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'f : WINTHROP
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DAILY HOR05COPE :

FORTUNE: WILL 5M1Le
ON 'IOU TODAY.

WAlTA

u 'IOLJ &lt;:AN e.xPEcr 10 ~
A FINANQAI- WINDFALL.

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AGREES TO 1\JE()FLY .~PJ4.~G- CallforuJa (:lov •. ~lind G. .
Brown Jr. liestl!t'\'1 a8 • ~ ...p.iat '!!bile s...;.klag iD Loa Allgelt!!l.
BroWD, say!Dg bis baud wasbcetq forced by the federal governmeat, BDnounced he would order.immedlate aerilil spraying ol areas iDfesled by
Meditemuieal. fruit files, whkb threaten produce growiDg areas ill northem Catiforllla. ( AP Laierpboto).
'

by Ed ·sui II

Priscilla's Pop
5TUARr.' G:JME WITH ME ...
THEREIS A 'MJNDERFUL...
LECTURE AT THE
UM.6RY/

1 Section , 10 Pages

IT"5

ON THE

COSMOS.'

I.,JOU

HEAR

HOW~IES

WERE R:::)I&lt;MEV·"

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) Emergency shelters were readied as
some residents of lush San Francisco suburbs prepared to flee
before · helicopters begin spraying
pesticide to wipe out destructive
Mediterranean fruit flies.
Attorneys for several cities planned a last-diteh appeal today to
Judge Bruce Allen of Santa Clara
County Superior Court for an injunction against the spraying. The
request is similar to one denied
Friday by U.S. District Judge
William A. Ingram.
State and federal authorities said
the malathion poses no health
dangers. But some local officials
and a doctor urged the 500,000
resld~mts in the target area - particularly pregnant women and nursing mothers- to leave home before
the 117-square-mile area is
blanketed with malathion spray to
·eradicate the ·Mediterranean fruit
fly . The first helicopter is set to take
offat2a.m. Tuesday .
Zoe Lofgren, a Santa Clara County
supervisor, was one of those who
urged peop,le to leave . "I don't know
where I'll go, but I intend to leave,"
she 's aid. ·
Red Cross officials said Sunday
that they didn't know how many
refugees to expect at their four

shelters - located in nearby towns
outside the spraying area . The
largest of the shelters would accorrunodate 1,000.
"This is the first time this kind of
situation has occurred," said Mary
McClellan, director of family services for the Santa Clara Valley
Chapter of the American Red Cross.
" We don't know whether to expect 10
people or 10,000.
"I doubt it would be 10, since
we've been receiving a large nwnber of calls from individuals who are
concerned. about the spray. But it's
difficult to piJ1point the number. ''
Pr.oject spokeswoman Gene Cone
said the spraying would go ahead
despite Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger's decision Sunday to
deny the use of nearby Moffett
Naval Air Station to U.S. Department of Agriculture helicopters.
Weinberger said he made the
decision because non-military
facilities were available.
Aerial spraying was ordered by
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. on
Friday after the U.S. Department of
Agriculture threatened to ban shipment outside the state of all California fruit and vegetables to prevent
the pest from spreading. Brown said
the Reagan administration "put a
gun to my head."

\,; -

.

ON 111E FLY - Agriculture Secretary John Block, appearing oa
NBC-TV's Today show Monday morning, expresses confidence In the
safety of a pesticide scheduled to be used in an effort to wipe out the
Mediterranean fruit fly in California. Several cities are slated to ask the
courts to stop the spraying. (AP Laserphoto I.

Rockefeller seeks toxicity reading

... "rrU'LL LEARN
A60llT THE EAIUH'$
ORIGIN"•

•••
&amp;&gt;

Polic~ investigation

underway

, CANJ,Pt-.

Obi.o- All 41v"'!!iSI!tion is under way by pa_nton police into. t)Je.ae;th. of,Cl\lisll!le K!IY Jones, whOSII bulfeWiddltd'J)G!Iy ~t4!!
discovel"4\il earb; S!lturilay under a tree in West Lawn Ceme!ery, near
the McKjnley Monument.
The 25-yeaMld mother of four had asked one of iler sisters to babysit early' Friday evening so she could go out and meet a friend .
The~ was (ully clothed. No money was found in the victim's purse, but police said they didn't know if she had beeri carrying any.

Strike won't ruin partying
CLEVELAND - The city of Cleveland is not letting a postponed
Majdr League All.StarGame ruin planned All-8tar partying.
Celebration began In the spurned host city on Sunday, and the in. tensity of the revelry was to grow today.
llbwever, Sunday, hundreds of revelers came to a bash in the city's
Public square.
The festivities today included opening of an "All-Nations Festival,"
al)d another civic party highlighted by the debut of the new night
li(ihting on the Terminal Tower, the city's tallest and most well known
landmark.

CaptlPn Kangaroo stricken

•

NEW YORK - Production on a revamped " Captain Kangaroo"
television show will be delayed until at least mid-August while
longtil'ne host, Bob Keeshan recovers from a heart attack, according to
~
.
spokesman Steve Reichl.
.
' Keeshan, 54, who has been "Captain Kangaroo" to millions of
ciJildren ov~ the•past 2j! years, remained in stable ~ondition today at
· EtOblcoke General Hospil{ll in Toronto.
. ,
•·\ .j{ees)~n was stricken minutes after his arrival Saturday at Toronto
'· International ·Airport. He hl!d e&lt;&gt;me to the city to occept an award for
his service to children.
.1
11

.Si.D.ger
~wis
remains
critlc~l
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,¥E;MPIDS; Tenn. - ~tcy OIUSiC star Jotuuly cash stopped by.to
see lletry Lee Lewis in a hospital's intensivl! care·unit while doctors

workedagail'Btinf~optosayeLewis''iife. '.

'· ,
Af mid'41fter!loon SUridayJ 'a hO&amp;pital'l'epc)!t said Le'wis remsined In ·
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extreml!ly ,c{ltipal'cOOdltlon. .
Lewis; t5 ; 1)U. ~Io Methodist Hospital,~slnce, June 30 when.
lie unclerwerat ~e'!Ct i\lil1¢r): .,o l'fPB~ llllt'Oriiacll l)e'rloration. He
·· ~ •to' b!! ~er'jng !ifitli Frldaf,
a' lligli f!Mr ,aletteil ~·
physfctans to the presence .o( a ', IT18islve•inf!!CtiOii 'in IIIII abdOOUnai , ·
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CHARLESTON (APJ - Gov. Jay
Rockefeller will ask the U. S. Defense Department this week to help
detennine tbe extent of toxic
chemical contamination at the McClintic Wildlife Station, state officials say.
David Callsghan, director of the
state Department of Natural
ResourCes, said the governor was
notified of the problem last week.

Three public fishing ponds at McClintic, site of a World War II explosives plant, were closed Friday.
Callaghan said he discussed the
situation with the governor, who
plans to ask Defense Department officials to help the state analyze the
contamination problem.
Callaghan said that, at this point,
officials do not know how much of a
public health hazard - if any ·exisl&amp;-at the site. Nevertheless, ' 8

report prepared by the DN R 's
hazardous waste section a nd
scheduled for release this week concludes that the "hazard appears to
be limited to explosion of TNT."
Dinitrotoluene, used in production
of TNT, was found to be seeping in
what state officials call " small
amounts" into pond 13 at the area.
Callaghan said there was enough lor
officials to notice a " reddish
discharge" into the pond .

Two nearby ponds - 12 and 17 closed as a precaution, he said.
There are about 40 such ponds at McClintic and the others remain open
for publi c use , although no testing
has been done on them, Callaghan
said.
The Mason County site is one of 11
nationwide where evidence or hazardous waste from military munitions
plants has been discovered.
w~re

Meigs deputies check two break-ins
Two breaking and enterings are
being investigated by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.
Robert L. Stealey, Belpre, who
owns a house on Callsway Ridge,
reported that sometime during the
week his property was entered by
kicking in the front door.
Taken were a portable TV, electMc ca11 opener, coffee maker, 14 in-

ch fan an4 a folding lawn chair.
Earl Jack Warner, Jackson, who
owns a house at Harrisonville,
reported that the property was
broken into and taken were a
shotgun, two other guns, a TV and an
eight track stereo and speakers.
Also reported to the department
was the dumping of tin roofing on
Ball Run Road. An older black

pickup truck with a wooden bed was
seen in the area near where the
roofing was dropped. Anyone having
an information in regard to the
pickup truck is asked to cantact the
sheriff's department or Salisbury
Township Trustees.
Vandalism was reported to the
Pearl Chapel Church on county road
338 near the Athens County line.

A side window had been knocked
out with a large piece of concrete
from the front step. A glass cover on
an electric meter box was broken , a
whiskey bottle was smashed on the
front steps and a sign was taken
from the front of the building. The
vandalism is believed to have occurred Friday evening.

Reagan team shifts into high gear
WASIDNGTON (AP)- With the
budget battle winding down, the
Reagan administration,plans to shift
into "high gear" in Its drive to bring
public pressure on Congress as the
tax-cut fight begins in earnest this
week.
And -while .Treasury Secretary·
Do"illd T. f{egan .. concedes a
"bruising fig)tt· on the floor of the
House" 18 .Wlav,oidable, budget
director David A. Stockman flatly
predicts tha~ President Reagan also
will win on taxes.
"I think we will move into high
gear, in terms · of ·.calli,ng the attention Of the AmeMcap public to
"hat's at stake' .here and the point
.that if lthey 81'1! to get a ta:J reduction
this year, w!Uch ,they .~xpect, then
we rn~ have a tax bill ....~igned by
the~ent l?efore Cqtlg~ leaves .
its ~t'rJOI!Ii A~S\JI.I. recess," ,
'*'lCla,w!O, . aald ,~~y on, ,ABC's ·

identifylawmakersripeforlobbying
by business leaders.
The
lawmakers, scattered among '1:1
states, are generally the same ones
on whom Democratic leaders are
concentrating.
There will be time for three more
weeks of such lobbying in the House •
since lhe Ways and Means Committee is still writing its version of a
tax cut. But the Republicancontrqlled Senate, tired of waiting
for the House, plans to start debate
Wednesday on Reagan's bill, as
modified by th.e Finance Committee.
:Il!ere :is considerable doubt the
Senate can pass the bill this week.
Eve(! though Democrats are outnumbered 53-47·, ·they easily could
delair a final voie until their dozens
of amendments are COIIIIidered.
The bill approved, by the Finance
Committee woul~ reduce personal
!all rates by an average of about 25
"Iselles,jiM Answers " .' .. ,,
'p ercent .over 33 months, ~tartirig
. "Itbirititialhilt'~rJie'';- and OCt. 1. The sallie rate reduction
it ,Ia ~t sort of ~ tirile fuse. woUld , g~ to all taxpayers, regar~ ~te ·~- the . dleS5ofiJ1COffie . .
Hquse 111111 ~It, aDd g.. us ~. tu
· The Democrats want a bill that
blll,by
~uilusf.". lie'added.
Would cut taxes in no more than two
~ saiil Reapn is'tlirough years, wjth an extra sbare of relief
.~and ~ :.,"i think . for workers with Incomes below
we' . 1!1 !be. ~: dOne be'caule· the $50,0(10ayear. ,
'
·
wants
j'ob '· t11ere la a lorig list of other amenddone."
·:' · , 1,
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.•
• •
menis ·tq be cOnsidered by the ·
Tile adminlsttatlon's-, battie' f,la, Senate, incluc!lng several being
targetll~ Houle Republica&amp; aDd fl3. ·~ by Republicans. !Jut it is
Democrata.
., · .
1
abiiOit certain that the bill passed

see if there was any way to avoid a
bruising fight on the floor of the
House .... We didn 't think it was
possible .... lt didn 't work and we
said, ·No more." '
Many of the 6:J House Democrats
who are considered undecided on
which tax-cut bill to support were
among those who joined a solid
Republican minority to provide the
margin of victory for Reagan's
budget cuts.
That part of the administration's
economic program moves into the
final phase this week, with as many
as 200 House and Senate negotiators
trying to iron out differences in the
multlbillioo-dollar budget-cutting
packages passed by lhe two chambers for the fiscal year that begins

Oct. I.

Stockman said Sunday that the
budget conference is ''a cleanup or a
finish phase ... essentially a
ministerial task to resolve the minor.
differences ."
He said he expects no major
problems from House Democrats. " I
would expect that they would look
for other opportunities to contest us
on, primarily, the tax bill," Stockman said.

The tax debate also could figure
this week in a fight over efforts to
reftrict court-ordered busing for
school integration. Liberal senators
are filibustering the restrictions ,
and the Senate has agreed that if the
question is not settled by Wednesday, the legislation will be
shelved to make way for the tax-&lt;:ut
bill.

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·' Norihei'n m~W.I'fti) m.y~·it.

~ iildi~ tax ~u~ ~eel by ~pn ~ ·
' tracUdflll~~byH¥:, !1 Jlll ,tedllctlon 1!1 buslll~ taxes
Dili~atjc ~ lllllt ~ .,_. ~ fliater Wrlte-offs for ·.I!Qulpman ~ Nliilf for loHnd rilld!Ut-~ ment
bulldinC purc!IBSes; and
~ ·Aine!i~ MGilt 0( the .tax ~ntlve!J for :savings ·and inDimoi:n~::nau
-IJOe~ ton- ..,.baa1t.
·,' .
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··~ 1W ~._,_,nature or ~ Secretary Regan, in' thfJii,IJ'LI•t'•tubii1\11Pt-n -t.et:Y~em ,stlnday 0!1 CBS' "Face
{J ~ttilft.
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. Tile lllh• ·~,by
U.S. L, ov~ to Ho~ Def(locrata last
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srocxMAN SPEAKS- David

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Attorneys continue appeals;
shelters ready for citizens

VE~ea:;,N.

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WI NTHfltJP. ..

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· :·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 13,1981

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af. Muipmftl and Badaet

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lelllli'el fpliGI' Ill lppearil~J ·bll
tile ABC 'l'elevlllaa abo'll' "(gaM
an~
Answers" Sunday In
Wublqtoa. (AP Luerpliele).

TREASURY TALK - Do•ld

Reg•o, · Secretary ol · tbe
. Trealury, grlauices •Prior 10 ap-

pearing oa llie CB$ · Teleylaloa
sbo~ "Face the Nadon" ~y
In Wpbiagtoo. IAP Luerplaoto).

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'C ommentar.

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Page-2-The Dill S~tlliel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, July·13,1911 · •· ·

Strike .differences widen

Don

.

:Israel's indecisive decision___________----;-,.,
· It would be a mistake to read
Israel's bitterly fought election as
evidence of a radical change in the
. c;ountry's political style as such.
From the very beginning of the
· Jewish state, politicians have gone
. at each other with a ferocity
.customarily reserved in other countries for civil wars. Few holds are
·barred in personal and partisan infighting . Even the physical violence
that scarred the closing weeks,
. dismaying to some observers in
. Israel and elsewhere for- its storm
.trooper echoes, differentiates the
·pa.'!Sions of this campaign from
o0thers more in degree than kind.
But it would be a greater mistake ·
fo dismiss the outcome of this election a merely more of the same
because once more Israeli voters,
after all the rhetorical vehemence
and partisan fury, have failed to
provide themselves with a stable
government.
This time they have also revealed
the country to be more sharply and
evenly polarized than ever before
between a right wing of doctrinaire
traditionalists and pragmatists of
the center and left .
Israel, even during the long ascen-

dancy of the Labor Party of David
Ben Gurioo and Golda Meier, has
never had a solidly based majority
government. Cabinets have always
been intricately crafted coalitions in
which inherent lnsiability has been
the common denominator.
But this time the crafting is going
to be more difficult than ever, and at
a time when Israel is less able to afford the luxury of preoccupation
with the techniques of politics.
Whether formed by Shimon Peres
or Menachem Begin, the next gover·
nment faces formidable problems
that will not yield to the politics of in·
stability. The country is burdened
with perhaps the most virulent in·
flation of any developed economy in
the world.
Economic weakness is more than
a n internal problem, it increases
Israel's dependence upon aid from
a broad at a time when its hard-line
policies - given dramatic ex·
pression in the destruction of Iraq's
nuclear facility - are increasing its
political isolation.
The confrontation with Syria in
Lebanon drags on, as does the dead·
lock over the future of the Arabs of
the occupied West Bank . Instability
to come to grips with tbilt issue

The Daily Sl:ntincl
Ill I IIUtl SttM•t
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ttl \ t I rF.n Til THI-: 1'1/Tt:Kt:.ltiT m·· THr M t: I(~S.MA'Sflflrri -''MI-:A

ROBERT 1.. WINGF.TI
,·,IT WIIIH.Ilt:r\11

BOB HOEFLICH

Or\ I.E ROTHGEB. JR.

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Foot-in-mouth
.diplomacy
Just when you probably thought it safe to begin taking your State Department seriously again, along comes the chief himself to warn you off.
You may have missed the latest exercise in foot-in-mouth diplomacy although by the time you read this it may no longer be the latest : things tend
to move along that rapidly on this team of foreign policy makers.
It does not have the headline-making implications of an intraadministration personality clash that made the criticism or U.N. Ambassador Jeane J. Kirkpatrick by still-anonymous aides of Secretary
Alexander M. Haig Jr. such a splashy story for a while there. But the im·
plications it does have are enough to raise questions - even fears - of the
team's grip on the political realities of the policies it's supposed to be
making .
Briefly, we had Haig justifying American lecturing or the French on the
makeup of their new government as the consequence of a simple fact of life
~ •'that Communist regimes, whether they are closely aligned with Moscow
or not, pursue policies which are not consistent with those of the Western
family of nations."
Forget how the French regime could be expected to react to that
wholesale writing off of the Socialists who are running the show. What
makes the comment worth commenting on is that Haig had just returned
, from China - you know, the China on the mainland, the one with all the
territory and all the people and a Communist regime. More, he had offered
U.S. weapons to that regime that by his own definition does not pursue
· ··policies consistent with those of the Western family of nations, which
-presumably are also the policies of the United States.
How do you explain that apparent undiplomatic hack of the hand to both
·
· Paris and Peking? However you try, you're on your own. Neither the
· secretary nor his anonymous aides are providing any help.
But that's not all, for which Haig can probably be thankful. At about the
. same time, his bOSs was publicly expressing his continuing regard for HlS
· preferred China - the one on an islaRd with few people and a non·
~ Communist regime. Who is a Chinese capital - Peking or Taipei - to
·' believe is defining policy? A secretary of state or a president'
But that's the way it has been going since January, even November.
. · Secretllrles rl state and defense, U.N. ambassadors, national security ad·
• visers and even presidents have been bumping Into t!IICh other and even
. • themselves on occasion in Washington's corridors of power.
At least If you believe what you read in the newspapers. And right there,
. · you may haw the problem. Or at least some very well-placed observers
think they have located the problem.
AI the White House among other points, it is reported that over-publicity
is
blamed.
The media's unending purauit of the new and attention-getting
'
Jlnd Ill mercllesa foc111 on newaw01 thy individuals tend to magnify minor
~· A careleuly worded remark, 1 teru,.,al'y difference of
·
can bedlllit an
·

•

blocks full implementation of the ·
peace with Egypt.
And potentially most serious of all,
there is a widening breach within the
Israeli community between the elite
of European origin that has run the
show since independence and later
arrivals from Arab countries and
North Africa, a culturally antagonistic and economically disadvantaged proletariat that now outnumbers the Europeans.
And finally, the issue that
dominated the campaign remains
unresolved: Menachem Begin.
Whether he forms the next government or leads the opposition, Begin's
personality and style will dominate
the post-election pohtics. He may
not be wholly responsible for the
present polarization, but he certainly personifies it. He arouses
great admiration in some quarters,
i ncludin g the burgeoning
proletariat, and even greater antipathy in others, notably the intelligef1tsia.
And for essentially the same
rea sons- his hard-ball politics, acid
tongue, un.;werving dedication to a
fire-eating brand . of Zionism that
rejects accommodation
of
Palestinian aspirations and a flinty
refusal to compromise not only with
the opposition but independent
opinions in his own camp.

Wbatev~r !he precise composition
of a new government, post-election
lsraer appears committed to
carrying on the unfinished bailie of
Begin, to the detriment of the
nation's ability to deal effectively

with its many Internal and e~rnal crises and made them, despite all
problems: And that may not be the . their problems, the brightest.spot in
worst of it. Polarized and pre- the Middle East.
occupied, Israelis may b.e losing
It would be a mistake to discount
some of the democratic vitality that the seriousness of that possibility.
hea sustained them through so many

•

camping, vacation cabins, swim·
ming, scuba diving, fishing, boating,
and hiking trails.
Members of the House Education
Committee travel to Toledo and Cin·
cinnati next week to hold public
hearings on pending legislation af·
feeling Ohio's school funding
program.
The panel is seeking testimony
from business, industry and labor
leaders, as well as school officials
and the public.
"The purpose of this meeting is to
generate a clear understanding of
the financia l situation of Ohio's
schools and the education programs
presently offered," said Rep .
Thomas C. Sawyer, D·Akron, com·
mittee chairman.
The Toledo hearing is to be held

1 ;:
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TENNIS viiNNERS-.Joy Deatley, Syracuse, !ell, took top houonlD the

womeu's iltles•tellllll ~monl Jlild at the Syn&lt;~~se courts July 9,
tbrougb J
12. Rhoada Woeds; New Haveu, rlgbl, look second place
houon iD .
WOIIIell's 11Dgles. The ~our~~&amp;menl wao sponsored by Xi

Monday, July 13, at 9:30a.m. in the
Toledo Board of Education offices.
The Cincinnati hearing is scheduled
for Friday, July 17, at 9:30a.m. at
the Great Oaks Joint Vocational
School, Scarlet Oaks campus.
Long·time Rep . Myrl H .
Shoemaker, D·Boumev~le, may
have put the House-Senate battles
and bargaining over a ·new budget
into the most proper perspective.
Shoemaker was asked about
various problems facing the joint
conference committee he headed in
an attempt to work out a com·
promise version of the spending
plan.
" There are two things you don't
want to look at too closely," the Ross
County legislator told a reporter.
" Making sausage and making

iJiJ;;;;:;~ King
ro;J~V~Y,

•

Democrats should discipline
colleagues who defect and con·
sistently vote for President
Reagan's programs.
At the same time, the Democratic
National Committee has com·
missioned a new study of the
presidential nomination rules, and
its chairman began by talking of
changes that would scrap some of
the handiwork of earlier refonners.
In the House, 30 or so Democrats
have been siding with Reagan in key

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., a
particularly thoughtful member of
the House, offers one explanation for
that new voting pattern: The
moderate-11}-Jiberal Republicans are
" afraid of well-financed right-wing

hit men."

~

,

vi

Klltg.,

the sec:!nd . set . · &lt;?,f wome? 's
doubles), K1ng sa1d. By the third
set, he was really getting personal.
I'm all alone out there on the court,
aild he's back there hiding in the .

ot a

crowd.''
She turned to the heckler, deman'!led his name, asked him how he'd
like it if she did the same to him, and
followed up with a well-known
vulgar gesture.
"His wife kind of jabbed him in the
side and he. was quiet the rest of the
night·, ". King said. .
•
: ..:The rest of the evening went well
forherasshedefeatedBarbara Potter, 6-3, and· combined with Fritz
B11ehning 'for a 6-4 mixed Houbles
v:tctory that sent the match ' Into a
. super-tiebreaker. Oakland won the
. tie breaker, 7·2, and the match.
King's team is now 4-1 and in first
place. The Oranges are 2-3.

stirred controversy .

she a&lt;lmltted having

~d 'a lea · n aff8lr with her former
secretary, ' arilyn Barnett, paused
during he Team Tennis match ilt'
this Ora County community sunday to gl e the . heckler a lecture,
followed a one-finger salute. • ·'
The p yer --' wh!lae Oakland
Breake too~ .~ 28-fl; victilry over,
the Cali ornia Oranges llefore an
audien .of 1,!143 at Los Caballeros
Racque and ~ports Club ..:. said it
was the lrst time a fan has given her
a bad ·
publicly since she admltted
relationship.
"He as riding 'me pretty good in

Besides, they don't have the kind
of disciplinary clout they used to
have. In the days of autocratic
speakers and power by seniority, a
party leader could enforce discipline
with reward or punislunent. But the
process was changed, at the behest
of Democratic liberals who wanted
democracy rather than decree. They
resented the dominance of Southern
Democrats who became the )Xiwers
of the committee structure by virtue
of seniority.

Cal{s·' owner expects profit
CLEVELAND (AP) Ted
Stepien has climbed many financial
"lountatns In hiS succ;essful bi!Siness
career, allel the outspoken entrepreneur saya he fully expects his
Clevelarid Cavaliers to turri a profit,
or at least break even, In the
National Basketball Association

Who'S running the hOUSe ?'--_R_o_be_n_W._al_te_rs
WASHlNGTON (NEAl- " Do you a popular idea than to a Republican
realize what 's happened' " a
juggernaut in the House.
jubilant aide to the Republican
But such definitions - Democrats
leaders of the House of Represen- abandoning their party's leadership
tatives asked nobody in particular. positions to vote with the
"For the first time in 30 years, they Republicans, or vice versa - are
don't run Congress."
hardly uncommon in the modern
" They," of course, are the history of the House.
Democrats, whose leaders had
Throughout recent decades, confailed only minutes earlier to servative Southern Democrats 1ofprevent House passage of a White ten referred to in the vernacular as
House-promoted bill that would "Dixiecrats") regularly have
mandate more than $36 billion worth crossed party lines when they
of reductions in the federal budget.
viewed the Democratic leadership
If the Democrats are no longer in pOsition as too liberal for themcontrol, who is' "The Republicans selves, their constituents or both.
certainly aren't running the House,"
The only distinguishing feature
says Rep. Thomas R. Harkin, D. about this year's budget votes was
lowa . "President Reagan is."
Rep. Tom Bevill, an Alabama that the "Dixiecrats" have a new
Democrat who sided with Reagan on colloquial appellation. They're now
some I but not all) of the budget known as ''boll weevils."
What was significantly different
votes, shares that assessment.
"Back home in my district," he about the House votes on the budget,
says, "all they want to know is, 'Are however, was the absence of viryou with the president or are you tually any "liberal" or
against the president?'"
" progressive"
Northern
Other members of the House Republicans siding with the
agree that the defection of 29 Democrats. Such swjtches, whi.c h ofDemocrats during a pair of crucial fset defectiOns going In the other
budget votes can more logically be direction, also hiive been a common
attributed to a likable president and phenomenoo in the past.

d
. •o e s n

recentJr w .

laws."

budget-cutting votes, providing the
margin of victory for the Republican
administration. "Where there is a
concerted pattern of action against
Democratic programs, that merits a
possible disciplinary action by the
leadership," Manatt said.
House Democratic leaders are
wary of efforts at punishment. Their
party majority is narrow;
Republicans would need to gain 'lJ
seats in the neKt election to take con.
trol. And a defector on one vote can
be an ally on the next one.

Calif. (AP)
~.,: ~eheCklerfouridoutin·pubUc
that Wmia star· Blllie ·Jean King
'1. take klndi). to il].sultlng
~Iii. eSjle(:lillly, ~
per-

s. .'nature 1

Reform, senority have different meanings .
WASHlNGTON lAP) - Reform
isn't what it used to be. Neither is
seniority.
As a result, the political
generation that overhauled
Democratic rules in the name of
refonn has presented its successors
with a dilemma . They' re trying to
figure out how to reclaim some of
the old ways of party discipline and
organization - and still call it
reform .
Party chairman Charles T .
Manatt contends that House

..

seasOn.

. ,

:·· &lt;;:ounting alll3 players, the player
pilyrollia aboqt $3.8 tnlllion, not in'c!ndtng incentives offered to free
agants James Edwards, Scott Wedman and Bobby Wilkerson. The
bonuseS, ' hued on attendance and
playoff perfonnance, could boost the
payroll cost to $4 million.

.

TJie task wlll'not be easy.

With his newly acquired, high
agent players, Stepien
priced
and his fortes must realize ~
million next seasOn just to break
even.
He recenUy revealed the C9St of
operation. .,
'
'
Stepien ;said the club must
average 12,500 per ·hOine game:
more than double last season's at-

free

strong Republican challenges to
their re-election, it's impossible to
control every local GO.P., ·
orga nizati on and all 'of · tlle ill
congressional aspirants In botll P,BI'- .
ties anxious to seize a .unique 9P- ..
portunity to caplb!ltze upon . an ·
ciunbent's weakness. •·.
Thus, the defectors ,a re likely.:' ·.
first face a Democratic prima'*t
challenge in which their opponents
accuse them of unreliability; ·
disloyalty and assorted . other ·
poli,tical sins.

Edwards and Wedman top the
salary scale with base salaries of
$700,000. Wilkerson gets a base pay
of $350,000.
Veteran guard James Silas,
acqul-\'ed In a trade, is attempting io
renegotiate , IUS contract Into ·the
$300;000 ra~ge. - '
.
The ciub expects to incur another
S2 million lri oper.atlng cosiB In tr{lvel
expensesan~.rentat the Coliseum In

By Associated Press
Doc Estes says 'attempting to
make \IP for a bad play right. away
often just creates another one. But
the Toledo player only waited one inning Sunday night to erase his
blemish and help the Mud Hens
defeat Syrac.use 6-4 in International
League baseball.
Estes' throwing error in the
second inning had helped Syracuse
score two runs. But his homer in the
third gave those two runs back to the
Mud Hens.
"I was upset, sure, but I wasn't
trying to make up for the error,"

Estes said. "I think it just happened
!bat way. You try to make up for a
mistake right a way, a lot of times
it'll just get worse."
In other league games Sunday,
Rochester hammered Columbus Ui·
7, Pawtucket beat · Richmond 6-2,
and Tidewater edged Charleston Hl.
Terry 'Felton pitched six innings of
shutout relief in the Toledo victory.
Felton, ~. entered the game in the
top of the fourth inning with a
Syracuse runner on second and
nobody out. He retired the next three
batters and allowed just three hits

NASHVIlLE, Tenn . ( AP)
Darrell Waltrip held off Bobby
Allison's late charge to win a nearly
race-long duel between the two
ve\eran speedsters in the Nashville
Busch '420 Grand National stock car

race.

POSTS TWIN WINS
Meigs ' American Legion
baseball team continued to roll
Sunday afternoon by blitzing
Parkersburg Soutb twice, 11-o
and %:W. Tbe sweep gives Meigs
an 18-2-1 season record.

Waltrip picked UP, his fourth Nashville victory, crossing the finish line
on the 420th lap around the highbanked .596-mile track just one car . - - - - - length ahead of Allison, who failed
pass.Waitrip on the final few laps.

to

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te ., yerso ._,. \
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·
1

1 '

power•the Wings' attack.
Columbus got most of its runs on
homers by Steve Balboni in the third
and by Tucker Ashford and Mike
Patterson in the fourth.
Clipper pitcher Andy McGafflgan,
2-4, faced five batters and allowed
four hits, five nms and a walk; He
left the game in the first inning
without registering an out and was
charged with the loss .
Steve Grilli, :h'l, came in in the
fourth and got the win for Rochester
after holding the Clippers to three
hits and no runs .
Pawtucket&amp;, Richmond 2
Wade Boggs, Jim Wilson and
Chico Walker all hit doubles in a
four-run second inning, and Dave
Koza slarnmed.his 14th homer of the
year in the Pawtucket victory. Richhanging tough.
mond's
Paul Runge hit his sixth
"I thought Billy played pretty
of
the year in the seventh to
homer
well," Palmer said. "He's always
cap
the
visiting
Brave's scoring. :
been a tough competitor and he stiU
Hu~t. 7-4, got the vic~ory
Bruce
is.
"I remember Bob (Stone) quite with relief help from Mike Smithson,
well from the early days on the tour. who picked up his third save. Jim
I played with him a few times, but I Acker, f&gt;-3, lasted jusll2-3 inningll.
Tidewater I, Charleston t
can't give an analysis of his game."
Ed
Lynch hurled a four-hit shutout
That Palmer remembers little
in
the
Tidewater win. Lynch, ;3-5,
else about Stone is understandable.
fanned
six Charlies while walking
The 51-year-old Stone is the pro at a
three.
public course in Independence,tMo.,
who appeared only briefly on the
Tidewater scored in the sixth in·
tour before a bad back forced him to ning when Gil Flores doubled, went
·
to third on Todd Winterfeldt's single,
give it up.
" So far I haven't been nervous,"
and then scored on a single by' Phil
said Stone, who earned the third and Mankowski. Budd Anderson, 2·2,
took the loss for Charleston.
final slot in his regional qualifying
R
p •tt had
d bl
d
round at Kansas City. "I expect that
. on rw . . a ou e an a
will change on Monday, although _ smgleforthe v1s1lors.
I'm going to try to approach it as
just another round of golf, another
day off."
The soft-spoken Stone said he
would be back giving lessons and
working around the pro shop at
Crackerneck Golf Club if it weren't
for today's playoff.
"I never thought this late in life I'd
find myself in a playoff with Arnold
Palmer," Stone said with a laugh .

Waltrip posts win

napes

mllll;

over the next five innings, while the
Hens rallied behind the tw(}orun
homer by Estes and a two-run single
byK.C. Chauncey.
The Hens knocked out starter·
loser Colin McLaughlin, 1·2, in their
three-run fourth.
Rochester 16, Columbus 7
John Shelby knocked in four runs
in the first inning to lead the
Rochester Red Wings to victory. The
Red Wings scored eight times in the
first inning ancl never trailed. Floyd
Rayford homered in the second and
Dallas Williams in the fifth to help

BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (AP)- It $26,000 while the other two each will
was · understandable that Billy earn $9,586.
"It seems like we've been here
Casper was recalling the 1966 U.S.
Open at San Francisco today while before, " Casper said of the playoff.
Arnold Palmer was trying to block it "My swing came a little unglued at
times, especially on the back nine,
completely from his mind.
but I was able to produce when I
However, for Bob Stone it was just
needed to."
"another day off."
During the 1966 U.S. Open, Palmer
Casper, Palmer and Stone finished
led Casper by seven strokes but let it
in a three-way tie at the .close of the
U.S. Senior ()pc:n golf tournament at get I! WaY during the final round and
Oakland Hills Country Club Sunday. Casper beat !lim by four in a playoff.
It was a similar story at the B, 79&amp;
Under United States Golf
Association rules, the trio had to set- yard South Course here Sunday
tle the championship in an IS.hole · where Paimer had it all but locked
up before bogeying two of the final
playoff today.
three
holes to let victory slip away.
The three finished 72 holes at ~
rather than dwell on his
However,
over par 289, one stroke ahead of Art
own
faltering
finish, Palmer gave
Wall who earned ~ .736 for fourthto
Casper
and Stone for
credit
place. Today's winner will pocket

average.~ cket -piiced a,t $8.so:·such ·rnean ·lfle team would.·have to ad- ·
an a .
de ·, perfonnance would vance well into the playoffs, and obbring
Cavaliers organization . lain .the resultant revenue, to tum a
· profit..
·
about $4 ini\licin.' · · · •
"We~ have to realize aroUnd $4
million(' he,said. .
.
l'h' U , .
,
Stel!ji!D said tllll •Ca¥!en 'br~,
·
~ , , U1ly. Scn ~ i ncl
trust
tb make up the other $2
' . · ' iUSP$·1 -1
mllll when they receive .a ' $1
·,. ADt.u~""•llun...ia.I...
.
share of televiaion revenue ' ' Publis.,;t er&lt;'l1' a(temoon, !'londll)' lh.,.,llllh ''
flCBS, another ~,000 'triilii p.e
~:'~~ =·i~· ~.~~'t.v~~~
Da
~Mavericks from a PI:! or · Purnoliiy. OhJo,.l$7611, er.r·2156.•'"""'
neg lion and revenue from Iota!
, ~tal(~pold•,lPOlnero,.Oh••·
,

frW

player. If the player moved up: one
level, the signing team Prolecti 30
players. If the player moved within
the sam level, the signing team loses
only an amateur draft choice. If the
player moved down one or two
levels, there is no compensation.
-Further, If a team lost a free
agent and receives a pro player as
compensation, it would pay the compensating team $200,000 if the Cwlpenating team was allowed· to
protect 24 players and $150,000 'i f it
was permitted to protect 30 players.
While compensation seems to be
the sole issue In the strike right now,
another problem is lurking in· the
wings - full service credit, namely
whether the players will be credited
for the playing time lost during the
strike. The players say they won't
return without the credit. The
owners dot because of the effect 11
has on future free agency.
Pitcher Ron Guidry of the New
York Yankees, for one, will become
a free agent after the 1981 season if
he receives credit for all of it. If he
doesn't, however, he will not achieve
free agency until the end of the 1982
season.

Three way tie forces playoff

-f-.. ,,. ·-..-... . -

Disloyalty to Reagan, Frank
suggests, would almost certainly incur the wrath of one or more of the
currently hyperactive conservative
political-action committees and encourage conservative challenges in
future primary elections.
Meanwhile, the Democrats who
Even . if they survive that "'
have been providing the president
with his victory margins are pain- challenge, they could · wei) be conling themselves Into a poli~cal cor- fronted by a ReJlllbllcan ·a ppealing .
ner from which there probably Is lit- for ·support in the general e)ectlori
Ue chance to escape - and they're with a campaign pitch along ,these
awareof.theirproblem.
. lines :
'·· ,
Rep: Sam B. Hall Jr., a Texas
"Why settle for an ersatZ(Reagari
Democrat who has consistenUy ' supporter - a, Democ._t ~ . sides .
backed ~eagan in the h!'dget · with the·presidenl O!f s e l . votes
struggle, Is q~otedby a c;onea~as ; when. properly cajole,d ~ ·~ y:..J ·
forlornly musmg about his proSpeclS • can elect an " authentic , ~an
in the 1982 electlo!l: "The backer?· If you Uke the .!teJiqblican
RepubUcans won't need us•and u,{ : program elect a Repub!Jcan 'froiD'·'
·Democrats woo't want us."
., ·~.. thiS ~oPal distrltt.wbO
Even if the Whjte House is willing -. ropresentiry,o;urviewa."
·
~·
to provide covert assistance to' liB
There's nc)' easy response ~to.'tbat
Democratic friends In fending off arg\unent. · ·
·'

-·

team then choosing an WJproteeted

claulfied a "premier" player.
-Players 35 and over, those with
more than 12 seasons in the majors, ,
and those who have previously gone
through the free-agency system
would be excluded from the
"premier" label.
-Premier players would be excluded from tiJe re-entry draft and
permitted to negotiate with any
number of clubs. All other players
would go through the current reentry draft and be limited to
negotiating with 13 ~·
- Compensation in ~ form of a
professional player wo.lld be limited
to the top 12 ranking free agents.
Compensation for any other ranking
free agents would be a special
amateur draft choice. Compensation
for nonranking players would be a
regular amateur draft choice.·
'
- The degree of compensation for
the top 12 premier players would be
based In part on the team's overall
standing in the previous two
seasons, with the league divided into
three groups - the top nine , middle
eight and bottom nine clubs . If a
player moved up two levels, the
signing team would be able to
protect 24 players and the losing

Estes redeems himself with home run

'

immediate vicinity; can begin
operations on July 10; and can
operate for a management fee to
cover administrative expenses," the
department said in its written
request for approval .
The college is already familiar
with such operations. It currently
operates the Hocking Valley Motor
Lodge as a training facility for
students in · its culinary arts and
restaurant management programs.
Richard A. Shein, of the depart ·
ment's office of business and finan·
ce, said lack of profitability had
hampered earlier attempts to find
private concessionaires.
" We believe that it will be
profitable in the long term," Shein
said.
Other facilities and activities at
the park include tent and trailer

. . . . .'

wu

Hocking Tech takes over operations
COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP) Operation of a restaurant -at Lake
Hope State Park is being turned over
to the Hocking Technical College
this swnmer in hopes of showing the
Ohio park facility can turn a profit.
Details of the agreement are
outlined in a $70,000 contract bet·
ween the college and the state
Department of Natural Resources
which has been approved by the
state Controlling Board.
The department turned to the
college after failing in two attempts
to entice private companies into sub·
milling bids for operation of the
facility in the Zaleski State Forest of
southeastern Ohio.
" Hocking Technical Institute was
chosen to operate Lake Hope Dining
Lodge under a management
agreement because they are in the

'

.

mediator's reconunendatioo Is not
NEW YORK (AP) - 1be.gap between the playen and owners In' the . a~ted-by I!JlY of 111. It is a low
and ICIIrrilous tactic, a tactic that Is
major league baseball itrlke
wide!led ~derably over the deplored by everybody.''
Moffett said his proposal was the
weekend when Ray Grebey •aid
result
of data collected by himself
Marvin Miller ·WBii Keruietb Mofand
Nancy
Broff, general counsel of
fett's ~ter and Miller said
·
the
Federal
Mediation and ConGrebef
a liar.
· The three are · the. principal .cilialion Service. He also said it is
playe"" In the strllce which ' entered not unusual that · one side - the
rejecting side - makes a charge
liB second month today. Grebey is
·the ¢lief negotiator for the owners, similar to Grebey's when the other
Miller 18 the head of the players' side accepts the proposals.
George Steinbrenner, principal
union' and Moffett is the harried
owner of the New York Yankees,
federal mediator trying to bring
said ln view of.management's rejecboth sldes.together.
Last Thursday, Moffett gave both tion of Moffett's proposal, it was imsides a plan designed to settle the portant that the owners bargainers
sole issue - · for now - o( free-agent advance a new proposal early this
compensation which hea wiped out week. Steinbrenner sald he was op392 regular-season games . and put timistic, adding, " I think it (the
off the All,Sia~ game; scheduled for strike) will be over in a week."
Herman Franks, general manager
Tuesday night In Cleveland.
of
the Chicago Cubs, said, "It looks
• Moffett's piaJ! was aceepted by the
like we're going to get into the 'white
players. But the owners rejected it.
And Gi'ebey, said of Moffett's plan : hats-black hats' thing again ... This
is pretty sad."
"Marvin wrote it It'sa setup."
Under the plan offered by Moffett:
The incensecl Miller later replied :
-An eligible player in the top 20 per"That is the worst lie he (Grebey)
has told and he has told many during cent at his position, based on a
these negotiations ... The attempt to statistical formula covering the
cast doubt on the impartiality of the most recent two seasons, would be

"

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Haas holds on, wins
MILWAUKEE (AP) - The word
on Jay Haas has been that only a
balky putter had separated him
.
from the elite of golf.
But he showed Sunday that he may
. be preparing to challenge for
position among the game's best.
Displaying remarkable con·
sistency until he took a
meaningless double bogey on his last
hole, Haas shot a final-round l-over·
par 73 at Tuckaway Country Club for
a 3-stroke victory in the $250,000
Greater Milwaukee Open tour·
nament.
Haas, who began the fina l round

with a five-otroke lead over Rex
Caldwell and Mike Smith, finished
with a 72-hole total of 274, 14 under
par and three strokes ahead of
veteran Chi Chi Rodriguez.
Lyn Loti, having started the day
six strokes off and in third place,
bogeyed his last hole to setUe for a
tie for third with Danny Edwards at
278.
Defending champion Bill Kratzert
was at 279, along with Caldwell, Jeff
Mitchell, Tim Simpson, and 1972
GMO winner Jim Colbert.
Haas, a 27·year-old resident of
Charlotte, N.C., has won only one

Milwauk~e

other tournament, at San Diego In
J978,1n five years on the tour.
But he conaistenUy has finlBhed
high in the money, having ranked
35th last year with •114,102.
He climbed to 18th on this year's
list at ,111,316 with his f45,000
Milwaukee che&lt;:k.
Haas bogeyed his first hole s.m.
day, but Smith took some pressure
off him by bogeying the second hole.
Caldwell bogeyed No.3. Then Haas
regained momentum when he sank a
:?J&gt;.foot birdie putt on No.3.
Rodriguez, 45, shot a final-round
69 for his runnerup finish. His $27,000

Open

I

''Do

1 1'I 1

Class of '4"1 ·holds reunion

,'

c:hect bOosted his career earnings to

.'.

$930,000.
"I started playing for second place
when Jay was 16-under and I was
only eight under," Rodriguez said.
" If you can't win, I always say,
flniah second... .
It was Rodriguez' best tournament
since he won at Tallahassee two
years ago.
"I want to be comeback player of
the year, and I w•nt to win a million
dollars on the tour before I quit," he
said. "Of course, I have already
spent a million and a half."

Q

EJgbt of the 28 members of the
. • gttduating clau of 1!141 of Rutland
' HJCh SChooi attended the 40th
· · reunion held at Rutland Alumni

Asaoclation. .

••

Attending were Don Morgan,
Dayton ; Kathleen Donahue Fink,
Rutland; Oorolhy Wlae Rathburn,
· ·(:ollllnbus; Moine Ogdin Griffith,
,Pomeroy; Margaret Fink Silchuk,
Rittman; Betty Dunfee Biggs,
. Pomeroy; Thunnan Carsey, Middleport; and Mary Kathryn Davis
Holter. Bas han.

on the 16th hole to finish four strokes
ahead of Hollis Stacy and Myra Van
Hoose.
" Can you believe, sleeping on a ~
s hot lead and having a terrible
night?," said Austln after recording
a 2-over 74 in the final round to finish
with a ~under 279. " I slept awful. I
probably had about three hours of
sleep."
The 33-year-old from Haines City,
Fla., a tour member since 1968, said
she woke up about6 a.m. and started
putting into a cup.
" I've never done that in my whole
life," said Austin after the seventh

pro victory of a career which was
nearly ended in 1978 by tendinitis in
her shoulder.
" That's when I went to travel
agents school. I spent four months in
a school in Atlanta learning the
travel agency business .. .lf my
problems with my shoulder didn't
work out, then I could go into that
kind of business."
The triumph was worth $22,500 to
the :&gt;-foot-4 Austin, who is recognized
for her big smile even when thinl(s

are going wrong. The winner's check
boosted her earnings to $61,009, her
best year since 1977 when she earned
$86,392 while winning five times.
"I kept telling myself all day to.get
aggressive," Austin said. " The win
is important in many .ways. I've
worked so hard to win again."
Stacy, who won her second U.S.
Women's Open title on the same
course in 1978, shot a 4-under 68 in
her final round to move into the tie at

283.

VICtORY WAVE- Jiy
. givtlB a wave lifteroiDldDI!I
.. tile
18th bole for a double bogey.- and victory Ill the Greater Mlhroke_e fltlea
Suaday,. Haas; from Charlotte, N. C., picked up f45,000 for bla !Marpar 274 victory. The win was Haas' secood 1111 the PGA leur. Chi .Cbl
Rodrigue~ finished second tbree sbots behtod Haas. &lt;AP Lailerpb~te) .

McEnroe, Connors pace America·
NEW YORK ( AP) - For the next
two weeks, John McEnroe would
like to be John Doe.
''I'm taking a vacation. Maybe
people will forget who I am for
awhile," said McEnroe, who capped
three weeks of tennis history and
histrionics by overpowering Tomas
Smid 6-3, 6-1, IH in the clinching
match Sunday as the United States
defeated defending champion
Czechoslovakia 4-1 in the Davis Cup
quarterfinals.
Jinuny Connors completed the
best-of-five Davis Cup series before
a crowd of 16,008 (11 ,718 paid) by
beating Czechoslovakian ace Ivan
Lend! 7-5, 6-4 in a match shortened to
best-of-three sets because it did not
have any impact on the team competition.
The United States will next face
Australia in the semifinals in Portland, Ore. , Oct. 2-4.
While McEnroe's two-week
charge to the Wimbledon title was

marred by temper tantrums,
disputes with officials and the
British press and a final snub by the
All-England Club, 'Which broke with
tradition by not 'making him an
honorary member despite his victory over Bjorn Borg in the finals, he
behaved much better this weekend
in his hometown.
But that doesn't mean he· s
changed his mind about the quality
of tennis officials. He was clearly
displeased by several line calls in his
lopsided victory over Smid, as well
as his opening loss to Lend! on
Friday.
With McEnroe leading Srnid 4-2 in
the third set and the score tied 3().30
in the seventh game, the
Czechoslovakian player hit a serve
that appeared to be good. The
linesmen called it good, but were
· overruled by the umpire who called
a fault.
The Czechoslovakians com~
plained, but to no avail - so

McEnroe took matters into his own
hands. He signalled to Smid to hit his
second serve, and rather than trying
to return it he simply waved at it,
giving away the point.
The crowd loved it, treating
McEnroe to the loudest ovation of
the da y.
" I don't like to get bad calls
myself and I don't like to see other
players get hurt by bild calls," explained McEnroe. " The bail was
good by a foot. There was no way the
umpire could see it clearly enough to
overrule the linesmen."
As for the cheer from the crowd at
the National Tennis Center, where
McEnroe has frequently been booed,
he joked, " Let's hope I hear more of
it at the Open."
Defending his title at the U.S.
Open in late August and early September is McEnroe's next big tennis
goal. After his hiatus, he'll play tour·
naments in Montreal and Cincinnati
as tuneups for the Open.

HILL
'

'

\ Pomeroy

Today's

Sports World
By WW Grimlley
AJ'CorreopoDdent

aware of an old silver bowl which.

crammed to the rim, holds 37 bottles
of champagne .
It's the Davis Cup.
One had to be lifted in spirits to sec
more than 17,000 people - many of
them parents with small tykes in tow
- trooping into the modern National
Tennis Center stadium on Friday for
the opening quarterfinal tennis matches between the United States and
Czechoslovakia.
For most of the decades of the past
- even those glorious years of Big
Bill Tilden,
France's Four
Musketeers and England's Fred
Perry, followed by such greats as
Jack Kramer, Pancho Gonzales and
Rod Laver - the nation's sports television .
public had greeted the international
Like the game, it has gone totally
event with a wide yawn .
professional. A Japanese comUndoubtedly there was signlfican· munication giant, Nippon Electric
ce in the fact that a couple of hun· Co., Ltd., has thrown one million
dred yards away, Shea Stadium, dollars into the Davis Cup pot. u.s.
borne of the New York Mets, was players are partially subsidized by
empty, baking in the sun, victim ol Ellesse, a wearing apparel finn,
the baseball strike, which has en- their other commercial tie-ins. In
tered Its second month.
the past, players perfonned for the
· But, more importantly, it was a honor of their country. They do the
mad crush of fans who wanted to get same now, but not without reim8t look at sparta' most celebrated bursment. Members of the
viUtan, young John McEnroe a hero team get a cut of the gate and stand
·:to sOn\e and anti-hero to &amp; s.
to collect some UO.OOO each. Italy
It baa been a great revival for the reportedly has paid $75,000 for the
' DavtsCup. .
services of Adriano Panatta.
. Tile big trophy wears the tag
But there's not enough money to
"Ma~ Iti USA" but never until n~ .Jure Sweden's Bjorn Borg.
hal eQjoyed the prestige afforded in Patriotism or not, he no longer plays
&gt; ; other lsnds, particularly Australia, in Davis Cup matches.
, ! ,which held the trophy 15 times bet-

u.s.

t

~~;;;, \215 W. Main

ENROE'S BACK - John McEnroe serves Czechoslovakia's Tomas
Smid Sunday during their Davis Cup singles match at New York's
Natlooal Tennis Center. McEnroe regained his winning form , after a loss
to Ivan Lend! Friday, by smashing Smid &amp;-3, 6-1, 6-olthus advancing the U.
S. to the semifinals against Australia. 1AP Laserphotol .

ween 1950 and 1967.
Dwight Davis, later Secretary of
War under President Coolidge, conceived the idea of an international
match between Britain and the
United Stales in 1900 while he was an
WJdergraduate at Harvard . He paid
a Boston jeweler $7,000 for a sterling
silver bowl lightly washed in gold, 13
1nches high, 18 inches in diameter
and 217 ounces troy weight.
A tray had to be added in 1927 and
a circular shelf in 1968 to accomodate the growing names of the
champions.
The competition, controlled by
Davis Cup nations, has undergone
few changes, the principle being a
departure from the Challenge Round
in 1972. It is the only major tennis
event that has not adopted the hebreak, thus discouraging network

••

rRACTORS

The Equal Payment Plan.

It took a baseball strike and the
Wimbledon histrionics of John " Sore
Toe" McEnroe to do it, but after 81
years America has finally become

CL,488 OF 1!141; Rutland Hlsb School, held a
reuulon recently. Attendln&amp; were, froqt, ~ MOJ'IlBD
and KathleeD Doaahue li'lnk; aod back, Dorothy Wise

In . IIOUthem AlaJka where It was
warmer than Ohio last winter.
Others unable to attend the
reunion were Catherine Morrla
Pausha, Bloomington, Ind. ; Darren
Burson, New Carlisle; Catherine
Bolen Wogan, Columbus; Carl
Moore, Monroe, Mich. ; Leanne
Rumfield Jacks, Langsville; Homer
Russell, Florida; Lucille Spaulding
Smith, Columbus, and Evelyn Goff
Davis, Langsville.

Center; Lawrence Snowden, Columbus; Donald Shrader, Philo; Mabel
Ruuell and Thelma Michael .
Displayed at the banquet in their
honor were flags and fiowera.
Read at the reunion were letters
from Ellene Darst Ward, Columbus,
and Cecil Hewitt, .civil engineering
superintendent of RCA Service Co.
in Murphy Dome AFS, Alaska. In his
letter he spoke of being 200 miles

for your electrtc btll.

Some household expenses are fairly steady throughout the ye~. But
your electric biD varies from month to montlt because your electric usage
fluctuates with the changing seasons . The bill is usually higher in the winter
It dip~ a little in the spring months, then, for most people, rises during the ~ir
condttioning season, before dropping again in the faU.
.
We can't do anything about th~ w~ather, but ':"e can help you ~mooth
out the ups and downs of your electric btll. And that s by offering you four
·
Equal P11yment Plan.
.
With the Equal Payment Plan, we bill you a fixed amount each month
based on your average yearly usage.
.
,
Your. a~count. is reyjewed every six months to see that your b\ldg!#
payment is still as c:l~ ~ possible to your average use ,·At the en\:1 of the.
twelfth month youc'U rece1ve ~ ~ttle,up bill o~ ~. !?'edit. . . · ,
:\
1'-iany of opr customel'!! we a!rEJady taking advantage Of the Equal' 1.' ·'
Paymer)t Plan. If It sounps like a good idea to yo~;~,, simply contact· us: We'U •
take It from there. .
•
.
·
'
·,.

. : weglveitQUrb~.' · ...
OHIO POWER
COMPANY
.
.
'

.·

.

Rathbun, Mulile QJdlD QrUfltb, Mariaret Fink
Sllchuk, BeUy Dwlfee Bills•. Thurman Caney, aud
Mary Kathryn Davia Holter.

Church yputh
hold roast
Youth of the Middleport Independent Holiness Church, Pearl
S\feet, enjoyed a wiener. roast recently at the Middleport Park with their
leaders, Nancy and Dorcas Manley.
Hot dogs, potato chips, cupcakes,
Kool-Ald and tea were served by the
leaders assisted by · Mrs. Nancy
Snyder. Game~ Included volleyball
and softball. The 14th birthday of
Lisa Snyder was celebrated with a
cake and gifts:
Attending were those named and
Debbie and Roger Snyder, Louis and
Todd Davidson, Mark and Crissy
Imboden, Patricia and Jerry School·
craft, ~inl'berly atid Mary Hudson,
.Jeai1Jiie ~nd Jay Gilmdre, Duane,
Debbie IIJ'd Jo Anna Light, Robert,
Crystal, 1 Tra~, Roger, Donna
Christian, Jonfla, Allen and David
Manley, Nao!ni. Angie, Roberta,
Christopher, Brenda, Lee Ann, and
Scotty Georg~.

Pomeroy teacher
attends workshop.
Becky Cotterill, a teacher from
Pomeroy, was a participant in the
Ohio University Creative Teaching
and Leaming Workshop from July 610 on the Athens campus.
The objective of the workshop was
to explore a variety of teaching and
learning strategies. New trends and
developments in creative learning
and teachlhg were analyzed and
media materials were designed for
use in the classroom.
All sessions Included active participation In the , areas of exhibits,
handouts, resource materials,•
demonstrations and low cost
. materials anc1 teaching/learning
strategies.
· f; · ·.
Oliio Univers!ly .faeu)ty members
who conducted the program were
Dr. Shirley Slater, Juite Varner, Lee
Cibrow!lkl and Virginia Miller from
the SchoOl of Jlof'M' E~omics _
,llji
Dr. Larry " Jageman, associate
professor of curriculum and instruction.

was read by the minister.
The group participated in a quiz,
"Who the Senior Citizens Really
Are." Mrs. Karr gave a reswne of
John NeWton's life, a black man who
wrote the hymn, "Amazing Grace,"
after which Mrs. Ruth Karr, Mrs.
Helen Wolf, and Rev. Thomas sang
the song. She closed the program
with prayer.
At the conclilsion of the meeting,
members sang "Happy Birthday" to
Rev. Thomas and presented him
with a gift.

and approved. It was noted· that
vanilla is for sale and may be purchased from any member. Twenty·
seven shut-in visits were reported.
Mrs. Altona Karr had the program
which was entitled "Growing Older
- It Ain't SO Bad." Emphasis was
on helping women, young and old,
see life as a whole, each age being a
frontier with its own opportunities,
problems and joys, and to clear up
wrong ideas about aging. There was
group singing of "America" to open
the meeting. Scripture from Isaiah

College

and
Community College

SECOND SUMMER SESSION
July 20, 1981 thru August 21, 1981
ACCOUNTING
Prin . of Ace. II
Inter. Ace. II

Military ri~ were' tonduCied for
Junior Wan! S!lllday at the Wright
Cemetery at · Langsville by Eli
Denison POI\i AmeriCS!lbglon. ,
Taking part.were·Qon I;.audennllt 1
firin(! squad commander; . ~)elbert
Mite~. cll!a~n; K~nnt Michael,
commander;. ;,oe · Anclei'onf, first
vice ,c ommander; Harry Thomas,
.adJutant; ~ Eugene flilk; ·Jiln'
~· J;yle Hysell, !)ill, HudSon,
Mark Tllllsj -Bill Kenpecly, GroYer

SUMMER QUARTER

HEALTH, PHYS ED. RECREATION jCon'l.)
MTWTh
MTWTh

6:00· 7:50pm
8:00· 9:50 pm

(4)
(4)

TTh
MW
TTh

Intermediate Swimming

Tennis
Tennis

10:00·11 :50 am
1:00· 2 50 pm
1:00- 2:50pm

(1)
(1)
(1)

June 15, 1981 thru August 21, 1981
(CIIIIOI 'Start with Firat Summer Session

end End Wllft the Second Summer Seoalon)

ART
6:00· 9:50 am

MTWTh

*Curriculum Development

(4)

MINING
TBA

M ine Surveying

ECONOMICS
Intra to Macroeconomics MTWTh

10:00·11 :50 am

141

EDUCATION
Soc . Sci. Mothods-Eie.

10:00·11 :50 am

(4)

(3)

FOOD SERVICE MANAGEMENT
Cooperative Edu ca tion ' TBA -

(3 )

MANUFACTURING -----~------­
TBA
(4)
Coo perative Ed . Exp

MUSIC
TBA

Selected Topics
MTWTh

Music for Elerr\. Teac hers MTWThF

BOO· 9:50am

(5)

MINING - - - --

-

Int e rnship

ENGLISH'
Tech . &amp; Report Writ ing
British literature
'Camp. Comm . Skills
Comp. I
Creative Writing
'Comp. Comm. Skills
Comp . II
Comp. 11
Comp. l

MTTh
MTWThF
MWTh
MWTh
MWF
MWTh
MWTh
MWTh,
MWTh .'

8:00· 9:50 am
8:00· 9:50 am
8:00· 9:50 am
8:()(). 9:50 am
10:()().11 :50 am
10:()().11 :50 am
10:()().11 :50 am
1:JO. 3:20 pm
6:()(). 7:50 pm

FINANCE AND BANKING
Banking &amp; Financial Sya. MTWTh

13)
151
(4)
(3)
(3)
(4)
(3)
(3)
(3)

NATURAL SCIENCE
Desc Astron.

MTWTh

PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION
MTTh
Intra to Philosophy
PHYSICS
• Applied Phys. II
Lab

MWF
TTh

MTWTh
MTWTh

8:30·10:30 pm

(4)

10:00·11 :50 am

(3)

7:00· 9:00 pm
7:00· 9:00 pm

(4)

8:00· 9:50 am
10:00·11 :50 am

(4)
(41

2:30- 4:20 pm

(41

HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION, RECREATION
·uo. ·
MW
10:00·11:50 am
TTh
10:00·11:50 am
'Golf
MW
10:00·11 :50 am
Foundations

111

SPEECH --------------~

(1)
(11

Fund . ol Speech Comm.

MTWTh

8:00· 9:50 am

-

-

- - - - -1-41

- -TBA

(4)

NURSING -~-------------~
M
8:00·11:00 am
17)
'Child Health Nu rsing
M
12:30· 4:30 pm
· ' Clinical Group I
T·
7:00· 3:30 pm
W
7:00· 3:30 pm
· 'C l inical Group II
Th
7:00-11 :00 am
Th
12:00- 4:00 pm
• 'Clinical GrouP, Ill
F
7:00- 3:30pm
• '"E1ch student mual tlgn up lor one CH of lh• Clinical Groups.
Cllnlc.l oroaapl ,,. llmlled to nine (II, students each.

PSYCHOLOGY
Ed. Psychology
General PsychOlogy

(4)

SOCIAL WORK ------------~
(1-4)
S. W . Fld. Obsv. &amp; Report . TBA
(1 ·9)
Social Work Practlcum
TBA
So . Work Fld. Placement

TBA

115)

TBA

1121

THEATRE
Theatre InternshiP

'Lab FH Required.

'Lab Foe Required.

SECOND SUMMER SESSION

DESTINATION=
The Future

Roglatratlon tor Cl...... . . . . . . .
. . . . . July 20, t lilt ·
Booln .. .. . ...................... Julp 21; tNt
Lilt Day to Add Claao . . . . . . . .
. .. ...... July 22, 11111
Lilt Day to Drop Wllhout Racard ... . ...... Auguat 7,11111
Lilt Day to Drop Cluo. .. .
. . Auguat 17, 11111
Endot SacondTerm .. ........... . .. .... Auguat21, IIIII

a ..-

DepartureTune: NOW!

LAB FEES:
(Mar1&lt;od wl1h

one 11terlak (') on achldule)

SECOND SUMMER SESSION:
ART

Curri_
culum Development .... . .... .. .

~.

A convenient way!o ~udget

"

A donation of over $100 made from
the ice cream social and bake sale
will be donated to the Chester United
Methodist Church building fund, it
was reported at a recent meeting of
the United Methodist Women held at
the country home of Mrs. Altona:
Karr.
The meeting was preceded by a
picnic attended by 15 11'\embers and
11 guests. The Rev. Richard Thomas
has prayer before the meal. Mrs.
Ruth Karr presidedat the business
meeting with reports being given

r-~~~~----------------------------------------

Conduct rites

.,

temperature was ao below zero, and

Methodist women donate to fund

Debbie Austin captures Mayflower Classic
INDIANAPOLIS (API - A moestroke lead going into the fina l round
of a tournament may not be the best
formula for a sound night's sleep.
" I had a terrible night last night, "
said Debbie Austin, who set a tour·
nament &gt;+hole record in the $150,000
Mayflower Class ic and held on to
capture the 72-hole Ladie s
Professional Golf Association tournament by four strokes.
Austin bogied four holes in her
tina! round Sunday after having only
eight and 18 birdies in the first three
days of the tournament. But, she
came up with a key 8-foot birdie putt

north of tbe Arctic Circle when the

It was noted six membera of the '
clasa are deceaaed : Hllbut Nelson,
Dexter; Lawrence Bater, Salem

ENGLISH
Comp.Comm . Skills .... ..... ...... ..

. .. $

~.00

. . . . $25.00

HEALTH. PHYSICAL EDUCATION , RECREATION
Golf .. .. .. .. . . . .. .. ..
. .... $10.00
PHYSICS
Applied Physics 11 .... .

. . . $ 5.00

AD.VANCED
SCHOLARS
PROGRAM
. ·A . ,,;.

SUMMER QUARTER:
NURSI(IjG
Cnllo Health Nursing

'

. . . . . . . . . ...... .... ... $15.00

.

R,(,Grlfld~ C0 11fQf frta Commurll/ylJG{Itgflad mti S ! lude n1 s o • M~ race. co1o1
reiiQion ..l'llf'ldtc ap. age. and l'lltional oi ,e1t'l'1oe

'

Kleinl Jlln Ftnk, .firinC eqqad ~.

or t QH"~

.

.

·

.,

SUMMER SESSION 1981

gll81'1\.

colot
,f'efll,l&gt;:" Dew,liurs\ apd
··
Megan Cale ~l!re the buglers.
.

l

Loc.a,l

t .

"'

, .. ~

Full Tuition Scholarship

'

[S· .... ;Je,...., Orl.:

mori ;n Hospl}a);;_-

Charles Hayes . ~ a_ ~cal
pattent-at,the H~lzer Medl~l ~
lei'. &amp;t&amp;il
be' llent 'to him (llere
at t'O!II'n,)02; ·
·

54 ::"C oe· ,....Cu' '"'.s· '~· C ,....:J
-~- e

'e€

. . ·.::·.

Open to graduating Seniors ...
'
.
Open to Juniors in upper half of class ...

may

t f

CO~· S

c . . s ooo ... s O"'!C suco:es - c -:J' .. r-g : ::~ c

,&gt;

Ec;:Jrn recognized COIIE!ge credit ...

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

...

~ .

·First Summer Term June 15 · July 17
. . Second Svmmer Term July 20 · August 21
,

,

I

Contacl 'your Guidance CounseiOf
~j ·for :adQIIIOn(JI
detQiiS
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Rio
,G,ande
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College
and
CommunitY C~llege

·'
I
~ ... .,...'!"·-~ ~r~.-

·'

�,-Sm~ · investme~t,_ large
retQ.im.s, ·sentinel Want Ads

In and around Meigs
Ox Roast Festival

set for Aug. 3

Amber Colmer and father

Celebrate birthd4y
with c/oum theme
Mr and Mrs Steve Blackwell
hosted a party m observance of the
fourth birthday of the1r daughter,
Amber Damelle Colmer, June 21
The party was held at the home of
Mr and Mrs Benrue Wnght,
Pomeroy A clown theme was
camed out w1th the ch1ldren bemg
entertamed by Amber's father m
clown costurnmg Her uncle, Tunmy
Colmer, entertamed w1th mag1c
tr1cks All of the c h1ldren rece1ved a
g1ft and Kunberlee Mayle won the
door priZe
Refreshments of a clown cake,
decorated by Pat Thomas, ch1ps,
and lemonade were served to Kell}
and Misty Lane, Jeremy Adkms,
Tracy and Wend} Collins, Tammy

The Ox Roast Festival at Our
Lady of Loretto Church, Tuppers
P~ms, will be helil Sunday, Aug 3,
from noon to 10 p.m
The day will mclude a vanety of
games, smgers and pony rides w1th
the contemporary gospel group,
"Search Ught," to smg from 5 to 7
pm
Also mcluded this year will be a
talent contest Those desmng to
reg1ster should caD 667-&amp;191 or 6676289 Se'feral door priZes wlll be
awarded durmg the festival

Honors Rev. Shook
A farewell p1cruc honormg the
Rev and Mrs Floyd Shook was held
recently at Royal Oak Park With approxunately 80 persons attending
Gilts were presented to the couple
Rev Shook who has pastored the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
for the past seven years Will be
leavmg July 22 He has accepted the
pastorate of a Free Methodist Church m Canton

Outstandmg Brownze
chosen by troop
Melame Beegle was selected as
Outstandmg Brownie" for the
Sahsb~ry troop at a recent votmg,
held at the home of Mrs Janet Smr
pson, troop leader
Melarue, daughter of Mr and Mrs
Jennmgs Beegle, Mmersv•lle, w•ll
be a fourth g rader at SaliSbury
Elementary School, and has been a
Browme scout for three years. She
11as selected by vote of troop members on the basiS of participation
Melame w1ll now prepare a
resume of her scout program and
subnut to the JUdgmg committee
which w1ll select an Outstandmg
Brownie for Me1gs County

Johnson and son, Jeremy, Mr and
Mrs Benme Wnght and daughter
Jess1ca, V1cky M1ller and daughters,
Apnl, Karl, and Tiffany Kandl and
Tnna Bachtel, J R Blackwell,
Paula Canruchael and son, Dav•d,
Bndget Canruchael, Cmdy Mayle
and daughter, K1mber!ee, Shannon
Hmdy, Tern. Toma and Jackie
Wolfe, Dav} Leach J1mm1e Smder,
Debbie Burns, Mr and Mrs Roy
Bareswtlt and son Ryan, and Ar&amp;
her's maternal grandparents, Mr
and Mrs Jerry Colmer and sons,
B1ll and Tun
Sendmg g1fts were Amber s
maternal great-grandparents, Mr
and Mrs Onen Colmer, Mr and
Mrs Jun Farley and sons and Pat
Hindy

Observe birthday
with cookout
held
Sundaydinner
In observance
of thewere
bll'
A picnic
and cookout
thdayofCaro1R Pierce, Sr.
Attending were Mr and Mrs
Charles (Sandra) Newton, daughter,
Jocty and son, Scott, Waverly ; Mr
and Mrs William (Dolores) John-

Pierce and Craig Pierce, Columbus,
Ricky P1erce, Barbara Lambert,
Columbus
Also VIsiting duri ng _the
celebration was Earl Nelson, Co!umt Pierce
bUS, asc hoolmate of R USY
Elnora Wnght of Chelsea, Mich.
telephoned congratulabons to ber
brother-m-law

K1m Grueser, daughter of Mr and
Mrs. Don Grueser, Mmersv1lle, was
the rec1p1ent of several outstanding
student awards upon her gradua!lon
from R1o Grande College this spnng
and wsa honored at the recent Rio
Grande
Alumm
Association
banquet
She received the Outstanding
Student Award m Mathematics for
198C}.ill, the Outstanding Student
Award m Secondary EducatiOn for
198C}.ill, and the Who's Who award
for 1~1 M1ss Grueser and her
mother were guests at the banquet
A graduate of Me1gs H1gh School
m 1977 MISS Grueser received a
bachelor of sc1ence degree m
mathematiCS and biOlogy from Rio
Grande

Middleport Church donates
to local youth league program
Youth League Sunday was observed at the Middleport Church of
Christ on June 28, With a $50
donatiOn bemg presented to John
Hood for the Middleport Youth
League program
RecogniZed for havmg the most
players present was Hubbard's
Greenhouse team A swururung party will be held for the teams
represented at the Middleport
PubhcPool

Teams came m the1r umforms and
held a parade dunng the Sunday
school hour At the worship serv1ce,

teams set together and were
recogmzed Attendance that day
was 277 persons
The teams present were T-ball
T1gers, the Rams, Mets, Red Socks,
Mustangs, Cubs, Braves, lnd1ans,
Pony League Wranglers, Panthers,
Dusters, M1dgets, Hubbard Greenhouse team, and the Harnsonv1lle
Aces
Coaches recogmzed were Dooz1e
Stewart, Harry Roush, Charlie
Cassell, Kathy Hood, Ed Kitchen ,
John Hood, Don Erwm, Richard
Baile}, M1ke Stewart, Jun Sheets,
and Bob Melton

Order of Eastern Star meets
Ht!lary Hams

The charter was draped for
Geraldine Young at the recent
meetmg of Pomeroy Chapter lfl6,
Order of the Eastern Star, held at
the Pomeroy Masomc Temple
Pauhne Hysell, worthy matron,
and Dale Snuth, worthy patron,
pres1ded at the meetmg attended by
22 members A sunshine collectiOn
was taken by Kathryn WIUdon A
thank you note was read from the
Jun Fugate fanuly and the deputy
grand matron. Estelle Ankrum Pre-

Hold birthday party
Hillery Harns, daughter of Mr
and Mrs Jeff Hams celebrated her
second b1rthday w1th a party at her
home
Attending were her parents and
brother, C J , her maternal grandparents, Mr and Mrs Earl P Cross,
Racme, her paternal grandparents,
Mr and Mrs Charles R Harns.
Portland
her maternal greatgrandmother, Lena Holter, Racme,
her paternal great-grandmother,
Helen Harns, Portland, Mr and
Mrs Gary Norns and daughter.
Kendra, Racme, D1ana and Della
Cross, Columbus, Amber Cleek, Portland, Mr and Mrs Jack Turner
Ravenswood W Va , and Jack1e
Proffitt, Wenatch1e, Wash

Thornton here
POMEROY - Bernard Thornton
of Seattle, Wash , has been called
here due to the serwus lRJunes
recmved by his son, Jeffrey Thornton, Racme, on a dnlling ng m
Rutland last week Jeffrey 1s confmed to room 216 of Hol2er Medical

regiStration forms were received
from Grand Chapter
Ella Smith announced a wedding
reception dinner Will be prepared on
July 24 Members were asked to furniSh food and adv1se Mrs Srrulh
what they Will provide
Next meeting w1ll honor past
matrons and past patrons w1th the
past matrons to wear the dress o1
their year
Refreshments were served by
Mrs Mabel Moore, Mrs Marlene
W1Ison, Mrs Mabel Goeglem and
Mrs Phyllis Clark

Shrmers to meet
RACINE - A regular meelmg of
the Twm Clt} Shnne Club Wll! be
held this evenmg at the clubhouse m
Racme Dmner W&gt;ll be served at 7
p m with the meeting to follow all
area Shrmers are mvited to attend

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY,OHIO
ESTATE OF DAISY VAN·
CE, DECEASED ,
Case No. 23419 Docket
12
page 241
NOTICEOF
APPOINTMENT
OF Flo
On June 4,IClARY
1981 In the
Meigs County Probate
court, Case No 23 419
Ronald Vance, Box 761
N~ Haven. W Va was ap
potnfed Executor of the
estate
Da1sy
deceasedof late
o1 RVance
D
•
•
Pomeroy,Ohlo&lt;l5769
Robert E Buck,
Judge
(7) 6, 13. 20. ltc

waSie facilities toceted In
other counties may be ob
tau&gt;ed by contacted Mrs
Norman atlhe address or
number llsto!d above
Please address a II
queshons regarding thiS
pybiiC notice 10 Mrs Nor·
man
All
technical
guestlons concerning
facilities shOuld be ad·
dressed
toMs Peggy Vince
161 41 -.. 2 673 1
Llstolfrad~~~~ Me,gs
Me,gs Mine Number 1.
SR 124 3 miles w, Wilkes
viii, Lan~sville~ OH 45701

TO~AGE
""'
Me1gs M1ne Number 2,
PO Box 490 • Athens. OH
&lt;15701
STORAGE
Texaco u sA , o 1v of
Texaco Inc. Beech and
Ash St Middleport. OH
45760
Public Notice
Appropriate DIStrict Of
flee
Southeast D•slrocl Office
2195 Front St
Lfian Oh o "13"
PROBATE COURT
' •
AI n · D•slrocl
Ad
0 F MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
'
mlnlstrallve Assistant
ESTATE OF EDWARD
(614) 3115 8501
MARION
BLAKE
WayneS Nochols
DECEASED
•
Cha.rman
Case No P442 Docket 12 171 13 11 c
Page 24J •
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
i&gt;ubllcNotlce
OF FIDUCIARY
On May '29, 1981 1n the
Mergs County Probate
IN rHt:
Court Case No 23442
&lt; OMMONPLf:/l:) f' OU"" t
Joyce A Blake, 55 South
OF
Second Street Mrddteport
r \ rc ~ ro
Ohto 45760 was appornted
t
UN 1 Y OHtO
Ftducrary of the estate of
t ' A tt?H f( l McOOL • •
Edward Marron Blake Jr
ET AL
deceased l.t.,-~ of 55 Soulh
t 'l .1•nt1tts,

6~~g~~7~Jreet ~tddleport

fHA...,t

Robert E Buck
P robate Judge/
Clerk
IIi 6 13 20, 3tc

HAZARDOUS
WASTE
FACILITY
APPROVAL BOARD
RECEIPT OF
APPLICATIONS/
REQUEST FOR
COMMENTS
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT The Hazar

dous Waste Fac 11tty Ap
proval Board (Board) has

rece•ved, pursuant to RC
3734 05!0 I. applocatoons for
Hazardous

Permtts

the

W&amp;ste

waste

In

and Operation

( permtts)

followtn~

tram

hazardous

facll•t~~:~s

(ltsted

below&gt; located m th•s coun

ty, wh•ch have stated to

have been tn operat1on 1m
mediaTely pnor to October
9, 1980
&lt; Th•S
not1ce

prov•des the locatton of the

faCihty and whether such

a

1S

storage, treatment,
and/or drsposal facllrty)
A copy of the permrt ap
pllcatron (Part A of the
federal
permrttrng
process) rs available for'"
spectron and copy1ng from
Mrs Ethel Norman {see
address below) or from the
appropr~ate
Oh10 En
v1ronmental Protecttcn
Agency Otstrrct Offrce 10
dtcatetd below
All concerned crtrzens
are requested 10 submrt
wrrtten comments con
cernrno the listed factllt1es,
as to whether a permit
shall be
rssued, ac
companred by specrfrc and
concrse statements of the
reasons therefor All com
ments must be submttted
to Mrs Ethel Norman, 361
East Broad Street (6th
floor), Columbus
OhtO
43215 16141 4666037 and
recerved bV the close of
busrness August 17, 1981
Any comments recerved af
ter that date wr II not be
constdered
A trst of the hazardous

WA~T AD

t

NOTICE OF
PUBLICATION
To Charles T Taylor.
George Cottle Cora Cottle,
and Charles A Baker, ad
dresses unknown rf Irving,
and tf deceased
thetr
unknown spouses, he.rs,
devrsees
legatees.
executors admmtstrators.
and assrgns whose ad
dresses are unkown
You are hereby nottfted
that a Complatnt to Qutet
Tttle has been fried rn the
Common Pleas Court of
Mergs County, Ohto, Case
No 17,865 demandrng qutet
tttle of the followmg
descnbed real estate to
wol
The follow1ng descnbed
real estate sttuated rn
Lebanon Townshtp, 1n the
County of Metgs and State
of Ohto, to wtt
Berng 1n Range (11),
Town Ill. Sectoon 1271 of
the Ohto Company s Pur
cha$e and descrtbed as
follows Begtnnrn~ at the
Sout~ East corner of lands
formerly owned bv E H
Sloters land thence WesT
wtfh S6uth lrne of sard land
ten rods, thence North to
the line of Davrd Jones lot
thence East ten rods to the
corner and sard E H
Slater and Oav1d Jones
land ren rOds thence Sou1h
wt1h the Oav1d Jones ltne to
the place ot beg1nnmg to
confatn Two (2) acres of
land be the same more or
less
REFERENCE
DEED
Vol 112, Page 476 Meogs
County Deed Records
The followtng descnbed
real estate srtuated rn the
County of Metgs Townshtp
of Lebanon and State of
Ohro, to wrt
Betng a part of Sect1on
27, Town 3, Range 11 . Oh10
Companv s
Purchase

INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Dally Sentmel Class•f•ed Dept.
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
tANNOUNCEMENTS
I-card ot Tb•nu
2- tn Memorlem
J-Annount1ment'
4-0iveaway
s-Happy Ads

t-ltn.tlnd Found
1- Yarcl S.te
t-Publlc Salt

RENTALS
41-HOUitit()r Rent
u - Motlllf Hom••
tor Jte~tt
44- AJNrtmtntl for Rlnl
U-Furni•Ma RMml
46-S~~~ tor Rent
4~ - W•nttd ta Rent
41-Equtpmlltller R1nt

&amp; Auction

t-Wantld to

8u~

lt-HetPWanfiCI
tJ-51ttNttftl wanted
U- lnlur•nce
14-lullness Tr.llftlnt

e MERCHANDISE
Sl-HJ»UIIMifGOOCis
52-CI TV lt.dlo E.qt.11pment
ll-AIIfif!UII

M - MIIC Mtrdlelldll.

SS- IutHiintSuppUII
56-PIIIIIOI" Sale

I._Radto, TV,
&amp; ca AtNlr

It-WantoN To Do

eFINANCIAL
11-•usll'ltSIJ

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

61 - F•rm El!ulpmenT
62-WaniMito luy
n- Truc11:1 tor 5al•

iiJ- Ltvnlecll:
64- Hay 1 Grain

Opportun•tt
n - Monoy to Loan

U- Prolllltonal
Servtce•

t REAL ESTATE
11 _ Homos for s•1o

n - Moltllo Hom ..
lor hi•

J&gt;- Farm1lar •
odlnts

4!-SHd&amp; Fer11fl1tr

eTRANSPORTATION
11 - AutoS lor lele

7l-\flanll4 W 0
74-Molorcyc:ln
71-AUto Plrll
&amp;Accnltrtll
17- A~o~ta RtiNir

lJ-Lols &amp; Acr••••

u--•eal Elfllf W.1nled
l7-RNIIIN'I

Want Ad Advtrllslftg
Deadlines
t Jo en ht~o~nlev
Tueldly lbru Frlclly 2 at p M

Menu.,

tM dly Defore IMI~Iic•tl•
S~o~ncln 2 JO P M ~rklay

.• 1

"·

'

.. ~

NICE, FRANCE SARDINES - AI uoual dariDI
&amp;lie · - 1110111111, berdea ef 1111Ht8rved European
1 t lab p&amp;ller oa &amp;lie MedHerrueu beacllel, bere at

Capes sur Mer, Ill Soulbern Fl'llllce. 'Jbese sun wo.sblppen don' t appear to Oiljoy the sea water as mucb
u die sunsblne. 1AP Laserpllolo 1.

BISSEll
. '
SIDING CO.

the r:p,ht to reject any ond
•llbl s
DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR
817 73

11ne
mans
Long Run thence west
I SW G
along sad
erma1ns
west line 37 rods and en
links lo a stake at the
southeast corner of Mrs
Jones lot thence south
along s•de line of Mrs
Jones land 86 rods to a
post . thence - east th.rty
seven rods and ten links to
a post. thence north 86 rods
to the place of beginning
contatnmg twenty acres
REFERENCE
DEED
Vol 129, Page 516, Meigs
County Deed Records
The demand of the com
plalntlslhat the title to the
above descrobed real estate
be qu1eted on the names 01
the Plaontlffs. Patrock E
McDole and Emerson Me
Dole
You are required 10 an
.
swer lh~ Comptaonl
W•lhon
twenty·e•ght (281 days at
ter the last PUblication Of
thos notoce which woll be
pubhshed once each week
lor six 161 cbnsecutlve
weeks The last pubhcatron
woll be made on August J,
1981 and the twenty e1ghl
(28) days tor ~nswer wtll
commemeonthatdate
tn case of vour fatlure to
answer or
otherwi~e
respond as requrred by the
Oh10
Rules
of Ctvll
Procedure
dge
1 b
' IUbe rendered
men
Y
default wdl

1716 13. 2tc
Public Notice

Vinvi &amp;
AlymHwm Siding
'

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
• 1
Clerk,
(7) 6, 13, 20. Jlc

'

'
!leal EstateGeneral

i 'i'

HOBSTETIER
REALTY
'"
'
Office 742-2003
George S.1Hobstetter Jr
Broker
NEW LISTING
Racrne
Lovely two

.

Gen•rat

craftsman an~
. w~work: ~~ ~s exqurslte
-&lt; throughout ,5 bedrooros.
~ bath,
11v1ng ro ~tn.
dtnlng room, famtly
room, modern krtchen
Wllh breakfast r.o om
Also extra rirce 24'x44'
workshop S37 ,500 00
NEW LISTING-' Near
Moddleport, off Rt 7
Rembdeled 3 bedroom
home. hvmg room. lut
chen, uttltty, bath,
cellar on 21 4 acres wrth
lruot trees and grape&lt;!r
bor, $16,1100110
~OAN ASSUMPTIONLow 1nterest
In
Rutl~nd
Two story
home, 4 bedroqms, 2
baths, uttl1fy on 3/S
acre Ask1ng $33,000 oo
NEW HOME - Noce 3
bedroom, all ~lectnc,
large ltvlng room, kit
chen and dtnrng comb ,
bath ,
carport
and
storage on large corner
tot
Prrce reduced
$38 500 00
FARM -72 acres large
2 story home, 3 or 4
bedrooms, 2 baths,
ltvrng room, modern krt
chen,
carport
and
workshop Barn w1th
e lectrrc1ty and water
PRICE REDUCED $37 000 00
Velma Ntclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone742-3171
w0011

second street

Phone
1 (6t4) -992-3325
I'JI V

LI!)IIN(

--

5

yr otd ranch
21 ~
C(•ramtc oaths btrch
ktlchen d sosal dtsh
Welsher J bedrooms
convectton heat utrlttv
rm 3 car ga rages, full
basement wrth famtly
rm 2 palros and large
lands cape d
lot
ovC&gt;rtookrng
Rt
7
Ask1ng S75 000

Public Notice
NOIICE ro

&lt;ON~~
fOR~
HAf
0 OHIO
OF PA r ENT OF
l ~ANS Oil fA rtON
COI~'!i'S• Oh•O
J e •. l981
( ontrnct aiQS
l egat Copy No
INII PRICE
CONfRACr
Sealed proposals wtll be
·ecerved at the offtce of the
) trector of the Oh10 Oepar
Tment of Transportation,
Columbus, OhtO, unt1llO 00
AM Ohto Standard Ttme
Tuesday July 21 1981 tor
rmprovements rn
Athens Jackson, Mergs
and V1nton Count•es Ohto
on ATH S R 346
0 00
stare Route 346, rn Athens
County JAC S R 346 S 28
Slate Route 346 tn Jackson
County MEG S R 346 0 00
State Route 346 tn Me1gs
County and v 1N S R 346
0 00
State J;i!oute 346 , tn
V1nton Countv bo; applvtng
a sandseal to the West
bound lanes
Pavement Wtdth
l4
teet
Pro1ect and Work Lf~ ngth
8 I 788 feet or 1.S 49 mrles
The date set tor com
plet•on of thts work shall be
dS set forth tn the btddmg
proposal
Each btdder shall be
teQutred to frle Wtlh hrs b1d
J
certtfted c heck or
ash1er s check tor an
1mount equal to hve per
ent ot h1s btd, but rn no
~v ent
more than f rftv
thousand dollars or a bond
tor ten per cent of hts btd
payable to the Dtrector
'
Brdders must apply on
tor
the orooer form s
qualrficafton ar least ten
days prror to the date set
for opentn~ btds m ac
cor dance wtth Chapter ~.525
Ohto Revtsed Code
Plans and spec•ftcatrons
are on frle rn the Depart
ment of Transportat1on and
the ottrce of the Otstrrct
Deputy Drrector
The Director reserves
54 Mrsc. Merchand•se

I l .ON YOUP FU rut?t
JO acres surtable for

-

subd1V1StOn T P water
b y land and nrcc n1ce
lay ng well dratned E:.:
ccl lent tor a burlder
p!annef' on tratler park
Lf's rhan S2 000 00 per
101
1 NO..,r..,ous. - - 9 rm
br1 ck hom e central atr
t=~nd hea r
new shrngle
root 11 baths garage
wrlh storage over N1ce
corner lot nea r schools
and shops
I 66
A r ... F.~
Butldtng on t-ltler lot
Wrsr nr
\..0 On lied
~"'"c rank
wen !
Want, ,y$6500
HIJ/INO Nf W
Fur
n1shcd J bedroom home
a t F1vc P010IS EQutp
pl"'d kitChen c arpe t•ng
r~nd IMQe lot Witnf lUSt

0.

' 608 E.cMAIN

000

~J)

!Wf
Botrom lr~nd and lots
Ol WOOdS tor hunttnq I
room house and several
OuTbutld1ngs
All
m1nara1 s rn cl udcd Only
)J/.Ifi-'•~Ol!Vt

~') '

eSERVICES
11-ttomltm,rovemffttl
12-JIIum'-'tttlllcev•tfftl
ll-l•cn•tlnl

16-•tecfflc••
&amp; ..., ...,.,..,
11-Geitet•tHaullne

..,._M t4 a.,.lr

17-UIIIMIIttry

PH. 992-)20l
. '

l•

elnsulaflon
Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Repracement
Wtndows

LEO
. MORRIS
Rl 1 S1de H1ll Rd.
Rutland, Oh•o
PH. 742 24SS

-Addons and
remodeling •
- Roof,ng and g~ttj!r
work
~1
•
-Concrete wor.k
- Piumblftg and
e1ectr1ca1 work
(Free Es.t•mates)

V. C. YOUNG II
or9?2 731~
Oh

5 11 tfc

KAUFF'S

HYSELl'S
GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
Repatr
-TransmiSSIOn

Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fr..
9 a.m.-5:30p.m.

12 Park St.

M•ddleporl, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

992-5682

6 15 1 mo

BIG APPLIANCE
SALE AT
POMEROY

&amp;J
~--·-

614

9~2

2181

Freezers
Refngerators
washers Dryers
A1r Condrt•oners
Also
several
Repossessed at GOOD
Pnces
F l NAL CLOSEOUT
OF SHRUBS
Make An Offer

"'

SERVICES..

HJ 50"-20-30 H P.
• HA•I0"-2$-60 H.P.
HE 60"-45&gt;-10 H. P
All Models Available

Free Estimale
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

PWMBING
-AND .
HEATING

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

CARPENTER1• ''

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex·

ALL StTEEL

Farm Buildin~
s'tzes
"From JOxJO'
SMALL

Utility BuikUh~
S1zes from 4x6 to 12x40
'
'

P&amp;S. BUILDINGS
Rl

3, Box 54
Ractne, Oh
Ph 614·843 2591
6 15 He

,H. L
ROOFING'
All types of root work,
new or reparr gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleantng and parnt.ng
All work guaranteed

6 3 1 mo

4 lfc

q

SERVICE

Hotpomt

C•l PlClty

dryer S5~Y In
1nnce e1.1ttorm w !-. h.&gt;p!.
1 t'l1"f1 Cr 1.1., ~
w 1t h
l hJ~»MtUm r&lt;1rhnq )II:IY
~oot
ro.lhAl9 ~11 ~o
'V .liCr Hc.t tc f 10' Ott
&lt;htrmq month .ol July
I' •t'lll
w rndow
cr.lnl
h.ondlo'
~ pow I HYc
' "''
mooon1 wondow
opt r 1tor' . , 1 ~Y
t-tr Jt ~IH toY HOf'H "
fl

f'

card ofTIIanks

1 w1sh to thank Dr Sub
blah, Dr Berk1~h. and Dr
Yodfawsk1 for a successful
f.Urgery and the .wonderfut
core the nursing staff al
Holzer Medical Center
gave me. Also to friends
and nelgllbors who called'
or sent cards Herman Will
and Georg,a and Harley
Smith.

... I I I I N(

~

I"

\I I (I .AI I Y

FrOm the Smallest
Heater Core 1o the
Larges1 Radiator

Farm Marke1
lOth
Stfl I
beans and
15
6 J BC
Gallipolis

Radeator5peCI~I15f

NATHAN BIGGS
:J5 Yrs. Experrence

SMITH NELS'0N
MOTORS ITtC.
Pomeroy, OH. "

Ph

H2· 2174 r

tJ'11 '}5ll1

N D.

OU"'

OrHrR

\ 1( 1\.0 \. AilABl
\t 1 rt-t
A!l, fl.AN
I H I(
01\ IDINC
1 OrJ\\ I I till ON, F"IN
trrc INC
AND
At'

PRODUCIS
Sl(hng

Root mg./ Gutter
Remodeling
Servtng Your Area for
20 Years

llt.I~IN(

Housi11~1

Headquarters

Free esr1mates
Call Collect
Ph 843-3322
7132mopd

Mise Merchandise

Ranch Home

C. R. Mash
Consb.uctkln

NO DOWN
PAYMENT
Payments as Low As
s I 50.000 per month
Dependng on your income
Number m Fam1ty- Max1mum
Yearlv Income

Custom K1tchens, Ap·
pltances,
Custom
)Ba1hrooms, Remodetrn·
g, Plumbtng, Electr1c,,
Heahng.

992-6011
992·7656

010 . I I I I e f i t l l t t l t t e • I 0 Otoo

0 0
e e e 0 e e e e. Ieee. e ••. 0 • I ••• e e t •• t II

Call '992r7034
'

wks old, 3
le, 112 1nsh
Genr1an Poltce
Call256 1637

Let George Mllo,le~;r:c;:~~~~~
your present c
sys1em
R es1dent•a 1
&amp;Commerctfll

Call742-3195
or 992 7680

German

.,
SANITATION ~1

'

'

Pos1tton open for nrght sh1ft
duty Apply 1n person The
Donut House, 303 Upper
R1ver Rd , Galhpohs,OH
No Phone Calls

Part ttme (4 hours a week)
Regrstered Nurse ( R N) to
work tn tntermed1ate care
factllty for the mentally
I
retarded
month old German Part tr me Lrcensed Prac
Shepherd Great guard trcal Nurse (LPN) to
dog New dog bo~ &amp; cha1n dtspense med1catton to
Call only 1f Interested resrdents of an tn
Owner movrng out of state termedrate care facthtv tor
~47 3584
the mentally re1arded
Hours vary, dependrng on
AKC
Registered Old when medlcatton needs to
Engtrsh Sheep dog male, be drspensed Please con
Will grve away to gOOd tarm tact John Lehew 446 1642,
home 992 7733
ext 332

mv

TV servrce calls Call 992
6776 or 992 203~ Also used
color TV for sale

22

Money to Loan

FHA VA Conventoal Home
Loans, Columbus F lrst
Mortgage Co • 463 Second
Ave, GallipoliS, Oh. -'46
7172
23

Protess1onat
-serv1ces

COMME.RCtAL and on
dustnal
photography
Phone -'411·2909 or -"6 7226
afler4p.m
Ptano tun.ng and repair,
Love your ne1ghbor 1une
your Plano. Bill ward,
Wards Keyboard 446 -4372,
Gallipotos
GAl:.LIA Cleaning and
Rent A Ma1d Servrce Inc ,
Free Estimates, bonded.
msured, phone 245 9234
Cleantng 1bV the week, mon
thor contractual
Complete Auct1on Service
stock reduct1on close outs
estates farm equtpment h
vestock real estate Lrcen
sed and bonded rn Ohto,
and West WV Bud McGhee
AuctiOn and Real Estate
Co Call tor terms 446 0552
or 446 0818 428 Second
Ave, Gallipolis, OH , 45631

6 colhe pupp1es For more S185 00 to $500 weekly doong
mtormat1on ca II 992 3923
matling work
No ex
penence requtred
AP
PLY Corcle Sales, P 0
Box 22~ D, RIChmOnd Hill,
Happy Ads
NY 11418
ROBERTS
CON
''
Pocking up easy play organ
STRU,CTION CO tnc, Out
1n your area Low down GET VALUABLE traon1ng trademark
Quality &amp;
payment, low monthly as a young busrness person Satisfaction
We have
payment Credr1 manager a,nd earn good monev plus references Phone 256 1560
collect, 6U 592 5122
some great g1fls as a sen
ttnel route carrter Phone WELL dnlltng, both rotary
us nght away and get on &amp; cable tools, usually wells
the e1tg1btl1ty 11st at 992
1n 1 day Call Ray Beagle
Yard Sale
21.56 or 9?2 2157
30• 895 3841
2 Famoly Yard Sale July
910.11,13,&amp;14 9 &gt;Jackson
Rd across from grade
school '" v onton, o H

Yard Sale 110 Choll.colhe
Rd. Gallopolos Monday,
Tues, &amp; Wed Girls sum
mer clothes 6 to 8, odds &amp;
ends Reasonable priced

ES!!!
those un
wofktn9 Garage Sale July 17&amp;18, 2
30 to 10 30 m1les on Bulavolle Rd
ias.hl&lt;m styOst Cloth.ng, dishes, pans,
S10 110 per stove, smk, and many other
Ideal for rtems Porch gltder 9 00
11117 00 PM
1
!amlly
5 fam11y yard sale 15 16 17
Me1gs Co Beagle Club, Rt
692 Ralnorshlne

~::::::::::::::::s~ ·~~~rr~:~~3~~j ;w~~~·h9

J&amp;C

RE STEEL FOREMEN
Hydro electrrc power plant
construct1on
Exp
requared tn placing all s1zes
re bar Foremen must be
able to read blueprtnts and
do own layout $10 50/hr
Call or wnte Guy F Atkrn
son Co • Box 756,
Sl
Stephen, s c 2'1•79 803 567
3266 Attn
Lyle Smoth
EOE

Wrll do baby srt1tng rn
home Call-'411 1029

R N needed for weekends
Exc benefots Call Arcadia
Nursrng Home Coolville
667 3196
lnformatron on Alaskan &amp;
overseas employment
Exc oncome Call 312 741
9780 ext 4061

31
Homes for Sale
NEW CABIN or small
home, completely fur
nlshecf, S3900. Call 446 0390
with acreage for
or ~ bdrs • tully car
319·2258 or

Wman to stay wtth elderly
lady Help wtth cook.tng
Air cond1troned Anttques,. and light housework
furniture, diShes. school Phone '192 7807 or '192 3767
desks. bokes, table, boys
clothes, toys, everyday Baby
stt1er
wanted
beg1nn1ng 10 a.m Camp
reference reQutred
bells on Jencho Road
304 882 2010 New
Area
YARD sale JUIV 14, 2319
Lincoln Ave Pt Pleasant,
10 00 5 00 30 gal aquanum
and all equ1pment, etc

Free Estimates

2.......••..•.•••• ' •..•.•••••....• '11,760
3. :~..t.."
'12 •060
4
'12,300
r.. 5...•..••.•••••••• , •,•
··Sl~,660
,Models at Athens ~•nd PomerOJ

'
For all ol your w•rmg needs .

EUGENE LONG

3 kittens, litter trarned,
white, yellpw, and m1xed
Call-"4 12.18

Baby sitter needed In Ad
dtson area near Tara Apts
for shift work Call after
5PM367 0692

While Upor) lh1s e•ar•n:~~~~~ ,'j~I!!~Qt':.'~
stay
Sadty m1ssed by
"'-c~------chltdren and graon'rl'·' l· ,
children

• t 1711
tncr"nllt• Ohto

~ ,,

1 killen 8 wks old Call 446
4027

Auto Body repair man ex
pertenced only, contact
Harold Dav1s, at Gallipolis
Motor
Co
(Chevoret
Garage)

In Memoriam
In' Memory of Roy L (Bill)
Hendrix who passed away
July tO, 1980
'
Gone from us,
lei!!lvlng memories
Death can never
awav
Memorres that ,
always linger

Free Estrmates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949·2862
949 2160

rr~,~"~"~' ~&lt;~H~u~m~e~ ~.~"~".~~n~•jf;;;;;~~~~~~;~~
\' 1 her

1

Af'iY PERSON who has
anythong to give away and
does not offer or attempt 1o
offer any other lh1n9 for
safe may place an ad In th•s
C!olumn There wtll be no
c;harge to the advertr!ter

2

tensive remodeling.
• E lectr.ca 1 work
• R oollng work
13 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

t&gt; t {( ..,..,oroe&lt;;

I

'100

I I I 'Y I ~~ (

54

BEDS IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars. wood Ice boxes,
stone jars, ant1ques, etc ,
Complete
households
Write M D Miller, Rl 4,
Pomerov, Oh Or 992 7760

\

I lTI , ,1ftfl It CC ('\'&gt;O rtC &lt;;,

All AMERICAN HOMES
1% Interest
3 ~edroom

eDumpTruck
eTr,ncher
LICensed'&amp; Bonded

'

story horrie Owner t}_

~~~~L~~:m
I .
---

~

'

Headqu:Jrter5

;16 E

Beautiful, Custom
&gt;:liUtlt Garages"
CaiiJf..f for free S1d1ng
est1mates, 949-2101 or
949-2860.
No Sunday Calls
J 11 tfc

INSUlATION

OUStn!)

Me

Ill 6~7

2

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of Educatron
of Eastern Local School
Oistrrct desrres to receive
sealed b1ds on 1he
follow1ng
1 Milk and Da1ry
Products
2 Breod
In order to be constdered
all sealed b1dS shall be
received tn the teasurer s
off tee by 12 o'clock noon on
July 22, 1981
Said Board of Educat1on
reserves the nght to acceot
or re1 ec r any and all or par
ts ot anv and all brds
Elorse Boston,
Treasurer
Eastern Local
Board of Educat1on
38900 SR 7
Reedsvrlle, Oh10 45772

agamst you tor fhe reltef
demanded rn the Com
plarnt
Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Mergs county Ohro
16129 1716 13, 2(), 27 (81 3

Gu Lines

11

~ev

Real Estate

eBackhoe
• Exc~vatlnv
e Septic Systems '
• Wat~r, Sewer &amp;

;

11 . . . . . . . . . . .

IJ-5dtOOIIInlfrucJIOft

).1- IUI IniU I

I

Or&gt;tend tnt~
Nu I "I 1:165

Public Notice

stallat•on

~ I v~t.'YLOR

tJ.l

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

.....

Vinvl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING '

r=~~~~~~~:::l~~~~~~~~~r~~~~~~~~;;n~~:P~ub~l~le~N!ot~lc~e~~:

son, Carroll, Mr and Mrs. Ronrue
DaviSOn, La ncaste r. Mr a nd Mrs
Danny J 0hns on, N0rth LeW1S b urg •
Ms Twila Johnson and Bruce
Charlton, Columbus; Mr and Mrs
ld
Ca
Davad P a.erce, MansEle ;
ro 1
Pierce and
{Rusty) Pierce' Debbie
son, J ason, Salem Cente r; Mr . and
Mrs Kuruny Pierce, daughter, Kimberly and son, F r ank1in , Wllkesv1lle, Mr and Mrs Stanley Sheline,
Allensville; Mr. and Mrs Jeffrey

Rio Grande alumni
honor local woman

Bus

•

8

Public Sale

&amp;Auct•on

Neals Auctton Hogset1,
WVA Rf 2 Eyery Sat 7 ·00
(Consignments
taken), IWill buy turnoture)
Lonme Neal367·7101
wanted to Buy

'

SCASHI
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
,
COME TO
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
O~' CALL

4464775

OP!ll&gt;j9T05

Woman to stay w1th elderly
lady In Cottageville on
weekend Phone 304 372
3398, Cottageville, WV
BabY$11fer In our nome for
22 month old Must have
own transportation and
reference Call 304·675·1183
alterS

three
car·

acres.

�!3~1~~"~om~e~.,~~~s.~l~e~~UJ~s==~L~o;.t,~&amp;~A;c~r~ea~,~~~=l~4~4::::~A=~~rt:m:en=:,::::-r5:1::~"~o~u:se~h~o~ld;G;~~~s==~~KrT~ 'N' CARLYLE;:~N:------------=by~La-ny:-:~::~~~~7~4::::M~o~~rc~y~c;.,";=_::=lr,~1==
By ow,.,.·new ~~ar &amp;
·brick home I mi. off Rt. 7,
on
Bear
Run
Rd .
overlooking
Raccoon
Creek. Coll256·64n.
By owner, old house, lot
electric, gas, water in town
tdr sate~ trade tor a place
on the Ohio River. m
Beech St.. Alberto Bockus.

1 room house and acreage.
Driving distance to mines
or Athens on St . Rt. 143.
A cross
from
school.
Bulldings fer business
possibilities . 742·2239.

OR RENT · almost new 14 x
79· 3 bedroom, 1 1h baths,
SLtting on nice lot. ready to
"'ove Into. Phone 304·576
2711 .
2 story frame

house, .9

acre, large garage 40x30.
Phone 30H95·3.540.
Three bedroom house with

bio

lot

and

garden, by

owne r . Phone 304·675·2529.
House . 2 years old, Camp

con ley . Assumable 8 and
one-fourth

Phone 304
12

per cen t

loan .

675 ~ 6615 .

lor Rent
2 a c res
Floyd-Clark Rd. Hoose for rent, 57 Olive St.
close to Rt. 160, s...ooo . . 1 bdr ., unfurnished, no
Phone446·0390.
pet•, you pay utilities, dep.
req., s150 _ mo. ~-7886. Af·
tor 5 ~- o4045.
41

Houses tor Rent

'-'--__:..:==-='--"='----

Nice home near shopping
center. Adults preferred,
no pets. depo sit plus
reference, S250 per mo.
CA11446·7322 .
House for rent in Crown
City, 5 rms &amp; balM, S175
mo., $275 sec. deposit. Call
Huntington 525·0391 week
days, after 5PM 522·1735.

For Rent S room house on
St. Rt . 7, accept on child .

6547 .
3 bdr. hovse partl y rurn., J
miles from Gallipolis. S250 .

mo. Call 4-16·6238 .
FOR SALE OF REN T 3
home.

new

7274.

!97 1 Schultz Homestead
12x60, wa sh &amp; dry er . new

c arpe t, com . furn .. set on
lot 6 in Quail Creek i n Rod

ney, OH S8,750.00 245 5420
or 3BB 8349 .
For Sale New 1981 Fair ·
mont Mabi le home. 52 x l4.
all elec tri c, 2 bdr . only 7
m os . old _ Need to sa le due
to rel oc ating . Call 446-9303 .

1978 F estiv al mob . home,
turn , l 4x70 ff ., J bdr., 2

batn s, SIO .OOO

Call 256·

9]09 .

1980 double wide mobile
home, 3 bdr, 2 full baths,
l i~e
new .
$16,500 .
Negotiable. Call 256·6345.
73 Granvill e, 2 bdr . awning,

air cond., good cond . Call

4-16·2651 or 446·0876

3 bd r . house $250 Referen
ces, sec dep ., Rodney
V i lliage 11 Call 446-4416 at ·
ter 7PM .
3 brd . house in P lant Sub ·
divi sion, $250 per mo ., plus

S100 de p. Ca ll446·2851.
Unfurni shed house i n
Pomerov . Sl25 a month,
plus util ities and depos i t.

992 751 1.
1 bedroom furni shed house
on Ohi o River south of Mid·
dleport . 2 children, no pets.
References &amp;
deposit
required . Mus1 keep yard
ma intained . S150. month,

$150 deposit. 614-837·3614.
Si x room house $100. a
month, great for large

fami ly. 675 5104 or 67B386.
3 room furnished cottage,
utilities furnished, adults,

no pets. Pnone 304-675-2812
or 304·675·1580

carpet . 1970 PMC , 12x60,
two bedroom . new carpet,
B &amp; S Sales. Inc ., 2nd and
Viand Street, Pt . Pleasant,
WV Phone 675·442.4.
1970 12x60 Hill crest, tipout
in living room, gas heat, air
c onditioner ,
storag e
build ing on one acre. 247 ·

3915
1973 Kirkwood Mobil e
Home _ 14x70. 3 bedroom , 2
full baths, 1otal electric,
central air . On 1 acre of
ground _ On St Rt _ 15.4

Mobile Homes
torRent _ __

2 bdr. tra i ler Roush Lane,
Cheshire . Oh . Phone 1-304·

more information call 773·

5127 .
1973 NASHUA 14x70 $7,000.
304-675·6768 .
.Trailer, partly furnished,
-Gellipolis Ferry
Phone

:304·675· 1867.

33

Brown's Trail er Park . 992

~

acres, nine room house,
&amp;rn, minerals, secluded,
good hunting . Morning Star
.area. $65,000. Additional
·101 acres available. 949·
::Z6JO.

)5 acre farm with barn.
.Electric &amp; water. Good
-place for new home or
l.railer
site .
For in ·
iormatlon Arnold Grate,

-Rutland .

Cays

742· 2511,

:evenings 742-22A6.

as .

from Rl . 2. 675·•088 .
Two 2 bedroom house
trailers for rent, furnished.
1 witn central air, good tor
working couple or
I
wiftl1 child. $150 per m&lt;&gt;nHl.l
plus deposit . 675·4088.
1 bedroom mobile home,
married coupl e only . No
pets. S150
per month

PHONE 304·615· 4151.
Farms for Rent

2 bedroom trai ler on
pr ivate lot . No pets S17S.
month . New Haven. Phone

304-882·2636 .
44

2 bdr . apar t ment. across
from park , $175 . mo .. par
tially turn ., ref . &amp; dep .
required. Call446-3919 .

for Rent
Apartment for rent . Call

992-5908 .
2 bedroom furnished apart ·
ment in Middleport . S175 .
month. 992·5545 between 7
a .m .J p.m . weekdays .

cal·l afler 3 p.m ., 256·6413 .
Green eeans. Pick your

$6.00

bu .

Peach orchard,

Raynor

s

1-1~==========;::=========~
6..!.____£arm Equipment

Building Supj:llies

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

John Deere 24T baler with
bole
kicker,
Muse~
Ferguson hayrack, 3 point
post hole digger 9 in ., all in
good cond. Call 1·614-286
2394 or see Tom Jones near
Thurman, OH .

Building materials, block,
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
W inters, Rio Grande, 0 .

Call245 5121.

Pets t6r Sole
1970 Chevy 1/ 2 T pickup 6 56
c yl. , standard . Call 446- POODLE GROOMING .

9698 .

' HAY

Call446· 4416 after 3PM .

F EVER'

TS . has 1 bdr . apartments
rent starts at $152 mo.,
depos it $200. Call446·2745 .

S. R .A. Co .. P .0 . Box 284,
GallipOliS, OH 45631.

Furnished effi c ien cy apt.
$135 util i ti es pd ., share
bath. suitabl e tor one. Call
446·«16 after 7PM .

Tappen harvest gold elec.
range, $100, also 1972 Oat·
sun . Call 446·8548 .
For Sale Good used Futura
sew i ng
machine
with
c arrying case . Asking
5200.00, call446· 1444.

2bdr . unfurn . apt ., clean,
good location on Ma in St. .
Vinton. Oh , sec. dep . Call

245 5818 .

POOLS :
1 bedroom apts. avai l able SWIMMING
PRE
SE
ASON
SALE :
at River side Apts. Equal
Opportun ity Housing . Call $999.00 INSTALLE-0!!!
Above ground pool COM·
992·7721
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting at$999 .00. Pr ice in cludes pool. deck, fence,
t il ter ,
liner, and in ·
stallatlon under normal
ground conditi on . Free
s hop at home service . Call

, 1- - F ur rli shed Rooms
SLEE PI NG ROOMS and
apt ..

cultivators. Co11446· 1700.

HOME

remedy , tr ad if ion for cen·
turies, it works. For com·
plete into and receipt send
today self addressed Starn·
ped envelope plus $1 .00 to

JACKSON ESTATE S AP ·

Cub Tractor for sale with
side
dresser
and

Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

1·800·624·8511.

63

Chow
puppies . CFA
Himalayan, Pers ian and
Siamese kitTens. Call 446·
3844 after 4 p.m.

Also

AKC

3 REGISTERED Nubian
goats. I Billy $80.00, 2 nan·
ny'• 575.00 each . Call 304·
675·2372 or 895-3952.

facilities.

Reg .

Dober ·

mans. Caii446 ·179S .

::-:.:.:~

O'Brien Slalom water ski
68" Exc cond . $75. 992 ·

6330.
Half runner bea ns. $10.00
bushel . Pick your own ,
brin g your own container .
George Hill. Ra cine, Ohio.

992 ) 479
TR A ILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Hom e Park , Cheshire. Oh

Sears Kenm are Portable
dishwasher . Good con d .

992·3242 .

TRA ILER space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y , Pt . Pleasant, 675·

Lawn &amp;. garden tractor
with bell'; mower &amp; plow &amp;
cultivator . $300. 1 antique
sewing machine $10 . 1 iron
mangle $10 . 949·2779.

3248

Gas refrigerator. 992·2941

or 992·2689.

51 -

1216.

Sofa, cha ir , rocker , ot ·
tom an, 3 tables, $500 . Sofa ,
chair and loveseat, $175 .
Sofas and chairs priced
from $275 . to $695 . Tables,

71

Hide ~ a

NEED severa l items of fur ·
niture ,
applianc e s,
televisions. Big discounts
for quanity purchase .
Vil l age Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave . 675·1773.
BIG d isc oun ts for cash and
carry at Vi ll age Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·

1773
AIR

CONDITIONER S

sale priced , all sizes in
stock , expert installation
ava il able . Village Fur niture. 2605 Jackson Ave .•

304675· 1773.

675· 1773 .

males,

females,

2

well

1981

marked . Call 367·7594 After
6PM .

15 ft . crest l i ner new seats
carpet,
60 HP
a nd
Evenrude trailer $1100.
Parts for 50 HP Mercury

AP

PL I ANCE S
washers,
dryers,
refrigerat ors ,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap
pliances , 1918 East ern
Ave ., 446·7398 .

outboard .
3664.

AKC German Shepard pup,
very nice, $50. Phone 446-

AKC Weimaraners. 8 wks.
old, bred for hunting, outstanding 4 H obedience.
blue eyed, silver beauties.
and parvo &amp; dhl shots . Call
George Woodward 614·379-

2597.

ch dwarf rabbits $10.99,
Canary and Cockatiels.

Dachshund,
an

2 lots for sale 16 Nell Ave .•

1967 Oldsmobile Cutlass.

1•nn1.

Sale-four male, black AKC
Registered $75. Partially

Dependable. S700 . or best
offer . 992·3717 .
1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675·
2722 or 675·5571.

304·675·3832.
Rabbits.

Registered Beagle puppies.

Phone 304-458· 1552
Chow ChO'N pupies, e)( ·
ce llent pedigree, black
cream and red, male and

female . GlenwOOd 304·762·
2035 .
Beautiful AKC Pekingese,
toy poodles champion
bloodline, tiny, teacup
Pomeranians, shotsr wor·
med and Parvo, very
reasonab le. Phone 3041 -743·

8002 .
Musieal

Instruments
R 1120 Luxmon receiver
w ith Bosse speaker JVS

turnlable ..Call 388·8240 .
Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Green Beans for sale. Call

&amp;
Vegetables
Homeorown · sweet corn ,

Charles . McKeon

etc .

Farm .

Call 4-16·9442.

675·4123.

---· . ........ ... .

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

..,

One bedroom furnished
apartment In Henderson
· $150. per montll . 675·1972
afler5P .M.
_ _ ___.__ _ _ __

~~~~~~~1J61

.

--.-

.

. . . ""T"

'

Farm li\qulpmenl

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
ground at

Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone1 ·304·422· 2781.

Datsun,

proved head , gas-elec.
refrigerator -water system,
galley, air cond. Shoreline

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,

Accessories

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

Auto parts, auto repair.
wrecker service , buy
automobiles. radiators and

baneries. 446·7717.
1980 Prowler camper 17ft ..
fully self contained, ex .
cond . Must sell. Call 256·

6626.

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr . wrecker
serv ice. " Big or small" we

tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. oav
446·2445 or N lght · 4-16·
4792.
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding

S115. any color,free pickup
&amp; delivery in Gallipolis
area, Hammond Body

Shop, 221 Mill St. 379-2782.

Answerhere :

..••

Oliver, ond Richard Poooo ••
olloqull. (211co., 30 mlno.)
1:01 (J)IIIOVIE -{IIIOQIIAJIII'
11
AIIIUinl How8rd Hutllee"
1177
1:10 (I) . NIW ~ IAFFU

membera

T
and
R
building ,
remQdel;ng, also papering,
carpet installation, and
general
home
im -

Adult
Care
Center .
"Providing the personal
care your elderly need in a
home·like atmosphere ."
Call Robert or Dorothy
Harper, 675-1293.

1969 Plymouth GTX G.C.
2130ak Street, New Haven,
Phone 304·882·2377.
75 Corvet, excellent con·
dillon. Phone 304·675·4318.
1977 RABBIT, 4 SPeed, 304·
675-6923.
~=:::===o=:::=:::=c==

72

Trucks lor Sale

1975 Ford F -100, - PS, PB,
AC, AM· FM 8 track, trailer
brakes, camper top, 57,000
miles, 51950. Call ~- 3987.

caualng Colonel Potter to tum

the 4077111 upoldo dOWIIID lind
tho CIU_II. (Repool)
1:10

1:!!11111111, (Ropool)
10:00 ( I ) . (I) THE LAST CONYERTilL! With the war over, Ruaa
leto, but the otmoophere Ia
tenee 11 hla aurvlvlng college

trlondllflndlldlfflcuhlood)uollo

tt" dr1111UC ChlftQIIIn their
live e. (Pert four of 1 five -part

prooontotlon.)
!!!lftl.)
(j)

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

Home
Improvements

BEST

In

Carpet

Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's

Hume'atathereecepeathebor·

odom ol rett.-nt by ohopllfl·
(R-t; eomtno.)

,.

DOZER WORK Compare
our RATES. Phone 256·
1560.

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing

Steamway.

Call

614-446·

209~ .

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446·4208

GASOUNE AU.EY

Rembowa. wife of movie Idol

The man claims

~atentlno.

tobehis - uncle?

:~;: !Enl't'B~~~~-

r

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding. 30
years e)(perience. Fr&amp;e

&amp;

estimates. Remodeling.
Call 388·9857.
STUCCO PLASTERIN'G
textured ceilings, com·

IS

mercial

and

residential.

free estimates: Call 256·
1182.
SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING, Carpeniry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, ~-2787 . .
CAPTAIN S t EEMER Car·
pet CleanlnO featured by
Hoffelt Brotll@rs, Custom
Carpets. F.ree estimates.
Call ~·21.01.
· .
.

ONE

"The Beat Of Carton' Oueata:

CryotoiGayle,DavldSiolnborg,
Pottl D' Albenvlllo, Colvin TnHin.
-t;IIOmlno.)
AMOTHI!II un
I!INHY tiLL SHOW
(J) CU LATI! MOYIE
'QUINCY, M.E.: Semper
Fidello' AooiDMI'uondlooon

1

446· 2171,
and

maneuver• In boot cemp and
O~olincy Ia called In to double

COULl'
HAVE SURPRIS'Ei:&gt;
II$ WITH A
')0(1

check the mllllar-t'o aulopoy
flndlnua. (Ropool) 'HARRY 0 :
Exerclaeln Fatality' A pollee
o"loor 11 accuood ot murdering
hla dllughtor'o boyfriend.
epeal)
AIC CAI'TIOIII!D HI!WI
MOVII! -{COI!EDY) ••••

V151T JUST A5
· EASILY,/

COHNJE,

l
red

~UIIeftHoi"1NI

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO ·
N. arr condition service,
c:ommerclal,

PRIORITY

NATIONAL

YE·Ai.UNATLARGE
TI!RUIIITI
IGHT GAI.U!RY
WOATI!NI!W8
THI!TOIIIGHTIHOW

t 1:01
1t:28
11:30

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fa~?rlc Shop,
Pomeroy . 992 ·2~84 .

(II). Me NI!WIIIICIKTL.INE

Industrial .

11:31

Phone 882-2079.

··~

byTodKappel.

MoYII! -(ADYI!NT\1111!)

...,.,.....,... 1-

11:00 (I) AIC NI!WI IIICIIfTUNE

Gener•l Hauling

.ldbyTidK_...

I'ANfAIYIIUNOAcorpentor'e ""eire 10 beco011 •
dalhlnll Jew" thlelleada hloo
Into - - ond high odven·
.._._abeallflf\ll-;end

JIM'S

DEPENDABLE
w~ter delivery. Call 256·
9368 .onytime.

.-n

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; l.lmeslone for driveways.
Call for estimates 367·7101

·-wilD--~-,..
of '*'
111011 .

--lind•

male trouble tftln ahl evtr
--oleelheMOkelulflll-other wllh. IR-'; 70

LiOht -Hauling, tree work,

garage and .basement
cleaned Ol/1. Call anytime
245·92(&gt;4. Ask for Roy, Thur·

(80

man,OH .

.

... ,

nice,

Adulbonly. No pets. Phone
· 145
--------~~~ACRES 412·378·1804.
304·675-1386.

Jumble Book No. 15; conllinlng 110 puzzln, ~ •v•llllble tor $1.15 po~~lJMkt
from JumbM, do thllntlillll~, Boll: 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your

.

milk• ChMU PIIYIIble to N.wspap.tu~s .

NlrM, llddreN, .dp code 8

BRIDGE ..,.,.,.
Setting an irresistible trao
By Oswald Jacoby
ll!d AIID Soatag

NORTH
t7

7-13· 81

.74
tJ95

Oswald: "Freak hands
lead to freak results since
everyone Is bound to be
doin!l a lot of guessing in the
biddmg."
Alan; "In Ibis hand from a
team game both South players elected to open with one
spade. The hand is too strong
far an opening preempt and
doesn't have enough highcard strength to make a
forcing opening advisable."
Oswald: "South was a
trifle disappointed when
North passed to the onespade opening but East reopened with a takeout double.
Now South decided to try Ia
trap his opponents. He simply bid two spades right over
East's double. West bid three
hearts. East raised to four
and South proceeded to four
spades."
Alan: "The trap worked.
West passed and East decided that his three aces warranted a business double .
, The defenders did get three
tricks, but dummy's jack of
diamonds was all South
needed to bring home the
doubled game."
Oswald: "At the other
table East also doubled one
spade. South jumoed right to

+to 911 ~; J
WEST

EAST

+93

+&amp;&gt;

.KQJ96

• A 10 83
t A 10 2

• 7 64 3

+KJ

tAQ42

SOUTH
tA KQJ 10842

.....
.52

tKQ8

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

w...

Nortb

Eas1

Pass
3'1'
Pass
Pass

Pass

Obi.

Pass

4•

Pass

Obi.

Pass

iour. West thou~ht awhile
and finally bid f1ve hearts.
Everyone passed. North ·
opened his singleton spade.
and West had to lose two
spades and a diamond for ~

down one, so team
gained 890 points for
IMPs.

on~

13

ec,.. so•w'
lty THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Socrates'
shopping
center
6 Till now
11 Nobleman

2 Effrontery
3 Voiced
4 Actress
Patricia
5 Sox
6 Blockade

12 uSmoke"

7 "- pro nobis"

heroine
13 Otildren's
literary
classic

8 French fire
9 Picnic pest
10 King (Sp. )
14 Malediction
17 Canadian
peninsula
18 E:tpeditious
19 Dried
20 Vetch
%1 Gennan

15 Building
feature

16 Fall behind
17 Make
electricity
!2 Taste factor
Z5 Romanian
city
ZIGather
Z'l Plrmacle
Z8 Ezpressway

river
%%Segment

Vestenlay'o Auawer
1!.1 Swedish wine 34 Abstract
measure
being
Zt Dress
35 Cognate
material
3S Actress Rita
%7 Assassins
37 Taro root
Z9 Any
38 Patriot Hale
minute now
as a boy?
31 Court action 39 French one
33 Ascend
40 Decay

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

lncUne
Z8 Baseball pitch
30 Arboreal frog

h-+-+-

3!- Acuff
33 Gardner-

3119111 Kentucky
Derby

winner
41 Turkish city
4Z ''Lou Grant"
reporter

43 Staying
place
Dutch
palnler

Jones Boys Water Service :..

Call J!-7·7.471 or 367·0591'.

·•

---------,-.....,-- ,.
DILLAROS
•

o

I

,,..

W -ATER ~

DELIVERY
Call446·7404.

'

.

SERVICE . .

.~..,........,.:.:.,
- ,.__,_-~~-

JONES ilbys ~·WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7411 or
367·0591.

DAILY CRYPTOQOQTE:.... Here's how

to

' AJ:YDLBAAXR
Ia L~NGFBLLOW

.,

work it:·

.. •'

,Qtle ·letter simply »Ianda for another. In tills sample A ~
uied for the three L'a, X for the two O 's, etc. Slnele letters,
the lenllh and fomiatlon of the worda are all

APOIU'OPit•·

blau. !acb day the eode lelten are dll'ferent.

'

ABDH

BL

F

C~WGQXE

TBWCQH

GW

,

•

CllYI'TOQUOTII

CG

....

KITTEN

What the bankrupt boomerang
manufacturer was trying for-

A COMEBACK

BKKGZHKZH,

OU'RE. ON 'I'OUil 0'.111&gt;1 . MP&gt;IJOR•

BAMBOO

~"1171

(J)IYMIIOLSOI'UY1!8PA8T:
THIIIAIIIOYACOUI!CTION
Vlnoent Price"'"'''' thl1 tUm
•bouttheremartcebleAambowa
COllection ot Etyptlln onllqul·
tlee and lte rounder Nat••h•

Slden _.,

Cooling

THIII8THIUFI!

MOVIE
-{ICII!NCI!-FICTION) ...

BACKHOE and Septic tank

Heating service Call 3889698 .

==~==

10:30

Dozer work. Small jobs a

Qua.ifly

LOU GRANT Tho

.
::.: I

675·3376 or 675· 1240.

on call. Ph .
GallipoliS.

THE

elderly neighbor ot Lou'o, Har·
vey Strong, Ia h811led by mil·
chlovoue kldo end Charlie

Fuller Electric Co. Com-

8l

FOR

eo

problema of the older uener•llon touch the Tribune when on

plete rewiri!lg, commercial
or residential. and elec trical maintainance, also

Sep lees

(Ropool;

IIACI!

;~~

ANI&gt; WI!

D. C. Contractors Plum ·
bing, electrical, heating,
roofing, aluminum, vinyl
siding, and home painting.

Larr~

.(J)Cfal HOUSI! CALLS A PI·

tientwho lee well known cr1mln·
11 CAUMI problema for Or. Ml-

stricker. 675·5580.

WQODSHQP
' Cablne11.
plcnl~ ;
tables,
porch
swtnos.
most
WOOd
produc·
Used R65 Ditch Witch treo· . Is
1 court St G'a lll·p· o 11•
cher &amp; 1972 GMC 7500
· 10 ·
·•
•·
series Tamden aKel Diesel' Coll44f· 2572 ·
Dump Truck . · 1-614-694·
7842.
.
WEATHERALL C9,1i ·
CRETE i quallly and l4tr·
.
.
197l Chevy truck. New vice, c'all675'158~
'
\ ···;
Holland bailer, M Farmoll
tractor, Myrtle Holter 949·

2558.

•

hae a reunion at hla family' a ••·

742·2903 .

COVEY

atudlo

chaelaandKentlngtonGenerel

10ft. truck camper. Phone 84 ·
Electrical
304·576·2585.
&amp; Refrigeration

FOR

1974 Super Beetle, exc.
cond. $2,600 Phone 304-675·,
2835.

FROM TH'
~!!:f.~~:J .. wHOO! MY
WAY THEY I'IERE
IMACiiHATIOI'f MUGT BE
OOIH' IT... IT
TO ME I IT FELT AG IF
LOOK.ED Lii/.E
GOMEONE 11lPffi' MY
. THEY DID-IT A
GHOOLDER, BOT I IX'N'T
LOT- SEE ANYONE-

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Service.

tile

C9nJ19rL..Diantl Canova.
(I) Ill! M.A.S.H. Hawkeye
•evtno-zlnuondcon'lotop,

~ AH'

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

in septic tank . 675·1234.

S6, 100.00 Call 304·675·5090.
1970 MUSTANG, in good
shape, 304-882-2195 .

6UY WITH TH'.
8EARD'~ i11AT
ANGELA WI'!G

Harper ' s

78

614·992·3304.

~·EXCEPT F-OR

provements. 675 5689, 675·
5304.

Ditcher work . Charles R.
Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe.
Gas, electric. and water.

Camping
Equipment

of

'(R-ot)
UPDATI! NI!WI
FLAIIIIIQOROADOn
o vlo.IOMiaml with Som Curtlo,
LaneBolouiiiHiolnoldlrlend
who IIIII her lllel lhrll peoj)ll
wlth......,lhey lhoroduocnt
put ho.. myeterlouoly dlod In
recent wMko. (Ropoot; eo
mlno.)
(I) 70oCLUI
CDlJleAICIIOIIDAYIIIGHT
MOYII! 'The Dooth 01 Ocoen
VIew Pork' 11178 Storo: Mike

1:11
1:00

wv

specia lty. 742·2753 .

Answer

'Mtrder on the Aocldentel

Ser·

E~~:cavilting

(Answ&lt;ors tomorrow)

Salunsay·sl J u -: MAGIC

eucllencetopelfonnwllhhlmln

stump rem ova I. 675-1331.

8J

[I I) 0 (I I)( I)?_

THI!nMCONWAY
IHOW Tim Conwov plcko •

Phone675 ~ 2250 .

SERVICES :

••lio

. "'k
nCIII

house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446-2454.

E &amp; V Body Shop Want
your car looking new? Call
446·9304Georges Creek Rd .

ex ·

loaded,

Now arrange the drcted letters to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon .

HTHWN

Furnished one bedroom
apartment
In
Point
Extra

.

locat~ abov~

required, 30oi·675·136S.

Pleaaant,

1980 200SX

cellent condition,

For Sale 1972 GMC 7500
Diesel dump truck. Call 1·
61 4·694· 711-42.

SMALL furnished apart·

COOK'S Television
v ice, Henderson .

1975 Dodge Coronet 2 door.
runs good . Phone 304-675·
6545.

1980 VW truck diesel
engine, 40 MPG, ex . cond.,
55,800 firm . Call afler S:30
PM367·0694.

-

BY owner, 3 apartment
hOUse on opprox. 1 acre.
L:lve In one, rent o1hers to
make your payment. Can
be converted single home.
CI1Y water, will constdj!r
land 'CO!)tract, 67S·1883 9-5
p .m . ...

1973 Pinto. GOOd condition.
Phone1 ·304·882·3664.

245-9183.

MODERN 8 ft . couch &amp;

675·6020, 9:30 to 5.

25' ( Sportcraftl FIberglass
Houseboat . 115 h .p . Mer·
cury O.B . Motor. e .G . ap-

1979 American Traveler.
27' . Self contained, built in
stereo &amp; tape deck . Call

Very good car. Phone 304·
675-5075.

WHAT THE 5oUR6EON
6tAIDATTHE
HOSPITAL'S AIIINUAI..
C!'ANCE .

IMARPHE!

HARPER Halstead, lawn

Specializing in zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and

77 Grand Prix, 301 engine,
air, cruise, AM-FM 8 track .

.,..,

) I I t)

CONTINIOUS no leak gut ~
tering, custom made for
your home . For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR . 614-698·8205.

1979 Starcralt fiberglass
boat, skis and accessories.
90 h.p . used bery little.
s-1,500 . 992·6272 after 5.

77

(J

PNKANP

882·2079.

p.m. 675·5868.

388·8240.

1978 Fold down camper
with awing &amp; port-a -pot.
Call446· 7230.

Different sizes,

mangos,

(XJ

Service .

motor with drive on trailer

MORRISON'S Auto sates.
. HendeUon, WV . Phone 675·
1574 or 675·2881 .

cages and all 585.00, 304·
675·5492.

cabbage,

--

I...............I-....-I . .-·-""

mower repair and shar·
penlng servi ce, 10 a.m .- 6

Phone Ripley

372-6740.

Apartments. 675-5548 .

ment. no pets. references

Good

cond.

1975 Dodge statlonwagen.

bro~e .

RATTI

1977 Checkmate Trl Mate
11, 16 ft. 140 HP Evanruqe

&amp;

.

one letter to each aquare. to form
tour Oldlnar-t -ds.

Residential , automot•ve.
-E mergenc y service . Cal l

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446· 3888 or 446-4477

PoOdle

chair , blue floral design ,
excellent, $175. phone 304·

2 bedroom apartment. Call

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

LOCKSMITH

76 Lincoln Town Coupe,
loaded, 32,500 actual miles.
CA II 256·6029.

Looking tor a house pet?
Poodles are the best . For
paper

YI~wmg

RINGLE'S
SERVICE :
Complete
bu i lding,
remodeling , repairing ,
large or small lobs done ef ~
flclently . Phone 675·2088 or
675·4560.

82

Plymouth .

1-

Gene's carpet Clean ing,
deep stream eJC1ractlon .
Free estimates, reasonable

1965 Jeep body. Minus ten·
69' Mercedes Bentz 220 ders &amp; hood . With 2 win·
diesel engine. Call4-46·4846. dshields. Never used. 1600.
992 ·2124. Mon .- Fri. 8·4 : 30.

Inquire at
Rock St., Pomeroy. $300.

pups 895-3958 .

APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES675-4130.

$6,000, 38 Nell Ave., s-1,000.
phQne388·889' or 992·7042.

mi.) . $850.00 llrrn . Call367
0672 after 5PM.

runing

Fruits

Phone 30.-675·6800 .

headers, slot wheels, new
tires, engine rebuilt (3,000

1973

Open 11 ·4.
P.omeranian

Classic

1978 CAMARO, silver with
black interior. 305 cu . in,
PS, AC, in-dash tape.
$4,000. Call 446·8049 after
3:30.

THE FISH TANK and Pel
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave .
675-2063, Pt. Pleasant. Out·

AKC

Caprice

1970 Malibu 350, 300 horse

Phone 304-882·

Stereo componet system .

72 TRIUMPH 650 motor·
cycle, phohe 304·675· 1751 .

Auto Parts

Oiesel. Call 379· 2745 .

AK C Poodle,
Apricot
female, 3 yrs. old, $75. Also

58

446·0322

----------

1978 Kawaskl LTO 1,000.
s2:ooo. Excellent condition.
675 · 5079 .

Autos for Sale

AKC St. Bernard Puppies 3

•

'i}flj)f.\.ftfj}lf ~ THATICRAM.LEOWORDGAM! .
~~~~
.
byHenriAmoldllldBobi.M
.
.
Unscramble theM tour Juinblel,

model,

Trailer. 992·3160.

53.800. Call446-1136.

17

Lowest pri ces on Bemco
bedding i n the area. Cal l
for pri ces . Village Fur·
niture. 2605 Jackson Ave .

:·:.::-::: ·:.

77 Trans Am, black with
many options. Compare at

Call4-46·4191 .

PUREBRED
Austrailian
blue hee ler puppies, $75.

EASY credit available now
to pur c hase furnitur e.
televi sions, or appliances .
Villag e Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave _, 675· 1773.

beds,SJ40 ., queen si ze, $38Q.
Re c liners , $165 ., $295 .,
Lamps tram $18 . to $65 . 5
pc . dinettes from $79. , to
$365 . 7 pc , $189 . and up.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
$350 up to $495 . Hutches,
$300 _ and $375 .• maple or
pine finish . Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak , $649 .,
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk
bed complete with mat·
tresses, $250. and up to
$350 . Captain' s bed s, S275.
complete . Baby beds, $89 .
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, $55. , firm . S65 .
and $75 . Queen sets, S185. 5
dr . chests, S49. 4 dr . chests,
S42 . Bed frames. S20.and
$25 ., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350 .• dinette chai rs $20.
and $25 . Tappan gas or
electric ranges, S285.
USED
.
Ranges ,
refrigerators. and TV 's,
J miles out Bulaville Rd
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri ., 9am to 5pm, Sat

USED

trave l

trailer and camp site on
Raccon Cree~ . Close to
Ohio River . SSOO down .
Owner will finance. 614·256·

Hous.eholdGOOds-

$38 and up to $109 .

TROUTWOOD

.450 Honda, 1975
$425. 675-3135.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
A KC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.

2310.
Spa ce for Rent

Livestock

For Sale English saddle 4'
cutback Call 388·8270.

HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor

1977 Kawasaki K.Z 1000, ex·
cellent condltiQn . Phone
675·6810 afler 5 p .m.

75

•

RON'S Television Service.

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL, AKC

miles

billOW Gallipolis on Rt. 7.
call446·4807 .

,.

TV

256 1427.

Furnished apt . $160, 2 bdr.,
water paid, children OK .

GOOD

Apartment

., • .,.,_..

Lots &amp; Acreage

LoTS · Real nice campsite
bn Raccoon Creek, all
ptllitles available, $300.
c:town, owner will finance,

own

Two bedroom house trai ler
on Ashton -Upland Road .
$150 plus utilities and
damage deposit . 3 miles

180

(II¥;

t

---=--======-,----

For Sate 16 cu . f t ., side by
side refrigerator, $175 . Call

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

'l bedroom trail er for rent.

7••

Jtal

in

brick, sewer pipes. win·

26'

•

used

stations. Call602·622-2290.

borhood , 675-6722 or 675·

Ca II 446·6642 .

43

Farms for Sale

m a nf act u re r,

TRA I LER space for rent
on Greer Rd ., sewer and
14x65 mobile home 2 bdr, 1 water availab le, 304·8361/2 bath, beautiful river 5937 between 9 &amp; 11.
view, and 2 more 1st of
Aug ., no children , no pets .

9&lt;/2 -5858.

anyth ing

. .

'

rates. Scothguard, 992·6309.

1978 Odyssey, gOOd con·
dillon. Phone304·675·5173 .

••

Special Sale! Satellite An tenna, BUY direct from 55

773 ·5882 .

For rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom
mobi le home . Rae: ire area

in·

5nll78, Huntington .

chenfurn ished , carpeted,
bill s partial ly pa id . $200
mo .
E xce llent
nei gh ·

--

1975 750 Honda. Excellent
condition. Phone 304·675·

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER ·
VICE . Complete sales, ser·

Restaurant and store
equipment. RAOCO 304·

2 bdr. trail er, turn ., gas 992·3954 .
and water turn , $225 . mo ,

S100 dep . no pels . Call 446
4745 .

Misc. Merchandise

Most

REGENCY APT . INC 2
bedroom .
kd ·

l ig ht hou sekeeping
Par k Central HoteL

-

For Sale : 1000 gallon
PLAS T 1C septic tanks .
State approved. Phone 2865930 . Jac kson, Ohio.

For r ent new 1 bdr . apt.

TWO bedroom house 304

USED Mob il e Hom£&gt;

1973 Hallmark 12x60. For

no pets . Cal l 446·3437 .

Park , Route 33, North of
Pomero y . L arge lots. Cal l

42

.s•

uti lities paid, no c h i ldren,

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

2 bedroom Mobile Home. 1
bedroom apt . utilities paid,
1 child accepted . No pets or
drunks. John Sheets, 3112
miles south of Middltoport
on Rt . 7.

1971 Du ian- 12 )II 65, 3
bedrooms
1972 Crow n
Haven, 14 x 65 with B x 10
upando, 3 bedroom s. 1973
utopia 12 )( 65, 2 bedrooms .
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau. 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms . B 1/ " s
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts_ Pt
Pleasant, WV .
Phone 675·442-4 .

vice, suppl ies and
stallation . -446· 132 ...

263 ·2669 .

3324 .

2711.

4 r ent unfurn . apt . all ca r ·
peted , $250 mo. $100 dep,

46

$15,900 . 9'12 -7774.
576 ·

'

2111 bedrooms, 1 acr e, 6
miles
South
of
Pt
Pleasant . Refer ences and
deposit, 1-614·263·8322 or

675· 1371 or 675·3812

1973 Crown Haven, 14x65,
three bedroom . new car·
pet, 1971 Cameron , 14x64,
two bedroom, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12x60, two
bedroom. new carpet. 1976
Cameron,
12x60,
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/ 2. new

767·3167 or 557·3411 .

vinyl ' 510.4 .

PRICES REDUCED · used

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALE S. 4 MI .
WE ST. GA LLIPOLIS . RT .
35 . PHONE 446 ·3868 or &lt;WI·

fi c ienc y apt. Furnished,
adu lts only, no pets. 729 2nd
Ave . Gallipolis. Call &lt;WI·
0957 .

Sen ior Citizens 1 bdr . apt .,
ren tal
assi s tan c e
available . Call «6-2745 .

Call446 ~ 3897 .

MOBILE HOMES . CALL
446· 7572.

coin collectipns. Call 6U·

Clean S rm . house i n
Eureka, full size basemen t,
fuel oil turnance. Ca l l 256·

siding, na t. gas heat, c ity
sc hool d istrict other extra s.

mobi le homes and travel
trailers .
TRI · ST ATE

Second floor finished ef-

Call.wl-0390.

bdr .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 bdr . apartment lg. LR
and Kllchen . Across from
Honda Shop no pets. Call
4-16·3937 or 367·0560.

Call 256·6474 or 446·4292

j

53
Antiques
AT T E N T 1oN :
( 1M ·
PORT ANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified c heck
tor antiques and col lee·
llbles or entire estotes.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches, and

Television

Improvements
1975 Honda 7.., many ex· · Hoover sweepers r~lred
Ires. gel. cond. Call ~-064 at Empire Furniture, 8o42
ofter6PM.
•-ond A.ve, Gallipolis, OH.
_,.,._
1975 360 Honda 1,:100 miles. Interior and EKterlor pa inexcellent condition 1795. ting, trallor roofs, and dry
Ph0ne30ol·675·3995.
wall S18 and up, 15 yrs. experience. Free est. Call446·
Motorcycle 2 'Honda Trail 1562.
905. 1 runs good, $300, both.
Phone304·882·3664.
Ashworth Installment Ser ·
vice . carpet, vinyl ,
1977 Honda CB 550K, 4 cyl ., ceramic tile, floor t ile, for ·
1000 miles. Phone 304-675· mica counter tops, all work
2832.
guoronteeed- Call446·8019.

sears washe r and dryer.
Phone304·576·2638.

on

"~•

YFWZE

DWGV

CHYRCFCBGK;
CG

TBZH.

�Meigs hoard drops Supt. Gleason

14 die on Ohio highways
By Tbe Auoclated Press
A spurt of fatal accidents Sunday
Ufted Ohio's weekend traffic death
toO to 14, the Highway Patrol said.
lncluded In the total were two
double-fatality smashups.
The patrol counts fatalities !run 6
p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
The dead :
SUNDAY
HAMILTON - Chase A. Shafer, 51 ,
of Cincinnati, in a two-car collision

on a Butler County road.
COLUMBUS - Robert P. Russell,
17, and John R. Hammons, 15, both
of Colwnbus, in a two-car smashup
on U.S. 23 in southern Frallklin
Countv .

FREMONT - Kelly W. Walby, 22,
of Helena, in a one-car accident on
Ohio 500 In Sandusky County.
DELAWARE - Steven L. Jennnlngs, 25, of Johnstown, in a molal'
cycle accident on a Delaware County road.
JEFFERSON - Scott Mackellar,
17, of Jefferson, in a one-car accident on an Ashtabula County road.
UMA - Bret Brandehoff, 21, of
Delphos, in a one-car accident on an
Allen County road .
NAPOLEON - Gary Griebel of
Defiance, in a twQooCar accident on
Ohio 281 and Ohio 6S in Henry County.
SATURDAY
STRUTIIERS- Thomas E Danks,

By BOB HOEFUCH
The Meigs Local School District
Board of Education voted 3'1 Monday night against the renewal of the
contract of District Superintendent
David L. Gleason.
A quick action against the renewal
followed an hour long executive
session with -Board MemiJer Robert
Snowden moving against renewal of
the superintendent's contract and
seconded by Richard Vaughan.
Casting the third vote against the
renewa l was new board member,
Bob Barton.
Barton began his duties as a board
member Monday night after hts
recent appointment by other board
members to fill a vacancy cre,ted
by the resignation of Dr. Keith
Riggs.
Board President Larry Powell
voted in support of Gleason and the
fifth boartl member, Carol Pierce,
was not present for the meeting .
Gleason has one year remaining
on his contract which provides that
he was to have been notified one
year ahead if the board did not plan
to give him a renewal. He was hired
by a 3-2 vote tw~ years ago at a
highly controversial meeting attended by a nwnber of residents of
the district who insisted that the
board name Dan Morris to the
superintendent's spot.

22, of Stnithers, tn a one-car accident in Struthers.
CLEVELAND - Angela · Battaglia, 24, ol Panna, in a on&amp;-car accident on a Cleveland city s~net.
GRANVILLE - John A. Welsh,
32, and Annette Hayes, 23, both of
Newark, in a two-car accident on
Ohio 16 in Licking County.
RAVENNA - Eugene L. McCourt, . 35, of Garrettsville, a
pedestrian killed on Ohio 303 In ·Pol'
tage County.
FRIDAY
BOWUNG GREEN - Jason M.
Barber, 2 months, of Findlay, in a
one-car crash on a rural road in
Wood County.

Youths hurt in accident,
.

Two Rt. I, Patriot youths were injured in a truck-minibike accident
on Mount Zion Road Sa turday af·
ternoon, according to the GalliaMeigs Post of the stale highway
patrol.
Deanna K Cline, 13, wa s taken to
Holzer Medical Center by private
vehicle and treated and released for
multiple bruises.
Sabrina Norton. 12. was also taken
to HMC, but appa rently not treated.
The patrol sa id Cline and Norian
were ndmg the minibike at 12:20
p.m. while four miles south of SR 775
when they colli ded on a curve with a
south bound truck driven by Wllliam

E. Payne. 57. Rt. I. Scottown.
The Cline bike was moderately
dama~ed

and there was no damage

to the truck. Cline was cited for no
operator's license.
Three accidents in Gallia County
were investigated Sunday by the
patrol.
The l&gt;atrol said it cited Roscoe
Browning Jr., 29, Colwnbus, in a
tw&lt;&gt;-ear accident on U.S. 35 Sunday
mght.
According to the report, Browning
was backing from a private
driveway at 9:55 p.m. when he
collided with an eastbound auto
drJ ven by Rodney H. Foley, 35, Rt. I,
Red House , W.Va ., ca using
moderate damage to both vehicles.
Troopers said a van driven by
William Burns Jr. , 26, Rio Grande.
was eastbound on SR 588 at 12:25
a.m . when he went off the right side

of the road to avoid. collision with a
westbound vehicle left of center on a
curve.

The van then came back onto the
road and overturned, causmg
moderate damage and no injury to
Burns.
The report said a car driven by
Michael L. Lambert, 29, Rt. I,
Rutland, was attempting a left turn
into Holzer Medical Center parking
lot from SR 160 at I : 18 p.m. when
another auto driven by Tammy D.
Brown, 17, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, also attempted a turn by passing Lambert
and collided with the left side of
Lambert's car.
There was moderate damage to
both vehicles and no citations
issued.

Meigs County happenings •••
Emergency units
have busy weekend
Local emergency units were kept
busy over the weekend. the Meigs
Emergency Medi cal Service reports.
On Sunday at 9: 33 p.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Veima Winedbrenner from the Pomeroy Health
Care Center to Veterans Memonal
Hospttal. The Rutland Unit at :i:20
a. m. took Ronald Janiak from
Langsville to Veterans Memonal
and at 11:08 a.m. look Gary Priddy
from Hysell Run to Holzer Medical
Center. At 9:21 p.m., the Rutland
Unit took Chase Ellis from Harrisonville to Veterans Memorial and the
Tuppers Plains Unit at 12 :35 a.m .
took Flora Elkins from the Arbaugh
Addition to St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg.
On Saturday. the Middleport unit
at 12:22 p.m. treated Theima Siders
at her residence on North Second
Ave.: at 12:53 p.m . took Lucille
Casto from Hysell St. to Holzer
Medi cal Center and at 6: 48p.m. took

Veterans Memorial

Ruth Gosney from Ash St. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
Rutland Unit at 7:42 p.m. took
Michael Gross from county road 27
to O'Bieness Hospital in Athens;
Rutland at 2:51 a.m. took Ann Coe,
Racine, to Holzer Medical Center;
Syracuse at 6:20 a.m . took Gerald
Hayman to Veterans Memor ial
Hospital.
On Friday, it was reported that the
Pomeroy Umt made a ca ll to Five
Points for Sue Bissell. That call was
for Babby Kauss who was treated
but not transported.

Saturday Admissions- Mayme
Manning, Ra cine; Ruth Gosney,
Middleport: Benjamin Fields, Point
Pleasant.
Saturday
Discharges--John
Harrison, James Hunt, Christopher
George, Bertha Diehl, Beth Darson,
Donna Philabaum, Albert Hemsley,
Benjamin Smith, Delta Cleland.
Sunday
Admissions--Ronald
Janiak, Langsville; Charles Jones,
Middleport; Alta Dill, Reedsville ;
Bessie Turley, Long Bottom; Linda
G. Bailey, Dexter, Charles Ellis,
Pomeroy.
Sunday
Discharge--Michael
Reynolds.

AGENTS ORANGE ENTER JAIL - Emergency
response officers, 1D their distinctive bright orange
coveralls, ma.-.,h IDio the Westchester County Jail at

Marriage licenses were issued to""
William Lester Pugh, 20, Rt. 1, Long
Bottom, and Dora Ann Shaver, 18,
Gallipolis; John Ronald Nelson, 21,
Pomeroy, and Tamara Jayne Harden, 19, Gallipolis; .Larry Duane
Carpenter, 41, Middleport, and
Jerusha Fern Carpenter, 38, Middleport; Billie Allen Davis, 44,
Hemlock Grove, and Ruby Ann
Curry, 32, Rt. 2, Racine.

Mrs. Freda Irene Little, 05, Route
I, Middleport, died ea rly Monday
morning at the Holzer Medical Center.

Mrs . Little was born Aug. 14, 1925,
at Cheshire, a da ughter of the late
Fred and Jewell Mulford Little.
Surviving

are

her

husband,

William C. Little; Utree sons and
daughters-in-law , Michael R. and
Terrsa Little and Steven K. and Rita
Little, all of Route I, Middleport;
Ricky William and Sharon Little,
Wonder Lake, fll . ; a brother and
sister-in-law, William and Maxine
Little, Route I, Middleport ; a sister,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
JULY CLEARANCE

CAN NON $3 BATH TOWELS
49

CHOOSE SOLID COLOR STYLES OR
FLORAL PRINT ON WHITE BACKGROUND.
SOFT AND ABSORBENT

Deadline is July 20

•2••

Deadline lor payment of real
estate taxes is 4:30 p.m. Monday,
July 20, George Collins, county
treasurer announced today .

DAV meeting set
A meeting of Meigs Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans, has
been set for6 :30 p.m. Tuesday at the
chapter home , Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.

MATatiNG s2.49 HAND TOWEL ·····-······'1"
MARCHING '1.69 WASH CLOTH .............~1 29

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Mrs. Little was a member of the
Silver Run Freewill Baptist Church.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Silver Run
Freewill Baptist Church with the
Rev. Merlin Teets officiating. Burial
will be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire. Friends may caD at the
Rawlings-Coats-Blowers Funeral
Home in Middleport from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Tuesday and until 12 :30
p.m. on Wednesday when the body
will be taken to the church.

.

mmmiN THEW

ODOE. receives funds
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Department of Energy has received
$885,000 for the first phase of a waste heat utilization program.
The money is earmarked for funding preliminary engineering on·
reclamation of waste heat from the Portsmouth Uraniwn Enrichment
Plant in Piketon. It' s also to go toward utilizing that heat as the source
of thermal energy fur a proposed 400-acre industrial pa rk near the
plant's boundary.

O~J O .

AI l.au, an FBI agent fror. Portsmouth, told Spiegel that Spencer
used the names of 134 tnehgt ble students to obtam $42.746 m Baste
Educationa l Opportunity Grant funds Aug. 30, 1979.

0

s

, 1!&gt;@ 0

Interest up on six month money

~--

Mrs. Delores Miller, Route 2,
Cheshire; five grandsons; a granddaughter; several nieces, nephews
and cousins.

TooAY

"

agencies.

..'\. _=·

~;.....

Reminder issued
A reminder that an open house and
sign-up day will be held at Meigs
High School at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in
the Larry R. Morrison Gyrnnasiwn.

,To begin VBS
CHESHIRE - Cheshire community Bible school will be held July
13'17 at Cheshire UM CHurch 6:308:30p.m. each night.

A new car loan from

the Farmers Bank
•
can put you In the
driver's seat.

NEW-Bob Barton. Pomeroy businessman, was given the oath of office
by Treasurer Jane Wagner as a new member of the Meigs Loca l Board of
Education, Monday night and attended his first session on the board. He
replaces Dr. Keith Riggs who resigned from the board recently.

•

enttne

at y

1 ~cc tton , IO· Paqcs

A

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 14, 1981

CINCINNATI -- The President of the Portsmouth" Interstate
Business college has pleaded guilty to defrauding the federa l government of $61,746 in student aid tunds.
Jack Spencer, 34, pleaded guilty Monday before U.S. District Judge
S. Arthur Spiegel to tw&amp; counts of making false statements to federal

A crackdown on drin1dDg and Uttering on the parking lots along the .
education classes will be held at the Ohio River In Pomeroy Is fo,.
Meigs Senior Citizens Center from I theomlng Acting Pollee Cbief
to 3 p.m. Tuesday. The public is in- George Stilts warned today.
VIted to the free program which will
Drinking Is prohibited on the lots
be conducted by Dr. Wiima Man- and so Is littering and arresta will be
sfield and will deal with the topic, made. Heavier palrolllog of tbe lots
" Cancer-Its Prevention anbd Early by police officers will start imDetection".
mediately, Chief Stilts warns. The
chief asks the cooperatlou of the ·
public also In that people be alert
; and report offenseo to the pollee
] department at once.

EMR teacher and Bruce Wilson as
junior high physical education instructor and eighth grade baskethall
coach.
Phyllis English was given a one
year leave of absence as a cook at
the high school and named to the
substitute teacher list were Linda
Aikman, Clotine Blackwood, Ertc
Chambers, John Coffman, Kitty
Cassell , Fern Grimm , Grace
!lawley, Mildred Hites, Jeff Holter,
Farie Kennedy , Mary Kessler ,
Vinas Lee, Margaret Lewis, Helen
Maag, Roberta Maidens, Barbara
Mathews, Joe Myers, Ma rgaret Pa rsons, Mary Powell, William Robinette, Dave Warga, Roberta Wilson,
Dorothy Woodard, James Wright
and William Young, tutoring only.
· Ed Harkless. vocal music instructor , was also employed as
assistant band director for one yea r.
No action was taken on employing
Marla Grimes as junior high
secretary, !().month positi on, ~fter
Snowden commented that the job
should have been posted in accorda nce wtth rules governing non·
certified employes.
However. Supt. Gleason sa id tha t
Grimes had been employed earlier
and that her positi on was being
changed from an II month job to a 10
month job to rrduce costs. It was
1Continued pn page 10 I

•

Vo1.30,No.6l
Copy,-iqhted 19111

College presi.d ent pleads guilty

The first in a series of five cancer

teacher for the seven children who
had been in the class last year. The
teacher will be employed for a tw&lt;&gt;hour period each day for a five day
week. The special help will extend
over the pummer months until the
start of school.
Rev . Knittel expressed appreciation to Gleason lor his
suggestions of monitoring and
testing these students during the
next school year, but he added that
parents felt the students had not
been given propep instruction during
the past year and something should
be done now to help them before they
start classes next year.
Rev. Knittel was assured that the
students can be monitored for
progress next school year and the
board did agree to provide the tutor
against the recoiTIJilendation of
Supt. Gleason. Parents.have agreed
to provide transportatton for the
students .
Asst. Supt. Morris said classes for
the students will prohably be held at
the high school library and he indicated that He will make an UTImediate attempt to secure a teacher
for the group.
Before the executive se!l"ion, the
board accepted the resignations of
Dorothy Oliver and Celia McCoy as
junior class ~ponsors; Robert Oliver
as golf coach ; Carol Reese as an

e

Marriage licenses ··

Area· deaths
Freda Irene Little

Valhalta, N. Y., Sunday oight to begin locking up
prisoners following two days of dlslurbaaces In which
the pmoners had control of the jail. ( AP Laserpboto) .

Crackdown coming

First class set

Morris, 'at that time, was director
of curriculwn and has since been
named assistant superintendent.
Gleason indicated this morning he
was not surprised by the failure of
the board to renew his contract and
vowed that he will continue to work
for the improvement of the district
until his contract expires a year
from now.
Following the executive session,
the board also announced a special
meeting for July 29 and passed a
motion limiting the length of
meetings in the future to three
hours. They will start at 7 and end at
10, according to the motion.
Before last night's executive
session, the board by a :H vote with
Powell again casting the dissenting
vote , reversed an earlier tie vote
regarding assistance for seven
students in a learning disability
class at the Pomeroy Elementary
School last year .
Appearing before the board on the
matter was the Rev . WilHam Knittel
who said that children of the class
were not given proper instruction
during the past school year and he
asked that they be given tutoring
this summer, An earlier request for
such assistance had been turned
down.
Last night, however, the board at
t)le split vote agreed to provide a

WASHINGTON - Persons willing to invest at least $10,000 in sixmonth money market Certificates Will be able to get as much as 14.48
percent interest beginning today.
The rate was set ·Monday after yields on short-tenn Treasury
Securities - which govern money market rates- rose for the second
straight week to their highest levels since early June .
· About $4 million in six-month bills were sold at Monday's weekly
auction at an average discount rate of 14.2:! percent, up from 14.0:i percent a week earlier and the highest level since 14.491 on June I.

Mull•med~&lt;l

l~ Ce n t\

In c. Ne w5pclper

Columbia gas· closes Mi,d dleportoffice
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc. will
close it's Middleport office next
month.
That was announced by John
Koebel, area manager, at la st
night's meettng of Middleport Council.
Koebei"advised that a)though the
office is being closed, the garage
with present personnel will be maintained and he assured council there
will be no change in the quality or
promptness of service to custom ers.
He noted the consolidation of the
Middleport and Gallipolis offices is a
company trend Cor better economy
and efficiency. The area manager
advised that arrangements have
been made for collections to be handled by Dutton Drug.
Several members of council ex·
pressed rrgret about the move with
council., President Marvin Kelly
describing it as detrimental to the

$240,025, general fund ; $18.215.39.
revenue sharing ; $6 ,700. ftre trurk;
$92,:i00, street maintenance: $17,300,
street lighting ; $21 .8110. cemetery:
$85,000 sanitary sewer escrow:
$19,100. swimmtng pool : Sl .r'lf111()11
HUD: SH6,670, water; $22,450. street
levy; $6.:100, bond retireme nt . $3.000
meter deposits; $89.160. sa nttary
sewer ; $18.950. fire eqwprnent. and
$564.98, planning commissi on.
Gene Wise requested $:i.OOO
designated for lighting at the Mtddlc port Park be appropr iated fo r
other needed improvements al the
park. Lighting JS currently bei ng installed at the park thro~ g h contribution• from the Southern Ohio
Coal Co. and Ute United Mine
Workers of Southern Ohio Coal Co.
with equipment donated by BenTomCorp.
Coun cil agreed that the S:i,OOO in
revenue sharing funds should be
used for park improvements and
suKgesled that the Recreation Commisston submit a proposa l. The need
for improvi ng the basketball court
was noted as was the parking
problems which exist in the park

village and ··creating one more
vacant room .''

ADOPTS BUDGET
The 1982 budget of $2,387,81:i.20
was adopted during the meetinK . fl
includes estimated receipts of

a rea.

destgnaled as the depository for

Counctl accepted the price bid uf
the Shelly Cu. for resurfacing purlions of North Second Ave .. Locust
Street, Pea rl Street and Dock Street
or $.14 a ton for asphalt and $1.25 a
ga llon for tack. and $2,000 for the
Mill Street gutter surlactng.

v1 llage fu nds for the next t wo years

Members

where

vol untee rs had

arra nged

green cots m rows.
Hotel owners outside the spraying
a rea reported a crush of booking s,
and the Red Cross set up I ,000 beds
in schools.

Wants private schools closed

"Despite·{he low turnout Monday,
Red Cross spokeswoman Mary
Terrell said the shelters would be
kept open Tuesday ntght.

invited

complex on Powell Street in

Mi d~

dleport. The units will be brought lu
the local Site on .luly 21.
Council agreed to dose the marina
al II p.m. except when spec ial permission for later use is granted. The
first reading of an ordinance for increasing the water meter depos it

was given . Residence deposits will
be increased from $25 to $35 while
service stations, groceries and
several other businesses will be in-

creased from $:15 to $50. as recommended by the Board of Publtc Affai rs.

The mayor"s report of $4,32 t was
acce pt ed.

Spraying begins after

SAN JOSE, Calif . 1API - A lowflying helicopter sprayed pesticide
over a residenttal area of the Santa
Clara Valley early today, beginning
a controversial assault against
ba ckyard infestations of the
Mediterranean fruit fly .
Most area residents stayed at
home
during the spraying, despite
LONDON - The opposition Labor Party wants to force private
urgings
by some local officials that
schools to close under a plan to end class distinctions in British
leave"
to protect their health .
they'
SOCiety.
But
a
few
dozen
people, unconvinced
The plan outlined Monday, which the Labor Party would implement
by
federal
assurances
that the
if it wins the next general election, would abolish private schools
was
safe,
slept
on
cots in
spraying
within 10 years. About :l50,000 pupils, some 5 percent of tlie school
Red Cross shelters outside Ute
population, attend 2,500 private schools. The next general election is
·
spraying
area. Others fled to hotels.
due by the spring of 1984.
The lone helicopter took off from a
secret location exactly at I a.m., according to Gene Cone of the state 's
Medfly Pr-oject.
PARIS - Hundreds of thousands of patnotic French pay homagf
The state Supreme Court cleared
today to a national landmark that no longer exists, dancing in the
the way Monday for the spraying,
streets to celebrate the 192nd anniversary of the fall of the notorious
over the objections of Santa Clara
prison known as the Bastille.
County and three of its cities.
Accordion music filters through the air and vin rouge ordinaire
Earlier in the day, Superior Court
Oows as merrymakers toast their way toward ··Ia gueule de bois,'"
Judge Bruce Allen turned down a
request for an injunction hanning
1trahslation : wooden mouth I the French term for a hangover.
Village courtyards and city squares were filled Monday night for the
the spraying.
traditional Bastille Eve drinking and street dancing festivities.
Gov . Edmund G. Brown Jr. reversed himself and ordered the
spraying after the U.S. Department
of Agriculture said it would Order a
quarantine on California produce
CLEVELAND - The wiMing number drawn Monday night in the
unless the aerial spraying were unOhio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 310.
;
dertaken. Agriculture . · Secretary
The lotlery reported a loss of $262,003 from the wagering on its daily
John Block said the spraying posed
game. The lass came on sales of $872,949, while holders of winning
no health threat.
lickets are entitled to share ,1,135,012.50, lottery"officials said.
Brown said he would be in the area
where the helicopter sprayed.
"I'll be in the spray_area," Brown
said, "but I ·won't open ·my mouth,
and I won't look up. "
, Clear"tonight. Lows in the upper 60s. Vari~ble cl9Udiness with chanFour Red Cross shelters outside
.
ce of showers •nd thunderstorms W~esday. Highs ill the ml~.
the spraying area had attracted only
Chance of rain 10 pel;l.'llnl tonight and 30 pe~nt Wednesday. Winds
abOut 8$ ,PI'Ople by late Monday
easterly near 10 mph t_onight.
'
, night. One slleltet, itt tlie q&amp;lifornia
· · , . . Ealeilded Ohio Fol"ftut •
.
· Senooi !fi UW:~f at Fremont, was
'l'llurlda)" tbrougb Slitaniayi \
• · I .·
'
closed ~Ul'e no Olle shpwed up.
• 'Fair Tliunday. Clluee' ., . .~ ,BI!d tlwlde~to11111 ~rlday aud
''I ilidn't like the idea of llllllaUiion
S..~Y· Hfllla m'e.tly la..l.lbe _... ~ from·tbe .IIIIHts to low . .
NriJ,TIIDndaylllili!tlk•, •ly~Y.IIDIIS.. . .y: {l
·. ';..._ '•be"~n~ d~ 0!1' me;•·' lAuren
.Mellcln;. ll; of Palo· Alto slid at
' .
Milpl~ hlgiH!d!ool' gylniwiwn,
·"" r

or Council were

by Ca rdinal Industries to travel to
Columbus on July 17to view the construction of the modular umts which
will be used a t the senior dtizell'i

Ce ntral

Trust

was

posing the action .

Clerk Jon Buck read a letter fro m
Ash land 011 noting a .G decrease in

the pnce of gasoline. Butlding per·
nut requirements to quali fy for flood
inw rance were discussed a long with
Sf'\'eral storm sewtr problems.

Referred to the sewer corrurnttee
was thr one &lt;.J t Hamilton and South

Thi rd whtch was reported stopped
up
Another at the end of Brownell

newspaper

delive ri es

wou ld be delayed until a fter
spraying ends at6 a.m.
Although one helicopter baserl tn
the Los Altos Hills area of the valley
conducted the initial sprayinK. as
mctny as five helicopters a t a time
will eventua ll y be used, offi cia ls

wa s

Ave .

reported

as

being

dcwgerous lo small children beca use
or

the

strong ' suction.

Council

discussed the possibility of installing
50 feel of lile there h&gt; alleviate the

problem, but action was deferred
until the area ran be chec ked by
Mayor Fred Hoffman and the sewer
cornmitee.

Also discussed at length was the
dJnger of Lhe d1trh along Middleport
Hill. Several proposals such as
tilin1~ and r ovtTlng to the level of the
ru&lt;Jd were mentioned but no action
WCl.S

judge~s

The San Jose Mercury and the San
francisco Chronicle announced that
rn o rnin ~

wtlh Coun ctlrnan All en Lee Krng op-

taken .

ruling

sa td. A refueling base was kept
secret because of sabotage threats .

··we du nut anltcipate we wtll
cover a very large part of Area 1

tonight,"" sa id Frank Hubbard, the
project's chi ef spokesman. ''There's

a concern for the pilots who have
been very busy the last couple of
days ."

Thousands celebrate event
,.

EVERY t~SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

'

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!

Stop by the Farmers ~ank and talk
to us about a new car "loan.
'

For Just

Wiruiing Ohio lottery number
.
.

•Combination Dinner Only
•Dining Room Ontr
Served with : Whipped
Poatoes, Chicken Gravy, Cctle
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.

' ·, Far·mel'.s

-·sank .~~

Sorry, No Substitutions, Except Beverages
which have an additional price . .

Crow's Family Restaurant ·
W. MAIN

PH. 992·5432

..

t. {,

POMEROY OHIO

You~

Weather

.

i

,

.

' . ,.

a

.

RULE!! IN FAVOR OF ·SPRAYING -Superior no dllqer to baman health 'll'lth an lntensl•e aerial
eoait Judie IInce )r, AIlea U.teaa to a~ull about. apnty campaign ~slog pestle!de mala thian. ( AP Laser·
the ellecii of aertalsprayiiiC lor Meclfly lavaslon Monday. The judge ruled that there was notblng !Uegal, and

pboto). ,

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