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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

.

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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 ~

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�Niel~~n ·rallies Oilers .past Saints,
.

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Il l fnurt 1\lh'i'l

Having written with some heat in detailed and complicated measure,
opposition to the Dole tax bill, I feel there are elements that creep In
which subsecjuenUy need to be fineobliged to relay the reasoning cf Mr.
tuned out For Instance - the
Reagan in the matter, so here goes,
Reagan
people, say - It wasn't·
faithful to the old injunction thai a
seriously
contemplated thai certain
polemecist is obliged to make as for·
beneflta
cf
leasing one corporation's
cefully as possible the arguinents he
tax
breaka
cin over to another COropposes.
.
poratlon
should
liave beelt counMr. Reagan, In 1981, declared that
tenaneed,
and
7.7
percent
cf the f100
his policy would include cracking
down on people ._,ho, in defiance Of
bllUoo will come from puttfug an eJI(I
lo that. Ditto to some cf the reinthe law, were simply not paying the
aurance provisions which were an
taxes they owed. Reasoning back·
unmeditated ilonanza to the inward, we are aware that economists
surance
comP,Inles. The Investment
calculate that $100 billion or more in
tax
credit
was too high, and lowering
taxes is not being paid In - by
people who have discovered the It will bring In 5.2 percent. Requiring
corporatioll8 to come In more
me111111 of avoiding it.
One is trained automatically to quickly with taxes due will mean 4.5
think of the rich man In this con- percent.
nection, who takes advantage ol a
tax loophole. But this II not what we ~:ftMNM ,,.
have In mind here, not at all. Tax
· ·"v-·~­
loopholes, for Instance lnvestmeirta
In tax-free munlcpal bonds, are
thoroughly legal.
This is not to say that there aren't '
rich people w,ho illegally evade
taxes: Of courae there are. It II to
say that the bulk of the so-called underground ecooorny Is not the
buslnes ol rich ·people, not by any
means. Middle - and lower·lncome
earners are likelier to find theJn..
selves situated to avoid taJCes. Most
obviously In thli category are thole
who realize a substantial amount li
their Income from tips. . . ·
Now - 8ays a prOminent member
cf the Reagan camp - we estimate
that about ~ perCent of the $100
blllion In taxes over the next three
years Is to be realized first from this
category of norH:Ompllant taxpayers; and secondly, by taking
back from the business community
certain accidental breaks it reCeived
as a result of the omnibus legislation
of 1981.
Inevitably, when you pass a

l ' llnlt' ru~· . C)hlu
lU-992- 21~

IJf·:\'UTt:U l'OTH F.

I NTE Rt:.~THF

Ttl f.: Mt:Uis-MM.;o\ Alt EA

ROBERT L. WINGF.TI'
ROB HOEFI.ICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
A ~ll ifl laltl

f'uhlb;hr r/('!!nlrullt-r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

•

Nr1u t-:t!Uur
A MEMRf; R 11f Tht- A ~tol li ' bll~ Pmt:o, lnhmd O~tih I' m•~ ,b ~oul'iM liun UIWl !hi'
Amt&gt;rinln Nt'M'"iJ»JWr rtlbllsht·n A ll~l" 'la1inn.
.

1.1-:TTf:RS OF OPINION wno v.t•lt·nmrd . Th~ v ,.t\uuld ~· lt'Pi!i thHn .100 "''rtlli h1111!. 1\11
h·lkn; urt• Mubjrc·t lu t'"dllinJ(
MlUIII be· !IIJ(iwd "·lth IWPII'. lldlln·"-" vtul h•ll'phmu•
11Un11M'r, Nu urwltcned ltllt&gt;nl .""lll ht• puhlhtht'd. l.t'llt'rll 11hnuld bc· illi(!Hitlla slr , a ddr ,·ssiHIC
iliN IWII. nut pt'rliullHiili"'"·

••Hi

'Crisis to .crisis'
The drama occurs ln broad daylight on a public sidewalk. A young man
pulls a pistol from a holster slung around his waist, then playfully twirls lt
around his index ringer to impress his companions.
·
But when one of those companions makes a derogatory remark, the guntwirler's mood instantly turns ugly. His ann is fully extended, and his hand
rinnly grips the gun, 'pointed directly at the source of the insult. ·
·
"You move your- head, I'll blow your-head right off," he snarls. ' •
The scene abruptly shills to a view of a juvenile gang marching down
another street. A local teen-ager is heard attempting to describe life in the
community.
·
"Those folks are crazy, man. There's a lot of murder, a lot of violence ...
People the whole time are testing you to see how weak you are - and if
you'reweak ... they're going to beat your-or all jump on you."
Those dramatic vignettes are presented in the opening minutes cf a power·
ful television documentary, "Children of Violence," which examines the
lives of a Chicano family and the members of a juvenUe gang In Olfkiand,
Cslif.
That compelling portrayal of leen-age violence ill one of 10 brllllanUy conceived and executed hour-long documentaries soon to be broadcast on many
of the country's public television stations.
The series, "Crisis to Crisis," is an important and unp~ented new venture for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the Washington-based
private organization that distributes federal funds to public broadcasting
stations.
"We have a board of directors which gave us a mandate to seek out diverse
and controversial program material, but we are forbidden (by federal law)
to produce the shows," explains Lewis Freedman, ·director cf CPB's
Program Fund.
To fulfill the mandate while abiding by the restrictions, CPB two years ago
began searching for Independently produced docwnentaries thai were
"tough, painstakingly researched, hard-edged (and~ fair-minded reports."
• Seeking programs that "explore realities that citizens, although they may
disagree with the conclusions, cannot Ignore," CPBV offered a compelling
rationale for its initiative: "With the world lurching from crisis to criais; an
infonned public is the only protection for democratic Institutions."
: That approach represents a significant departure fOil. CPB because it sits
atop a public broadcasting bureaucracy traditionally uneasy about controversial program material that might affront viewers or endanger sources
ol financing.
, As a result, public television generally has offered viewers a bland diet of
l!&amp;llet, Beethov'en and BBC imports rather than attempting to attain !Is
potential as a nationwide communications medium uniquely qualified to
focus public attention on sensitive issues that commercial broadcasters fear
Ill confront.
: In the past, CPB has only occasionally funded individual docwnentaries on
public policy issues, and it has never before sought out and packaged such
programs as a series. "Crisis to Crisis," which begins In late July and will be
llroadcast weekly, could mark the beginning of a new era.
'Frank Jordan, dean of American University's School of Communications,
which supervised production of the series, suggests that public brol!dcasting
Should be like the cipposite-edltorlal pagl!s of newspapers, "where illl points
ol view have an opportunity to be expresaed."
: The new series does exactly that. "Roses in December," the first of the
docwnentaries, Is an especially compelling portrait of a )'Dung American lay
missionary murdered in El Salvador.
'
• "Portrait of an American Zealot" docwnents the activitieS"~~! a leading
figure In the religious New Right. The geopolitical and military' decisionmaking process of the nuclear age is analyzed in "How much Is Enough?'.'.,
· Other programs examine the issues of pollution, race relations, irrimigratlon and censorship. The series 4s well worth watching because it
achieves CPB's goal•of encouraging programs that "will touch the nerve and
stimulate the mind."

Berry's World
•'

William F. Buckley Jr.

Reagan's .side

The Daily Sentinel

. I
.

i

.f

I

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0

"Comrade, here's to our pipeline, which has

deVf?/oped tn'to a 'FUN projecl'ln many ways."

. • b•

T' 9 day ID IStory

a blinding,' choking, churning thunderhead of smoke and sulfur - apparently has somewhat affected the
vision of my press colleagues.
They have tended to see the forces
of Yasslr Arafal as heroic, war-tothe-death defenders fighting against
Iraeli aggression. The tcilth is lesa
exalted.
·
The . massive Israeli onslaught,
which roared Into Beirut and swept
before It Arafat's stunned,
misalign!1d trooj!s, may have been
excessive. But the .Palestine
Liberation Organization caine to
Lebanon 11 years ago as armed enci'QIIchers, uninvited and unwanted
- terrorists who came to dinner and
refused to leave.
They turned Beirut into a
devaata~ city long before the
Israelis arrived to finish the job.
PLO militiamen helped themselves
at gunpolnf to what they wanted.

his neighbor's blink eamlngure not

In round llpres, ooe half cf· what

also taxed at IIOUI'Ce.

: .1- '

U.Tot)jybFrlday, Aug.l3, the225thdayof1982. 'Therearel40ilayaleft1Jl

Mvts hlghllPt In history:

,O.!~ 13, 1961, EutGermaDy Ealed off the border between~ and
closlnl tile BraDde:ilburJ Gate Ill halt the flllbt ~ 1D

ifmaJIIY.

IIJ!Isb.CODQII!I'f!lr HlllmaDdo COrtez C8lltUed MDico Qtyfnlll

bJ411'11oaed Fraace'aiOYII fulliy. ·

.
'.
Ot .rW!t-and left·wlnl exln!miiiB battled
.
'
•

.

''

r.·;;;;;:~;;;;:;-""':'""-, r;~;f]iaia

Bud i\daml. ·

Jlillt as the boo-blrda were warm·
lng up In ' the MOODd quarter,
·Nfelsell raUied the Ollen from alJ.
0 deficit to a 22-11 victory IIVI!I' the
NI!W0rlean8Salnta1bunday,nlght
In the National Football J..eaiue ex·
hlbltlon opener ill' both teams.
For A.damS. It' means hf has
braggtpg rights In the ·exclusive
~ver Oaks fii1Ctlon of towp wJ.lere
.he is a neighbor of Saints owner
John fdecdm Jr.
.
"Obviously, Glflord had vert
good poise· tonight," Oller~ Coach
:
Ed BUes said. 1
Nielsen, who netted. the Oilers · Saints running back Holde Gajan
only 22 total yards In the first quar· · scored his first pro touchdown In
ter, hit tight end Dave CUper wltb the fourth quarter to !live New Or·
a :Jl.y&amp;!d touchdciwn. shot.wlth.2: 29 leans Its final lead and oet up the

..,

81111 Cll8well.

l

Jack Anderson!

,,.

Jr fte a

;s;uka?
Oelrol

Phlladflphllat Montreal

HoUlton at Ckldnnall

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Su Ff'llndlco at Lol Angeles ·
Allarlll II 5.ln Oleio

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MUwluMe 7-4, Toronto 1-3
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Ootlonod
Mark Brouhard, outfielder, to Vancouvt!'l'
· of . tiN! .Paclne·. Coaat .Le-que.

thra-~Tratt

ex1ensk&gt;n.

N.... MI F-Ill Loll"'
B4LTIMORE
' COLTS-Sirned
Cliff
Odom, llnebackw: Tony Vitale. offeftiiVt
pard.

Blltlrnore tf1tniCII'I 8-91 at Bmtm
JV!uas 0ty !Frolt &amp;-C) at Detldt (WU·
o»i 64), (n)
To:otto II.Lil 8-91 at MJIW~Me tV!JCk·
(n)

.

BASEBALL
~--Le.....
MILWAUKEE
BREWERS-

aa:er a

1'1\dor 7-!1). (II)

OYicb 12-41,

Transactions

NUiouii.Aape
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Annouracl they
llave gtven Jack Mckeon 11eneral man·

Onb&lt;.led
·• - ,.....,.,
Glen*

PITTSBURCH

Releued
Ken McCulloch,

6-7 ~ . lnl

SeaHif! lfmy 7-91 at MtnneJOta (CU·
tiUo !-9\, (n)

Clevellftcl ISutdUfe Ml at 1'e?wi I~·

STEELERS -

placekicker .

ua•e• SU&amp;• P'eotba.ll Leape

CHICAGO BLI'fZ-Siped Greg Landr)',
Q\larterback. ·

.
IOCIIEY
Natioul Boelep Luau

,

New York tJohn 7·91 at O..Cago (Trcut

Rank-and-file. PLO fighters told!
, me they had trained In Lebanon with
"foreignel'1" who later had re~
to take the revolution to theil(
homelands.
\

BOSTON BRUINS-Siped Gerry 01~
vera, hfacl co• nt.,.ct ud f!"'lgftstaat
footb.ll coaeh ucl
Dick F~jlls , admlnlltnllve •••latant to tbe
Athle tic Dirtclor.

ana ~Ul . lnl
Cailtlrria (Witt 7.31 at Odland 1Non1s
W\,(nl
.
.

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Leadel'8

Kanaal City 11 Oetrdl
Baltrnctre It E*klft

AIIDICAN LEAGUE

BAT11NG IZ!O at bats): W.WU.OO,
KAnlltt CIIY. .317; Hlrrall, QoveiiJ1d,
.m; Cooper, MllwnkH, .lM: Garda, ·

c.Jit.Jrnla It ()U.)Md

'J'u'orU at MIIWI\Iker
NfwYorkttOicqo
~~H~ at ~a. (n)
mwetand 11..1Ual, lnJ

dillE-

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"·
RBI: McRae,
tea. Cleveland. n i

Baltlrru~ 11 S.tell

·

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Kansu C1ty, fl; 'Jbom.
Cqoper. fdllwaula:!e,
87; O.'Jbotnal. Mllwaukil'e, BZ; Ludutl,

New, York II Chltqo
Seittk! at Mln.MIOII

Tcionto-at MUwauloee

to Mexico this spring."
"EI Tlante" allowed six hits,
struck out four and walked one 1n
his seven·Inning stint, his second
start since the Angels purchased
him from Tabasco of the Mexican ·
League Aug.2. And then he talked
about the thing be knows best pitching.
"You can't set up these young
Twins the way you can an experlence&lt;!hltter," sa!dTiant, now1·1.
"So I mixed a lot ofslowsturf, then
busted the fast ball once In a while ·
w.hen I really needed lt."
In 'other American League
games, Milwaukee swept a doubleheader from Toronto, 7·1 and 4-3,
and the Chicago White Sox edged
the New York Yankees 2·1.

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(Palmer ... ,.

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Olctlo .(Blrd 1·.01 at New Ycrt (Zie&amp;ry 6-41, Ul)
Acs.nta (Camp 1-:11 at S. Dleao (Dn·

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Cll-,.,

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III!U, IN 71fl(f

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.
Pn'OIING (U Decb'lonl): Bunw, Odt,.o. J3.1, .7eJ 3.D.; Vullo'lld\ MU:
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5 fARM
Portl1nd, Ott.

Open 9:00 lil8:00

From Pomeroy: Toe 12~ Enl

Bring Your Own
Container
And Pick Your own

CANNING
TOMATOES
We Also Have
Fresh, Homegrown

~antaloupes

NEW HAYEN UNION 76

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AMC PACER : • • . • .. . • . . • . . • . . • . ,

•&amp;711: I'OIIy, Dotrdr, IU, .lSI, 3.21: Gttnt.
ICaMII Ctt)'~
.811, . . . . Buka'.
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S'I'RIKfXJU'l" F.Buallt«. Statt~.

ua.

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AMC GREMliN .•• ·.••.•..• , ..•. , . '1395.

...
·~~
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Selttlr~
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New YCII"k.
Ul; Eck·

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1976 RABBIT 4 Dr., 4 Spd.••. .' • . • • . • • . • • '1395
.191HORD LTD STA. WAGON •• ~ •••••••... 11895
Auto~; PB, f&gt;s, Air.

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PH. 843-2693

HA

SI'OLEN BASES: ~. QU.
llad, 10'7~ Garda. Tcwonto. 3t, J.Cn2,
S.ott~, IOl Wlthllt, K l - CI!Y, 28;
,W'!Oft, Cltlcqo, Z; W.WI- Kansas

·

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notif~~all my Patients tllllt I am

·

.

physical- .
ly unable to return to practiCtNit MelpSufiHIIs, Inc.
All ·Medical records are left wltll Dr. Rltlgeway,
cople~ for transfer to any physician of cllolce llti!Y be
olltal..-1 by slfl'llne a request In Ids office.
1 wish to thank an whO Hpporlell me llurlllt my,
tenure llere In Pomeroy . .You llrt too numerous to lllank
'

·

I

Jill, " ·

.

1975 'BtiltK SKYLARK ••••••.••.••..••.•• '1095
1976 VOLARE •.• : . •• ·: • • .-.,••• •.. . • . . • . 11095

1

T~M~!n:neso=ta~a~n:d~Pu:rd:u~e~."~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ~~~~~Ca~rds~~~~~~~

CleYeiU&gt;d, " ' Oo·
)I; DeCktcea, C&amp;lllor"·

Auto., fSB, .PS, Air .

~1'0.11/.

PH. 992·2920
WISIOK EXAMINATIONS
HARD &amp; SOFT CONTAcT
UKSES
l11111r1nte 1nd Medital

., a...iM4 15: .........

IWdch 13-1) ,

· ~ "" (

113 Court Street

PIHlltloy, Ohio 45769

HOME RUNS: G.'J'nomM, MlJwau)Cle,
rt.~ldcaon.
Thor.....

:11:

'

t

Richard H. B~lm111ll , 0.0.

Bn!tt.

San FIWN.iloo tC:.Ie 5-101 at Lol AJIIP"

.

OPTOMORIC
CENTER

plays both Ohlo State and Michigan
at home. Wisconsin will be good
again, and so will Michigan State,

est
here,"
offensive
Bruceline
said
since
of Ithis
haveyear's
been
team. "We have some exceUent
players at the sklll positions. We .
certainly ougftt to be able to move
the football." .
As for thl!defensl!, he said, "I saw
Improvement all through the
spring. If we continue to Improve
during .the !all, we wlll be a better
defensive team than we were a
year ago Our depth Is still not
where we want It, but we have a
number ct. fine young players com·
lng In to help us."
Noting tbat most Big Ten teams ·
·have shifted their otfenslve empha·
sis !tom a riin:ortented game to a
passing game, Bruoe said competl·
t!on amoog the schools wiU be
tough.
"Selfishly, I should like to think
that
It lsllw'aysgomgtocomedown
1
~ Ohio State 8IIJl Mlchlg!lll tor the
title. But lherewas.morebalanceln
the league last year than there has
been for some tlrne, and I think that
WID continue thls year," he said.
"Illlilols looks very strong and

&amp;
Summer Hours
Mon.-Fri. 9:00 to S:OO

-~ll.lnl

8

Big Ten title and defeated Navy In
the Liberty Bowl.
"We have t~ biggest a,nd deep-

c11y, 12;

8ernl:u.rd.

4

Ptttlburth .

w.- -...

KanstaCUy, 7.

- .

sc.
Looll , . _ 2
Onb&lt;l_ _ ..... ..

St. Loull 1Ftneh
(Rol*llon JH), ( DI

'
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio ·
State football Coach Earle Bruce
says his team'ssuccess thls!ootball
season dEpends In a large part on
Its kicking game and performance
early In the season.
Fresllml1n are to report Monday
and upperclnssqten Aug. ~ as the
Ohio State Buckeyes begin practice
for the l9l:l2 football season.
"We !mvethe potenttal to be very
good," said Bruce. "A lot depends
on how we do early In the season.
and on the progress of our kicking
game. That ts what hurt us more
than anything else last year."
. The.ieam'sschedulecallsforcon·
ditlonlng drills Aug. 23-25 and. the
first day ct. P.ractlce with pads on
Aug. 26. The Buckeyes' Se&amp;SOII opener, against Baylor; ls SePt. 11.
Bruce, enterblg ~ tourtl{year at
the osu helm, said the defending
Big ~n C~H:hamplop Buckeyes
sho!lld have "a good offensive foot·
ball teani" this season. · ,
1
However, he said he doesn't Uke
being selected as thli conference fa·
vortte. "I have been In the league
thtee years now, and the favorite
has yet to win !t."
Ohio State Is returning 42 lettermen an&lt;!17 starters from the squad
thai ·went S;3, tiel! wl!h Iowa for the

Herndon. Detroit, U; You.nt, MOwaukee,

!llfl F~ 2
Sin D\010 8, A - I '
Monlrettl ... Pltll-l-1
CNciiO 13, New YOI1t I
~

Braves, who lost their 10th sti'algbt
and 14th In the last 15 games Thurs..
day by an 8-2 mar!lln to San Diego..
"It's nice to be In front by a game
and a half, but It only matters If ·
that's where we are the final day of
the season," said Ron Cey, who homered and drove In three runs In
Los Angeles' 6-2 victory over San
Franctsco. 'It was the sul'li!ng
Dodgers' 13th victory In tl)eir last 15
games, and Improved the!r lead In
the National League West to 1~ ·
games over the staggering Braves.
In other National League action,
St.Louis vaulted Into first place In
the NL East with a 3-2 triumph over
Pittsburgh, Montreal swei&gt;t a 'lwl·
night doubleheader from Phlladel·
phla 6.J and 8-7, and Chicago
pounded New York 13-6.

!f.-·
Doll'IIIU: M -. New
York. ?;
OUeaao. 7;

.... 1&amp;\i
.50

.e1

'lltttMttJ'•Loa-(

CIDctMIU

I!

..... 15\!

• "
w-..
51

Sin D\010
San Frudlco
Houstca

"I feel good. ' My arm Is good,"

Yount. MUwaulcee, 139; ' Mol.llor, Mil·
waulti!e, Ul; MeRle, KanJu City, 134.
~= Whtte, I&lt;Jnsu City, lf;
Yount, Mltw~UIIee, 31 : LyM. C.llfotrU.
:1!: MeRlo, ....... City, 29: c-os,

NATION.\1. L&amp;AGUE

3

said Tlant, who Is In his 19th year In
the major leagues. "I made some
good pitches today. I want to go on
as far as I can, bull don't know how
many years."
Tlant's last big-league victory
came on Sept.15,1981, when he beat
the Chicago Cubs whUe pitching !or
the Pittsburgh l'lrates.
National League
The Atlanta Braves are starting
to sound exactly llke a team that
has lostnotonlytengames Ina row,
but Its hold on first place as well.
And, for a team that has made up
12 games In the standings In 15
days, the Los Angeles Dodgers are
acting more than a little blase
about the whole thing.
"The guys are going to have to
start showing prtde," said third
baseman Jerry Royster of the

H1TS: Carda. Toronto. m · Coos:~«:
MUwaukee, \H; Harrah, Cle'ltland, 1'-1;

t

'

The Saint's biggest loss may
have been In the first quarter when
quarterback David WUson, chal·
lenglng Archie Manning !or the
starting posftlon, left the game with
a knee Injury.
He-watched the rest or the game
on crutches.
Thirteen more exhibition games

OdCifiO, 19.

Cllllbniaat Oakland
Qrveland at 'INal. 1111

WL

.Dl; ............ Chlcqo, ......

RUNS: R - . 011&lt;111111. 93: Moll·

u . MOwau&amp;, M: ·ltarrfh. ~anll.
83: Y~nt. Mltwauklee, 83: ~· Boatoft.

KaniU City 11 Deti'Ott

1

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Pd.( 01
.!ll'l-

6746

jn)

San Fnndlc:o II Lol ~ In) '
Atllml II San DttiD. In! I

PMI

...........
w .,:;. .

Boll..,_

•

tive envirorunent, becoming m
virulent.. Inaects transmit
fi'CIIll the dead to the Jiving. They ·Are! ·
usually kept l.n checll by the birds.!
But birds, which are very sensitivel
to'radlstion, would be killed and
insecta would proliferate In
trillions and carry dilea&amp;ell Ilk
black plague, typhua; hepatitis, ~
cephal!lls and typhoid, not Justin thei
ta~geted countries, bUt to the un-,
t:lrgeled countries as well. There
only a »day supply cf food In the e
tire world, and much li It Ia tra 1
sported by boat from the Unltedl
States to other countries. There!
would be great starvation in the'
third 'world."
Hundreds of those bombs are no
stOckpUed in ljle United States and1
Russia.
•
1
II Is becawie more -and morel
people are becoming educated to the!
final effectrJ It nuclear' war that I am ·
sure the nuelear freeze will not goj ·
away, regardless It the Reagan admlrlilltrat!on and the eong'res.. The:
wishes oliiO miWoo' people Clllll1ot!
lmg be denied. There w111 be ..,i
great a pressure 'on the Congress I
that they will be fOI'I."ed to over rule!
the ldmlnlatration.
-~
Tben, we may breathe easier '

, 'eel

Houitm at Ctndnnat~

"AMI'JIJCAN 1.8AlJUE

I left Lebanon with the feeling tha~
the PLO has merely added to thei
tragedy.
_ It hall been accorded the atatus cfi
a governmenHIHlllile .b~ tile Un~
Nations. It is actually a con· federatioo li revolutionaries ....:
. more than 40 different factions -l
which sometimes turn their guns oct
each OCher. In structure, the PLO
resembles the American Malia, with
Its rival but affiliated fariilltes.
i
Ironically, the PLO has beer}
training revolutin8ries to overthrtnll
t)le same goveminel\18 which supl
(lort and finance it.
1 • ;

again!

On Saturday night, It's Buffalo at
Dallas, Cleveland at Detroit,
Denver at Los Angeles Rams, Mtn·
nesota at Atlanta, the New York
Jets at Green Bay, the New York
Giants at Baltimore, the Raiders at
San F.ranctsCo, Phlladelphla at
Tampa' Bay, Pittsburgh vs. New 1
England at Knaxvllle, Tenn., and
Washington at Miami. On Monday,
Chicago IS at San Diego.
Players In the RedsldJls. Dolphins
game agreed Thunday to shake
hands before the kickOff In a show ·
or- solidarity for the NFL Players
Association. The players union Is
Involved In negotiations with club ·
owners tor a contract to J:Wiac:.e the
onethatexpfredlastmontlL

'

St. Loullat Plttlbul'lll

-

.·Majors

7e
~asily convinced .me that the!
Palestinians are a tragic people. But:

1

lncludlDg Cincinnati at Kansas City
and St. Louts at Seattle tonight.

Bucks kicking game early
in year b_ig factor • Bruce

.,

Scoreboard ...

'

vantage cf being born ugly. For ngly
be was - stun,led and ungainly, ,With
a hint of deformity. Thia apparenUy
has given him a compeflllllting
enlargment cf brains, tell(lcity iuid
guile.
• He seemed to revel in his ugliness,
to carerully cultivate an unkempt
look. His acuffed, gray·jowled appeat'lllce and macho, chaotic style
appeared to be purposeful, adding
an aura cf drama to hls presence. l
woodered Idly how he managed to
maintain hill scraggly stubble constantly as he hadn't shaved for fiye
days.
·
Aralat is a magnificient fraud who
made sweeping exaggerations with
the air of a man of destiny. He took
me on a personal tilur cf a hospital
that had been struck by an Israeli
shell. He showed me films ol Israeli
bombings. He spoke to me intenSely
'about the plight cf the Palestinian

arescheduledlnthe~extbardays. ·

OUers' last rally.
' ·
"We played ln spurts," Saints
Coach Bwn PhUIIps said. "We also
made to many errors."
New Orleans' btllliest error came
1n the fourth quarter when the
Saints had 12 players oo the field for
a Houston punt, !living th!1 OUers a
first down. This time Nielsen com·
pleted a &amp;-yard pass to Adger Arm·
strong for a first down and two
plays later. Nielsen hit Casper with
the winning points.

Tian- hurls 3-1 Angel victory over Twins
· The 41·year·old Tlant, who was
playlng"ln Mexico just a couple of
weeks ago, 1\urled the Angels to a
3-1 victory over the Minnesota
Twins, boosting California back
Into the American League We5t
lead over the· Idle Kansas City
Royals.
"We've been married 21yearstoday," Tlant said Thursday night between puffs on a cigar. "I wanted to
GOING GAME HUNTING AFl'EB 'l1ll!i 'BIGCAT'-Marilii'WOCJII. . win as a present to her.
"I never lost the faith In myself or
ward,.Pomeroy, baRed a "bll cat"· '\'bell he,. w• llelml at Baclne
God that l could come back to the
Ioeiia -now~ near llle Julllle- 011 Tu~..w~arcl, whoplanll
major leaR!Ies and win when I went
011 eatlalllle flO-pound catlleh, said be had to JNIIi1ally llllllr8a &amp;lid
IWim In alter &amp;be IIIII, wblch was tiiiiJ!ed ID llle line. He waallehln1w¥h

'

flaiWII railed for the ftrlt Ume 1D Lol Aqelet
twl).way trl!pbone OIIVIIAIIDII by aatelllle Will !IIIId.
U.N. Sec.tltuyoG•wal Kwt WUIII!Im lllalled ai'eport
a,il."'llila made llet:mn lila' powa • ..-e Jllit ad8qullie til

1

The (reeze . vot."'--:----:-----""'·----:-,--~L~owe~u~w~i~e~ur

=~~~~~

leftlnthegametosecureHouston's
first victory over the Saints 'tn two ·
years.
The Saints had lakell.a J3.0 lead
on a l ·yarp touchdown 'run hy
George Rogers and field goals ot44
and 39 yarc1s hy Benny Ricardo before Nielsen cranked up the OUers
early In the second 11,uarter.
Nielsen hit tight end Tim Wilson
With a 12·yard touchdown pi,ISS and
free agent Florian Kempf kicked a
palr of 37-yard field goals to tie the
score.
'li).e OUers took a temporary 15-13
lead when lln~backer John Corker
tackled Saints quarterback Bobby
Scott In the end zone.

B1 BOB GREENE
AP Spolia Wrtler · ;
Veteran pitcher l.:uls Tlant gave
his wUe, Marla, an 8lllllversary
·present, and had a little something
for the California Angels, too.

American Psychlstric Association.
The vote on the nuelear freeze months!
No matter how much the Reagan It Is alarming that adolescents can
resolulloo In the House cf Representatives last week means absolutely administration would like to see the recognize the danger while the
nothing officially. To me It only nuclear freeze movement go away it · presidelit, the majority cf Congress
proves we have two " more will not do 80. •It will be something an4 our politicalleail~rs cannot.
knuckleheads serving in the. House they will encounter with more and ' Dr. C&amp;ldlcott closed a lucrative
than we have resPonsible officials. . more frequency dllfipg their time iii practice to devote full tlme to the anThe most recent poll taken by the the Prelidency. A majority as high , tinuclear movement. She concludes
New York Times and CBS shows fl as ff1 percent cannot possibly be that In the event of a nuclear war 90
percent of the. people In favor of a ignored. Anyone, whethet he be percent·cf the American people will
verifiable freeze , on nuclear president of the United States ot its be dead within 30 days. Medical
weapons. Yet the House voted :i04 to !owllest citilen, who believes \hal a . people and scientists do not frighten
202 1111 a resolutloo backing the nuclear war can be fought and won easily and are not prone to
president's policy of nuclear Is a fool not to recognize reality. exaggerate conditions. In addition to
superiority before a freeze and Today (August 8) in he American Pllyslclans for Social Responsll)llity
negotiations for disarmament as op- . Weekly, a supplement to a great resolutiona have been Jlll8lled by the
posed to the policy cf a freeze oo all many Sunday papers, Dr. Helen · American Medical Alloclation, The
nuclear annaments and then disar- Caldicott, a leader In the antinuclear National Aca~ at Scief\ceS and
mament negotiations. The World- organizatioo, .Physicians for Social · the American Physiological Society.
wide demonstrations on the 37th 'an· Reapo111lbillty, baa a ' most U such people who are accustomed
nlyersary ol the atomic bombing cf . enllgbtenlng and graphic article. I , to dealing dally wiP. matte.., liJife .
Hiroshim! proves that the freeze 1'\)pt yoa we~ able to read it In ItS and. death are frjghtened, who' are·
,
. we u laYJillllto dllmil8 their feilrs.
movement ia not dead. In fact, II ia entirety.
The article, enliUed "Growing up ' !.would like Ill quote a particular
more alive than ever and · many
political action committees have Afraid." ali IIIII the effect ol chllllng paragraph from Dr.
been fonned to take their case to the growing up In an alrnolphere li ap- Caldlcott's article. After describing
polls In the Nove111ber 2 ~on over nuclear war. She the sn-me results li a 211
coogressional election. 'That Is \he says that cblldren are veey . megaton nuclear bumb near -the
" ' • only direct benefit I can see coming frigbtened that they will never grow acene ol the ellllollon 8he says:
"And, ol course, there would be
oot cf the vote 1ut week - It up, ~r Bet jCJbl, never get
separata the sheep from the pts. It lll81Tied and have chlldrwl ol their mllilons and m11llonali dead bodies ,
makes It easier for the" freer,e ad- own. That wu the belief cr( almoal on the face ol the earth and, aa they
all li a a--1 · cblldren in- decayed, tbe blcterla would
tervlewed recently in lklitAin by the . multiply and mutate In the radloec-

.

·

the 1981 bill gave In breaks to
Are we done?
American business ia taken back by
Colmlent No. 1: 'iVhy did the tax
the bill.
package mill: .categ1lfiea? One that
There II no way In which fresh was. directed excliaaJvely at comlallel 1111 cigarettes, on telePhones pllance would have been
and On air travel can fie held to be a philosophically easier to handle. Bit
venture In compliance. These are, · what we have Ia a ~t ,huge blur,
pilre and &amp;!rnPie, fresh taxes.
an omnibus Jlill that i_loes
'l'he ,bottol)l Une? Approxlrn!ltely every'fhere from collect'llg taxes on
75 percent cf the lalles directly paid Ups at hamburger atands, to one that
by llldlvlduals can be held tl! he iax clips you extra on a phone Can, to
enforcement, or - In the case cf one that Immobilized one or anolher
dividend payments and Interest buslnesa merger becaue ol changes
, . payments - an lmpoeltion on one in tax scheduling. When such blun
category ol income ol the same happen, the public tends to l011e sight
llabUIUes suatalned by another class of diatiilctions, however clearly they
cf Income. A taxpayer ia entitled to were Intended.
aslt why if h1s salary tax ls withheld,

They used the electricity and water, . ....
1}11-n_ts_li_h_ll_f_orces--._H_e_had
__th_e_a_d-;.___1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~1
the road and school!! without paying
taxes.
·
They moved lrito homes and
buildings, sometimes confining the
owners ~o a small corner of their
own homes or kicking them out
altogether. It ltasn't uncommQII for
PLO tt'OOpB to confiscate
automobiles In the streets, making
sudden pedestri111111 cf the stranded
owner1. .
On my way to Arafat'sl}eadquarters, a PLO guard. nudged my taxi
driver with a rifle and llllked for
some gaaollne. The driver, h1s face
white 'll'ith fear, quickly agreed and
watched In dismay as he PL0
drained hia gas tank. I hid to apPeal
to Af!lfat's. high conunand to give
back a quart of gas 80 he could drive
me to my hotel.
I found Yasair Arafal in hiS
basement bun)ler, smiling sereilely,
surrounded by the shattered rem-

Houston

the day ·for hlmlelf and Oilers
ownet:

So where are we?

PLO and the tragedy
BEIRUT- The overcast of war-

HO~N lAI:'~ •:..,.

·', t~Wu1erbacli Gitford Nklllet ~ved

22-20::

llldlvlclually. Your loyalty, encoura..mewt, ..,..,.
lll'ayen, ancl adv~ce will always M ••••m..... 1
tMnJc HC" of y~ Sincerely fftd wish YOU fOOd ,hlallft•

N.J. DILirtOa. D.O."

1

1

1

1

1

1

~

0
I

I

I

1

I

I

1

1

I

0

1

1

1

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'995

JULIA DeWEESE, MAIIMiER OF II EW .HAVEN .
~NIOII 76 WOULD UIIE TO IIIVIT£ AllY UCEIISED
DRIVER TO 'STOP BY All» IIEIISTU FOR ntE
&amp;ASOLIIIE TO IE GIVEII AWAY. DRAWING WILL
· BE HELD TUESDAY, AUGUST 31;19J2.

1st Prize- 100 Gallons Ga.OII~•
2ncl Prize • 75 Gallons·Gasoline.·
3rcl Prl._' • 50 Gallons Ga.OIIne
~.

~~

•et, .. Prlllll ....
, • CIIDI1 CAIDI AtamD •
Union • !unoco • Vlia • ~- Coni

.. , . . . . . ._ , ,, ll(llt«, ... '" 11141
' ..

..
,....,.,...
(,

1t5, IIIII STIUJ

.'

�Meigs County's ~eeting notes
Council on Ministries
Meigs County Council on
Ministries met A,ug. 9 at Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Chainnan Kennit Walton called the
meeting to order and the host pastor,
Rev. Rtchard Rothcmich led the
devotions. The scripture text for the
devotions was 'Luke 6:27-36. Rei(.
Rothemich said that, "Christian
love makes a peculiar people."
After a brief opening the meeting
was temporarily adjourned in order
that the committees of the county
Council could meet. When the
meeli!lll was called back to order the
following reports were given:
Rev. James Clark reported that
the F;~ucation Committee had
organized and had made plans for a
&amp;hool of Religion to be held on Sept.
30, Oct. 7, 14 and 21 at the Chester
United Methodist Churth from 7 to
8:30 p.m. each evening. A
registration fee of $2.50 per person
will be charged for the four
evenings. Classes to be offered inelude: ·Parables, Lay Leaders, The
Book of Discipline, United Methodist
Hlstoty, Council on Ministries, The
BookofRevelationandEvangeli:;m.
Rev . Rothemich reported for the
Evangelism Committee. He indicated that Rev. Ray Price, of the
Albany Charge, who has been on the
mission field in Africa, will be in
Middleport, Racine and Tuppers
Plains on three consecutive nights,
to be negotiated and announced
later.
Mrs. Mildred·Ihle gave the report
for the Social Concerns Committee.
In addition to their regular work
they are obtaining information on a
bill which would raise the age of
t)Jose legally able to purchase
qlcoholic beverages in the State of

Ohio.
Rev. Richard Thomas indicated
that the Evangelism Committee is
workin~ on setting up a county-wide
evangelistic service for early 1983.
Mr. Lloyd Dillinger reported that
a mrrununications workshop is
being planned using Rev. Robert
Storey, Director of Conununications
for the West Ohio Conference as the
resource person. This event will b&lt;
video taped and will also be open to
all persons of the Athens District.
Mr. Dillinger also reported that a
video tape of the Bible Quiz, held in
July at Enterprise Church, will be
shown in the Cooperative Parish
booth a!the Meigs County Fair.
Pastors were encouraged to keep
mailing lists, for the cHurch they
serve, updated. It was also Joentioned 'that the Cooperative Parish
does own a 16 mm sound projector
and a 35 mm filmstrip projector.
These can be used by contacting
Rev. Clark in Ra cine.
,
Rev. Mark Flynn reported thatthc
county youth are planning a retreat
at Camp Francis Asbury for the first
or second weekend in October. A
swimming party, at an indoor pool,
is being planned for later in the year.
The director's report, given by
Mrs. Fa~ Sauer, involved providing
a packet for the representative and
the alternate from each church in
the county. This packet contains
question~aires which concerned a
need assessmentfor the local church
and information which would
establish .a talent bank in the county.
The next meeting will be held at
the Morse Chapel United Methodist
Church at 7:30 p.m. on Monday,
Sept. 13. Following adjournment the
women of the host church served
refreshments.

Calendar
FRIDAY

Athletic Boosters

MIDDLEPORT Youth

1'..c!aiUe Will have a swtmmtng

Monday was set as the day for
general cleanup and palntingoUhe
food booth and the ·Iocker robm at
the football stadium when the
Meigs Athletic Boosters met Tuesday night at the high school.
Members are asked to come at 6
p.m. with cleaning supplies, paint
brushes and rollers. It was noted
that more workers are needed tor
the food booth at t)le Meigs County
Fair on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Anyone willing tn help Is
asked to contact Clnda Harris at
992-2451
.
Also dlscussesd durtng the meeting was the -ooo club; the football'
program, and membership tickets.
Next meeting wtll be held on Aug.
24 at 7:30p.m. at the high school.
All parents of athletes In both the
junior high and senior high school
program as well as other interested
individuals are invited to .attend.

party at thciMlddleportpooJSat·
ui'day, ~· 14, s:8 p.m. Unl·
forms should be turned In at that

tlme. ., •. _

f\OMI!:ROY ·1- . Eagles
Awdliary annlvenai'J dinner
Friday, 7p.m.fou11Eaglemembers and their families. Band and
Wince at t p.m. J,i:veryone to take
a covered dish.
RU1'£AND- Dance, 8 to 11:30
p.m. Ftlday at Rutland Civic
~ter; ~ton, $1 and m~ic
~y ltomlc Sounds.

- ·
POMEROY - Ice

cream
social, Seriior Ci\jzens Center,
lreginniJi@ at 5 p.m. Homemade
ice p-eem. . pie, cake, sandwicliea; trttertabunent to begin
at 8 p.m. Carpenter's Dance
Studio and Francis Andrews
Banet.

Rio play ·continues
"Make Me an Offer," a comedy by
Athens wr~ter Joe Ballou, has been
·continued for another week on the
swruner theater pl~ybill at Rio
Grande College and Corrununity
College. •
The play wUI be Thursday, Friday
and Saturday nights at 8 p.m. in the
Fine and Performing Aris Center on
the cinapus. Originally, "The Castro
Complex" )\'as slated to be this
weekend, but the play was carr
celled.
Neil Simon's comedy "Plaza
Suite" will conclude Rio Gra'nde's
swruner theater season Aug. III-21.
For additional infonnation, coir
tact Rio Gran~e College at (614) 24&gt;
5353, ext. 364.

'

TROPIIImi AND MORE TROPHIES- ClDdy Pitzer, left, ,and Joyce Bowen unpacked the llt'.llrly 2110
trophies and plaques wble~ wW be awardecUe graDtl

F~ir's

Edtth Forrest, a Christian for the
longest time, and Stefani Pickens,
the youngest.
Mrs. Pickens read several orlg!naJ poems. Selected as outstanding
mothers were Nora Cambron for
her support of mlsslonalres and her
Christian example, 8J1d Tl1lte Rowley for her Christian example and
concern for the sick and shutlns.
They were presented by the past
mothers of the year, Edith Forrest
and Frances Hysell, and given
gttt,s. It , was noted ·that the 1981
mother at the year, Helen Miller, Is
hospltilltzed.
Marge WUt was selected as the
mother at.the yeai and presente&lt;!'a
bouquet of Dowers and a spray of
roses.
Attend~ were Lora Wood,
Tamn'ly Mossman, Jody Hysell,

Over two hundred awards will be
presented to oull.'landing youth ·at
Youth Night on Wednesdjay at 8
p.m. al the ~eigs County Fair show
arena.
New for this year will be the
presentation of trophies to all 4-H
grand champion project winners
and plaques to all ohio State Fair
participants.
.These awards at;e made possible
throu~h the contributions of local
Frances Hysell, Mary Durst, businesses and individuals, Cindy
Jackie Reed, Ellen Bowel'S, Naomi Pitzer, activi!ies , assistant in the
Ohlinger, Ellzabeth Ohlinger, Jean · Meigs County Extension Office, has
Michael, VIvian L. Pierce, Mlldred providc'li leadership for t.he awards
Hysell, Clara Jeffers, Tressle Hen· pro~ram. Assisting her have been
drlcks, Tillie Rowley, Lau~ Harri· John Rice, extension agent, Dale
son, Bonnie Warner, '13ellnda Stoll, extension' 'hom'e economist,
Rou~h, Edith Forrest, Edle.Tayior,
Pansy . Jordan, 4-H progra m
Shelly Stobarl, Linda Stobart, Ruth assistant; Joyce Bowen, extension
Durst, Dreama Pickens, Stefani secretary, and Jean Spencer, 4-H adPickens, VIcki Smith, Bonn! Joyce viser.
Smit.h, Madeline Painter, !'laney
~' Trophies and plaques recogniz~
Morris, Carol Anderson, Sharon youth as outstanding and encourage
Russel~ Becky Ambel'ger, Nonna
higher achievement," Miss Fitzer
Russell, Jllora Cambron, Gladys conunented, addin~ the kids really
Hendricks, Mllrge WUt, and Sharon feel honored to receive an award.
Russell.
She satd trophies and plaques in-

Me~gs equestriennes

fair's grand ·champs
· Mlkkl Conley, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Conley, Coolville, and
, Tammy Kennedy, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . .Junior Kennedy, Tuppers
~Ins, won grand. champions with
their li!limalS at the Ohio State Fair.
!&gt;flkki, 13, with her pony, "My
Gray Millll" won the 1982 grand
champion in showmanship in 9 to 14
year old age group, while in . the
same a~e ~roup, Tammy, 11, won

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SATURDAY

)"outh, .Night Wednesday

Cambron, Rowley 'outstanding mothers'
"Buttons and Bows" was the
theme of a recent mother-daughter
banquet held at the Bradford
Church Christ.
: Theme was carried In thedecora!Jons. for the chicken dinner which
was followed by a program prepared by Madeline Painter. The
group sang ."Mother's Prayers
Have Followed Me." There was a ·
sldt, "Through Other Eyes" by
Frances Hysell, Tressle Hendricks,
I',{Udred Hysell, Madellile Painter
and Norma Russell. Jackie Reed
and Ruth Durst had a song, and
there was a responsive reading
"The Ideal Mother."
• Recognlzed were VIcki Pickens
Smtih, the yoimgest mother; Edith
P;orrest, the oldest; Frances Hysell
ll!1d Linda' Stobarl, the mothers
":~th tpe most daughters present;

hruat ; ::
.

ebamploils aDd Olllo Slate Fair 'partiCipaDIII
youth algh at t!te Melp County Fair.
.

the 1982 grand. champions horsemanship_award with her quarter
horse, 11 Mag:icSolo."
1
Both girls have been active in
Meigs County 4-H for several years
and ha.ve participated in many competitions.
'
·
They competed at the Oh.io State
Fair with 748 entries from across the
state to win the grand championShips.

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ton Insurance, BroJ!an-Waner

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The Daily Sentinel

'
Publilht.od ~wcy •ft.emom,
Mortd.llly lhrot.l,th . · 1'
FHdoy, Ill Cuurt Street. by tho Ohi&lt;l Vall•y. : .

• Pu.bUshlntt Coml)lltly - M•JUmedli, Inc.. , 1 •
Ponwroy, Olllo 457111, .,_2111. Setood &lt;IW ' ·
pcwhll(e paid at Pomt~~ O!'io.
, ::
Met'*r: The Auuclal~ Preals, Inland Oai·
Jy 1 ~ Auoclatioo and . the Amerkan
Nt\rllfllper Publi&gt;hor.o AlBot'iallllll NaUilnlll

POSTMASTER: Send add""" Jo '!11e-Jlauy
Sentinel. Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Obiut:i?U.

::

SUBSCRIPTlON RA'n;s

''

ByCankrorM-Roule

.

One week ............. . .. . .. ~ .. ,.. .... Jl..,
OncMonlh ······ r· ·-,..... J .~ • • • f4.40

Subst•r·ibt•rs not t.l~lrinl( lt&gt; pay tM carrit:r
may rl'tnlt in l:ltlvam't! dlmt to fht.o In!lly
St•nl lnt•l orr l:l 3, 8 or 12' 111Qflth Wit!. Crl'dit
will bt• l!iVI!nt.'.wrrie~ I!Ht'hmonih.
·
Nu subS&lt;:riptiuiUI by 11\&amp;tll JM!Mnitl.t&gt;d In towns

wht.•rr hnme l'llrril!r servltre Is i vailable.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
I•IROhlo
13WL't!b ......... . ............. ; , fi&lt;I.Of

26 Wcl'lts .. ... ...... . ...... , .. ..... S21.:l0
S2Wd;k.~ .... : .................. , . SS1.41
Oul.llklt'Ohlo
13 Wl&gt;t'k.tt .• . ......•....... ...... .. Sl5.2l

CHESTER . . • .

.NEEDS. AND 4-H PROJECTS
'

cant• Halters- ttone &amp; Pony Hal""- w•ttl..,. 1 ~· ,
LHds - stack ca,.. - ltanMIII - Fomlc Tullo &amp; 1•·
IIICk,ts- Gtlftnlzecl Tuba &amp; luclclll- Shant-l'ly Spraya &amp; Rtlltllenta- lruahtl- Qlrry Comlll. Groomlnt Suppllu- Ytterparlan SuiiJDIIH - SIJclcllu
- Rablllt FHCI ~ Suppllu - P8rlna ..,..... &amp; Animal
HHrtll Aida tor ,..u Fafm Antmata.

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._;.,,

-

915-3301'

w: VA • .
14th AT 8:30P.M~ .

PT. PLEASANT,

*";* ·*'*
* *·EVENT:
* * * * ~ *..
·. ,MAIN

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todar

'ANTIQUITY - A songfest will
be held Saturday at 7:30p.m. at
Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ, S.R. 338 with the United
Gospel Singers and the Herdman
F.amily. Pastor is Rev. Franklin
Dickens. The public is invited to
attend.

Patricia Dyer, daughter of Maxine
Dyer, Rt. ), Bidwell, wu recognized
as the recipient of the Luther Mylander famly 4-H scholarship at the
Ohio 4-H Reoognition Breakfast
.A~g. 9 at t.he Ohio State Fair. The
scholarship is sponsored by Luther
Mylander family.
Dyer attends Ohio State University and is majoring in agriculture
education and agronomy. She plans
a career in soil conservation or
teaching.

Patricia Dyer (center) receives her $SOD Luther· MylalJIIer 1-H
SebolanblpfromMr.aodMn. LutherMylander.

r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;!;;;;;;~:;~====----;

GEORGE CARTER

Coates birth
'
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Coates, Marietta, announce the birth of a son,
Joshua Hendricks Coats on AUK. 10,
at tdarietta Memorial Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are Pearl
Hendricks, Newport, Ohio and the
late Ralph Hendricks. Paternal
l(!'lndparents . are Charlotte Elber·
feld, RD, Pomeroy, and the late Bob
Coates.

HOUSTON, TEXAS
Georae Cnt~c. founder and
president ol life Ministries,
is a Bible teacher who feels
God's Word should be the
center of ewerrone's .life.
Geor1e 1raduated hom
Rhema Bible Tralninl Center
and has been on the evan·
aetistic field since 1980. He .
was an en1ineer lor 16
rem before enterina the
ministlJ full lime. Come join
us · 'FRIDAY , AUGUST 13
throu'&amp;h SATURDAY, AUG ·
UST 1• at 7:30 P.M. in the
eveninl and 111in SUNDAY
at 10:00 A.M.

CHRISTIAN ·FELLOWSHIP
383 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, OH. 45769
Richard Stewart-Pastor

PH. 992-2406

10

TUPPERS PLAINS - A car
wash will be held Satunhiy from 9
a.m. to noon at the Hawk Station,
Tuppers Plains. Proceeds will ~o
to the Tuppers Plains ,ball teams.

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, POMEROY - The annual plt''nic at the ladies. Auxiliary of
;Ve.terans Memorial Hospital will
•be held at 8 p.m. ,sunday at the
&lt;home ol Bill and Carrie Kennedy,
:Route 35, Pomeroy. Those at:teildlng are to take a covered
:dish, Meat will be furnlahed .
'Anyone needing transportation is
:to caii99'M074.
·
· : RUTLAND .:}fymn sing Sun\lay at I p.m. at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church, potluck
\!inner at noon. Pastor Donald
;Karr invites singers and the
;public to attend.
• PORTLAND McElroy
:reunion Sunday at noon at Por·
:nand Park.

216W1•clcs .......•...•....•....••• , $29.64

52 Wt't'k.~ .............. , . . , , .. . . , , ~. 21

a·A UM LUMBER CO.

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.onevear ..... .'.... . , . ~ .. ~ .... L~.t. $52.80' ' 1.1 1
SIN&lt;lLE COPY
:
PRICES
I.
DHily ............. : ....... ..... 15~nt.s
c

. I

SAT.,. AUG.

AuguiJ 14, JI8Z
,
. Enterprises or ventures which are artistic or have glamorous
elements will prove to be happy involvements for you this coming year.
They CC!Uid also be lucrative.
LillO (hly D-Aq. 2Zl)t's Important
not lo.JM!l!lect old pals in
order to cster,to your newer acquaintances. A choice l!llly be called for,
but you'll make the right decision.
.
~. lAue. !S&amp;pt. 2%) Your poulbllltles for succesa are very @ood
loilay if yqu are JIC'OPe!:IY motivated. Pay heed to those urgea' which puah
ytiu In a positive direction.
• 1..D1RA (Sept 23-0rt. Z3) Rather than experiment wit.h untest,ed
methoda or ideaa today, stick to fonnulas which you !mow (rom ex. perlence produce desired results.
SCORPIO (Oct. It-Nov. 22) A matter Important' to you, but over
' wboee destiny you feel you have little control, should wcirk out smoothly
today' Be hopeful.
SAGm'AIUUS (New. 23-Dec. %11 You have a special knack today for
bringing people or ~tuations together In ways which will benefit all 111volved. Put It to liSe.
•
CAPRICORN (Dec, ZWau. It) Greater gains can be derived from
something that you've al,ready started- and today you're likely to figure
out,h_o! this can lie dorle.
·
.
AQUARIUS (Jau. •Feb. 11) Seek stimulating COfllPCIIliOIIS today
who are in hannony with your social and sports Interests. 'i ou need to be
·active with those whom you enjoy:
PI8CE8 (Feb. •Mareb 211) Your ideas or plans today regarding
ways to beautjfy your surroundings should be followed through. Ch!lnges
will add a lot ol charm.
,
ARIES (Morell Zl-April19) Someone with whom you'll be asaociating
today II anziou to know where he or she stands wit.h you. Let this person
know,you really care.
•
.
·
TAURUS (April ..May 2111 Profitable developments are possible
today, so bl! on yoar toes to capitalize on them. Gains could come In areas
you've already primed:
GEMINI (May %1-.June Z8) Take an active role today in matters affecting YOIU' self.interests. When others make decisions, it might be more
to their advantage than yours •
CANCER (June %1-.JDty 2%) You have greater influence today than
you may realize. Fortunately, you'll use this gift in ways which will prove
helpful
., to all.

SUNDAY
.:

·

•13 HP YANMAR Diesel with 4ft. rear Mower.

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~::~~~~&amp;l~=~~e~~v~ve~J:.n~

Vorl.,' New Yurk loti?.

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RACINE - Weekend revival,
Racine First Church of the
N828rene services at 7:30 each
evening, and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday. Rev. Tom Collier invites the
public to the Friday, Saturday
and Sunday services.

A'strograph
.

IUSPSliS-IRI

/IDMIIiMIIf~loc.

-GRAVELY Walk ~hind rractor with Sulkey.
.
.
•12 HP. ...MASSEY
.
. FERGUSON . with40'' Mower.

FOR ALl OF ,YOUR. FAIR

•

/'I•

•FARM~LL CU.Bwith_Sickle ~r
an~ Plow...
'

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,.,.•

creawa sense of achievement and 'Macht~ Shop, staie ~ann In-:: i
expressed appreciation 'for the'com- surance, Twin City Machine Shilp, •'
mlinity support for the project.
V. D. Edwards Insurance, ' Valley' ::
Con.tributing to ll1tl fund for the Lumber and Supply Company, Waid •·
P!ll'~hase of the trophies and awards Cross and Sons, D. V. Weber Coil- ::
were the following businesses 'and struction.
' ;:
individuals:
':.
1
Ace Hardware, B&amp;J Service
. :.
Station, Bank One, .nr. Sellm
· •· ·
BlazeiViCZ, Richard ~nd Macel Bar- r=====::~===~

surance, Bur~er Chef, Clay's Shake
Shoppe, Crafty Ladies Handicrafts,
Grow's Family -Restaurant, DavisQuickel Insurance, . Diamond
Savin~s and Loan, .Fabric Shop,
Facemyer and Salmocls .Lwnber
Companyr- Fann Bureau of Meigs
County, Farmer's Bank, Francis
Florist, Fulton-Thompson Tractor
Sales, G&amp;J Auto Parts, Gaul's Store,
Gr~n-Up Reclamation Service, Ken
Grover · Phot'o~raphy, · Harris
Associates, Harris Fanns, Hawk's
Station, Helen's Beauty ShQp, ~o
Hill Photography, Julie's Beauty
Shop, K&amp;C Jewelers, Karr Corr
slruction, Keebau~h's Shake Shoppee, Landmark, McClure's DairY
Isle/ Miller's Antiques, Mullen Irr
surance, Newell's Sunoco, New York
Clothing HD!~Se, Pomeroy Cerl)enl
Block, Pomeroy Flower Shop, Larry
, Powell (Powell's Super Valu), R.C:
Bottling Company, Racine· Home
National Bank, Racine Planin~ Mill,
Reed's ' Country Store, Ridenour's
Supply, Rig~'s Used Cars, River·
view IGA, Rutland · Department
Store, Rutland Furniture, Simmon's
'Oldsmobile • Cadillac - Chevrolet,
]Inc., Skatc~A-Way, Smith-Nelson
·Motors, Inc., Sorden Tool and

MEIGS COUNTY Coon Hunters Friday. at 8:30 p.m. at the
club btiuBe on Snowball hill.
Refreshr~ents will be served.

Gallia resident
awarded scholarship

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'

MAN TAO TEAM, Including: FLYING FRED
CURRY, BIG BOB WHITE; &amp; THE· lAWMAN vs. HANGMANI,. HMGMM II lflorth .Amen~· Til Jum Champs) .&amp;·
..
1HE REIIEGADE.
.
SPICI,..
... I MAUi,."oJa
.. .....~~.~... ' 1il•l!~~ "'J " :1...

L~DY. .WMITLEaS
.
.lii.US aM~ IIG MAtCHES ·

************
AdmE
u.•

TICKETS ARE1 Utldtr lt-fi.OO'
. ·Gen.
lt11111•a .....
aNI are Dll sale at Killtly S
llud IJUI'tllfUre Ill G11II!M'ftlt Ill\ It 1M door IIIVNIY

at7tltp,m.
.
·
For Mort lnformaHon Call: 216•11411

HEATH United Methodist
'Church ol Middleport.will hold its
annual picnic at Royal Oak Park.
Sunday. Those attending are to
'at'rive tlllrly in the afternoon
activities and eating will take
Pl;ec at 6. p.m. Those attendin~
~ to take their own table
•v_jee and a basket ol covered
'llishes. All vacation Bible school
•sl\xtents are especdially invitelf
,and the event is open to the
:f!libllc. There will be gsmes.

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·-·· ' .POMEROY United Methodist

'Church will observe Christmas in
'Au~ust on Sunday, Aug. 15. A
'Cllristmas tree deCorated With
,Chrismons, wiU be the highli~lt
:ol the . Christmas theme.
~Chrismons are gold and white
'religious symbols. Both the chlir· ·
school at t: 15 a.m. 'and
I;"''"'"•in service at 10:30 11.m.
the emphasis on cnn• ·1
Afellowship carry-in' dinper
be held at 8 p.m: folio-' by
congre,~ati•llll81 singing of ChriBtcarols. The public is invited'
attend.

.

HAZEL COMMUNJTY Chlirch
hold a homedlllling Sunday
Harn'lony to sing and,Floyd
BOiliard to speak. ~orning ser9:30 .a.m:; basket dinner at
program at 1:30 p.m. Edsel
linau, pastor, invites the publk.

MONDAY
. Due to the Mei~U~ CoWity Fair,
regular meetiJll! ol Dmr
~ :Rc!~Jcst.ci:r, PGCit 31, American
be held at 8 p.m.
inatead ol Tuesday. POll
.
to c!alJ in 1114

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�friday,!. A~ }~1982

Sentinel

Remembered from Hollywood to New England

Veteran actor Henry·.Fonda dies at ·77

The Dolly s.ntlnel.t ·~' 7

':;=Y--:Micldlepor!. Ohio

7:fXrt2RifN€f.JHII JOY Of RELI61dN - .~
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By YARD~A ARAR
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Henry Fonda, dead at the age of
77, was remembered from Hoi·
lywood to NeW England, the set·
Ung of his Oscar-winning role In
" On Golden Pond," as the unpretentious hero he portrayed so
well In more than 100 stage and
screen performances .
• With his wile, Shirlee at hls
~Ide, the veteran act~r died
~acetully Thursday at Cedars
sptal Medical Center of resplra·
tory !allure brought on by hls
long fight with heart disease.
Fonda , who appeared In more
tban lrl,films and dozens of plays
during a career that spanned a
hal!·century, had worn a pacemaker slnce.l974 and had been
In and out p! the hospital since
his most recent heart s11rgery In
M ay 1981. H e was hospitalized
on Sunday for the last time.
" He was rom!orlable and was
In no pain, " Mrs. J;i'onda, flanked
by the actor:s chUdren, Jane,
Peter and adopted daughter
Amy, told reporters gathered
outside t he famUy's Bei·Air
home. "He had a good night. H e
talked with all of us and he was
conscious at all times. He woke
up this morning, he sat up and
just stopped breathing."
Among t hose who paid their
respect s In person during the
day wer e James Stewart, Eva
Marie Saint, James Garner, Robert W agner and Stefanle
Powers.
In accordance with his wishes,

Fonda's eyes were donated to
!he Manhattan Eye Institute and
hls body was cremated hours af·
ter he died, ·ramUy spokeswoman Pat Kingsley said. She·sald
there would be no funeral and
the family had not decided what
to do with the remains.
A tall, lean man with an hon·
est face, Fonda played presl·
dents and senators, lawyers and
soldiers, farmers and Indigents
with equal skUL But despite his
prominence, he kept his open
manner and was rem embered
as much for his personal quail·
tie s as his professional
achlevemen(s.
" I don't think you ' ll ever find
anybody who'll have anything
but good to say about Hank,"
said Glenn F ord, F onda's costar In " Midway" and ''The
Rounders."
"We've lost one or a kind ... he
was a real super, super, super
actor, " said LucUie Ball, who
worked with Fonda In '"The Big
Street" and "Yours, Mine and

m embers of the crew - the
r oustabouts, cameramen , sound
people. He just sat right down
among them and was right at

CARS. INC.

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home."
In his hometown of Omaha, '
Neb.. Fonda was the boy who
m ade good but never forgot his
roots. His family asked that Jn.
stead of flowers, donations llfi
made to the Omaha Community
Playhouse 's Henry Fonda
Theater Center Memorial
Born H enry Jaynes Fonda In
Grand Island, Neb., on May 16,
19m, Fonda grew up In Omaha
and got hls start In acting at the
Playhouse with a·blt partlnl925.
The son of a printer, Fonda
quit journalism studies at the
University of Minnesota to study
at the Playhouse under Marlon
Brando's mother, then moved
east to work at the University
Players Guild on Cape Cod.
There he met Margaret Sulla·
Van, first Of hls five Wives, and
Stewart, who later roomed with
Fo!!da at New York's MaC!ISOn
Square Hotel while both worked
on Broadway .
Alter starring with Imogene .
Coca ill "New Faces" In 1934,
Fonda won a $l,®a-week con·
tract With movie producer Wal·
ter Wanger and ·began his !lim
career with ''The Farmer Takes
A Wl1e" In 193;,
Five years and :10 rums later,
he got his t!rst of three Academy
Award nominations for his portrayal or Tom Joad In "The
Grapes
Wrath." Another
would follow In 1957 !or ''Twelve
Angry Men, " In which he played
a juror who slngleljandedly per·
suaded his 11 rolleagoes to ac·
quit a young murder defendant.
In 198l'he was awarded a special lltetlme achievement Oscar. But It was not until this year

Ours."
' I n the New Hampshire com·
munlty of Holderness, whose
• Squam Lake was the setting lor
Fonda's Oscar-winning perter·
mance In "On Golden Pond,"
word or hls death hit hard.
"We feel we've lost an oldtimer from this area, even
though I think It was his first
time here," said Malcom Tay·
lor, president of the Squam
U.kes Association. " He much
preferred .to eat lunch with

or

St.IU.

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I&lt;

&amp; Olfl~e
GIFTS
99 Mitt 51.
Middleport

, NEW Y08K

By HELEN BOTI'EL
DEAR HELEN :
Whatever happened to the baby·
sitter qualities we fonner sitters
wer e taught?
In the past seven y "ars I have
trusted my children to th e cure of 15
or 20 si\ters, many of whom I have
asked notto return.
1
Some of the bad experiences we
d1counter ed include :
uaving the kids alone.
. Si ters fal!in~ aleep while children
. were awake.
·
,
Noluod or drink provided when I'd
leave ihem for !on~ periods at sit,

ter'1llome.
, Re41rriing

tO

' KERMIT'S KORNER
Pomeroy, Ohio

RIDENOOR
·.

a !ouilly destroyed

' Muddllkl abuse.

·
three jobs in the last
years because of sitter
'they either wanted an inin pay or claimed
,
the children that bad_!
up to $55 a
at l ellll than

1 tllw 4Ul1

··:~fo•rd work. Inexpect full·
I'm off and

f.r:;;~::~=======t==z=~~~~;::::;~~
£~
o:#/T

:...'!_~
&amp;.~~~

.

HOUSE COAl: . -

..., .,....-

DELIVERED

Pltt1burgh, Nl I .
Mine Run (Strip)
4 TON MINIMUM'
.

Prices are
. effective
t"ru•
Sept. 1~ 191?

,

PRICE

Pome-:oy ·-:--• ..... ~ ..... ,~. ~ •...•.• ·..••.....• SH.IO Ton

Middleport.&amp;- ~acine ... , • , .• •• , •• , ••.• , ••• S27.DO TOll
Meigs County ••••••• ·•••. ,' •••••••••• : . ~ • •

c.o.D.

·

SUPPLY

&amp;LOHSE
PHARMACY
-~.
We Fill Doctors•
00

that he won an Oscar for his per·
formance In "On Golden Pond"
as Nonnan Thayer, a retired
professor who masked his fear
ot death with grim hUmor. Too
Ul to attend tbe a.wards ceremonies, Fonda wept as he watched
daughter Jane accept the Oscar
on televlslon.
'
Alter his brief, stormy mar·
rlage to Miss SuUavan,. Fonda
m arri ed Frances Seymour ·
Brokaw, mother Jane and Peter, ·who committed suicide In a
mental asylum whlle they were
estranged. Later marriages, to

or

•

'

that his social consciousness
dated !rom his youth, when his
father took him to see the lynch·
lng of a rape suspect.
Fonda also had an explana·
tlon for those who wondered how
a one_tlme Eagle Sl;out and as·
plrlng journalist wound up an
actor.
"It's therapy !or me," he said
late In his lite. "I loved the
theater from the beginning because It gave mea mask. It ain't
me playing a role up thene; I'm
Tom Joad or Mister Roberts or
~ence Darrow."

actress Susan Blanchard and
Italian Countess Afdera Fran·
chettl ended In divorce. In 1966
·he married Shirlee Adams, an
airline stewArdess 28 years .
youllgl!l' than he.
Despite his liberal views, he
feuded !or many years With hls
daughter Jane over her radical
politics and was for a time es- ,
!ranged from both Jane and
Peter.
Fonda's be~t-rell)embered
. turns focused on the quest for
justice and fair play. He told biographer Howard Teichmann

-

1-~'··7

•

'

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• ,

I

deaib of her lmoband. Thul'8day moi'lllug. ~m left are Fonda's chlldreu
Jane, Amy alld Peter, rlg.bt. Fpnda died ThurSday lu a Lui Angeles
IAl&gt; Laserpi!Gto) . ·

· PH.

TOll

992· 332S

V

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Jaumtv.

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epeed .:rOu
lhem fiOing ..
from ... wail&lt; .. '
- ........,. • .~hough~ for lilt .,.._.
Ina gonlla whlcl1 ' - enolilod mon 10

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214 E . Main
992·5130 .Pomeroy

WAID CROSS

SONS STORE

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Fay Sauer, Director
Rev. Robert MeG"
Auoclote Director
NORTHEASTCLUSTER
Rov . Seldon Johnson
Rev. OuaneSyden 1trlcker
Rev . Richard Thomas
ALFRED - Church School 9:30 a.m .:
W oro hi P• 11 '00 A ,M.: UMYF 6 ' 30 p.m .;
UMW , Th'•rd Tu.-,.
-•-· 7:30 p.m . Com·
munion first Sunday .
CHESTER ~ Worship, 9:00 o.m.: Chur·
&lt;h School, 10:00 o&gt;m.: Bible S!udy, Thur·
sd~ , 7:00 p.m.: U,MW. first Thursday,
1:
p.m. ; Co mmunton II rs 1Svn day.
JOI'PA - Worship. 9:30 o.m.; Church
S&lt;hool, 1D:30 o.m.•Bi~le Sludy. Wednesdoy , 7:30p.m.
LONG BOTTOM - Church School,
9:30a .m .; Worship, 7:00p.m ., B;ble
Study, Wednesd~y, 7:30 , p.m .;
UMYF, Wed., 6.00 p.m.. com·
munlon Flrst Sunday.
REEDSVILLE '- Church School ,
9

GRAHAM . UNITED METHODIST ,
' ~tt!J'fl' wg~~~JL: OOA .MChurch
Preaching 9:30 a.m. lirsl arid ,second
School, 9:00 a.m.; Worship, 10:.00
Sundays of each month; third and fourth
A.M.; ChriStian Endeavor , Youth
Sundays each month, worship ser;vice at
Fellowship, 6 :00p.m. ; Bible STudy,
7:30p.m . WednMdoleveni~gs at 7:30 . Wed., 7: 30p.m.
Proie'ondBibleSiu)9'
TUPPERS PLAINS ST . PAUL S VE.NTH•DA¥ AJ) ENliST. Mulberry
Church School, 9:00a.m.; Worship;
Heighls Roo~. Pomeroy .
Michael
10: 00 a.m .; Bible Study, Tues. , 7:30·
Plonkowskl, postor;RIIo White, Sobbolh
p.m.; UMW, Third Tuesday, 7:30
SchoOl Superln!ondent. Sobbolh School
p.m .; Communion first Sunday.
is ol 2 p.m. on Saturday wilh worship
CENTRAL CLUSTER
services following or 3: 1~ p.m .
Rev. Stanley W. Merrifield
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHRev. Richard Rott1emich
Stster Harriett Warner. SUpt. Sunday
Rev. Robert E . Robinson
School , q:30 a .m.; morning worship ,
Rev. Robert Rider, Jr.
10:A5 a.m.
Rev. Robert McGee
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST , David
ASBURY (Syracuse) - Worship,
Monn, minister; WilliOm Snouffer. Sun ·
10:00 a .m .; Church School , 10 :00
day s&lt;hool supl. Sunday scbool , 9:30
a.m .; ,Charge Bible Study, Thurs.,
a .m. ; morning worship 10:30 a.m .
7:30 p .m .; , UMW. 1st Tues., 7: 30;
FIRST SOUTHJRN BAPTIST , 2B2
Choir rehearsal, Wednesday, 6:4.5
Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy: Hershel Me·
p.m .; UMM. ~th Sunday. 6: 30p.m .
Cluro, Sundor. och09l superinlendenl .
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9:00
Syndoy schoo , 9:30a.m. ; morning wora .m .; C04rch School, 10 :00 a .m .;
ship. t0:30; ••enlng worship, 7:30p.m.
Bible St~dy, Tu.esday, 7:30 p.m .;
Mldweekproyersorvlco, 7:30p.m.
·
UMW, Forst Monday, 7:30; UMYF,
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH , Dex· every other Su"day, 6:00p.m . Choir
ler Rd., Rd .. longsvitlo, Rev. A. A. rehearsal, 6:30p.m. Wednesday.
Hughes. Pallor. Sunday Schoof ID o.m • . · FLATWOODS - Church School.
Services on Tuesday, Thursday and Sun·
10:.00 ft.m.; Worship, 1:00 . a .m .;
dqy, 7:30p.m.
Blbto Study, Thursday, 7:1Xl' p.m .;
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Batley
UMYF, Sunday,6:00p.m.
Aui't'Road, Rev. ,Emmett Rawson . por.tor .
FOREST RUN - Worship, 9:00
!iondley Dunn, oupl. Sundoy school, IO
a.m.; Church SChool, 10:00 a.m .;
a.m. Sunday evening service 7:30 : Bible
C~olr Practice, Tuesday, 6:30p.m .;
leoc~lng, 7:30p.m. Thurs·day .
. UMW, fir$! Tuesllay, 7:30p.m .
HEATH (Middleport) - Church
' SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry Sl.,
Syrocuse. Services, 10 a.m. Sunday . School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30
Evening services, Sunday and Wed·
a .m .; Bible Study, Tuesday , 10:00
nesdoy. 7:00·p.m.
a.m .; UMW, 2nd Monday, 7:30;
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
UMM, 3rd Monday, 7: 30p.m .
CHRISTIAN UNION . lawrence Manley , , MINERSVILLE - Worship Ser·
· pastor; Mrs. Russell Voung. Sundoy
vice, 10:00 a .m.; Church School,
School Supl. Sunday S&lt;hool 9:30 o.m. !1 :00_a.m .; UMW, 3rd Wednesday,
E~ning worship, 7:30, Wednesday
1:00 p. m. ; Choir practice, Monday,
prayermeeting, 7:30p.m .
7•30pm .,
MT. MORIIIIH CHURCH · OF GOD,
:: PEARL Cl:iAPEL - Worship Ser·
Racine- Rey. James Satterfield, cstor. VICe, 10:00 a .m .; Church School,
Morning wors~ip, 9'; 45 a.m.; undoy
!1 :00 a.m .; UMW, 2nd Tuesd~y, 7:30
ochool, tO;~S a.m.: evening worship, 7.
p.m.; UMYF last Tuesday , 7:30
Tueldoy , 7:30 p.m., ladles prayer p.m ..
m"ling: Wednesday, 7:30p.m. YPE.
POMEROY ~ Church SChool,
· MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner 9: 15 a.m.; Worship service, 10:30
Sixth and Palmer, the Rev. Mark. Me·
a .m.; Choir rehearsal, Wednesday,
Clung, Sunday school, 9:15 a.m.; Don
7:30p.m.; UMW, 2nd Tuesday, 7·30
White, Sunday School, superintendent . . p.m .;. UMM, last Sunday, 7: 00a .m .:
John ~oibel. Sr .. ossl. supt. Morning .. UMYF, Sunday.6:110p,m .
Worahlp , t0:15o.m. ¥oulhm"llng, 7:30
ROCK SPRINGS ' CHurch
p.m' Wednosdc)y. Including woe lois
School, 9:15 a.m.; Worship, 10:00
; , . r beavers. junior .astronaut• . on.d a.m .; Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:30
jun;or·onct· -lor high BYF: choir, proc·
p,m.; UMYF (Seniors), Sunday ,
lice, B&gt;30 .p.m. W~nes doy: prayer . 6:00 p.m .: . (Juniors), every other
meeling and Bible sludy , Wednosday.
Sunday, 6:00 p.'m.
.7:30p.m .
RUTLAND - Church School, 9: 45
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mickl~rl . 5!h
a.m .; Worship, 11 :00 a.m .; UMW
· and Moln, Bob Mellon , minisler , S&lt;oH
(Evon;ng Circle), ' 2nd Wednesday ,
Saltsman, o11o&lt;iolo mlnisl~r, Bible
7:90; UMW, 2nd Thursday, 1:00 p.m .
Schpof, 9;30 a. m.: morniDg worship, . SALEM .CENTER Church
'10:30 a. m.; evening servko. 7:00p.m. · School, 10:00 a.m.; Wor~Hfp, 7:00
cloy Bible Sludy ond yovlh II'""P
p.m,
moet.i rtal. 1:00p.m.
SNOWII,ILLE Worship, 9:00
MIDOLEPORT CHURCH OF • THE
a.m .; Church School 10:00 a.m.
NAZARENE, R... Jim Brooma, poslor:
SOU;J"HEIINCLIJSTER
· lilt WhHe , s... cia, s&lt;hool supl. S&lt;mdoy
Rev. James M. Clark
schOol. 9:30 a.m.: ~"'I worship,
, Rev. Mark W. Flynn
1D:30 a.m.: S,.lld
evangeltsrlc
Rev. Florence Smith
•.-ling, 7:00 P·m·
meeting,
APPLE GROVE-ChurchSchoot,
•w.dnoidov..7P.m.
·
9:00a.m.; Worship, 10:00 a.m. 1111
UHITfD I'IIESIYTEittAN MINISTRY OF
and 3rd Sundllys); UNIW, 2nd
MEIGS COUNTY. Rov. Wanda Johil1011.
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.; Prayer
. . . _ , Herrold Johnson, dlrecror of
meeting, Wednesday, 7:00p.m .
education.
'
BETHANY- wontllp, 9:1108.1!1.;
, HAIIIttSONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN, Wcw·
Church School, 10;110 a.m.; Bible
llhilo Sorvtco, 9 a.m,; Cllurdl S&lt;Nol, Study; Wednesday, 10:110 a.m.; Dar·
10:11 •· m.
cas Women's Feil-'llp, Wed-'
II1IDDLIPOIT PIIESBYTliRIAN. O...rdl f1Hd.IY, ll:OOa.m.
.._,., 9:00 a.m .. Morning -.hlp,
CARMEL - Church School, 9:30
i!O:IS. lflolo ~TuMcloy. 10 a.m.:
a.m.; Wonhfp. 10:4.5 a.m.; ~'"' allll
fllllll . . ., 1hu
, 7:30p.m.
4111 SUndaYS) i Fetl-'llp 4!111111'
, l.'tlACUSE . IUT
UNITED
wlltl Sutton, lhlrll Thui'SIIIIy, 6:30
Cirufdr. Church School, p.m.
. . ·
'!'O'!'Iftll ,worthlp, 11:30 a.
lAST LETART- CIIUrCII School,
T..-.r. IOe....: Junior
9:00 a,m .; .Worshlp, 10:00 a.m. I 2nd
'I'DUIIIGfouti, Sul!doy, 6
and 4111 Sundays); UMW, lilt
, TUesday, 7:30p.m •.

,.

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com ptete

. ·~~

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Autom~tive
~
· · 7. .
Serv•ce
Locust &amp; Beech Street

99H92t M iddleporl

Aa'D
HOttlE
IW1

NaliOnwlde Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0 .
BtMW. ~a in
992·2)11 Pom~roy

;-niiiii¥!

and
Equl'pment ,Sale~
serv1ce
Rutland, Ohio 4S77S

J . wm . " Bill" Brown, Owner

Phone 1614) 747 ?777

SENtiNEL

.... ~·

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

THE DAILY
Middleport
Pomerov . 0

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liltot"""'
...
tmes
when
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TRINITY CHURCH . Rev. W . H. Perrin.
pastor ; O.bble Buck , Sunday schooi
supt. Churth School, 9:15a.m .; worshlr.
service, 10:30 o.m. Choir rehearaa ,
Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. under direction of.
Allee N.eose .
GroceriesPOMEROY CHURCH OF THE
GeneratMorchandiso
NAZARENE: Corner Union and Mulberry
Ricine 949· 1550
Rev. Virgil Byrer, pastor. Glen McClung ' ~~------------.....1
asst .. pastor. Clyde' Henderson, paste;
emorolus. Sundoy S&lt;hool, 9:30 a.m..
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Poslor,
GIMl McClung, supt.; morning worship ,
Rev . John Evana. Sundoy achool , 10
10:30 a .m .: evenir,g tervice , 7:00; miG·
"~
a.m.; Sun-..,
worahi p, tt a .m .;
week serv Ice, Wed nesdoy , 7:00 p.m .
Childr.., · ~ church, 11 o.m. : Sun~
GRACE EPISCOP-'l CHURCH - 326 E. . evening service, 7:00 p.m.; Wednesday
Moln St., Pomeroy . Sunday services Holy
evenlng~ung ladlea ouMillory, 6 p.m.
Communion on the first Sunday of eoch Wednes
family worship , 1:00 p.m.
monlh , and combined wllh morning
HAZEL OMMUNITV CHURCH , Near
prayer on the thlrcl Sunday . Morning
Long Bottom, Edsel Han, ~tor. Sun..h..
prayer and sermon on otl other Sundays
h 1 930A M w h 10 30 -v
of the month. Church School and nurse~
sc 00 •
· .:
ors P :
a .m .:
cora provided . Coffee hour In the Par is
Prayer
mHtl7:30FREEWILL
p.m. Thurtdoy
. , CorMIDDlEPORT
BAPTIST
Hall immediately following the ser..-ice.
ner Ash and Plum : Leslie Heyman,
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
pas lor. Bob Grubb, 011 islonl poslor.
Main St. Neil Proudfoot , pastor, Bible
Sunday School, 10 a. m. : Morning war·
sct\ool , 9:30 a .m.: morning wor1hlp,
stllp, 11 a . m .: W.dneaday and Sofurdoy
10:30 a .m .: Youth meetingi, 6:30 p.m .;
Evening SerVIces , 7~30 p.m.
evening worship , 7:30. ;'i.ctnesday night
MEIGS
·
prayer moe!lng ond Bible sludy , 7:30
COOPE~ATIVEPARISH

•

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EU.IS &amp; SONS SOHIO

,~

p.THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Bunernul
Ave.. Pomeroy . Envoy . ond M,... Ray
Wining. officers In charge. Sunday·
holiness meeling, 10 a.m.: Sunday
Scl)pol. I 0:30a.m. Sundoyschoolleoder,
VPSM, Elol1e Adams. 7:30 p.m .,
salvation meeting. various spea~ers and
music 'J)eclols. Thursday- tO a .m . to 2
p.fT'
I. lodies
, ed
7 30 Homeltogue, ell women In·
Vlf
;
:
/..m. pro~er meetlnn
• and
Blbt est ud1y . ev. NoeI arman. teacher.
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHAPEL, Roulo t , Shade. Bible school. 7
p.m . Thurtday; worship ser..-lce, 8 p.m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE I CHURCH OF
CHRIST, :ZOO W, Moln Sl., 992·5235. 1/ocol
music. S•nday worship, .10 a.m. ; Bible
studY, 1Blbol .m.;~ntiip, 6 p.m. Wednescloy I e sluBit' 7 p.m.
.
OLD DEXTER B BlEhCHRISTIAN CHUR·
CH, Rev.Rolph Smil , poslor. S~ndoy
school, 9:30 o.m .. Mrl. Worley,Fro"cls,
sup8flnfendent. Pr~tllng •erviclts, flnt
~hoolltllr,d Sundays lollo~lng Sunday

,

Pom eroy

992·2955

Homelite Saws

Golden

116 S. seCo nd

Proscriptions

AUCTION SERVICE

""'-~ ~

ViRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

'

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

died Thul'8day afer a long battle wllll heart disease In
FONDA DIES - Actor Henry Foada, shown '!l'illl
actress Katharine Hepburn In a scene from hls Oscar- . Los Angeles. He was 7'1 . lAP Laoerpholo)
winning performance In the film "On
Pond, ;,

PhDn.e 992·3480

Pom!roy

W-

H.

·

1101111
at Ule end of an evening out,
with J11ter
supposedly in charge:

fO!D'

DEAR MOTHER:
A day-care center ( which provides
a bus to pick children up at school) is
your best bet. But, if one of the kids
is pre-school, therefore full·time, ex·
peel to pay about one third of your
salary for sitting. ·
·
It's rough, but it's still less than $1
an hour. Would you work lor~hat?­

.

r.~

J..hn F. Funz, t.A11 r.
Ph. H2·21Dl

~~: .~

I1UU&amp;.
aDIHING ~.~n~~r

DE;ATH IN· TilE FAMILY - Shirlee Fonda1 second m;m riJI!t,
widow of actor Henry fonda, galllers wllll the actor's rblldren oat.lcle
.. her home In Bel Airsectlon of
to speak to the pre~~~
the

Helen help us:

Chaster

MEIGS nRE

·
\
~ CENTER, INC.
~r(.,
u

MIOOWORT ·
BOOISJORE
Church
supj,ttes

11

ACffiR HENRY FONDA died Thur.;day after a long battle wllll heart
disease, according to Larry Baum, a spokesman for Cedars Sinal Medical
Center. He was 7'1. (AP Laserphoto)

Ray Rlns

·~ '.

The Interested Businesses Listed On This
MARK 'y STORE ~ ·
Middleport
j1

..._.
~·~,

~pi

been the bridge
-ond·

10 ,... - · 0&lt;

y.., .....0, your foml~ Mods. the
IPirttual Rlmutltion and tnrtchment
your ploo:&lt; of WO&lt;shlp ""pr&lt;Mdo. The
rtiOUICtt Qllned CWI 1PM the week.

POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS
. TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
Harr isonville Rood; Eorl FleJds, ~''or;
Vincent C. Waters . Ill , mlnlaler · Herrna~
,Block , superintendent , SundaY, School Henry Eblin , Jr.. Sunday S&lt;hool Supl.
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.; Morning Wor·
9:30o.m .: evening ser\llce. 7 p.m.: Wad·
ship 11 o . m.: Sunday ev811lng 1ervlce,
.nesdoy Bible StudY , 7 p.m.
CHESTER CHURC::H OF THE NAZARENE. 7:30 .m.; Prayer M•tlng, Thundoy, 7:30
Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor. Fronk Rilf le, p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Supt. Sunday School, 9:30a.m. Worahlp
kr ...... O'f' l llf ('I n BOll Soc.,,
Not Pentecoatal , ~ev . George Oiler,
service, 11 a .m. and 7:30 p.m. Prayer
Thur~
Frldoy S8turday
pastor . Warship service Sunday, 9:45
meeting , Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
• Psalms • Psalms
. LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST CHUR· a .m.; Sunday school. 11 o.m.: wonhlp
1.. 2:1·7 143:1 ·1 2
CH , Rev. Robert Miller, pastor: lloyd· serv ice . 7:30 P·!JI· Thursday proyer
meeting , 7:30p.m .
,
Wright , Directo r of Christian Education .
MT . HERMON Unlled Brelhren In
Su~~or School. 9:30a. m .; Mo.rning Wor·
sh1p. 0:30 a . m .; Choir Practice , Sun· Christ Church . Rev. Robert $ander1,
LETART FALLS - Worship, 9:00. Wednesday evening Bible study ,
day , 6:30 p.m.; Evening Worship , 7:30 posror: Don Will. loy leader. located In
a.m.; Church School. 10:110 a.m .
7:30.
p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study. Texas Community off CR 82. kndoy
MORNING STAR - Wor!hlp, 9:30
school. 9:30a.m.: Morning worship Mr·
7:30p.m.
a.m. ; Church School, 10:30 a.m.;
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev . R.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST , Chorles vice . 10:-45 a .m.; evening preaching ser·
B;fileStudy, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
D. Brown, . pastor. sunday School,
Russell , Sr .. ministef; Rick Macomber , vice second and fourth Sundays, 7:30
Church 9:30a .m .; morning worship 10 : 45 ;
MORSE CHAPEL p.m .; Christian End....,or, flrl't and third
sup! . Sunday school . 9:30a.m.: wonhlp
School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 11 :00 youth service, 6:45 p.m.; evening
Sundays. 7:30 p.m . WMinesday proyer
service. 10:30 a .m. Bible Study , Tuesday ,
worship, 7:30 p.m .; prayer and
a.m.
meetin9 and Bible study, 7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
praise, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
PORTLAND - CHurch School,
JEHOVAH'S WITNES~ES, 37319 Stole
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST,
7:110 p.m .; Worship, B:OO p.m .;
Roule 12~ (One mile 0011 of Rullond).
Rev. Marvin Markin, pastor; Steve · CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Por·
UMIIF, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
Sunday , Bible lecture 9 :30 a . m .; Wat.
tlond Racine Rood . William Roush ,
Little Sunday school sup!. Sunday
RACINE WESLEYAN - Church
atudy. 10:20 o . m .; Tuesday,
chtower
poster
.
Lindo
Evon
s.
churctl
school
dirac:
·
SChool, 10: 00 a.m .; Worship, 11 :00 school , 10 a .m .; morning worshif· tl
Bible study , 7:30 p.m .: Thursday ,
to r. Church school , 9:30a .m.; morn ing
a .m. Sunday evening worship, :30.
a.m.; UMW, 4th Monday, 7:30; Han·
Theocratic School. 7:30 p.m .: Service
worship, 10:30 a .m .: Wedneadoy
Prayer meeting and Bible study,
dmaldens of· the Lord, tst Wed·
Meollng , 8:20p.m.
evening prayer ser..-ices . 7:30p.m.
nesday, 7: 00 p.m .; Men's Prayer
Thursday, 7:30p.m. ; youth m eeting
RUT~AND FREEWill BAPTIST Church BETHlEHEM BAPTIST . Re\1 . Earl S~uler ,
Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Breakfast, Wednesday, 7:00a.m. ·
Salem St ., Rutland . Donald Korr , Sr .
poslor . Warstlip ser..-ice, 9:30a .m . Sun·
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
SUTTON - Church School, '1:30
pastor: Bud Stewart, •uperintendent.
day ac hool . 10:30 o .m. Bible Study and
a.m.; morning worship, 10:45 a.m. CHURCH , 383 N. 2nd Ave, Mid·
Su!"cloy School , 10 a .m .; e..-enlng wor·
prayer ser..-ice Thundoy , 7:30p.m.
dleport.Sunday School, 10:110 a. m ,
· tlirst and third Sundays) ; fellowship
CARLETON CHURCH . Kingsbury Rood . shtp. 7:30p.m. Wednesday evening Mr·
Sun. &amp; Wed. Evening Services 7:30
dinner with' Carmel, third Thursday,
... ice , 7:30p.m.
Jimmie Evans·. pastor. Sunday school ,
6
OF GOD of Pr&lt;&gt;ohocy . tocored
P· rifE~·Tv Christian Church, ~ 9:30 a.m .. Rolph Carl . superinte,ndent ; onCHURCH
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
theO. J . Wh ite Rood oH highway 160.
even ing worship , 7:30 p.m . Prayer
Liberty Ave ., Pomeroy. Sunday
Oliver Swain, Superintendent. Sun·
Sunday School 10 a.m. Superintendent
meeting , Wednesday , 7:30p .m .
School tO a.m. ; Worship 7:30. Wed·
day school 9 : 30 every week .
Johr:~ Lo..-edoy. First WednHday night of
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Tom
nesday Service, 7: 30p.m .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION.
monttl CPMA ser..-lcea. second Wed·
Rictioson . pastor ; Wallace Damewood ,
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD,
Sunday School. 9:30 a.m.; evening
nesday WMB mMtlng , third through fifth
Sundoy School Superintendent. Worship
Rev . R. E . Robinson, pastor . Sunday
service, 7:30 p.m . . Wednesday
youth service. George Croyle, postor.
service
a)
9
a
.m
.
Bible
SchoollO
a
.m.
school, 9: 30a.m.; worship service,
prayermeetmg, 7: 30p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - S70 Gran1
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH . Rev .
11 a.m.; evening service, 7:00; youth
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHUR ·
Sl .. Middloporl: Sunday Scfloet. 10 a. m.:
. Theron Durham , pastor. Sunday School
serv ice..Wednesday, 7:00p .m. •
CH OF CHRIST, Duane Warden,
morning worahlp. 11 o. m. evening wor ·
at 9:30a.m .; Morning ' worship at 10:30
m inis1er. Bible class, 9:30 a.m .;
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
ahip , 7 p . m. Wednesday evening Bible
a . m . Ttlursdoy services at 7:30p . m .
morning worship, 10:30 a.m .;
CHURCH, ~ Robert E . Musser,
study and P.roye,- meeting. 7 p . m. Af·
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bold
pastor. Sunday school. 9:30 a.m .;
evening worsh;p, 6:30 p.m. Wed·
filiated w1th . Souther-n Baptist ConKnob . located on County 1Rood 31 . Rev .
Paul Musser , supt.; morning wor·
riesday Bible study, 6:30p.m .
vention .
Lowrance Gluasencamp,. pastor : Rev .
ship, 10 :30; Sunday evening servi ce,
NEW STIVERSVItLE COM·
8RADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTRoger Willfoossistont pastor . Preactling
7:00; mid· week service, Wed·
MUN lTV Church, Sunday School
State Route 12-4 and County Rood 5.
services. Sunday 7: 30 p.m., prayer
service, 9 :45a.m .; Worshlp .s ervice,
nesday , 7 p.m .
Mark Seevers , miniater: Sunday School
meeting . Wednesday , 7:30 p.m.. Gory
t0:30; Evangelistic Service, 7:30
SYRACUSE
CHURCH OF
THE
Superintendent , Steve Pickens. Sun;day
Griffiti'l . leode Youth groups. Sunday
p.m . Wednesday ; Prayer meeting,
NAZARE~E . Rev . James B. Kittle, pastor;
School, 9:30 a .m .; mornin9 worship ,
eveing, 6:30p.m . with Roger and Violet
7: 30. Thursday :
l
Gordon Winebrenner. Sunday School
10:30 o .m.: evening wars.,tp. 7 p.m.
Willford as leaders . Communion ser·
Superintendent. Sunday schOol 9:30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Wednesday worstlip , 7 p.m .
vices finl Sunday each month .
Pomeroy· Harrisonville Rd.; Robert
a .m.: morning warship. 10:30 a .m .':
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER .WHITE 'S CHAPEL. Coolville RD . Rev .
Purtell, pastor; Bill McElroy, Sun·
evangelistic ser..-ice, 6 p.m. Prayer and
George'• Creek Rood . Rev . C. J. Lemley
Roy Deeter. pastor. Sunday school 9:30
Praise Wednesday . 7 p.m.: youth
day school sup!. Sunday school, 9:30
pastor: John Fellur8. superintendent:
a .m.: worship service. 10:30 a .m. Bible
meet ing, 7 p .m .
,
a . m.; worship service 10:30 a .m. ;
Church sctlool, 9:30a.m .: momlng wor·
study and prayer service. Wednesday,
EDEN' UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
sunday worship service, 7: 30 p . m .
ship . 10:30: evening service, 7 p.m. Bible
7:30p.m.
Elden R. Bloke, poslor. S..ndoy SchoollO
Monday and Tuesday evening ser·
Study Thurs., 7 p.m. Clan~• for all oges.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Eugene
a .m.: Robert Reed . sup!. : Morning ser·
vices, 7 :30 each evening.
Nursery provid~ for worship services.
Underwood , pastor: Herb Elliott . Sunday
mon , 11 o .m .; Sunday night ser..,ices
ST . JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH,
ST. P~UL LUTHERAN CHUIICH, Comer
school supt . Sunday school. 9:30a.m.;
Ctlristlan End.ovor, 7:30p.m.: Song ser·
Pine Grove. The Rev . William Mid·
of Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy .
morning worship ond comunion . 10:30
vice, 8 p.m .; Preaching 8:30 p.m . Mid·
dleswarth, Pastor. Church services
The Re\1 . William Mlddleaworth, P01tor.
a .m.
week Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
9:30a .m. Sunday School10 :30 a.m.
Sunday School at 9:45 a .m. and Churctl
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH.
p.m.; Alvin Reed , lay leader.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
Services 11 a .m.
Amos Tillis . postor; Danny Til lis . Sunday
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST . locoled al
CHRIST, Paul Prall, pastor, S•nday
SACRED HEART , Rov. Folhor Paul D.
School Supt . Sunday Sctlool , 9:30a.m.;
Rutland on New lima Road , next to
school, 9: 30a.m ., Larry Haynes, s.
Welton , pastor. Phone 992·2825. Sotur· ·
followed by morning worship. Sunday
Forest Acre Park; Re\1 . Ray Cle..-enger,
S. Supt.; morning worship, 10 :30
day evening Mon. 7:30; Sunday Man, 8
evening service . 7:00 p.m. Prayer
pastor; Sunday school , 10:30 a .m.: wor·
a.m.
and 10 o .m.; Confession, Saturday. J.
meeting , Wednesday . 7:00p.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
ship 7:30 p .m.Bible Study, Wednesday,
7:30p .m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev. Thomas H . 7:30p.m. : Saturday night prayer service ..
VICTORY BAPTIST - S25 N. 2nd St
NAZARENE . Re11 . llo~d D. Grimm . Jr ..
CoWer, pastor. Martha
Wolfe,
7:30p.m.
Middleport. James E. Keesee , posto;:
postor . Su nday sc hoo l, 9:30a .m .: war·
Chairman of the Board of Christian
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Roger
Sundoy morning worship. 10 a .m.;
ship service, 10:30 a .m _ voung people's
WatsOn , po1tor; Crenson Pratt, Sunday
Life. Sunday School, 9:30a.m .; mor·
evening service, 7; Wednesday evening
service. 6 p.m. Evangelistic service , 6:30
ning worship, 10 :30; Sunday evening
schoolsupt. Morning warstlip, 9:30 o .rri .;
worship. 7 p.m .; Vis itation. TtlursdcJY ,
p.m. Wednesday 1er11ice , 7:00p.m .
wor.ship, 7:30 p.m . Prayer meeting,
Sundoy school. 10:30 o .m.: evening ser·
6,30p.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Corner of
Wednosday, 7:30p.m .
vice. 7:30 .
TRINITY Christian Auembly. Coolville
Second . Pastor Fronk Lowther. Sunday
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Rev . Tom
RACINE FIRST BAPT.IST, Don L .
- Gilbert Spencer. pastor. Sunday
school. 9:-45 a .m .: worship service, II
Walker, Pastor, Robert Sm;th, Sun·
Dooley: Joe Sayre, Sunday School
sctlool. 9:30a.m .: morning worahip, 11
a .m. and 7.:30 p .m . Weekly Bible Study .
Superintenent. Sunday school. 9~ -45
day school supt .; Sunday school,
a .m. Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m.:
Wednesdoy , 7:30p.m.
9:30 a.m.; morning worship, 10 :40 o.m.;.eveni38 worship , 7:30p.m. Prayer
midweek ,proyer. service Wedneaday,
• MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST . Miller
a .m. ; Sunday evening worship, 7:30;
meet1ng, 7: p. ~ . Wednesday.
St .. Malon . W. Va . Eugene l. Conger.
] :~OU~T Olive Community Church
mini ster . Sunday Bible Study 10 a .m .:
Lawrence Bush, pastor; Mo)( Folmer . Sr:
Worship II a .m . and 7 p.m. Wednesday
Superintendent . Sundoy School ond mor·
' Bible Study , vocal music , 7 p.m.
nlng worship , 9:30a.m . Sunday evening
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - 12 Norlh
service , 7 p.m.; Youth nieeting and Bible
Third St. . Cheshire . Independent , fun·
July is over and so is th~ month where we remember we are
study. Wednesday . 7 p.m .
domental services. Sunday e11ening 7:30
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Roule 7 on
Am e ricans. It's a term not too highly prized in the world of politics
p.m. Pastor Rev . Or. Robert Persons.
Pomeroy bypass . Rev . Robert Smith, Sr ..
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding
over the world and also by many Amerloaris who selfishly demean the
pastor; Rev . James Cundiff, o11istant
Lone , Masa~ . W. Vo. Rev . Ronnie B.
nation. Mostly they are called liberal thinkers who feel only the gover ·
pastor. Sunday School. 9:30a .m.: mor·
Rose . Pastor . Sunday School 9:-45 a .m .;
nment and themselves know what Is best for everyone . Ne vertheless
ning wonhip. 10:30 a . m.; e\lenlng wor·
Morning Worshi p 11 ,a .m. Evening Ser·
the normal ev.eryday peoples of the world still look to America as the
ship. 7:30. Women 's Fellowship .
11 ice 7:30 p.m . Wednesday Women' s
land of the Free and the land ol Opportunity . People are try ing to
Tuesdays, 10 a . m.; Wednesday nigtlt
Ministries 9 a .m. (meeting and prayer.
sneak into these shores of freedom any way they c an and that mean s
prayer serv ice. 7 ~ 30 p.m .
Prayer ond Bible Study 7 p.m.
mostly illegally .
FAITH BAPTIST Church. Mason , meet
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Why do they want in and many of our own cities want to tear down
at United Steel Workers Union Hall
CHRISTIAN UNION . The Rev . William
this land we call America? As we look 1oour founding father s we f ind a
Ra ilroad Street . Mason. Morning wor:
Campbell . postor . Sunday SchOol . 9:30
great difference of opinion among them about GOd. indiv idual r ights
ship 9:30a .m ., Sunday School10:30c .m.
a .m.; James Huqhes , supl ., e ven'lng ser·
and the Bible. We find they believed in God and wanted God to be a
Evening Service . 7 p.m . Proyer meeting
11ice . 7:30 p.m. Wednesday evening
part of our beginnings. y.Je see they were not all in favor of equality as
Wednesday. 7:30 p .m . MidWeek Bible
prayer meeting. 7:30p .m. Youth prayer
we see it tOday . II was not equality for all but a striving loward that
Sludy . Thursday . 7 p.m.
·
servl'c eeoch Tuesday.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev. Nylo
end. The 1houghts of that day ~re not the thoughts of today. We have
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Lelorl, W .
Borden . · pastor. Cornelius Bunch
Vo .. Rt . 1, Mark Irwin . pastor . Worship
grown in many ways even as we l"laveslid backwards in others.
superintendent . Sunday tchool . 9:30
services , 9:30 o.m.; Sunday school , 11
As we look at America we see a nation dolled with schools, chur·
a .m.; aecond and fourth Sundays war.
o .rn .; evening worship , 7:30 p.m.
ches, houses, factories, ball parks, shops, and monuments to freedom ,
ship service at 2:30p.m .
l
Tuesday cottage proyer meeting and
work and those who gave their all In many areas. Amer ica was fo'un·
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourlh and
Bible atudy . 9:30 a .m . Won hip service,
ded on the ;ndependence of the people with as tittle ;nterference from
Main St ., Middleport . Re..- . Colvin Min·
Wednesday , 7:30p .m .
the government as possible. Sad to say the ullra ·liberal leftist or
nil , pastor . Mn . Elvin Bumgardner
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH maybe socialist types want the government involved In everything
sup1. Sunday school. 9:30a.m .: worshiP
Walnut and Henry Sts ., Ravenswood , W.
th~t !ouches our lives and living and God as well. Mostly God is to be
service . 10:45 a .m .
r
· Va . The Rev . George C. Weir ick , po1tor.
;gnored or considered nothing. This Is probably why this America ol
IIURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. : Sunday war·
ours appears to be in the trouble 11 is In right now.
CHURCH , Roulo I . Shade. Post'!! Don
ship , 11 a.m.
July ~th Is known as Independence Day but we c;tizens today are
Block. Affiliated with Southem _..,tist
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH . now locolod
not free and Independent. The courts seom to have taken over. Many a
Convention. S~ndoy school . 1:30 p .m.;
on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25, near
trial is held becamse a man's word Is no looger his bond. Put it in
Sunday worshtp , 2:30 p.m . Thursday
Flatwoods; Rev. Blackwood. pastor. Ser·
writing or I do not bet;,ve you . TOday we find the Government w;th' its
evening Bibl, study . 7 p.m.
..- ices on Sunday at 10:30 a .m . and 7:30
P&lt;NTECOSTAL ' ASSEMBLY , Racine.
fingers ;n our school, hospi1als, roads, ilou!leS, shops, factories, etc.
p.m. with Sunday school, 9:30a.m . Bible
RoJte 124 , Williom Hobock , pottor. Sun·
sludy , Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
It's an attitude of g;mme someltling lor free and "I GOT RIGHTS"
d~yschool . 10o.m .: Sunc:fay.....,ingser·
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
with no sense of responsibility. As we look at God, the Bible aM our
'o'ICe , 7:00p.m . Wednesday lhen ing ser·
CHRIST - Sl . Rl. 338 Anl~ully . Poslor,
forefathers, we can see they wanted as little governme"t interference
11ice ot 7.
Rev . Fretnklin Oickens.Su
morning ,
as was possible , aM the lndivldua.f was everything . America's un· '
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Don Cheadle
10 A.M. Sunday evening, 7: . Thursdciy
derstand;ng !hat the individual and 111e family was to educate, work.
Supt. Sunday Sc:hool. 9:00 o .m. Morn iog
evening 7:30.
play and worship their way because1hel' knew what was best for the;r
Worship, 10:30 o .m . Prayer Service
STIYERSYILLE COMMUNITY BAPTIST
community and family. They thought that God gave them a mind,
alternate Sundays.
'
CHURCH,
Pastor
Robert
'
&amp;yors.
Sunday
·
strength and free will and said W!lf'Shlp me and take care of the earth I
MIDDLEPORT PENrkOSTAL, Third
SchooiiOa.m.;
Worshlp5ervico11
a.m
.:
h~ve given you. As God Is removed more and more from out ol .
Ave .. the Rev ~ Clork Iaker: pastor. Carl
Sunday evening servlce.,7:30 p.m.: W~­
everylfay living ;t ;seasv to see He II being push«! into the church and .
Nol!ingham , Sunday ~I S..pl. Sun·
nosdoY ovenlngservlco 7:30p.m.
nome onty and Is forgotten. Every nation that has or has tried to
cloy School 10 o . "'· - clones for oil
IND~PENDENT HOliNESS CHURCH ,
remove God from the dally actlvHy 111.SC/loot, shop, factory, street,.
,a ges; hefling Mrvkn. 6:00. Wed·
'INC. - Poor! S!., Middleporl. Rov.
and govemmen!S, etc., hat fallen by tile waySide. ·
· '
.
nesdoy S~dy , 7:30 ~t.tn . Youth services,
O'Dell Munley, pqslor; Sundoy school ,
7:30p.m, Fridor. ; ·
July Is ended but Amerl~. foUnded on the premise man with God
9:30a.m.; MDn\lng warship 10:30 a.m.:
ECCLESIA FElLOwsHIP , 128 Mill 's1 .. .
at his side can COIIQ- all end Improve all, needs to return to tile
even,lng worship, 7:30 p.m. Tueodoy,
Middleporl . ~astor It Brother Chuck M&lt;·
' creator GOd side by sljle wlltl man. Let the government take care of
12:30 p.m . Women's prOyer mev•ing;.
Pherson. ~ Scl&gt;ool 01 10 o. m. Sor·
nllllonef defense and diplomatic relati~~M with nations. Let God ~nd
~;J-:m~ rise Mt"Vlce, W~nesdoy ;
vices Sunday evening ol7 p.m. and Wed· ,
•man lloke care of family, !lOme •
Cfl!'lmun;ty with all Its problems
nesdoy all p.tlt.
,
·
RilfLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH QF
and lovsarrd happtrwa. l..t'l let God be God to the ~ommon man and ·
ANTIQUITY IAPTIST, Rov: Earl Shuler
JESUS CHRIST. Elder Jom01 Mitior. Bible
the' not so common man found en the street and neighborhoods and in
poslor. Somdor school9:30 o.m.: Cllurch
, sludy, Wodnoodav, 7:30 p.m.; S..nda,
' the family. Gall In tile I I - at Amerlclnshal mllde this land great. Let
service. 7 f· ~ ·: youth· meetint. 6
SchOol, 10 a .m. SundaY night service ,
us keep God pretfnt• ...,. Rev. William H. Nllddteswarth.
p.m.fuooday ltble Sludy, 7 p.m.
7:30p.m.

' ~eftfo·

Serntonette

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... _, _-.;,_ ~ .i

�8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

. ~-Fridaj,

Ohio ·
,.:

/

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.,us. 13,1982 .

Ohio ..

•
The uptight and the l~id back

.

-

·.Dealing ·wiJ~ depression:

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1.

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••

.,!)eY

cope

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f

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By PAUL RAEBURN . '
' verslty has lilentll!ed certaiJi chlld·
AP Scleace Writer .
renwboarewhathecalls"llllant,"
AT~A (AP) -The knack of or reluctant tolnteractwlthotbl!rs.
JteePing calm UJ'Ider stresa may be
Slioml said that be ancj Kag~
sometblrig chlldren are born with
tlilJ1II, they are tal~ jlbout thi!

.!
:
:1
•,
1

!

and thOse whO can't
rna; same thJJW.!even
have l
sutrer frllm depression later In lite, given It dltfb-ent
1•
a scientist says. · ·
' ' The ld~al IS tha
qualltr, ' '
Stephen Suomi o1 the University -w!Je!ber vigilance or Inability lei ,
of WISconsin told a meeting o1 the : •haOOle stress ·or a tendency to de- : : •
International Prlmatoioglcal So- pression; may be a genetically de- • •
clety. on Thursday that monkeys 1' 'tetlnuned 'cl)a!I\Clel'lstlc. .
•
::
and possibly people - tend to fall 1 Butthat doesn't mean that people "·
Into two groups he calls the ''up- who .react badly to stress cannot
tight" and the "laid back."
. Je~ to haild,le
Suomi said.
•
In experiments With monkeys, he
There's no questl&lt;!n that even If : .
has found that their abWty or lnablj· there Is a genetic component - ; :
tty to handle stress ts a qllj\llty tlult whlcl)_I believe there Is -you have, : ;
remains constant for long periods', · to consider enytronmental lac- , '
perhaps aU their lives.
tors,:' he sald. "U~ what clr· : ·
It Is slmpJe.t o teD which category cumstances can yOII change? · ;
an animal' ts In by subjeet!ng tt 'to That's one o1 the things we're try· : :
stress, such as removal from Its so- lng to lind out."
:
Suomi has found 'that monkeys : ,
eta! group, Suomi said.
1-le IS riow learning that measuri!. react almost exactly Uke human be- : •
ment of hOrmone levels, ~- lngs to many ant!-depr~sant
larly ~rt!sol, may be used to , drugs, and that they rope •With : :
classify monkeys. Eentually tt may stress better It they experience It In : ,
be possible to Identify uptlgbt and · the'company of a partner or a social •
lald·back monkeys- and pe9ple- group.
_
With a simple blood test. ·
"If put In a stressf\il situation, ·,
suomi said In an tptervlew that ·:~_ you've got to have 'f riends With •
he~ has evidence "that thOse feyqli," Suomi said.
males whO shOw depression as ado- · '· He said that despite the s!mllarl· ,
lescents have an unusually high . tlesbetweentherhesusmonkeyshe ! ,
likelihood of being Inadequate • studies and human beings, the find- ! ,
mothers, not taldng care of their lngs·WIIh monkeys may not all bold
kids." ·
.
true with humans.
,
advan,t age of· knowing early · ' "I'm the first to admit that mon· : ~
In Ufe that an Individual wiD have keys are not furry little hurnails · •
problems later, Suomi said, that . with l!IDs," Suomi said. "Whlle we • •
It allows the Individual to be treated don't know exactly what the lmpll· ; .
before the problem becomes cat!QDS for humans are, there are : :
serious.
cel'talnly. sorne.lessons learned and ' :
• some reasonable possibilities of' • •
Jerome Kagan of Harvard Unl· . inuch more dirEct comparisons"

·r ·

eyeH on ihe fascade of an allract!oo allhe Ohio State Fair In Columbus.

The midway, billed as "The Wor!d'i Largest", has over 1Z5 attracdou
ranging from a circus to darl games. (APJ..aserpholo)

The

'

Lively gubernatorial campaign
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) that Celeste "wants to raise your
Ohio's Democratic and Republican
taxes. Increasing taxes on business
gubernatorial candidates have
sounds good, but It doesn't make
warmed up to a series of debates
much economic sense."
next month by firing olr a few pot·
"If you want to lose jobs, you
shOts at each other over taxes.
raise taxes on business and lnd!v!d·
Democrat Richard F . Celeste of
uals," he said.
Cleveland and GOP standard·
Brown satd that It Ohio's taxes
bearer Clarence J . Brown of Ur·
have to be raised, he would prefer
bana. tl'8ded barbs Thursday In
the sates tax, some excise taxes
Columbus.
and possibly user fees at state
Celeste and Brown both spoke at
fac!Utles.
·
a meeting of the Ohio Small BustCeleste, asked about Brown's
ness Coa!!t!on, boldine separate
description of his stand on taxes,
news conferences afterward.
said, "I took forward to the oppor·
Both depleted themselves to the
tun!ty to debate. When that occa·
coalition as small·buslness men,
slon arises, I won't speak tor his tax
Celeste In real estate and Brown tn
policies and I would assume he WID
the newspaper business, and both · not try to speak for mine."
prorillsed programs and policies to
The former Peace Corps ~tor
assist business.
went on: " What I have said about
Brown said one ofthe first things
taxes ts that I wanttoclosetax loophe would do It elected Is to appoint a
holes. I've always ~ld that I want
srnall business task force to study
everybody to pay their fair share."
the problems of small business.
Celeste shrugged off Brown's
The conpessman also said he cr!tlc!sm for voting for a !egtstatlve
woilld create a vellture capital pro- pay raise when he
a member of
gram· which, possibly with some
the Ohfo House.
tax 'doUars, would back developBrown said Celeste's voting remeg! of new products.
cord shOws that he not only voted
"Srnall businesses give us most
for the pay hike. but consistently for
of our jobs and our Innovations,"
higher taxt?S and spending.
Brown said.
Celeste said he would be happy to
Brown told the business group
compare voting records With his

was

exp~cted

opponent.
"Clarence Brown's votes !It Wa·.
shlngton have been potlceable by
his absence," the Democrat said..
Celeste called Brown' s accusa·
lions "desperation campaigning In
August" and said they are Intended
to obscure "the real Issue In .this
campaign, getting people back to

portfolio.
-The Ohio ColmcU of RetaU Mer·
chants announced It oppOses the d!·
rect election of public ut!l!ty
cornrntssklners and the proposed
sales tax Increase for a high· speed
rau system.
-Democrat Anthony J. Celebreu.e Jr. said he wiD consider dework."
bating CharleS R . Saxbe, hiS
Republican opponent for attorney
In other political news Thursday: . general, It the Ohio League of
Women Voters arranges !t.
-Celeste said Milton A. Wolf,

former
U.S.serve
ambassador
to Austrta, would
as chafrrium
of
the Democrat' sgubernatortal C8JI!·
patgn. Wolf, who founded a con-·
structlon compauy, current~ Is an
economics lecturer at Case West·
ern Reserve University In Cleveland and serves as a director of .
several companies.
-Republican Dana Rinehart,' a
candidate tor state treastiiB', proposed two changes In state law that
he said wciuld save money for state
and local governments.
'
Rinehart proposed allowing local
governments to Issue bonds with
multiple Interest rates, rather than
a single fixed rate. And he prqJOS'ed
allowing the state treasurer to
make sbort·term loans of up to $100
mnuon from thestate's_lnvestmenl

Quality control inspections reduced
CINCINNATI (AP) - Zimmer
nuclear power station's regulators,
critics and owners agree that the
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co. can
relax r!gld quality control lnspec·
tlons at the plant.
J11n Strasma, spokesman for the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
said Thursday the utnlty has
p!Wen that quality assurance programs at the Moscow, Ohio, plant
have Improved enough that NRC
demands can be slackened.
":Jlley've done what they've been
asked," Str;tSma said. "It's time to
crank down the program."
Illllle Garde, an Investigator with
the , Government Accountab!llty
Project, said the Washington-based
agency agrees with the NRC al·
though It has frequently cr!tlc!zed
the .ultl!ty.
"'fhere was a lot of duplication

and unnecessary expense" In the
Inspections, he said.
CG&amp;E spokesman Bruce Stoeck·
lin said the change was an "expres·
s !on I of added confidence" In
expanded quality assurance programs at Zimmer.
The NRC ordered extra tnspec·
ttons April 8, 1981, after It deter·
mined that CG&amp;E's prime
contractor, Kaiser Engineering,
was not getting the job done.
Strasma said the 100 percent relnspectlon program which the NRC
ordered never was Intended to be
permanent. According to the program, construction would first be
Inspected by Kaiser Engineering.
CG&amp;E would follow With a second
Inspection.
Now, the NRC has decided that
CG&amp;E must check 50 percent of the

is

----r------ -

'

.n.•

1 o c.H~

flt

-Darers
-B•ckhoes
'-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trltncher
-Water
- sewer

Rrown's

T•lJrid('rnly, Co. Rd. 25
n('ar Ches ter.
r.v I flnd R cldio RePil ir
Also other Flectronic
r ctuipment.
1 er~v Brown

. 1 eC1mician
As soci.1te devee and
l!it clilSS F CC hce nse.
I •hone 9,85·3364 Avo.
or 915-3833
'J
7·16·1 mo .

•Custom
•Rooling
14 Years Ellperience

-Gas~ines

Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

-Septic Systems
Large or STall Jobs

or992·2282

-~H. 99;·12~7~ .

0

7-15-1 roo.

SIDING

Wt caiiy Sqwart Two,
IOCGIOJOI, Ounlop , &amp;
BrowoinJ Equiplnlftt.

*fiELD TRIPS

.

$$ HoIe·ln·One U
. JOHN Tf. A FORD

Chesler. OH .
·' 1·t4·1

Her1ter

Pomeroy, OH.

to ' the ,

P.1diator Specialist

PH. 99H506

NATHAN BIGGS
l' Yrs. E:~Cperlence

e SEAT COVERS
eVINYL TOPS
a CONVERT! BLE TOPS
e CARPETS
eA Complete Line of
'Automobile Upholstery
B·~· l mo. pd,

3-ll·tlc

Core

largest Radiator.

302 Mechanic St.

"Betutlfut, Custom ,
B~lt Gtrtges"
Call for free siding ·
estimates, 94HN1
' 949·2UO..
'o
No .Sunday Calls ·

*GOlf LESSONS
AlUG£S

A~TOTRIM

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

*PliO SHOP

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE . .
From the smallest

DAN'S

Vinvl &amp; Aluminum

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy, Ofi.
Ph. 992·21]\,

~6-lf c

;=I=====~~~~~~~~~;;~~~=====~=~f~~~~~~~;~
ALL
. STEEL
.
BUJLDI NGS

ROOFING

Slres~tuttrom30x24"

H. L WRITESEL

Utility B•iildings
,.

• Gutters
• Downspouts
• New or Repr\ir

• Painting ··

.

FREEJSTI!IIATES
Ph. 9'2;2791
orMt-2263

OHIO VALLEY
R(J()fl NG

Slru from 4 to 6 and all
lf!oOd bulldlngs24x36.
lnPs&amp;ulaSt!"UDotllD
' IHNouGsSes

And Homt Maintenance
e Roofing of all types
a Sidint
a Remodeling
e Free est1m1tes
a 20 Y.rs. experience

Or anything else you
want to do, because I
live with a carpenter .
His name is AI Tromm .

fit. 3, Box 54
Racine, 011.
Ph: 614-14H591
6·15·1fc

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949· 2160 or949·2322
.1·20-lfc

Rutland, Oh.
7· 15· 1 mo. pd.

81

1· i4-uc

BACKHOE
FOR HIRE

'

742-2328

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

Odds a!"d
mowers .

Glveawoy

4

•·
for at lrAst thirty

days

I ·~5t~~~~j~~

1;

after

the
c losing time for

(7)

.

.
"."
••

G~-_;;afch·d~~.-2-k-itt;;n-&amp;

•

NEW..,..3 Pc. LM11 Room Suite .....................'399.95
3-Used Colcir 1Ys ............................... 1100 ilritl up'
1-llsed llocMr Dill-A-IIItic S.eaper ..... ,.... :.'100.00
2-llset! Part-A-Power S.upn ................ •· '35.00

=

'·••
:t••,,
~.

.•:i

VIRGIL 8. SR.

.
115

Built!111111 ~Oiiiii"iiiid'iiiliiir"1"""Ri'iii"""'
•
Haod Vtlt ........t:. '199.00 .

Phone
H614)·99N325
NEW

'
LISTING

-

3 famlly . 6th St .. Syracuse . collect .
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10·4.

7 year old spayed female,
medium size dog. Call &gt;146·
0839 .

A

•'

a

•

bath and some f iXifl' . 2
l eve l 1lots · for only

$16.500.
.
'
REDUCED· - 3 acres
with .water tap, 'electric

..
608 E:- MAIN
POMERoY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

For a Quick sale will . .
take $4,500. ,
'
••
BARGAIN - Small 3 · l'
•

CHEsTER - Approx . 82.5 acres, .JO acres !llllitile,
27 acres in pasture, 2 ponds. barn, several sheds,

:1

wih gas furance and~ wOOdburner. $89,500.
'

•

PbMEROY- OWner ;.,Ill sell this well constructed
3 bedroom home with Sol,cioo - n and $286.78 a mon·
th for ten years. Interest rate is 10011. , Sale Price is
$25,100.
.

but make us a.n offer.
BARGAIN - 6 room

•\
·~ &lt;
•) I t·.

rmd other Utilities. wlm1

'' :~

frame home. Wal~ to
,I he storos, bath, nat. gas.

\ heifer barn. Also a nice 3 bed'r oom remodeled home
•

·~

utilities. AskinQ $16.000

&lt;

$17,500. What will you
piV(I.

2. 8

ACRES

j

bedrooms, basement
witt\ Qlllrage, bath, city

water, and gas. $25,000.
Assume mprtgage.
24 .ACR F; S - Eastern
sc~ool . Remodeled 2

· 'I

•4
i

:,j
:&lt;
.~

, •( •
., ,:) .
1
' lh
1. : :

bedrooms, mQder~ bath
..
and kitchen . Aluminum• · "
sidin~. ba.. ment and &gt;
~Mii!1Q · Offer might
. •;

!;

SY~IlCUSE

- · Lovelv 2
bedrO!Jm, fur·
mGblle home.
2por

PUBLIC AUCTION.

.~

bedroom vinyl siding
home. Bath · .1nd ail

1

'
,.

l•

1;

,..

ITEMS: OJd croeks, bottles, glasses, newspapers,
cerblle miner lamp}, oil lamps. many old dishes of
all sorts, vases, tins, old w00den'1&gt;9xes, 2 chaUffeur
ba!fges 1983; 19~7; McCoy mark~ il~ms; lots old
bu~s •. many Ieney; marbles. old 'ooll head and
pariS dug up from boitle digs, &lt;llher dolls, lrons1 old ·'
wire bail trull jars, milk bottles. arrowheads,
graniteware, paper weiOhts, k~lves, Ditlaey chum,
trinkets, whalnots of all sorts and much more. '

.

old buildjng of olcl furniture In the rouglj to be
du9 out yetsuch as chairs, end, tables,'etc, ·
·
COINS: 83.4 wheat pennies; u steel 1,9&gt;13 Pl!fln.ies;
1817, 1822, lUI, 1850, 1852 larg, pennies; ·11164 two
cent piece; 1866-3 cent nickel i 1838, IN, half
dime. .
\._
,
~:
" .
Old bottles and advertising 11em1 from Mejgs,
Gallla aod AthensCounl'j. · 1 :.,
Paper lte"!s · 0 0i~' s\amps or lef1~rs arid other stamps, old R. R,. mlt'~Ni~ !Tiany boXes of books, ~~
pc~~tcards from tMj!iJ'~o. 25 from Atl1eos. 16 from
Gllllla co .. ;19 from Merlefto, 110 from P~rke~rg, ·.
touvenlr folders, elsp a stroe box of oreettng and,
other cards, scrap albums.
Sweepers,,_, as iS In found cOndition, new sltQII. ~
tune-up kits. meet end produce scales, table uw, l
Old ~t Iron, bath tllb, player pifnolfttBtll delk.
...,., Lois of IIOxn Ifill hive lief bHtl ....- yet.
LAIIDfllllln ..... so111 bY IIOx 11111.
If you

..,.....

.

'

A...,)

'
'·
· ~ MrvtllbY. Point PlnNnt Chrtat..nSchool
Tw11111 Clill' O.y Dl llle or Clleelc Willi Plll(tlve
I•D.

01ft!llti•MR.

SNYDE.R

&amp;

SALES
SERVICE
U.S. Rl. SO Eut
Guysville, Ohio
Authorlred John Deere,
New Holland, Bush HO!r
Farm Equipment
Deller

For al·l your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair setvic:e and

14-lO:OO'A.I!II. ~

.

BOGGS

ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call

..
SATURDAY, AUG.
"
1• '
'
~·
. Location:
One mile south of Middleport,
Ohio on'
State Route 7 or App. 15 mile' north o1 G•llipolls on
,· ,
.
Route 7. Signs will be posted.

O~e

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

2 baby kittens . Call &gt;146·
4243.
1 old English Sheeo dog, 2
part German Shepard. Call
&gt;146·0770.
Free kittens to good home .
614·992·2290.
3

kittens·!

black

with

like

Kitten

2 kittens· ! male·l female .
614·742·2983.
Puppies mother Irish Setter. lather German
Shephard . 742·2374 after S.

-------

-~-·

callico killens. · Long
haired. 614·992·7164.

6

Lost and Found

6

6505 .

MtLLI;R

and nat. gas available.

'

)#

~

TERMS OF SALEl CASH OR CHECk
WITH POSITIVE t.D.
'

""

Cl~ll La B,onte
36061 !!a shan Rd.
long Botlom, Oh. 45631
614·985·4345

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

lots of

sale

other

FOUNO :
Peek ·A· Poo .
Rock Springs Area. White
with black spots, also 6
months old dog, brown with
black face. Afler6p.m. 614·
992·5225.

at

Ernesl

;r

.

-----·------.'

r7 - - -Miscellaneous - -~------·--

Any kind of art. Paintings,
posters, signs, wall murals.
Reasonable rates. Contact
Roger Walker, 123 Union
A_ve., Pomeroy , Oh. Phone
614·992·39'10.

CARPENTER
SERVICE .
..._IMin•J:IIq

:=.-=.t'"" '!"" .

-==·
c:
'

sn

items, f ishing equipment,

clothes, tools .
Public Sale

-·--- ~Aucti'!_n_ -·· __
Rick
Pearson,
Ex -

perienced AUCTIONEER .
Estates, antiques, farm,
household. Licensed Ohio·
wv: Buying antiques. 304·
773·5785, 773·9185.
Auction every Fri. night at

V.

YOUNG

i

• I

hltrHJsell

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

GARAGE .

-"'"

It, Rt. 114 P'11•1oy, 0~

·u o &amp;'IIUCK
IEPAII

;, '

Also TraumiiiiOd
PH....MII .

ortn·7lt1

FOVN D·6 or 7 month old,
coal !!lack, female dog, no
collar. 30H75·520l.

.

Pomeroy, Ohio
9-JO·Ifc

.3·2-t·tfc

The Fam!IY of ,Loulae
wioh to t - the
&amp; nelghb9fl for
gifts of !lowers. fclod.
cards, end their' many
visits durnlng her itlneta
,lncl ctealtl.
P~ul

&amp; the Boy

Box 748 Mulberry Heights,

Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769 .
Need someone to baby -sit
five days a wet!k in our
home. Middleport . after 5

p.m . 614·9'12 ·3937.
WAITRESS . maids, bar·
tenders &amp; clerks wan1ed

Write qualification &amp; phonJ
number to : Job Placement.
P.O. Box 1~. Henderson,
wv 25106.

lhe Harllord Community
Center. Truckloads of new
men;:handise every week.

consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome .
Richard

Reynolds Auctioneer. 275·
3069 .

Experienced cri'et for
restaurant. Please send
resume to Box, P.6 in care

of Pt. Pleasant Register.
200 Main St. Point
Pleasant, WV . 25550.

c:·::-

Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson
&gt;146·0069 .

__ - - - - - - - - -- - -

Painting interior, exterior
&amp; roofs. Free estimates, by
contract only. Call •14·256· ·•·
1945.
BABYSiTTING
In my
home, days only. George~ Creek area . Prefer 3 yr. Old
or over child. References .
Call4-06·7668.
'
- ----- - - - Remodeling 8. Carpentry .• , •
Eleclrlcol &amp; Plumbing ,
~:
576·2989.
..

....

304·:
'.

~

...

WIL L do house cleaning,
hour,

$4 .00

c·an

give ·

reference, .304·675·617A or

675·3458 .

.

- - - - - - 7' - - - - -

'"'

WI LL babyslt for working , .
mother

in

my

hOm e\ , .

Mason. "ays only . 304-773·
5155.

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. State St ..
Athens, Oh. 61~·592· 3051 .
'
-- - - - - - - - - -

2-3 --P

rot.esSfOiiAf

•

--~

\&gt;

..

- ----~~~ -- -

ca. L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; lax service , ·
tor all types of businesses. ,.
Carol Nea l
446·3862

11 ==.sTI~ali~! wan~ :
Will care for elderly men
and women In our home.

31 ___ H_~"!~ lor_Sai!_ __
In ground concrete pool on

2 acre lot. Also has a 3 bdr:
air conditioned house with

full

basement,

2

WB

fireplaces, new carpet. ,
Would consider lower

valued property in trade or · •
will finance with low down

f

payment and 10011. Interest. ·
Located 123 Garfield Ave. .,
Call446·1546.
. .,
MODERN 3 bedroom
house, Patriot Star RL,
Green
School.
Full
basement. Call ~-3o40. ·

'
.
:\
'

Attractive 4 bdr . home in

city full basement, family
room. dining room, fully
carpeted. Assumable ioarl,
low down payment. Callaf,
ter 5. &gt;146· 1323.
Priced

reduced .

...

bdr. . :

J

hou~ e

106 2nd Ave,
Gallipolis. 1 112 baths,
modern kitchen, lull ..•
basement,
e)(tra
lot,
fireplace. walk in closets,

large porch, carpeted . Call ·
&gt;146·4826.
GOTT A SEE IT to believe .
all !his and price to sell, 4 ·
bdr .

Colonial

Hedgewood

on

Dr ..

large · ··

country kitchen. living , ;
room, dining room, formal
entrance, 2 ca r garage, fuil
basemen t, family room, 2

wood burning FP,
more. Call446-7802.

lots

I would like to trade d
small fa'rm for house and '

lot or mobile home and rat
IN or NEAR Galllpo!ll.
Write lo Box 1001 in care 01 "
Gallipolis Daily TrlbU,.
825 Jrd . Ave .. Gallipolis, elK ;'.
45631 .

.....

'

l

ne.'r' '

27 acres with house
Vin ton for sale or tradt~ ......

..

Call 446·8615.
Also have rooms for rent
with or without board. 3 bdr. home full basement
Trained and e)(perienced. for sa le or rent. Lovely '
country setting. 'call 1·21• '' '
614·992-7314.
BEOS· IRON , BRASS, old
734 3734 evenings. ' ·
,.
furniture . gold, silver
.. - ... ...
Will
care
for
elderly
men
dol iars, wood ice boxes,
Three bedroom liouse · jn
stone jars, antiques, etc., and women in our home.
Pomeroy. Nice locat~ :
Also
have
rooms
lor
rent
Complele
households .
qrpe!ed, vinyl sldlflg.
Write : M.D. Miller, Rl. ~. ' with or without board. fireplace. Priced IO sell
Trained and experienced.
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992·7760.
$22,500. 614·992·74&gt;46.
" .. ,
61A·9'12·73U.

children. Glassware, misc.
to~s &amp; games. Thurs .. Fri.
&amp; Sat. 9 lo 5. lsi house on
Bladen·f)'lercervllle Rd. off
St. Rt. 2181•
Gold, silver. sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
5 Family Garage SO.Ie cu~rency. Ed Burkett Bar·
flugust 12, 13,. 1~ . 9-5, Rod· ber Shop, Middleport. 9'12·
3A76.
ney Village lf; 3rd.
6th house on left.
sizes
clothes, kltche~ ap·
pllances, sewing machine,
air conditioner, . clarinet&amp;.
much more.

Ill ;

1982. Send resumes to
Meigs County E.M.S. P.O.

.

. .

ft2-621S or "2•7314

and

BORED! Broke! Blue! Sell
~~n}e_!lf~~i : ~ toys and gifts tor nations
I loy company .
WANTED TO BUY Old fur · number
niture and Antiques of all Free kit of $300. value . 614·
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, 9'12·7046 .
LOST : Billfold, tan. 6 miles &gt;146·3159 or 256· 1967. In !he
DEPENDABLE . Babysit·
north of Pomeroy, South· evenings.
ter needed in my home. day
bOUnd lane on Rt. 33. If
found please mail to 1972 Buying Gold,
Silver, shill. call between 4 and 10
Erwin Rd .. Port St. Lucie, Platinum. old coins. scrap p.m . 304-675·5628.
Fla. 33oiS2. Keep money, rl"'ls &amp; silverware . Daily
send contents.
quotes available . Also MATURE. responsible ,
- - ----------- coins &amp; coin supplies for babysitter In our home, 2
sale . Spring Valley Trading children, flexiable hours,
Co .. Spring Valley Plaza. own transportation. 304·
773·5758.
&gt;146·8025 or 4&gt;46·8026.

A Family Yard Sale
Clothing, men, women &amp;

lflllllliroatoll

matters

plica nt is not state cer·
tlfied , provisions for
training will be made . Ap·
plicant should have a
Saturday only .
Broad· working knowledge of simway 51., Middleport . 1 ple vehi.cle maintenace
block from pool . 9·?? . Nice procedures. The person
chil~ren's clothing, jeans.
selected for the position
must move to Meigs Co. if
COTTON ·Holley's Jerry's he or she is not currently a
Run. August 11 , 12, 13. 10·6. resident. All resumes to be
co nsidered
must be
Prices low. rain cancels.
received before August 2S,

Aug . 14th. 1 mile out
Bulavi lie Rd. Household

Lawn Mowing no yard to
big or small . Reliable and
F
dependable. or esllmate
call ...U-3159 after 6PM 256·
' l 96l.
T'rash collection &amp; hauling .
Call oi46- ~0.

personnel
supervision .
Previous experience in the

items, misc . Aug. 13 &amp; 14. 7S.

We pay cash f.or late model
CANDLELIGHT INN
BetW~n Cheshire &amp;
Middleport, phio

budgetary

Health Care Center. Fur· field of E .M.S. is desired,
ni ture, clothing, baby however if successful ap·

clean used cars.

YOUNG'S

~~rvv~ce . b~~~~~~~t~d~~~~

perience
in
business
manaement, accounting,

Cullums residence on Old
33 iust before PomeroY

----------992-6011
Person who lost a Keese
SOciety
. 614·992·
Humane
::=:::=====~~=====7=·2:8:·•:m:o:·~ hound
in July,
please
notify

SHERMAN T.ILLIS: OWNER
LONNIE NEAL: AUCTIONEER .

••

a·

·Mature Quail Available

PH.

S&amp;KAUCYION

..

in any quantity.

ESTIMATES

j)

'7

Quail of al.l ages
available up to 8 weeks

Ready to Turn Out

D•"t
~Main
Rutland, OhiO

11

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM

FREE

Corner of

Applications are being ac-

Garage S.ale. Fri. 13, Sat. cepted for the position of
14. 8·6. 51 . Rl. 143, 2 mi. off Coordinator of the Meig~
Rl . 7 bypass. Heavy duty Co. Emergency Medical
bow, race&lt; car set, canned'

B

kitchens and
bathrooms: Remodeling,
add·ons, new . homes,
plumbing, eltM:Iric, siding.

AT.

,,••
'
••
••

QUAIL

Custom

I

acres, mostly level.
Good Fleetwood Ux70
two ' bedrooni • mobile
home. cenar and water

well, JustS20.000.
NEW LISTING room house, ~ or
bedrooms, but not
large home. Neel!s

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

'·

\. SATURDAY, AUGUsT14 AT
/
7:00P.M.

=•~

.
3.5

Jumbo Bob White

AVQN. Need extra money?
Set your own hours. Sell
Avon . CMusl be 18 or over) .
Call now 614·698 · 7111

5 Hamslers. Call4-06· ~926.

white·Looks
II

MISCELLANEOU$

'·••
'

2!6 E. 2nd 51.

Karat;«;~ ultifTl&amp;le In ~If ,.
defence all private lessona. '
Men, women, ·a. children,
'Instruction thru black belt., •.
Also available ' !(arate
uniforms puchlng an,d •1
kicking bags, 'and protec,· '
tlve equipment. Jerry •
Lowery &amp; Assoc lat~s ;
Karate Stud to, U :k •
Burlington Rd., Jac~aont ' ,
Oh. Call614·286·3074, : , • , "

Attention RN'S· Pomeroy WILL hang 8. finnish dr¥ ,,
H.C.C. now has opening for waiL free estima1es, 304·
full and part lime RN for 3 273·2881.
to lt and lt to 7 shills .
.Upgraded salary and shill
V•:
diflerentlal. Contad Nancy
VanMeter director f11 Nur·
s1ng. 614·992·6606.
.

Yard Sale. Friday 9·4. 927
Brownell St., Middleport.

Male. 2 female
~===r'::::·:::::::::~==~=========~ Carlisle!
Calico's. 614-742·2328.

TOOLS- RJRNinJRE

••

CLIP AD AND GET 20%
OFF ON RE' BLUING.
OFFER EXPIRES 8-JI ·
82.
7.2,i.1

PH. 992·7201
3·29-tlc

\

CookWARE I v.

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS

·uc•d &amp; Bonded

AUCTION

1--ilood USid ReCliner, Mth Yllnlor ..............'100.00
2-41sed ~~~yt~c.·Auto. Wishlrs .................. 1199.95
·1-USid lllyla&amp; Dryer •.... :............................ :..1188
1-Used 22 Cu. Ff Side-By-Side •
.•
Rlfriatiiltt ....................~ .................... '299.00

wide, 36" till CUitll*l allinet with built·

Ph. 992·7456
Re-BI.u e and Re-Fini•h
restock, Parts. Etc.

*

30. (8) 6, 13. 20, 4ft

Used Steno All-fm, Tlll11tlblt williS TriCk, 19'1!"

AND CllsTOIIIZIIIG'

•bec.khoe ·
• excavating
ltt»&gt;lc·systems
' • Awater, sewer
&amp; gas lines
---~-----+-----,------4' 1 •dumptruck
•llmosrone

Jane Wagner, Treasurrr

Of MeiQS LOCrtl

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
ROOF REPAIR/
REI'LACEME NT
IN

j ., ·

621 South Third AvenuP
Middleport, Ohio 45760 ·

bids.

Board of Education

Public Notice- .. -

.&lt;P,ublic Notice

Sc:hool ~District

GUNSMITHING

Lawn

a cat . Call after S:OO &gt;146·
0730.

Yard

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

ends.

anything to give away and · 5 family sale- Thurs.· Sat. 9
ANY no!PERSON
who has
does
olfer or attempt
to to 5. 3 mi . N.of Fairgrounds
olfer any other thin!! for on old 33. Clothing all sizes,
sale may place an ad ln this TV's, games, toys, kitchen
column. There will be no appliances, fuse box, recor ds, tapes, air shocks . shoes.
charge lo the advertrser .
Watch for signs.

fruit and
items.

t · • • • • • . _.;

••t·

new

BARN

Or Wrol~ 011olr Se111tne1 (IUtol \n o.,,
I I I (01/rl Sl ., ......"'~ · 011110411.1

... ;
. ,..742-

lid

~CAVATING

SERVICE

PHONE 992·2156

ELGIN, Ohio (AP) - Investlga· seen the person or persons Involved less ~ $50 In cash was iaken.
tors say they are running Into one In the !nc!,dent.
MU1er said the amount ol postage
~t&amp;•te-o-..1
dead end after another In their
A Delpho!i po!!ce oHicer )lypnot· missing "wasn't much. This Is our
-:::=======:::::11 MIDDLEPORT- A·two bedroom, one story ho~e• ..
_.ch for a postmistress believed !zed three possible wltnesse~ srnallt!St class of post olllce."
r
new car'Peting, utility room. fenced back yard. OnlY
$22;.500.
~
.
~
abducted In an apparent robbery shortly alter Mrs. Motttnger' s
One ot11clal suggested two people
1108S1£1'TER REALTY
' - Nicety remodeled Hbedroom home;
tour clays ago. ·
diSappearance.
lll!IY have bEen Involved . In the
., GlolpS.IIIMI!IIIr~ ­
POME~OY
''We have not had any real subMiller said Thursday that Vln· ro!Jbery and abductlon. One per9C11
tevet lot. excellent nejghborhood. owner wants
1.5..!110 ,down, balance - 1,., rnleresf, 20 years
staOI leads yet," said Lanny cent Sheehan, a hypnotism tnstruc- ."did not li!lve ~~ fo ~mp,~h
1257.75 mor)l~. ~ale PrlceS27,SOO.
' • ,1
one of l8 U.S. Postal Ins
tor at the Ohio Peace Olflcers all that was accompllsbed" ~
1'011£10'1 - ·2 story, 2
•('.
'
'
bedroom hoine with aptort probing the disappearance Training Academy In Coiumbus, the post olrlce, said Tom StrausREEDSVILLE - A ITIOblle home wlttr an extra
' prox . 1296 sq. fl. living
tory built 2 ~ r09m a~ ilion and a pore~. N
wltb 1111 V411 Wert County sheriff's re-tntervlewed the thrEe Wednes. baugh1 a Pc*tallnspector !rom Cospace, Corner lot. Only
bedrooms, family room, lOts ol closets. end a ler!l@
c!ep!llllllld two FBI agents.
day and hypnotized one o1 them.
lumbua llelldlng the Investigation. .
$12.000.00,
lot. Financing avallallle. $17,500.
.
had three or four foot '
Sheehan was abletoobtalnapar.
.
,
RVTLIIND
~
'
.
.
bedroom hof'ne, 1 bath,
POMEROY - Near the grade schaol, 3·4 I&gt;Mttllllms.
iiltdlll lllied on tips ihat have tlal license number of a two-tone
~ sajd, ~tt\,IC!Iori Qt. eventS
full basement, vas fur·
huge lamlly , room. full basement, nice
,,.. , " 1" 11
~ fruitless," Mtller' said brown car seen Ill the vlclil1ty the · would )ilive'allOwi!cl one penoll only
nace. Storm dOOrs. Selll
GOOd·buy at $31,900.
for $12,.!110.00.
'IWIII y, '"11iere has been no ron· day Mrs. Mottlnger disappeared
a minute lnllde the tiDy bul1diDg:
PAYMENTS LOW AS
1llb *-falnlly, no dernantls of
Mille~ said an Ohio Department
·A I')IJ'Illl)aU canter art of nearby
RINT on both of 1'••"
of Ttansportatton worker provldel,l
Del. . . s8ld lie saw a man
a
llanlel. E Itiler Cln tNi
llltt!nger, 48, d!sap- the .Information after seelllf a car 'broWil car, wJth • ·•botaWI ' llid'
purcllaMcl wtlft only
. . . d.n .... lllflltld
office In this · .matching the descrlptloo ~ · ' lftellhfi' ••
emer~~~~&amp; frolll 1
1
0
lnternt rete al 12\lt"village of Pear Delphos between 9 lind 9: 00 : "ll'elcJ. ; ~ I
WU ~ ,
Miklt OWiihiO Y - CJIII'.Illng for bust· a.m. Monday.
I• ''" Weclnelclay.
.
110mt ei"HHItY. Botti ••
e~etellent atarter ~
.,. e was rifled ·
"But the ODOT employee p\'l\ ' ·'Van Wert Couni)ISberiffJet'Jll B.
at an efforcteble price.
lltamps taken, ' us Jettets and numbers, In nQ pat. artttlllll -.Ill an addttbjll SIO.IDI Cell
TOday! II
I
tlcular ~equence," Miller said.
reward lid .•
1'1111111 by· ooaChlrYt Le!IMY; AllfC.
Pllellf Jq-1171
'IWe're rulllllng down cllffl!rent
cerDed clttzelll IDIDwltb-of. Veiml
NltllllkYo AlsOc .
.combinations."
ll!red by tile Paltai llirYice filr
Pltone 742-Jit2
Offhe post oftl,c e and found that lnformadon about the case.

.._.uw

.'

is- S ch06fsTMtniettciil

__

.

..•

S/IT/St:Y YO(JR NEEDS

The Daily Sentinel

Inspections done by the contractor.
The Inspections still are more than
required f9r any other utnlty In the
country; Strasma said.
The re-lnspectlons were Implemented before the NRC ordered the
utntty flned~,(XXJ(orvlotatlonsof
quality · control regulations last
November.
The NRC said theutnttyhadfals~
fled records -and allowed .harassment of J,nspectors at the$1.5bllllon
plant, which Is under construction.
abot 30 m!les northeast of
Cincinnati.
"
Federal tnvesttgat!ons continue
Into allegations of shoddy work at
the plant.
The NRC's five commissioners
last month narrowly overruled an
Atomic Safety &amp; Ucenstng Board
decision to reopen con1416t«!d licensIng hearings.
•

Pee·

.••

r---------.,--_;_....,..-"---------

r;:::=::====================::;:=========:;:;.~-

Authorities find only dead ends in
disappearance of Elgin post:in~stress

MJUir,

.
•

'

..

---------

1!,

WHAT A SIGIIT TO SEE - Aerial-borne.rlden glide past mooslr01111

Yard Sales mi . down Rt. 7,
Eureka. 9·5, Aug. 11 to 18th. WANTED·new hay, ,call Ed
TV's, beds, clothes, ~ouch. ~130H43· 5915.
'
etc.
·- ~ -- -- ...---.
' .
:: ;.: :: .::.: :~ .:
From Porter gO 1 t/ ~ mi.
ser lees
down Bullavllle-Porter Rd .
Thurs.
&amp;
Fri.,
9
to
6
.
Starting small day care
Drapes. curtains, bed:
center In Thurman. Past spreads,
•1::::--iie.pWanted ~
elementary &amp; preschool misc . . books, clothing,
POSI"CION AiiAILPjBLE
teacher. 2,3,4,5 yr. old. Cait
Foster Grandpar-ent .
61~,2oiS · 5S02 .
Yard Sale Thurs .• Fri. &amp; Qualifications, . over 60
Sat. Womeps, toddle, baby years of age .and annu'ei In·
Golf
Lessons . John clothes, misc. North on 160 come le~el · below 5,3'10.
Teaford. Chester, Ohio .
past 554 Intersection, lsi Respons1tlflitles to asslst In
road on left· Fioyd Clark teaching and training of
handicapped children 120
Rd . FO\IOW Signs.
hours per week) . Contact
Guiding
Hand School (for
August 16th. Monday . 9 to application),
P.O. Bo• 1~.
~ - Jean, clothes, household,
hall tree. magazine rack, &amp; Cheshire, Oh ~5620, 614·367·
misc. Corner of Third and 0102.
. -·- -..,:
Olive St. Galllpoli~, Oh. .
POSITION
AVAILABLE
-.,...----Giganlic Yard Sale 13· 14· July 29, 1982. Substitute
bus driver for
15. Out 141 to 775,,3.5 miles school
Guiding Hand School. Must
on right. Pinto parts (74), pass physical examlnallon
TV. appliances, clotnes, and hold current bus driver
large &amp; small, lg. women license lor school bus
.noes 10, old tashion 1\our operator.
Salary will be
bend cabinet, living room
$3.35
per
hour.
Available
set, baked goods too. 614·
immediately . Application
379·2464.
can be obtained from Mr.
David Ratliff, P.O. Box 14,
Yard Sale 379 LeGrande Cheshire. Oh 45620. 614 ·367·
Blvd. Large Size clothes. 0102 .
books, sweeper &amp; lots
more. 91111 5.
POSITION . AVAILABLE
July 29, 1982 . Subs!ltute
16!h·281h Ralph Boster, teacher for Guiding Hand
Lincoln Ridge Rd. In· School. Must have valid
tersection of Lincoln Pike teaching cerlicate from the8. Hannan Trace Rd. Car· Departmenl of Education .
PI'!· bedspreads. ety.
Salary will be S35 per day .
Avollable immediately .
Garage Sale Rock Lick Rd, Application can be oboil 218. Monday &amp; Tuesday. tained from Mr . David
9 to 8. Clothing. used fur· Ralliff, ~ . 0 . Box u,
Cheshire. Oh ol5620. 614·367·
nilure&amp; antiques.
0102 .
PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
12·13·14th.611 w. oil 33 . 4th
Professional Electrolysis house on left. Lots of Jeans Men &amp; women . part or full
Center. A.M.A. approved, and etc . Washer and dryer. time. Recruit coal sales
trainees. He lp organize
Doctor relerals, by ap·
pointment only . 30H7S· 4 family ca r port sale . seminar. No exp. nee . 7036
Maynardville Pike, Knox 6234.
Aug .l3 . Chlldr~ns clothes. ville, TN, 9'12·7265.

-

~

. •. - - --- -:--;-

't

-....

'

--·-·.f.,.'

House painting-exterior J bd . room house il) ,
and interior. Trash Pomeroy. Nice location '
hauling-grass
cutting . All carpet~, litnyll siding 1.' ''
Chimney re· pointing. Roof and fire-place. P.riced to1 1,
sell at S.22.500. ·~~-m- 74\. ·
painting. 6 14·9'12·1A19.
- - - - ·- - -....,

---.... J,.._ ' .,

Will do babysltling in my
home. 1 live In Middleport
area .
Referen·ces
available. 614·992·6349.

3 room houw •with bath. . .
Maspn, W.VA Laroe tot: "
OWner Will
lp finance"'
6\A-992-7352.
; ••

13

For lllet!J Churcn. H0U14t
on cor~Oj'Fifl!l end Mill!'
Sis. In Rltin,, 011, To br "J
torn clown or MOVed. llw J '
!!!!"' l~rmallon call •1~· ,.
--21112 offers p.m. Or 61ol; '
....21~.
' ' ..,,

Insurance, .•

SAIQDY AND BEAVER In·
surance CQ. · hos offered
services lor lire lnsu~ance
coverage in G.allla Ceunty
for . almost . • ce~tfllry .
-Farm, home end pel'lllnll
properly • coverages ar~
available _to.t: meet· · In·
dlvldual neeos. Contact
Kall Burleson. ~tent,
Phone &gt;146-2921.

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- · · . - - ....,... ./•1 I

�lQ-The
31

Sentinel

Homu tor Salt

' Modern 3 bed roorri' total
electric home wltti utility
room and one caf garage
situated on a large lot. low
Interest possible through
owner. $35,000. 7&lt;12·21).47 ,

They'll Do It Every Time

RAY ' S USED · FUR ~
NITURE Chest of drewers
S22.SO. 2 pc . living rPOm
suite SSO, breekfast set$30,
metal wall cabinet $8, high
chair 110. oak ,rocker $25, 1&gt;1
oak chair. S12 ee ;, lawrl
mower SJO, 20' bicycle,
$22.50. Caii6U-~7-0637 ,

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dillon, 3 bedrooms, family
room with flrepalce, cen·
tral air, basement, phone
304-675· 1542.
Lovely

remodeled

----HouseholdGOOds

51

Dining room set, 4 chalr.s'
and table, c ushioned
chairs, 1100. Caii4S8·1997. ·

3

bedroom home, basement,

'N' CARl-YLE"'

I

Maytag wringer washer
$100. Whlrlpoal automatic
was~er S85. 614-742·2352.

;

TIRED Ot .belng "all gum·
up" from the symptons of such things as
headac.hes, constipation.
arthritis, ellergJea, and
oi&gt;Hity? Cali 304-675-1293
for rierbal assistance from
Naturallle.

•

SAM
Somervlll's
War.ehouse 7 miles East
RavenswOOd old Rt. 21 ,
(New Era) open as usual,
Fri., thru sun. l :oo-7:30
p.m ., Mon. evenings, Sur·
plus . hew
army
camouflage, combat boots,
denim,
used . rental
doz,n call In
orders$5.00
675damaged
clothes
3J:W Pt. Pleasant.

1 WANT TO HAVE ONE
QUIET NI6HT WITH MV
F~I&amp;ND~ AND VOU

1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond . Deluxe kitchen. large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hidd~n util . room .
379-2310.
25 acres, fenced , 1980 Win·
dsor mobile home, heat
pump, 3 bdr., 1260 lb. lob.
base. Mudsock a rea.
$26.900. Call446·08«.

3 bdr. country home with
fireplace, WOOd stove In
clly school district, $200
plus deposit. Call 614·256·
9363.
Large home situated on a
nice lot In Syracuse, Ohio.
GOOd neighbor hOOd, will
accomodate 3 or 4 single
men or single women.
Private rooms wllh common lounge and cooking
areas plus l'h baths.
Available before SGhool
opening Aug. 15ore school
th . $450, per mo.
utilities. Call
992·5732 or992-7671.

3 room furn ished apt. S250.
month Includes utilities. Ai'R c·o ndltloner, 8,000
Inquire at Meigs Inn In BTU, S125. 304·675-5684.
Pomeroy .
USED . household Items,
2 bd.ioom, furn. Upstairs. Dinette set, 19" color TV
SlSO. per mo. You pay set, hlde·a·bed couch, full
utilities. 1 child accepted. size box sprlnos &amp; mat·
614-949·2875.
tress', carpet·18'x10', Call
\
304-675·1224.
'
1 bd .room Apt. In Mid·
dleport .. 614·m ·3590.
USED 2 piece living room
suite, $50. 304-576·2213.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apts. 614-992·5434 or 992· 54 Ml1c. Merclulndlce
5914 or 304-882·2566.
~-'!.=~'!!.!~!!!!!C'o!_
·GIRLS' SHOE SKATES
and patent leathers.
1 bedroom apt. Newly
size 2. Box of clothes,
decorated. Darwin area.
size 6, and dresses. Call
614·992·2807.
446-0195 after 5 p.m.
. Apartments. 304·675·5548,

You'll love this 14 acre
farm in the country with a APARTMENTS, mobile
houses :
Pt.
pond and small barn. This 2 homes,
bedroom brick home Is Pleasant and Gallipolis.
14x65 1981 Ventura , 2 bdr., only 2 miles from down· 614·446·8221 or61N45·9484 . ~
ex cond _. $13,000. Call 446· town Pl. Pleasant. Will
sign a year lease atS450 pe~ Three room furnished
4719 or 614-256·6265.
month . 30~·675·6276.
'
apartment, adults, no pets,
Point li'leas ant. Call 304·
1974 New Moon Trailer.
)'
Total etec .. new carpeting, 3 bdr ., 2 bath, Riverfront 675·2~3.
ranch. 5 miles soutll of'
underpinning . 614·992·7406 .
Gallipolis. S250 per'~ ino. THREE room furnished
Contact Wiseman Real collage, utilities furnished,
12x60 Buddy mobile home. Estates Agency, 446·3443.
adults, no pets, 304·675·2812
Good cond. washer, dryer.
or
675· 1580,
stove, new refrigerator,
- ==;::::;:;:;:::::;:;====
nice furniture, patio, buill , 42
Mobile Homes
NORTH Myr\le Beacti',
on utility room. $8,500, 6U ·
for Rent
m -2684or614·m ·2717.
l bdr . beautifully fur· South Carollnat,nd Piper
nlshed, wall to wall carpet, Coodo. S385.00 eek. 1
1973 14x70 Grandville has large living room. air I to 10, poal &amp; nnls
large rooms plus laundry cond., gas heat, private lot. one biOC:k to beach. '
' 803·272·5943.
room, must be moved. 304· Call446·1409, 41o7PM.
882·2820.
12x60. 2 bdr .• unfurnished FURNISHED effjclency
utilities paid,
USED MOBILE HOME . mobile home on R't. 35. Ref, apartment,
Pt. Pleasant, call 304·895·
&amp;
dep.
required.
Coli
«6·
576·2711 '
3450.
4229.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Furnished Rooms
Licensed &amp; insured. Call 12x60, 2 bdr., unfurnished 45
mobile
home
In
Cheshire.
304-576-2711 '
Sleeping room.
S115,
Ret: &amp; dep. required. Call utilities paid. Single male,
share bath. 919 Second·Ave,
1973 Imperial. 12x65, car· 446·4220.
Gallipolis.' 446-«16 after
peted throughout, 2
bedrooms, 2 bOths 55500. 2 bdr. fully furnished, air 7PM .
conditioned, adults only,
404 Locust St. Henderson.
-· 46
call446·4110.
Space for. Rent
1?74 Cameron mobile home
2 mobii.Mome.lots for r~nt
14x70, 3 bedroom, one ancj Very nice. 2 bdr. mobile In Southwestern Sch.901
one-half baths, 3 ton cen· home, furnished, modern a. District. Caii61H79·2322.
tral air cond. &amp;.15 porch clean, goOd location. Call
completely underpenned 614-245·5818. '
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
lOxlO
building
Sll .OOO .Snown by ap· 2 bedroom trailer. Real Parkl Route 33, North of
Pdm~roy . Large lots. Call
poinlment 304· 773·5143,
nice, adul1s only . Brown's '1'12·7479 .
Trailer Park, Minersville.
1978 Ux70 BELLEGLADE 61&lt;·992· 3314.
NICE mobile home space
trailer for sale, low energy.
modular trailer, 3 3 bedroom Mobile Home. for rent on Jericho Road.
bedroom. 2 baths, kitchen furnished, utilities paid. caii30H7H190.
&amp; living room, household Also for rent·lf&gt; of apt.
_, ... ' "' '
appliances. washer·dryer. house,
furnished,
1·
dishwasher. self defrosting bedroom , No pets,- no
refrigerator, stove, cen· drunks or dope. For more
trallzed air, underpennlng. info. call 614·367·0611, John s·~I,---:;
H"
ou
""s:-:e"'h"'
old=G"'o-od
-,s­
Price $13r, und,OOO. Call Sheets, 311&gt; mi. SOuth Mid·
304·4$8· 1760. Inquire &amp; can dleporl.
SWAIN
be seen at·next to Baptist
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
Church, Leon .
Beautiful 2 bedroom Holly PAW.N SHOP 62 Olive St ..
Park trailer for rent with Gallipolis. Couch, loveseat
chair,
Slh.;
TWO bedroom mobile option to buy. Call 614·'1'12· and
wallhuggers $125.; bu~k
home . Also electric 2053.
beds with bunkles, $110.;
fireplace . Call304·675· 1845.
box spring and mattress,
S100 .
Firm, $120 . ;
44
Apartment
33 _ ___!:F~a.!.:rm~s.!:fo~r...:S~a"'le~recliners, $80.; 9 ' x 12
lor Rent
142 acre farm near Rio 4 room unfurnished apt. all linoleum rug~, $22.; maple
roekers, $49 ,, wringer
Grande, house. buildings. carpeted.
peld, washers, refrigeratOrs,
mineral rights, wllh or adults only utilities
no pets. Call dinette sets, chest,
without livestock and 446·3437.
dressers. bunkie ma"ress.
equipment. 61A·«6·2599.
$40. Call446·3159.
Elfiency · apartmMts lsi
35
Lots &amp; Acreage
floor . Call 446·0957, 720 2nd GOOD
USED
AP·
Ave .• Gallipolis.
PLIANCES · washers.
112 acre lot on Mitchell Rd.
dryers;
refrigeratorS,
rural water, city school,
nice for building or trailer . 1st floor furnished apart· ranges. Skaggs Ap ·
men!, adulls preferred. ref. pllances, Upper River Rd ..
Call446· 3~33.
&amp; dep. required. Call 631 beside Stone Crest Motel.
446·7398.
4th Ave., Gallipolis.
2 acres. Panoramic lop of
the hill view of Big Bend of
Ohio River in Pomeroy . Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath,
Utilities, new 2 car ga~age . clean, no pets. adults only,
Extras. Will consider land dep. req. Call-«6·1519.
'
contract. 614·992·6254.
Small furnished house lor 1
Two acre lots·150 ft. road or 2 adult$ only . Call «6·
frontage .- city water , 0338 .
behind84 Lumber. Ca11304·
675·6873 or 675-3618.
H\)D available 2 bdr.
deluxe, kitchen furnished,
28 acres, tobacco allot· gOOd location, utilities par·
ment, mineral rights, no !lolly paid. 5 rm house· tor
bl.llidlngs, $9,500. Call 3Q.4· rent. Reslde~tlal and com·
merclal properties for sale
675-6851.
or lease. A·One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager,
Realtor. Caii304-675-51Q.4 or
wanted
675·5386, I
· wenleil to buy old house In
q.lllpol(s. Will consider
~ ,_.,ding restoration
a r - elready restored. M.
Ev-. Call 446·2800 . .

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

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved. 1,000
gal . tank, price SJAO. Other
sizes In stock, haul In your
pickup truck. Call 614·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

SAM · Somerville's
damaged , work clothing
S5 . 00
dozen.
army
camouflage, 57 Burdette
Addition Point Pleasant,
675-3334.
'

~~::======~~~r=========~ exterior,
PAINTING · plumbing,
interior and
roofing. some remodeling ,

= ..

: ""!'!, ::::

--···
.. .
. -. .......
•

61

Metal sheets for all
building purposes. Flat
porcellan enemet coated.
4x8 thru 4 x 12. Prices, $7.00
lo$9.60. 614·667·3085,

'

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . . 30 years ex·
perlence, specializing In
buill up roof. Call 614·388·
9622 or614-388·9857.

ONE rMO
'tEN Jlflti SHB-

HO. ~

cellent Interior; gOOd con·
dillon $1200 or reasonable · ' - - - - - - - - - offer. ' 304·675·2099 after 4 BINGS CONCRETE CON ·
STRUCTION SpecialiZing
p. m.
In concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
floors, patios,
$1,000.
etc. 11 yr. exp. Call614·367·
.,
7891 .
1974 Chew vega.r·c;,.
dillon . 31).4·675-671 . :

gOOd cond., $14,900, Call
446·4537.

71
HILL,CRE~T

KENNEL ·,
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg. Dobermans pups and
Doberman Stud Service.
Call «6·7795.

POODLE GROOMING .
ADD'ITIONAL DISCOUN· Call Judy Taylor at614· 367·
Tl
LIMITED TIME 1220.
,'
ONLYI THE BIG, NEW
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY· · AKC ' Registered Poodle
· SIZE POOLS WHICH IN· puppies. Caii~·0857 .
CLUDE DECK~ FENCE,
FILTER &amp; WARRANTY
ARE NOW AVAILABLE Groom4ng services' fOr
FOR ONLY $999. IN· pets,, Will clip English
STALLAlilON &amp;' FINAN· Sheep dogs, poodli!s ·&amp;
CING AVAILABLE . 'FIR· Schnauzer'&lt;$. Reasonable.
ST COME, FIRST SERVE . t;,or appt. 614·992·7342.
CALL 1·800-624-8511 (Ohio),
'
1·800·642·3053 (W)/).
.
Mlnialure collie puppies. /
'·
31).4-576·27621
'
Maytag automatic washer, .=::-='= ==:=;;:'=:==::';===
S95. GE dryer, $90. Both 57
Mu11col •
InstrumentS
real niCe a. guaranteed.
Call oi46-81Bl.
~aldWin, Cabaret organ
w,llh
machine,
74 Ford 3/4 ton PU, priced praclallytunnew.
Has 2
right. 4 yr. old -quarter
keY!&gt;Oar~. Call 61079·
mere, 4 yr. old Palamlno 2623.
'
'
mare. Homemade small
stock trailer. Call after
·Fruit
58
4PM, 614-319·2761 .
a. Vegetables
3 house trailer axles and Fresh veoetablu Open 3:00
tounge$175. Caii4S8· 1997.
to 6:00 dally. 2 miles west
of Gallipolis on Rt, 141.
Used above the ground -'MiqOBQ . .
swlniR)Ing poal. 24 fl .
round, S75. Call446·1lJ73,
NEW ~EAN PATCH
OPEN7 Pick ' Your own
REPOSSESSED SIGN I NO toniafbes. ~-00 bu, corn
DOWN PAYMENT! Take Sl.OO doz .. ' Raynor ·Peach
over payments of 559.50 per Orehard, ~t . 7, ·· L&lt;&gt;Wer
month . 4'x8' flashing arrow River Rd., Galllpdll~, «6·
''
sign. Complete with new 407. '
bulbs &amp; .letters. ·cutiiff
slims. Toll free HIOQ-551 · GOOD THINGS TO
3070. Ask about REPO.
EAT : : :CANNING PEAC·
HES. Yellow Freestone
WOOd burning add on fur· cann,lng peachn now
nonce. Still In factory available while the supply
crate, S450, Call 1-614-1216. .
•BOBS MARKET ..
tM.!I!Ion W.VA,. 773·5721 open
REPOSSES~ED SIGN III Maysa w~k.
Nothing down I Take over
payments $58.50 monthly . 4
your llwn half runner
x 8 flashing arrow .sign. beans. $5.00 bu. and can·
New bulbs, letters. · Hale ntng tomatoes. $3.00 bu.
Signs. 1·800-227-1617, Ext. /'indrew Cross term, Letart
667 .
Falls. 8 a.m.-noon. ~14-247·
2852orm·3734.
•
·

Pony 2 yr. old, rideable.
Call614·256·9363.
Montgomery Trailer sales.
614•669·42ot5, Farm trailers,
See you at the Mason Coun·
IY Fair.

- - - - - - -·- - -·
Livestock

Truck's for S!le·

For sale 81 pickup 4x~ exc.
cond., Low mileage.· tall
446·2706, '
' '

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

57 CHEVY pickup, all·
original, narrow bed~ "265

Hol$1eln calf, 3 mo. old, · engine, 4 speed, $1 ,000 . Call ' - - - -- ----·-priced $160. Call 614·256· 304?76·2670,
STARKS Tree Trimming
65«1.
. and Lawn Service. Shrubs
trimmed. Phone 3041·576·
61 FORD truck, 11· 100 ·half 20\0.
'
REG. QUART~ HORSES
61 Ford Falcon station·
•'
l'--4
i
T raj nl ng,
showIng , wagon, 6 cylinder,, Call304·
bree!llng, sajes and boar· 675·6·130,
' ' _s·
' _
,' _ RON'S· Television ·service.
! I
.«&lt;in~. · Contact , Dan Beam,
Speclalili,ng In Zenith · and
Galli poll~. «6·0113 .
1970 Dodge Slanl-6 pickup Motorola, Quazar, and·
house calls. Call 516·2)98 or
$.100, 304-675· 1892.
446·2454.
CharOIP.IS bulls ' Reg.
Polled, horned, 1 mos to 4
Vans&amp;4W. D.
yr. old. Also Polled heifers. 73
F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
WOOdward's Ohlllco Far· 1978 CJ· 5 Jeep, ii,ooo stump ·&lt;em oval Call 675·
ms. Call 61~·379· 2597.
•
miles, canyas lop, hard · 1331._:._:;_
;
top, carpet, gDqd condition.
Brown laying chickens. Call«6·1817after6 :00PM. · RINGLE'S SERVICE ex·
Laying now. Also good for
. perienced m.:;son, roofing,
butchering, S.l.OO ea. 614· 1979 Dodge van. p~ .• p.b,, l:arpentei, electrician,
9.92-7'713.
auto·trans., alr· cond.,
. general repairs and
cruise cont., a.m..f.m. remodeling. Call 304·675·
REGISTERED
Alpine P.rlvacy glass. Sofne 2088 or 615-4560.
dairy goats, Gentle, shoW custom work, 614·'/t2'6330.
,.1. -~---.- - quality. Star M dOes, DH IR
Water wells. commercial ·
records, ADGA classified, ·1972 CI:IEVY ·van, ..~so. a~d Domestic. Test holes.
.NIce selectiQn of doe •kids .. engine, automatic, PS, 'PB, Pum~ Sales •and Ser;vlce.
St-yd service from long wheel base; excellent 304·895-3802.
ctas~lfled bucks. 3Q.4·4S8·
condition, 51350.00. 304·576··
~­
1763.
' ~·
'
ADVANCED . ,Seamless
Gutter-Doors . ·'Offering
74
Motorcycle•. contlnouse
guttering, ·
64~---!!H~ayL&amp;~O~ra"!in
!!__
1982
Honda
450
custom,
I
~~an1te•os
.
sjdlng,
roofing,
Hay, Clover, Alfalfa ,
doors.
- miles, like new. Call
Timothy. Secohd cut, very 1.....
. 614
.698 ..8205 _free
_
gOOd hay. Priced S2.00 bale. «6·2350,
.
Call614·367·7350. ·.
PAINTING Interior &amp; ex·
78 Honda mlnature so. $200. . terlor, free esllm~tes. 304·
Laroe round bales hay or: Call614-256-1487. '·
675·,1128:
corn tor sai.SlO. to qo. 3Q.4·
458· 1656 or 3Q.4·675-7s.tl.
1974 Yamaha 360 endre, 82 ===cP~I:um
.::=~lng
dl~l blke.,Call458· 1997.
'

---·- -----

_

---------'

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

71

'.'

,

"

----·~r--"--

1976 Suzuki 550, road bike.
Call 4$8· 1997,,

Aulo$1or Sale

1975 .C orve"e black with
saddle Interior, automatic,
T· Top, power. windows, air.
CaU 6,14-286· 1636.
- - --~----

1972 Ford Mustang fast·
back 351 CJ.
cond.,
radial fires, AM·FM tape
cas~"e, radio with pqwer
. amp. Caii·4S8·1997.

ox.

1978 KAWASAKI 40Q, 3,.00
miles. ~.oo. 167 Lane st.
New Haven, 31).4•882-2636.
---'---· -~----......

19~8

!'AWASAKI ~E- 100,
very · good condition,
$375,00, 31).4·675·2731 . .

CAN DEMAND

PAYMENT

FRO.\\ MY
I

l

Boomer leeds a dance duo
through a storm to shelter
in an aerie mansion.
(I)
MOVIE: ' It's a
Wonderful Lifo'

CD PKA Full Contact

K.mo
(I) MOVIE: 'Deli&lt; Com·

mand'
(I) Today'o FBI Ben and
his agents try to sav e the
life of a wealthv execu·
tive's son. (RI (60 min.)
D (I) ® Advonturoo of

Uttla lord Fsuntteroy TO·

night' s program features a
series of illuatradons cov·
ering the event&amp; in Francis
Hodgson Burnett's novel.

- ~Healing

CAR-TER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
. P.hone 446·3888 or 446·«77
J_!_ _~xe avallng

1

tries to impress his father
when
he
meets
two
women. IAI ~ 60 min .)
(Closed Captioned]
1!J (I) (jJ MOVIE: 'No
Place to Hide'

8:00 D Cil (!) Hore'o Boomer

()!)

OlJY· (60 min.)
(!) ESPN Sports Center

(() Major League Blise·

boll: Atlanta at Son Diego
Fantasy loland A

(J)

bride-to~be
wants
her
father to give her awav
and an archaeologist en·
count ers the spirit world
for a discovery. (AI (60
min.) !Closed Captlonedj

Gioluy

liD Cluolc Couritoy
8:30 D Cil (!) Harper Valley

,

Stella and Buster team up
. with 'Charlie' Wells to save
a once·~lar eatery. IR)

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st . . Co. Custom · dozer &amp;
backhoe work. Special
farm rates . Call us for free
estimates. «6-U..O.

9;00 D

Cil (!) Nlckelo and
Dimeo
Cil MOVIE: 'Cinh of tho

t0:30 (I)

Ttt.na' ,

Cil MOVIE ; 'Poplllon'
(]) love Boat A doctor

Lawrence .Sidenstrlcker
Backhoe' Serive. Call 675·
5580.

meets an old girlfriend, Go ~
pher flip1 for his former

SATURDAY

school teacher and a man

Matlnoo at tho Bljou

'Cooking Up Trouble .' A
performer is murdered and
his two friends try to care
for hi s son. (90 min.)
10:00 0 (2) (I) NBC Reports
'Japan vs. U.S.A .· The High
Tech Shoot·out.' Tonight 's
program BKamines the Ja·
panese threat to American
si.Jperiority in high techn ol~

(60 min.t
&lt;J) Hitch Hikers Guide/

· 7s ·

Boatuoiii....--'MotonforUie ' _
·
u toot Starcraft
V hUll fiShing boa!
HP, J.Ohn.on OB motor,
. trailer; new condition, 3Q.4·
675-2651.

!!&gt;UT WE KNOW 5HE'S
IN A FINANCIAL
BIND RIGHT NOW.
5UPP05E SHE CAN'T
PAY?

THAT MEANS I

I 1YE HAP HER
DAUGHTER SENT
TO NEW YOitK ON
AN AUDITION
FOR A PART,
WHICH 1\¥. tWill
SHE'LL GET•• ,

_____

11 :DO

Rock Church

rep'alrs,
Singer

Pro-

claims
··
GD Mystery! 'Aumpole of
BaiiBv.' Conclusion. Aum·
pole takes on the cese of
Dave Ambrev . 160 min.)
D Cil (J) (!)Ill Cll ® II

az New•
MOVIE:

Cil

Biassing'

~/14/82
EVENIIiiG '

'Deodly

~NM"tr
by THPMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Compos..,

41 Famlly
or shoe -

DOWN
1 Caesar's
wife, on 1V

John-

5 "-tSade"
10 Bugbear
II Type face
13 Unruffled

Z Attica's
shopping

14 "Streetcar"

1

center

character
3 N.A.S.A.
15lrlahman's
section
"indeed!"
4 Slippery
16 R.R. ...,P
cu.rtorner
17 Gennan city . 5 " - Roberts"
18 Stamen part I Rose esaence
2Q Bakery item · 7 &amp;;oUish
21 Entrance
explorer
3% Suspicion
8 Iffy
%3 "- du
t Woi'king
Prlntemps"
the soU
Z5 Tropical lrult
Z6 Egyptian
%7 "Scarface"

v ..tenlay's
12 Awakened
27 Pull back
16 Loafer, e.g. 29 Procreate
19 Act.&gt;r Rip
30 Set
3% Tool handle
straight
23 strauss opera 34 Manumit
Z4 Of love
38 Initials
Z5 Japanese
before

ship

an atlas

name

37 Favorite

co-star
28Swedlah
county
29Hername

means
"bright"
31 BasebaU great
3% Medieval
shield
33Sprfle '
350ptlcal
illusion

31Duad
31 Brought out
39 "-Kleine
Nachtmuslk"
400!eer

7..t= r=. =:.:: :::__-::;:;:.-=:-:-..::= r:

~ ·- _ G!!'!!'!.t.!!!.ullng

-·- --

JONES BOYS WATER
SER\IICE. Call614·367-7471
ar6U·367·0591, · ,

-- '

---~-

'
-·-

DAILY CRYI70QUOTE- Here's how to

-~ -

AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

..

AN EA5Y WAY 'TO
e;eT OJ&gt;J 'TV.

!Hwl

HARTS Used Car't,
Hawn Wett V11'1111fa, Over

-· --,- -,---.-·-.-- -

JIM$ .water Service, Call
Jim Lanier, 30+675-7397.

.

'

.-. - · - ..J:+__,._ .......,_

17.--

One letter limply otando for another. In this ample A ,.
uoed for the three L'o, X for lhe two O's, etc. Sla~ )etten,·
apootroph.., the lencth and lonnatlon of the words are 011
hlnto. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYMOQUOT'-'

NWV

JDHKDHLNPDR

XN L Z,

UCXN

WLX

LX

J 6 GV

NWV

-:--...l...._

... _,_

u~--,•

- -...~ ~-~.~

&gt;·TRISTATI
. VPHOI.S'tE"Y SHOP

na1m
1«.
...
. .Avel.'_Gelllpotta
. . __
.

'

"mDOY" KIIO!IG

AH AWFIJL LUT I!
PEOPlE, AN' I,.'I'E filET
sOifE a: 'EAI, eoT

~~~t~e~~~:qou'~:i:~r, ~~63.;.~~vfz~~':~Me: ~~: I· ~::;:::·~·

lair 'lllllpe,

«6-1188.

tires, runs

s~.

20 yrs. exp. Call 61088:
9652.

SUMMER SHOWDOWN
JIVIDEN ' S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
446·1675
' CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
Long tractors, Vermeer
pel Cleaning featured by
balers, &amp; Hay equipment,
Hallett Brosthers . Custom.
CONTROL hunger and lose bale movers a. ·t eeders,
weight witp New ~Shape waoons, rotary tiller S1039., 1'977 CHEVY Vega, 4 cy_l. 4 carpets. Free estimates .
Diet Plan and Hydrex disc, 5eejlers, rotary cut· speed., excellent condition, Call «6·2107,
Water Pills. Fru\11 Pha•· ters, blades, gate~. &amp; no rust, $1650.00, 304·576·
cultivators.
•
macy ..
Masonary work, Logue
·~ , •
I·
And see us to gel your parts 2866.
Contracting,
Rt.
1,
&amp; Complete service . .
Ewlngton. Call 614·388·
55
Bulldlnt.Suppll••
USED EQUIP:
1910 TOYOTA ' Cilr~lla, ex·
IH Hydro 70, Ford 2000, ~ellent &gt;ondltlon, air con·
Bul!dlng materialS ~lock,
brick, sewer pipes, wtn· Ford Jubilee, 165 MF, dltlon,SS,600. 1979FifiX·19 ~
top, $.4,500. '1J.4·675·
dows, lintels, et~. Claude Massey Harris P~y: 70
.
• .
'
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . Oliver, Long 4d0 , 4x4
w/front·end ,l oader, 185 AC.
·---·--,----~Call614-2&lt;15-5121,

20 , _ •IIP8Mtw cars In
lfocll,
'1

ONE BEDROOM furnished
apt., i:arpetwd, air corld ..
S200 plus utilities. SlOO dep.
no pets or children.

~..... ,n
.ew

Also • 1970
needs
work, $300. 3Q.4·882·2052.

~=-·=R~.=.=1e
==.t=.=
,.= =

Unfurnished apt. 2 bdr .•
1136 ·1/2 Second Ave,,
Gallipolis. $110, water pd.
Call «6·4416 afler7PM.

D LTD Landau,

Form Equipment

Case

RATLIFF ' S POOL CEN·
TER Pools sale. supplies &amp;
Installation . .03 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipolis, Oh. Call «6·
6519 . In ground·Ablove
ground.

Autos for Sole

71

'

'

450 , dozer·
tractor, 1,800 hr.s. , verv
1975

&amp;AR6JN6 IN-

_.. ,,

FirewOOd. $15. a pickup,
you get , 304·576·2010.
House in crown Clly tor
rent, S200 per mo., $200
deposit. Call614·367·0242.

'

. II

:~

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

EISN~Jl, VOU'il!f
A REAL PeSlj PO
VOU I&lt;NOW THAT 1'

~EE P

HOUSE for sale, 2207 Oak
St. Cniflsmlm table saw.
304-675·2130,

TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED-MOBILE
HOMES. CARS, TRUCKS .
GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK .
OUR PRICES . CALL 446·
7572.

8 It, sliding camper. gOOd
cond .• $.100. CaiL-M6·8668.

10" Radial Alarm saw·
Craftsman. WOOd lathe·
Craftsman, 31).4·576·26«,

FIVE room house wllh
bath, fuel oil furnace, on
one acre ground. se.ooo.
Caii30H82·2371 ,

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Sale-1978 · 17111 11.
camper. Tan··
dem axles. Fully sell·
contained. EXC!'Iiefll Cond. ·
SJOOO. 614-949·2037.
'
For

WJI~rness

Wip'n aiJgo 5th ,w~l. 1973
"Chieftain" llk'e ~w Inside ·
and out, self contained . 304·
675·3283.

HOMELITE XL·12 chain
saw. 304·675· ~32 .

fenced backyard, carpeted,
. sided, storm windows, near
schools. 304·675·4338.

32

Camplnt
Equipment

by

CRPDR
JLR

WLX

TD

JD(IV

LRT

WLX

ND

N H LTV

X·NLZ .
TDRV

NO

VLJW
AHVLN'

A.DDT . . NWVDTDHV !tDXVQVYN
Yutenllly'o Ceyplilqtlote: POKER 18 A
'ITER OF G&lt;Xll:?,
~-~NIF YOU WIN, 1M' II
LtJCK IF YOll
0 1•1 kW'Ig F....,...,.._, Inc.

�12-The

Ohio

Sentinel

AbouL ••

Fair· races will begin . Wednesday
Horse harness racing is scheduled
once a ~ ain this year at the Meigs
County Fair. with heats to be run
W~'llnesday, Thursday and Friday,
beginning at 2 p.m. daily.
Wednesday's racin~ action inclUdes ·a tw.rycar-old filly pace, a
thrct~yl'a r-nld trot, a two-year-old

pace, and a thret.~ycar-old filly trot.
Thursday will include a two-year-old
trot, a thrL't."-year-old pace, a twoyear-old filly trot, while Friday has
a thret"year-old filly pace, a trot for
non-winnt~ rs of $3,000 in 1981, and the
Ohillco pace, for non-winners of
$1~.000 lifcthne as of January 1, 1981.&lt;

. . . . .
.
(Continued from page I)
Each classif1callon IS d!vlded mto . thatshouldhavesta edatGDC the
races and heats dcpendm~ on the loy
ld
Y
'
'
t
·
d
th
•
•
nts
emp
ee
sa
·
f
nwn~r o en ncs, an
c eve
Ill a related matter several GDC
will be run under USTA rules.
•
Several local owncm and drivem . officials were In•Columbus Thurs.
' te in the day to appeal citAtions the develop, • , , t •d t pa'rticlpa
mental center received In
arc cKpec c 0
racin~ .
December.
GDC was cited by the &lt;kcupatlonal Health and Safety Administration for falling to take measures
to prevent outbreaks It amebic hlstolytlca. Hlstolytlca Is an lnfectloil
of the Intestines which emplOyees
arreara~e. two years probation and
and clients at Institutions are suscosts.
ceptible to.
Forfcitin~ bonds were Michael ft..
Heck, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, DWI, $370.50;
GDC otflclals appealed the cltPatricia A. Hindy, Pomeroy, no atlolis because theY claimed the Inoperators license, $60.50; Linda D.. spection which led to the charge;
Beaver, Rt. 3, Racine, speed, $50.50; waa prejudicial and was not conPaul D. Evans, Rt. 1, Portl11nd, no . dueled according to medically aceye protection on cycle, $47.56, no cepted procedures.
cycle endorse]Tlent, $47.56; Robert
. An ,otrtctal 'flth the Ohio DepartR. Musser, lancaster, ·expired ment Qf .lndulltrlal Relations, who
operators license, $45.50; Richard participated In Thuraday' s hearBaker, Pomeroy, reckless Ing,, said;tt may be a week before a
l'llllilg·ts .made on the appeal.
operation, $400.

Co.llege. preview.:,c~,7

•• A-4
Inside••~

Judge fines 15, six forfeit bond
Fifteen defendants were fined and
six others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
wt•re Dustin Dorin, whitehall,
speed, $24 and costs; Jerry Rach,
Rc'fdsvllle, spt.-ed, $26 and costs;
Lemuel Harden, Addison, failed to
display valid license plates, $10 and
costs; Jacob Roush, Pomeroy,
speed, $26 and costs; Rita L. Harmon, Rutland, no valid license
plates, $10 and costs; Terry Napper,
langsville, overload, $358 and costs;
Clifford Whittin gton , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, expired registration, $30
and costs; Robert E. Davis,
Syracuse, illegal parking, $20 and
costs; Charles R. Geary, Mid-

dlcport, no operators license or
cycle endorsement, $7:i and costs,
one year probation.
'
Ricky T. Miller, Rt. 2, Racine, no
operators license, $7~ and costs, six
months probation; John B. Cooper,
Wilkesvllle, left of center, $50 and
costs; Timothy H. Pratt, Guysville,
eKpired registration, $Ia and costs;
Michael Todd Musser, Pomeroy,
DWI, $200 and costs, three days confinement, license suspended 30 days,
criminal damaging, 15 days confinement, costs, six months
probation; Ruth Pearson, Pomeroy,
obstructing official business, $150
and costs, one year probation;
Michael Capehart, Bradner, Ohio,
non-support, $30 per month on

Negotiations••• __.:.;:(.c;:;on; ; :tin: :;~;: ed:.:;fro.;.;m; Jea: : g~Z:e.:.,1_ _
Israell ~IIP!Ipers quoted Begin
Beirut today that the PLO had 'told
U.S. presldentlal envoy Philip C. as saying he stW waa.confldent the
Habib there are 7,100 PLO fighters PLO evacuation would begin next
that must be evacuated from the week.
Israelis ~arned that the
war-ravaged Lebanese capital:
Habib also has a breakdow!l of ceas4!-ttre "c!epends on mutuality."
how many guerrillas wW go to each But Radio Israel aald Begin and his
Arab host country, "but I don't . Cabinet decided to take. no action
have this treakdown," HUal told re- that might endanger the diplomatic
porters. Estimates of the PLO process which the fourth successive day It devastating Israeli bomstrength In Beirut had ranged from
6,1m to 9,1nl and Israel has de- bardment brought to a halt.
Because of the bombing, Lebamanded an accurate count.
Lebanese Prime Minister Shafik nese olflclals suspended Habib's
Wazzall, a key Intermediary In evacuation negotiations, In which
Habib's peace effort, was lm· they aciiiB Intermediaries with the
pressed by the speed and tlrmness PLO. White House spokesman
with which Reagan won the cease- Larry Speakes said Reagan emfire, and Is expected to resume the phasized to Begin that Habib's et·
tl\lks he suspended Thuraday, sour- forts had been halted ".)Vhen they·
were at lhl! point of success."
ces close to Wazzan said.

.''
f

· "DOG DAYS" OF SuMMER - SmaD boys and dop bave alwiQ'S
been Ideal companions and, In the IMI IIUIIIIIIfl' da.Ys before ICbool
be&amp;lns, their thne speut toae(her becomi!B !Jbori, Cal')' BelziiiC. POIMroy, amd Yvooae, hl8 p-eat·clane,looldng rather Ike a Nonnan Rocllwell palatlng of Ufe In small town, America. recently look adYIIIAie ill
of the mlcUuguat weather to lake a t4-alk ~ dowll Mala Skeet.
Yvonne llllrlendly by nature and 8lopped often to lnlroduoe ~to

MILLER MOBU UNIT TO BE AT THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIRTenth District Congressman Clareace Muter wUI have a mobUe unit at
the Meigs County Fair from Aug. 17to !Ito &amp;IIIIIHt area resident&amp; with any
federally related problems they may have. The Congressman wUI also
conduct a public opinion poll on natlunallssues !rum the mobile unit and
tnviles lOth District falrgoers to stop by and give their views.

Hospital news

Squads to share fair duties
Area emergency squads and personnel will be taking turns next week
on the Meigs County Fairl(rounds, in
case of any medical problems at the
five day event begiMing TUesday.
Racine will begin the week during
the day Tuesday, while the Tuppers
Plains squad will be present during
that evenin~ . Wednesday, Mid-

d1eport will be on the ·grounds, and
Pomefby will be on duty Thursday.
Rutland will stand by Friday, during
the day, followed )ly Tuppem Plains
again Friday night.
Finally, Syracuse will take care of
Saturday, with Tuppem Plains
wrapping things up Saturday night.

Education main concem of
Meigs Conservation District
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD) held its
annual planning meeting Wednesday morninl(.
Robert First showed slides of
problems and of conservation work
done in the county.
Ideas and comments were
discussed lor work on the 1983 annual work plan.

Koblentz; Treasurer Geor~e
Collins; Jim Rush, Program
Specialist ODNR Division of Soil and
Water Conservation; Jackson;
Huss; SWCD Supervisors Roy
Miller, David Gloeckner, Tom
Thiess, Thereon Johnson; SCS
District Conservationist Robert First, and Opal Dyer, office secretary,
MeigsSWCD.

Veterans Memorial Hospital reported several admlssklns and discharges Thursday.
Admissions-Henry Wells,
Pomeroy; Allen Humphreys,
Pomeroy; Martha Roush, Rutland; Beverly McGlothin, Racine.
Discharges-Gina Fleming,
Emma Hayman, Ida White, Ruby
Halliday.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCIIARGI!ll AUG, lll
PhyUis Brjltton, Dorothy Brennon. Frederick Burdette, Patricia
Canada; Maxine Canter, Eric Carter, Hobert Costen, Luther End!colt, Mrs. Mark Haffelt and
daughter, Robert Hemby, Mrs. Donald HOI and son, Teresa Ktnnlard,
Gladys Martin, vera Mason, Me-

James Waugh and daughter, Ethel
Wells, Quentin WUldns, Green
Wolford.
8IRTBS
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow RIchards, daughter, Long Bottom;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Salser, son.
Mldl,lleport. '

Squad has two calls

B)\ KEVIN KElLY
11PB-Sentlnel Staff

FILLED
WITH HELIUM
9" and 11" LATEX BALLOONS AND
18" MY~R BALLOONS FEATURING
•The Smurfs •Strawberry Shortcake

Plus GET WELL and

HAPPY BIRTHDAY MYLAR
We can add that "SPECIAL TOUCH'' to a
floral arrangement with balloons.

CALL AND ORDER YOURS.~ ••

Two runs were reported overnlghtThursdaybytheMelgsEmergency Medical Sen~tce.
At 10:11 a.m., Tuppers Plains
unit picked up Tom Burroughs and
took him to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Parkerburg; at 9:47 p.m., Pomeroy transported WWiam Morris
from the RainboW Inn to Veterans

.

' Your"ExtraTouch"

~ Flo~ist-Since1957
l52

-

E. Main, Pomeroy

FLO liST
•

Ph.H2·2644

Your FTD FIOr151

;. •

..;,

·' R,I

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tng

it 11inht
lQU :ill\' • ..,._~

Iissa Nance, Mary Nottingham, Mt- ..~M~em~o~rlal~H~osp~i~t8!~.~-;_--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.
chael O'Brien, Velme Pendleton.
WWiam Ringgold, Evelyn Rollins,
Naaman Stapleton, Caley
Summers, Arehle Swartz, Sandra
Taylor, . Pearl Warman, Mrs,

The main
concerns
l&gt;ducating
adults and
children inwere
soil r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;:~::::;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;:;;l1
and water conserVation, erosion control, and savin~ soil.
Dan Huss , Private Lands
Biologist, Ohio Department of
Any complaints or problems ·of any nature
Natural Resources said he would be
regarding Hwer line construction In the
glad to do a wildlife plan for anyone
VIllages of Syracuse and Racine should be sub~
in the county who wanted one.
First reported the Comprehensive
mltted In writing to:
Soil Survey of Meigs County is
The Sewer District
scheduled to begin in 1984. He also
P. 0. Box 201
reported that the expansion ap- .
Racine, Ohio 4Sn1
plication for Buckeye Hills Resource
Conservation and . Development
No later tha" Au ust 20, 19b.
Project (RC&amp;D) which will include

NOTICE

Meigs County is now in Washington t;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;~~;;;;;;;l1
forfinal approval.
.
Armand Jackson, Service
Forester, Ohio Department of
.
'
Natural Resources, went over the
requirements for getting taxes
reducL'Il by declaring it forest land.
Attending were Conunissioners
Henry Wells, Rich Jones and David

ELBE.RfELDS IN POMEROY
WEEKEN' D SALE PRI:CES
ON •.

Rep. Ball to attend
Meifp County Fair
PO~ROY - State Rep. Claire
"Buzz" BaD·announced today he will •
have a public service headquarters
at this year's l'deigs County Fair.
Visitors at the five-day event wiD
1
have an opportunity to voi~ their .
Gil atale ilsues by voting In a
pUbliC oplnlGII poll being conducted
· by the legiJlator. Literature on state
government wiD allo be available. .
Re~t!ve Ball will b1J on
ha(ld thi'ou8hoit the fair to talk with
iret~ rellldel* en llleir views and
. problelllll Jn'l!llvll!l ltate govern-

vtm

ment.

-LADIES' SUMMER HANDBAGS
-MEN'S JEANS and CORDUROYS
-GI~LS' FALL TO.PS
-WOMEN'S SUMMER SlEEPWEAR
-BOYS' JEANS and CORDUORYS
-JUNIOR FALL BLOUSES
.;.WOMEN'S UNIFORMS
-UVING ROOM SUITES
·
.;..MEN'S and BOYS' HANES UNDERWEAR ,.

n" 5
ELBERFELDs IN POMERO~

SHOP FRIDAY TIU I, SATURDAY

,, No. 26

.:co~vrlghltd 1982

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

: : GALLIPOLIS :.... Authorization
for an inland waterways omnibus
blli - w111ch IncludeS the proposed
~ mUilon 'renovation of the Galli~Is Locks and Dam.- faces a ''leglslattve Frankenstein" In
t:;iingress, according to one
'o!J!erver.
. . Two weeks of testimony before
the Hou!l@ Water Resources subcOrnmtttee on this omnibus bill
eitde!l recently. While support for
the dam's renovation was loud and
long, the posslbtllty C1l the new dam
emerging Intact or being discarded

rtlfil81ns.

. ' ·~ against the dam reno.
vatlon 18 tile the old "pork-barrel"
specter, ~Clh historically means

·~tavlaor~dlsatrtppclsrop.rlatlon b~.
w

Pbll Strawn,' an admlplstratlve
;assistant to ·Rep. Clarence Millet,

making an August or September
R.Qhio, said the dam may be
vote
doubtful.
thought of being In this cateaory beIf It passes the authorization
cause It iiffects Miller's district.
to the Senate,
Among the 10 othei' Ohio proJElC!s stage,I the biD li0!!5
.
whicl1
Is
presently
In
a
conservative
tecommended' for authoriZatiOn by
mood,
and
from ihere
spending
the U.S. Army Coi'Jl6 ot Engineers
onto
President
Reagan,
whose ad·
·
Is fiood control tor the LotJan and
ministration
Is
calllngforausterlty.
NelsonvDie areas, also In Miller's
It adds up to three or four "real
dlstrtct.
.
unknowns," In Strawn's opinion.
Procedure In the federal tread"This Is not unusual, and Galllpo.
mOl calls tor the omnibus bill torelis
Isn't being singled out," Strawn
celve authorization from Congress
before any or the proJects can be said. "It's more a victim of theclr·
cumstances around it."
funded. It's hoped by Strawn and
Since the corps of engineers' Hunseveral other congressmen the bill
may get out a1. committee and onto tlnglon district completed a touryear study of Gallipolis In :198l,
the House fioor tor a vote by the end
~upport for renovating the 45-yearof the summer. , .
old
facility baa been ~g•.par"My analogy for It Is !Ike telling a
kid he can go to the movlell and not
tlculal'ly trom tile bar~,1 ~ and
giving 111m 8J)y money to _do ,it," . cbeJnlcal lndua!r1e5 wht~h,, ba:v!'
CQD!erided with numerous Clelays
,SU:awn iald.
" • · ·.
The committee, however, Is also . and navlg~tlonal accidents at Gallipolis ror years.
considering a disaster reuet act and
(Continued on Page A-4)
· revision of \he clean wlater act, ·

' By .JEFF GRAB~
.
'11mee Se..lnel Staff
GA!LQ'OUS - State mental retardation officials
have deVeloped a 'pial) to jnvestlgate. allegations
brought NaJnst the Galilpolls Developmental Center
Sdllllnlst1lltlon.
.
' ' ,Rudy Magnone; director C1l the Ohio Department of
.¥ental ~dation and Developmental Dlsabtlltles,
tOld GDC employees In a letter delivered to them
· Friday tliat a committee wiU be set up to review their
·complaints:
The committee wW be made up of one representative each of Magnone's olflce, the Department of
Administrative Services and one of the area
legtslatorL
· This committee will present its findings and recommendations to an "9bjectlve, Independent review
board," ~·s ~said.
.He said'the tbree members . the review board wW

not be otfldals of the ODMR or "anyone Involved" In
the GDC controversy. The members wiD be appi'O\l'ed
by Sen. Oakley CoDtns, R-Ironton, and Rep. Claire
"Buzz" Ball, R-Athens.
. Mapone said the board wUI preaent a final set of
recommendations to him and he wUI decide wbat
action to take.
1be .letter sent to employees, which was signed by
Magnone and •GOC superintendent Robert Zimmerman, iald "this approach wUI allow for the fairest and
most Impartial hearing and resolution of employee

concerns.''
The letter states that the coriunlttee "wW also review the job abolishment process and make recommendations ror ctiange If deemed appropriate."
In an lnten~iew Saturday, Magnone said "the broad
base of representation" on the committee and the ·
review board "guarantees" the employees a fair

l;

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'71' CIIEYIOUT . 10' OLDSMOBILE
CAIIARO
DELTA 81 ROYM.E
..tilt whlet,'l21'
4
dr,, A-C, erviN, AMAM-FM

FM .._,wire wiiHIS,
split ...... cloth Intrior, low miles.

'7f MERCURY
COUUR 11·7

'IIO'HVIOL£T
IMPALA

t.oall-, red, A-C,
cruiM control, AM-FM
· sterto, low miles, NoM
Nlcerl

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remote mlrNr, wire
wiiHI C0¥11'1, c~"l"
~trol. vltlyl ,..,,

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LeMMS
A-C. PS, Pl. cloth lnt ,,
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'll' VOLISWMEI
U881T .

-·

• clr•• l"iii-Nd cllltllnt..
,..., 111ft llflr, llcll 1·

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Ohio River,
lA Blated lor renovation - U authorization for the
proJect llllf&amp;nted by .Congress first.

hearing. Any problems that are found wUI be cor·
reeled, he added.
The process wUI be completed by Sept. 23 so it wUI
not Interfere with appeals llied by employees whose
Jobs have already been abolished, Magnone said.
In addition, this process wW only be used to investl·
gate allegations COMected with the most recent
abollshments.
In the future, employees with complaints will have
to use the normal chain of command, Magnone said.
Although employees have said the chain of corn·
mand has not worked in the past, Magnone said "this
process wW resolve those problems.
"There Is no way administratively we can continue
Ulre this," he said. "We have to get back on track."
Magnone' said he had not heard of the committee
which some employees had Independently formed
Thursday to collect complaints. However, he said the
committee formed by the ODMR "will be the only

:A nnual car show attracts 135 entries
dating from the ·~s through the
Tlmi!B Sentinel Staff
present from all over the region.
·- GAU.JPOLIS- Flor soine, car · Theentrteswerejudgedln32dlftercol!ect1nc Is a handy way to make ent categories.
=~~bu~tt for others It's more an· Though coll,ectlng and showing
hobby, tt not an may be a bit expensive, Mary Anne
Ley of Marietta said, "Everybody
has somelhtng theY spend their mo-

SAVE '79' OLDS. CUTLASS "CALAIS" $AVE

defed one ol the woni bottlenecks

'

IIJ lULIE BRIENZA

..,_.,..m•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pfuns developed to probe GDC allegations

1

ci'uiM Clllllrol,
windows, wlllt.Int.

10 Sections, 76 Pages JS Cents

Sunday, August lS, 1982

Locks and dam proj.ect
plagued by pork barrel
:specter, says observer

Cremeans releases monthly .figures
and costs, and speeding. There was
one arrest each for intoxication, improper transportation of firearms,
failure tQ transfer l(cense . plates,
open flask, reckless q&gt;eration,
mipor pcurchasing, no driving
privileges, driving Ul)der suspeO:
sion, no lighted headlights, assault,
trespassing at the marl~. resisting
arrest and trespassing.
Parking meter collections arnownted to ~28 ard ali cruer mileal(e for
the month totaled 2,827.

' Vol.

pa~~serll-by.

the

Ali'IOng the 61 arrests rnade. by the
Middleport Police Department in
July, 21 persons were charged with
disorderly manner and 13 others
were charged with driving while ·intoxicated, according to the monthly
report of Police Chief J.J.
Cremeans.
Of their total, four persons were
charged with public iodecency and
there were two arrests each for
driving without a license, expired
license tags, failure to pay old fines

•·
tnttJ

'

Her husband, John, drove Ills
1978 Corvette Turbo model to Gallipolis and left his remaining three
Con~ettes at home In the garage.
He Invested $2l,lnl In the car,
which he said was "about $2l,lm
too much." But he added, "You buy
and sell, buy and sell, and make a
little on eaCh one."

newest on show, the park front was
not without the Model T' s and '50s·
era Chevys.
Roy and Maurita MUier of Pomeroy drove along the river this mornIng. ,h f th~r '27 Studebaker,
complete with Mohair upholstery
and an original bood ornament In
the shape of Atalanta, the Greek
goddess of speed.
"It's a nice !)obby If you like to
work,'' Roy said. He's been "workIng" for 25 or 00 years and' baa nine
cars In various stages of
restoration.
Along with the old and new were
the rarities.
Larry D1Qar of Columbus bought
his '29 Ford panel delivery truck
,112 years ago for $6,000. After tossIng on,a few coats of paint, beating
out some of the dents and getting
the engine to cooperate, the truckone of five left In the United
· States-Is now worth $22,oo0.
. ••rn let ' my bride sell It when 1
die," he said with a laugh, when
ulred If he'd ev« give It up.
~ of the entrants were trom
HUDtlngton, W.Va., and the area.
.'lbecO.IIPOIISOI'~the show, the Ole'
car Club, contributed about 15 cars
Ill' the mech•nJCal mecca .
DurtDa' the tint two years, the
. - WU beld It the Gallla County
~. bilt the fl'IOVe to the
part frallt bu helped bring In more
pert~Mp~nts, aid show chairman
DaVId McCoy, U1q tile perk atJ!I!IIIIIbere .......
List
year lllout·lOOeuaWII't!regilta ed

tile,__

,lbr

. .'

mechanism recognized and supported" to present
employee allegations.
Magnone also said he Is unsure If he wUI comply
with a request by some employees that he release tbe
results of an Investigation of GDC conduc-ted by the
Department of Admini,Stratlve Sen~tces in late June.
He said he wUI ask Collins and Ball If the report
could be released to the employees now. The report
will eventually be made public, he added.
Employees also requested a copy of GDC's table of
organization, which Magnone said Is available to any
employee in the GDC personnel office.
Magnone said he does not know tr the newly-formed
commlttee wW uncover any wrongdoing at GDC.
"Maybe some problems have been blown out of
proportion. Maybe there are some real problems," he
said. "I'm sure tr there are (problems), our process
wtll discover and correct them. "

Panel trims food
•
stamp program tn
budget negotiations
The Republican-controlled Senate
By CLIFF HAAS
has endorsed a plan to llmlt annual
AIIIOCia&amp;ed l'rellll Wrtter
cost-of-llving Increases for federal
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
military and civilian retirees to 4
gresslonal budget negotla tors,
percent a year through 1985. Such a
drafting a package aimed at saving
plan would affect an estimated
$12 bUllor., have agreed to trim the
three million people and save an
food stamp program but are stUI at
estimated $5 bfillon through 1985.
odds over a plan to cut federal pen·
l'tep. WUilam D. Ford, 0 -Mich.,
slon costs.
The conferees from the House chairman of the House Post Office
and ClvU Service Committee, resand Senate had hoped to complete
work Friday on the cuts mandated · Isted a series of Senate offers that
would have the effect of capping the
by the budget blueprint .Congress
cost.of-llvlng Increases.
adopted earlier this year.
· · But they abandoned those efforts
Ford offered a pension package
that achieves about half the $5 bll·
untU1 jMonday when a tentative
agreement to trim federal pension lion savings contemplated In theSecosts by $4 bWion fell apart. At the nate plan. That was rejected .by
same time, si!parate negotiations Senate negotiators.
After several hours of private neon cuts In da!I'Y piice supports also
gotiations, Ford and Senate Repubwere postponed untn Monday.
The tun House ·and Senate wDI lican Whip Ted Stevens or Alaska
have to ratify the compromises reached agreement on a plan that
would sa:ve about $4.1 bllllon by
drafted by the negotiators.
On the food stamp program, ne- freezlrig cost·of-Uving adjustm~nts
gotiatorS said their plan would save tor more than I mWion military
$2 billion Qver three years by hold- and ctvUlan reti):ees under 62, while:
In&amp; tncreues In benefits each year ·retaining the ·tun adjustment 'tor"
:
,:
to slightly below the rate of those over 62.
· But almost as soon as the agroo.'
lnllatlon.
Democratic aides said the provi- mi!nt waa announced, It fell apart•
sion would reduce future, benefits because Stevens was unable to get
for a family of tour with no othel; the support of his Senate colleagues
·and administratiOn alficlals.
Income by about S2.5il a month.
• 'l1le negOtiators wW trY again
' Meuwblle, the ~ for federal pensions snageed the panel. Monday.
'

.

.

J

.l

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