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12

Pomeroy

Th e Daily S e ntinel

Middl e o r t , Ohio

California produce rolls in Texas today unhindered
WS GATOS, Calif . i API California produce rolled unhinder ed mto Texas today a lter a
federal judge temporarily lilted a
qua rantine im posed by the Lone
Star State m response to Cali!orma's
problems with fruit rues.
California laywers, meanwhile,
we re preparing to ask the U.S.
Supreme Court, posSl bly today, to
halt sinu lar stringent quarantines
that also went into effect Monday in
F lorida, South Carolina, Mississippi
a nd Alabama.
A&gt; helicopters completed the f1rs t
daytime ae rial spraying of the
pe s tiCide
mala t hion
Mon day
southeast of Sa n Francisco, state officials expan ded the spraying target
zone to 2n square nules from 1 7~
sq uare n11l es to ba ttle mfestati on.s of
Medite rranean fruit flies .
The next acn al assa ult on the
flies, whi ch destroy about 200
vanelies of frUJ!.'i and vegeta bles, Ill el uding pt•ppers . toma toes and
peaches. JS scheduled to start Wednesda¥.
In Dalla s, US . D1strirt Judge
P&lt;i trick Ht gg mbotham gra nted a
temporary restnunmg order sought

by a coalition of California growers,
lifting the Texas quarantine. His order came after trucks laden with
fruit; a nd vegetables were stopped
a t Texas roadblocks to check to see
that pr oduce wa s fwnigated or
grown in areas free of infestation. A
court heanng on a pennanent injunction is set lor Saturday .
" We removed the roadblocks. but
we a re shll tem bly concerned the
Med it er ran e an fruit fly is
spreading." said Texas Agriculture
Commissione r Reagan Brown . " I
have_ a bsolutel y done everything I
can to protect Texas interests. Now
it is out of my hands."
Tony Cimarust1, an aide to Califorma Attorney General George DeukmeJ ia n, sa id Monday night the
stale's laywers we re preparing to go
to Washington today to seek action
from the U.S . Supreme Court on the
quarantines in the other four
Southern slates. which fear the hny
ny may spread to their cro~ .
Ca liforma and the federal government have sought to assure the
stales the medfly outbreak is confined to three San Franc1sco Bay
area counties a nd doesn't a ffect

commercial !arms. The federal
government already has its own
quarantine in effect in the three
counties.
Before issuing his ruling, Higginbotham was told by a U.S. Department of Agriculture attorney in
Washington that the department
was " on the verge" of issuing a
proposal that would extend the
~unty
federal quarantine
over the entire state.
But Harvey Ford, deputy administrator for USDA's AnimalPlant Health Inspection Service,
said he had merely made a technical
change Monday, one that would not
affect the quarantine area. He said
the area would not be expanded
unless new medfly finds were made.
The first medflies were found a
year ago in Santa Clara County. An
intensive ground-based eradication
effort started in January, but more
maggots were found this swruner.
Gov . Edmund G. Brown J r. reluctantly ordered aerial s praying two
weeks ago after U.S. Agriculture
Secretary John Block threatened a
statewide quarantine.
·

Senate offers special tax relief
1\'ASHI:\ t; TO:\
Sl'na h:

!S ()ff t'rliJ ~

• AP 1

The

speCi al tax relief

1{1 nearly 70 nullwn couples and in-

dJ\'Jcluab 'r\h() J,.:tve to chanty but
don't Jt e m iZL' the1r de duct ions .
Starting next Yt';Jr. s uch taxpaye rs

would he allowed tu deduct a shar e
uf the1 r cuntnbutiUn s a nd still cla im
th e standard dl'd uctJOn .
The p rO\' IS JOil . sponsort-ri by Sens.
Bob Packwood. H-O re. and Danie l
Patn ck ~ oymhan. [).N Y.. wa.s
adopted nn a 9i- 1 n Ht• Monday a nd,
with tht&gt; suppurt qf the Reaga n adm tmstr&lt;tt tun. adclt'd tu the Se nate"s
wx-&lt;.:ut pl ~n1

The

&lt;.Hirmnt~tratwn

ongi nall y

foug ht l•ffort.'"l to put tht• iJTTiendment
un tht' klX bi!l but ga \·t· Ul afte r more

than ha lf the senators announced
s upporl of lhe proposal Only Sen
S.l Hayakawa. R-Calif., voted
aga inst the amendme nt. s.:~y m g 1t
fl i e~ m the fdC(' of pfftlrts to s implify
the tax la\\'S .
Meanwhi le. a behmd-the-scenes

battl e 1_•un ttnued tn the Sena te and
thr HousL' Wa\'.'i and Means over how
to cut t;JXP.'i 011 lhc oil ind ustry
Dermx.Tattc lt&gt;ader.'i of the House

and Republica ns a re bidding for the
votes of conservative oil-state
Democrats for their respective taxcut bills .
P resident Rea gan started the bidding two months ago when he offered a tax credit of up to $2,500 for
owners of land from which oil is
pumped . Democrats, who control
the Ways and Means Committee ,
matched that ol!er. The Republicancontrolled Senate Finance Committee added another sweete ner :
cutting in half the " windfall-profits"
tax on newly discovered oil.
Sens . Uoyd Bentsen, D-Texas, and
Da vid Boren, D-Okla. , are urging
the Senate to expand further the tax
break for the oil industry. Their
amendment would exempt from the
" windfa ll" tax the first 1,000 barrels
of oil pumped each day by independent producers. They also
may seek a better break for owners
of oil-productng land.
Under active consideration 10 both
houses is a proposal to repeal the
" windfall" tax on all newly
discovered oil .
The Senate-passed amendment

a llowing a special deduction for
charitable contributions would cost
nearly $5 billion over the next fiv e
years . Unlike most of the Senate bill
which has been embraced b;
Reagan , the amendment would
favor low-and middle-income taxpayeJ-s: 80 percent of the tax relief
for contributions would go to those
with incomes less than $30,000 a
y~r .

Present law allows a person to
avo1d tax on a Jinuted amount of
charitable contributions. But the
deduction is available only i( deductiOns are itemized. Unless a single
person has deductiOns totaling $2,300
or more for medical expenses, state
taxes and the like, the standard
deduction is applied. The break-even
point for a couple is deductions of
$3,400.
In 1978, the last year for which
data is available, 211 .7 percent ot a ll
tax returns iterruzed deductions.

l\larket report
Ohio Valley Uve5tock C&lt;1 .
Pn~

J udge Ammer may file suit
CIHCl .EVII.IJ·: . Oluo 1 AP 1 - A yea r.
l'wkilway County judge says he'll
Judges are authorized under s tale
s m.· county conurussioners 1f they la w to order funds to operate their
duo' t &lt;Jppropna te fu nds for 10 per- courts.
l"L' rl t cust-of-llv mg pay ra tses for em·
" II they don't act, then I've got
pl uyees in three county agencies.
two alternatives ," Anuner sa1d
('ouunon Pl eas Judge Wil liam Monda y. " One is hold them m conAmmer unkred the cotrunJSS!Oners tempt. but I propose to file a manto boos t th\:' cu rrent Ludgets of his damus suit in the court of appeals
,·uur·L thl' s henff"s department and for all three offices .
the prose cuttng attorney's uffi ce b;
" As I point out in the orde r , the
:~bout $J:I.700 bv Thursday .
other two offices are both ancilllary
CommJ s:--t oner Don Strous ha d no and necessary to the court .··
llli! JH'dl&lt;:f tt• cnmrnent on the orde r.
bu t the p;inel lllcllcated durmg
The judge ordered corruruss10ne rs
rrl' l llll l !lil r~· Fl82 hudgt'l h eCI rings
to provide another $3,109 for pay
la st wt:' t'k that thl'Y expect t o Ue out hikes in his court, which was apIll m uncy b.\· the end of th1s yea r .
propriated $110.466 for lh1s year' s
Thuugh cd l t.&gt;lected off1 cers budget.
requested h1 glwr b u dge~ next yea r.
The s heriff' s office lias a 1981
c umrm~ s t ontrs L"Ut the 1981 budgets
budget of $462,533 from the general
by J per&lt;.Tnt. Funding fo r some non- fund , plus $170,000 from federal
elcrtrd il~enc1e s was slashed by up revenue-sharing funds . The latter is
to 50 prrcc nt. and at least one county used for salaries, retirement and
uperat iun may be s uspended next workers' compensation programs .
'

Marktt Rr por1
laken from the ;~ucl l tm nf Sa turda y,

Jul y 1&amp;. Trt&gt;nds : Veal ca lves ste ady. Cows

steady . Feeder catlle S2-&lt;l lower. Total head 47() .
Fffiler stee rs Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbs
sc:J.S3; 300 to 400 lbs. 48-~ . «10 to 500 lbs . 51-.59: [iOO
to 600 lbs. 51-60 : 600 tu 700 lbs . ta-55 .30: 700 to 800
lbs. 4$. 50-:i2.:JO; 800 and Ovt&gt;r U-57 .
Feeder Heifers: Good and Choice 2S() to 300 lbs.
42 .50-53: 300 [() 400 lbs. 44-52 : 400 to 500 lbs . 41 -~ :
500 tu600 lbs . 4+51 : 600 to 700 lbs. 42 .5()...48 : 700 to
800 lbs. 43-46 .30: 800 and ove r ID-45.
F'et&gt;der Bulls: Good and Choice Z.SO to J.OO lbs.
48-37 : JOO to 400 lbs . 50-53 : 400 ttl 500 Ills . ~56 . :.0 :
500 tn 600 lbs. 47 . ~ : 600 t o 700 lbs . «-51 . 700 to
1100 Jbs. 4Z-48 : 800 and over"«H5.
Holstem steers and bulls 300 to 1100 lbs . +4-57
Bulls 1.000 lb..'\. ontl up~
Slaughter co.,.,. s .- utilities 38-45.50 : ca nners
and euttt&gt;rs 40 down

•

Spnn~ e r cows

- b\· the head ~330
Cows ttnd calv t-s b)· Lhe h~ml37~
Vt-al r alves - choiC"e and prur~t? 60-70: MOOd 5I).

"'·" hogs

B&lt;lbr cal ves !i0-8.S
Tep
210 to Z30 47. 5(}...49 . ~

Boa rs ~ 2 . 5()
PIKS- bY thl' head JG-2:1 .
Sows wo'lb.'i. and up 43~

WASHINGTON (API - The Democratic-controlled
House Ways and Means Committee completed work
early today on the largest tax cut In history after offering to compromise with President Reagan on
reducing Individual taxes in three consecutive years.
The conunittee voted to allow the third-year tax cut
only if inflatiOn, interest rates and the federal deficit
are reduced to. the levels forecast by tbe Reagan administration for 1983. The proposal was rejected by the
president's advisers.
The conunittee plan also would give a bigger share of
tax relief to families earning Jess than $50,000 a year.
While the House panel was rushing to finish work in
time for floor action before the August recess, Senate
debate bogged down &lt;&gt;n a tax bill to Reagan 's liking.
Uberal Democrats were trying to block a vote on a
Republican proposal to cut oil-industry taxes a bout $20
billion over the n~rl decade.
The Senate bill gives Reagan the full three-year, 25
percent, acr~ss-the-board cut in personal rates that he
asked. The two sure years of the House plan would cut
,t axes an average 15 percent.
The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that

•

FRUIT STOP - Texas State Department of
Agriculture officials began checking trucks entering
the state at El Paso on Monday, checking for fruit from

Grant deadline near
The Ohio Board of Regents has set
an Aug. 21 deadline for applications
from the Ohio instructional grant.
Anyone interested in enrolling or
applying for these ~rants should do
so by Aug. 20.

Special session
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will
meet in special session this evening
at 7 p.m . There will be work in E.A.
degree. All members are asked to
attend .

Weese in hospital
Mrs . Carl (Grace ) Weese,
Syracuse, is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center. Her room number is
412 . Cards may be sent to her in care
of the hospital.

. mvenary pageaat. &lt;AP Laserplloto 1.

Calllornia that may have been Infested
Medlterranea!l fruit flies . (AP Laserphoto I·

Emergency runs
The Meigs County Emergency
Medea! Ser vice made seven
emergency runs Monday and early
Tuesday morning.
Ted Coppic, Hamilton, was
treated by the Middleport squad at
1:50 a .m ., but was not transported.
At 1:55 p.m . the Middleport squad
took James McClain from Route 143
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Nellie Price was taken !rom
Second Avenue to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 2:211 p.m.
The Middleport squad also trasnsported Carolyn Triplet from North
Third to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 11 :03 p.m .
At 1:41 a.m . Larry Wehring was
taken from Uncoln Heights to

•

e

~y

bill Thursday , which would send it to the House lor
debate ne~t week .
The Senate has been debating Reaga n's plan for a
week.
The latest snag was the oil-tax amendment, which
would gradually exempt all newly discovered oil from
the 1980 " windfall-profits" tax. Finance Committee
Chainnan Bob Dole, R-Kan., who proposed the amendment, said the e~emption would spur increased expi oration and production of domestic oil.
Uberal Democrats were especially upset that
Republicans were pushing relief for the oil industry
only a few hours after the Senate rejected an effort to
retain a $122 minimum monthly Social Security benefit
for 3 million people.
Tax breaks lor the oil industry have become the
currency used by Democratic leaders and the Reagan
administration to woo oil-state lawmakers, who could
hold the swing votes on whether the president's tax-cut
plan or the Democratic version becomes law.
The House committee, working past midni ght
Tuesday , agreed to about $6.4 billion worth of special
tax cuts for the oil industry over the next f1ve years.

Reagan's across-the-board reduction would give taxpayers with incomes betweenS15,000 and $20,000 a year
an average 24.5 percent cut in ta~es between this Oct. I
!jnd the end of 1984, compared witb 28.8 percent under
the House bill . The average reduction in the $50,000-t&lt;&gt;$l00,000 bracket wOuld be 25.7 percent in Reagan 's plan
and 21 .7 percent in the House version.
A working couple with · two children and earning
$30,000 a year would realize a $1,142 tax cut from 1981
through 1984 from the Ways and Means Corrunittee bill,
compared witli $1,079 in Reagan's plan. The figures
assume economic conditions would allow the third in·
stallment of the tax reduction.
Either bill would start cutting personal taxes on Oct.
I.
In addition to cutting tax rates, the House bill would
reduce the "marriage penalty" fa ced by many tw&lt;&gt;eamer couples, raise the standard deduction, boost the
eamed-income credit for poor working families , increase tax incentives for savings, repeal estate taxes
for all but a handful of the wealthiest families and slash
business taxes.
The committee plans to give formal approval to the

at

Voi.JO,No.69

WASHINGTON (AP I - President
Reagan, accusing Democrats of
playing " on the fears of many
Americans" to keep the minimum
monthly Social Security benefit,
says he will go on national television
to set the record straight.
The House was considering a
resolution today by Democratic
leader Jim Wright of Texas to
preserve the $122 minimum monthly
Social Security benefit. In the
Senate, Michigan Democrat Donald
Riegle was pressing for an amendment to the pending tax bill that actually would restore the benefit.
Outside, the National Council of
Senior Citizens was s cheduled to
hold a rally on the Capitol steps to
protes t proposed cuts in Soc1al

RiO de Janeiro; and Miss Belgium
Dorrunique Van Eeckhoudt , 20 , of
Brussels.
The 12 judges for the contest, including Brazilian soccer star Pete.
fashion photographer Francesco
Scavullo and actor Lee Majors.
JUdged the beauties throughout the
week in three ways - swimsuit competition, evening gown competition
and personal interviews.
E a rly in the evening they
na rrow e d ihe field to 12
semifinalists. Besides the fi ve
finalists . they included contestants
from Holland , Ecuador . New
Zealand, Norway , Germany, Tahiti
and the United States. Miss U.S.A. is
Kim Seelbrede , a 20-year-old model
from Gennantown, Ohio .
The Venezuelhn ambassador to
the United States, Alberto Martini
Urdaneta , who came on stage after
Miss Venezuela won her title, said,
" It is a very happy day for all the
country and for all the people. All of
Venezuela is with her." He noted
that it was the second Miss
Venezuela to be chosen Miss Universe in three years .

BRINGS SAVINGS . MEN'S and BOYS' WEAR
• SUMMER JACKETS
• BOYS' SHIRTS
• MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
•BOYS' SHORTS
• DRESS SlACKS
•SWIM TRUNKS
• DRESS SHIRTS
· •sPORT SHIRTS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Security .
"I deplor e the opportunistic
political maneuvering, cynically
designed to play on the fears of
many Americans, that some in the
Congress are initiating at this lime,"
Reagan said in a letter to Senate
Majority Leader Howard H. Baker
Jr., R-Tenn . " These efforts appear
designed to explOit an issue rather
than find a solution to the urgent
Social Security problem ."
In the letter released Monday, the
president said he will request
television lime " as soon as possible"
to " tell the American people the facts ."
"During this address, I will call on
the Congress to lay aside partisan
politics and join me in a constructive
effort to put Social Security on a permanently sound financial bas is as
soon as the 97th Congress returns in
September," Reagan added.
House Speaker Thomas P. O' Neill
Jr ., D-Mass ., responded by
questioning Reagan's commitment
to protecting benefits for current
Social Security recipients .
Budget-cutting measures passed
separately by both houses of

enttne
Mail costs will go up

Avert postal strike
WASHINGTON (APl - The tentatlve three-year contract that
headed off a nationwide mail strike
shouldn' t push the cost of a firstclass stamp beyond the 20 cents
already sought by the Postal Service , Postmaster General William
F . Bolger says.
Bolger estimated the pact, hammered out Tuesday after 30 hours of
almost non-stop bargaining, would
cost the Postal Service $4.8 billion. It
would give the half-million members
of the two largest postal unions
about a 10 percent pay raise- $900
apiece more in base wages and
~bout $1,200 in bonuses - plus
unlimited protection against inflation and rising health benefit
premiums .
In announcing the settlement nine
.10urs after an earlier agreement fell
apart when words were put into
writing, Bolger took the occasion to

Vt-lerans Memorial
Admitted Media Schrinver,
Ruthnd ; Frieda Buchanan, Lower
Bottom; Jane McClain, Pomeroy;
Nellie Pr~ce, Middleport ; Richard
Blessing, Pomeroy .
Discharges Zelda Davis ,
Thelma Eblin , Trenton Qualls, John
Metzger, Leah Williams.

-

. .BANK ONE ..-....

LEASING .
=EQUIPMENT

TO BUSIMESS.IMDUSTRY,
- -AND THE PROFESSIONS

POSTAL SETI'LEMENT - Postmaster General
WWlam Boljler, center, faces reporters In Washington
~Y.-:!~.ytncenj Sombrotto, lef!.. P.fe!lldeqt of the
Natl01111l Assoelatlon of Letter Carriers and Moe Biller,

president of the American Postal Workers Union. They
answered questions about the settlement that avoided
a strike by half a million postal workers. ( AP Laserphoto).
"

ToDAY

Charge Libyan in murder case

Proposal against missiles

LOOK LOOK
.
TWICE SALE
'

.

American Postal Workers Union,
predicted the contract will be
ratified .
While _ the unions di~'t get
e~erythmg they wanted, we feel
•t s a good contract and that the
membership will approve it," Biller
said.
.
Vmce Sombrotto of the Natto~l
AssOCiation of Letter Camers sa1d
the ra!tftcattOn process Will take
about 30 days .
In separate negotiations, the
National Rural Letter Carriers
Association, which represents about
63,000 . employees, also agreed to a
lentattve contract Tuesday. Terms
were not announced.
.
Representatives Of the mail ~,_
dlers division _or the Laborers Int~rnat1onal Urn on broke off talks but
said thetr 40,000 members Will stay
on the job while _unresolved iss~es
are submitted to bmdmg arbitratiOn.

,.
•

WASHINGTON CAP! - Political
fallout from President Reagan's
Social Security reductions is raining
on Republican lawmakers, who
abandoned on• proposed cutback in
the House while narrowly salvaging
it in the Senate.
GOP senators and representatives
are extremely nervous about having
to defend any plan that calls for
trimming Social Securtly benefits.
top Republican congressional
leaders concede .
Democrats , meanwhile , are
rapidly mobilizing behind the Social
Security issue as part of their 1982
congressional comeback strategy.
" We 're putting their feet to the

••• IN THEW

OGDEN, Utah ,- A Ubyan arrested while trying to leave the United ·
States has been'cjlarged with killing a countryman who was resisting a
-return to Ubya.
The FBI said Tuesday one federal agent and two Chicago policemen
interviewed Mohamad A. Shabata lor three hours. Shabata was picked
up Friday on a second-degree murder warrant as he stepped from an
airplane in Chicago. Police said he was carrying $3,300 in cash and had
plane reservations lor Libya.
The Utah warrant was i~ued hours after the bullet-riddled body of a
man wearing a ring and clothes belonging to Nabil A. Mansour was
found in the trunk of Mansour's car.
·

..

plug the Postal Service's request to
raise the first-class mall rate from
18 cents to 20 cents .
But he said he thought 20 cents,
tw1ce rejected by the Postal Rate
Commission would be enough ·'for a
couple of ye~rs."
Higher labor costs can be offset by
increased productivity, Bolger expla ined, noting that the settlement
includes $350 in productivity bOnuses
for each worker in each year of the
contract.
.; Postal officials had estimated
their first offer, linuting cost-ofliving raises to an average 5 percent
a year and freezing base pay, would
have increased mail rates 3 cents by
1982. They had said union demands
for 14.7 percent annual wage and
cost-of-living raises, a :!a-hour week
and a lOth holiday would have forced
a 45-cent stamp by 1984.
Moe Biller, president of the

(I

''

Political fallout showers lawmakers
fire ," House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill Jr .. D-Mass. , said Of the
Republicans. " We're going to keep
on the issue."
But House Republican Leader
Rober,! H_. Michel says: .. If anyone
thinks they are going to ride that
Social Security issue to political
paradise at our expense. they have
another thing coming. "
As 5,000 elderly people protested
on the Capitol steps Tuesday, the
GOP-controlled Senate killed a
Democratic move to preserve the
$122 minimum Social Security
benefit Reagan wants lrinuned. The
largely party-line vote was ~2-46 .
" The question is whe ther

Congress is going to Jose its nerve,"
Finance Committee Chairman Bob
Dole , R-Kans., said in urging
colleagues to stand by the earliersanctioned reduction .
In the House, meanwhile,
Republicans abandoned the administration 's position in droves to
join Democrats in supporting , 40513. a non-binding resolution urging
restoration of the minimum benefit.
Reagan is aware of the political
woes his Social Security proposal is
causing Republican lawmakers,
especially in the House, and will
seek to defuse the issue in a
nationally broadcast address, according to administratiOn and

congressional sources.
The sources said the speech
probably will come late next week,
hefore Congress takes its annual
August recess.
One top House Republican who
asked not to be identified said the
Social Security cuts "will be the hotlest issue of the 1982 elections ."
" We didn't want our members to
have to walk the plank just to help
the Democrats score points," he
said. " We're trying to make up
ground we 've already lost on this
issue: " said one top House
Republican who also asked not to be
identified .

Cheshire man hurt in Meigs accident
A Cheshire man was injured in a
one-car accident in Meigs County
Tuesday night .
Frederick D. Thomas, !9, was not
treated at the scene for his injuries,
according to the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the state highway patrol.
The patrol said Thomas was westbound on CR 5 at 10:30 p.m. when he
swerved to avoid collision with a

TilE HAGUE, Netherlands - Three key political leaders plan to offer their parties a proposal for a new center-left coalition government
which would lean strongly against stationing new U.S. nuclear
missiles in Holland.
Approval of tbe proposal drafted Tuesday after two months of
negotiations wOuld allow foi'JTiation of a new three-party coalition
reOecting the outcome of the May 26 national election. The parties'
parliamentary deh!gations began debating the program later

Tuesday.
Christian Democratic Premier Andries van Agt would return as
head of a government including the Labor Party and the smaller
Democrats 1966.

deer. He lost c ontrol of his vehicle ,
went off the left side of the road,
struck an embankment and overturned .
Thomas' vehicle was severely
damaged and no citation was 1ssued.
The plltrol cited a driver in a tw&lt;&gt;car collision in Gallia County
Tuesday morning.
The repnrt said a car driven by

Russ~ll A. Arthur, 61, Sedalia , was
unable to stop and hit the rear of a
stopped car driven by Robert D.
Herdman II , 17, Gallipolis, onSR 160
at !0:20a .m .
Herdman was attempting a left
turn when the crash occurred.
Moderate damage was reported to
Arthur's vehicle and slight to Herdman's car. Arthur was cited for

assured clear distance.
No injury was reported in a onecar wreck in Meigs County later in
the day.
Lewis E . Zele, 23, Euclid, was
westbound on SR 124 at 4: 10 p.m .
when he went off the right side of the
road, lost control and hit an embankment, causing moderate
damage.

Averts major fire

BANK ONE QF POMEROY. N.A

614/992·2133

1 Section , 12 Pages
1S Cents
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 22,1981

Copyrighted 1981

Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy squad. She was later transferred to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Annette Lambert was transported
from Brook Street to Holzer Medic~ I
Center at I :45 p.m . by the Rutland
squad .
The Pomeroy squad took Floyd
Burney from Route 33 to Holzer
Medical Center at 7:16 a .m .
Tuesd_a y .

Congress and endorsed by the administration would eliminate· the
minimum monthly benefit, which
goes to 3 million Americans.
By agreement, House-Senate conference working out differences in
the two budget bills are not to drop
features in both bills.
Wright's non-binding resolution
" strongly urges that the nece~ry
steps be taken to insure that Social
Security benefits are not reduc~ for
those currently receiving them."
Riegle 's amendment would mandate resoration of the benefit.
Baker said the president Is
" aware of all the flap" over
elirrunalion of the minimum benefit
and is trying to cut down pa~tisan
bickering over the issue.
But Baker, who met with Reogan
last Saturday, told reporters Monday that he has "no indication
whatever the administration has
changed lis position on the minimum
•benefit."
The administration has argued
that other benefit programs will
take care of those who nee&lt;J the
m1n1mum payment, while
elirrunating it will save $7 billion
over the next f1ve

That's $300 million more than recommended by the
Senate Finance Committee.
The House bill wOuld reduce individual and busineaa
taxes by about $640 billion wer the next five yean,
assuming inflation does not allow a third-year reduotion. The Senate bill is worth $695 bi!Uon.
House Democrats have fought Reagan's three--year,
across-the-board plan for six montha. They argue that
a commitment now reaching into 1984 risks higher inflation, and they insist that an extra share of relief be
eannarked for low-and middle-income families, who
suffer most from inflation and rising Social Security
taxes.
Knowing in advance that the administration would
accept no conditions, the Ways and Means Committee
agreed to allow a third year of tax cuts, starting Jan. I,
1984, only if inflation is cut in late 19113 to the 6 percent
range and if the government deficit and interest rates
are reduced to levels forecast by the White HOUBe.
The vote on that amendment was 23-12. Rep. Kent
Hance, D-Texas, sided with Republicans against the
amendment ; Rep. Richard Schulze, R-Pa., voted with
Democrats for it.

•

President will explain situation

ELBERFELD$
JULY CLEARANCE SALE

ON TOP OF mE WORlJ&gt; - lreDe ~ez Collde, 11, of C.aracas,
Vmeaaela 1r1et oa ber crowa after slle wu selected as lbe new Mils
Ualvene olltllln New York Monday lllpt at the competition's 30111 an-

•

Meigs County happenings.·••

Miss Conde chosen Miss Universe •
NEW YORK IAPl - Irene Saez
Conde had watched the Miss Universe pageant since she was a ch1ld, and
she had always dreamed of being
named the most beauliful woman in
the world.
Miss Conde's dream came true
Monday mght whe n, as Miss
Venezuela, she was crowned Miss
Universe 1981.
The 19-year-old civil-engineering
student from Caracas said the first
thing she did when she learned she
had won the pageant was to thank
God. Miss Conde won more than
$100,000 tn cash and prizes along
with her title, including a Mazda
RX-7 automobile. a sport boat ,
jewelry, a mink , a wardrobe a nd
$20,000 cash .
Miss Venezuela was among 76 contestants. There had been 77, but Miss
Mauritius got homesick and went
home Sunday. according to Steve
Solomon, a spokesman lor the
pageant.
The five runners-up were, in order, Miss· Canada, Dominique
Dufour, 22, of Toronto; Miss
Sweden, Eva Lundren, 19 of Pitea ;
Miss Brazil Adriana Olveira. 20, of

DemoCrats finish tax hill work

A fire that could have caused
severe damage was quickly brought
Wider control by the l'vfiddleport Fire
Department Tuesday.at 5:43p.m .
Actording to Middleport police,, a
car driven by Carlos M. ~c1(night,
lu. 1, Middleport, pulled into the
Mobil Gas Station, comer~ R~tland
and North
Secilnd Streets,• when the
Jl,
hose to a gas pwnp ca~ght on the
front bumper. The hose ·was pulled
loose, ignited, and burned. A second
p~p received damage . No injuries
were report~. '
'

Demands life imprisonment .
ROME - The pf'O!Iecution demanded MehmerAli Agca be jailed for
life today for shooting Pope .!ohn Paul Il1 calling the Turkish terrOrist ·
"a man of hate, II man ofvlolence,li man of ~~~~peralion . "
·Prosecutor Nicolo Amato.asked ·for ihe 'llllilQmwn penalty against ·
the. ~year-pld lieaf(!ed defendant , who' bo,y~t~ the trial today to
~ being tried Ill Italy:
' .
.
'
l\g~ ~dmitted to the Italian court at the openihg of the trial Monday
lie shot the pope in St..Peter's Square on M~y 13.

I

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•

Givt~n

'

-

prison tern'!

Terry ~ Lee Brewer, .Racine,
·pleaded guilty to attempted arson in .
Meigs' Collntl' c~oo Plllil~ t:ilort .,
Tuesctayltft~moon.'~. • · ,.
·· ·
'
· Juclgel Jolin c, ~COli Sente~
him _to sli months, to five yea!'l m
' ~tate prison, ~~~

.w.MetRI

· •··~m
· '~~ter
,
4:
·

!red ~-

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Brewer wu lnCueted July 3 after
au...-, eet fire to a trn ·

he

~ piek~ tniCii on

qro.,llld.

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BEGIN REPAIR'ON MABON BOAT RAMP-Tlle Corp of EIIIIDeen frem tile HllldlqtM Dlltrld .....
....... ~ ~nlly ee Ute ·belli nm~ at !ife Ma1011 levee. Aee• . . . to
Daile7; "qtn,e·a..-. ·
'fecllllelu wlllltlle HUll~ ~Iatric!, 1100 tou el 1toae will be bna&amp;ht
anud tile ....,. ..._.,. ·
w1lft 11 111e l'llilp li eqieded \0 ltake lrom tllree to four claya.(Photo by Tim Davia.)
~· ·

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�- - -- - -----

Commentar

"
Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, Jul 22,1981

Dealing with the dark sidt/---____:_______R_o_be_rt_Wa_lte_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
word ia '•fascist.''
Becall!e it, more than almost any
other word in the American political
lalcon, is heavily fraught with
emotional overtones, it is rarely uttered in public by politicians.
But Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, RAri%., deliberately chose to use that
potentially inflammatory word
when recenUy asked about the rightwing, quasi-political organizations
that have become so shrill in the
national debate over selected
"social issues," notably the question
of abOrtion.
"They're really taking more of a
fascist line than a conservative
line," said the man whose credentials as an eq&gt;ert on the subject include his st.tus as the patriarch of
the modem conservative movement
in AmericaR politics.
An Interviewer from a Washington
television station asked Goldwater
to be more specific : "You mean the
·Moral M•jertty•"
: lleplim the senator. " Yes, the
Moral Majlllity, the R!«ht-t&lt;&gt;-Life ...
I den't like llle use of organized force
ill a politiCal movement Let' • not
three!81 pelltlcal death''
Atanoothet point in theeschange, a
queMioner liked If Goldwater
believed a penon must be opposed
t.o ·~ or the Equal Rights
Amtndml!nt In order to be coosidemla b8na fide conservative.
"Ne," saW the seliBtor. "I don 't
· tlllnlllhey're related at all. "
Natint! that ideoiOCical puristl!
~~~~ du...odo!d Senate votes on
tlleir llburtitll cause IliOn! than 40
times in ~t years 1often as an

amendment to a peripherally
related appropriations bill ) Goldwater added:
"I'm getting sick and tired of all
this hoo-rah about abortion. I don't
care how many laws we pass; if a
woman wants to get an abortion,
she's going to get an abortion."
Finally, the senator was sha!lllY
critical of organizations "getting
rich raising money for conservative
candidates" - and be included in
that category the Richard A.
Viguerie Co., the nation's premier
right-wing !Wid-raising operation.
With those statements. Goldwater
has made a truly momentous contribution to the contemporary
political dialogue - one that he is
uniquely qualified to offer at a time
when voices of sanity are too seldom
heard and acts of courage are too infrequently petiormed.
Similar deRunciations from
liberals or even mOderates would
have gone unheeded because they
are preswned to be motivated principally by frustration, intolerance or
hostility. But the time is long overdue tor candid critiques of
fanaticism and Intoleran ce
masquerading as l'OOSI!rvlltisn.
All across the political landscape,
-lots are jiNitNting their beliefs
as the only morally acceptable
position on se!Witive issues ranging
from abortion and the ERA to school
prayer and gun control..
Howard Phillips, natwnal director
llf the Conservative Caucus, talks
candidly about mobilizi"'l his constituency of true believers by
.. pushina their hot buttono" - a
barely disguised euphemism for ap-

What others say .••
'niE DAYTON DAILY NEWS - "Gov. James Rhodes has maae a cu~&gt;­
vincing 'defense' - though none should be necessary - of Central State
University and U.S. Education Secretary Terrel Bell clearly should do as the
governor asks. He should review the recent federal accusation that Ohio has
violated CIVil rights laws.
" If Secretary Bell does review the case, he will realize quickly that the
charge made by the Office of Civil Rights in Chicago must be withdrawn.
"The discrimination finding rests mainly on two claims. One is factually
wrong - that the state IS short changmg CSU financially . Ohio is not funding
any of its universities adequately but that is another story. Gov. Rhodes
presents clear evidence that the predominantly black Central State is not
being discriminated against in that regard .
"The other act of discrimination charged against the sta le w~s the
establishment in Dayton of Wright State Untversity. That, the Civil Rights
Office claims, drew white students from CSU. In fact, it did to a degree,
especially siphoning off white students from CSU's education department. ..
··But the intent was not segregationist. As Gov. Rhodes correctly says, the
two schools are designed to serve quite different functions- CSU as mainly
a residential campus drawing students statewide, Wright State as mainly a
commuter campus serving students away from the inunediate area .
··The key questions to ask are I II whether an institution is predominantly
black because of segregatiOnist pressure and 121 whether the institution serves to keep black citizens out of the social mainstream or facilitate their entry into it.
" As Gov. Rhodes points out, 93 percent of all black students in Ohio's
public colleges and universities are in schools other than Central State. Otr
viously, CSU is not a device for keeping black students out of other Ohio
schools."

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH - "The Ohio General Assembly has given
fanners a break on estate or inhentance taxes and the federal government
will do likewise if the tax program of President Reagan is adopted .
"Gov. James A. Rhodes has signed mto law Senate Bill 28, which will
double all estate tax exemptions and will also change valuation procedures
for privately-owned fanns . Too often, a widow or progeny of a farm owner
has had to sell the family farm to pay inheritance taxes.
"The result is that many private fanns have been bought by farm corporations or real estate developers, reducing the nwnber of private fanns .
" On the federal level, the proposal by the Reagan administration would increase the size of an estate that may be passed along tax-free from $175,625
to $600,000. A farmer could leave his entire estate to his spouse free of estate
or inheritance taxes.
"We hope that Congress enacts its part of the legislation to preserve the
family farm and we commend state lawmakers for their enactment."

•

Today in history.

• •

Today is Wednesday, July 22nd, the 203rd day of 1981. There are 162 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in h1story :
On Wednesday, July 22, American aviator Wiley Post completed the f1rst
!IIlio ai!lllane night around the world.
On llil date :
In
Napoleon Bonaparte's troops were occupying the Egyptian city of
Cairo.
In 1934. federal agents in Chicago shot and killed gangster John Dillinger.
In 1t37. the Senate turned down President Franklin 0. Roooevelt's
proposal to l"''«'ganize and enlarge the Supreme Court.

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CPI overemphasises items
NEW YORK iAP) - When you
consider that: -The Consumer
Price Index is widely believed to
distort inflation in consumer items
because it overemphasises some
items, such as housing, but doesn't
even cover taxes, one of the fastest
growing expenses...
-And that the CPI is the index
used as the basis for raising checks
to Social Security beneficiaries and
Federal government retirees, as
well as to many workers in private
industry ...
- And that the Federal Reserve's
count of the money supply is so
erratic that last month it raised its
estimate of the supply $3.8 billion by
including nonbank traveltr's checks
for the firsttime ...
- And that millions of Americans

use the weekly money supply figures
to determine whether interest rates
are likely to rise or fall, which in
tum often has an immediate impact
on stocks prices....
-And that a jump in the jobless
rate to 7.S percent in May from 7.3
percent in April is considered a fluke
because the June reading came in
once again at 7.3 percent of the
civilian laborforce ....
- And that some economists now
expect revisions in the gross
national product, which jumped to
an 8.6 percent annual rate of growth
in the first quarter, and then fell to
..(I O growth in the second ...
Well, then, it is understandable
how so few forecasts of economic activity can be relied upon these days,

and why so many people who
"should know" don't know. Why, for
example:
- President Reag\n could offer lit·
tie convincing evidence, but instead
had to rely on the sincerity of his
hope alfd promises, when telling
Western world leaders that high interest rates were temporary ...
-Heads of some of ~ nation's
biggest banks express confidence
that interest rates will be corning
down, only to find their own hanks
raising the prime lending rate within
weeks of their assesments ...
- Almost no current observer can
prove if the country is in a recession,
but must wait until figures are reexamined and revised, which
sometimes takes until a year after

the worst is over... ·
-,Consumer confidence, which is
based on reliable infonnation on
which to make BSseSIIIII!nts about
current and future economic
strength, has made no sizeable or
steady improvements .in ~~~~~~Y,
many months.
,
Well, when you consider all ·that,
wouldn't it be nice to have a simple,
reliable index that would tell )[~
where the country stands, .-~liM
another that would give some indication about what tospect? -The econometric mOdel malitrs
have sought something of the .sQlt,
but the flaw in their econoffiic
thinking - demonstrated over and
over again - is that what goes· 'in,
comes out again.

New policy won't set sales records
WASHINGTON !API - the
Reagan administration's new anns
policy is unlikely to set sales records
or cause a major upsurge in
weapons traffic this year. But China
and other authoritarian countries
stand to benefit from the softpedaling of human rights concerns.

On the theory that an enemy's
enemy is a friend, corrununist China
has been taken off the restricted list
as the administration maneuvers to
build up its anti-Soviet strategy .
While no arms sales have been approved so far, a Chinese delegation
will shop here in September.

The administration has asked
Congress to lift a ban on sales to
Argentina and has proposed a $3
billion economic and military aid
package for Pakistan, despite is suppression of political insurgents and
an ambitious nuclear development
program that is causing concern.

Chile and Guatemala, both under
iron-fisted military rule, are on the ·
verge of qualifying again for U.S. ar- .
ms.
But rising competition, mostly ·
from Western Europe, and the
worldwide economic · slump
probably will offset new customers.

Rep. LeBoutillier used verbal venom
WASHINGTON IAPl - As a
newcomer on Capitol Hill, freshman
Rep . John ' LeBoutillier, R-N. Y. , IS
developing a reputation for verbal
venom.
Both Democrats and Republicans
have been stung, among them Sen.
Charles Percy of Illinois, the
Rcpubhcan chainnan of the Senate
Foreign Relations Conunittee.
LeBoutillier called Percy "a
wimp ... He did it several times.

Percy phoned House Minority
Leader Robert H. Michel, his fellow
Illinois Republican, at home early
one morning to complain about
LeBoutillier's remarks.
"He's called me a wimp again,"
Michel quoted Percy as saying.
Michel said he sympathized with
the senior Illinois senator, but Percy
wasn't satisfied .
"I don't know what a wimp is,"
Michel quoted Percy as saying. "I

looked the word up in the dictionary
and couldn't lind it."
Webster's New World Dictionary
of the American Language, Second
College Edition, defines wimp as
slang for "a weak, ineffectual or insipid person."
Michel said he supplied Percy
With the rough usage of the word.
LeBoutillier now says he's sorry
that Percy took offense, "but I'll say
it again : He's a wimp."
" A wimp is anyone who doesn't

know what a wimp is," LeBoutillier
says, adding his own definition.
Michel said he, for one, wishes
LeBoutillier would speak a JitUe
more softly, although the GOP
leader said he wasn't about to tell
anyone how to control his mouth.
Meanwhile, LeBoutillier says his
staff has spread newspapers around
his office in response to House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr.'s
description of him as "a young pup
thathasn'tbeenhousebrokenyet."

More about a memoria.a..l____n_o_n_Gra_ff_
Don't believe everything you read
- not even what may on occasion
appear in this space.
The subject a few weeks back was
the memorial to be constructed
honoring those who served in Vietnam . Strikingly different for
monumental Washington in a number of respects, it will be of black
gramte, not white marble. And it
will consist not of the usual ne&lt;&gt;classic pillars but of two low walls,
intersecting in a shallow V, upon
which will be engraved the names of
57,692 war dead . But not, it was
noted, that of the war in which they
died .
IncorrecUy noted.
The suggestion that there will be
no direct reference to Vietnam is an
error that has popped up here and,
previously, elaewhere - possibly
resultlna from a misinte!llretation
ol the project's stated purpose t.o
create "a memorial not to honor the
war but rather to honor the
sacrifices of Vietnam veterans."

Whatever the origin, it is a
misconception that the memorial's
sponsors are anxious to dispel. The
finished structure, they assure, will
make it perfectly clear that it is
those who fought and died in Vietnam who are being honored.
Those sponsors are another difference about this memorial.
Although some hold or 1\ave held
public office ~ Gen. William C.
Westmoreland, Ret., former
President Gerald R. Ford and former Sen. George McGovern, incumbent Sen. Barry Goldwater they are acting as private citizens.
The Vie~m Veterans Memorial
Fund is a private, nonprofit
organization established In 117!1 to
promote public interest in tho:
project and to raise money for construction.
It was a slow start. By July 4 of the
first year, a granll total of $144.511
had come in. But interest has picked
up since,
incl!ldlng. . in Congress
.

which has donated a site on natiOnal
park lafld, Washington's Mall.
A national competition for a
design was won earlier this year by
a Yale University architecture
student, Maya Ying Lin, 21, who
defeated more than 1,400 other entrants, including her professor.
In her own description, "the
memorial appears as a rift in the
earth - a long, polished black stone
wall, emerging from and receding
into the earth." On it will be carved
in chronological order with·dates of
death the . names, "~gly infinite in number," of all the service
men and women known to have died
in Vie~. The walls .ffil point
respectively taward the Washington
and Lincoln memorials; uiiifying the
nation's ~nt experience with its
past.
.. ·,
The two-acre, tree-bordered mall
site is the government's only direct
contribution to ihe memorial
project. Construction money ·.~ an
estimated $7 million - is being

raised through donations from corporations, foundations and in·
dividuals.
It is being called "the people's
memorial," the one the government
did not build. Wisely, it mig!)I be
argued. The American government's role in the development and
conduct of the Vlelll8m conflict ia
still the stuff of dispute. But there
can be no argument about .the
American people's responsibilities
toward those who serve in it.
"The memorial will make no
political statement about the' W~J~."
the· fund's founder, . veteran Jan
Craig Scruggs, has e~.: 1•A/1111
pf9!M!r, beca~ in, ~ ~. lrtiJI
with the ~!story of, ·V~ i,our
nation must ~pante' the ~lbelf
from the issue.of how \bi! '~iut
servedtheircountry." ' ~;: . ·
To those people who
,
·
eluded in,
·
·
to ·the Vletll8m
Fund, Wuhington, o.

despite long talks
"I hope you understand,"

WASHINGTON (AP) - When the
negotiators in the major league
baseball strike finally leave
Washington, they undoubtedly will
remember the face of Labor
Secretary Raymond Donovan.
For the better part of the last two
days, Donovan has attended talks
between the Major League Players
Association and the Player
Relations Committee, the club
owners' bargaining ann.
He was due back today at 10 a.m.
EDT, as the teams returned to the
ninth floor of the Federal Mediation
and Conciliation Service headquar·
ters.
At Donovan's urging, a news
blackout has been placed on the
talks. So the parties refused to say
after Tuesday's seven-hour session
if progress had been made toward
ending the strike, which has wiped
out 490 games - 24 percent of the
2,IOS-game season.
"I really don't have anything to
say. The government's involved,"
said Bob Boone, the Philadelphia
PhiUies' catcher and National
League player representative.

da on how long It laats."

Doug

Deeinces, the Baltimore Orioles'
third baseman and American
League player rep, said as reporters
approached.
Marvin Miller, executive director
of the players' union, also refused to
discuss the talks, but said the two
sides probably would be meeting
each day even if no progress was
being made.
"We have a duty to bargain," he
said. "And, I might say jocularly,
'Where else do I have togo? '"
Baseball Conunissioner Bowie
Kuhn also was in Washington.
"The Commissioner feels it is important to be close to the scene,"
said Bob Win:, a spokesman for the
commissioner's office. ''He is not involved in the negotiations and how
long he stays depends on what
develops."
MiUer added that, in theory, the
blackout should help achieve a set·
tiernent on the free-agent compensation issue.
" If it works, my feeling will be
that it's very good," said Miller, ad·
ding that the blackout's effect on the
players' bargaining position "depen·

Donovan, Kenneth Moffett, the
federal mediation chief who has han- ·
died the baseball cue for the laat
two years, and the PRC team
headed by director Raymond
Grebey were unavailable for comment.
Tueaday's session atarted at 9:30
a.m. and lasted until 5:30p.m. , with
the session interrupted for 1Y• hours
and Kim Grueser. Baek row - Assistant Coach Greg
DISTRICT CHAMPIONS - C &amp; D Peoozoll will
as Donovan left to address the UrBecker, Doooa Larkins, Sonia Ash, Demaris Crawford,
play
In the USSSA slate softball tournament at Kent
ban League convention at the
Terrie
State
during
tbe
lint
weekend
In
August.
Team
memWilson, Beth Bartrum, Susan Zirkle, Laura
Shoreham Hotel.
Smith, aud Coach Beooy Deut.
bers
of
tbe
championship
team
are,
!root,
J..r,
Tools
" The two sides met both
Ash, Sara Jobosoo, Cel Jeoklos, April Klog, Pat Dent,
separately and in joint session, and
r-~--------------------------------the secretary attended aU sessions
that the mediators sat in on," .said
Nancy Braff, the acting general
counsel for the Mediation and Con1
ciliation Service.
She refused to discuss the substance of the day's meetings.
The key issue in the strike is how
INSTALLED
teams losing free agents will be
The Meigs County based C and D
compensated. Until now, the only
CHECK OUR PRICES FIRST!
Pennzoil women's softball team
compensation has been an amateur recently completed a very sucdraft choice from the signing team,
cessful road trip that earned them a
but the owners want professional berth in the USSA softball state tourFeel Free to U se Our 2nd St. Entrance
players as compensation when
nament.
124 W. Main
Ph . 992-2848
Pomeroy, OH.
quality players change teams.
CandtoDwin
Pennzoil
won four
straight
games
the district
crown
and

Meigs team
advances to
state event

Weathers faces stiff competition - ~~e~en~~~~:~~~/uring
and tackling ability on the Browns'
kick and punt coverage squads in the
past two seasons.
"Curtis is a good tight end, but he
was.n't going to beat out Newsome.
We are using hinn to try to improve
the overall speed and athletic ability
of our linebackers. He is big, fast
and smart,' ' Rutigliano said.
The 6-foot-S, 220-pound Weathers
has been clocked at 4.5 seeonds in
the 4G-yard dash, one of the fastest
times on the team.
Weathers, 24, who has not played
defense since his high school days,
admits he has " a Jot to learn" about
playing linebacker.
"The toughest thing is knowing
what to do because there is a dif.

• Mufflers • Brakes
•Shocks •And More

Moore's American Hardware

will play in the state tourney at Kent

KENT, Ohio (AP) - Curtis
Weathers is a third-year veteran of
the National Football League, but he
studies his Cleveland Browns
playbook with the nervous intensity
of an unseasoned rookie.
Weathers faces a stiff challenge in
1981 as he makes a major transition
from tight end to linebacker during
the Browns' preseason training
camp at Kent State University.
"Everything is new to me and it's
pretty difficult. The playbook is my
most important friend right now,"
said Weathers, who saw little
playing time in his first two pro
seasons behind Browns star tight
·end Ozzie Newsome.
Despite his Jack of playing time at
tight end, Weathers impressed head
coach Sam Rutigliano with his speed

MECHANIC ON l&gt;UTY

ferent assignment in each
situation," sai!l the Browns' ninthround draft pick in 1979 from the
Univetsity of Mississippi.
" An offenseive player has to do
only one thing each play ~ but a
linebacker has three or four
possibilities on each play. He has to
read the offense and react,"
Weathers explained. " Playing
linebacker is a Jot more physical,
too. I'm very stiff and sore."
Weathers makes no bones about
his goal to beat out either Charlie
Hall or Clay Matthews as a starting
outside linebacker.
"I'm glad to make the switch to
linebacker because I want more
playing time. Everyone wants to be
a starter and I'm no different," he
said.

r~~~t~~~:;;;~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~
'

-

t IKO INDU STR IES INC t

the first
A 13 hit attack Jed the locals past
Elm Tavern 11-1 in the first game,
then the C and D team whipped the
Rampp Company Ill-S in the 14 hit
shelling. The locals overwhelmed
Heirs Electric 13-5 and blasted the
same opponent 11~ in the next

t

t

ro~~~all
the hard-hitting champions collected 57 hits for a tournament high, while hitting eight

ho~~~h had eight hits for the
:~:;"~~IKK~~r;~~~; ~~ ~~nc~h~d .
six hits apiece.

t
t

jury which kept him froin playing
the entire 1980 season.·
He even had to pay his way Into
Cincinnati Bengals' games. The
Bengais turned down his request for
a sideline pass to the games after he
injured his knee in a water-skiing a~
cident in May 1980. He suffered tom
ligaments and cartilage damage.
"I lost a Jot of bread, messed up

since

he suffered a serious knee in-

Champion
game slated
this evening
The 1981 Meigs-Mason Pony
League proved to be one of the
toughe!t and most competitive
leagues in recent years. Tonight the
league will have a playoff for the
title between Middleport and
Eastem. The game wiU be played at
Meigs High School beginning at 6
p.m.
Starting lineups for the big game
.were announced recently . For Middleport Chris Burdette will take to
the mound, while Jimmy Newell will
hurl for Eastern. Other probable
starters will be Crow, Follrod, King,
Thomas, Wise, Bush, and Baker for
Middleport.
For Eastern it will be Probert,
Cowdery, Carpenter, Newell,
Guthiie, Everett, Collins, Maxson,
andBaiser.
.
Eastern, Middleport, Mason, and
Racine each had a great first half of
the iieaSOn and ended the season
with striking distance of the title.
League standings :
W. L
10 3
'7 32

a1
7

'

t ,.
t

,

AM ARMOUR f
. '-

trwn, Kim Grueser, Donna Larkins,
Terrie Wilson, April King, Demaris

·

"'-

~-~~.~~~
Pat Dent, and Sara Johnson.

NGLE l'

'
$2490 .
sQ.

on and lift oil the Nautilus, I said
'OK-both ways.' I lifted Nautiluses
up and down stairs, dragged 'em
through snow, took 'em apart to
push 'em through handball court
doors. If you can move Nautilus
equipment, you can play pro ball,"
Kurnick said.

,------------1....,~------------~---------======-

Highest Yield.
Guaranteed Rate.
EfleclJve
Annual
Yield

16.411%

Currenl
lnleresl
Aale

1~5.568%

•

&amp;-month Money Market Certificate
$10 .000 m1n1mum ,n..,estment reqwea Interest mit~ oe ocua momnry _quaner 1y or ar
matuntv chrecllv to vou or transterreo mto anotner o,amono S.3vmgs accOLint Ettec·
ttve annuar .ytetO oa sea on remves tmenl ot pr.nctpat .Jnd ,nterest at maturtt~ Tnts 15
"" annuar rate suo1ect to cna nge at renewal Feoer at regula tion s prohtblt compouno ·
109 at tnleresr .i!M reawre a sutJst_anttat mterest c~nauy tor e.1r1y wttnClrilwa t

tO

~

OlAMON) SAVHGS

........

a

I2 10'

a

rriy leg, and cried lot," Is how· the
fonner eighth-round draft choice
describes the year. He was not paid
because the injury was not footballrelated.
To earn some money, Kurnick
delivered N;JUtilus equipment, and
he worked to build up his muscles at
the same time.
"When the doctor said you can go

•

Intro duces Th e
NEW IK0

T!~:n'As~e;::~:s s~~~;::h ~!~:

Kurnick must prove himself again
~CINNATI (AP) Things
haven~t been easy for Cincinnati
Ben~' linebacker Howie Kurnick

'

SEAL ASP HALT '

:.• • :~·", ' "-· f&lt;"'! 'rS 'I~ I ~!(:; J o ' S.

AN) LOAN

COMPANY

Z16 w. MAin, Pomerov
M-W 9-4
&amp; Sll. 9-Noon

I 12

RON CAREY SAYS:
"Nabisco takes the great taste o(
·
cheddar, bakes in real sourdough for delicious tasting
Better Cheddars Crackers. A San Francisco Style Snack Thin:&lt;

--------------------,
15¢

SA

p

·~~~=-...w:.~:t:;~~~~~~=·=":.":,',M.,-;

.._.._.P*

,-.....-....,:~

No ·s ettlement made

lz

DALE R0111GEB, JR.
..
~.
" ....
Jls&amp;lt•'*B 5 : r

sc~'-

an immoral man, an unchristian ·
man." Hooray for him.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

I
I

ROBERT L. WINGETI'

I :S b-IC tiltu

around," says Goldwater. "I'm get·
pealing to the dark side of human where he struck back.
" I don't like being pushed ling tired of being characterized as
nature where fear, anger and intolerance dominate.
~
President Reagan, whose political
career is a product of the conservative revival inspired by Goldwater's 1964 presidential campaign,
has - to his everlasting credit defied the radical right in making
what probably are his two most important personnel selections.
He picked George Bush to be his
vice presidential running mate in
the 1980 campaign, ·then named
Arizona Judge Sandra Day O'Connor to fill the first U. S. Supreme
Court vacancy during his tenure.
Neither could be accused of being
a liberal or a Democrat, but both are
sensible moderates whose politics
makes them •·mainstream
Republicans"- a classification that
is anathema to the right-wing
crusaders.
Indeed , it was the brutal verbal
assault against Judge O'Connor, a
longtime personal friend of Goldwater and a fellow Arizonan, that
angered the senator to the point .. .....,_ _,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 22,1981

.~
I

.••15~
'

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44000 103430

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

I
I

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I
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15¢1

..

�..

1981

Wednll!sda

Pomeroy, Syracuse advance
to championship contest_
• i•

·.'.:.·,..

'·
l,~l

CHAMPIONS - Members of the Middleport Pee
Wee Girls' Softball team who woo the Middleport Girls'
Pee Wee Tournament are, front row, 1-r, Mary Butcher, Kathy Thomas, Sue Cassell, Jennifer Taylor,
Mary Brewer, Jody Taylor, Leaona Plants. Back ro"

- Jeoniler McKinnev. Nikki Whitlatch. Leslie Carr,
Tammy McFarland, Margie Baker, Paula Gilkey and
Kiodll Carsey. Coaches are Max Whitlatch and Dave
Baker.

SYRACUSE - An exciting semi- John Riffle, and Dave Ambergey ters, while not issuing a single walk.
Eads came back to the mound and
final round of baseball highlighted . each collected singles.
finished
the game the following inIn tbe second game of the night
Tuesday night's play in the Syracuse
Little League Tournament where Pomeroy's Pirates rolled to a hard- ning.
Brian Freeman and Huey Eason
Pomeroy's Pirates and Syracuse fought IH win over the Rutland
led
the Pirate fireworks with one
Reds.
posted wins. tllus earning berths in
double
each, while Gerald Moore
Dave
Hendricks
was
the
winning
the championship game tonight.
pounded
two singles, Rodd Harrison
as
the
pitcher
with
seven
strikeouts
Rutland and Albany will square off
singled,
and
Greg Fields singled.
Pirates advanced to the chamat 7 p.m. in the Consolation game.
Joey
Snyder
singled twice for ,
pionship
game
of
the
tournament.
Syracuse narrowly edged Albany
Rutland,
while
Kent
Eads and Tony
Eads
started
and
suffered
the
Kent
4-3 in the opening semi-final thriller.
Shoemaker
each
singled.
loss, posting seven strikeouts and
Doug Owens posted the win with an
Tonight Rutland faces Albany's
eight walks.
eight strikeout, no walk perFarmers
in the consolation game,
formance. Mark Chapman suffered
In the fourth inning Michael, Barthe loss with one strikeout and one truro, who pitched a no-hitter Mon- while Pomeroy meets syiaclise for
walk. Jim Allman relieved to fan six day. relieved a nd fanned two bat- the 198Jtournament title.
a nd walk one. Jimmy Swnmers and r---------------~~lf.---....,..J-.-")"-­
Mark Chapman hammered two
singles each for Albany, while
Allman hit a home run a nd single .
Jack Gilkey and Steve Grissett each
REGISTER NOW FOR FALL CLASSES AT
singled.
For the hometown Syracuse club,
Shawn Cunningham, Doug Owens,
APPROVED FOR VETTERANS
FiNANCIAL AID AVAILABLE .
DAY OR NIGHT CLASSES
Applicalton s lor Ohio Industrial Grant must be made by

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

'Tuppers Plains wins pee wee title
: The Tuppers Plains Indians recentlY claimed the local Pee Wee league
title, behind so lid pitching and tough
batting . The Keebaugh T. P. Indians
posted an undefeated season of 7-ll.
Regula r pitchers for the team are
Kenn y Caldwell and Scott Fi tch.
: The champion T. P. Indians recorded a 20-0 win over Racine B team.
Hitters were Scott Fitch w1th a
grand slam home run, Jason Hetger

a single. Jay Blackwood a double
and single and Kenny Caldwell tw o
singles .
. Plating rurl.S for the winners were
Oan Tripp wtth three runs scored.
t:hns Adams. Jenny Meier, J eremv
Blake . Brad Powell , Jay Blackwood.
Scott Fill-h. and J ason Ha ge r wit h
two runs, and Jason Meier, Theresa

Lambert. and Kenny Caldwell one
run
Behmd the reliable pttchm e of

Caldwe ll a nd Fi tch. T. P. brought
home a IH win over the Rac1 ne A
team. Ca ldwell , Tripp . Hager. Fttch.
and Lcimbert scored runs for the
winners. Kenny Caldwell and Brad
Powell eac h si ngled for the winners.
Pitching for Ractne were Todd
Grindstaff, Shannon Willi ams.
Jasun Quillen i::l ll d Jeremy L.dwrence. Grindst&lt;Jff, John McClintock ,
Chr is Murp hy, and Carpenter each
scored for Raci ne.

Others scoring runs forT. _P. were

Blackwood with two. and Ca ldwell.
Blake. Tripp, a nd Chris Adams with
one . Fitch added a single. Blackwood a double. and Blake a smgle.
Scoring fur Stewart were B . Por-

ter. M. Whee le r, J . Bartlett. D.
England . T. Lavtston. Clem. a nd
Ben nett . Stewart hitters were Ar-

nold a nd Wheeler with two singles,
Bartlett a single and do uble.
E ngland two stnglcs. and LaVIS! On a
double.

Chris Murphy and Greg Beegle
each singled for Raci ne, while Ja son

Pitching the VIctory for the In-

Quillen banged two si ngles.
The final league game wtth
Stewart was a real cliff hanger with
the seore lied IHl in the top of the sixth. Jay Blackwood got a walk , then
stole second a nd third before riding
horne on a J eremy Blake smgle.
Tuppers Plains cloimed the win 7-&lt;&gt; .

dians were Kenn y Caldwell and

Scott F itch. Stewart pttche rs were
Wal burn. Ba rtlett. England. and
l...avision _
Monday e\'ening visiting Syracuse

rolled to a 13-3 victory over the Middleport Cu bs tn loca l pee wee league

competition .

Aug . 20 .

Syracuse Hubba rd 's Greenhouse,
coached by Mike Stewart , completed the season on a high note and
ended the season with a very respectable 8-3 record.
A good tea m effort aided by II hits
boosted Syracuse to an early lead
wh ich it nev er relinquished.
Todd Lisle tripl ed a nd singled,
Chris Stewart singled, Chris Stout
doubled a nd si ngled, Eber Pickens
tripled and doubled, Kevin Grueser
doubled and sin gles twice, while
David Custer and Doug Lavender
each smg le.
For Middleport Todd Hood singled

PHONE 446-4367

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;,

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

tw ice and Davis lined a s ingle.

P1tcher Chris Stout picked up the
wtn w1 th 13 strikeouts and just ftve
walks, whi le hurling " three hitter .
Crooks and Hysell combined to fan
10 and wal k 10 for Middleport .

Office Hours oy Appointment Only

WILLIAMSBURG, Va . 1 AP 1 · Bil l Rogers was stiU r idmg an
emotional

career high fro m his

British Open triumph when he teed
off for a practice rou nd Tuesday for
the $300.000 Anhe user-Busch Golf
Classic.
" It was the greatest thing that' s
happened to me tn golf. I sttll
hllvcn't come down and, really, it
hasn't hit me yet." sa td Rogers. who
scored the first maJOr triumph of he'
career Sunday on the Royal St.
George's golf links m Sandwich,
England.
He tock an munobil e sta nce. ruckstill, his eyes wide a nd stari n ~
"" Just like that, " he said. ·-rube

One other benefit already as surfa ced.

th1s yea r ... Rogers sa1d. a nd ti cked
them off · lwo trips to Japan. the

or (304~75-1244

He recei\·eU an inunediate in\' ilatJUn to compete in the 16-ma n

Match P l &lt;:~y C h;:~mpion sh ip , anothL•r

fte ld for the World Match Play
Cha mpi onsh tp oulstdc of London this
fall. an event he won two years a~o .

tn11 es 111 bi g-money fo re ign events .
·Tve gu t fivt' rnor e forei~n tr ips

all of a sudden it' ll hit me just like
tha t "

Latonia

He hasn't even begun to tote up the
rewards and potential rewards from

FLORENCE. Ky. 1AP I ~ Ra mblmg Man won its fifth race tn a row
at Latonia Tuesday by ca pturing the
mnth race. It pa1d $4 .80. $3.40 and $l
In the featured e1ghth race , Idle
Ntbble took f1rst place and paid
$:!7 .20 . $6 a nd $3 .60. Q.D.'s Best
placed second a nd paid $4.20 and
$420 . Sash fl mshed thi rd and pa1d

nament of Champions"" he asked

while receiv ing congratulti uns from
his fellow pros in the locker room uf
the Kingsmtll Golf Club course. stte
nf this week's PGA Tour event whi ch
begins Thu rsday .
" It does' And five years al tht'
Masters? Well. hotdamn."

Summer Clearance
FILL A BAG FOR 1.00
Clothing, Shoes, Bags Only

HUMANE SOCIID
THRIFT SHOP
Middlll!port, Oh.

The course. 6,822 ya rds long and
playing to a par of 71. IS rolling country wrapped around fi ve lakes and
ponds and overlooking the broad expanse of the James Ri ver.

AMA Professional

HILL

Prices Effective Thru Saturday, July 25 th
'

ECKRICH OLD FASHION lOAF.
GERMAN BOLOGNA •••••••••• ~.b~$2.09
Homemade

rt '!i lllt !"

Quarters

ONIONS ........ ~.~~ 89'

••

MARGARINE 2/99~
Sharp

.,.

HARTLEY'S SHOES
FEATURING
Naturalizer - Sebago
Easy St. - Poll Parrot
Shoes lor Children · Florsheim · Jarman - Red
Winq and more .

SERVING THIS AREA
OVER 50 YEARS
210 E . Main

COUNJY-WIOE· REVIVAL
AUGUST 2·7 - 7:30 P.M.

OCEAN PERCH FILETS •••••~~!· .97
16 oz . Del Monte

BOMUS PACK ••••••••••••••••J.a:.

4 oz. Nestea

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CHUNK PIN.EAPPLE •••••••••••C.~~ .

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Fryer Parts......... ~A
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$}l9
·or Drumsticks ..........L~... .
'

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COLU¥BUS, Ohio (AP) - Live
:Power;· driven by Lenny Meller!.
:Won the first' heat ·of the Ohio Sire
llfakes for 2-year-old trotting colts at
Scioto .Downs on Tuesday night.
: The winner, winning by
(eng~~!~! in 2:06.2, paid $6.00, .$4.20
and$3.40.
· SWl11Jlit Hill, driven by Bob Steall;
jwn the stakes' eighth race by three
lengths in 2:04.1. Swnrnit Hill paid
$3.00, $2.60and $2.40.
. : The 1Jinth-rate trifecta, 2-7~. paid
J2,13l,IIO.
I The crowd · of 4.502 wagered .
pn,562'.

'Chicken Thighs...L!·.

6•,

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Bananas.............4'Jf. $}

Local howling
rtnt ofSftGDd Half

,...

SII!DIUDII

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Ttlm
Prol'fall'!iGro
oietrs Garry Out
·Team3 •
Fetly's~Service

(

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8

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PARKAY

Olt Ubt'ity.
0 8 tiC
Team ~11srrie s- Proffitt's GN. 1646; Team
-3' J$82 ; Fftty'a Tree Servit't 152S.
•. •

Margarine......... 2~l.

., Te•m's IU«h games - Prof'filt 's Gru. S9i , $$4 :
Ttllfll3UI.
-~-~~·.s hi.Mh !H!rles- Cind)' 462 : Jenn)' ~ :
uuruoy4t2.

Women' a hiJih game - Cind)' 181: Martha~ iU: ,
•

c Vuilr Sentinel
~

IUSPSI. . . . I.

STAR .KIST

JELLO INSTANT PUDDING •••• 2/-ge:
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$}29

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CH·unk I. una..........
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COUPO N

CUUPCl N

COUPON

TENDERLElF

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·tEA. BAGS

VINEGAR
G~LLON $169

' 100 ..
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Dlvllleo of Mlllllmtdlo,ID&lt;.- .

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9 oz.' Pfingl~s

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, Good only at Powell's
·:,OttPrExpires Ju,Jy'25, 198 .

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On County Road 20 Off Route 33, Darwin ;
I

Sandwich Spread.~

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BATH SIZE 'P.LMOLIVE'.'
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HOMEMADE

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15112

Chuck

'

EVANGELIST
PROFESSOR
AND
COACH K.C.C.

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN•ASS£
(Old Bedford SchoOl
Gygw)... · "
.

' Rochester was backed by three
·defensive plays. First baseman Dan
.Logan and second baseman LaRue
Washington made double plays, and
centeifielder John Shelby threw a
nuuier out at the plate for another
,
.double play.
~ Cliff Speek went 6 and 1-3 innings
.to pick up his third victory against
two losses. Ric Williams, 11-6, t!lOk•
theloss..
·
· :niewater 8, Pawtilcluit ~
Tidewater scored four runs in the
.fourth inning to take a lead ·they
' never relinquished · in its triwilph
. over Pawtucket.
Charlie Puleo, ~. took the win,
:with John Samprini, in his first ap.pearance with Tidewater, getting
~the save. Bob Ojeda, 12-7, was the
:loser.
• Russ Laribee hit his 13th home run
Pawtucket in the eighth.
Syncuae I, Richmond 3
; Charlie Beamon and Tony Fer-nandez each werit three for four with
:two ~I to lead Syracuse to its vil!j
tory civer Ricluilond. ·
• . ·
· Tllt,~efs · scored five runs in the
:fifth .liilirng" as 10 men went to the ·
41Jate. Hits included Fernandez' tw~
;run double a'nd Beamon's tw~run
:single,, ~mon also tripled, in ,the

$}&amp;9
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LUNCH MEAT. ••••••••••••••••~:~. $1.79

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PICKENS HARDWARE

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, Theloss~Rydti_i(t!lll-4.
Rocliester 5, Toledo 2
- . B"' ~r ~ Jol!ri'V!IlJe !t!d the
•way all Rochester flashed 14 hits en
. rdilte to a ~2 victory over Toled~.
, Bonner and Valle; had three hits
.a piece, while Dallas Williams and
' catcher Flayd Rayford supplled
' cruci!ll hits in the three-run eighth

2 Pack

Pom eroy

•Horse Shoes
·•Horse Shoe Nai

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win iii 10 declsltlns: .' ! &gt;' \

CABBAGE ....~~: .. 2/29'

12 oz . Armour Chopped Ha.m

GET READY FOR THE FAIR!

.. hl.s.
· .nut 'ot the
year out ~ 1the paz;t iii ~:~d ir\.
!ling With two outs and none on.
Charlestqo's, 'Gor-dy GlUer 5cat·.tefe4 ~e!i. l!lta pick up h!s sixth

Tutldlly A.f~naoon Leap

1 lb. Booth

MEIGS COUNTY CHURCHES OF CHRIST

,,

New

12 oz. Kraft Single Sliced

The 4-7 dou ble of Rust,· Ca nnon
and B.G. Counsel patd $32.60 and the
crowd of 1.224 bet $114.320.

298 SECOND ST•.·
POMEROY, 0.

.

2 lb. YII!IIOW

,

SUnday 10 am-10 pm

:Scioio
Do.wns results
i:
',
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'
'

Phone 742-2100

$i40.

Starting Wed ., July 22nd
1

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

new. perm a nent site in the Virginia
tidewater cou ntry.

"" I jumped a ll over tha t invita tton," Rogers sa id . "" I love that
tournament. It's really fu n."
But it adde d to an alreadycrowded sc hedule fur Rogers. who ~--------------------------1
has a habit of playi ng his best when
abroad. He' s ta ken only two titles on
National Championship
thl' Ameri ca n tour. but he's won four

messi ng around ur something , and

a victory in the oldest of a ll the
world's go lf champt onshtps
"Does thi s get me tn the Tour-

return to Engla nd fur the Ryder Cup
matrhes and. pro bably . a trip to
Austra ita.
He heads a field of I~ who wtll be
pl&lt;:~ying the Kingsmill course in com·
petition fur the fi rst time. And Ben
Crenshaw is in the peculiar position
of bc mg a defendtng champion on a

course he's never seen.
Crenshaw won this title last year
when the tou rna ment was played Ill
Napa . Cal if. . before moving to its

,,

I

:ror

CALL (614)-992-2104

Rogers ready for Busch Golf Classic

stoRE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. B am-10 pm

,.

5LB.
BAG

•••
•

�Wectnesday._July 22,1981

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

The Da ily Sentinel

Pag e- 7

D ·o f A thartks member~ for project participation at recent fare
Chester

Council

323,

No.

thoaewhohelpedinlbeRegattaand
the Fourth of July parade. The lOdge
tied In fU,.t place with the ~r
Young .Wives Club, each received a
trophy.
The following conununi~tions
were rea,d by Margaret Tuttle,
reconliJ!g secretary, to inform tbe
COWii:il, with deep regret, tbe death
of another Past National CoWlCiiOr,

Daughters of America, met recen-

Uy. Charlotte Grant, councilor
presided.
·
'
Auditing report was read by Enna
Cleland, ,t rustee, and accepted.
Thelma. McMannia tbanked - lbe

rnembersfor~ai'ds.

Two applications were read for
membership. The c;ouncilor thanked

WINNERS - Grand champioos, reserve champloDS and tbe category in which 4-H members participated respectively were, 1-r, Pam Riebel, and
Carrie Karr, preserve and serve I; K1la Young and

GRAND CHAMPIONS - Grand champions and
reserve champions and the category In wbich t-H
members pat11cipaled respectively Tuesday at the 4-H
food judging were, k Alice Ritchie and Kevin Napier,
magic of microwave ; Becky wand Kathy Stotts, tbe

mystery of microwave; Dee Dorst and Liada Riggs,
quick meals, Unda also was grand champion of
making It witb meals ; Patty Parker, reserve champion, making it wilb meals ; Betty Loftis and Melanie
Mankin, outdoor cookery I; Mary Edwards and Robyn
Barren, tricks for treats.

Gallia-Meigs CorrunWJity Action
Agency will hold its free clothing
day lor low income families on
FMday, July 24, from 9 a.m. Wltil
noon. The clothing bank is located in
lbe old high school building.

The Neville reunion will be held
Saturday, July 25, at Krodel Park
Club House, Point Pleasant, beginning at Ba.m. There will be a basket
dinner and"'singing. Everyone is
welcome to attend.

lcecrebm
social Saturday

Buckley reunion· set

-

..::.:·

.• l \ .

-

HELPERS - Assisting with the t-H food judging
at Meigs High School Tuesday were. front, ~r. Cindy

Pitzer and Pansy Jordan; back, Lisa Collins, Becky
Edwards. Kila Young and Jamie Sisson.

150 take part in
4-H food judging
One hundred and fifth 4-H members took part in the 4-H
Food Judging held Tuesday at Meigs High School. The
judging was in conjunction with junior fair activities.
Members participating were judged in 17 different
categories. Judges were Niesel Duvall, Mary Louise Phillips,
Lisa McDaniels, Sarah Hulbert, Karen Facemyer, Virginia
Kirkwood, and Donna Brown.
The judging was sponsored by tlie Meigs County Extension
Office. Dale Stoll, county ext~nsion agent, home economics
was in charge of the event. 4rry Powell of Powell's Super:
Valu supplied a beverage of lemonade.

Singer reunion set
The annual Singer reunion will be
held Sunday , July 26, al Royal Oak
Park . All relatives and friends are
welcome . There will be a basket dinner at noon .

at the Cleveland Clinic for bypass
surgery .
Mrs. Ruby Brewer had company
drop in on her unexpectedly, a more
than four foot long black snake dropped in to sit with her on the porch. I
bet she did some tall jumping and a
little screaming too! Nevertheless,
Ruby must not like unexpected
callers for the poor snake never left
the porch alive.

Reunion Sunday
The Nelson reunion will be held
Sunday, July 26, at Forest Acres
Park, New Lima Road. Lunch will
be served at noon .

·r -

t
t

DRAGONSLAYER &amp;
ENDLESS LOVE

Full Cut
Round Steak

$ 99

OOOD lUNDAY JUlY 19 TH•OUGH lATUIOA't' JULY 25 .
lfiiiN POM E WOV AND C.ALLIPOLI ~ ~ I,OI&lt;'E :,

Picnic Sunday

DUTC~

FIIVE
'"""-"'• I DRUMSTICKS

I'l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1

Decorcrted Cakes

I

.~,...... ~~~~))'t

ForAIIOccasions

_ ., 1 .
' ~"lvu'%V::iv1
, "~~'s'' "'liiH · w.•. ;
~II

ROUSEL CONFECTIONERY

H,,,.,

Ph 992 6342
.

5th

... ~

..

lftn

1~

: $1.20

~-~3~17~N;.2~n;d~~~M~id;d;le;p;o;r~.~~~"~'~'~'~"'~""~'~"~"~"~'~'o~'~'~''~"~-

Pkg

"'P\l

I

99

$
21-oz.

1 .-S~AVE,.....,

I

wEE.: '' 10 I g , JO ' ·"·

e

IN THE
FROZEN MEAT
CASf

•

LIMIT 2 P11CS. PER COUPON

I

1st

.Weaver's
Fried Chicken

I....-..,,,,,,,
I

. ----------------..
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

ll
llf

CIIPIII -AI .. 1111 111111111.. Ill! IS.

tilt

,,.

-~~--ll!llllliCil lUll

~~~~dParts ... ....

SPECIAL. OF THE WEEKI

lb.

LIMIT • PLEASE
F"!SH PACIFIC SNAPPER

49 C

'

--··_...

.'{iii ·i

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
PH . 992·2SS6
Pomeroy, OH .
"Located at the End of the Pomeroy· Mason Bridge"

ANYSIZE~KG.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Ground Beef ........ lb.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE.
IONELESSIOTTOM

FRESH DRESSED
CROAKERS OR

.

·

Flounder ... ... lb.
F"!SHPUCH

Tea
Bags

SLICED

Ole Carolina 1-lb .
Baeon ..... .... ...Pkg.
SERVE 'N' SAVE

Avondale

"'

Dill
Slices

32•0J .
Jo •

99c

J · OI

COUNTIY OVEN

Potato
• · 01

Chips.

. .. log

99 C

1000 ISLA NO FRENCH OR
ITAliAN liQUID

KDroge~
resstng

.....

.. . ..

95C

79"'

12-oz.

ClOVU IJ \lllY

CornDil

Pkg.

~~~.

Margarine

'Y

COUNTRY O 'V{N

$169

HROGER

Flalte
I.

Coconut

o1

"•

FROZEN MINUTE MAID

COlO CAHI

Orange

Marshmallow
13 0 1
Creme
Jo r

2
99
·Honey Bread. .....
IUTTERC~UST

20·oz.

69C

Angel Food
16o · Ol
Ca ke . . . "'

I

KROGER

$1' 49

Gelatin .. .. •• •

Smoked Ham .. ........ lb .

sJ99

"

IOO.C &gt;

Mix

w·1e.ners .. .. .. .. ... ..

$239

"'

I

loking

...........

•

Country Club
Ice Cream

49

$

C

LYI.

Hush PupdRif§'

an

-rRozEN 1

..Jeno
s
. •

:PIZZa ........

AV ATLAIU ONLY IN
WITH
I, STORES
DEll DEPT$.
HOT FOODS
AVAIL,ULlllam

$1 09

11.75-al
Pkg.

TIL7pm

.

·Shampoo. ......

12·01.

Fried Chicken Bucket

$229

SLICED OR IV THE PIECE

Muenster Cheese. lb.

Btl. .

$159
IOO·Ct.
Btl.

SLICED TO ORDER. SANDY MAC
DELISTYLE

:

s2.
0
9
·Kodak Film .......,k, .. '.
: ~··EXPOSUiE,C~IlO

bobbin and 1 step bu ilt-in
buttonholer.

LARGE

Modei833
The Sty~ist4 machine with
built-in ashion features .
Front drop- 1n bobbin and

CAUFOIINIA

. l

fr~ltrm .

Mom
· Hush Puppies ' are the value
answer for your chi ldren 's back · lo·
soh~ol shoes . Breathin' Brushed Pig skin leather makes 'em durable . Ready
to take 1t. Cleanable ,Lightweight . .too
w1th steel shan~ support for growin~
feet and cushiOned.comfort inside. Plus
kid-pleasing style. ;A pleasing answer.
.

'

Nectarines ........ lb.
•hDIIII'I.CUT

FRISH lAKED

•lt8 Bread.......16-01.
W
Loaf
h
c
.
1

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4

'

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' .ft,......"". :. .
d

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· .. ~·' ,~"
'

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lb. '

10

.-cFt.OIIID~ , '.
Ll-••
. . ,.,..... .', ; ....... Each
' I

'

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•

Avondale

e~ Drink Mix

24 -0Z . CANISTER

$159
II!RIDIT LDW PRICI

69 C
.

IIIADAVAILAILIONLY At YOUIIILYIIIIIDOI&amp; 11
J'DMIIOY KIOGII

20%

OFF LUNCHEON

MEAT SALE

KAHN'S

.

Olive Loaf ........ .... .... •

' Watennelon. ,.. ..lb.
. ;·RID'SIIDLISI ·. '
SJ49

(
;j,

.

S349

MIKIS 8 OUIRIS

o

99
59 0
170
.

$249

a.()

Boiled Ham ... ... .... lb .
FRESH lAKED
s139
· I
26-oz.
App e Pit .. .. .. .. Pie

·39c

l'• SI~E

Southern
. ~!IC~fs ....... lb. . .
" PUSH
'
i
...
'be
•. ' ' . Pint
BlVI rnes'

,,

SAVE ssooo

S499

a:Piece;ISHIONE

. VIDAL SASSOON FINISHING

Model 1036

lb.

$255
·

~··
Du'tch Loaf .... .. ..... .. .. •II' lb. $215
·

KAHN'S DILUXI

.

$2 23

. Club 8ol01na ............. liiW lb. .
0'
.
$JI~
•'

..,

12

UOGEI

Tomato

&lt;II

'c~:

Paste .

~.

O&amp;C

Onion Rings ~::

KROGIR FROZEN

Pomeroy,

o'!!:.J
' '

.

'

I

fMfi A\~

JIFFY

$139
.
Ch
24·o•.
C0 age eese.. . Ctnr.
IN THE
$129
" OAitY DIPT .. KROGER
.
f
•t
J
•
'lr·Gal.
G,ape ru1 UICe .. ctnr.

.·Asp1r1n .. .. .. .. ..

b !~.~-. --~992·2284

I

29

$

KROGER

The Cr~ative Touch
Fashion" machine.
Featuring a s~lf winding

~ACINE, OH.

$249

Round
Roast .. .... .. lb .
FISCHER'S HOT 011 MILD
Pork Sausage .. ~~~~ S119

·

11·0 1

PIIZO .

Bos-ton
Butt
SLICED INTO
Pork Steaks

Juice ••• • • •• •.•• • ••

•liAYU
•
• •

RACINE DEPT. STORE

Fox De Luxe

IIUIDAI lOW 111CI

7·11 ..11. AVG . WHOlE BONElESS

f------__;;::;,..,;;;::_..:._-==========;:==--.;,~· Back To
School
.: \'c

$129

lb.

· ~--·"' Fillets .......... lb.

S70 W. Main

IN·STORE GROUND OR CHUB PAK

'"

FROZEN

t&lt;ltOCU HA.MIIURGER

S279

J'i;;, F1llets ........ ..

FISH SQUARE ••••••••• 69~
WITH FRIES •••••••••• '1 09

$
109

PIICI

11 ·01

BBQ Sauce

USDA
CHOICE

I
.. '"~~~

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A. INi'ECTEO

:.atNSEOR

t I~~~ ·~.~:::.~-.1:1:...':".":t-

Hillcrest

A BLEND OF IEEF I HYDRATED TEXTURED
VEGETAILE .PROTEIN.

Kroger's Pro
·Beef Patty Mix. lb.

Chester High School class of I 931
will hold its annual picnic SWlday,
July 26, at the Chester Firehouse. All
teachers and schoolmates are
welcome.

-

SAVE s2000 {~""~~~~
"Made By
On A Singer
Machine

(I[ I! DillOW

COf'VItOHT 1911 · THI ICIOGII CO. ITIMS ANC l'ltCIS

casuals

Put Your Own
Label Of Quality
On Back-To
-School Clothes

NO OTHEIIUNDS AlE STOCKED.

lONE IN

The 45th aMual Buckley reWJion
will be held Sunday, July 26, at the
Belleville Dam Park in Reedsville,
beginning at I p.m. with a potluck
dinner.

•

Jeanie
MaeNewell,
visitedScott,
Mr. and
Darlene
Rex, Mrs.
and
Keith Ridenour, Floyd, Kelly and
Matt one evening and watched home
movies.
Mrs. Angie Morris, KMstal and
Karen, Mrs. Mary Newell, Misty,
Scotty and Mikie, Mrs. Darlene
Newell, Jeanie Mae (all Keno)
joined with Mrs. Alice Curtis, Toby
and Terry and Mrs. Ruthie Mills and
Brandy and all enjoyed very much
picnicking and swimming at the Salt
Fork Lake.
Rex Justis spent the night Sunday
with his grandfather, Ronald Grady
of Racine.
Scott Justis, son of Mrs. Eimer
(Darlene) Newell and Rhonda
Riebel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Rodger Riebel, are attending Ohio
University this swnmer.
Long Bottom Happenings Richard Hayman is a heart patient

COIPAIED TO DTHEIIIAJIDS• AT KROGER.

•fOIIIIE SOIPII COST

JuJr 24th

·Neville reunion set

By Melody Roberts
Keno Area news Racent
weekens guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Newell and children were Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Curtis, D. J . and
Katie.
Darlene Newell, Jeanie and Rex
visited Mrs. Newell's son , Scott, at
Ohio University recently and they
wentouttodinner.

.AYI Ult TO 40% ON
.001tl8 CO.T CUTTI8S

Starting this Friday

Free clothing day

LongBottom
News Notes

ihla Fae Kimes thanked lbe lodge
for her 50th year pin, and said she
would wear it wilb pMde.
Flag Bearers escorted Betty
Roush Council deputy to tbe altar, it
being her birthday, lbey sang happy
birthday , members presented her
with cards and Dorothy Ritchie,
chairman of the Good of Order committee, presented her a gift.

Parker,

In and Around Meigs

Members of the Bashan Fire
Department and auxiliary members
will sponsor an ice cream social on
Saturday, July 25, beginning at 5
p.m. The event wiD be held at the
Bashan Fire House.

Slate Councilors' Project ; Mystery
Packsge~~ (25 cent item) ; Bazaar
and Fancy Work; Candy and
Cookies; Blanche's speciallable for
1be Good of Order; Orphans and
Home; Slate Ways and Means . She
also sent word, " It's wonderful that
lbe lodge in participating in the
parades, showing beloved order."

white and all officers, wear white
floor-length dresses. She says it has
been a pl~ure and honor serving
as State CoWlcilor, thanks for the
courtesies shown here, also for conlinued dedication to lbe Order and
its high pMnciples. She also asked
members to bMng gifts lor the
following tables at State Session -

and Joe
do your tblDtl with food; Kn. Yoaag
and Melllu Searbo1'1JIIIIl, foods wflb an IDieJ'uaUoul
flavor; Usa Collins and PIDI Riebel, tasty meall;
Teresa Dorst and Patty Parker, leeDS enlerlala; AprO
Parker and Kathy Parlier, seU detenaiDed.

MORE WINNERS- Grand champion and reaerve
champion&amp; and lbe category In wblcll f.H members
pardclptlted reepecllvely Tuesday at lbe 4-H judglllg
food ju8g!Dg were, 1-r, Leah DaDDer and Usa Henderson, all American foodes; Missy Calaway and
Krtati Hawk, foods to lake and share; Crystal Kaylor

Donia Crane, preserve and serve II; Joe Parlier and
Sberri Myers, breads (plaiD); Tammy Calaway, and
Lee Ann Gaul, breads (special) .

Sister Ruth B. Kepler, who served
from 1111!2 to 1964, who died May 22.
A letter frim Blancbe Moldlney,
state COUD9ilor, said this Is her last
conununication to the lodge ; she
hopes to see all tbe counclls in lbe
state represente-1 at the State Conventlon, to be held in TOledo in
August. All voting members, wear

.

.Whipped l •ot .
TIIpplng ... ""'·

.

.

59~

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·

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wtCinesday, July 22,!911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, Pag-8-The Daily Sentinel

&amp;cine Social Events- - - - - - - - -with- - - -Colwnbus
- - spent
---__,_
___
_.___
Friday and SatllrdaY With
Fla. and
and
Builder/' 11 Perfed Church," "I'll
Not Look Back." After a Bible quil

By Mn. Frucls Morris

The Booster Sunday School class
of Mrs. Marjorie

I

~t at the home

the meeting closed with the Lord's

{

Grinun with a potluck dinner at 6:30
p.m. ~· Ora Hill, president,
opened the meeting. The hymn

'•

.. Pr&amp;ise . Him! Praise Him !" was

Prayer in unison.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Williams announce the birth of their third son,
named Adam Charles, July 13, 1981
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Moore and
daughter, Sharon Whitaker and Keri
moved from McArthur into the Gor·
don West property recently pur·
chased . Mrs. Moore, Sharon and
Keri , spent the past five years In
Hawaii.
Mrs. Sylvia Wolfe returned after
spending a month with Mr. and Mrs.
Wheeler Sarsons and visited at
Eureka Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Birch of

•
I

SWig by lhe·group and prayer was by

Mrs.

Florence Adams. Scripture
was from Psalm 148. A business
session was held. Thirteen members
answered roll call with a scripture
verse. A program followed, presen·
ted by Mrs. Garnet Ervine. She had
a meditation followed with poems,
" One Day at a Time, " " Day Break ,"
"My Journey," "Steadfast Heart, "
"The Bend in the Road" and
readings, "The King Will Answer
Them," " God's Word," " The Bridge

Waterford spent Sunday
her
parenta, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Wallace.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sayre and Mrs.
Betty Khoeler of Roseville and Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Moore, Zanesville,
spent a day with Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Hill and Mrs. Ura Morris.
Mrs. Shelba Foster and son of
Marietta spent several days with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill.
Tate Simpson of Jonesboro, TeM.
spent a week with his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. William Hayman.
Andy Young of Colwnbus came
home with his grandfather, Martin
Wilcoxen, and spent a week, His
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rokl Young
a nd daughter joined him Sunday
spending the day, and Helen

Wilcmen of
the
weekend with her father, ~rtln .
WUcmen.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre and Eric
spent ovemlght Wednesday and
Thursday with Mrs. Ethel Johnson
and family and visited Mrs. Ura
Morris. Tiley were enroute to their
home at Bowerston after a sb:'weeka
trip. They spent three weeka with
their son, Freddy, at Seattle,
Washington and toured many places
of Interest down the West coast and
Te:ras.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert MOrris of
Athens, Elsie Roush and Marie
Chapman of f'OO!er'OY and Ura
Morris, local, visited Mr. aitd Mrs.
Clifford Morris Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. AI Alto of Lantana,

198 1

ovemlght

Mrs. Gary Hall, Jeanie

Sarah of West Palm Bea~ Fla.,
were guesbi of their parents, Mr.

Mr. andMn. William Lone.

and Mrs. Fern Noi'rls and all visited
Mrs. Audrey Brownell at Kanaqa.
Mr. and Mrs. Merle Schroeder and
Mae Fern of Fayetteville, Ark.,
were overnight guesl.!l of her
mother, Mrs. Francis Morris.
Mrs. Don Fisher, Jennifer and
Matthew, of Akron were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Turley and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Turley and families
attended a family reunion at Spring
Hill Park and were overnight guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ball at St.
Albans, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pauley and
family of Mt. Alto, W. Va. spent

Posts roll()f(_victory

Busi·ness Serv·ices
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

WINDSOR, Ontario (AP~ - Mike
Aulby defeated Gil Sliker, 21&amp;-203, in
a one-game rolloff to earn the ~
seeded position In the finals of the

BISSEll
SIDING 00.

$100,000 Canadian OpeD on 1lle
Professional Bowlers Association

tour.
Tile Indianapolis bowler was In
eighth place goln8 intO the sixth
round before roUlng games of r/6
and 267 to take second. He then forced a rolloff by c:lefeatlng Sliker,~
215, In the final game of regulation
play to even their 42-game plnfalls at

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call lor f ree siding
estimates, 949·2101 or

949·2160.

No Sunday Calfs

3 11 tfc

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want !ds
Public Notice

.PUBLIC NOTIC E

pr opert y may be seen by
ap po1n t me nt by c a ll1ng th e
unders,qned a t 949 2589
H 1lton Wol f e. Sr
A dmini str a t or of

Off ers will be receiv e d a r
th e l aw offices of Crow ,

Crow and Porter on the cor
ner
Of Mulberry
an d

f•
I

\

I

Frid a y , Jul y 31st , 1981. f or
! h e res •dence o f the la t e
Guy H Nei gl er . s•luated 1n
the
Village Of Ra ci ne .
OH•o . Thts p rop e rty wa s

whos e last known address
wa s 524 Brown Aven ue.
H a rvey , Loui siana, 70058,
o th e rwi s e

( 7 1 22 . 26 29 . ) l C

~··-

t ob e r ,
1980 .
Jo s eph
Raymond
Pr o ff i tt.

No . 232 10

t ne

residen ce

u nknown, wi ll take noti ce
th.=~t on the 6th day of Oc

---- .,..,.,--Public Notice

·--

r-----------------------.

Pet ilioner, f i led a Pet ition
to r Adopt ion perfa i ni ng to
Jonn Ja y Dodderer , a child
b orn November 1st , 1967 , at
C ol umb u s. Ohi o . Sard
Peti troner seeks a ch ange
of The na m e of sa id c hi ld
fr om Jo hn Jay Dodder er to
John Ja y Proff itt
Sa1d Pet rtioner: further
stat e'&gt; that he was m ar r red
ro Ard eth Kay Proffitt , tor
merly Arde th Kay Dod
dN ~ o~ September 30th,
General
Real Estate

!

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

I

THE ADOPTION OF
JOHN JAY PROFFITT
JOHN L. DOD(JERER.

G uy H . N e 1g lc r .
D eceased

---appra •sed a l S10 .000.00 a nd
LEGAL NOTICE
c annot be sold f or less thil n IN THE COURT OF COM ·
80 per c ent at t he appra •sed MON
PLEAS , ME IGS
va lue. Ter ms of sale ar e
COUNTY
,
OHIO
ca sh and •s to be sold sub
PROBA TE DIVISION
1ec f to rn e 11en t or re a l
es tare ta xes to r 198 1

IN THE MATTER OF

th e Esta te a t

Se c; a nd St reets in Pomeroy ,
Ohta. at 10 :00 A_M on

'I
I

1

N EW LISTING -

IAddre••·---------------IPhone,,__________________

buildings . $45, 000 .00
OWNER

35

NEAR MINE 11 I - J
bedroom ranch on 217
acres . N.ndern kitch en
and living room , stora ge
shed. garden a rea

I 7.

Sl1.000 00 .

18.
19

t.HAC RE SOFYAR D -

21
22
2J
24
25
26
27

i.

2.
3
4.

5.
6.
7. ~----

28
2'1

8. - - - - -

JO

10.----1
I

13.

I
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TRAILER AND LOT IN
RAC INE 12)(65 mobi le
t10me w it h I. bedrooms ,
eQ ui pped
krtche n .
storage burldng, on ap
p ro x
i . 85
a c re s

111 ,000 .00 .
TUPPERS PlAINS Ranch hom e with an
acre lot. 3 bedrooms,
nice kit chen, garage .

32 - - - - - -

---·--

1J .

S34,900 00
R E-1\'LTOll

3]

-----

Henry E . Cleland, Jr .

]4

1 14.
1 15.
I I6 .

'

S37 ,900 .00 .

-----

] I

I

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2 4:11:60
double
wrde .
equ1pped k1fchen w ith
di shwshe r , utdrty room
w1th washer and dryer,
J bedrooms . 2 baths.
plus
family
roo m .

9.

II

CON ·

CON

on this la rge
tamily home or se t up as
duplex for rental in·
ves tment , 4 bedrooms , 1
ba lhs , ca rpet ing , kif
ctlen equ i pment , some
l urn rtur e. SJJ,OOO 00 .

ad•n Your
ad w ri t be --+--i---1f--+--l
fh e p ro per To

11

LAND

TRACT -

70

1
1

Will

SIDER

claslfl cai10n d you"ll ___J,_ _L,_:,,L_,.L_
I c heck Th e pr oper bo)(
These casn rates
I b elow
rn clude discount

I
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I

992 -6191

ASSOCIATES

35

T~R~~L~~~rn
216 E . Second Street

.,m
..
y;J.

Mail This Coupon wtlh Remittance
The Dail y sentinel

l-----~~m~r~~~ ~~~o ~S?_6~------.J ~~~~~-~~~~~·~·J
.

..

I'

BARGAIN -

•
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Located at Maplewood
lake in Racine .

COUNTRY HOME -

REMODELED

For all of vour wir·
ing needs.
let George Miller t:heck
·your present ~·
·· · svstem.
Residential
&amp;Commercial

PH. 843·2075
Virginia hayman!....Associate

PH. 985·4197

2 8 II&lt;

ALL STEEL

·..

All work guaranteed .

In memory of our dear

But II seems like only
away
.
yesterday,

Three kittens, white with
blue heads and tails. Phone
CHIP WOOD . Poles max
675-4464 .
diameter 14" on largest
end . $12 .50 per ton . Bundled
slob. $10.50 per ton .
Deliverd to Oh io Pallet Co.,
6
Lost and Found
Rock
Springs Rd . ,
Pomeroy . 992·2689.
FOUND : Reel Bone Hound .
Describe when ca ll. 992~old,
si!ver,
ster_ling ,
3666.

~~g., ~n~ memories still
Only God knows how much
we miss you Mom.
Sadly missed by
children VIrginia , Mary J .

H
- 20 ' 30 . P.

andLawrence.

HA 60" -25-60 H. P .

HE 60" -~5- 80 H. P .
All Models Available

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

LEO MORRIS

In loving memory of my
dear Mother, Katie Young,
who passed aWay 7 years
ago July 22.

yo~~e;:~;:n~e~~stLord,

Rl . I Side Hill Rd .
Rutland, Ohio

For when on earth, she
was one of the best.

PH . 742 ·1455

5 1Hfc

S·7· 1fc

in

Sadly

missed

by

OHIO VAU!Y
ROOFING

P.ARTS AND §E RVI CE
AL L MAKES

• 0o~poial 1
eDo ill'#lliiS hlrr'
eHoiW•ler T.:tnk \

e W.as.hen,
•O rytr~

eRanges

Sizes
" From 30xl0"

SMALL

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

3

SWEEPER
supplies.
delivery,

• Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
eWater, Sewer&amp;
Gas Lines
• Dump Truck
• Trencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded ·

Pick up and
Davis

Vacuum

Cleaner, one hall mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
-'46·0294 ..
Cleland Greenhouse is now

open. Vegetable plants,
tomato plants, bedding
plants. pots and hanging

Rt&gt;Pottrlngsmcl! 19Sl

TOM HOSKINS

baskets .
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

Ph . 949·2160

• Apt HouseOwnc r s
· MObole Home Pa r k ~

and .sewing

machine repair , parts, and

and Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
eSiding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 vrs . experience

··sotoclill AHu For··
• Corn L .aunCifln
• llt' nt•l Properloe~

Announcements

7·5tfc

REESE ~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

ATTENTION LADIES!!!
Help pay off those· un ·
wanted

bills

working

evenings from 7: 30 to 10:30
p.m .

as a fashion styl ist.

Earn $8.00 to 510.00 per

hour profit . Ideal for
homemaker with family .

LOST on Midway Or ive,

New

Haven.

medallion ,

Phone

initials

Gold
CSW.

furniture , gold , silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone iars, antiques, etc .•

Complete
hquseholds .
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Dh. Or 992·7760.

Lots

Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
· Windows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992·2772

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

- Addons and
remode ling
- Rooting and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs .: Mon. - Fri .
9 a.m. -5:30p.m.

V. C. YOUNG II
~92·62I5

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U.S. Rl. 50 East

..

Guysville, OH .

NEW LI STING -- 1 to J
acre's ot nice laying land
w rth ma i I a n d sc hoo l bus
servr ce. 54,000 per acr e.

Phon06I4·662-3821
Authorized JOhn Deer.

New Holland, Bush H99
Farm Equipment Dealer

Housing
Headquarters

FARM EOUI PMENT
PARTS/SERVICE

When you leave on your vacation, let us pack
a pak for you. Let us save your newspapers
for you until you return home, and at that
time we will deliver every back issue so that
you can catch up on the n'e ws that you
missed while you were away.
If you prefer to take your paper with you on
your vacation, we can arrange that·too.
Call our circulation department or mail this
handy coupon to our circulation department
today.
·.
·

USED EQUIPMENT
I-No. 8600 Diesel Ford
Tractor w/ Cab

I-Model275 Diesel M.F.
I-Model479 Hay Bird
N.H.
7·3·ttc

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

I:.:I_ __,H,_,e"lp"-'W,_,a,_,n,_,teci~-­
-

WANTED · Lease men , to
leasae oil and gas proper·
ties, GAIIia and surroun·
ding counties. Inquire to

benefits. You will attend
training one weekend each
month and two weeks each
Yard Sale July 23 &amp; 24, 215 year. Benefits Include low
2nd Ave, Gallipolis . Nice cost life insurance, exschool c:lothes, jeans, cellent pay and a free pen·
dishes. turn., toys, and sian plan. Plus, the Army
Guard's valuable techni cal
misc .

a lso clothing.

Siding

for a well paying civilian

job. Call675·3950.
FRIENDLY

Roofing 1 Gutter
Remodeling
Serving Your Area for
20Years

EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates
Call Collect

Ph . 843·3322
7- 13-2 mo . pd .

of

wedding

and

an·

Draperies, un i forms,
miscellaneous items. 9
Walnut
Street,
Point
P leasant .

.

I

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~···..;

•
•
:

•
•

.

(i

.•

i

~

' .

109 High Sl., Pomeroy
6·28·1·mo.

.

ana ......

!e

like to tatce my pap~ ·~th me ,ori
bon. PIAHtransfermytubKriptJOnt.o
· ·
·
on the day of
'
P I - reaume my ~lome delivery

.

.

• .

j

•

a:. '

Misc. Merchondllo

Rutland Furniture ~ Shop

'

save my papers in , ii,,~.~~Y va~ati6~ pak and ·
deliver them to me ~hen I retUm from my yacat~n . .
I will be leaving
.I
&lt;'
• '
turning on
. .' ,\J/1 •

1. would

Also
several
Repossessed at GOOD
Prices .

FINAL CLOSEOUT
OF SHRUBS

! ...

'

Ple~se

),1

~
.......

,

Make An Offer

. . "1. ~· r

1

BIG APPLIANCE
SALE AT
POMEROY
614· 992 ·2181
Freezers
Refrigerators
Washers · Dryers
Air Conditioners

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

·---------------~-~-----.
.
.
•

sday,

obligation.

The Daily ~ntinel

•

~· •

mV vaca"

tsuMME• CARPET
!sALE
!5
·

ALL CARPET

1(\"',.

MAR!&lt;ED DOWN

,CARREl '' RUBBERBACK
Me~~~~~pet
cosh-n·carry
IExt{a Good I

WtPoddlni
Instilled

srorti~l

$l· • •'

~ .. ~.yd

I,,
"" -&gt;1- • ~!.&gt;

. , it

I,Roll Eoch
Brown, Blue,
Groen

... 1'' '5
, ••· · •· vs:·
1
nstallll!
·

If' sq. yd. . Now$J3'fr':.'

GOOP $ELECTION OF'Rl~NANTS.

ISuy Now &amp; Save $2·U F'tr Yarcf.
2SH olli • ca~pet If! sti!Ck
pick from, .
Retillfar -backad_, carpet' lnstallacl free
t wltfi Hd. Gooll .setectlon Roll Ends: Rem·
nants s;~;so
Gr~'' carpet . ~·" yd .
G,.n ancUrown.
·• ·
..

to

~~~'·''•
.t15-Ut$.••

up.

.·

·

.
.:i

&gt;$) ·

I

, Drive A LIHte '-save A Lot
.
~
.'
'

'

r

person .

Franklin,

Point

Wed ·
and

Tuesday -We,nesday· Thur -

lhllik»l

&amp;

phone

Yard Sale. Hobson Dr., Cook wanted for new area
Lower end of Middleport. restaurant . Exceptional
Wed ., Thurs . &amp; Fri. Variety opportunity lor qualified

nesday, Thursday
Friday , 9·4.

, I

'

Car

Toy

Yard Sale. Tuttles, 238 s. necessary. Call before s
2nd Ave ., Middleport, Oh. p.m. to Carol Day colfecl
Fri. &amp; Sat., July 24&amp; 25.
5IB·o189 ·8395.

Tuesday·Wednesday· Thur·
sday . 9·? Bedspreads,

niversary invitations
and
accessories.
Rl!asonab.1y
priced,
quick service.
-Look
without

;

HOME

Wr ite

Box

316,

Galfipolis.

- Portraits
-Weddings
- Anniversaries
-Passports
-and Now, an im·
pressive, complete line

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Pleasant .

SEMI invalid needs help
three

days

per

week .

Staggard. 30073-5897 .

9·?

Bedspreads,

Draperies , uniforms ,
miscellaneous items. 9

Walnut Slreel.
Pleasant .

Po int

YARD sale July 23 &amp; 24, 9·
8, Leon Baden Road,

Needed baby silter out Rt.
141, t ime 7 : OOPM to
ll :JOPM. One lillie g irl 2
yr.old . 5 to 6 days a week.
$25 per wk . Call «6· 1081 .

Daniels. 7•2·2951 or 'I'll·
2082.

WORKING girl With auto to STARKS Tree Trimming &amp;
Shrub service.
Insured .
Phone
304·576·2()10
.
board , 304·67S·6999 .
12

-..................
.......
0---.. .0

Situations Wanted

Custom

brush

hogg ing.

Pomeroy, Middleport. 992·
6331.
Have vacancy for room &amp;
board . Elderly or retired or

disabled . 992 ·6022 .

or

small

completely

fur ·

n ished, 53900. Call «6·0390.
House with acreage for
sale, 3 or A bdrs., fully car·

peted, 2 barns, 379·2258 or
after 6PM .

379 · 23~ ,

3 bdr. home, kit ., dining
rm .,

living rm . with
large family
surance Co . has offered room with woodburner, 1
services for fire insurance 1/ 2 baths, fenced in
coverage in Gallia County backyard , nice bar·b·Q ·
for almost a century. area , and c:ity schools. Call ·
Farm , home and personal -'46·2003.
property coverages are
available to meet in· 6 rm . &amp; bath , on large lot,
dividual needs. Contact Oak Hill, Oh. Washer &amp;
Lewis Hughes,
agent . dryer, air cond . Call 682·

SANDY AND BEAVER In· fireplace,

Phone .u6-33I8.

741• after I PM .

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN·
can ·
your

celled"?
Lost
operator's License"? Phone
'1'12 · 21~

Full ·time Program Coor·
dinator to work with persons handicapped with
mental retardation in a
group home in Bidwell.
Ohio. A social services
related degree is required ;
applicant
must
be

Qualified

Mental

dation

Professional

(QMRP)

or

Retar-

YARD sale 2108 Monroe
Ave. Friday &amp; Saturday
July 24 &amp; 25.
BIG yard sale at 827 30th
St. Thursday, Friday and
sunday .
Public Sale

District. Shown by appt .

16

only caii367·78J5 .

Specializing In Zen ith .
House Calls. Now servicing

bedrooms upstairs, built· in
k itchen , dining room , large
living room, utility room,
pantry ,
bath.
Frame

Radio Til
&amp; CB Repair
RON'S TV SERVICE

Motorola Quazar. Call I·
304· 576-2398 or o446-24.5.4 .
18

Wanted to Do

Remodeled 2 story house, 3 :

building and 2/3 acre 101.
Willing to negotiate price.
'1'12·7719 in Bradbury .

D.J.'s LAWN MOWER
REPAf R · On Neigh · 2 story house with attached ·
single &amp; 5 car garage. 11!2 ·
bOrhood Rd., all makes ser· baths,
3 bedrooms, large
viced. Specializing in Lawn
l.r
.,
stone
fireplace, fully
Boy . Blades sharpened .
On 1 acre of
Call .u6 «2S after 5 p.m. carpeted.
Pick up and
delivery ground located 1 mile out
on 1~ off Rt . 7 bypass . 992
available .
7040.
Certified Clerk·Typist will

do typing . Call
anytime

(80

367·7615

cents

per

page) .
in my home, would prefer

day shift. Call-'46· 1749.
TV servic:e ca ll s. Call 992·

6776 or 992·2034 . Also used
color TV for sale.

Older home in the country
with 2.3 acres, 4 bedrooms,
bath, garage . Centrally
located to all 3 mines.

$17 ,500. 742 ·2502.
Modified A frame, 3 bdr . 2
baths, carpet. Sprial stairs,
circular stone fireplace, 8

a cres . Col1992-774l .

By owner, old house, lot

Sewing ·alterations . Phone

304-882·2038 .

electric, gas, water in town
tor sale or trade tor a place
on the Ohio River . 222

Beech

QMRP

eligible ; experience w ith
persons with mental retardation is preferred. Send
resume to Carol Baisden,

BY OWNER : 4 bdr., split
level. living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat·in
kitchen, lg . family rm., 2
112 baths, located in Tara
Estates, Club house and

pool privileges, $75,000
firm . Kyger Creek School

Wanlecl to do baby silling

St.,

Middleporl .

Aberta Backus.

Flaaaelal

1978 Swinger one and one·
half ba t h, fireplace . Phone

P 0 . Box 60•, Jackson, OH
45640 . Buckeye Community

21

Services is an equal op·
portunlty employer .

LAWN &amp; Garden Equip·
ment Sales &amp; Service. For sale or rent 9 room
Owner wishes ro retire. house Park Drive $325 . per
~nquire at Ourdoor Equip· month . Phone 304·675·2885.
men! Safes, Jet. Rts . 7 &amp; 35,
Gallipolis, or phone -'46·
HOUSE -Meadowbrook Ad3670 for appointment.

location Dwight Sayre's

8

Your Piano rusting in sum·
mer HuMidity? Free in·
spectlon with tuning. Lane

stay with lady for room and

schooling will prepare you

of items.

THE PHOTO
PlACE

Wr ile P .O. Box 177. Pt.

antiques,furnlture

P l easant .

BOGGS

&amp;

We have
references. Phone 2S6· 1560.

New 3 bdr. house with

Three Family Yard Sale on Wilh the Army National
588 in Rodney, OH . Friday Guard, you'll have a part
and Saturday July 24·25th . time job with full ·tlme

3305

Qualify

Satisfaction

BUILDING and carpentry garage and full basement ·
and remodeling. Phone 304· s.-s.ooo. Call-'46-0390.
·
675·2«0.

C:lub, PO Box 1823, Sum·
mervi lle, SC 29&gt;183 or call l ·
803·871-9850, 2~ hours.

10 7 li e

Pomerov, Oh .

tor

Yard Sale wed ., Thurs ., &amp; Parties now In our 26tn
Fri. Clothing and misc. year, is expanding to your
items. 1 mi le out 218 on area, and has openings for
managers and dealers .
Kriner Rd . follow signs.
Party plan experience

992 · 5682

or 992·73! 1

c hest,

wardrobe

514 Hilda Dr. behind Spring
Valley, Plaza.

barn, 30•·895·3621

trademark :
Secretary and receptionist,
good typing skills requ i red.

CABIN

LONELY
Christian
Singles. Meet Christian

year old, nice around the

ROBERTS
CON ·
STRUCTION CO. Inc ., Out

NEW

YARD SALE Fri . &amp; Sat,
July U &amp; 25. 9:30·6: PM. 622 Great Bend Oil Inc . 269
Jay Dr., Gallipolis . variety Lower
River
Rd .,
of Items .
Gallipolis. Call-'46·4285.

Garage Sale Fri. 24th, 9-5.

2 SNOW while tom cals, 1

Auction and Real Estate

co. Call for terms . o446·0552
or o446·081B . 428 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, DH ., &gt;15631.

home ,

helpfu l.

J&amp;L BLOWN.·
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

on

vestock·real estate. Licen·

sed and bonded In Ohio,
and West wv . Bud McGhee

Wanted to do. Housework
in Chester, Tuppers Plains,

2233 Chestnut St .

Caii992 ·3U1 from 9·6.

· singles lnyour area. Write
Southern Christian Singles

Cottageville

estales·farm equlpment·ll·

ber Shop, Middleport . '1'12·
3476.

Large Yard Sa le Fur ·
niture, clothing, and misc .
Thurs. 23 &amp; Fri . 2•. 9 till 5.

Some

in

weekend. Phone 300723398, Cottageville, wv.

Complete Auction Servic:e
stock reduction -close outs·

Homes for Sale

college student. After 5 304675·2468.

Gar age sale 62 112 Jrd.
AVe. Gallipolis. Fri. &amp; Sat.
Chlldrens clothing, toys,
jeans, and lots of misc .

day l ime. 992·3704.

GALLIA C:leaning and
Reni·A·Mald Service Inc.,
Free Estimates, bonded,
Insured, phone 2oA5·92~.
Cleaning by the week, mon·
thor contractual .

31

INEXPENSIVE
Yard Sale

has openIngs for managers

and dealers. Party plan ex·
perlence helplul. Car &amp;
phone necessary . Call
before 5 p.m. to Carol Day
collect 518·&gt;189·8395.

Plano tuning and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your Plano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard. 446-~72,
Galllpolfs.

Posl hole d igging. 7•2·2577.

dresser,

7

Friendly Home Toy Parties
now In our 26th year, Is ex·
paneling to your area, and

COMMERCIAL and In·
dustrlal
photography. ·
Phone o446·2909 or 446-7226 .
alter 4p.m .

1ewe1ry, rrngs, old c:o1ns &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar-

30• · 881 · 2038.

Reward .

Opportunity Is vours just
for lhe asking . Ask your
Beeline stylist and she will
be happy to help you join
lhe Beeline world of
fashion and success. Phone
992·3941 between the hours
of9·6.

lady

Professional
Services

2J

Woman to stay with elderly
Wanted good used baby
bed. Cail446·3974 .

KITTENS 304-675·1138.

~·

Help Wanted

Lady to li\le in especially in

Standing limber. Call 388·
9906.

BEDS·I RON , BRASS , old
1 ornery tiger kitten.
341. 8 weeks old .

11

FEATHER BEDS WAN ·
TED, ANY CONDITION .
MISC., BOX 65, AURORA ,
IND. 47001. GIVE DIREC ·
TION WILL CALL SOON . . Full time &amp; part time bar·
lenders, part II me
CASH PAID for clean, late waitress. Must be 21 or
model used cars. Smith older. Apply In person. No
Bulck· Pontlac , GAllipolis, phone calls. Meigs Inn.
Ohio. Call-'46·2282.

today.
Since you left us and went

HJ SO"

Ph.

WANT TO BUY Did fur ·
nilure and Antiques 01 all
kinds, call Kenneth swain,
2.56-1967 In the evenings .

949·2862
949·2160

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

Pomeroy , OH.
992·2174

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give .way and
Canl of Thanks
~ not Offer or attempt to
We would like to express Offer any olher thing tor
our heart felt tnank you, to sale may place an ad In this
all our friends and neigh· column. there will be no
bOrs WhO Offered and gave charge to the advertiser.
their loya l friendship and
support to us, during the
dealtl of Ernest (Jr.) Ward. KITTENS, 8'h weeks. .W.·
And loving gredltude to the
pallbearers WhO helP carry
him away to heaven and 2 yellow tiger stripe, 1
beige k!Hens . Call2&gt;15-580o4.
peace. Thank you all .
Sincerely wife,
Annabelle and children, 6 kittens, 3 tiger stripe, 2
l;)on,Evelyn, Rulh, Kay, twins and 1 pure black. Call
and Tammy.
-'46·0615 or see at 3 Garfield
Ave.
I wish to express my sin·
Lovable kittens to good
borhoocl people for collec· homes 2 yellow tiger, one
cere
thanks
to
the
neigh·
tlng $57.50 to donate ro can· black and while litter
cor In honor of my wife trained . C:aii446·U79.
Mrs . Gemma easel.
Thanks for the masses of 4 kittens, mother was
the catholic people. All
food brought In and hun· calico. Call-'46·7139.
dredsofcardssenl. Thanks
3,... . 'tens. All females. 2,j.l
to everyone . Paul c:ascl .
!,_ .more Sl., Middleport.
2
In Memoriam
Dog House . 992·5204.

Wantld to Buy
SCASHI
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL ·
446-4175
OPEN9T05

Free Estimates
Reasonable
Pric•s
Call Howard

ROTAVAII'TORS

From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator

'

Glvuway

mother Mary Frances
McQua id who passed away
July22,
1974.
It has been Seven years ago

or 992·7505
4· I7-Ifc

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Farm Buildings

ot nr ce carpetin g, 3
bedroom s,
formica
baT h. e lec base boa rd
heat. 1. porches. patio,
gar den and nrcety ca r ed
t or lot SJS,OOO .
340 ACRES -- Fen ced ,
som e f a r m la nd , lots of
de er and oth er w i ldlife.
Several good spa rs for
pond s. 10 r oom h ome, 2
tutl ba ths. fr ee gas,
gara g e ,
and
other
bu1tdrng '&gt; .
Owner
an&gt;~rous to sell.
NIC E OLDER HOM E 7 rooms. 3 bedrooms.
nrce carpe t.ng, ba th .
burlt rn k rt wrth stove,
Qrt S F A furn ace . storm
dr s
a nd
windows
Ba sement, front porch,
clnd
qarage . Asking

_

All lypes of roof work.
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.

Call K·en Young

SERVICE

hardwood floors.

Nancy Jaspers-Associate

Cheryl Lemley , A soc.
Phone 742· 3171
Velma Nicinsky . Assoc .
:"~~~ = 7'1:i ·l092 .

ROOfiNG ·

APPLIANCE SERVICE

Asking SJB,OOO.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL

$16,500.00.

992 7656

kE&gt;E&gt;P Ttlos. Act tor Future Re ttrenu

I acre back of Ractne. Large

3 bedrooms,

Free Estimates
992-6011

~

Elva and Lewis
and Hudson
son·in· .lay,
i~~~~~~~~~;t~~~~~;~~;;t,~=====~~~~~ daughter

130 ACRES - (Old Durst Farm) c lose to Raven·
swood Bridge. All mineral rights. Plenty of pasture
and woods.
room s inc l uding

1ft
SANIT•noN
SERVICE

7-l7I mo .

ASking $58,000.
3 ACRES-In Raci~e . Surveyed. Asking$16,000.

•

'

PH. 94~2285

Rd. All mineral rights. Asking$37,000 .

' '

'.

Monday · Fr iday
4 p.m . to 11 p.m .
All Day Saturday

Going
Somewhere?

.A tur

n ac e, ., _, ge porc h .
qara qe and storag e
Asking $ 18.500
Offer
welcomed
RACINE
3 or 4
bed room hom e, bam
w 1lh shower . nat . gas
F A tu rna ce and cen
t r al ilr r condilroning . 4
porch es ,
stovt&gt;
&amp;
r efr iQerit tor 10 la rqc k i l.
Basement , carpf&gt; trn g ,
c tfy w &lt;'! ter and .66 of an
nc r e S48 .500
EX TRA NIC E -- Like
nC'w 3 bedroom ran ch.
F~m r ly
room
with
heatolator lr r epl ace ,
sun deck . large porch
and IMgc wooded lol .
Nr cc carpe ting and db l
t rn1 shed qa r age .

: ···························~·,··~·~·. ;!
••

Fabrications .

ACREAGE- 14x70 mobi le orne . This location has
shade t r ees, pond a nd garage. Asking $16,000.
CHESTER - 3 nice acres w i th shade and fruit
trees . Insulated J BR home, garage, small barn.
Lots of indoor living spac:e as well as outdoor.

story, 3 bedroom home.
Full basement . Lovely
wrap·around porc h. Has
own garage for off ·
str eet park i ng . Asking

Metal

Lg. 2 BR mobile home (1 BR I4XI61,

large eat-in kitchen, many cupboards, covered front
patio . carport, outbuilding . Very nice . $22,000.
39 ACRES- 3 BR home 3 miles off Rt . 7 on Texas

Nice 1

•

Call742 · 3195
or 992· 7680

~~ ~QJHER CARRIER AP,PtiCATIONS .ARE NOW IEING
~::·,1·C:CEPTED. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED CALL: ·- 44_~~~2~·

.'

ches

20 ACRES - On land contract . Chester area. 10%
down , owner to help finan ce . Asking $13,000.

Comfortable J bedroom
home with bath on 2'"4
aces . Sells for $16,000.00.

5 7tc

•Steel • Aluminum •
, Casting • Trailer Hit-

pt. $62,000.

ms.
COUNTRY LIVING -

&lt;6t74 . 171 I. B. I5. 22.29 fBl

home rn Middleport
Modern ba th . lots of
woOd cab i" .t.O t he kit

package and much m_ore_._
Anyone interested, please contact:
Mark Banks: Circulation Dept.
.
At; ~92-21~~ (Daily Sentinel)

••

Cou ld have ex tra BRs or family room in basement:
Plumbed for 3rd bath if needed. Garage . Call for ap-

RACINE -

Heating .

SERVICE

WELD SHOP

equipped . 3 BR and 2 baths , carpeted throughout.

Large, solid brick
home in Pomeroy 3
spacious bedrooms, l'h
baths and equipped kit·
chen I firep la ce. Hom e
is well insul at ed . Close
ro shopping Ca ll for ter ·

POMEROY -

Rl 554 Gallia Co., split entry,

spacious L~. archway into formal DR . Kltc:hen

ONLY $15,000 .00.
OWNER FINANCING

Bathrooms; Remodelin ·

· ~tf~c~
~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~fi:;~~~~~~~J~··~
BARNETI'S
HOWARD ·

3 bedroom

.

--.

STARTER

or r ental in·
vestment . 3 bed·r oo ms,
carpet throughout . In
Middleport close to
stores and shopping .
HOME

Petitioner
RobNI E Bu ck . Ju c1Q ro
ProbcH r Court a t
M 0rQ SCount y . Otl ro
d. E x OII1 C10 Ctcr k

i• for a bundle drop carrie.r in the Middleport :•
•
area. This position earns you up to $40.00
:
.:) :&lt; ~ per week. Insurance Coverage is also in the .:

..

NICE

7. . mo. pd .
15 1

LETART, OH. - Brick home, llf2 bath, 3 BRs, hard,wood floor.s, fireplac e, clean, neat and ready to
move into. lOo/o Loan can be assumed. Asking

535,900.
NEW HOME -

Ap·

custom

g, Plumbing, Electric,

The Village of
Middleport, Oh ,
Ph. 992 · 501 6

985· 3965

OFFICE 742·2003

JOSE PH RAYMOND
PRO FFITT

:····································
•
This newspaper is now accepting applications :

;

HOBSTETTER
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

ptiances,

63 1

Trash Pickup 1n

992 · 2478
or
Bla ·ne Ml'lhoan
1

S27 ,500

Trussell 949· 2660
Roger Turner 992·5692
Dot1ie Turner 992· 5691
J eo:~ n

I

Housing
Headquarters

PULLINS
EXVACATING

S37, 500

Ap

2 1 acre tarm plus
newly remode l ed 4
bedroom home, li ving,
dini ng room. kit chen.
bath , storage room
Barn
and
oth e r

pr o &gt;~

II Print one word in each
spa ce below Each rn
I i1ial or group of f igure.-,
I c oun rs as a wora Count
I name an d address or
1 pnone number 1f used "" '"""
I You ' l l get be tter result s
1t vou oesc r 10e t ul ly, ---+--+--+--+-- ~
I g1 ve pr ice . T he Sent.nel
I r eser ves th e r rghl To To 16
1 c tas:&gt; dy , ed •l or r erec t _T_o_2_5+--+--+--l--l

l wanrea
l j;or Sale
l Announcement
l For Rent •

Real Estate- General

SYRAC US E - Modern
7 room f r ame onl y a few
yr s. old . 4 bedroo ms,
balh
with
c er am i c
showe r , nat. gas F .A .
fu r nace, full baseme nt
w ith tamity room Car
pet•ng , large porch and
n ic e lot near P 0 .

POMEROY,O.
992· 2259

INam•--------------------

I
I
I

fa ct that the said John L.
Dodderer
ha s
fa i led ,
w ithout justifiabl e cause to
communicate with the
minor or to provide tor the
maintenanc e and suppor t
of the minor as required by
law or judic ial decree for a
per i od of one
year
preced ing the f i ling of the
adoption petition or the
placement ot the minor in
the hom e of th e petitiOner ,
John Joseph Proffitt .
You are required to an ·
swer within twenty -eight
days
aft er
the
l ast
public at ion whic h will be
on the 5th day of August ,
1981 . Furthermor e, lhe
hearing on said adoption i5
sc hed uled for th e 9th day of
Septem ber , 1981. at 10 :00
o'clock A.M. before th e
Honorable Rober t E . Buck ,
Proba te Judge, at the
Meigs County Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Phone
1-(614) · 992 · 3325

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when vou g~t
results. Money not refundable

l any
I pur

1972 , and said chitd has
been living in t he nome of
said Petitioner si nce Sep
t ember 30t h, 1972, and that
said minor i s in the per·
manent cus tody ot Ardeth
Kay Proffitt, Route 3,
Racine, Ohio, 45771.
Said Pe ti tioner further
alleges in his Pet it ion tha t
the -:onsent of John L. Dod
der er is not required to th is
adopti on b y r eason Qf t he

Publi c Notice

PUbliC Notice

Custom Kitchens,

nu

Farm Ponds · Land
Clearing. Roads .
Call :

Real Estate - General

Public Notice

tensi.ve remodel·
in g .
• Electrical work
• Roofing work •
13Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583

~·~·~m~o=.is=~~·~~=~
F;~~~~~~~~==~~~
,7rR wnRK
D0CAT
J&amp;C
H• L WR
. ITESEL
J&gt;.6.C
.

9,556.

U.

Public Notice

J·

C. R. Mash
Consb uction

CONSTRUCTION
New "omes • ex: ·

. . ..

' "' ' '
'
"' "'''"'" ' r

~

~"

Social work position part·
time at local Develop·
mental Center advocating
for developmental disabled
individuals. Must have

BS/BA

or • related

ex ·

perience . Send resume to

Business

304-675·5672. 2 miles out

Opportunity

Jericho.

For sale, by owner, Coun ·
try Grocery Store, gas
pumps, air tank , living
quarters . Oak Hill area .

Muriel Ranum, Suile 112
1350 W. 5th Ave .. Colu m·
bus, Oh ~212 .

reasonable.

Person to call on business

Unexcelled

Call

S1l5.00 to $500 weekly doing
malllno work. No ex·
perience required. AP·
PLY: Circle SaleS, P.O.
Box 224·D, Richmond Hill,
NY 11418:
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and etrn llood monav ptus
some ~~rut gifts ao. a 5011·
llnol nillte •carrier, PhOne
U1 riDht away and get on
lhe eligibility list' at 99'2·
2156 or 99'2·2157.

15•2.

614 -682 · 7813 , 32

&amp; Auction

Neals Auction Hogsett. and industrial acounts in
WVA. Rt . 2. Everysat . 7 :00 areas
surrounding
PM .
(Consignments Gallipolis. Must have own
taken), (Wi ll buy furniture) car . Send resume to
Lonnie Neal367-7101 .
Sparkle Supply, ISO 3rd
Ave., Galflpolls, Oh . or call
AUCTION at MI. Alto Auc· 16W o446·4109 tor further in ·
tlon &amp; Sales every Thur· formation .
Sday 7 p.m. Antique auc·
lion f Irsl Sunday each mon· Position open for a trouble
th 1 p.m . Consignments ac· call/malntance worker .
copied each WedneSday 6· Please apply at Dhlo Job
lOp.m . Thunday12noonto Servl~es, E .O.E.
6 p.m . Ken Cole Auc·
tloneer.
Immediate position open
looking tor novae wives
who want to work part·
Wanted to Buy
9
lime. Contact Greyhound ·
Bus Center 446· 7332, Thur·
$!lay· Friday , t0·7PM.

dition, 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, c:en·
tral air, basement, 304·675-

ground

floor

opportunity! We' re looking
for sales leaders with the
ability to promote a
legitimate multi ·levet sales

program

backed

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

PRICES REDUCED · used ·
mobile homes and travel

trailers .
TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES . CALL
«6·7572.

by ex·

CLEAN US ED MOBILE .
HOMES
KESSEL'S ·
QUALITY
MOBILE '
HOME SALES , 4 MI. :
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. RT.
PACESETTER FASHION · 35. PHONE «6·3868 or -'46·
s Oilers a highly profitable 7274.
and beautiful Jean &amp; Spor·
!Swear shop Of your own . Must sell Ux70, 3bdr. ·
Featuring over 100 brands· mobile home on acre, new ·
Levi, Calvin Klein, Jor· drilled well, Sll ,OOO. Call ·
dacha, Lee, Wrangir·many «6·4394, Davis Rd.
more. $16,500.00 Include!
Inventory, installed fix ·
tum. ln·shop training &amp; 14x7o mobi.le home w ith tipone paid airfare to Apparel ~1, 3 bdr ., central air,
Center. Call anytime. Mr. priced on Inspection. Call
446·2544 before I PM .
Hartley 12141 937-9176.
perience leadership and a

quality product line . For
further information call
61H72·55~ .

22

Mont to LINin

1973 Crown Haven, 14x65,
three bedroom, new car· :
FHA·IIA·Conventllill Home pet,, 1971 c:ameron, 14x64, .
Loans, Columbus Flr.s t two bedroom, new carpet. •
Mortgage co .. &lt;163 Second · 1972 Champion, 12x60, two ·
Ave., Gallipolis, Oh., -'46· bedroom, new. carpet. 1976
7172
Cameron, 12x60, two
bedrooms, bath.&amp; l/2, new
carpet. 1970 PMC, 1.2X60, .
23
Professional
two bedroom, new carpet, •
StrVICII
B '&amp;• S Sales, Inc ., 2nd and
HORSE shoeing 304-675· VIand Street, Pt. Pleasant,
WV'Phone675·,j.l24.
6626.

Y

.

�Page-l
32

Sentinel

1980 14x70 Mobile Home. 3
bedrooms, extra room with
wood bi.Jrner, sitting on 2
acres. Good building site
for home. $24.000. 614-985·
4395.
12x60 Buddy, 3 bedroom,
fvrnished , central a ir .
washer-dryer, awning, un·
derplnning . Set up in Coun·
try Mobile Home Park.
$5.900. 992·7479 .
USED Mobile Home . 576·
2711.
1971 Darlan 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Crown
Haven, •• x 6S with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65 , 2 bedrooms.

1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3

bedrooms. 1972 Nashau. u
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B 11•
Sales, Inc. 2nd an d Viand

s

?leasant,

wv .

Phone 675·4.42.4 .

Trail er for sale or r ent,
partly furnished , Gallipolis
F erry . Phone304 ·675-1867.
67 12x60 mobile
Phone 675-4898.

home .

1967 Tra i ler for sale . Phone

304-675·4898 .
2 bedroom

mobile home

10x45 S1400. Phone 30H75·
1452 or 675· 2996 .
Nashi 2 bedroom trailer ,

pr iced on inspection, good
condi1ion.

Phone

304-675·

6273 or 675·3442 .
1971 Brookwood , bath and
half, has been remodeled ,

wall

To

wa ll

car -

peting,unfurnished. Phone

675· 1553 .

lJ

Farms tor Sale

55 acres, nine room house,
barn, minerals, secluded .

gOOd hunting . Morning Star
area . S65 ,000. Additional
101

44

lor Rlftt

New 1912 6b14, 3 bdr ., 2
baths. electric, turn., gar ·
den tub, bav window,
$13.950. Several use&lt;l total
eleclrlc (2 1979 Winsor' s
70x l4) . 1973 Bachelor Pen·
!house 70xl2 with Roman
tub. 2 preowned double
wide, 2 &amp; 3 bdr. Kanauga
Moble
Home
Sales ,
Kanauga, Oh . Cal l .u6·9662 .

Pt .

acres ava i lable. 949

2 bdr. trailer Roush Lane,
Cheshire, Oh . Phone 1·304773·5882.
For rent 2 bdr. tra iler. Call
.u6· 7334.
TraHer for rent In Rio
Grande, SlSO per mo. plus
utilities, $150 deposit. Call
388·8508.
2 bdr. trailer furn, gas and
water turn ., 1225. per mo.,

SIOO dep .• no pets . Call .u6·
4705.
For rent, 10)( SO 2 bedroom
mobile home. Rac ine area .
992· 5858.

2 bedroom trailer for rent .
Brown's Tra iler Park . 9923324.
2 bedroom Mobile HOme In

Racine . $175 . month, S75 .
deposit. Pay own utilities.
3677811 '
12X.60 trailer in Svracu!M!,
air cond ., washer and
dryer . Call992·2897 .
Two bedroom house trailer
on Ashton·Upland Road .
5150 plus utilities and
damage deposit. 3 miles
from Rt . 2. 675·4088 .
Two 2 bedroom house
trailers for rent , furnished ,
1 with central air, gOOd tor
working couple or couple
with 1 child . $150 per month
plusdeposit . 675· 4088 .

2 bedroom mobile home in
New Haven. adults only , no
Phone 304·615 · 1A52 or

.,,. ·~··

2 bedroom mObile home tor
rent . Phone 304 ·675·3885.
1 bedroom mobile home,
married couple only . No
pets S150 per month. Phone
304-675·4154.
1 Two

mobile home lots for
rent. married couples apply in person to Everette
Schwartz, Rf . 1, Locust
Road , Point Pleasant .

Two mobile home lots for
rent, married couples ap·
pi y in person to Everette
Schwartz . Rf. 1, Locust
Road , Point Pleasant .

2630.
BY owner , 53 acre farm ,
remodeled ,
beaut i ful
Colonia l style home , 4

bedrooms,

2 new baths,

OR RENT · almostnewux
70, 3 bedroom . 1 1h baths,
sitting on nice tot, ready to
move into. Phone JO.t·576·
2711.

central heat &amp; air, 1 wood

burning stoves, 1 connected
to heating system , 3 wells,

on blacktop road , 25
minutes from Pt. Pleasan t
on Rt . 62, 40 acres fenced ,
S82 ,500 . 304·937 ·J,IJ2

35

Raccoon

Creek ,

all

utilities available, 5300
down , owner will finance ,
call affer 3 p .m .. 256·6413 .
2 acres on Floyd · Clark Rd
close to Rt . 160, $4,000
Phone 446·0390 .
Green Beans. Pick your
own S6 .00 bu . Raynor
Peach Orchard, 5 miles
below Gallipolis on R1. 7
Ca ll 446·4807 .
1 plus acre lot on F latwood
Rd ., all wooded . Call 992
5396 after 5.
10 acres near Portor on old
160, ideal for home or home
sites . Road
f r ontage ,
assumable mort ., low in
teres!. Call 388 9060.
21 acres bottom land
located in Bidwell, Oh . Call
388·8429 .
Roughly 1112 acre, S.R. 684,
Harrisonville .
Ask i ng
$3,500 . 742·2577 .
Lots for sa le &amp; 2 new sub·
divisions in Racine Village.
On Vine St . &amp; Yel low Bush
Rd . 949·2340.
BY owner, 3 apartment
hou!te on approx . 1 acre .
~ive in one, rent others to
rpake your payment. Can
be converted single home.
crity water, will consider
l~nd contract . 675·1883 9·5
p.m .

~1

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr apartment lg. LR
and Kitchen . Across from
Honda Shop no pets. Call
446·3937.

Houses for Rent

~ bdr. house S250. Referen·

Second floor finished ef ·
ficiency apt. Furnished,
adults on l y, no pets . 729 2nd
Ave. Ga ui pol is .
a11 446 .

c

0'157 .
4 rent unfurn . apt. au car peted , $250 mo . SlOO dep,
utilities paid, no children,
no pets. Call446 ·3437
For rent new 1 bdr . apt .
Ca ll 446·0390 .

- - - · - · - - --

-

REGENCY APT . INC . 2
bedroom,
kit·
chenfurnished , carpeted,
bills partially paid . S200
mo.
Excelten'
neigh ·
borhood . 675 6722 or 675·
5104 .
Furnished efficiency apt .
$135 utilities pd .. share
bafh , su itable for one . Call
446 4416 after 7PM .

Furnished
Apt . $220,
utilities paid, adults, 1 bdr,
nice . Call 446·-4.U6 after
7PM .

- - - - - -- - - ·
NICE
UNFURNISHED
Apt. $200 mo. plus you pav
utilities . Adults only , no
pets . Avai lable Aug . 1. 446·

Misc. Merctt.ndJse

Spoce for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479.
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mabile
Home Park, CheShire, Oh .
992·3954.
TRAILER space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y , Pt. PleaSllnt, 675·
3248.

Sleeping room, middle·
aged white female, bet·
ween 3·S p.m . 67S-1060.

51

.. . .. g,o. .

Hoover Celebrity vaccum,
works good. Call.w.l-4134.

4 pc . LR suite, very good
cond., early Amer ican,
S325 . Call446·8118 .

2 MAPLE bunkbeds not
exactly alike . HIS. H30 .
with mattresses, good con dition, 304·675·2698 .
2 COMPLETE
hOney
maple twin beds, both $75 .
304-882 ·3348 or 882'-2211 .
Antiques

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too l arge . Also,
guns, pocket watches, and
coin collections. Call 557·
341!.

-==c=c========
M'

c-;;

;11"'1
::-__....,,~s.,.c.'-'M=e,_,rc,_,h,a..,n,d_,is~e~

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER ·
VICE , Complete sa les , ser ·
vice, supplies and in ·
stallation . .u6· 1324.
'HAY FEVER ' HOME
remedy, tradition for cen·
turies, if works. For com plete info and receipt send
today self addressed stam·
ped envelope plus S 1.00 to
S.R.A Co., P.O. Box 284,
Ga llipol is, OH 45631.
Burrough's
L6000
Programmable Accounting
Machine . GOOd cond . Call
(614) 446·2342 .
Lowest prices on Bemco
bedding in the area. Ca ll
for pri ces . Villiage Fur·
niture, 2605 Jackson Ave .,
675·1773.
Refrigerator, SSO . Call 367·
782&lt;
10 cubic H . cnesttype
freezer less than 1 yr . old.
Ca ll446·0230.

11067 .

ATTENTlON : Buy direct
from factory outlet. New
2 bdr . unfurn . apt., Main living room furniture,
St ., V inton . Clean con· upholstered sofas, chairs,
venient location, sec . dep., loveseats and hideabeds.
O!k frames, custom made .
Sl45 mo. Cal l 245·5818 .
Choice of size, fabric &amp;
sty le. Low, low prices on
3 bdr . house for rent and 3 fabric in stock . GOOd prices
rm . apt. utilities paid . Call on reupholstery . R&amp;M Fur·
675 5140 or 675·5386.
niture Manufactu!"ing, St.
Rt. 7. Crown City, Ohio,
1 bedroom apts. a&gt;Jailable 256·1470. Hours : Mon. thru
at Riverside Apts. Equal Friday 7:30·4:00, Tues .
Opportunity Housing. Call 7:30·8 :00, Sat. 1 :00·5:00.
992· 7721 .
6x10 metal shed reinforced
Apartment for rent . Call by 2)(4' s, on 4x.C foundation
floored . Easily moved,
992·5908 .
S200. Cal l .u6·0230.

76
AIR CONDITIONERS
sale priced, all sizes in
stock, expert installation
avai Iable. Village Fur·
niture. 260.5 Jackson Ave .,
304-675·1773.
EASY credit available now
to purchase furniture ,
televisions. or appliances .
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave .. 675· 1773.
7800 BTU air cond .. new.
Caii843·24U.
Yellow Freestone canning
peaches. Now thru Sept . 20.
Any quantity available.
Retail &amp; wholesale. Bob's
Market, Mason . Phone 773·
5721. Open daily till9 p .m .

26' TROUTWOOO travel
trailer and camp site on
Raccon Creek. Close to
Ohio River. $500 down .
Owner will finance . 614-256·
1216.
NEED several items of furniture,
appliances ,
televisions. Big discounts
for quanity purchase.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675· 1773.
BIG discounts for cash and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.
18,000 BTU air conditioner,
excellent condition, SJOO.
Phone 304·675-2820.
Roper 8 hp rotary mower in
good working condition .
Phone 304-675-6774 or 675·
2194.
Hotpoint
no
frost
refrigerator, one Yahama
Chappy. Phone 675·1553 .
SEARS air compressor,
l ike new, S285. 304-675· 1481 .
OLYMPIC stain, in stock
only $13 .95 Pt . Pleasant
Paint &amp; Wallpaper Center .

5~5-~
B~uo!':
' ld~i~n'l!9c;S~u'.!P'I'P'!!Ii~e~s­

Building materials, block ,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande , 0 .
Ca ll 245·5121.

56

Pets for Sale

AKC Registered brown
poodle pup. 3 months old .
DHL, Parvo&amp; Rabies shots
good to 1 year old. $150 . 992 ·
7102 .

THE FISH TANK and Pet
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
675·2063, Pt. Pleasant. New
hours. Now open on Wed .
Open 11-4 Mon . !hru Sat .
Fri . hours 11 ·6.
AKC
Dachshund ,
Pomeran i an an Pood le
pups895· 3958 .
TWO. 5 month old female
white, German Shepherd
puppies. AKC registered,
304-895·3473.
AKC Chow Chow puppies,
e&gt;&lt;cel lent pedigree, black
cream and red, male and
female . Glenwood 304·762·
2035.

They'll Do It Every Time

3 bedroom house in city ,
$175 per mo. Sec . dep. req.
Call446· 4729.
2 bdr. house in Evergreen,
all carpet, stove, and
refrig., S235 per mo. plus
dep. &amp; ref. Call245-9170.

3 room furnished coffage,
utilities furnished, adults,
no pets. Phone 304-675·2812
or 304-675· 1580.
TWO !le!lroom house 304·
675· 1371 or675-3812.
42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Unturn:, 2 bdr. trailer few
rent. Call ~3371.

For rent in Middleport, 2
bedroom furnlsh&amp;d apart·
ment. Calll-304·882·2566.
1 BEDROOM furniShed
apartment, utilities paid,
304·675· 1197.
1, 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apart·
ments now available at Pt.
Pleasant Inn. Also a
honeymoon au lie. All
utilities paid. Apartments
as 1- as
a -k.
Honeymoon suite $45, a
night. Call 304·675-6276.

suo.

cs

T# E SPU r

f}fRSCWAL t rrES· ..
.. ~--

~E,.. · H6 H ···

AN' R6MoMBER
WI-ISH WE. WERE.
FISHIN(; 0N WE
Fb!NT fn:&gt;S, AN'

1

CA~Ci&gt;HT

3

BIGBWESON
ONS LINE: ?

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
ORAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERY · KENNtl, AKC
Chow
puppies.
C FA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 4.46·
3844 after 4 p .m .
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding aU breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans . Call 446· 7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC Gordon sellers .
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call .u6·4191.
Minature POOdles, 2 male,
2 females, 9 wks. old. For
more info. call882·3956.

ACF Registered White and
shaded Silver Persian and
seal piont Himalayans.
Call 304·523·7749.
Beautiful INKC Reg. Peke·
a· Poo puppies and AKC
Reg. Pekingese puppies.
Phone 446 ·0857 .

THEY'" TAKE UP
MOIANTAIN CLIMBING
TO ~T AWAY' FR0+1
THoiR SARRACUt&gt;AS ..

71

Autos for Sole

Green beans, pick your
own $0 .00 bu
Raynor
Peach Orchard, 5 mites
below Gallipolis on Rt . 7.
446·4807.
Homegrown tomatoes, four
houses below Gall ipolis
Ferry post office , roadside
stand.

-·····-··I OIO "'T"
-. .........

1

... . .

I

1969 FORO LTO, auto., 429
eng ., 62,000 actual miles,
PS, PB, air. Runs gOOd, one
owner . Call388·9996 .
77 Trans AM many options
price redUced to $3,600.
Call446· 1136.

1966 Ford Fairlane good
cond . Call992·3743 .
1975 Ford Mavrick 2 dr ., 6
cyl.,
auto, good gas
mileage, 32,500 miles,
almost new tires, exc .
cond . Call446·2235.

1976 Cadillas DeVIlle, low
mileage, ex. cond., 4 new
radials, no rust, S3,79S. Call
.u6·4525.
For sa le 1964 Ford pickup
tru c k , 1968 Buick Skylark ,
and 1970 Buick Skylark .
Phone 446·4684.
79 Thunderbird 302 motor,
PS, PB, red &amp; white. sharp,
$4,500. Call379·2435.

1978 CUTLASS Salon . 675·
2722 or 675·5571.
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, wv. Phone 675·
1574or675·2881 .

1972 Volkswagen A·l con·
dillon. Phone 304·675·3476.
73 DOdge dart sport black
an black cragers, new
tires, 340 automatic . Phone
304·675· 1769.

Farm Equipment

1981 Plymouth Champ,
12HP, 2·wheel, Gravely, 40 7,000 miles, $4,800. Phone
in . mower. 26
in . 675·6951.
culitivator . Sears electric
week·wacker 16 in. cut. 1978 Chevroletb fourspeed,
Sears drop spreader. All in excellent condition and gas
ex c. cond. Ca II 446·6575.
mileage. 1-304·882·2915.
Four 15,000 gli iiOn tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Ohio . $3 ,000.00
each . Phone1 ·30H22·2781.
Farmall cub tractor with
cultivators. Has new c lut·
c h, pressure plate, throw
out bearing, transmission
over hauled, magenta
overhauled. new starter,
new battery , battery
cables, new voltage relay ,
runs good . 247·20'12.

62

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

CHARLIE' S SALVAGE
1978 CAMARO, sliver with Auto parts, auto repair,
black Interior, 30.5 cu. In, wrecker service, buy
;&gt;S, AC, ln·dash tape. automobiles, radiators and
$4,000. Call 446·8049 after bafferles . .u6·7717.
3:30.

Boxer puppy, female, 8 mo.
old. Needs room to run and 1973 Camero 6 cyl, 3 spd.,
loves kids . Call3888429 .
PS, AM/ FM radio. Phone
388 ·9334 after 6 PM.
57
Musical
Instruments
1976 Chevolet Love with
top.
Call .u6·1537 after
Lowrey Organ double
keyboard, like new, S900. 5PM.
30&lt;-882·2476.
Burgandy Monte Carlo
Landau,
1976, loaded with
58
Fruit
air. Cal l247·2411.
&amp; Vegetables

61

BLACK leather cou c h,
Early American $40.00.
Pony with saddle, $75 . very
gentle, 304· 675·2574 .

APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES 675·4130.

'

Pets tor S•le

S6

17x6S Mobile Home, real
good condition. 1979 Ford
4x4 , customized,
low
mileage . 1969 Mustang . 304·
773·9185.

S rm . house on Chilli cothe

SMALL furnished apart·
ment, no ~ts, references
required, 304·675· 1365.

Boats and
Motors tor Sale

70 Model 18 11. RunabOUt
with trailer, 65 H. P . Mer·
Service .
curv Motor. Mlsc. Equlp· LOCKSMITH
Residential,
automotive
..
ment, excellent condition
$1200. Call 675-3383 afler Emergency service. Call
812·2079 .
8 :00 f' .M.

r-------==:...1..=======::::;;;.,~

Apartments. 675·5548 .

75

Gene' s Carpet Cleinlng,
deep stream extractlc:in.
Free estimates, reasonable
rates . Scothguard, 992·6309.

1971 Cadilla c, reasonable.
Phone 67S·3901 .

1972 Chevelle Malibu, $600.
Phone 304·458·1853.
1977 Olds Brougham, ex·
cellent condition . can be
seen at 2307 Mf. Vernon
Avenue.
1951 Chevy delux, 4 door,
good condition, caii6U·388·
8240.

Wanted to Buy

Trucks lor Sale
Standing timber, 10 acres 72
or more. Phone 614 ·634· 75 Chevrolet 112 T. V·8,
2289.
auto . ,
new tires.
75
Chevrolet 1 T, 12ft. stake
bed low milage. can 446·
63
Livestock
0322.
Pony stud service. For ap·
pointment phone992·3904.
1975 Ford 3/4 ton pickup
truck, automatic, PS, PB,
2 milk goats, $60. each or 360 engine, air cond .· Call
bolh lor SIOO. Freshened .u6·2641, 8· 5.
June. Shade. Ohio (6141
696·1234.
1975 Ford 1 ton ilatbed
truck, good engine &amp;
2 kid goats, 5 weeks old, 8 : 25x20 tires, bOdy rough.
males . $25 . each . lf2 Cail.w.l-2641, 8·5.
Nubian. Shade, Ohio 614·
696·1234.
1977 CHEV . 1h Pickup,
most all factory options
6 week old roosters tor sale. plus extras. Real good
25 cents each . 949·2502.
cond. Ph. 367·0107 or 446·
06411 after 5 p .m .
2 yearling helffers, 2 bulls,
500·550 lbs . 992·7458.
73 Dodge Truck, 318 engine.
Call388·9036.
1 Alpine Nanny goat
lreshed In April the first 1971 Ford Dump Truck .
time. Call304·895·3821.
Good coild. $3,200. Roy
!Frankl Riffle. 915·4395.
Three vear old pair Reeve
Pheasants, also trio Silver 1979 If• ton cilevv pickup. 4
Pheasants. Phone 675·4367. wheel drive. lock our hubs.
54,100. 949·2190.
Hay&amp;Graln

77

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr . wrecker
service. "Big or small" we
tow them alii 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipol is , Ohio. Day
- 446-2445 or N lght · 446·
4792.

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

CAPI'AIN EASY
THE~E'5 THAT MACHit.l5 THAT

!DON'T KNOW
WHO IT IS, BUT

FIDOLE!io A~Ut.ID WITH THE!
!Pin OF LAIORATORY RATS.

HARPER HalStead, lawn
mower repair and shar·
pening service, 10 a .m .·6
p.m . 675·5868 .
RON'S Television Service. :
Specializing in zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446· 2454.
Ser·

COOK ' S Television
vice ,
Henderson ,
Phone 675·2250 .

wv

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

Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any color.free pickup
&amp; delivery in Gallipolis T
and
R building,
area, Hammond Body remodeling, also papering,
Shop, 221 Mill St. 379· 2782 .
carpet installation, and
E &amp; V BOdy Shop Want
your car looking new? Call
446·9304 Georges Creek Rd.
78

Camping
Equipment

generlll
home
im ·
provements. 675·5689, 675·
5304.

EXPERIENCED Mason,
Rooter. Carpenter, Elec·
triclan, General repairs
and remodeling. Phone 304·
675·2088 or 675·4560.

1980 Prowler camper 1711..
tully self contained, ex .
cond. Ca ll 256·6626, Crown
City,OH .
82
1977 26 FT. TlTAN motor
home, generator, air cond.,
awning, TV antenna, 6 ft.
top carier, sleeps 6, 13,000
miles. Call 367· 7300 alter
5 :30.

.¢..,

?-=

ANNIE

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

··"E.JF'c~

OLI VER! TH().;E

'r-J7 • ~~C'.'
FilM/LIES, AN':'--

PWEP. :: MCWE' THAT
YOUii NOKTHE~s·~;;.'

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or .u6·4477

LIVE :'i :0' "T :VJ~~ ~:

- .,~~ NECE'55MY,

(r~M: C~- ;_~~ T

rLL 3E !~

llfOL06EnC,
.1N~ ::~J / £ \ c

IJJ~- ~ITM

Y.JU

\'I'IEN I'VE ~EeC' THE

-:-...IS ~'-~')
t&lt;.)~ SE Tr~N

wj:7

iT ~LRtAi::&gt;)
I

CONTfiMINfiT'EP ~~ ~ -= ~

~EPJRT C,1R ~~J~L),
~.)~ NOW~ l

5VT

TIWST )tXJ'll

2\CUSE ME IF I -:;,1'1

GJODNIGHT...

Jr Elili.\ fN...

J&amp; P

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

69 YELLOWSTONE self·
contained. Phone 304·367·
3427

0. C. Contractors Plum·
bing, electrical. heating,
roofing, aluminum, vinyl
i i
and home painting.
1972 20 ft . Terry Camper,
self contained, sets on ren· l675·3l76 or 675·1240.
ted riverbank lot in Mason,
$2500. 882·3662 .
14 ft . trailer camper .
Sleeps 6. 304·675·2267 .

CAMPER top for long wide
bed, luggage racK, good
condition, S200. call 304·576·
27S2.

&amp;er"'ees
81

Home
Improvements

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer' s
Steamway . Call 614-446·
2096.

DOZER WORK Compare
RATES. Phone 256·
1560.

Oitcher work. Charles R.
Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe.
Gas, electric. and water.
742-2903.
EDWARD' S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
In septic rank. 675·1234.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
.u6· 4208

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Fuller Electric Co. ComJIM MARCUM Roofing
plete rewiring, commercial
spouting and siding. 30 or residential, and elec·
yel!!ln experience. Free trlcat maintalnance, also
estimates . Remodeling. on call. Ph. 446· 2171,
Call 388·9857.
Gallipolis.
STUCCO PLASTERING ·
textured ceilings. com·
mercial and residential,
tree estimates. Call 256·
1182.

ALLEYOOP

Dozer work. Small lobs a
specialty. 742·2753.

BACK HOE and Septic tank
Service . Larry Sldenstrlcker. 675·5580.

Quaitly Cooling and
Heating Service Call 388·

GASOUNE ALLEY

Clovia, wh4 not let
Rovers relatives
take him?
He's their

chewinq
on his
blanlt.et
aqain!

problem,

not yours!

SEWING Machine repairs.
ser.ice. Authorized Singer
SANDERS
CON · Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
TRACTING, Carpentry Scissors . Fabric Shop,
work &amp; painting, concrete, Pomeroy . 992·2284.
landscaping, 446·2787.

JACK ' S REFRIGERATIO·
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car· N. air condition service,
pet Cleaning featured by commercial. Industrial . .
Haffelt Brothers Custom Phone 882·2079.
Carpets . Free estimates.
Call .u6-2107.
Clotus B. Buck Jr . Home
and Industrial Sewing
WOOOSHOP - Cabinets, Machine Repair. Also will
picnic
tables,
porch l:t~rra:~de&amp;:o• r sell old or used
swings, most wood prOducmachines. · Phone .,
ts. 101 Court St., GallipoliS.
1659.
Call446-2572.
WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice, call675· 1582.

IS

.

WfNNfE IJEHINP ·
MY &amp;tfi!K/

HEREXPOSEP

ANY

iNI=LUENCESf
SHE PROMISED
HER lOYALTY

DEPENDABLE
delivery. Call 256·
anytime.

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367 ·7471 or .

THE' 8UP! 1
roN 'T WANT
TO

JIM'S

DILLARDS
WATER
DELIVERY SERVICE .
cail"-46·7404.

··

I'VE GOTTO
NIP TillS IN

OI.JTSIDE

General Hauling

Jonfts Boys Water Service.
Call 367·7471 or 367-0591.

~

WINNIE

TOAfE///

PAINTING · Interior and
eMterior , plumbing, NOW HAULING house coal
roofing, some rem~ling. &amp; limestone tor driveways
Call tor estimates 367· 7101 ·
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.
BING'$ CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTIDN · Specializing
In conCrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
ba'l4tment, garage floors
and .etc. Free Htlmates. 11
veil's experience. Call 367'
7891 .

-

.•. . .... . .
..................
l.w\61NE TilE .NMrE
OF TIV\T .IN&lt;SAATE,
COI'j,Nif' ... SfEIN6

BARNEY

7:00 C2). PM MAGAZINE
(])
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
ffi MOYIE •(ANIMATED) ' 0
"Bon Yov•a•. Ct'llrlle
Brown"
(I)!DI. FAMlLY FEUD
(!) WILD KINGDOM 'Lond ot
lho Dingo'
D(l) TlC TAC DOUGH
(I) (fi)
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
&lt;iD) NEWS
7:05 (I) AU IN THE FAMILY
7:30
BULLSEYE
(]) ANOTHER LIFE
(I).(J) JOKER'SWlLD
(!) HOUYWOODSOUARES
(l)(fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
&lt;iDl
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
illllll FACE THE MUSIC
7 :35 (I) BASEBALL Richmond
Brave a VI Syracu1e Chiefs
7:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :00 C2)8CIJREALPEOPLEAiook
at a New York City cat doctor
who makes house calla , a visit
to a sun tanning compelltion,
and a profile of an American
Indian from Oregon who
successfully fought the United
States governmen t over his
rights to tribal lends ere
featured . (Repeat; 80 mine.)
(]) SPECIALS
C1J crJ) ID SPECIAL MOYlE
PRESENTATION ' Dynaaty '
1961 Stare : John Forsythe,
Linda Evar~e .
8 (I) (lDJ THE WHITE
SHADOW Basketball takea 8
back aaat when Coach Reevee
is offered S 1,000 to appear in 8
tire commercial and his team
becomeathe' Showero!Power'
group to cut a record. (Repeat:
80 mine,.)
Cll &lt;lll NATIONAL GEOGRA·
PHIC .'Gorilla' This special
lakes a look at the conserve·
tioniats who are working to
assure that the largest ol the
great apea, the gorilla, will not
fall victim to extinctiol"'. (60
mine .)
8:30 ffi
RACE FOR THE
PENNANT
8:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
11:00 C2) I) CIJ DIFF'RENT
STROKES As a atap towards
helping Arno ld and Willis
understand their c ultural
heritage, e psy chologist
suggests tha t they reverse
roles with Drummond and
Kimberly .
(Repeat)
{glosed·Ceptionad)
(]) 700CLUB
ffi MOVIE -(DRAMA)"I'o
"Wifemletre••" Hl70 a
• (I) (IDI CBS WEDNESUA Y
NIGHT MOVIE 'A New Life '
1979 Stare : Angie Dickinson,
Gordon Pinaent.
CIJ FREEDOM'S DEFENSE:
AMERlCA'S CUP 1gao The
color, drama and aheer beauty
oft he 12-metaryachtatraveling
the 24.3 mile, six.·leg course in
competition tor the moat
preatlaioue troph.y In yacht
racing , the Ameri ca's Cup, is
the toe us of tn1s documentary
narrated by Robert MacNeil.
(60 mins.)
!fil OFF YOUR DUFF This
program gives inspiration for
physical fitness by highlighting
the.benefits of proper exercise.
Features are visits with various
peop le who perform different
forma of exercise to stay In
shape , from running to belly
dancini,;.
g:30 !lJeliJ THE FACTS OF LIFE
Blair loses the student council
presidency to a rival whose
outward con fid ence end
sell·asaurance mask the fears
end pressures that tragically
engulf her. (Repeat)
10:00 C2) 8 (!) QUINCY Quincy
traina an attractive young
medicalatudenl to be a medical
examiner but is shocked and
disturbedwhenshereportathat
a veteran stall doctor is
covering up the homicide death
of a gangster . (Repeat; 60
mins.)
CIJ MASTERPlECE THEATRE
· Ou che as o I Duke Street :
Trouble and Strife 'WhileLouisa
is away, Lizzie Is hired as a
laundry maid . Trouble ensues
when a guest reports some
valuables missing. (60 min a.)
10:01 (I) TBS EVENING NEWS
10:18 C1J CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 (]) LARRY JONES
&lt;lll OUTER LIMITS
10:58 (]) CBNUPDATENEWS
11 :oo
CIJ
Cll (IDI illl
NEWS
(]) THlS lS THE LIFE
ffi
MOVIE
·(SClENCE·FICTION) " '
11
AHen" 1978
CIJ URBAN LEAGUE'S NATIONAL CONVENTION 'New
Strategies tor the ChaAging
Times' This year's theme
exam in as th a con serve tlve
mood of the country 8Ad ita
impact OA Black America, as
well as Reagen' a policies on
social
and
international
iaauea.
11:05 CIJ NIGHT GALLERY
11:211 CIJ CBNUPDATENEWS
11:30 Clle(!)THETONIGHTSHOW
Gueata: Robert t&lt;lein. Johnny
Mathia. (80 mine.)
(]) A~OTHER UFE
(I) BENNY HILL SHOW
8 (J) CBS LA1E MOYIE 'The
Greiatest Thing That Almoet
Happened' 1977 Stars: Jimmy
Walker, James Earl JoAea. A
high achool athlete Ia stricken
with a aerloua dlaeaae Just
before he Is about to face an
important lnteracholaetlc
baaketball game. (Repeat; 2
hre .• t5mlna.)
(I) DAVE AUEN AT LAROE
(IDI iiiOYII! o(ADYENTURE) 0 1&gt;
"PWe.IOnoCIIIIn" 1.72

(2).

SHE SURE: I!P
BEIIUriFUL!

WONDER. WHIOIU ,.,

What do 40u
do when he
starts chasinQ

cars~

m•

75 · DOdlle sportsman van

.... . .. .. .•.
. . ... . ..
"'

s12so. Pnone.304,.75-2115.

1971 Chev{ 'Scottlilollt ~
WIIMI (lrlve .. em·lm, !'hone
61H923.'
.
'
"
'

Se

'

71

Autos for iole
,

1969 DOdge Dart GTS,
asking $1,300. Call949·2123.

l
'\.

........__,,

WHAI SOM5
&amp;EN'TLeMEN 6E'T

J I I

'

.tOMOIIIIOW
COAIT·TO·COAIT0ueo1o:
· 'I'M llftOOk,
mlno.)
(J) LOY! BOAT

ceo

FROM

Yesterday·s

I

L.ADIE~.

Now arrange the circled letters to
torm the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

I XI I I

Printanswerhere: " [

Jumble Book No. 15; containing 110 pUzzles., Is avaUablel:w- sus pot~ld
hom Jumble, c/o this newspaper, Box 34, NOI'Wood, N.J. 07648. InclUde your
name, address, zip code and make checks payable to Newspa.,..t a a«•.

BRIDGE
Reviewing the ABCs
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alaa Soa1ag

NORTH
The Merrimack Book Ser ·
vic e of Salem, N.H.. is dis·
tributing "The Bridge
Player's
Alphabetical
Handbook" by Terrence
Reese and Albert Dormer. It
gives a great mass of infor·
mation and the part on play
is really worth having. The
part on bidding is based too
much on British bidding
methods, which are conspicuously unsuccessful against
Standard American in its
advanced forms .
Today's hand shows an
avoidance play . South is in a
normal three notrump
contract. The five of spades
is led. South takes East's
queen with his ace and must
set up diamonds without let·
ling East gain the lead. He
does so by leading a diamond to dummy's king and
returning to hlS own nine
spot.
There are possible complications here . Give East
West's five of diamonds and
comr.ensate by moving
Eas1 s three of hearts over .
to West. Now West shows
out on the second diamond
and declarer can only get
three diamond tricks without Jelling East in.

7-22 ·8 1

+ 6

"K 8 1

.KI0862

+A 9 3 2

WEST
+Kl0752
52

"J

tJ 5

EAST
+Q913
"Q 10 1 3
• Q74

+J7

• Q 10 6

SOUTH
+AJ 8
"A 9 6
• A 93

+K 8 54
Vulne rable: Both
Dealer : South
Welt

Nor1b

East

Sooth

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

I NT

Opening lead :+s

Now he must extend the
avoidance play to the club
suit. He cashes dummy's ace
and leads a second club.
East plays the jack, so South
must put up hts king and
hope that West holds the last
club. He does and South still
makes his contract.

·tieu• "* ,(
br THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

I Patti of song
5 Dieter's
concern
10 Surrounded
by
II Spillane
sleuth
IZ Economize
13 Digestible
14 Unresolved

37 Southwest
wind
38 Harass
39 Western city

DOWN
I Dough
Z Violently
3 Set going
4 Dutch city
Yesterday's Allswer
5 Ford
6 "What Kind 18 Contradict 25 Samurai's
of Fool
19 " -/ Sade"
weapon
?"
22 When
Z8 Used up
7 Vivify
crwnpels 29 Explosive
8 Film
are served 31 Chiropodist's
Clouseau
23 Roman
concern
way
34 "Waste-land"
9 The "T"
24 Sacred
poet's
in NATO
Cairene
monogram
II Macho guys
l5 Disfeature
15 AfMcan plant symbol

score
15 Soul (Fr . )
16 The gwns
17 Give
power to
19 Convene
ZO Gassy sign
21 Wrong
22 Tessera
23 Mascagni

opera
24 Trailer
25 Ending for
thenno
28 Gannent
for Dracula
27Madasa30 Ending
for temper

31 .. _ All
We Know"
32 Bunnese
hill-dweller

33 ' 'Three's
Company"

star
:15 Catcher's

glove
38 "We are not

"
DAILY

Here's how to work it f
AXYDLBAAXR

CRYPTOQUOTEIs

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

•

One letter simply •lands for another . In this sample A Is·
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the len11h and formation ot the words ore all ·
hints. Each day 1he code letlers are dllferenl.

CRYPTOQUOTES

UAJ,

DHBA

UGKHSVD

UVLA

s

HJKETGUAJEK ;

PA

EW

MDVOAL..
P W X A A

J

"
I

,

Yesterday's CryptoqUGte: 11iE CRUEI...F.Sr UES ARE OFTEN.._.
TOW IN SIIENCE.-'-ROBERT LOUJS,STEVENSON
'I

•

r

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: ELEGY WELSH FEEBLE HUNGRY
Answer· The onl y thing rev olutionary about some of
th ose new car models - THE WHEELS

G MWJ

Ill

I (]

tAVGASE

·mantri.. lowlnlheoHoctloilaol
on woman. {Rop..t; 70

e

. .... "'

I KJ

Kl\AU

mllliJ..

-

NALAB

mlcho huatiand: and a young

: 11;10 (J)

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m

AnchoteclbyTedKoppel.
11:31 (I) 'MOVIE -(MYIT!IIY) 00 1&gt;
"Crolecurrent" 1171
11:00 (J) IIOH DOllY IHOW
(J) AIC NIWI NIGHTLINE
MChoteclbyT~Koppol. , ,
LOVI! BOATllllC flndo
hl"'aolf lll'l pracorlova PQOHion
when ~e meet a 1 beautiful
fOrmer echoal chum and her .

FurniiiiMd ltOIIms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Perk Central Hotel.

me

\1Je ABC NI!WB iltGH1UIII!

Large clean bales of
$1.50,
.
675-5180.

I

ECIDD
I (J

EVENING

Household Goods

GOOO
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers ,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances , 1918 Eastern
Ave , 446· 7398

Unscramble theH tour Jumbles ,
one tetter lo each square, to tOfrTl
lour ordinary ·

. JULY II, 1881

_,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
loman, 3 tables, S500. Sofa .
chair and love~at, S27S.
Sofas and chairs priced
from 1275. to $695. T abies.
SJ8 and up to S109. Hide-a ·
beds,$340., queen size, S380.
Recliners, $165 ., S295.,
Lamps from $18. to $65 . 5
pc . dineHes from $79., to
SJ65. 7 pc ., $189. and up.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
$350 up to $#15. Hutches.
SJOO. and $375., maple or
pine finish . Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak , S649 .,
Basseff Cherry, $765. Bunk
bed complete with mat·
tresses, S250. and up to
$350. Captain' s beds, $275.
complete. Baby beds, $89 .
Mattresses or bOx springs,
full or twin, S55 ., firm, S6S .
and $75. Queen sets, S185. 5
dr . chests, $49 . A dr . chests,
S42 . Bed frames, S20.and
S25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350., d inette chairs $20 .
and S25. Tappan gas or
electric ranges, $285.
USED
.
Ranges ,
refrigerators, and TV ' s,
3 miles out Buli:lville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri., 9am to 5pm, Sat.
.u6·0322

•

VIewmg

Ketvlnator refrlg., S200 and
Warmmorlng wood heater,
$375. Call 379· 2435.

One
bedroom,
all electric.
992·unfurnished,
2094 .

For rent ' bdr . house in
Centenary r 0f . and security
dep. req. Ca 11.u6· 4053 .

•

...'.... ......... .
....
' ., "'

~ft~~fi)~ ~THAT8CIIAMIL!DWOADOAIIE
~ ~ ~~ "
byHenrf Arnold and Bobloe

For Sllle girls clothing Sizes
6-14, like new . Call In
evening after 5 :30 245· 56J.I.

aes. sec . dep., Rodney
V'illiage II. Call .u6·4416 after 7PM.

Rd. Phone 446·3437 .

1973 Honda 350. Good cond. ~~~~~~~~·
949-253.5 alter 5:00.
1:

AMF 10 speed men's bike.
Only o few months old, S85.
Call .u6·0562.

Wanted to Ront

47

53

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS · Real nice campsite

on

by Wry Wright ,~.---;:
M;::-ot,...orc
~
yc71H
--

'N' CARLYlE,..

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Sfs .

Ohio

�sentinel

Area ·deaths
Sara L. Mcfadden
Mrs. Sara Lawrence McFadden ,

ltl, of Masonic Home, Parkersburg.
a native of Syracuse, died Tuesday,
July 21 , at the home. Funeral services will be conducted at II a.m.
Thursday at Woodmere Abbey of
Remembrance by the Rev . Gray W.
Hampton. Burial will be in Wood·
mere Memorial Park.
She was born Sept. 23, 1893, a
daughter of the late David Lawrence
and Vecuria Davies Lawrence. She
was preceded in death by her
husband. Harry McFadden. She was
a former Huntington resident: a
member of the First Presbyterian
Church and the Order of Eastern
Star Lodge 8.
Survivors include two daughters,
Mrs . Daniel V. I MarjOrie I Love of
Huntington and Mrs. Harlow !Sara
Louise I Reed of warren, Mich.; five
grandchi ldren, and 12 great·
grandchildren.
There will be no visitatiOn.
Klmgel-Carpenter Mortuary. Hun·

Sales in Hamden, Ohio. He was also
a member of the American Legion of
Rutland.
He was bOrn March I, 1923 in
Meigs County, the son of John
Thomas and the late Cora Matheny.
He is survived by his wife, Irene
Thomas ; father John Thomas ;
daughter, Mrs. James rJan l Getties. McCarthur : and two sons. Ray
Thomas, McCa rthur and Ron
Thomas, Wellston.
Also survived by brothers Jun
Thomas , Rutland and Harry
Thomas, Pomeroy; sisters Hazel
Bowers. New Carslile; Maxine
Balser, Mansfield; and Virginia Ar·
bOugh, Columbus.
Five grandchildren also survive
hun .
Funeral service will be 1 p.m.
Thursday at J p Rogers Funeral
Home. Rev . A.B . Malloy will off&gt;ciate .
Fnends may call at the funeral

Saturday tournament

The foU'owing people applied for
divorce in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court:
Dixie McDaniel, Racine, from
Paul L. McDaniel, Jr., Middleport; ·
Elbert T. Cains, Pomeroy, from
Margie M. Cains, Pomeroy; Doris
Williams, Long Bottom, from James
F. Williams, Geneva.

Jay Mar Men's Golf Association
will play an 18 hole tournament
Saturday, July 25, beginning at I
p.m. The event is open to aU members with club handicaps.

George Stitt, Pomeroy Police
Chief. warned today that bars will be
checked with the help of Carl Hysell
for persons drinking under age.

.

.

fj

Because of a severe financial
crimp, Southern's LoCal Board of

ADD ON

Gets C-2 licenst'
A G-2 liquor license has been
issued to Meredith Oil and Ice Co., a
partnership. DBA Sure Stop, 382 N.
Second St.. Middleport, according to
Clifford Reich, direclor of Ohio
Department of Liquor ControL

WITH AGE ROOM AIR CONDinONER
~::;=;;=~··
4,000 BTU
GE CARRY-COOL~
• 115 Volts, 7.5 Amps
• Easy lnstatiatlon
• 111-Posltlon TtlennDIIIt

BEND AREA OPTOMEMETRIC CENTER

tington , is in charge of

Speeds
• Built-In Handle

Provides Such Services As

VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES

ONLY

OPEN M.·T. · W.· F. 9· 5
CLOSED THUR.·SAT. · SUN.
113 court St.
Pomeory , Oh.
I · P
Above Clark's Jewe rv m omeroy

M h · St eet p

- FiliAL CLEIRAIICE-

MEI'S liD BOY'S
IMERICII lADE

MEl'S ASSORTED SUMMER

GYM SHOES

HEIDWEIR
C"'"""
ot " ' " " ' moo,
svmm e- r l"lC.:Jd w c a• Assor l e&lt;l

sty l es

on Ci ud"l9

weste"'

3

- STIFFLER'S FIIAL SUMMER CLURIIICE-

IEI'S BLUE
IYLOI AID SUEDE

IEI'S SHORT SLEEVE
DRESS liD SPORT

CHITHII QUILin
FULL SIZE SHEET

SELECTED &amp;ROUP-CHILDREI'S
FAMOUS BRIIIDS SPRII&amp; I SUMMER

JOGGERS

SHIRTS

BLANKETS

Blue n~t on and !luede JOQgmg snoes Gooo
ranue o t stzes Soecral low prtce lor Tht s
hnat clearance

IEIUI.LII 'l.tl

WORK SHOES
OFF
REGUALR

Me n s lu s t Ql.laltty rea!her work snoes
Regular 1.33 values All sozes A great
bargaon

FOOTWEAR
Oul they go , one big lot ladies' spring
and summer shoes. Save 50% Now.

OFF
REG.
PRICE

SAVE
BIG
NOW

ROUID WDVEII
RAnll BREAD

~toe~ Do~~

Clearance of entue
ol
sum me• st111t s Incl ude ~ k r, t s.
perm a·c•ess. etc Sozes B to 18

MUSLIN

Asso rt ed rou nd w o ~e n rat tan tH e;r d
basket s You w oll hlld "1 iln y uses to • the se
8 1.1y

&lt;1 0 W ~nO

OFF
IEiiUILR
PIICE

Sm noo '

45" WIDE QUALITY
UIIBLEACHED

BASKETS

Y2I

SPORT SHIRTS

LADIES COMFORTABLE
OlE PIECE TERRY

ROMPERS
Be coot and comt orlabre '" ~ lyle o11 our one
p11'!C P. t e rr ~ romper s Assorted co101 s to

Sil•l! '

cnoose trom

JUIIORS liD MISSES
COOL TERRY

SUN DRESSES
Broacl toom 24o70 o11c h ru " r~,~ nn er s on
assorte&lt;l colors Spec•al tow p11ce to • tn•s
l"mat Cteat.ance'

Moll as sortment ot ': to 1 ya rd tengt n re m
nants 111 assorti!O t a.brrc s Pr•rot s ano so l 'd
colors Save'

~·sses and 1unr ors cool and comfortable
terry su n (lressu "' USOtle&lt;l colo rs F on•t
Clearanc e

~

~·

Tltl• Week
Only

4

'-1,

20% OFF
~09'

·.'O'J•Nlttr.t
'

MAIN · · POMEROY

·•

WORK CONTINUES- Employees of the Empire Pipeline Corp.,
Dayton, are continuing work on the sewer system for the Kerrs Run area .
A spokesman said it wlll be about two weeks before the street is repaved

f;amou s ·c.anno n brancl towel ensemble Yo1.1r cho•ce o l co lor s 10

attrac tive " SOflnkt es·· destgn

liTH
SIZE

$111EA

MILL LEI&amp;JHS
· ASSORTIEIT

KNIT FABRICS
Lad res can .... a" tummer
nsorted styles . stzes and
low pr•ce l or lhr a stle!

$

handbag!!

m·

colors . Spectal

"" special assort ment ol knif IIC:III CS Top
we•Qhls and bollom wetghlll Bu~ now lind
save'
·

LADIES ASSORTED
SUMlER lilT

TltiK TOPS .
Cteartnc• ·gfoup otl~i•• coot and cOm tor·
ltble summer ttnk IOpt 'l(ltllOt1tcl t!vtes.
s•zes and cotors.

·

•

MilD
SIZE

$15!

ANKARA, Turkey - The Turkish Conununist Party says at least 50
men imprisoned for alleged lelt-wing terrorism and subversion are in
the third week of a hwtger strike to protest torture in Ankara's Mamek
prison.
A leaflet distributed by the outlawed Conununist Party said guards
tried to force-feed the hunger strikers and banned family visits to
prevent word of the protest from leaking out. The leaflet alleged the inmates, who can be jailed without formal charges under martial law,
were subject to 'ifXual abuse, beatings and electric shocks.

DRESSES
· ~OFF

I

CLEIRIICE·IIISSES IIID JUIIDRS
FAMOUS BRliD$ S,RII&amp; I SUIIER

Clearanc e o l mrnes 1ne1 tunrOf s1te spr·
rnr;jans summer sportswe•r. N1ce tasorl
ment ol styttis and cotor1. Coofolnallno
skifts . JICkets. stacks tnd lops. Save, one
hall du1ing our Frnal Summer Cleartnce
Sale;

W,:~p.l}in,g O~q. lottery nu~ber
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber ilrawn Wedl\esday night In
the Ohio Lottery's ,dllly gaMe "The ~uniber" was 7163. Tile lottery·
rqlllrted eanJinp of $518,178'on the draWing. Elarfilngs c;ame on sales
of .,_.,
910.00,
holders of winning tickets are entiUed
to share .
' while
'
l
$31111,734.~,lot~rY officials said. ,

f

.

'.,

·. OFF

.lEI
PIIOE

WASHINGTON tAPl - Housing
costs, boosted by record home-Joan
rates, sent the nation's inflation up
at an annual rate of 8.8 percent in
June, the government reported
today .
June's 0.7 percent inflation in·
crease marked the fourth consecutive month of what economists
have , been calling " single-digit
territory'' ·- below 10 percent on an
aMualized basis. II prices rose at
the June rate for 12 straight months,
the annual inflation rate would be8.8

ROME - The chief investigator into the shooting of Pope John Paul
II say~ questions about how and why It happened may remain unanswered as the 23-year-old Turk convicted of the crime sits out his life in
an Italian prison.
Two judges and a Jury of four men and two women deliberated tor
6'• hOUn Wedlles«lay, then cOnvicted Mehinet Ali Agca of trying to
murder the pontiff and two American women in St. Peter's Square on
May 13. He was given a life sentence, lncludjn~. a year in solitary confinement. There Is no death penalty under Italian law.

-:-STIFFLE•'s FiliAL .,. . . CWIIIIICE-

Assistant Prosecuter Carson Crow
discussed the final approval of the
grant with the commissioners.
The $00,633 not covered by the
FmHA grant will be funded by a
Department of Housing and Urban
Development grant.
In other business, County
Engineer Phil Roberts told cornInissioners several highway projects
are being completed. includin g
paving on CR 30 and welding of the
deck of a bridge on CR 25.
He said patching is also being dune
on various roads in the county.
On recommendation of Roberts,
the commissioners granted an

easement to Columbus and Southern
Electric Co. to insta ll a power lin e
over county property.
The power line will be built along
CR 7!i in Salisbury Township.
The commissioners met with
Rubert Bailey and Kathryn Russell
of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service to discuss a bill
owed to the Motorola Corp.
Motorola recently insta lled radiO
equipment for the EMS.
The commissioners told the EMS
representatives Motorola has contacted them requesting payment of
!he account.
It was decided a special mectin~
uf the commissioners. Bailey, a nd

the EMS Board of Trustees will be
held July 29 to discuss this matter
and other EMS business.
Cha rl es Blakeslee, Meigs County
Planning

Commission

director,

discussed preparation of tax maps,
subdivision regulations, issuance ot•
building permits and other
uperations with the commissioners.
Blakeslee said there should be
m ore coordination between govern-

ment agencies, financial institutions
and attorneys in these matters.
The commissioners decided those
mvolved should meet to discuss the
matter at the next Planning Commission meeting .

.

percent.
The improvement from last year's
12.4 percent annual rate has been
due largely to lower-than-expected
energy and food prices, and bOth increased only moderately again in
June .
But a big increase in housing
costs, which had oogun showing up
in May, came on strong in June, according to the Department of
Labor's Consumer Price Index.
The housing component of the in·
dex rose 1.1 percent in June, ac-

counting for about thre~fourths of
the overall inflation increase. the
Labor Department report said.
Hom~ownership costs rose even
more - about 1.5 percent - but that
increase was softened in the overall
housing figure by a slim 0.4 percent
rise in rental costs, the smallest in
more than a year.
All the figures are adjusted for
normal seotsona\ va riations in
pri ces.
The CPI is the most widely
publicized inflation index, but it has

been criticized for the heavy WCIJlht
it gives to housing costs, particularly mortga ge costs. Although
mortgage rates have clearly risen
rapidly in recent months, reaching
an average of 16.75 percent in early
June, critics point out that relatively
few Americans are buying houses in
any one month.
Therefore, they say, housing costs
should not be allowed to produce as
big a swing in the CPI as they did in
June.

·E astern ~board hires Rose as football coach
..

'

.

' ..

.•

~

·-

~·

'

4

t

.

Ardlle Rose·was named head ·foot-·
'ball co,ch. ana' llllistant basketball
coach when the Eastern Board of
.EducatiOn ,met !n !;'!gular ~on
w~,nl,hC

Role'

:. .

nu. 1111 ... vded by lhe

reslpn(!Oit rllliltld)' Moore.

Roae ~'-!~ned u aclvllor tO the
tltudent COUilcll 1 81111 ilopliomore
clau.
l .·
.·
. Ia otlW liullnia, the board hired
the foUOwlJII Ohio ,UnlvenJty

f

$179,664.

June inflation rate up 0. 7 percent

· Pope·s assailant gets life term

IIEIILIR
PIIICE

SPORTSWEAR

Construction is expected to begin
August 3 on the Union AvenueMulberry Heights access road, it
was announced at a meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday.
The commissioners awarded the
project to Shelly and Sands,
Zanesville, who entered the low bid
of $296,633.
A final grant closing was signed
which will allow a $200,000 grant
from the Farmers Home Ad·
ministrationto be used for the
project.
James A . Jones, district FmHA
director, Archie Stegall, of the local
FmHA office and Meigs County

50 prisoners on hunger strike

CLEIRIICE OF ILL LADIES
SPRII&amp; liD SUMlER

and traffic returns to normaL It will be three to four weeks before the
sewer pumps are in operation, he said. The total cost of the project is

Zanesville firm low bidder

OTTAWA - Canada's month-old postal strike is !raying the nerves
of an even-tempered nation.
Small businesses and magazines are dying along with undelivered
ladybugs. Tax-refund checks lie uncashed in unmanned sorting centers. Interest mounts on unpaid credit-card bills. The elderly wait nervously for an untried delivery system to get their pension checks to
them.
The strike has also demonstrated how enterprise responds to
emergency.

TOWEL EISEMBLE

·'

· ~ .~ - ~

.

Full bed s•ze needlewo~en blanket wtlh
"fiOro bmdmg "' .your chotce oJ solid colors
Sllgn t orreguiars

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio- The town's fire chief staffed the fire depart·
ment alone early today as aU 13 firefighters stayed off the job in a
sickout to protest proposed city budget cuts.
But attempts to get off-duty firefighters to work overtime lor thz absent day shift were fruitless, Medley said.
The proposed city budget cuts, suggested by City Council on
"Tuesday night, include a hiring freeze and layoff of two provisional
police officers, two probationary firefighters and three other nonuniformed city employees.

FIMOUS'CIIIOI' BRAID
'SPRIIILES DESIII' PRIITED

Clearance of alllo:~d•es sprtng 5
summer dre sses Assorted
soles colors and styles Va lues
to r.2• 99

•.(;r'-

1\o I .

BLANKETS

Bo y's Ma..,.tmck Aut o matic · hlue nen•m
,ean s rn coo t •tare or Sl tiu!Jhl re c styles
Reg and st om srzes

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio - Striking Mahoning County sheriff's
deputies agreed' late Wednesday to retum to work at midnight after
a))I)C'OVingPcomproinlsewtthcommtsiJJIItrers.
' · ,,. , ,, ·
The compromise will reinstate II laid-off deputies and prevent furtherlayoffs.

- FiliAL

CLEIRIIICE • BOYS ASSORTED
SHORT SLEEVE SUMlER

THE PROMISE
RING
TO SAY "I LOVE YOU"

FULL SIZE 'SPARTA'
SOLID COLDR

DENIM JEANS

Deputies return to work

Firefighters protest cuts

-FIIIIL

BOY'S MIYERICI
FLARE OR STRAIGHT LEG

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - frews removed the last of nearly 100 tons of
steel and concrete debris from the Hyatt Rej!ency hotel lobby early
Wednesday, as damage claims reached $212 million from the
disastrous collapse of two walkways.
Workers took out the last of the debris overnight, bringing out huge
slabs of concrete from the fallen skyways as well as purses, shoes and
personal belongings of some of the Ill victims of Friday night's collapse.

-·

- FiliAL

CLEAN UP LOT
LADIES SPRING AND SUMMER

in -

FOR WHEN YOU WANT

-Ft•AL CLEAIIIICE-

Last debris .removed from lobby

Strike frays nation· s nerves

fro m

Tu cker,

II

PRICE

' ,.

Pomeroy Parking Lot to Veterans
Memorial Hospital: Syracuse at I :30
p.m. John Shriver, Racine Hydro
Plant to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and later to Holzer Medica l
Center; Racine at 12 :30 p.m. for
Ronald Grady, SR 124, to Holzer
Medical Center: Rutland al 7:02
Maxine

Chatham " qua1it)l maae 100 percen t
acryttc 70 " ~90 .. whrre ana pastel sheet
blanket s Slight ttre(julim.

EACH

MEl'S FIRST QUALITY
LEATHER

.h

Men 5 short 5leeve dress and soon s hut ~ tn
a sso rted style, , colors and punts Buv now
ano She '

$
-FiliAL

vice.

for

Large col ton teuy bath towels in a beaulilul
assortment ol pnnt s and solid colors Stock
up now1

-FIIIL CWIIIIE-

Soec •al gro up o t tamo .. s br and s s po rtswear t or
t)oy s ano g ~r ts Inc tudes sn o rt s to ps. s"'" su•t s
and bat n•"9 su• t s •n assort ed s ryres an o colors
S•zes 2 to 6)( Buy now and save'

Six runs were made by local
emergency units Tuesda y accordi ng
to the Meigs County Emergency Ser-

p.m .

BATH TOWELS

-FiliAL CLEARIICE-

SPORTSWEAR

Enwrg-t'ncy run!'

tersection of SR 7 and f24 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Tuppers ?lams at 10 :39 a.m. for Joann
Hetzer, Coolville Road, to Camden
Cla rk Hospital.

DENIM JEANS

-FiliAL CLEIRAIICE-

- FIUL SUMMER CLEIIIAICE-

George

CIIIOI LARGE SIZE
SOLID liD PRIITEI

·~'i1f•!

PRICE

COME EARLY FOR lEST SELECTIOII

Jack Neff and Luther Blevins
were released from jail after ser·
ving time for not paying fines. Both
ftl'e told to stay out of Pomeroy.
• Robert Wood , Racine. forfeited a
$30 bOnd for fa ilure to keep assured
rlear distance .
The following forfeited bonds for
speeding:
Edward L. Wood. Raleigh. N.C..
$33: Katlllt&gt;en Scott . Minersville.
$27: Dale R. Smith, Leta rt. W.Va ..
$29: Carolyn S Triplet. Middleport.
$29 : Franklin M. Miser. Pomeroy.
$3.1 : Roger Rible. Long Bottom. $31:
Kenneth G. Rose. Long Bottom. $30:
Peggy Carper, Pomero1·. $27 .

Helen

lEI'S POPULAR
IIYERICI BLUE

Amer.can made g ~m shoes w1th molded
soles and cush1on 1risotes Sturdy canvas

~ RE&amp;UUR
OFF

""•'

probation for menacing threa ts.

for

1 Seclioil, 10 Pages
15 Cen1s
A Multimcd•a Inc . News paper

Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 23 , 1981

PIULADELPfflA - Authorities are preparing their case reluctantly againat a 62-year-ol&lt;l woman charged with stabbing her son to
death because of what she called his "mean, nasty ways."
Rebecca Daniels told homicide detectives she stabbed her drunken
son, Eugene, three times with a World War II bayonet June 28 while he
lay sleeping on a living room couch in their home after he had
threatened to kill her. ·
In tbe statement, she said Daniels had beaten her five times since
his father died in April, including the day she stabbed him to death.

THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY- JULY 23, 24 &amp; 25

Four persons were fined and nine

p.m.

Pomeroy

enttne

ToDAY

OF ALL SPRING AND SUMMER IERCHAIDISE

manner.

Pomeroy at 7·16 a.m. for Floyd
Burney who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center ; Pomeroy at 10 :30

•

at y

Vol.l0,N0.70
Copvrighted 1911

Depending on personnel, Southern
is expected to operate a multi type
offense this fall .
According to Porter, "We're offering the students an opportunity to
get into a sound program. We will let
as many play as possible.".
Pre-conditioning for Ohio high
school football players begins on
Aug . I.
Southern has three scrimmages
plaiUled, two at home and one at Vinton County.
The Tornadoes open their season
Sept. 4 against Southeastern of Ross
County.

LD
Police reluctantly prepare case

One defendant was fined and tw o
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined was Clarence Smit h. Middleport. $00 and costs, discharging a
gun within city limits.
Forfe1tmg bOnds were Roger
Williams. Middleport. S2!i. fa il ed to
yield right of way: Theodore Coppek. Middleport. $100. disorde rly

Tuesday night.
David L. Camp, Mason, W.Va ..
fined $30 and costs for runmng a
traffic light; John E. Blm, Mid·
dleport, fined $300 and costs for
OWl ; Marshall Slater, Snowville .
fined $30 and costs for operating a
motorcycle without safety equipment ; Robert Alger. Pomeroy. fined
S2:i and cosLS for destructiOn of
property and put on SIX month

•

second son, Andrew, played defense
for the Panthers; a third son is a
member of the Southern football
squad and a fourth son is a fifth
grade student in the Southern Local
Schools.
Dugan, an employee of Southern
Ohio Coal Company, played high
school football under Jim Vennari at
Rutland High School and has been
very active in bOth the school's
athletic boosters and junior high
sports programs.
Dugan will work with the Tornadoes' defense while Porter will
handle the offense.

••• IN.THEW

Mayor's C

Pomeroy Mayor Cla re nce Andrews

Kenova High School in West
Virginia, where he played four years
of high school football, is a graduate
of the U.S. Army Academy at West
Point. While in college, Porter
played one year of football before an
old basketball knee injury shortened
his career. Porter then coached at
the academy .
Porter has been active in sports
programs at Pomeroy, Syracuse
and Racine and has served as a
volunteer coach in footliaU and other
sporta.
His son Frank was an all conference player at Pomeroy; a

y

.. L
I== I N ....

Ernest R. Thomas, 58, Wellston ,
died Tuesday at Kettering Memorial
Hospital. Kettering. Ohio.
He was the owner of Ernie's Auto

period frcm January to July, and the
additional burden caused by the
state's enactment of an interim
budget, the bOard had no other alter·
native, according to Ord, but to employ two para-professionals as
coaches.
Attorney Bill Porter and Darrell
Dugan, both of Racine, will share
head football coaching duties . They
were employed by the board as
educatiOnal aid~ under the new
school law which provides for the
hiring of persons to coach wbo are
not certified as teachers.
Porter, a graduate of Cered~&gt;-

e

Sl9900

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

992·2920

R. Thomas

forfeited bonds in the court of

E;ducation has been forced to drOp
its head football coaching position,
but, the school's football program
will continue.
Tueaday night, the bOard after
discussing il:i critical financial
situation · with Supt. Bob Ord,
decided to eliminate the football
coaching position tonnerly held by
Bill Henaler, who resigned last month to accept an industry Job.

Hensler had been riamed to the
post earlier this year. He replaced a
two-man
coaching set·up
established last year.
Ht!ward Caldwell, assistant
basketball coach and Mlck
WinebreiUler, long-time assiBtant
football coach, served In a co-head
coach capacity last season.
Prior to that Winebrenner had served as an assistant under John Dudding and Bill Jewell.
Due to the district's financial
woes, forced by a cutback in state
foundation funds last January which
were pro-rated over a silt' month

• 2 hn/2 Cooling

R. H. BILLMAN II, O.D.

~

By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
OVP NeWII Edllor

COOL THE KIDS' ROOM TOO!

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

home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday.
Buri·al will be at the RI.d"ewood

Financial probl~ms force board action

ELBERFEUDS WAREHOUSE

arrangen~en- rcCcei~n;et;e;r}·;---:::;;~~~~~~=~~~~~~;;~~~;;;~~~~~~~::::~==~e~C~a~m~C~~r~~~~O~m~e~ro~~=:~,~~

Is .

Ernt&gt;~t

]

To end marriages

•

'

'

graduates as · teachers : Sherry
Stollar, first grade at Chester
Elementary; Usa Mader, junior
high; Cheri Gagai, Tuppers Plains
.EJementarv, ·and George Gagai,
jwil\11' high teacher imd ~.ssistant
fooball and basketball eoach.
The board accepted the
~lion of David Weber, head
and llxth grade teacher at Tuppers
,
Plaina. · I
The bOard, in other action, voted

•

to send two months advance
payment of teacher ,s retirement in
the amount of $10,471 to the state
teachers association and make a
payment to the state retirement
system for Clarence Warner.
The board accepted the bid of
-Broughton Milk Co., to supply milk
products in the · district and Betsy
Ross to supply bread products.
The board approved the purchase
of text books for the senior English

program and agreed to purcha..,.
liabilty insurance for Eloise Boston,
clerk, James Page, principal and
Richard Roberts, superintendent.
The next meeting of the board will
be Aug. :1£, at 7:30p.m.
·
Attending were Roger Gaul,
president, Oorsel Larklps, vice: .
president, Deryl Well, Bernaf'll &lt; ,·,
Shevlers
and James
.
.. Caldwell, board
'•
' '' .' ,.~•
members , Eloise Boston and ,
Richard Roberts.

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