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                  <text>Survivmg are a niece,

Belpre, and Miss Janet M. Rogers ,
Annandale, Va.; grandsons, Dr. ana
Mrs. Stewart R. Altmayer, Buffalo,
N. Y., and Lawrence W. Altmayer,
Ale•andria, Va .; tw o greatgrandchildren , a sister, Miss Lydia
Davis, Pomeroy ; two brothers.
Milton Davis, Sr., Dearborn, Mich.,

Grella Thomas, Pomeroy , U1ree
ne phews, Raymond Brown.

and
Dr. several
Hugh H.nieces
Davis,and
Syracuse,
N.
Y., and
nephews.

Area ·deaths
A. Oal1 · Ba&lt;'h n1 •r

f!uu, h, her husband, Charles E.

A. Dale' Bachner, 82, 35370
Badme r Road, Route l, Rutland,
died Tuesday at O'Bieness Hospital
111 Athens follow1 n~ a long illness.
Mr. Bachner was born July 21.
1898 m Rutland, a son of the late
Will iam and F'riwces Howell
Haehner.

wC~s

He

married

in

Pomeroy un Jan. 13. 1923 tu the former Gar net Rice who surv i ve~ alung
w1th twu sisters, .Mrs. Gera ld 1Rut111
Morris. Rutland. and' Mrs. :\lvrle

Knupp, Daytu11 . Besides his par~nL-;

lw was preceded 111 den th bv a
daughter, a brother t:tn d a sis ter.·
Mr . Baeher wus a r·etired f £lnllt' r
He was a member 11f the Maidlcpor·t
Church of Christ . ~l fon nl' r rn t' JllbtT
of the Km ght.s of Pythiets Lodgl' and
the Mei~ s Count_\· F'arm BurL'i:tu
Ovt•r thl' yl'a rs he had been acli\'t •
\\ 1 l h
s l' , . t.' r CJ I &lt;-~ g r i t ' u f t u r a I
tlr~ anJzatiun ,..; .

Serv icl's will bL' lwld c1t 1 :JO p.l!l
at tile Walhr funentl Hnrrlt'
With lht• nt:'v . AIIIIISTJIII s uffit'laltrl g
Btu·irll will be in Mi lt•s Ct'lTlfil'I'Y.
Fnends 1na y call &lt;:~ 1 tlw fum~ ;·al
lw11H' fru111 2 p.m. Thursda\· llll! tl
ltlllt' uf til L· st'r\'ll't''i _ The faJt;ih. \nil
rt '( 'l'I\T frll'IH! S ft't i/! 1 2 to i CJ JH] .i \If~
Fr id a~

. p.Jn . Thurs(lay .

Zana 1'. \\ itlrnm
Mrs. Znll&lt;l P Wilhl'iH·\', 82, di L'd
Tue~tb~ &lt;1t

lll' r

t'l'~ td c nn·

in

Mltlt'r-

une

sister a nd

three

Brown.

Mrs . Young was a member of

Mmersvi lle : and Floyd Brown. Mid-

Trinity Church in Pomeroy and of
the Friendly Circle of that church .

Victor

RcynuldsiJurg ;

diepurt; &lt;:t siste r-in-law. Gencvi~.·vc
Hummel. Barberton, ~nd seve ral
greal-n it•ces and nephews
. Mrs. Withrow was a member of

both

the

Mi nersvil le

Um ted

Methodi st Church and the Racint'

F'1rst Bapllst Churc h.
F' uu ere:~l

Sl'rvices \\·i ll be held at 1

p.in. at tlw Ewing Funera l Home
with the

Rev. Dun Walke r Df·
B uri;ll wiII be in the
Grahcun Ste~t ion C'e11Wlery. Friend!;
may call at the funerCJ I burnt.'
rl nytl li lt' 2fll'r 7 p.rn . Wednesday .

fi l'l&lt;lll ll g .

\\(L'o j)I"L'CI'(it'd Ill

d t•a th by

htT

pclfL'IllS. (;purgt• H. &lt;Jil d .Juse phllll' H.

W~~ kend

Salisbury Township Trustees will
meet in regular session at 7 p.m.
Monday, July 6, at the home of the
clerk, Wanda Eblin. This is a change
from the regular meeting night
which would have been Friday, July

Clc,s'i!~Ji~;Li
All Middleportbe closed Friday,"'"'"'''"
employees may
dependence Day h~~;~~tf:~I}
business hours will r'

3.

liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,.;iji!i.W;;t~~i'-!;jji;iw~R..~~~...;;t~P!iiiiiiiiililliiii.

She was a member of Pomeroy Or-

der of Eastern Star and was a past
worthy matron of that chapter. She
served as OES representative to
North Dakota in 1961-1963.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev . Robert McGee

..
.
J
UaemJ)Ioylnent rate falls In une

Medrcal Ce utcr.
Mrs. Young was a daughter of the

~le

a~ ~ah

S. her parE"n ts
M.s he
Moore
Davi-;.Juhn
Bes !des
was
pren•ded in death by her husbrtnd ,
Thomas Young, and a brother.
Duru1e De~ vis .
Sun ·1v ing a n • thret' sons- in-laws
&lt;-~nd daughter s. Mr. and Mrs. Pil'r cc
1 MC-l ri ly n 1 Rice. Arlington, Va. , Mr .
and Mrs . EdgCJ r il .eahl /\ltmaycr.
I -t.·v ittu wn . Long Jsland. and Mr . and
Nelsunvi Ht•:

and Mrs

o[

granrldciUghters. Mr.

Pau l 1Na ncy 1 Wells.

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FOURTH-OF~JULY

Jury convicts ex-convict
MOBILE, Ala ..- An ex-convict who said he made a deal with police

to implicate three men in the death of a black youth has been .aonvicted
ofperjury.
·
Johnny Ray Kelly, 28,'\JU'Iichard, faces one to 10 years in prison af·
ter being convicted Wedn~y for giving false testimony in the investigation uf the slaying of Michael Donald, 19, of Mobile, whose hody
was found hanging from a tree. in March_ No one has been indicted in
Donald's kilUng.
The three white men implicated by Kelly were charged but later
released.

SALE

Handicap continue Rainier c.limb

.· }I/ ·
'"'lolo-"\1~~

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PARADISE, Wash. - Eleven disabled climbers, seven of them
blind, sang and joked as they and their guides inched up 14,41G-foot
Mount Rainier in a conquest they hope will show the handicapped can
surmount any obstacle.
The party, 1!!&lt;1 by Jim Whittaker- the renowned mountaineer who
was the first American to scale Mount Everest- reached Camp Muir
at 10,000 feet Wednesday night. The camp, served as the base for
rescuers searching for the II climbers who were buried under tons of
ice and snow that fell from a glacier on the mountain June 21.

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Adults didn't get involved
FAIRBORN, Ohio - Though two young boys are charged with
delinqueqpy in a 2-year-old girl's drowni 0g, a crowd of adults did
n#Ul),\)~~$ilve 'IIJe child as s!Je lay face downJn ;~ drainage ditch;
pollee say.
·. Acting Chief of Detectives Richard Bishop said Wednesday that
about 10 or 15 people, mainly adults, gathered around the drai11age
pond near the Landmark Village housing complex in Fairborn after
~ndra Marie Slaven was found June 19. They stood there waiting
for police while the girl lay face down in the water.

I t H.

Judge returns innocent verdict

PICKLE &amp; PIMENTO LOAF •••51.89
OLD FASHION LOAF •••••• '.H
. $2.07
HAM
SALAD ••••••••••• ~ ~. $1.39
oz .
FRENCH CITY WIENERS •••••• 95c
I C l' FI C h

CINCINNATI - Betty J. Welch, $4, Loveland, has been found innocent of a charge of involuntary manslaughter charge in connection
with the fatal heart attack of the caretaker at her sister's home Dec.
11,1980. .
.
Judge Gilbert Bellman dismissed the charge Wednesday in
Hamilton C&lt;!unty Common Pleas Court after pathQlogist Charles ijirch testifletl that Walter Korte, 50, had a hearrt condition so bad he
could have died anytime.
Korte died after Mrs. Welch fired a pistol into the home uf her sister,
Alice K_Sclioonover, in the well-ttHio suburb of Indian Hill.

Hom c m .1 ~ e

11

.

s1.97

.
IU oz . I ,1Siy

-THURSDAY, JULY 2
-FRIDAY, JULY 3

...,

JU 1 Olln t ( fl lllorn1 {1

CELERY

O h1 0 ( olb y I onqhorn

CHEESE , ,

FOR 2 BIG DAYS

PRODUCE

2/99~

III II&gt;. New

1

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39~

Whi! C. s l

POTATOES

I ,J q

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,,

Bill continues present levels
WASlllNGTON - The White House says President Reagan has
signed legislation continuing present benefit levels for the nation 's 23
million f09(1 stamp recipients through Sept. 30.
The bill, enacted by Congress last week and signed Wednesday, .
authorizes spending an edra $1.7 billion on the program In the current
fiscal year. The original level was $9.8'bi1Uon.

99

FROZEN

Mexico will as~ist refugees

f\ird

CHICKEN LIVERS ••••••••••• age

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(. . . :.:....:':··. :.
L,.--..

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16 oz . De l Monte

t

tU oi . &lt; .1~ tl cller ry

.worten.

HOT DOG SAUCE •••••••• , 2/95~
I 0 . S 01

POCHMAN'S MUSTARD······ 49~
oz

, ""''·

(hie~ en 1 rurt·e y

·CARNATION SPREADABLES s1.19
flo unly

I WID

P ;ICI&lt;

PAPER TOWELS •••.••••••• s1.29
10 oz . Del Monte

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE ····~··89'

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LONDON - The economic policies of Conservative Prime Mlnjater
Margaret Thatcher's govel'nment will have "dlsasti'ous" social consequences If \lflemployment reache!t 3 million, fonner PriJne Minister
Edward H~ath predicts.
·
There are now 2,880,000 jobless In Brifllin.
.
. Heath sald Wednesday the tlght-money,pollcies of his succesaorl in
. the rulbig,Conservative Party 1 cutting public spending and forcing Interest rates up, are ''Incomprehensible" to many ·businessmen and

PORK-N-BEANS •••••••••• 2/79'

1.5

Predicts dir.e con~equences
I

PINEAPPLE JUICE ......... s1.29
~ h ow h o.l

·- -. · · .· ..

\'ku··

CHARM IN ••••••••••••••• $1.89

01

MEXICO CITY ~' MeXIco says \t will give food and medicine to
th011S811da of refugees who fled Guatemala, but send home those It considers ineligible for political asylum.
Mexican newspapers report that 4,000 Guatemalans have taken
refuge In boJ:der, towns of Mexico's southern Chiapas state in the past
10 days to escape what they called repression by the G\IBtemalan army and right·wing paramilitary groups .

I

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' ,,. oil

1'l

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Welfare
checks
in mail

WEARING APPAREL

MARGARINE

1 Section, 12 Pages .

--. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 2,1981

Ph . 992-6342
317 N. 2nd
Middl e por.

EVERY ITEM OF

CJtr.nt r. r .:;

en tine

c;ct·a Jdirw Davrs Yuung, 75. 222 W.

Ma111 St.. died Tuesday at Ho lZ&lt;•r

j

1 I h . I ce n 0 1r ce n

at

VOI.30,N0.35

tober of last year. The previous high monthly figure
was 7.8 percent in December 1976.•
Private analysts say the nation's unemployment rate
is expected to remail) relatively stable despite indications of an economic slowdown say.
Several forecasters agree with Treasury Secretary
Donald Regan's assertion Wednesday that there is little likelihood the jobless rate will reach or top 8 percent
as business activity weakens during the summer.
In an interview, Regan said that it appears the
United States has halted doublf-'!igit inflation. But he
acknowledged that the immediate result will be an
economic slowdown, accompanied by higher unemployment.

who have given up their search for jobs because they
can 'tfind one.
1be department reported these other unemployment
rates:
- Adult men declined from 6.3 percent to 6.1 percent.
- Adult women declined by 0.3 percentage point to
6_5 percent.
-Teenagers declined by 0.5 percentage point to 19
percent.
- White workers declined from 6.8 percent to6.4 percent.
- Hispanics remained at 10.2 percent.
The 7.6 percent unemployment rate in May returned
to the peak level recorded in May, July, August and Oc-

•

Copyrighted 1911

PRICE ON

DAIRY

.

The department also repOrted an increase of 100,000
people In its " discouraged worker" category - people

.e

"NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY"

-

jobs.

For All Occasions

SELECTED SHOES
CHAPMAN'S SHOES

1

a result, unemplii)'Jilllnt illcreased on a seasonally adjusted balliB to 7.a m!Won."
The departmimt reported lhat unemployment among
blacks J'06e by 0.6 percentage point, from 13.6 percent
to 14.2 percent.
The department says the labor force overall grew by
1.3 million 1aat month, but lhat the rise was only about
half the amount expectecJ " based on patterns which
have occurred In recent years."
Total employment feU by 840,000 in June, however,
as the government reported 98.4 million people holding

WASHINGTOf'l (AP) - '!be nation's unemployment
rate fell an une~ 0.3 percentage point In June,
breaking a pattern of rising joblessness lhat coincides
with the end of the·school year, the Labor Department
reported today.
The department's Bureau of Lahor Statistics said
last month's unemployment rate was 7.3 percent of the
national workforce, compared to May's 7.6 percent.
The deeline returned unemployment to the range
that had prevailed in February, March and April.
"Unemployment traditionally rises in June, coinelden\ with the closing of schools and the entrance of
many young people Into the labor force in search of
jobs,'' the department said.
"This June, the increase was less than usual and, as

r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
Dec:orated Cakes

CHAPMAN'S CLEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES! ! !

Y2

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Truslt•t•s to mt•t•t

(;t ·raldirw J)_ 'oun g-

Mrs. Robert 1Eiaine1 Rogers

S\'I I Il' .

.S ill'

Withrow ,
brothers.

officiating. Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery . Order of Eastern
Star services will be held at the
funeral hom e at 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday . Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. today .

All WOMEN'S CLOTHING·
All CHILDREN'S CLOTHING
All MEN &amp; BOYS CLOTHING
\

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Monthly benefit checks are on their way
to 580,000 Ohio welfare recipients
following the General Assembly's
adoption of a $1.85 billion budget to
finance state goverrunent operations
during the next four months.
Representatives wrapped up work
on the tem)iorary bill at 11:53 p.m.
Wednesday with an IJ6.8 vote to accept a compromise measure hammered out by a six-member con·
ference conunittee.
Senators followed suit at 12:20
a.m. Thursday, 29-4, sending the bill
to Gov . James A. RhOdes for his
signature .
Passage of the bill cleared the way
for irrunedlate weHare department
mailing of 1!10,000 checks totaling $49
million. Their distribution had been
held up for two days afier legislators
failed to reach agreement on the bill.
Clark Law, executive assistant to
Kenneth B. Creasy, welfare director ,said arrangements were made to
mail the checks at the Columbus
post office as soon as legislators
completed action on the bill.
But tile approach of the Independeilce,..Day holiday . ,niiJied
questiOns ·whether all the checks,
benefitting 582,000 individuals under
the Aid to Dependent Children
program, could be delivered before
early next week.
Passage of the interim budget will
give the House and Senate edra
time to work out a wide range uf differences on an appropriations bill
covering the rest of fiscal year 1982,
which began Wednesday.
Approval by the conference com'mittee followed a hectic day of
private meetings between top
legislative leaders and ~hers trying
to resolve differences over funds for
capital improvements, school
desegregation and industrial
developi"M}lt.
Conferees began moving off dead
center following a meeting between
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
D-New Boston, and Senate President
Paul E. Gillrnor, R-Port Clinton.
The pan_el agreed that the bill
would cover four IJl()nths, as
suggested by the House, and that
spending would not exceed $1.85
billion.
But conferees scaled back the
amount of money included in the bill
for initial funding of new capital improvement projects around the
state_ . Majority Democrats in the
House had originally allocated $25.2
million; the compromise plan calls
for spending $15.2 mllUon.

""aq¢D,.WI):LLWISHERs lsaraeli Prime
Minister Menachein Begin greets wellwishers outside
his house In Jerusalem Wedoeday. Begin claimed vic-

tory ln the Israeli's parliamentary election against
Shimon Peres- ( AP Laserphoto l

Begin feels he can get majority
TEL AVIV, Israel i AP) - Prime
Minister Menachem Begin claims he
can patch together a new parliamentary majority ned week even
though it appears that the Labor
Party will win one more seal in the
Israeli Parliament than his Likud
blue.
••J hope by next week to fonn a
goverrunent," Begin said Wednesday after meeting with Yosef
Burg, whose orthodox National
Religious Party is essential for a
majority.

to initial returns from the sl ow count
of paper ball,ots.
With those seats . Begrn would then
need the support of two independent
legislators for a bare 61-seat
maj ority , a brittle edge that could
easily crwnbl e.

The 67-year-old prime minister
refused lo discuss hi.s coalitl ~n­
building efforts , saying he was entering a " period of silence and contemplatiOn." It was asswned the
religious pa rti es would demand new
restrictions on the secular majority
Projections based on still unof- as their price fur supporting eith er
ficial returns from Tuesday's elec- party .
As members nf Begin's governtion gave the socialist Labor Party,
led by Shimon Peres, 49 seats in the ment for the past four years, the
120-member Knesset,
or relig1ous bloc forced through tighter
Parliament, to 48 for Begin's con- controls on abortion and autopsies
servative Likud, or Unity bloc.
and won an easing of the rules goverBegin is wooing the National ning the release of religiQUs women
Religious P&amp;rty and the ultra- from military conscription.
orthodox Agudat Israel; who will
Burg, the interior minister in the
control.a total of ll seats, aCCI&gt;rdlng _Be!l_in's last Cabinet and the chief of

th e

Palestinian

aulon orn v

negutl(lting learn , signaled his pa~­

(y's willingness to join forces again
with Begin. But he a lso did not role
nut jn1ning a Labor-led coa lition.
Asked 1f he was forming a
coalition with !.ikud, Burg repli ed.
" Yes. that 's true. " How about a
Labor

'' [don 't rule it

guv~rmnent?

nul, but I can't see that now," he
sa id .
Bu r~ sa id the NRP favored a walllt&gt;-wall coalition bringing together
both major parties. Peres has flatly
rejected that.
Agudat Israel has made no public
cununent.

Peres clai med victory after the
first results were announced but
retreated when it became clear that
the pivotal NRP preferr ed an alliance with l.ikud. Speaking priva tely,
Labor campaign officials said they
had lost hope of building a majority,
but the party refused to conede
defeat.

Rep. Miller
.main speaker
" COngressman Clarenee

Miller
retlimS to Southelll!t:em Obio Friday
for a.bwt)l July 4th'SChedule_
The lOth dlstri~ Jl~er begins
his ,[ndepenctence DiiY::sehedUie in
Gallipolis where he Will serve as
paride 'marshall fo,r ihe aimual 4th
parade ~ by the
Galliipoli! ~ Chamber of Comparade begins at 10 a.m
~~=~~Y ~:'!!~' At l'p.m.,that·af·
~
partiCipate 1n the .
program at Park

ru

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OPE.N THURSDAY 9:30 Til 5,,FRIDAY ,:30 TIL 8 P.M.

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CLOSED SATURDAY, JULY· 4th

Ofh~the

ELBERFELD$ ltf 'PbMER().Y
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addriia tbe July
a_t Ma~ Pait In
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D. .Y. ~.' tetera1111 ' Memorial tiOipltal , V011ng (leftl, geoe~ ~hlarmaa 'Of ihe frog e\'en'u.
wllb 111 Iris "Gall sa-y" woa 'lbe BeVeDib · Gnnd I.Aieas stated . be WBI ~ndlng ~· .to Bn.D Akers,
Na~. he~ Derby held Sa~y during lbe Big ~ytoo, and dlvkilDI · ~ bala~ of lbe lbelley
Beltd Rep~ wlill • U.. fl %1 aecea*. A c!left llllbe received l!etweta · lbe ladles auxiliary aDd cady
._.... C!l tilt pllia a ~ - • ~ated t.o Stott · •trlilm at Vetetallll ...aiotlal. 'Set!orid plate tropb
Llell '(rtpl), lllbidilllti'at.or at lb htllpltal, by BUI wentt.oKerrDislrlballllgCo.,Athens.
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Commentary

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The' deposing of rip O'Neil.._)~--·-·-__,....;......---]ames
__ ._.J._~'K_il~~"-tric_k
WASIDNGTON - H the events of
June 25 and 26 had occurred in the
British House of Corrunons, instead
of in our own House of Representatives, a defeated prime minister,
hat in hand, would be caning on the
queen. The government would have
fallen on a vote of no confidence.
Something very close to such high
drama happened here .
What we witnessed last week was
the · collapse of the ruling
Democratic Party in the House. It
was the deposing, if you please, of an
imposing figure: Speaker Thomas
P. "Tip" O'Neill. Neither he nor his
frustrated majority leader, Jim
Wright of Texas, could hold their
restless members in line on a
procedural question . On Thursday
the dam broke. On Friday came the
deluge. It is perhaps as well that
· everyone then fled to the hills for the
i ·- Fourth of July recess. We need time
to think upon these events.
Something historic has happened.
butit's hard to say exactly what.

It may be useful to look first at the
votes on the massive oodget
resolution simply in parliamentary
terms. Then we might speculate on
what all this means to the Reagan
administration.
The two-party system in this country has been going to the bow-wows
for the past 50 years. For a host of
reasons, the 61d devices of party
rewards, party punishment and party discipline have rusted away . Little remains of party patronage, party fund raising or party responsibility. Even so, simply to retain
some semblance of a system, certain unwritten rules have prevailed.
Among them is the rule in Congress
that on procedural questions, party
members are expected to vute un

party lines.
The Democratic leadership had
established a party position on the
budget resolution. Under the rule ,
only six amendments could be offered on the floor. The rule was
designed deliberately to embarrass

The Daily Sentinel
Ill {' &lt;~Uri Slrl't'l
Pumt&gt;ru)·. Oh i&lt;1
6111· 9!2-2 156
11• \41"rt: DTti"I''H F. INTER~&lt;;ST OF THE M E IGS..MASON ARF.A

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~m~ r-T""\...._1~-,-,~c:::::~.~

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ROBERT L. W!NGETI
Puhlisht-r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Mt:MRI-~ R nl Tho · r\ so;ndah·d Prt•,;,;, Inland Dally PrMO~ A.ssiW'iaticm and thr
!lrm·rio·1m No' "''IWP''r l'uhli :o; h• · r ~ 1\ssnciati••n.
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l..t t..r' ;m · , uhjt·•·l tu o ·d i tin ~o: and mu!&gt; l tw ''il(nt•d \olilh nHmt·. addrl"S!i 11nd lt'lt•pfmm•
111111 ,,.,., ~ .. uu.. i.:_n,·ol kth·r. \ol ill tw puhli , ho·d . IA·tkr\ -. hut~ld Do.· in l(otld Lasll', addrt'!i!i ln)(
'''It'''· nul ,.. -r ... uualitil ''

It all takes place
at the White House
This is a story about house hunting, crowded neighborhoods. a welldressed man with a gun and a disappearing baby. It all takes place at the
White House.
Alongside the Rose Garden, two ca rdinals decided to build their summer
nest. And, as birds will do. they produced two eggs, one of which produced,
eventually, a baby cardinal.
But last week, when the gentleman who worked m the nearby Ova l Office
left town for a few days, a terrible corrunotion arose.
Painters arrived and spread dropcloths all about. They carefully avoided
the nest as they spruced up the area . Workmen came in to remove two trees
blocking the view of the garden from the Oval Office and Cabinet Room .
Other men set tu work on the lawn.
A While House aide, discovering the work, peered toward the nest and
looked at the baby, lying very still while the swnrner sun beat down . Its eyes
and beak were closed. "Oh, it's dead, it's dead for sure," she said.
But a painter gently poked the nest with the long handle of a painting roller
and the bird pupped open its mouth, expecting a feeding .
Then, over the weekend. before the gentleman returned, the cardinals and
their offspring disappeared The nest, on Tuesday afternoon, was empty except for one egg that never hatched.
The neighborhood mourning dove was not ta lking.
From her perch about 10 feet above ground. she eyed from time to tune a
well-dressed man carrying a gun and standing his guard between the Oval
Office and the White House mansion .
The dove and her mate had taken over a nest built 'by a pair of robins, who
moved in un a quiet Friday and out on a busy Monday, frightened by the
hustle and bustle they discovered .
"Doves don't mind people," said lrv Williams, the White House groundskeeper.
The White House lawns are almost unique in the heat of the nation's
capital , reflecting their pampered treatment.
By swnmer's end, a dose look reveals patches of crab grass and other
weeds, and sometimes blades of rough, brown grass that just couldn't survive .

But the Rose Garden, which is simply a rectangular plot of grass surrounded by roses and other shrubs, is shining these days.
Moments after President Reagan left the White House on his way home to
California last week, one-third of the lawn was tom up.
With the speed of a crew tearing up a basketball court and replacing it with
an ice hockey rink at Madison Square Garden , workers stripped away the
grass and brought in a gas-&lt;lriven tamper.
The gadget, with considerable agitation, smoothed down the earth. By the
end of the day, a new carpet ul sod had been spread.

Letter to the editor

In many parts of llle world, the
kind'of freedom we take for granted

~u·=V~etooAl~~us ~i~

!retdonrOr speeth,;Jl !ssembly
·•

and rellgion Ufllllrallelld In history.
·I personally find freedom con.t seience ,yery precious. As a Seventh; i . d@y Adventll!t. I believe in wor.IIIJipplil&amp; • Jltunlay, Unlilte mOll!
· ; olllef. ~latls who obllerve Sun. -·~ day. "iflMtilits of lllam consider

"f

..

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.
t

which the Reagan administration
could write its program into law.
Looking to the future, the question
is, will the coalition hold?
It prohably wiU hold. The 29
Democrats who rejected their party
leadership have -burned their
bridges. In Thursday's angry

debate, they heard themselves·
def101111ced as ~·traitors" to their party. They.knowingly took the riSk that
a party caucus may punish them in
various ways. On the most important roll calls of the 97th
Congress, they left their leaders and
found the Republican camp.

As eVery mortal sinner knows, the
first transgression comes hard, the
second'not so hard . As~ critjcal
roll ca!Js come along, the defiant
Democrai$, most of · whom are
secure in their own districts, will
have fewer qualms about supporting
the President.

WASHINGTON CAP) - The
government's index of leading indicators, an important gauge of
future national economic strength,
plunged in May, the Commerce
Department reported Tuesday.
The drop was in line with other
recent government reports that
have indicated the economy is
slowing in its recovery from last
year's recession.
"The decline in the index of
leading indicators for May. together
with other information available,
suggests that the economic recovery
that began last summer temporarily
ha s stalled," said Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldnge.
"Since the end of last year, the
leading index has been telegraphing
the message of a slowdown .... We do

know, hosting two All-Star games in
orf'e year, that sort of thing."
Cleveland was the site of the
National Basketball Association's
all-star contest In February.
" It's not so much the financial
aspect," Allen said. "It's more a
civic pride type of thing."

of responsibility.
The suit charged CBS and Augusta
National with negligence for leaving
an exposed wire on a designated
path.
Testimony during the trial showed
that the injury to Mrs. Silas has curtailed her personal and social life
and has disabled her permanently.

Begin suSJ)ensions
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jockeys
Rufino Diaz and P.J. Cooksey begin
sllApensions at River Downs after
they were set down by track officials
last Friday.
Diaz, who got a 14-day suspension,
and Cooksey, seven, were both
disqualified for bwnping during the
feature race . Stewards charged
Diaz, in the post position, and
Cooksey, on the outside, pinched the
field out of the starting gate, causing
two horses to spill. There were no
serious injuries.

Both sides upsetQueenCitymayor
"That's it... cut away the e~rly retiree .... Yes, I believe we're going up_a
little now."

not expect to see a recession - but
do expect a continued slowdown in
the short term," Baldrige said in a
statement.
The department said the index
declined 1.8 percent in May after
gains of 0.4 percent in April and 1.8
percent in March. The earlier increases were mostly due to rlsing
crude oil prices.
The index is considered a
barometer of future economic activity.
The biggest contributor to the May
decline was a change in the prices
lor raw materials, according to the
Commerce Department.
In all, said the department, nine of
the 10 leading indicators registered
declines in May : layoff rate, new or-

But the move, aimed at saving $1
billion in fiscal 1982, is not easy to
carry out. Without manually sifting
through millions of files, Social
Security has no ready way to tell
which of its 36 million beneficiaries
are getting the minimum benefit and
how much their checks will be cut.
Top Social Security officials
acknowledged
in interviews
Tuesday that it will take them 9,000
worker-years and cost $170 million

Our forgeign

ders, vendor performance, contracts and inflation-adjusted orders
for plant and equipment, building
pennits, sensitive raw materials
prices, stock prices, total liquid
assets and money supply.
Only one - average workweek rose.
Two other components of the 12element leading index - inventories
on hand and on order and net
business fonnation - were not yet
available.
The report lent support to predictions of private analysts as well as
economists in the Reagan administration. They have generally
forecast little or no overall growth in
the April-June quarter and only
slightly better performance in the
third quarter before renewed growth

late this year.
The leading index, with its 1.8 percent decline last month, now stands
at 135.2 percent of its 1967 base.
The new report said April's
leading indicators index showed a
0.4 percent gain, the same as
originally reported . The new May
figure is also subject to later
revision when more· complete inlonnation is available.
In companion reports, the Commerce Department reported that its
index of coincident indie~~,t.ors, a
measure of current econQJ'liic activity, increased O.i'percent in May,
while its index of Jagging indicators
was up 8. 7 pereent in May .' The
Jagging index increased after falling
for four straight months. ~

...'

to lind and recompute the minimum
benefits.
The Reagan plan not only would
end the minimwn payment fur
future beneficiaries, but would affect 3 million people now on the rolls,
mostly elderly women in their early
70s. About 90,000 arc over 90.
Last week, Rep. J . J. Pickle, [).
Texas, chairman of the House Ways
and Means subcorrunittee on Social
Security, entered into the

Mann, who has gathered a
business corrunittce to think up ways
to cut the city's economic loss, fired
off a telegram Wednesday to
representatives of both the Major
League Baseball Players
Association and the club owners,
urging a quick s.ettlement.
Mann said major league cities,
which have built big stadiwns for
t'he sport, are suffering
economically from the Joss of games
and the tax revenues they normally
produce.

Congressional Record a contingency
plan written last March by Social
Security's Office of Central
Operotion! that wamed of nearchaos if the agency sought to make a
minimum benefit change in two
months.
•
The contingency plan said that
would require postponing all other
work, includihM· ·figuring initial
benefits for 200,iloo.~ew retirees.

..... ,.
"' r

-"

The Daily Sentinel
, IUSPSI-1
A. Dlvllloll of MalliiDecb, lDe.

Isrdel?"

' 'Our policy toward Israel is to sell
them planes, · 'tanks and other
military hardware to protect themselves against their enemies in the
Middle East."
"Saudi Arabia is an enemy of
IsraeL What is our policy against
that government •"
"To provide them with sufficient
equipment to defend themselves in
case they are attacked by the Sovietsupplied Arahs."
"What if Saudi Arabia gives the
military equipment to the Pl.O instead of using it to save them'lelves
from the Conununists?"
" Our policy is to lake a dim view
toward such action and have our ambassador advise of our displeasure."
"Can we move on to Pakistan? Do
we have a poUcy toward Pakistan?"
"Of course we do. It's. to provide

I

Under the r evised Plan, a limit of Type B's n •quiring compensa tion .
NEW YORK (AP) - The baseball
strike marked its three-week an- eight Type B players would require Ft lr example. if the re arc nin e Typt•
rliversary today. And although compensati on in the fonn of " A's. then lht·ee Type B's would
stalemated negotiations have professtonal play er and that number ~encr~ t c cornpcnsatiun. If the re is
resumed, both sides agreed there could be reduced based on the num- une Type A, then eight Type B's
ber of Type A players 1 all uf whom wuu ld require compensation .
was no cause for optimism.
Mi ller was uniJ
would
require compe nsa tion 1
The casualty count added 10 more
canceled games today, pushing the availabl e. The number uf Type A
total to 261 since the strike began players in the draft would be su bJune 12. And from the tone of both tracted from 12 i reduced from last
sides' observations Wednesday. week's 14 1to produce the number of
when talks reswned for the first r - - - - - - - - - -- ----1

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier Gr Mater Route

hoursession. ·'' No.''

It was a position with which Marvin Miller, executive director of the
striking Major · League Players
Association, could not argue . " If Mr.
Grebey said there was no progress,"
Miller began, .. , find nothing to
disagree with there."
Management used Wednesday's
session to alter certain aspects of
their last proposal on compensating
learns who lose ranking free agents
in the re-entry draft - the only issue
in the strike.
\...
The major revision involved the
fonriula used for determining the
nwnber of Type B or second-level
free agents who would require
professional player compensation .
Type 8 free agents are identified as
those falling between the top 25 and
40 percent statistically of all
available re-entry draft players.
Type A players fall in the top 25 per·
cent.

One Yea~ .. .

. ..... . ~2.•
SINGLE COPY

PRICES
Dolly ......

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15Ct!nl'l1

Sulxw:ribem not desirilll!l to pay the c8rrill
Ina)' remil in idnnce direct to The Daily
Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 1! month basi11. Credit
will be given carrier eHh month.

No ~bciptilHL'I b)' maU

pen~tted in t~

where horne carrier lJei'Yift Is available.

MAoLSVIISCRIPTIONS
Ollie aMI Wnl VlrJlaia

J'

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)'Month . ................ . ........ fl0.50
Si:uTKifltll ........ .. .... . .. . ...... fl7 .50
1 Year ................•... . ...... 133.00

Ratet OatiWe Oble
• • Wetl Vtrpdl

3 Moolh ..................... ..... IU .OO
6 Moolh .. .. . . .. . .. ............ 110.00
lYear ......
. .... . . . ...... ta.~.

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time this higher
week. .the toll will go considerably
"Am I optimistic?" management
representative Ray Grebey asked rhetorically - following the three-

POSTMASTER : Send addres." tu The Daily
Sentinel, Ill CuurtSt., ~meroy, Ohiu45769.

MIDDLEPORT
''The Finest In Work

BACK IN TALKS Marvin !\'IIIIer, the executive director of the
major league Baseball Players' Committee, speaks to the press Wednesday at New York's Doral Inn, following another day of fruitless
negotiations In the baseball strike. Miller re-entered the tallts lor the
first time since June ·1Z, when he removed hlm&amp;elf from the tialks at the
start of the strike. (AP La~erphotol
·~

Scioto results
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Tipsy King,
driven by Dan Irvine Jr., won the fir, st heat of the Ohio Sire Stakes for 2year-old pacing colts at Scioto
DoWIISon Wednesday.
Tipsy King, winning by three
lengths in 2.02.0, paid $4.00, $3.00 and

$3.00.

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

Earn Some Paper Money

:

•:rhls Yoath Roate Is now
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open in the.

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and Westem Wear"

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(;all The Dally

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No progress reported
despite long session

York, NewYori&lt;IOOo7.

.,

fer, Gary Snouffer; ba ck, I to r. Tony Loquosto, Tim
Smith, Shon Loquosto, Yvette Young, Johnnie Sargen~
Jnsh Heck, and David Fetty.

SENTINEL The Dally Sentinel t-ball team lor the
1981 season Is pictured. Members are front, I to r,
Megan Bartels, Mlstl King, Gary King, Jr., Kyle Shaf·

Member: The A.'IIWCiat.ed Press, Inland Daily PretiS A..._owcitllion and tht! AnlfriCan
NI!W!'If*per Publishers A.!1.10eiation, NaliOOlll
Adverlislng Repre!tentatlve, Branharn .
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue, New

- -.fi;

theni with our latest lighter planes
"We plan Jo get tougher with
to protect them against Mghanistan.
Angola and softer with South Africa .
This is a signal to the Soviets that
But we can go either way with the
hasn't been lost un them.''
rest of the continent, providing they
"Pakistan is building a nuclear · ·stay o~t of the 1\oviet camp.''
bomb which is being financed by
" Do we have a South American
Libya. How do we feel about that?"
policy?.''
"Lousy."
·
"We certainly do, We will supply
"Do we have a policy toward
any authoritarian government with
Iraq?"
ahns to defend themselves al(ainst a
"Yes, although we condemn their
Marxist takeover by Cubanattack on Iran, which violated the
supported rchels and their Soviet
United Nations Charter, we support
roasters.".
their resolution in the U.N. against
Israel for knocking out their nuclear
"Than '""' l assume •.that our
fuel enrichment facilities in Baghforeign puli•·y is one based slriclly
dad."
nn military security around the
"Do we have a policy toward
world?"
Europe?''
" That is •·urTcct. The only way to
"Our policy toward Europe is one
bring about fll'ace is to. ·. see that
of friendship and cooperation,
every nali11o iu ttie Free 'World is
dt&gt;Spite the fact they won't pay their
sufficiently i1nnL&gt;d to defend themlair share for the defenlie of their
selves against Communisrn.:''
own countries, or allow us to place
"But · suppose' they use their
neutron bomhs on their soil to use
military mig[l,l tn settle sc'nres .with
agairist the Soviets if a~d when they
their old encmit..·s? ''
invade Wesl4lm Europe."
'-'We don't need any polk'Y on that
·''Whereareweon ~rica?'' ·
because it-t•luld nev~r .hawn . "
l

·

Published every artemuoo, -Munday through
Frid!;ly, 111 Court St.ret!l, by the Ohio Valley
Publi!lhi.ng Company • Multbnedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio t$7&amp;9, 9D'Z-21~. Second tlatfi
pusta~ l)llid at Pomeroy, Ohiu.

policy~------:-:--·A_n_B____;uc_hw_"'_"

stead of threatening the Soviets?
What is our policy then?"
'' One of stron~ condemnation."
" What is our policy toward

provement."
Mann estimated a loss of $900,000
to the local economy for every game
lost to the strike.
Local business and civic leaders
are working on an advertising campaign to attract tourists in the absence of baseball to the city, but
Mann said the strike must be settled.
"To avert the dire ramifications to
our nation's urban centers of an .increasingly protracted strike, I again
urge an irrunediate resolution of this
conflict," Mann said.

"It is bitterly ironic that the same
cities which have continually been
among base bali's most loyal a~d en-

.

syst~m

thusiastic supporters will have their
present fiscal difficulties worsened
with the revenue loss imposed by the
absence of games," Mann said.
The city government has losl
nearly $500,000 in taxes so far, and
the impact on the loc~l economy has
been devastating,l&gt;b.nn said.
"The losses are upwards of $10
million and growing," in Cincinnati,
the telegram said. "Combined with
proposed federal cutbacks, the
financial outlwk fur cities is a bleak
one which shows no signs of irn-

CINCINNATI fAP) - Mayor
David Mann is boiling .mad at both
the striking players and the major
league owners for allowing the
baseball strike to lag on while major
league cities are missing the money
spent by fans.

··:

Taiwan?"

.

0 klahoma COUple wins action

&lt;Qne week ..

When President Reagan was
asked at his recent press conference
why he had not made a speech on
foreigQ policy, he took the question
as a criticism, and replied to the effect that just because he hadn't
made a speech on foreign policy,
didn't mean that his administration .
didn't have one.
I never doubted he did. But
because I wanted to be accurate
about it, I called a friend at the State
Department who is assigned to the
desk which briefs other foreign service officers on what our foreign
policy is.
"Where do we stand on China•" I
asked.
"Our foreign policy is to sell them
arms so they can defend themselves
a~ainst the Soviet Union."
" And where do we stand on

-

l

Document says problems could plague
WASHJNGTON f AP) - The entire
Social S'ecurity system could be
plagued with unpaid benefits, incorrect checks and poor service for
a year or more if mandated
rninimwn payments for 3 million
retirees are eliminated, an internal
agency document says.
President Reagan has targeted
the minimum benefit for extindion
and both the Senate and House have
voted to kill it.

·h. i '

CLEVELAND (APJ - Cleveland would likely be Jllllllponed, or
has struggled for years to make ends perhaps cancelled, if the strike;
meet, but city officials say they are which began June 12, lasts much
not too worried about the possible longer.
'Joss of some tax revenues as a result
"That is one avenue through
of the major league baseball which we were hoping to demonplayers' strike.
strate the rebirth of the city - you
• "It's a hard thing to get a handle
un a Jot of the indirect monies,"
Phillip Allen, Cleveland's director of'
budget and management, said Wed' .
nesday. " For example, we don 't
know exactly how much the possible
AUGUSTA, Ga. CAP) - An
loss of business to downtown Oklahoma woman and her husband
•restaurants and businesses will alwere awarded $75,000 in damages in
feet w;,"
connection. with an accident at the
Despite the uncertainty of the 1978 Masters golf tournament.
situation, however, Allen said the
·A Richmond County jury made the
city does not plan to undertake a award Wednesday to ·Mary P. Silas
study of the strike's potential fiscal
and C.J. Silas after a two-day trial of
impact.
a 1980 lawsuit in which MrS'. Silas
"In tenns of direct taxes," he claimed she broke her leg and sufsaid, "we get 3 percent of the gate at fered pennanent injuries when she
the Stadium, which isn't something tripped on a television wire laid
we're overly concerned about . With across a designated walkway at the
a $500 million budget, that isn't I978 tourna ment.
going to mean much ."
The jury first awarded Mrs. Silas
City officials are Jess worried s:;:;,ooo from CBS television and he~
about the direct financial impact of husband $20,000 from the Augusta
the strike than they are about
National Gulf Club, the two defenanother potential negative side ef- dants in the suit.
fect, Allen said.
'
But Judge William M. Fleming Jr.
"We are very concerned about the called the verdict inconsistent, and
possible loss of the All-star Game to after discussion with attorneys for
Cleveland," he said.
all parties, he ordered that CBS
The annual classic is scheduled lor would pay the ' fuU $75,000 and
Municipal Stadium July 14, but it Augusta National wquld be relieved

Indicators -s how decline last month

"We have a treaty with Taiwan to
sell them military equipment to
defend themselves against China."
"Suppose the Chinese use the arFriday the day of worship. People
without a religious faith observe no rns we sell them to attack Taiwan inspecial day.
Throughout most of humam
history, such pluralism of worship
has nut been tolerated. Only in the
last two or three.hundred years, and
only in certain parts of the world an
individual's religion - or lack of it
- has not bee" determined by the
·
state.
As Alnerican approaches its 205th
birthday, I want to express my
gratitude to its people for their
willingness to risk the grandest 'experiment of all - -democracy,
freedom of choice for us au:
Rita Wl1dte l~
Rt.l, Cbe!lhire' '[

----Expresses thanks•---As the 4th of July appraoches, I
want to say "Thank you, America"
- thank you for your beauty, your
plenty, and your opportunity. But
thank you most of all lor taking a.
chance on Jetting us be free.

the Republicans, by fotcing ~to
vote separately, yea or nay, on such
sensitive budget cuts as those for
Social Security and child nutritjon.
The rule itself could be debated for
one hour only.
· But after all-night maneuvering,
featured by heavy White House
pressure, the resurgent Republicans
felt they could defeat the peilding
rule. The test came on a motion to
put the previous questions - that is,
a motion to cut off debate . The
Republicans, joined by 29
Democrats, voted against . the
motion. The effect was to kill the
rule and to admit the Republicans'
single package to a single triumphant vote.
When it was all over late Friday,
Democratic leaders in the House
complained bitterly that the
Republican resolution had been
railroaded to adoption. The charge
could not be denied. It was a terrible
way to run a railroad. The
Republican package had been
posted together in the middle of the
night, cutting here and restoring
there, as drafters frantically sought
to accmrunodate both the defecting
Democrats and their own wavering
members. Next week this untidy
conglomeration goes to a cuf){erence
corronittee with the Senaie. The
corronittee will have its hands full in
cleaning up the mess.
This was not the first time, and it
surely will not be the last, for mem·
bers to vote on a measure without
practice knowledge of its ocntents.
Given the political circumstances,
this probably was the only way in

Loss of revenue doesn 1t
bother Cleveland leaders·

,&gt;

Peee-2...,.-The ·Dally 'Sentinel
.P omeroy-Middleport, Qh.lo
Thursday. july 2,1911
''f''.U···

Pom~y-M.•ddl!por!, OhiO •

Thursday, July 2.1tt1

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•

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ST., R·AC·INE, OH.

Member FDIC
.

�Racin~· 's pon~
IN ~ros:.... Mason PonY ~Kue
9cUotl Itacill• came horne ,..ith" 12-5
¢n 0\.er pomeroy lifter prodliCing a

great teaJp effort at ROck springs.

To~~y Rif{le pitched a three hitter
slru&lt;:!lt out nine and went the distan-:
ce on the mound while Steve Fisher
~veq the way at the Plate. fisher

ltll a long triple and two singles.
pe~ reaford had a double and
smgle, an J!iffle a double .
·
Racine's defense was tough With
RYall Oliver turning in several good

plays at second base. JaY Bostick
also Singled for Racine.
Racine's first three rufiS· on in
each of the first three innings,
resUlted (rom wild pitcheS- Riffle
had ;;; no hiller until two 0 uts in the
fourth when Milhoane singled after
an &lt;&gt;~ror and Perrin tripled them
~mn., _ The only other hit was a
smgle by Mallory .
. PollleroY plated three ,~ore runs
the seventh as darkneSS rnacte it
harq to see- Riffle walked [our in the
fmn-,e and the re was 0 ne Racine
errol'_stewart was lagged with the
loss and was relieved by Riggs.
R&lt;lcine is now 4-2
Also in pony league plaY Eastern
smothered Mason 2141. Jirn Newell
went five innmgs to P&lt;Jst the win . He
fanned fiVC and walkect fo ur. Whtle
allo\\&lt;tng nine hits . Mike collins got
the save In one Inning 11f work .
Cullins walked two and fanned one .
The eontest was called after s ix inmn~s due to the 12 run rut e.
tn

F"ur Mason, Van Mete r suffered
the loss in five innings of work. He
gave up 15 hits, walked mn e, and
fa~t'lt!d four . Bradley carne on in
reh.,f to ..,a lk eight and fan two.
MilSon took a 2-1 leact in the first
inning, bot in th second TroY Guthrie
got the ball rolling fo r Eastern.
Gutht·ie h&lt;t the first of sevet·aJ
Eastern home runs over the left fie ld
renee.
Torn Everett also gave £astern a
boost by hitting two horne runs
over- the Ieft field fence, drawmg two
walks, and banging a single. In the
SIXth inn1ng Bub Maison l1it a two
run homer over the left fie ld fence in
a pi llch hitting rule.
Besides the three irnporwnt horne
runs, Jirll Newell and Mik• Collins
ea c h doubled. Jay carpe nter
doubled twice. Tim Probert added
two singleS and Larry Cowdery had
two s ingleS - Ray Maxson and Roger
Balser also had singles.
gre~t

M itchell had a horne run. double,
ana single for Mason- Lansan
doubled and Van Meter. Bradley,
Hoffrnan. Collins , Spradlin g and
HYsell added s ingles.
In other pony league 3 clton Middleport blasted Rutland 16-5. S.
Bak~r as the winner with six
strikeouts and nine walks- Rtck Edwa~ds pitched five tnnings. fanning
six and walking ten.
Chris Burd ette had a triple fo,. the
winnrs, S. Baker singled and
doubled. T. Cassell dou bled and
singled twice , J. Acree doubled and

league team scores/ 12~5:~ victory

Bprg-Connors .sq.uare off in Wimbledon.

singled twice:A~ CheeP ·~gled: . Syracuse hits.
five innings of work, fanning three R.eiiien ouver a triPle and double,
.
.
For Rutland. Joey Snyder tripled and walking nine. D. 'l'bornal! _pit- . -~- Wolfe a triple and single, .
and N. Blish 5 v~ -".
For RuUanll ~ ~~~w11 fi!Sd~b!ed and singled, K. Eads singled, J . - cbed two Innings with tl)ree· ·Beclcy Michael a doubleanctslngle··
and singled t-"1 \hile Smd~t ad· Sisson singled, M. Hart and 0, WelSh - strikeouts and no walks. RaJiins and and Traci Mearnsi Michelle Johnson
ded a single
· each singled twice.
Dawson combined for New Haven to each doubles. Debbie Michael and
MiddlePort ed!~ Mll5on lt.g in
The New Haven Reds upped their fanfourandwalk14.
LlndaO'Brieneachhadtwoslngle$.
Lellgue ftctioP season record to 9-3 with a 7-' vicRick Wise and T. Welch doubled
Pomeroy bombal'ded Brazle and
Metgs-Mason
behind the pttc·-l~ of tuck Wise, tory over HarrisOnVille and a 14-2 for the winners, while D. Duff, A. Brazle 1&amp;-!; K. Rought went the
who went the~~~~ 111Jilling three Victory over the Middleport Braves.
King, D. Thomas and S. Gheen and distance for the win · while T. Clark
and walking e•g ~ ~;aoJeY Pitched
The Reds scored five run in the T. ·cassell colle&lt;Jted singles. Simon- · suffered the loss.
For the winners Andrea Riggs bad
four IDnlngs 1°r , "llson- Jle. "'lllked bottom of the fourth lnhing to take ton doubled for New Haven.
In the senior softball league, a home run aDd triple, V. Jeffers and
four anct fa~t lin &gt;l'hile van the lead against HarrisOnville. A
We .elect oitly
Meter completed ~I! e, tfl' Wit~J five double by MiJ&lt;e Wolfe was the big Dravo edged Middleport Ina !G-9 Gloeckner each triples, Hatfield,
tbe) nO.t reli'
strikeouts and t:do \~f:sblow in the fi"e run inning.
squeaker. Unda O'Srien hit Debbie Grueser, Moore, stegall, Swindell
able ' atalf to
Steve Crow ~ nnl:l. Foli,.OO Singled
Todd Pethtel had a double and Michael in for the winnlng ·run in the and Bentley eacll singled. Pratt had
set'ft our CUS•
.
twice for the "'' B&amp;~~s 5. G~en and single, Matt Fisher two singles, Troy bottom of the seventh innfng. Debbie. l two singles for the winners.
tomers. Bring
For Brazle and Brazle, V. WISe
doubled, and S 1 ~~; rJ· ll8h and 'stewart a double and Joe Burris and Michael got the wm w1th no walks
in yo,... otders.
A. Kmgeach''"gt~ ·
DaleSmitheachhadasingle.
and no strikeouts. J. Meadows suf· had a home run, while Fisher,
Stewart hli~et~~~e •ingle~ ror
Troy Stewart fired five innings fered the defeat with six walks and Batey, Stewart, and Clark each
Call Us
Mason, \ian in~~ d0 vblect, and from the mound to pick up his first no strikeouts.
singled.
Lawson, Sprlldl a~. srlldley , Mtl· win of the year. Mike Wolle relieved
Leading hitters for Middleport
chell and CoJlin&gt; a &lt;:lq~d s~rgles.
in the sixth.
were Paula Horton with a triple and
Little 1ft ~~ AC!l 00
Leading hitters for Harrisonville three singles, Kris Snowden a triple
In Little ()''11\~e play, host were Scott Williams with a triple, and single, April King two douBles
Syracus~ edged R~lland 4-3 ~hawn double and single, Charlie Barrett and a single, Pam Crooks, Cindy
Arnott scored l~e "-t, ·rg run 1n tlJ€ adouble and two singles, Chris Han- Crooks and Vicki Boyles each a
ror il ..m
•
.
FLORIST
fou rth tnnmg
~~ ctPe. " great
ning a double and single and Joe double and single, Tammy Walkins
three si ngles and Joyce Stewart,
pttching battle ~~w~f1 Rutland'S Haddox a single.
PH ..992-2644
The Reds scored the runs in the Jenny Meadows a single each.
Mtke Battrul~' an&lt;:l •··~e Kl~s and
"liP
,
t
Doug Ow~ns of th~ ~~use ueve Oped
bottom of the fourth inning to down
Leading Dravo were Elaine Smith
mE. MOin. Pol"or•v
Doug Owen''d J&lt;:./SYraC"se Starter. the Braves. Mike Wolfe, Dale SMith, r_:w~it::!h~a~tr~ip~l~e_:a~n~d~th~r~ee~s~in~g~l~es~,..L~::::O:==Y•:•:':F:T:D:F:Io::rl:''==::!~_l.::===::=======
gut the w10 9 f1 si'l lt&gt;,., got the save. -, Rob Smith and Emmitt Anderson all ~nd ;"alkeq two. h&lt;!d doubles in the big inning.
Ownes fanned
while Kloes f~nnt'~~~ t 0 Dnd "'a)ked Grtmm and Anderson also had a
one . Bartrulfl f! a~~~ seve,_, and single each.
Todd Pethtel. Troy Stewart and
walked two fOr 11 \iand i~' • g &lt;&gt;Ud ef·
Mall Fisher each had a single.
fort.
Mike Wolfe fired a two hitter in
picking up his sixth win of the year.
Brave hitters were Tim Cassell and
Donald Stein, each with singles.
Middleport edged New Haven 60
as Nick Bush pitched a one hitter in

r-;::==========;;-i

992-6669

•

VIUAGE
PHMMACY

CLEARANCE
SALE
IS STILL

GOING

TONGUE TWISTER - Chris Evert Lloyd licks her lips during a
break in her Ladles Singles, semifinal match against Pam Shriver on
Wimbledon's Center Court Wednesday. Evert Lloyd won S-3, S-1, and
will face Czechoslovakia's Hana Mandlkova In the finals. I AP Laser·
photo )

Columbus

de ~eats
J.l

• ·
·
. By The Associated Press
Dave •Koza doubled home Sam
Bowen in the fourth inning to give
the Pawtucket Red Sox a 1-0 International League baseball victory
over the Richmond Braves.
In other IL action Wednesday

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AND FIND

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ON WOMEN'S
WEAR THROUGHOUT

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TWO'S CO.

Charleston

drove in three runs as Toledo beat
Tidewater. Veselic, wlio struck out
nine and yielded one walk, evened
his recordat7-7.
Estes doubled in the fifth to send
two runners across and doubled
again in the eighth to score another

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K02a's double followed Bowen's
leadoff single and another single by .
Jim Wilson.
Bruce Hurst, raising his record to
5-4, pitched a twt)-hitter. giving up
both safeties to Brett Butler. He
struck out six and walked four.
Ken Daley was the loser, dropping
to 8-6. He lasted five innings. giving
up six hits while striking _out six and
walking three.
Toledo 6, Tidewater 1
·
a three hitter
tWice and

•• ••

~Ct~O% OFF
HU~RY ON

plays only a fair matcli, and Chrt. . In contrast, Mandlikova was
plays it as smart us I know she will, looking forward to the arrival of her
then Chris will wln it."
parents- fanner Olympic sprinter
Shriver said .that losing the last Vilem Mandlik and his wife, Hana three Wimbledon finals will be a
motivatingfact&amp;r for Uoyd. ·
" I think Chris really wants to. win
this final and go out in a blaze of
glory," Shriver said. "It has to be a
fairy tale end, and to come out a
loser in four straight finals would be
sad."
·
Lloyd watched some of the Mandlikova-Navratilova semifinal and
was impressed with the way Mandlikova played. .
"Hana certainly played well; she
has all the shots," said the top seed.
"She can be brilliant, but is a bit
moody. On her off days she can lose
to a nwnber of players."
However, Lloyd refused to commenton Friday's match.
"I don't want to look ahead. It has
hurt me too much in the past," she
POMEROY

r~s;ai;d;.;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~

sn

By Tandy ®

..,The statistics leave Qlnnors cold.
WI~Lf;DON; Englan4 (AP) semlflnala are 75 . "We' ll be going out there trying to '
perce!lt aetordlng to the world kill each other. That is what the
public wants to see," he said.
raJikings - No.I Bjorn BQrg, No.2
John. McEnroe, No.3 Jirnrtly Con" If I play as well ·as I did in my
semifinal against Vi jay Amritraj,
nors and Rod Frawley.
I'll be pleased- win, lose or draw. "
Frawley Is where it all lalla down.
On Wednesday, Pam Shriver was
The 28-year-old Australian,scraped
into the main draw only by the skin outplayed by Chris Evert Lloyd in
of his teeth and is ranked !12th by the women's singles semifinals and
then explained why she wants her
the wmrld computer.
Frawley blckled secqnd-seeded conqueror to win the tournament.
"I think it means a lot to Chris to
McEnroe today, while Borg, aimmg
win
this time," said Shriver, who
for a sixth straight Wimbledon title.
was beaten 6-3, S-1.
played the gutsy Connors.
"She.'s 26; and it would be a great
For Frawley, reaching the
way
for h.~r to finish before fading
semifinals is something of a dream
out
of
tenms. Then maybe she could
come true.
start
a
family, which I know she
Hampered by a painful and perto
do. I'm rooting for her."
wants
sistent back injury, he had won only
Lloyd,
who has played in seven
five rnatches In 12 tournaments this
Wimbledon
singles finals and won
year. This is his fourth Wimbledon,
and he had never before won a only two of them, faces the
remarkable Hana Mandlikova in
singles match here.
"I will just go out swinging," he Friday's final.
said when asked to predict the tacThea 1!1-year-old
Czechoslovakian
won
bitterly contested
baseline
tics he would use against McEnroe.
" I haven't come all this way for slugfest with Martina Navralilova to
post a 7-5, H, 6-1 victory in the other
nothing."
Frawley., who plays club tennis in semifinal.
Mandlikova, the reigning French
West Germany to supplement his
earnings on the professional circuit, and Australian champion, served
is bidding to become the first un- brilliantly to outlast the 24-year-old
seeded player to reach the men's Navratiluva , winner here in 1978 and
final since West Germany's Wilhelm 1979.
"The final is all in Hans's hands,"
Bungert in 1967.
Bungert lost 6-3, 6-1, 6-1 to said Shriver, 18. "If she plays a good
match, she will win because she has
Australia's John Newcombe.
Frawley has reached the Final an advantage on grass. But if she
Four I~ easy way, without playing
a seed. Two of his victims, John Fit- r-;::;:;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;;;;;~
zgerald and Cliff Letcher, are fellow
Australians.
He also defeated two of the world's
brightest junior prospects, who have
no expenence on grass - ThiCrry
Tulasne of France, 17, and 16-yearold Swedish prodigy Mats Wilander.
Borg has defeated Connors in two
Wimbledon finals and has not lost to
r,
the American left-bander since the
1978 U.S. Open final.
They have met in nine tournament
matches since then, Connors

The ,Wimbledon

I'"'·"

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ClOTHIERS
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�Pa

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Sentinel

,.,

Garden club discusses civic beautification

SAFETY SPEAKER - Jared Sheets received a certificate of excellence and plaque from Marty Holmberg for his speech on bicycle
safety in the Jackson Area 4-H Safety Speaking Contest.

Rutland youth wins
area speaking contest
Mrs. Jun Sheets. Rutland . Tammy
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Calaway. Coolville.
The 4-H Safety Speaking Contest is
held annually . 4-H members may
participate by presenting a speech
on any aspect of safety. Winners in
the local contest compete in Jackson
a~ainst nine counties. Those winners
participate in the sate 4-H safety
speaking contest at the Ohio State
Farr in August.

Jared Sheets, participant in the
Jackson Area 4-H Safety Speaking
Conlest. received a certificate of ex·

cellence and plaque from Marty
Holmberg,

representative

from

Westfield Companies, sponsors of
the Safety Speaker Contest. Jared's
speech about bicycle safety. "To Be
Safe ... Be Seen." was judged top in
the county-wid e competition . Tam-

my Calaway was awarded second
prize. Jared is the son of Mr. and

Helen Help Us

An expanded July 4th
celebration will be staged in
Rutland by the Rutland Fire
Department Saturday.
~esides the traditional ox roast
that day, there will be a parade at
10 a.m. The lineup for that event
will start at 9. At 11 :30 a.m., Mi"'
and Mr. Spark, and Miss and Mr.
Flame will be crowned as well as
Miss Rutland .
AI 12:30 p.m. registration for a
chain saw contest will be held ;
the,contest will bto al I p.m. At 3

,

She doesn 't want to be family scapegoat
By Heleg and Sue Bo~l
13." You've reached the! super· lui she's there. lllld tel her help you
Special correspondents
sensitive chengeover time when toward a closer relationship with
. DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
every problem multiplies, every your family. - StJ~;;
I'm 13. My brother and sisters are laugh becomes a slight, and every
20, 19, 15 and 11, and we all live in a .slight is exaggerated by your in- DEAR RAP:
small
three-bedroom house. security.
This is for youll~ wornen who think
Everybody mocks and makes fun of
Wise parents (siblings too) " it won't happen to 10e," or "there'a
me unless they're ignoring me.
recognize this adlescent turmoil and always ab0rtt 0 1l.'• At 17, I dated a
My mother laughs along with help 13-year-olds through it with man four years "lder than me, got
them, or else she says, "I'm not in special understanding. Let's hope carried awaY• alld ended up in bed,
the mood tu listen to your mouth." people at your home wiseup soon. figuring "j1J51 One time wouldn't
When I have a problem, I go to the - - HELEN
hurt'' (Besides 1 was safe, acwoman across the street, because
cording to roY C&gt;"&lt;:!le.)
my family doesn't care.
M.:
My trip to the llbortion clinic was
Also, if I do something wrong, I
Another explanation might be: miserable,
etnotionally
and
'·get it," but if one of the others does you're next·tl)olast in a large family,
the exact same thing, Mom passes it and lower middle children are often
over. When I mention this, she says, ignored, unfairly blamed, or not
"Shut up!"
taken serously, especially if they've
I always get the blame, even when done little to set them apart from the
Winners of Prizes for the recent
it's not my fault. I feel the least crowd.
grand
opening llf r..ocker 219, a new
loved, but my sister says it's just
My Rx: Excel in something! Find
annex
to fhe lieritBge House of
self·pity. Honest, this isn't a hobby, a sport, a school activity
Shoes,
MiddlePort,
were announced.
imagination: my friends notice it that excites you and really get inCathy
price,
~uuand,
was winner
too.
volved. If your achievements don 'I
of
a
Western
li'lyer
bicycle;
Rick
What's "'f.'ng and how can it be rate proper respect at home, well,
7
Chancey,
SYrll~use,
leather
Conchanged - M.T.K.
you'll find more enjoyment abroad,
verse basketh&lt;lll shO"S and wrist
and family slights (imagined or not)
DEARM. :
Not knowing your family, I can won't hurt so much.
only guess that a big part of your
At least you have a friend in the
trouble centers around " unlucky age woman across the street. Be thank·

phYsically. ~ors and counselors
we~ kind , but it's still a very painful, expetJSive experience: Believe
roe, abortion isn•t a form of birth
control!
flow rtluch wiser to prepare
11head, if you Feel you can't abstain.
Chnics in every city offer birth control services. oFten free and usually
confidential: !Ia rents needn'tknow.
It&gt; s better to prevent than terror nate a pregn11 ncy. Abortion Jsn't
easy the emotional pain may never
wholly go away. - ONE WHO
J&lt;Nows

.,

p.m .

ba~d;

SallY Ross, r.fason, W. Va.,
Converse canv11s tJBsketbaU shoes
and tube socks; Teresa Cremeans,
r.liddlepOrt• lliike all-cou~ tennis
sh~s· Anthony Fields. Hartford, W.
Va., ~YJll bag and Nik~ hat; Lois
Jones, ~,etBrt, W.va., Nike !·shirts;
Randa l Cllrl, Converse l·shirl.

The judging results of four classes
in the recent horse show of the Meigs
Ridrng Club held at the Rock Springs
fairgrounds were unintentionally
omitted from an earlier listing of
results.
In western horsemanship, 14
through 18 years of age, the winners
were Tanuny Phillips, first; Jeannie
Welsh, second; Cheryl Riffte. third ;

Kathy Stanley, fourth. and Eddie .
Roush, fifth.
In the ladies western pleasure
class, the winners were Debbie
Lewis, first ; Debbie Jones . sPcnnn:
Suzanne Williamson, third; Jane
Roush, fourth and Karen Beam, fif·
th.
In the "dash for cash" class, the
winners, first through fifth respectively, were Kelly Meeks, Mike
Jones, John Greer, Kelly Meeks and
Paul Cain.
In senior horsemanship, !9 years
and older, the winners, first through
fifth respectively, were William
Greer, Suzanne Williamson, Grant
Newlun, Debbie Jones and Dan
Beam.

Honor carrier

Women's fellowship donates
$180 to Christian camp
A donation uf $180 on parnt for the
auditiorium at the Ohio Valley
Christian Camp was made by the
Meigs County Churches of Christ
Women 's Fellowship at a meeting
held recently at the camp.
The women attended the vesper
services at the camp along with
Bible dramas by the Bible school
children in session during the week.
Two baptisms took place ·that night
and six of the children rededicated.
Trudy Andrews of the Pomeroy
Church had devotions on partriolism. She read from a book writ·
ien by Glen Wheeler and used some
quotations of Gruver Cleveland and
Daniel Webster.
During the business meeting ,

Next meeting will be held at the
Zion Church, July 23, with Miss
Rw;sell to have the program and lhe
Rutland women the devotions. Mrs.
Andrews had the closing prayer.
Refreshments were served by the
Rutland Church.

Honor Miss Stewart

were discussed
projectsAnother
for the
Meigs
County forFair.
meeting was set to complete the fair
projects for July 8, 11 to I p.m. Mem·
bers made posters and marched in
the Regatta parade, and continued
their badge work. A campout was
discused. Penny Clark, Kenda Carsey, Kim Stewart and . Amy
Luckeydoo served refreshments.

WJNNEit -Cathy Price, RutJBDd, "'•s ..-lODer of tbe first prize
given at the recent grand opening of ~ker Z19, an annex of The
Heritage !lOUse of Shoes in Middleport· l'he prl1• Wlis 8 western Flyer
bicycle.

Chester News Notes _____________
By Clarice Allen
Mrs. Opal Eichinger honored her
daughter, Laura, un her 18th birthday with a cookout and homemade
icc cream Sunday cveping. Guests
included Mr. and Mrs . Don
Eichinger, Rio Grande, Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Eichinger, Kris and
Michelle Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Turn
Nice, Brett Matthews, Denise White

Vernon CJeia'l.d, ~oiWnbus, spent
the weekend Wlth'his 1nother, Erma
Cleland.
Mr. and JVfrs. Dougla' Wickham,
Jr ., Richrnond, were wernighl
guests on Slltur&lt;iay of Mr. and Mrs.
B. K. Ridenour. '111eY also visited
with Mr. and 1'.1rs. John Ridenour
and were sun&lt;lay dinner guests of
Mr. and Mf'S· John wickharn.

Ph'"-'nix. Ariz., spenl a couple of
day, with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Aile~ and Visited with ·Denzel
CleJ,.n,L
,
Mr,. Alire li'erguson and friend ,
Ebner [,ake, Huntington, were
wee~end guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Erruu conroy and attended the

r~a~n~djiCjias~s~ieiiSiihiieiiets• • liiuciiaiilii.;;;;;;M;;r.~a~nd~~M·rs~.~Cl;a.re·nc~e;W~i~li·~~Ch-es;te;r;A;liurinim··ba;;n;q.ueiit.iiip;;;;~

discussed . It was noted the Come
Aliv~ Singers had appeared at Mid' dleport. Peggy Russell will be at the
Long Bottom Church on July 12 at
6:30p.m. and at the Bradford Chur·
chon July 19,7 p.m.

·' Bake sole set
The Racine PTO will ltold a bake
.,
· · sale at Ebers Gulf Station on Satur·
day during the parade. Those
wishing to donate to the sale may
call Patty Circle, 949-2021.

Club to meet

The Middleport Amateur Gar, 1 . denei'S will meet on July . 8 at the
~ . . home of Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Liri- .
·
:.;· coin Heights, Pomeroy,8p.in.

IS 10 AM TIL 5 PM
NOT 1 TIL 6 AS STATED
IN OUR TUESDAY·
HOLIDAY SALE .AD

flag to the corrununity and from I
to 4 musical e"lertaimnent will
be featured.
At 4 p.m. there will be contests
such as the greased pig, greased
pole and relay events. The Voices ·
of Liberty concert at 7 will be
followed by the annual talent
show at 8 p.m.
Other entertainment will in·
elude a senior citizens display,
antique !ann machine display,
hnrnemade lee cream, food stands and closin~ out the eveni~ will
be a fireworks display .

Polly's Pointers

Debra Meachum a~d il'lint Greer
were married on June 13 ~t the nome
of her parents, Mr. arid 1'.1rs. Don
Meachom, Hartford, J'Y ·
Their attendants .,e~ Mr. and
Mrs. C. L. Spurlock (Leah Greer) of
Rio Grande.
The .!Jride wore a go"''l of satin
with lace overlay J118d~ bY her

.The Meigs county V~iled
Methodist Churche~ he!~ a county.
wide mini-conferenC~ho~ SundaY at
the £Wrltand Park· :~ were approximately 65 persQQs in attendance.
.
Highli~ht 0£ the rOlll(~onference
was a report on tht hallpenirtgs of
the West Ohio Annu9~1lr)Ference of
the United MethodiSt .~tch presen.
led by Mrs. 1'he1Jll9 ~11. MrS· Dill
remarked on the dignity lind IJCaUty
of the ordination servtcl!s 8 nd the
outstanding serm0f15 by ~ishOP Ken.
neth Goodson. Of irtter~st to local
United MethOdists Will be tile new
system of evaluation ot_&lt;:!hurches as
well as the pastorS· aluq~ with the
new pension Prograrn ~ffllcti"e Jan .
I. Its impact on chllrchl!s of small
membership remai~ to~ see~·
The Rev . ltobett ~cGee
welcomed three neW. llltstors to the
cooperative PBrish w•lh the presen.
tation of welcoJlling ~ifts. These
were: tho! Rev. geldot) Jollnston,
Joppa United Metnod•st Church,accu'l'panied by his w•F.e lind family ;
the Rev. Robert Jt•&lt;ler ~tutland
United MethOdist C~arl:~, 3lSU accompanied by his w•fe lind falmly;
and the Rev. RiC~~ ~otnemich,
Rock Springs . vn 11etl ·Methodist
Charge. Also reC"~Ilized was
retiring parish coordm~lur, th• Rev.
Richard Thomas. ~rs. li'ay Sauer.

ROASTING
~CO.,. RN' 'to~RCHotce

"-'txORMATCH

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No.1 New
White

'

Crop .
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12 ~~.~~$.18.9
1

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frees t~fle' T'r ee Jl iJK!ned

pE~cMES .·.:

iPOTATOES

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F~a~r~m~P~r:od:uc~e~~=:=~:::-L~=~~=::::~=~;:-'11!':

Full line of other
cucumbers, Fancy Calitqrnia

t=nilfs .&lt;~nd cant~llo1JPE~sl
0/PIN. . ~ULY
. . 411f &amp; 5TH

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". IH. 33

.
'I'Hu~PA\&gt;
oUVE TownshiP 1'1'\q,tees 1'hursday at 7:30 p.m. 9! R~vtllC Fire
·
·
Statron.
··
EVANGELINE: ~ltA'ptJ&gt;R,
rn !0!,_, 7 30
Order. of the Easte ,.,.,..~
·r :
p.m. Thursday at tfle "'ll eflOrl
Masonic TemPc~.;,: ,Pfl.hy
matrons are reqtl""";''t . ~r
the dress of tlleir year. l&gt; at \fOr·
thy matrons aniJ Pllllt 1:;rorthY
patrollS night w!U ~ 0 ~1JC!·

.

Kim Cogar, my heritaKe , spurts

By Polly Fisher
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY- I have many old
books of beautiful drapery samples
that I've been
planning to throw
out. Do you or any
of your readers
mother. Out-of-town guests are
r.lary Greer, Long Bottom; Lola . have any ideas on
what to do with
Greer, Elizabethtown, Ky., and Mr.
these samples?
and Mrs. Jay Grace and children,
They
are of many
· Paducah, Ky. Mrs. Grace is the
different
textures
bride's sister and played and sang
and
weaves.
- J.
for .the wedding. Magistrate Robert
Polly
M.
Coppage performed the ceremony .
DEAR J. M. - Your fabric samThe couple plan to make their horne
ples could he a gold mine uf raw
at Cambridge.
material for any number of craft
projects. You could make some
beautiful · patchwork fabric by
piecing together the swatches in
either a random or planned pattern.
Depending on the cheracter of the
Final fabric, this could be used for
anything from table coverings and
bedspreads to skirts and jackets.
county council president, presented
The
weighf..IIMI texture of the sam. a gift of appreciation to Rev.
ples
you use will detennine the most
'111omas.
appropriate
use of the finished
Following grace by Rev. McGee,
fabric
.
the group held a picnic style supper.
If the samples are large enough,
After a time of fellowship and
they could be used to make small
games, a brief business session as
items like doll clothes or book
conducted by Mrs. Sauer. The councovers. If you don't care to pursue
ty-wide revival in August was post· any of these projects yourself, you
poned to a later date, as was the
might call lhe occupational therapy
county-wide pulpit exchange, nor·
department of a local nursing horne
rnally held lhe second Sunday in
or hospital to see if they'd be in·
August. The !50th Anniversary of terested in using your samples.
the Racine
Wesleyan United
Children's groups such as the Girl or
Boy Scouts might also like to have
Mehodisl Church was announced for
these fabric swatches. I'm looking
Sept. 20.
After a son~fest led by Rev.
Thomas, the group funned a friendship circle. Rev . McGee pronoun·
ced the benediction.
The next county council on
Fowler
ministries will be July 13 at Salem
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Fowler of
Center.
Route
I, Middleport, are announcing
Pastors attending were: Rev.
· Florence Smith, Morning Star UM the birth of a son, Bemjamin James,
Church; Rev. Mark Flynn, Southern June 25. The haby weighing seven
Cluster II; Rev. Stanley Merrifield, pounds, 13 ounces and being 19 inSyracuse Charge; Rev. Robert ches long, was delivered at home by
McGee, Pomeroy UM Church; Rev. Mr. Fowler, in the presence of the inRichard Rothemich, Rock Springs fant's grandmother, Mrs. Pat
Charge; Rev. Seldon Johnson, Joppa Fowler, and his 'sister, Barbara. The
UM Church; Rev. Robert Rider, couple had made extensive
Rutland Charge; and Rev. Richard preparations for home birth.
Thomas, Northeast Cluster UM
Jordan
Churches.
-,
Mr. and Mrs. CIBy Jordan are an·
nollncing the birth of a d~ughter to
their son-in-law· and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Roy Cassell, Ada,
on May 'J:/. The little one, theit first
royal crowning, 11:30; chein. saw
child,
has been narned Christine
contest, I prn.; genes at 4; Voices of
Ann. Other grandparents are Mr.
Liberty concert, 7; annual talent
and Mrs. Cha_rles Thomas Cassell,
show 8, with Fireworks dislay closing
Ada; while great-grandparents in·
celebration.
clude.Mrs.
Roy Cassell, t&gt;flddleport,
J;:ASTERN Athletic Boosters spunsoring July 4th celebration at an~ Mrs. Rulh'Kay, Ada ; along with
.,
M~: and IVIrs. C. B. Dwelley, OrlanEast~rn· High sChool. Barbecued do,
FIB.
chic)len and ribs available beginning
at' 11 a:m. : free throw l:lasektbaU
cont~t with trophies to be a.:;.arded; Columbia Grange '
little league games at:! arid 3; ilan- hosts Harrisonville
ce, 9 to f1 p.m. with muSic by"Music
Unlimited.
.
Friday

siKn of the arrow.

Wendy Fry, spurts sampler, miss
flxit , textiles and fibtors . bicycling.
juniur aides.

forward to hearing other
suggestions from our readers. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When blowing
out a candle, hold your finger directly in front of the name. The airflow
around your finger will extinguish
the Dame without blowing drops of
hot wax onto the table. - MR. M.
DEAR POLLY - When I get
magazines containing craft projects
I'd like to make in the future, I write
the correct page number and name
of the project on the front cover of
the magazine. Later, when I decide
to make a certain item, I cun easily
find which magazine contains the
directions without leafing through
all of them.,- LYNE'ITE '
DEAR POLLY -We all know that
long distance phone rates are
cheaper at night. To take advantage
of these rates without in·
conveniencing the people you're

calling, remember these simple
gujdelines: When placing a call from
east to west, call at or after II p.m.,
your time. When calling from west
to east, place the call in the morning ,
shortly before8 a.m.- M.E.O.R.
DEAR POLLY - I bake my owr
bread and store it in the freezer . As
soon as the loaf has cooled, I slice
the entire loaf before freezing, so
that I can remove only what I need
at any one time. - ELEANORA
Polly · will send you one of her
signed !hunk-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colwnn. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

Announce local new arrivals

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4XIJI!IY4at~::a;-l:,:~
~111e.,~
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F,rldU,~aJJ~p.m;',t ~,'

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Others recognized were Clara
J.uchary. a retired Meigs County
teacher. who related stories uf early
Meigs County; Dick Seylor who
showed hls collection of antiques lu

the scouts; P-atricia Struble, a
leac·her. who discussed why she
decided tu be a teacher and the
qualifidiuns she needed, a part of
1/w sign of the rainbow requiremen·

Angie Grucser. my heritage, spor·

ts; and Shari Coga r and Susan Jell,

ls si:nnpler. miss fix-it, textiles and
fibers.

the
scouts "'·ith knots cmd in making a
n Jpt•lmnger.
Sllirlt•y Cogar, leader , also
thanked the scout pe~rent,~:; who
assisted inlran!lporting the girl!'i and
included inlhe that group were Mrs .

Kelly Mul len. sports sampler and
junior aide.

Becky Winebrenner. my heritage
fix-it.
Also recognizd and presented
sell in~ badges were Kim Cogar,
c&lt;Kikii!S. 135 boxes; Jayne Good, 81
bars of candy, Kim Cogar, perfect
allendancc. the seoul earning the
111ust bad~cs, and the girl selected as
HIHI mis.s

senior scouts, who Hssi.sted

Adms. Rush Philson, Mr. and Mrs .
.John firueser. Shr::tron Cogar and

Ma1Tia Arnold . She abo thanked Pat
Pllilsun
llla 11 for

serving a s cookie ehairtlw troop .
f()f'

Special service set for Friday
Special services will be held
Friday evening. July 3. at the MitJ..
dleport United fiientecoslal Church
w1lh the Rev . and Mrs. Elton Ber·
ttard, missiuno.ries tu Korea as the

'special speakers.
The Bernards haw been on the
mission fields of Korea for 16 years
and they make their horne in Seoul.
I he capitol of Korea. Rev. Bernardi'

the general field 'uperintendenl of
Kurea, H c11untry with a population
of nt•arly 39 mi Ilion people.
Mr.;. Bernard is co-author with
Ihl'ir :-;un' David of a book entitled ··In
Sl•ardl nf Holiness."

Tire 'crviec will begin at 7;30 p.m.
Paslur Knittel extend!l an upcn in·

vital ion to thpublk .

Shower :- honors bride-to-be
A brida I shower was he ld recenlly
at the multi-purpose buildin~ on
Mulberry Hcigs honoring Becky
Painter, recent bride of Bill Amberger. The shower was hosted by
Miss Parnter'ssister, Diana Bing.
Garnes were played .with prizes
gorng to Dorothy Brown and Cindy
Hayes. Refreshments of cake, min·
ts, punch and nuts we.re served tu
Bnnnee Wood, Lori Wood, Donna
Hysell, Debbie· Brown, Megan
Manuel. Vicki C)munins, Cookie
Salser; Pal Smith; Tonya Salser.

Claudia Roush. Madclint· l'a1nllT,
Ol•lorcs H~wk. Mary Rnwil'S,
Wilhemina Tmm1. Margan•1 Am-

berger, Pauline Kennedy. Goldie

Frederick, Judy Hysell, Franl'-'S
Hy,ell. Evelyn Wood. Ruby Hysell.
Diom:1 Bing, Dorothy Brown, Annie

Bruwn. Aarun and Alex , Vicki Smith·
and Bunnet· and Cindy Hayes.
Sending gifts wre Avis Bing, Linda
Hysell, Karen Hysell, Mae Spencer,
Vcmn· Spencer, Oee Brown. Jim
Spenct•r. Keith Wc•&gt;d and Paula
Hawk.
.

-.

Meigs 4-H news
--lots of summer activity!
From the-County
Ex&amp;e•loa&lt;Hflce

Carnp.wlls wonderful! Nineteen Meil(.s County
members partlciP.Bted in the fivt'-llay 4-H
Junior ~rnp 1:11 beautiful Canter's Cne. Five J,
L. metnben served 111.counselors at the camP.·
Dln•lyn Bowen, Beth 1\ltchle, Dean Colwell, Bill
Dyer and Robert Jeffen: assisted the IJ.It year
ole.! cwnper~ lhr~houl the camp. HiMhlight.inJ:
thr camp wu a 5()'!1 da~. swimmin8 in the new
pool and recre~tion ln the new lodge. As:Jistinl! at
the camp was MeiWJ Cuanty Ederulion Home
Ewnomist Dale Stoll, and Pat Wolf , a volunteer
arxl rllf"Ther 4-H member.
Whl:ll's CtHninJl Up in +-H? - We're alll(etlinf(
ready for the fair , planning judginlo( days, 1tnd
l lr~t•niainl( the.· style revue. ClJ/rung up in July is a
llt!w PfOI:'ram fur ~H members, advi!Klr.i and
o~-H

p~~ren.t5.

Mrs. Fowler and Infant ·

4-H foods and Clothing 'J"'ruunirlfl will be held Ml
the St. Paul Lutheran CbW"Ch, Pumeroy, on Ju.ly
11. The rood!! pro,:ram wUJ...btgin at 1:30 and end

alll :30 a.m. ~ dothinK Pr'olirsm i.11 from 1 to 3
p.m. Bring yuur own lunch. Come~ p~~rt of the

Stage tribute
A special tribute was paid to the
fathers on Father's Day at the Middlpeort United Pentecostal Church
with the mothers singing "Father, I
Appreciate You," and the gralldmothers singing "What a Friend We
Have in Father." All the fathers at·
tending that day were asked to stand
and be recognized. A skit about the
typical day in a father's life was
presented by Mrs. Theresa Shaffer
and Amanda Easbnan. There were
176 present in Sunday school that
day .

Sat~y

'ilt1e

day or the whole day ! Bring yoor fnetl&lt;hi, parents 1nd 4-H advisors !
We·u talk about 4-H foild5 'and clothlns projecL'l, an~~ower questions and wort on solving
problems, :tee 80mt' really l(ood fllma and play
KIUnes. "O.Im:! Hndmeetthe new E:rtension Home
Ecooomist!

Cit.izen,hip Washing\~ Ji'IX.'WI - Ralptl Jordan
April Pl:lrker will be attendlrtM Citizenship
Short Course lri Wastunglon, D. C., JuJy :.-11.
Selected for their ctmtribulioo to the 4-H
p~ram , delegale8 meet for one week at the
No~~t10nal 4-H Center to lam to be better 1*1'ticipaUI'JM citif;el'l!J throuch aeminars, workshops.
ele. Thla: ctwUenglng and enriching procram has
proven to be IJnl o( the best activlUei offered t.o
lU'Id

"""'4-H"'nClub
dl""Coogreta
•H membtnln the United Stales.
- Five Melp Couaty +-H

lr14ffi'lben1Mllended 4-ff Club Congreu, htkl June

17-111 on the Ohio Unlvenlty "'"11PIIS·
lledcy Edwanlo. Molle Clllford. 'l'rusaell.
Crall! 8oUn ood JUIIl! Honey ..-nted Moil!'
County -durillG this •lllmuloU,. """""""·
f'Nr!rams nll!filll!
1- -ting-1 bill
ln'the' H~ ot Repr'e~e~Cattves t.o l'taf.eUon at
Uw OSU fiiCIIIUa JWOVJIMd txpelieek«&lt; in perS4ll'l'alaildaodll rowttL: ;; ~- .
.

In"""""

r-·li:oll!P- 1'::.,...11riiii&gt;{IU&lt;d-nm

for oldot' ._H - 1 r,Teeli Qinp. Mei&amp;J

Counl)/ ......... il!dOIIi'l.lol Colllao, Rodile7
Trt111rlild Corolyn BowOfti April Plfter wtU'lle

.minor ••.-tor•"'""'"!"'lP·Lolaclgreot
ocUvttlc!liJ!Ioihliaht .lhl.•~ ~ ot ca,.

The Meigs Coonty Swine Club mel June 15 at
the Meigs County Ertension Office with two advison and eight club members in attendance.
Veterinarian O.ve Krawsceyn talked to the club
about feeder pi8s. !lema cl ~ dbcusoed

were a covered dish dinner al Forked Run pan
and plaruJ to clean the b..ms at lJll!! fairgroun4s
oo AQIUit J. Retreshmentl wre then served by
Allee Rllchle. The &lt;&gt;eXt meeting will bt hold on
July 6 whto slides will be shown by John Rice

about showing hogs.- Amy Ritchie , Reporter,

The Saddle Sitters 4-H Club met June tat Bar30 with two advbors and five membt!rs In at·
ter.lance. A project lessm wu given on hor"""""""" and P"'P'' mounting and dlsmoun-

tlngproce&lt;lure!l. - Tarnie Kennedy, Reporter .

The Saddle Sitters 4-H C1ub met May 26 at the
Kennedy Ranch with two adVisors and four dub
members in attendance. A project lesson was

given on horsemanship and proper

~tung

Jli'OCf(IUI"'eS. Refreshments were then served by
Judy Kennedy 1nd Ltndl Newland . - Tamie

Kennedy, Reporter.
The Meigs County Pleasul"f! Riders met at the

MelD County Fairgroonds on June 3 with three
ldv&amp;on: and four dub memben In attendancr.
The 5llbtect of tack was discussed and club me~
ben pnctit"'!d honem~~nsttip and showmanship.
- Betty Jo Hunt, Reporter.
1llt Meip County Plca:mrc Riders met June
l$ at the residence ol Betl)' Jll Hunt. There were
two act.taors and three club membera In at·
tendance. Items ol business dixuased included
the a~al o( a 12$ dmltJon to the Meigs
Riding Club f()f' ring repairs and also g~
tnphy sponsors for lho llato q..llfylng ohow.
Refrilt.nenb were served by Betty Jo Hwtt

Pratlce Je85i0flli dates were set for July 1 and
1$, and are to be held at the Meigs County
Falrgr'OWXII. A meelinll was set for Jllly 20 at
RornoN Compton's resfdtnce. - Betty Jo Hunt

"-1&lt;r·

'

The HanUonviUe- Honor Glrll +-H Cub met
June 10 ot tilt. IMine cl Poullne Atklos wltll """
advilor and five membert~ in attendance. The
club dllcuDed dues and fair proiectl. Uu and '~
Llndl Rtuo_pve-"" food' pro~ while
Corio oriif l'lmi1IY Klulf ~ on blrdi. ,
~Dull olao ,.... ._,t .. bortrip to l!lnp Island ond • Ctnctnnou Retia btrU.

pmo.- TUIIIII1 KaOII, ~.

ter's &lt;:WW. A'booirtetylorrlflc to llle- fur tlila
I

• .

~ Bit~ Jopoo\ II 0omtntc WMel&amp;l Cow&gt;

lyi ,_. Jopo._ yoorlho will lie orrlvtnor in
Melp 'County .. tht end ct July for • month'•

villi. Mr, aod Mrs. t:.elml """'"" ond l!rmlly
Mr:~ Mn. Jqlin JUc:e ond fomll7 wtU•eoch

IIIli

huoioJ- yolilh.

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cftiiiCe ,F_ltoo,_
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the best junior girl coul in the troop.
Several adults were recognized
during the awards ceremony. They
included Ernie Sis.ona and Don
Kouns of the Ohio Power Co. who
provided a program on electricity
and safely, a requirement for the
miss fix-it badge; Cherles Chaun·
cey, Meigs coach, who talked about
the duties of a coach, a requernent
for the sports sampler badge; Carol
Adams, R.N ., who talked on first
aid; Gordon Winebrenner of the
Roeine Planing Mill whose work
with the scouts was on tool safety .

.

MEIGS Assoctation li'atl jtet&amp;rded
CltiZellB Thursday Ill , :30. p.m. at
!'
'
tr oq1
·
'
1\tONDAY
Coiumbia Grange was host when
~'!m~!:!N\!! ~gh). (former CANDY siiruPERS. wlli meet at 7 HaflisQnvllle ~r!lnge visited ·on
·
~~ ~• Y,.. or .. ,
. . . . · p.m.' Monday at the cafeterill ,of
Friday evening. Members presented
_TilE ?OMEJiO~ 'l Uut~ J,ea~e Veterans Memorial Htl!lpital.
'a progral)'l following a potluck StiP'
baseball Blld ·;_,rtbQil ~partY IS
per a~ 7 p,m.
schedul~ ·, foj. .ttl~ e'i~lling (Thur•, It · was annpunced that Meigs
sdayl from 7::li.li&gt;·9:3t) p.rll: at the .
· - .
Cotmty Pwnona .Gf'lllil{e woqldhost
Syri!clllle Plio!. ·, '
,.
Plan Vl:IS :
·
.
JacksOn County Pt11Jiona.Grange on
'AMERIC~ J!£!1()~ i\lll'lli&amp;ry
.
, ,
..
_July -10 at 7 p.m. al ROck "Springs
'teS for
z,l)ll Wi\h ... will be
•The St. PauJ s United
:,&gt; grange haU. A P'1lluck supper-,au
::e.d the Ewir)gf 0 1it~!;'flllll! at 7 Chur:h ~ ~uct .:,;,1 J;,r~~ .. grangers to fwln
.' ~food Will be held.
this ' ,~J · '&lt;
·
dallY vaca tOn·Billle se
~ .
. Jacboll' OoUnlf Gran~ers wiU
p.m,
.ev~n..., •. '
· ·
. . ·, frunt:3il\On:~a,m.~.•'i'here 'presenUliilJII'OIIrim."~' '""
.
Auxiliary to meet
·,· · 1 ·· II.\Tl~J4P4\&gt; . · · ~· ·. wlllbeell~eaf'!"~alts,incltidlng •. Art!)tlr CraWee, Meigs County
,
'l1le Rev. Eddl' ~ ,no be • a ~JUs fGr adJilll. 'Pbe ~ ~; ,~ l..ec1~ ~Mrs. Crabtree .. Jilniors of the American l.egilln
• · spe&amp;kerata.~~;,tU~I!). •.':J-. ,'Y~C!f.d JJvn :.,~~ ~· hada~ndedtliefiye:cbWt\ygra~e .' ~~Z.:!t~~~~~=
.: . :·
.fori ••
at •.
.drange m Thui'ilday, Friday and
al
c ,.
'.
thellilmeofMr.'a'\"Mrir.VirgilPII!'"
For~ .-Hon 'll\illlad ~":
·
.· urn- 110118011SI.Rt.ltaattlieCrossro6ds
,. ~......_.-.
-~.,.. •m.
' .to t , .thil aev. ~-;;:;;;;. at·,.- . ...
Visitation .ol Colll'"bus . behind tlie Dairy Dl:llt!~· Tbe
_ ,; ' &gt;,. . , . . .··, ': ,' •,.'.
1!1
June willbeginljt9a.m.eachmornlng.

¥ri

Badges were presented at a court
of awards held by Girl Scout Junior
Troop 1204, Syracuse, at the
SyracuSe Elementary School recen·
tly .
The program opened with the flag
cerernony conducted by Kim
Adams, Jennifer Arnold, Angie
Grueser and Kelly Mullen.
Receiving awards were the
following scouts:
Kun Adams, my her1tage, sports
sampler, mi"' fix-it, textiles and
fibers .
Mary Baldwin, my heritage.
Jennifer · Arnold, my heritage,
spurts sampler. mi"' fix·it , textiles
and fibers , food raiser, sign of the
arrow, and junior aide.
sampler . miss fix·it , textile and
fibers, sports lover , b1cydrng and

Drapery samples
craft gold mine

Meacbom, Greer wed
in .mid--June ceremony

Thursday, July 2,1981
·Page-7

Girl Scouts. hold
court of awards

Social Calet1dar_ _ _ __

. FARM FRtsH WHITE SILVER ®EEM OR
Y~ ·GQuJEN QUEEN

HOLIDAY HOURS
FOR SATURDAY,
JULY 4th

Clarence

County United Methodists
hold coof~ence in Portland

;---------------------------1

ways to improvf! attendance were

·; i '

A picnic was held Thursday
honorrng Carl (iorby, rural mail
carrier for the Langsville and Dexter Post Offices . .
Gorby was presented a certificate
and pin for 25 years with the postal
service by Mrs. Faye Walker, post·
master of Langsville. Attending
were the mail carrier and his wife,
Pauline, Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hobbs ,"
Mrs. Maxine Hobbs, Robert Bell and
sons, Ben and John.

Cungressrnan

Miller will bto present lo give a

Mr. and Mrs.

Locke,. 219 awards prizes

Kim Stewart was selected the outstanding scout from Girl Scout
Troop 1039 at a recent meeting held
at the home of Mrs. Joy Clark,
leader. During the meeting plans

.,. .

.'

July 4th celebration
to begin in Rutland

holds horse sho~

photo)

The Daily Sentinel
'

~

Atlantic Florists ronvention held in Fredericksburg, Va_ lAP Laser-

&lt;

'-wns

Meigs Riding Club

HATS OFF TO MARGARET Margaret Cawthorne of Lynchburg, Va. hopes for still winds as she shows off the 15 pound hat,
over three feet tall, made of fresh !lowe,... Margaret's hat, made by a
Lynchburg florist, Dan Snapp, won first place in compe,tlton at Middle

.:.,

~

I!I:Yth.e~ &amp;rid

the 51st annual convention of the
GarderUng tiPii for tJ1e month were
Ohio Association of Garden clubs to given by MrS· ~ma •ho noted that
be held Ill Denison University, Gran- now Is thetiJile lll mal'e ~ planville, Aug, 4, 5 and 6 was read. T]le tings cit sweet Clltn and bush beaiiS.
open meeting of the Rutland Frien- to apply ~ to
to kill out the
dly Gardeners was al$o noted.
broacjleaf Weeds lluch as dendeUons,
Mrs. Margaret Parker presided at planUn, and Ct'llbgr,.s&amp; She also
the meeting with members noted .thai tuberollS begoJiias,
displaying minlsture containers.
caladlll111SJio. geranitJlliS, mums,
Jackie Brickles provided the dayllltes aJfO alltlllal nowers can sWI
traveling prize which was won by be planted. ltOSes should be dllSied
Ruth Moore. Mrs. Parker judged . now, she noted, lind newly planted
the miniature arrangements with a trees imd shfU~ shollld be watered
blue ribbon going to Mrs. Addalou well and kePt cUltivated· It Is also
Lewis, a red to Mrs. Allee Thom- time, she 511id til divide and re-set
pson, and a white to PegJ!y Crane.
the be.arded irtS.

Civic beauttflcallon projects were
discussed at the June meeting of the
Winding Trail Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs. Pat Thoma.
II was noted thai Dowers have
been planted in the garden at the
Meigs County Infirmary and
arrangements were made to paint
the entrance col.wnns to the Beech
Grove Cemetery. Members staged a
ftea market on Regatta Weekend io
raise money to carry out their civic
beautification projects.
The annual open meeting was announced for September with the
theme ~ "Four Seasons" to he
carried out. An invitation to attend

.

"

•

.

... \. "

'

'

.

•
~ .;·

Ricling duh

The Bar :10 Riding Club will hold a
new and us~d lack sale at the .
showgrounds near tuppers Plai\'!1; .
at 8 p.m: Friday, July 10. R~resJi. .
mcnts wtll bto availa.bl~ on the grounds .

oJ' •

-.. ·ftr"¥t:'

~ ole

&lt;t•

'

�Carpenter Personals
at the ~ of
and Mrs JamesGutonwerehls
bt~tl ers sister and families
Pi:! oent were Willlaltl Gaston, Sym• n~a. Del , the Bryon Guton family
rrom ~P.alllmore Oh area Mr and
Mrs1&gt;!\!chard Gaston Mr and Mrs
Charles Gaston and Evelyn Smith
Athens area and Mr and Mrs
James Smith and family Toledo
Mr and Mrs Eddie Jordan and
Clay William West Palm Beach
Fla are spending some tune here
With her mother Ora Cotlrill and
his brother and slSter-m-law Mr
and Mrs Lavern Jordan and other
relatlves
Guests of Mr and Mrs Glen Clme
recently were Selma Mansfi eld and
Nonna McCoy Canaanv11ie Regma
McK1bhen and Suzanne Wlihams
Alban v Grace I senogle and Geme
Alibr1te VlsJtmg m th s area from
Cahform a and Perry Ca rpenter and
grandson Roger of Long Bolt
Oh
M" Leshc Huffman F ort M} ers
Fla spent a day here w1th Mrs
Lewi s Sm1th Mrs Huffm an ~ II

Mr

614

PH. 992-7201
5 21 Jfc

M&amp;S BUILDING ROGER HYSBl'S
GARAGE

1 other Mrs E thel Ra dekm
1
M'Arthur and VIS t ~•th
lht r
rcl~ t v~s

Murl Ga l a~ ay and Dale D) e wer e
Sunday d nner guests of Mr D} e s
s n n I a ~ and daughter M r and
Mrs Clyde Walker and fa mily
Thurman Fa ther s Day and Mr s
fral a \\ a \ s b rlhd a}
\\ ert
celebrated
Mr and Mrs Harold GJll ogl} and
B uce and Mr and Mrs Walter Jor

Laurel Cliff

k•tchen cabmets

remodeling

crete

roohng &amp;

sTorm w•ndows

woodburners Installed

CALL
Paul Sogman- 992 2984
Pat M tchell- 742 2567
6 7 1 mo

$il

(; r nf'

~mo

~

REESE
TRENatiNG
SERVICE

SERVICE

From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator

rt

Radtator Spec•ahst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Vrs Exper•ence

Water Sewer Electr•c
Gas Lme D1tches
Water L.ene Hook ups

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Septoc Tanks

County Cerhfled
Roush Lane
Cheshire Oh

Ph

Ph 367 7560

57 lie

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vmyl &amp;
Aluminum SidJOg
elnsulatron
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wtndows
• Replacement
W ndows

1'1111111: l OIIPP Ill: GREENS
Oh o nnd whose pl aet"' o f
NO I H t ~t N I
h n.
r es dence s now unk nown
P'JIG.SHOP' HOI.f-lti.ONE (Kindap)
tUHll
f
NOIIf
nd
Rebecca
Hoove r
S 4~ 1 J N JO a
w hose address w as 4'17 19 f' ot ce of P bl c H e lr ng on
QUI REPAIR - FASl SERVICE
Do ~ Ke n n
th e \. ll&lt;1ge ot M ddteport
V andehotf Road Coo v I
X 0{ on o 4 ~ l J
mo
and whose Anm 1 Audget tor IY82
A Budget Hear nQ fo he
Pu b c Ass s n n c c
p l ace o r es de ncc s now
ext succeed n g f sca t yea r
are he eb y
l:UI:I ]64 00 u nkn ow n
YH ~
noT ed Th a t T he Peop es rnd nq December J
R nEs t a c
l nd Revenue Sh ar ng pur
B ank nq an d T r u st Com
posf's w I be he d on M on
prtn v A Corporat on P 0
nse
CMY
uly I J 19HI n he
Box SH Be p re Oh o J~ 111
counc
ch a mbe s
:l J
Pt a n t t n Case No I tl fJ
Com mon Plea s Cou r at ~n e e St M d rl P po t 0 1 a
JO P M
M~,;. q~ Coun V
Oh o
as
Res dC'n 5 o M ddl cp ort
ed a Com pta m a qa nsr
nv cd to a end nn
a h at yo u n t he am ount it
p ov de w t l n and o &lt;l
at ':111 H o w h n e es n
h('
a e a t S 4 11 per day com m en s concern nq he
J
4j ' "
0 I){)
t e budget
Trash Pickup In
r om Ju ne ~ 19H
In the
M F \, ~C O UN T Y Second Cou r of sa d Com
The Vrllage of
COMM &gt;&gt; ONER&gt; p il n
he sa d Pi a nt tt
Middleport, Oh
Ma r y H obs c er
de mands tor ec osu e ot s
n
C crk m ortg aqe r ec ord ed
Ph 992 5016
Volu me 46 Pnge J IS o thP
or 992 7505
Mo q aqe
Reco ci s a t
Me qs Coun y Oh o on The
4 17 ftc
t o t ow nq desc r bed
ea
cs nt c
S tu ated
th
r ownsh p at Or anqr Co un
N I Ht
ty of M e g s nnd ~ t itf ot
Publ c Nohce
01' l\10N P l t A \
O h o tow I
ou" or
fR AC ON E Beq nn n q
8 431 TP PEX
I f \ f OUN Y
n thr cen tc ot O ld ~ to e
LEGAL NOTICE
OHIO
Rout e No
at the ~o ut h
Not ce s hereby g ven
H ttOilt S HANI-&lt;tN(
wcs
o
of il o n rt cr e
that Eul a M Holmes and
A ~ O
t&lt;'U~I
f O M .ANY
tot of Vil do Koeng ecor
other subscr bers of the
fj
t. I O ... .ll
ON
f ... O A ,Q rt C OUP I
ded n Volu me ':1'1 Poq c
Coo1v I e E xchange of the
nt It
OF M F IC ~
JJH M f' qs CounT y Deed
Reserve
W e st e rn
f
OUN
I
Y
OHIO
Re cor ds th en e Edst 1110
Te lephone Company have
se
No
H'/'J
tee t n tonq he so u h nc at
f led a comp ta nt w th the
NOIIC f Of
th ~ sn d o n£' n
e ot to he
Pub l c
Ufil t es
Com
APPOIN
Mf
N
cen er 01 New St&lt;l c Rou e
m ss on of Oh o r equest ng
c c No
OF FIOUli.AJ.i'Y
No
I
f' nce sou h
NO I
I ~y
On June 16Th 9H
n the the establ shment of ex
deq f'C' S '&gt; 0 Wf'st IIH lf'f' t o
l HI IC A ON
P abn e tended area telephone ser
n pos n h
l
ot sad M e g s Coun y
'II ce between the Cootv e
Vv
&lt;" m
L
H oover
Case N o
LJ 411
~ n te Route
th C' n Cf' Wes t Cou t
Exchange and Belpre Ex
w o sc add eo;.s w a s A I.J
t ..u '&gt; fee l o th e ce nter of r ess e Rose E va ns Box
v andc no Road Coo tv e O l d Stn c Rou C' N o
11:1 6 Rac ne Oh o 4511 1 change of th o Oh o Bell
Tel ephone Company
In
wa s npp o n e d
Ad
Th en ce No h '&gt; de'/ r ecs 1&lt;1
st tut on of the proposed
Wcs 1 U '&gt; t eet e~ ong th e m n stra r x ot the es t a e at
ccn tc o sn d S ntc Rou e J mm e F r a nkl n Evans
ncrease
n tel ephone
serv
ce would
result rates
n an
deceased late at R D 'l
ro he p &lt;lee o b('q nn nq
for the Cootv lie Exchange
Rae ne Oh 04577 1
c an t a n nq
.'&gt; Ac c mo e
The Com
Robert E Buck subscr bers
or es5 (' )( CCP no rtll l ea n!
m ss on has scheduled lh s
Proba e Judge
g h So l w a y
matter for- publ c hear ng
Clerk on
E xccpt n q one ha t at the
Tuesday June 28 1981
'f 6 Jt c
a
dnd ga&lt;) r oh 5 wh ch
at9 30 a m atlhe Coolv I e
Wf' r f' cse ve d by for me
Grade Schoo Ma n Street
or Wnte Da•IY Sent JOel Class1foed Dept
ow ner and he Gra ntee s
Coo v I e Oh o w th July
Public
Nottce
to h vc a I r cn ta s from
'19 1981 reserved for tur
111 Court St Pomeroy 0 45769
leases fr om sa d
and
ther hear ng f necessary
NOTICE
TO
be n q he sa me as r ese rved
At
th s hear ng all partes
BIDDERS
and set tortn n th e deed to
Board of Educat on of nterest w be afforded
Georqe How e I by Charl es of The
the M e gs Loca School an opportun ty to present
Be ll and v te eco ded n D str
ct des res to rece ve ev dence mater al to the
Volu me
.&gt; 1 Page .".6Y
se aled
b ds
tor
the spec f c ssues relevant n
M e qs Count y Deed Rec or
e ANNOUNCEMENTS
RENTALS
followmg
th s proceed ng Further
ds
r~ t e rcn ce t o wh ch s
ca dol Thant.s
nformat on r egardmg th s
1 Student ace dent n
4 HOus~s fO Rcn
her
eby
m
ade
1 "M ~ lfl(lf am
U Mob t Homu
matter may be obta ned by
s.urance
Be
n
q
I
he
same
prcm
ses
or Ren
)- Anmluncemll!nt i
address ng an tnqu ry to
2 Flee t nsurance
conveyed by Deed I am
44- Ap• tm1n1s to Renl
the Pub I c u t ht es Com
3 T res and tubes
4 G 'ICIW I ~
Floyd
H
M
a
r
n
m
arr
ed
45 Furn shed Rooms
4 Gasot ne 011 and ant
m ss on of Oh o 375 Soulh
s- Happy Ad~
w
rn
re
case
of
dower
by
46 Sp.~cc to Ren
H Qh Slreet
Columbus
r-Lo's. and Found
Ca ro yn A
M arl n
h s freeze
47 W1nted to Renl
5 Fue o•l
Oh o 43215
w
l
e
to
Mortgage
he
c
n
7 Y ~rdh c
11-E qu pmen o A en
6 coal
daTed Augu st l :l 919 and
t-Pub c Sic
7 M lk and da~ry produc
THE PUBLIC UTILITIE S
r
ecor
ded
n
Vo
ume
'11~ at
&amp; Auc on
Is
COMM SSION OF OHIO
P
a9e
1/
Deed
Reco
ds
of
f-W1ntaa o Bu~
eMERCHANDISE
8 Bread and bakery
Polk
By
Oav d M
M e gs Counly Oh o
St HoVIChOid Goods
products
Secretary
f~ AC f TWO Beg nn ng
9 Meat
S2 C B TV A.ado E qu pment
e EMPLOYMENT
at t he Southwes t corner of
n Ant quu
10
Produce and dry
(6) 18 2S (7) 2 3tc
SERVICES
an e ghteen ac e o n the
S4 M sc Merchind i t
northeast corner ot the gOOds
Ht PW1nled
In order to be constdered
Pubhc Notice
n -- Bu td 119 supp n
Norfheasl quarter of Sec
1 s tullfll wanted
all sealed b ds sha ll be
~PI!tsto he
ton No 6 ·rown sh p No 11
l lniurance
PROilA
r E COU I&gt; r
Ra nge No l :l of The Oh o receoved on the Off ce of the
4- Bus ness T 1 n 119
OF
M
E l&lt;lS
Treasurer
SOuth
Thtrd
Co mpa n y s
P u r c hase
J.-S(tloolt nuru ct on
OHIO
e FARM SUPPLIES
thence East on the ne ot Avenue Mtddleport Oh o r StolteCOUNrY
l.__Rad o TV
of N e v~ l
Bcuas
tam ! owned by R E Green on or before 12 00 o clock
&amp; LIVESTOCK
&amp;CIR•oar
OECE
ASED
form er v owned by W II am noon an July 13 1981
11-W•nt~ To Do
'
Farm Eqv pm..,t
c
se
No
2l117J
The Board of Education
G r een 10 rods to a co ne
U - W.anted to Buy
NO riCE OF
r eserves the nght to accept
th
ence
North
H
rod
s
to
a
2
Tuct.aorb
e
eFINANCIAL
APPOIN£M E Nr
corner
t
hence
Wes
t
:lO or re ect t~nv and all b ds
1
63
L
vl!s
ocll:
OF FIOUCJARY
2 Ius nesu
rods to a co rner thenc e
.. Hav a G .a n
On June 26th 1981 n the
Opportun tv
Jane Wagner
south
H
r
ods
t
o
the
place
of
•s-Sn
d
&amp;
Fe
1
1e
M e gs County Probate
22- Monl!y to LOilln
beq nn ng conta n ng one Treasurer
Cau t
Ca se No
4!3473
2l- PRfHs on.a
Me gs-Local
ac
r
e
m
or
e
or
less
See
Frank W Porter Jr P 0
s....... cu
Deed No 4l'Jtl Vo
21 School Otstr ct
eTRANSPORTATION
Box dtl6 Pom eroy Ohio
P age 496 Deed Records ot South Th rd Avenue
- Auto' or Sill 1
45769
w as
appotnted
e REAL EST ATE
45760
M
ddleporl
Oh
o
M
e
gs
Count
Y.
Oh
0
A
ISO
n
J-V.an~&amp;4WO
E xecutor ot th e estate of
31 Homu or s•t•
BooR
No
139
Page
388
74-Motorrvc •~
Neva L Ba as deceased
Jl-Mobile Homes
a lso n Book No 152 Page (61 25 (71 2 9 3tc
7s--Auto P11rt1
late of R D I Reedsville
o nd

Free Eshmate
James Keesee
Ph 992 2772

nt

F u ncl

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

. J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

- Addons and
remodel ng
Roof ng and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbtng and
etectr cal work
(Free Est•mates l

)7

IYl

&amp; Accessor es

7 Auto Re,11 r

eSERVICES
''- Home mprovements

fltalton

MDnfn 2 lOon Saturdiv
TulriHy th U Fr diy 2 lO fl M

ltMcliY bltiM'e ''"'kat on
SIHMiay 2 3f P M Frrclay

12 PumbntiE•cav•tne
U - E•untint
M- E ectr ca
I Aetr ttrat on
U- Gfitet~l Hilul nt
N-MH lil.-r
11- Uphelsterv

Rates and Other Information

u,,.,,..,...

oned1y nserton

u,tt11...,.

tftrNdaylnMf1MHI

U,lt IJworfl

I

Ullyl

11Mr11on

Ull
uoo
t7 OD

CAverlte4 wonlsPilr line)
Mlltlltftemt Ml" ilfMI y._rd II In iltt ICCI!HH Clfll'l' W lfl Clift wltfl
.,..,

Clftl cNir. . fllf' acts carrylltJ lo• NYmMr In Cart tl Ttlt

rner"" the rltfn to Hilt or rtjtct •ny Ht flttmtd
w

II not It rts»&gt;nsUtl• fDr ,...,.. "'-" 01tt

Pi a nt ff further a leges
that each of you are n
det au on the payment ot
th e note of February 11
19tll and that the real
es tate descr bed here n be
sold and th at the amount
due Pia nt ff on such note
be pa d out of th e proceeds
of the sal e of sad r eal
estate together w th ts
costs
You are r equ r ed to an
swer w th n 28 days after
the last pub I cat on wh ch
w II be on the 13th day of
August 1981 The answer
date s on September 10

1981

LARRY E SPENC E R
CLERK OF COURTS
OF MEIGS COUNTY
H
0
0
2 9 16 23 30 (81 6 13

I

\

s hereby given

lhal on the 13th day o~uly
1981 at9 oooctockA
a
publ c hearing Will be held
on lhe budget prepared b~
the bOard of educauan of
Melqs Local
School
Dostr ct
Miegs County
Ohio tor the next sue
ceedlng fiscal year ending
December 31 1982
Such hearong will be held
at the Office of the
Treasurer
South Tt&gt;ird
Avenue Middleport Oh o

A 11 types of roof work

HE~ -45-10 H P

All Models A valfable

In Callla County

new or repair gutters
cleamng and

LEO MORRIS

pa1nteng

card of fh.anks

2 4 lie

~

6 Jtc

MILlER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all of your w1r
mgneeds

Call 742 3195
or 992 7680

for

and
any
tn house
chLJngc s that have to be
made Sac~ hoe and

Sm th

Now rakmg Enrollment
tor Summer Classes
In Pomeroy &amp; Racme
Age53 and Up

In tov ng memory of my
dear
mother
Evelyn
Whaley who left us St)(
y~ars ago today
July 3
Ann
Leonard
Scarbrough

Garages Bu1ldmgs
- Barns- Equrpment

and

PH. 367·7671
or 367-7560

memor es 1 love and m ss
you st II
w le 011 e

'J

Pomeroy

Automat c transm ss ons

and all sorts of mechanocal
reparr and ma1or and
m1nor auto body repa1r

VIRGIL B SR
,
216 E Second Street

985 3965

Nt W LIS riNG - Han
dvmnn s Specli•l Wou d m ake a niCe ren
ta w h some f x ng up
A
I
stOry fram e

1 0 50000

KINGSBURY HOME
SALES
ot ~nd 1 1rts ~tore w II
he clo sed Fr d.ly thr
~ ndc1y tor the July 4th
Hot drly!'i
t

1h PRICE
Alaleas

fh'rlrY

YAI&gt;D

-

AND BIG
Approx

ac r e
Hom e has 4
bedrooms tam ly room
I v ng room and b 9 k t
chen Most of the wa s
ar e
pane ed
Jus!
S20 500 00

OOYOU NEED A LOr?
- For a home a t r atler
or whatever Approx 1
acre of n ce tay nq land
w th water and elec tr c
avaolable S3 500 00
SOU rHE RN DIHh'OC 1
- Cute 2 bedroom home
w th a full basement
dtshwashe
wood

burner shed and many
more extra s

S :l~

900 00

IS rHE HEAr CET
riNG ro YOU? - If so
tht S J bedroom home
w th central a r tS what
you need Has c arpeting
everywhere n ce k•t

chen and full basement
Sll 500 00
Jr

stories

Famtly room or dtn ng
2 tub bath!\. one en

gas for

ced atr furnace d sh
washer n btrch k tch~n ::
enc osed back porth "'
nt ce patio wtth r.ver 111

frontage 545 000
•
2l AC.R n - Plus
ga~ IQis of hom"' !lites •
overiOOkong the Oh o •

tree .:,

R1ver: near Reet.t:svrlle :
' ~us ~15 000 Owner w 11 •

•~":~:es
- In Rutland~(.~
TOI'insh p wolh
al
'

bas e ment

POMEROY

Route 7

Tup-

pers Plarns

Yard Sale Friday July 3
8 5 698 Laurel Sf Mid
dl•port

COLLIE and Coonhound
Puppoes 991 2770

Parch Sale
Drop teal
table camel bark trunk
over 100 years metal top
table rugs etc 6th house
on lett north on old 33 abOve
County Rd 18

7 week old k oltens L Iter
tra ned whtte with some
dark
mark ngs
M d

dleport 992 7873
3 large cats 3 baby ktrtens

YARD SALE Wed Thurs

8 weeks old 247 3961

&amp; J;r Sa1l boat $150 roll
away bed
toys bak ng
d shes curtatns bedd ng
Ratn or shme 10 m nutes
north of Pomeroy on 33

7 week old k liens L lt@r
tra ned whrte w th some
dark
mark ngs
M d

Club

female beagle runs rabb1ts

gOOd 675 2145 after 4 30
675 4444

Yard Sale Thurs &amp; Fr
Don
Lann ng
restdence on R t 33 at En
terpr se

9 30 ?

Phone 304 882

2'/Q7

Yard Sa

5

Happy Ads

Geraldrne

ne Oh o

FOUND
Smatl black
female poodle type puppy
Bucks Dam area Town
shop Rd 444 985 3540

I

e Thl,lrS Fr1 on

North Maon 51
Phone 742 2648

Rutland

4 Family yard sale Dishes
cookwore linens curtains
wafer hooater stove sink
good clothing etc
Blr
chfleld s East Of Rutland
on 124 July 1 2 3

be«;~

stereo console tables

m sc 2'101 MeadoWbrook
Basement Sale 411

Sl

Cloth ng

Lewts

x

doshes

m sc July l st and July 2
and JulY 3

Garage Sale

ThursdaY

Wednesday

Fr daY

Bays

b ke aquar um complete
29 gal rn sc tems 9 a m

to 6 p m
Dnve

2900 Annoston

I

Yard sale 2221 Jefferson
fam ly f ra n t w II be n
Yard sale Thursday
Fr daY 9 I II 0 201 H gh
St
Lots
of
cloth ng m see taneous te

Work Wanted

AI k nds
masonary
work
ftreplaces chtrnneys free

Ltke Crafts? Love money'

ter Street Mason
sday and Fr day

Thur

Large Yard sale ant ques
and qu Its of at k nds June

30 through July 4 2 moles
oft Rt 87 on L..eon Baden
Fr daY Jut-; 3
kn ves
books s tverware d shes
rad o
Avon
watch
b cy c le
m tk can
elec
games 'l m out Jernco
R:d Not n~·s.pons ble tor ac
c dents

Gall polos

Carpentry
roof work
house Pa nttng
Free
Est mates s pec a ty ba r n
roofs 992 S349 or 173 5921

~art t me front offtce help
1n Pomeroy area Must be
abe to type keep ftles an
swer phones
ass t
customers and do I ght
bookkeep "9 Apply by sen
d1ng resume or wrrt ng

Cancelled t ran

WANTED

Lease men to

teasae o I and gas proper
t es GAiha and surroun
d ng count es lnqu re to
Great Bend 0 I Inc 269
Lower
Rtver
Rd

Ga ll pol s Call446 4285
$185 00 lo S500 weekly dong

as a young bust ness person
and earn good mon•y plus
some great g fts •s • Sen
ttnel route carr er Phone
us r ghl away and get on
the el g b I ty st •I 992

2156 or 992 2157
Opportun ty tS -;ours tust
tor the ask ng Ask your
Beet ne stylist and shew II

be happy IO help YOU 101n
the

Beeltne

world

F uti or part 1 me help Ap
ply n person SyrAcuse
Da ry Bar
Full or par t t me help Ap
ply n person Syracuse
Da ry Bar

Eorn

hours MERRIMAC need$

553 9077 or wr le MERR
MAC 801 Jackson St
Dubuque Iowa 52001
Wanted
someone w th
cha n saw to cut fallen tree
mb nto t rewood 992

6097
ply n person Crow s Steak
House Pomeroy

NEED someone to nslall
carpet

dog

old p1ctures of locamottves

----

Wanted to buy old ra I road
lanterns locks keys and
Call 367 7433

Must

have

own

tools Call675 1371
Older lady n good hea lltl
wt1 1 provrde free home to
work tng g rl or older
female compan on Phone

675 1786 or 675 4013

hnens d shes s lverstone

kn ves

tools

73 0 R 74 liW super Beetle
hood and nght front tender
Cai1446 0827

WANTED TO
BUY
Kr.ow•.rzyn GOLD
SILVER
Bro•advva'/,,1 PLATINUM STERLING
COINS
RINGS
JEWELRY MISC ITEMS
ABSOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEED
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OHI0992 3476

13
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been
celled&gt;
Lost

IN
can

Ca

ntormaton

675 649 3

MUSI

sac r t ce Ser ous

nqu es

r/

GO~

d v dual

ncorroe

bonus car and trave can be
yours Calf wanda Peck
304 675 613 0

FHA VA Convent al Home
Loans
Co umbus F r st
Martgag~ co
463 Second

Ave

Ga111pol s Oh

7172

21

446

ProfeSSIOnal
ServiCes

coMMERc AL
dustr a1

all(l

n

pnotograph-;

PhonE 446 2'109 or 446 7226

att~r

a P Ill

NCOME TAX AND AC
couNTING SERV CE
Call &lt;&lt;6 7068 lor ap
p a no tun ng and repa r
Love Your n f iQhbor tune
your P ano B I ward
wards keyboard 446 4372
Gail poi s

GAL!- IA c ean ng an d
Rent A 1\Aa d Servt ce nc
Free Est mates bonded
nsured
phone 24S 9234
Clean ng by tne week man
thor contractual

Gall po s

Oh o
J:loassports
tarn ly
photos Wedd ngs and com
mere at Photography

wELl dr 11 n9 both rolary
&amp; cable toots usually wells

on 1 day call R•y Beagl e
304 B'IS 3841
STARKS Tree Tnmm ng &amp;
Shrub Serv ce
Insured

Phone 304 576 2010

__ _

Ceramics

classes

now

Modern 3 bedroom total
elec tr c
hom e
ma n·
tenance free On a large

Modern 3 bedroom to al
ele ctr c
hom e
ma n·
tenance fre e On a arge

ot Reduced pr ce 742 2047 .
OR RENT almost new14,.:
70 3 bedroom I ' balhs,
s It ng on n ce lot ready to
move nto Phone 304 576·
271
5 ROOM hou se tor sa e
Call anyt m e 304 77 3 5514

Larg e 7 room house,_
base m ent gas heat and
work shop
W II accept
reasonable c ash offer upon
nspec t on 105 Park Dr ve .
lmmed ate occupancy
fhree room furn shed cot
tage tor r ent ut I t es n·

eluded

Phone 675 1580
f

House for sa e New Haven.
One and half story home on
large lot excellent con
d ton F ve large rooms._
bath
bet se ment
and
gar:age
Fu ly nsulated.
nexpens veto heat or coo
s tuat ed w th n one block
from c enter of town
Pr ced S5 000 below ap
pra sed value See or call
Geo Hes ter 312 Seventh
New Haven
W Va
St
Phone 881 2 t 4..

Mobile Homes

32

for Salo

For sa e 197 .. Freedom
mobtt e home and tot.
110x 250 located 2 m tes
abov e Henderson WVA
For ntormal on cal after

6 00 PM 675 4310
M ob e h om e on 2 to s tor
sa le by owner
Wayne
J v den Cal1446 675

3 bdr central a r nat gas,
c arport 1 2 acre storage
bu ld ng Centenary 24xd0 .
ca 446 3556

1913 11xl 0 3 Bdr m mob 1e
hom e S6 SOO 446 7697

W/3 Cr own Haven
three bedroom

14x65.

new car ·

pet 1971 Cameron 14x64,
two bedroom new carpet .
1972 Champ on 1 2x60 rwo
bedroom new carpet 1976
cam eron
12x60
two
bedrooms bath &amp; 112 new

carpet

1970 PMC

12x60.

two bedroom new carpeL_
B &amp; S Sales Inc 2nd and

v and

Street PI Pleasant.

wv Phone 67 5 442 4
2 mob

e homes

tu rn shed

New

torm1ng

1om led number accepted
Special beglnn!!rs class
beg nnlng July 6th Class
limited to 8 Call Now 4411
1786 Sharon McNabb Cer
tilled Duncan Instructor

'f

Phone

USED MoboiE Home 576
2711
Beaut fu1 voew
1 mole
from Hlll\c 1 yr Old 3 bdr
2 full bath brock ranch full
basement
2 Plus car
garage weFP 3 acres

1971 Oartan 12 x 6S 3
bedrooms
1972 Crown
Haven u x 65 w 1th 8 x 10

____

Lots &amp; Acreage

JS

L..Ors ~&lt;:e a t n ce camps te
on Racc OOn Creek
at
ut I t es ava lab e
$300
do\oV 11 0 wner w 1 t nance
can after 3 P m L56 641 3
Beaut ful &amp; evellots Fa r
f e ct church Rd approved
sub d '1/ 5 on c ty school
r.ural wat er 3 3 a acres

SlO 000 1 1 4 ocre S4 500
w
f nance
10
down J79 2196

Owher

'l ac r es on F" to yd Cl ar k Rd
c lose ro Rt 160 $4 000

Phone 446 0390
B Y 0w11 er 3 apa 1m en
house on approx 1 ac r e
L " e n one r ent other s to
m ake your payment Can
be conve rted s ngle home
C ty wat er w 1 cons der
and co!1 f r ac t 675 1883 9 5

Prn
14SACR E' 5 41 1 3761804

41

MOUSes tor Rent

H ou se tor ent 57 0 v e St
I bdr
unturn shed
no
Pe ts. you pay ut t es dep
rEq $150 ITIO 446 7886 AI
rer 5 4.:16 4045
bdr h ou se $275 Ver y
n te ROdney v II age
446 4416 at e r JPM

3

For enf new small 5 rm
br ck c arpet ra nge 19
f rant parch over took ng 0
R ve
awn mo tr ee Y ou
Pa y $Y 00 wat er e ectr &lt;;
rno untur11 shed 15 m n
lrom Gall po s ower Rt
I W anl m d dle age coup e
or tad'J' no ch ldren $200
Permo Cal 1561198

N ce zodr un urn house
Bo 1 11 rang e ta ge back
close to B dwell
Yard
Schaal Cali h6 1785
Re L sf ng J bdr
1 ti l'
bath tully c arpeted w th
gara ge over look ng Oh o
R ver on Rt 7 Call 367
IVa n t&lt; YQe c eek Sc hool
d Str ct

J BDRM house c tv sc hool
d st L..Fl g k tchen bath
Ul 1 I Y room
a t ac hed
qa. r age
Rodn ey V age
No l ( il 446 1356
J soR M
arge lam ly
room 4.46 4754 tn Northup
J 8 DRIII' HOM E 21u I 5 ze
bttth s total elec w th wood
borner 3 rn south at c ty
'£Jou $150 dep Youp ay utt

l S6 t'&gt; 6
bdr hou se base m ent
age
Ro se
H II
Pom ero Y Depos t tease
requ r ed No pets $'175 per
rno 0 4 618 1513
l

9~

H r tord
6 r oom s and
bath ta ge ~lo"'rd e n spot
li 'J ~3 !1 aher 4 PM
s )( r oom house s 100 a
rn ontt
9rea t for Ia ge

v

6/S Sl04 or 675 53H6

4~

MObile Homes
for Rent

'l bedroom tr a er for r en

Brown s Tra e Park 99:.!

]J14
T w 0 bedroom house tr a tcr
on As nton Up and Road
$fso plus u t es and
dam aae d(\pos f 3 m es
from R t 1 o s .tOBB
f w 0 1 bed room house
t r a 1cr s l or rent furn shed
I w lh cenTr al a r gOOd tor
Work n g couple or coupl e

x 60 2 bedrooms

• S

Haven adu ts only no pets

Sales Inc 2nd and Viand
Sts PI
Pleasant wv.
Phone 675 4424

B

304 67&gt; 14S1 or 675 1'196 nl
lor 3

on 1979 mobole home 3
bedrooms. one and half
baths central
air .
lor'!Piace
Interest 12 96
per cent payments S21S 5(1.
per mor th Insurance on·
c luded «6 9340

Full

m

expando 3 bedrooms 1973 w lh en ld s so per m onlh
utapoa 12 x 65 2 bedrooms, Plus depOsoJ 615 4088
1~72 lnva~er U • 70 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau lA , 1 BD R mob le home New

Assume loan S1 000 down

with

oo 245 5420

2 bedroof'T'I

'192 7517

Call~ 770'1

ney oH $8 750
or 388 8349

lam

10x50

breaker box 54500

operator s L1cense, Phone

McNabb

sc hUltz Homestead
wash &amp; dryer new
carDet com furn se t on
tot 6 1n Qua I Cr eek n ROd

t er 3 00 p

12x47 .
5 ROoM
house
64 Browns Tra11er Park .
cnoll &lt;otlle Rd only $3 500 M nersv lie Oh
cai1446 4038 or 446 1615
1971 Cardona! 12x~ porcn,
step
und e rp1nn ng .
NEW CABIN or small
underground
home
corn pletel y fur block ng
cable hght pole
new
noshed $3900 Call446 0390

992 2143
Schools lnstructoon

1971

12X6()

House for sate by owner
Beaut fu country home 1
4 acres 3 bedrooms large
vang room w th f replac e
f am l y room 1 bath ktt
c hen
w HI
s t o ve
refr gerator
lots
of
cab nets
attached 2 car
garage w th automat c
r!oor opener Large barn 8
)( 12 Uti! ty bU d1ng Tup
pers Pia ns and Chester
water w th sottener Home
heated by L P gas or coal
and woodburner
ac
comodat on
Proper ty s
f ve years old Other n ce
features not ment oned
Pr ced n ow 30 s 985 3560

needs Qo to rawney Stud o

Ave

CL EAN U SED MOBILE
HO~E S
K ESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HO~E SA L E S 4 Ml
WE ST GALLI POL S RT
35 PHoNE 446 31168 or 446
7274

and sma I pond S25 000 00
Call 67S J784 or 675 1682 af

po ntmfnt anY' me

424 2nd

tr a lers
TRI STAT!i
MOll u : HOMES CALL
«6 7sn

appontment (AIIerlPM)

Dave 0 Ne al Real E state
Broker

MoneY' to Loan

22

used

2239

your

"'

ltreploce forced air lur
mice 3 lpts and garage
13 ~ears Old AsKing "
$45 000
I

For con,Piete

PRicE s REDuceD

mobile homes and travel

Well

Water

----..:::
-._.
ome"Storiate -

cabtnet

Duncan
Phyle
tabLe,
chairs clathong beddlri!l

sa e

For

Dr I ng Sus ness S20 000

FOR •I your photography

GRIL L COOK wanted Ap

seegl~

or Phone 446

3670 for app0 ntment

of

severa dealers tn your
area to offer our I ne of
toys gtfts and home decor
tems on the party plan
H gh comm ss ens No n
vestment
deliver ng or
co teet ng Car and phone
needed Call to free 1 800

mture anc:t AntiQUes of at
kinds call Kenneth Swa n
256 1967 tn the even ngs

s

GalltPO

Be a su ccess
You r spare
t me
Coupl t _s or
n

Neal$ Aucr on Hogsett
WVA Rl 2 EverY Sat 7 00
PM
&lt;Cons gnments
taken) &lt;w•lt bUY furntture)
Lonn e Neal367 7101

WANT TO BUY 0 d fur

lnquore at outdoor Equ p
ment Sales Jcl Rts 7 &amp; 35

GET VAL,UABLE tra n ng

extra cash' work you r own

\CASH
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
420LIIIE;&amp; SECOND
OR CALL
446 4775
0PEN9T05

LAWN &amp;, Garden power
equtpment sales &amp; serv ce
Owner 'tN sheS 1o ret re

onlY

HOMEMAKERS

Wa"ted to Buy

Buslrless

O~un•tv

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

v,-ork 5hop 2 c ar- garage
W1th work shoP large gar
washer
basement
wtn Must sell L ea v no state
den 2 porches
5.48 Gcant
St
Moddleporl S59 500 Sev~n room bath all elec
Want ng qutck sale to settle tn c home Approx mately
estate Call 614 384 3809 lor eleve-n acres Has a gara ge

01 Reduced pr ce 742 2047 .
21

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

Large 2 story stone home
well nsul1ated w ttl 3 large
Farm s lor sate
bedrooms one full bath 2
112 baths tor mal dtn ng
n
M.e
gs County 7 room
room newly remodeled k t
far01 house an d bu ld ngs
ch en bu It 1n nc lud ng d sh w lh l6 acr es
614 742

~-

C rcle Sales P 0
Box 224 D R tchmond H II
NY 11418

Public Sale
&amp; Auchon

9

Phone '192 lllO or 949 2791

P 0 sox 729 H Pomeroy

Ave Pt Pleasant

??

~~-

w 1 do babys II ng on rroy
home 11 Syracuse Good
ref er ences v erY ret able

YARD sa • Fr day July 3 fash on and success Phont
3941 between the- hours
o a 111 3 p m Ptano tor 992
of
9
6
sal e $100 oo J208 Roush
YARD sae 6 m l es out
Crab creek Rd at corner
or JHTl HI Rd Ntce terns
nctud1ng Beehne womens

esl mates 614 6112 781 3

your area No tnvestment
and no del very Excellent
arrangement to add to vour
tamtly ncome 256 934

PLY

Yard sale
810 South
second M ddleport July 2

Avon toys

ava Jable

S x tarn ty ';ard sate Cen

Call after 5 446 4'196

chm~

D J s LA.wN MOWER
REPAIR
On Negh
borhaod Rd ail makes ser
v ced S~c 1 al ttng tn Lawn
Boy
B actes sharPened
Call 4.46 4425 after s p m
P ck up ancl del verY

rna ng work
No ex
per ence requ1red
AP

Yard sale July 2 3 4 Thur
sday Froday Saturday 368
East Maon Pomeroy

Bed

9

ms

Regrstered

11

1

fl!~!!!i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Garage sale JulY lSI and
2nd cloth ng roll a way

Yard Sa e Carroll Teat or
ds corner Broad &amp; Matn
Ractne Oh Fn &amp; Sat Jrd
&amp; 4th 10 dark LoiS of n ce 8
ttems

ten long haor 8 year old

71JCQ::Jff"""'""

,... ~

ACT NOW Be the f rst Art
craft concepts counselor on

3 large cats 3 baby k1ttens

ttems &amp; matern,ty clothes
Ra nor shtne

OIIIITIIA4 -

softball

------- - - -

room
attached
Rodney V llage

No 2 Call «6 1358

only

dress slacks July 2 3 10

John 51 II. Frog Syracuse
July 1 &amp; 2 LOIS Of good

--·

ut I ttY
garage

II

am

7 tamt y yard sa e Neut
zl ng s res dent corner of

Ill' 1NE
MSTSIQ'fE
Ill' /OWl'(

Yard sate 11 Leon 1 2 3 9
1 1 8 Avon qu Its clothes
d shes

992 2420

Phane675 5768

3 BDRM hou'!.e city school
dost L R tg r&lt;otchen balh

team

cHeport 992 7873
8 weeks old 247 3961

SI'W$71(£
SCH!;StHr

Ra n or sh ne 2918 An
ntston onve end of 10th St
by
Juntor
Sponso'ted

Women s

Shown by appt

llM. ~ .­

Garage Sale Lots of g rl s

SaturdaY

eat '"

only 367 7835

2 or
J ~
den
new

bath and k tchen

IUYINOW;J

s

Road

plants

PIANO Lessons Lucy Jane
Bulmer Hartford WV 882
2395

SIB 500 OFFER wan
ted
CHESHIRE - l,ovely
large 4 bedroom '119me

bedrooms

Vegetable

LONEl.Y
Christ an
Stngles
Meet Christ an
songles tnyaur area Write
Southern Christian Songles
Club PO Box 1823 SOm
mervllle SC 29"3 or calli
803 871 9850 24 hours

natural gas forced a1r
furna c e
garage
storage over and leve l
lot near shopptng Only

tra c tno~e

Moving Sale Weds Frl
July 1 2 3
Maytag
automatic washer $.10
Danville follow signs from
124 out 325 Briar Ridge Rd
2nd house on right

5 long ha red~t,.k ttens to
gOOd home see "Polly after
6 62 L ncoln St Gallo pols

Picking up easy play organ
In your area Low dOWn
payment
low monthly
payment
Credit
manager
Gwen Folmer Is now
workong at Kay s Beauty collect 614 592 5122
Salon 169 N 2nd Mid
dleport Call 992 2725 for
appointment

for

m noral s on. gOOd ll ll,l' v~l
road Wahl waur~ you
,. g ve down dr lraae o
1
Jh s one want gnly
$15 000
PEfiMA S rDNE - At

Beauty Saloon IS

baskets
Cleland Rae

full

3

a

s

tomato plants
beddmg
plants pots and hang1ng

balh
lots of wood
cab lll!ts on the k tchen

c losed Nat

Yard Sale Carrol Teafor
ds corner Br011d &amp; MaIn
Racine Oh Frl &amp; Sat 3rd
&amp; 4th 10 dark Lots of nice
Items

6 wk old puppy half beegle
half retnever Call 388
'1926

Coty Cab offoce 39 State St
Galllpolos open 5 30 toll
11 30PM 7 days 446 0451

open

trailer
near
r ver
Water e ectnc and sep
toe lank JUST $6 500
2

1

Call

Brown lemale puppy loves
ch ldren 675 5506

Cle land Greent'louse 1S now

shop f am I y room car
and 2 car garage across
street on 2nd lot Only
$28 500
NEW LIST"ING
Bu ld ng lot or set up for

bedrooms

992 2420

5 K liens

bedrooms bath shower
tn basement
wood
burmng f replace wtth
bookcases on each s de
Kttchen wtth breakfast

BARGAIN

3 k ttens 2 gray &amp; yellow
Call446 1527

Four Border col e pupptes

now open
Located an
Gall a St Crown Coty OH
Call for appo nlment 256
1642

NEW LISTING - COde
bu II quality home 3

oo

sat e

away
toys ~~b~a;~k~ ~1n~g;;l
dishes bed
curtains
basement
Rain or shine 10
north Of Pomeroy on

Ten week old red male k1t

1 (614) 992 3325

room

YARD SALE Wed Thurs
&amp; Frl Sall 'loa! S150 roll

See James Smoth or Tom
Masters or call 446 7757

Karen

basement

does not offer: or attempt to
offer any other th ng for
sa e may place an ad'" thiS
column There w II be no
charge to the advert1ser

NEW GARAGE OPENING

EAFORDm

d nlng

ANY PERSON who has
anythong to gove away and

sewing

Cleaner one half mole up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
406 0294

6 28 1 ma

nook

and

machtne reparr parts and
supplies
Ptck up and
delivery Oav s Vacuum

Headquarters

Nt W liSfiNG - Abg
to t w th a 1 '1 story
frame hom e Modern
k tchene tt e I ant and
r ea r
porch
and 'J.
bedrooms Also an extra

Annoul'tcements

SWEEPER

ousiny

Farm Ponds Land
Cleanng Roads
Call

Porch Sale
Drop leaf
table camel bark trunk
aver 100 years metal top
table rugs etc 6th house
on left north on old 33 aboVe
County Rd 18

Geveaway

446 4027

rthday

Burnette who passed away

Bob Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

l

4

b

Ju y 1 1980
W lh a cluster of beaut lui

Real Estate- General

Real Estate - General

Yard Sate Friday July 3
8 5 698 Laurel St Mid
dleport

Decorated cakes tor all oc
cass ons character cakes
sheet
c akes
wedd ng
cakes
New strawberry
shortcake 992 63.42

One k1tten 8 wks o d Call

N MEMORY of Charles R

an tm
presstve complete hne
of wecldtng and an
n•versary mvltaltons
and
accessortes
Reasonably
pnceCI
qu1ck servtce
-look
wtthout
obhgatton

CHESHIRE

Earn S8 00 to $10 00 per

tn Memory of Stella Marte
Denny) Franklm on her

-Anniversanes

- Passports
-and Now

109 Htgh St

as a fashton stylist

Reg German Po c e

-Weddongs

Guaranteed

p m

Moving Sale Weds Fro
July 1 2 t. Maytag
automallc washer $.10
Danville follow slg~s from
124oul325 Briar Ridge Rd
2nd house on right
,

B II

T me can never steal away
RE"membran~:::e of t~e past
ot you the one we loved and
a
s
I
Our hearts w1tl hold t fa5t
Sidty mtssed by Pam

-Portratts

FREE ESTIMATES
All Bu1ld ngs

ION LADIES
pay off those wn
wanted bolls workopg
evenings from 7 30 to )0,30

446 3171

JHE PHOTO.
PlACE

REESE BUILDINGS

lot $29 900

and

6 8 1 mo

CAT D-6-C

or
Blarn Mrlhoan

In Memor1c1m

1

Phone

992 2478

hour prof t
Ideal for
homemaker w th fam ly

Coni act Ed Burkett Barber
Shop M ddleport

Call'/92 3941 fram9 6

call949 2710

r~~~~~~~~~=~

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

son
Sub
b ah Dr Berk ch and Dr
Yodtawskt tor a successful
surgery and the wonderful
care the nur~ ng staff at
Holzer Medtcat Center
g•ve me Also to fr ends
and ne ghbors who called
or sent cards Herman w 11
and Georgta and Harley

CARPENJER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

Qua hty But It
Economrcally Pnced

,

JU y
4 5
Ce r~mtcs
clothes
and
m sc
1tems
and S
Yard

clothes
4 FAMILY Yard Sale July
8 ~ 10
Riverside Dr
Cheshire
Antiques
clothing toys gas
BR suite bike lots of mlsc
FoliGW signs

w sh to thank Dr

992 2036
5 20 l mo

Ph 843 3322
582mopd

Gigante Moving Sale 491
Kathy Dr
Gallipolis
Thurs and F rl

3
Announcements
1 PAY
hodhest proces

thanks
and ap
prec at on to my many
fr ends for the m any cards
etters gtfts and VIS ts
wh le I was l!l pahent at
Holzer Hospttat t extend
spec tal thanks to my netgh
bors Mr &amp; Mrs Emerson
Corb n Mr &amp; Mrs Carl
Woods
Florence Crace
Bea Lee and Jean John
Mr &amp; Mrs James E Neff

dor:er serv ce avatlable

One t&gt;edroom mob1le home
A r cond toned all uhltt es
I urn shed Outsk rts Hen
derson snu month Phone

6ls 6 no

lra 1er '1 bedroom com
Pl etcl'f tu r n shed Washer
dryer and a r condrt on

Porvare lol

upper Mason

Referenc es

Requtred

Phone Ill 9113

__:.._

Hntl\"11111

t··
I

Plumbtng

2&lt;45 93Z2

poss ble for gold and Stiver
co ns r ngs tewelry et,

1975 Sadly m ssed by Ja

2H

COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY

2 lie

valle y

sew er hne connecttons

R es 1 denh~

&amp;Comm er c 1at

FOR LEASE

Meigs Local
SChool District

Don twa t Contact Ohto

Free E st mates
Call Collect

~et George M ller check
your- pr-esent lectnca
sy5tem

r

Treasurer

EUGENE LONG

Any sue bu•lt to your
spec ftcattons
Models

-::•9= = =F=or::;:L•;:•:;s:;e;;;:;;;;;;;:;,

Jane wagner

Stdrng
R ooftng &amp; Gutter
Remodeling
Serveng Your Area tor
20 Years

992 621S or 997 7314
Pomeroy Oh

Clerk

Moddleport OH
A or Condltooned
UGOSq Fl
Offtte &amp; Seleo Area
6 000 Sq Ft1 Storage
l'enced In Yard Storage
Contact Jim Thomao
992 6611 ' ;

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

V C YOUNG II

Pr obate Judge/
{I

tensrve
remodel
mg
• E lectnca I work
• R oohng work
13 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583
6 3 1mo

RACINE-SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS

0 stnct

Yard sale TOddler clothes
little g1rl ClotheS fires
remnant Pieces
teans
dtshes F1rst house beyond
Tall Tunber s SR 1 Satur
day and sunday

Ceram cs

cere

CONSTRUCTION
New t1omes
ex'

Hu_ge Yard Sale July 1 2 &amp;
3 9 to 7 off 35 at Jordan s
Gas follGW signs 3 miles

992·2156

com~ nation

kitchen lg tam ly rm 2'1'
baths locateo In Tara
Estates Club Hause and
pool pr voleges
S75 000
ftrm Kyger c r eek School

oo

Yard Sale 1st time Thurs
thur Frl Bidwell turn right
street be lore post office
Mise Items

1n Mason County

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160

oo

In Meigs County

446-2342

and downspouts gutter

room

floor

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

All work guaranteed

Sheds
POLE BUILDINGS
15 x20 up to 40 xlOO
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS
(4x16
8x8
axro
10 x1o 10 xu a up)

Robert E Buck

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
ON BUDGET

(1)

•

Oh o 45Tn

Public Notice

Not ce

HJ 50 -20-30 H P
HA 60 - 25-·60 H P

;::====~~~~=~11mMason
Me1gs
Galha
counttes

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

for Silll
»-Farms for s.a I!
)4-l~o~slrtns lu ld nts
JJ-Lotl&amp; Acre1gl!
Jl-filea Estill • w•nted

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Rl 1 S1de Hill Rd
Rutland Ohio
PH 742 2455
5 11 tfc

992 5682

Public Not1ce

Publtc Nottce

HfMARD
ROTAVATORS

1 w1sh to extend my s n

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Pubhc Nohce

- Auto and Truck
Reparr
- TransmiSSIOn
Repa1r
Hrs Mon Fn
9am530pm

gut1er SldU]9 &amp; plumbeng &amp; ~lectncal con

Pomeroy OH
992 2174

PubliC N0t1ce

bath

Buoll Gorages
Call for free sodong
estimates 1149 2101 or
949 2860
No Sunday Calls
3 11 lie

BY OWNER 4 Bdr spilt
l•vel llv ng r oom/ dlnong

Several family yard sale
Frlda.y July 3 syracuse
Ball P~rl&lt; Rain dat• July
A\lon COIJectlon un
believable Prices Dishes
Whatnot~ sa11 &amp;
Garego Sele Rain or shlne draperies
pepper shakers
baked
Old oek teble, chairs and goods moch more
China Cabinet
Dls~tes.
model stero antiques
Porch
sale
and much more July 1st Weekend
2nd 9
to 9
July 3rd &amp; 8egonnong Fr day July 3
4th 2 00 to 9 00 2 miles Leadong Cr~k Rd 2 mo
west Of Gallipolis on Rt south of Rutland 2 famoly
sal e Haro d Sau er 7.t2
1.1
2301

992--Middlepor
347-chesliire
Po"'eroy
,_VInton
915-Ciitster
245-Rio Grende
3•5-Portlond
379-Walnut Dlst
247- Letart Falls
2~uyan Dill
949-Roclne
643-'-Arabia Dlst
742-Rulland
Mason CoW Va
Area Code 304
675-Pt Pl&lt;!asant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
112-New Haven
"5-Letart
937- Buffalo

custom

aeauttful.~.

Carmel News,

spend s nne tu ne m OhiO wtth her

614

~lllfllllis

32

----·----

Meigs Co ArM Cod~

Gallla Co Area Code

Varuale

7

Cws,lfied Pages cover the
folio~ telephone exchan,ges ...

dan Joshua and Jeremy attepded a
fanuly gathenng at lbe home of U ncoln RusseU at Wolfpen on Sunday
Mr and Mrs Reece Prather Ket
termg spent several days with her
mother Mrs l£w1S Srruth
Mrs Janet Dunham IS spendmg
some tune here with her parents
Mr and Mrs Reed Jeffers and
other relatives Mrs Dunham flew
from her horne near N~w Boston,
Ill to Coiwnbus \\here ramliy mern
hers met her Mrs J ef fers ts un
privmg rrorn treatments taken '"
Parkersburg
Family members gathered at the
hone of Mr and M rs M endal Jor
dan to celebrate Father s Day and
help Mr Jordan observe his birthday Those present were Mr and
Mrs K ennelh Crabtree Mr and
Those spending Easter Sunday
Mrs Waller Jordan Joshua and w1th Mr and Mrs Robert Lee and
Jeremy and Mr and Mrs D~ame fa1ruiy were Mr and Mrs Arthur
Jt rdan Bryan Ke1th and Sarah Orr of Chester Mr and Mrs Paul
Faye all loca l M1ss Trac1e Brown
Newman and son or Gabon Mr and
Al ban)
was also pre sent The Mrs Roger Grueser and family or
fa m ly presented lhelf flher a pocket Logan Oh10 and Paul Moore local
wa tch cham and fob
Mr and Mrs Earl Gordon of
Mr and Mrs Leon Woodrum Weston W Va called on Mr and
Ca thy and Jessie M cArthur Beulah Mrs Douglas CJrcie on Sunday
and Cmd) Crabtree and Dale Dye Rocky Pitzer or Bashan called at the
local were guests or Murl Ga la wa y CJrcie horn• on Monday
n Tuesda) evenmg T he occasiOn
wa s Mrs Calaway s b~rthday and
homemade oce cream was enJoyed
b) I he group
Mrs Cia) Jordan spt!nt se v eral
Mr and Mrs Vaughan Taylor
days 111 Ada Oh J w1th her s n n
Dayton spent a rew days With Mr
law and daughter Mr and Mrs
and Mrs David Weber
Thomas Cassell and new babv
Carrel Chevatier of Mansfield
spent the weekend with his mother
daughter Chnstme Ann
Mrs
Lesl e Huffman
Dena
Mrs Edward Chevalier

J 'llMlst: gathj!rln8

·~/( u.ut··f·~;

KAUL gravel ll.,...tone
coal etc Dencll
Phone675 5215

Yard Sale Friday July 41h
10 to 5 P M
Mayes
Grocery Ashton w v a

~urnlshed

twa bedroom
150
month
~eleren ce
and deposit
requored 61' 6851

traoler

~

�. lD-The
42

4~ :::--s~ceiO.Iiw·-

Mobile Homes
for Rent

--

.

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

3 bdr. trailer. $200mo. $100
dep . furnished . Phone 367 0271 .

-

Office space downtown
Gallipolis location, 1st
floor. «6-3.02.

Sec luded pr ivate t rail er lot
Beaut ifu l m obile home in WOOded area . Idea l tor
With garage on 1 acre lot. th at summer ou tdoors .
1/ 8 m ile tr am North Gall i a Contact Brown's Trailer
High School on Rt . 160. Park , 992 3324.
Compl e te ly fu rn ., including
wa sh er and dryer . Ca ll 388· .CO UNTRY MOBIL E Home
8436 .
Park. Route 33. North of
Pom eroy. Large tots. Call
2 Qdr . mobile home near 991 ·7479 .
Capt . D . Adults only , no
pets, sec . dep., and ref . Call TRA ILER spaces for rent.
446 2491.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Pa rk, Chesh ire, Oh .
2 bdr mobile home . Cal l 991 3954 .
446·0168 .
For rent , lOx 50 2 bedroom
m ob ile home Rac.ne area .
992 5858 .

Equipment for Rent
Scaffold. Phone 675·6850.

£

Apartment
tor Rent

House tor r ent , 57 O l1 ve St
1 bdr , unf urni shed. no
pets, you pay ut i l i ties, dep.
rt-q ., $150 mo 446 7886 . Af
ter 5 4-46 4045 .

For L ee1se

For lease unturn . large 3
bdr . apt . 2nd f Ioc r. $250 per
mo Cal l 446 4425 or 446
1H 19.

__

RATLIFF POOLS S. SER ·
Complete sales. ser ·

VIC~.

vice,

suppl ies

and

stalla tion . 446· 1324.

Thomas Orga n, 2 key boar ·
ds, foot pedals, excellant
for beginners or e~ ·
perienced pl ayers, 5200.
Ca ll446·4225
Koken · B a rb er
cha ir ,
barred type, e)(ce l lant for
barber shop or recreation
room. $150 . Call 446 4215 .
high for p1ck

up truc k , r em ovable back

8. full door, good cond.,
$200 . Ca ll 446 4275.

---·--

·1980 Prowler c·amper 11ft..
fullv self contained. ex.
cond . Call 256·6626. Crown
City, OH .

..

.Jii_

u.f
•••••

rL!=====::::::=::::=r.~;:;;;;;;;~~~;~
64
__ H~y:S ~G!ain=:: :_
if
Autos for Sale
i n. .- .
Straw. $1 .25 bale on wagon,
in barn S1 .50.
Butler
Hereford
Farm , Lower
River Rd ., Gallipolis. 256 ·
1113 .

'

·--·--·~--

AKC reg i stered c hoc ol a te
male poodle pup . 1st DHL
and Pa r vo shots . $150 . Ca ll
992 71 02.

- Mobile
married

Home
couples
Phone 675-1076.

Lots,
only

Fresh cut cabbage ~ason
County Vocational Center,
FrJ, July 3. 12 : 00 noon til
4: 00.

Th r ee 2 year o ld colts, 1
car t pony , cart , harness ; 1
6 year o ld m are See Ancil
or Da n Burbridge, Rou te 2,
A l bany, OH , 698 ·6372
THE FISH TANK a nd Pet
Sho p . 2101 Jeff erson Ave
67':J 2063, Pt Pleasa nt. our
c h dw ar f ra bbits $10.99,
m1 n1 lop rabb1ts $19 99, a nd
20 gal aqu ariu m w ith lull
h ood $51.95 . Open 11 4.
AKC
Da c h s hun d.
Po m era n1 a n a n Pood le
pups 895 ·3958.
Regis tered Blue T ick. pups
Best blood line money ca n
buy Phon e &lt;15.2 ·1503 .
AKC Ba ssett hounds pup
p1eS. 2 m a les and two
f emales. ') 150 each . 304
S86 9Sa 1
AK C

Register ed Chow
Chow pupp1 es. bl ack. r ed
a nd be 1ge ')400 Excellent
pf' d 1gree Ph one 57 6·25 11 or
162 2035
TWO dogs Bl ood hounds. I
ma le, 1 f em a le, 304 ·881
J3 16

1976 Chysler Cordoba, low
miles, good cond .. tilt
wheel, cruise, priced right,
446·8661 , Gallipolis.
1975 M e r c ury Monarc h
Ghia , $ 1800; like new Go·
Ca rt $250. Ph . 256·6495,
Crown C1ty, OH .

1981 Bui c k Regal L T D ..
b lac k , 2dr., r ed velour i n
terio r, loaded . 8,000 m i les
Ca ll145 5405 .
68 Fire bird 400 eng ine. 4
spd ., hursf trans ., exc .
cond ., n ever been driven in
winter, $2000. Call Jackson,
DH . 286·6500.
78 Camero balck , T ·top,
a1r. cond ., AM FM stero 8
frack .
Ca l l · 446 · 400 2,
Ga ll ipoli s .
1977 MGB red con ve rtibl e,
gd . cond
Ca ll 446·3939 .
Ga llipolis
IY61 Chrysl e r I mper ia l, a
c lass ic beauty W1th every
ava ilable option for th a t
year, v e ry good cond Call
J81:1 9907 ask for George .

77 Trans Am near loan
value 53800. Call 446· 1136
9AM1o8PM.

MU SIC&lt;'ll
ln sfrum ents

G 1bson ES 325, Fender
twin. Crow n 300, Gu il d
Echo box . Ca ll 992 ·61 37 .

_::Farnllai'pii5---:::
tivestocl(

TR 6 1975 CL ASSIC CON
V ERTIBL E Low m1lage
body B. m echimics, in e-x
cel lenf c ondition 245 9111i ,
SJ, B75
/4 Fireb1rd $350

Call

4~6

3910 alter 5
61

' II Ford L T O . ru ns good.
New Holland , 451 Mower,
good sh a pe. SJ OO. Ca ll 446·
f')(C cond, 2 yrs old CA ll
0705
446 6566 or 446 4036 .

F our 15,00 ga l lon tank s
locaTed above g round at
A th e ns. Ohio
$3, 000 on
eac h . P hone 1 304 422 DH 1.

1977 Old s STartir e hatch
back . AC. PS. PB . new
pa1nt job. new battery , new
radi a l t1res Pri ced to sell
QUICk . Cal l446 1052 after 5.

Cleaner Comb ,ne, model
69 NOVA , 307 Ct. , ra lly
60 Pro drive . David Yost,
wheels,
good co ndition ,
Portland . DH Call843 21 41. $500 00 . P hone 446 8061. 446·
46 48, 446 3549 .
Grav ely lractor w1th 30 1n
ch mower , ro ta Iiii er , plow 19J:J C H EVY Impala, 4
an d new tires . good con door , $475 or best otter . .446
d1 t10n $1 400 . 304 675 6253 af ]948
ter 6 p. m .
197 0
VW
SQuar eb ac k .
One John
Deere se lf Overhauled,
new brak es .
propelled combine 45 with E )(( $ 1,200 698 6804
10 a nd hal t tt . gra 1n head .
Good con dit ion SISOO . 576
1970
VW
sQu a r ebac k .
'1.97 1 or 576 21a6.
Overhauled , new brakes .
Exc. $1.100 698 6804 .
63

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

Trucks
fo~-· Sale
- --

n

. .

1974 Chev . 3/ 4 T pick up
truck. S650. Call 446·4215 .

1964 Ford 111 ton pic k up
standard. 6 cyl., fair cond.,
$150. Call 446-3145 evenings
after 5PM .
·
1969 Chevy truck long bed
350 eng ine runs great, body
need s work $450. Call 446 ·
07&lt;7 .
'69 &lt;;hevy pickup, 2 n ew
t ires . good cond ., best of.
fer . Call 379 2609 .

72 INTERNATIONAL
Ton P1ckup. 2•S - ~741.

,,,

1970 Chevrolet 6 cyl . Sa le or
Trade. 675·2149
79 Chevy pickup wilh
every thin g Caii675 ·3Y38
71 CHEVY
truck. , JOS
au lomalic , 51,000 mil es.
$1400 . will accept trade in ,
J04 67 5 3044 .
V.ln\ &amp;

11

1:1

W .O .

1980 JEEP CJ 5. 6 c yl. , 4
spd .. exc c ond. , ca ll 446
121 1
ML&gt;ST SE LL , Make me an
off er 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cy l, 4
spd, l ow mil eage, canvas
top, w i ll trade , call446· 1211
or 446·3594 .
1965 C JS Jeep. clolh top
and m eta l top, s 1.200.
Phone 675 ·1564.

Farm Eq u1pment
1968 Jeep one ha If ron
p 1c kup, 6 c yl, Standard :J
speed . 4 wheel drive. 675
41:174
74

Motorcycles

19 74
Norton
850
Commando, hl27 actual
miles, orginal. exc . c ond .,
$1, 000 Ca ll 446 8637
1980 Suzuki GS 550. l im ited
ed1t ion , l,:j42 miles. Call
156 9367 after 5 :30PM.
19 74 360 Honda new tir es,
new battery , good con ·
d if1on, S400. Call 446 · 7754 .

197Y Honda C B 750K. l ow
mileage, ex . cond .. extras
Ca ll 446 2714.

Set lock· in lock -out hubs for
Jeep. S35. call 882 3664.
Topper for Luv or other
mini truc:k 6 ff. bed . Phone
675-5280 .•

n · -· ·

12 YR. OLD . 1.000 lb . work 19 76 Monte Car lo tandau .
hor se, gen tl e, works sing le Average mi l es, r~ir , loaded
or double S550 Cal 1 256 $3, 195. 247 HI I. after 4 p .m .
6040 .
197 4 Chev r olet Suburba n
Pony and sa dd le. Very gen
New tir es . $600. Phone 992 ·
tie $125. 00 . Phone675 · 3 18~ . 2881.
Five Hol stei n he ifers, 3 1975 Fo rd LTD to r sa le.
ready to f res hen , two in Engi ne ov erhauled , new
tnree week s. average about paint job , 4 new tires. First
shape . W i ll sell
1200 lbs or be tt er Ca ll Vin c lass
rea son a bly . Phon e 992 ·
ton 388 9329 .
5612
L ay mg hens. Phone 304
675 19 26.

•

Golden and G 191 pheasants.
Bantam c hi c k en s also
fe m a le ra coon. J04·89.S·
3971
POL LE D He r eford
$350. 304 -895·3997 .

bul l

New Moped . $450 00 Phone
675 1076.
1972 350 Honda Scrambl er ,
low mileage . 6/5 4874 .
Sea r s m1n1 cyc le
Phone675·4628 .

$115.

Motorcyc les. Hondas two
tra il 90s, one runs good
$300. tor both . 882 -3664 .

75 Bu ltaco 360 Porsang, 7'5
Bultaco 200 Alpina, both
need som work $250. Phone
675 3833.

197 8
F o rd
Fairmont
stationwag on . P.S., P .B ..
a1r, AM FM ·8 track. . $3,000 .
985 4175 .

1980 TT 500 Yamaha dirt
bike. S1300. 304675-3938 .

MORRI SON 'S Aulo sales
Hende rson , WV . Phone 675:
1574 or 675·7881.

1978 FIBERFORM W~ ikiki
11 II., 115 h.p. Mercury
motor, Tennesee trailer,
skis
and
accessories.
$5.000 256-6002 or 4~· 2478 .'

1964 Rambler Ameri can ' 4
door, automatic, 6 cy l in ·
der, S500.00. 304-882776 7.

1973 Camero, type L TO,
gOOdcond . Phone675·1424.
1973 Pinto, gOOd body, runs
goodS800. Phone8823664.

AUtO. Re~air

· ;· -- - ·- --

75
.-

Boats e1nd
Moton for Sale

--

..

--

-- -- -

-- -· . .

21 II. Skiffcraft WOOd boat
w ith cuddy cabin. complete
covered top. table, Ice bax,
sink, 120 HP inboard -'
outboard
MercCr.usier
motor and trailer $4,000.
Call «6·4042, Gallipolis.
16 ft . boat, 45 h.p. , motor.
frailer , ski equipment.
Exc . cond . $600. 698· 680~.

guaranteed. Call 4&lt;16-8019 .

- -·

--------

E &amp; V WELDING Paint &amp;
Body Shop, Georges Creek
Rd. Gallipolis, 446 -9304. for
m a lt y
With
Ga llipo li s
Motors, 3 years. .
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any colar ,free PICkup
&amp; delivery in Ga llipolis
area,
Hammond Body
Shop, 11 1 Mill St . 379·2782.
Camping

- --

1972 Cadillac. excellent
condition. Phone 675·6676.

·- ....

-

-- ·- ·-·

-·

7:00 Cfl · ·PMMAGAZIHI!
(I) WEEKEIID OAIUI!IIEII
&lt;ll THE BEST OF COIIIUII!I\
REPORTS A compilation of
highlight• from pall Conaumer
Report a lhowa whh aegmente
co vering a broad r•nge of
topics tram lood end medk:lne
to· household producta and
saf!1)' devlcee .
FAMILY FI!UD
C!l BACKSTAGE AT THE
GRAND OLE OPRY
Ill (IJ TIC TAC DOUGH
()) (fi) MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
iJID •NEWS
7:30 Cfle BULLSEYE
Cll ANOTHER LIFE
&lt;ll WIMBU!DON WOMEN'S

()) (1J).

LOCKSMITH
Service.
R esi dential, automotive.
Emergency service. Call
882 ·1079 .
CONTI N IOUS no leak gut ·
tering. custom made for
your nome . For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS
GUTTER
AND DOOR 614 ·698-8205.

CONFERENCE And&lt; ow Young,
Corella King, Julien Bond and
Jesae Jackson will parUclp•te
in this aerie a of apeclale that
~hlight the deye ICtiviti•a.
(lQ)
RICHARD SIMMONS
SJ-10W
&lt;llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
IDle FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 (}) D C!J NBC MAGAZINE
WITH DAVID BRINKLEY This
weekly series offers a blend of
c urrent news stories , topical
reports and profiles.Hoat David
Brinkley is ioined by contributing reporters Garrick Utley,
Jack Perkins , Douglas Kiker
and Betsy Aaron. (60mina .)
Cll
PRIORITY
ONE
INTERNATIONAL
()) (H) ID MORK AND MINDY
Mork performs as lead a Inger
w1tha hilariouamus1cal comedy
~roup alter Remofireaa female
entertainer because aha is
pregnant, which angers Mindy
101 o leading a picket I ine agalnet
the restaurant. (Repeat; 30

F. ~uipr:nen~

TRUCK
TOPPER ,
tibergtas, with sliding w1n·
dow for 6 1h ft . GMC or
Chevy truck , 5325. Call 388
Y334 after 6 p m.
14 tr self ·contatned 19/:J
travel trailer
Very g ood
Condif ion . 991 ·:.1'142.
IYIJ 25 Car a Van
home 304 773 5945 .

RON'S Television S.ervice.
SpecialiZing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls. Phone. 576-1398
or 446·7454.
COOK · s Telev ision
vice,
Henderson ,
Phone 675 2250.

motor

IY69 18 H . c amper . StHOO.
J04 7l3 5 134 itfter 5 pm
23 foot motor home. cheap.
14 Dodge Chassis . Ca ll 675
46J1.

- -- ---- -

Sef·
.WV

F &amp; K T re e Trimm ing,
stump r emoval . 675·1331 .
T
and
R
building,
r e mode ling, also papering ,
carpet installation, and
general
hom e
im ·
provem ents. 675 ·5689, 675 ·
5304.

ANNIE

-YOU FEEL 'IHAT
PEA5E 51'01JLD BE
IHVESTIEiATEU?
THAT WOUI.D BE
()fSPICABLE, ASP.

Plumbing
&amp; H~a.t.i~~.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446· 3888 or 446 ·4477
GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbing
Heating
Air
conditioning
300 Fourth
Ave . Ph . 446 -1637 .

ti&amp;l®J

YES--IT fWD
DESPICAI!I.E •

BOT HEeESSMY.

I WILL LEAVE
FIRST lliiH6 IN
THE MottHIHG.

SOUTHERN
SE~VICE
CO .
Heating
mobile
home furnaces. elec:::tric hot
water tank repair . Cal l of·
fice,
446 · 3008
night,
emergency no. 367 · 7131.
J !!. P Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Rr . 1 Gallipolis, 367 ·7853.

= ~ ···:.o ·

1:11

Home
Improvement!&gt;

FOR BE ST In Carpel
Cl eaning
Cal l Smelfzer 's
Steamway
Ca ll 614 446·
1096.
STA NLEY STEEMER
Carpet C leaning
.
446 4208
PAINTING
Residential
and commerc ial. lntenor
li nd e)( terior , mobi le home
root s. Free estima tes . 11
yrs. e)(p with r e f e re nce~
call J67 7784 or J67 7160
J IM MARCUM Roof1ng
spouTin g and siding . 30
years experi e nce . Free
estimates
Remode ling .
Ca ll J88 9857 .
CALL 44611:401 tor termite,
roa c h . bird , rod e nt ,
SPider s, tleas and other
sma ll insec t control . Free
es timates given . A local
r: ompany
lo c ae o
1n
GallipO I• s
area .
Bill
fhoma s

D . C. Contractors Plum ·
bing , elec tri cal. heating,
rooting, aluminum, V1t'tyt
sid ing, and home painting .
675l376or675 1240.

DOZER
backhoe, dump
truck . Cail446 4537 .
COMPLETE SEWER IN
ST ALLATION &amp; backhoe
service for the RacinE'
Syracuse sewer district .
Dozer work if needed . 94Y

n9J

S f UC CO PLASTERING
te xt ured cei lings, com
mercial and residential,
fre e estimates . Call 256 ·
llB1 .

SANDERS
CON
TRACTING.
Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping ; 446·2787 .
INSTALL fireplace lacing
or chimney, dry wall .
plaster, stucco, free est .
Simulated brick or stone,
Greg Burdette, call 675 6357 .

HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
Contractors · Build~ siding ,
remodel , concrete, rooting ,
free estimates. Call cot..
614·259·2814 ask for Charles
or Mike.
INTERIOR and exterior
painting, Mark White, call
24S-9561 ,
.,
CAPTAIN ST,EEMER Car
pet Cleaning fea.tiJred by
Hoffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates .
Call 4~· 2107 .

GASOLINE AlLEY

. Some people treat
their doqs better
than they do their
childrenf
_

D ozer work Small JObS a
specialTy . 742 1753.
Ditc her work . Charles R.
Hatfield, Hatfi e ld Backhoe .' ..
Gas, el ectric, and water .....
7411903 .

eP~
rJIAAC

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

ISUVI

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service . Speci alizing
1n septic tank . 675· 1234 .

.........
~·-­

BACKHOE Service . Lar r y
S1densrricker . 615 5580.
84

E lecfr.cal
~ett"iger~tton

F ...er Electric Co. Com
pl ete rewiring, commercial
or residential. a nd elec ·
trical maintaina nce, also
on call . Ph . 446 -2171
Gallipolis
'

SE~ ING Machine repairs,

:.er;vKe Authoriied Singer
Sales &amp; Service . Sharpen
Sctssors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 997-2284 .

JACK 'S REFRIGERATIO N . a1r condition service.
commercia l ,
industrial.
Phone 8611079 .
as

Cenerrti .H.1uli~g

LIMESTONE , gravel and
sand All sizes At Richards
and Son , Upper Ri\ler Rd .,
Gall ipoli s, Ohio. Call 446
7785.
JIM 'S
DEPENDABLE
witter dP. Iivery . Call 156
936ti a nytime.
NOW HAULING house coal '
&amp; limestone tor driveways.
Call lor estimates 367 7101

.&gt;

DIL~ARDS
WATER
WOODSHOP
Cabinets, . DELI.VERY Servico . Call '
446· 7404 .
picnic
tables ,
porc,l1
swings, most;wood produc
IS. 101 Court St ., Gallipolis . LiQhT Hauling, tree ·wQrk "11·
C/'11 4~ · 2572 .
~ar:a9P. and ba'semerit ·. !~
&lt;
.
•
c leaned out. Call anyti me •o •
WEA fHE RALL
CON · 245·9164. Ask for Ro\l oTKur- ... •
man. OH .
~
·'
c ,' *ETE · 'qual.lly and ser
vice, call 675·1582.

. upi.oi~~e~y

THE WALTONSSan
returnslrom the war and iereun·
itedwith Cindy, but the family' a
JOYal his homecoming ie d•m·
pened by John's bad newa
about Olivia . (R8peat; 80
mina.)
•
Cil OMEGA FACTOR 'Double
Vistona' Tom haa the unnerving
experience of aeelno hie wife,
Julia, all around Edinburgh alth·
o ugh she died some months
before. (60 mine.)
~ HARVEST OF SHAME
Edward A. Murrow ' s last
documentary for CBS, first
aired in 1960. examines the
co nditione of the migrant
workers who lab.or in !he fielde
of America. from Florida to Ml·
chigan to Calitornia . (80 mine.)
8:30 (I) SOUND OF TRUMPETS
riil (H) Q) BOSO.IIIUDDIES
Kip learns the hard way that it's
a cold, cruel world when in a fit of
t emper he impulsively quite hi I
JOb a nd winds up selling hoi
dogs on the street. (Repeat)
8 :35 CIJ LAST OF ntE WILD
CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :58
11:00 m DC!J THURSDAY NIGHT
AT THE MOVIES 'Baggarman.
Thiel' 1979 Stars: Jean Slm·
mona, Glenn Ford.
.
ffi 700CLUB
(6) il}) W BARNEY MILLER
L ev itt comes riotously to the
rescue wilh hie knowledge of
gn language when a deaf
man is p1cked up lor solicit·
,andWojoswimatheicyHud·
n River in pursuit of a burglar.
( epeal) (Ciosed·Captiooed)
0
®l MAGNUM, P.l.
Magnum linda h1a invaaligative
bag of trick s sorely needs
repl enishmg when he agrees to
li nd a man who dropped out of
stghtt en yea ra a go .(Aepea t; 60
mins .)
[f)(jj) SNEAK PREVIEWS Film
cntics Roger Ebert and Gene
$1ske l review the new movies in
to wn . and show scenes from:
·sup erman II, · the return of
Chrislopher Reeve as The Man
or Steel; 'The Cannonball Run:
s tarring Burt Reynolds. F'arreh
Fawcett . Dean Martin and ·
Sa mmyOavta, Jr .; andtwoother
lilms .
9:05 CIJ MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
9:30 r4lMOVI!-(COMEDY)'' "Serial" 11180
(f)(H)GJ TAXI Tony'slacklus·
ler boxing career seems to be
movtngto a close when hlaboK·
ing license is revoked and he
makes the dangerous decision
IOfighlundersnaasumedname.
(Repeat) {Closed-Captioned;
U.S.A.)
(j) GOOD NEIGHBORS
(11) THIS OLD HOUSE This Old
House is new again! The work·
menaregoneandthenewlyren·
ova ted Bigelow House ia reedy
and welting 'for Its new occupants. Bob Vila take a ua on
I he lonQ awaited grand tour in
this special llnal program .
(Cioaed ·C•ptionad ; U.S.A.)
(60mina.)
10:00 (IJ(H). 2D-20HughDowna
anchors this weekly magazine
profiling noteworthy event a in
news( science and entert•ln·
ment. {60 min&amp;.)
CJ (IJ &lt;i§l KNOTS LAtiDINO
DianaFalro•te.SidindKaren'• .
high school age daughter, tnt·
inghereelfputuponbyherpeera.
to 'go all the way' with herbo~· ·
lriend, leaves herself vulnerable to an older man'a ad·
vancas. (Rapeat; 60 mine.)
(l) COMSTOCI,( LOAD
10:05 (J) TBSEYENINONEWS
10:28 (I) CBN UPDATI! NEWS
1D:30 ffi
JOHII ANKERBERG
SHOW
.

m

f.lfcclvating

I:IJ

WINNIE

ONE OF OUR MOST
SUrXES5FUL MODELS
KEEPS THIN 8Y EAT1Ni&gt;

MYT'HING5HE
WAIIIT,S.1

S'fMPI.E!'51£ MAKES
SURE SHE t::OfSN'T
KEEP ANYTHING
!:OWN! 5UT 1
....OUI.ON'T RECOMMENt:&gt;

7H47/

~

'' "''•'·

. ,t..

t

l

·~·

l&lt;,.

) I I
1

WHA'T ONE Ml61-iT
C:.E'T FR'O\A A

CHA-5e.

r

1

Now arrange lhe clrdad leitors 10
form the surprise answer. u suggested by the above cartoon.

Prlntanswerhere: " (

(D).

Yesterday·•! J"'l'bin AOULT SHOWY EROTIC HAUNCH
" ' - ' " W"-t they found In thlo bank COI.DCASH

BRIDGE
Luck of the slam
ByO.waldJoooby
.... AlaJI Soalal

fll.....
c...... IJiaNC:aAIIdnlw;vOUftO,

Cor•tl• King, Julian BOIICI and
JaclliOII wllll*!iolpj;lo
in lhil IOflel ol ~ealtllo that

Jeooe

·

11:08

p:m::...... .

11i21 (I) CQ UI'OATI! 111W1 .
11:~ mti&lt;IlTHETONIGHTIHOW

.

NORTH
+10

The slam hands from the
Cavendish charity game
&amp;bow the element of luck.
There Is also a skill factor
when play of the hand Is
illvolved.
It doesn't look as if there
is any way for South to go
down at four spade&amp;. He
must loee a heart and a diamond and eventually will
attack clubs. The only way
for him to 1et two club
tricks Is to play West for the
queen and as West bas that
Card, every South but one
made four spades.
The loaillfl _South wa~
debited 228 IMPs while the
Eut-Wesl opponenlll gathered in a 228 IMP profit.
The losing South started
with three rounds of trumps
while discarding a diamond
and a heart frOm dummy.
Then be led his eight of
diamonds. West played the
nine and dummy's I 0 lost to
East's jack.
Eut led his king of hearts.
South took the ace and led a
heart back. East played the
queen and 10. South ruffed
and now dummy's nine of
hearts had become a potential winner.
South led a club, communed with nature a while

1-2-81

.98764
• Q 10 61
+K J tO
EAST

WEST

+762
.J53

.H

t A 9 54
+Q86

tKJ7Z
+HU

.KQ10

SOUTH

+AKQi!U

•Az

ta
+97 3

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

North

East

Pass

Pass

Pass

Soot

4+

Opening lead :+2

and called for dummy's king ·
to wind up in the ash can.
His play was bad. You
don't expect your opponent! ·
to give you a needless extra ·
chance and South should
have looked the gilt hone in ·
the mouth and not gone
wrong in clubs.

~"·····-'
lly THOMAS JOSI'"

d - noire
DOWN
tlmbeclle
Overbead
veil
3 Olalntegrate
8 Hautboy
4 Find out
tFit
5 Requm
U Capital
for retrial
ct Italla
1 Went wrong
u Laud
7 Kiwi
15 SUpervise
11 Gradually
17 Greek letter n The press is
Love set's
the fourth
barrier
12 Anthology
U Wy 11 Train,
!I Despicable
as a bozer
me
Cartoonist,
ACROSS
1 Speed of
IOtllld
5 ChaUce

z

zz

Z1 Voiced
Zl Swell affair
UPrank
!I Ahltemloua

Gardller -

Yesterday'• Alllwer

23 Dahomey
native

U Ransom
seeker
Z5 Make
the scene
!I Londoo
district

28 Noble domalit
31 Equivocate 32 Manifest
33 Reservation ·
sight&lt;&gt;
31 aean
the deck
• Dlsencumbet:

!'I Gloconda's

"SUlcldlo"
ZIScl"\lwny
Zl Priority

pre&amp;
DScctfer's

utterance
nGoto(clecay)

HT!ritcb
II Catlltlc
1'7 Euggerate
DCry

•Quit

_.

U ''God's Utile

tr.-+-+-+--+--+--

dActrea,
Susan.,

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

AXYDLBAAXK
LOJtiGFaLLOW

•'

One letter otmply otonda for another. in this nmple A II
uoed for the three L'a, .X for the two O's, etc. Sin1le letlen,
opoltrophea, the lenllh and fonnotlon of the words ore ol(
hlntl. Each dQ the ~ode 'lttlen are dlll'erent.
.,

DavkiLe?•""••t~keoltlehlgh

ro•d to ·eo rile unlikely plactl
where he uaea hll un,Qutly
imlglniiMOJIIO lind h-ln
tho mo,t mundane leiiWO
actlvft..a.
IIAAO:P ·IIATI~AI;

I I I I J'
(Answers tomorrow)

llJ UP POMPEHI ,

•

.
~&gt; · · · - t~'t·

m

()!) OUTER .....TS
10:118 ffi Cllli UI!OATI! NI!WS
·
t 1:00 (I).())(!). ClllBJ
HI!WI
.
(I) THE U!IIIOII
&lt;ll DAVID LEnE!IMAN:
LOOK IIIja FOil PUN Comedian

"--,TRISTATE
t:I!"HOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec , Ave.• Gallipolis
4~ ·7833or~~ · l833. ·
--. ·
·MOwreys: UphQistery. Rl.' 1·
80• . n~. Pt.Pieasan! . 304·
675·4154.
•..• ·•
' . . .. . ' ..
.

I K)

SEM~FINALS

()) CJ ()) JOKER'S WILD
C!l HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
CIJ
NAACP NATIONAL

HARPER Halstead, lawn
mower repair and shar·
pening servi ce. 10 a.m . ·6
p .m 675 5868 .

.....

-

· EYEIIING

RINGLE ' S
SERVICE:
Complete
building,
remodeling,
repairing ,
large or small jobs done ef li ciently . Phone 67S·208S or
675 4560 .

a7
.

·.JULY:Z, 1N1

Gene's Carpet Cleaning.
deep stream e)(tractlon .
Free estim!tes. rea·sonable
rates. Scothguard, 992·6309.

a~

•

-~--

.Hoover Sweepers repaired
at Empire Furniture. 842
Second Ave, Gallipo~s. OH .

. .1: - - .

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr. wrecker
service . "Big or small" we
tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio . Day
· «6·2445 or Night
446·
4792 .

•

VIewmg

mica counter tops, all work

~obll e homes moved,
l icense d, and bonded 576·
1711 or 675 4398.
·

... - ·-

•

ceramic tile, floor tile. lor·

IL

Liv es toc~

WEIGHT bench, like new,
614·«6-9375 or 30~·675·2930.
..

Four Cragar r ims for
Plymoum .Phone 675 -4874.

78

·-t"- ---·-·-- - - - - , Mobile Home site. Pnone
675· 4636.

1974 Pont iac LeMans . 304 ·
675 1519.

1976 GRANADA. priced to
sell due to heal.th condit ion,
real ni ce. 304·6'75-1402.

-------

-· ---

19 78 CUTLASS Sa lon . 675·
2722or675·5571.

75 Trans Am S2700. Phone
304 675 -4333.

Ga lvanized Culvert S2 .3S
tt .,up . Bridge,elc . Steel. 10
cents lb . up. Phone 925-0884 .

---

I nsullated truck topper for
short bed Ford $100 . Call
~- 9472. Gallipolis.

-

&amp;

-

-· -· --·-·
..
--- .. ·- "-·
1978 Ford Fiberglass topper. all sliding glass doors.
Phone 446· 1077 belor e
7: 00PM.

446·

10 year POA Pony 55'~
pleqsure Huntsea t contes t
44 7 yr $600. 91/ 7 ft Coach·
man tru ck ca mper, air con·
ditioner, se lf con tatn ed.
Ve ry good S4,500. 742 3019.

57

buy

automObiles, radiators and

RE-Gt S~ER~·D

$50.00.

servi ce,

batteries. «6-7717 .

HI LLC REST KE NNEL
Boarding al l breeds, clean
indoor outdoor fa c iliti es.
Also AKC Reg . Dober
mans . Call446 ·7795

Stove with microwave
oven . Ca ll 367 7824 .

6.000 BTU a ir co nd. $95,
5,000 BTU a i r ca na. $95,
1 Bed room apt . al l util 1t1 es Sl
Ma ytag auto. was her $95,
Hou sehold Goods
pa• d 675 5104 or 675 5:J 86 ,
Phtl co r etr 1g . 2 dr . frost
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Pt Pl easan t .
free $175. 30 i n g as range
So fa, cha i r , rocke r . ot
S95, Whirlpool port . dish
taman, 3 f ab les. $500 . Sofa, . washer $55 , W h ir lpool
F UR NI SHED APT . Cen
chair and loveseat, $275
ret r ig . $75
Skaggs Ap
tral air. hea t and park. 1nq, 1
Sal as and c hai r s pri ced p1 1ance, 1918 Eas tern Ave ..
or 2 adults onl y 446 0338
tr am $275 . to $695 . T a bies. Ga II ipol is , 446 73Y8
$Jij and up to $109 . H ide a
2 bdr a pa r t m ent l g L R beds,$340., q ueen size. $380.
and Kitc hen . Across from Re c liner s. $ 165 .. $295 , Quasa r v1deo tape record e r
Honda Shop no pe ts. Cal l Lam ps tr om $18 fa $65 . 5 W1th camera and 5 Tapes.
446 3937 or 367 0560
pc dinettes lrom $79 . to llk. e new Ask., ng $800 Cr~ll
$365 7 pc., S1B9 and up . 446 1805
I bdr unl ur n r~partme nl , Wood !able and 4 chairs,
d owntown
Ga ll lpO i ts $3.50 up to $495 . Hu tc hes, 5.000 BTU s1ng le room air
loca ti o n, no pets, adults $300 . and $375 , map le or cond .. 1 y r . old ra r ely used
p1ne fi hish. Bed room suites $100 . Cal l 446 Y308 aft er 5
only , newly remodeled 446
Bassett Oak, $649 . ,
3431
Ba sset! Cherry. $765 Bunk Most n n y thing used in
bed complet e w1th mat
and
store
Furn e !f1 uency apt .. \ 125. tr esses. $250 and up to R es t auran t
cqu1 pm ent . RADCO 304
u t1 1t1eS pa •d. adul ts . 446
SJSO . Capt a1 n ' s beds. $275 . 513 1378, Huntmgfon .
384 4 a fter 7 PM .
complete . Baby beds, $89.
Ma ttr esses or box spr ings.
tull or tw in, SS5 . , firm , $65 . · I Ma pl e baby bed &amp; ma t
Furn1 shcd etll c tcncy apT
$115 . Uti l 1t1 es pd . share and $75 Queen se ts. $185. 5 tr ess . 1 h1 g h chair, 11ke
new Ca ll 446 2360 .
bath. adults . Ca l l 446 4416 dr c hests, $49. 4 d r . c hes ts,
$42 Bed lrames. $20.an d
aft er JPM .
$15 ., 10 gu n Gun ca bin et s, ' H AY FEV ER' HOME
$350 .. dine tf e chairs $20 . remedy, trad il 1on to r cen
Second f loor fin ished et
and $25 . Ta pp an gas or
tur Jt'S, 1t works For com
Furn•shed,
l icie n cy ap l
elec tri c ran ges, $285 .
plete 1nfa and r ece ipt send
Pdu lts on l y, no pets . 7'29 2nd
U SE D
Range s.
today se lf ad d ressed sta m
Ave Ga ll 1polis Ca ll 446
re ln gerafor s, and TV ' s,
ped enve lope plus $1.00 to
6951
3 mi les out Bulaville Rd .
S R.A . Co .. P.O. Box 28~ .
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon . Ga l lipol 1s. OH 45631
JACKSON E STA TE S AP
l hru Fri , 9am to 5pm, SaT
t s h as 1 bdr ap rs ren1
446 0322
I NOU ST R I AL alum1nurn
st art ,n g at $152 per mo
door , 3 tt 7 a lu m ,num w•n
Ca ll 446 'l745
GOOD
U SE D
AP
dows 4x6 200 ga l gas tank
PLIA N CES
washe r s,
Ca ll 388 aJ 49
I bdr ap l 1n R10 Grande. drye r s.
re fri ge r ato r s ,
Call 446 0157
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap
SNAPP ER
NIOWE R S.
pl1an ces.
1918
Eas tern
$40 00 ott I1st on a ll push
Av
e
.
446
7398
tr ent unturn ap T al l ca r
mower s 1n stock . $60 00 off
pel ed . $250 mo $100 dep,
on
al l
se ll pro p e ll ed
(JTII.r ,es pa1d, no ch il d r en. Brookwood 2 piec e so fa
mowers On e 8 H P rider for
no pe ts Ca ll 446 34:l7
un1t , queen S1Ze h1 dea bcd . $950. Outdoor Equ tpm en t
Brown be ,ge pl nid , $400 00
Sa tes JeT
Rts 7 &amp; 35,
Phone675 1786
Ga llipoliS. Ph 446 J670
For re nt n ~w 1 bdr apt
Ca ll 446 0390
E
Upr 1ghl
ai r
co n
SWIMMING
POO L S
10 ,000
BTU ,
PRE SEASO N SALE
TO B E DROOM apar t ment d 111oner.
$999 .00 IN STA LLED! ! !
1n R10. Gr ande A ll util11 1eS '!. 1/ S Phone8B13664 .
Above ground pool COM
ca1d Ph J46 0157
PLETELY
IN STALLED
Mctylag wr.nger washer
slart1ng at $99Y .OO Pr1 ce •n
$40 good condll ion . c all at
I BDR M , com pl ete ly tur
el udes pool , deck, tence.
n1shed . A l l e lect, n ewly ter 5 PM 675 653 5
filt er.
l1n er , r~nd
in
de c ora t e d ,
deposit ,
staf lat•on under norm a l
rel er ences $200 per mo
Bedroom su ,te, w h 1te and
ground condi t ion . Free
446 1236 or 446 158 1
gold, thr ee c hai r s, stereo shop at ho m e ser vice Ca l l
wllh oul spea ker s, Phone
1 BOO 624 ·85 11 .
1 8. 1 bedroom f urnished 67 5 4335 or 675 5322
apar tm ents 99'1 5434 or 992
In su lated st orage bulld1n g.
sq14 or HB2 iS66
S:J
Anttqu es
Bx 10 wi t h 7 ft . celi.ng Idea l
work shop . $799 See these
liM
1 bedroom ap rs ava1lable AfTE NTION :
al K 1ngsbury Home parts
PORT A NT TO YOU I Wil l
r~t R 1ver s1de A p i s
Equal
stor e.
pay cash or ce r t ifi ed c heck
Oppor tun ,ty Hous1ng Call
to
r
an
l1Ques
and
coflcc
9Y7 712 1
G1bso n
fr ost
f re e
T1bl es or e n11re es tat es
N oth1nq too l arge . Also. retr.ger a tor t reNcr , 1J cu
For renl 1n Midd leport 2 qun s, pock e t watches, and ft Sf5 949 2275
bl•d room lurn 1shed apa r T coi n collections . Ca ll 61 4
ment No ch1ldren Cal l I
76 7 31 67 or557 3411 .
SUMMER
CL EARANCE
304 8.8 2 2566
SALE!
Every 1tem ot
chi ldren 's wear reduced 25
Misc . Merch•ndise
Furn •she d apa rtm ent 1n SA
to SO~ L argese lec t1on . In
M •d d leporf
1 bed r oom .
t an ts to boys 18 a nd gir ls 14
16
'
T
ROUTWOOD
t
ravel
!&gt; 1'}5 per mon th 9Y2 5545,
Noth1ng over S6, most $2 or
tra der and ca mp sil e on $3
weekdays bPtwee n 7 a rn
All m aternity wear
R accon Creek . Close to reduced 1 ' Irr egu lar to ps
.ind :J p m
Oh 10 R1ver . S500 down
and pan ts, now $3 . 3~
Owner wdlltnan ce 614 256
Jea ns, $6 .66 Much more
'l bedroom l urn ,shed apart
I) 16
HURR Y' The Waterm e lon
men ! lor rent , $150 per
Par ch, Fa c tor y Oufl e l .
mon th plus utiliti es $50
EASY credit avl!dab le now New Ha ven, WV
depos i T. No pe t s Loc ated 1n
t o pur c hase fur nifu re,
Rl!c , ne 985 2875 Ava1 lable
t e lev isions, or app l 1a nces
July 8
Gen tl e b1ll y goat, $90 or
V 1ilag e Furn1ture 2605 best ott er . A lso, 1974 Nova.
Jackson Av e., 675 1773
55,000 mi les $1,350 949
One bedr oom, unturn1shed,
2372.
•II electric. ma x1 mum two
N EE D seve r a l items ot f u r
persons.
im mediate oc
ni t ure ,
a ppl ia n ces.
(upa n cy 992 2094
8ft . pool table 1n good con
te lev iStons . 8 19 discounts d 1t ion . $ 150 99L 5986.
fo r quanity pu rc hase
APARTME NT S .
Fur
V •llage Furnitur e 2605
nished or unlurn1 shed 675
40 gal . co ld wa ter storage
Jac k son Ave 67 5· 1773
1371
d ays ,
615 38 12
tank . 8400 B TU air con
~ve ni n g s .
d it ioner 742 252&lt;1 .
BIG discounts for cash and
carry at V.llag e Furniture
~PART MENT S
AND
BURIAL lots far sa le.
~6 0 5 Jackson Avenue, 675
M OBILE HOM ES675 4130
Beau tifU l, perpetu a l care,
1773 .
uprighft monu ment per
miff ed .
For es t
Hill
Apartm ents 675 5548
A IR COND I T IONER S
Cem etarv Rt. '1 Nort h .
5a le pr iced, a ll sizes in Phone 675 5548 (J ames H .
2 bed room apartmen t Cal l
stoc k, ex pert installation Lewi s)
675 6020, 9 JO IO 5
availa ble . Vil l age Fur
n1ture, 260 5 Jac kson Ave ..
A L L types of grani te, m a r
304 675· 1773 .
(:urnished effi cie ncy apt.
b le. and br o n ~e memorials .
all utilities paid Depos1t
DISplay IOf On M ain St . Pt.
-;equired . Pho ne895 · 3~50
Lowes t prices on Be mco Pleasa nt
Gr an ite Com
be dding in the area . Ca ll pany . Phon e 675 5548 .
for pnce s Village Fu r ·
One bed room apa rtm ent.
n1ture. 2605 Jac kson Ave .
ii1r
c ondif10ned .
675 1773
Everything fu r ni shed, oul
ski r t s ot Henderson $225.
r'pon t h . Phone 675·6730.
1 6 ft . Sears Ken m ore
fr ee zer used twi ce. Ideal
tor .ca mp1ng or fiSh1ng .
SMALL furni shed apart
Phone675 ·4001 .
menf, no pet s. r ef erences
required, 304 675· 1365.
1979 Grand Pri ~. many e)( · lciJ,_,.ai..;,·;;;
t r as 15,500 mi les, 1979
45
Furnished Room s
Motor boat 70 H . P . new
SLEEPING ROOM S f or
stainless steel prop. al l skis
r«:;nf. Galli a Hotel 446 9715 .
and accessories inc luded .
675 5170.
SLEEPING ROOM S and
Hght housekeeping apt .
Ut i lity trailer , factory
Park Central Hotel.
built, 4 x 8 ft bed . 1500 lbs,
like new . Phone 675 -5280.
- -·
--·--· -

wrecker

----------

musk

--Auto
- --- - ·--·
Parts

CHARLIE ' S SALVAGE ·
Auto parts, auto repair,

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
K EN NEL , AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
H i m al ayan. Persian . and
Sia mese cars. Seal &amp; cream
point Himilaya n &amp; White
Persian kittens . Ca ll 446 ·
3844 after 4 p .m .

black.
Y289
.

..

. __ _!._~cctssories

7220.

female
Ger man Shepherd puppy .
Cream and sil ver with

Hollll
lm!!!'!Yimlfth

Exc. COnd . $600. 698·680~ .'

s~ ---- ~e_!s__t~ -~•_~!___ ...
POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367 ·.
..

11

Moton iw Sale'

16 fl . boat..,.15 h.p. motor. Ashworth Installment Ser·
trailer, ski equipment. , vi ce . Carpet, vinyl ,

16

1971 GMC 1500 series pick
up, ta1r cond .
1. 200 lb
tobac co base . Ca l!388 ·835 1

Mercbarufke::

•

Building material$, block,
brick. sewer pipes, win·

in- · dows. lintels, et c. Claude
Winters, Rio Grandeo, 0 .

For Sal e :
1000 gallon
PLASTIC septic tanks .
Sta te approved . Phone 286·
5930. Jac kson. Ohio.

.........

71

Call 2~5 5121 .

Topper 3' 8"

41

41J

44

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tf• CiyJta~alet YOU 'CAN'T
FooL ALL OF THE
tiME-BUT IT ISN'T ;';

PEOP · · -'LL . F THE
NIDS'ARY.-ANON

�Pt!!=l~The Deily Sentinel

. __ _

Meigs County happenings ••
Deputies probe
theft, hit-skip

Emergency calls

~

James Priddy, Rutland, $1115 and
costs, overload; WUliarn L. George,
OleShtre, $56 and costs, overload:
Robert Johnson, Pomeroy' $125 and
ccets, 10 da~ confinement with five
.days suspended, six months
probation, theft; Robert K;ennedy,
Rutland, $100 and costs, disorderly
conduct: Timothy Dayldson,
Pomeroy, $60 and costs, 10 days confinement, failure to transfer
registration and driving under
suspension; ' Brian Dingez, New
Haven, $27 and cosjs, speed.
Forfeiting bonds were Ralph E.
Bowers, Jr., Guysville, ~.50,
speed; Lesley R. Hayman, Rt. I,
Middleport, $60.50, speed; Andrew
J . Voiers, Millwood. W. Va., $360.50,
DWI: J. A. Fowler, Pl. Pleasant,
$35.50, speed.

Job progressing well

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;:;;;;;;

According to Bob Campbell, job
superintendent for Ontario Pipeline,
job progress continues on time on
the Racine-Syracuse sewer project.
Despite an abnonnaily wet summer, mainline work in Racine has
been completed. Crews are now

%
a'ncl

SAVE
Clothing F~r Women

During our. 4th of July Sale
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
CLOSED SATURDAY, JULY 4th

IN

Closed Friday

Admissions - Eva Kunkel,
Pomeroy ; Augusta Hall,
Syracuse; Thomas Anderson,
Middleport; and John Moon,
Pomeroy.
Discharges
Winnie Dailey, Miilia Rydell,
Okle Barr, Martin Mollohan,
Jul ia Payne, Jeffrey Thorton and
Aaron Bradford.

Funeral services for Mrs. Zana
P . Withrow, 82, Mmersvi lle, who .,
died Tuesday, will he held al 1
p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. Don
Walker officiating.
Mrs. Withrow was a daughter
of the late George H. and
\'t&gt;ll'rans Mt&gt;nwrial
Josephine R1zer Roush. She was
a member of the Racine First
Admitted-Connie Manley, MidBaptist Church. Friends may
dleport ; Aaron Bradford, Racine.
call at the funeral horne any time.
Discharged-Donald Covert, Eva
S.haffer, Wllliam Smitrh, Sidney
I aylor, Andrew Fields.
Mom•y actions fi1 4·d

!leg.. 514Y.Y5 Now

A rnarria~e license was issued
to Ivan Pearl Powell, 29. Rt. 2.
Pomeroy.

and

Linrta

The Farmers Home Administration Office in Pomeroy will
be closed Friday , July 3, due to the
holiday.

( :lu~t·d Friday

r

The Meigs County Court House
will be closed Friday in ol&gt;servance of the July 4th holiday .

Was$129.Y5

SAVE TODAY

Friday rlosin~

•

10 A.M.-I P.M.

NOW•a·995

lHE GREAT BUYS

~~·
JEWELRY

113 r ourt St., Pomeroy

Immigrant wins big jackpot

WE WILL BE

NEW YORK - The biggest jackpot ever in the New York state lottery - $2.8 million - has been awarded to Dayse Fernandez, a 37-

CLOSED SATURDAY
JULY 4th

year-old lrrunigrant from the Dominican Republic, despite a com·
peting claim by a 17-year-old neighbOr .
Lotto spokesman James Nolan said thursday that Mrs. Fernandez
is the righUul recipient because she holds the. winning ticket. He said
she would receive a check for $200,000 within two weeks and an annual
check of $267,720.33 for the next 10 years .

Fireworks explosion injure five

at Diamond Savings!

CINCINNATI - Five persons were treated as the result of two
fireworks explosions in southwestern Ohio Thursday, one at a loaded
·
fireworks stand.
Three persons were treated at Clermont County Hospital in Batavia
after an explosion at a trailer-stand on Ohio 125 in Amelia.
In Cincinnati, $25,000 damage was reported at the home of Jerome
Schneider in suburban Green Township when an burning ember set off
fireworks in a.bedroom.
Richard Schneider, 14, and his brother, Ronald, 16, were treated for
burns, firemen said.

Y-ACCESS

C()LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
state's county fair circuit is taking
the week off, eliminating border-toborder and shore-to-shore entertainment in Ohio over Independence Day - summer's most
festive weekend.
July 4 parades are planned in
nearly every village and city, from
Gallipolis and Ashville to Upper
Arlington, Granville and Cleveland.
In Akron, civic leaders plan an international festival along Main

WASffiNGTON- An air traffic controllers strike, narrowly averted
12 days ago, looms again as a real possibility with the union's recommendation that the tentative contract be " overwhelmingly rejected."
The union's executive board called the agreement unacceptable and
said it "does not address the fundamental issues important to the air
traffic control profession."
Ballots on the new contract are scheduled to be sent to the 15,000
union members Wednesday and a tally is not expected to be complete
, until the end of the month, union spokeswoman Marcia Feldman said .

• High Interest Rate
• Short Teran
• $2,500 Minimum
• No Penalties or Fees

60 civilians die in massacre

ReadJ·Acce•• Jl'aad from Dlamoad

KAMPALA, Uganda- A squad of rampaging Ugandan soldiers, apparently hunting a wounded guerriUa leader, attacked an Italian
Roman Catholic mission In northwest Uganda, killed 60 unarmed
civilians including at least 24 young girls and wounded dozens of
others.
Ugandan government sources and Swedish Red Cross worker Lars
Astrom Thursday confirmed the massacre June 24.
Government SOUfCCS said the troops entered t~e mission in the belief
that it was harboring anti-government guerrillas.

sawm,.:we're leading the way for savers and
Investors to get more for their money. Stop in
today. We'll help you earn
to'o!
. more,
'
.-

.

••••1...Aoaou
..... Ia aot a ••ftltC• • - t or ••poolt ... Ia
.,... ''tile I'Heral ......,. oat ..... _ _..
~t

~ratlea- . . . ,..._..,. a t a - -

fer l'lllllletallo.

Candidates for school boards,
township posts and viilage positions
have until 4 p.m. Aug. 20 to file their
petitions of candidacy with the
Meigs County Board of Elections.
In the fall elections, two trustees
will be named in each townsbiP and
to be elected in the villages "\iUI be

LONDON- Masked raiders invaded Lon®n's prestigious Cartier's
jewelry store after hours Thursday night, sprayed ammonia in the
faces of two security guards and got away with as mucb as $1.88
million worth of gems, Scotland Yard said today.
fn additiOn to being sprayed, with ammonia, both security guards
were hit on the head, pollle ' said. One guard remained in a London
hospital today and tiM! other was released, but pollee said neither man
was seriously hurt.

12.5%
per annum

'
'

.

SWI5f.IER LOHSE

'

v

ClEVELAND - The wlnJ!Ing number drawn Thursday In the Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 598.
Injljlweekly "Pick4" game, the winner was 9629 .
And In the weekly "Pyramid" contest, the winning numbers were

84: 31m; 01127.

The lotteJr reported ~rnl~ of f!26,745 on tbe dally game . .

k _ , . MC:C .......... 1"11,
Cliillrlll•tffM. • - Pa.
fltM141NNIIIttt, fl . ,. ,
MM~. tMvhl . l r •a.lft. ltt,.fll .

Weather

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P•Ur:lltlfiTtON!I
a . M• ·~

We ~e you tox:omparet ,

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"';. 216,W. I~N 992.&amp;655· P~EROY, ' oit!Q\.
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tows

Variable cloudinesa with' • 'cbenee of~ or thunderstonns.
tonight and saturday. 'filg!ls Saturda)l'ln tbe lo,v 80s,
tonight In
the mid-eOII. e11ance ill rain 10 l!ti t·eut tonight and 5!1~M~rcent satur- .

Ohio Power Company Thursday
gave fonnal notice of lt!i intent to
~lle, on or after September 30, a rate
mcrease request Or $177 million.
.Last week, the company an·
nounced its decision to seek approval. of the increase by the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
&lt;PUCO). No increase is likely to
take effeet'until July 19112.
Over the past five years, the
PUCO has approved only 69 percent
of tbe C9JIIPIII1Y's requested for rate
relief. That Includes an Increase of
7 million for the company last
April. The new req~~est would in' Crease operating revenues by 24 per-

*·

·.

. cent. .
,
uilder the. priJpoaed schedules of

cloudlniiA~thadllnt!ebfabowmaortlllndenlonniPcllday.HI8bs .
In the low to mid-tOll. LowB ln_the mid lb upper liDs.

' Unit~ of electricity for a residen-

· ~Y· w~~rlyiealhanl~!llllbtoni,lhl.
'

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&amp;doMeF...,..t:..' S~thtoaghTUeaday;, .

--.......... ~· .

Street with ethnic food, arts, crafts
and fireworks . Blossom Music Center near Akron is to stage a
fireworks display Saturday night
and its first Sunday family forum
the following day.
At Beilefontaine, dancing is set for
Main Street for the llllllual Top of
Ohio Festival. The town, with an
elevation of 1,549 abOve sea level, is
billed as the highest city between the
Allegheny and Rocky mountains.
Following is a partial list of ac-

or approximately $1.25 per month
according to Herb Gibson,
bookkeeper for Syracuse Horne
Utilities.
Effective in July the conunodity
charge will be $1.90 per 1,000 cubic
feet used per month; effective Jan .
I, 1982 the commodity charge will go
to $1.95 per 1,000 cubic feet used per
month; effective July I, 1982 the
co~odity charge will be $2 and
June of 1983 it will go to $2.05 per
I ,000 cubicfeet.
The commodity charge does not

four council members in Rutland;
four council members and a mem·
ber of the board of public affairs in
Racine, and four council members
and a member to the board of public
affairs in Syracuse.
School board· members will be
elected with two full term seats and

Ohio Power seeks hike

Winning-Ohio lottery number
,:r

mittee has yet to llmsh its own lax·
cut plan.
The House panel returns to work
Wednesday with several major
decisions pending. Although the
chairman, Rep. Dan Rostenkowski,
D-Ill., says he wants the bill passed
by the House before Aug. I, his aides
admit it will take some effort to accomplish that.
Then , a conference conunitlee
would have to resolve the dif·
ferences between the House and
Senate bills.
Several years ago, then-Sen. Gale
McGee, D-Wyo., complained that he
found it impossible to take a
vacation with his family since
Congress met virtually year-round .
So Congress passed a Jaw requiring

members to take off the month of
August - a fav orite time to get
away from hwnid Washington - in
non-election years.
This year the vacati on period 1s a
little longer, lasting until Sept. 9.
Dole is hoping Congress will delay
the vacation fur a week or 10 days.
giving the conference committee
time to work out a compromise bill
that could be given final approval by
the House and the Senate before the
deadline set by the IRS .
Dole
said he
believes
Rostenkowski when he says House
Democrats are not stalling on the
tax bilL " I don't think there's any
desire on their side to be blamed for
individuals not getting any tax cut in
19111," Dole said.

tivities around Ohio for the July 4
weekendandthefollowingweek:
July 3-4 : Ashville July 4
celebration; Granville July 4
celebration and Akron International
Festival; River Festival, Gallipolis;
July 4 Fair, Shelby; Ontario Independence Celebration; Railroad
Days, Woodsfield.
July 3-5: New Berlin Days
Sesquicentennial, North Canton; Arts Festival, Conneaut; International
Art Festival, Boston Mills near

Peninsula;
Landmark Day~,
Navarre; Top of OhiO Fountain
Fesllval, Bellefontame; Flrst Town
Days, New Phlladelph1a; Bratwurst
x Wme fesllval, Springfield; Cedars
Indian x Wh1te pow-wow, Terre
Haute, southwest of Urbana; Fa1r ~n
the Square, Georgetown; F•rernen s
U&lt;
roast and flea market,
Mespotamla; H1stonc . celebration,
Gnadenhutten ; M101 Festival.
Lebanon .

include the amount charged under
the fuel adjustment clause. The new
contract is for a two year period.
Robert Wingett , grants administrator, presented letters to
council from the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources and the Department of the Army, Huntington
District, Corps of Engineers concerning the proposed marina .
The Corps of Engineers pointed
out that a pennit is not necessary to
authorize · the excavation of a large
emi&gt;ayment on village property and

the excavation of a ca nal access to
the Ohio R1ver for work landward.
A Department of the Army permit, however, will be ri"Quired lor all
wurk riverward. A penni! application with drawings wijl have to
be submitted to the l::orps of
Engineers well in advance of construLtion activities which require
authorization.
The letter from ODNR
acknowledged receipt of the
village's Land and Water Con(Continued on page 12)

Filing deadline· August 20th in Meigs County

Loot 'valued at $1.8 million

Todar's rate:

Sbort term. Your agreement matures In only
89 days. $500 minimum withdrawals may be
made anytime after 14 days. provided a $2,500
balance Is maintained.

By KATIE CROW
A second reading of an ordinance
fixing and regulating the price of
natural gas was approved at the
regular meeting of Syracuse Council
Thursday night.
Council, after discussing the ordinance at great length with Jim
Diddle, president of Syracuse Home
Utilities, finally agreed to approve
the second reading.
The new rate ordinance, when the
third reading iB approved, wiil in·
crease natural gas rates five percent

WASffiNGTON- The Justice Department says the nation's prison
population rose 5 percent to 329,122 in 1980.
All of the increase was in state prisons, which are becoming more
crowded as legislatures pass mandatory sentencing laws and restrict
the possibility of parole, Justice officials said Thursdal(.
Since 1969, the nwnber of prisoners in the United States has increased 61 percent, the officials said.

No pea•ltie• or fee•. Cancellation of the agreement may be made anytime after 14 days with
total interest earned to date and no penalties.
And you don't pay a brokerage fee to purchase
the Ready-Access Fund.

plele its work by Aug. 15.
That's where the problem arises
-the sununer recess is scheduled to
begin at the close of business Aug. I.
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan ., the Finance Committee chainnan, told repor·
ters Thursday that he wants the
Senate to defy tradition and pass a
tax-cut measure before the House
acts . "II Congress does not act soon
it will he impossible to deliver any
tax retief to the American people
this year," he said.
Dole said he thinks the Senate can
pass lts version of the biU- which is
just about what President Reagan
asked - in three or four days. But
the-timetable is much less certain in
the Democratic-controlled Hous~,
where the Ways and Means Com-

Second reading given on rate hike

Prison population goes up

...for sending miles acron the miles.

tI

2 Sections. 12 Pages
15 Cents
-A Mul1imedia Inc. New spa per

Holiday-activities underway in Ohio

Air controller strike possible

Cards

I

WASHINGTON (AP )- The chairman of the Senate Finance Committee wants Congress to delay its
August vacation a week or 10 days to
ensure that Americans get a tax cut
this fall.
The lawmakers, now in the middle
of a Fourth of July recess that lasts
until Wednesday, have only 21
working days - counting Saturdays
- Jefl this month. There are doubts
the largest tax-cut bill in history can
make be written into law in so short
a time.
The Internal Revenue Service
needs six weeks after a tax-cut biU is
passed to draw up new withholding
tables . If the lax reduction is to take
effect on Oct. I, as President Reagan
wants , Congress would have to com-

LIO

•••

!.AVE $60.00

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Y~Y~2-~2~os~4~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

·· ... when only the finest will do:·

PhrJt ,,,C\

A beautiful fireworks display will
be staged and this year should prove
to be a great show .

Dole·urges tax cut passage

Aeautitul 101&lt; Yellow or White Gold.

• VISA '•
• MASTER CHARGE
• LAYAWAY

~ew

bicycle winners in three divisions.
Following the parade, volunteers
will sponsor a chicken harbecue at
the fire station. At 1 p.m. games will
be held on the junior high grounds
with more cash prizes being a war·
ded. The talent show begins at Bp.m.
in the junior high school building. After the show at 10 p.m. will be the
main attraction of the day .

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 3,1981

Copvrightecl 1981

'69'5 ~AVE$60.00

Wi!s514Y.Y5

mined dally by market conditions. But, unlike
money market funds, the Interest rate is fixed at
the date of purchase for the term of the agreement You may reinvest at maturity at the
prevailing interest rate. Or we'll transfer your
funds directly into a Diamond Pay-by-Phone
INOW or other savings account.

Greeti~

Voi.30,No.56

" dressed up" for the occasion. The
talent show will feature talent from
the area with the volunteers filling in
with comedy acts. A $50 grand prize
will go to the winner of, the show.
Second prize is $25 and third, $10.
Show time is 8 p.m.
The parade will line up at the
junior high school grounds beginning at 9: 15. It will start at 10 a.m.
Prizes of $50, $25, and $15 will be
awarded to the .float winners in both
the theme and non-theme division.
Prizes of $5 and$2 will be awarded to

•

at

e

.

The Racine Volun~r Fire Departmenl has finalized plans for its annual 'Fourth of July" celebration
tomorrow in Racine.
This year's celebration includes a
full day of activities starting with
the annual parade at 10 a .m.
Highlight of the day will be the
"Miss Racine" beauty pageant, ,held
in conjunction with the firemen's
talent show.
"Miss Racine" will he crowned at
\tie affair . Actually, the beauties will
be Racine fire fighters, who will be

•

10 DIAMOND Q.USTER

ARE JUST
AFEW OF

Bt,h batere•t r•te. Interest rates are deter-

~fff~A ®

I·

GRIA r SAVINGS

Here's a unique opportunity for you to earn high
interest on as little as $2,500 In just 89 days.
Our Ready-Access Fund Is a repurchase
agreement between you and Diamond Savings.
Quite simply, we transfer to you an interest in a
U.S. government (or government agency) .
security. After 89 days, we repurchase your
agreement for what you originally paid plus
Interest.

OPEN JULY 4th

d

AVE $70.00
f.ARRING!.
or
te Gold

to use extreme caution, avoiding
construction where possible.
Hopefully by the end of October,
restoration will be completed. That
involves the paving of streets,
sowing grass seed, and replacing
sidewalks.

DIAMOND SOLITAIRE

S&lt;~le.

Lou

'7995

l ADII'S' BEAUTIFUL DIAMO
Your chOice of either 14 K Y Ill

Now lhru July 11th We
Have
Reduced
All
Diamonds in Stock. Take
Advantage ot fhis Great

Beliveau, 21, Rt. 2, Pofneroy .

Rollin E . Stiles, 67, died unex·
pcclcdly at his Langsville home
Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. Stiles was born May 2, 1914 in
Pmneruy, a son of the late Frank
and Anna Schneider Stiles. He was
married on Jan. ZH. 1948, at Cumberland Md., to the former
Josephine Folden who survives. Also
!-;Urviving e~re a grandson, Bulch
Sllles, Langsville; two sisters. Mrs.
Helene Fox and Mrs . Frances
Waters. South Zanesville.
Surviving are his wife. Wilmet
Preceding Mr . Stile' in death
Richards Wright; a son, James N . besides his Jl&lt;lrents were a son. Mar·
Route 3. Pome roy : three sisters , vin T. in 1973.
Bessie Wright and Lela Wright, both
Mr. Stiles was a retired jub setter
of Ripley, W. Va ., and Mrs. Eula
wit~ General Motors have retired in
Grogg, Covington, Ga.; a brother.
1977 followinl(25 years of service. He
Lawrence of Miss ion. Kan.: H granwas a member uf the United Auto
dson, Joshua James Wright, and a
Workers uf America and was a
stepdaughter. Amanda Darlene
veteran uf World War II havmg serWilliams, Route 3. Pomeroy .
. ved in the Army Air Corps.
He was preceded in death by a
Services will be held at 2: 30 p.m.
brother . Clyde.
Munday at the 0 . R. Woodyard Co.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Chapel, 255 E State St., Columbus.
Saturday al the White Funeral
Burial wit! be in Union Cemetery.
Home in Coolville with the Rev .
Friends may call at the chapel from
GarJ Peck officialmg. Bunal will b.•
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday . Friends
in the Rockland Cemetery at Belpre .
may call at the Walker Fun"f.i!I
Fnends may ca ll at the funera l Home in Rutland from 2 to 4 and 1\o
home at anytime after 1 p.m . 9 p m. Saturday.
Fnday.

IJC1RA SPECIAL

Grand jury was seated this
morning in Meig~ County Common Pleas Court .

,J

Kr1llin E.Stilt&gt;M

20%

annual fireworks display, wlllch wiU be tomorrow, July
4. Dave Nelgler, left, captain In the department, accets
the donation. Campbell praised the service of the local
volunteer organizations ID tbe area .

DONATION- Bob Campbell, right, Job Superintendent lor Ontario Pipeline, presented the Racine
Volunteer'Fire Department a donation for $200 for jts

DIAMOND SALE

REDUCED

Jury ~'''ah'd today

A su it in the amount uf $29 2fij)
was flied m Meigs Countv C~m­ Announct• A[)(: funds
lnun
. k· F.man,
. l Pleas Court by p ar
State Auditor Thomas E.
Cia Inc., Col umbus , against Har.
Ft!rguson
announced
the
vcy Russell , Rutland . eta!.
distribution
of
$48,961,262
in
Aid
to
A SUit In the amount of $327.39 .
Dependent
Children
to
573,679
due on a prunissory nut.
.
fil d '&lt;. W, l.,
recipients in Ohio. Meigs County
e
u}' Auto-Owners Inc
Coiumbu,
aua 1·nst D. I · received $1110.927 for 2,217 recipien.
·
""'
tmp L'
Eakms, Rl. 2, Racine.
ts.

Area ·deaths

JULY·4th

The Leading Creek Conservancy
District Water Office will close all
day Friday in observance fo the July
4th weekend. Also announcing
closing on Friday are the Meigs
County Adilor' s Office and the Meigs
County probate Court.

working in the village of Syracuse.
Campbeil has anticipated that
mainline sewers will be completed
by the first of August. During the
next two or three weeks there will be
three mainline crews working in
SyracUBe where motorists are urged

Parade highlights celebration

Children, Men and Boys

Vt&gt;lt&gt;rans Memorial

Friday funeral

Carl Wright . 70, Hockingport, died
Wednesday evening althe St. Joseph
Hospital m Parkersburg following a
brief illness .
He was born at Reedy, W. Va ., a
son of the late Clark and Effie Moore
Wright. He attended the Reedy Baptist Church and was a graduate of
Spencer High SchooL He was a
retired employe uf Union Carbide of
Marietta and was a member of the
Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers
International Union.

•·

.....

I.

Judge O'Brien terminat~s. ·15 court cases

'25.

SyrCJcuse .

Carl Wri~ht

-z-

Pomeroy-Micldl!eort, Ohio

Eleven defendants were fined and
Four l"UIIII were ~de by area
four otbers forfeited bonds In Meigs
eliHirgency IIII~~Bds Wednesday ,
County Court Wedne!day.
according to tbe Meigs County
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien In
Emergency Medical Service.
the Meip County Court were SanThe Middleport squad was
dra Wright, Pomeroy, and David
called at 7:59 p.m. to take Tom
Anderson to Veterans Memorial \!01. Caul, Athens, S24 and costs each
Hospital.
.
speed; Dorst:! Randolph, Long Bot:
tom, $10 and costs, failure to display
John Moon was taken to
valid registration; Douglas Cleland,
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, failed to
10:23 p.m. by the Pomeroy squad.
stop for stop sign; Virgil 0. Layne,
The Rutland squad respon4r'
to two calls.
and costs, overload;
Cheshire,
James While was taken to
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital at
Must follow laws too
1:57 p.m. and Tony Keyser was
taken to O'Blenessat9:09 p.m.
Middleport Police reminq
The Syracuse Fire Department
citizens that bicycles and mopeds
responded to a fire at the home of
must follow the same traffic laws
Paul Harris, Minersville, at 12:53
as motor vehicles. Also, moped
p.m.
drivers mUBt be 14 years old and
pass a written test, police said.

The Meigs County Sherilf's ·
department reports it is investigating a theft and a hitskip
. acc)dent.
The Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative told sheriff's
deputies that a electric pole and a
dawn to dusk light were stolen
from Sidehill Road, RD Rutland,
sometime Tuesday night.
An unknown vehicle went off
the roadway and lore out four
fence posts on a pasture on
Snowball Hill sometime between
Friday and Tuesday, according
to the sheriff's report.
Delbert Smith, Racine. who b
renting the Jl&lt;ISture, reported the
incident. The properly is owned
by Bob Durst.
The sheriff's deJl&lt;lrhnenl urge,
UJOh)risls to reduce ~(Jt'cd wht•n
traveling the detour aruund

I

. ·e· . •

filed Thursday
Variable :. •ralel.abd·tal'l&amp;with the PUOO ~ city oftlctals in

.Ohio !,'ower's aervice .area -

the

tial customer who uses an average
of 650 ldlowatthours per month
would rise from 4.99 to 6.2 cents per
kilowatthour.

an unexpired term to be filled in
Meigs Local; two full term seats in
the Eastern Local District; three
full term seats in Southern ·Local,
and three full term seals on the
Meigs County Board of Education.
So far, four candidates have filed
for posts. They are Gary Dill and
Thomas 0. McKay, Jr., for trustee
of Chester Township ; Dennie E. ffill
for trustee in Sutton Township, and
Roger M. Davidson for full term on
the Meigs Local Board of Education.

·Showers pose holiday threat
•
By The Auoclated Press
• Scattered showers and thun·
derstorms will continue to pose
some threat to plans for Ohioans on
tbe Independence Day holiday.
The molrt likely time for thunderstorms Saturday will be from
late .aftemoon through the evening
hours. Not, ,much temperature
change Is expected "With afternoon
highs from the upper 70s to low 80s
and overnight lows in the 8011.
Thunderstorms drifted across northwest Ohio ThUrsday evening.
nearly a quarter of an Inch Ill rain
fell at Toledo. Another area of

showerS and thunderstonns drifted
north through southwest and west
central Ohio last night and a few
isolated showers occurred in otber
sections of the state.
Temperatures today were about
normal for early July. Readings
were 'In the 60s at daybreak. On the
morning weather map a large high
pressure system was centered off
the mid-Atlantic coast and was
nearly stationary. Aweak cold front
from Minnesota to Kansas was
moving siOIUY' east and will reach
western Ohio by Slinday .

FILED - Roger M. Davldsoo,
98 Hlgb St., Pomeroy, has IUed a
petition of candidacy for a full
term on the Melp lAical School
District Board of Education.
Manied to the former Mila
Woods, Davidson IDdlcaled that
he bu filed for the board ..ecause
of bls Interest ID studelllll and
hopes to have the opporllllllty to
Improve the status· of the Meigs
·
Local District.

•

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