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Wednesday, MaKh 23, 1983

Page--14-The Daily Sentinel

Twenty...

Local briefs:
Will show Holy Land slides
Sherman and Mickey Cundlf!. Syracuse will be showing slides of
their trip to the Holy Land at theSalvatlonArmy,l15Bl!tternut Ave.,
Thursday. March 24, at7: 30 p.m. There will be special music. Mrs.
Wining invites thC' public to attend.

Final signup Saturday
Final sign up for the Syracuse-Minersville Youth League will be
held Saturday, March 26, from 9 a .m. until noon at the ballfield at
· Syracuse Elementary School.
· The program· includes T -ball, minor league. peewee, little leag'.t&lt;'
and pep wee girls softball.
·
Youth interested in pony league also must register. Foiradditiona l
information call992-5811l. All parents are encouraged to register their
children. Saturday's sign up will be final.

SOUI'IIERN - Six talented and gifted atudents · the Soutbem
Local School district took part Iii the Young Experimental SclentW
Program. 'lbey are, left to right, Carol Fisher, Letart Elementary;
Kathy lhle, Racine! Tracy Beegle, Letart; LesUe Dudding, Racjne;
Becky Evans, Poriland, and Kevin Burgess, Syracuse.

Emergency runs

(Continued tram

A hJihllght of the propam was a .
recent visit of_the ~ ~tu!lents and ._
~e four teachers to cosr 1n
Columbus . where tbey were
brought together wttll 10me 37JJ
othi!r gifted students from other
Ohio locations for "hands on"
science activities and demonstratlons. Physical scleoce, earth
science and history were the main
areas covered by cosr statf
members during the visit.
The program was fllnded by
CQSI and a grant trqm General
Electrtc .. Costanzo Is more: than
pleased Wtth the program and
although General Electric might
not be providing a gr1111t for future

programs, he Is hoping that Meigs
County students can be involved
next year. Students and teachers ·
have found the experience to be
Interesting, exciting and motivatlng, Costanzo reports, and hopefully, will spread the knowledge
gained through their trip to COSI to
other teacherS and other students.
The Eastern Local School provlded the bus used for transportatlon of the :aJ Ioc.al students and the
faculty advl~rs to COSI for the
hands-on studies.

Hospital news

·· vot .3l ,No.229
Copyrighted 198;l

Come In and See Our
Magnificent Colledian.of

Seeks divorce

Three forfeit bonds
Three defendants forfeited bonds, six were fined and one was given
a jail sentence in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Michael Athey, New Haven, $450, posted on a
charge of driving while intoxicated; Kenneth L. Buckle~. Coolville,
$48, speeding. and Lawrence Stewart, Rutland, $40, speeding.
Fined were Connie Grirrun. Middleport, $25 and costs, destruction
or property; Charles E. Lawson, Vinton, $425 and costs and lOdays in
jail, driving while lnto~icated; Jerome K. Howard, Pomeroy ,$15and
costs, speeding; Terry E . Icenhower, Cambridge, $100 and costs,
driving while under suspension; Jenny Grinstead , Pomeroy, $10,
driving on an expired license; Paul A. Miller, Middleport, $25 and
costs, spinning tires. Kenneth Musser was given a five day jail
sentence on a disorderly conduct charge; 10days for resisting arrest
and 15 days for assault on a police officer.
·

. EASTERN - Eastern Local School District talented and gifted
students taking· parl In the Young Experimental Scientist Program
from the left Include Don Allen Harris, Chester; Tom l\'lorrlssey,
Chester; Christopher Spencer, Tuppers Plains; Joey Bame,
Riverview; David Rice, Tuppers Plains, and Michael Mardn,
Riverview.

ladies' and Mens' 1\ings.

Filing for divorce were Norma J.
MU!s, Rt. 2, Racine, agaln!lt Alan P.
MU!s, Rutland; Steven H. Dunfee;
Middleport, against ·Nancy L.
Dunfee, Kent, Oh.; Almena Klein.
Pomeroy, against Thomas Klein,
Pomeroy; Jeanette Tlloma s.
Pomeroy, against Tim Thcmas,
Pomeroy.
Filing for support was Julie
Richmond against Larry E.
Richmond.
·

~-~

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

The Womens' Fellows.hjp of the Meigs County Churches of Christ
will meet at the Bradford Church Thursday, March24at 7:30p.m. The
program will consist of a film about flowers from Williamsburg. Va.

m

PH. 992-6342
317 N. 2nd

E. Moin, Pomeroy

Area deaths

J
Vena Whaley

Mrs. Vena Whaley, 86, Pomeroy
Pike, Pomeroy, died early Tuesday
evening a t Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A housewife. Mrs. Whaley was
born Aug. 29, 1897 at Darwin. a
daughter of the late George and
Amanda St iles Howe tt.
She is survived by four daughters,
Mrs. Karl (Doris I Grueser, Miners·
ville; Mrs. Nat (Maxine I Prentice;
Haines City, Fla.; Mrs. William
(Ann! King, Newark, and Mrs.
Herbert Herdman, Lakeview. Six
gra nd c hildren . six grea t ·
grandchildren and iourgreat -great.
grandchildren aiso survive.
An active member of the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Organiza tion, Mrs. Whaley was preceded in
death by her husband, Welby
Whaley, her parents and a
daughter.
Services· will be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday a t the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Richard
Rothemich officiating. Burial will
be in Burlingham Ceme tery.
Friends may call a t· the funeral
home from 6 to 9 p.m . Wednesday.

Herbert Moore

MEIGS - These are the talented and gifted atudents of the Meigs
Local School District making the COSI trip. FrOm left are Cindy
Maynard, Salem Center; Mark Corsi, Salisbury; John Evans,
Rutland; David Frymyer, Salisbury; Aaron Sheels, Harrisonville;
Teny Fields, Pomeroy; Lesley Carr, Pomeroy, and Joe HaD,
Bradbury.

I

Herbert F. Moore, 78, 301 Wright
St., Pomeroy, a former Middleport
businessman , died Monday night at
University Hospital in Columbus.
Mr. Moore and his brother, Harry
S. Moore, operated the R. C.
Bottling Co. In Middleport ior a
number of years until1970 when he
retired. He was born Feb.17, l!lffiat
Ashland, Ky., a son of the late
Samuel S. and LU!ian Rule Moore.
Surviving are his wife, Gladys;
four sons, Herbert F ., Columbus;
.Jack, Rapid City, South Dakota;
Ferman E. of Pomeroy, a nd James
A. of Philadelphia, Pa., and a sister,
Helen Lyle. Ashland, Ky . Also
surviving are 16 grandchildren, 20
great ·grandchildren and two great·
great-grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews . .
He was preceded in death by his
parents, three brothers, Harry S ..
Franklin a nd Eugene Moore, and a
sister, Mrs. Marie . Wheatley. He
was · affiliated with the United
Methodist Church.'
Services wiU be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. William MiddlesMeigs Memory Garden. Friends
warth
officiatiJlg.
Burial
wUIfrom
be in2
may call
at the funeral
home
to 4 and 7.to 9 p.m. Thursday.

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*Firearms
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WEAPONS PRODUCTION
1974·1982

WEAPONS PRODUCTIOI
1974·1982

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By KEVIN KELLV .
OVPstalf
RIO GRANDE- In what was
billed as a discussion of black
politics in th&lt;' 19005, civil rights
activist Julian Bond Wednesday
night vigorously a ttacked Presi •
dent Reagan for a retreat on
basil' human righ ts.
ThC' end· result of this, Bond
believes. is establishmenl of
white suprem acy as a permane nt feature or the American
c haracter.
"We now know what real fear
is, " the ' 'eteran Georgia legislator told a Rio Grand&lt;'Collegea nd
Community College a udience.
"Two years ago, Reaganomics
was an unproved economic
throry. Two years later, it's still
an unproved economic theory,
but its applica lion makes the
Gneal Depression look like a
Sunday school picnic."
Reagan, whom Bond labeled
a n "amiable -Incompetent," has
bPttered the ll ws of the haves
while the have-nots can expo.&gt;et

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Page 4

Page 5

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defense system, Reagan turned to
an oft en successful tactic to work his
way on a reluctant Congress.
And, with the surprise a nnouncement of his anti-ballistic missile
system plan , the president dangled
a carrot on a stick by indicating that
some Pentagon funding in the
future would go to 1a system of
deterrence based on something
other than the threa t of reta liation.
The early publi~ reaction re·
ceived by White House te lephone
operators was nearly 5·1 in support
of Reagan, according to Peter
Roussel, a deputy White House
press secretary. But on Capitol Hill.
early reacl ion opposed the
president.
Sen. Mark Hatfield . R-Ore.,
chairman of the Senate Appropria tions Commil tee, said the presi·
dennt's '· terr ifyi ng propo sa ls "
would drain fund s needed to rebuild
Am erica. Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass .. spoke about
" the misleading red scare tactics
and reckless Star Wars schemes of
the president."
White House spokesma n Larry
Speakes sa id the genesis of the
anti-ballistic missile proposa l was a
recent briefing of the president by
national security advisers who
painted a plcturP of military
developmenT In coining years and
"aU he could see was a buildup of
offensive weapons."

Bond attacks President.,s policies

$4400

MEIGS INN

27

AAMOII
SUBMARINES
PRESIDENT'S CHARTS - 'lbese are four of the charts UBed oy
President Reagan used durin&lt; his natlonaDy televised speech from the
- ·OviJ Office ai lhe White H01111e Wetlnesday night. They show four
categortes of weapons production comparison betw~ the U.S. and
Soviet Union from llr74 to 1982. (AP Laserphoto ).

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Q)

Issued marriage licenses
Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs County Probate Court to
James Gary Markwell , 22, Pomeroy, and Rhonda Kay Bamhart,l9,
Pomeroy; Elvis Wayne Peck, 25, Rt . I. Racine, and Christine Ann
Pullins, 25, Rt . 4, Pomeroy: James Edwin Miller. 30. Portland and
Denise Ann Miller, 25, Portland.

the Senate a nd on the Democraticcontrolled House when key economic votes approach,
With his speech Wednesday night
on the Soviet buildup a nd his
proposal to develop a missile

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Riverview students
to present op~ratta

•

•

enttne
.

.

.
2 Sections , 12 Page\
20 Cenh
A MuhimHf ia Inc New•poper

Missile defense system
pushed by President

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Turquoise . Tiger Eyes ,
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Birthstones. in 10 and 14

HARD CANDY...$1.50 per 'h lb.

Meigs diamondmen
prepare for opener

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March '24 , 1983

WASHINGTON (API- For two
years, President Reagan has said
that if he can't make Congress see
Th&lt;' light. hE' will let it feel the heat.
That is how he describes his
effons to build public pressure on

Suprfree

Church group to meet

Letters to editor

e

Veterans Memoiial Hospital
Admltted ..Deborah Smith, Racine; Vena Whaley, Pomeroy;
Cuba Little, Pomeroy; Julia Manley, Middleport; Donna ?hila·
baum, Pomeroy; Karen Hawtborne, Long Bottom.
Discharged.. Linda Carpentr, Reo
becca Smith, Dorothy Kimes.

Five calls were answered Tuesday by local emergency units, the
Meigs County E mergency Medical Services reports.
At 10 a.m .. the Pomeroy Unit took Vena Whaley from Pomeroy
Pike to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 5:02p.m. took
Ann Davis, :D Riverview Drive, to Pleasanl Valley Hospital;
Pomeroy at 5:24p.m. took Donna Philabaum. Condor St., to Veterans
Memorial: Pomeroy at 9:45p.m. took GladysCucklertromPomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans Memorial. and at 11:56 p.m.,
Middleport took Virginia Duckworth, 405 Page St .. to Veterans
Memorial.

page' 1)

''M illions of American families are daily herded into
poveny. allowed tosllpthrougha
net so loose it could not hold Moby
Dick," Bond contlnued. "The ·
president said he would leave a
safety net to protect low-Income
people. This Is simply not true. "
Speaking at the same hour
Reagan appeared natlona Uy on
televtsion to state his case for a
stronger dPfense budge t' BOnd
said "aggressive mlllta rlsm"
was another reason foreconomic
and socia l Imbalance plaguing
the na tion.
If one less B-1 bomber or
Trident submarine Is built, he
~rgued. the millions saved froni
those projects could be diverted ·
to necessary social, education
a nd law e nforcement programs.
Bond said later during an
answer-and-question pertoo he
favors national preparedness in
case of attack.
"I'm as bloodthirsty as tbe
next guy," he said. " But l see no
rea$on to destroy Russia 100
· times over ... lt's a stupid waste."
Bond indicated that recent
attacks on clvU liberties have led
the administration to view the
Constitution as "a docUment of

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

infinite elasticity, to cut and snip
as fits the moment."
A fixture in the American
political scene sinC't' the mid1960s. Bond evoked the spirit of
that era when he told the
a udience the means to fight
Jhreats to huma n rights is with
thP ballot box a nd mass partici·
pa tion in loca l a nd nation'al
politics.
"There is, I believe, a sizable
amOUI\1 of bodies that won't
surTender today's goals to the
current princes of power," he
sa id. "Most of all. wemustsay no
to self·impost.'d political impotence. It's nothing s han of a
scandal that in a terrorist
organization like the Klu Klux
Kla n, membPrship has inC'reased. while me mbership in a
group like the NAACP has
rem ained stabiP."
Following Bond 's speech,
which brought most of the
audience to Its feet with applause. reactions were heard

from a pan&lt;'! that agreed with
Bond'.s sentiments.
Rev. Henry Fletc her, a Ga llia
County native a nd a member of
the West Virginia Human Rights
Commission, again recalled the
early act ivist days of the civil
right s movement with a state·
ment affirming Bond's lalk.
"One of the most significant
steps is that wa lk to the polls, for
it is a t the polls where civil tight s
struggles, a fewyearsagowaged
in the streets, can bPwonat last,"
he said.
"Our greates t moment of
victory won't come with a
display or military might. nor
when unE'mployment is at its
lowest ebb, nor with two cars in
the garage and a chicken in
every pot; " Fletcher continued.
''Our greatest moment ofvictory
will come when all of us can join
at the base of the mountain arm
in arm and chant ·ln unity, 'lam
m y brother's keeper.· "

BOND SPEAKS- Georgia State Sen. Jnllan Bond attacked Reagan
admln1ltratlon poUcles om human rights during a speech to Rio Grande
College and Commwdjy College VJem-lay night, labeiHng the
PIE tldent an "archlled of avarice" for driving a wedae.between poor
andrlch.
.
.

I

Speakes said Reagan saw the
defensive system "as the only hope
to ending the buildup."
Speakes said Reagan had two
.motiv&lt;'s in delivering the speech:
-To m obilize American public
opinion, and draw a ttention to what
he sees as the disadva ntagrous
military position of the United
States;
-To offer "some sort of longrange hope for the future ."
But in offering a new policy tha t
foreshadows a shift In a JO.year-old
stratejzy, Reagan was also making
a political statement.
In a week that began with the
president moving to shOre up his
standing on domest ic issues by
nominating William D. Ruckelshaus to takeover the Environmen·
tal Protection Agency, Reagan also
took a step to soften his hardline
image on military matters a nd
justify his defense budget increases.
Before Reagan spoke, he was
dealt an expected setback by the
House of Representatives, which
passed 229-196a Democratic budget
plan that would slash his defense
buildup by more than hair.
"The so-called 'alternate budget '
backed by libera ls in the House," as
Reagan described the IX&gt;mocrats'
plan, is at the heart of his sudden
flurry of activity on defense issues.
With little chance of winning the
budget vote In the House, whatever

REAGAN ON DEFENSE - President Reagan points as he
· addresses the nation on television Wednesday from Washington In
supporl of his proposed defense budget. At left is a picture of Soviet
Mlgs In western Cuba according to the White House. The House voted
earlier to cut the defense budget in favor of social programs. (AP
Lllserphoto ).
pressure Reagan hopes to bring to
bear on the Congr&lt;'ss is be ing
directed at the Senate. There, even
some key Republicans, have balked
at supporting his defense budget.
The telev ised spePCh lacked som&lt;'
of the rhetorical fireworks tha t t hc
president a nd his speechwrit ers
have produced in the past.
But there were ple nty of pictures
-of Soviet ins lalla !ions in Cuba and
an extended airfield runway in
SovteHnfluenced Grenada in the
eastern Caribbean- a nd charts on

· And . there were numbers, intended to counler argument s for a
freeze on . the devclopmenl a nd
deployment of nuclea r weapons.

Soviet' weaJxms expansion .

week, and now have 1.300."

The Soviets, Reega n said, had 600
med ium -range la nd-based nuclear
missiiC'S in 1978; 8(XJ by the end of
1979, and 1,200 last August, and were
recently claiming that "a pproximate parity offorces" exists.
To which the president added:
" But .the Soviets are still adding an
average of three new warheads a

New contract
proposes cuts
in benefits
Eliminat ion of a
number of
benefit s including rrouction of
wages are proposed by Foote
.Mineral Co. for thP nex t thrC'e year
contract with the United Steelworkers of America, AFL-CJO a t
the New Haven Plant, according to
one union member.
The employe sa id union officials
Wednesday provided a handoul to
workers listing proposals or the
compa ny for a new three year
contact with the union.
The proposa ls lnclude .. reduce
wagesS2.50 per hour : e lirninatC'cost
of living a nd all reference thereto
under thC' agreement: eliminate all
insurance coverage provided to
employes on lay-off and all reference thereto under the agreements;
eliminate all Insura nce coveragP
pmv ided to ret ir£'Cs a nd a ll refer. ence thereto under lheagrreme nts;
elimina te the Supplem ental Unem ployment Benefit Plan, guara nteed
SUB, and all reference there to
under the agreem ents; e liniina te
the extended "acation plan and a ll
reference thereto under the agreements: elimina te thC' vacation
bonus and a ll reference thereto
under the agreements; elimina te
the percentage formula, under the
pension agrecment, for calculations
of future retiree benefit levels:
elimina te the 70-80 retirem ent
provision and a ll reference Ihereto
under the P&lt;'nsion agreement:
elimina te the 13-week specia l payment and all reference thereto
under the pension agreement:
eliminate the62-15 and 30 year early
retireme nt provisions and a ll reference thereto under the pension
agreem ent.
Workers arP up for a new contract
with the company in October of this
year, it is reported .

' i&gt;

•

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FILED - Roger Manning Davidson, left, filed his petition for' the
Republican nomination to run for mayor with the Meigs County Board
of Elections Tuesday afternoon. Davidson filed four years agu as an
Independent candidate for the position. With him on the right Is Hofile
Green, a former l'omeroy councilman, who was also a candidate for
m3yor four years ago. Green will assist Davidson with ·his campaign.

Filing deadline
today
.

.

Is the only candidate to file.
Pomeroy Village wUI have a
Filing deadline for Pomeroy a nd
Republican council race a nd mayMiddleport ca ndidates with the
or's race by both Democrats and
board is 4 p,m. Thursday .
Republicans, according to the
latest primary election flllngs with
Roger Manning Davidson, Lin·
coin Hill, Pomeroy, Tuesday filed
the Meigs County Board of
Elections.
his petition .10 run .for the Repubii·
Henry J . Werry and lla Juanita
can nomination for mayor of
Pomeroy.
Rusche! have both flied as Republl·
This marks Dav idson's second
cans to ru n for council.
Earlier Incumbent, Bruce Reed,
attempt · to secure the mayor's
position. He filed for the Republia Republican, flied for nomination
bringing the total Republicans to
can nomination for mayor of
three seeking nomlnatton for two _ Pomeroy.
This marks Davidson's second
seats opening neX1 year. .
attempt to secure the mayor's
Kenit.y K. Klein flied for the
_position. He-flied for the post four
Democrat nomination to run for
years ago as an Independent. ·
Pomeroy mayor and will opposed
A graduate of Pomeroy High
Democrat WUllam · Quickel who
Weather forecast
earlier.
·
·
filed
School,
class ol 1952, Da vldson
Mostly cl~ar a nd cold lonight.
attended
several colleges a nd
Roger )11. Davidson flied as a
Low around 20. Winds northeasterly ·
universities. he is a veteran of the
Republican for nomlmitlon to run
10 mph or less. Sunny Friday. High
KoreanC{Jnflict having been honor46·52.
• for mayor. He wi ll oppose lncu'1"ably discharged from the U.S. Air
bent Republican Clarence Andrews
ExtendL'II Ohio Fore&lt;:ast
Force,
and Richard Seyer for the nominaSatunlay t!U-ough Monday:
Employed In the mass appra(sal
tion
to
run
In
the
fa
II
.
Fair oo Saturday and a chance of
In
Middleport,
two
seats
on
and
computer business for some 20
rain or snow Swtday and l\'lonclay.
years.
Davidson pioneered thc use
council
open
this
year.
Thus
far,
Highs In the 40s. Lows In mld-20s to
Carl
J.
Horky,lncumbent,
R.,
only
(Continued
on page 81
mld--3&amp;.

�••
Thursday, March 24, 1983

Commentary

Page-2-The DDily Sentinel
PviiMII'O'J' Millcllepatt, Ohio
Thursday, Wa:d1 24, 1913
r

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Coorl S tr ~t'l
Pumt'ruy, Ohiu

114-192-!151
()fo:\'CHEU TO TilE I NTE K ESTOFT HJo~ MEIGS.MASON AREA

1'1~
~m~ ~L..--r"l r'""'I"""E:2d·~==~
~v

ROBERT l. WINGETT
Publi~ht!r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
A.. sislalll P uhl isher/funlrulh-r

DALE ROT!IGEB, JR.
Nt'Wll Edi tur

A MEMBER uf Thr As:Hwial~ P~s. · Inland Duily Pnss /\ ssnt'i~U1lD and lbt&gt;
Amt'ri&lt;·an !l•k v.·spaptor Pu_blisht&gt;rs AliiHWiatiun.

LF.1TERS Of OPINION

IU't~

vot•kumt'd. Thry sbuuld bt'

l ~s thun

J00

'AIIrds

ln1111,. All

ldh'r.~ arr s ubjt'&lt;'t tu ~itiDII. and mull bt sl ~~:nt'd with rwmt', addrt'S!i and t.-lepl11~nr

numht'r. N11 ull!iigrlt"d ld11'11i will hr publi!ihtil. Letten 11hnuld bt' in J'ond Las k , Hddn-ss•nt:

issurs. nul ~rwntdilit'S_.

Computer talk
Six months ago I wrote a mlldly
exasperated complaint against the
computermanla taking over the
country. It happened that l was In
Hawaii at the time attending a
- convention of IBM folk, to one of
whom I had addressed the question: What Is the computer going to
do for me? The vagueness of his
reply enhanced my suspicion that
computers were, really , something
for experts to fu ss over, like X-ray
machines. All of us need X-rays
from time to time and profit from
the avallablllty of the .machine, But
no one bas urged me to learn to
operate art X-ray machine, and !do
not expect this to happen, unless
Apple goes Into the X-ray business.
The piece brought an astonishing
amount of maU suggesting that
people care most awfully about

computers. Many, .Jlke me, were.
skeptical about the useful11f!SS of
the rilach!nes to non-specialists.
Others were out-and-out proselytizers for the machine. What emerged
was a comblnatlona of corlfuslon
and curiosity.
It Is entirely a matter of
coincidence that In the Island of
Maul the day after I wrote, I
happened on a book by a young
writer called Peter McWilliams. It
was called "The Word ProCessing
Book: A Short Course In Ccmputer
Literacy." A few months later,
McWilliams brought out "The
Personal Computer Book." In the
spring, McWilliams Is bringing out
a syndicated column. And today I
learn that he has launched a
newsletter, the f!tSffssue of which I
have seen. I am most grateful to the

William F. Buckley l r.
McWilliams Industries, and the
reason why Is forthcoming.
Many wrtter:s and manutactur·
ers proceed on the myth that all
Americans are mechanically Intel·
llgent. My expeiience Is that only a
few are. but that they are almost
uniquely targeted by · writers of
manuals and technical literature.
When my fathl!r dledat;tge78, he
had not yet mastered the conven·
tlon that to make the radio go ori, It'
was neceSsa.ry to tum the kpob
clockWise, not counterclockwise.
So that every week or so when he
turned to the radl&lt;;&gt; he had ~&gt;.xactly a
50 percent chance of succeeding, In
the first attempt, In turning It on.
Having Inherited his mechanical
Intelligence, I found that reading
McWilliams was - as Jeremy
Bentham, I think It was, said after

President Reagan
a neo-Keynesian?
Some people are calling President Reagan names these days. They say
he's become a Keynesian. and if that doesn't m ake him bristle, probably
nothing will.
They say Reagan is embracing huge budget deficits, increased federa l
spending and tax cuts to stimulate demand and revive the economy- the
sa m ~ medicine that British economist John Maynard Keynes prescribed
in the 192ils to li1t the world out of the Great Depression.
"Jndero . in the best Key nesian tradit ion, his !Reagan's ) emphasis has
shifted fmm supply-side dOJPDa to boosting demand as a means of reviving
the economy," states Walter Heller, chief White House economist in the
K~ n ned y and .Johnson administrations and a professed "neo-Keynesian."
11 is the very cure that Reagan has blamed for making the U.S. economy
dea thly ill owr the past two decades. He had come into office promising to
overturn the Kevnes
.. ian approach. which has guided industrial soc ieties
for a ha l! century.
Reagan's brand of policy, dubbed "supply side" economics or
"Reaga nomics." was promoted by his administration as the antithesis or
Keynes' belief that government must play a centra l role in achieving a nd
maint aining a healthy economy.
To Reagan. there is nothing wrong with the American economy that
can:t be fixed by less governme nt: less spending, less taxation , less
regu Ia t ion .
·
Keynes advoca ted large government budget deficit s and tax cuts in bad
limes to st lffiUiate demand by pulling money in consumers· pockets.
Reagan advocated balanced budgets. and tax cuts that would stimulate
supply by encouraging people to work harder. save more and invest in the
production of new goods and services.
But the supply-side rhetoric of two yea rs ago has given way to economic
dC'eds that bear Keynes' imprint :
-Reagan's 198J campaign pledge to balance the budget by 1983 has
l(iven way to n&gt;eord deficits. Under his latest estimates. the national debt,_
which reached S1 trillion in 1981, will double by 198i.
-Federal spending, which Reagan promised to curb. continues to rise
significa ntly, boosted in part by the large increases hE' sought for the
Pentagon and in part by Conwess ' refusal to cut non-defense spending as
much as he wanted . This year, federal spending is ,expected to equal 2.'i
percent of the gross national product, the highest figure since World War
II . .

reading Hume - like having the
scales fall from the eyes. One
shouldn't pretend that somehow
computer-talk becomes as easy as
a Democratic campaign speech.
But the trick Is toe~ln the uses o1
a computer In language that Is
jargon-free to the extent this Is
possible, that has bounce, nte and
vividness.
His talents as a communicator to
one ·side, McWiillanl$ has the
extraordiliary benefit of not having
studied computers at school. He
would probably' be as mystified as
you and I If someone were to gjve
him a chest full of microchips,
some wire, a soldering Iron and a
keyboard, and .say to him: Go.
Make me a computer. It requires, I
think, an Ignorance of a certain
variety, to explain well. Because
that Ignorance requires an exercise
In lucidity sufficient . to explain
something to yourself. And since It
Is a human tendency to look. first
after one's own Interests, It follows
that If you write Instructions simple
and clear enough to be understood
by you, and you are someone for
whom the field In question is
organically alien, then you are
going to write In such a way as to
permlt others to understand.
I could not have predicted, slx
months ago, that today I would he
sitting In Switzerland using a word
processor. That after a message or
arllcle or chapter was written, In
order to communicate It to New
York, I'd have only to dial a local
telephone number, plug ln something called a modem, push a few
buttons, and five seconds later,
everything here resides within a
five-Inch disk In my office In New
York.
The speed at which It Is all going
seriously suggests that before the
decade Is over, the majortty of
Americans will communicate with
one another through their compu·
ters.

~JlJ\'s clirt)T~~a~i~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~thlliee~a-~~~=~:~:&amp;s:~w~~n:~~:~:~~~:

WASHINGTON - The function
o! the E nvironmental Protection
Agency, of course, is to protect the
environment. But the people who
run the EPA seem more interested
In protecting the environment's
Industrial polluters.
Take the matter of "particulate
pollution." This. Is the visible soot
and dust that people suck Into their
lungs. EPA officials decided. the
existing standards were too strict,
so they decided to run a "cost·
benefit" analysis of Its proposed
relaxation of the standards. This
means detemrining whether the
cost of enforcing a regulation Is
worth It in benefits to the public.
The idea of equating human
because do you really want people
Yea for Mr.- Oiler. He's right!
health and dollars-and-cents is
out of work? This is on COAL
Coal miners have worked a long
pretty crass. In fact, Congress
time for a safe way tominecoal and . shoulders now and they can see the made an explicit exemption from
problems they have started and
make It cheap but just like someone
now the future of nearly 2.000 jobs is
said, if we sit back and let
at stake. · ·
environmentalists or people who
Why can't these people take the
don't care about another's jobs
offer of county water and fixing o(
they'd have birds' nests and
Memo: To New Head of EPA
their property and leave It at that?
flowers planted all over this
From: Glitz, Chief of Shredder
country. We, as Americans, can't 'They seem to want blood instead.ll and Hit List Division
yell for jobs when people are out longwalllng is stopped our county
will be at loss of jobs and vttal tax
there trying to ax them. So.
America. the time has come to dollars. So I hope for the local coal Dear Sir:
either face the facts or see a lot of miners COAL will take the offer
Assume, in spite of some changes
and let the coal miners go to work you wUl make in agency, you will
people looking for work.
We must learn now that some- so they can make the life they wa nt up-to-date information on
times things like this w!U happen know. - Floyd H. Cleland, Ru· EPA employees who are clean air
and we must grin and bear It !land, Ohio.
fan a tics, pro-envlronmentallsis,
and have relatives who belong to
National Audubon Society. Your
predecessor, as well as the Secrewe would like to congratulate
We are also wondering why all tary of Interior, found these Usts
Ccach Ccnnle Eoslen on a great the girls on the team didn't get most helpful In sel"lng EPA
coacjli!lg Season·. S~e j!'5t led the some recognition, especially the political IntereSts Of the eountry as
Southern Tornadoettes to their first seniors. Tony a Salser had a very mandated by Congress.
District Championship.
fine season, along with Cindy
This is updated report for week of
Some people say they reached Evans and Michelle Johnson, who March 7, 1983.
this goal by sheer talent, and we certainly did their part and were
Duncan Plowrtght - Denver
couldn't agree more, these gil:ls always there when they were office. Was photographed In 1970 at
needed .
certainly do have talent, but
Ea rth Day Demonstration while
without the talent of the coach,
This team got where they did by student at University of Utah . Wife
where would the team be? Coach team work, not only by the starting . was once engaged to leader of
Enslen has been at Southern for
five, butbythewholeteam. Though "Save the American Bald Eagle
many years, a nd a lot ofthoseyears
most of these girls may not have Club" In Santa Fe, New Mex!c0.
have been winning ones.
gotten their name in the paper. the Plowright's brother Ze\h was attor·
We've heard a lot of complaints team couldn't have gotten as far as ney for class aftlon suit to remove
thrQUghout the season about how It did without them. Weare proud of polson gas from U.S. Army cheml·
bad the coach was, but then again our team and of the coach. And we cal depot on runway at Denver
we've heard a lot o! good things
hope that Ccach Enslen keeps up Airport. Plowrlght spends all his
about the coach, from people who
the good work for years to come.- time citing our friends for EPA
know what they're talking about.
Roger A. Michael.
violations, despite warnings from
~~------~~--~
his superiors iii Washington that
Justice Department doeS not have
1 am a Southern band boosier I'm ·speaking of grade school lawyers to prosecute cases. He ls
mother and proud of It There
through high school. 'The chlldren extremely dangerous and could
doesn't seem to be verymanyofus. need to know that their parents cause trouble In 1984 elections.
Mathilda Meriweather - [)e.
When the school year started we support them.
trolt.
Was observed by one of our
had a new director and every one
My daughter has been In band
political
Informants having lunch
was for our band. The first two since the fourth gtade and will be
with
a
Canadian
environmental
meetings we had several parents ·there untll she graduates. Sunday
official,
code
name
Pierre,
and was
were In attendance. ·
(March 20) she was In the
overheard
dlscu.sslng
acid
rain
and
Well, football and basketball are Iii-county concert.
Its
effect
on
lakes
and
wildlife
along
over and where are all of our
For the parents that weren't
supporters? The last three meet· there let me tell y.ou I was very Canadian border. Two days later
ings there have been three and four proud &lt;if our kids. Everyone wanted same Informant observed her
people there. Do~ ·• the paren\S o! a bainl1 so let's get out and support going lnt.o movie theater to see
our band members care about theee children and show some documen(l!ry on nuclear war made
what Is going on and what our _Interest In what they are doing. The by Canadian Film Board. She
band Is as good as Its supporters.- · failed to report seeing this picture
childreh are doing?
to her superiors. Meriweather has
When I talk about band members Lola J . Proffitt, Racine.

Letters to editor
Take the o.f{er

llit

the cost-benefit yardstick In the
Clean· Air Act. ·
But the determined particulatepushers at EPA went ahead with
their cost·benefit study anyway.
They justified this nose-thumb at
Congress by citing a White House
executive order that Instructed
federal agencies generally to run
cost-benefit studies whenever a
rules change was being considered.
But guess what: The EPA's
proposed looser sta'ndard flunked
its cost-benefit test. EPA test
studies and a $200,&lt;XXI report by an
outside consultant agreed that
letting the air get dirtier would be
far more expensive, in terms of
additional health-care costs and
workdays lost due to tllness, than
t he amount saved by ha vi ng a
looser standard to enforce.

One EPA study found that the

existing tough air-pollution stand·
ards had prevented as many as 40
mllllon lost workdays. Aoother
showed that hundreds of lives
wouldbelostfromlWlgdlseaseand
thousands of Illnesses caused If the
standards were relaxed.
EmbarrasSed by this bureau·
cratlc boomerang, EPA officials
simply kept the studies away from
the agency' s science advisers,
whose job is to provide relevant
data for new regulations .
Sheldon Meyers, director of
planning and standards for EPA's
office of air quallty, saki the studies
were not allowed to be used
because they hadn't been "peer
reviewed" by other scientists. My
EPA SOurces Suggest It was
because the results weren't what

e-

At any r;~te, EPA next contracted
with Mathtech, a respected consult·
lngflrm In Princeton, N.J., to do the
required cost·benefit study· But the
Mathtech report, a draft of which
was seen by my associate John
Dillon, was even less palatable to
the EPA poohbahs.
Mathtech estimated that relax·
lng the air-pollution standards
would save about $20 bllllon over a
nine-year period. But It estimated
that keeping the current standards
would save S78 billion over the
same period:
Slapped down by their own
cosl·beneflt studies. EPA ol!lclals ·
abruptly reversed themselves.
They cited a provision of the Clean
Air Act that says the EPA should
not use the cost-credit ratio as a
basis for setting. poilu tlons.

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Proud of team

Let's support band

•

poll tical experts turned down his
Club, and our Information Is they
request,
because It would help elect
still keep in contact. He Is the type
a
Democratic
mayor, Pester went
of person who won't he satisfied
our
heads
and contacted "60"
over
until the Wl)lte House Is turned into
Mi!1utes.
a blrd's nest.
Mike Wallace was seen sniffing
Hubert Deplatz -Newark office.
around
St. Joseph's last week with
We have received tlve complaints
a camera crew. Pester ..Is a
on Deplatz from the "~ow -Now
smoking
gun, and If he Is Inter·
Dioxin Chemical Ccmpany," loviewed
the
fallout could be hazard·
cated In New Jersey. The Chairous
to
President
Reagan's political
man of the Board claims Deplatz Is
health.
Suggest
we
give St. Joseph
wagtng a vendetta against "How$500,000
Immediately
even If It
Now" and cited a report Deplats
means
depleting
the
capital
of. the
submitted to EPA without first
Superfund.
letting company lawyers edit It.
This ls just a high-priority llst· of
This violates the' verbal under·
standing our agency l)as with all . EPA tro~blemakers.l amappend,
longer one of :i,&lt;XXI names
chemical companies, cannot be lng
·,which
you
should have In flies.
fired, but there Is nothing In the
Your
predecessor
tried to get rid
regulations that says he can't be
of
as
many
pro-envlronrrientallsts
transferred to Nome, Alaska. '
Digby Pester - St. Louis oftlce. In the ;tgency as she possibly could.
Pester has requested $500,&lt;XXI from . But unfortunately she was unable
EPA billion dollar Superfund to to finish the job. The greatest
tribute you could pay her Is to pick
clean up toxic waste dumps In St.
up the torch and take up where she .
Joseph, Missouri. When EPA

a

0

-

Sentinei-Page-3

Indiana-Kentucky tilt highlights NCAA action
By The ~lated P.ress
conferencechampionsand features
The college basketball season Is
three of the four cqaches still In
a pproaching Oscar time, with · the
contention who have captured a
main producers and directors in . national championship. To wit :
Knoxville, Tenn., tonight, while the
-Big Ten champion Indiana is
·sport's biggest star takes the stage
seeking its fifth national crown and
in Ogden, Utah.
third under Coach Bobby Knight.
The NCAA Tournament, down
-Kentuckyclaimedoneofitsfive
from 52 teams to 16 resumes with
national titles under Coach Joe B.
fifth-ranked lndiana'meetingNo.l2
Hall.
Ke ntucky a nd runner-up Louisville
-:-Louisville, th&lt;; top seed in the
taking on ninth-ranked Arkansas in reg1on, hopes to giVe Coach Denny
the Mideast Regional at Knoxville.
Crum his second national crown in
The regional is loaded with three four years .
·

Meanwhile, In the West Regional ,
at Ogden, fourth -ranked VIrginia
with 7-foOt·4 Ralph Sampson takes
on No.ll Boston College and No.l6
North Carolina State meets Utah.
On F riday night, the East
Regional at Syracuse, N ·Y:, pairs
third-ranked St. John's with No.l8
Georgia and eighth-ranked North
Carolina, the defending NCAA
champion, with Ohio State. .
.
If Kentucky and Louisville wm
tonight, It would set up the first
collision between the two perennial
powers since 1959, although the
. schools are located only Ill miles
a part. The Louisville players. are
· trying not to think about that.
"If we don't win (against Arkansas). there's no matchup at all,"
said Lancaster Gordon, the Cardinals' second -leading scorer.
"You start thinking about . too
many team s, it can distract you, "
echoed Rodney McCray.

Crum says Arkansas Is probably meeting a Cinderella team. 'This is a
lead .'! wouldn't know what to do."
quicker than any team Louisville w ade 'B' movie we have going
Utah got there by defeating · •
has played."We're not slow, but here."
Illinois 52.:49 and then. upsetting
we're not as fast as they are," he
The Wolfpack have come from
seventh-ranked UCLA 67-61.
said.
behind to win th~ ir last five games
"When we were 7-10, if anyone
"I think our team believes they - three in the Atlantic Coast
had suggested we'd wind up In the
can beat them," said Ccach Eddie Conference tournament, plus
final 16, 1 would have wondered
Sutton of Arkansas. "Tf It were a NCAA victories over Pepperdine,
where they broke out of," said
seven-game series. we'd be in 6%7 in double overtime, and
Coach Utah Jerry Pimm. " We
!rouble. but it Isn't. It's just one sixth-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas
questioned ourselves forawhlle, but
game;"
71·70.
our tough early schedule helped .us
Ind1ana beat Kentucky 62.-59 at
"We have obviously had five
in the long run a nd now were
Bloomington in December. bul the incredible ga mes," Va lvano said. 'playing our best basketball of the
Hoosiers are without high-scoring "I'd get nervous If we ever had the
year."
Ted Kitchel, whO underwent back ,.__;...,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,.._ _ _- ' - - - - - surgery last month.
"I don't think the earlier game
has much bearing whatsoever,".
said Knight.
"I really like the attitude of my
team r ight now," said Hall. "They
have a new look in their eye. They' re
anxious to play. India na is~ team
you have no trouble getting prepared for."
AI Ogden. North Carolina State's
Jim Valvano calls the Wolfpack's
match with Utah "a team of destiny
Yes No

Former Browns'
(:Oach Collier dies

2. Has your home increased in value?
3. Have you paid off any part of your
original mortgage?
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SI9 9 ~AIR

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THE KEY- Gtl!nVllle Walters, Ohio Stale's 6-foot-11 senior, Is the
key 1o NCAA champlonshiphopesaccordlnglo Larry Huggins. Walters
Is shown passing the&lt; ball In this year's Michigan game. (AP
Laserphoto ).
,

DO
DO

l. Do you own your own home?

LEXINGTON, Ky. !API Former associateS praised Blanton
Collier as a man whose expertise as
a college and professional football
coach was . transcended by his
personal decency.
Ccllier, who led ·the Cl£&gt;veland
Browns to the 1961 National
Football League championship and
was the last coach to post a winning
career record at the University of
Kentucky, died Tuesday night in
Houston.
He was 76 and had been a cancer
patient at St. Luke's Episcopal
Hospital in Houston sirice Jan. 2.7.

GALLIPOLIS:358 Second Ave .. 446-1973
POMEROY: 125 E. Main SL, 992·2171

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listL--------------------~-------A_rt_B_uc_h_~__
ld
mother who lives In Toronto. and
could easily be subjected to black·
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Pollee.
· Suggested we eliminate Meri·
weather's job In budget cutback,
and tum over her duties to Slg
Dolby, a consultant firm that now
represents the Heavy Sulphur Coal
Producers Association.
Frank Mulch - San Francisco
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1978 Plymouth.
Road Runner
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1976 Mercury
Mcirquls
'1995

�Pomeroy-Middle~rt, Oh-

Thursday, Marth 24, 1983.

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

Meigs diamondmen prepare
for opener against Vikings
.

'

MEIGS' LETI'ERMEN - Five returning
lettennen for C..ach Tim Saunders' Meigs Marauder
basebaU squad are, left, first row, Nick Riggs, aud

from

Chris Burdette and In the back are
the left, Allan
King, Scott Harrison and Dave Follrod.

NIT tourney continues tonight
night when Mississippi meets
By Associated Press
noted Miller.
The Oregon State basketball DePa ul at Rosemont. ill.
Meanwhile. Wake Forest Coach
team has a revenge motive and the
.Oregon State will not only be
Carl Tacy has other problems home-court advantage in tontght"s trying to get a ticket to New York for
most nota bly the South Carolina's
Nationa l Invitation Tournament the NIT semifina ls next Monday
fast break.
game aga inst Fresno Stare in night at Madison Square Garden,
"We have to find some way to
Corvallis.
but will be trying to avenge a 43-42
close· out their explosive fast
And Fresno State Coach Boyd defeat by the Bulldogs earlier this
break," Tacy said. "Although they
Grant is a little conce rned about the season.
don't have great speed, they are
situation , particula rly the home"This wilt be a rematch and
explosive getting the ball down the
court advantage.
provides us with.a chance to rectify _ court on the break and we'll have to
"We sut't' have gone through a lot a n earlier loss,'' said Beavers Coach
be equal to that and do well on the
of traveling recently," says Grant, Ralph Miller, who recognized his
boards. I think we'll be ready for
who feels his learn mig ht not be as Pacific Coast Athletic Association
that challenge. Those are two big
fres h as it can be for the quarterfinal foe as "a formidable oponent."
keys I see right now."
game. "They're playing ar home
" It also gives us an opportunity to
Wake Forest. 19-11, will have the
where they're tough to beat.
earn a trip to New York City,"
home-court advantage in this
"Wha t wUI really beat us is we added Miller. "so a lot is riding on
game. It 's especially pleasing 'to
don't have much time to prepare. the game and we will do our best to
Tacy since his Demons a re roadThe Bulldogs have all the advan- succeed ."
weary after a victory at Vanderbilt.
tages in this game."
Grant is hopeful his Bulldogs can
" Vanderbilt was a good victory on
Alter an opening-round victory a t . play a s well as they did against
the road- it~ms likethat'swhere
home over Texas- Et Paso, the Michigan State.
we've been playing most of our
Bulldogs flew to Lans ing, Mich ., on
"lf we play like we did at
games recently," he said. "It's good
Sunday, and beat Michigan Sta te Mic higa n State," he sa id, "we can
to be back home against South
play anybody."
72-58 the next night. Then the
Carolina."
pl ayers flew home Tuesday for a
The Bulldogs do have a couple of
South Carolina has a height
day of classes and were back on the adva ntages. Fresno State has the
advantage with 7-foot sophomore
road Wednesday, heading for nation's leading defense, giving up
Mike Brittain, who scored a
Orego n and one of three NIT ga mes feiver than 54 points a game.The
season-high 15 points against Virgitonight .
30-second shot clQck may also prove
nia Tech, a nd 6-8 Jimmy FosterIri the others, Wa ke Forest meets a plus. Fresno State had time to
.Brittain averages only 4.5 points
South Caroli na a t Greensboro. N.C., adjust to it during the regular
and 2.2 rebounds but has improved
and Texas Christian plays at season. It was used in PCAA.
steadily while playing the high post.
Nebraska. The last of the quarterfi "The clock has not really boFoster, at the low post, leads the
nal games will be played Friday thered us and wasn't expected to,"
Gamecocks with 17.2 points and 8.8
rebounds per game.
"One reason we do it is Brittain is
a legiti ma te offensive threat out s ide, " Gamecock Coach Bill Foster
TAMPA, Fla. (API - Gary
Ma nager Russ Nixon was asked if
Redus hit his fourth home nm in he was considering moving Redus 1 sa id. "Plus, we don't want Foster
too fa r from the basket . We want
seven games on Wednesday but he to a better RBI . position in the
him operat ing as close to the hoop as
was even more pleased about batting order.
we
can get him ."
drawing three walks.
"Not right now. How many times
Like
Oregon State, Nebraska has
Redus stole second base in the do you get a leadoff hitter coming up
stayed at home for the first two
sixth inning. The Reds lost the game with men on baseandhecan't hlt the
games and will be there again for
8-2.
ball 200 feet ? When that happens
the quarter-fina l aga inst TCU. The
Redus, who has one gra nd slam you can' t score somebody from
\rip is nothing new for the Horned
this spring, was expected by the second with a single.
Frogs.
though. They've won their
Reds to be more of a ·running threat
Meanwhile, Reds Manager Russ
games in the tournament,
first
two
than a slugger.
Nixon has pur an end to the trade
both
on
the
road.
He led the American Associa tion rumors surrounding Ron Oester.
at Indianapolis last smson with _54
"Russ ca lled me into his office
steals in 59 attempts.
and sa id ·I don't krtow what kind of
He a lso hit 29 doubles. nine triples stuff was going on, but you're not
and 24 home runsamong hisl46 hits. going a nywhere," ' said the Reds
"I need to work on my base infielder.
·
stealing. I'm not trying to hit home
The first ball to be thrown out in
run s. I'm just trying to get on base as the Opening Day game between the
much as I can. But there's nothing Reds and the Atlanta Braves on
wrong with the leadoff man hitting April 4 will have travelled 52,00l
home runs. ''
miles.

Redus's bat contiues smoking

This year. thertt are mora than 100 changes In the
tax laws and forms. BIR at H&amp;R Block, one thing
hasn't changed ... fait prices! Just ask. and we'll
give you a free estimate of the cost for preparing
your return. -You get a complete Interview. Plus we
doublecheck your return for accuracy .

OPEN WEEKDAYS

9:00AM. TO 6:00P.M. SATURDAY 9:00 AM. TO 5:00 P.M.
PHONE 992-3795

ouUielder and designated hitter
after
maldng the team as a
walk-on. Saunders graduated from
Rio Grande In 1981.
During his student teaching days
at Portsmouth High School, he
assisted a team that went 28-4 and
lost 4-3 In the state "AA" finals.
Among the returnees for the
Marauders are senior second baseman Scott Harrtson, senior out.
fielder Allan King, junior ouUielder
Chrts Burdette, junior shortstop
Nick Riggs, and junior catcher
Dave Follrod.
"So far our returning lettermen
have sbown much 'leadership for
our younger players. We've been
stressing the Importance of leadership to this young team," c;ornmented Saunders.
Graduating from last year's
4-16-1 squad were all-SEOAL shOrt·
stop Roger Kovalchik, honorable
mention all-league Terry Wayland,
Jim Boyer, Dave Reuter, John
Cremeans, Troy Brooks, and Tony
Jewell.

Big Brothers, Sisters meeting
reports on 1982 activities, gifts

.

Me1p Rooter
PGo
·
Yr
yer·
•
5011
Scott l!on1 · X. 2B-P _....... .... .. .. .. .... ...... 12
Allan ~-x, CF ............. :..................... l2
Todd CUndiff, OF·INF ., ........... .............. t2
Chris Burdene-x ............................LF-Pll
Nick R!gp-x ................... .... .... ......... SS 11
Dave Follrod-x, C-INF ... ............... .. ...... . 11
Mike WUlford, RF ......................... ., ...... 11
Fn!d Colburn, OF .. ...... ......................... 11
Don Mohler, OF ...... ... .. ........ .............. ,. 11

By KEl'l1l WISECUP
Despite having only three seniors, the Meigs Marauder base. ball team shows promise for a
successful campaign. The roster
consists of three senlors, seven
juniors, and seven sophomores
which Includes five lettennen.
"We're lacking In experience,
but not talent. If we play up to our
potenttai, we'll have a g9Qd chance
of being in some bait games. It's
always hard topredlctwhat'sgolng
to happen when you have a team
mostly of underclassmen,"
summed up second-year head
roach Tim Saunders.
Saunders, a Columbus Olen tangy
1977 graduate, played college baseball at Rio Grande where he was an ·

April 8, Athens

Aprll9 (doubleheader) Totroa!Woodmore
April U , ~an
Aprill3, J ackson

Pia

Ed Bishop, J.B.P .... .. ........ ,.... ................ 11

Dan Thomas .... ..... :....................... 38-PlO

Scott G~, C·INF ·· ··· · .......·............. ·· ... lO

1

Aprl.ll4, at
AprU 15, at
AprU 19, at
AprU :11. at

Southe-rn
Waverly
Alexander

Ironton
Aprtl21 at Ravenswood
Aprll22: GaiUpolls ·
A riJ 25 t Athe
A~ri126: :U.vens~
A U 'r7 I J.,os

Arril 28: ~exa:er
April 29 .at Jackson
May 2. Wa..,rly

James Acree, OF .................................. IO
Jackie Welker' INF ............ ................... 10
May 3, at Wellston
TonyWelch,OF-DH .•. ,.......................... lO r;:========;:=~
Nick Bush, INF·P .... ............................. 10

~~~':e.c:.ie;;;;e;;: ...... ,.............. IO
Marauder Schedule
March 29, VInton
March :k), Wellston
March· 31, Manoo Etgtn
AprU 2 (doubleheader), at VInton
Aprtl4, Irontoo
April 5, South&gt;rn
April 6, at Galtipolls

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

.

The Dai_ly Sentinel

(USPS 145-111(1)
A Dlvlllon of Multimedia, Inc.
Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by
the Ohio Valley Publishing Commpany
• Multimedia , Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, 992-2156. Second das~ postage

paid at.Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the
American Newspaper PuUshers Association, National Advertising Repre·
sentatlve , Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.

'CINDEREllA'S SLIPPER' CN!T - The main
characters In the Riverview School presentation
Friday night include Mickey Sclunldt and Mludy
Wells, the stepsisters; Michael Martin as Prince

POSTMASTER: Send address to The
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Riverview Eleme~tary School
students will present the operetta,
"Cinderella's Slipper" at 7: ~ p.m .
Friday In the school auditorium .
The operetta Is based on the fairy
tale, "Cinderena" with Sherr!
Bissell, fifth grade, In the lead role.
Playing opposite her will be
Michael Martin, sixth grade. Usa
Driggs, Mindy Wells and Mickey
Schmidt will fill the stepmother and
s tepsister rol es ·with Jenny
Cowdery playing the Fairy Godmother. All are in the sixth grade.
Ernie Baker, fifth grade, will be the
peddler and Lord High Chamberlain wilt be played by Stanley
Bennett, sixth grade.
Matt Sisson, Howle Lawrence,
Mikel Young and Keith Putman
will play guards and Ann Buckley,
Lori Mundcy, Bobbi Price and
Serena White will be ladles-Inwaiting.
There will be several chorus
groups including first and second
graders as the "mice" with Wendy
Rat:h, Amanda Richards, J essica
Schmidt, Shelly Pooler, Guy Morton, Nicole Kanawalsky, Chastldy
MUlhone, Matthew Martin, Willie
Adams, Deana Good , Mandy

Subscribers notdeslrtngto pay the carrier may remit In advance direct to
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basis. Credit wtll e given carrier each
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No subscriptions by mall permitted In
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available.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnBlde Ohio

13 Weeks ................................. $14 .04
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13 Weeks ..................... .... .... .... . $15.21
WMPQ 92 fM
26Weeks ......................... ........ $29.64
P!tchlng
appears
to bea good
a bright
- ·;--·;-~--;·-~-~-- ~---~-~--~-~156~-;21~
spot
as Burdette,
whodld
job t~~;;~~~~~~~~~;~;w~ee;k~·~-~-;

on the mound last year, has Ironed
some control probrams out. Thr&gt;- ' 1
mas and Bishop will be the two and
three hurlers, both In their first
year at the varsity level. All throw ·
hard and seem to have plenty of
promise.
The main reliever will be Harrison. "Scott has good control and we
hope he will pull us out of the close
jams," added Saunders.
Saunders raleS Ironton, Logan,
and ,J ackson as the favorites In the
SEOAL race. Always tough Ironton
has nearly their enUre team back
while Jackson bas one Allen Collins
who has raised Cincinnati Reds'
scouts' eyebrows.
5aimders will be asslsied by Greg
Drummer, who ;1lso will coach ·the
reserve team.

52

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110 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH.

I

'•

Drake, ~manda Barringer,
Amanda Wells, Jimmy Buckley,
Cheryl Johnson, Misty Newell,
Zean Wilson, Billy Baker, Vince
Reiber, Prett Price, Wayne Rlt·
chle, Letttta Holsinger, Karen
Morris, Jessica Reiber, Susan
Richards, Patrick Barringer makIng up that group.
Villagers will be Kim Johnson,
Belinda Barber, Breuda Holter,
Susie Kirner, Cindy Smith, Christl
Adams, Edna Driggs, Tina Newlun, Andrea Cleland, Vonda Johnson, Melissa Barber, Johnny RIchards, J errod Barber, Chris.
~dams, Jared Spencer, Amanda
Bissell, Melissa Wells, Tammy
Johnson, Billie Wells, Ernie Baker,
Kip Davis, Ranse Fields, Jeff
Horner, fourth, fifth and sixth
graders.
The green tailors will be third
graders Amy Well, Jamie Brannon, Honey Sue Fields, Wesley
Holter, Danny Lawrence, Carrie
Gillilan, James McDaniel, Keith
Spencer, pat Gibbs, David Gumpf
and Valorie Wilson.
The musical Is under the direction of Maxine Whl tehead, vocal
music Instructor, assisted by

MOII.-SAT. 8:00 TO 5:00

tie Baum and Doris Well. Mrs.
Baum Is the plano accompanist.
Costuming has been provided by
tire mothers with roommothers Iri
charge. The · -operetta will be
presented for Tuppers Plains Elementary School students on Thursday afternoon and Chester Elementary School students on Friday
morning.
A donation of one dollar will be
asked at the door for Friday
evening's performance. Preschoolers will be admitted free of
chrge. The public Is invited.

of the local chapter, praised the
efforts of the IJ(tard members, the
auxiliary, and the people and .
organizations of the four-county
area who have actively supported
the major growth of the organization during 1982. "We have built a
strong foundation upon which this
organization can grow. Continutid
effort will be necessary as we
expect to employ a director In 1fll3
and begin providing Big Brothers
and Big Sisters to children in this

area."
Big Brothers/ Big Sis ters of

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

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A sporty OldsJUSt got spollier. Reclrnrng
bucket searswrth checker/charcoal desrgn
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holiday sto3ndsout from ordinary days-wrth
exclusive new formal roo[ Includes: Opera
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MEMBER' FDIC .

BETTER MA

·5TARRIDii THE 15th RDDIUERSARY llmiTED·~DITIDO HURST/DlDS [UJlRSS.

book
,,-ilhfhe
HAPPY

•UCUS£

Meigs, Gallla , Jackson and Mason
counties Is a progra m whose
purpose Is to match adult men and
women with children In need of an
a dult friend to provide guidance
a nd motivation in the years of
growth between the ages of slx.and
16 years. The local chapter Is a
private organization managed by a
Board of Directors made up of local
citizens. It receives no governmental support and Is connected in no
way with any federal, state or local
governmental organization.

TIE/iiEIT

RANCHO MIRAGE, Ca lif. (API
- Routine business appears the
staple of the agenda as the annual
National Football League meetings
head into their final two days.

618 E.Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

teachers Grace Weber, Gary Reed,

Fred Kessinger, Pat Shriver, Mar-

A report of the 19&amp;! activities of
the Big BrotherstBig Sisters Board
was presented by Board Secretary,
Linda Krasner, during the January
meeting.
Two major fund raising events
were conducted. In April. the
Voices of Liberty held a benefit
c;oncert from which $200 in donations was received. In December,
an Art Auction was conducted and
netted $2,001 In proceeds for the
local organization. A $300 donation .
was received from the Pave Piles'
golf tournament. Contributions
were received ·from a number of
other individuals and otganizattons. In total, $10,00) was raised by
the organization.
During the year. representatives
of the Board appeared on the three
local radio stations and spoke
before ten different civic organizations. The geogr11phlc sCope of the
local organization . was expanded
with the addition of Mason County.
An agency name contest was
conducted. The winners in each of
the four counties · received a
bicycle. An auxiliary was formed In
Gallla ·County providing valuable
support In_ihe fund raisers.
In addition, personnel policies
and job descriptions for the future
Executive Director and case
workers were completed. A complete llbrary of video tapes was
obtained for use In Board and
volunteer training. The tax-exempt
status and articles of Incorporation
which reflected the addition of
Mason County were completed:
A climax to the year was marked
by the donation of a cabin near Burr
Oak State Park which will be used
for fund raising and recreational
opportunities In the future. ,
In commenting on the past year.
James Levernter, M.D.. president

IrS HERE now FOR YOU TO SEE AnD JOIO

PH. 992-2811

Owners conduct
routine business

APPOINTMENTS AVAilABLE

Channing; Sheni Bissell as Cinderella; Jenny
Cowdery as the Fairy Godmother and U..&lt;;a Drigg» as
the stepmother.

Riverview Elementary to present
~Cinderella's Slipper' Friday night

..'

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11.9

Annual pertentage
rate finondng now
on oil new
'83 Dldsmobiles.
Ava rlable to quallfred retail buyer ~ To take
advantage of thrs frnancrng. delrvery must
be taken lrom Otds dealer's ltock before
March 31 . 1983 Dealer frnancral ~
pamcrpatron may affect-the frnal
negotiated pnce of !he vehrcle

liM

.. .. ..........
~

�Pag~~ The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

Thul'lday, March 24, 1983

Thursday, March 24, 1983

.

ESPECIALLY

FOR
EASTER
by . auditions

®

Your New Easter Outfit Wouldn't Be Complete
Without Just The Right Footwear.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - T he Women's Association of t he F irst
United Presbyterian Church.
Middleport, will meet Thursday, March 24, at 7: 30p.m . at
the c hurch .

P OMEROY - The Royal
Arc h Masons , .Pom eroy Chap·
ter 80 will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m . for the annual In·
spect lon . Work In the most excelle nt m aster de gree .

BMNDY

MARGUERITE SHOES

He/en help us

..

Calendar

CHESTER - There will be a
weekend revival at Chester
United Methodist church,
Thursday through Saturday, beginning at 7: 30 nightly. &lt;;;uest
speaker will be the Rev. Frank
. Crofoot of Athes . Special music
. each night aild the public ·is
lrivlted.

MIDDLEPORT - Twin City
Shrinettes, Thursday. 7: 30 p.m.,
home of Jean Moore, Middleport.
RACINE - The Women's
Weight Training Class a t South·
em Hig h School wtll be Thursday at 7 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepori Pack 245 will hold Its Blue
and Gold Banquet Thursday at
the Middleport Masonic Temple
from 6 to 8 p .m . Badges and
awards will be presented. Bring
table service and covered dish.
F oJ additional lnformatlori con·
tact dean leaders.
POMEROY P receptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma P hi Sorority will meet at
7:30 p.m . Thursday a t Riverboat
Room, Diam ond Savings and
Loan, Pomery.
POME ROY - Sherman and
Mickey Cundiff, Syracuse, will
show slides of their trip to the
Holy La nd at the Salvation
Army Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
There will be special music. The
public is Invited to attend .
BRADB URY - The Women's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ w1ll meet at
the Bradford Church Thursday

POMEROY - The Twin City
Sbrlnettes will meet a t the home
of Mrs. Edna Slusher Thursday
night instea d of the home of Mrs.
Jean Moore due to a death In the
fa mily.

FRJDAY
POMEROY - Halr·a ·thon
will be at Meigs High School,
sponsored by cosmetology class
Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . No
appointment Is necessary.

SATIJRDAY
RACINE - Sign up for
Racine Summer League Baseball progra m will be Saturday at
Racine Kindergarten from 10
a .m. to 11 a .m. There will be a
registration fee of $5.

ANTIQUITY - Songfest will
be conducted at F aith F ellows hip Crusade for Cbrlst, S. R. 338,
Antiquity Saturday. Music will
be provided by the United
Gospel Singers. Pastor Is the
Rev . Franklin Dickens. Everyone Is welcome.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Booster bake sale will be
Saturday beginning a t 9 a.m . at
Powell's Super-Value .
SYRACUSE - Final registra·
tion for Syracuse-Minersville
Baseball Youth League will be
held Saturday from 9 a. m. until
noon at the ballfield at Syracuse
Elementary School. ·
ALBANY - The New Life
Qua rtet of Ironton will sing at
Pearl Ch apel United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p.m. Sunday. The
church is located just off Route
681 South on C.R. '338 In Meigs
County, near Albany. The public
is invited .
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Youth League will bold
a nother sign-up day Saturday
from 10 a .m . un'tll 2 p .m. at the
park. Registration fee Is $7.

Reviva l at Vanderhoof Baptist Church
E aster services a t the Vanderhoof Baptist Church . Coolville,
will feJ turc the voca l group.
Tu rning Point . P hil Gore. South
Point , .lim and .John Lancaster.
Perry, recent grad ua tcs of
J udson College . Elgin . Ill. . will

present a pmgram ·o f cont em porary a nd fOlk re lig-ious m usic
a nd testimony on Apr il! and 2at 7
p.m .. a t th!' sunrise serv ice a t·6
a. m. andu t the9:45a .m . worship
servicC'.

The nint h a nnua l-Ohio University Language Fair for high
school students w ill be Sa turday. ·
April 9, on the Athens cu mpus.
Last year. mo1't' tha n l ,OOJ
high school s tud ent s from Sou·
theastern Ohio partic ipated in
th!' fair .
The pvcnt is sponsored by the
Department of Mod!'rn La n-

Bashan Auxiliary
p!an.r bake sale
A bake sa le wa s pla nned for April
1 at Kroger and Vaughan's a t a
rf'('('n t mccting of the Bashan
Auxili a ry at the firehouS&lt;'.
Becky Pu llins urged members
a nd othPr interested res ident s to
donatP towar~ the sa le. ThoS&lt;'
wa nt ing to pledge donat ions , may
call 'W9-2960 or 'W9-2825.
Officers· repon s were given
followin g the Lond' s Prayera nd flag
pledge. Refreshments were served
by Marga ret Tuttle and Cha rlotte
Grant.
Others attending wPre Cera ldire
Varney, Ka thleen Morris. Stella
Sm ith , Mary Holt cr, Pcrlinc Lee,
a nd Thelma Whit e.

Racine PTO

- - --

.

FASHION
'
BELTS
REGULAR
14.1)()-$8.00

'

''SPEECH THERAPY"
Stuttering, learning
Disabilities
COMMUNITY MENTAL
HEALTH CENTER
''992-2192"
- Insurance policies
General! cover fees..:_

'

L:t;;cuu• .NOTI CE

99¢

KNIT
TOPS

REGISTER
FOR ONE
OF SIX

REG. 110.00

$2500

$499
.

GIFT
CERTIFICATES

GOLD FILLED

RINGS
•

PIERCED
EARRINGS
• REGULAR
-$15.()().124.00

'$999

COMPARISON

.

400/o OFF
Lingerie

PRICES
.

$2QOO..S4QOD

$799

SAMPlE UNE
FROM
ULY OF FRA.NCE
GIWAN

e Publlc Ut!lltles Com·
ssion or Oh\o has set
pu bllc h earing Case
No. 82 · 182 · EL · EFC
(Subflle A), to review t he
fuel procurement practices ana policies of Col·
umbus and Souther n
Ohio Electric Company.
the operation of Its E lec·
trio Fuel Component and
related m atters . Th is
hearing Is scheduled to
begin at 9 :30 .a .m . on
March 25, 1983 at t he of·
floes of the Publ'lc
Utilities Commission of
Ohio, 376 South High
Street , Columbus, Ohio
43215 .
All . Interested parties
Will be given an oppor·
tunlty to be heard. l"ur·
· ther Information ma.r be
obta.lned by oonta.ct!n g
-the Com mission.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Da.vld M. Polk ,
Becreta.ry .

(

l'{ursing workshop set
in new cancer trends
What do you say to a cancer
pa tient? Thi s and other questions
will be answered for ntitses at an
April 7 workshop on current trends
In cancer nursing, at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospita l.
The day-long program fea tures
speakers from Sout heast and Central Ohio on topics ranging from
ostomy and skin care to nutrition
fo r cancer patients.
Dr. Cam! Sholtis, a Galli polis
oncologist , will speak on recent
advances in cancer patient management. Dr. Shol Us staffs the
Oncology Clinic he ld a t O'Bieness
each month .
Betsy Hewitt, a registered nurse
at Ohio Sta te Unive rsity Hospital,
will discuss care of the ostomy
patient , and Sherry Kittleber ger, a
nutrition consul tant with Ross
La boratories. will cover m eeting
the nutrition challenge.
Commwiicting with ca ncer patients a nd their fa milies will be the
topic of a session led by Marti
Montovanl. associate professor of
management at Ohio University.
Athens County Nurse of Hope Lynn
O'Leary will introduce the program speakers and a panel of
resource persons from area cancer
support groups.
The 9 a .m . to 4: 30p. m . workshop

By HELEN AND SUE BOTI'EL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
':Not That Equal" wanted replies
from single reader s so here goes:
She wa s upset because " J ohn ,"
at the end · of their firs t date,
suggested they split dating ex·
penses hereafter, since they earned
nea r-equal pay plus she was all for
women 's-equa:llty;
I wholeheartedly agree with you
·two that John was ' 'more right than
tight ," though perhaps his timing
was a bit off.
I'm a liberated ma le, though I
still hold doors open , a nd don't
mind footing the bill on dates. But
sharing expenses is grea t too.
Otherwise I couldn't afford big
nights on the town.
I'd say NTE puts too much
emphasis on material things. If she
likes the guy a lot then ha ving him
spend great am ounts of money on
her shouldn't m a tter . It might even
make her feel guilty.
Actually, having a good time,
s how in g you li ke som eo ne.
shouldn' t come with dollar signs. I
don't care all tha t m uch for
dinner-show dates. It's mor e fun to
watch the Northern Lights, walk
through the woods when the
dogwoods are blooming or the
leaves change color , watch the

is sponsored by the Consortium for
Health E d ucation in Appalachia
Ohio, Southeast Ohio Ca ncer Resource Center d Athens County Unit
of the American Cancer Society.
Registration fee is $20 and $5 for
students. Lunch is not Included.
The course has been approved by
the Ohio Nurse Association.
Persons inte rested In atte nding
are encouraged to pre-register.
Information and registration ma terials a re· availa ble by writing
CHE AO. Box 825, Athens or ca lling
593-5526.

cheap?

hawk migration from a mountain
top, throw Frisbies In the park, plan
" unusua l" amusement s tha t cost
lit tle a nd produce t he b es t
,.
m emories .
As you might guess, I'm a pa rk
ra nger . Recently l got talking with
a camper who was slngle .. He said
he couldn 't live on hls $40,000 yearly
sala ry. I could live off that for four
years and still ha ve a good time! HIGH SIE RRA
DEAR HE LE N AND SU E :
"Not That Equa l" was right In
suspecti ng " tig htness" In the m an
who suggested splitting da te expenses. aft er he 's spent his first $50
on her.
Tha t wa s a n a udacious thl ng for
him to say! Why not instead take
her to Jess expen sive pla ces•
1 suspect, deep down , he's
resentful tha t women ha ve fina ncial independence , a nd he Intends
to exploit any female who desires
his company.
NIE should be realistic about
this cheap guy. Next tim e, he m ay
" forget" his wallet and slick her
'wtth the entire bill. And don't be
surprised if he suggests she buy a
nice car, a nd he 'll do the driving for
her ; or that he needs a new suit but
just doesn't ha ve the money ... and
sign me, BEEN TH E RE AND
WISER NOW

~2~0'YI-oo-'-ff----. .connle:s

got 1t!

LL WOMEN'S DRESS SHOE

FOR EASTER

ACCEHTONIOWS.
Delicate bows make the difference between p lain
and pretty. So feel your most feminine as you dress your
most fabulous on fresh new heels. Connie's got the
._________
affordable bow klok that makes it happen.

ROSE. BEIGE &amp; BLACK

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

~­ PRINTs
!Wit FROM
SUDES

REPRINTS

.. -- . .. .... _

Your Choice c·oupon ;

. i.

;!..
~~~:;,~~ 99¢ :
3 Prints from ~
:,

guages unde r the direct ion of
Charles Ric hardson. director of
th!' language labora tory a t the
university .
Any school tha t has not
recei~ ed informa tion and regist ra tion m at eria ls should contact
Richardson a t &gt;94-&gt;795 or 5'W·

6 Reprints .. ""' trom
COUPOIIIIUST ACCOIIIPAIIY Ot OER

' · - Valid March 24-31. 1983 - -

:tour " htra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

rates through the departm ent's
P hD program , alm ost half are
expected to particpate In the event.

·t

:tOll ~Dior ~-~

CJ622.

Symposium feature.r program !!,raduates
Ohio Universit y's Department of
Comparative Arts a nd the Ohio
University Alumn i Association are
cosponsoring on the Athem s campus a March 24-26 Symposium on
Inte rdisciplinary Study In the F ine
Arts.
The symposium will be held In
the School of Music Recital Hall
a nd coincides with the 20th annlver·
sary of the Departm ent of COm par·
alive Arts. Of the 81 men and
women who have ea rned docto-

Chairing Cance r crusade - Cra ig a nd Barb Matthews , Rock Spr ings
Road. will chair the a nn ua l door-to-door fund drive of the MeigsChapterof
the American Ca ncer Society, to be conducted in Aprii.A kickoff m eeting
for the c rusade was· at Veterans Me moria l Hospital last Monday. This
year's goa l is at leas t $5,00J. There will be other l und r a ising activities
during th«:&gt; d riv0.

IUdl fro m Jllll
color snapsllets.

OU hosts Language Fair

~ate

Is equal pay

at 7:30p.m . The program will
ronslst of ·a film about llowers
from Willia msburg , Va .

Happenings

A tool acut!on to be held by the
Racine PTO. April 30 at 7 p. m . at
the Racine Junior High School, was ·
planned during a recent meeting of
"
the Racine PTO.
Dan Smith will be the a.uct!oneer ,
a nd refreshm ents of hot dogs,
s loppy joes, popcorn, pte, coffee
and pop will be sold.
Arra ngements were m ade to
purchase printed ribbons for the
school's art fair to be held in April,
with a display to be open for
parents' . viewing at the April 18
m eeting of the PTO.
Robert Beegle , principal, a n·
nounced that the Easter party w1ll
be March 31, at 2 p.m ., at the
school. Marco the -Clown will have a
show a t the school on April 6 with

The Daily Sentinei- Page-.-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~
FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main , Pomeroy

VILLAGE

heritage house

PHARMACY

OF SHOES

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,.---- --everybunny loves .•.
our three new baskets

Your FTD Florist

specially decorated and fille d with Easter
treats . Th ey are sure to sui t your gift gi vin g
needs. Our baskets are a charm ing ad &lt;iition
to your holiday celebratio n.

WHITE FISH
POTATO
VEGETABLE
ROLLS
SALAD BAR
DESSERT
NON-ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGE

6 OZ. PRIME RIB
POTATO
VEGETABLE
ROLLS
SALAD BAR
DESSERT
NON-ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGE

$795

PlUS TAX

$795
PLUS TAX

OPEN DAILY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
WNCH SERVED 11-2-DINNER SERVED 5-9

ON FRIDAY FROM 4-6

our easter treats
bright ancl colorful , they ma ke a
deli cious gift that anyone will
tre asur ~ . Our wide variet y of
Easter can.dies can be given wi th
the knowledge that you have
chose n only the fin est fro m . ..

n~s~ ·
~CAN.DIES

®

-------r-·- SWISHER
------------,1------.J
LOHSE
I
I

IT'S T.G.I.F.
~

I

II

Pharmacy
K• nneth Mc CuiiOI!9h, A.Ph.
C:h•rli!s Riffl ~. R.Ph,
ROnild Han int, A, Pl'l .

I

Mon . thruSii.I:Oh m tot p.m .
Surld• v 10 :30 to 12 :10 iMCI S to • .m.
PRESCRIPTIONS

PH . H1·2tU

L------------- ---E . Ma •n

Frien!lllv Str't'ict

Open Nithts till t

Pomeroy. 0 .

�Area deaths
Sylvia Gail Herrmann

1

flight instructor . throughout the
Meigs-Mason- Ga llia area for 10
ye&gt;ars . HP was a member of the
board of thP Ga llia -Meigs Regional
Airport Authority. -Mr. Browning
was well known iti the area for his
musical ,tall'nts which he dona ted on
numProus occcasion for charitable
causes. H&lt;' had served in the U. S
Marine Corps.
Surviving bes ides his mother are
three sons. Ronald K., Dale Lee and
Billv ,J. Browning, all of Pomeroy.
and a brother, Rufus Browning,
Pomeroy. His father, a brother and
a sister preceded him in death .
Officiating at the Saturday services will be thP RPv. Gary Green.
Burial will be in the Letai1 Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
fune ral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Friday.

, Mrs, Sv l\'13 Gail Mulford Her·
rmann. 78. Rout e I , Ch~shire. died
Wednesday at the Holzer Medical
Ct'nter Iollowl ng a lingering illness.
Mrs. Herrmann was born Feb. 6,
1905 in Gallia County, a daughter of
the latP Harvry and Margaret Rupe
Mulford. &amp;sides her parents. she
was preceded in death by her
husband, Roy Herrmann in 1978: a
son in infancy: th ~ brot he rs and
thret&gt; s istersSurviving are five daughters,
Mrs_Emmett tPa ulinrl Thompson
a nd Mrs _Charles t Peggy! Thomas.
both of Cheshirt'; Mrs. Bill i Maxinel Little. Middlepon: Mrs. Howa rd 1Wilma 1 Parker. Long Bottom,
and Mrs . Carl I Karen I Austin,
lnvl'rncss, Fla .. 12 grandchildren.
six great-gra nd- children and sev·
era! nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Herrmann was a me mber of
the Silver Run Freewill Baptist ' Joseph F. Proffitt
Churc h.
Joseph Franklin Proffitt, 86,
Serv ices will be held at 2 p.m.
Route 2, Racine, died Wednesday
Saturday at the Rawlings-Coatsnight at Vetera ns Memorial
Blower Funeral Homewnh the Rev.
HospitaL
:'\oel Herrmann officiatmg.
Mr. Proffitt was born Oct. 30, 1896
Pallbearers will be Roy , Dwight
at Millwood, W. Va., a son ofrhelate
and Jon Thompson, Douglas and
.Joseph · H. a nd Maiy Moriah
Keith Little and Shawn Thomas.
Burial will bP in the Gravel Hill
Vincent Proffitt . He was a retired
farmer.
Cemetery at Cheshire. Fr iends may
Surviving are his wife , Dorothy
ca ll a t the funeral home from 4 to9
Wolfe Proffitt: a son, David W.
p.m. Friday and until 12:30 p.m.
Saturday when the body will be
Proffitt, Racine: two daughters,
Mrs. Jacob (Suzanne! Bush, Rataken to the church.
cine, and Mrs. Larry 1Nancy)
Holsinger, Racine: a sister-in-law,
Ronald j. Browning
Hazel Proffitt, Portland: several
Funeral services for Ronald J. nieces and nephews, 11 grandchildBrowning. 48, 40410 Laurel Cliff ren and fqur great-grandchildren .
He was preceded in dea th by his
Road, Pomeroy, killed Sunday
when the plane he was piloting parents, seven sisters and a brother.
Mr. Proffitt was a veteran of
crashed into a mountainside near
World
War I having se!'lled with the
Crossville. Tenn .. will be held at 11
U.
S.
Arn1y
in France.
a.rn. Saturday at theEwingFuneral
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Home.
Mr. Browning was born Sept. 21, Satunday at the Ewing Funeral
1934 at Lorado, W. Va.,
son of Home with the Rev. James SatterMandy B. Evans Browning of field and the Rev. Lawrence Bush
Whitman, IV. Va ., a nd the lateRay officiating. Burial will be in the
W. Browning. H e was a cra ne Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
operator at the Kaiser Aluminum may call at the funeral home
Co., Ravenswood, W. Va .,andwas a anytime after 9 a .m. Friday.

a

Three hurt in traffic accidents
Three persons received injuries
in two separate traffic accidents in
Meigs County Wednesday.
The Gallia -Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol cited Hubert Stafford, 70, Rt . 4, Pomeroy. for failure
to yield from a stop sign after an
accident on Ohio 7 at County Rd. 79
at 4:0:1 p.m.
Troopers say Stafford turned
from CR 79 onto Ohio 7 and pulled
into the path of a vehicle driven by
Virgil E. Taylor , 19, Rt.3, Pomeroy.
The vehicles &lt;Wllided, causing
moderate damage to Taylor's
vehicle and heavy damage to
Stafford's vehicle.
Stafford and a passenger, Mary
Haggerty, 58, Middleport, were
treated at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and later released.
Bobby Kuhn, 44, Rt. 2, Cheshire, is
in satisfactory condition at VMH
after he was involved in a single-car

Thunclay, March 24, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pa~8- The Daily Se"tinel

Money sought
A suit for money in the amount of

$27,350.98 was !Ued in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Mercury
Marine, Division of Brunswick
Corp., Skokie, Jll ., against Leonand
c. Lyons and Carol L. Lyons,
Pomeroy, for money due on an open
account.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted- -Gladys Cudle~
Pomeroy; Frederick Werry, Pome-_
. roy; Velma Parsons. Racine;
Bobby Kuhn, Cheshire; Ola Smith,
Shade; Christopher Gilkey, Ru·
tland ; Frederick Hildreth,
Pomeroy.
Discharged--Nellie Price, Clara
Riley, Louise Eshelnian, Christine
Napier, John Thabet, Karen Haw·
ihOrne, Frederick Werry, Horton
Arnold.

1983

Ohio

Multi-organ failure claims recipient's life
SALT LAKE CITY tAP) Barney Clark. "aver;· stoic. very
strong man '' who traded a peaceful
&lt;Wath from heart disease for a
paintul, uncharted medical odys·
sey. died 112 days after beComing
the first human to receive a
permanent artificial heart.
The end Wednesday night for the
courageous retired dentist came " in
peace and with dignity," said
Univcrsirv of Utah Medical Center
spokesm~n .iohn Dwan, shortly
after the 62-ymr-old Clark died of
"C irculatory collapse due to multiorgan system failure."
His death at 10:02 p.m. MST
followed a day of medical setbacks
in which Clark was returned to
intensivE' care and fell from fair to
critical condition . .

It was a quick, quiet, (lilinless
death; Dwansa1d. _
Clark was "a very stole, very
strong man," said Helen Kee,
hospital directorofnur$g. "A man
whochosetodowhathedidknowing .
this could be the result."
liis death came almost 16 weeks
to the minute after he was rushed
into surgery late De0. 1, life rapidly
draining from his tlssue-toin natiJ·

ralheart.
Withoutthe experlmentaldevlce,
hewouldlu!ve becomeoneof8,CXXlto
IO,CXXlAmericanswhodleeachyear
from cardiomyopathy,_a degenera·
tive, inoperablediseaseoftheheart
muscle.
He had been suffering since
Saturday from a fever·and increas·
ingly severe kidney failure, prob-

21
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43 Ft..,.olor R..,t

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Toto! Receipts

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
fol' Fiscal y..,
Ending Decembof
31 , 1982

Genera l Fund

M otor Veh1cle L•c ense
Tax. Fund
1 1.39147

Gasol•ne Tax
Road an d Brldge

Coolvilo, Ohio
March 1, 1983
I cortily tho following report
·

23.673 17

Fund

Bedford Township

to be correct.

15.053 10

'

Holen Swartz

Township Ctooi&lt;

Tel. No. 614-696-1116
614-696·1116
SCHEDUlE I
CASH BALANCE
SHEET
Docembe&lt; 31 , 1982
ASSETS
Depository Balances
(ACI IV€ and

Emergency runs

3.4 7553

Fund
Federal Reven ue
Shanng Fu nd
Total
To~l

. 3 756 00
57.349.27

Receipts

111d Bunces

,

General Fund

22 274 26

M otor Veh 1d e L1cense

Tax Fund ·
Gasoline Ta)(
Fund

11 952 48

23 742 67

Road and Br1 dge

3 661 6B

Fund
Fede ral Revenue

3.759 38
65 390 4 7
Expenditures

Shanng Fund
Total

General Fund

18 4 97 25

Motor Veh1cle L1cense

Tax Fund

10.325 98

Gasoli ne Ta)(

21.263 56

Fund
Road a nd Bndqe
Fund
Fede ral Revenue
Shanng Fund
Total

I

588 09

3 552 85
55 227 73

Balance
Dec. 31. 1982

General Fund
3 777 0 1
Motor Veh1cle L1cenSe ·

Tax Fund

Gasohne Ta;~~:
Fund

1.626 50
2.47911

Road and 8r1dge

Fund

Feder at Revenue

Shann g Fund

2 073 59

206 53
10.162.74

TODDLERS
BOYS
GIRLS
STUDENTS
YOUNG JR.
MEN'S
LADIES JR.
MISSES

1-3 (Reg. &amp;Slim)
~ 14 (Reg. &amp; Slim)
4-,14 (Reg. &amp; Slim)
25-30
6-14

$17.99
With. Coupon
bpirts 3/31/83
'

STRIP
COAL

- '.

Lee Rider Straight Leg Jeans.
NO CHARGE TO SHORTEN
JEANS TO DESIRED
LENGTH JUST LIKE
FACTORY HEM

t

$5 OFF
MEN'S STRAIGHT LEG
PRE-WASHED JEANS
REG. ·S20. CJ9

$1 5. 99:With Coupon
bpjru 3/31/13

$3()00 A

~GtJ ',4
18 NORTH SICOND

/JiMJ .Sl.p

SPECIAL

TRANSMISSION FILTER
· AND FLUID CHANGE
ONLY '31.95 ~· 14·ttc

l·ll-tfc

3-181 mo

-Roollng and gullor wook
'CoilGOIO u-~
-"'
-'Plumbing and
olodrldol wool.
(FrM Estimates)

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

P&amp;S Racine,
BUILDINGS
Cilt.
Ph. 614-143-5191

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174

2·2&amp;tlc

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

CEMENT
FINISHER

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Garfield
. Richard
'
'Patting Lots
• Driveways
'Basements
'Patios
Reasonable Rates
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 614-985.-4464

SERVICE
985-3561

9

Wanted To Buy

22 Money to Loan

who has

Gold, silver. sterlng, jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
does not offer or anempt to currency . Ed Burkett Barber
offer anv o1her thing for sale Shop, Middlaport. 992 ·
.
may place an ad In this 3478.

HOME LOANS 12% fixed
rate. leader Mortgage, 77 r;: ~ ·•
State, Athens , Ohio. 1·614· ·
592-3051 .

~Refr.lgeratora

•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS -and SERVICE
~

I

ON RT. 143- One mik! oft Rl
7. With -10% down, ,.,g carry
the ba~nce. 1rh baths, several
garages. Healolator: carpetin&amp;
large kitChen, dining and one
acre. Only $40,000.

Business &amp; Second Mort·
W•nted to buv . Investment gage loans. Equity Resourr
property. Cslt 614-992- cos. In Ohio 1 -800-992·
Hampster &amp; cage. Call446- 5868.
. out of Ohio
4436.
1----___;____ ' 2351
1 ·800-641 -5286.
Wanted to lease tobacco,
1 part German Shephard &amp;. 25c per lb. 304-675-2275 .
Collie female ' pup. One red
23 Professional
mixed bo-oed dog. Call 614- WA NTE old pianos. Paying
Services
$20,00 and 840.00 each.
256-1398.
First floor only, writtt giving
7 weeks old German She- directions. Witten Pian·os.
C&amp;l Bookkeeping
pherd &amp; Doberman. lovely Box 1 88. Sordi.s. OH Tax Returns &amp; bOokkeeping
puppies to give away to 43946. Phone 81 4-483· for Individuals S. busineases . .
good homes. Already been 1606.
Short forms 85.00
Long forms 820.00 and up .
wormed . Call 446 -3839.
Carol Neal
446-3862 .
charge to the advertiser . .

1----~----,--

because toof attend
your tacking
in
Afraid
Church

knowledge of tho word of
God? A FREE of charge
Home Biblo Study course
can give you a clear under·
standing of tho Word of
God. With no obligation an
oxj&gt;eriencod teacher can bo
sontto your home by 'sim;r:ty
calling 985-3564 o·r 9 2·
3824. To gat tho timo of
lesson you want. call now .
~i/cri.;~.; B0 x 2 3 1 ·

~ ,~~!,!!''~

4·S.Uc ·

AL lROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

BOGGS
SALES &amp;SERVICE
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILU, OHIO
Authorized John Deer,
NeW Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipmel')t
Parts &amp; Service

•Lowest Rates -~
Around
'Friendly. Service
. '
GIVE US A TRY

742-2328

~

J&amp;F

RYDER TRUO&lt;
RENTAL &amp; ONE·WAY
lDcal and one-way. low r.~les,
top maintained trucks . Right
sizes, right equipment. Hand
trucks, ·furniture pads, Nationwide Road Serv1ce. Mov- ·
ins tips and insurance.

Riverside WJ
446-9800

Inc.

'

SERVIC~

CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE ·
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
oPONOS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK

~WtN~

rt:c~o~Jo

Long Bottom, OH.

HOME BULDING
ROOM ADDITIONS
REMODELING
ROOFING &amp; SIDING

618 E. Main, Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-3795
We Do Bookkeeping For
Smal, l.arp and Corporate
Busi~

"FREE ESTiMATES"
REFERENCES
PH. 985-4141

&amp;Partnerships

.MARY C. KEBLER-OWNER
1·21 ·2 me.

HO·l mo

1·3·tlt

JESCO
BUILDERS

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING

22tH mo pd

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozers

ISears I
FREE

-Backhoes
-,-Dump Trucks
-to-Boy.
- Trencher
-Water
- Sewer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
, PH. 992·2478

EXTIMATES
"Chain Link Fence
·carpeting 'Painting

!Sears!
CA1 ALOG MERCHANT
Pomeroy,OH.
Greg &amp; Patty Gibbs-Owners
PH. 992-2

1·12·3 mo. pd.

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appolntmen1. Ward ' s Keyboard:
446-4372 .

.

For Agri Busineu·Salen.,
general office secretary .
Send resurrte to P. O. Box
444, Rio Grande, Oh
45674 .

Excellent condition &amp;
location--all ready for imme·
dia1e occu pancy--lnterest
rates are down and probably
won't be lo'INer.
. :

12 YEAR old Border Collie
to good home in the countr.

Legal Secretary wanted. ex· . Home and or rental
perience pr~erred . Send Broadway-Middleport.

Good companion for

rest.111e to Box 969 , Gallipo·

people. Call 304·675- lis. Oh 45631 .
5768.
-'--------

Pt1odern business bldg. 58
Court St., Gallipolis .

3 puppies, 2 mole &amp; 1 ing7 The New Sarah Co~ten­
female. part pit, bull &amp;. trv is seeking fahion 'show
German Sheppard. 304· directors . lfyouwanttoearn
882 -2993.
excellent rrioney. call 304-

112 + acres with 2 homes

ARE you tired of job hunt·

Male

for

Gallia County.

Ca\1992-3267 or 675 -2516
evenings.

more

Beagle and - mixed. information .

t:;;==;==::::::===

304·676 -4095.
Free garden plot. 304-675 - 12
Situations
2482.
Wanted
FIVE small kittens. 6 we•ek•sl-- - - - - - - - old, part Siamese. 304-675Room, board &amp; care for
6145.
only.

1 h acre with 5 rm. house,.
with basement, need some
work on house. $6,500. Call ·
614-245-921 l .

·

Reasonable.

GARAGE to give
614' 992 -6022 or 614Pt. Pleasant, 304 •~·· 1 992 -6748.
1365 .
1---------'-0dd jobs, painting, small
carpentry work, house

SI)C. Labrador Retriever puppies, 3 11)on1hs old, 304· cleaning. 614-992-5614.
676-3628 .
Riverview Personal care
home for the elderly pa·
tiants. 304· 773-5882.
6 Lost "nd Found
Charitable or~J~nization hir·
odd jobs. From
LOST brown 8 track iape ing Out · for
grass to plumbing
case, full of tapes . Fell off cuning
. from clean up to fin·
car between Crown City &amp; and
ished
carpentry. Call 614·
Gallipolis. Reward . Call 992·7825
and 614-985·
61 4·256-9362.
3564.

j::;:;=:;=======

LOST Female Doberman
Wednesday near Memorial 13
Insurance
Field. Fawn color, name
Fannie. Reward. can 4 4 6 - l - - - - - - - - - 8691, 446-1000 .
SANDY AND -BEAVER In·
LOST large bluish-gray cat. surance Co. has o1ferad
Los1 approx. 2Vz: mi. out R1 . services for fire insLJ"ance
588 from Gallipolis. Re- coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm.
ward. Call 446 -2310.
home and personal prq»erty
LOST Jarge male black cat. coverage• are available to
Fairview Bur;:kridge area. meet individual needs . ConChild's pet. Call 446-9629. tact Eugene Holley, agent.
Phone 388-8690.
LOST 4 reupholstered bright
'blue nylon cushions on Rt. 7 Are you paying to much for
close to. R 8t M Furniture at your hospital·health insu·
' Crown Ci1y. Reward . Call ranee. Call Carroll
Snowden . 446-4290.
614-245-5876.

992-7201
J-7-lk
EXCHLENT BUY - Grav~
GallipoliS, OhiO J 181 mo
15
Schools
Hill, 6 roomhome. Lots of
Instruction
remoo~ing, carpeting, ~rge ~----------~~----------~-------------+------------~7
Yard Sale
eat-1n krtchen, dry basement
natural gas lurnace. front
Easter Craft Sale. Fri . &amp; S111t.
Kitchen Cabinets- RoolAntiquity.
Sign in yard. · Karate the uttinate in self
porch and level lot for only
i_ng - Siding - Concrete
R&amp;V!llOnd
Pierce
residence. defence all private lessons,
$21,500.
Patios - Sidewalks .:..
Men, women,' S. children ..
614-949·2374.
New .Construction - RelnstructOn 1hru black beh.
flVI POl NTS - 122 acres of
modelin&amp; - Custom Pole
Roofing, Spouting
YARD aale. 192 North Park Also available Karate uni·
n~e ~ying land New garage,
Barns.
Dr .. Pt. Pleasant. Friday, fonn1 PIJching and kicking
Complete Home
concrete Hoar and a like new 2
March 25th. 10-4 p.m. bags, and protective equipCHARLES SAYRE
For an your wiring
bedroom Schulz trailer. Gas
~nt. Jerry lowery &amp; Assocancelled if rain .
.Remodeling
ciates
Karate Studio, 143
furnace, T.P. water for
AND SON
needs; furnaces re·
Thanks tor Sympathy, fond
Burlington
Rd., Jackson,
TWO
family
pOrch
sale.
pair
service
and
in14
Years
EKperience
~26,500
memories at loss of sister
Oh. Call 614 ·286-3074 or
Lincoln
Ave
..
Pt.
Plea·
2627
Roofing
&amp;
Siding
Co.
stallation.
Georgia.
Bless
vou
.
Ali Work Guaranteed
'
Margaret,. Alma 8a Ruth . sant, Friday, 10-3. little bit 614-384-6160.
WE ADVERTISE OUR LIST·
Route 1
Residential
everything .
INGS 4 TIMES A MONTH.
Lone Bottom. OH . 45743
8o Commercial
742-2324
17 Miscellaneous
Housing
985-4193 or 992·3067 ·
Call 742-3196
773-5684

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Headquarters

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

~=======U:·'~:":'~~=======':· '·:••=t=========~ 2

Real Estate General

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Long Bottom, Oh.

608 E. MAIN
tPOM£ROY, OHIO
PH.992·225g

Ph. 985-'1345

'I

Clell LaBonte, Sr.-Owner

.

NEW LISTING - LETART '- ·f~ntastic .vie~ Appr011imately .19
acres wooded land wrth 2·3 bedroom mabie home. Greenhoose,
new block root celtar, outbuikiint Minerals included. $25,000.00.
,.

NEW LISTING - NEAR RUTLAND- Approximately 5acres with
a 2 story frame home that is mostly remodeled. Has 2 wells, 3
·bedrooms, and a family room. Rreplace and a woodburner set up.

~~~
. .,\

: ~\..,

~ .~.rf~
· Mature Quail now being
sold. Eus available with
notice after May I. Day old
chicks available with deposit alter May 25. ,_,, mo

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•S1orm Doors
•51orm Windows
•Repleacement Windows

Roofing
: ..FREE ESTIMATES .
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

•Now

H ·l

mo.

$26,900.00.
·NEW LISTING- POMEROY·- Stately older home with originru
wood war~ french doors, bay Window, and incinera!O&lt;. 8 rooms
plus a fuM basement and a large attic. Nev.iv painted. $35.000.00.

H. L. Writesel

ROOFING .
Ali types of roof wort; new
or ltpllir, gutters ·and .
downspouts, autter clean·
inc and paintina, stonn
dllOr$ and windows.
All Work Guarantnd
"Frn Estimates"
Call: 949-2263
Or 992 "79)

$39.900.00.
:MIDDLEPORT - One &amp;or !Mn home with 2 bedrooms, d1ning
·room, Irant deck. chain link fence. Real cute home on a nice street

,$24,500.00.

'

. ' '

: PRICE REDUCED "'- BRICK ST. POMEROY - 110% fixed ram
; available. This 2 bedroom home in Pooieroy can be yours with
· $2,400 down. Payments of $92.66 monthly fllf 20 years. Good
oondifun! Total price $11,000.00. .
REALTORS
Hemy E. Cllllnd, Jr.. GRI ............... :................. 992-6191
Jtan Trussell ... ................. ... :: ........:................. 949-2660 ,
Dottie Turner ..................................... ,............ ,992·5692
Jo Hill ......... .................................................. 985·3335
.Office ............................................................ 992·2259

m··

.~
~~-

"Something New"

RAVENSWOOD FABRICS
Now Hat Fashion

Outlot Quality
• Jeans dothlng:
'Blouse's
'SWim Suits
'Evenin&amp; Gowns
Etc. Open Tues.-Sat.
10:00 to 5:00
204 Washinaton St.
Ravenswood, W.Va.

1t ~=====":"'==·':~:"':::~=======~•:·:•:•:.j
GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.
Industrial, Co~~tmercial,
Residential, Interior and
Elttrior.
Painting
Sandblasting
Mortarblaatlng
·I'Jirklng Lot Stripping
Sprey Painting
' Texture CoatlnJII_ ·
FillY~•~

'

CALl 614-949-2616

'·

1

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

'Sid Inc
'Rooflnc

'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
.'Remodeling
20 Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

Clll 843-5425
3-4·2· mo. ,cl.

In Memoriam
In memory of Dale
Rothgeb.Sr.. who died
seven years 11gp today,
March 24. 1976.
The face we loved is now laid
low .
His voice is still,
The hand so oftem that
helped others,
lies now in death's cold chill.
We often think of him ,
~specially when
we're
alone.
For . memory is th&amp; only
thing, · .
·
that grief can call its own.
Wife. Glenna &amp; Sons

8

3 Announcements

9

SWEEPER and sewing. machine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick ·up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
George• Creek Rd. Call
448-0294 ..

Control hunger and lose
weight with New Shape
Diet Plan and Hydrex Water
Pilla at Fruth Pharmacy.
made for all occaolona. 304-273-5288.

Square Dance every Satur·

,1AM.

day
9 to 7 toCountry
Rockfrom
Sunday
11PM.
Robert Plckett'o, Eaat Darwin, St. Rt. 681 .
RIVERVIEW Peraonat Cere
Canter. now taking applica-

......,,,,

31 Homos for Sale

Reliable babysitter for 2
children . day shift. MuSt
Small black shaggy dog. have references . Prefer 160
Male. 6 months old. 614 ~ Spring Valley ilrea. Call
985 -3870.
446-7693 ofter 4:30.

elciu'ly

NEW LISTING - I year old
80% finished 2 bedroom home.
Full basement carpeting, nice
kitchen and 5 acres in Salem
Township Want only .$19,500
NEW LISTING - 84 acres
near HemlOck Gr011e with \0
1ninerals. Nice modern~ed 3
bedroom home. Natural gas
furnace, hardwood flooo. large
~am and other building&gt;
$75,000.

column. There will be no

676-4831

All Make5
•Washers •Dishwashers
Ranges

3 J.l me Pd

10-&amp;llc

2·23-Uc

SMITH NELSON
MO
· :rDRS, Inc.

pd.

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
l~sulatd Dog Houses

TON

' COMPLETE
RADIATOR SERVIa
F
rom he Smallest Heater
Core to the i.arKest Radiator, .
Radiator Specials!
NATHAN BIGGS
35 yrs. Experience

992 •6215 or 9 _,2 _ 7 ~ 1
Pomeroy,

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PH. 992-2280

·NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom
:insulated ranch. Woodbuming
'fireplace, carpetin&amp; equipped
~itchen, gass furnace, garage
and n~e lot on west .end of
'Rutland. For $36,000.

.

VISA AND MASTER CARD ACCEPTED
NO LAYAWAY ON COUPO.N SPECIAL~

PAT HILL FORD

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Sizes start from 12'xl6'

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Large brick on a corner lot
,with a huge pretty liye-in kitc~en that has afire~ace. Home hass4
.bedroom~ 7 fireplaces, and.a 3 room apartmert $25,000.00.
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - A2 story frame home with 8
·rooms, and an furnished'. Also. a 3 bedroom garage apartment

STOP BY AND LOOK AT OUR NEW
CLOTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY.

Dewayne Williama
&amp; Scottie Smith
All Makes-and Models
Antenna Instillation
House Call$ and Shop
Service Available

MINE RUN

.NEW LISTING ...,. 3 acre$ in
. Suttoo Township. 3 bedroom
:home, woodbumer, modern
kitchen, tap water on good
:blacktop road. Asking$27,500

SPECIALS

REG. '22.99

OPEN 9 to 5 MON. ttru SAT.
All Typos of Auto Repair.
Brakes. Tune-Ups , etc.

Phone
1-(614) ·992 -3325

27-46
1-15
6-18

$5 OFF
LADIES BASIC 100%
COTTON JEANS

ta- COfW, We can lllto
acid boil and nld out ra·
dlatora. We also repair
Gas Tanb.

-Addons and romodoling

·

Ph. ·985-4269 01 98s-4382

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

VI ROll B. SR. REALTOR '

I .

·6,000 PAIRS OF JEANS
IN STOCK

'Chester, Ohio

Also Transmiuion

210 F: . 2nd St.

Will sell body shop tools. equi~, car. and truc:ks to
settle the estate of Robert H. Ntcholson. Case' No. 33.283

Athens County.
'
EQUIPMENT: Kansas rack auto body and portable frame
straightener lk.j.) camp. pllfta power w/ puller.;, chains &amp; bars;
Smrth gas weld1ng outfrt w/ cart and gauges, port sand bl~er;
chain ho~t: tack stands. Black Hawk 4 ton porta ~~ bench
grinder: Unooln 225 welder. porta spot welder; 4 Sharpe 75 PJ
paint spray guns; 2 Blue Po1nl gnnders: 2 i1re ed.; e•t cords:
Emgjo 3 hp 4 cyl air compresscr w/&amp;l gaL tan~ eKhaust fan: rust
· proof ouM B&amp;D jig saw: I \I ton floor jack:' creeper;: a1r hose;
battery ch;rger: air grinders &amp;buffers, wheel pullers: a1r wrenches;
body sanders: air sander!:; v1se, etc.
·
' TOOlS: Snap on tool boK {7 drawer top and 9 drawer bottom);
Snap On sKle too bo•:· a lot ol Crafts~nan ratchet sets: 6-Bmm,
10-llmm, l2-ll l4-l6-l7-l9mm: metric wrendles: Snap Cllline
wrenche; i/ 4lo 13/16: sev . l~ sock~: door wrenches: standard
ratch~; Mac wrenches l/ 2 to 7/8: a lot of open and 1m end
wrenches; a lot ol screwdrivers: bodv spOOns and dollies; bodv
hammers; Snap On air drill w/ bits; compress~n gauges, Snap Cl1
bars: 40 pc. tap and d1e set pullers: a1r hammers; VIse &amp; welding
cl;rnps and grips, punches and chisels: 3/ 8 1mpact driver,
Rod&lt;well 3/ 8 air ratchet; 1/2 Craftsman socket sets: I~ assl
sockets, wrenches, pliers, pipe wrenches, etc., hack saws:
sandpaper, a lot ol paint. paper rack, Snap On pry bars;
r;ompressor hone, ridge cutter. clutch adj. too, torque wrench,
timing light, welding rod, lg asst. oi bodv nuts, botts and screws,
wak benches, paint bench. many other 1tems.
CARS. &amp; TRUCKS: 1962 Chev truck w/ ramp type flat bed for
haul1ng stock car: {4 spd. trans., dual wheels), 1972 Chevy ~ckup
20 series w/ lloiJ s~ft; · Chevy Camaro slack racing car w/
replacement enfline a~d many other spare parts;e1~a whee~ and
t~res. 73-79 Toyctt lenders.
OFFICE EQUIPMENT: metal des~ 4 !aiding cha~r&gt;. metal utility
cabin£4: body manuals and books, etc.
Terms: Cash or clleti w/ posdive l.D.
Notllne shown befOre day of sale. Not responsible 101 loss or
accidents. No lunch.
Attorney for Estate: Susan L GWinn
AUCITONEER: Bill Janes. Phone 557-3411

Pomiroy, Ott.

radilltons and toea-

CARPE li'TER
,,_
SERVICE

SERVICE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

lEAFORD

SATURDAY, MARCH 26-12:00 NOON
11 Graham Dr., Athens, Ohio ·
ROB'S BODY SHOP

2711 w. Malft

YOUNG'S

S&amp;W
TV
AND
APPLIANCE

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

614-992-2181

Public Sale·
8o Auction

C018

31J.tfc

'l2.4 tit

uoo
uoo
" 00

Wa can !8plir and,.

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

No Sunday Calls

WE ALSO WORK ON
ALL OTHER APPLIANCES

PUBLIC AUCTION
Public Notice

949·2860.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

, Rllal Estate General

- Public Notice

"Beautiful, ·Custom
Built •Gara•es"
•
Call for free Siding 85·
timates, 949-2801 Or .

. AUTOMATIC
. TRANSMISSION CO.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

~========:::;t==~:;;:;::;:==;-1;========:::-t.=========~

. POMERoY
lANDMARK

8

SIDING

·.BISSE' LL
Sl Dl NG CO • · · ·

It P·llc

n1 e..u • ..,

11 ·f•onf,..,...,.,..,,
ta w.. •d•ol"'
I&amp; Seed&amp;.

41 · 5po,_ too R••&gt;t
·7·W. . . dloR..,I

Ctl IIIII ...

~c,.,w

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

New Homes- Extensive
Remodeling.
•lnsulance Worlt
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
oAll!'"inum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992· 7583·
or 992·2282

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
~ENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOII(T

......... c .. .wv

c;.oUnl'l

A,_CDihl14

21 f'l ..l E "Ill VlttPitd

lnact1ve)
wreck on County Rd . 21 at 9:40a.m .
S10.162 74
Net Fund s on
According to the patrol, Kuhn was
Depos1t
10,162 74
eastbound when he went off the left
101G274
TOTAL /\S$ f1 S
side of the road. over an enbank·
LIABILITIES
Fund Balances
10.16274
ment and into a creek.
Total
His vehicle sustained moderatP
L1ab tllt,es
10162 74
Services conducted
damage.
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES.
The patrol also investigated a
Funeral services for Lena B.
RECEIPTS AND
three-car wreck on Ohio 124 at 7: 55 . Shenefield, 91, who died March 2
EXPENDITURES
a.m. Wedne!;day.
Balance
were held March 4 at 1 p.m . at the
Jan. 1. 1982
Troopers say this is what McCoy-Moore Funeral Home.
General Fund
7 22 1 1
happened:
Mrs. Shenefield was born Jan.l2,
Motor Veh1c le L · ~ ense
Junior H. Keller, 54, Rt. 1, 1892 at Newark anci died at VInton.
Tax Fund
56 1 0 1
Gasolme TaK
Langsville pulled from County Rd.1 She is survived by her husband,
Fund
69 50
onto Ohio 124 and struck the side of Claire Shenefield, Vinton.
Road and Bn dge
an eastbound car driven by Kenny
Fund
186 15
Purice. 28, Rt. 1, Langsville.
Fede ral Revenu e
Shanng Fund
3 38
Keller's ear then spun around and
Total
8 041 20
hit a westbound car driven by
Four calls were answered by local
Howard L. Barber, 3.3, Reedsville.
units Wednesday. the Meigs County
Keller was c ited for failure to Emergency Medical Service re·
yield at a stop sign .
ports. At 9: 46 a.m., the Middleport
Keller's and Purice's vehicles Unit took Robert Kuhn, Hobson
received moderate damage.
Road, to VeteransMemorialHospi- ·
Barber's car was slightly damaged.
tal; at 4:10p.m. , the Pomeroy Unit
took Margaret Haggerty and Hubert Stafford from the scene of an
auto accident on Route7toVeterans
Memorial Hospital : Tuppers Plains
cated, and Allen Wilson, Pomeroy,
$63 and costs, disorderly maiUier.
at 5:50 p.m. took Ella Gladman
from her home to Camden- Clark
In other actions, CarrteGulnther,
Syracuse, was placed on probation
Hospital in Par~ersburg and at 6:43
for six months on a disturbing the
p.m. !he Syracuse Unit took Pam
peace charge and six months
Clara from Thind St. to Holzer
probation on an assault charge;
Medical Center. .
Lisa Oiler, Middleport, was placed
on probation for six months on an
Inspet-tion Friday
assault charge; Mike Custer,
Pomeroy, and Barbara Stahl,
The Harrisonville Chapter, Order
Letart, were each placed on
of the 'Eastern Star, will have its
probation for one year on disor·
annual ins)iection Friday at 7: ~
derly manner charges.
p.m. at the Masonic Temple. All
members are asked to take potluck.
r-::::-:-:,.-::=

-DRESSES, COORDINATE GROUPS
HATS FOR,GIRLS
PURSES
SHIRTS
DRESS PANTS

Robert E BuCk
Probate Judge/Clerk

,

Dtpt.

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

l&amp;- l uroiAcr-•

11 ~te~.,w- ....
I 2 Slt,..t&lt;HI W-H

! 1ft. RIIIIO.

11_,....,.,

114-Mioc
fii ·IBwii&lt;Sifi{II&amp;&gt;INiti•

5 MIII&gt;IOY ... dl

ll_o...,dr... MI
1 v ..c1 s.l. ,..,.. "',...,,~ .. ,
I Pul&gt;ocs.M ,
1

11 H..,...,ol&lt;la-do
UCI TV&amp;AMi&lt;IE_,......,
l l-Antkl""

Landmark Soc Sec
legislation passes
WASHINGTON tAP) - The
Senate on Wednesday night pasSed
a landmark Social Security rescue
plan, but only after granting a
reprieve to federal workers that
some leaders said could rupture the
entire $165 billion package - and
possibly draw President F(eagan's
veto.
The Senate, after six days of
-debate and dozens of amendments,'
followed the House's lead in
adopting a bipartisan reform commission's ca ll for higher payroll
taxes. a six-month delay in this
July's benefit increase, a later
retiremel!t age in the next century
and a tax on benefits of more
affluent retirees.
But in the first major crack in the
compromise plan. the Senate approved by voice vote the by Sen.
rRussell B. Long, D-La., to delay
coverage for new Civil servants until
after Congress establishes a supplementary pension plan for them.

NOTICE OF
·APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Marc h 4. 1983. rn the .
Meigs · Coumv Probate Court.
Case No. 24030. Joan Armstrong - Pennrngton. 175 North
Taylor, Oa&lt; Park. Il linois 60302
was appornted Execulrrx of 1he
es1ate ot Bernard Penrirnglon
deceased, laTe o f 175 North
'Taylor. ·oak Park. ll lmo]S
60302

54 Misc. Merchandise

--==--~

......................
4 G,._,,
2-!ft..._

(Continued from page A1 )
of computers in Implementing tax
structures and coilections. he Is a
past member of the lnternatlonal
association of assessing officers.
Davidson is a son of the late'
Ernest (Rink ) and Clara Ebers!&gt;-·
ach Davidson, both lifetime resl·
dents of Pomeroy. He is married to
the former Mila Jane Stark.
Davidson is owner-perator of the
KEG, E. Main St., Pomeory.

ROUS~

11

I C••ol ot f..._.o tpNi" od•o"&lt;: t .

Giveaway

AN'f PERSON

PHONE
992-2156
Or While
Setlt111el Cl11sifi-'
O.;tty

4

anything to giVe away and

111 Court St . PoMeroy. Ottto .S71il

'-~ ~~-.=

Filing..

-Business services

!ems that doctors sald were
. probably caused · by a common
· virus. By Wednesday, he had colitis
in his bowel and e·:idence of
pulmonary hypertension In his
lungs.
_
Dr. Chase Peterson, university
vice president for health sciences,
said doctors also worried that Clark
might have suffered an infarctionor death of tissue - in his bowel.

The Daily Sentinel

Four people put on probation
Fourteen defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
night.
They were LaiTY A. Longenette,
Long Bottom, $51; Donald Deskins,
Pomeroy, $49; David Snodgrass,
Racine, $45; Roy Powell, Rutland,
$47; George Hoffman, Middleport,
$47; Sandra S. Peyton, Dexter, $45;
Vernon Roush, Mason, W.Va., $43;
Jeane Andre, Ramsburg, $64;
Ronald Bivens, Saxton, Pa., $47, all
on speeding charges; Mary .Rus·
sell, Pomeroy, $213, assault; Eddie
Patrick, Pomeroy, Gregory Cundiff, Racine, $63 each, disturbing
the peace; Timmy Grtfflth, Middleport, $63, traffic light violation, and
Jackie Carl. Pomeroy,$6.~. dl•turhlng the peace. .
·
Thomas Chapman ll, Pomeroy,
was fined $67 and c&lt;ists on speeding
charges; Joseph R. Bennett, 'Jackson, Fla., $513 and costs and six
days in jall, drtving while lntoxi·

March

Public Sale
8o Auction

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Communi1v
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise avery week.
Consigments of new and
used merchandise alWays
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 275-3069.
AUCTION every Saturday
night. Mt. Alto. WV. 6 p.m:
Consignments welcome.
Emma Bell auctioneer.
Wanted To _B uy

WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni·
ture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
448·31 69 or 256-1967 in
the evenings.
Buyihg· Gold, Silver, Platinum·. Gold and Silver prices
are the highelt in two years,
check our prices on gold &amp;
silver, scrap jewelry. Buying
Old coins, scrap rings &amp;
silverware. · Daily quotes
available . Also coins 8t coin
supplies for sale. Spring

~arge contemporary family
home overlookng Ohio ·
River. Woods. 5·20 acres.
tennis coun. ,city schools.
446-3554 or 1 -513·4238~28 . Owner-Agent.

REDUCED now -3 bdr .
house in Sunkist. was ~
~9.000 now $55,000. Call .
446 -3 617.
Count rv home for sale. 7 ,
rooms, barn , 2.7 acres. Sara
Ramsey, Rt. 3, Pomeroy
Pike, $10,000. as is.
·
House for sale with nice
view of the Ohio. Kitchen .
with dining area. 2 bed·
rooms and large basement.
One acre. Call 8_,3-5234,
81'2 ASSUMABlE Joan, pay.
ment $239.00 a month.
Three b~droom, 1 1!~ bath,
fenced 1n yard. Call 304675-6889 after 4:30 .

1

THREE bedroom, full balement, 75x120 lot, Clifton
city water. gas heat .
$17,000. 304· 773-5B60.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI -STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED· "CARS ..
TRUCKS. GALliPOliS.
CHECK OUR PRICES.
CAll 446·7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAl.' .
lTV MOBilE HOME SAL£S.
4 _M.l.,:WfS.T. GAlliPOliS.
RT 35. PHONE 446 -7274.

19,8 0 14x70 Buddy Mobila .
home, fu mished, 2 bdr ..
large bath with gard&amp;n tub •. '
Wanted ricE toH u nt ington built-in s'aro. round ki1ch&amp;n"
five days week . Arrive Ba .m. with double ovens. central
leave 5 p.m. · 304 ~ 676 · air and wood building in .''
7132.
eluded . Located in Green · ·
Terrace Mobile Home Court ..
Call 446·9486.
1B Wanted to Do
1975 Holly Park Mobile . ·
Home, 14x70 with central ·
General Hauling and Trash air, new drapes. new carpet.
removel Service. Reliable Owner willing to le&amp;se pres··
and dependable. Call 446· ent location, including pas·· ·
1U re on SR 554, BidWelL ·
3159.
Coli 446 -_9786, 8:30-3&lt;30 . .
lawn Mowing no yard to big ·evenings; 367-7160.
or small. Reliable and depend&amp; ble. For est in ate call 1971 Freedom· 1 2x60, 2' ,
bdr., good con d. Call 61 4· ·
446-3169.
246-5549.
Small engine repair, IBW'n
12x60 mobile home, 2 bdr. ·
_mowers. riding mowers,
U!~U~ ... ..A•a10nabhf rates. Call 614-245-6830 altor 6 ..
-:l1d. &amp; Otiua St., Gallipolis,
446·31 59 betw•m 9 and 5. Clean 1972 14x60 Kirk ·
wood Mobile home. gas ·
Wanted to do plumbing. heat. 1 31-. baths, front aod
electric, roofing, remodeling rea1 bedrooms. $7900. Call .
&amp; building. Free alt . No jOb 61 4-992·5 732.
to · large or to small. Call
614-246-5114 or call col· $2,950. up used mobito- .·
homes for sale. 2 bedroom, ..
lect 1-286-2962.
completely furnished. ,
- - - - - - - - - - Ready to move in. Brown's
Gardens plowed with large
Park, Minersville, Oh. ·. ·
rotodller six inches deep. Trailer
Ready to plant. Reuter-614- · 614-992-3324.
l

Corner lot wi1h mobile ·
i9i9i2~-2~4~9i0i-~iii~(---~----home. NeW carpet, cantsa'1

Votlay Troding
Co., Spring
Valley
Plaza, 446-8026
or
446-8026.
W pay cash for late model
clean used caro:
'21
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson
448-0069

e

·Pay cash for used mobile
1ion for ambulatory patients. homes ·or travel travel trailFor lnlormotlo n phone 304- ers. Prefer 1 966 and..,_ Colt
773-6882,_ oak for Betty 614-446 -0175 .
MeroM.
1 ~-----------------Sat of used golf clubs. Call
PRAISE &amp; Evangelistic Ser- 446·4094.
vlceo, Centar of Ute, 40
Worwlck Rd. Pt. Pteeaant. BEDS-IRON, BRASS, otd
Saturday 28th. 2 p.m. furniture. gold, eilver dolSpollkM: Daymond Adams. llln. wood Ice bo~••· stone
Saturday 28th. 7 p.m .. ]lin, antiques, etc.. ComSundoy 27th. 2 p.m., Sun· p~ete houeeholda. Write:
day 27th. 7 p.m. opeaker: · M.D. Mlltor, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Doug loaac.
Oh . Or 992·7780.

Save thousands $by buying
from owner . Assuambte
loan 11%%. 3 bdr. ranch.
1 1/2 baths. built in kitchen,
laundry room. large living
room with brick fireplace .
new above ground Pool,
garden space. home is 3 yrs .
old. 4 mi. from Gallipolis,
priced in 50 's. Call 446·
4703 . .

Business .
Opportunity

air, large patio, large build·
ing . 6th &amp; Pearl. Racine, Oh. 614-949-2719.
. '
12x60 trailer and lot in
Rutland witl:t fenced in yard
and garage. Phone after 6
p.m. 614-7 42 · 2864 or
614-986-4117.

OWN your own JeanSpnsweae, Infant-Preteen
or Ladles Apperal Store.
Offering all nuionelty 1972 Sherwood Park Mo ·
known brands such as Jord - bile Horne. 14x65. Excellent · .
ache,· Chic, lea, Levi, Van - condition . Partially fur-' ·~
derbilt, Clavin Klein, nished . Phone !304) 882· . ·
Wrangler over 200 other 3592. After 6 p.m.
brenda. t7,900 to $24,600
Includes ·beginning lnven· USED MOBILE HOME . '
tory. airfare for one to 576-2711 .
fashiOn Canter; training,
flx.turea. grand opening pro- 1972 12x65 mobile home, · :
motion, Coli Mr. Koo11!Cky 2 bodroomo. $4,000 or boot-- · ., '
11a' -nT-11031.- ---- .. .. _ :offer, 304·676·5694. · '·

.' .

�Poge - 10-The Daily Sentinel
33 Farms for Sale

Pomeroy-Middleport,

They'll Do It Every Time

~

Farm f or aal e 26' acres
mostly level , good hay

//RIVERS AI7E GIVe!
---~EVE TESTs...

home . new furnance .
county w ater new bath
carpe! ted. new alum . siding
co al &amp; wood burning stove.
Good barn &amp; other out
bldgs. garage . located on
o ld 1 6 0 nea r Porter . Call

Uaed 2200 Ditch Witch
trencher. Call 1-814-7B42.

207 a cre fa rm , Langsville,

mineral rites included , no
house $12.000 down w~l
carry rest. 61 4 -388 -9346 .

ff/E PEE:PEI? !=IIM!LY··· 7RREE 0.C 7NEM lf't4V£ E~E

7I'Otl5/.e "· 6Vt:SS WHO &amp;ETS 'THe EXAM .. ..
11'$ FO~MG .. ·1111 20 -20
VISION .... 7U!' MOTOf&lt;
V!EHICI.!'S f!,UREAU
WANTS TO CH&amp;CI&lt;
MG· ...

35 lot s &amp; Acreage

l ot in Nor1hup on c on cre~e
Rd. 1 27'x1 20 '. $4 .800 .
Ca ll 446-6254 .
5-20 ACres woods, · overlooking Ohio River, city
schools . 446 -3554 o r 1513 - 4 23 - 8928 .
Owne r / Agent .

Lots for sale in Racine .
614 -949-2340 o r 614 ·
949 -2571.
6 acres land . Spring wa1er ,
sewer. electric . .On good
road . $8 .200 . 614 · 992 ·
2603 .

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart-

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

Furnished apt. 1 bdr .. 920
4th Ave. Gallipolis. Adults,
S226 mo ., Utilities paid . Call
446-441 6 after 7PM .

.

2 bedroom home in town.
$240 -mQ . deposit required:
Call J,im at 446 -3643, Tho
Wiseman Agency .
Small one bedroom furnished hou1e near Bidwell .
Call 446-8639 evenings for
appointment .
4 rooms and bath, full
baaement. all nB"N paint.
carpeted. No inside pets.
Deposit and 6 months lease
required . 614-992-3090 .

Country Store for lease
$100 per . mo. Coli 614 ·
245 -9315 . .

ments $200 per mo . or if
income is $10.000 or less
'
'
•u. aa. .o.u
,.._.. ._.. ..
HUO available. A-One Real
Estf!tes. Carol Yeager, Real- 1-c::-:--:-:---;--;-::-:::--::tor. Call 304-675- 5104 o•
51 Household Goods
675-5386 0! 675-7788 .

Rural area. Nice lot. 1 36 '
frontage " 1 27 ' depth . In- 3 rm . end 4 rm. unfurnished
cludes 1974 Skyline 1 2x60, apanments. Utilities paid.
city water. 1 mile-Rt . 33. no pets, no children . Call
lass 3 mi .· schools . $8,696 . 446 -3437 .
lot-75 ' frontage by 127'
depth joining other, City Furnished apt . 607 2nd.,
water . 614-992 -2055 .
Gallipolis .. $226. utilities
pd .. 1 bdr.. aduhs. Call
446 -4416 a1ter 7PM .
36 Real Estate
Wanted
First floor furinshed apt,
utilities paid , deposit &amp; lease
required . Adults. no pets.
Buying houses and apart· Call at 631 Fourth Ave ..
ments . Need properties with Gallipolis .
favorable price and terms. 1- - - - -.!'.•- - - - Box 1109 Gallipolis, Oh . JACKSON ESTATES ' Equal
45631 .
Housing Opportunity' has
one bedroom apanments
rent starting at $167 per
month and two bedroom
11\BAtBI&amp;
apartments rent starting at
$193 per mon1h . Call 4462745 or leave message.
41 Houses for Rent
House fo r rent 8150 mo.
' $75 depos~ . Call 614-2459315 .

TO ALL CONTRACTORSWe are able to vlve contractors price on ell building
mattrlala. Delivery avail1ba.
Gallipolil Block Co .. 1231.1.1:
Pine St., Golllpolio, Oh 446·

2 bdr. apartment park fr~nt
view , part furn .. water paid,
$175 m o . Call446· 391 9 or
446 ·0~21 .

Efficency apartments, fur nished . in town, $160 mo.
Has all utilities paid. Call
446 -3643, The Wiseman
Ag8ncy.
Apt. for rent. Half double-2
bd.room Ap1 . Adults preferred. No pets . 614 -992 2749 .
1 bedroom furnished apt .
614-992-5434.
bed . apts. All include
individual carports with storage buildings &amp; fenced back
yards. Rental to suit all
budgets. 304-273-3344 in
Ravenswood between 9
a.m . to 4 :30 p.m.
3

Air conditioner~ 2 y rs . old. 1 -:::-:::-::--::::-::~:-:::::-:::::::
12.000 BTU. 110 Emonon BUILD YOUR OWN HOI\IIE
Ouiot Cool, $326 eo. Call 6 roomo and bath, •2 .996 .
61 4 ·36.7 ·0378 .
See our modelo, 1-614B88-7311.
Doll molds to make 271-;;::::;;;;::;:;~=
different dolls. most of them ~ now. 9B Chriatmu orna· 66 Pets for S!lle
ment molds, 58 assorted
molds, wind chimes. 7 pc.
tea l et. figurine•. table &amp; HILLCREST KENNEL
chair for doll, and beads . Boardir;'lg all breeds. AKC
Cell 1-614·6B2·7183.
Reg . Doberman• pupi afd
Doberman Stud Service .
Quality loc...,st posts for sale . Call 446-7795 .
Call day or night 614-2566702 or 614-256 -1148 .
DRAGONWYND CATT.EAY
• KENNEL. AKC Chow pup·
'276 gal . o.il drums. C•ll plea, CFA Hlmolavon, Per446-4684 .
ai,_n and Siamese klttana .
Call 448-3844 after 4PM .
Swimming pool, 18 ft . by 4
ft . Includes sun deck &amp;
accessories, $325 or belt
offer. Call 81 4· 3BB-9969 .
1 977 35 ft . 8onanu tra~ol
trailer, tilt room. ex. cond ..
$7,600. 1977 'A ton Chevy
truck ex cond .. $3,600. Will
soli both ot 81 0,600: Coli
446·0541 .

Sigler stove la'r ge 1ize.
$200 . Call814-287-7459.
Photographt equipment .
coli 446-8630.

Atari game with 8 car·
· SWAIN
tridges, $295 . Call 614·
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 266-6215.
62 Olivo St .. Gallipolis . King
coal &amp; wood heaters with Firewood, split, $30 .00 a
fan S459, set box spring &amp; truckload, $35 .00 delimattress $100. firm $120. vered. Ph. 16141 992 -2770
sofa-love1eat &amp; chair $199. or 13041 882· 2 1 94.
love seats S70, new coal 8t
wood heaters as low as Antique Oak R-eproduction
$399 with blowers, used
full line in stock.
coal &amp; wood heaters, new furniture,
also Antiques. Paul Conkels
dinet sets 8190 8t up, . Antiqu81.- Tuppers Plains.
refrigerators. ranges, bunk
beds complete $199, bun· REPOSSESSED SIGN I No·
kies manresses 840. chests. thing down! Take over paydressers. TV' s. Call 446- ments $68.00 monthly. 4x8
3159 .
flashing arrow aign. New
bulbs. leners. Hole signs.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Call FREE 1 -800·626·
- washers, drvers, refrigera~ 7446, anytime.
tors. ranges. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Crest Motel . King Size water bed. Exc.
cond. Used 3 weeks. Firm
446-7398 .
price $595 . 614-992-5762
after 6:30.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker. otto- Fat sale-Washer, double
man. 3 tables. (extre heaVy tub. Dexter~ UsiKI one year.
by Frontier), 8685. Sofa.
chair and loveseat, $275 . Uke new. Bathroom. lava tory. Dining room hUtch,
Sofas and chairs priced from table and foU; chairs. Mag ~
S285. 10 $896 . Tobias. 845 navox cabinet stereo 8t large
and up to 8125 . Hido-a- speakers.. 61 4-B43-6234.
beds . S440 . and up to
8626 ., Recliners, 8175 . to
For sale White refrigerator
8350., laimps from S28 . to 8125.
gold gu range $126.
875 . 5 pc. dinenes from White gas range 836 . Call
&amp;99 .. to 8436.7 pc .. 81B9. 446·4434 or 992·3892 .
and up. Wood table with six
chairs 8426 . to &amp;746 . Desk
S1 10 up to 8225 . Hutches, TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS
$550. and up, maple or pine Dl1counts. Avoid April price
increa1e. Free Hiller in·
finish . Bunk bed complete eluded. Immediate shipwith mattre11es. 8260. and ment. Parts, engines . Trade
up to 8396 . Baby bods, ins accepted . 703-942 &amp;1 10. Mattresses or box
3871 Hickory Hill Nursery,
springs, full or twin, 858 .,
At. 1 Box 390 A. Fishers firm , 868 . and 878 . Queen ville,
VA 22939.
sets. $195. 4 dr. chests,

$42. 6 dr. chests, $54 . Bed Brown eggs 85 cents dozen,
frames, S20.and $26 ., 10 will deliver Or'!Ce a week. Rt .
2 bedroom houSe. Large
gun - Gun cabinets. 8360.. 2 &amp; Pt . Pleasant. 304-895livi'IQ room, kitchen 8t bath.
dinano choirs 820 . and 825 . 3395 .
·
Furnished . Overlooking
Gas or electric ranges, 8326 l-:-- --:---:-: -- - -Ohio River. Aduhs only .
up to $376 . Baby ma- F
1
treueo, 825 &amp; 835 • bod
or so e. beby bed. play
Brown's Trailer Park. 614 - ~
frames 820, $26, &amp; $30, pan.&amp; pony chair. All for
992-3324 .
Apartment in Pomeroy .
$20. 304-46B·1042.
king frame $60. Good solec· . - : : : - - - - - - - - - - HOUSE and 2 acres in 1he Trailer in Syracuse. 614 - tion of bedroom suites, Wanted couch and chair.
country, 14 miles from 992-7511 .
cedar cheats, rockers. metal Free or cheap, 304-676Point . two extra large bedcabinets, swivel rockers .
7821 .
DoWntown
fumished
apt.
rooms, bult-in country kit Used
Furniture
-bookcase,
ch·en. large living room , carpeting, air cond ., $225 ranges. chairs, end tables,
beamed ceiling, fireplace, mo. plus deposit and utili- washers, dryers, refrigera · BEAUTY shop equipment.
for two operato.rs,
aur conditioned , garden ties . Call 446-1788 .
tors and TV's. 3 .miles out enough
304-676-6083, 876-4444 .
space , etc . $255 . month &amp;
Bulaville
Rd
.
Open
9am
to
security depotit. Call 304 - Apartments . 304 - 675 - 6pm, Mon. thru Fri.. Sam to
5548 .
1979 HARLEY Davidson
675-6321 after 6 p.m .
Spm, Sat.
Sportster, 1000 cc, black,
44~·0322 .
APARTMENTS. mobile
black motorcycle trailer.
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
Both elf:callent conditiOn .
42 Mobile Homes
One
Hotpoint
no
frost
and Gallipolis. 614-446for Rent
·
refrigerator-freezer. one 1 973 VW Super Beetle,
B221 .
General Electric range with good condition. wl1h factory
self cleaning oven. A pair· of air condition. Priced on
UNFURNISHED apartment
inspection . Call 304-675Eureka : Riverfront lot. 1 for rent . 1 bedroom , lady Kenmore heavy duty 4852 .
bedroom, fum .. aduhs . Ref. $180.00 Call Automotive convertible washer &amp; dryer.
Call 446-3649 .
&amp; dep . $100 . Coll614-643Supply , 8· 6 . 304 - 675·
MINI-bike, camper trailer.
2644 .
221 B. 675-6753.
New 5 drawer.dresaers S62. Magnus organ, plant stand.
304' 676-6999 .
2 bdr. mobile home ref &amp;: ONE bedroom apartments aman desk 889. 4 drawer
dep. req: Coli 614-256 - for the elderly. All u1ilities chest 850. unfinished harv- Prom dreu sire 7 , 304-6751922.
paid. Tenants pay 30 per- est gold refrig . fro~ freel 2032 .
.
cent of their adjus1ad ~­ 8250, white 2 dr. refrig.
2 bdr. trailer for rent. all . coma in this HUD subsidized frost free $96. electriC range For nle- telephonea. aselectric . Call 446-4480 .
apartmen1 building . Twin $95. gas range 196, 2 pc . sorted types and colors also
Riven Tower, phqrw 304 - livingroom suite $65, 6 pc . cordless phones, low prices,
Eight rooms, lincoln Pike. 675 -8679 . Equal opportun · dinette sat 856 . Skaggs call 304-676-6393 .
Appliances. Upper River Rd,
8200 mo. plud depo•"· Coli ity housing.
Gollipolia,
Oh . 446-739B .
4!46-4B92.
DAN Wesaon 38, 387 mag 9 5
num, hn 4 8t 6 Inch barrels.
Mt. Varnon Ave. 2 bedroom
Very nice one bedroom apartment. 304-676-1962.
carrying case plus ammunitrAiler . .good location in city.
tion. $400. firm . 304· 676·
52 CB,TV, Radio
Completely furnished .with THREE bedroom apartment.
~
.
3528 .
o::qutpment
gh furniince . Nice patio and ceiftrol olr . wato-rbBll-;-off street parking. Deposit washer &amp; dryei hookup.l--- - - -- - -BROWN plaid couch and
required and must have storage area . a 260 . a
chair with matching table,
references. Call446-4169 .
month, 304 ,675-6294.
"§"IX channel marina mobile $7&amp; .00 or belt offer. 304radio with new power pac
882-2673 .
Nice 2 bdr mobile h_ome ONE bedroom unfurnished, 8300. firm. 304-676 -382B:
washer &amp; dryer hookup, all utilities paid. except 1 - - - - - - - - - 81Cpendo, on Bob McCor- olectric. t175 . month, 304- I-=-:-:=--;-:--:--::- 55 Building Supplies
mick Ad, cable available. 675-1317 or 675·3812 .
64 Misc. Merchandise
$175 mo ., plus utilities,
·water paid . Deposit &amp; refer,ncel required . Call 446· 45 Furnished Rooms
4491 after 5.
- - -- -- - -lcSleeping room &amp;1 16, u~li ­
2 bedroom Mobile Home in tiet pd. single roale. share
Racine . 8200 . tnonth . bath . 919 2nd Ava .. Gollipo·
$100. dep. You pay Utilities . Iii. Call 446-4416 after
~· KitcHen stove &amp;. r~ridgera­
7PM .
tor turn .. rest unfurnished.
614-367-0288 .

I

I;;O~p~e:n~;·~;•~M~o:n~.·:S:a~t·==

I;;;;==;;:=;:=

1--------'---

2 mole full blooded beegle
puppies. 6 weoks old. e5o.
614-992-3644 .
AKC regioto,.d Shetland
Sheepdog, 1 year old, mole,
$126. 304-876-3538.

AKC Doberman Pincher.
blue bloodline, black S. tan.
cell before -4:30 p ,in . or after
9 p.m . 304·676 -1822.
AKC Doberman puppiaa.
blue bloodline, bl•ck and
tan . Call before 4 :30p.m. or
oftor 9 p.m. 304· 875-1822.
BABY Easter Bunnies .
$2.50 ooch , 304-676 ·
30B1 .
67

Musical
Instruments

1 Hammond Organ. 614949-2477.
WANTED: Reoponsiblo
party to take over low
monthly payments on spinet
piano. Can be eaen locally .
Write Credit Manager: P.O .
Box 33, Friedef'll, PA
16641 .
68

&amp;

Fruit
Veget•bles

Potatoes U.S. No.1 . 88.00
100· lb. bag. $3 .26 60- lb.
bag . 304-876-3762 or 448 ·
8247 .
STOBART'S
OREE'NHOUSE · For ao!e·
:Cabbage. caullflowar, bro~
colli. head lettuce . In
Racine .
69 For Sale or Trade
1976 Buick Electro 2 dr..
PS, PB, AC, AM-FM otero
$1,850 or trade for cattle.
farm equipment of equal
value, Call 448-4537 . .
OLIVER 77 troc;tor, A model
Moline tr•ctor, call 304896· 3441 .

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

I~

)WII.IeRe

HPWil'¥:1
QMiAAY,
SOli~
I'[) ~jf(e.

f'Uol.e.

~'!&gt;Y .

61

Farmall cub cultiv•tora.
turning plow, belly mower,
aide mower &amp; blade. 82660 .
Dioc plow 8275. Mlxor
grinder 8776 . Coli 446·
4157 .
Masaey Ferguson 60 farm
tractor. Liko new U.OOO.
n.e w tires. new paint, rebuilt
angina . Coli 814·246 ·
6B1B .
Buoh hog in good ohapo
8326 &amp; older modellnternetional tractor (needs work)
f1 ,200. Call 446·0B66
doyo &amp; 448-4267 even.

71

3/_2~83 .
EVENING
6 :00

- SOME Wll-1,1 &lt;:;0 ·
TOWARD MV KIDS.'
EDI.JCATJ0/&gt;1, BUT

PEOP~!! WHO WANT 11\V MOJ.JE:V,
~0 I 'M 61VIN6 IT All AWAY•.

-ANP I 'D llk:l; TO
~U66eST THAT ANYONe 1?~5-E WHO WINS

I'M:;eNPIIJ6 7Hii

THE LOTTERY DO THE

. ~EJ'T TO THI!&gt; LIST
OF CHARITIE!I&lt; • .

5-AME. PLENTY OF
PEOPLE:' &gt;JEED rr
MORE THAJ.J I DO.

Home
Improvements

1978 FORD Fl 00. 302 3
speed. air conditloni~g .
304 -678-2714 or 6761577.

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilinga commercial and residential. free
~stl~etes ,
Call 614-266 1182. -

NEW &amp; Uoed Horveotore
Structures. Automated II·
vestock feeding-computer
feeders. Coli .collect 61 4 ·
585-2260,, John L. Botto,

74 OLDS Cutlon, PS, PB,
power windows, AM-FM
radio, good running condition. 8660 . 304-876-82B7.

PAINTING
interior and
exterior. plumbing. roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs.
exp . Cell 61 4-38B-9652 .

1976 DODGE pickup, short
bed, with slant 6 engine,
good condition, no rust,
., ,600. 6, 4 -445-9376 .

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. 30 years1experience.
specializing in built up roof.
Coli 814-3B8·9867.

72

Home M•intenance Handyman Service. Also remodel ing &amp; room additions . Call

For aale 520 JD farm tractor
$2,000. 304-678-2784.
63

Livestock

Angus bulls 1 to 3 yrs. old ,
excellent blood line, ... ta
run farms, Jackson,Oh. Call
81 4·288 · 53911 or 614 ·
286-1787.
4 Regioterod Polled Here·
ford Bulla brooding age .
446-2109.

Non IJegister Quaner horae
1 0 yra. old, very apiritied,
not for 4-Her'a, •&amp;oo. C•ll
after &amp;PM. 614-379-2144.
Regloterod .Polled Hereford
bull 4 yr . old . Coli 4460B71 .

Holstein cows. fresh and
springing Holstein heifera .
Coli 1 ·61 4-286 -2496,
Ragiatered Ou•rter Horse .
Ruth RHvu. Also gr•de.
Saddles, bridles, winter
hor~e
blankets, Western
booto. 614-898-3290.
Stud service . Ragiat&amp;red
bloode Belgian Stallion .
Resonable ratas. 614-94924116.
Hay

1982 Chevy S-10. V-8.
auto, 6,000 mi.. 86,600
firm. Call446· 8878 after 6 .
1975 Dodge P.U. with
topper. "'h: ton 226 6 cyl .
Standard. 61 4-949·2867.
1979 Ford F-250 4x4 Super
Cab.' Mechanically 10und.
body good . No ruot. 85,000
firm. Coli 1 -61 4-986-4329
between 10 a .m . and 2 p.m.
Monday thru Friday.
1975 ·chevy picltup. 814·
992· 7342 anytime Sat. or
aher 7 week daya.
19.8 3 Aongor Ford Pu , 4
cyl .. rtanderd shift, gogeo.
mirrors. 1tero. S window•.
aoking t6,760. Coli 614992-379B .

1971 International truck
1 600 oerieo, 346 engine .
Excellent running condition .
11.000.614-992-6161 .

&amp; Grain

Hay for sale, square bales.
Delivery avail•ble. C•ll4486666.
.

66 Seed

Trucks for Sale

1976 Chovy 6 cyl. auto, PS,
with or without insulated
camper top. Coli 614-2661371 .

73

&amp; Fertilizer

LEASE-OPTION TO BUY 3
bedroom houH. For informatjon call 304-6711-5889
after 4 :30p.m .

.. . .- .-.....
... . .........
.. ' ...' .

.

Autos for Sale

1976 Buick Electra 2 dr.,
PS, P8, AC, AM·F.M otero
S1 ,850 or trede tor canle.
ferm equipment of equal
value. Coli 446-4637.

V$ns &amp; 4

W .O.

1978 Ford customized PS,
PB, AC, A. tlreo. 4 capt.
...ltl tabla. bed. ice box.
AM -FM radio tape player
8·trock. Coll446. 3346 .
1973 lntemation•l Scout 2 .
4 wheel drive. 8800 . Good
condition . 614 -992 -6544
after 6 p.m.
76 DODGE Powarwagon, 3A
ton, club cab, good condition. U ,OOO. 304 -6752377.
74

Wanted tobacco poundage.
304· 676 ·6625 .

71

••• WHICH I~ WHV I CA~~E:O
. TH IS. &gt;JEW" CONFE~HICc. I'M
TIRED OF ~EIIJ6 80THEI':ED ·s y

Autos for Sale

International di1c 20 cun:er.
3 point hitch. new, U60.
Coll614·266-n42.

Motorcycles

1----------1982 Honda 460 custom
axe. cond . Call 446-2360.
1974 Yemoho Enduro dirt
biko, 2,900 miles. Coli 468·
1997.

1982 Harley Davtdeon
Roadater 1000 CC, 86
actu•l miles $4,500 firm .
Call 446-81130.
1982 Honda CB760 cuatom. Cra~ bars. adjustable
back rest, cr~jte control,
cuohion grlpo, 614 -949·
2734.
1977 Harley Davldoon
Sportater. $3,000. or trade.
Call evening• after 7 pm .
814-949-2446 .

1982 K•waaaki Specter
KC1100, 614-742-2006.

...Y' M~N YOU THE I&lt;IINE 15 rt!JKTHL£55
AIN'TGOHN~
EKCEPT AS A PLACE
HAVE TH' MINE TO POT OUA PROtl!'ti'E
I O~ERAT·r:c BY
ROBOT 1l1AOOGN SOME
R080TS?!
Ei~UELIH6 TIIW•. .

446-4916 .
A&amp;S Remodeling. Interior ond
&amp;terior. buih on room1. patios. carporta, roofing. .,...
-ry finiah concrete. alectri·
cal 'NOI'k. Free eatimatea. f)y ~
hour or job. Relet ence if
required . Phone 614-742.. •
2295 .
-~

0 I]) ®l Magnum, P.l.
(I) &lt;Ill Sneak Previews Jef-

F 8t K Tree Trimming. stump ~
11
removal . Call675-1331 .
RINGLE ' S SERVICE expo · .
rienced roofing . induding
hot tar application. carpenter, electrician. m•son . .~all
304 - 676 - 20BB or 675·
4560 .

...SO, IN A. MA.NNt=R

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Te1t holaa.
Pumps Sales and Sarvi~a .
304· B96-3B02 .

a.

Auto Parts
Accessorius

Car trailer for sale . 304676-7346 .
77

Auto Repair

frey Lyons and Neal Gabler
showcase some Oscar nominees that haven't received a
lot of attention .
Ill Food For the Hungry
8:30 Cll Gl · II2I Amanda's
Amanda schemes to put
two 'lovebirds' together.
_[I) Good Neighbo111
® Enterprise 'New Space
Race.' T(\nigh1's program
examines the space indus9:00

B2

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.,'
.,'

·carefree( Unshac~ led!

It's

Just me
and my

bac~

to the

old TV!

old
ore·

• Excav!lting

Lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer. backhoe, dump ·
truck . Work by hour or job.
Coli 446· 7903.
84

I spent some of the best
da~s of mL! life in here!

Loc~ed

out!

CARTER·s PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3BBB or 446 ·
4477
83

WINNIE

.'
'

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

DEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR . Guaranteed work. Call anytime
614 - 266 -6620 or 614 256- 1207.

SEWING Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
SCiiiOrl . Fabric Shop,
Pomoroy. 992· 22B4 .

I Af(/$1'GET
DANNY DEVILLE
ON MY SIDE.
MAKE HIM
F'EEL I'M HIS

MILK HIM
IDEAS/COPY

HIS STYLE/
EVENTUALLY,
I'LL 8E AEILE

FRI&amp;NP.

TO PV.Pt.IC'Ai~
HIS WORK ...

c

------------.
--------- ~
ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR ,.,.
SERVICE call City Furniture _:
304-875-2608 .
86

General Hauling

'I

:I HEAR TELL
\IOU GIVE STAMPS

JONES BOYS WATER SEA·
VICE . Colls61 4 -367· 7471
or 814· 367-0591.

NOW,

THAT'S
RIGHT,
LOWEEZV

SOME
STAMP

·~t"

~:
driveways. top aoil for yards &lt;k.,
&amp; fill dirt. Coli 814-367- ·';
7101 .
•

-:-::-:-:-::-':--:-------- ·- ~

DEPENDABLE WASHER - ~.
DRYER REPAIR . Guoron- '
teed woik. Call anytime - •
614 - 25'6-6620 or · 614 ·
268: 1207.

--------------------..
JIMS WATER SERVICE .

Call Jim Lanier, 304-676- -,
7397.

------- - - - ' :

~=-~~~------~
·· ·
87
Upholstery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave. , Gallipolis.
446-7833 or 448· 1833.

1--~~-----

I

A Break
on a

cru~h

high s chool football star.
'The Amateur'
(1)700 Club
CII ESPN's NCAA Tonight
Cll Ill 1I21 Too Close for
Comfort Henry has to move
in with his mother~in- law
whOn Andrew gets the
chicken _EOX . (R)
0 (I) ®l Simon &amp; Simon
The Simons are hired by a
murder suspect that their
chum Janet is prosecuting .
(60 min .)
Cll (fi) Mystery/ 'Lim.bo
Connection .· Mark plans to
meet Clare a t their weekend
cottage but Clare never arrives . (60 min./ [Closed Captioned]
Ill MOVIE: 'Linle caesar·
9 :30 II Cil C1J Cheers Diane pro·
fesses a desire fQr a confi~
dant and Carla whispers a
wild s10ry . IAI
(I)
NCAA
Basketball
Championship: Regional
Semifinals - Game 2
Cll Gl (f2l It Tokes Two
Molly becomes the targe1 of
her best friend ·s fiancee ,
10:00 II (}J C!l Hill Street Blues
Cap1 . Furillo saves Lt . Goldblume' s badge and Renko
meets the girl of his dreams.
IRI (60 min.)
(}J MOVIE: 'The Boys in
Company C'
Cll Gl II2I 20/20
0 Cll ®l Special Eddie
Rabbit
Eddie's
special
guests are Anne Murray.
Donn~ Surr-,m_
er end Lesley ·
Ann Warren . 160 min .)
(I) Avengero
(fi) Nawswatch
10:1 5 I]) TBS Evening News
10:30 (I) Star Time &lt;Ill cross Country Ski
School
fiiiNN News

Cil MOVIE:

E &amp; R Troe Service, fully
Insured , free estimates . '
Phone 614-357-0636 . call
after 6 .

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

II Ill C1J Gimme
Julie develops a

...

MOWREYS Upholotory At .
Auto paint job, ., 50 to 1 Box 1 24, Pt. Pleuant,
1200. eon 448-0388.
-304-676-4164.
__ ,

. .

NYLOP

rJ

I tJ

1

LIGARC

tJ

I I I

I CEVIED j
I I K

PEANUTS

TOMO~ROW'S CUR FIRST

6AME, CHUCK .• ! WANT
YOU TO 60 HOME AND
GET A 6000 REST•.•

BUT DON'T TAKE YOUR
COSTUME OFF! I WANT
YOU TO THINK PELICAN i
AMP 8E PELICAN!

"THINK PELICAN •.
BE PELICAN::.

11:oo II Cil Cll 0 1D ®l Ill 1I21

Newa
On Location:
An
Evening Robin Williams
The famous comedian performs live et San Francisco's
Great American Music Hall.
C!l News/Sports/Weather
(I) Dave Allen et Large
&lt;Ill Sign Off
Ill Benny HIU Show
11:30 II Cil C!l Tonight Show
(I) Another Ufe
(I) ESPN SportsCenter
(I) MOVIE: 'The Bedford
Incident'
Cll Benny Hill Show
0 Cll (jJ NcAA Baaketball
Champlonohlp
Toumamem:: Western Regional
Semlflnela
(I) Sign Off
Gl (jJ Nightline
aounlflloka .
~ 2:00 (I) Bumo &amp; Allen·
Cll Nlghtllne
Ill (jJ l.aet Word.
12:15 Cil MOVIE: 'Confessions
of a Driving lnotructor'
12:30 U Cil C!l Late Night with
David Latterman
Cil Five American Guns
The stories of five people
who used guns are told in
this doCumentary.
(I) Jack Bonny Show,

Cil

CE.~iAII)ILY' AN
OCCA~ION

FO/f:

EATINIS OUT.
Now anenge 1ho clrdod lettera 10
fonn tho aurprl.. an._, as sug·
gosted by lhe abowe cartoon.

Print answer here:

A(

I XlJ XJ

(Answoro tomorrow)
Yesterday·s Jumbles: LOONY .PAPER MOTHER LADING
Answer: A doctor who specializes ln this often stans
.
from scratch-DERMATOLOGY

I

Jumble Book No. 20, containing 110 puultl, Is awall:~ble tor $1 .95 postpi!ld
lrvm Jwnble, clo thla newspaper, Box :W, NOtWood, N.J. 078d. Include /OUr
n1me, ~ddress, zl .code and INikl ch•ck• ayst.le to New
._

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Well-planned play pays
NOI\ TH

3-2&lt;·83

+ to52

.9 6

fAK854
tAJ9

EAST
+Q

WES'I:

tKJ 8 7

.K Q J 10
.87542
fJ6
• Q 10 9 3
+843
rt-752
SOUTH
+A9643

.A3
f72
• KQ

to s

Vulnerable: Both
. Dealer: South
West

North

East

Soutb

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+
3+
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+
4+

Opening lead:

i+

•K

By Oswald Jacoby
aad James Jacoby

t ry .

Get your carpet in ship
shape. Water removal, FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
ST~AMER 614-446-2107 :

-Now
- - - -hauling
------ - - -- - for
lime1tone

76

NEI'I, 0~,
VENTURE ..
.l'lHAT IS IT?
THIG

·A Preview of the Reg ional
Semifinals.·
Cil Andy Griffith
C!l No-/Sports/Weather
(I) ®3-2-1. Contact
IJIII Chariie'a Angels
6: 30 . II (}J C!l NBC News
Cil Braingames This show
is a cross between a v ideo
game amd a game s how ..
(I) MOVIE: ' Outlaw of Red
River'
(I) ESPN SportsCentar
(I) Garner Pyle
Cll G (f2l ABc News
0 (I) ® cBS News
Cll Dr. Who
&lt;Ill Over Easy
7:00 II Cil P.M. Magazine
Cil HBO Magazine
(I)
NCAA
Basketball
Championship: Regional
Semifinals - Game 1
(l) Portrait of America:
Georgia The sporil of 1he
'Old South ' permeates the lifestyle of modern Georgiahs
from the remote beauty of
Cumberland Island to the
skyscrapers of A11anta. 160
min .!
Cll Entertainment Tonight
C1J Charlie' s Angela
0 CIJ Tic Tac Dough
(I) (fi) MacNeil-lehrer
Report
®l News
Gl (f2l People' s Court
1!111 Star Trek
7 :30 IJ (}J Ue Detector
Cil World Figure Skating
Championships:
Exhibi·
tion of ChampiOns
Cil MOVIE: ·Guys and
Dolle'
Cll D Cll Family Feud
[I) Business Repon
®l You Asked For It
(fi) Space Age Technology
Gl (f2l Entertainment
Ton!ght
B:OO II Ill C1J Sheena Easton:
Act I Sheena '·s guests are
Kenny Rogers and AI Jarreau . (60 min .I
(]) I Spy
ill MOVIE: 'Lonely Are the

Cil Gl II2I Condo

1980 KX 1 2&amp;. good condl·
tion. 304-876-3308.

14ft. aluminum bass boat.
Oelu•e ...ta, live well,
atoraga, carpeted with new
troller. Coli 446-41 63 .

GHI21

Brave'

Need something hauled
away or something moved? .
We'll do it . Call446-3159o ~ , .. _.
814-256-1967 after 6.
-·

Boats and
Moton for Sale

HJMGaF, l'iE'LL 6E ffEAOY Tl106E OF
FOR THE NEXT GTEP IN A THE MEN
MfiSSIVE NEW
I'IHO I'IIGti
/Iff"= Til'""" 1
TO oT0/1'{ ME IN
"r"r"7 "'-'"-"·_,.. Tf116 'lfrfTURE 1'1/LL
Bf WELCOI4E.

&lt;i

400 KDX w-leath8rs and
helmets, axe. cond . 400
milu. 304-876-6768.

76

.. ONCE F100 HA~ PROVED

RON 'S Teklvision Service . ·
Specializing in Zenith and !
Motorol• . Ou•z:ar. and ~
houae calla. Coli 576-2398 ,
or 446 · 2464 .
·'

1978 Suzuki 650 hoo boon
reeked. make offer. Call
458-1997.
1 9BO Kowoaaki 440 LTD
like new. 3,600 miles. Price
11,000. Coli 814-9928317.

(JJ

(I) Tic Tao Dough
(I) Coli . Basketball Report

~--~------------- .

B1

Cl CiliD 8 ID
Nj~WS

1974 Apache fibarglooo pop
up sleeps 6, air cond., · .
furnance, stove, good condi·
lion . Coli 614-246-9163. •

1978 Mercury Bobcat atati onwagon f1 800. 2 blocks
fro,n Maple Drive Inn . 304675-7309 .

b
1&gt;=--=----·. .

'f)~j

THURSDAY

1972 22 ft . Storcreft .
camper. ex. cond .• $2 ,600.
Call 676-1824 .
·

200 bates of hoy o1 .76 bolo.
Tractor &amp; farm machinery &amp;
lumbar. Call&amp;! 4·3BB· B4B3
or 1-471 -1472 .

64

Television
Viewing

•

F11rm Equi"ment

The

1978 Storcroft fold down
camp8f. sleeps 8 , like new.
Call 814-266-1142.

197B, 21 ft. Motor Home.
less th•n 10,000 miles.
cli!lan. automatic, PS, PB,
AM ~ FM 8 track. 4 speakers; ,
reduced to 12.000 or ba""'
offer. 304-882 -2730.
••

•

Ohio

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Reese-Weight distributingj.
hitch, receiver. dual-cam
sway control, electric brake
control. 5425 . Call 614'
367 -7412 , or 614 -3677242 .

·p -1

1983

DICK TRACY

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

Good quellty hoy. Navar
wet. Contact Op.l FitzPa·
trick, St . Rt . 689. Phone
Wilkoovillo 614-869-3785 .

LO•dar-Masny Fergu1on 1
wk. 3116 w~h forko. Coli
614·245-5B04.

March

Thursday, March 24, 1983

n83 .

6 14-388-9060 .

lot on Da vis Rd., 200 by
200. $1 ,000 . Call 446·
4684 .

64 Misc. Merch11ndise 64 Misc. M•rch!lndise

Cut up slabs fo r firewood
816 pick up load. CoD
614-246-6804.

Al.REAOY-l!CCNSEP

fiel ds. S45,QOO, M ust sell ,
reaso nable off er. 3 bdr.

Ohio

The Professor studied the
hand for almost hall a min·
ute before taking his ace of
hearts. This was such a long

time for the ·Professor to
take that the student got up
to watch the proceedings.
Then the Prof cashed his
ace of trumps and )ed a second trump toward dummy's
10.
West went up with the
iack and led his queen and
Jack of hearts. The nine of
clubs was chucked from
dummy while the Prof
ruffed tn his own hand.
The next three tricks went
to dummy's ace-king of diamonds and ace of clubs: The
jack of clubs was overtaken
by the queen and the king-10
of clubs continued.
West finally had a chance
to ruff, but it was too late.
The only trick he could get
was his king of trumps.
"Sorry I took so long at
trick one," said the Prof. "I
had to plan the whole play."
He had indeed. The trump
play was the standard beSt
play with that combination.
The .rest of the play was the
only_way to keep West from
getttng three trump tricks.
Note that on the chance
West might hold only two
clubs, the Prof's club discard had set up dummy lor
an over,rufl of the eight.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

.6Lmw'tHA'
THOMAS JOSEPH
by

DOWN
1 Cacciatore

ACROSS -

1 --vis
5 Diagram

meat

IO City in Judah 2 Slteltered
11 Actor Cesar
13 Confederate
14 ExpWJged
15 Bulgarian

·bay

3 Major

llarbara 's
group
coin
4 One of
16 Barrie's
the Carters
Yesterday's Aruiwer
Peter
5 Wrinkle
16 Boatswain's 30 Gennan
17 BoWlder
6 Clarion, e.g.
whistle
style cake
18 Tapestry
7 Candlenut
19 Chaplain
32 BoWJdary
20 UnmaMerly
tree
20 Distaff ruff 34 Nail
2I 8 Military
23 Get wet
36 lndian
recorder
effort
24 Watch it!
fodder
%2 Slippery
9 Foot lever
25 Make over
plant
beings
12 Most
27 Gennan
37 Actress
23 Elapse
Wlusual
art songs
Scala
25Convened
anew

26 Needy
27 Author Carlo
28 Solitary
29 That is
. (1..8t:') .
31 Assam

t;;-;---t---r-

tribesman

32 Tolstoy
33 Eugene Debs
was one
(abbr. )
35 Squalid
37 "Georgy-"
(1967 song)
38 Merciful

m-t-t--ttr.-i-+-

39 Whit
40Mary Moore
n Over again

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'J'E- Here's
,

Ia

how

to

work

It:

AXYDLBt\AXR
LONGFELLOW

One leiter simply, stands for another. In this sample A"';'[1
. used lor the three L's. X tor I he two O' s, elc. Single leiters
apostrophes, the length and formalion of lhe words are ali
hlnta. Each day the code letters are different.

CllYPTOQVOTES

QICKLWOXJH
QIND

XN

XQEILDWHD

CXTDXIHWLM .

rHK
AILCN

WFGLKC

I G

XH

DSK
DSK

WLQWHC

QIHDWEKLD
Yesterday's

Cryploquote:

WE

DON'T

BELIEVE

IN

RHEUMATISM AND TRI.{E LOVE UNTlL AFTER TilE FIRST
AT:rA.CK.~EBNER ESCHENBACH

�Thursday, March 24, 1983

Pomeroy-· Middleport, Ohio

Poge-12- The Daily Sentin4;!1

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Marauderettes have
nine letter winners

Easter meal
suggestions ...

Weekly sermonette
Page 6
•

BEGINS FRIDAY, MARCH 25th AND CONTINUES THROUGH SATURDAY, APRIL 2nd
SELECTIONS
ARE EXCELLENT -.- SAVINGS ARE TREMENDOUS ON CLOTHING
.
FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY
EASTER SALE!
EASTER SALE!

EASTER SALE!

MEN'S
KNIT SHIRTS

LITTLE GIRLS'

Camisoles, Ha~ Slips and Full Slips.
Sizes 32 to 50 and Smal thru XXL

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

CHILDREN'S

EASTER HATS

JACKETS

SALE PRICED$
FROM ONLY

·21 9

$14.35
$19.95
$23.95
$31.95

Support can be Beautiful"' bras
including No Body's Perfect"' bras.
· "Thank Goodness it Fits""' bras,
Free Spirit"' bras and bottoms.
Instead'" bras,
Cross Your Heart"' Playtops"' sports bras, j
Playbottoms"' sports P9nties,
and Double Diamonds~ girdles

EASTER SALE/

LITTLE BOYS'

EASTER SALE!

Men's Dress
SlACKS

OUTFITS

..

~\ .

You'll like this newselection in fashion
s~id colors and neat patterns. Waist
sizes 30 to 42 and extra large size 44 to

\

One and two p~e outfits 1n
polyI cotton blends and kn~ Sizes NB
to 24 mos. and 2 to 4.

i

..

-- \

50.

sovs·

June primary elections will be held in bOth
Pomeroy and Middleport.
This was evident Thursday evening.. the deadline
for candidate tuing--wlth the Meigs County Board of
Elections.
In Pomeroy, both Democrats and Republicans will
have primaries while in Middleport there will be only
a Republican primary.
On the Republican side of the ledger in Pomeroy,
three candidates are seeking the nomination to run
for mayor in the fall and four Republicans seek the
nomination to run for council.
Mayor candidates are Clarence Andrews, incum·
bent; Roger Manning Davidson and Richard D.
Seyler. The nominee in the fall will be opposed by the
winner of a two-man Democrat race for the
nomination of that party. Democratic mayor
· candidates are Kenny K. Klein and WiUiam C.
Quickel. .
Two seats on Pomeroy Village Council are open
this year. Four Republicans seeking nomination to
run in the fall Include two women, Brenda Kae
Neutzling and Ila Juanita Rusche!. Other Republican
ca ndidates ate Bruce Reed. incumbent, and Henry J.
Wer ry. The Democrats have one candidate ~king
nomination and he Is incumbent , Dr. H. D. Brown.
The Democratic nominee will be opposed by the two
Republicans in the.fall. ·

DRESS PANTS

SALE PRICED

Fashion pants of 50% cotton, 50%
polyester permanent press. Navy blue,
dark brown or tan accented by a
striped belt and brass buckle

Men's $15.95 Slacks .... Sale $12.60
Men's $19.95 Slacks .... Sale $15.70
Men's $24.95 Slacks .. Sale $19.70
Men's $29.95 Stacks .. Sale $23.60

EASTER SALE!

JUNIOR
DRESS SALE

BOYS'
SHIRTS

Sundresses, 2 pc. sets, short sleeved
dresses: 2 pc. mini-skirt outfits,
sleeveless dresses and fancy dresse~
Jr. Sizes 3 to 13 and S, M, l.,

This sa~ is on all of oor boys spring
short sleeve shirts kn~s. dress shirts.
sport shirts and westerns. Sizes B,lo
20. Stock up now for Easter, Spring
and Summer wear.

• SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

118.95 STUDENT SIZES
(26 to 30 waist) ............. $15.00
$17.95 HUSKY SIZI.. .......... $14.30
$15.95 SUM or REGUlAR
SIZE (8 to 14) .............. $12.70

EASTER SALE!

Boys'
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'

'
\

'

\

EASTER SALE!

LADIES'

DRESS.SALE
Our entire stock of new spring dresses
is included in this sale. Jacket dresses,
su ndresses, ~rty dresses and jacket/skirt sets. Misses sizes. half sizes
and petites.

$4.95 Shirts .. """ .Sale $4.07
$6.95 Shirts ...... ... Sale $5.67
$9.95 Shilts ... "" ..Sale $8.17
$12.95 Shirts ..... Sale $10.57

r
EASTER SALE!

EASTER SALE!

Reg. $23,00
Reg. $34.00
Reg. $42.00
Reg. $58,00

Dresses .... Sale
Dresses .... Sale
Diesses .. Sale
Dresses .... Sale

DRESS SHIRTS

$18.39
$27.19
$33.59
$46.39

WASHINGTON !API - PrPsident Reagan has signed into law a
bill that gives a $4.6 billion booster
shot to the economy in public works
projects and provides additional
billions urgently needed by more
than half the states to continue
paying unemployment benefits.
The House gave float congressional appraval totheanti -recesslon
leg islation late Thursday and the
president signed it shortly after It
arfived at the White House. about
9:30p.m.
With many congressmen eager to
leave town for a 10-day Easter
recess. there was no formal signing
ceremony.
Although the major focus of the
bill is to create jobs, it alsocontalnsa
$5 billion emergency supplemental
appropriation to replenish a special
fund from which 27 states and the
District of Columbia are borrowing
to meet their unemployment compensation payments.
He said 19 states either have
exhausted their unemployment
benefit funds or would today, and
that further juggling of accounts-

EASTER SALE/

Neck size 14\1 to 17 in solids, stripes,
whrte, short sleeve styles in full cut and
tapered looks. An excellent new dress
shirt collection at real savings now.

Boys lightweight Jackets in sizes 8 to
1 20 Some styles are l igh~y lined.
. Pe'rtect for wear now-Snd-lillsumme'r....:
long.

SPRING
HANDBAGS
Beautiful new clutch and shoulder
· bags, canvas. leather, tapestry, lace
and vinyls.

$14.00 Van Heusen
Shirts .................... Sale $10.99
$16.00 Van Heusen
Shirts .............. ...... Sale $12.95
$18.00 Van Heusen
Shirts .... ................ Sale $14.19
$20.00 Van Heusen
Shirts .................... Sale $15.79

Boys' $9.95 Jackets .. ..... Sale $7.75
Boys' $14.95 Jackets .. Sale $11.65
Boys' $19.95 Jackets .. Sale $15.55
Boys' $22.95 Jacket~ .. Sale $17.85

\

MEN'S

LITTLE Gl RLS'

DRESS SALE
Sundresses, 2 pc. outfits, pinafores, 3
pc. coordinates and open stock skirts.
Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to Gx, 7 to

14.
· Reg. $10.00
Reg. $13.00
Reg. $17.®
Reg. $23.00

Dresses ......Sale $7.99
Dresses .... Sale $10.39
DresseL .. Sale $13.59 ·
Dresses .... Sale $18.39

Reg. $5.00 .................. Sale $3.99
Reg. $7.50 ,,,, .............Sale $5.99
Reg. $9.50 ..., ...............Sale $7.59
Reg. $13.00 .............. Sale $10.39
Reg. $19.00 ............... Sale $15.19

EASTER SALE!

EASTER SALE!

SP

SALE

20&lt;Vo Off

Save 20% now on ·Hanes men;s and
boys' underwear. Briefs. T-shirts, boxer
shOrts. Includes · and tails for men
Hanes

SPORT SHIRTS
INCLUDING WESTERNS

'

The resignation of Eileen Buck,
'who Is retjring after teaching 37
years, was accepted when the
Southern Board of Education met In
regular session.
The board also accepted the
resignations of Megan Manuel and
Rita Mathews as cheerleader

MEN'S $10.95 SHIRTS ...................... SALE $8.69
MEN'S $14.95 SHIRTS .................... SALE $11.89
MEN'S $16.95 SHIRTS ..................... SALE $13.39 .
MEN'S $22.95 SHIRTS ..................... SAlE $18.29

advisors~

The board employed · Donald
Dudding and Valerie Jay Hanatlve
as subsltute teachers for the 1982-83
school year and accepted from Mr.
and Mrs. Jef~y Alkire the follow-

•O•U01, OH IO

III&gt;IWI .J•"

'

- - ·--·........

1 Sec tion. 12 Page•
20 Cents
A Multimed ia In c. New•poper

rising aga in to 67 in 2027.
A pension would still be ava ilable at age 62, out a,t a
bigger penalty than now - the discount from full
benefits would be 30 percent instead of 20 percent.
The measurP also calls for payroll taxes togo up by
almost $40 billion in this decade, although workers
would get a one-year tax credit in 1984 to cushion
them from feeling the bite next year. Workers would
still pay a 6.7 percent payroll tax next yea.r, but
· employers would pay the full 7 percent rate.
The tax was already scheduled to climb to 7.05
percent in 1985 and 7.15 percent in 1986. Ttie
compromise plan would not Change those rates, but
would boost the levy to 7.51 percent in 1988. It would
hii 7.65 percent, as already sched uled, in 1990.
Meanwhile, retirees who have an adjusted gross
income combined with half their Social Security
benefits exceeding $25,001 for individuals or $32,001
for couples would be subject to an income tax oh half
their benefits.
In addition, to new federal workers and employees
of non-profit organizations, the legislation calls for all
current federal judges, and 3,(0] other political
appointees and top government exec11tives, as well as
the presiden t, vice president and all members of

CongreSs to come under Social Securityliext Jan. I.
The bi ll also contains. provisions for a $2 billion,
six-month extension of emergency jobless benefits
due to expire at the end of the month.
Under the compromise agreed to by the conferees,
1.6 miUion jobless workers would get up to 10 more
weeks of benefits if they have exha usted ~'i weeks of
state and federal benefits before April 1.
Among other provisions of the leglsla tion:
-The payroll tax on the self-employed will rise
from the current 9.35 percent to 13.02 percent in
1988-1989.
- In 1992, Social Security will beset ~ part from the
regular federal budget, where it has been since 1968.
- Income from tax-exempt bonds \\(ill be counted
in determin ing thresholds for income tax on pension
benefits.
-After 1990, retirees 6.'i through 69 would lose$! for
every $3 they' earn over cerlain limits. The current
penalty is $1 fo r every $2.
Social Security needs the new rPvenues and benefit
curbs in order to pay its checks on time over the next
few years. The changes also would eliminate ail of the
$1.9 trillion deficit in the old age and disa bility
programs over the next 75 years.

~~-~-- -·-

,.-

- -

.

'.

Ellen Jane Rought, Pomeroy Village Clerk·
Treasurer, has filed .lor nomination to run for her first
term In the position. A Republican, she is now seiVing
in the position by appointment.
While she · is unopposed in June, Rought will be
opposed in the November elections by William E.
Snouffer. Democrat, who is unopposed in his bid for
the nomination of hls party to run for the
clerk-treasurer's post. There wUI be one person
named to the Pomeroy Board of Public Affairs and
there Is only one candidate. He Is Chester M. Knight,
a Republican.
Middleport has onlY one race upcoming in its June
Republican primary. Three candidates are seeking
the nomination to run for two council seats. They are
Carl J. Horky and William G. Walters, incwnbents,
and Roland E . (Gene) Goodwin.
Republican Mayor Fred Hoffman is unopposed in
his bid for nomination to run for mayor as Is
Republican Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck who ls·seiVing
in the post now by appointment and is seeking hls first
term.
There are to be two members elected the
Middleport Board of Public Affairs this year and
I here are two candidates, both Republicans. They are
Thomas R. Anderson and Lewis H. Sauer. Anderson
is an incumbent.

which was done over the past
several days- was impossible.
Hashlan said federal and state
goyerrunents pay some $100 million
in unemployment benefits dally
under various programs and
added: "We're flat broke."
The recesslon-rellef portion of the
bill contains a provision ensuring
that about $2 billion of the money
will go to areas hardest hit by the
recession.
.
The measuree also provides
about $325mUllon in food and shelter
for viet ims of the longest recession
since World War ll, as well as
several hundred million dollars
more for social programs.
It contains $1 billion in Commun·
ity Development Block Grants to
local governments, of which $375
mlllion may pay for public seiVlce
lobs. That was pushed by women's
groups con(:!erned that men would
benefit from the public works
money In the bill.
Most of the rest of the money will
be used for a variety of construction
projects, including flood control,
highways, Veterans Adminlstra·

lion hospital repa ir, airport im·
provements and Tennessee Va lley
Authoriry programs.
Congressional aides estimate the
bill will create tens of thousands of
jobs, many of them in hard-pressed
regions. But officials were unable to
say precisely what type work would
be created.
Many of the jobs will be in the
construction trades for building
highways, repairing hospitals and
completing other he11vy construe·
tion projects: Those jobs will go
mainly to highly skilled construe·
lion workers.
The blll also provides money for
distributing surplus food and establlshlng shelters for the homeless.
There was noestimateof how many
people would be helped .
Politically, the legislation was the
new Congress' first attempt to
alleviate the lmpa,ct of the long
recession. It represented a com·
promise between Reagan, who
began the year opposing a traditional jobs bill, and ccingressional
Democrats, many of whom wanted
to spend much more.

ANNUAL BANQUET Members of the Meigs FFA
chapter held their annual appreciation banquet Wednesday
night. Presiding over the ..Vent
before reHnqulshlng their posts
to the new omcers were front
row, left to right, Greg Bolen,
president; Rodney Tripp, vice
president; Tony GUkey, secretary; back, I to r, Craig BoHn,
treasurer; Bill Holcomb, parlla·
mentarian; Mike Goegleln, student advisor, and James parker,
reporter. Retiring sentinel, Tim
LeMaster, Is not pictured. At
bottom right, James Miller,
principal of Meigs lfigh School,
was presented a special award
of a pen and pencU set by
ROOney Tripp, vice president, at
the annual Meigs lfigh School
Future Farmers of America
parent and member banquet
Wednesday night. The award
was In appreciation for help
given the Meigs Local PTA by
MIUer durln,g the past school
year.

Trial date set in sexual assault case

David L. Carr, D.O., the Point
Pleasant physiciah indicted by a
Putnam County grand jury earlier·
. this month on charges offirst degree
sexual assault and two counts of
ing items for the kindergarten to atlend the OSBA Southeastern armed robbery, is scheduled togo to
classes-- a ·toy kitchen stove, Region Spring Conference at Ohio irlal on May 31, a spokesperson
.from the Putnam County Circuit
refrigerator, sink, games, puzzles, University on April6.
The
board
set
the
wages
of
the
·
Clerk' s office said this morning.
records, books, toys and dolls.
subsltute
bus
mechanic
at
the
same
The board, In other business,
Carr entered pleas of not guilty to
rate as that of the buldlng and all three counts before Putnam
hired the seiVices of The Personal
ground maintenance position elfec· County Circuit Judge James Holll·
SeiVIce Insurance Co., Columbus,
as Insurer · for student ·accident · .uveAprll I.
day in a 10-mlnute hearing yester·
The board set up new rules and
day afternoon. the spokesperson
insurance for 1983-84; and liability
regulations for the cheerleaders · said. Pre-trial motions will be held
lrisurance for board members from
and approved an energy audit to be March 28 and arguments on
Republic Franklin.
sent to the Ohio Energy motions, March 31. Carr Is not
The board granted approval for
Department.
required 'to be present at those
board members, treasurer, assistproceedings.
·
ant treasurer and superdintendent

Veteran Southern teacher to retire ,

Short sleeve styles in solid colors, stripes and patterns.
Campus, Wrangler and Van Heusen brands. You'll like the
selection and the savings during this sale.

Eli.,/•ltls

.'

Before the final vote, Senate Majority Leader
Howard H. Baker Jr:, R-Tenn., pleaded for support.
With action completed on the biU, Congress has left
town for a 10-day Easter recess.
The way was cleared for final congressional action
after negotiators bargained for nearly 12 hours
Thursday to hammer out a compromise version of
the legislation which had previously passed the
House and Senate.
But in the Senate, legislators grumbled that their
neogitators had given up too much to the House, and
that the package relies too much on increased taxes.
The conferees dropped the Senate's "fall-safe"
mechanism - devised by Long - which would
automatically have reduced cost-of-living ,increases
if tbe Social Security trust funds ran low.
Sen&amp;te conferees also agreed to drop their plan to
raise the retirement age to 66 by the year 2015 and cut
future pensions by 5.3 percent at that point. Instead
they agreed to the House position of gradually raising
the retirement age to 67 in the next centu ry.
That provision would affect everyone born in 1938
or later. The retirement age would hit 66 in the year
2009 for those born in 1943. There would be no change
for almost a decade, but then the age would start

Reagan signs jobs legislation

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN

Boys' Spring
JACKETS

enttn·e

June primaries certain

EASTER SALE!

REG. $4.00 TO $19.50

at y

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 25 , 1983

WASHINGTON (AP l - Congress sent President
Reagan a landmark plan today to assure Social
Security solvency into the next centu'ry by making
workers pay more into the system. increasing the
retirement age by two years and taxing benefits.
Shortly before midnight Thursday, the House
approved the compromise $165 billion package
243-102. Then a 58-14 vote in the Senate early today
ended two years of partisan congressional conflict
over the explosive Issue, and will avert the impending
collapse of the system which seiVes 36 million
beneficiaries .
The legislation, which Reagan has embraced and is
. expected to sign soon, follows the blueprint lald out
two months ago by the 'National Commission on
Social Security Reform including:
-Higher payroll taxes in 1984, 1988 and 1989.
-A six-month delay in July's cost-of-living
increase in benefits.
-A first -ever levy on benefits going to more
affluent retirees.
-Mandatory Social Security coverage for new
federal workers and employees of non-profit
organizations.
· -An increase in the current retirement age of 65.

20%0fF==

Add that extra touch to their Easter .
outfit w~h an Easter bonnet or hat
Infant and Toddler sizes.

Ideal lor spri ng and summer wear .
Unli ned and lightly lined fashion and
basic styles. Sol1d colors and two and
three tone color combinations. Sizes S,
M, L XL and XXL.

2

$ 99

spring Sae

EASTER SALEI

MEN'S
LIGHlWEIGHT

••

·House approves Social Security bill

Nvlon or cottom ha~ slips and full slips.
12 to 24 mos., 2 to 6X, 7 to 14.

~zes

Reg. 14.00 ...... Sale s3.39
Reg. 16.00 ...... Sale ss.o9
Reg. 19.00 ...... Sale s7.69
Reg. I 14~00 ... Sale s11.89

EASTER SALE!

Voi.Jl ,No.230
Copyrighted )q83

SLIPS

LADIES' SLIPS

Dress Kn~s - Casual Looks- Tank
Tops - Cut Offs - Jeans Shirts And manv more. Sizes S, M, l., and XL
Entire stock induded in this Easter
Sale. Short Sleeves.
Men's $6.95 Shirts ........Sale $5.49
Men's $9.95 Shirts .. ...... Sale $7.89
Men's $12.95 Shirts .... Sale $10.29
Men's $14.95 Shirts .... Sale $11.89

Men's $17.95 Jackets .. Sale
Men's $24.95 Jackets .. Sale
Men's $29.95 Jackets .. Sale
Men's $39.95 Jackets .. Sale

e

.

'

"

Carr is free on a $50,(0] bond sel
by Judge Holliday March 11.
He was indicted following a state
police invest iga tion of the rape of a
Fraziers Bottom woman. In addi·
lion to the sexual assa ult charge,
Carr is also charged with robbing

the woman and h&lt;'r husband of ,j;.l
and $26, respect i,·c t~· . al gu npoint.
Th~ alleged crim Ps look placp .
Jan. 8. according lo state police C'pl.
R.E. O'Dell, who ronduct!'d th&lt;'
investigation and appeared b&lt;'fore
the grand jul')·.

Cool weather will continue
Cool wea ther will continue. with lots of sunshi nl' in most at'(''"
today. Temperatures will drop into the 20s OV&lt;'I' the sia l&lt;' ronight.
Sou theastC'rly winds ahead of an approaching low pn•, sur 'i' s,,·sl&lt;•m
will bring a warming trend Satu rday, wilh afternoon r&lt;'adings in llw
40s and low :iOs. Clouds will spread in ahead of lh&lt;• I0\1', and h,·
Saturctay afternoon some rain Is likely in WC'sl&lt;'rn Ohio. ThP
extended forecast calls for a chanc&lt;' of ra in or sno\\' &lt;'arh da~ · .
Sunday through Tuesday with highs in the 40s.

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

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