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                  <text>•

e
at y_ enttne
--President takes tax
battle before .public
..

Yoi .30,No.72 .
Copyrigh!ed 1'11

,W INTHROP

•

r~ 5URPRI5ED '?QJ

KNEW THAT.

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AFTER LUNCH - ijep. Keld Haace, D-Te:L, ceater, Ullb wllh
reporten In Wu~ ·Sllll(lay after retilniiDg from a ba~e at
Camp Davkl, Md. spo1110red by Prealdeot Respu. Wllh Hance are
Treasury Seeretary Dooald Regao, left, and Rep. Rk!hard Shelby, 1).
Ala., right. (AP Luerpboto).

Priscilla's Pop

I Section. 10 Pages
IS Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

_·., . . Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 27,1981

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...AND A MA551VE HeAD.

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WASHINGTON (APl - President
Reagan, opening the final round of
the battle over his Uls-eut program,
goes before a national a11dience
tonight to plug his plan and scorn a
rival Democratic proposal.
After a weekend of speechwriting
and lobbying at the ·presidential
retreat at Camp David, Md., Reagan
planned to address the nation from
the Oval Office.
The president will stress that his
version of a tax-cut bill is an essen·
tlal Ingredient of the ad·
rillnistration's economic recovery
blueprint, according to White House
chief of staff James A: Baker Ill.
Treasui-y Seeretary Donald T.
~gao said the president will "talk
about his tax proposal and what it
means to the country and why it's
desirable that it be his tax proposal
rather than the other (Democrats')
tax proposal" that wins
congressional approval.
CBS, NBC and ABC television net·
works said they would carry the address live at 8 p.m. EDT.
Democrat. will start taking shots
at Reagan's speech inunediately af·
terward on ABC, which said it is
giving them free time to respond .
NBC said it will put them on at 10 :30
p.m., and CBS said it is setting aside
Tuesday night for their rebut·
tal.
•
The House is scheduled to choose

time

.....

,__

Wednesday between Reagan 's
proposal for a 25 percent tu: cut
spread over three yean or a
Democratic alternate providing a 15
percent reduction over two years.
With the end of the battle In sight,
both sides were lobbying heavily for
votes.
, Reagan sent a helicopter back to
Washington to ferry 14 Democratic
congressmen to C8mp David for a
Sunday barbeque. The guest list actually numbered 15 since one
congresswoman - Rep . Beverly
Byron of Maryland - drove instead
ofnytng.
The menu featured hot dogs and
llarnl)urgers and a relish of soft-sell
from the president and his treasury
secretary. After making his pitch,
the president· answered questions
. from his guests.
"I think everytime you meet and
eat you try to persuade, but I think It
was low key and on a high level,"
said Rep. Richard Shelby, I).Ala.,
who declared he would support
Reagan.
Rep. Kent Hance, ]).Texas, a supporter of the president's program,
said Reagan did not ask anyone to
commit himself but merely to give
his version careful consideratiPn.
Rep. Glenn English, D-Okla., said
he remained uncommitted and that
Reagan did not tell him anything he
had not heard before.

CAN'T HEAR YOU - President Ronald Reagan shouts to reporten
that he cannot hear lhelr abented q11estioos as be returos by beUcopter to
the White House Sunday from Camp David, Md. The presldeld met with
15 Democratic Congressmen at Camp David Sunday to lobby for his tax
cut proposal. (AP Laserphoto) .

Bidwell party turns· into 'riot';
two Gallia County deputies injured
Police believe, but it's too late
CHlCAGO .- Hard of !tearing and nearly blind, Sigrid lljlrginde

·Uv~ ~'~t1wo monthS Of her'87_y.elir&amp; iii terror, plea«!!ng'wlth Po,ilt;e

to believe her story of telephone taps, assaUlt and strangers lurking in
her darkened house.
One offieer ori the beat said pollee had just begun to believe her tales
a!ld b4d beefed up lheir checks on her small brick home on the South

"rrll HAVE
\\ONDERFUL -

A HQ!§EWARMING
PARTY, STUAR'f ~ ·

FRIENPS.
[7~./

Side when her body was found face down on her bed, her hands bound
behind her back with a scan.
·
thire wa8.no sign of forced entry, police said. There are no suspects
and her death remains a mystery.

Three Chessie employees hurt
WAVERLY, Ohio - Three Chessie System employees were injured
three coal trains derailed just outside of the southern
Ohio community of Waverly .
The Pike County sherifrs department said W. Caudill, an engineer,
lind H. Roafk, a conductor, were in fair condition SUIIdaY night in Pike
County Hospital.
,
All three trains were owned by the Chessie System, and two were
bound to Columbus from Russell, Ky ., police said. The accident occurredabout8:50a.m.

Sunday when

Four Ohioans die in collision

,.
'f

OGALLALA, Neb. - Four members of a family from Defiance,
Ohio, are dead after a car-van collision eight miles west of Ogallala on
U.S. 211, the·Nebraska Slate Patrol reported.
Five llther persons were injured in the accident Sunday near Lake
McConaughy.
The 1!1\trolldentlfled those killed, ali in the car, $II George Curtis, 65;
his Wife Marie; 63; their daughter, Penny Lynn Speiser, 22, and her
da~~&amp;liter, Amy~Renee ~peiser, 3.
lklaplla,liz~ In Ogallai8 were Floyd Speiser, a~t 25, husband &lt;I
. Penny, and Cecil Wolle of ·Rogers, Ark., driver of the van.

Celeste feuds with party leader
'

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CINOINNATI -' The gubernatorial race lan't unUI1982, but former
Ueute~t governor and expected candidate Richard Celeste has

aJreac4t .found himself In the middle of a Democratic Party feud in
HuniiiOQ County.
·ee~a~e; •a resident of Cleveland, isn't there by choice but he Is not
baclti{lg QUI either.
.
·
~ l~ belap."'hen Celeste agreed to appear on a P,rogram Sponsored ' by lbe Concerned Democrats C!f Hamilton County, ·an
orgAniziiion of partY diasldent...
,·
· . ·

Two Gallia County sheriff's altercation, and was treated and
deputies were injured and several released from Holzer Medical Cen·
people arrested when the depart· ter wil!l stitches. Deputy · Mike
nient broke up a party in Bidwell Pollock was reportedly stabbed in
Saturday·i)ight. • ·:
. ·
., thtt.back, but was not injured due to
A depai"tllleni'SJ)okesman Said the · - protective gear lie wore.
arrests almost led to a riot-like
Walter Peck., 33, Columbus, was
situation and backup from the state listed in fair condition Ibis morning
highway patrol was utilized to in HMC with scalp cuts and head in·
restore order.
juries. It was reported Peck was
Investigator Preston Mustard was struck by a car during the incident,
cut on the side of the head in an but the report remained un·

confinned this morning.
The incident began with the party ,
held at Sarruny's Place, a recreation
hall in the village operated by
Samuel Morris. The party:JIIH! \leen
going since early aftenwllii and
residents began complaining in the
evening about the noise.
Deputies arrived on the scene bet·
ween 11 and 11 :30 p.m. and said beer
was being sold on the premises. The
crowd, consisting of local people and

some from Columbus, Chillicothe
and Michigan, also had possession of
drugs , they said.
The department closed the place
down and confiscated the beer and
other liquor and charged' Morris
with alcohol resale. The crowd was
ordered to disperse, but refused to
until backup from other deputies
and the patrol arMved. The incident
lasted one and one half hours, the
(Continued on page 10)

1 ~ • r~

Ohio has
11 road
fatalities
By Tbe Associated Preu
Seven of the 11 traffic deaths
recorded in Ohio over the weekend
occurred in motorcycle accidents,
the Highway Patrol said·.
Among the motorcycle mishaps,
one killed two teen-agers and
another took the life of a pedestrian.
The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The.dead:
SUNDAY
WOOSTER - Michael R.
. Keshoch, 24, of Poland, In 11 motor·
cycle accident on Ohio 539 near West
Salem In Wayne County.
LIMA~ David J. Stokes, 'll, of 01·
, tovllle, In a one-car sinuhup on a
rufal Allen County road.
CLEVELAND - Lisa Gilmrnalo,
3,11f Cleveland, a·pedestrian hit by a
motorcycle on a dty street.
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COil'uMBus
- Michael
Franklin,
11
i
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21; of . Columbus, jn a one-car ac,i:ideilt op Ihtentali! 711n' boiumbul. ·
CIN~A11-'-~ Jackson,
.~ of~ot wOOd, Ina_.. ~~~nt .

, qn lnterltale 751n'Clncinnati. ·
Jli)Ffi'JRSON 7" ~~ Aris\e8d
Jr.,'~ 1 of.AIIron,.&gt;:ln II·C~J'-Inotprcycle
·lttldelll on 'a ·\ieilevi;OM!Ie;Lake

'· city .tree\, \
I '

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•

Corilmentar

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel '
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, July 27,1981

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IIJ 4 1ii elltlid rr..

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son's bar mitzvah. The meal consumed on that occasion would have
provided Mrs. Impoverished with
one good plate fullof meat per day
for the rest of her life. Conclusion :
The government of Santa Fe, N. M.,
prefers conspicuous consumption
for the Upbeats of this world over
nutritional security for the Impoverished. If you believe this, then
you are required to believe that for
so long as it can be demonstrated
that a single human being has less
than you believe that person should
have, no human being can have
more than that human being needs
to have.
And that isn 't all. In addition to
believmg this , it is required that you
must also believe that the only
means of transferring the surplus is
by act of government. And - wait there is still more. You are further
required to helieve that that govern·
menl is undemocratic. Because if it
were democratic, then the voters
who elect the legislators givmg them
a mandate to take from A in order to
give to B are voting to take money
from themselves. But if that is the
case, then they are disposed to give
up that surplus voluntarily. If they
are so disposed, then you do not need
the intrusive machinery of the
government to consummate the
redistribution. Or is it that A.
rccogmzing that C, if left to his own
devices, would not contribute to B,
desires not only to make his own
sacrifices voluntarily, but to require
C to make similar sacrifices - coer·
c&gt;vely. In which event you redefine
democracy as the means by which
the majority forc"s the mmority to
share the majority's priorities. But
since the majority , by the laws of
rea lity, cannot ever consist of all the
Upbeats in the world, then you are

Board chairman
keeps promise
NEW YORK i API - When Paul Volckcr accepted the chainnanshipof the
· Federal Reserve Board he promised to do his best to take the heat out of in·
flalion with a restrictiVe monetary policy .
· Over the past two years he has fulfilled the promise. He concedes the job
isn 't done, a point he underscored this week by lowering still further his
goals for adding to the economy's supply of money.
But as the inflation thennometer drops - the second quarter came in at an
annual rate of just 6 percent - Volcker is feeling more heal. As he succeeds,
at least in his view, the criticisms grow more intense.

Understandably, because success for the Volcker policy means slower
economic growth , some pamful readjustments to lower standards. tough
times for some businesses and very likely a rise in unemployment.

Slower growth already is here. Output during the April-June quarter
shrank to 1.9 percent less than in the first three months of the vear, and
economists now see the likelihood of a 1981 recession.
·
The painful readjustments arc taking place, as you can hear everywhere
from would-be home sellers and buyers in a market almost wiped out by high
interest rates, and from small-business people unable to maintain adequate ·
mventories because it costs them 23 percent for money .
Curiously, the jobless rate hasr 't measured the economic falloff. In Ma y it
did rise to 7.6 percent of the civilian laborforcc from 7.3 m April, but then 1t
fe ll to 7.3 again in June. Nothing, however, prevents those figures from being
revised; it happens all the lime.
In view of the consequences, are Volcker's efforts justified? Viewed in the
abstract - by the numbers - the economic slowdown is more easily accepted than when measured in human casualties. People out of work shout.
as do business people turned down at the loan window .
So do municipalities that must float bonds, and shareholders who see their
holdings shrinking, and perfonning artists who watch donations decline, and
taxpayers who find smaller budgets mean fewer services.
The press is on, and by most of the measurements that economisl• use to
devine the future , a job they concede they have done poorly, the pressure
will increase. Volcker, in fact, has all but said it.
" We're at a critical point 10 the fight against inflation," he told the House
Banking Committee on July 21 after reading the latest money supply figures
and detennining even less money should be available.
And as he pursues the monetary press he hopes will queeze the breath
from inflation you can be sure the he"t of controvery will rise . Complaints
wlil become more numerous . There'll be demands he res ign.
Some of the complaints will be frivolous. Some will be self-serving. And
some will come from those who wonder if the chairman knows what he is
doing, or whether he is practicing economic bloodletting.

Tf!day in history.

• •

Today is Monday. July 27, the 208th day of 1981. There are 157 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On July 27, 1953, an armistice was signed at Panmunjom, ending the
Korean War after more than three y~a rs.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Strft&gt;l
Pomfroy, Ohio

114-"1-2151
OE\'rrTED TO mF.INTERESTOF THF. MEIGS-MASON A. REA

this world? 6) H the objective of the
estate lax is to guai-d against great

really inviting the majority to take
from the minority exactly what they
want. This is done through the
mechanism of a progressive income
tax, which is the instrument by
which inequality of political station
is exercised. Everything Mr. Kon·
dracke needs to know is contained in
the paragraph just concluded.
At a less philosophical level, the
argument about estate taxes and orphans is subject to an almost infinite
number of crippling practical
questions, e.g., I) If the federal
government doesn't support orphans, how does it follow that orphans would not then be supported'
2l If a man pays taxes on his ear·
nings during his lifetime, why isn 'I
that money his? In order to be his
money, he must have the right to
convey it. Otherwise it is only contingently his.
3) Do we want to encourage
profligacy during a man's lifetime,
especially in the later years, in order
for him to avoid estate taxes' 4) If
we encourage profligacy of that sort,
don't we discourage savings, which
create a r~sidue? 5) If there is no
residue, where's the money going to
come from to help the orphans of

accumulations of wealth, but estate
taxes are forcing beneficiaries to

sell family businesses in order to
pay taxes, which sales n:suit in
diminishing rather than increasing
the concentrations of wealth, are we

well Sl!rved by estate taxes?
It is all very dilcouraging. How
splendid it would be If everyone
reasoned as lucidly as I?

.

By.Tbe Alloelaled ~
A few feet of centerfield waU kept

Rochester's Tom Chisin from lila
third home i'un agalnlt the leagiaeleadlng Columbus Clipper:~ :- lo
Chlim settled for two homers and a
triple in leadlni! the Red Wings to a
1~21nterll,atlonal ~victory.

"I hit the ball good,'' ChilD! laid of

lila shot In the seventh

The temporary spending plan was
adopted when the House and Senate
could not resolve major differences
over separate versions of a one-year
budget which had cleared each
chamber. Representatives included
money for the commission in their
proposal ; the Senate took it out.
Ms. Virginia C. Ortega, one of
three commission employees rein·
stated July 1 after a court ruling
restored funds which had been cut,
called for prompt Senate action to
extend the agency's life beyond Oct.

had three hearings in the Senate
Ways and Means Comrmttee. No additional hearings have been
scheduled.
Funding lor the agency is contained 10 the four-month interim
budget which the General Assembly
approved before it adjourned for a
summer vacalion that is expected to
last through Labor Day.

7.

"There is no one in the state who
can pi ck up the slack" if the commission goes out of business, she
said.
The commission gathers and
disseminates information on
problems and programs concerning

Spanislrspeaking people. Its mem·
bers must be American citizens who
speak Spanish and are of Spanishspeaking origin, representing the
distribution of Spanislrspeaking
people throughout the state.
Although the 1980 census placed
the number of Hispanics in Ohio at
about 119,000, Ms. Ortega believes
the total is higher.
" We lake great issue with that. We
know ci numerous cases, people
very close to us, who did not fill out
the Icensus) fonn," she said.
Mrs. George Bush appears to be
enjoying the extensive travel, heavy
volume of mail and duties she has
assumed since her husband became
vice president of the United States
six months ago.
She shared some of her experiences as she spoke this week at

\I·:I\

YO IH\ 'AP t - Sh,ul&lt;l
llllllll 'l l\\" llt' r :-1 lx_· rennitted in c t l llll'\;tx dl'ductin11s fur infL•rt•st pa id on

111p1('
II

loans '! Or should the

lndt•t•d it i.'-. . In tltt • 111inds uf sulllt' .
IS il topil' !ha t fncUSl'S Oil~ of tht

the 19111 Ohio Republican Women's
Political Day in Columbus.
Mrs. Bush, whose ties to Ohio go
back to 1808 when her great-great·
grandfather settled in Ross County,
has greeted the American hostages
from Iran, welcomed visiting heads
of stale and toured the space shultle.
"I answer reams of mail," she
said, quickly noting how she handles
letters on one particular subject. "I
hope you won't write me about my
gray hair . I have a form letter for
that."
Mrs. Bush, whose new role has
taken her on a series of trips in the
U.S. and to foreign capitals, recalled
one particular journey in which •he
visited with the families of the slain
Atlanta children.
"That was one of the most moving
things I've ever done, " she said.

'llctjtlf' t't'lllllll nic

issut·s 11( I hl' t11lY .

dl'ducll1 11l." lw dra slH ·a JJ .\- redu('t'cl.

wh ich tlwy Sl't.' a s I hl'

t '\ I'll t•]JIJllll(tlt•d'l

wt·t·ssily of quit·kl~ - modt•rnizing tht•

[)1"11\"ll(';t(i\ "l' ( U dlt'

toll ion\ indus! r ial t'i-tpacity .
But wait. H11w d ttl:s llw is;-; ur

(o11

;Jild ]Jl\-'t' S (JJJl' IJ]

al l aly ~ l.o.,,

lhink -t;uJk SL'\'1' ~. rJUthors.
t·dtt,,rs and lht· ltkt· kno'' 11. Atul Sll.
f or \ "t ti'IOU S 1'\';tSII/l S. thl'y l'XL' I"l'i St'

IHIJJlt •ownt·r

II IIo

t ' \ 'o ll"t '

!T ill ·

Twt, difft&gt;n·nl
t ss ut· ~o . yttU sa~ ·- Mayht• not .
Tl tt' anti-ch'dudion folk;-; &lt;11'1-!lll'
tl 1at tla· $:15 llilltm l 111 ft•tkral lax·
tlt·llt14 ·\ twls fur httttlt' '''''l'tgage in ~
lt'J"t'SI is IIIUI H.'~ 114'1\ t•r Spt•JI\ on
lnuld11r12 and rnodt•mizllll-! pn,l l ut· ~

i11 tis .July issw ·. tilt' t•d tturs 11f
\ ;iltllll ·s Bust lll'ss" tnaga zuu· an·
'&gt; 111'\'t '.\ III J..! tiH.'I I' n·ali l'I' S l lltlhl' ISS llt '

llllt'

lht ·

dt·dudion.o. ;
prohlt'rtl
of

lax

,,f

rll t ~ lr t ali z a\ i o n · ·

I ht • I... S tlt' IT ).! UI&lt; trl ,\ ·.

IJtTO ILJSt ' . it S

ahsulutt•

of lht'lll '\ U).!).! L' Stt•d ,

\IIIIi :14 !llJIIJtlll j&gt;t'llpit' paytiiJ-! IIJl
tl l l •r t g a ~~ ~ ·s it' s just a \' t•ry j.!tt11d

1Jt lll fcwrltlit '.'i :;11

that tllt'y can tum

u11! I! UtHis iu il lllttrt' drit·il'nt , lc!-1~ inflalturtcu-y rtlillllll'l".
B_,. pcnnitting all hou tt' rnort~()ge
tnkrt's\ to I.K' dt&gt;dut'h-d. tlll'y argue.

I n f;u·t. a prupc 1~a~ tu climinah.• t11c
tkdudiuns wets t~onsidcrcd by the

/rt lllsitrg ;rs r111 inveslrnent is made
l1u1 fl11radi vt•. at h•ast in a rt&gt;lative
st•ll st· 11 t·orrrpdt·s willr slot·ks, they
st l\ . ,~\nd it dot'S lit lit• In raise
prudJtdtril y lwntllst ·. 11f t'tlllrsc, a
IH,IIst·
dtlt ·s n ' l
produt·t· market

ht'l'allle appctrcnt. aut C:t limit un the
;11rwunt uf dcdudions could ~urfacc

.

.

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Miller, the Q!rllers haven't broken
ralikl either and are backing their
Player RelatiOilll Cmmni~ and ita
bead and chief negotiator. Ray
Grebey.

You ~·t s1nll: half a bQat aild ezpect
the othet half to lloilt on ahead.
Right now we're both. going down
tilgether."

The player reps ol the 26 teams got
together.to be briefed on the owners'
latest proposal by Marvin Miller,
executive director. of the union.
Thou&amp;h a few players have voiced
dl.saatlsfactton with the situation,
support for Miller is very solid
among the players.
And Miller hal 118id the executive
board won't recommend acceptance
of the newest offer.
"I think It's a showdown right
now," said Braves 'pitcher Phil
Nlekro, who was to be in Chicago for
the meeting. "We are going to have
to come up with something pretty
exciting to get fans back In the ball
park. "
While the players stand behind

· "We're behind Ray Grebey and
the PRC 100 percent," 118id Detroit
General Manager Jim Campbell. "I
think the offer proves that the
owners havorled to get something on
the table that Is palatable to both
sides. "'nlere wxloubledly are
thlnp .I n It that they (the players)
don't like and there are thlnp in It
we don'tUke.
"But ·1 think It's a real honest ef·
fort to get something on the table
that both Sides could accept."
As the lmpU8e continues- no fur·
ther ·negotiations have been
scheduled - the [lllSsibllity that the
season will not resume looms larger.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Indiana
University basketball coach Bobby
Knight waa ·"speechless" when he
teamed that JU star forward Landon
Turner remained In aerious condition after a weekend auto ac·
cident.
Knight, who led JU to an NCAA
title this year, called the famUy Sunday morning from Idaho, where he
is vacationing, according to Tur·
ner's mother, Rita Turner.
" ,Of · course · he · was just
speechless," she said "He offered
everything he possibly can, even to
fly in today. But we told him that
wasn't necessary because there isn't
anything he could do."
Officials at Methodist Hospital in
Indianapolis said Turner was semi·
conscjous and hal some paralysis in
his extremities after an aceldent
Saturday on an Indiana highway.
"He Is not in a life-threatening
situation,'' said hospital spokesman
Fred Price, adding Turner was in
traction because of a fractured spine
and other injuries. Priee ,said the 6foot·IO; :HG-pound forward had suf·
fered a break in the sixth vertebra.
Turner ·was injured when the car
he was driving went out of control on
a !~lane highway and fll~ over
abOUt llO !lliles soutl)eut ol IndianapoUS. Three other peiBOns in
the car were injured. One was
hospitaUzed.
A neurosurgeon who eiamlned
Turner was uncertain whether the
21-year-old player would suffer per·
manent paralysis, said Price.
Turner,!J Indianapolis, who was a
' starter flir the J911 NCAA ehampioo
Indiana basketbaU team, also suf·
fered a COIICUSI(iin, said Price who
added that' it was "to early to deter-

ill-!ilill '

!/rust · \\lro t·lairn that lou
lillll'h r·&lt;tprtal 1-!"l'.'-i into lruusing .
\-liJI'h uf i1 . IIi ' says, is Ust'd 11ot tu ul.r-

11,,._, '""'' ' an unu'u"IIY powerful

latrr hurnt•s hut It, refillfllltT IIH.' /11.
lit- ;rr~! \lt'S tltal rt Isn 't adding to the

tti'J.!IIIItt'lll:

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s lilttlloll s t ·llitl/' ft'llt l\\ . ts proruincnl
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S&lt;I!Tt•cJ ti S ll!ttlhl•rhtiiHI.

almost as

Bureaucratic success story.__R_o_be_rt_J._.w._a_gma_n
WASHINGTON INEA 1 - All too
often the only stories about federal
bureaucratics that find their way into print are those describing waste,
lazmess or folly. Perhaps this tale
will serve as a reminder that the U.
S. government contains thousands
upon thousands of dedicated, talen·
ted employees whose services to the
taxpaying public far outweigh the
costs of their paychecks.
This story concerns the men and
women who work for the oftmaligned Food and Drug Administration. Their quick action a
lew weeks ago may have saved your
life or the life of someone you know.
II all started one evening in mid·
May _at a Rockford, 111. 1 firehouse.
F~ref1ghter Ron Hill was preparing
dinner for his engine company when
he opened a can of mushroom pieces
and realized immediately that it was
spoiled.
Rather than simply throwing the
can away. Hill telephoned the local
health department. His call set in
motion an effort that within hours
would involve thousands of FDA employees from coast to coast.
Botulism - even in small amounts •
- is one of the most deadly fonns .of,

poison. II causes several deaths in
the United Stales each year.
The poison most commonly occurs
in low-acid fOOds that were im·
properly canned. Mushrooms are an
ideal carrier of the toxin, so the FDA
suspected what kind of problem it
had on its hands even before an
agency inspector arrived at the
Rockford firehouse .

cans that were processed at the in 1980. Six of them Involved fOOds ,
same time.
four involved drugs and seven irJ.
"All we have to go on is the batch volved medical devices. Ohe last
number of the tainted can," says category includes products such as
FDA spokesman Jim Green. "That X-ray machin~; if one machine is
batch might contain thousands of found to be emitting too much
cans, and none of the other cans radiation, all similar machines must
might be spoiled. But we cannot take be. tracked down to determine
the chance, so we have to track them whether they are doing likewise.
all down.''
The tracking-down process in·
As the FDA's Green expla1·ns .
Another FDA inspector visited the valved tho usands f FDA emp1oyees "When a 'class one'
decl.ared
grocery store where the mushrooms who vtsl
· 'te d per haps 100 ,000 everything else stops until the recall•
had been purchased and removed aU whoi esa Ie an d r eta'!
1 esta'blls 1unents
is complete. Every available person
similar cans from the shelf. Samples nationwide · Cans from the· batch is put to work - Often Including not
of the mushrooms were flown to the were found 1·n stores m
· a1most a11 of only ·our normal inspectors but
FDA's microbiology laboratory in the 50 states - 1'ncl,udi ng AIaska a nd · supervisory personnel _and, In the
Cincinnati, where the presence of Hawaii - as we II as ln mr'l'ta
I ry post
smaller offices, secretart'al and
botulism was, quickly confirmed.
excua
"~ n
ges ov erseas.
clerical employees.
This finding caused the FDA to
This sto ry ha s a ha PPY ending.
"The mushroo
. m recallt'n May· was
dec Iare a "class one" recall - that Every can
was 1rae ked down:. A the largest one we have had 51·nce
is, the recall of a product •hat could spokesman for th Ce 't
f
'
~
n er· or the early 1970s in the nwnber of
pase
an
inunediate
threat·
to
human
D1·
ea
Co
trol
·
Alia
ta
5
10
life.
se n
n reports people Involved and the nwnber of .
!hill not one conflnned case Of estabJishments that had ' to be
The canned mushrooms were botulism resultep from the !llttch in · Visited~ we can ont'y' hope that all
traced to a Pennsylvania packer. question.
· lis· th f
·
Even that was not done without
Each year the FDA supervtiles reca, m e u~ure will ill&gt;~ a~ well."
some difficulty for the mushrooms some950 product recalls.Stnce'19'16
The moral. or th_~ s~ory: ',Whlle
carried the grocery chain's own th
... " rd -ed
,
there is waste aplenty ill the lederal
uas o er 6,700 recallli; government, there
.' also' are
' a~enc'les '
Ia heI. XDA Jhspectors visited the 50eofagency
which haye Jleen of the "c~
e
plant and detennlned that the toxin one" varletv_. · , .
.
· U~,the FQI\ that can'move quickly
tnight be contained 1rr thousands of.
The
&lt;
Ia
~no efficienpy · fi!· llfe-threa!fntng
r.e were
17 "c ss one" recalls · .' sltuaUons.
.
r------~--·-.,
w
-~
,0
, .i

°

.

Clippers. WWiama, Rlpken and
Chism hit home runs in succession
againlt Clipper starter 8rain Ryder,

11-5, In the leCond inning, Jumping to

a 7-Giead.
Rochester starter Cliff Speck, 4-2,
pitched ·the first six innings,
allowing jtllt two hits and a run.
Nate Snell worked the final three irJ.
n1ngs to gain hi.s first save of the

season.
Rlebmood 4, Pawtucket %
Richmond scored three unearned
runs In the top of the 20th inning to
break a 1·1 tie and beat the
Pawtucket Jted Sox.
Chico Rulz scored Matt Sinatra,
and Randy Johnson hit a double to
score Steve Hammond and Paul
Runge for the Braves.
Carlos Diaz, 1-3, pitched the final
aeven lnrlinl!s, allowing two hits and

Mahaffey
captures
tourney

striking out" six, for the win. Starter
Steve Bedrosian went the first nine
innings, allowing five hits and one
run.
· Pawtucket starter Bob Ojeda went
the first 10 Innings, allowing six hits
and one run. Jim Dorsey, :J.-7, took
the 101111 for the Red Sox.
Richmond opened the scoring in
the third oil a horner by Runge, his
eighth of the season. Pawtucket tied
the game In the eighth on an RBI
single by Wade Boggs. Pawtucket
scored again in the bottOm of the
20th on a lead-off home run by Mike
Ongaraio, his sillth of the season.
Tidewater 3, Syracuse 1
Tidewater's Charlie Puleo allowed
only three hila before being relieved
in the eighth inning, as the Tides
defeated the Syracuse Chiefs.
Puleo, who· in picking up the win

upped his record to 9-6, was
threatened only once. In the seventh
inning, Puleo walked Syracuse's
Charlie Beamon, who moved to third
on a single by Dave Baker. But
Beamon remained stranded there,
as Puleo retired the side.
The lone Syracuse run was Greg
Wells' 19th homer of the year in the
ninth inning off Tidewater reliever
WilLIAMSBURG, Va. lA P)
Jesse Orosco.
John Mahaffey shrugged off his
newly acquired status as a golfing
The Tides scored two runs in the
millionaire .
third inning when Mike Fitzgerald
"II doesn't mean a thing," Mahaf·
and Ron Gardenhire, who had both fey said after a front-running, 2·
singled, were brought home on a stroke triumph in the Anheuser·
single by Bill Haslerig.
Busch Classic Sunday. The victory
Mike Howard scored the final was his sillth on the PGA Tour Iitle,
Tides run in the seventh on a and the $54,000 check made him the
sacrifice fly by Mike Fitzgerald.
31st man to go past Sl million in
The losing pitcer was Larry Me· career earnings.
Call, :J.-2.
"Look at those great players of the
past, Hogan and Nelson and Snead .
If they'd played for the kind of purses we have now, they'd be
billionaires.
"Besides, you can't keep it.
"And besides that, my ex-wile has
dy. Do you know who we are•' And
most
of it."
he rolled his eyes toward me and to
Mahaffey,
who started the hot,
his father and then the tears started
humid
final
round
in a threeway tie
to come from his eyes. It just about
for
the
lop
with
hometown
favorite
wiped me out.
Curtis
Strange
and
Howard
Twitty,
"He can squeeze your hand and
quickly
took
command.
By
the
time
flutter his fingers, but he can't move
he'd
played
two
holes,
he
had
a 2·
his legs," she said.
stroke lead.
AI the start of the round, 25
players were within four strokes of
the lead. By the lime Mahaffey had
played seven holes, no one was
approval for any franchise shift within four strokes.
He simply cruised in from there ,
fromonecilyloanother.
finishing
with a 276 total, eight shots
"The league felt we had to make
under
par
on the hilly, 6,822-yard
the mistrial motion for the record,
as an insurance policy if the jury Kingsmwll Golf Club course.
does not decide in our favor and
there is an appeal," NFL spokesman
Joe Browne said after Sunday's
ruling.
The judge's ruling on the single en·
lily question was considered a victory for the Raiders and the
Coliseum Commission.
"We have consistently maintained
that 28 separate teams that do not
215 W. Main
share profits or losses and are in·
dependently operated in competition
Pomeroy
with one another, could not be a
single entity," said the Coliseum's
992-2668
attorney, Maxwell Blecher.

mine" how the head injury would alfecthim.
"1bere's no scheduled surgery as
of yet. And there won't be until they
run some more extensive tests,"
Price 118id.
Mrs. Turner said her son
recognized her when she visited him

in his hospital room Sunday and was
able to grasp her hand with his
fingers.
"He did recognize us," she said of
the visit she made to Turner's room
with the basketball star's father,
Adell Turner. "He opened his eyes
and I said, 'This is Mommy and Dad-

Federal judge denies mistrial
WS ANGELES (AP)- A mistrial
sought by the National Football
Iague was denied by a federal
judge Sunday during a hearing to
discuss instructions to be given to
the jury in the Oakland Raiders' an·
titrust trial against the NFL.

Most of the three hour, Z2 minute
hearing dealt with Judge Harry
Pregerson's instructions for the I~
member U.S. District Court jury,

Local
bowling
TD&amp;II

. 'hut
Proffitt'1Gro.

W. L.l'too
16 0 1440

Jefl'sC.nyOut
14 Z 1461
Toom3
I I 1412
01&lt; Uborty
I 10 1!107
F&lt;lty 1'lo&lt; Smile&lt;
4 12 1469
Team lllih ll&lt;l'i&lt;s - 01&lt; Uberty 15al; F&lt;tty
Tlo&lt;Sorvlcel. .; Jelf'l Cory0ul1461.
TMII ¥....,..-Felty Tto&lt; s.r.tce ll$;
01&lt; lJborty IW; Toam 31111i.
w.....·, hiP-~&lt;~- Tina Col1lns . . , Lao
-~: ~Maylo411 .
llllh-- Tina Col1lns ttli, 113 :

w....,•,

~Doorfor153.

which is expected to begin
detiberations Wednesday. Only in
the last few minutes of the hearing
did Pregerson deal with the mistrial
motion, NFL Attorney Patrick Lyn·
chsaid.
The Raiders and the Los Angeles
Coliseum Commi.ssion brought the
lawsuit after the Raiders were
blocked in an attempt to move from
Oakland to Los Angeles in 1980- the
same year that Los Angeles Rams
vacated the Coliseum to relocate 35
miles away at Anaheim Stadium.
The mistrial motion dealt with
Pregerson's partial directed verdict
on Friday, whe,n he threw out the
NFL's contention that it is a part·
nership- a single entity- and not
28 separate corporations. The NFL
contended that a major part of its
presentation during the 50 days of
testimony dealt with the partnership
issue.
As he denied the mistrial motion,
Pregerson reiterated his Friday
ruling that the single entity question
was a matter of law, not a matter of
fact lor the jury to decide.
Still remaining before the jury in
the 12th week of the trial is whether
· the NFL reasonably applied Its rule
requiring a 75 percent membership

r--------------1

TRACTORS

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LOAN
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t25 E. Main Sl. • 992·2171

'

LBTI'D8 OF OPINION 1ft Mk1aed. 'ht)l . . . . lit~

Please 1e11 me more oboul the
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When you find yourself with a
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Or take care of bills. Or for
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• A MEMIIEII ol 1'11&lt; "-loiN Prnl, lalaod Dolly Prn• A....louoa aDd 111&lt;

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. ~-..,.,.

STATE
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BOB HOEFLICH

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Then - you may qualify
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Just give us a call or
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INSURANCE
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hblllhft'

Auil. .t Pwbliltlft'fCGIIb'Mifr

Insurance Package

DALE HILL

15'

·

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
PAT WHITEHEAD

CLASSIC WINN~- Jobn Mahaffey, of Woodland, Tesas, waveo to
the crowd after wlmllDg the Allbeuse!'Buscb Golf Classic at the Klngsmlll
Golf Club In Willlamaburg, VIrginia, Sunday. Mahaffey fiDisbed the 10111'
oameot wltb a elgbt under par 276. ( AP Laserphoto) .

Indiana cage _star hurt in accident

Hcagw1 !calli hut quickly dropped
when the sizt• of the 11ppositiun

TIJust· whu fa\'ur t·ontinuatiun uf
tl rt· dt•thlt'tiun iududc almust
t '\"!' t\ ltllt' inlwu~in~ and homc'fimm~
t't'. Asult· frnn 1 ))tllilic~al pHwer - 67
pnn ·nl of U.S. huu!-:ing is Ol'l'Upied
" ·' pt•uplt· who uwrt their humes -

Jnnln&amp;. "I

thought It had a good ~ to go
out. Our bullpen thought it waa a
home run. They thought It hit ·
something and bounced back Into
the park. It would have been nice."
In other league ~ Sunday,
Rlclunond beat Pawtucket 4-2 in 20
l,nnlnl!s and Tidewater defeated
ayracuse :J.-1.
The Red Wins also received
homers by Cal Rlpken and Dallas
-Williams In their victory over the

Should homeowners he permitted deductions?
II is

Player.

Cbleago today tQ . Blrlke,.whlcb lain Ita teth day, with
latellt prGpOIII. lili2 pD.lolt.
But It was- unlikely they would find
"The future o1 bueball Is on the
much of tha~ proposal to their llldng.
"It's just a smokeso ttil on the old line, tD a .certain exlel!t." 118id
JII'OPOIIal," llld Detroit Tigers Cblla. "How we handle Ibis Ia going
player representative Milt Wilcox to detennlne If we come out of It and
about the oWners' latest offer. That contln11e tD get better..,or get worae.
offer would require professional A pholly; fictitious settlement really
player compellllltloil for ranking ~·t do aD)'body 811)' good. It
free agentaln the.liPPM' II percent ol would be a step in a downhill plunge.
"If we dllll't addral the real
the performance criteria 011 a tw~
~.
then 110011er or iater we're
year average, rather than 211 perg!llng
·
to
have to say adios to
cent, as previOIIIIy ~ by the
bueball.
owners. The P!ay.ers walked olit
June 12 solely over the IssUe of free
"We have two maj_IK' forces here,
agent~tlon. .:
the
owners and the MYers, Uld we
"It's just a 'bunch ol propaganda
have
· to leam to live together
and the owners don't ltate what the
we're ~ on. each
because
long-tenn effects of It might be,'' adother. We're aU In the !IIIJll' boat.
ded WUcox, a pitcher.

a smoke screen?

Chism's two blasts defeat Clippers

cormnission a new lease on life has

d~t·s .

~

"*Ill
di!Jcl.a the owners'

~ Eddie Cllllel, wu thlnklnC
abwt tlie ~ elfeeta·ol the

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio IAP I- Members of the Ohio Corrunission on
Spanish Speaking Affairs face a new
deadline of Oct. 7 in their drive to en·
sure th e agency's continued
operations.
That is when a sunset provision in
the original law creating the II·
member panel calls for it to go out of
business unless renewed by the
General Assembly.
A House-passed bill givmg the

Th1 · issut· rlt' \'l' r

One o1 the 0t1nen, Tau Rangers

Aa!Jociation

Commission faces O~toher 7 deadline

IH IIIH' I!Hit'lg;.jge

'

· The euei!Uve bQatd of the

Ono~h~s~des~te~----~------~-~-~_m_~_n_~_~_~_J_~
It's precisely because they don't
make people much brigher than
Morton Kondracke, the executive
editor of The New Republic, that one
worries. If he were just one of those
street comer ululators who never
analyzed any social question on their
own, who were brought up tq believe
that Congress can manufacture
money and that the world is divided
between misanthropes and philanthropists, the hitter Democrats, the
fanner Republicans - why, one
would simply endure, even as one
does a cold or a rash. But Mr. Kondracke really thinks that the Reagan
administration is a) in favor of ri ch
people at b) the expense of orphans.
I kid you not.
He said the other day, Isn't it true
that the Reagan administration is in
favor of reducing the estate tax'
Well, yes.
He then said, Isn't it true that the
Reagan administration is opposed to
federal subsidies to orphans'
Well, yes.
From this, can't we conclude that
the Reagan administration is for
rich people at the expense of orphans'
Well, no.
Now the lest of fundamental
economic sophistication is to be able
to absorb proposition one, then
proposition two, while res1sling the
sy llogistic temptation to arrive at
th e conclusion that Reagan
"prefers" rich people to "orphans."
Let us look at the problem as a
reductio ad absurdum:
In Santa Fe. N. M.. there 1s a
lon ely old widow , Mrs. lm·
poverished, who in order to stretch
her savings eats meat only twice a
week. In Santa Fe, N. M., Mr. and
Mrs. Upbeat gave a barbecue last
night fur 500 guests to celebrate their

~~'f.l?e~t- proposal

strlltlnc MAJOr

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Mon"ay, July27,1"981

' £STI91l

�\ •

'

':Nionila•
o ll vly 27,1911
5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

: ,Page-4-The Daily sentinel

United Methodist Women meet

Meigs still alive in tou~~m~nt \ .
~THENS -

"we:t~nd,

1

~~\'j~- ~

a~~

Over the
TerryWaylandhadadouble.
lad
Meigs spilt in ita bid to win the
Jay Faires and Randy Hooper had and Jerry Fleldll CCIIItrlbllted IIMIIC
Eighth District American legion
two hits apiece for Glouster, in- run and two al.nglea .00 8 double;
eluding a double by Faires and 8 Kent Wolfe, a al.ngle and dwble .00
baseball tournament by suflering a
U lll8S to tournam'ent favorite Landouble by Mark Echstenkamper. Terry Wayland, two slng!ea.
and
caster and claiming a 14-1 triumph Meigs played Wellston Sunday.
In the secoh~-~~ ~~'!"
over Glter
Dill
Swtday afternoon, Meigs con- ~~~--~
W land bad 1 .tnnt
~eigs, while continuing play In the tinued Its winning ways with a 15-9 while Terry ay
- ....e
double elimination set up, was in ac- win aver Wellston and 8-5 11 itming ~ double and Jeff Wayland a
tion late Sunday afternoon. Meigs
· to
Athens
smgle and home run. Meigs wl11 play
VIC ry over
.
a ain "'•esday
now owns a respectable ~I
In the first contest, Ken Brown · g
record.
Two of the top teams In the region
locked horns Friday evening as Lancaster edged Meigs in a tight pit·
chins duel, 2-0.
Lancaster combined Alan An·
derson's pitching and a fourth Inning
home run by AI Marlow for its 2-ll
winning margin.
Alan Anderson, a southpaw, and
hard-throwing Jell Wayland hooked
up in a tough pitching duel. Both pit·
chers went the dJstance, but
Wayland made one mistake; a home
run pitch to AI Marlow.
Anderson, who allowed three hits,
struck out 19 while walking just lour.
Wayland struck out six, walked one ,
and gave up 10 hits.
The game's only runs scored as
Phil Young singled to lead off the
fourth, then rode home on Marlow's
blast over the fence.
Both teams stranded nine runners
and passed up several other scoring
opportunities. Tim Edwards and
Todd Norris had two hits for Lancaster, while Kent Wolfe, Joe Bob
Hemsley, Jerry Fields, and Bob
Foster each singled for Meigs.
Saturday afternoon, Meigs stayed
~
alive by posting a convincing 14-1
win over Glouster behind a potent 16
hit attack.
Roger Kovalchik picked up the
win with relief from Kent WoHe in
the filth and Bob Foster in the ninth.
Dave Campbell started for Glouster
and Jerry Dixon took over in the first, while Rich Burdette finished the
game from the seventh inning on.
Joe Bob Hemsley had a great day
at the plate as he pounded out four
hits to lead the Meigs squad. Kert
WALTRIP HOLDS TROPHY An'ER WIN- Darrell Wallrlp Ill
Wolfe added three safeties, Jerry
Franlllln, Teno. bolds lite winner's tropby alter be won lbe NASCAR
Fields and Bob Foster each added
Pocono 508 race at Pocono International Raceway In Long Pond, Pa. SUDtwo, Kovalchik had a home run, and
day. ( AP Laserphoto 1-

TROPHY SMACK - Pat Bradley, Nashua, N.H.,
kisses er trophy after winning the U.S. Women 's Open

Sunday in La Grange, 01. She fired a course record M
on the final round lor a total of 279. lAP Laserphoto) .

Whitworth hits million earnings
LA GRANGE, lll. I AP i - Pat
Bradley sank a dramati c liebreaking 7()-foot putt on the loth hole
to shake loose from Beth Daniel Sunday and win the 29th USGA Women 's
Open with a fmal round 66 and
record-breaking 9-under-par 279
total for 72 holes.
Kathy Whitworth , the leader entering the final round, slumped to a
74 and 284 total , but won S9 ,!'&gt;00 and
thus became the first woman golfer
to break the $1 million mark in
career earnings.
Bradley , turning in a bogey less
round, captured the top prize of
$22,000to move into first place on the
money list this year with $154,000.
That put her ahead of the $149,000
won by Nancy Lopez-Mellon, who
was forced to withdraw from Sunday's flnal round because of a
shoulder injury .
Bradley started the final round
three strokes behind Whitworth, two
behind Bonnie Lauer and one behind
Daniel. Bradley and Daniel overtook
the others in the early holes and then
staged a head-to-head battle until

the pivotal 15th.
Bradley put her second shot 70 feet
a way from the pin while Daniel's
second shot found the right bunker .
Since Bradley was away, she putted
a nd canned her birdJe before Daniel
could blast out of the trap. Daniel
saved par but then picked up her fi rst bogey of the round on the neKt hole
to fall two shots off the pace.
Bradley 's 6-under-par 66 broke the
one-round La Grange Country Club
record of 67 equalled earlier in the
week by Lauer. Her 279 Open total
bettered the 280 record established
by Amy Alcott last year.
Alcott's record came on a par-71
course in Nashville, Tenn. , while
Bradley set it on a par-72 course
Daniel birdJed No.l7 to move
wtthin one stroke and also birdied
No.18 to put enough pressure on
Bra dley to force her to make a threefoot birdJe putt for her first Open
triumph and eighth victory of her

career.
Danie l finiShed with a 6ll while
Whitworth was blown out of contention when she put her tee shot in
the water on No.l7 and took a

double-bogey 5. Lauer had a 76 for
287 to tie with Cynthia Hill, who had
a final-round par-72.
Whitworth either led or was tied
for the lead throughout the first
three rounds and hoped to add this
Open to her previous 81 tour lrium·
phs .
Whitworth parred the first two
holes to remain 6-under, but took
consecutive bogeys on the next two
holes . Lauer's slide started on the
third hole with a double bogey, then
she bogeyed both the fourth and sixth holes.
Daniel birdied the second and the
sixth to go &amp;-under par and into a first place tie with Bradley, who had
birdJes in the first, fifth and sinh
holes.
Daniel and Bradley, playing
together and still tied after six holes,
then traded pars on the neKt six
holes and it appeared as if Bradley
would take the lead when she chipped in for a birdJe on No.l3. But
Da niel responded with a long birdie
putt on No. l3 to remain in the tie.
They both parred No.J4 and then
came the dramatic break at No.l5.

Rookies impress Browns' coach
KENT, Ohio I AP I - Cleveland
Browns' Coach Sam Rutigliano
says, so far, there is not one disappointment among the Browns' 1981
dr.ft picks .
That's a pretty optuni stic outl ook ,
considering that only one week of
training camp and one scrimmage is
past . " If six to eight guys on a team
that won its dJviston a re able to
llU:Ike our tea m, and one or two start.
I would say it was a great dra ft,"
Rutigliano said .
"Right now , I would say they all
have a chance I to make thts team 1."
Dunng Cleveland's ~ti e with the
Buffalo Bills in a contr olled scrimmage Saturday, Rutigliano said he
saw more bright spots than dark
ones
Of first round draft pick Ha nford
Dixon, a fleet cornerback from the
University of Southern MisSissippi ,
Rutigliano said, " Hanford Dixon
covered well, which we expected ,
but he also came up and closed well
on the run. He IS progressing very
well. "
Rutigliano also mentiOned rookJes
Mike Robinson, Ron Simmons and
EddJe Johnson as standouts in the
scrimmage. Saturday was the third

time in three years Lhe Browns have

tied the Bills
Because Cleveland meets the
Atlanta Falcons on Saturday in the
Hall of Fame Game m Canton, the
inaugural of the NFL pre-season
campaign, a planned second scrim·
mage against Buffalo won' t be
played . That' s a bit of a problem in
getting a second look at some
rookies.
" I think it' s difficult in the sense
that we don't want anything to Interfere with our progression ,"
Rutigliano said .
" But because we're playing a Hall
of Fame game on national TV and in
our home state , we want to play
some good people and have a good
game . This week we want to play at
least two good quarters. "
That means veterans like quarterback Brian Sipe, running back
Greg Pruitt and fullback Mike Pruitt
will see some game time ea rlier
than normal. Rutigliano said he expects to split quarterbacking duties
betwee n Sipe and second year
backup Paul McDonald .
Other veterans who get the call
will be doing so on short notice . Sunday was their first full day of prac-

tice, a successful day, according to
Rutigliano.
" They Cthe veterans) were effic ient and responsive. The spirit
was good. The intangible thing IS
that they've won , that they've accomplished something. There's an
air of confidence, not cockiness," he
sa id.

Transactions

Kn i ~ llt .

corn~ rback ;

Gifford

Ramsey ,

safl'l y.
Bcrj
Ycpremum.
placekicker ;
Hcl)' Locklin , runnml( back ; Tuny Taylor ,·
'&lt;''itlt- r l'1:'c i\'t'r . antl Hut&lt;:h Ch.llltuun, t ight
l'nd

DF: N\' f:R BRO NCC6 - Wai ved F'ntnk
Hu!&gt;. lmt&gt;ba rkt&gt;r : Wilham McCIWl!: , cen.
LN . arul T um Schremp, defe n5ive tnd.
Placed Scott Ke:i.'llrr, de(tnsive b8ck and
K~ n l..ont: . uff en:s ivr tackle oo injured reserve h:s t.
HOUSTON
OILERS - Wa i ved
Gt!UrM ~
fu ll back &lt;~ nd Ernie Ro~~:en , of.
fensin&gt; l:d&lt;"kl e.

Wuod ;mt .

SAN DIEGO CHARGER S rellcl . cr nter-..:u.ard , retired .

SAN

FHA NCISCO

Spidt'r Gi:lmes.

Sllmf•. ufft&gt;ns ivt'

~9E RS
wid~ receiver
~ liard

Chris Burdette went the entire
dJstance for coaches Perk Ault and
John Hood. Burdette fanned nine
and walked seven enroute to the victory. Jim Newell suffered the loss,
while fanning three and walking
five.
Burdette's excellent pitching was
backed by an eight hit attack, led by
D. Follrod with a triple and single,
Alan King two singles, Nick Bush
two singles, Scot Gheen a single, and
S. Crow a single.
For Eastern Cowdery, Collins,
Mason, and Balser each collected
hits.
In the junior softball circuit,
Syracuse Dairy Bar made an extra

FOOTBALL
Nalioll81 Footballl.ugue
CHK AGO BE ARS Si~nt'd
Wulter
P:n ·ton . n.mnm~ llaC'k, lo an undisclosed
nuinl)l'r uf une-ye&lt;1 r contracts.
1'1.£V FI.A ND
BROWNS Cut Tom

Roilph Per·

-

Waived

and Charles

Pleasantcomeback
14-13.
inning
to defeat Point
Leading Syracuse hitters were
Regina Nance and Becky Adkins
with a home run and single each.
Nita Guinther had a triple and
single, Jill Nease had two singles,
Candy Staats two singles, Tanuny
Staats a double and single, and
singles by Wendy Triplett, Angie
Davis, and Lisa Parsons.
For the losers Low had two
singles, Todi two doubles and a
single, and Tracy, Robertson, each
bad singles .
Also in the Junior league Salisbury

claimed another championship with
a 12·2 win over Syracuse. All around
good defensive play by Salisbury
limited Syracuse to only six hits,
while Salisbury collected 15 safeties.
Syracuse's Jill Nease was credited
with playing a great defensive game
and saved several runs for
Syracuse.

M". AUea Eldilaler, Pomerey.

World.War IT shipmates reunite
Navy llhipma!A!II who aerved
aboard the USS LC.S. (L) (3) 53 In
World Warn beld a reunion recently

at the hDme of Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Eichinger, Mulberry Heights. For
the

Put

12 yean, members bave

met once every two years In dll·
ferent·states.
·
Dlaa~led mates and their wives
were ient cards during the reunion.
Photographs and letters were
shared from several members
unable to attend.
Outdoor
devotions
and
meditations were led on SWiday by
Pastor Roy DeBII!k Ill Sweetwater,
Texas: He was assisted by Paula
Eichinger.
·
A tape received by William Knief
of Jackson Center, Ohio, froin Cltde
Corneille of Clifton, Colo., was

played. In lt, Clyde gave hill regrets
lor not belnc able to attend.
Preceding the dinner, grace was
given by Mrs. Allen Eichinger. The
blrthdaya of Mu Eichinger and
Darla Kelly were observed on
. Friday evenlns.
The next reunion, to be held In
June 1913, wW be hosted by Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Miller of Lock Haven, Pa.
Thole
were Pastor Roy
DeBusk, Sweetwater, Tell.; Mr. and
Mrs. WWiarn Knief, Jackson Center ,
Ohio; Mr. and .MrS. Dale Beasley,
Tell City, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Miller and lrlend Paul, Lock Haven,
Pa.; Louie Roberto, Rochester, Pa.;
M.r. and Mrs. Lee Fisher,
fiellngrove, Pa. ; Mr. and Mrs. Max
Elchlnser, Becky, Max, Jr., Scott
Hlll, Denise Mora, Mr. and Mrs.

Syracuse ended the season with a
fH! record. Salisbury ended league

~=~ 7~: "a:.~~ iS: :o~~~~

straight year Salisbury finished the

.

,
..
·
{:
·
;
·
JJUWIIIJI',

e£~~

iQ

league with an undefeated season.
r~s:ea~s:on~i:n:l~ir:st:pl:a:ce:in:the::Juru~·:orj~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dr. P. James Navalkowsky

Specializing In Internal Medicine
Is Now Accepting Patients..

Will Be
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

The Dailv Sen I inc I
IUSPSI~I

A DivltkMiof Multimedia, Ia&lt;".

P\lbli:;ht-d cwry afternoon, Monday thruu~.:h
Friday, Il l Cuurt Street, by the Ohiu V11l lc)·
Publi:.;l'uo,: C"mp.aoy • Multi111~i11 . Inc .,
Pumcruy. Ohiu 45769 . 992--%156. Stoctmd dass
ousUif.( t' pcud ~~ Pmneruy. Ohiu

'

Monday - Friday

Mcmbt)r : Tht.&gt; A.o.;,o;ot.' i&lt;~lL'll Press, lnlant.l Dlli·
13· ~ Assut.·ttltiun ouKI tht.· Amcrit:01n
Nt.• ws~per P\lbli ~ hers A :&lt;..'itJt 'it~~ti l •tl . N11llnnal

11 dinner time from 6:30 to 6 p.m .
Dorothy Downie, Polly Eichinger ,
Thebna Dill and Janice McGee were
named to oversee preparation of dinner ahd the dining room.
The nominations committee
should be holding a meeting soon to
name new officers lor the coming
year.
Ada Werner, chairperson, collec-

The dev elopment will include a
community center and laundry
faciliti es and is located at Powell
and Page Streets in Middleport. CardJnal Industries will be managing
the development. John and Virgima
Pickirs who are the new resident
managers are now accepting rental
applications for Stone Woods Apartments. They can be reched by

Alfred UMW discuss recent activities

Tracy Loraine Fife, daughter of
Kathy and Gary Fife, celebrated her
fifth birthday on July 4, with a party
and picnic at Forked RWI State
Park. A bicentennial theme was
carried out. The cake was an
American Flag decor.ted with
firecrackers. Attending in addition
to her parents were her sister, Terri
Lynn Fife, grandparents, Richard
and Esther DeMoss, Kim, Karla,
Marty and Richard . DeMoss;
William, Linda and Tommy
DeMoss, and Eddie, Todd, Debbie
and Scotty Fife.

Allred UMW met July 21 at the
church with 10 members present and
12 sick calls reported. The meeting
opened with prayer by Martha
Elliot. President Nellie Parker announced the UMW district annual
meeting would be at Grace U. M.
Church, Gallipolis, October 6. Mrs.
Parker had the prayer calendar and
chose Lois Jackson, Navajo School,
Fannington, N. Mex. The society
signed a birthday card lor her and
friendship cards for kate Rodehaver
and Helen Woode.
The society voted to purchase a
step ladder for the church and
decided to have a soup supper later
in the season.
Thelma Henderson announced the
coming charge revival and asked
prayers for its success.
Mrs. Henderson reported on a
Methodist minister, Elena, in Chtle
whose ministry helped prisoners,
young students and people
struggling for a better life.

calling (614) 843-2341.
Cardinal Industries is manufacturing the apartments in its Columbus facility . Each unit will be transported to the site neary 100 percent
complete includJng all wiring, plumbing, insulation, wall covering, carpeting , appliances ... even the light
bulbs. Rental rates at Stone Woods
Apartments will be subsidized by the
Farmers Home Administration.

Names omitted

POMEROY - The names of Mr.
Annie Thompson led the program, and Mrs. Nathan Biggs were unin"Growing Older - It Ain't So Bad." tentionally omitted from the list of
All members took part in a quiz, those attending the recent picnic of
readings, and discussion . Mrs. the Meigs REACT team.
Thompson closed by leading the
group in the Lord's Prayer.
Students graduate
Gertrude Robinson, Mrs. Parker
James Lee Sclunoll, Middleport ,
and Mrs . Henderson served cookies
and
Rachel Lou Hunter, Pomeroy ,
and summer drinks to those menare
recent
graduates oC Ohio Stale
tioned and to Genevieve Guthrie,
University
.
Janice Pullins, Clara Follrod, Nina
Robinson , and Florence Ann Spen- . - - -- - - - -- -- - cer.
Next meeting will be at the church
AGRONOMY
with Martha Elliot and Genevieve
FIELD DAY
Guthrie as hostesses .
fl~rlturtng

Teacher correction
RUTLAND - Mrs. Fenton Taylor
is the teacher fur younger elementary chldren for the Rutland United
Methodist Church Bible school
rather th~n Mrs. Spencer as reported earlier.

JOHNSONGRASS CONTROL
rli f_' ~ OAY , JULY2ti, Jl,ltiJ

l . J O· J : OO P .M
.lndo 10-H·J O P . M

••

CL E ARVIEW FARMS
JI M .l nd M(j. r r ~ ,ll.lJNOf R ::.
l OWl' f R IVC r Ro ,ld
Galhpoho;., OhiO
~ .. uHi w •Ch co;

.1nd Icc Cr e nm w tll

lw \l' r ve d .

.

Columbus and JoAnn Foster of
Livonia, Mich., and seven grandchildren. The reception will be
i10Bted by their daughter and son-inlaw and grandchildren. Mr. Webb is
a retited Federal employe and Mrs.
Webb is a retired elementary
teacher. The couple requests that
gilts be omitted.

Society discusses business
.
.

The Missionary

sOciety

of the

Pomeroy ·Church of Christ met
recently at the home of Janet Venoy.
President Eileen Bowers opened
the meeting and 'C harldlne Alkire
had dev~ons and read the poem,

SOCIAL
CALENDAR
MOHIJA:Y
ALL VARSI1Y and freshmen foot·

ball players a~ Ill ~ to Me~
•. High School thill evi;nlnt at 6
to
1
be fitted with he!rnets, Charles

p.m.

Office Hours

season.
It was decided to change the Aug .

ted the least coin offering.
Reports were received from
Dorothy Downie, delegate, Thelma
Dill and Janice McGee who attended
the School of Missions, held at Ada,
Ohio, recently. Thelma Dill stated
she was amazed to learn that only
about three percent of the Ruasian
people do not belong to a church.
·,
Janice McGee asked the group to;
send birthday cards to shut-ins and ,
elderly rwho have birthdays In July
and August. There were 50 sick and ·
shut-in calls made by members.
Ada Warner ws program leader
lor the meeting and used the theme ·
" How Does a Local Unit Becomei
More Involvedn Missions?" Her
scripture reading was laken from
James. She read an article "Steps to
Take Action ."
The hostesses for the meeting
were Ruth Barnitz and Bernice Carpenter who served relreslunents
during the social hour.

Housing complex for elderly to open
On July 17 Meigs County Senior
Citizens traveled to CardJnal Industries, Inc., a Columbus-based
developer of modular apartments ,
motels, single family homes and
condominiums for a factory tour .
Cardinal is d~veloping Stone Woods
Apartments, a new 36-unit housing
complex for the elderly , for general
partner Arthur Winer of Marietta .

Girl celebrates
fifth birthday

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Webb, Rt. 2, Racine, will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary dn
Aug. 2 at the fellowship room of the
Racine First Baptist Church lrom 2
to5p.m.
·
The couple were married on Aug.
I, 1931 in Charleston, W. Va., by the
Rev. J . H. Stambaugh. They have
two children, Dr. James Webb of

1'~:~.

Eichinger, Paula an? Tanuny,
Darla Kelly and the host and
hostesll, all from thla area.

Tracy Fife

'

~

for Clara Thomas . A discussion was
had in reference to future Sunshine
Boxes. A motion passed that a committee be appointed to buy most of
the gifts and that they be paid lor by
the organization. Also, members are
to donate whatever articles they
may have that can be used lor the
boxes.
A date was tentatively fixed for
starting the preparation of Christmas Chrismons for the holiday

Paul

pl'eRI!t

Couple will celebrate
50th anniversary Aug. 2

Syracuse hitters were Jill Nease
with a home run, Candy Staats a
triple and single, Tanuny Adkins
two singles, and T. Roush a single .

Amerl&lt;"aa HOC"key Leagut&gt;
~u.a c h .

l'ad

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb

Salisbury hitters were Jennifer
Couch with three singles and a
double, Jodi Harrison a triple, Kim
Eblin a double , Carla King two
singles, Maria Musser, Tanuny
Eblin, Greta Kennedy a single each.

HOCKEY
SPRINGFIELD [NDIANS JuM Wilson, CU&lt;&amp;r h. re ~ito:ned . Hired Tom Webster,

111111 Wllllma ICJJief. Ablleat wa Louie Roberto. The
anap atteaded a reulllllrec:eady at &amp;be bom~ ol Mr.

Middleport romps Eastern
In the Meigs-Mason Pony League
championship play-off game, Middleport rolled to a 10-3 win over runner-up Eastern. Middleport ended
the season at 10-3, while Eastern
dropped to 10-4.

A meeting of the Pomeroy UMW
was held In the social room of the
~burch with Janice McGee
pi-ealclent, presiding. There were
members In attendance . Mrs.
McGee welcomed the members
present and asked the group to
remember Clara Thomas and Frances Spencer In prayer. shoi also
shared a note with the group which
the McGees had received from Cinda and Ed Harkless.
Polly Eichinger gave devotions
and read scripture from Psabns 55.
The secretary's report was read
and approved. The secretary also
read a letter from Mary M. Willis,
chairperson, inviting members to at·
tend the West Ohio Conference
Membership Workshop at Glenwood
United Methodist Glturch in Columbus August 15 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Registration deadline is August 3.
A Sunshine box will be prepared

ui

"u •· ·

/I

DailY Sentinei- Pa..,s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Chancey. head CO!ICh, teJIIM1ed.
mE MEIGS Count)' Jaycees will

meet thla ~ening at 7:30 p.m. to
plan activities for the balancie of the
yellt. All meJI!bers
urged to at;
tend.

are

"Package of Seeds." Trudy An·
drews gave the opening prayer.
Charldlne Alkire gave the
secretary's repOrt and Betty Spencer gave the treasurer's report.
Janet Venoy gave a. report on the
flower fund.
In old business, it was reported the
Women's Prayer Circle will begin
soon on Tltunday mornings at the

Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Flowers

around the bulletin board

will.be taken care of next spring by

Nadnl Ohlinger, It was annOiillced.
In nelir buiiness, the society decided
to make a quilt for Bill Morgan.
The roll call was about birds.
La()o!lna Clark and Betty Spencer
fel!d about doves. Janet Venoy told a
true s&amp;0ry about a robln in her back·
'Yinl Trudy · Andrews read the
i!llisiiin story . and Eileen Bowers
read a~ Mary Magdalene. .
~ts were . served· to
1'nldy Alidrewa, EUeen Bowers,
Labonlla Clark, Janet Venby, Betty
~r, Naomi Ohlinger and Anna

.BfUdlavldaon.

Atln:rtbin~
Rtpr~s e nlativ~ . Bnmham
Ncwspa~r Sa l ~:~ . 73.1 Third AVI'nuc, Nt!w

Vurit. New V11rk 10017.

F'OSTMASTER : ~nt.l IHit.lre!l.~ tu The Dlllly
Sentinel , Ill Court St., P,urne"'y, Ohio 4S769 .

'

Dr. Navalkowsky

SURSCRIPTION RATES
Ry Carrier or Mltlnr RouiiP
Orit! llo'L&gt;ek . •
.. . . . . . .. • • . . fJ.OO
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SINGLE «;;PY
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Sub!lcrilwnc not ~~ to PM)' the CMniet'
IBil)' n!mll 1!'·~ direct to The Daily
Sentintl Uft a S. 'I r!M' I2 month '*"i~ Credit
will be .cl~a~rrler each~·
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Nli llublscriptl~.~ru~ by mail penniU~ in,tuwna
whert" huint c1rrler Jervice i:t MV11ilablil.
MAO. SUII8CRIPriONS
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GOOp SEASON - Mem.bers of ibis Tappen PlaiDII

T·U.U ...... 11110 hltd an outstandlq seaaon, JIGitlng a
7·1 record. Pictured are leam memben, lroat, J.r,

Mlke Newlud, Pat Newland . Eric PoweU. Robert

Reed, and Johnny Lao~. Second row, Michael Smllll,
Mary Joe Reed, Shawn Price, Sieve ,B iuMU, IDd
Adam Calaway. Bact, Atslltao&amp; Coeeb KatlaY Powdl:
Absent was l&gt;avtd GuiDplland Coach DeaiiiJ Newlalld. ·

Ratct,OidlhkOblo
wWniVJrllolo
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SMuulh ... , "'· .. t. ,..c. .. :~.. ......... fll .~

IMooth ·· ··· , ···· · •··· ·, · · ~ · ···· · · ····
)Yttr
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Call

61~-6143

&lt;FOR APPOI.NTMENTS.

J?r~ Nava1kow~k'y's Offi'c e Is
Located At

2513 Jackson Ave.

like many do-lt-yourself projects, installing
your own TV or CB antenna can save you money.
But unless You take proper precautions, it could
put you In touch with our .POwer lines.
.· Ar'JCfthe Slighest contact between you, your
a.,teni'la ahd our lines, could be fatal. ·
; , ~~ before you put up your antenna. here
\. an! a ~w· suQ!iestlon~ you should folloW.
.
· t=lrst, we recommend you have Cl profes·
sJOf.lal ao lt'for you .
.- . . .
• •• ;.c Q~ay; l.f yourfe det.ermlned to. do It your·
self, look out fot power lines. The ones attac)led
to poles. llrid the ones attached to your house.
·If you.can't.tell a p,ower line from a phone
line, aon't'experlment. Steer clear.
'/

Then make sure you locate your antenn a
(including supporting mast and guy wiresl at
least one and a half times its total height from
all power lines. Which means, a 30-ft. high
antenna should be 45 feet away from all power
lines In all directions.
That way, if it falls during construction, or
gets blown down during a storm, It wont hit
any lines and endanger you or your neighbors.
walt for a calm day, assemble the antenna
where you Intend to put it up, be sure to
ground the antenna properly and get somebody to help you.
.
And remember : .Ladders don't mix any
better with power lines than ao antennas.

·OHIO POWER cOMPANY

~-

..

..

�Monday, llltty 2'1, ltm

Carpenter Personals __________ _Apple Gro.ve News Note&amp;___,;~-:o--'---:-:"'o:--. Guests of Mr. arid Mrs. Glen Cline
were Myrtle Folden Queen, Venice,
Florida, Lois Queen and daughter,
McConnelsville, Ohio and Tonya and
Sonya Haning, local.
Madge Dye and Freda Smith accompanied by Dale Dye attended the
wedding of Jack Walker, son of Mr
and Mrs. Clyde Walker, Thunnan,
which wsa held an Brookville, Ohio.
Madge Dye and Freda Smith were
overnight guests of Mrs. Smith's
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Reece Prather an Kettenng
whUe Mr Dye accomparued his
daughter, Mary Kepnar, to Hartford
where he spent a few days before
returning to his home here
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey and
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Rupe, local,
along w1th Mr and Mrs Roy

Wtseman ,

Harnsonvtlle,

were

among those attending the Rupe
rewuon at the Athens County
Fairground.
Ida Deruson spent a recent
weekend with Edith Talbert near
Salem Center
Metta Fisher and Ida Cheadle accompamed Freda Snuth to Athens
where they spent an afternoon at the
Quilt Show at the Dairy Barn
Mr and Mrs Walter Jordan and
sons attended a special Recogmuon
Day at the Methodist Church m
Hillsboro for Rev David Ashworth,
assistant pastor They were accompamed by Mr and Mrs Tad
Gilkey and daughter and Wilbur
Conkey of Albany Rev Ashworth
who received his Elder's orders at

Gaston, aU local, along with the host
and ltostea8, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Gaston.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Cuter, Dayton,
called on his C01181ns, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Starkey.
The Richard Jeffen family , New
Boston, IU., and the Gene Jeffers
famlly, local, enjoyed a cookout with
Mr and Mrs. Michael Lawson and
son, Racine Gene Jeffers also called
on Rev. Freeland Norris at Racine.

the annual conference, was born and

reared In the Albany area and attended the Methodist Church and
youth fellowship there. Rev. Howard
Mayne, former pastor here, was in
charge.
Mr and Mrs Richard Jeffers and
daughters, New Boston, Illinois, are
spending some time here with their
parents, Mr and Mrs Dana Bailey
and Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers and
other relatives.
Carol Folden, Lima, and Linda
Martm, State Route 143, VISited thear
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs Glen

.

.

aoo

Mrs. ltotler Roush and daughters,
Mr. and )Irs. Gerakl Hayman and
Mrs. Phyllis YOWifl ol Middleport
spent the weekend with their son and
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman
and famlly at Colwnbus:
Mrs. Francis Coe aiad Delores

Fairview News Notes

Cline.

By Mn. Herberl Rousb
Inez Grunder and Tina Repp of

Guests of Mr and Mrs. Vernon
Perry were Mr. and Mrs Larry
Rose and daughters, Wellston, and
Mr and Mrs. Bruce DaviS and son,
Dayton
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dixon and
Mrs. Daye Canode viSited Neva
Baker at Port Jefferson recently.
Those attendmg a family
gathermg at the home of Mr and
Mrs Paul Gaston mcluded Mr. and
Mrs Jun Rutan, Mr and Mrs
George McKrught, Rebecca and
Terry, Mr and Mrs Ed Season and
Chris and fnend , Tammy Walker ,
all of Colwnbus , Mr and Mrs Ralph
Frazier, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs
Rick McDamel and daughters,
Albany, Mr and Mrs Dave Noms
and daughters, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs Arthur Crabtree, Mr. and Mrs
Carl Crabtree , Russell and Kevm,
Mr and Mrs Cecil Gillogly and Jeff,
Mr and Mrs Harold Gillogly, VIcky
and Bruce and Mr and Mrs Joe

Wooster, Ohio visited Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Manuel and son, Tim, Tuesday
evening.
Wilda Lawson spent a week with
her brother, Mr and Mrs. Harold
Lawson and son, C. J. at Letart, W.
Va.
·
Mrs Joyce Manuel and daughters
spent a vacation with her daughter,
Rhoda Earl and fanuly at Ft. Worth,
Texas Places of mterest they
VISited while there were Fort Worth
Zoo, J R Ewmg Ranch; SIX Flags
Over Texas at DaUas where the TV
show Dallas IS made.
Mrs. Don Manuel VISited her
brother, Eldred Hart, and Ellis Hart
at the home of Mr and Mrs. Gilbert
hart at Racme Tuesday evemng
Roger and Chrasty Roush ,
daughters Kim and Jenny, Mandy
Russell and Michael Russell VISited
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush and Cm

·~~~~t!~"
v'.. \». ai'MI ,...., ,.~
...,... Pai'IIOII8 at·

'
' l.el1nWt ol Carbon Hill vlalted ~­
Mr. and Mri. GecJrile Thutoa, 11011 t' lleriha Robinson and Mrs. FOC!e

8yMn.-.t~

Kevin ol eottqevllle, vi, Va. IJI\ent
Sunday aftemoCIIi with Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert R~ and vlaited Mr.

ljy recently.
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush, Cin·
' dy Roush, Mr. and Mrs, Jim Hupp
and son, Billy, vtsited Mr. and Mrs
Arnold Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Hupp and Jeremy Sunday evening at
Portland.
Mr. and Mrs Terry Norris and
baby of Columbus visited Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush, Cindy and Ed
Monday evenang.
Mandy and Mtchael Russell are
staymg with their aunt, Mrs. Rober·
ta Lewas at Clifton while their
mother, Mrs. Nancy RusseU is employed at the Pomeroy Courthouse.
Mr. and Mrs. MUo Richardson of
Port Huron, Mi~h. are spending an
mdefimte VISit at their fann.
Don Manuel visited his siSter, Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp Monday
everung. Mrs Hupp recently retur·
ned home from St. Joseph Hospital,
Parkersburg.

Monday, July 27,1981

On Sunday they" ~ the S.yre l"flll!!l~.at,J1$1ckeye
'I"Te guellts 'tif Mr. arid Mrs. Wallie t.Me and vialted J&gt;.nS&amp;yre.

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ours, Mr. and
Mrs. MUo Richardson ol Port Huron,
Mich. visited Mr. JDCI Mrs. Gerald
lfaymQQ Saturday evening.
Mr.~ Mrs. Don Bell spent a few
days wi\11 Mr. and M_rs. Bruce Hart
at Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Parsons, Jun
Bob and Angie of Ashland visited
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons recently.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush a recent Sunday were Mr.IU!d
Mrs. Carroll Pickens of Eaat Uverpool. Carroll was a fonner res1dent
of the Apple Grove and Letart community. Other visitors were Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis, Kun and JeMy

Roush
Mr. and Mrs. George Crane of
Fairplaan, W. Va. visited Tuesday
with Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
and Mr. and Mrs Herbert Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ables of Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ables
and daughter were recent guests of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Ables, V1cka and Michael.
Clarence Story and daughter,
Rosalie, of Darwin spent a weekend
With Mr. and Mrs. Ed Moran and
fanuly at Washmgton, D. C. and also
visited Mr and Mrs Larry Badgely

PubliC NOtiCe

IN THE

Betng m Range ( 11 )
Town (JI Sec t1 0n (27) of

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
PATiiliCK

E

McDO LE ,

ET AL

th e Oh 10 Company s Pur
chase

and

descr•bed

fo ll ows Beg1 n n•ng at the
Sou th Eas t cor ner of lands
formerly ow ned by E

Sloters land

vs
CHARLES

r

rAYLOR ,

E TAL
Defendants
No 17 86S

NOTICE OF
PUBLICATION

as
H

th ence Wes t

Wtfh Soutt1 l1ne of sa •d la nd
ten rods then ce Norrh 10
the ltne of Dav•d Jones lot
thenc e East ten rods ro the
corne r and s.a 1d E
H

Slater and Davtd Jones
To Charles T Taylor l a n d ten rod s thence South
George Conle Cora Cottle Wttn tne Davtd Jones ltn e t o
and Charles A Baker ad the place of begmn.ng to
dresses unknown 11 l•vtng con ta •n Two 121 acres ol
and If deceased
their land be the sa me more or
unknown spouses, he1rs less
dev •sees
l eg atee s
REFERENCE
DEED
exec utor s, adm•n•strators Vol 11 2 Page 476, Me•gs
and ass•ons whose ad Cou nty Deed Rec ords
THe follow.n g descnbed
dresses are unl&lt;own
You are hereby not d 1ed r eal es ta te s• luated m th e
that a Complatnt to Qu1et County of Me1g5, Town sh•o
T11le has been filed tn the of Lebanon and State of
Common Pleas Court of Ohto to w.t
Be1ng a part of Sect•on
Me gs County Ohto, Case
No 17 ,865 demand•ng qu•e1 27, Town 3 Range 11 Ot11o
Purchase
t•tle of the follow1ng Company s
bounded as follows
descr bed real estate , to
Beg1nn.nq 1n the West
w•l
The follow•ng descr1bed l•ne of southwest S w Ger
real es tate S•tuated 1n mans lot '" the center of
Lebanon Townsh1p, 1n th e Long Run
thence west
County of Me1gs and State along sa1d 5 W Germ ans
of On1o to w1r
west l1ne 37 rods and ten
links to a stake at the

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

Curb Inflation. I
Pay Cash for
l
Claulfleds and I
Savell I

Pubhc Notice
southeast corner of Mrs
Jones lot
thence south
along std e line of Mrs
Jones land 86 rods ro a
post
t hence eas t thtrty
seven rods and ten 11nks to
a post th ence north 86 rods
to the place of beg.nntng
conta1n1ng twenty acres

REFERENCE

DEED

Vol 129 Page 516 Me•gs
County Deed Records
The de m and of the Com
pla•nt •S that th e t 1tle to the
abo ve descnbed real estate
be qu•eted •n the names of
the Pl a .nf•ff s, Patr1ck E
McDol e and Emerson Me
Dole
You are requ1red to an
swer the Compl a1nt wtthm
tw enty etg ht (28 ) days af
fer the last publ• ca t10n of
th•s not •ce wh1ch w•ll be
published once each week
for s1x ( 6) consecut•ve
weeks The las t publicatton
will be made on August 3
1981 and the twenty e1ght
1281 days tor answer will
commence on that date
In f .=I Sf' ol your failure 10
answer
or
otherw1se
respond as r eqv.red by the
Oh •o
Rules
of
C1V1I
Procedure, IUdgement by
default w II be rendered
aga.nst you for the relief
demanded •n the Com
pia tnt
Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
M e•95 County , Oh10

Public Notice

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF WILLIAM M
HALEY, DECEASED

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE OlVISION
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SE
TLEMENT OF ACCOUN ,
PROBATE
COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

V~erle Adams hu returned home
after having surgery at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Rev. Bob Robinson'vlalted Mr. and
Mrs. ~rt Smith Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roi,Jert S11Jith, Sr
spent a week's vacatloo in Pennsylvania. They were guests of Mr.
aDd Mrs. Carl Mangus and attended
the Mangus reunion. They also
visated their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Freeman and family, and two
nieces, Mr and Mrs Tommy Kloea
and Mary Bennett.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Findley of
Columbus were weekend guests of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Findley and famlly.
M~. and Mrs. Terry Norris and
baby of Columbus spent two weeks
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Norris.
Saturday visitors of Mrs. Pearl
Norris were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kane
of SwnrnervaUe, N. J ., Mr. and Mrs
Jun Pierson of Clifton, Mr. and Mrs
Hoyt Ferguson of Point Pleasant.
Mrs. Herbert Roush rece1ved a
telephone call from Mrs. Kitty Allen
Skeels, Columbus, stating she had
been confined to a Columbus
hospital but was home now
recuperating Mrs. Skeels was a for·
rner 4tart Falls resident and says
she enJoyed The Daily Sentinel

'

H. L WRtTESEL
ROOFING

Case No 23494

PUBLICATION
OF NOTICE
TO ALL PERSONS IN
TERESTED IN
THE
ESTATE OF WilLIAM M
DECEASED
HALEY,
LATE OF R D I New

L1ma Road, Rutland , Oh10
&lt;5775. MEIGS COUNTY

PROBATE COURT, CASE

NO 23~94 An appllcat•on
CASE NO 23386 F,nal
has been flied ask1ng to
AccounT of Mary Darst, Ad
rel•eve the estate from ad
m•n•slratnx of the Estate
m.n .strat•on say1ng That
of
Leonard
G1lmore,
the assets do not exceed
Deceased
515,000 and the creditors
CASE NO 23123 Fmal
will not be preJUdiced
Account of Bobby Joe
thereby A heanng on the
Adams, Adm•n1strator of
applicaf1on w1ll be held •the Estate of Betty Adams,
August 5, 1981, at l 30
Deceased
o clock PM Persons
CASE NO 23339 FirS! Ac
know• ng any reason why
count of Elmore E 801ce
the appl •cat •on should not
and Ramora C Young,
be grantt&gt;d should arpear
Trustees of the Raymond
and .nform the Cour The
E Bo,ce
Court IS located at the
by
the Trust
Last B,
W1crealed
ll and
Probate Court .n the Me.gs
TeS!amen!
of
Raymond
E
County Courthouse, Second
BoiCe, Deceased
Street, Pomeroy , Oh10
CASE NO 23338 F ,rs! Ac

&lt;5769

I 7l 27. l!c

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk

CASE NO

From

CASE NO

Account of Eleanor Ber

(6) 29. Ill 6 13 20. 27, 181 3

Reol Eslllt

6!c

.T

AD INFORMATION

r

VIRGIL B SR

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

RENTALS
4!- HOuses fOr Rent

1- ln Memortllm
l-Announcemftlli

41 - MOb!lt Hornet

4- G!YUWIIY

44-Aputments lor Rent

.-H•ppy Ads

U - Furrushod Rooms

lor Renl

.u--s,.ce for Rent

.-Lnt uct Fou"ct

47- W•ntod to Renl

1-YIIrdSIIII

41- EQUIPII'II!nt lor Rl!"f

._Public Sllle

eMERCHANOISE

11 -

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
1!-HeiP W•ntf'd

u

eFINANCIAL

eREAL ESTATE

71 - Auto' forS.te

25
26
27
28

)3 - MObllt Homt~
lor S•le
ll-Fums far S.•lt

31 _ _ _ __

eTRANSPORTATION

13-\lus a 4w o

31 _Hom•stor s•lt

74 - Motorcyc lts
n - auto Pllrh
&amp; Accnsor.n

n - "wto R•IN•r

34-Bu•lneu lu•kl•n9t
a - Lots

a Acr••t•

lt---Ae•l Elfllte Wllnted

e SERVICES

37-lle•tton

l t -H 0 melmpro~tomerns
11-Piumb•flt &amp; E•c•v•ttng

W•nt-Ad Adverltsing

D-EIIUVIItiltt
14- EltctriCII
I lhlrlteriiiiiMI
11-Genlll'•l k•utiflt
lt-M tt Jt.,.lr

DeJidltnes

35

Mail Tnis Coupqn W1lh Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729

l-----~~m~:~~~~~~~-----~~

Tuold•v thru Frld•y 1 lOP M

lttediiY llefOf'epubMCIIIIOn
SuMII~

2 JCI PM Friday

Up to 11 WOI"CII
up 10 1J wenls

..... ., iltMrfilfl

Up to 15 wenll

Sill 'lVI ir1Mf114lfl • ,

HtrM lily lnHrtt•

.

,

(Aot•r•tt4 words per UntJ

........
"·"

MMile Home Illes tnf YMtl Sties ~rtiiCCipttciMiy wttfl Cl;h wlttl •

ltntlnol
The PuiJIItMr r"ents tM r~tlflt to Mit.,. rejHt toy Ms ...,...,

oiJitcfiorlll TM Publl.._. wilt not N ,...IMftliiNI rer ..... Htan 1M

heat, small home W1fh 2
outbuildtngs
and
Lead1ng Creek Will sell
on terms Only S11,500
REALLY NICE - 3 or 4
bedrooms large famtly
room, tots of n•ce car
pet1ng and remodeling
Built •n stove, d1sh
washer F A furnace,
dr~ lied well and over 2
acres of nearly level
land w1th large barn and
garage Only S4.J,OOO

sell for S350 00 per' acre
for all
13 YRS OLD - Permo
Slone 3. bedrooms. 2
fireplacu,
,hilt
basemeot. 3 lots and
garao• Patio, storm
drs and wtndows For

ced "" he•t

$.45,000

,

Asking
•f

TRAILER LOT - with
all ut11111es, level lol
with view of lhe Oh,o
Rtver·.

-------~- ~-

{

Free gas

and matt routes t Will

ord., H cent ct111r.. fDr ••• c•rryillt ••• N,11.,Mr '" c1 ,.. tf Ttle

IIICGrrtCI NtMrfl. .

4 bedrooms 2 full baths ,
w1th d1sh
b•rch ' ktt
washer nat gas F A
furnace,
pat•o
over iOOI&lt;tng the Oh10
R1\ler, 2 porches and
garage tn Chesh•re A
r eal ntce older home tor

45 ACRES on good
gravel road School bus

17-u,.._.•._,

Rates and Other Information

90

---- -- - -

-..

•

Me1gs

County

Court.

Case

No

t"robat e

23487 ,

elnsulahon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
W.ndows

!Free Est1matesl

Unton Avenue, Pomeory,

Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/

VINYL SIDING

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

Soffitt,
Gutter,
Rooting, Remodeling,
Room
Ad·
' dttil1ns,
Drywall
and Repatr
Call:

-Trash Pickup In
The VIllage of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016
or 992·7505
4 17 lfc

ROBERT MASH
7 24 1 mo pd

Stzes from 4x6 to 1b40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl 3, Box 54
Rac1ne, Oh
Ph 614-843 -2 591
6 15 lt c

APPLIANCE SERVICE

c.an.~~.~~~~~~g

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
•

W.a ~ flen

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

Just completely

I

Phone 742·1171
Velma N•c•nsky, Assoc

NEW LISTING- Rutland - Reallyblgprettyyard

George S Hobstetter J r
Broker

NICE

NEW

to

chen 1 ttreplace. Home

,. w•ll lniUialod Cios•
10 shopping Call lor 1er

•

the

ten

ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·
NG
Open1ng
soon
specializing 1n aluminum
cans, alum1num siding,
sheet &amp; cast alum • copper
wire, brass, radiators, and
auto batteries Watch thiS
paper for locat1on and

593 7477
-

lor 2 cnitdren, ref req
Good pay Call4-46·8652
ALCOHOLISM
Coun
seloriDW 1 School 1n
structor
Bachelor's
Degree Soctal Serv1ce

CASH PAl D for Clean, late
model

used

cars

Smith

Field Soutnern Ohio Send

Bu1ck· Ponllac. GAllipolis,
Ohio Cal14-46·2282

resume to : Search Com

BEDS I RON , BRASS, old

Jackson Meigs

furniture, gold,
dollars, wood ice

mlllee, 327 Malh Street.
Jackson, OH 45640 Galila

silver

Health
E.O E

boxes.

slone Jars, antiques, etc ,
Complete
households
Wnte : M.D Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh Or 9'12 7761l

silver,

perlence

currency Ed Burkett Bar·

VINYL
PRODUCTS
S1d1ng
Roofmg I Gutter
Remodeling
Servmg Your Area for
20 Years

EUGENE LONG
Free Est1mates

C•ll Collect
Ph 843-3322
1 13 2 mo pd

DOZER

CAT 1).6-C

Farm Ponds· Land
Clearing- Roads .
a 11:

c
PULLINS
EXVACAJING
992-2478

Or
Blame Milhoan
985 • 3965

LONELY
Ch,sllan
Singles. Meet Christian

singles lnyour area Write

Southern cnrlstlan Singles
Club, PO Box 1823, Summerville, SC 29-183 or calli
803·871·9850, 24 hours
REDUCE safe &amp; fas1 With

GoBese Tablets or capsules
&amp; E·Vap "water pills"
Fruth Pharmacy.
4
Gtvaaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attemptto
offer any other lhlng for
sale may place an ad In th1s
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser
7 PUPPI•S Colli• II. Sheep
dog, 4 blue eyed . Call 3888711 or 388 9692
4 tame r•bblts full grown

Ca11379·2742 or «6 2329

ol

weddtng

and

New

Farm

FAR:cc.::cc-:..:.

an-

niversary Invitations
and
accessories.
Reasonably ' prtced,

quick service.
-Look
without
obllgatton.
Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
· Hoeflich
109 High 51., Pomeroy
'·
6 21·1 I!JO;

+log

EOUl~MENT
D1ese1 F~rd
Tra.c!or w/Cab
1'::~~~~: 27S 01ese1 M. F
II
1479 Hay Bird

eBackhoe

• Exc•vattng
• Septic Systems
• Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas L1nes
• Dump True~
• Trencher •

ber Shop. Mlddleporl 9'12
Ul6

and

Licensed &amp; Bonded '

PH. 992-7201
s 21 lfC

r~~~~~~:-l?s:;7~3~11:c!.l~====:;;::;::::::~
EVERYBODY

Sbops the
\

~

•

•

•

•

• I '

WANT AD WAY

HOWARD'·
ROTAVATORS
'

j

r

HJ 50"-:10-30 H.P.
HA 60"-2HO H.P.
HE 60"--4,.10 H.P.
All Models Avallalll•

copper kettles and other
types of antiques Phone
446-3925

Tame, outdoor, short hair
cled k1ttens to glveaw•y
Call388 9001
3 tiger kittens IIIIer
trained, 6 wks old 1 pure
black killen, 8 wks old.
Call 4-46·0675 or see al 3
Garfield, Av•, Gallipolis.
Old antiqu• plano, provide

=J~a=rtatlon. Phone
DOUBLE bed, springs &amp;
mattrns, good condition,
304-675 2267.

,.E,

L' ApP,~th.

6

yrs. Old, one

!'';,~~;;;:;:.' with 3 bedo'ooms,• large kilchen, and

that ~ « 0 ,boncrete lloor. ·Just

··· ,·..

:~;~
.
:
r~;~~r
~
;
r
·
i
~·
~
-~:~~~~~~
~
,,

I

h

t

l'

"1-61ft '

'

1

aptitude

.. ." ....
' ..
.--. . .... ..
....
... .....

OVERSEAS

stay wtlh lady for room and
board, J0.4 675 699'1

Excel lent

em

tn

come Call 312 741 9780 e•l
4061

excellent

WORKING g.rl w1fh lluto to

'

HONEST, mature, depen
dable lady Apply 1n per
son Apple Tree Dell , Rt

t•es, GAIIia and surroun·

35, Henderson. wv
SALES AGENT WANTED

TV service calls Call 992
6776 or 9'12 2034 Also used
color TV for sale

Rd,

Do you want to be '"
dependent?
Bustness
people l•ke to lldvertlse by
gtvtng calendars, pens and
executive gifts to their
customers
Men
and
women who clln work
without superv1s1on can
build a career wtth the

restaurant
Excepllonal
opportunity for quailllod
person. W"te Box 316,
Gallipolis

Thus

Social work pos 1t1on part

D

Murphy Co

a

pioneer 1n advert•s•ng stn

Develop

ce 1888

mental Center advocating

for d•velopmental disabled
Individuals. Must have
BSIBA or re lat•d ex

perience Send resume to

Muriel Ranum, Suit• 112
1350 w. 5th Ave, Columbus, Oh 43212

ThiS

IS

Person to call on business
surrounding

FHA VA Convent•al Home
Loans, Columbus Ftrst
Mortgage Co , 463 Second
Ave , Galllpolts, Oh , 4-"

7172
Professron.al
serv1ces

COMMERCIAL
dustr.al

and

1n

photography

Phone 446 290'1 or «6 7226

Ptano tunmo and repatr,
Love your ne1ghbor tune
your Piano
8111 Ward ,

Wards Keyboard 4-46 4372 ,

Insured,

Cleantng

and

Rent A ltla1d Service Inc ,

Free Estimates, bonded,

phone

245 9234

Cleaning by the week, man

Me1gs Co. Area Code

614
992-Mtddleporl

446-Galhpolts
367-CheSII!re
JN-Vlnlon
245-Rio Grande
379-Wolnut Dlst.
256-'-Guyan D1SI.
643--Arabia Olst.

Pomeroy

985--Chesler
343-- Portia nd
247-Letart Falls
'49-Raclna
7!J-Rutland
M~son

Co. W . VI .

ArNCodeJ04
675-Pt. Pteuanl
•st-Leon 1
576+-Apple Grove
775-MIIon

Shrub

742-2951 or 9'12
•

servtce.

Phone 304-576-2010

HORSE
6626.

Insured

shoe1ng

304·675

In Callla County

·~342 '
. . ''
II,

i

I

•

f

ln"""son County

den In Middleport S4S,OOO
m 737o
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
dtt1on, J bedroom, fam11y
room w1th ftreplace , cen
tral a.r, basement, 304 675

1542
NEWLY remodeled house
on 1 acre 2 Bedroom, com
pletely carpeted, new
Siding
and
Windows
guaranteed for 40 years

9 ROOM house plus some

turn1ture, 2 baths. paflo.
1811:20 shop bulldmg, 116

Park Dr

304 67S 2592 or

Priced

6752053
spectton

on

tn

property

Newly remodeled two story
house 1n Potnt Pleasant,
corner tot has been con
verted 1nto for rental untts
Good extra mcome $25,000
"Prlnc1pals only" For 1n
formi!ltion 614 446 7526

3;;;
2--M;;:o:;:b~
ll;:e-;:H:;:o::m=e~
s-

PRICES REDUCED

used

mob1ie homes and travel

traders
TRISTATE
MOBILE HOMES. CALL
4-46 7572

1974 L1berty 70x1•, 3 bdr , 1

112 ba!h, w'!h dryer hook
up, unfurn Does have ap
pllances, electric f1replace,
carpet throughout Blocks
and sk•rt1ngs, steps and
me!a l bu,ldlng $5,9'15 00.
John son Mobile Home
Brokers, new ltstmg -446

--- - - - -

1978 70•14, 2 bdr , 1 112

burnmg fireplace, patio
EVANS Cay Care Center, aw.ng, sk•rting
ap
Kings Drive, Evans, WV Is pliances, d!fttng room table
now accepting applications and cha1rs No other, like
for •nrollment Opening new lurnlture. $10,000.
August 17. ages 2through 5. Johnson Mobile Home
Teach•r Becky Sharp, Brokers, new listing «6phone ]().4 372 5398.
l5A7

In Meigs c:;oun!Y'

- '.

full basement
Suttable for
l!,. acre wtth
Yi!lrd, &amp; gar

bath, front den w1th wood

TOPLACEANADCAL,L

1'

3 bedrooms,
&amp; garage
bus1ness, on
pool , fenced

35•7

31
Homes for Sete
NEW CABIN or small
home, completely fur·
nlshed, 13900. Coll416 0390 .

' ~' i!' ~

'il

Daniels

2082.

,

·H5-Let•rt
n2"'-luffalo

mo on same property Cal!

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
MOBILE
stock reduction·close outs QUAliTY
HOME
SALES,
4 Ml
eslates farm equipment li WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT
vestock-real estate. Llcen
35
PHONE
446·3868
or
«6
sed and bonded in Ohio. 727A
and West WV. Bud McGhee
Auction and Real Estate
Co Call for terms «6 0552 1981 Fa•rmont mobile
or 4-46-0818 428 Second home, 52X14 Need to sate
Ave, Gallipolis, OH., 45631 relocat1ng Call U6 9303

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

112--New M1ven

.

Fully carpeted. 2 baths,
laundry room,basement &amp;
garage Pnvate sw1m pool
wtfh 6 acres land Reat nrce
4 room house wtth double

Complele Auction Servtce

STARI&lt;S Tree Trlmmmg &amp;

Galli.a Co Area Code

Real n•ce 7 room hovse

thor contractual

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

I

appomtment after 1 p m

for Sale

Your Plano rusting In sum
mer Humidity? Free tn
specfton with tuning Lane

~~

51 • Middleport S59,500
Wanting qu1ck sale to set!le
eslale. Call 614 384 6309 lor

Galltpolts

Sltuotions Wanlod
Baby Stller needed for 2 12
children '" City School Custom brush hogging
district Call «6-7669
Posl hole dlgg,ng. 742 2sn.

I

Large 2 story stone home, ,
well insullated, w•th llarge
bedrooms, one full bath,
211:2 baths, formal d101ng
room, newly remodeled k•t
chen built In lncludmg d1Sh
washer,
basement w•th
work shop, 2 car garage
with work shop, large gar
den, 2 porches 548 Grant

INVESTMENT

after•p m

Full or part time, Wrlle Pal
Murphy , P 0 Box 382. Red
Oak, Iowa 51566

Convlent Store
Please
send resume to Gas Plus,
Box 334, Gallipolis Ohio
45631

formatton

'
I

10

Money to Lo.an

22
'-'----"=='-'='=='--

GALLIA

managers and clerks for

to

Sparkle Supply, 150 3rd
Ave , Gallipolis, Oh or call
(614) 4-46·4109 for further ln-

'

after

Must relocate Call 304 576
2102 after S 00 or 562 9292.
10 !o3

Flwanelal

portunity for good com
missions and conttnued 1n
come from repeat orders

MANAGERS ASSISian!

Gallipolis. Must have own

I

Call

a m 949 2405 Faye Powell

$9,000 00 or $6,000 00 down

your op

WOMAN to stay Wllh
elderly lady dayt,me, 304
675 2827

and Industrial •counts 1n

LOIIInd FOUIMI

potntment

and take over payments

23

Gallipolis Cai1446·428S

resume

page)

In

ding counties lnqulr• to
Gre•t Bend Oil Inc 269

Send

cert1f1ed Clerk Typtst wtll
Call 367 7615
anyttme (80 cents per

do lyp1ng

tenhon917

Help Wonted
WANTED Lease men, to
leasa• oil and gas proper

car

Rad1o TV
&amp; CB Repair

on and sewmg, phone
Ataskan &amp; overseas em 2088

11

areas

mile out of Racine of Oak

Grove Rd If can' t sell all

your

WILL do house clean•ng
Jo• 675

INFORMATION

~

local

Lost

&amp;

come. call 312741 9780 ex

sas,ooo 00

PRICED TO ENJbY ,-'-' C~te 4 room garage apart
ment w1th 2 full garage$ under, storage buildmg•and
a level lot Woulq make 'a ntce rental property
S15,500.00
~· "J 1 I' ,
,
.
T"'' t"':
'" NO' OF •' H '-o
~., p~rox.
'"' ; 1 acre
"' -n·Ttfi•·:..wr.
R AD -~
1
P wlth, frut~ ,t r...s Olllbi.JIIdlngs, and' a -a rbolh 'h ome
w1th a llreplace. $14,oop.oo.
1

provided

Mechanical

ployment

614

for. extra tncome Tf'tlS·one ou mUst1$!!e

1ra1n1ng

ployment,

at

house,

992 2502

GOOD used baby slroller,
304 675 3214.

t1me

room

IN LOCAL Terntory, In

and

R1ver

7

large pat1o &amp; garage at
tached &amp; 8 acres of land 1;,

garage thai brmgs S200 00

Cola bott le with November
16, 1915 01" December 25,
11123 patent date with Pl.
Ple•sant WV on bottom
David Lyon, 23 s. Corw1n,
Leanon, Ohio 45036

Lower

celled?

124 John Sheets, llf2 m•les

south Middleport

seperalely Shown by ap
IN
can

InformatiOn on ALASKAN

tor needs 6·ounce Coca-

J

In

will consider selling !and

home Ca II 446·657 •

COCA COLA bottle collec

• • •

bath

Phone 446 3318

college degree helpful. we Will do housek~_pmg or
sell qual1ly products &amp; babys1tt1ng or . Sj t w1th
need quality people Do you elderly 1n hospit~l or home
qualify? Send resume to Call446 9623 alter 5 30
P .0. Box 230 Worlhmgton,
Oh,o 4.3085
Will do baby stttmg 1n my

Old furniture, stone jars,

•

rooms,

Langsville 140 II on Rl

the Beeline world of Boy
Blades sharpened
tash1on and success Phone Call 446 4-425 afler 5 p m
9'12 J9A1 be!ween the hours P1ck up and delivery
Of9 6
ava1lable
dustpal Sales, excellent op
portuntty 1f you have am
bition Sales &amp; technical

rool, catnip and sass•frasl.
10 am to 6 pm daily Also
Flea Market on Saturdays
CAII675 5868

-

4

Modern

11
Wanted to Do
D J 's LAWN MOWER
for the askmg Ask your REPAIR
On N•lgh
Beeline styl1st and she will borhood Rd, all makes ser
be h8PPY to help you 101n v1ced Spec1ai1Z1ng '"Lawn

Wanled Fllldlrl 9'12·7501

...

Life Estate Cons1st1ng of
farmhouse with acreage
Further lnformat.on call

Opportun1tY 1S yours JUSt

Cook wanted for new area

Kittens 6 wks. old. Pnone
ut.·.u84

AP

acres Call992 7741

surance Co has offered
serv1ces for fire 1nsurance
coverage In Gallla County
for almost a century
Fllrm , home and personal
property coverages are
.!V.!IIable to meet in
dtvtdua I needs
Contact
lewt~
Hughes, agent

2156 or 9'12-2157

have their annual family

PICnic Monday, July 271h
at7 p m

SANDY AND BEAVER In

as a young busln~ss person
and earn good money plus RON'S TV SERVICE
some oreat g1f1S as • Sen Specializing in Zen1th
tmel route carrier Phone House Calls Now servtc1ng
us rtQht away and get on Motorola Quazar Call 1
the eliOibl illy liS I al 9'12- J0.4 576-2398 or «6 2454

aluminum , lead, statnless

The Izaak WalTon Club wtll

requtred

Modified A frame, 3 bdr 2
baths, carpet. Spr1al statrs,
circular stone fireplace, 8

992 6747 after 4:00pm

16

sterling,

batteries

lOAM to

Insurance

13

GET VALUABLE tral"'ng

1ewetry, "ngs, old coins &amp;

steel.

home 9'12 2772

PLY . Circle Sales , P 0 operator's LICense' Phone
Bo• 224 D, R1chmond H1il. 992 214.3
NYIW8

HARPER
HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CO .. 11th and
Viand Slreel, now buying
metals !copper. brass,

•HotWaterT•nk\

Mental

Board Alflllated

1 w•ll do babysitt •ng •n my

S185 00 to SSOO weekly doing AUTOMOBILE
been
mailing work
No ex SURANCE

CHIP WOOD Poles max
diameter 14" on largest
end $12 50 per ton Bundled
stab. S10.50 per ton.
Dellv•rd !o Ohio Pallet Co,
Rock Springs Rd.,
Pomeroy 9'12·2689
Gol d,

Cleland Greenhouse IS now
open . Vegetable plants,
tomato plants, bedding
plants, pots and hanging
baskets
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

Need reliable baby s1tter

FEATHER BEDS WAN
TEO, ANY CONDITION
MISC., BOX 65, AURORA,
IND 47001 GIVE DIREC
TION WILL CALL SOON.

'' NEW L1S T1NC '-'-' Stately old~r. hom ~ m M1ddjepor1
W1lh many posslbilllies. Plus a Garage Apartment

I&gt;

thru August 3rd

8PM.

11
Help Wanted
12
Situat1ons Wilnted
Baby
sitter
for
one
Infant
In
Have \iacancy for room &amp;
WANT TO B'UY Old lur
nlture and Antiques of all our home near Holzer board Elderly or retired or
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, Medical Center Rei req disabled 9'12·61l22
Call 446·8563
256-1967 In theeven1ngs

'

STRIE\'CtjER

Open house Wed . July 29

4.44-4ns

IHSTlN~ . il ~!land - 12•54 lurmshed New

~'"!l· ,$ ,13.000.00

Possible
rental
no
reasonable offer ref used

OPEN 9T05

Moon mobile hpm~ , •,th 2 bedfooms, a1r cond1t1or
and washer dryer
lcej level 1,. acre lot Wtth a one
car gal'lage, concrete walkS, patto, and some fen

HOME
or rental m
ves-tment 3 bedrooms.
carpet throughout In

baths and equ,pped k1l·

Authonzed Joht1 Deer,

Now, an tmpressive, complete line

and energy efftc1ent one floor plan 2 bedroom
home , w 1th d1nrng room, k1tchen, ntce back porch,
carport, and storage bulld1ng S21 000 00
NEw LIsTING - Apple Gro~c
7 mtles from the
1
bndge Approx 37 acres, Wt fh a beauttflll vtew of
the rtver . One story home w1th 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms,
dmtng room, vftl1fy area, and an enclosed 'ront por
ch There •s a, rental house, med1um stzed barn,
cellar w.ttt smoke house, workshop and 2 one car
garages S26,900l00. '' '

Laroe, soh~ ~rtck
home tn Pomeroy 3
spac lous bedrooms, ll 2

-Anntversanes
-PAssports

or1g1nat woodwork, but It'" bookcases, front s1tt.ng
porch, and could have rental untt over garage Thts
7 room home has 3 4 bedrooms. l lf'l baths, full
basement, W B ftrep l aceJ, and tS re.:tlly n•ce

552.900 00

ONLY S15,000 00
OWNER FINANCING

3
Announcemenls
SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and

O• shw.asl'lers

East

Guysvtlle, OH.
Phone 614-662-3821

-and

Rd Reduced lor qu1ck
sa le !o$32,500 00
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

shopp1ng

Donald, G c. Murphy Co .•
Loolon Posl 23, Wilcoxen
Funeral Home . May God
bless each of you. Nellie
and cnartes Henson

of

-Weddtngs

NEW LISTING -- BeautrfUI Older home With mce

STARTCR

Cerl1hed
Roush L•ne
Chesh~re. Oh.
Ph 367-7560

flt

porch S24,500 00

OFFICE 742 2003

SeptiC T •nks

Co~nty

r

NEW Ll STING - Portland - Large level lot w1th a
2 story frame h~ome w1th 6 rooms, 4 bedrooms, large
k •tchen, basement. storage btdg , and mce front

HOBSIEIIER

Mc-

=~~~~~~~ioiT:•~·~c~r==li~~§~~7~~~~~~cl~~~~~~7~I~s~l~m=o==~ 4020
Kittens, 8 wks old ca11 «6r----------,1
I&lt;ltt•ns free to good hom•
lHE PHOTO
Hand raised s'"co I week
SALES &amp; SERVICE
J&amp;F
age, IIIIer bo• Ira Inod. Call
245
PLACE
..
CONTRACTING
·556S.
'US
so
-Porlralls

an assumable loan $29,900 00

Phone 742-lll'l2

Gas Ltne-D1Iches
Waler L1ne Hook-ups

992-5682

NEW LISTING - Middleport - Excellent nergh
borhOOd A 11h story frame Wi th a .ntee front porch,
storage over garage, recently remodeled w•th 6
rooms, 3 bedrooms, family room, ut11tty room Has

Comforlable 3

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Waler Sewer-Eiecl"c

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

remodeled by one of the best carpenters in the area
If has new v1nyl Std tng, new root, new wmdows and
doors, new plumbtng, new w1rmg, new oak cabtnets,
new appltanccs, new carpettng, 1n fact everyth tng •s
new There •s 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, pantry tn the kit
chen, ut1l1ty room, n•ce yard and garden area

bedroom home wtth ktt
chen, bath and d1n1ng
room
Lots of nice
bulldtngs and farm
pond The almost con
t•nual breeze and the btg
shade trees Qtve you the
feel•ng you're ngh1 at
home Located approx
one mile out New l•ma

Rev

Wontod to Buy
$CASH1
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL·

• a.,posals

e Dryers
elhntts

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

GeorgeS Hobs1efter Jr
Broker
FARM - 49 acres mil
Approx 6 acres ttl! able
9 pasture, J3 acres

Hanna,

McGhee nome, 15 miles
from Gallipolis
Askmg
w,ooo on land contracl 25
per cent down/ 8 per cent
Interest or 10 per cent down
J 12 per cent Interest

9

e:ard of Tllanks
THANKS to everyone who
expressed
sympathy
during loss Of our husband
and F•ther, Frank Henson.
Or. Waggn•r, nurses. aids,
Rev.

buildings One mile south

of Vinton, on 51 Rl 160 Old

radiators, ginseng, yellow

PH-• 992•2259

OFFICE 742·2003

.. .

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

Clerk

27 (81 3 10. 3!c

BradbUry -

.

' '' "•
-""

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

992·6323

c Ipse

PH. 949-2285

Aluminum Siding

remoctel1ng
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Ptumb•ng and
~lectncal work

Make An Ofler

,.

IN~~r!ON

- Adjlonsand

-- - -

NEW LISTING -

GET

Immediate
Possesion
Large white 5 bdr farm
home on 8 roll ino acres
with log cabin and 3 out

An oay saturday

7 511 c

J&amp;L BLOWN

~ER:V~~J~.~

FINAL ClOSEOUT
OF SHRUBS

COI,INTRY

Ph 949 2160

"YOUNG'S

POMEROv,I OHIO

Real Estate- General

Public Salt
&amp; Auction
Neals Auction Hogsett,
WVA. Rt. 2. Every Set 7:00
PM
(Consignments
taken!, (Will buy furniture!
Lonnie Noa1367·7101.

Recycling,
140 Rosenberg
Columbus
openiQg.
;:::::;;;;;;::::~f.==;;:;::;;;~f=::==:=:::::::1 grand
Rd., Athens, Oh 45701 . Cali

Also
severill
lilepossessed at GOOD
Pnces

and

Monday - Frtday
4p m toll p m

TOM HOSKINS

949-2860
No Sunday Calls

Retngerators
W.1shers Dryers
A.r Cond1troners

M1ddl~port

•
casttng • Trader Hitches
•
Metal
Fabncat1ons.

Loca!ed at Maplewood
Lake tn Racme
7 11 1 mo

and Home Maentenance
• Rooftng
tv pes
•Stdtng
• Remodeling
• Free esttmates
• 2CI yrs expenence

"Beauttful, Custom
Bu11t Garages "
Call for free Stdrng
estrrDates, 949·2801 or

F rcezers

stores

WELD SHOP
•Steel • Aluminum

I

Were

!he eslale of Allen w Har
lie~ deceased, late of 121

(7)

lensive
remodel- ·
in g.
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work
13 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
6 3 1 mo.

YARD sale JUlY 27 11\ru 29.
Holloway St H•nclerson
l06

Cleaner, one half mile up

Ed•son Hobstetter, L1ncoln
H1fl. Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
was appotnted Executor of

Oh,o&lt;5769

CONSTRUCTION
I
New Homes • ex:

;=======~=~·t===~===~=;t=====~~~~~ delivery,
Davis RdVacuum
Georges Creek
. Call
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
OHIO VAllEY
ALLSTEEL
«6·0294.
SIDING
Farm Buildings
com·
mandments nailed to the
ROOFING
s"e'
BISSELL
Cross• Bible study
'From 30x30"
neSday 7:30 PM al 1057
SMALL
Fourlh St , Apt 2
at
all
SIDING CO.
UtUity Buildings

614· 992 2181

wooded

992-6011
992·7656

Ph.

kitchen, lg. famlly rm • 2
112 baths, located In Tara
Estates, Club house •nd
pool privileges, S75,000
firm l(yger Creek School
District Shown by appt
only c•ll367 7835

ROUSH

Free Estimates

S-7-lfc

608 E. MAIN

HOBSTETTER REALTY

acres of good hunt.ng
woods and ftelds m
Lebanon
Townsh•p
GOOd gravel road 3
bedroom home 12
yrs old Formtca bath
full basement, F A fur
nace, dn lled well and
garage S550 DO per acre
for al l
SOUND - and quality
bu •ll 3 bedrooms, nat
gas F A furnace wood
burn.nq f.rep lace wtfh
built 1n bookshelves on
each
Side
D1n1ng,
covered pat1o elevator,
ful l basement large at
f•c for storage, J car
garages and 2 lots
Askmg $28,500

$45,000
7 ACRES -

•1-SHCI&amp; Ftrlthur

Monct•Y-2 10 Ofl S.t•nllly

32 - - - - - - 33 _ _
34 _ _ __

15.
16

'' - F•rm Equtpmtnt
U - W•ntfll to luy
73-Truclls IGr S.• ••

24

]()

12
lJ

&amp; CB RIIWir
11- W•nted T 0 Do

NEW LISTING -

Custom Kttchens, Appltances,
Custom
Bathrooms, Remodelln
g, Plumb1ng, Electrtc,
Heat1ng.

992-2174

• ........

LEVEL RIVER LOT -

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCI&lt;

23

29

11

ll - tnsur•nc•
14- luiiMII Tr4!1ftln1J
1J--Scl'looh tnstruclton
14--R•d•o, TV,

U - l t\ltsl(l(,k
14-1-411y &amp; Crttn

22

10:..·------

S4- MIIC Merc~ndtU

21-eu 1 .nesss
Opportuntl't'
22-M~»ntt to Lo•n
ll- PrOf'I'IUIGn.l
Srrv•c•s

21

9

HoUstftold Goocls
n - CB rv , A•ct •oEqu•pm•nt
il- AnltQUtl

U - IBUtldlftt Suppl1tt
Wo-Ptls for S.le

11-SIIu•tMI W•ntMI

'I.J:!

the

.

Pomeroy, OH.

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

~

Smallest

·-

__ _ ~.!~ ~~~~- Ge_!l~r~l

216 E Second Street

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

20

BIG APPLIANCE
SALE AT
POMEROY

fAFORDm

1-c.rctot Ttt•nu

18
19

Geller a I

Housing
Headquarters

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

17

T

the

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS INC.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
on July 20, 1981.L 'n !he

Shops the
- -- - - -

C. R. Mash
Construction

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. E•perlence

Case No. 2J487

EVERYBODY

Mesc Merchandtse

23352 F 'nal

23031 Final

to sa•d accounts or to mat
pertarn•ng to the
exec uhon of the trust, not
less than f1ve days prtor to
the date set for heanng .

~=~~~~~~~=,I

2 4 1tc

Heater , Core to
largest Rad1ator

WANT AD WAY
54

33
Mon F" 8 30 to4 00
Aller Aug. 3
Ph nl-6564
7·26 I mo pd .

SERVICE

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ALLEN W
HARTLEY, DECEASED

23230 F'rs!

Unless except.ons are
filed thereto, sa1d accounts
Wtll be tor hear~ng before
sa1d Court on the 15th day
of August, 1981. at wh1ch
t1me sa1d account will be
constdered and cont~nued
from day to day unt11
f•nally d1sposed ot

Account of Vtc:tor Brown,
Executor of the Estate of
Agnes Co leman, Deceased

or Wnte Daily Sentmel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomerov. 0 , 45769

) wanTeo
1 For Sat~
1 Announcement
) For Rent •

coun!
of E lmore E Bo1ce
and Ramora C Young ,
TruS!ees of !he Raymond
E Botce Trust B. created

tnterested

may hie wntten excepttons

Robert E Buck
JUDGE
Current
Account
of
COMMON PLEAS
E l 12abeth Jane Stover,
COURT
Guard•an of the perSOf1 and
PROBATE DIVISION
estate of Mildred T
MEIGS COUNTY,
Beeson , an Incompetent
OHIO
person
171 27, lie
CASE NO

bodtes, scrap •ron and
metals
1
mile west of
Fatrgrounds on Old- Rt.

3 11 ffc

2283S F'na l ters

Account
of
Curtts
Luckadoo, Adm1n•strator
of the Esta te of Delbert
Luckadoo, Deceased

by the Last W•ll and
Testament of Raymond E
Bo•ce, Deceased

'

wnt~ your own ad and order bv ma1l w1th th1s
coupon cancel your ad bo; phone when you get
r~sults Money not refundable

Accounts and vouchers of
the
follow.ng
named
f•Ouc•anes have been ftled
'"the Probate Court, Me1gs
County, Oh•o, for approval
and settlement

CASE NO

person

( Pomeory Scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)
rop prtces patd for auto

COMPLETE
RADIATOR

PubliC NOIICt
Any

· WANTING 10 BUY
SCRAP

Free Est1mates
Reasonable Pr~ces
Call Howard

949 2862
949-2160

room combination, eet In

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

All types of roof work,
new or repa.r gutters
1nd downspouts. gutter
c1ean1n9 and pa1nt1ng
All work guaranteed

I

niCe Thomas, Executnx of
the Estate of F Cla.r
Taylor, Deceased

BY OWNER: 4 bdr., spill
level, living room &amp; dining

"

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
PubliC NOtiCe

The Datly Sentmel-Page-7

·Business
- .Services

..

~ Monday.

Stover accompanied by Mrs. Robinson.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$92•2156
N- 3 ' 1bdr. house with
gorage and full basemen!
145,000. C•ll446-o390.

73 Schultz mobile home
12x60, total electric,, cen·
lralalr, $7 ,500 Call256·1265
or 379-2250.

:

~

I

�Page-S-The Daily Sentinel
3J

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

~2

USED Mobile Home . 576·
2711 .

Mobile HomH
for ltent

4S

2 bdr . franer Roush ' l!ane,
Cheshire. Oh. !'hone 1·:104·
173 - ~ -

1971 Darlan 12 • 65, 3
bedroom$. 1972 Crown 2 bdr . trailer turn, gas and
Haven, U x 65 with 8 x 10 water turn., $225. per mo.,
expando, 3 bedrooms . 1973 $100 dep., no pels. Call «6·
Utopia 12 x 65 , 2 bedrooms. &lt;1&lt;5.
1972 Invader 1• x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972

N~shau ,

14

x 60, 2 bedrooms. B 11• s
Sales, Inc . 2nd and Viand

Sis. Pt . Pleasant.
Phone615·«24 .
2 bedroom

WI/ .

mobile home

10x45 Sl-100 . Phone 304-675·
1452 or 67 5· 2996
1971 Brookwood . bath and
half, has b een re modeled.

wall

to

wal!

ca r ·

peting,unfurn ished . Phone

675·1553.
1979 LIBERTY mobile
h ome, 14 ft . wide . total
electric. 304 -675 ·5444
12 x 60 Mob il e home . Pa t io,
awning , under penni ng,&amp;
air conditi on er Will se ll or

renllot . Call9'121885.
33

Farms for Sale

55 acres, nine room house,
barn, mi nerals. sec luded.
good hunting . Morn ing Star
area . $65,000 . Addi tional
101 acres avai l able. 949·

2630.
BY owner . 53 acre farm ,
remod eled ,
beaut ifu l
Colonial style home , 4
bedroom s. 2 new baths,
central hea t &amp; air, 2 wood ·
burning stoves . 1 connected
to heating sys tem, J wells.
on bla c ktop road, 25
minutes from Pt . Pleasant
on Rt . 62 . 40 acres f enced,

$81,500 . 304 ·9373431 .
FARM house &amp; garage &amp; 1
acre of gr ou nd for sa le on
Jerrys Run Road . Owner
wi ll help finan ce . 1·614·279·
5015 .
J3,Yowner 140 acre farm . 35
Acres cree k bott om , ap·
proximately 70 pasture,
rest 1n t1mber, 2 story
house , 2 la rge barns ,
several out bui ld ings, large
toba cco ba se, oil and
m ineral ri g hts. drilli ng i n
area . 4 Mi les off Rt . 35 on
9rave l road $110,000 304·

675· 2933
31._ _ _!_ot s &amp;

Ac ~e~a.,ge'e__

LOT S Rea l nice cam psi te
on Rac coon Creek , al l
utilities avt3 ilable. S300
down , own er will finan ce,
¢a tI afTer J p.m .. 256·6413 .

2 ac res on

Floyd· Clark Rd.
ctose to R1. 160. $.4 ,000 .
Phone 446 ·0390.
1 plus acr e lot on FtafwOOd
Rd , all wooded . Ca l l 991
5396 after 5.
21 acres bottom Ian d
located m Bidwell , Oh. Ca ll

388 ·8429
6 acres wifh we ll between
Rio Grande and Vi nton.

S5,400. Ca ll 388 8139 .

12x60

E leona,

excellent

FOR RENT 2 BR . mobile
home, 6 miles from HMC

992·3954.

den . «6·0157 .
For rent, lOx SO 2 bedroom
mobile home. Racine .!lrell .

992·5858 .

2 ~d room trailer for rent.
Brown's Tra iler Park . 992·
332 • .
2 bedroom mobile home. 1
chi ld accepted . No pets or
drunks. John Sheets, 311"2
miles south Middleport .
Two bedroom house trail er
on Ashton-Upland Road .
$1.50 pl us utilities and
damage deposit. 3 miles

trom Rt . 2. 615·.088 .
Two 2 bedroom house
trailers for re nt, turnisned,
I with central air, good for
working couple or couple
witn 1 chi ld . $150 per month
plus deposit . 675·4088 .
2 bedroom mobile home in
New Haven , adults on ly, no

Apartment
lor Rent

2 bdl"'. apartment lg. LR
and Kitchen . Across from
Honda Shop no pets. Ca ll

«6·3931 .

41

Houses lor Rent

') bdr house in Evergreen.
all carpet, stove. and
refrig ., S235 per mo . pl us
dep. &amp; r ef. Ca 11 24.5·9170 .
Imm ediate
P osses ion .
Lar9e white 5 bdr . farm
home on 8 rolling acres
w ith log cabin and 3 out
bui ldings. One mite south
of Vinton , on St. Rt . 160 . Old
McGhee home, 15 m iles
from G a l lipolis . Asking
$44,000 on land contract . 25
per cent down/ 8 per cent
intere st or 10 per cent down
1 12 per cent interest.
Possible
rental
no
reasonable offer refused.
Open nouse Wed . Jul y 29
thru A ugust 3rd . lOAM to

8PM .
slory . co il 882·7388.

-

month. All util ities paid .
Also Mobile home spaces.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

apt

Cal l «6·0390.
REGENCY AP T. INC

1

bedroom ,
kif
chenfurn ished,
carpe ted ,
b i lls partially paid . $200
m o.
Excellent
ne i gh ·

borhood , 615·6722 or 675·
5104.
UNFURNISHED

Garage Apt . $200 mo. plus
utilities . Ad ults only , no
pets . Availab le Aug . 1, 446·

8061 .
2 bd r unfurn . apt ., Main
St., V inton . Clean con
venient locati on, sec . dep.,
S145 mo . Call245·5818
3 bdr house for rent and 3
rm . apt . utilities paid . Ca l l

615·51.0 or 675 5386 .
Apartment
comp lete l y
furn ., all e lectri c, 3 large
rooms , with porch, newly
decorated , Sec on d Ave .,
$200 mo. , ref . &amp; dep. req .
Phone
.446 · 2236 .
A pa rt ment
com ple te l y
turn ., all electric, 3 large
room s, with porch, newly
decorated , Second Ave ..
$200 mo ., ref . &amp; dep. reQ .
Phone 446 ·2236.

9977711

Two mob i Ie home lots tor
rent, married couples apply in person to Everette

Schwartz,

Rt. 1, Locust

Road, Point Pleasant.

OR RENT · almost new t&lt;x
70, 3 bedroom, I 1/ 2 baths,
sitting on nice lot. ready to
move into. Phone 304-576·
211t

2 BEDROOM trailer near
Leon, WI/ partially fur ·
nished. $150. per. month
plus deposit. Pay own
utilities . Call 304·458·1978
after 5 p . m .
2 BEDROOM, air con ·
dltloned, furnished) _o ut ot
town on Rt. 2, small deposit
Phone 304·675·62n, · ·

and

1917 CHEll. 1h Pickup,
moot a.11 factory options
plus · eJ~tras. Real good
cond. Ph. 367·0107 or «6~
• 0648 after 5 p.m .

in·

sta llatlon. «6· 132•.

Apartment for rent. Ca ll

992 5908
2 be dr oo m
apt .
in
Pomeroy . Equipped kit ·
chen. $150 .00 per month .
Call Cle l and Realt y, 992 ·

1159

after

5,00.

A8erEbaHdlse
Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa , cha i r, rocke r , ot·
toman, 3 tables. SSOO . Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and cnairs priced

614·8432341 .

beds,$3.0 .• queen size. SJ80 .
Recliners, $165 ., S295 .,
Lamps from $18 . to $65 . 5

Portable welder. 225 Am
Hobart. 19•9 Chrysler, 5 Coll2&lt;5·5121 .
window cou ple, 18 H P out·
b~ardengine. Call «6·9638 .

Ca ll «6·2928 or «6·4175.
CANNING JARS, 3n·2115
25 IN . COLOR Til Sy lvania
Superset,

dual

S365. 7 pc ., S189. and up.
Wood table and A chairs,

S350 up to ~95 . Hutches ,
S300. and $375., maple or
pine fin ish. B edroo m suites

Bassett

Oa k,

S649 ..

Bassett cnerry , S765. Bunk
bed comp lete with mat
tresses, $250 . and up to
SJ.SO. Captain' s beds, S275
complete. Baby beds, $89
Manresses or bO)( springs,
full or tw in, $55 ., firm, $65
and $75 . Queen sets, $185 5
dr . chest s, $49. 4 dr . cnests,
$42. Bed frames, $20.and
$25. , 10 gun - Gun cabinets,
$350. , dinette chairs S20
and S2.5 . Tappan gas or
electric ranges, $285.

USED

Ranges ,

r efrigerators, and TV 's,
3 miles ou t Bu lav i lle Rd.

Open 9am to 7pm, Mon
thn,1 Fri. , 9am to Spm , Sa l .
«6 ~ 0322

refrigerators ,
Skaggs
Ap ·
1918 Eastern

Ave ., «6·7398.
For sale General Elec tri c
washer, real nice shape .

Ca ll 388·979•

EASY credit available now
to purchase furnitur e,
televisiOns, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605

Jackson Ave .. 675· 1173.
Yell ow Freestone canning
peaches . Now t hru Sept. 20 .
Any Quantity avai labl e.
Retail &amp; wholesale . Bob's
Market, Mason. Phone 773 -

Canning tomotoes. Andrew
Cross,Letart Falls, Ohio

247·2852.
Green beans. Pick your
own. $8 .00 busheL 247 -2664.

HOOVER Portable wa sher
&amp; dryer, like new, 304·675

PORTABLE washer &amp;
dryer ,
love sea t
and
re c lining chair, co ffee
table &amp; 2 end tables. TV an
tenna. 3301 Robinson , Pt
Pleasa nt.

ANTIQUE

poster

be d,

wh ite spool bed , J C Penny
Berkshire wood stove, 304

675·2039 .
SHERICH Birch kitchen
cabinets, double Hotpoint
ovens &amp; countertop range

with grill. 304·675 ·1831 .

maker .

16' TROUTWOOD travel
tra i ler and camp site on
Rac con Creek . Close to
Ohio Ri'lo'er . $500 down.
Owner will finance . 614·256·

CB,TI/, Radio
Equipment

QUAZAR

portable

NEED severa l items of fur ·
niture ,
appl i ances ,
te levisions. Big discounts
for quan i ty purchase .
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675· 1773.
BIG discounts tor casn and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue. 675·

1713.
OLYMPIC stain. in stock

only S13 .95 F&gt;l. Pleasant
Paint &amp; Wal lpaper Center .
12x6.5 Mobi le Home, real
good condition. 1979 Ford
.4x.4.
customized.
l ow
mileage . 1969 Mustang. 304·

173-91115.
TWO 12 1/W seats. s1o.oo
each . See at 2910 Spruce
Ave. Pt . Pleasant .

Admiral

TV,

or 9·volt

SMAL L furn ished apar t · battery . 304·675·40•2 alter
ment , no pets, references 5.
requ ired, 304·675 ·1365.

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Coil Judy Toylor ol 367 ~
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY · KENNEL, AKC

Ll i&lt;.E new 5 piece Home tn ·
terior clock set {wh ite
w icker) originally $97 . will
sell for S35 . Also would like
to se ll remaining var-d sa le
i1ems as one lot. 4 boxes inc lud ing clothes, household
items, drapes, rugs , etc .

Will sell everything for S20.
For information call 30,. ·

6156535afler 5:00.

2 BEDROOM apartment in

Pt . Pleasant, 30H75·6020
or 61•·«6·2200 .
2 BEDROOM, unfurn ished
apartment · and 2 bedroom
furnished apartment, lOA·

675·5571 .

furnished, $250. a month.
$100. deposi t. Call 6U·«6·
7526 .
APARTMENT

for

2 kid goats, 5 weeks old,
males . $25. each . 'h
Nubian. Shade, Ohio 614·

2 RIDING horses, $500.
each, 30H75·5851 .
2 RIDING horses, $500.
each 675·5851.

Large clean bales Of straw,
$1 . 50,
675 · 5180 .

KENNEL ·

Hay &amp; Grain

lfiiiWZZn-'P

~7Ht~ 8WTQOP

~lJ~~~~~

F&lt;XI&lt;S AT ])IE HOTEL . .~""'U
WHILE SWt!VeER
WAS 7HGR6. 70MY
HIS VACATION
IS tiP· ···

Bl NG'S CONC~ETE CON · ·
STRUCTION · Specla11llng :
drlveweya, .

7~

. Motorcycles

197• Honda 750 ext . frt.
end .• drag pipes, chrome
backrest,

lnlltiQ .

Hoover sweepers repaIred
at Empire Furniture, 1142
Second Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

Boarding

and

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

1979

Honda

lOth An ·
750 . Wants
S1,900. Call 379·2133 after 5.

1916 Kawasak i KZ 400, new
baMerv. 17,000 miles, $650 .

Ur11C1'amble -lour Jumillto,
~-to ~
to form

setters.

English Cocker Spaniel s.
Call4~ · 4191 .

71

1915 Ford Mavrlck 2 dr .• 6

ACF Registered White and
shaded Si lver Persian and
seal piont · Himalayans .
Ca II 304·523·17 49 .

BeoulifuiiNKC Reg .

Peke ~

a-Poo puppies and AKC
Reg . Pekingese puppies.

Phone 4~ · 0857 .

74
Auto Parts
_ _ _,&amp;o..::A,c,ce,s,s,o:cri,ee,
s__

cond . Call «6·2235.

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,

1973 Camero 6 cyl , 3 spd .• wrecker service, buy
PS, AM/FM radio . Phone · automobiles, radiators and
388·933&lt; alter 6 PM .
batteries . AA6·7717.
1971

Ford LTo' Country
,.· Dr .

S&lt;tation ·

2 rabbits with nice cage,

wagon . Complete tuned-up,

S2S . Call 388·8711 .

new exhaust, 5 new radial
tires, radio, AC, PS, disc.

2 females, 9 wks . old . For
more Into. Call882·3596 .
THE FISH TANK and Pel
Shop, 210 1 Jefterson Ave .
675·2063, Pt. Pleasant . New
hours . Now open on Wed .

Open 11 ·• Mon. thru Sat.
AKC

Dachshund ,

Pomeranian

an

Poodle

pups 895·3958 .
TWO, 5 month old female,
white. German Shepherd
puppies, AKC registered,

304-895·3473.
AKC Chow Chow puppies,
excellent pedigree, black
cream ·and red. male and

temale. Glenwood 304-762·
2035.
57

Musical
Instruments

cond . Call245·9258, $200.00.
WANTED :

Responsible

cellent running shape and
very good body . Asking
$900 or best offer. ca 11 388·
81.0 after 4PM.

1975 Honda XL 350, 3000 ac ·
tual miles. ex. cond. Phone

361-0397 after 5:00.

P .O. Box 33 Friedens. PA
155•1.
58

74 GMC, 112 T, 11·8, new
tires, $1500. 7• Plymouth
Voyager,

Window

van,

$2700. 70 Plymouth Duster,
6 cyl., $650. Phone «6·0560.
78 HONDA ACCORD 33 to
35 MPG, 5 spd., std . trans.,
hate hbac k. ex . cond, AM·
FM, new radial, book value
$4,800 will consider less.
Make ofter . Call after 6 «6·
2055 .

76 Aspen wagon. slant 6, 3
spd., with dr ., Ac, new
radial tires, 11195. Ca ll .446·

1969 Dodge Dart GTS,
••king S1.300. Call949·21.23 .
197.tl

Monte

Car lo .

Full

1912 White Fury 1. High
performance engine . P .S.
P .B. A.C. Excellent In·
lerior . Call992·5700.

Homegrown tomatoes, lour
nouses below Ga llipolis
Ferry post office, roadside
stand .

., .. .
..........
--· ~

"
' "' ....

1911 Olds Brougham, ex ·

cellent condition. Can be
seen at 2307 Mt. Vernon

I bl

Avenue.

Farm Equipment

Farmall F20 tractor, SJSO.
Massie Harris with front

end

loader ,

S650 .

13 MAl/RICK priced $200.
Call alter 5, 30H75·1470

In·

ternational 18 ft . flatbed

1966, S900. Phone 256·9303.

·'- 1976 FORD Granada,
good condition, phone 304·
675·36&lt;5.

located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. SJ,OOO.OO
each . Phone 1·304·422·2781 .
Farmall cub tractor with
cultivators. Has new clut·

ch, pressure plate, . throw
out bearing, transmission
over hauled,
magenta
overhauled, new starter,
new battery,
battery

FARM wagon, ~w 14 fl.x7
II, oak bed, $350, Spoke
wheel, side delivery hay
rake, ·3 pl. hook up, t«&lt;I.
New 6 11. disc, 3 Pt.' hook up
$350. !'hone 30-4-112·2119.
Call after 6 p .m.

1979
cellent

CHEVETTE ,
condition,

ex 33,000

miles, silver with racer
stripes. Best offer, 30•·7735660 or 30H75-5603.
73 GRAND Torino, ldr par·
IS, 1150. :104·615·6219
59 WILLIES In
rag top," 4

cyl. engloe
high transfer
Seri!IUS c•llersonW 30.0~m:
6219.

remodeling.
9326.

388·

!'hone

' I KNUSK
10
I BAEBY

II I J

UNAS~&amp; TO
!':EACH niEIR:
ALL¥ ~091TA

IOA9'tAND.

11Wi5ELA ARE
FORC&amp;P TO .
II!EMAIIJ .•
A80ARP THE
MV$~E~ SHIP. .

An'"'""":"A(

what may lie ehUd for todar'•

CONTINIOUS no leak gut·

olde~y. tor middle-aged wago
oamero, 1nd fqr the children of
tho 'bobw boom' who are 11111
m1nyyeor1 from retlremlfll. (eo

estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR . 614-698·8205.
HARPER Halstead, lawn

'" RELOCATIHG AU. THOGE VERY
FAMILIES AW R.STOR.IHG
LI~ELY.
12 GQUAR.E !Iii LEG OF
PLEASE GET
CONTAMIHATEO L~O
GTAR.TED OM
COOL 0 COGT 'rOO YOUR IT R.I6HT
Ef'ITIR.E FO/i,TlJNEAWAY, ASP.

Phone 675· 2250 .

TO "G¥\DOY'? HOW
COOLD WE HAVE
BEEN 50 WIUJHq
rBOOT HER.?!

·YEAH, YE~ ... l
KHOVI! Y' NEVEK
01~ Llll.E

HER.
CI!TBOT Y'

MEEOI'I'T LOO&lt;.
GO 5MU6 ABOUT

IT!

Tree Trimming,

Mllnee, Plecldo Domingo, end
Ralno Kobalvanake ator In thll
production ol Pucctnl'a tragic
opera. The plot Involve• the
fJmoueoperaalnoer'alovetora

IF fiE 50flE-. CWlN
CAN UGE TH' HEAT FR.Of.1 ~~
TH' f'AGAA T' ~1\'E
TliESE TURBINI:G, 1/E'u. PUINT IH TH~

BE &lt;SEHER.ATIIi'ClE'AH
ENEF«iY!

pollce,whoaeloveforherfanne

the third lido of thelll·fatad
trlang!t- (2 hro., 30 milia.)
~ II
ABC ~I!DV
8:01

area,

Hammond

Bodv

building ,

remOdeling, ai&amp;O paperi ng,
carper installation, and
general
home
im ·

MONDAY NIGHT
BASEBALL (II the player' I

~r!l11

atrikel1 1tlllln effect, aMemate

provements. 615·5689, 675· :
5304.

2l.O!U'!II!'ina wiH elr.)
llliJIIIIl THE TIM CONWAY
IHOW Guool: Harooy Korman.

Harper 's

~HI)

Adult
Care
Center .
"Providing the personal

8:58

t:OD

care your elderly need In a
home-like

II CIJ

tlll

!2J41t_r._ffiopaal)
8:30 II Cll
HOUlE CALLI A

Plumbing

femou1 doctor vi1i11 KenllngtonGeneraiHoepltalandiiUied
by Dr . Weatherby to gain
needld .publlcity tOr the

CARTER'S F&gt;LUMBtNG
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone «6·3888 or «6·4477
10:0D

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

teducea Sam Curt it . (Aepeet;

675·3376 or 675·12~ . ·

ilrilllLOUGRANTTracldng
down 1 nna atory become• 1
tough loot for Roool when h1

13

trlee to help a Trlb etaffer
1earch for her real mother .

Excovatlng

«6·9304 Georges Creek Rd .
JERRY'S Garage now
open, soutMide. 9 Miles on

·oitcher work. Charles R.
HaHield, HaHield Backhoe.

35 . General repair on
automotive and trucks.

78

i

opeat: eo mlno.)
10:20
Til EYIIING NI!WI
10:21
CBN UPOAn NI!WI
10:30
THIIfiTHeUFI!
C'I!IT MOl, TOULOUII!·
LAUTRI!C Thla program
proaenta tho life Of the French
ortlll, Henri do Toulouol·

Gas. electric, and water.

142·2903.
EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Doler Service. Speclalillng
In septic tank. 675 · 1~3~ .

Camping
Equipment

1971 211f2 ft . camping
trailer, fullv self contained,

:~::

Service . Larrv
stricker . 675· SS80.

14 fl . TRAILER ·camper,
s leeps 6, 30H75·2267.

14

)IOU TH INK CONNIE

&amp; Refrigeration

Fuller Electric Co. com · ·
plete rewiring, commercial :
or residential, end etec- .,
trical maintainance, al$0
4~6 - 217l,

Home
Improvements

~

WILL REAUY
F'OI.LOW 1/R .
!!)UMAN '5. AI/VICE?

".:7HE

WAS REAtTY

FOR THE APPOINTM ENT, ANt' AS

[;&gt;OCILE As-A
flOVE .'

THIS 19

ltllllt'l/LOUS.1r.-tt _"
1'17 NEYER

.,

Qua illy

Cooling

~·
PRIORITY
...,...
INTI! RNA nONAL
(])MOYlE •CDRAMA)
''Wlfenllatteee'' 1171
ALU!N AT LARGE
OUTIR UlltT8
.11:20
NIGHTOALU!ItY
t 1:21
UPOAH NI!WI
11:30
THITOitiGHTIHOW
'The Bell 01 ~araon' Gueato:
Robe~ Blake, Jamto Gelway,
Marilyn Maye, Den Ford .
epaat; eo mini.)
ANOTHER LI'E
UNNV IILLIHOW
CIJ Cll LATI! MOVIE
'QUINCY,M.E,: O.adAndAtlve'

and :

Heating Service Call 388o-'·

I/IET!

diHicull forenalc ldantHicatlon
proJect when the fomlly of a
young men, the preeumed

service. Authorized Singer :
Sail'S &amp; Service. Sharpen ·
SciSsors .

Fabri c

Shop, ·

Pomeroy. 992·22.84.

·

victim of a bomb.lnolalalheboy
II lllllaflve. (Reput) 'HARRY

JIM MARCUM Roofing
and siding . 30 , JACK'S REFRIGERATIO ·

spoutl~g

years · e»e:perlence .

Free

estimates . Remodeling.
Coll381-9857 .

N . air condition service, ·
commercia·!. industri::.JI. ,

Phone 882·2079.

- -·· ---

STUCCO F'LAS'TERING
textured ceilings, com·
merclal and residential,
tree estimates. Call 256·
1182.
- - , - - -.,-SAI'tDERS
, · ' cON ·
TRAC'r.ING , Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, «6·2787, . ·.,
. ' '

.

75 DODG!; part. 6 cyf. , elr,
power brakes, power
steering, automarlc, priced WOODSHO,.. , •.
picnic • • fables,
$16Q!I, 304-576-2~.
swingS. 'niC!SI
ts.·101 Coyrt
Call.wt'2572.

!~ ~. Genero iHau~
JIM'S · DEPENDABLE '
water delivery. Call 256·
93611 anytime.
f\IOW HAULING house coal .
&amp; flmestone for driveways.
Call torestlmates367·7101 :

·-·- ·-- -- -

'J9nes Bovs Water Service.

Calll67·7471 or,367·0591 .

---- - ·

i

·--- -...:0-' ,

DILLARDS- WA'rE ~ ·
DELIVERY SERVICE . ·
Call ~~ · 740~ .
··""T·.:_, .....

-- AN'l

+87543
SOUTH

tAKJ
.AKJ

... .

tAKJI0 98ti

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wesl

North

East

Pass
Pass

3t
Pass

Pass
Pass

South
2+
7t

Opening lead:+K

cards we note thal by refusing the spade finesse we
would make the slam, but
that would just be a lucky
result from a bad play." ,

1 Modem energy u
I CUt, as timber
11 Animated
us~~e

'"-"tt71

~b)'TedK-' ·

W
..OVl.l! ·IADVINTURI!)
••It ''UIIelr-" tNT

. ·ta:OD (J) I10U IAGLP~
·
(I) AIC fiiWI NIGHTLINI
~od by Ted KOjipat.
al) II PANTAIY !lLANO
,T hrHlieautlfut
who
went to orack
Uka

Father
Damlen
was one

DOWN

13 One kind
of closet

1 Oregon city
! Green or
u Main artery
stuffed 15 "All About - " 3 Ancestry
Yl!lterday'a Allswer
11 Be mistaken
4 Blvd.
17 Fall
29 Remiss
11 Sheep tick
5 New
Into decay 31 Suspicious
11 Fanner
start
of India
I Eltra
23 Suffii
about
1 ~rian
7 N....
for auction 33 Revolted
21 Distress
24 French river M Eatery
I Earn a
21 Mining find
Deed
promotion
Z5 Uneasiness 39 Ending for
22
9 Begin
N Infested
din or win
24 Ever and f71be "F"
n Wooden
Z5 Set an elllllllPle 10 Klngaley
In F.D.J.C.
core
f7 Devil
drama

Incarnate
1111 Avouch

It Camera

feature
Ill French

article
31 Stripling
32 RoD of

u Plrabolli
river

-~~

~

fabric

UMcn
nlllnal
UCaUMO to
~

.

1

DAiLl' CRYPTOQUOTB _: Here's how
AJ:l'DL8AAJ:a

to work

It:

le r L 0 N G P 1: 1. L 0 W
0111 leUer aimpiJ_atandf for onother. In this nmple A Ia
us..
tilt thrw ll'a, I for the t - O's, etc. Slnsle letten,
apootropliet, -lhe lenlltll and fonnotlon ol .the wonlo are all
hlatL Each day the code letttn ale ~liferent.

nor.

,

'.

ca'I'I'Toctuons

-- --·-- - ~--

JONES . BOYS WATER
SERII"ICE, Call 367·7471 o~.
3417-0591.
'

3356.

HVG

.

·, TRISTATfi'
;•
. UPKOLJT&amp;R\' SHOP
I~ lite. AW., , GallipoiJs• '

l

446·71;1) or 446· 1133, ,

. ...

'

~ ·~

,:fl

'"

~

MHGC

VBN

VGGM

GKN

IHEG

Ni.KV

AKEN

Gyy

N il

'b.v H R

us

" ,' w It

Furnished Room1
INTE,RNA!1 10~A !1:· Far·
mall Cub 'With' mid' mount'
belting ,mOOV.r, ·s ft; cut.'
12,500. 304-675-2135. .
'-:!1

+KQI096

U Foyer

3'1 Uril bero
31 Actrela
Plpu

llllii. AICNI!WB~

11:10

ACROSS

that hlo ox-partner hoo-boen
murdered and the Ia woroan
filling o deocriptlon of Harry' 1
Iormor wife wea - n •nerln;
hlo room ahortlr bofore hl1

~IIOV1I =IWIIftRN) ••Ito

EAV6SDROPPIN'

1

ltr fMOMAS .IOIDH

• EncJlsh

lh. ~l)

OI:.NORA J'ANE

•w
f2

t7

tll.aat .,.,

0 : AeHectlona' Harry learn•

MC CAP'IlOIIID NEWS

. WANT NOSEY

·-

••Ito

Quincy becomea lnvolvM In a

9698 .
SEWING Machine repairS,: ·

STANLEY STEEMER
carpet qeaning
«6·4208

~tlJI~arc£~.

l

LOSE WEIGHT

ON Tlf/S

FOR BEF In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway . Coil 61•·«6·
2096.

NIWI

.
li

Siden-

Electrical

on call. F&gt;h .
Gallipolis.

l

utrec, In hla own worde.

I!JWI
C1J

BACKHOE and Septic tank

excellent condition. 30H75·
5513 or 675-•193 .

11

(Repeal)
FLAMINGO ROAD
ConllancodlooovoraFieldwltll .

bingo In a roadolde ber and

electrical. heating,

Alan: "It Is like Frank
Stockton's story called, 'The
Lady and the Tiger.' There is
an even-tnoney chance and
no way to get up to 51
percent. Todar's hand is a
case in point. If South is in
six diatnonds he is guessing
for an overtrick. AI seven
diamonds be Ia auessing for
the difference between plus
2140 and minus 100.''
Oswald : "Now it is up lo
South to cash the ace and
king of one of the major
suits, U he casbea the spade
he drops West's queen and
his worries are over. If he
cashes the hearts only small
cards arpear and his best
play wil be to cash one high
spade, enter dutnmy with
the one possible trump
entry, discard the jack of
hearts on the ace of clubs
and try the finesse lor the
spade queen." ..
Alan: "Looking a_t all the

EAST
~1098 53

!nftltllll~ .
(lJ II CD

Lene, and unable to control het
anger and J•alouay, go11 on a

roofing, aluminum, vinYl
sldlng.~nd home painting .

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

your car looking new? Call

tlll M.A.B. H. While

driving to Seoul on a two -day
pall, Hawkeye Ia ambuehed
andcapturldbyaNorthKorun

&amp; Heating

bing,

;

caN IJPOAH NI!WI
70D CUll .
MOVIE ·(THRILLER) ••

·~~"tiNIO

atmosphere ."

Shop, 221 Mill St. 379·2782.
E &amp; II Body Shop Want

CIJ MOVII•CCOMIDV) •••

'jlaretootfn Thl1 Pork" 18117
8:30 CIJ
NI!W BIBU! BAFFU!

D . C. Contractors Plum ·
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
S175, any color.free pickup
&amp; delivery in Gallipolis

III'I!CIAL

7-2 7-81

+AJ2
WEST
+Q2
.Q9U 2

one."

fugHiva palnlaf, and tho chief ol

NOKTHEI\ST'

stump removal . 675·1331.

Auto Rop•lr

tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
· «6·2«5 or N lght · «6·
4792.

f1H6Elfl DIO THIG

NORTH
+761
.873
• Q513

Oswald : "Sometimes
declarer is presented with
an insoluble problem in lhe
play. He has two ways to go
and no way to tell the right

(Ror••&gt;

Ser·
WV

12

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 2• hr. wrecker

aboultobolholod,thayunhaln
protutand appoint Bailey to
!Dd th• nghl.
liJ ®
QRI!A PI!RFOIIMANCEI 'Tooco' Sherrll

ANNIE

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and

SERVICES :

By O.wald Jacoby
aud Alan Sootog

l11tdmark office building 11

p.m . 675·5868.

R

Which way to go?

l'&amp;ltlll
WKRPINCI~A·
Tl Whanthollaff learnathalr

mower repair and sharpening service, 10 a .m .·6

2 NEW tires &amp; rims tor
small pickup, :104·895·3&lt;41.

n

BRIDGE

ex•mlne the problem• facing
America'• ma111ve Social

terlng, custom made· for
your home. For free

and

LAGOON

l

SocurltYoYIIItllandwiHixpleln

T

NOGGIN

wao- VEAY "ENGAGING "

1
1 other
oon. (Repeat; 2 hre.) (CI-,
ptioMd; U.S.A.)
AMEIIICAtl CATHOUC
· SOCIAL II!CUIIITY:
MYTHS AND RI!AUTII!I Thlo
ABC Now1 1pocla1 report will

Emergency service. Call

K

BISON

Answer: What they said the personnel manager

.

882·2079 .

&amp;

I I I J [X I I 1"

Sllllrday'al Jumbleo: GRAVE

LOCKSMITH ·
Service .
Residential , automotive .

F

Now orrange the clrclad letter. to
form the 1&lt;1rprioe _ , , u ouggealod by the above cartoon.

!Answer. tomonow)

' .

Mobile Home roof painted
for w inter, S35 you supply
paint. Will alSO dO pipe In·
sulatlng. Call Ken Mannon
at «6·5577 or 256·1932.

()

tXJ

IIY MPIO,

tlnlsh. Call388·8711 .

COOK'S Television
vice,
Henderson,

0

...

I K)

Home bu ilding , home
remodeling and repair .
Custom work from start to

sallies. Phone 30.·675·2851.

1978 CUTLASS Salon . 675 ·
2122 or 675·5571.
MORRISON'S Auto sales_
Henderson, WI/. Phone 6751514 or 675·2881 .

and

Call Robert or Dorothy
Harper, 675·1293.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

61

following cars :
197S·BO
Ford Granada, Mercury
Monarch &amp; Lincoln Ver·

service. "Big or small" we

party to take over low. mon· power, good cond . $550. 9'12·
thly payments on spinet 3136. Ca ll after 5.
piano. Can be seen toe ally.
Write Credit Manager :

TRAILER hitch filS the

brakes. uses no oil. E • ·

2706 .

Maestro electric piano, ex.

304·675·&lt;1327 .

c yl. , auto, good gas
mileage, 32,500 miles ,
almost new tires, exc .

Squire,

Miniature Poodles, 2 male,

Boats ilnd
Motors for Siile

der, fro/ling motor, ex·
cellent condition. $3,.500.

Autos for Sate

malntalnan .c e

WHEN DID YOU FIRST
NOTICE THAT WEAK BACK?

one.._
four ordinary•-•oquore,
-at,

lntortor end Ex.lor pain·
tlng, trallor roots, and d.rY
wall 118 and up, 15 yrs. ex·
perlence. Free est. Call«6·
1562.

house calls. Phone 576·2398
or «6·2&lt;5• .

1979 BASS boat, 16 ft . 55 H P
Johnson motor, Depth tin·

grooming .

Gordon

rent,

SLEEPING ROOMS. and
light houlik~lno · apt.,
Park ~entrat Hotel.

ftfl~Nl~Y THATICIV-1 EDWORDcWil!
~ ~ ~~·
byHenriAmoldendBobLH

:.=..~- · --

TO

niversl!lry ,

75

A 1&lt; C

$1,000.

1972 Kawasaki 175, like
new. Call «6·.uo6.

Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Ca ll «6·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS

extras,

Call «6·«01 or 675·2035.

675·5504.

furnished or unfurnisMd,
very reasonable. 304-112·

45

.._JULY27, tll1

1979 CHEI/Y Pickup, four
wheel drive, lock out hubs,
with camper. Excellent Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
condition . SS.OOO.OO or deep stream extraction .
Sl ,800. and take over Free estimates, reasonable
payments. 304-675- ~27 .
rates. Scothguard, 992·6309 .

Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor· outdoor faci I ities.

Four 15,000 gallon tanks

They'll Do. It Every Time

72 Ford 1/an or 74 Ford
van, your choice $650. 1971
Maverick, S&lt;50. Call «6·
7037 after 6PM. '

1980 CR 125 Hondo, rode
only 6 times. $950. Calll67
7200.

HILLCREST

cables, new voltage relay,
runs gOO!!. 2~7 - 2092 .

VERY clean &amp; nice 2
bedroom apartment in New
Haven, lots of room , air
conditioning &amp; completly

696 · 123~ .

64

I.,;:::::::::;::;::;::___.L::::::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;.;;;~ - - - - - - -

For rent in Middleport, 2
bedroom furnished apart·

2 milk goats, S60. each or
both for $100. Freshened
June. Shade, Ohio (614)

Chow
puppies .
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call .446·
3844 after 4 p.m .

Fri. hours 11 -6 .
A Bear Polar II Compound
bow with quiver, arrows &amp;

121 6.

USED brown end white
l iving room chair Sl5. see
at 769i!rownell Ave., Mid
dlepor¥

APAR TM E NTS
AND
MOBILE HOME S 675-&lt;130 . S2

1·800·624·8511.

sights. $100. 142 3045 .

9 x 12 rug, bedstand, AM ·
FM 8-track stereo with
speakers. coffee tabl e. 2
doub le size bookcase head
boards, 1 bedsprings . Ca ll

ice

eludes pool , deck, fence,
filter.
liner , and
in ·
stallat ion under norm al
ground condition . Free
shop at home service . Call

5721 . Open daily lill9 p.m .

GO OD
U SE D
AP
PLIANCES
W05hers .
d r yers .
ranges .
pliances,

SWIMMING
POOLS :
F&gt;RE · SEASON SALE :
$999.00 IN STALLED!!!
Above ground pool COM·
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting .et $999.00. Price in·

63
Livestock
Goats Numblon kid nan·
nies SJS . Bantam chickens
Coshln and others. Coli «6·
1266.
·

696·1234.

speaker .

$600 . «6·4051 .

pc . dinettes from $79 ., to

Sl50.00. Call992-7352.

Apartments. 675-5548.

brick, sewer pipes, win ·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .

S38 and up to $109. H ide-a·

' ' ·· Rt . 7, Middleport . For Side by Si de retrigl!tor w ith
renta l information phone

Lowest pr ices on Bemco
bedding In the area . Call

For sale La zar Trans, Dial
a grade. spectra · tronic.
Valued at $6,000, asking
$1 ,700 . Completely recon·
ditioned with new tube .

V•ns &amp; 4W,O.

1978 Chevy 31~ T, 4 wheel
drive, Scotsdale 20 series.
4,300 miles. ·can alter 6 «6·
7927 .

56

650 • .

OPEN IN G SOON . Senior
Citizt&gt; ns &amp; handicapped
apt community opening .
Featu rin g 1 bedroom unfurnished with wall to wall
carpe t ing , wa iHex walls,
bu il t in bOOkcase, appli ances, smoke detectors,
air conditioned, private
pat io, storage fa cil ities,
sin gl e story with no stairs
to cl imb, pr i vate entrances
w ith individual parking at
your
door ,
laundry
fa ci lities on premises witn
re creation &amp; meeting
roo m s .
Profess i onal
res id ent
manager
on
premises . Stonewoods Ap·

73

f:::::::::::::::::::::-r---------:-1

675·3788

Television
•• •
VIewmg

FERRELL ' s
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE HOme

tor pr ices. 1/illiaoe Fur·
nilure, 2605 Jackson Ave.,
3
675·177
.·
TRAILER lot 30&lt;-895·3480.
Mise, Merchandise
AMF 10 speed men' s b ike. 54
'2..-CC!!!'~~~~~~47
Wanted to Rent
5
Only a few months old, $8 . Portoble welder 225 amp
Young,
responsible Ca ii.W.~OS6 2 .
Hobart. 1949 Chrysler. 5
professional wants to ren t
window coope. 18 HP out·
in Rio Grande area . Ca ll af· For sale girls clothing sizes i&gt;Qard engine. Call«6·9638.
6·14, like new. Call in
ter 5 ,00 «6·9770 .
evening alter 5:30 145·5634.
4t
For Lease
55
Building supplies
1400 sq . tt . retai l s p~ c e , air F i rewoOO for sale . Ca ll 256· Building materials, block,
condition ing &amp; carpet . Pt . 6514 .

142 1367 .

ment. Caiii ·30H82·2566.
Two mobile nome Iars tor
rent, married couples apply in person to Everette
Schwartz, R t . 1. Locust
Road, Point Pleasant.

1975 Ford 1 ton flaibed
truck, good eng Ino &amp;
8: 25x20 II res, body rough·.
Call ~- 26-11 , 8-5.

Misc. Merchandite

supplies

Hom•

, 1m~v~rnents

In · concrete

The Dally

Ohio

patiO , ·
1975 Ford 314 ton pickup basement, garage floors ·
truck, automatic, PS, PB. ··lfd etc. Free estlmotes. 11
J.o eiiOine, air cond. call . year'S experience. Call 367·
446-26,41, 1·5.
78'11 '
.

30073-5319.

electric lighter

4 BEDROOM house, bath, 2

42

Mason, WV . Lots for rent.
Travel trailers, by week or

from S275. to 5695 . Tables,
For rent new 1 bdr

NI CE

vice,

11

sldewal~s.

' HAY FEllER' HOME
TRA 1LE R space 3 m iles remedy, tradition for cen·
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at turies, it works. For com·
old Y, F&gt;t . Pleasant. 675· plele info and receipt send
tOday self addressed stam·
32-48.
ped envelope plus $1 .00 to
S. R.A. Co .• P .O. Box 284,
LISA 'S
Trailer
Park, Gallipolis, OH &lt;5631 .

51

Lots for sale &amp; 2 new sub
division s in Racine V il lage.
On Vine St . &amp; Yellow Bush

RtHtals

Mobile home lot for rent
John Sheets, l 1/ 2 miles

pets . Phone 30H75·1451 or
675·2996 .
44

S4

03:ll.

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER ·
I/ ICE , Complete sa les, ser·

Pleasant,

I bedroom apt s. available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing . Ca ll

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on appro x . 1 acre.
Live in one, rent others to
make your payment. Ca n
be conver t ed single home.
City water, will consider
la nd contrac t . 675·1883 9·5
p.m .

Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .

· 7S c"*'-rotet 1 T, lift; atalct
·bed low milage.' Call ~-

south Middleport.

SJ,SOO . 742 ·2577

Rd . 949 1340 .

Rooms tor rent, "'utijltles ATTENTION : · (1M ·
paid, TV In rooms. $55 and F&gt;ORTANT TO YOUl Will
up. Call416-2501 .
pay cash or certified check
tor antiQues and collec·
~•
Space for Rent
tlbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
COUNTRY MOBILE Home gut\s, pocket watches, and
Park, Route 33, North of coin collections. Call 557·
Pomeroy . Laroe lots . Call
~11.
992·7&lt;79 .
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern \/alley Mobile

out 160. 1 acre of land I gar·

·liY 1-afri, WiiQhtn'."!L.....,....!.T!!ru~ck!!!l!.!for~S~al!!:t_

Antlquu

5J

cond .• pri-vate lot . Call 2.56·
6033 .

Bra nd new, small. 5 rm
apt .. IS minutes fro m
Ga lli polis. Ca11256 1198.

Roughly Jlh acre, 5. R. 684,
Harrisonv i ll e .
Ask i n g

Furnished
. Rooms

98l

Mond"y, July

Ohio

'

111 ,.·,
., .
'

R : It ·T N G E
"

HS

uN

N H '.

KV

uc

A K Y G

�•

•
10-The Oai

'•

ll:

Ohio

Sentinel

Monday,

1981 ·

.......odes claims he was misinterprete~....

.

' ...

dedication aad · •.nortl luwardl

athletic acUvitlle In ~ and
Southaaatem Obio. In the future, tbe
Born March 9, 1924 in Hartford, he
the son of Clara Staats Roush,
;1.1118011,, andl the late Jack N. Roush.
,
was a veteran of World War
iu and a fanner employee of the
· Philip Spom plant
He is survived by his second wife,
~thleen M. Roush, Mason; ooe
;daughter, Mrs.Beverly Plymale,
!itucyrus, Ohio; one son, Rodney Ray
·\"itruSh, Middleport; two sisters,
; Mrs. Lucille Lewis and Mrs. Pauline
'·Piechnil&lt;, both of Detroit, Mich.; two
brllthers, Roy Roush, Florence, S.C.,
·and Don Roush, Hartford ; four grai&gt;dchildren.
In addition to his father, he was
.}!receded in death by his first wife,
Ruth E. Roush.
' Services will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Foglesong Funeral
. Home in Mason with the Rev . Benny
Stevens officiating. Burial will be in
the Gilmore Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to
9p.m.

Bill Hubbard
Clyde William I Bill I Hubbard. 51,
Syracuse, died Saturday at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Mr . Hubbard was the son of the
late Leslie and Mary Hendricks
Hubbard. He was also preceded in
death by two sisters. Louise Anderson and Elizabeth Stewart ; two
brothers, Edison and Nunnan Hulr
bard and h1s first wife, Mary Jane
Stewa1t.
Mr . Hubbard was an employe at
Ohio Valley Electric Company for 25
years.

Hubbard. a iongttme resident of
Syracuse, was in charge of the for·
mer Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament for some 18 years and
had been tournament manager d
the Syracuse LL Tournament since
it succeeded the one at Kyger Creek.
Recently a monument. provided
by the Syracuse Volunteer ; F'ire
Department. was erected )ll appreciation of Mr. Hubbard for Ius

annual LL tournameDt at Syracuse
will be named in his honor.
He is survived by his wife, Mildred
Hubbard; one dalllhler, .Mrs. Clyde
(Debra) Triplett, Syracuse; three
sons, James Hubbani, Chester; Jeff
and David Hubbard, Syracuse; eiglt
step-children including Tony and
Mark Salser at home; three
brothers, Carl and Oris Hubbard,
Syracuse, and Lawrence Hubbard of
Colwnbus; two si$!rs, Mildred
Pierce, Syracuse and Virginia
Langhern, Jackson, Mich.; six grai&gt;children and 17 step-grandchildren
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Bob Stewart and the
Rev. James Kittle officiating. Burial
will be in Graham Station Cemetery,
New Haven. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime.

Bidwell
(Continued from page 1)
spokesman said.
In addition to Morris, the following
people were cited and scheduled for
arraignment in Gallipolis Municipal
Court:
John F. Garnes, Gallipolis, disor·
derly conduct; Ronald E. Morris,
Bidwell, disorderly conduct; Roy
McCarter Jr., Rt. 4, Jackson, disor·
derly conduct; Thomas A. Lee,
Chillicothe, disorderly conduct,
resisting arrest and possession of
marijuana ; and Alonzo C. Lenoir,
Chillicothe, criminal damaging .

St&gt;ssion set tonight
The OH Kan Coin Club will con·
duct a regular business meeting this
evening in the Riverboat Room at
the Diamond Savings and Loan,
Pomeroy.
Out of town coin dealers will be
present for the social and trading
hour preceeding the 8 p.m. meeting.
A 27-lot coin auction will be held
and prizes awarded. Refreshments
will he served. Local area residents
interested in coins or currency are
invited to attend.

........ -.·'

COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) - Gov.
J8Dlll8 A. Rhodea mys he was rnJsin.
~eled by reporters who last
net, after he signed the death
penalty bill quoted him as saying he
would not
any death sen-

tences.

.:.munute

"We'll be falr. We'll look at
~Mlrything," Rhodes said in an interview later. "I am as compassionate as I've ever been."
Eight people convicted of murder
were saved from the electric chair
by Rhodes during his first eight
years in office. '[be last commutation was Dec. 7, lli70.Since Rhodes has been governor,
two people have been executed. On

Deputies check complaints
•
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigated two accidents
over the weekend.
A car driven by Allen Young,
Pomeroy, was demolished in an accident Friday night.
Young was allegedly traveling too
fast while making a tum on CR 12
when his vehicle ran off the left side
of the road and struck a tree.
Young was cited in Meigs County
Juvenile Court for failure to stay on
the right side of the roadway.
The shertff's department is also
investigating a hitskip accident

which occurred 3 a.m. Saturday
morning on CR 25.

According to reports, a pickup
truck ran off the roadway and struck
several mailboxes.
'l1le truck apparently sustained
damage, but did not stop and furnish
information to the property owners.
John Brogan, Sr., Dexter, repor·
ted sometime Saturday night an
unknown vehicle travelling west on
CR 4 went off the roadway and slid
through his lawn.
Sheriff's deputies are in·
vestigating the incident.

Meigs County happenings ..
Marriage licenses
Michael Wayne Stanley, 22,
Pomeroy, and Mary Kathleen
Cameron, 31, Rutland applied for a
marriage license in Meigs County
Probate Court Friday.

To end marriages
Two marriage dissohitions were
approved in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Friday.
Mary and Nathan Brady's
marriage and Keith and Shirley
Williams' marriage were dissolved.
Mary Ann Riley, Pomeroy, and
Douglas F. Riley, Amesville, apptied for a disslution.
Gladys I. Barrett, Rutland, asked
for a divorce from Buster Barrett,
Rutland and Angela S. Bowman,
Racine, asked for a divorce from
Bruce E. Bowman.
Also, MantaS. Metzger apptied for
divorce from Richard A. Metzger.

·~

.

Feb. 15, 19113, shortly after Rhodes
took office for his flnt tenn, Robert
H. Griffith of Cuyahoga County was
sent to .death. A month later, Donald
Reinbolt·of Columbus was executed.
Reinbolt 'Was the 315th and last
pel'SOII to receive the death penalty
in the state.
In 19'72, the Ohio death penalty W!IS
ruled unconstitutiDI!Bi, leaving Ohio
without such a statute for the
following nine years.
At the signing of the new death
penalty bill July 19 in Dayton at the
Fraternal Order of PoUce state convention, Rhodes was interpreted as
saying he would not grant clemency
to anyone sentenced to death under
the law.

At Georgia base
Sgt. and Mrs. James E. Holman
and family are presently stationed
at 125 C Baker Street, n. Benning,
Ga. 3!905.

"That's olcWa!lhloned for agovernor to act u a court ot 1aat resort,"
Rhodes was quoted u saying. "No
one knows wben the bullet will strike

new law."
.
·,;
Rhodes said he would live llei'IOI!I:
thought to CIIQlllllltN a, death ien1
tence under certain clrcuinltaneea..;
next."
But it Ia pollible that no a~
Later, he explained that a section will be sent to 'Rbodea since he will
of the new law required appeals leave offiee In 1M3.
.
courts to review evidetlce in death
'lbe law goes Into effect Oi:t. 19;
pelll!lty cases and not just legal but lawaultll prorniled by antH!eal!!
issuesaslnthep8!1L
penalty grouJiil,. ln~udill8 the
An apPellate court will have to American ClvU Uberties Union, are
detennine whether .the death · ezp,ectedtoJlelayanyell1icutione. ,
penalty is proper, which Rhodes said
'lbe new law allows the death
he thinks will prevent many clemen-- penalty to be used for thOee concy cases from coming to his office.
victed of kllllng law enforcement of.
"Tiley dori't need the governor's ficers, a president, a gwernor, ~
office," he said. "'llley used to have aggravated murders Committed
the governor sit in judgment.... The during the conunisslon of another
rights are more protected under the felony or for a second murder.

Good Thru August 2nd, 1911

Veterans Memorial~--,-----------,.

Quantity rights reserved. We are not responsible for typographical errors .. Sorry no dealera.

Heldreth, Viola Tucker, Jack Ward,
David Shuler.
SUNDAY ADMISSION8-Eleamir
Tillis, Pomeroy; Carrie Hall, P.U4dl~
•
SATURDAY DISCHARGES-Ha·
rold Brannon.

SATURDAY ADMISSION8-Beli·
nda Ross, Middleport; Clarence
Lee, Pomeroy; VIvian Phelps, Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES-Nancvy Collins, Lula Quivey, Lowell
Collins, Betty Wrltesel, Brian

~::n:,~~~ .~:=;:-a-..;.....~Ho..,.o-,L "\3'\Sj "'BACk-ToSGHOoL I-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·

·J9c

--·

--- -

·- - .

i&gt;

.

•Kit Kat
•Milk Chocolate
YOUR CHOICE

n.n

Clearance
sale
prices on our entire
stock of quality
name brand Jr.
dresses.

,. -c~

,

.

'

'

----

Jr. Sizes 3 to 15.

.

0
0
T

·aa·.o·· :

,

Sundresses, 2 pc.
sets, knits, seer·
sucker, gauze and
many others.

....

v

IFL TEAl PEICILS

r•'

' ''.

NluoH'$·1110,

•NFC

-

•AFC

.•

~

I '

535.

NEW SIGN-The Dabble Shop, located on Pemeroy's'West Maio
Sll'eet. an arts and crafts store,received a new sign last week. The
buUdiDg's new .facade includes a front and shingle overba1J8. The sign
Willi done by Roush Coostructloo, Syracuse. Amy Hillis the owner and
operator of the estabUshment and bas been lD busllless ID Pomeroy lor
over a year. The shop Is next door to Dale Hill Ford Tracter.

Boosters meeting set

14 Ct.

PRICE

rnKld
Data.
Center~ ·
..
'

/;

~

.

. •.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
HIRYESt
CROP OF HOlE
Clllllll SUPPLIES

.

•Reg. pint Mason jors with caps

II•
'

....

.

CHASE I

- ~~~

CSargains

·• .THE
RICHER
COFFEE

'

chai-att•rs -on··

•Combination Dinner Only
•Dining Room Only

Lunc.h 1(111

..

Served

with:
Whipped
Poatoes, Qlicken Gravy, Cole

Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.
No Substitutions; Except
' whi~ have an additionaf price.

Beverages

Farmers

:, Barik.
.

~

·..

)

.

......

1,0t. C.peclty
. ·,,

A11orted ,

WEBSTER'S DICTIOIIRY

1 Lb.

MWLioN'I RIO.
. :....)• ,•.2...'

0
0
I
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VJ
0
f-

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&lt;()

$111

~l'llit 5 Pk.
t!l Yo !'i!lt ~· pk.

•

1

1 11 12's

SAilORI
COFFEE

Class

Put your savings in a safe place, a savings account ·
at the Farmers Bank ....

For Just

Sorry,

II' 12's

.

The Farmers Bank is the safest place for your
savings. Your savings is insured up to $100,000, and
you'll also earn high interest.

II' 12's

•Aluminum Reg. Mason Jar Caps, lids &amp; rings

NILiOfl'l • • 11.41

Keep your savings
•
In a safe . place.

Case

Case

•Reg. Mosan Jar Caps. lids &amp; Rings

1.1% Oz• .

·•~rt3Pk:

tansoA Y NIGHT A r cRow·s
All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!

'3''
'2''

•Reg. Quart Mason jars with cops

The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
meet Tuesday, July 28 at the high
school at 7:30 p.m. All members are
urged to attend.

EVERY

0
&gt;-

'
f

To celebrate birthday
Doris Jean Kiser who is a patient
at Holzer Medical Center will
celebrate her birthday on July 29.
Cards may be sent to her in care of
the hospital. Her room number is

V)

-

The Middleport Garden Club's annual picnic will be held 6 p.m . Aug. 3
at the J .W. Morrisfann.
Each member is asked to bring a
covered dish. Any member that
needs transportation should call 992·
2500 or 992·2429.

jll

:r
v' ;'

NElSON'S R!G.

Picnic set Aug. 3

II
II

0

•Reeses

NILSON' I 110, tl .H

The Long Bottom Community
Association will hold its monthly
meeting 8 p.m. Wednesday in the
Community Building.
There will be a silent auction. so
everyone is asked to bring
something.

'--

-- ~-

....
0

HERSHEY'S 6 PACKS

Meets Wednesday

-

~-

KIDS

.

5 BALL PENS

JUNIOR
DRESSES

lBTS

CLEARAICE
&amp;0.% OFF

BIC BIRUII
PICK
'

JUl. Y CI.EARANCE

Emergency runs
Five emergency runs were made
by local units over the weekend ac-cording to Meigs County Emergency
Service.
Runs made Saturday were Mid·
dleport at 12 :58 p.m. to Hamilton St.,
for Willford Taylor who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid·
dleport at 5:50 p.m. to South Third
for Arthur Strauss who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at
8:51 p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Stephen Harris who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Sunday runs included Pomeroy at
6:25 p.m. to Five Points Grill for
Jerry Owens who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 6:23p.m. to county road 25
for Fl1&gt;rence Deeter to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

SALE STARTS TODAY

NILION'I HO.

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