
!II Ent..uinrnem
Tonight
B:OO •
(I) (l) F...,e Bruno
tries to overcome hi1 shy~
ness eo he can perform in
front of his ctassmetes. IR)
160 min.)
(I) Unexpurgetecl Benny
Hill England's popular funnyman presents hit zany

ANNIE

----·-------·--

Olf, GiEE -I'M REfl. CQIRISEq

LOOIUH'

~

(!0 Magnum, P .I. Magnum
bacomes involved with a
former Russian plloi. (R)
160 min.)
B:30 (]) Top R8nk Boxing
From NM!MIIe, TN
(I) • !II Boeom Buddin
Kip and Henry recaH their
wild college days. (R)
[Cioaed Captioned]

(() Good Nel9hbon

(Jj)M......,.......e18
(I)
Dlfl'rent
Strokes Mr. Drummond
cencela a business ·trip
when Arnold has nightmares. IRI
(I) MOVIE: 'Spiral Stair·

.,....

(I) MOVIE: 'Cabo Blanco'
(I) 700•Club
(I) • !II Barney Millar
Bamay and his men try to
cope with gang warfare in
Chinatown. (R) (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
D (I) ® Simon • Simon
A.J. and Rick go to Me•ico
to find a young girt who Is
believed to be kidnapped
by her father. (II) 160 min.)
(I) To !be Menor Born
CID &amp;n..k ,.....,.._ CohOsts Gene Siska! and Roger Eben lake a look at
what's happening 11 the

GASOUNE AILEY

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test hotes.
PumPS Sales and Service.
304·895·3802.

movtes.

ADVANCED
Seamless
Gulter-Doors. Off~rlng
contlnouse
gulterlng,
seamless Siding, roofing,
garage
doors,
free
esllmales, 614-698·82os ..

..

~

..... ___.. __....

.

. ·-

13 · · -

9:30 •

(I)
(!) Dlfl'rent
Strokes Willa gets involved with discrimination
el home and at school. (R)
(I) Wodahoull ~
&lt;Ill Thlo Old Hou11 Host
Bob Vita asaesll88 the affi..
cienc:y of the houae's heat·
ing plant. IR) [Cioaed
Captioned]
10:00 8 (I) (!) Hill Streat
Bluaa Joyce makes Capt .
Furillo mad when she outmaneuvers him in court
and Sergeant Estemauo
foams that, he may be a
Iatner. (R) (80 min.)
(I) • !1120/20
II Cll Ill Knol$ Landing
Vel's old flame abandons
his stepdaughter and Karan
is reunited
with
her
brother. IR) 180 min.)
(I) Auetin City Umlte

' WINNIE
el)T NOW THAT
·s HE'S 60NJ:
1 . •. 1 FEEL
KIND OF
SORRY
F-0~ flE~.

::. ::-::

-·.... -·.. --

CARTER'S PLUMBING
1'\ND HEAT.JNG '
•
obf:. F01,1rtH .nd PI~ ,
Phone 446·3888 or oiA6· 4477

'

'

. .,... . .. --·--eiicavliinv·
-·
- ,......····~-

~·

..

, .

Gall!polls D·lversilled Const. co. Cusrom . dOzer &amp;
backhoe work. Special
farm rates. ¢an us for free
estimates. 446·4440. '·

CID Newawdeh
10:115 (I) TBS Evening Newt

L~~r;n~~· ~~"J;~·;,~ I~k~r
Backhoe Serive. Cat( 67S·
5580.
,:
. ·~ •.

.1- •

• •

'

· t 1ecirici1
. I Re!r!gera,lio~ .:
SEWING Machine repairs;
service. ,Authorized Sin~r
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen ·
Scissors. Febr!c Shop, .
Pomeroy. 992-2284.
, ·

14

51U

alter

10:30 (I) Laughe Four young
comics are followed both
on and off the siege as
they learn their craft.

, BARNEY

. ' r---------------------------~--~
ME AN' PAW SHORE GOT
PLI~NTY

OF ELBOW ~OOM UP
HERE IN TH' MOUNTAINS

NOW,IF~E

JUST HAD SOME

.FEET ROOM

· lj

(l)AFIS'(1) Sing out ArneriCOI
1B1 Hhchcock
11:00. (I) (I). (I)®.

7101.

vw
peril , F'liS!·
..
back/Squareback.
A. J· 1 ;:.~ ·w· ~.: ~.' · · ·
1IOOCC engine, "110- 8.
..... a.... - .lc~. Call
Fl'llftl Mid, 1131. (, RMr Jim Lanltr, 304-67H397.

suo. o.

' . --- ... . ' ·I
mile, SIOI. IHts. 111...... ., . - · · , ·- ·- .. - ..

.

'

etc. Will eo~•••• trade ·for ..
104- ..-,C'eii ....1Uf.
.
':
.

.l-1'0 Lillcflll,

rarwe:.t
1975 FORO

IIIVI'Oiel --

-*1*-

Trude filii

.

·' • U..~alslfij

TR1 IY~TIE

,· ' ..

J!=i-~_ ~p~!r.=lsC0111111ttt

~; JiliiiiiOfa'or~=
Trtm c.tt-

J833or•••·

I l I )

(Antwetl tomoriOW)

Ne-

:r l-:---~-

(I)
(])
(l)
(I)

!II

Nashville RFD
ESPN Sparb

c-

Newa/Sporu/Welther
011Ve Allen .. Large

11 :1&amp;!!! AU In the F-lly
11:30
~~~Show

1ii

8enfW HIR
OulllcY Quincy
heil!l a women clear her
f - of rrtanllalghter
chaigel. iR) 160 lllil-1
Cll Cloptloned AIC Newa
till "'-rt Mt. llo¥tl
(I) After
• •· (I)

,PIWIUTS

•u
uz .

.Q 1078

.QJtU
SOUTH

'

"j.

•

at

Y!e:JPDI tt To-

•xplor•

• nlgl)i'. pi Ollf•h
the lnvetlon of pijvecy. (90

mln.l

•

I

HHa:•!ll"*!-··· T-'

12:00 Cll ....... M.n
I]J
Auto
t.alng'l2
fn!toll Gr8lld l'llx
.

Cll

.H

Yle\vp Ill T~··

PJOiiWil ....... the it¥•
tlon~min.l

~~ ..~~

IL·tmAI'
(

UQJIU
•• 73

Vulnerable: Nortb.&amp;uth
Dealer: West
West Norlli Eut
st
Dbt.
Pus
Pus
Pus s•
Pus

•

·one of bla trunlj~! while dla·
cardln11 dummy s two small
clubs. East will have to
make three discards. Two
will . be eaay. Tbey will be
the four and two of clubs:·
Tbe third will be lmpouible.
·u be chucks another club,
South will cub dummy's
ace-klnp of both suits. Then
be will ruff back to bla band
with bla lut trump and
make the last trick with his.
lut club. If East chucks a
heart the ace-klnf of heart&amp;
and a heart ruf establish
dummy's fourth heart.
Wby didn't squeeze expert
South claim right away~
Because if West held three
clubs the crlaa-cross squeeze
could not be developed.

t101

:.II
Pua.

Openlns lead: •K
By O.wald JKGIIy
and AJu Sotllal

Tbe bel!nner follows to
two spades and wins tbe
trump shift. Tben he runs off
10 tricks or If be is In a bur-

INE'Ii8PAPI!:II ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~OUM"tilf

lty THOMAS JO~EPH
41 Singer,
ACROSS
Wayne!Applaud
uEquai
5 Perfumed
product
DOWN
11 Partner
1 Task
cfseek
Z Invigorate
I% Gratify

3 Stilled

4 Apfec:e
5 E:remjlteil
15 Cravat fabric f Ultewlse
II Favoring
7 That (F-r.) 2% Agreed
30 French
'
8
GhosHidden
23
Frivolous
.river
17 Catnip
.
II Menu Item
t Regard
U tilt:e Albee's 31 Hire
ztPagoda
hlghly
Alice
3% Subsequently
ornament
10 Home.of
Z5 Muffle · 34- Rlver.a,
the brave
21 Attraction
Calif. ·
21ShreWIIIOIIIII
!!Greek
lf .Jaunty
Z7 Seoul
37 ToWhSlJUin
toWilllhlp
19.Genuine
citizen
38 Wise to

UBeyond

14 Sagacious

!3Helda

sMslon
U Wool welllbt

Z5 Roald
Arlene
Z7 Relatives
!8 OlcMime note
Z9 "Tip"
h-t-'--t--

or

:::-'-!-~

01' Eugene

33-clear
34Snoop
(Iaiit)

31Her name
means
"awed"
IS DeadIS Beethoven's

._

Sympbony"

.. GaeDe
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
·A X 'I D L B A A X II
II ,L 0 N G F 1: L L ·o W
' , OM· letter llmplJ atudo, for another. In thiJ sample· A Ia
Uled for tile tllree L'a. .X for the two O's, etc. Sincle leiters,

lfaiiNIIbn, tile lel!ttb and fortiiAtioa of lhe worda are all
IIJali.'J:idl daJ tile code lette~ are dll"erent.

'

11:'111(1) ~IE: ' T - . The
ApfMan'
.
(I) MOVlil: '..... to

'~

11queeze.

. He simply runs off all but

35At-

(l) MOVIE: 'The GI'Ht
TexM ~Ire CIIHI'

4:30.
Now Haunnu n.,..rone-lln
dirt-top" aoll·gravei. Free'
ftllmatee. Cell 614·367·

rn

9:00 •

I. lUI"

.AltU
EAST

'Donoven't

movtea.

-· · - - · - - · ..

.il~;;ibin;
&amp; Heating

J&amp;[

concedes down one.
Tbe man wbo knows a lit· .
Ue about fMiueeze&amp; will abo
concede. He will see that
East, In back of dummy, will·
,be IODI In bearta and clubs
and that a simple two-su)t
11queeze won't work.
Tbe man who lmows all
about squeezes will expect
to make bla contract by
means of a crisacrosa trump

• A 107

F81r
(I) S..... Prevle- Cohosts Gene Sisko! and Ro·
gar Eben taka a look at
what's happening at the

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced mason, rooting,
carpenter, electrician,
general repairs , and
remOdeling. Call 304·675·
2088 or 675·4560.

NORTH

tJS
•.u:u

CIJ Kentucky State

D

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal . Call 675·
1331 .

0

-x I

I

rY juat shows bla band and

from ~1. iR)

~46'-2~5-C .

=

.. 10

A crisscross squeeze

Mork • Mindy
Mork tries to free Mind~

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenllh and
Molorota, Q~azar, a~d
house calls. Call 576·2398 or

82 " :;

-

Jumbles: AlGOR BOUGH WEAKEN BLOODY
Answer: Why the bookworm visited lhe l[brary- · ,
TO "BUI)ROW" A BOOK
.

!II

(I) •

-· -·- .. ...

PAINTING interior &amp; exferior, tree estimates, 30~·
675·1128.

MOVIE:

Reef

16 ~OAOOY" NEllE flllWl'OO'?!
HO¥t'D Y' IUiOW

•STARKS Tree Trimming
and Lawn Service. Shrubs
trimmed. Phone 30~ · 576 ·
2010.

-··· -L . .

Mange 111e -

::'t.ctlheby~er::::o.,u oug·,

BRIDGE

(])ESPNS~m

(I)

condition, ~500. .~773·

11'111.
1975 CUTl.ASI, SHD.

I

Yeslerdsy's

cast of characters.
(I) Chlld'a Cry

WI AM! WHO ME YOO'?I'ftY

___ ,

14 fool Starcraft aluminum
'V huH fishing boll! with, "10
H F', Jonnson OB motor, till
~
·~
,!railer, new condition, 3Gf· · es · · Ginerlliiluun.i · ,
'
r
•
,.
•
•,
.
•·
'
•
, .., ••
675-2651 .
JONES
BOYS
WATER
·SE!IVI~E. Catl614·361·7.q1
1971 Slarcraft 15 ti. trl
Cll'61•·367·05f\.
1
90 HP Mercury motor ltlt .•
.. - I
car hltc!l end tre11er1 1 Mt
'
skis, 1 slelom aki, 5 life
Jackets, •ncnor, · 3 on
lanka. ~lble ~. new

---

1965 M)lllang, lair shape,
304-675-5162&gt; .

lts-3349.

BETWEEN(

rn

--·--- ------!!Vu

--- .-

Answer.

(II Muppet Show
(I) You Aaked For It
(I) Anolher Ufe
(]) ESPN SporU Center
(I) Andy.Gtifflth
(I) • (I) F...,lly Feud
Loverne Mid Shirley
(I) Butl,.... Report
(JI Richerd Slmmona

CARPENTRY ·DOORS,FL·
OORING,WALL PANELI·
NG,tEtLING TILE AND
PAINTING . 61~·992· 2759 . .

. ., ·- - . .. .

-

_(c......&lt;)L--L-'o..(~)

7:30 •

BINGS CONCRETE" CON · ·
STRUCTION -S pecializing ·
in concrete driveway$.
sidew"alks, floors, patioS,
elc. II yr. exp. Ca11 614·367·
7891.
- - ··· - ---,.-·- -r -~
Gene's Steam Carpet
Ctean-Scofch Gaurd· Fr~
estimates-spring specialsGene Sm ilh, 992·6309.
·

. . . .. - -· . . . ·1

·--~---

_L..\

L...l

®Newt

-~--·-

==::

for Renl

Efllency apartments lsi
floor. Call oiA6·0957, 729 2nd
Ave., Galtlpells.

\1-D:;::::::U;;N;..:.TI~C~f-P""'i:::

•

____ -·-

--

Ap;~rtrnenl

apt. all
paid,
~dullS only no pelS. Call
446·3437.

u.-.P,M.'Y!)IIIIIIIICI
You
Megulne

(J)
(J) MOYIE: 'M'
(I) Bull' I~
(]) CFL Fnoin the 611 Yerd

-H-om.-,--·-

1977 CHEVY Vega, 4 cyl. ~ CAPTAIN STEEMER Carspeed, excellent condillon, . pet Cleaning . featured by
no rust. S16SO.OO, 304·576- Haffett Broslhers Custom
Carpets. Free· estimates.
2~.
Cal1446·2107.
• ·- .
. .. . . - -· 1 - · - ·· - - . ,...._
-· ----·
1980 TOYOTA Corolla, ex·
cell en! · condillon, air con· Masonary work, Logue
dillon, $5,600. 1979 Flat X-19 Conlracllrig,
Rt.
h·
Targa lop, $4,500. 304·675- Ewinglon . Ca11 61~·381•
2517.
9939.
'
-·. - ·-·--- -1963 Chevy lmpalla, 2 DH, CHRISTIAN'S COlli ·
283 wllh 92,500 miles. Ex· · STRUCTtON .
Conslr :,
celtenl inferior, gOOd con· roofing, siding, spouting,
dillon S1200 or reasonable fencing, palnting,.repalrs &amp;
offer. 304-675·2099 afler ~ cleaning : ~46- 2000, call
p.m .
before8a~dafler5:~.
;

HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds. AKC Super M FarmaiiJlicker, 2
Reg. Dobermai!S puPS and row pulllype New Idea cor·
. . - ---· ----·- ·
Doberman Stud Service . nplcker, 1 row New Idea 72
Truck's for Sale
.
' -·· ·-- -·. - .. - ··
cornplcker,
5000
Ford
trac·
Call ~46- 7795.
tor, IHC 615 cornblne, MF ' For sale 81 pickup 4x4, exc .
~10 combine bofh heads. cond., Low mileage. Call
POODLE GROOMING.
Russ Brother 139 South of 446-2706.
Call Judy Taylor al61~· 367· , Jackson, 614·286·2731 .
7220.
1967 C~ev, truck 327-.j()()
Montgomery Trailer sales. lubo, engine, automatic,
AKC Registered POOdle 61~ · 669· 4245, Farm !railers, short·wlde bed. 1/2 ron.
puppies. Call446·0857.
See you at !he Mason Coun· Call458·1997. ·
ly Fai~.
Grooming services for
57 CHEVY pickup, all
pets. Wilt clip English n ·- - - .. CtveirciCii · · ·
ori~lnal, narrow bed, 265
Sheep &lt;logs, pOOdles &amp;
-- .. ---·- ----, . -· engine, ~speed, S1 ,000. Call
Schnauzer's . Reasonable. ~olsteln calf, 3 mo. -old, 304-576·2670.
For appt. 614·992·7342. ,
priced S160. Call 614·256·
6540.
67 FORD truck, Fi 100 half
'TWO registered, 8 week
1'- •..• - · - -· ----~ •.. ••. •
ton. 6~ Ford Falcon stationold, Bluetlck, female pups. REG. QUARTER HORSES wagon, 6 cylinder, Call 304·
Phone 304-675-3328 .
Training,
showing, 675-6130.
breeding, sales and boar·
Miniature collie puppies . ding. Contact Dan Beam, 1970 Dodge Slant-6 pickup
GallipoliS, 446·0183.
304-516-2762.
SG. 304·675·1892.
::
=·==::::-:.=
-· ·. ·· ·· --·
Charolais bulls
Reg . 73 • · --··57
Musical
POlled, hOrned, 7 mos. 1o ~
·-vans&amp;4W.D.
- .. -- .. -·- ..
___ f~S!!'~_II!_enls __ _
yr. old. Also Polled heifers. 1978 CJ -5 Jeep, 28,000
Baldwin Cabaret organ WOOdward's Ohlllco Far· miles. canvas top, hard
with
fun machine, ms. C'aii614·379·2S97.
top, carpet, good condition.
praclally new. Has 2
Call446·1817 alter 6:00P~ .
keybOards. Call 61N79·
Brown laying chickens.
- ·----··--· - ··- - ..
2623.
Laying now. Also gOOd for 1979 Dodge van . p.s .. p.b ..
butchering. $1 .00 ea. 614· au1o·trans., air·cor'ld.,
se · ·· - - · i'rliti' ·- - 992·7713.
cruise cont., a.m. ·f.m.
Privacy
g lass.
Some
- -- _!._V."@~l!\~-- -F resn vegelabtes Open 3:00 REGISTERED • 1'\lplne custom work. 61~·992·6330.
to 6:00 daily. 2 miles west dalrv goats. Gentle, show
of Galiljloils on Rl. 111. Call quality. Star M does, DHIR 1972 CHEVY van, 350
446·1080.
records,'ADGA ~tassified . engine, aulomallc, PS, PB,
Nice selection of doe kids. long wheel base, excellent
service from condlllon, $1350.00. 304-576·
NEW BEAN PATCH Slud
OPEN Pick Your own classified bucks. 304·458· 2866.
tomatoes, lima beans, $6.00 1763.
bu, corn $1.00 doz. Raynor
~~ ::. ~ ~~t~~icf!~=
Peach Orchard, Rt. 7, 6(_:· ~- ~~r!o~!•_~,;- ~
1980 HONDA , ATC 110, 3
Lower
River
Rd . ,
,Large rOund bales hay or wheeler, exc. c~rid . , $800.
GalliPOlis, oiA6·4607.
corn tor sale$10. loSJO. 304· Call446·9278.
oiSB-1656 or' 304·675-75-Cl.
Cornfield beans, $5.00 bu .
.. - ·. - ·" ":":""":""
.. ····1982 Honda 450 cuslom,
Cat1614·245·9S87.
1,.j()() mites, like new. Call
- ~ ·· ·, · ··· · ···
oiA6·2350.
GOOD THINGS TO
- .. -· - •.. - --- . - -EAT:::CANNtNG PEAC·
7i
~
:·
::~!_o!_l!r}~i~
~1a
Honda minarure
s200.
HES . Yellow Freestone
canning peaches now 7~ MuSiang II, SG. Call Call614·256·1ol87.
available while !he supply 446·0468 or 245·9.05.
· • ·•· - • - · - • · ·
lasts. BOBS MARKET·1974 Y amana 360 endre,
Mason W.VA. 773·5721 open
·e:;,:NiA- Ro:
f.s~
dirr bike. call ol58· l 997 ·
7daysaweek .
wheei; air, good cond.,
·-· - -- ·--·-- ..... --~· $~700.
1976 Suzuki 550, road bike.
Call367·0632.
Pick your own half runner
Calf 458· 1997.
beans. SS.OO bu . . and can·
nlng tomatoes. 13.00 bu . im5- co~elte-;.;~; -~itn
Andrew Cross farm, Lelart saddle interior, automatic, 1978 KAWASAKI 400, 3,400
Falls. 8 a·.m.· noon. 61~·247 · T-Top, power windows, air. ml\es,. S900.oo, 167 Lane St .
New Haven, JOJ-882·2636.
Call614-286·1636.
2852 or 992· 3734.
Canning tomatoes. 'Bring
own containers. $4.00 bu .
Wayne Rowe, E. Lelart.
Ca)t 614·247·2704.

I I I

C1D All C.-urea GI'Ht

SUMMER SHOWDOWN
JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
oiA6·1675
Long tractors, Vermeer
balers, &amp; Hay equipment,
bale movers &amp; feeders,
waiJ(lns, rotary tiller $1039.,
disc, seeders, rotary cut·
ters, blades, gates, &amp;
culllvafors.
And see us 1~ get your parts
&amp; Complete service .
USED EQUIP :
I H Hydro 70, Ford 2000,
Ford Jubilee, 165 MF,
Massey Harris Poney, 70
Oliver, Long ~60 ~x~
w/fronl·end loader, 185 AC .
spreader, 501 Ford mower.
We buy used Equlpmenll

i9n

NICCIP

ill~~=
(I) Or. Who

o

-- ---

I []

(J) (!) NIC ~
(I) $110,000 Pyr.mld

---· .......... .

1974 Chevy Vega, gOOd condillon . 304·675-6719.

=·=-=

I LATAN

®Over~

STUCCO PLAS.TERING :
o• ..,,.....
textured ceill!igs com-merclal and residential,
I'1::=========;:;=========~ freeestlmales.
Call 614-250:
·1182.
- - ---- - - -·-·- --- - ·
ii
AulosforSale
5I
Fruit
- · ' PAINTING
Jnlerler and
&amp; Ve~lables
e•ter 1·or , plu~blng •,
·-· · - · -- ·- - - · · - ·
72PLYMOUTHu~:~~e·~-~~
"
·~ 11 •
aulomallc, runs'rooting, some rem . • ng.
Canning IO'I'atoes. $.1.00 30 ~_ 458 _ 1679 _
20 yrs. exp. Call 614·388bu. Pick your own. 614-843·
9652.
2495.
· -~ - ·- · -- - - --- --·
.. - ... - .... - .. - - ---· 67 CAMARO, call 30HTS· : Marcum
·· - - - · · .. -- - · - -- r
Roofing
&amp;
6335 or 675·3246.
: Spouting. 30 years ex·
_.
- ,. , ,. ' I
II •&lt;perience, specializing in
1980 DODGE Diploma! buill up roof. Call 614-388'
Slalionwa~Jon, 304·615·5867.
9622 or 61088·9857 .

--- --·- _.__,
~ : _ :_·~ui!cii~1!l!!~= 6J ==~!~ eil!.!!~~c

.

11:30 •

&lt;Ill

II

(J) (II •

~Compeny .

-· ---

it .. - - ..

'

(J) MOYIE: .'The HldN·

.... -,

WinnabagQ 5th wh~l, 1973
"Chl~flaln" llj&lt;e new Jnsld~
and our. self contained. 30~675·3283.
. .. -· ·· .. - ·-···-

r.n..

al ciJ •

11:00 • (J)

~

Farms lor Sale.

142 acre farm ne" RIO
'' · Grande, ,house, buildings,
.• • mineral rlllhl$, wllh . or
c11 .wllhout
tlvestoc~ and
equipment, 614·446·2599.

-; :-·:;-:.

79

-----......~-· --

10" Radial Alarm saw·
Craflsman. WOOd lathe·
Craf!sman. 304·576·2644.

9ol!l-2702 afler 5 p.m . or 6U·
9ol9·21'l2.·

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dil lon, 3 bedrooms, family
room with firepalce, cen·
tral ,..;r, basemen!, phone
30A-675·1S.C2.

,. , I
.
THU,_S,DAY ,
8/12/82 . &gt; .,

carport outfit .a loot. bed
complete, • beSI otter. 304''
67N373.

HOMELITE XL· I2 chain
saw, 304·675·203+,

torn down or moved. For
mbre information call 6U·

House for sale. ReedsVille,
OhiO. $23,000. GOOd in·
vestment properly . 614-423·

Vie~in.'g

18 ' x3' SWIMMING pool,
filler &amp; fence, $100. Call
304·675·6809.

4~·4826.

Thre@ bedroom neuse in

Television··

Tomatoes, by basket or
bushel. 304-675·1981 .

Priced reduced. 3 bdr .
house 106 2nd Ave,
GalliPOlis. 1 1/ 2 baths,
modern
kitchen,
full
basement,
e)(fra
lot,
l'fireplace. walk in closets.,
J.arge perch, carpeted. Call

27 acres wllh house near
Vinton for sale or trade.
Call446·8615.

KIT 'N' C~RLYLETM

TIRI;:D of belrig '"all gum•
med yp" from the symptons of sue~ things as
headaches, conslipallon,
arfhrltls, allergies, and
obesity? Call 304-675-1293
for herbal assistance from
Natural lie.

~P!IQI'r

IW)R'Df

. Mlsc._!-1•~~~·-·~'co .

Ritchie cattle fountain .
New, $200. 6U· ~7H311 .

WHQA,

.. The

Ohio

Mityta g wringer W(lSher
S100 . Wh irlpool automatic
washe r S85. 61n&lt;2· 2352.

(MIS/.$

MODERN 3 bedroom
h,lluse, Patrlol Star Rt.,
Green
School.
Full
~asement . Call446·3040.

' J

•'-

Clp't

.

&lt;:aYPTOQUOTBS

TMRQG

Dl.

. OYABFQUV

c · , FCVVQG
DP
•.

' KMY
'

MP
J DU,

BMMA
EYV

ECA NYHIJ . DP KMY NMLQ , - CUMU
Y 1 ..,., Cl:ntcs II!: LOOK BEFO
_ RE YOU LEAP OUT
OF 11d: FRYlNG. PAN INTO ~ FIRE.-MIXED

METAI'H&gt;R

�'·""- ·''"

12-The Daily Sentinel

;:JJloodmobile. receives
r71 pints from donors
!_

Seventy-one pints or blood were slst!ng were Thelma DUI, Phllo, contributed to the Meigs County mena F.ollrod, Herbert Shields,
:blood.' program Wednesday when · Gladys Brothers, Bernadine Meier
, an American Red Cross Bloodmo- and Myrtle Sisson.
; bile visited the Meigs Senior Cltl·
Donors by l'OimmanUy irl(;JudL'tl :
Pl.llm'hl.Y - l.orahw E. Vcnuy, l.au•·• K.
; zens Certter In Pomeroy.
HarrilWil, Brt!nda NUl!tzlln~ot. S~lly D. Clurk.
:, Seventy-five persons reported to S..rblira A. Rht.WI, M•ry L St.urdwr, Pall)' J .
Wis J. Wfanl, Maxine Wil'ncr, IA.'1 1 I ~
. the unit to become donors with 28 Bartoo,
I•
Vau~otht&amp;n, Rus.~~d Moon!, Cent! HO\lduhcll,
persons giving replacement blood. Sally PI~I'C\!, SWvc Blackwell, C.ri R. Hall, Jant•
Abbott, Ot!bm'lh L. Gritcllt.'r, 04.• rald ,Rou~ht .
Seven persons were first time do- V.
Vllltil K. Wintlon, 0~..-otfrer. A. Wllaon, How1rd P.
: nors. Randall L. Roberts became a Lillo(Kn, Jat.:qill!linc D. 8r ckk'11. Carolyn A. Jl&gt;f·
ft·n. Billy J. Spcnt.~r. M1.ry K. S~&gt;t:nt·er, O..•nnia
· gallon donor durtng the visit with Gihnurc,
Arhmd Kinw.. Etlwar ADbott. Jdft~ ry J.
Joyce Bartrum becoming a four W11mer, P11uiA, Rfct.
- JudY Spencer. JoM Coslllnzu, Rlllngallon donor, Ellis Myers, a five dollftal•int•
Robo.'111l, 11'111\am H. HOO.,k, O...uthy M
gallon donor and Howard Logan, a S.rn:.
l'ht:thil'tl - John Rant~Mir, ROOney E. Splr~'tl.
seven gallon donor.
Middleport ~ J1Jnt.11 Andcn:un, l..indlllbtlcy,
Nur5es ~e Ferndora Story, Le- Edward L. ~nlcll, Patridw J. Vau;!han, John
JoyCe V. Blrtrum, IA!afy t'htl.dt.'t'll, Nor·
nora Lelfbelt, Jackie Frost and Elial,
ltul G. Will'llX, Sarah J . Fowlt•r, Edward W. Our·
Beulah Ward and attending physi- JJl, Willhun Allen Bltu:kwood, Mike Kelly, Faay~ ·
Wallal.'l!, Debra J. Cl.nler, Gloria J. Pcw\'ll!y,
cians were Dr. WUma Mansfield L.Putrlci1
K. Lo11.an.
and Dr. James Witherell. The canl..anuvlllc - Kunm S. Clark, Ellill E. Mycrw.
St·aarbt.&gt;rry, Pltltrldu Smith.
. teen was served by the Rock Ann
Syracuse - Eirl 0 . Picit-11!1, Vir~inl!l Dclvls.
Springs Better Health Club. CleriLoolt Botton - Harlan A. &amp;ll11rd, 1-Lil ill'tJ
, BdhA. Reibel, Howan.l E. Parker.
cal workers were Mary Nease, Riebel
Rutland - Karolyn Bllll'k, JaJnc!i C. Bir·
~ean Nease, Juanita Sayre, Emma
dllidd, Jaml~ E. Miller, S..undn Burnem,
E. Davidson, Donna DavldiJon.
K. Clatworthy, VIrginia Buchanan, Mary
Mason, W. Vw , - l..uthtr 0 . '1\K'kcr, Jamt'8 R.
Joyce Hoback, TwUa Childs, Mar- Proffitt. LarT)'Bwn~ ardnt!r .
Chclltcr - Clllrcnt't!C. Wolfe, Jr.
lon Ebersbach, Vernon Nease and
Mincnvillt' - Mary L. Voss.
Maida Mora. R.S.V.P. workers asRl'l.'tkvilll' - Rich11rdS . Bartoo.

Postmistress
• massmg
• •
remams
VANWERT, Ohio (AP) -Apos.tal Inspector suggested that two
persons may have been Involved In
the robbery and abduction of Elgin,
Ohio, Posbnlstress Betty Jane
!'tfottlnger.
Mrs. MOttlnger, 48, disappeared
from the rural post office Monday
morning. The safe had been rUled
and all the postage stamps were
taken.
·
One person "did not have time to
·accomplish all that was accomp_.llshed" Inside the one-story, metal
post office, according to Tom
Strausbaugh, a postal Inspector
from Columbus.
Strausbaugh salthen the rown
car with a shotgun and another
man emerging from a field. The
lll"ea was searched Wednesday
a1temoon.

Clarence Mottlnger, the missing
woman's husband, who has heart
problems, paced outside the task
force headquarters waiting from
for some word.
"I don't give a damn about mynight and I die tomorrow, I'll be
happy."
Strausbaugh said that sex might
have been a motive In the case, '' al·
though we have no evidence It

was."

12,1982

Pomeroy-Midd)eport, Ohio

Rat poison tested
in Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (AP) -A rat con·
trol project In Cincinnati that
helped get government approval
for use of the poiSon Eplbloc should
be expanded to a COUnty-wide rat
extermination program, says a
former city councUman.
Cincinnati provided the first test
In an urban setting for the polson,
which ktlls or sterWzes rats.
"The experiment In Cincinnati
was very successful," formercoun·
cUman Walter Beckjord said Wed·
nesday. "There was no doubt thalli
ktlled rats. One day somebody was
sent to look at the screens at the
Millcreek sewer plant and found It
was pretty well plastered with
rats."
The Environmental Protection
Agency approved Eplbloc last .
week for use by pesticide experts.

_Meigs County -happenings~·
••
.
'

merleavlngtwowomell and a man
In the statton. WJM!tnhe lllllalled
she returned to the atatloil IDd
Charged after wreck
Event postponed
Wednesday Stternoon. I
round the cash drawer open an4 the
A famUy picnic "planned for
PoUce said that Helen J. Pickens 'money· taken from the~- In· A recent accident resulted In a
charge or failure to Yl,eld the right- members of Feeney-Ben,nett Post ,..~w~as~~~!_!g~aso~Un~e~fo~r~a~cu~s~to-~__::v~es~tlg!a~t~lon~ls~C9D~tln~u:ll!g,~.;..;
· - .:;•
of-way at an Intersection for a Vln· 128, American Legion, for this Sun·
ton man . .
day at the post rw:m on BaUey Run
Edwin King, Letart, was travel- Road, has been postpOnEd due to
Ing west on East Main at Spring weather conditions which have
~treet when a car, drive!!' by Rl·
created a muddy situation 'at the•
chard Stewart, Vinton, pulled ftom .farm. The new date Is Sunday,
Spring onto Main, Into King's path. Aug. 22, at 1 p.m
King, unable to stop, hit the Stewart
..
car tn the side.
There was moderate aamage to H08pital news
the Stewart vehicle. Stewart was
Veterans Memorial Hospital had
cited by Pomeroy poUce.
the following admtsslons and discharges Wednesday.
Admissions-Stephen CreEMS runs
means, Tuppers Plains; Richard
DeMoss, Pomeroy; Minnie Cl""k,
Meigs Emergency Medical Ser- Pomeroy;
John McDaniel, PomevIce reported three runs roy. Discharges-Ruby Dalton, De- ·
Wednesday.
At 6: OJ p.m., Middleport EMS borah Smith.
.

a

went to the jaU to take Kenny White
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
7:49 p.m., Middleport responded to
another run on North Second Street
to take Leon Van Meter to VMH;
Pomeroy squad took John McDa·
niel to VMH from the Pomeroy
Health Care Center at 6:59 last
night.

Any eomplalnts or problems regarding sewer llne coJIS!ructlon In
the vUJages or Syracuse anc1Raclne
must be submitted ln·wt1t!ng to the
Sewer Dlst, P.O. Box :Ill, Racine,
Ohio, no later than Aug. :.11.

Hunten meet Friday

The 1972 class at Meigs High wW
meet Monday, Aug.l6, at 7 p.m. at
the off!ceofDavid Krawszcyn, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

1be Meigs County Coon Hunters
will meet Friday at 6: :JJ p.m. at the
club house on Snowball HUL Refreshments wW be served

J

Week-end sale prices on junior,
misses and half size uniforms.
Pantsuits, dresses. separate .
slacks and lab coats.
limb polyester and poly/cotton .
blends.
.

Our remaining stock of
summer
handbags
is reduced 50%! Choose
trom leather sty les,

macramaes,

straw,

terry, nylon totes and
clutch purses.

REG. 112.00 . . . . SAL£ 19.59
REG. '16.00 . . . . SALE '12.79
R£G. 125.00 .••. SAL£ 119.99
REG. '31.110 . . . . SAL£ 124.79 .

lj2 Pric~
LlnLE GIRLS'

FALL TOPS

JUNIOR
BLOUSES

$34,885.97; general bond retirement,
$533.71, $6.58, $16,810.36; planning
corrunisslon, no receipts, $5.04,
$119.43; sanitary sewer escrow, no
receipts, no disbursements,
$142,807.29; water tank, $1,349.04, no
disbursements, $164,640.34; water
$9,417.42, $9,884.56, $36,948.37;
sanitary sewer, t6,539.80, $7,299.113,
$3,890.24; swimming pool, $3,564,
$6,310,28, $429.94 deficit; cemetery,
$638.47, $1,392.79, $295.72 deficit;
water meter trusts, $125, $243.14,
$8,706.01.
.
Receipts for the month totaled
$123,862.34 with expenditures
amounting to$121,503.25.

Clearance

Summer
Handbags
'

NEW FAL-L

blotJses, velours and pullovers .
Sizes· NB to 24 ,mos ., 2 to 4, 4 to
6x, 7 to 14. . .
1

BUSINESS PICKING UP- The secretary's office
at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds was doing a land of·
flee busiDetis Tbunday evening, accepting open class
entries for the allliual Meigs County Fair. Pictured on
right Is David Gaal, son of Mr. aod Mrs. Richard Gaul

Reg. '6.00 . . . Sale 4.79
Reg: 111.00 • .. . Sale 18.79
Reg. '15.00 .1';.', Sale 111.99
Reg. '19.QO ..\: Sale 115.19

Rea. '13.00 • Sale 110.39
1 Rea. '17.00 • Sale 113.59
· Rea. '23.00 . Sale '18.39
· Rea. '29.00 • Sale '23.19

.

·~

.·~.J,

',

Negotiations resume after cease fire

.•.

•M

I:.~
I

'J EANS

l

'. ovr

~

I

entire stock of denim and
~ c orduroy jeans. Big selection of
;, ~ ~ styles and size.
· ' ; B,OYS size 8 to•20. - 'Slim · Reg. ·
',: ,Husky. Student sizes 26 to ) 0,
: lengths 30 to 36. II' 11 pay you to
'~ buy, what you need now.

'•. ' \

' ill•

SAVE *1S.ts

.

113 COURT ST.
POM.ER,OY10H.

.

992·2054

COLUMBUS, Ohio- State utUity regulators have recommended
a reduction of 40 percent to 52 ~rcent In the Ohio Bell Telephone Co.
request fOt;" a $1$7 mUiion rate Increase.
The suggeStion came In a staff recommendation by the utUitles
division or tile Public Ututues Commission or Ohio.
Las.t November; Ohio Bell filed for ·a $123 J'nllllon annual Increase
In revenues: It Increased tfult to $187 million last month, adding on
J"E'Venues denied by the PUCO lrl a rate decisiOn handed out In Aprtl.
ThiS week, ~ POCO stlttr recomi11eJ1ded that In this next round,
the phone company be awarded $89.5 mlllloli to $UI. 7 mUllan, depending on the proper rate of return.
· . State Consumers' Counsel William Spratley said the recommendation stUI would give Ohio Bell moi;t of·the $123 mlllJon orlgiJially
sought.
., '.
i
"We sttU,!hink1t (the recommendation) IS too high," Spratley said.
' · "This Is an lnexctisable Increase - up to 70 perc;ent In monthly
. rates In some ~ties -and \1"! problem Is a lot r1 peOple don't Jaww
aboUt II yet," Spratley added. :
.
'
.·
'.

..

'

ONE GROUP OF 13 LIVING ROOM·SUITES
'

Charms .

10

Suggests ~ut in rate hike

Ohio lottery wiQJlers .

Reg. '39.90

l4K SERPENTINE
CHAIN
14K INITIALS
All

'

.MEN'S AND BOYS'

,\._.~ sAvE 25.·C17 ·.

HURRY and
SAVE!

..

2 PIECE sqFA AND CHAIRS
•• 2 PIECE SqFA AN.D LOVE $EATS ·
3 PIECE SOFA, CiHAIR AND OTTOMAN

'

'

' ·

1

•

"'

r

1

Kroehler ancl Rowe Suites .
'Regular prlclcl 51075.00 to Sl2GO.oo'
'

.•ns~
SALE PRICE

. CLEVELAND - The winning humber drawn Tburlllay night In
' the Ohlq Lottery's dally game ''The Number" was !!99.
·
In lhe semiweekly ''li'ick 4" game, the winning number was 6772.
' 1be lottery repol1ed eatillnp of
79f.IK) 00 Its dally game. The '
, I!8I"IIJnis came on sales of S1,0'l7,921, whDe holdl!rsotwtlinlngtlekets
.are entitled tO 111are $3i7 ,126m, 1ottely otr1c1a1s said.
•
' In pi(r.di!Utl "Pick ... PJill!, sales ~ed $265,621.00.
Holden or wiRDIDc tleiiA!tll are entitled to i5 ~t. or Sll9,81. Any
wjnniDg S1. atrilatt ticket eami .IDI, and IllY WlnpJq $1 boxed

mo.

Large selection Of SOlids and floraiS. Modern, Traditional and
Early American, nylon or Herculon covers.

,

of Chesler, registering Uvestoek for next week's fair.
Taking the registration Is fair board worker, Letllle
Bradford. Deadline for open class registration Is 4 p.m.
today.

1'·1ACK TO SCHOOL SALEI

AUqUST CI.EARANCE

and

'

ticket earns 17M.

•

.,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ohio have controUed the price of gas put - even If It doesn'.t get final approutilities would be restricted In buy- Into their lines and thereby con· val this year- sends Important signals to the utUitles. "It shows
Ing expensive out-of-state gas and trolled their own profits," he said.
legislative
Intent," he said.
passing t~ cost to consumers If a
He said there has been no regulaAs
Introduced,
the meas\}re dealt
bill approved by a House subcomtion or gas purchases by the Public
prlmarUy
With
"construction
work
mittee becomes law.
UtUitles Commission, "maybe beIn
progress"
laws
under
which
the
It prohibits companies from
cause of the lack of legislation."
utUitles
can
start
charging
custocharging customers for the extra
He also said there has been m
cost or any gas they purchase from regulation by the Federal Energy mers for new facUitl~ before they
come on line.
a supplier that Is higher than the Regulatory Commission.
The present statutes ·say the
most expensive Ohio gas. Backers
"This Legislature must act to
charges
can start when the new fasay It could save consumers money protect the consumers of this
cUlty
Is
75 percent "complete. The
In utility bills.
state," he said.
charge
cannot
ex~ 2Al percent of
Columbia Gas or Ohio Inc. and
James, who headed the subcomthe
utility's
' tota·l property
other firms tOng have been critl!!·
mittee and Is House UtUitles chair·
valuation.
lzed for the purchase of out-of-state
man, said the measure approved
Colonna's bUI fncreases the degas at prices higher than · those Thursday will be considered by his
gree
of completlol) 19 90 percent
within the state.
tun committee Aug. :J:I-31.
lowers
the maximum charge to
and
Under the presept law, the comRep. Rocco J. Colonna, 0-Brook
10
percent
of
property ,valuation.
panies are permitted to recoyer the
Park, Is sponsor of the measure
SummariZing
the bUI; James
cost ftom customers.
which stUI has a long way togo. The
said,
"I
think
It's
gQtng to save
WUIIam Spratley, Ohio's consuLegislature's meeting schedule for
countless
dollars
because
It limits
mers' counsel, said the companies
the remainder of this year Is
construction
·
work
ln
.:
progress
l)ave been_paying up to$8and$9 per
uncertain.
thousand cubic feet whUe the highRep. James M. Petro, R-Rocky sharply and puts regulations on gas
est priced Ohio gas, known as
River, said he thinks the measure purchases." .
"ttght sands," Is about $5.60.
Spratley said the pending measure, which also restricts charging
consumers for utUity construction,
co• .UMBUS, Ohio- Six children sustained minOr Injuries Thurs"Is a good bill."
'
day night when a horse brokeo!f a chUdren's merry-go-roui)d at the
Rep. Ronald H. James, D·
Ohio State Fair, fair officials said.
Proctorville, who headed a legtsla·
Fair spokesman Dave Branham said four of the Injured were
tlve probe of Columbia's purchase
treated for bumps at tbe lair First Aid station, llohite the other two
practices earUer this year, offered
sustained cuts and were released after treatment ar Children's
the committee amendment.
Hospital.
''The gas companies of this state

State fair accident injures. six .

Week ·end ·sale prices on our new
Fall tops for lillie girls .
Includes: Knit tops, turtlenecks,

Beautiful
new
junior ~./....""'- .
blouses. Sailors, novelties.
ruffles, long and short
sleeve prints and solids.
Junior sizes S,M, L an~ s
to 13.

1 iectlon, 12 '"'"
\5 Conti
A Multlm.dla Inc. Newl a ...

Panel approves gas propos~l

'

UNIFORM SALE

The Duncan famUy, gospel singers, will be at the Maplewood
Lake camp"meeting tonight at7: :JJ.
Saturday night singers wW be Russ
and the Gospel Tones, also at 7: :JJ
p.m. The publlc Is welcome.

en tine

.

ROY

Aug~sf

SAVE

.

at y

Declines were also recorded for ·freSh and dn.,
vegetables, fish, poultry, pork, fresh fruits and cookIng oUs. Egg and sugar prices rose. Co!fee prices
were virtually unch!lflged.
So far this y~ar. food prices have risen 4.8 percent.
The department reported these other details on
wholesale price activity ~ J11ly:
·
-Prices for passenger cars rose a small 0.3 per·
cent, after soaring 1.9 percent In the previous month.
Light truck prices were oti 0. 7 percent·after a sharp 3
percent advance In June.
-Capital equipment costs rose 0.5 percent, less
than the 0.8 percent gain In Jun!!. Those cos~ are for
machinery and transportation equipment used by
business.
All the Increases are adjusted for non:nal seasonal
variations.
In all, the unadjusted Producer Price Index for
finished goods stood at 281.7 In Juty, ·meaning that
goods costing $10 at wholesale In 1967 would have cost
$28.17 last month.
·
·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Au ust 13,1982

WOMEN'S

Singen to perform

The 7.9 percent gain posted by jSasoUne prtces last
month outpaced the ~.7 percent overall jump recorded for energy prices. Both gasoUne and the overall measure of energy costs had risen 4.1 percent In
June:
Prices last month for home heating on rose 5.4
percent, compared With 7 percent In June. Natural
gas prices were up 2.4 percent, less than the 2.9 percent gain of June.
For tbe tlrst seven months of the year, energy prl·
ces have fallen at a 6.3 percent seasonally adjusted
annual rate.
But the once-abund!mt oU stockpUes have been
shrlnktng the last few months, a development economists have pointed to In predicting that lnfiatlon for
all of this year wUI be slightly higher than the rate
registered so far.
Juty'sdecllne In food prices was the first since a 0.1
percent drop In March. Beef and veal prices tumbled
5.2 percent In July, after climbing for the last six
months.

•

,.

save now on
beautifUl karat
gold Jewelrvl

' .

and u.s percent of 198l
~~
'
Economists are stW predlctllig that wholesaleprice Inflation for all of 1982 wUI be about 5 percent.
Buttressing that atgument, the department's Bureau or La bot Statistics revtsecllts estlmal!! of April
wholesale ~rice activity to recofll a 0.1 percent droPThe revised April figure, following declines of 0.2 percent In February and 0.1 PI!J:cenl In March, means
that wholesale prices feU fo~ three straight months
for tbe first time since earlY 1967.
OVerall, the Producer Price Index for finished
goods, the official name for the wholesale priCe measure, rose il seasonaUy adjusted 0.6 percent In July.
If prices rose•for 12 straight months at July's rate,
the yearly gain would be 7.1 percent after seasonal
adlllstment. The ;mnual rate reported by the 4bor
Department Is hased.on a more precise calculation of
monthly changes than the figure the department
makes public.
Today'sreport sa!d that for the 12monthsendlng!n
JulY, prices a:t the wholesale level rose 3.6 percent

SPECIAL SALE PRICES .

Sizes Petite thru XXXL.

•. ~-

BY SALLY JAOOl!SEN
,
· ~Press Writer
• WASHINGTON (AP) - Wholesale prices, fueled
by the biggest gasollne price 1\lkes In eight years but
~estra!ned by the sharpest food cost declines slilce
J1976, ro.,e at an annual rate ot 7.1 .percent In J\lh', the
government said today.
·
~ GasoUne costr;, picking up momentum after falling
earlier In the year, rose 7.9 percent last month, al·
)nest twice i!le Increase posted In June and the largest
·jump sinCe March 1974, the Labor Department said.
: But food prl~ tumbled 1.5 percent, the blgggest
1
droP.slnce February 1976. Falllngprices for beef and
veal accOunted for much of the decline.
JulY's overall Increase seemed moderate, however, In !:Ompartson with the 13.3 percent rise posted
:the month before.
Even with t))e sizable Increases InJun!! and July,
·Inflation at the wholesale level was running at a mod·
est annual rate of 3.1 pet:cent for the first seven
months d. this year - well under the 7 percent of1981

FRIDAY THE 13th
. -SATURDAY THE 14th

babydolls, short· gowns
robes, dusters and shifts.

NECKLACES,
BRACELETS
.

:Wh,elesale prices Up· 7~1 percent

e

.

.

I

•

.EtBERFELDS··1N PO

SUMMER SLEEPWEAR
Long gowns and robes, pajetr)'las,

ON CHARMS ..

•Furniture
•Lamps
•Chairs
e()dd Lot of Living Room
Tables .
•Dehumidifiers
•Hoover Sweepers
•Appliances

l&gt;eadline·Aug. 20

Class to meet

Vlllage funds total $457,455.97

40%
OFF REGULAR PRICE

Pomeroy poUce are investigating
the theft of aboUt $00 trom the Bea·
con Service Station In Pogleroy

SAVE ON:·

JWODAYSALI

All Middleport VIllage funds
totaled $457,455.97 as of July 31, according to the monthly report of
Village Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.
Receipts, dlllbursements for the
month from ea~h fund and the balance as of July 31, respectively, follow:
general, $17,597.54, $13,420.91,
t26,388.55; street m!lintenance,
$2,544.28, '!1~.88, $1,058.27 deficit;
mm, $75,11110,
$72,979.42, $3,347.38;
federal revenue sharing, $3,343,
$254.52, $5,485.88; street light,
$1,1192.90, $1,:!92.47, $9,818.89; street
levy, $1,092.90, $19.75, t6,473.48; fire
equipment, $225, $1,051.31, $1,282.29
deficit; fire truck, $794.28, $13.17,

-----1Probe theft-------..

'

'

State weathe~. extended fcneast
OIIJI'£"

k:IFGIHMI • $unday tbmJ8Il ~..,fair wttb ,

....... to 115 ... lows U'OUIIII fO.

.

~: clear. Low 11811' . . Wbida lilbt llld "\llllabjt. ~
,. ..,. Hllb- so. a....,.. or rain:, IIMl' r:ero p!!IIUDt l!•...,.,dd

Sl.fllltdaY.

'

By The A!!!MM1le 1ed Press
A new cease-fire won by the personal Intervention or President
Reagan gave west Befrut a respite
fro in Israeli bombing today, and
American, Lebanese and Palestinian officials turned their attention
back to the negotiations over with·
drawal.or the PLO guerrilla army.
The cease-fire held through the
night In Beirut, but the Tel Avlv
· mUitary command claimed PLO
guerrillas fired Ught arms at JsraeU

soldiers In the area or Aamlq In
eastern Lebanon. It said the Israelis returned the fire without taking
any casualties.
. Reagan, described as "outraged," demanded the cease-fire In
a 10-m!nute telephon!! call Thursday to Begin after deciding Israel's
·attacks on tbe ravaged Lebanese
capital had "gone beyond reason,"
a U.S. official said.
Begin announced the bombing
was called off, and the 10-hour

pOunding by Israeli warplanes the fiercest yet In Israel's nineweek-old drive to crush the PLOstopped at 5 p.m .
Lebanese pollee said today at
least 156 people, mostly clvlltans,
were killed and 417 wounded In the
raids, and they expected to toO to
climb.
PLO communiques said 44,(0)
bombs were dropped by the divebombing warplanes and at least 600
houses collapsed In the ChatUia and

Bourj el-Barjaneh camps, renderIng the camps ilnlnhabltable. Bel·
rut radio stations said' more than
100 more buUdlngs were destroyed
In the city proper, already a scene
or massive deVastation ..
Israel reported two of Its soldiers
killed and 41 wouilded .In fighting
during the 24 houFS ending a til p.m.
Thursday.
·
Palestine Liberation Organization official JamU Hllal said In west
(Continued on.page 12)

About20
take part
•
•
tn
.sesston
AbOut :.11 present and former em·
ployees of the GalUpolls Developmental Certter met for three hours
Thursday evening to compue allegations and complaints they have
against the GDC administration.
Charles Crockrell, an otfl~al
with the Communications Workers
of ~ertca, sal!\ he wlli present
these allegations to Rudy Magnone, ~tor or the Ohio Department Of Mental Retardation and
DeVelopmental Disabilities.
The CWA represents some
em1
ployees at GDC.
At a meeting Aug. 3 between
GDC e111ployees, area ~tors
and 'ODMR officials, Magoon!!
promised he would inVestigate IllY
allegations ~l employees pre~e~~t
to him. .
According to a former GDC eniJI!oyee wbo attended lalt nllbi's
~Iiiii, employees pretlellted
Crosrell with detall.l to sp8euJc
C8lel of barraament, IUifalr ciiiCIplllle and ·tavortlsm of IICIIllll
Jise • ~ GDC admlalltratloa.
~-allopn!piiJ'I!d au. or
dial~ they felt ~

em-

_... .. __. Ja.ti!IWJoniWII1D

a.ioill

,_,.~are-­

• (~00~~11)

'I I................
Tai,.

...... ........._.,Fire....,.-.
NIP&amp;

I

a), II llth8&amp;111!

. ....... Ill l'w6&lt;4, 'llle

lhpnrt

(M (,.._., IIIII

.

' Jl Dtet
1

11J PC: I~~ Jl'lreD11

_,,!lit li\w•

.,

lire...

iilq, 1110111 wllh
hi OIIJ;y....
"'the Jlbwchire
tile lillie
~ Oae Puitil&amp;V) J'la
7) . . . . . Vadleter,

Jr;, -

tuea to

lor.....,._Mal

v~

Ia 1 led 111111 NleMed

llniJ*~1111d
lnllelet!oe '

.'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="176">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2766">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44753">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44752">
              <text>August 12, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
