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'

Hospital news

Squads ha've busy weekend .
.-

Veterans Memorial

' SIUeen 1'11111 were made ~ area
&amp;lrall'Seylet'wu t.itea frGm Filth
~aqudsovvthehOIIday
$reet
11\- RadDe to v.......
Friday
Admitted: ~th Ann Mulford, ~ •CC91'd1De to the Melp Meml~ lbplt.al by 1111 Rarine:'
Pomeroy; ADen HarUey, Pomeroy, 0ountr Eil:iel1l'JIIC1 Medlc:al Ser· . aquacl Which illo · hlllportecl ,'
vice.
_
Robelt Smith frGm the flrebouae to
and Charles Gibbs, Hartfprd, W. Va.
On FrlclaY, the PCimeroy aquad V--M~IJCifii!W,
Discharged: aara Peck, Elvira
wu
· Cllled ·at at -9;al a.ni. for
1be Mld&lt;~li!p~Wt lq!llid ._reel
Barr, June Ridenour, and Beulah
Leonard
lieu
who
wu
tU;en
frGm
two
calla, one at 9:llt p,m. to the
Kapleina.
h1a State Slreet ~ to the · home ol Wilbur ~ at Brad·

Satunllly
Admitted: Opal Barr, Ewlngton;
Wilbur Hanning, Middleport.
Discharged: Ada Dllcher, Enuna
Adams, Ruth Ann Mulford.
Sunday
Admitted:
Charles Tyree,
Pomeroy.
.
Discharged : Mildred Hudson,
Eugene McKerma.

WATERMELON RACE-Watermelon races were one of many activltes that took place Saturday at London Pool In Syracuse. There were
under water swimming races, big splash and diving contests. AP'
promnately 300 people participated In the 4th of July activities. Prizes
were awarded to the winners In each group.

IN CHARGE-In charge of events at London Pool the 4th of July were
Paige cleek, right, pool manager and Jaye Ord, Wegnard. The many
events planned by Cleek were well received.

Reagan slices
(Continued from page I )
School Aid Act, a program that funneled desegregation grants to cities,
would be wiped out in both versions.
School lunch and child nutrition
programs would absorb a $1.4 billion
cut, which August Steinhilber,
associate executive director of the
National School Boards Association,
said could add up to $1 to the daily
cost of middle-income students' lun ches.
erold Roschwal b of the National
ation of State Universities and
La
rant Colleges, expressed
concern about cuts in social science
research funded by the National
Science Foundation. The hard sciences emerged fairly well from the
budget battle, he said, "but in the
social sciences it seems to be well in
excess of 50 percent. That's tragic."
"The ricochet effect of these cuts
is sometimes much more important
than the immediate visible effect,"
added Roschwalb, who represents
140 schools with 3.7 millton students .

E

·'Some of the things that are going to
hurt universities most are n!(
university programs."
For example, he said, cuts in
Medicare and Medicaid could have
adverse effects on university
hospitals.
"The cumulative impact is what's
going to murder us because the
universities are big and they've go a
lot of dollars moving through them
from a lot of different sources," he
said.

Special session
The Eastern Local Board tf
Education will meet in special
sessiOn at 7:30 Wednesday night for
the discussion of personnel and employment of new personnel.

Wiener roast set
A wiener roast scheduled for
tonight by Meigs County Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, has been postponed
until Friday at 6:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Ruby MarshaU .

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DI'SCRARGESJULVZ
John Dailey, Rita Beattie, Sharon
Bisphop, VIrginia Burke, Adam
Bush, Leo Bush, Anthony Canter,
Ray Casey, Paul Chapman, Mrs.
George Cupp Jr. al1!1 daughter,
Mary Dalton, Clifford Eckard,
James Ferencz, Jwte hicks, Brian
Howery, Charles Keplar, Denise
Long, Ruth Maag, Bonnie Martin,
Charels Martin, Josephine Parsons,
Elmer Patrick, Ricky Patterson Jr.,
Sandra Peck, Henry Pierce, Mildred
Riley, James Ring, Ora Rodgers,
Roy RtweU, Pamela Samons,
Xylpba Saunders, Leona Sauters,
Kenneth Simpson Jr., Terry Stiffler,
Julius Swann Jr., Courtney Swango,
Deborah Terrell, Goldie Terry,
Alfonso Thompson, Angela Wheeler,
Phyllis Whobrey, Greg Winston
BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harrison, son,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Newell, son, West Columbia; Mr.
and MRs. Paul Skinner, daughter,
Gallipolis.
JULY3
Parnell Brady, Albert Casey Jr.,
Cecil CasUe, James Cheesbrough,
Mary Chevalier, Winifred Clark,
Jewell Curnutte, Dwight Delaney,
Wilma Edwards, Stephen George,
Thelma Ghearing, Ruth Gibson,
Edgar Harrop Jr., Sandinia Hoover,
Wanda Imboden, Donna Jordan,
Gina Kemper, Charlotte UtUe,-•Roy
McCarty Sr., Colleena McCombas,
Dannie Reynolds, Clarence Shupe,
Dorma Smith, Mrs. Robert Spradling
and son, Thomas Stutes, Lena
Thomas, Florence Trainer, Bobby
Watson, David Wyant, Dallas
Young, Mrs. Rick Zinn and son.
BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs.
Alan Swindel, son,
Athens.
JULYf
Clovis Bailey, Sharon Bailey,
Wayne Baker, Jessie Boggs, Joe
Bradley, Joe Carter, Bonnie
Clemens, Doug Cottrill, Edna Dar·
nell, Lester Davis, Lewis Day.
Virginia Fisher, Michelle Henri,
Keith McCarty, Hilda McDaniel,
Brian McEHresh, Mrs. Robert Pyles
and son, Ken Rainey, Mrs. Larry
Smith and daughter, Florence
BIRlHS
Tomlinson,
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Polcyn,
daughter, GAllipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
John Richards, son, Minersville.
BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Campbell,
daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Gheen, daughter, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Franks,
daughter, Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and
Mrs. Ephriam Herdman, son, Middleport; Mr. Mrs. Ray Norton,
daughter, Wellston.

Nobody knows
more about
Homeowner Loans
than City Loan.
We don't have to t.eU you about

the high cost of living these dar.;. But
prices aren't all that's going up. The
value of your house is, too. In fact, it's
worth far more today than ever before.
At City loan, we can help you
tum that increasing value into the
.money you need to meet major
wants or needs. Uke a coUege
education. Or remodeling the
house. Or to make a special
dream come true. With a
·•
Homeowner Loan of up to
$50,000 or more .
.· . ... .. ·
When it comes to &amp;&gt;lviog a big
money problem, Ohio people
know where to turn. To City loan. Because nobody
knows you- and your needs-like we oo.

CJTYL{}\N

COMPANY
125 E. Main St. • 992-2t7 1

G)

·-UNDf:R

Holler Medical Center. At 10:Ge
a.m. 'the Plimeroy lqllold went to the
Sln)mons Garage GO Eut Main St.
fnlm where they took Shn1l Harris
totheHolJer Medicai_Center.
At 8:U p.m: Friday, Bernice Min
Durst, Middleport, wu taken from
the comer of Walnut and 'Iblrd
where
she had
a bicycle
accident
to
the
Holzer
Medical
Center
by the
Middleport
Whittington

Stolen car·r4~d
A JI'/'1DoclpAipenltGIIrillllndaJI
~ ~ • nllbt cluli puking

h!twu .JWnced . l!ltlr~lll/
tbeJeanll!p ~ 1-'1* b !"' old
Fortll. Run ~ ,_ 1!.11' hid
been l'8lllllled IMo • fence 111 the
Beegle pr4JP!I'ty. Tile velllcle was
liter releilecl tO Ita pnlpei' OWJI!!r.
1be lnclder¢ Ia under lnveltipt1111
aceordlng to the sheriff'a depart·
ment.

bury with Hanning befuR t.bo to
Veteft,na Memorial HOipilal and • - - - - - - - - - 1:30 a.m. for Jobn Stlven who .~ lrUn .her n&amp;clne residence by the
taken to Holler M"'llcal Center.:··
R.aciDe 1!11~ to the Boiler ~Cil
On Sunday the '1'llppens PJ.ina Center, and at 1:1~ p.m. ~
aq!llld took Wllltam Tracewell from Coats was' tranlpOrtecl fram h1a Nye
bla rest~ there to St. J011epb Ave, Pcimeroy residence by the
Hospital In Parkersburg, W. V1. At Pomeroy squad to Veterans
8: 19 p.m.·_
Sirah
Congo
was_taken
Memorial
r--:..._
__
....:..,_
_ _-.:..;_
_ _Hospital.
__:_ _ _ _ __

8!11J8d. At 10:45 Teresa
was taken to Veterans

Memorial Hospital from Adolpha
Dairy Valley on Main, and at 8:18
p.m. the Rutland squad took Cynthia
Bailey from her Salem Street
residence to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
On Saturday at 3: 14 a.m. the
Rutlancl squad transported Howard
Birchfield from Rutland to the
Holzer Medical Center. They also
transported Teresa Barrell from
Main Street to Veterans Memorial
Hopilal.

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA.

614/992·2133

·Sl!Ci{J.l Security bankrupt by '82
WASHINGTON (AP) - Social
Security's ~ _,fund will ;110
broke by the end of next year and jhe
,;~ecllcare program coul!l topple
within the decade liDless taxes are
ral8ed or beneflta aluhed, accor:dlng

pellliiiiii)'IUim.
•
'"l'her:e la,a m»h tlaat hu 8J'IIWII
up In Alilerlca that Social Secu,rlty Ia
aprogramb'malntalnlng~er)une

at a mlddle-clus level In their
retlremetJt yei!'B," he llicl.
D!JnOVan and Treasury Secretary
tothethreeca~offl~;erawho..,-·
"~t baa 11"!!18 ~a~ of Dclr)aldT. Regan.
veutnille!llofthei}'Btem.
!JucW ~ty that It IB 8 bale for
the admlnlatraU~JD's approaCh
lntheirailQUII teport, tlletruslej!s retirement and a ·p11rtllll hu n111 Into heavy rea1atance on
Said partlcullir. urgency 8UITOIIIids. repllcement flfr wages IOIIt bec:aUile Capitol Hjl!. but the report ·left the
~ old age ~ i'etlremeilt tnlat ol retjrell,lellt,, death or -blllty, ~· f:10or opel! for ll~matlve measurea
fund, which "Would becl!me Wllllle he~- "II was ilever In· "whicbwlllaceomp&amp;hthesameob·
to pay timely bene(lts by ll!te 'JIIIIi" · tended 8.a .a full' retirement sylter!J . jectlveii,"
'wlthoutmajorhelpfromCongress.i
forAmeriC8111."
·
B~ the cabinet members
In dlacusslng their report, ~
Tile rejlort undeucored Prtlident rejected any notion that the
Security COIIIIIIIssloner JOhn A. Reagan's call for major reducliUIIII retirement fund's short-range
Svalm declafell that Amerlcaris In Soctal ~ty benefits, Including problema can be handled by
must lower their upectatl0118 of ilie a befty penalty for early ret1rei1Jent, borrowillg from the other two truat

account~, ~ aJid cllaabillty.
Tile dlaablllty fimd remalnl healthy,
they 1114; bllf Medicare Itself could
turribeiJYuplrlthlneiB)IttolOyears
u expeillel continue to exceed

Medicare's Mlpltal irlsurm:e • year proposed a comprehensive
fund paid out $2«.3 billion In flac.al package o1 Ideas for saving the
UIIO,·IJI ~ ol-18,4 percent ovv system. The president wants to
theprevi0118yar.·llllnclllnei'OIIel8 pen•llrepenonaretlrlngbeforeage
percent to f25.4 billion. But the 6Sbyreduclngthebenefitsavallable
revenues.
trustees fa~ · a allortfall around to them from 80 percentto 55 percent
Even ltthe _three funds were com- 1980wbeninlufflclentpaytolldeduc· beginning next year.
blned; monthly reUrement checks tlons will be available to cover adHe also would reduce future
couldn't be paid by 11185 If the mlnlstratlye COllis and bel)eflts.
benefits for all by lesser amounts,
ecCIIIIIlY l!hould falter again, they
The lcinger range (oncast waaleaa cut the dlaabllity rolla and, at the
said. Under .a worst-case scenario, dismal beciiue of an expected drop same time, hold down futllre Social
they added, the erld could arrive In in the ratio of retirees to workers Security tax Increases. Overall, the
1913.
and planned Increases In payroll admlniBtratlon acknowledges, those
Tile three funds rose in Income taxes. In fact, the report said, the measures would save billions more
from payroll tax deductions last truat fundi can be expected to begin than is necessary to keep the system
year by 13 percent to $145.8 billion, generatlnt! surpluses over the next solvent.
but outlays cUmbed by 16 ,percent, to 25 years.
About 115 million workers pay
$149., billion, the report said.
The administration earner this
(Continued on page 12)

•

at y

e

•
_Pomer9y-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 7,1981

Voi.JO, N0.58
topyrighted 1981 .

en tine

Convict youths ol murder
PHILADELPWA - Boys ages. 14 and 18 have been convicted of
murdering a University of Pennsylvania graduate student during one
of this city's so-called "woH pack" gangrobberjes.
Ten youths.were accuaed by the dlatril:t attorney's office of getting
together after a party to lind a robbery vlcUm - an4 Douglas Huff· .
man, 23, of New Richmond; Ohio, llllegediy was chosen. AuthoriUea
said he and a Temple University stUdent were attacked and Huffman
died of massive head Injuries sustained In a single punch to the head.

Stops
Japenase beetles from
damaging vaiiUible plants. Dual bait
contains a high potency sex
attractant and a proven floral lure.
Beetles ara attracted to bait, strike
tha vanes and fall into bag which
CIJI I'Oid ~v.er 4000 beetles. ·

'

HOUSEWARES DEPT. 1ST A.OOR

·. Suspect taken in slashing cases

ELBERf,ELDS IN POMEROY
~-----------------------------------------------------

· NEW YORK - A slasher slit the throats of sll[ derelicts, killing two,
oo a ~ through Manhattan early Monday, and the attacks atop.
ped after pollee arrested a man carrying a bloody straight-edged

razor.

"''

The 33-year.old man, who reportedly once was Imprisoned for rob·
bery on the testimony ,of derelicts, was suapected In the six latest at·
tacks as well as in nine earlier non .fatal assaults on on down-and-out
men in Manhattan, 80III'Cell·sald.
The attacker apparenQy tra-veled trom place to place by subway,
seeking vlctlma In the city's seedier areas.

Ohlom1 dies in plaDe crash
W~ ~D~ Permsflvanla- An Ohio lll8D w~ klJied M!ll·
dly wlien a liDall airplane Dying near a private airstrip In Mercer
County CJ'I!Ihed liJto an automobile CNI Pennsylvania route 318.
The victim was Identified as Domlnli: Coco, 21, wbo was pronounced
dead at scene by Dr. Wllllam · McDowell, deputy Mercer County
coroner. Coco wu from Uberty Town'stiip, just north of Youngstown,
Ohio, and was believed to be the passerlger.

Take
a closer
look

-

.

Investigators check incident
OOWMBUS, Ohio- 'lbe Ohio Civil Service Employees ~tiGO
has called for federal and state Investigations ol the Adams County
Welfare Depar1ment, whose workera went m a sickout Monday.
OOlEA EltecuUve Director Arthur L Evans said the department's
employees have missed at least one payday and general relief funds
are WIIV!~tlable.
·
.
·
i
Ev1111 said county commissioners have told the department's 20 em·
ployees that they probably will not be paid GO July 15. They also we~
not paid on July 1, even though the ~te bad allocated sufficler)t
money to the southern Ohio county.
·

at us.

Deputy face disciplinary action
ClEVELAND- Oiyapoga COWity Sl)erlff Gerald T. McFaul said
disciplinary a~GO Is be!l18 C01181dered jlgalllst Deputy Nonnan Por·
terfleld, '!'ho WI!S overpcili~red SUnday . I n a prtaoner'a escape. ·
The prisoner, 'Marlo~~. 33, lju, be:en at lllrge Iince the
escape. 'qle fli8iljve wu reported to be aimed and danjJeroua.
,
Sheriff'~ ~ ~ J. ~ ~cl Pmerfleld, 32, an e~·
year v~; :hU be'en,. ~rsect ltlth ltegligence, a departmentil .
charge ~ froni tbi eacape episode at Cleveland MetropoBtan
Gener.81 H011pllal.
·
.
.~ .

'

The Farmers Bank is your full service bank that
can handle all of your banking needs.
For your banking needs, come to 'the full service'
bank, the Farmers Ba~k of Po.Deroy.

BETHEL, Ohio (AP) - The life of
a fireworks and preci0118 metals
dealer who was slain along with
three other members of his family
appeared to be aa much of a mystery
as the events that resulted In his
death.
A friend said Billy Stevenson, -48,
"didn't haveadimeto h1a name" siX
yesrs ago, before he became a
dealer In Imported Mexican items,
gold and silver, fireworks and guns.
That Statement was made Monday
night by Jim Riley of Bethel, a com·
petlng fireworks dealer.
Riley told pollre that Stevensm
had a large amount of cash and
several' hundred thousand dollars
worth of jewelry In his home.
"I know he had over $200,000 In a
sultcue In the back ol his car !8st
night. He was worried about It
becaUile he was going to the bank
with It this momlng, · ~ Riley said.
The bodies of Stevenson and his 36·
year-old wife Undll, 5-year.old son
Billy, and 30-rear-old brothe{-.jn·law
Edward Lawsoii'Dciie~ piillec! ·
from a burning 15·room converted
bam home early Mlllday.
ClermGOt COIQity sherlfrs deputy
Clarenee Pennlnglon said police
found no morley In the suitcase Riley
mentioned.
Sheriff Jolm Van Camp said no
motive hap been established for
what he said were "executlon-etyle
killings." AU four victims had been
shot In the head. There were no
arrests. Peputiea refused to say
.whether any other Items were

....,

SLAYING SCENE- Firemen opray water on burDing embei'B of the shell of lbe home of fireworks
dealer Billy Stevell8on, 48. Steve1111on, his wife Uncia,

38, sen Billy,

and brother-I.Iaw, Edward Dowell,
30, were all IOUDd slaiD In the burning converted baru.
(AP Luerphoto) .

Cable TV subscribers can
·expect better receplion

ByKATIECROW
Better cable TV reception can be
expected when Cablentertainment
takes over the ownership of Pointview Cable it was disclosed at a
meeting of Pomeroy Council Mon day night.
Dick Newell, manager of Pointview Cable and Bill Randles,
Cablentertalnment's vice president
indicated there will be improvement
mlas.ing.
of channel six and 10 and possibly
Pennington said he belleved the
other satellite stations offered.
killers were known to the victims.
At the June 15 meeting, CoWtcil
"You could rationalize that they failid to approve the transfer of the
would have killed the people to keep franchise from Pointvlew to Cablen·
from being Identified, that they were tertalnment. However, cowtcil did
shot to silence them," Pennington approve the request Monday night.
said.
Randles told council he has been In
The FBI, state and county fire in· . cable TV management for 25 years.
vestlgators are probing the rubble of
"We have been able to generate
the blaze.
new sales · by adding · professional
Riley said the Stevensons had ac· management" Randles stated. He
cwnulated wealth and were inclined indicated that service would be im.
to show It oif. He said Mrs. Steven· proved and persons will possibly see
11011 wure many diamonds.
additional satellite service.
"Bill bought and sold gold and
Approximately 75 percent of the
silver," Riley said. "He kept the bet- residents in Pomeroy are on tbe
ter pleoes. Anyone who knew them cable system with approxln1aQey 24
krlew they had a lot of jewelry." percent on home box office.
Riley said he and hla wife were In·
It was pointed out that In order to
vlted to the Stevensona' home Sun· extend the service to other areas, 35
day night but did not go becaUile he homes per cable mile is needed. It
wutlrecl. ·
was indicated that cable service
Stevemioil sold fireworks may be extended to the Enterprue
wholesale In Bethel, Amelia and area.
~
,
Chllil. Be wds one of&amp;bree fireworks
The.reaiiOII cable TV cannot be ex·
dealetll wlio pleaded liinocent June tended too great of distance is the
• to ;~ell -ol · aelllng fireworks (act that It cannot go too far from the
mepny. He Wa8 to appear for trial main system.
. .01;1 July 15.
Also _meeting with council was

..

1 Section, 1'2 Pages
lS Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

•.

Mystery
surrounds
murders

ELBERFELDS
BAG-A-BUG
JAPANESE
BEETLE TRAP

-

a

u Jlle!UIS to keep !he pensl(ll and
health ~ sya1em solvent. It
wu compl1ed by Health an4 HllliiiiD
Servli:el Secntar)' Richard Sch·
welcker, Labor Secretary Ray

Terry Evans, construc;tlon superintendent for Empire Pipline Inc.,
which is presently extending the
sewage system from Kroger to
KerrsRun.
Evans' meeting concerned complaints regarding traffic tie-ups due
to L'Je construction.
Evans said the heaviest amount of
traffic is between 4: 30 p.m. and 5
p.m. and according to Evans, this
situation must be corrected.
According to a survey taken by
one of the ladies doing the Oag work
no one has had to wait over 10
minules. Evans did say that there
will be times when traffic will be
stopped In both lanes .
Mayor Clarence Andrews pointed
out that controlling the traffic light
at the interseclion of SR 7 and {/. S.
33 has helped some.
Upon the reconunendation of Orville Wiles, cemetery trustee, coun·
cil voted to purchase a new lawn .
mower, lour comer markers for
three sections of the cemetery and 30
lot markers at a cost of ap·
proximately $395.
Beech Grove cemetery will be sur·
veyed next week, Wiles said. The
markers will placed at the ~metery
following the survey.
Acting Police chief, Geroge Stitt,
told coWtcil that the depar1ment last
mooth drove 4,656 miles, made 46
arrest and answered 4317 calla.
Stitt also reported that Jim Con·
nolly, SyracUIIe, has been hired as a
part time officer to which council
gave Its approval. Stitt also said

another part time officer is needed.
It was reported that all windows
on the ground floor at the fanner
senior high building have been
replaced.
Larry \fehrung, cowtcilman, extended thanks to Charles Legar, fire
chief, and the members of the fire
depar1ment for taking the glass out
of the windows on Court Street that
posed a problem. Council also ex·
tended thanks to the police depart ment for their efforts during Itegattaweekend.
Council discussed the potholes and
the cleaning of streets. It was noted
that the viUage is short of manpower
and In order to get more work done
more help is needed.
Council stated that a volunteer
supervisor is needed ( ap proximately six hours a day) to
work with CETA employes. Anyone
who might be interested is asked to
caU Mayor Andrews.
A motion was defeated to complete the work on Pleasant Ridge. To
complete the work a . culvert is
needed and replacement of blacktop
at the Don McKenzie driveway.
Voling no on the issue were Betty
Baronick and Larry Wehrung.
John Anderson told council that a
tree on WetzgaU Street (that is on
village property) had to removed.
Council agreed to either llre
someone to take the tree out or have
the street department move it.
Steve Hartenbach, meterman,
submitted !lis monthly report to
(CGntlnued on page 12)

�1981

Commentar

Snmm~r baseball .re~ults .

'

P•11~2..:..:r11e Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO
Tuesday, July 7,1981 _ .

'

•

'

Mitterrand and the
terdependence" of the world com·
munlty. We are, to a Hmltell extent,
interdependent. 1be appointment of
Communlata as members of the
cabinet of a central ally of the
United States Is wrong for reasons
symbolic and geopolitical. During
this century American blood has
twice watered the plains of France
as the result of the failure of French
diplomacy, and right now we are
spending almost twice as much per
capita as the French for common
defense.

It Is never absolutely clelir
whether criticisms of General Halg
are critlclams of what he does or
critlclalils of him. Scme time ago
fuglemen of the opposition, finding
that most of their bulleb turned to
water when they abn at Ronald
Reagan, started firing at AI Ha ' f
Somettmea In his attempts to retL n
the volley Mr. Halg confuses: as
when recently he said that our
relations with Communist China
were improvl'd after a three-year
blight, declining to expand on this
generality probably for the best of
reasons, namely that not much sen·
se could be made of the proposition.
But surely in the matter of the
French Conununlsts be is absolutely
correct.
France is bound to the United
States by formal instruments and by
informal traditions. The cliche that
one must not Interfere in the internal
affairs of another country has
relieved a great many people of any
responsibility for thinking. Oddly,
the same folk who use that cliche are
forever tallting about the "in·

It is one thing for us to ask the
French to penni! us to run their
foreign policy. This we aren't doing.
We are, however, putting forward
the basic postulates of American
foreign policy with gyroscopic ac·
curacy, and nobody has composed a
b.:tter expression of this than AI
Haig when he conunenled, "It's sim·
ply a fact of life that Conununlst
regimes, whether they are closely
affiliated with Moscow or not, pur·
sue policies which are not consistent
with those of the Western family of

The president's
day in court
In a government of separated powers, separation from any part of the

pow~';!::e~r:::.~:~~~~~st~:~~g

from a touch of the
congressional bends after having been shut out of a meaningful role in the
decision·making process on Capitol Hill for the greater part of the last half
century. Never mind that they held the \,Vhite House off and on for respec·
table stretcbes ~? that period. That contributed nothing to the party's
legislative expertise and reserves of talent.
It is the public popularity and personal politicking of the president him·
se~•. abe~ ,bY Democrati~ dlsa~y, that is largely responsible for the ad·
minl.slration s current and unpressave budget victones in ~· not the
uncertain skills of a Republican leadership long unused to leading.
Or constder the Democrats, who have good reason for concern thst they
may be well into a sirnilar lengthy dry period in detennlnlng the mem·
bership and thus shaping the ideological inclination of the Supreme Court.
Unusually early in his administration, Ronald Reagan has been pesen·
led with the opportunity of naming a justice to the court, one of nine on what
may conceivably be the most influential collegial organ of government in the
world. Congress legislates, but it frequently falls to the Supreme Court to
define precisely the Impact of thst legislation upon the nation.
All of Reagan's recent Republican predecessors have also been able to
exercise their appointive powers in respect to the court.
It has been a significantly diffetenf story for Democrats occupying thO
White House, however. Jinuny Carter was shot out completely. 'lbe last
justice named by a Democratic president joined the court 14 years ago. Only
two of those now sitting are Democratic appointees.
And the situation, from the Democratic point of view, is likely to get wor·
se before there is hope of partisan improvement.
Presidents rightly prize their power to name the members of the
Supreme Court. It holds out the promise of institutionalizing their
philosophies through the selection of like·minded appointees and,
theoretically, of extending their influence over national policies and
programs long beyond their own presidences.
Franklin D. Roosevelt's struggle with and conquest of the court is
always the object lesson. His initial effort to pack a conservative court- ex·
pand membership to give him sufficient new appoinlments to shift the
ideological balance - failed. But the court eventually shifted anyway,
joining the political mainstream of the later Roosevelt terms.
And in the natural course of events he got his appoinlments anyway nine of them. Roosevelt appointees dominated the court until almost the end
of the Eisenhower presidency and the last one - William 0 . Douglas - did
not leave the bench untill975.
It Is an axiOJD of the system of separation of powers as practiced in the
United States, however, that no president can he certain how his appointees
will vote once on the court and what the long ·tenn impact upon the nation
will be.
The object lesson here is Dwight Eisenhower, whose appointee as chief
justice, Earl Warren, proceeded to the president's frequent distress to
preside over the most liberally activist Supreme Court in history.
Richard Nixon, on the evidence to date, has fared considerably better.
His four appointees, carefully selected for their "constructionist" con·
servatism, have not been responsible for many surprises. And two - Chief
Justice Warren Burger and Associate Justice William Rehnqul.st - have
been the court's staunchest conservatives.
For all their interest to students of American government, the lessons of
history have never stopped a president from trying to shape a Supreme
Court precisely to his political and ideological specifications.
And Ronald Reagan can expecl opportunities to try harder than most.

Communists~___

nations." Thus Haig expressed
reservatiOIIS which COOliDUIIicaled
simultaneously to our other aDiea in
Europe.
Mltterrand, it Is widely said, Is at·
tempting several things. For one, he
Is "buying" Industrial peace. Thla
statement is supposed to be un·
derstood ail a deference to the power
exercised by the Comr(lunlsts over
the largest French labor union. But
it resists analysis. U Mltterrand can·
not have industrial peace witltout
giving Communists four cabinet
positions, then what makes him
think that he can have industrial ·
peace if he embarks on a policy to
which the Communists are opposed;
for instance, either we display Per·
shing missiles, or you withdraw your
SS·20's.
It is then averred that Mltterrand
is subtly corrupting French Com·
mun1st fealty to Moscow. Thus, the
conununlsts were seduced into
talking about the need for caution in
respect to Poland, the right of the
Afghans to self·rule, and the need for
balanced withdrawal of weapons.
But the French Communl.st Party,
as was proved during the Hitler·
Stalin Pact and a d=n limes since,
is capable of saying anything. In·
capable, only, of effective resistance
to Soviet foreign policy, The notion
that Mitterrand, whose campaign
stressed his differences with the
Conununlsts, would be the historical
agent of a transmogrification of the

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
hbllllltr

!'AT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

• ' '"LIInt .,.biiK IMor/~ ' ulllr-.11«

Ge...aMuapr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Newt!dller
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unilateral liill.itary dlsannament.

_ __w._m_ia_m_F._B_uc_kzer_Jr•.

Worsthome has lor many years ser· around Soviet determination to'
ved the blgh function r1. articulating ' dominate the world are the object of
Torypr1nclplethrou!lh~CIIlumnin our fOI'eign polley. And 111Cb symi:
the IArlclqn TeJe8rapll, the SWiday boll as the ihwipura~llli of Comt
edition of which he edita. It Is aa if munl.sta into democratic gomn·,
the editor of the Wall Street Journal menta sap the spirit and challenge
had Cllllle Olit lor soclallzln(i the For· the bona fides of what caDs ltseJf
tune 500. The forces that Jilobillze "democratic soclallam."

·

Housing knowledge can help chance.s
NEW YORK (AP) - The more
you know about the housing market
said the real estate agent, the bette;
is your chance of snaring a good buy.
To which the would·he owner
replied: There are no good buys
anymore.
The notion has become prevalent:
you want to buy a house you have
to pay through the nose You have to
beg for the mortgage · money, and
then you have to pay monthly in·
stallments that are almost in·
tolerable.
But interviews with various in·
novative real estate people suggest
there are ways to accomplish your
housing goal with perhaps Jess pain
than you lear. It meaiis work, aiid
probably a lowering of your sights
for the time being, but there are
ways, they say.
-The rundown house. It means

u

opportunity, at a lower price. II
means work too. But it does provide
the essential element, which is
shelter. II might also require that
you learn to adjust to Jess than the
ideal.

Families buy inexpensively, and
so can afford payments. They use
sweat labor;, and what work they
must contract from p-ofessionals
they time so as to fit the budget.
Unless they commit an outrageous
blunder, the evidence shows, they
almost always Increase the value ci
their property and sometimes the
entire neighborbood. 'lbey have
equity. 'lbeyareontheirway.
-The multifamily house. Despite
Jarge·scale urban development
projects, and private initiatives
also, most cities of 10,000 or more
people have a supply of relatively

low-coat two.family and three·
family houses in blue-conar neigh·
borhonds.
Many of these houses never have
vacancies. They represent assured
income, and no lender worth a dollar
will fail to recognize that added In·
come when considering you for a
mortgage - providing you live in
one of the apartments.
- The no-cash purchase. The non·
believers laugh when they hear
about the no-cash purchase. It can't
be done, they say. But thousands of
no-cash transactions every year
demonstrate that It can be done.
No, say those who know about
siiCh things, the no-cash deal, and
the very low~h deal, don't ad·
vertise themselves. You must look
for them. You might have to look at
scores of houses and make dozen of
proposals before flndln~ a good deal,

but when you do it might be worth
the work.
No-alSh deals generally Involve
income properties, that is, from two·
family houses on up to very large
buildings. The aeller often Is fairly
well off and In no immediate need of
cash. Because he Is also about to
retire he Is looking for a good in·
vestment that provides an Income
with few headaches and a good rate
of return.
That Is, the aeller 1.s wUilng to give
you a mortgage, with your monthly
payments based 1111 a 30·year repay
period. In all pt'Obablllty, '-ever,
he will require you to pay the entire
amount in perbapa five years or so.
For five years your monthly
payments will be fairly low; then
you will be hit with a final payment
of whatever remained lql8id.

Removing decontrols will hurt gas customers
WASHINGTON (AP)- Removing
price controls on natural gas in 1982,
three years ahead of schedule, could
cost consumers up to $127 billion and
raise the average homeowner's bill
as much as S4 percent, an Energy
Deparltnent analysis says.
But the report argues that the
benefits would be substantial.
Full decontrol of the country's
second most popular fuel in 1982 Is
one option being studied by the ad·
ministration, and while the Energy

Department report made no recom·
mendation, il said President Reagan
"should act soon" if he decides to
seek the change.
'lbe study, ordered by Energy
Secretary James Edwards several
months ago, is expected to play a
key role in the administration's
debate on natural gas prices. II has
not been released, but a draft copy
was obtained by The Associated
Press.
Under a 1978 law, natural gas

prices are gradually being raised

until controls on most gas are totally
lifted on Jan. 1, 1911$. Edwards has
said the adminl.slratlon is com·
milled to speeding up that timetable
and Is studying ways to do it.
The DOE report estimated that
homeowners' natural gas bills would
increase between 21 and S4 wcent
in 1982 from full deconb ol. Tile cost
to all gas customers was eatlmaled
al between $91 biWon and $127
billion.

CINCINNATI CAP) · - Anthony
Munoz, the Cincinnati Bengals'
massive offensive tackle, believes
lte would have made it to Cincinnati
professional sports one way or
another.
'lbe 6·foot-6, 278-pound second
year player out of Southern Califor· ·
nia revealed Monday that he started
out to play baseball.
"Baseball was my first love. Foot·
ball to me in high school was
something to keep me in shape for
baseball. I never felt l was that good
at it. That was my life'sdream - l'd

Art B~hUJald

~------------------------------------thought-out economJc pa~kage.
"I don't think so."

like to tell you a.story. When I was
playing college football, there was a
fellow on the team naml!d George
Gipp. We used to call him the Gip·
per. George had a rare tennlnal
illness, and I used to visit him at the
hospital every chance I got.
"One day, when It looked as if the
end was near, he said to me, 'Ron·
nie, some day you're going to he
president of the United States and
you will be up againat it. You're
going to want to balance the budget,
and cut taxes and bring a new
JII'06IIel'lty and hope to the American
people. It's going to be tough
because with the fat and waste, you
will have will have ta cut out some
· meaningful programs that people
need and want. AJid they're gqlng to
fight you In the House of Repreeen·
tatives where they wiD demand an
up and down vote on each cut.'
"Areyoustmwithme, Tom?"
"Yes, sir, Mr: Prealdent."
"Gipp continued, 'And because
they're DenlQc:tata, Romie, they're
going to · want their own budget·

Jol!.

Titese free senders, who don't care
what happens to the taxpayers'
money, will forget the mandate that
you won from the American people
to cut out all the social programs
that destroy Incentive and cause in·
llation that hurts·every man, woman
and child In America."
"Is there much more to thla story,
Mr. President?"
" Gipp was having a hard lime
breathing by then, but he told, me,
. 'The .day before the vote, the
Speaker Is going to 1111 some .dirty
maneuvering to eee that all the
refonna you WOrked for wiD go ~
the drain. It Is then, Ronnie, when
you think all Ia I~ tltat I want you
to do something for me."
" 'Anything, a-ge,' I told·him.
And he said, '[ want you to caU aJi 29
Democratic congJ'eallell, men wbo
would vote 'their Cllllvi(\tloni over
their party loyalty, ilnd ten. themand tell them, to .th this - tor the
Gipper.' That's the end ql my~.

Tun.''

will!:inot~dot~"Did~~~=

cutting
packap,
which your weD·
the
11botlge_

'

..

'

'.)

'

&lt;1111

I

UIUe LequeActlell
.
In Big Bend Utile League action,
the New Haven Reds breezed to ~p
easy 14-2 win over the Middlepor:t
Braves. ~e .Wolfewaf'thewllil}lnjl
pitcher WJU! -eev~ ·-~ts · an!l
four walks. ~ Be&lt;:ker suffered
the 1098. He fanned six and walked
8even.
,
·
RobbleGrimmandAndea:poneach
had a sJngle and double 'for \he win·
nets, while Mike Wolfe and Snilth
each doubled. Todd Pethtel, Troy
Stewart, and Matt Fisher eaith ad·
ded singles. Donald Stein' had twO
singles for the Braves and Tim
Cassell added a single,
A three run fourth inning boolited
visiting Eastern to a 4·2 win over
Albany m·Melgs·Mason pony league
action. Eastern Is now7 -3.
Mike Collina went three and a
third Innings, · while walklng just
two,givinguptwohitaandtworuni.
Jim Newell suffered the 1098. He
gave up four walks and two
strikeouts. McClain suffered the
loss. He went the distance to fan
eiglltandwalkjustone.
Troy Guthrie and TO!Il Everett
had back to back singles to help
produce the winning run. Moments
earlier Jay Carpenter had reached
on an error and Jim Newell had
walked. Tom Everett tripled and
singled, Newell doubled and singled,
and Tim Probert, Jay Carpenter,
Guthrie and CoWns each added
singles. Green and McClain singled
for the losers.
In the softball league, Mid·
dleport's Dusters slipped past
Pomeroy's Blue Jays by a 17-13
score. Tina Hendricks was the win·
ning pitcher with two walks and one
strikeout, while Elise Meier came on
in relief to fan two and walk five.
Missy Woods sufferejl the loss with
one.walk and two strikeouts.
Middleport gOt out of the third in.
ning on a nice double play. Hen·
dricks caught a Oy ball, then caught
the runner edging off first base fOr
the two outs. Missy Woods and
Heather woods of the Pomeroy In·
dians played for the Blue Jays.
Duster hitters were Shannon
Stewart and Mandy Hubbard with
doubles, and Elise Meier, Doreen
Hadwell, Sherry Cooper, and Hen·
dricks with .singles. For Pomeroy
Angie Sloan, Mary Norman,
Mayrene 'lbomas, and Shelly WoHe
each singled.
In the second game of a double•
headet Elise Meier pitched a no:
hitter as the Middleport Dusters
coasted to a ·14·2 win over tlie
Pomeroy Blue Jays. Meier fanned
eight and issued three walks. Angela
suffered the Joss with three walks
and one strikeout.
Sherry Cooper led the winners

;Munoz feels he's
all around athlete

The department's atudy falls in
the middle of estimates dme by
groups on both sldea of the decontrol
issue.
Energy Action, which opposes
decontrol, estimates homeowners'
billa would lncreaae 83 )lel't'ent un.
der full decontrol. 1be cOnsumer
group said the average homeowner
would pay ~'15 for natural gas next
year under current law il!!l $940 un·
der full decontrol.
• ·

Ronnie's story

President Reagan is given full
credlt.for his budget-cutting victory
in the House. He used the telephone
to persuade 29 "boll weevil"
Democrats to vote for this program,
which gave him just enough of a
majority to get all the cuts through
without debate.
'lbl.s was the same tactic Lyndon
Johnson used to get his "Great
The chief justice and Justiceo Lewis Powell, Harry Blackmun, William Society" program through. But
Brennan and Thurgood Marshall - the last two comprising the present whereas L~ did this by ann·
. court's liberal wing- are all older than the retiring Potter Stewart and good twisting, Pre8ident Reagan's style
prospects to follow his lead by 1984.
·
was entirely different.
The Democrats' day in this court looks to be a long lime coming.
I wasn't listening on the phone
when he made the calls, but I heard
they went something like this.
"Congressman Ughter, this Is
Ronnie Reagan. I have a great favor
to ask of you."
"Yea, sir, Mr. President."
"I would like you to break from
your party and the Democratic
leadership, and vote your con·
science by passing ~ lxldget
Ill l'HUrtStrftt
........... Oble
recommendations without reading
114-ttHIIf
them.''
I,,.:\ ·tiTF.D TOniE IM'EREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
"That's pretty tough to do, Mr.
President."
tllb
"Before you
ttm~ f"'T"-'1-.-r-·~=·-=­
"q:lv

The Daily Sentinel

French Communllts is an In·
dulgence in the kind rl. naivete AI
Halg preciae1,y fears.
Things are oot going well in
Europe. The 111011 haunting symbol
of the past fortnight was peregrine
Worathome's sudden campaign for

Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
bombariled host Salem Center 22-t
in local pee wee league action recen.
Uy. Winolng pitcher for Syra~
was Chris Stewart. who walked eight
and struclt out six: Brian Weaver
posted the save, striking out three
and wallting three In two inolngs of
work. McGuire suffered the defeat
in three it~rl~Qu__gf work. He fanned
. seven and walked 20. Oiler relieved
in lhe fourth, fanni11g four and.
issuing 11 walks.
After a 1-1 first inning tie, 1
Syracuse buckled down and coasted ·&gt;
home with the win. David Custer
made a fine catch Iii right field on a
low line drive and turned it into an
importantdoubleplay.
For Syracuse Chris Stout had a
triple, Shane Simpson singled twice,
Da"id Custer singled, and Brian
Weaver singled. For Salem Center,
Gribrith doubled, while McGuire,
Stone, DellaValle and Oiler each
singled.
All Star games
'lbe New Haven All .Stars traveled
to Jackson for the annual all-star
tournament this past weekend and
came home an 8-3 winner over South
Webster In the first round.
Mike · Wolfe was the winning
hurler, pitching a three-hitter, while
fanning seven and maintaining near
perfect control. Wolfe also added a
double to help his own cause.
~ New Haven hitters were Donnie
Becker with a double and three
singles, J. T. Lloyd a double and
single, Doug · Johnson and Tim
Cassell with two singles each, and
Paul Briles with a three run homer.
Brad Smith had a double and Paul
Hesson a single.
In the second game, New Haven
.was edged by Jackson's AIIStars,
11·9. J . T. Lloyd and Paul Briles
went to the mound for New Haven.
New Haven hitters were Donnie
Becker with two singles, J. T. Uoyd
a three run home run, and Brad
Smith, Mike WoHe, Paul· Briles,
Doug Johnson, Tim Cassell, and
Dale Smith each had a single.
New Haven downed Eastern of
Pike County in a 23·20 slugfest
during third round action. New
Haven used five pitchers in the win.
'lbe five combined for nine hits and
20 walks. J. T. Uoyd grabbed the
win and Brad Smith got the save.
The hard·hitling New Haven
squad pounded out 16 hits ov,erall.
Donnie Becker had a two·run home
run, a double, and two singles. Other
hitters ewre Mike Wolfe with a
double and two singles, Tim Cassell
three singles, Paul Briles and Brad
. Smith two singles, Matt Fisher a
single, and Paul Hesson a single.
New Haven reswnes play in the
tournament this weekend.

'

"Well, IIi Florida we raise a Jot of
sugar and we're interested In f~nn ,
supports lor our crop. 'nle world ·
price of sugar Is ridiculous, and
unless the f~ g011enuuent stepa
in and keeps the price above lt and a '
half cents a pound, I'm going to have
a Jot of unhappy fanners In my
district."
.

'

I

~

two

with
hun)e runs and Tinit Hen· ·
drldm · added another .home run.
Hendrickl, Meier, Penny · Clark,
Shapnon Sjewait, and Cooper each
added·~ .. ' '
'

'l'l!li '~ ~

lhl:ee 'out

.........,

....-~+....,.;:;..~
.'

POLISH SAUSAGE •••••••••••••'!;. 99~
CHUN·K BOLOGNA••••••..•••• ~~·.•99~
RC COLA
DIET RITE, RC100
REG.
8 PACK
1.39

1

'129

The Duily Sentinel
CUSPS I - I
"Dlvillellef MIWmedla, IDe.

Published every afternoon, Mooday l~h
Frklay, lll Court Stn!et, by the Ohio VaUey

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Membero The Alllociated l'mol. lnlond Daily Preu A&amp;!llJCitltiun 11nd thr Arnerlc.n
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1

sign professionally and set up my

Daily .... .......... . ........... 15 Ceni.B

mom,'' Munoz said.
"In my junior (high school) year,
Cincinnati (Reds) scouted me out
there. 'lbey were looking at me as a
pitcher," he said.
But Munoz developed shoulder
problems although he later pitched
20 innings hl.s sophOtnore year in
college for the USC team that went
on to win the College World Series.
He stuck with football hl.s last two
years in
because several
knee
away from

SubHcribers oot deJ~~irlng to p.y ttw carrier'
rNY remit In advance ~ to The Daily
Sent~ l on a 3, 6 ur 12 OlClf'IUl bwlis. Credit

will be glvcn carri.,:r each month.
Nv llllb8criptions by mall ~nnilted in towns
where llornt carrier ~~ervke iM available.

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ROYAL CREST DAIRY

Gipp did menUon lll1glll' aubaldlea. I
think his exact JUt words wen,
'Ronnie, I got - more fa'{OI' to ask
of~.. Wbatev~ You do, ~·t ever
1~, importelj Sligar drive , down the
dllneltlc price, so our own f~
can't aell ihelrri at a proll~' "
"He lllid tltat?" .
•· .
"'lbt! G.liw~ sugar, Tom, as ! .·
much as he loved life ~-" .
:;
, "'11iat's a woracle.iul story, · Mr. f
Preak!ent. I'm glad you caUecl me up ,. ·
~ told It to
i'm ... to go oUt ;, ·
lbere tomorrow'and win - for lllllij · '
~lllellllflrtJ!eG~.''

MARK V

cftaJlned

of foii!i wins in the fofid·
dleport tournament. 'In - Wt the
Midget!~' claimec! a lf!U win over
Polrleroy Jllil's Gulf. Tammy Me·
Farland got the win with six
strikeouts and no•WIIks, While Mlaay
Woods suffered the , Jllu. Nikki
Whitlatch !llld SQsle c.!taell doubJed
for the winners. Mlsay Wooda tripled
for Pomeroy and Dee Henderson
iloubled.
A 26 hit attack propelled the Mid·
dleport Midgets by crosa-dty op·
ponent Middleport Dusters 20-6.
Tammy McFarland got the win with
relief frcm · Nlkld Whitlatch. Elise
Meier ·suffered the Joas, wlille Tina
Hendricks relieved. Kenda Carsey,
Nikki Whitlatch, anCI Tammy Me·
Farland each hll hme runs for the
winners. McFarland also added
three doubles and Jody Taylor ad·
dedadouble.
In another tounlament game the
Midgets rolled to a 15-6 win over
Pomeroy Jim's Gulf. McFarland got
the win and Tammy Wright suffered
the defeat. For' the winners Kenda
Carsey had a triple. For Pomeroy
HeatherWoodshadahmerun, while
Shelly Stobart and Tammy Wright
doubll!d.
After a 1-1 first inning tie, the Mid·
dleport Dusters narrowly defeated
the Midgets 8·7. 'lbe Midgets outhit
the Dusters 15·13, but it was the
Dusters that dusted off the victory.
Elise· Meier got the win with two
strikeouts and three walks; Me·
Farland suffered the loss. Tammy
McFarland hit a hpme run for the
Midgets.
In the senior softball league,
Pomeroy handed Middleport a 6-3
loss. K. Rought was the winning pit·
cher and J. Meadows the loser. An·
drea Riggs had two singles for the
winners, Beth Gloekner tripled, Jen·
ny Bentley doubled and singled and
T. Pratt singled. For Middleport
April King had a home run, Pam
Crooks had a triple and single, and
Paula Swisher a single. Pom~roy
had six hits and Middleport had four.

"Conie to think of It, Tom, the

-

on these

1

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·GENERIC

. GENERIC

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·,

.TRASH·CAN LINERS
·
a.
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10 PK.
·-AESCAFE
COFFEE

TEA BAGS
1110 cr.

99~

US GRADE A SMALL

' • :I

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.·· ...

The'"'Daily Sentinel ·

Cleveland reaay.'{or.conteSt
despite major ·league strike
ClEVELAND (AP) - 'lbouaands

of souvenir T-ehlrta and mugs have
been stockpiled, hundreds of media
credentials are being readied, and
50,000 programs have been printed,
·all for an All ..Star Game alrnoet cer·
lain to be postponed, and pDIIIIibly
canceled.
"I don't see any way IIIey can play
It on July 14 any more," 118id
Cleve~ Indians' spokesman Bob
DiBiasio, echoing tile feeling of most
officials in the game's 198!11C1St city.
In New York, Chuck Adams, a
spok1!81118n for Baseball Com·
missioner Bowie Kuhn, Mid: "The
game hasn't been called. We're con· ·
tinuing to re-evaluate it day by day.
But obviously, a decision has to be
made soon. We're rapidly running
out of time."
A decision on postponing the game

would have to~ made by baaebail's
executive.. committee, beaded. by
Kuhn and COIIIIJI'IIir!&lt; team ownen
from Delroit, ··MUwaukee, Cln·
clnnati, ~City, SanFranclaco,
Los Anceles, Bblton and Pittsburgh.
Cancellation of the game would
cost the baseball players' pension
fund about ~ mllllon, according to
Indians Pn!sldent Gabe Paul.

But preparations for the game's
.scheduled date continued at a rapid
pace Monday nonetheless, in the
event the ballebail strike that began
June 12 is sudddl:nly, and unex·
pectedly, settled.·
.Officials have not yet set up a con·
tingency plan, though, on how to
deal with tile 71,000 ticket-holders If
the sold-out contest is postponed.
July 30 is the second rainout date

Page-~

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for the eontest. The primary rain
(

Tuesday, July 7,19':1

••

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date,ls.{lj)y 15.

'' '

A month without 1Ju:eba11 has beer!

good tel Munlclpal~um's natural
grass, and tile stadlwn will be ready
to llCISt the gll!le.no mau.er when It is
played, •Friedlander Mid.
Although many of tile usual con·
cessions lllliespeople, mostly
college-age, have found other sum·
mer jobs, Friedlander said thete
would be no, .)lrQblem in finding
enough people to work the game on
short notice.
The Stadlwn bas enough hot dogs,
about 5,000 pounds, In stock to ban·
die the crowd, and other supplies
can be brought in whenever needed,
he said. A problem will arise,
however, If the 1981 game 18 corn·
pletely canceled.

Lou

tbe .

d the game W!l!lld i:.qst
Cleveland economy tt rillllllip to $II
rilllllon, according to Ff'l!nk ~
vlce'jnSident ol t1!e ~-~
Visitors Bureau. More~ be
~d, would be tile losa of pos!!lve a·
p1osure tile game could bring !l!e oft· ·
maligned city.
I
Ironically, as the 1981 game's
future dimmed, baseball on Monday
celebrated the anniversary ,of the
first AII.Star game, plaied In
· Ollcago's Comiskey Park.

About 3 million fan votes have
been collected toward cboo6i1lg this
year's team, and accordillg to
DIBiasio "There's ·considered
opinion among baseball executives
that that's enough. The thing they
obviously don't want to do is cancel
the game."

Former Red Simpson no ·longer biuer
GOLF TALK - Former President Gerald Ford chats with
professional golfer David Graham (center) and comedian Bob Hepe prior
to Monday's play In the Jerry Ford lnvitaUonal Geif Tournament ID Vail,
Colo. I AP Laserpboto).

Sports Desk
Let's play ball
By DALE ROTHGEB, Jr.
If you are any type of baseball fan
at ail, I am sure you have just about
had enough of this niaver·-ow•ner
diamond strike.
It's about time
Bowie Kuhn ,
baseball's so-call·
ed commissioner,
took control of

this sad situation
for the bettennent
of

America 1 s

favorite pasttime.
Where has the diamond
figurehead been hiding? It seems
since the start of the strike June 12,
Kuhn has done nothing, but
celebrate his birthday.
While each passing day brings
hope of a settlement, baseball's
brass continues to negotiate without
any progress. Player compensation
·still is the major hangup, the same
. problem encountered for the past
: two years.
• While the owners are content on
·finding some way of being com ·
pensated for a loss of a ·superstar,
the players say if they accept
:management's proposals, it would
:be a major step backwards in
-negotiations already decided by a
: judge's ruling in 1976. The players
·are also thoroughly convinced the
owners are out to break their union.
: With two pros such as Marvin
· Miller, players' union represen·
: tative and Ray Grebey, the owners'
;chief negotiator, one wonders if the
· issue has become a winner take all
: ego trip for both of them instead of a
·meaningful settlement for the good
of all .
Although the strike is indirectly
related to the greedy owners
shelling out loads of money to
players who played out their options
with their previous teams, I am still
behind the owners. Maybe, the
players should have a right to move
to other teams, but, despite all their
cries, they are not playing for slave
: wages. Just a few owners, George
Steinbrenner, Gene Autry, Ted Tur·
' ner. and Ray Kroc, all of whom have
made their millions outside the foul
lines, have continually gone crazy in
their lusts to sign proven big league
talent to long tenn, guarantee, no
cut, ho trade, do nothing but brag
contracts.
In doing so, those owners along
with Ruly C.,arpenter of the Phillies,
have made it almost impossible for
the other franchises to remain com-

petitive, particularly when their
players are on the last year or two of
their contracts.
Even though the Cincinnati Reds
have been seriously criticized for
failing to participate in the free
agency draft, the only time Cin·
cinnati really lost out big was its
failure lo sign southpaw Tonuny
John, who after being wined and
dined almost daily by the ship·
builder Steinbrenner, chose to sign
with the Yankees because the Reds
would not offer a guaranteed con·
tract.
If you recall, another southpaw
pitcher by the name of Don Gullett,
also left the Cincinnati fold because
of his failure to get the same type of
deal.
Without a doubt, Cincinnati's
managment was right in that case.
Since free agency came in existen·
ce, the Reds have lost Gullett, Rawly
Eastwick. Pete Rose, Mike Lum,
Joe Morgan, and Fred Norman
while signing just one player, Larry
Biittner.
Only Rose has continued to per·
fonn like the quality player he was
while playing with the Reds. That,
however, was more of a divorce than
anything else.
Whatever the outcome of the
current negotiations, it will be of ut·
most importance to the Reds since
three regular players, ouUielders
Ken Griffey and Dave Collins, and
shortstop Dave Concepcion, can
become free agents this November
along with utility outfielder Mike
Vail.

CINCINNATI (AP) - He once
threw fastballs past the National
League's best hitters but now for·
mer Reds' pitcher Wayne Simpson
can't lift a coffee cup with his in·
jured ann.
Simpson, in a recent telephone in·
terview from his California horne,
said he has trouble writing and often
feels no pulse in )lis wrist.
Doctors believe that Inflamed
muscles crushed the main artery in
his shoulder. He Has had four bypass
surgeries to restore circulation, but
none have been successful.
In 1970, Simpson jumped off to a
major league start that small boys
dream about. He pitched a two·
hitter and gave up no walks as be
shut out the Los Angeles Dodgers on
Apri19, 1970.
He won 13 of his first 14 decisions,
including a one-hitter against the

Giants, and be made the All-star the year.
team. But something broke in Slm·
"The Reds told me that If I didn't
pson's arm when he threw a fastball pitch, I wouldn't be eligible for the
to the Cubs' Billy Williams on July playoffs. We were off to a great start
that year, and I wanted to pitch in
31, 1970.
"My whole shoulder seemed to the World Series so badly. I don't
give way. I finished the inning but by think (team doctor) Dr. I George)
the time the next one started, I · Ballou knew that the injury was as
couldn't raise my arm. All the club serious as it was. I couldn't raise my
told me was that I had to work out arm, but I continued to pitch under
the pain, that the problem was fear of a demotion to Indianapolis.''
psychological. But one night I went
Reds Manager Sparky Anderson
out and pitched against San Diego, said at the time, "TIIere is nothing
and when I carne into the clubhouse physicaUy wrong with him. H
my arm was black and blue. That's anyone tells me his ann is bad, I'm
when I decided it wasn't going to send them to a
psychological," he said.
psychiatrist."
The Reds sent Simpson to Dr.
The Reds finally traded Simpson
Robert Kerlan in Los Angeles. He to Kansas City after the 1972 season.
diagnosed the problem as an He later pitched for tile Royals, the
irritation or tear of the right Pirates, the Phillies and the Angels.
shoulder's rotator muscles. Kerlan He complained of a "cold" or
told Simpson not to pitch the rest of "tired" ann.

Finally, In 1971, ·wbiJe Simpson
was wanning up for a game for' the
Mexico City Tigers of 'the Mexl~
League, his band suddenly stiffened!
and turned lifelessly white. In the1
hospital he was told that
damaged and swollen muscles in .
ann had pinched the artery lind cu
off hls circulation. He said he wa
stunned when he was told be ha
high blood pressure and blood clots
up and down the ann.
"I haven't been to a game since I
qui(" ·he said. "Maybe I really am
bitter and don't know it.
"I know this though: Knowing
what I do about how much of a win·
at-all-costs business baseball 18, I'm
not quite sure I'd want my son to be
a major league basebaU player. And
I think that's the opinion of a lot
other fonner athletes."

. ..
~

· :"rf(t;Jnur~l picnic .honors

:' Re'v~ Richard Thomas

Baseball's union leader offers testimony
Marvin
Miller, executive director of the
Major League Players Association,
testified Monday that requiring
professional compensation for the
loss of top·ranking free agents would
drastically effect a player's
bargaining power.
Miller spent more than two hours
testifying before an ·administrative
law judge in a National Labor
.Relations Board proceeding.
The NLRB hearing, postponed
three times since its original date of
June 15, was called to examine
charges of unfair bargaining by
NEW YORK ( AP) -

management in dealings with the
union.
The union bas asked that the 26
club owners be required to open
their books following various
statements of financial difficulties
attributed to some team owners as
well as Commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
Melvin Welles, senior ad ·
ministrative law judge, presided at
Monday's hearing.
The morning session was occupied
by opening statements for the two
sides with attorney George Cohen
rt!presenting the players and Louis
Hoynes, the National League at·

torney, speaking for management.
Miller took the stand after a lunch
break and, Wider eurninaUon by
NLRB , .attorney Mary Schuette,
traced Uie history of the union's
relations with management which
bas Jed up to the ~:urrent strike, now
25daysold.
At the heart of Miller's testomony
was the argwnent that professional
player compensation - the sole
issue in the current strike - "would
damage greatiy the ' bargaining
power of each and every player for
whom it would be required."
"When a club baS to give up one-d

Special olympic team has ·
successful Columbus trip/ ·

participant medal; Sheldon Wolfe 50 meter dash, silver medal, long
after a successful trip to the 1981 jump, participant medal; Brent
Ohio Special Olympics held at Ohio Larkins - \ 50 meter dash, gold
medal, softball throw, sliver medal;
State University in Columbus.
Six athletes were chosen to Mary Jane Curry - long jwnp,
represent Meigs Community Clasaes sliver medal, softball throw, par·
and adult workshop. Each athlete ticlpant medal.
David Karr - 50 meter dash,
won honors In their various track
and field events. Representing · bronze medal, lmg jwnp, par·
Meigs County at the State Olympic ticlpant medal.
All athlelell have just j)articlpated
Games
were:
According to observers, the issues
in
the 13th Annual Oltio Special
Maurice Smith - 50 meterdash,
of games lost because of the strike
and days allocated to the players' participant medal, long jwnp, silver Olyqllcs Prosram. an athletic and
years of service will also be big medal; Debbie Atherton - 50 meter recreational program for perB0118
decisions which must be reached dash, bronze medal, 200 meter run, with Mental Retardation.
before the strike is settied.
It has been reported in various
media that time lost will count
against the players who are eligible
this season to become free agents.
Personally, I hope Cincinnati's
Dick Wagner signs Concepcion and
Collins but as far as Griffey is concerned, I will not be disappointed. It
seems he feels his talent is so great
the Reds just don't appreciate it.
One report says he and the Reds
are close on money but not on the
terms of a guaranteed contract.
Well, It's time to play ball again.
Who wants to watch reruns for the
rest of the sununer?.
Meigs County's Special Olympics

team has just returned to Pomeroy

McEnroe ..retunts
for Davis Cup

The . Rev. Richard Thomas,
· ,,. "feasSlgned . for his' sixth year as
pastqr of the Tuppers Plains U.nited

ill!

a&amp;'leta In order to sign a
agent,. clearly that has to be
negative impact on that p~yer,"
Miller said.

.,

.- M~ Ch!"'lh and .thtee other

After Schuette completed her
examination for the NLRB, attorney !
David Silberman, representing the •
players association, continued the i
questioning.
Silbennan frequentiy cla:shecl with ,
Hoynes, who often objected to the
questioning and interTUpted the
playen' attorney.
" I do oct undei)'Stand your !.
question." Hoynes told Stlberman. :· '
"If you ask your que,1tion clearly,
I'll give you the same courtesy when '

it's my tum."

Silberman went over several .
cases of free agents aDd the course '
of the draft with rillller, atteinptlng ;
, to show that · under the current j
More than 2,800 participants were
system of an open draft, teams react .'
involved In the weekend program to the selections of other teams.
held at Ohio State University in
Columbus. Opening ceremonies
Cited was tile case of pitcher Andy l
started off the event on F,riday
evening, June 28, u the "Parade of Hasaler, selected by the Toronto J
Athletes" marched m to tile Blue Jays In the 21st round after that '
Stadium Field.
club had passed several times;
The tradltilllllil lighting of the Miller made tile point that Toronto .
Olymptc torch officially opened the picked ·Huller only wtw:n it became
G8J11!t8, and was follqwecl by • Dan, nee 1 ry, after .1!le pitcher bad
ce and Fair provided by thouaandl 'been 'selected by, two other clubs, '
of volun~rs. Satui'dly and Sunday limiting his barg81nin8 to t.IIOiie
wet~ fWecl with competiilon tn 10 ol· teama llfloelng him. Playefl! ~
flclal aportiJ and li wide variety of t.y Jess ·tJiin~JWII clul!!! .are tree to
.
educational &amp;lid '•recreaUonal
events. barpln with illl2G teams.'
;

j

1

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It was reported the recent yard
sale by the adult class had raised
$311.50 for the floor covering for the
.~.~~ ,, ~\lll.,l, , Q9!!!1~ . .-Bill

churclles of the charge, was honored .still needed, .it was reported, and are
Monday evening duripg the annual to be forwarded to any member of
·church picnic of St. Paul's Church · th~ Adult Bible, Class. The next
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. regularly scheduled meeting will be
Ju)y28.
Carl Barnhill.
Daily vacation Bible school was
Following a welcome by Mrs. Bar.nhlll, grace was offered by Rev. set for July 6-10 from 9:30 to 11:45
·Thomas. Mrs. Evelyn Spencer on a.m. with . classes for children
behalf ofthe congregation ~ted -through adult. The theme will be
. a gl(\'to.Rev. and ~s. ThOrnas'and '!Je$us; Your Word Lives jn Me."
,two cakes were also present.,t to.the Mrs. Anna Rice is the VBS director.
'_; _ .. '
'
At~ing were the Rev. and Mrs .
IJUIIISler ~ ·
~-~ .' .
Arthur
Duhl, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
· . Mri". f!etty'Cbevaller led the group
Chester
Gorrell and daugher, Linda,
'in 'the· singjllg or hymns with Rev.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Guy Spencer, Mr. and
ThOri1as at \he organ. The ~v. ,('1'Mrs
..
John
Rice and sons, Mark,
\hur pqtO 0,. Athens read scripture
John
and
David,
Mr. and Mrs.
lfOIIJ . ¥!Jrk '' 8, ·verses ' 1·14; · and
James
Stout,
daughters,
Connie and
readings PreJ!enled·lnclnded "What
Terri,
Mrs.
Sarah
Lunsford,
Mrs.
GG&lt;J ; Hath · ~" by Floyd
Mae
Vineyard,
Mrs.
Edna
Harmon,
S(O)It; •· "~..Extra PJ;ayer" by Mrs.
Mm. Edith Harper, Mrs . . Betty
· sPei~Cerl aiJil ··b 11lO\I in All'' Thy Chevalier,
Mr. and Mrs. John
M\ght":b)'·Vereia S!Qut. ·
.
Damewood;
Angela
and Kevin, Mrs.
.' •, · Mrs . . Li~ Dalpewood l!ld the ·
" .- groUP,' in 8eyeral Bible _quizzes on Dori:! Koenig, Mrs. Mildred Brooks,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd South, the Rev.
. -fathers,' m)ISic l_n the Bible, and and Mrs. Thomas, and the hosts.
·, · ~.

. ,,

.

.·.rr:..

··.· (~

~

t

·'

:.· .... ,

-~ -

••

· Clarification
Social
Galendar
. ...
v·~~

DaVid Parsons, Long Bottom, wllo

was fined on, three charges In the
court ·or Miildleport by Mayor Fred

Hoftman·last week is not the James
David Parsons, ~. of Route 2, Long
Bottom, a resident of the BaBban
area.

CLOWNS - Clowas added spark 10 the annual July 4th parade .In
Rutland and were especially effective thlto year. Under this makeup is
Marilyn WUcox, an employe of the Rutland Branch of Bank One ol
r•omeroy, one of several clowas representing the bank.

Announce engagement
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Colwell, Vin ·
ton, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage flf their
daughter, Mary Catherine, to Robin
Leroy Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold R. Johnson, 159 Warner Ave.,
Logan.
The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate
of Meigs High School and a 1981
graduate of Hocking Technical
College. She is employed by Nationwide, Columbus. Her fiance, a !978
graduate of Logan High School and
1980 graduate of Hocking Technical
College, is employed by Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
An open church wedding will be
held at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, July
18, in the Rutland United Methodist
Church, Rutland. A reception will
follow in the church social room.

Mary Colwell,

Robin Johnson
To meet Wednesday
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will
hold a special meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesda:y. Work will be in the en·
tered apprentice _degree. All Master
Masons are Invited.

Confined

Scioto Downs results

"

· HMCt

Arvll Holter is confined to lli~
Holzer Medical Center. His room
nwnber is 428.

Racing results
River Downs results

to

'

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�AD
'

P~cqverthe

/

.

PHO~E

.992-2156

' followj,ng telephone exchanges ...
Glllia Co, Arta Codt
MillS Ca. ArM Code
.
614
614
..-Gallipolis
992-Middl-rt
·•
367- C!helhlre
Pomeroy
:IN-VInton
ns,-cllester
24J-Rio Grinde
3&lt;1)-Parlland
379-Vfllnut Dlst.
247- Latart Foils
256-'Guyln Dlst.
~·.Ht-Riclne
MJ-Arlllia Dlst.
742-RUtlllnd
Mason Co. W. VI.
Area Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
4-L576-Af'ple Grove
77J-Milson
812-New Haven
895-Lotart
937-Buflala

or Write Dally Sentlnei Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769·

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
e ANtiOUNCEMENTS

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41- Moltl.. Homn
RENTALS

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t-Ift MIMit1l 1ft
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41-SHct ftr Rtnl
41- WintM to llmt
41-!qvlpmfltt fer Rent

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t-W.Ittlllt.luw

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51 - HoVHhOtcl OOCNII

eEMPLOY·MENT
SERVICES

RECOUNTS DEATHS - Kenneth Bianchi, roofessed killer In five of lbe notorious Hillside Strangler
murders, describes events surrounding the killings
that look place In late 1977 and 1978 during a pretrial

Now Taking Enrollment
tor summer Classes.
)II Pome111y &amp; Racine
AgeS3 and u,.

heartog Moaday Ill Los Angeles Superior Court. BJm.
rhl's testimony raised speculatloa dull cbargesapillll
accused Angelo Buono, ebarged wtlb 10 cowtla olllllll'"
der, may be dropped. lAP Laserphoto).

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Small

Bia nc hi

was calm and

s poke

almost as U in a trance. Buono,
facing trial in September and
clalffilng he 1s mnocenl, stared
grimly a t his cousin across the cour·
troom.
Bianchi 's sudde n change of mind
was a n unexpected blow to Buono's
defense . It had been believed
eariher tha t the prosecutor might
drop cha r ges against Buono beca use
B1a nchi was recanting his con·
fession.
Bia nc1 said his earlie r d e nials
were a result of " depression and
other problems I was having, " and
pronused not to change his s tory
agam.
B1a nchi had confessed to the mur·
dcrs of five young women whose
bod1es we re found on hillsides in 1977
and 1978 in a deal with prosecution in
which he agreed to give testunony
aga1nst Buono in e xchange for
a voiding the dea th penalty. Buono is
charged with 10 counts of murder.
In recantmg, B1a nchi said he did
not now know if he had a multiple
per sona lity or whether he invented
an alte r ego named Steve Walke r af·
ter seeing such movies as " Sy bil"
and " The Three F a ces of Eve," both

12-IMUriMe~

1+-lus.....a:rra lnl,..
1$-Sc...IS lnstnlctlofl
16-RIIti.:JV,
&amp;CIReprlir
11-WantMI To Do

10M. HOSKINS
I h \lJI,I '/I&amp;U

Pomeroy, OH.
992· 2174

eFINANCIAL

11-Tructcs I Dr hie

z1-ayiNIII
OpjMi ''"'"Y
22--Mit'lty to LOin

Q-L.I¥"tock
M-H1r I Or11n
CJ-SHIII Fertilizer

In Mas an County

IWUM"

'eDIIJMIHII

IDrrtn
IRinpl

• Oilttw.,IMrs
•HetWIItrTIM&amp;

&amp;Accnsoriu

eSERVICES
11- Homt1mprovemenll
12-Pium!Jint I l!auntlnt
ll-IEXCIVIfing
14-Etectrlcal
&amp;Relrlprlllon
IJ-Gitler•t Hlull•t
M-M.M. RIIN !r
ll-Upf'lolster y

· Meftd•Y·t :3tonSatvnlh
Tu..Uv tttru Frklly 2: XI P .M
riM Uy Detert puDfltltlon
sunnv 2:JD P.M. Frk11y

54

Rates and Other Information

eBacklloe
• Excov.ting
• Sttttlc Systems
eWoter, Sewer&amp;
GaSL!ntS
eDumpTruck

' Eight Easements, Syracuse·
Racine Reg. Sewer District,
Pomeroy.
·
John E. Anderson, Luda Anderson
to Anthony Eblin, Patricia A. Eblin,
Parcel, &amp;;ipio.
Stella M. Ebersbach, dec. to
Elizabeth F . Duffy, Faye Wilder·
muth, Cert of trans., Pomeroy.
Anthony Bradford to Keith G.
Bradford, Debbie Bradford, Lots 45
and47, Lebanon.
Mildred Fisher McDaniel, M ·
fidavit, Pomeroy.

UpitDls wOnk. , .OM41y lnMt'tlon .. . , . . , , , . , ....... , , , , , , , . SUCI
Up to 1Swordl•• . tltrHdiiY ln..rtlon , , , , , . .. , , , • , , , . , .. ..... SUCI
Upton wordl.. ·••• d•v•ln•rtiM . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .
$7.00
(AVtrl .. 4 W.nil per lint•
MMIII Htffte ..let and Y,, d lain lrlltttpted GftiV wilft c:llfl wltlt
ontar. JS c"t cMr. . tor 1411 urrrll•t lea Nv"'IMr In Care of TM

5Mt!M1.

TM PvllltiiMr nnrv11"" r ittn to ec111" re)Kt 1ny 1411 dH~~t~ed
objectfeUI . TtM Publltlter will fttt IN responsible tw more tMn one

Maple Trees
Magnolil Trees

lltCOfftl(t , ..........

54

Misc.

.Many OlheiS

t~!~· iloilcled
'

PH. 99Z-720i

J

COMPLETE
CLOSEOUT.

is currently seekmg

qualified

BUY NOWI

REGISTERED NURSES

large

'

or992·7505

returns, Sentinel Want Ads

4· 17-tfc

sewer tine connections,
and any In house

changes that IY!ve to be
made. Bact~

hoe ' and

dour service availab)e.
H2· 2036
5·20·1 mo.

Q..,_

for

BtSSEI,l
"Beautiful, Custom.
Built Garages"
Call lor free siding
estlmltes, f4.,..2801 or
U9·2NO.

ND SUnclay Calls
3·11-tlc

'

.

woodbuhlers Installed.
'

EXCELLENT SALARY AND ·BENWTS

Check This Out!
Printed Pattern

P•nt Valley Hospital
Valley Drive
Pl Pleasant, W. Va. 25550

'

An equal opportimity employer
·'

'S

It

IM! DON'T
YOU DOLT!&gt;
RE''-06NI"Z.E
I'IUTHENT IC

1

Phonw.------------------

RU~TIC:.

A~H IT6GTURE

F .um 1 fiUepmcnt c C'·•l4'!'r

f

Mayor and Council
Middleport, OH , Ef ·
lee live date 06/30/ 81
This final action not
preceded by proposed ac·
lion and is appealable to
EBR . Replacement of 2 In·

ch water llne with a 8 inch

17.

~ ~~~~~emenl

18
·
l9

) For Rent •

water line along Powell
Street from the In ·
tersectlon of . Page StreetI
Locust Street and Pawel
Stret West to an existing 2
inch water line.

22

3.
4.
5.

6, _ _ __

I 7. - - - - 8.
9.

10..:
· . - - - -- -

28.
29 .
:rl.

31. _ _ _ _ __

Jil· - -

:,
t!
~

: ;

I,

;· \•~ • 't'· •fl!ome.
. 'IJ ~ovOX. Ohio
72 . ~5769
'

-~

.
;..:.
m~ ·

; ~1 ·,.;• Tlle
. ·OBailv Sentinel
9

_

'

,". '
L...

t'j~~:~$~.~

I[

}' '

. 1~,1' 30; 11p. 14:

• •, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , , ....

::~~/i;/ •. , '

Hotpoint

reg .
cl!l pa city
.w•&lt;hertdryer U99; F. n· ,
tr.lnce.pJ.ltlorm WISt~~
11'11'1!tg"Ja s s
·Wi Ill
.:.lt~IIWtum
Slit,\
t.· oat t': o."' ting
\'.ilter Heflter
during month ot
.

. :
992; 5682 .

- - 5·
yr
old ranch . 21.,
ceramic bat hs. birch
kitchen , disosal. dish

washer,

3 bedrooms,

convection heat, utilit";"

N.EW LIST,ING - ~
acres plus a newly
remod,l~ ,farm •home,
The 311 a&lt;r,!lS ar.e all fel)·
ced . ·ljouse has 4
bO&lt;Iroc&gt;ms, living, di.~lng
room, • 'llltCIIetf.: I "!)ffh,
slorage 1110m, 12 ', pOt·
ches. Large barn, pole
sh,e lj. "pum,~&gt; hOuse ..
Secl~. private, a ~d
peacetvl. s...s.ooo.oo,

'.

living,
hall

rm .. 3 car garages. lVII
basement with famiiV'

' rm 2 patios and large
lands,cape,d
, l.ot
•. OVC[IOOkinQ
Rl . 7.
A~kmg &gt;7~.000 ..
l'l~N YOUfi fU1'URf.
- 30 aci'es. sullable for
subdivision . T . P, . water

by land , and- alee nice
laying well,drai"'!d . Ex
cellent for ar builder.
planner on .1tratler

par~

Les tnan s2.ooo:oo per
lot .
~
I
•
I. NOPMOUS ·- - ·Vrm .

~ric~ , home.

6,____,L,oa,_t'-!a~nd=F~ou!!nd~
· '---

'~--~
w~~~n~ted~t•~B~uyL-__

LOST mans gold bracelet
ln. Gallipolis area. Will pay
gold value for return. Call

SCASHI
FOR YOUR FURNI TURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
A2 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL·

446-3388,

Los! near Save Mart
Slollon In Middleport, older
gr'ey liter female cat.
Wearing
flea
collar .
Named General. family
pet . H2-5286.
Cocker spaniel, red and
,white. no, collar. lost
probably In Point Pleasant
to Hickory Chapel, Call 675
2267.
Cat. Child' s pet, gray with
black tiger stripe, female,
black collar, declawed. 30~·
675·3348 answers to name of
KItty Who, Reward.

4&gt;16· ~775

OPEN9TOS
CASH tor your dlam'onds,
gold and sliver, class rings,
Wedding bonds, silver and
gold coins . Tawney
Jewelers, .t2:2 second Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio.

BY OWNER ' A Bdr. ·split·
level, living room/dining
room comblnatlon , eat·l n
kitchen, lg. flmlly rm., 211'2
baths, located In Tara
Estates, Club House and
pool pr ivileges, $75,000
17
Mlsce111neous
firm. Kyger Creek SchOOl
Want to establish Gospel District. Shown by oppf .
Groups. Lettie Davis, only . 367·7835.
Phone 30-4-675·5166.
New 3 bdr. house with
garage and lull basement
11
W1nted Ia Da
$.15,000. Call4&gt;16·0390.
D.J .' s LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Neigh · 4 or s bdr. home in nice
borhood Rd ., all makes ser· neighborhood, as•uma ble
vlced. Specializing In Lawn mortgage 8%. 3.000 sq. II ..
Boy . Blades sharpeoed . central a i r , full si ze
Call 4&gt;16·.U2S alter 5 p.m . basement, double garage,
Pick up and delivery gas heat, Located 1 mile
available.
out of lawn on 160, $41,500.
Call 4-41&gt;·049&lt; •
Will take care of patients in
their home llve· ln or 8 hr. Large 2 story stone home,
shift. Caii36Hl39A.
well lnsulloted. with 31arge
bedrooms, one full bath, 2
Will do babysitting In my 112 baths. formal dining
home In Syracuse . Good room, newly remodeled kll·
references, very reliable . chen buill in Including dish·
washer, basement with
Phone 992·3110 or 949·2791 .
work shop, 2 car garage

RON'S TV SERVICE ~.
Specializing In Zenith .
House Calls. Now servicing
- o l o ~uazar . Call 1·
304-576·23911 or 446-2.&amp;54.

WANT TO BUY Old fur· Will do cvstom sawing.
nllure and Anliqves of all North of Racine on Carmel
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, Rd. James R. Parsons.
256·1967 in the evenings.
HAUL gravel. limestone.

central air

and heat. rfew Shingle

roof, 1'' ' " baths, ~a rage
sto~~ge

.

ATTENTIO'N LADIESIII
Help pay off lhose un·
wanted bills working
evenings from 7: 30 to 10:30
· p.m. as a tasnlon stylist.
Earn $8.00 lo $10.0!1 per
hour profit. laeal for
homemaker with family .
Call992·39411rom 9·6.

7

4 Family Yard Sale July
8,9,&amp;10. Riverside Dr .•
Cheshire .
Antiques,
clothing, toys, gas stove.
bedroom suite, bike, lots of
misc . Follow signs.
~ Family Yard Sale July
7,8,&amp;9th, 8 :00 to 1 1 112 mi.
from Cheshire on SR 554.
Detour op
~ Family Yard Sale July
7,8,&amp;9th, 8 :00 to 1 I 112 mi .
from Cheshire on SR 554.
Detour on Roush Road .
New storm doOr, dishes,
some antiques. clothing all

types

&amp;

sizes,

avons,

Phone 675·5215.

By owner. old house. Electricity, gas, water In town .
For sale or trade for a
place on the Ohio River .

Write Alberta Backus. 222
Beech St .• Pom~roy .
LAWN &amp; Garden power
equ1pment sales &amp; service.
Owner wishes

to retire

Inquire at Outdoor Equip·
men! Sales, Jet . Rts 7 &amp; 35,
Gallipolis, or phone 4&gt;16
BEDS· IRON , BRASS, old 3670 lor appointment.
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood Ice boxes, Own your own Jean Shop.
stone Iars. antiques. elc .• Offering all the nationally
Compl~le
households . know barnds such as Jor·
Write: M.D. Miller, Rt . 4, dache, Vanderbilt, Calvin
Klein, Sedgelield, Levi and
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992-7760.
over 70 other brands.
Includes begin·
CHIP WOOD. Poles max . $13,500.00
nino Inventory, training,
diameter 14"

on largest fixtures

and

Flea Market on Saturdays.

5 Family Rummage Sale CAII675-5868 .
rain or shine. Smiles below
Eureka, next Tues., Wed.,
and Thurs. Baby IIJrn,
dolls, clothes, and tonka
~
: :: ; ~·.: :..:.:
toys.

..

Yard Sale. Thurs. and
Friday, July 9 and 10. First
house on Lllfle Kyger Rd.
across from Kyger Creek
Plant,
Cheshire, Oh .
Dishes, display snell, small
organ, 2 old trunks,
chlldrens and womens
clothing, a lllfle bit of
everything.
HUGE
YARD SALE
Motorcycles, household
items, pool table, station·
wagon, clothing, turnllvre.
tools, &amp; etc . Gary Bane,
NeighbOrhood Rd., July 10
&amp; 11,9 tos.
Garage Sole 38 Vinton Ave.
July 9th &amp; lOth, Thurs. &amp;
Fri., 9AM 1111?
Yard sale, 810 Soulh
Second, Middleport. July 2·
11 . Bed, china cabinet,
Duncan
Phyle table.
chairs; clothing, bedding,
linens, dishes, sllverstone.
Avon, toys, knives, tools.
Garage Sale. 6&lt;1·8. Rt. 681
at Allred. Baby bed &amp; pen,
TV pool table, clothes.
books, records, quilts,
much more. '185·4189.

Grand

end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled Opening Promotions. Call
slab . S10.SO per ton . Mr . Wilkerson at 1·800·643·
Dellverd ta Ohio PalleT Co., 8760.
Rock Springs Rd . ,
Pomeroy. 992·2689 .
PACESETTER FASHION ·
S
oilers a highly profitable
HARPER · HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CO' , lllh and and beautiful Jean &amp; Spor·
tswear shop of your own.
VIand Street, now bVVing Call
anytime lor Mr. Har·
metals (copper, brass,
fly at (214) 937·9876.
aluminum, lead, stainless
steel, batteries and
radiators, ginseng, yellow Be a success in your spare

drapes,
bedspreads,
lewerly, chairs, clothes
press, and lots of other root, catnip and sassafras) . time . Couples
Items.
10 am to 6 pm daily . Also dividual. Good

2 Family Yard Sale At lhe
home of Doris Harder,
Ewlngton Ohio. Jvly 8·9·10.
9:oo-A :OO.

den , 2 porches . 548 Grant
St.. Middleport . $59,500.
wanting Qu ick sale to settle
estate . Call 61&lt;·384·3809 for
appointment. !Aller 1PM J

coal, etc. Dencll Dunlap.

Yord Sole

Yard Sale Mon. lhru
Friday 9:30 10 5:00, 102
Garfield, Gallipolis. Air
cond. babY clo"f hes,
dlshes,and jeans.

with work shop, large gar·

11

..

Help Wanted

'-'----'-= "-"= = '---

in -

bonus car and travel can be

yours .Call Wanda
304·675·6130.
22

Peck

Money to loan

FHA·VA·Convenllal Home
Loans, Columbus First
Mortgage Co., 4&lt;13 Second
Ave ., Gallipolis, Oh ., 4-16·
7172

WANTED · Lease men, to

leasae oil and gas proper· Z3
ties, GAIIIa and surroun-

ding counties. Inquire to
Great Bend Oil Inc . 269
Lower
River
Rd ,
Gallipolis. Call"-46-4285.

or

income,

Professional
Services

COMMERCIAL and in·
dustrial
photography .
Phone 44&lt;1·2909 or 4-16·7226
atter4p.m.

wanted Educational Sales INCOME TAX ANO AC·
Representative for GAIIia COUNTING SERVICE ·
County and surrounding Coli 446· 7068 tor ap·
area . Sales experience pointment anytime.
helpful salary pius com·
mlsson. Phone 4-16·4367 ask
Piano tuning and r~pair ,
tor Mr. Tyler.
Love your neighbOr tune
your

Piano.

Blll

Ward,

Auto Body repair man ex· Wards Keyboard. 44&lt;1·4372.
perienced only, contact Gallipolis.
Harold Davis. at Gallipolis
Motor Co.
(Chevorel
GALLIA Cleaning and
Garage I.
Princess

House

Rent·A·Maid Service Inc.,
Free Estimates, bonded,

Crystal insured, phone 245-9234.
part·tlme help avail ., party Cleaning by the week, men·

pion, earn SIOO to $200 lh or contr6c:tual.
wkly. One management lob
open Caii61H94·3308.
FOR all your photography
needs go to Tawney Studio,
$185 .00 to $500 weekly doing 424 2nd. Ave .• Gallipolis,
rna lling work. No ex· Ohio. Passports. family
perience required . AP· photos. weddings. and com·
PLY : Circle Sales, P .O. mercial photography .
Box 22A·O, Richmond Hill.
NY IW8.
Complete Auction Service

GET VALUABLE training
as a yqung business person

and earn good money plus
some great gills as a Sen·
llnel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at H2·
2156 or 992 ·2157.

PIANO LtsSOfiS. l ucy Jane Four family yard sate. July Opportunity Is yours lust
Bul'mer. Hartford, WV 882· 8·9 · 10. Riverside Dr ,, lor the asking. Ask your
Beeline stylist and she will
2395.
Cheshire. Antiques, gas be happy to help you loin
stove. bedroom suite, the Beeline world of
Turn your living robin Into bicycle, clothing, toys, fashion and success. Phone
a grNnhoule, pl!l$1ble to misc. items. Follow signs.
992 ·3'1~1 between the hours
1ncre110 ,u plant ,produc·
ol9·6.
lion 91 jler cenr; Free PATIO SALE. July 10.11.
report. Box 83, Gallipolis Beside church In Chester.
HOMEMAKERS! I Earn
Ferry, wv.
'
Stereo, bicycle. dresser, eMtra cash I work your awn
redlo-record player. 9·5.
hours. MERR I·MAC needs
· : Jackson c~nty Heir~ Club
several dealen In your
Inc. lsllavlllg a open horse YARD SALE. First .e ver. area . to offer our line of
ShOw Fr.l. JUlY 10, 1911 at Roger Spencer residence. toys, tilts and home decor
JackiOII' County f11rm. s .R. 33. some antiques, •Items on the party plan.
Show . ·• tarls 7 p. m.
appliances. Large High commissions. No In·
E-yone-lcqme.
ladltt clothing. 'Lots vestment, delivering, or
Items. Kitchen table, collecting. car and phone
Ch.l111rs. Jlllperbacks. July 7· Medici. Call toll'lree: HIOO·
553-9077. or write :MERRI·
"1
,,:..o;Y!Il;,ni·,
MAC, 801 Jackson St..
"
'.1jn~:~~· ;T
Dubuque. Iowa 52001 .
"'

stock reduction-close outs·
estates·larm equtpmenHI·
vestock·real estate . Llcen·
sed and bonded In Ohio,
and WestWV. Bud McGhte
Avction and Real Estate
Co. Call lor terms. 4-16·0552
or 4&gt;16·0818 . 428 Second
Ave .• Gallipolis, OH .• &lt;15631 .

Nice 3 or 4 bedroom home .
acre . Owner will help
with downpayment. Priced
reasonable at S28,000. or
$20,000. &amp; assume loan of
58.000. at only 8112 pet . in·

11..,

terest. 2 batns. fully car·

peted laundry room, l ~ roe
living room, kitchen with
like new Harvest Gold
rang e &amp; r efrigerator .
Natural gas furnace , wood·
burner .
E x tra
large
storag e or
business

building . Chain link fence .
Roy (Fr ankl Riffle at 985·
4395 or 949·2801.
Modified A·frame, three
bedrooms, two baths, car·
pet. Spiral stairs, circular
stone fireplace. 8 acres.

992-7741.
New 3 bedroom home, 2
baths, large living room·
dining room combination,
built in kitchen -laundry
room, 2 garages, fully car·
peled. forced air heating &amp;
air conditioning Corner

lot. 992·5062, 8a .m ·1 p.m
Shown

by

appointment

Middleport.
OR RENT · almost new 14 •
70, 3 bedroom , 1 '12 baths,
si"ing on nice lot, ready to
move into . Phone 304·S76·

2711 .
House for sale, New Haven,
One and half story home on
large lot, excellent condition. Five large rooms,

bath ,

basement

and

garage. Fully insulated,
ine'1Cpens1ve to heat or cool .
Situated within one block
from center Of town .

Priced $5,000. below ap·
praised value. See or call
Geo. Hester, 312 Seventh
St.

New

Haven,

W.Va .

Phone882·2144 .
Modern 2 bedroom house,

close in. 67S 4892 .
2 story frame house, .9
acre, large garage 40x30

Phone 304-895·3540.
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

PRICES REDUCED · used
mobile homes and travel
trailers .
TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES . CALL
446·7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT .
JS. PHONE -146·3868 or A46·
7274.

1971

Sc~ulll

Homestead

12x60, wash &amp; dryer, new
carpet, com. furn ., set on

lot 6 In Quail Creek in Rod·
ney, OH. $8,750.00 245·5420
or 388·8349 .

WELL drilling, both rotary
&amp; cable tools, vsvally wells
In 1 day. Call Ray Beagle
304·895·3841 .

Mobile home for sale 62
model Greatlake. Call 4&gt;16·
1036.

STARKS Tree Trimming &amp;

For Sale 12x60 1972 Oak·
brook trailer . Call4&gt;16·0952.

Shrub

service .

Insured

Phone 30A·576·2010.

1973 Crown Haven, 14x6s••
three bedroom , new car-

pet. 1971 cameron, 14x64.
two bedroom,

31
Hames tar S.le
5 ROOM house, u
Chillicothe Rd .• only $3,500 .
Call4&gt;16·«138 or 44&lt;1·1615.
NEW CABIN or small
home. completely fur ·
nished. $3900. Call4&gt;16·0390.

GRILL COOK wanted. All" House with acreage lor
ply In person. Craw's Steak sol ... 3 or~ bdrs., fully car·
House, Pomeroy.
. peted. 2 barns, 379·2258 or
379·23.43, after 6PM.

new carpet.

1972 Champion, 12x60. two
bedroom. new carpet . 1976
Cameron,
12x60, IIIIo
bedrooms. bath &amp; 1/ 2, new
carpet. 1970 PMC, 12x60.
two bedroom, new carpet, ·
B &amp; s Sales. Inc .• 2nd and

Viand Street, Pt. Pleasant,
wv Phone 675·.«24 .
USED Mobile Home. 576·
2711 .

1971 Carlon 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 M 10 ·
expando, 3 bedrboms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader U x 70. 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashou, 14
2

bedrooms.

8

11..,

s

Sales. 1nc . 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt. 'P leasant, wv.
Phone 675·4C4.

~ Mail Thjs ~oupon with Remittance

,.;,
, r,
.,._

J!.cccssortes.

a;m-.·5:30.P•,..tn·

Picking up eny·ploy organ
In your area. L.ow down
,.yment, .II)W &lt; monthly
payment. Credit manager
collect, 614-592·5122.

Public S1le
&amp; AUction
Neels Auction HogseH,
WVA . Rt. 2. Every Sat. 7:00
PM . 1Cons i gnments
taken), (will buy furniture)
Lonnie Neol367·7101 .

, Hollin lor Sale

x 60,

34. _ __

35. _ _ __

,.,,ob•le Home P.:.rts oillnd

i

29Je Annlaton Dr. end of
30th StreeT, 9·4, Wed·
nesday.
I

LONELY
Chrlatlan
Slnglu. Meet Christian
singles tnyour area·. Write
southern .Citrlstlan SlngiH Carport sale. July 6,7 &amp; B.
Club, PO Box 1823, Sum· Rain or shine. Twp. Rd. 79.
mervllle. sc 29.483 or call 1· Many Items. Free gifts .
10H71-9850, 2~ •,hours.
992·7781.

Nt W US rtNC.

Want t..,r'f S6.~.
·BIIAND NE

12.
13. . ...__ _ __

·--·-'----

welcome to attend .
m 7, lie

are

~;::=======~~~

Free.estimate

James tc:eesee' ·
Ph, 992·2772

NEW LISTING
Racine area farm ·- Ap·
prox. 80 acresland with
older home. House has~
bedi"IIOms, -approx. so
tilloble land -and
flm!&gt;er .

Phone
\:tl!41;992·3325

over . Nice
KhQOis
ahd'shqp•. ..
· ·&lt; '
, 11 ) .,.
' ~ • ·
1,•A.• ,. A.C,II F.,S - ·'BUilding j n. •·•lll!f lot
· west r-,..ft\.1) Drilled
wtll ~ ~·!t ' tank, ,

32. _ _ _ _ __

15. ' -'--'-7'"'-~ ·
16:
t

citizens-

' · "odel41¥
" .H.

elnsula.llan
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
e .Re..,.cemltlt
Wind- "f,

-Auto arid Truck
Repair
-Transmission ,. ·
Re.,..lr
· , ...
H~.: "'1on_
.:F;);

VIRGIL B. ~R . .f •1' r,• '
. 16 E. Second Street '

cor~er. loJ,.near

11 .

·"'~·

inspection after July 20

Senior

No

Vinyl&amp;
Aluminum Siding

with

23.
2d
25.
26.
27.

_

clerk'S
nome.
, Thebudciiit
·sum·
mary of lhl!
ef'ilcted
will be available tQr PObllc

•II ru

r-to. tu.oor·t~"iclfnn1
_ I rMtor w r ,\ h
, _ ,. 1odci1'1S o u~ ~C!'tr f
1-

S.ictf

21.

2.

LEGAL NOTICE
Bedford Township
Trustees Will hold a
Federal Revenue Sharing
proposed vse hearing on
July 11 and Annual BUCIQet
Hearing on July 11 at the

,..,et.11 window
handles -

:10

1.

f ~I'M I 01•'11 '" ' t J ' ·
l '.ti ... I~ : .M to'\" lft

Public Notice

ps of Engineers

&gt; wamea

rUt

Jl.utnonrOd John Oeer~.
New HoU,lnd. ~lu'ih ttog

Public Notice

. .II

,T~AFO~m·
Headquarter!&gt;

results Money not refundable

( UV~YIIIO , OH .
t ·hone 614 · 662 · 381 1

Turn your living room Into
a greenhouse, possible to
Increase all plant produc·
lion 9191o. Free report Box
83, Gallipolis Ferry,WVA.
25515.

1 PAY
highest prices
possible for gold and sliver
coins. rings, jewelry, elc.
Contact Ed Burkelf Barber
Shop, Middleport.

Oll'ilf" '

l 1 .~ .... t.SOI

NEW GARAGE OPI;NING
· Automatic transmissions
and all sorts of mechanical
repair and major and
minor auto bodY repair .
See James Smith or Tom
Masters or call4-16·7757.

I

Write your own ad and order b Y ma• l with thi s
coupon Cancel -;our ad by phone when you get

1Addreu,__________

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hall mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Coli
4&gt;16·0294 ..

Cleland Greenhouse Is now
open. Vegetable plants,
tomato plants, bedding
plants, polS and hanging
baskets.
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.·

RNI Estate- G!ntral

tNam•-------------------1

An11ouncamants

Acute.tare Munlns unlts

.

crete, storm windows,

3

Clly Cob. otllce 39 State St.
Gallipolis, open 5 :30 till
11 :30PM 7 days. 4&gt;16·04.51.

Contact Director of NoiSing

Kitchen .Ciblnets, INith
reilloclellng,1 roofing &amp;
tulftr. siding &amp; plumbIng, .&amp; elec!rical, con·

LEWIS, LAWRENCE L.
The family would like to ex·
press our deep ap·
preclatlon and gratiiiJde
lor the many who helped In
the lime of our husband
and lather's death. Our
special thanks go to the
Ravenswood
Rescue
Squad, Dr. and nvrses at
Jackson General Hosj&gt;ltal
at R lpley, Foglesong
Funeral
Home,
Rev.
James Lewis. the emir
who sang, for the beautiful
flowers and cards, and lor
the feed that was prepared.
May God richly bless you
o
I
I
The Lewis Family .

and

MIS BUILDING

~

POMEROY

~lANDMARK

Nursing Care Unit
(primarily geriatrics)

SIDING·
CO.
.

Don't wait. Contact Ohio
Valley Plumbing lor

Misc. Merchanise

FINAL
CLOSEOUT
Azaleas
Upright Yews.

Ph.

COrmw:TING

Klttent one grey e. Whit;,
female, on tiger male to
good home. Call446-9831. ·

Area courthou5e
to
Shoneys. Gold
Timex watch. dark lace.
Please coli 882 · 3146
evenings. Reward .

n - Avto ReiNir

Wlni·Ad.Advel"'lsing
De1dlines

5-7-tfc

Card al Thanks .

"'

n - v1ns&amp;cw .o .
14-Motorcycles
Js--Avto P1rt1

n-••••*'

PAIITSANDH .. VICE
ALL,...ICES

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

e TRANSPORTATION

J5-Lots &amp; Aero,.
J6-RHI Estate W1nted

..

_...

71 - Avto• tor S&amp;te

ll-P:arMt lir life
M-aUIIMll ltiUdl'lfl

J&amp;F

Trash Pickup In
. The Villap of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016

992·2156

• 1- Farrn l!tuipme•t

u- Servkn
rrtfft'""''

From the Smllltst
Hooter Cort to the
Lorgest Rldiator

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS INC.

In Meigs County

446-2342

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

tarSale

Rldlator SpecilliSI
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

In Calli a County

u-evndlftl su..,un
56-Pth for Sale

31 _ Homn tar pta
H-Mftlttle Homes

Transfers

investment~

11-Ht~t~Wantecl

11-SINI... WlllfM

eREALESTATE

a bout multiple personalities.
Deputy District Attorney Roger ·
Kelly, who called Biancbl to tbe
stand in a pre·trial bearinl!,
disclosed outside court that for tbe
past month Bianchi had been recan·
ling his confession to tbe killings in
conversations with prosecutors.
Kelly said he was required Wider
the law to tell Buono's defense
lawyers about the recantation and
called Biancbl to tbe stand to demon·
strate the new development.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

SJ- Anttcrun
Sri-Misc. Merctuu•dllf

n - WI'Itecl to Illy
'

Bianchi denies role in slayings
illS ANG E LES I AP l- Confessed
Hilh;ide Strangler Kenneth Bia nchi
took the sta nd Monday to de ny h1s
role in the slayings of 10 young
women, then cha nged his mind a nd
calmly descnbed all the murde rs in
detail.
Bia nc hi implicated his cousm,
Angelo Buono, in the s layings,
although in one or two cases he could
not remember whethe r he or Buono
actually strangled the victim.
"There are 10 homicides; it's not
easy," he told the prosec utor of his
difficultly in rem embering a ll the
details.
But he did recall how he a nd
Buono cruised the Los Angeles a rea.
picking up young women on street
corners or at bus stops, taking them
to Buono's house, having sex w1 th
them, the n killing them .
Of one v1 ctun , Lisa Kastm , he said
without a ny . a ppa rent e motion.
" Angelo didn ' t have sex w1 th he r. I
did. When she was being strangled ,
she struggled a b1t. I had started the
strangulation. I got off a nd Angelo
completed it. I assisted "
Asked wha t else he remembered
a bout he r , he said in the same
monotone . '·The hair on her legs."

52--CI, TV, hflo l!qulptMnt

11

r

�Bulllness Buildings
Country Grocery gas pum·
ps, air tank, living quar·
ters. By owners. 1·6 U -682·
7813 Oak Hill area .
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
ulll itles ovolloble, $300.

down, owner will finance,
call after 3 p .m ., 256·6413.
Beautiful &amp; level lots, Fair·
field Church Rd., approved
sub division, city school,
n.Jral water, J 3/4 acres,
S10,000. 1 114 acre $4,500.
owner will finance, 10
down 379·2196.
2 acres on Floyd-Clark. Rd .
c lose to Rt. 160, $4,000.
Phone 446·0390.
1/ 2 acre lot, 2 miles from
Rio Grande on Clark·
Evans Rd. Water &amp; electric

Apartment
·tor Rent

51

House for rent, 57 Olive St.
1 bdr ., unfumlshed, no
pets, you pay utilities, dep.
req., S150. mo. -146-7886. AI·
ter 5 446·«145.
FURNISHED APT. Centrololr, heal and parking, 1
or 2 adults only. -146-0331.
2 bdr. apartmeni lg. · LR
and Kitchen. Across from
HOndo Shop no pets. Call
446· 3937 or 367·0560.
Second floor finished ef·
flclency apt. Furnished,
adults only, no pets. 729 2nd
Ave. Gallipolis. Call 446·
0957 .
1 bdr. opt . in Rio Grande.
Call446·0157.

.c rent unfurn. apt. all car·
peted, $250 mo. S100 dep,

HauHIIokl GOOCII

LAYNE'$ FURNITURE
Sofa,

chair,

rocker, ot·

loman, 3 tables. 1500. Sofa,
chair and loveseet, S275.
Sotas and chairs priced
from $275. to $695. Tabies,
$38 and up to 1109. Hide-a ·
beds,$340., queen size. S380.
Recliners, $165., S295 ..
Lamps trom $18 . to $65. 5
pc . dinettes from S79.• to
$365, 7 pc., $119. and up.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
S350 up to $495. Hutches,
$300. and 5375., maple or
pine finish. Bedroom suites
· Bassett Oak, SM9 .•
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk
bed complete with mattresses, $250. and up to
S350 . Captain' s beds. S275.
complete. Baby beds, S89.
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, sss .• firm, S65.
and $75. Queen sets, SIBS. 5
dr. chests, $49. 4 dr. chests,
$42. Bed frames, S20.and
S25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
S350.. dinette chairs S20.
and S25. Tappan gas or
electric ranges, S285.
USED
.
Ranges .

televisions, cr appllance.s.

Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave .• 675· 1773.
nlture ,

appliances ,

make your payment. Can
be converted single home.
City w ater, will consider

la nd contract . 675-1883 9·5
p.m
145 ACRES 412·378·1804.

100 X 110 lot . 304·882·2954 or
882 3162 .

Houses for Rent

41

For r ent new small s rm .
br ick, car pet, range, lg .
front porch over looking 0 .
River, lawn mo . free. You
pay $9 .00 water, electric
mo . Unfurnished . 15 min.
from Gallipol is, lower Rt.
7. want m iddle age couple

or lady, no c hildren, S200
per mo. Call 256· 1198.
Small house tor one or two
working persons. deposit,
references. Reply P .O. Box

10. Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .
3 BDRM .. large fam ily
r.oom. 446-4754 . In Northup.
3 BDRM . HOME, 2 full size
baths, total elec. with wood
burner, 3 mi . south of city.
SJOO. $150 dep . You pay ulil.

256 1456.
Nice home near shopping
cen ter . Adults preferred ,
Do pets, deposit plus
r eference, $250 per mo.

CAl l 446·7322 .
Hartford , 6 rooms and
bath, large garden spot

773-5312 alter 4 PM .
Six room house $100. a
month , great for large

fami Iy. 675· 5104 or 675 ·5386.
Rt . 62

North

of

Point

dryers,

Furnished

$195, ranges .

Apt .

utilities peL adults, I bdr . pliances,

BIG discounts for cash and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.

Call446·4416alter 3PM .

1918

Ap ·

Eastern

Ave ., 446·7398 .

Furnished apt. S160, 3 bdr ., Bedroom suite, white and

water paid, children OK . gold, three chairs, stereo
with out speakers, Phone
446·4416 alter 3PM.
675·43lS or 675·5322.

Senior Citizens 1 bdr . apt.,

Antiques
rental
assistance 53
available, dep. S200 . Call ATTENTION :
liM·
446·2745
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
Apartments for rent. Call

446· 1578.

for antiques and collectibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also,

guns, pocket watches, and
2 bedroom, unfurn., apt. in coin collections. Call 614·
Vinton on Main St. Calen, 767-3167 or 557·3411 .
convenient location, large

yard. Call 245-5818.

54

Misc. Merchandise

carpeted,

vice,

supplies

and

in·

mo .

Excellent

neigh ·

2 bdr . apartment, across Most anything used in
from park, $175. mo., par- Restaurant and st,re
ti a lly furn ., ref . &amp; dep. equipment. RAOCO 304·
required . Call-446-3919.
523·1378, Huntington.
Furnished apt. $160, 2 bdr ., ' HAY FEVER ' HOME
water paid, children OK . remedy, tradition for cen·
Ca ll 446 · 441~ alter 3PM .
furies, it works. For com plete info and receipt send
1 bedroom apts. available today self addressed stamat Riverside Apts. Equal ped envelope plus Sl.OO to
Opportunity Housing. Call S. R.A. Co., P.O . Box 284,
99'1-7721 .
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

For rent in Middleport-- 2
bedroom furnished apart·
ment. No children . Call 1·
304·882·2566.

For rent will furnish house
or farm in exchange for
caring for an e lderly lady ,
preferred r etired couple.
Please send resume and

deposit . No pets. Located in
Racine . 949·2875. Available

reference to P .O. Box 6193,
Charleston, WV 25302 .

992-5908 .

dep. furnished . Phone 367·

0271.
Beautiful mobile home
with garage on 1 acre tot.
1'18 mile from North Gallia

High School or Rt. 160.

JulyS .
Apartment for rent . Call
Unfurnished 2 bedroom
apartment. Living room ,
dining room, kitchen has
range . In Pomeroy . Carpeted. Deposit reQuired.
S1.50 . plus utilities. 992· 6678.

2 bedroom furnished apart·

ment in Middleport . $175.
month. 992·5545 between 7·
a .m .J p .m. weekdays.

Completely turn ., including
washer and dryer . Call 388·

APARTMENTS .

8436.

nished or unfurnished . 675·

1371
2. bdr

mobile home at

days ,

Fur

675 3812

SNAPPER
MOWERS,
$40.00 oil list on all push
mowers in stock . S60.00 off
on
all
self -propelled

22 Colt auto. with ingravino
for sale . Call 466·0.49.4.
Special Sale! Sat'e llite An·
tenna, BUY direct from
manfac1urer,
180 TV

APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES675-4130.

to one person Call367-77.4.3 .
Apartments. 675·5548 .
2 bdr . trailer, furn ., gas
and water turn ., S225 . mo.,
.$100 dep., no pets . Call 446·
4145.

One bedroom apartment,
one bedroom mobile home.
Air conditioned, utilltle5

For rent, lOx so '2 bedroom

furnished, located In Henderson. Phone 304·675·6730.

45

; bedroom trailer for rent.
Brown' s Trailer Park . 992·
~324 .

Two bedroom house trailer
on Ashton-Upland Road .
S150 plus utilities and
clam age deposit. 3 miles
from Rt. 2. 675·4088 .

Furnished

Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS for
rent, Gallia Hotel446·9715.
SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.
46

~~-~5 pa
=c~e~f•~r~R-"e~n_t__

Secluded
lot
In woodedprivate
area . troller
Ideal for

Two 2 bedroom house
trailers tor rent, furnished,

that summer outdoors.
Contact Brown' s Trailer

1 with central air. Oood for

Park, 992·3324 .

working couple or couple

with 1 child . $150 per month
plus deposit . 675·4088.
3 bedroom trailer, Referen·
ces required plus deposit.
Gallipolis Ferry . Phone
675·6851 .
Mobile home, unfurnished
married couple only .
Phone J0.4·675·1076.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
99'1·7479.
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Dh .
99'1 ·3954.
TRAILER space 3 miles
from town Junction 2 a. 62 at
oldY, 675·32411.

43
2 bedroom !railer on
private lot. No pels $175. ~""9'----'F"or"""L"e'-=a"'••=--­
monlh. New Haven. Phone For lease unlurn. large 3
30-4-882-2636.
bdr. apt. 2nd floor, S250 per
mo. Call 446·.U25 or -1461819.
Apartment
. IGrRent
.,

2· bedroom apartment. Coli
9:.30 to 5,

675-~.

SMALL tllrnillied apart•menf, no pets, references
•requlrid, 304-675-1365.

'

.

Electric Stove. Phone 6752474.

For Sale or Trade

For Sate of Trade for
livestock 1969 Inter. 1600
series truck . Cat1367·7533.
For

Sale

two

or

for

Trade

livestock S800, 1962 Chey 1
112 ton Irk. with steel rack
to haul 200 boles hay .
Phone 256-1352.
For Sale
livestock ,

or Trade for
$200 manure

loader to fit Ford tractor.
Phone 256-1352 .

-_..............
. -........... ...
-'

&amp; LhtSIIEH
Farm Equipment

John Deere 24T baler with

bale

kicker,

Massey

Ferguson hayrack, 3 point

post hole digger 9 ln., all in
good cond . Call 1·614·286·
239-' or see Tom Jones near
Thurman, OH .

·

450·8 John Deere dozer
with 6-way blade . Call 379·
Building materials, block, 2340, Patriot, OH .
brick , sewer pipes, win·

dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .

Call245·512l. ,
I

S6

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220 .
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. seal &amp; cream
point Himilayan &amp; White

Persian kittens. Call 446·
38« after 4 p.m .

HILLCREST KENNEL · horse, gentle, works single
Boarding all breeds, clean or double. $550. Call 256·
indoor-outdoor facilities . 6040.
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans . Call446-7795.

Five Holstein heifers, 3
ready to freshen , two in

BRIARPATCH KENNELS three weeks. average about
and grooming. 1200 lbs or better. Call Vin·
AKC
Gordon setters , ton 3889329.
Boarding

English Cocker Spaniels.

For Sale 16 cu . II .. s ide by

AKC St. Bernard Puppies 3 female racoon. 304·895·
males, 2 females , well 3972.
marked . Call 367·7594 Alter
6PM .
Hay &amp; Grain
64

side refrigerator , $175. Call

256·1427.
Used

Hotel

Furnishings

Bed frames. head boards,
night stands, mattress &amp;

box springs, bed spreads,
carpet &amp; carpel padding.
Wednesday , Thursday &amp;
Friday Only . No phone call

please . Holiday
Gallipolis.

Inn

SWIMMING
POOLS :
PRE -SEASON SALE:
$999.00 INSTALLED!!!
Above ground pool COMPLETELY INSTALLED
starting atS999.00. Price in·
eludes pool, deck, fence ,
filter, liner,
and in ·
stallation under normal
ground condition. Free
shop at home service. Call

1 800-624-8511 .
Insulated storage building.
8x10 with 7ft. ceiling. Ideal
work shop. S799 . See these

Golden and Glgi pheasants,
Bantam

AKC

Poodle,

Apricot

Autos for Sale

73 Dodge Dart, sport black Topper for Luv or other
on black cragors. new mini truck 6 II. bed. Phone
tires, 1-«lautomatlc. Phone 675·5280.
3().4-675·1769.
77
Auto Repair
77 Grand Prix, 301 engine, ROBERTS BROTHERS
air, cruise, AM·FM 81rack. GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker
Very good car. Phone J0.4· service. "Big or small" we
675·5075.
tow !hem Bill 2332 Eastern
Ave., Golllpollsro Ohio. Day
1973 Pinto. Good condition. - -146-244.1 or Night - 446·
Phone 1·J0.4·882·3664.
4792.
1975 Dodge Coronet 2 door, Auto Pointing &amp; Sanding
runs good. Phone 304·675· $175, any color,free pickup
65-4.5 .
&amp; delivery In Gallipolis
area, Hammond . Body
Shop, 221 Mill St. 379·2782.
n
Trucks for Sale
71
Camping
•69 Chevy pickup, 2 new
Equipment
tires, good cond., best of·
fer . Call379·2609.
TRUCK
TOPPER ,
fiberglas, with sliding win78 Ford 6 cyl . pickup, good dow tor 6'12 11. GMC or
cond., S3500. 245·51411 after Chevy truck, S325. Call 388·
9334alter6p.m .
5:30.
74 Chevy 314 ton PU, auto .•

S600. Ca II 446· 4225.

chickens

1957 Chevrolet one-half ton
pickup gOOd shape. Phone
304-675·6544. p

-:===:;::;:==:::::;=;:;:;:;=;;:==
ii
Vans &amp; 4 w .D.
·-=----'-==--'-'=-'---

1979 Jeep Cherokee Golden
Eagle. P.S., air, radiotape, exc. cond. 304·773·
5323.

also

Straw, S1.2S bale on wagon,

1968 Jeep one half ton
pickup, 6 cyl, standard 3
speed. 4 wheel drlve .675·
4874.

THE FISH TANK and Pet SO bushels, ears of corn.
Shop, 2101 ·Jefferson Ave. Call 446·4344.
675-2063, Pt. Pleasant. Out·
ch dwarf rabbits S10.99,
, ·· · ·- ~ · · ·
canary and Cockatiels.
Open 11 ·4.

74

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

71

Dachshund,
an

Poodle 78 Camero balck, T·lop,

pups 895·3958.
AKC

Autos for Sale

Registered

Chow·

air. cond., AM· FM stero 8·
track.
Call
446·4002,
Gallipolis.

Motorcycles

1980 suzuki GS 550, limited
edition. 1,342 miles. Call
256·9367 after 5:30PM.
1981 Honda, 1100 Interstate.
For sale or trade for small
car. $4,600. Call675·664-4.
1972 350 Honda Scrambler,
low mileage. 675·41174.

Chow puppies, black, red
1973 CHEVY Impala, 4 75 Bultaco 360 Porsang, 75
and beige $400. Excellent door,
$475 or best offer. 446· Bultaco 200 Alplna. both
pedigree. Phone 576-2511 or
need som work $250. Phone
3948.
762·2035.
675 3833.

AK C Boxer puppies. J0;- 1976 Pontiac Grand Prix. 1980 TT 500 Yamaha dirt
Exc. cond.. low mileage,
at Kingsbury Home parts 576·2919.
loaded with extras. Phone bike. $1300. JO.C-675·3938.
store.
446·7736.
57
Musical
1975 360 Honda 1,300 miles,
Instruments
ALL types of granite, mar67 Pontiac Flrebird. Call exceuent cOndition $795.
ble. and bronze memorials .
Phone 304-675·3995.
Display lot on Main St. Pt. Will sacrifice practically 446· 1387.
Pleasant Granite Com- new Lowery Piano. Pianist
pany . Phone 675-5548.
moved. Phone 446·0541.
77 Trans Am, black with Motorcycle Harley super
guild 1200 cc low mileage,
many options.
Compare at block and chrome $2700.
SJ,BOO.
Call 446·1136.
serious Inquiries only
please. Phone afternoon
They'll Do It Every Time
1976 Monte Carlo Landau. 304·576·9071.
Average miles. olr, loaded.
$3,195. 247·2411, after 4 p.m.
1HSRE'S ONE
Motorcycle 2 Honda Trail
MISSING ....
905, 1 runs good, $300. both.
1974 Chevrolet Suburban. Phone 304-882·3664.
New tires. $600. Phone 992·
2881.
1977 Honda CB 550K, 4 cyl.,
7000 miles. Pllone JO.I-6751971 Ford dump truck. 2832.
Good cond. F600. 53,500.
985-4395.
1975 750 Honda. Excellent
cOndition. Phone :!M-6751976 Pontiac Sunblrd . 6 4848.
cyl., 5-speed. Good con·
dillon. $2,300. 742·2249.
1971 OdY-Y, IIQOd ·con·
dltlon. Phone 304·67t5173.
1971 CUTLASS SOlon. 6752722or675·5571 .
1975 125 Yamaha Endilr!a,
must , llll. Phone~
MORRISON'S Auto sales. 39)7.
1 c
Henderson. wv ..PhOne 6751574or675:2881 ,

- --'====- -

~-=========:JL..:=========-1

19il -camero,ty"' 1.TD,
goodcond. Phone675-.14:14:
72 · Volkeswagtn,
totaled, good, lor
bUIHIY or parts. $225.

:1833.

446-42011

.

•

•

-=~1 ,· .ytewmg

Gene's Cerpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free estimates. reasonable
rates. Scolhguard. 992·6309.

"'-"""r---1r'

g_

/-.n.1..,.

I. :.;.a:.-·
I K' ---)

RINGLE;: ' S
SERVICE :
Complete
building,
remodeling, repairing,
large or small JobS clone et·
flclently . Phone 675·2088 or
675·4560.

T· T

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Call
882-2079.

WHA"'T "THE
MOUSEi FOUND

HARPER Halstead, lawn

Veaterd ay .s

Television
Henderson,

ti.

BORN~R

Ser·

wv

MilwaukHon
mu Eve, trtppln(l the
nlnghama and their frlenda at
varloua opott In the ally. •

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

(8_-1)

(II

lm ·

provements. 675·5689, 675·
5304.
.
Plumbing

82

&amp; Heating

!lll,riOalty.

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.

OH, WY,
6MJr! I
SUDmfLY

,__,.r

SOUTHERN SERVICE
co. · Heating - mobile
home furnaces, electric hot

water tank repair. Call Ill·
flee, 446 · 3008 night,
emergency no. 367· 7131.

~.....

FEa UIU' MY
IHSIDs AU.
CAVED IH/

®APPOINTII!IITWl'TMDI!ITINY 'Tho Plot to Murder

experience.

Free

estimates. Remodeling.
Call388·9857 .
CALL 446·2801 for termite,
roach,

bird,

rodent ,

spiders, fleas and other
small Insect control. Free
estimates given. A local
company
locaed
In
Gallipolis
area .
Bill
Thomas.
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, commercial Md residential,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.
'

SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING, Carpentr'f
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446-2787.

AUEYOOP

ahootouta aren't what they

8•18

D;oo

COMPLETE SEWER . IN·
STALLATION &amp; backhoe

HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
Contractors - Build, siding,
remodel, concrete, roofing,

free estimates. Call col.,
614·259·2814 ask for Charles
or Mike.

Dozer work. small lobs a
specialty . 742·2753 .
Ditcher work . Charles R.
Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe.
Gas, electric, and watet;.
742-2903.
&gt;J

GASOLINE AllEY

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
In septic tonk . 675·123•.
BACKHOE Service. Larry
Sidenstrlcker . 675·5580.
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Hoffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Coll-«6·2107. •
WOODSHOP · Cabinets,
picnic
table&amp;,
porch
swings. mast WOOd products. 101 Court St., Gallipolis.
Call.u6-W2.
WEATHERAI.L CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice, call675·1,582,

LIMESTONE, gravel and
sa~. All sizes. At Richards
anll Son, Upper River Rd.,
GallipoliS, Ohio. Call 446·
7785.

'8

• A94
+Q96
EAST
WEST
+7
+QJ94
'K 4 3
.KQ532
• J 10 8 7
+K842
+AJ7
SOUTH
+32
'AQJI065!

•n

.,

+tH3
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Nortb
Nortll
t+
Pass

WHl
Pass

SOIIII
••

East

Pass
Pass

Opening lead :+J

Looks like a normal
result, but less than half the
pairs in the field got to
game so South had a very
good score.

'·'

nagging har to got morrlad .
(R-1) (Cioeeci-Captlonecl;
u..s.A.l
(III&amp;LITIII!I!TBLUI!8Whlle
Captain Forlllo contlnuoo hlo
nagotlatlo!to with rival glllltla to
ciHrthe way lot • pretklenllal
vloK, vlco oop JohMy LaRoala
framed by •
dotoctlvo
for aocaptlng a p•yoff.
IR-';§0 rnino l
•
(I) till&gt; CIB TUI!IDA Y
NIGHT IIOYII'Somo Kind Of
Miracle' 11181 Staro: D•vld
!!J!kD, Andrea Meroovlccl.
CIHIV IIYITIRYI 'Robecca'
Eplaodai. Tha....,.dMrt.Oa
Wlnlartrlaoto llvaupto R - oa'a
memory.
(Cloud·
CIPli!Nll!l: U.S.A.) (eo mlno.)
1:30 (IJIDI. TOO CLOII! FOR
COII'OIIT the down·
ot•lro neiGhbOr dlao, Sara and

de~. .~·,(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
U Particular
I Loee color
DOWN

-eel

5 VIrgule

Harta' romantic Valantlne'a

-,

DaypillnaiHdlharnlntoamadcep myotery Involving a mony
but murdarooo flllltl ol lo&lt;oign
a-to who rnuol rttrlava Jon·
atllan't -181 prtH(IItO Jen·
nlfarbeforetheoouploexpooao
tha a•ng•o tPY opor•tlon.
(R-t; eo mlnoJ (Cioeecl·
&lt;liPIIonad: U.B.A.)
W•IIOWOLI'I! A rich buallteatmaA hlret Wolfa to flnd lilt
long-loti eon and the clatoctlve
dlaooverethet the mlotlotlhefr
and a young man aoouaed or
ol•yfna th• brutal hoob811d of .
theWomailha_t,.oneancl
the-- {Raph!; 80 mlno.)

1 Gnocchl, e .g .

18 Distant
11 Proverbial
waste maker
1! Shirt

fastener

! In bot
pursuit

3 Ml&amp;alle site
4 Shrewmouse
5 Tremble
6 Teus

13 Convey
15 Denary

.

Yeolenlay's .Ynrer

statesman

11 U.S. power pro- 7 Snake
ject of I~
8 Beginning
17 Brown kiwi
I Female lead

18 Curve

14 Tijuana

19 Nonconformlst
!I Frost
!3 Typesetter,

treata
II "All - Jazz"
!II Joie de
vivre

• 'lblnk ··32-Winged
33 Moalem.. .
women's

zz Telling
blow (sl. )
!4 Newspaperdom

Z5 Clothing

quarteri

size
!I Cadence
!8 Deposited

38 Pledge 3t Flowet')':

Item

for short
!4 Dress fabric
!I Bowling

alleys

n Descartes
oreoty
!8 Sonar sowld
!I Olinele
delicacy
31 N.Z. fort

: ::Butt~er~wa.rme•~i:-HHeervlng

.Palm leaf
rr or the Serbs,

Croltl, etc.
3t PleudolQIUe
•united

41 Beinl (Sp,)
UDid "I do"

JIM' S
r;?EPENDABI.E
water deltvery. Call 256·
9368 anytime.

again

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.

PAINTING · Interior and
e -x terior, plu 'm blng,
roofing, -so'me rem•nng.
20 yrs. exp: Calll88-9J652,

"

Call for estimates 36f7101

·'
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXB
•

DILLARDS
WATER
I.IVERY Service. Call
-146-7404.

II

LONGFBLLOW

.:

Light H~ullng, tree work,
garage and b+, sement
cleaned out. Call 'a nytime
245-9264. As~ for Roy, Thurmin, OH.

ODe s.tter ailap)J otaada for another. In thb umple A II '
..... fOf the~ L'a, X for the two O'a, etA:. ~ile letters.~
: o - . the letlltb aDCI formaUoa of the worda are alf··
au. pelt cla7 tbe eodeletlen are dllerent.
;;

Jones Boys Water Service.
Call367·7471 or 367·0591 ..

••

'-.L.-;:~
· ----

Mobile' homet .moved,
licensed, and bonded. 576' ·
2711 or 675·.q911,
,

..

' I

'

.

'

VXZVMX

WRMP

RAZEW

LS

NXDX

.BZUXWTLCJ

' LW

JLOX,

MLPX

'
RB ~

MZOX

RO

S· MZMXDB ~ - RCCX

ZS

••

RDUSBM · ·.·

MLCl .AXDJT·- ~ .:

......,,.

.

~

~

.

~~

.

'

·..'· . ~"''

'f lct=~fiUTIIE~IIXJROJ'THII:~':-;· ;

. INGJB
'

J

7-7-81

•r•

llllftl. (R-t)
U1:00 (1) IIOYII-(ADYINTURI) ••
''lf!llk "tiiO
(I)IDIIHARTtOHARTTho

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Soles &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 99'1·2284.

Gener•l H•ullng '

Jack

~tndlnlotllavaoontap•n-

Qualtly Cooling and
Heating Service Call 388·
9698.

IS

oha •nd

Jackie concoct an outrageoue
ocheme to get Henry to rtlant
and let them move out of the

Fuller Electric Co. Complete rewiring, commercial
or residential, and elec·
trlcal malntalnance, also
on call. Ph . 446· 2171,
Gallipolis.

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air tondltlon service,
commercial, Industrial.
Phone882-2079.

"''~I!'BCOIIPANT

Janet tell a hervlaltlng parent•

NORTH
+AK10865

newlywed• to atop them from

INSTAL~

fireplace facing
or chimney, dry wall.
plaster, stucco. free est.
Simulated brick or stone,
Greg Burdette, coli 6756357 .

tobe.(Raput)
CBN UPOAT! NI!W8

that

Racine-

Syracuse sewer district.
Dozer"work If needed . 949·
2293.

84

CIX!Jii"'LA~w,:.ANDIIIM­

imiJiODIIonad;

DOZER - backhoe, dump
truck. Call 446·4537.

the

~~

LI!Y-Lavern•fallolnlove,
oha r. .chet naw halghto of
hllarfty,llndlng haraalfpercllecl
d•naerouoly on • ledge of o
building trying to convlnca
Bonnytoohlngehlsmindabout
thalr futurelo(lalhar. {Raputl
U.S.A.)
FLO Flo takoo a trip
back Intima to the OldWottand
dlac:overe that while men are
tllllmenandwornanara-.

heating,

=---~===~-

for

.

organiZed ha8~h cart dallvery
tor !hair-'", and-theM
oyttamtareflnlncecl. (Cioeecl·
Ctptlonad; U.S.A.) (eo mint.)

S:30

roofing, aluminum, vinyl
siding, and home painting.
675·3376or 675· 1240.
c===c:;::::::=:~:=;==
i3
Excavating

service

South's jump to four
hearts showed almost exactly what be held in accordance with their partnership
bidding principles. A sevencard heart suit with one possible loser and little else.
The game ·was duplicate
so South started by playing
dummy's ace of diamonds
and then leading a beart and
finessing his 10. It held but
the ace failed to drop the
king so he went after
spades. East ruffed the second spade with his high
trump and led a diamond
which South ruffed.
Now It was all up to the
clubs. West· surely didn't
bold ace and king. He would
have opened that suit if he
did so South's only hope was
to find West with jack and
one of the top honors.
He led a club to dummy's
nine. East took his king and
led another diamond for
South to ruff.
A second club was led and
West could do no better than
to take bls ace.

parea hOW the IOCIItlll Of
Great Britain and tha U.S. hava

D. C. Contractors Plum·
bing, electr.lcal,

By Oswald Jacoby

and Alan Sontag

WNOYA 'ThaMaladyoiHtlalth
care' ln.a n er• of mecllcatmlro·
cleo, a ohooklngly 111111 ment of !ha popul•tlo!t Ia unable
toallordhulthc.... Nov•com-

ANNIE

Newapo~.

Good partnership bidding

holdolhltllatbellevln(IKtocon·
taln th• aecrat to a huge b•nk
rtll·ol!, (8ffla•t; eo mlno.)
• (I} Ill WALT!R CIIOffKITI!'I UHIVIIRII CBS Nawa
Spacial Correaporldant Walter
Cronkltaanchortthlonowooer·
loolhataxamlneathefuHof aolantlflc tctlvlty Involving
the widaat range of human

T and
R building.
remodeling, also papering,
carpel Installation, and

to

BRIDGE

.

u.o A wtvsclounhowltlri

p•r•u•• Perklna, only to get

home

An-:

c:ontalnlng 110 ~ lo ...- " " $1.75 poalpald
from Juntia, do thllnh
Box " Noo•ood, N.J. 0714&amp; Inch* your

Phone675·2250.

general

I J u - : The
HOVEL RUSTY LAUNCH OUTCRY
king decided to abdicate rather than

--No.
. . . -lip..... ::r·. . . -pay-

and

house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.
COOK'S

to

risk being this-"THRONE" OUT

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In zenith and

vice,

~...

loon the IUrprioa 81]1Wer, U lUg·
gested by the

(An-ra 1omo1 row)

penlng service, 10 a.m.-6
p .m. 675·5868.

Quazar,

Now orrange the clrclad

-cartoon.
Ms-. A'"( I I I I I X)" (X I)

mower repair and shar·

Motorola,

HIM5ELF IN.

IFIFRAM
I
(X)

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367·7853.

years

In barn Sl.50. Butler
female. 3 yrs. old, S75. Also Hereford
Farm, Lower
AKC German Shepard pup,
very nice. $50. Phone 446- River Rd., Gallipolis. 2561113.
2310.

Pomeranian

24 ft. self-contained 1973
travel trailer. Very good
condition. 992-3242.

1975 Ford F -100, PS, PB,
AC. AM· FM 8 track, trailer
broken, 57,000 miles, S1950.
Call446·3987 .

1979 Jeep Cherokee Golden
Eagle, power steering. air
radio, tape excellent condition.

AK C

Chrome hooker header and
side pipes. Coll-146-2687.

Four 15,00 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. 13,000.00
Home
tl
each . Phone 1-304· 422 ·2781. - 1980 VW truck diesel
Improvements
engine. 40 MPG, ex. cond ., FOR BEST In Carpel
One John Deere self $5,800 firm . Coli alter 5:30
Cleaning - Call Smeltzer's
propelled combine 45 with PM 367-0694.
Steamway · Call 6l 4·446·
10 and half fl. grain head.
2096.
Good condition S1500. 576·
Used R65 Ditch Witch tren2971 or 576-2186.
cher &amp; 1972 GMC 7500 PAINTING · Residential
series Tamaen axel Dleset and commercial . Interior
Gravely tractor with sulkle Dump Truck. 1·614·694· and exterior, mobile home
mower and grader blade. ~2 .
roofs. Free estimates. 17
Phone 304·576·2720.
yrs. exp. with references
~===;::;:::::;;:;:;;=== 77 CHEVY truck, 305 call367·7784 or 367-7160 .
Livestock
automatic, 51,000 miles,
63
"'----====-- $2400.
will accept trade In, JIM MARCUM Roofing ·
12 YR . OLD, 1,000 lb. work 304-675·3044.
spouting and siding. 30

Call 446 ·4191 .

(nobile home. Racine area .

992 ·5858 .

59

Excellent Sl75. Phone 304·
67534123.
than

For sale or trade, 1971
Super Beetle convertible, 1!165 Jeep body. Minus fen·
1500 miles on motor Sl700. ders &amp; hood. With 2 win·
dshlelds. Never used. $600.
576·2720.
99'1·2124. Mon. -Fri. 8·4;30.
1972 4-door Impela, 8 cyl.
fully equipped, 1 owner, Four Cragor rims for
Plymouth. Phone 675-4874.
phone 675·1570.

receiver

Gibson ES 325, Fender
twin, crown 300, Guild
Echo box. Call992·6137.

chair, blue floral design.

less

Luxmon

stations. Call602-622 2290.

evenings .

Evergreen . Call446·7032 .

6Dx20 mobile home for rent

Hand gun model Smith and

Wesson. pocket watches.
Susan B. Anthony . Mint
sets. Phone 304-675·6439.

Sundeck

mowers. One 8 H P rider for

3 bdr. trailer, S200mo. S100

outboard . Phone 30H82·
3664.

borhood, 675-6122 or 675- For Sale : 1000 gallon years old . 6x8. Phone 6755104.
PLASTIC septic tanks. 5509.
Slate approved . Phone 2863 R &amp; Bath, Ut ., turnis.neol• l 5930. Jac kson, Ohio.
2 air conditioners, one
$225 mo . 2 R Bachlor ~pt .
14,000 btu, 28,000 btu .
Sl25 . 5 R house un· Quasar video tape recorder Phone 304-675-3614.
furnished , Sl75. Dep . &amp;
lease. Call 4 to 10 PM 446- with camera and 5 tapes, --==;::~~~~~==
like new. Asking S800. Call s-s
Building Supplies
0952 .
446-1805.
'-=------===~=~-

2 bedroom furnished apart· $950. Outdoor Equipment
ment for rent, S150 per Sales Jet. Rts. 7 &amp; 35,
month plus utilities . S.SO GallipoliS, Ph . 446·3670.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

15ft. crest liner new seats
and
carpet, 60
HP
Evenrude trailer $1100.
Parts for 50 HP Mercury

71

with Bosse speaker JVS
turntable. Coll388·8240.

61

Pleasant, 4 bedrooms, 2

42

Galvanized Culvert S2 .35
lt.,up . Brldge,etc. Steel, 10
cents lb . up. Phone 925-08114.

bills partially paid . S200 stallation. 446· 1324.

baths, S265 . plus deposit
and refer ence . 614·928·4339 .

Utility trailer, factory
built, 4 X 8 It bed . 1500 lbs,
like new. Phone675·5280.

Muslcel
Instruments

R1120

Modern 8 ft . c7uch and

REGENCY APT . INC . 2 RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER·
bedroom,
kit - VICE. complete sales, ser·
chenfurnished,

ltl

57

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning

lnsullatad truck topper for CONTINIOUS no leak gut·
short bed Ford 1100. call 1ering, custom made lor
446·9472. Gallipolis.
your home. For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND OOOR. 614-698·8205.
ded seats, oars, foot

~d
~SaD
~~nda\~Z:I~':1~s~~d~
.~ ;
available
. Village
Fur· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~===~
c .. .,..._....
spd., carpet.
Phone
367stock,
expert
Installation
operated
trolling
motor,
3
nlture. 2605 Jackson Ave.,
0397 otter 5:00PM.

AIR CONDITIONERS ·
sale priced, all sizes In

refrigerators.

Skaggs

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 446· 7717.

televlsjons. Big discounts
for quonlty purchase.
VIllage Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave . 675·1773.

For rent new 1 bdr . apt. refrigerators, and TV's,
Call446·0390.
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd . . 304·675·1773.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
1 BDRM., completely fur - thru Fri., 9am to Spm, Sat.
Lowest prices on Bemco
446·0322
nished. All elect ., newly
bedding in the area . Call
decorated , deposit ,
for prices . Village Fur·
references. S200 per mo. GOOD
USED
AP · niture, 2605 Jackson Ave.
446·2236 or 446·2581.
PLIANCES
washers, 675· 1773 .

Live in one, rent others to

Auto Parts

&amp;ACCtHOrill

NEED several Items of fur·

For Sale Choice building lot
J m i. from Gallipolis over l
acre, 56500.00. Phone 256-

8 Y owner, J apartment
house on approx. 1 acre .

1977 Checkmate Trl Mate
11, 16 fl. 140 HP Evonrude
motor with drive on trailer
318-8240.

EASY credit available now
to purchase furniture,

utilities paid, no children,

1352.

Boat, 1971 Bayllner 17 ft.
130 HP lnbOIIrd, excellent
cllndltlon. 11,000. ac ·
c-111, everything goes
SS.OOO. Phone 675-5210.

26' TROUTWOOD travel
trailer and camp site on
Raccon Creek. Close to
Ohio R lver. S500 . - n.
Owner will finance. 614·2561216.

available, S1200. 1-JO.C-755·
2318.

no pets . Call446·3437.

'N' CARLVLE,.

M isc. MercMndllt

·

.

OF'l'IIEDAY.~YW.MM•

.

'

.."

R . · ·

.

.\ '

�Tuesday, July 7,1981

Page-12-The Daily sentinel

Social Security_~(Contln==.=uedfrom~plg~el;;.:_)_
payroll taxes whicll go Into the three
trust funds. Some 35 million persons
receive benefits from the old age
and disability funds and nearly 25
mllllon are enrolled in the Medicare
PJ'01111111l·
The CUJTellt payroll deduction rate
l.s 6.65 percent on incomes up to
$29,700. It is I!Cheduled to rUe to 7.65 .
percent over the next decade, and
the Income ceiling will gq up as well.
The trustees' report was released
a day before a Senate Finance sub·
committee on Social Security was
scheduled to begin hearings. The
House Wayll and Means subcommittee already has begun drafling legislation on the subject.

,"'l'be fact is that the short-term
criall cannot be safely met through
ineer-lund burtWIIII! alooe," SVabn
said in dlacuMing the trustees' findings.

'1be II)'Siem will ~ence a shor·

ttan ol frum $10 billion to fl11 bUUon

over the next five years, depending
upon which ecooomic forecasta are
used.
Svahn said the admlnlstration is
willing to compromise in punuit of a
blpartlaan solution but "OUr last
area . . . is any Infusion of general
revenue. Anytbing above that is a
negotiable Item."
Congress already has begun to
consider measures to forestall
problems with the system, but ll(ll1le

Reagan )a'OP"""I• - espedally
pena1illn8 ~ retirees - have
clearly fallen Into disfaVOI'.
11le admlnlllratlon ha8 relli8ted
the idea ol either ralaiDC the stan·
dard rellremert age cr using
general Treasury revenues to finan·
ce the S)'Stem. but neither haa been .
ruled out in Congress.
.
Social Security's problema are
tied to a ~ ol ~ble fac·
tors. The solvency ol the .old age
fund depends on the number ol births and deaths, the unemployment
rate and the lnlllltion rate. The state
of the Medicare hospital fund Is tied
to the lncrealle In medical Wsta,
which has exceeded the general rate
of Inflation In recent years.

\

·Reagan takes campaigtt to Chicago
MOVING OUT- Women and childreb help trans· refugee camp at La Bermuda. The army said they
fer their belongings lo army trucks, Sunday, after were trying to protect the refugees from guerrl1la a._
Salvadoran authorities ordered them 1o evacuate a tacks. Despite sbootouts during the traDsfer, there
were oo casualties. (AP Laserphoto).

Squads answer 11 emergency calls
Local emergency units were kept
on the move Monday and Tuesday
morning answering 11 calls.

At 5:40 a.m. Tuesday. the Mid·
dleport fire and emergency units
were dispatched to the Cheshire
area where a truck had overturned.
The driver was not located. At 3:07
a.m.. the Syracuse Unit took
Mildred Milburn at Veterans
Memorial Hospital at at 12 :18 a.m.,

the Rutland Unit took Mary Nichols
to Veterans Memorial.
On Monday at 5:04 p.m .. the Mid dleport Unit took Rainelle Duff from
the Middleport Pool to Veterans
Memorial and the Syracuse Unit at
12:22 p.m. took Belinda Warden
from her Racine home to Veterans
MemoriaL Syracuse at 2:07 p.m.
took Wesley Clark, Dorcas, 1o
Veterans Memorial and Racine at
9:53 a.m. took Everett Jeffers,

Meigs County happenings •••
Dt&gt;em was owner

Check two accidents

Roger K. Deem, Middleport, is the

Pomeroy police report two auto
accidents Monday and Tuesday.
cident in Salisbury Twp., as repor Tuesday at 4:55a.m. a southbound
ted in Monday's SentineL
car driven by Carol Hubbard,
Deem was listed as the driver of Syracuse, on Nye Ave., went to the
the car.
right and struck a utility pole. Police
The state highway patrol post in said ths .-driver fell asleep. There
Gallipolis sa id the car was found were heavy damages to the car but
abandoned by the patrol after no injuries.
striking a fen ce and fence post
At 11 a.m. Monday on E. Main St.,
around 1:30a .m. Sunday.
a car driven by James L. Davis,
A patrol spokesman said the car near Pomeroy, was struck in the
had been stolen from the Tall Tim- rear by a car driven by Ginny Burns,
bers nea rby earlier in the evening Long Bottom. Davis was stopped in
and was apparently abandoned after a lane of traffic. There were no inthe accident.
juries.
owner of a vehicle involved in an ac-

Great Bend, to Veterans Memorial
and at 4:05p.m. took Kendell Grady
from Racine to Veterans Memorial.
The Rutland Unit at 7:24a.m. took
Augustine Clark from Harrisonville
to Veterans Memorial and at 8:20
p.m. took David Carsey from Meigs
Mine I to Veterans Memorial. At6 :21
p.m. Robert Darling was taken from
Forked Run Lake by the Tuppers
Plains Unit to Veterans Memorial.

Cable

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(Continued from page I)
council. There were 1,084 tickels
ISSued and $2,265 collected from the
parking meters.
Council in other business adopted
the_ anticipated budget for 1981-82
whichwill be sublllltted to the county auditor. .
•
The meeting was opened by
prayer by -Mayor Andrews. Attending were Mayor Andrews, Jane
Walton, clerk, Baronick, Wehrung,
Btll Young, and Anderson, council
members, Stitt, Donnie Ward and
Jack Krautter.

WASHINGTON (AP)- President
!Wogan, trying to spur the House
Ways and Means Cormnittee into
quicker action on his tax-cut plan, is
taking his campaign to the backyard
of one of the most important
congressional Democrats.
A pitch for the tax plan is expected
to be the centerpiece of !Wogan's
trip to Chicago this evening, his first
purely political venture outside
Washington since taking office in
January.
But the Democrat on !Wogan's
mind, House Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski of Chicago,
isn't going to be there.
The occasion is a Republican fundraising affair, a $250-a-person dinner .
and a $5,000-a-couple reception expected to gross about $1.5 million for
Gov. James· Thompson's 1982 re election campaign.
Among Thompson's invited guests
were the parents of James S. Brady,
the White House press secretary
who is still recovering from a bullet
wound to the brain suffered In the
March 30 assassination attempt on
Reagan. The governor planned to fly
the Bradys from their home In Centralia, 111., aboard a state airplane,
so they could meet Reagan at the
reception.
Thompson's campaign cormnittee
is paying for Reagan's roundtrip
flight, the White House said.
Deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes said Mon day that Reagan's speech at the Me Cormick Place convention center
would deal with the need to cut taxes

Later this week, he may meet with
'"and the fact that the Democratic
members
of Congress in an effort to
proposal is a tax bill and not a tax
win
approval
of his plan before the
cut."
congressional
summer recess
Under current law, Speakes said,
income taxea would increase 22 per- begins in August.
Tonight's political trip was plancent over the next three years and
the tax pian proposed by the ned weil before the tax bill began to
Democrats would cut taxes 15 per- slow down in the House. Speakes
cent over two years. The Reagan . said that by Reagan's hoped-for
plan calls for a three-year, 25 per- schedule, the measure would have
been out of Rostenkowskl's hands by.
cent cut in persoft4) tax rates.
now.
Reagan, wbo won his battle for
But Rostenkowski's conunittee Is
budget reductions with a last·minute
still
working on a tax cut and
lobbying attack on recalcitrant
probably
will be for several weeks
Democrats, is gearing up for a
yet.
similar battle fgr his tax proposal.

Barbara Betzing, Pomeroy, in formed the Pomeroy Police Department that a truck backed into her
driveway on July 2, and knocked
over a lamp post.
John !hie. Racine, reported that a
CB radio was taken from · his car
while it was parked behind the
Pomeroy Fire Station on July 3.
Both incidents are under in vestigation by the Pomeroy Police.

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SHOPlHN.&amp;
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FBUTH &lt;am8
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Marriage licenses were issued to
Manley Edwin Christy, 71, Rt. 2,
Guysville, and Malinda First, 73, Rt.
I, Portland; Scott Alan Bearhs, 2(),
Pomeroy, and Loretta Francine
Holsinger, 20, Pomeroy; Jack Lee
Lyons, Jr., 19, Racine , and Rhonda
Jean Holsinger, 18, Reedsville.

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ONE
STOP
SHOPPING

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·PHA-RMACY

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
announced today that the village
engineering firm of Floyd Brown
Associates Ltd. will be conducting
fire hydrant pressure flow testa in
the village all day Wednesday and
Thursday.
This will cause discoloration of
water in most sections of the village
on both days.
These flow tests are necessary for
the analysis of the water system to
detemilne where improvements in

ln Meigs
County Common Pleas
To
end marriage
Court Charlotte Louise Wolfe was
granted a divorce from Gale Eugene
Wolfe and the marriage of tarry Ed ward Grueser and Betty Jean
Grueser was dissolved.

service need to be made on a priority
basis.
Infonnation obtained from the
tests will be used in making
decisions on service line improvements whicll will be financed
'by the Department of H,!l1J81ng and
Urban Development over the next
three years.
The vJQage regrets this Inconvenience to ita customers but is
certain many benefits will come
from this water system analysis.

-.PRICES IN EFFECT

r~~~!~!~~-

JU~Y:

7th

·· THRU',J,ULY 19th

Holiday celebration successful

Area Deaths

MarriagP licenses

.

Pressure flow tests slated in Middleport

A beautiful day, a lot of work, and brother Steve on guitar, sang a solo second place winners in the sack
a large enthusiastic crowd combined and claimed the $25 second place races were, respectively, two-six
to make the Racine Volunteer Fire prize.
years, Julie Hill and Heather Hlll;
Department's "Fourth of July"
Little six-year old Christi Maidens six-12 years, Monica Hill and Dolly
Celebration a success.
won the hearts of the crowd and Hill; six -12 years, Traci Beegle and
A large crowd gathered in Racine third place in the sliow, after a Michael Hill; 12·16 years, Charlie
Michelle Levacy
to view the annual parade, which twirling routine.
Weddle and Jay Boatick; adults,
other contestants w~re Dave Hud- Dick WAmsley and Perry Hlll.
featured
SO entries, representing
Graveside services for Michelle
Levacy, stillborn daughter of Joyce nwnerous organizations, businesses dleston, Steve Souder, Hilton Wolfe,
Heather Hill and Teresa Lee
and William Levacy of Dexter will and Fire Departments from Meigs Sr. , Kenda Rizer and Jennifer placed one-two in the foot race,
be held at I p.m. Wednesday at the County.
.Damron, Donnie Dudding, Kelly while Sonia Kearns edged Jay
Snowball Hill Cemetery. Rev . Floyd
The volunteers' talent show and Rizer, and three acts from Car- Boatick lor first in the 12-16 year
Shook will officiate.
"Miss Racine" beauty contest drew penter's Dance Studio, all of which division. Several children cashed in
In addition to the parents, the a large crowd and proved to he a big were outstanding.
on the fun during the treasure huntchild is survived by paternal grand - hit to the local supporters. Twelve
The grande finale was the "Miss sawdust pile.
parents, Mrs. James Boggs, Bid - talent acts were featured in the show Raeine" beauty pageant which was
A heautiful fireworks display
well ; and William R. Levacy of Dex- and each act demonstrated great won by Miss Do Do, who was ac- provided the perfect enging for a
ter and maternal grandparents, showmanship. The competitive tually Racine fireman Junior John - great day. Another large crowd
Mrs. Paul Stover of Dexter and Ran- spirit and excellent perfonnances son. Twelve .beauties competed in gathered In Racine for the colorful
dall Harrison of Columbus; great provided by the local talent was weD the comedy act. "Miss Racine" was exhibit.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Everett received.
Levacy of Chester; Hobart Cozart of
Eleven-year old Matthew Jewell, carrots,
and radishes.
8 bouquet of
crownedonions,
and awarded
Portland, Mrs. Betty Baird of Racine, claimed the $50 grand prize
Earlier in the day the volunteers
Gallipolis, several aunts and uncles. after a sparking perfonnance on the sponsored a variety of games. ShanEwing Funeral Home is in charge piano that featured a Medley of com- non Stobart claimed the $5 prize on
of arrangements.
plicated compositions.
the greased pole, while brother Sean
Bonnie Boso, accompanied by her Stobart won the $10 prize. First and

Rt&gt;ceive Complaints

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We Serve Meigs, Gallla and Mason Co.
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