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                  <text>More coal letters

· · bv ·Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP.
WE LIVED IN AU51'RALJ,A..
FOR El6d-IT VEAR.I,S AND

Page 2

..

•

IN I.JA~ ~FI\A::.

•

• Voi.31,No.241 ·
Copyrighted 1983

FOR FOUR yt;AR5...

'

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP staff
Wll.KESVll.LE - Citizens Organized Against Longwalllng (COAL)
feel the Issue between themselves and Southern Ohio Coal Co. Is one lJ;l
which sides should not be taken.
COAL officials made the statement Sunday In response to a resolution
passed by several Meigs County civic Ixxlles supporting approval of a
mining permit filed by the company with the Ohlo Department of Natural
Resources' reclamation d(vl.$Ion .
"We're not children playing games," explained Betty Wells, COAL
president. "Deep down, I don't think sides should be taken."
Mrs. Wells said she'belleves officials who have approved the resolution
- whlch Include the Meigs county commission, Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce and Middleport, Pomeroy and Syracuse village councils - are
not getting the full story .
She said they may not be aware of what the permit application is, what
COAL's position is in the matter and may believe In a feeling In the area
that COAL is opposed to all further mining at Meigs Mines, one of the
area's largest employers.
"Most' likely, they don't have a real grasp of what's going on.'' said .lay
.WamSley, one.of COAL's attorneys. "if they knew, I don't think they would
approve the same resolution."
Officials endorsing the resolution have called attention to serious
economic problems if Iongwalllng Is stopped at the mln.es. DaveMulllns, a
COAL spokesman, said merchants may not recognize that the areas the
company plans to mine may be exhausted sooner than expecteli.
If I had a business, I'd be concerned about keeping the coal running and

i.

•'

•

ilia'

Ed

''

S.ORRY,
. riA I\OT PLAYING
nilS PART, HOLLYHOCK,
STUART. IT
AND THATS FIN.A.Ll
VvON'T HAPPE.N
AGAIN.""~""

JU'5T Gar'
CARRIED

AWAY:'

I /v\J'Y.N, THIS 19

'YOU

CALL IT A TR'IOOT"E

0"--LY A CHURCH PLAY,
6UT lrOJR INTERPREIATIOI'l

10 "TTUR .O.CTING
A61LITV.'

WHY 17 STUART

WELL"·
O&lt;AY.

50 UPSET?'

OF THE;: C:CXS'S CHARACTER
UFTS ITFARA~VE ~T 1

.HES HAVING A
HARD TIME
REMEMBERING
Hlq, LINES·"

... .ANI/ EVERY TIME HE:
FLUFFS ONE, HOLLYHOCk
5MACK5 HIM WIIH A

FOLDED NEWSPAPER!

PRINTED IN CANAOA

DUSTY CHAPS
'M:;VL.D '/OlJ ADVAH(;f.
M~ A FE:W BOC.KS

TlL.L. PA'IDAV ~

0&gt;

u~ w~"!'JE=t+-INTfNTION~o,
SUi ~LL. IN
A. BAD ·

wrrn

by Art &amp; Chi

~------------~----~~
BUT r..'M fJOCJ) FOJ' IT... ~'r yOU AAVE:
ANY COMPA?SIQ.J '?
~~?
lET M~ ~LL 'IO.J

Sansom

M'/~MARRIW

'lOUNb Feu.ow, NOr
ONLI~

'IOU,,

ALITTI...f::

HE CWED A ~ltib ~
AND OJJ.E. 10 ME I li\(.1:0
WITH LC&gt;.;INE; Ht:7 CAR •••

1 Se-dion , 10 Page•
20 Cenfl
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 11, 1983

keeping money coming In," he said. "Bul they (the company) are going to
mine it out a lot sooner. If they do this, destroy the community, !tnlsh up
here, and then move out, what wllllocal bll$1ness have Iefl? Do you go
along for 12 or 15 years and then close down when the mining company
.
moves out?''
In a move to make COAL ·s s1and known , Mn;. Wells said she has
requested to meet with all organizations that have passed tbe l»solulion for
time at each group's next meeting.
She said there also plans to arrange a telephone call-In program on
WMPO Radio with two COAL members, two company officials . and
listeners. If arrangements are finalized, the program maY'be broadcasl
sometime within the next two weeks.
In the meantime, It was a nnounced !hat Larry Malone, chief of ODNR's.
reclamation division., will meet with COAL members Tuesday and take a
tour of areas which have been damaged.
Speaking to the group Sunday Was Bob Wills, preslden1 of Vinton County
National Bank, who cl&lt;!rifled a statement on the Iongwalllssue published
"without m y knowledge" in a recent edition of the Athens Messenger.
Wllls told the group he made the statement as a private indtvklual and
not on behalf of the bank. The bank operates a branch at WUkesvUie at
which Wills estimated nearly 1,001 miners have savlnjlS accounts.
W!Us said he urged ODNR .IP ta~e a stand on the issue a nd .C!»aiP .
regulations controlling surface damage caused by mining .
The bank official said he agreed that Iongwalling "is the thlng that has
arrived, just !Ike the automobile," but said if damage will be caused by
Ionpalllng, the company should also own the land U is mining under.
"The big mine has brollf'ht considerable prosperity toou,r area. This ca n
continue if the property owner's rights are respected.'' he said .

Flood warnings given

$1 million sought
in Meigs lawsuit
PLEA?E CDME 6ACK
~AND LEIS TRY THE ,..,__,
SCENE .AGAJ N.

enttne

COAL opposes actions
taken in mining dispute

HEY; WAITA MINUTE' ..:tHAT
WOLIL.D MAkE 'JOL1 ALNOOr
1"H IRTY YS'.R6 OLD!

IN~ENTINA

•

at

e

-··

OH 1 AND VIE LIVED

County Agent's
Comer.....

Bench's bat smoking

~LL'f.

AND I DIDN
61VE; I-IlM A LOA~ I

---.. E:ITHE:I2.

A $1,00l,OOl breach of contract
lawsuit has been filed in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Flllne the action were Stone
Woods, LTO. an Ohio llmlted
partnership; Arthur H. Winer,
general partnew of Stone Woods,
LTD, and Arthur Howard Winer.
Marietta, against Benedict, Bowman, Craig and Moos, soils engineering consultants, Columbus;.
Sonj 1 L. Herzberg, registered Columbus architect, and Cardinal
Industrles, Inc., Columbus.
Plaintiffs state In 1979, they were
awarded a construclion contract by
the Fanners Home Admlnistra tion
to.)&gt;Uild a 41 unltapartmentcomplex
In Middleport .
Subsequent to the award by the
Fanners Home Administration, all
of the plaintiffs contracted with the
defendant Benedict, Bowman.
Craig and Moos to undertake a
subsurface Investigation and provide for the plaintiffs a subsurface
analysis with respect to the proposed construction.
Plaintiffs charge the defendant's
report failed to advise them of the
subsurface and surface soU condi·
!Ions and physical properties of soU
strata which might bring about a
landslide condition durtng the
construction of the project. Plaintiffs say they would not have gone
forward wtth the construction oftbe
41-untt complex had they been
properly advised. They charge that
as a result of the defendant's breach
of contract on April 9, 198~. a
massiVe landslip occurred · on the
northern slope of the project site
whlchresul~ in thedeletlonofllof
the originally comtemplated 41
units. Plaintiffs further charge that
as a result of the breach of contract
they sustained other damages
including additional costs .wtth
respect to a new site plan; new
grading plan, new utility plan, new

By The Associated Press
The storm thai pf()duced fioods in the Deep South was causing
rivers to rise in the Northeast today, and fiood warnings were in effect
in parts of southern and central New England.
Rain extended from eastern and southern New York state across
much of New England by early mornlnr. Rain also was scattered
over West Virginia. VIrginia and Maryland and throughout the Ohlo
Valley.
Snow developed in the. mountains of sciuthwest Wyoming and
stockmen's advlsortes were posled from Idaho across Utah for cold
rain mixed with snow today and tonight.
Generally, skies were fair over the remainder of the nation.
In Louisiana, the Pearl River, swollen by heavy rains. began
Inching down from Its record fiood stage Sunday - but still was
reported rtslng In subdivisions nanking the New Orleans suburb of,
Slidell.
The fioodlng around Slidell followed a tbree-&lt;lay deluge last week
that drenched Louisiana and Mississippi a nd brought near-record
noocts to New qrieans, Baton Rouge and a number of small
communities.
Water remained high today in about 200 Ascension Parish homes
along the Amite River eastofBaton Rouge, and some roads remained
under water.
Rain, heavy at times, was expected to · taper off later- today in
eastern New York and New England. Scattered rain was fo recast
through the central and northern portions of the Rockies and Cenlral
Plateau.
Ooudy to mostly cloudy skies were predicled for much of the
Southwest while skies were expected to tum fair In the central a nd
southeastern United States.
Below normal temperatures were forecast for the western third of
· .·
the nation.
Temperatures before dawn ranged from 26 degrees In Kalispell.
Mont., to 671n Key West, Fla.

parking plan. new footings plan,
new landscaping plan, new roadway, relocation of underground
utilities, construction interest In·
creases, construclion delays, construction ovemm, overrunning acquisition costs, loss of profits, costs
necessary' in order to stabllze the
massive hlll site movement and
additional o ut of pocket
expenditures.
Plaintiff Arthur Howard Winer
claims further damage by virtue of
hls inability to pursue his field of
professional endeavor. loss or
postponement of other slmllar
project awards and damage tn his
professional reputation.
The . plaintiffs allege Sonji L.
Herzberg was contracted to review
and advise tbe plaintiffs of all
omissions and defects In any of the
work performed by any of the
defendants to this action and others
who provided seivtces for the
plaintiff.
Herzberg breached his contract
by approving the work and report of
Benedict, fl!lwman, Craig and
Moos, the plaintiffs charge, faDing
to advise them of soli conditions and
physical properties of the soU strata
on the project site.
Cardinal Industries, Inc., was the
contractor for foundations, buildings, landscaping, etc.; was tn
select all subcontractors !.0 complete those aspects of the project
and in general to supervise and
manare all phases of the construction project, the plaintiffs state.
Cardinal Industries, Inc .,
breached Its contracts by falling to
complete the project as required;
by falllng to select appropriate
subcontractors and by falling tn
supervise and manage aU aspects of
this project, the plaintiffs alleee.
Plaintiffs seek $1,00l,OOl In damages plus Interest, costs of t11e court·
action and attorney fees .

The Forecast For 7 p.m . EST
Tuesday, April 12
·

WEATiiER FORECAST -

near

on Into t11e attic. Damage WIIS&gt;
confined tothecomer()fthehOuSe. It
was reported that the lamiiy was

· Weather forecast
I

pre.

,

Jr.

damage.

The NMIOnal Weather Servloo

forecMt lor Tue1lday pl'l!dkill • rain In !Milo!• of Arizona, Utah,
C&lt;llondo, New Mexico, MOIIUM and ~I· Fluntell are predicted
lor pu111 o1 Ulah, M.._, N'ot111 ~ and Maine. All area of
"'-en Is f~ for Ollnoll. (AP Luerphoio).

Fire causes $4,000 damages
attendingafunerall!tthetlmeo!the
1bere was 110 Insurance
coverage.
·
At 5: 12 p.m. Pomeroy ttremen
were called to the Plealant Rlci&amp;l'
resident c:4 Woody Call,
.ror a
chimney fbJ!. There was 110

Snow[J

•

..

Damage to the home ol the
Geoff€ Pierce family, 116 Vale St.
l'orrleroy, in a rtre Sunday after.
noon was set at$1,00l.
'
Pvmetoy flremel1 went to the
residence at 2:50p.m. to exttngulsh
a fire which started tram an
overhMted pan on t11e rante. ·
Flremefl ~ that a curtain
the stove caught fire which. .
then spread to tl!e wall tl1rOUih the
ceiling into the bathroom above and

Rain ~

.

Tonight partly cloudy. Low 35 to 40. Northwest winds tess than 10
mph. Tuesday mostly sunny and warmer. Hlfh 60 to 65. Chance of
precipitation near 1lei'O percent tonight and TuesdaY•
·
·
~Ohio Outlook
liMdl)' lbroulh F'rtiiQ: Cbaooe olllllowen W""-'•Y and a
, ' • ., olllllowa• or lbuadenlorml ~and Frlcla,y.lfl&amp;haln
tile 101 and 111
'ftunday IUid IJlOIIIIy in
._In lbellllllo iniUIIL

w..

w.m .,, •

*Friday.

·C~ STATEMENT ~ ,, ·i;tat.·•;1&lt;'nl on .ttu· .I!mgwnll L"-"l"'
·made by Bob Wllls, stwnling, .,i·rsldcnl of VInton County Natlnqal
Bank, was chuiflt'f.l . to m••mhers of Citb.(•ns Oq~JUli't,t'd t\gatnst
Longwalllng (COAL) Sunday . Will' sahl h•• favors "Rt&gt;n&lt;'root•'.'
settlement~J hy Southern Ohio foal 01 . for surfat't' darna){t' t 'JUL'!'Pd hy

the subsidence.

'

Point resident
dies in cra·s h
POINT PLEASANT tOVPi - A
28-ycar-oid Poinl Pleasant man was
dead on arrival at Pleasant Va ll&lt;'y
Hospllal la.!e Sa luJ'da;: aflrrnoon,
following ·a single car acc ident on

Poplar Slrect in Poinl Pim ~a n t.
Arco•'ding to thr Poinl Pteasa nl
Police Dl'partment, .la mes David
Leonard apparently dl0d of hrad
Injuries.
Mason Coun1y CornnPr Dr .. lohn

Grubb could no! IJC re arhN:l lhls
morning for a r1Jiing on the f'Xacl

caUS&lt;'ofdea lh .
The polic&lt;' r&lt;'po11 said Lconard
was tyaveUng north on KanJw ha

SI!T'f• l . Ills \'Phlcll' was rounding the
w h('n it fp(t lhl' rnaclway . li P
wa ~ ;q)!Xtrt·ntly fr;JVrl!ng at ilrt
PXt'PSS i\'(' r ail • of Sj)\'(1, thP l'f' JX.lrl
~aid .

('UI'Vf'

Thl' ear. a 1!17:1 1.-ord I.TD station
wagon. lr&lt;~v• · lt 'fl ~XI f('i'f ow·r an
••mban kmf •n 1 all r·r ll ·a\'ing lhP
IHidWa'_\· illld flyi ng , I))OUI ~.,() rt'f'f
through I Itt •air . T ht · \ ' t ·ll lr le ~ l ruck a
1t'f't•tx'fon' ('lH JI i r11 • It) l'f'sl o n it ~ !up.
[.('( mard wa s Pj t'( 'ft'1 l frorn thP
V('h[clf' .

T hf' victim w;t ~ trnn spot·tt'fl to
PVll by thP Point Jllt~; tsant f&lt;nwr
,l!l ' lll 'Y Mt -'(IICi l l ~r v in ·

Assassination suspect
held for questioning
ALBUFE!RA. Portugal 1AP) The Portuguese governm enl said
loday a Moroccan man Is being held
in connection wllh the assassina 1ion
of a leading moderale PLO official
who had advocated peace wllh
•
Israel.
Acting lnlernal Administra tion
Minl, ter Robe110 Carneiro idcntl . fled lhe suspect only as 2&amp;-ycar-old
Al-Awad and sa id the man was a
resident of Casablanca . He declined
to say tf a ut~orll ies believe the
suspect was the gunman who
Sunday pumped five bullets into the
head and chcsl of lssamSartwai,47,
a cardiologisllra ined in lhe United
States.
In Damascus. Syrta, h radical
Palestinian faction which has
broken away from the PLOclalmed
responsibility for the attack on
Sart.awi, who was European coordinator ror tbe Palestine Liberation
Organization.
·
The killer, who was c lad in a light
suit , eluded Immediate capture
despite heavy security at the hotel
where. Sartwal wass shot while
attending the 16th Congress of the
Socialist International In this coastal resort town, 120 mUes southeast
. or Lisbon.
Carneiro said the suspect, carryIng a Moroccan passpo,r t and U.S.
currency, was arrested Sunday
evening at a small hotel in Lisbon
about 11 hOurs after the shooting. He
also said the man identified as
AI·AwadhadenteredPOrtufalfrom
Spalil Oil Friday.
'

Lisbon pollee said the suspect
would appear Tuesday before

m agis ! ra tes wh!l w o uld

Ill IP

If 1h('tl'

were grounds for kt~· pin g him
detained .
InsJX.'CIOr Danl PI 1\Jx:&gt;lonia also
sa id pollr·c wrrr lrying lo lracc the
drlvcr of a 1ax i lhat fl&lt;~i a
Portuguese Nat iona l Guard pal rola
few hours a fl er lhc rmack a1 the
town of Ourlque. 411 mllrs norlh or
Aibufc ira on lhr road lo Lisbon.
Alex Kllson, who was allcndlng
lhP soc ialist confor&lt;•ncP as depuly
general secretmy of Britain's
largest tabor union. the Transp011
anct ..Dencra I Workers. sa id he was
surprised th(•gunman had been able

10 escape from !he hotel.
"r have- nc-vrr S4'"Cn so many
security men at t1 conff'rence as 1
saw at t.hls om•.

' I 1H~ I'l'

must be

repercussions of !his. becausP I his
was a man of peilcr. 11 hulids up !he
hi.te once aga in "
Witnesses said the gunma n
walked up to Sartawi and shot him
live times in the head and chesl. Hls
secretary, Anwar Abu E:isheh. was
hll in the thigh .
People screamed and ran for
cover as Sartawi fell to the floor
beside the rec:eption,deskanddled In
a pool of blood .
The killer fled with national
guardsmen fir ing shots after him . A
policeman chased the gunman
through the streets bul lost him in a
park.
Elsheh said in a radio Interview
that he saw two men run from the
hotel.
Sartawl was a key flf\lre h
contacts between lsraeUs and th•
guerrilla movement.

�·,

I

Commentary
·
·
. .
.

PUg• 2-The Daily s.ntt...,

I

Ill Cuurt Stret-l
Pumnuy, Ohiu
114-HZ-21~

OF.VHTEO TOniE IJ'IITERF-'nm,• THt: MEIGS.MASON AREA

A~
l!l!m~
~v

r-r--..._-.-,,.........do=
.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubiJ !i hl'r

.

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT-WHITEHEAD
~ '"id11nt

Pu hl isht'r/ l 'untrulh-r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'WII&gt; F:.dit ur
A MF.I\1BF:K nf Ttw As..,;uor Wit"'t P rr'li~ . lnhukt Dwil,v Pr~:~ s 1bsttdaliun
Amr-riran Nr'&gt;~IIJ)apt'r l'llblisht'N Ass uf'laltiun.

ll lwi

lhl'

l.t:n F:RS Of OPI NION a no "rknmt:d. Thr y ~ tK~t~ld lw l ~s thwnl(l(l \il·ur!.lli IIIIIJI. All
k·llt'Oi IHI' ~uh~f't tu ~diUn)C alld mulit Dto slp;nl"d with r.Hm.-. Hddrl'l'i" and trlcplH1Ut'
numlwr . N11 uru~ l~nnl I~Urr.1 will be puhiiM ht'd, l ~ ltt:l'tlli hnukl bt: in .(t Hid t.s~ . uddrt'!i!llfltll
i1111ut~. nul~t~=nturuali11d .

•

Today In history
Today Is Monday, Aprtlll, the IOlst dayofl!R'l. There are2&amp;1 days left In
the year.
Today's highlight In tlistory:
On AprU 11, 1951, President Harry Truman relieved Gen. Douglas
MacArthur of his command In the Far East.
On this date:
In 1814, Napoleon Bonaparte abdicated unconditionally as Emperor of
France and was banished to the Isla nd of Elba .
In 1899, the Philippine Islands were transferred from Spain to the United
States as part of the settlement of the Spanish-Ame rican War.
In 1947, Jackie Robinson joined the Brooklyn Dodgers In an exhibition
ga me, becoming the.first black to play for a major league baseball team .
In 1972, an earthquake In southern Iran claimed some 4,001 lives.
Ten years ago: The British House of Commons re jected a bill to bring
back capita l punt;;hment In Britain:
Five years ago: Israel! forces began withdrawing from part of southern
Lebanon In the first move toward compliance with a UN call for comp!Ne
withdrawaL
One year ago: An Amerlcan·born Jewish extremist shot his way Into an
Islamic shrine in J e rusalem, killing at least two people a nd wounding at
least nine others.

Letters· to the editor
Describes former operations
_____
.
'

1 thought! would write this leiter
to the people a nd Council of
Pomeroy.
1 see where two or three
companies want to loa d coal a t the
Swis her Coa l Company locks al
Kerrs Run. 1 feel sorry for Ihe
people at this point . The ma n who
spoke for the companies said he
would enclose everything. That ·
might be true. But still you will get
dust. 1 am no stranger in this kind of
a m atter. Most of you people know
that all I ever did was haul coal or
load It on railroad cars. 1 a Iso
workL&gt;d for Swisher Coal Company
wh11n he had that loading dock..
Now, 1 will get dO\Nll to the fa cts.
There is only one way . If I was the
council or Pomeroy I would make
these companies crush their coal at
the coa l pits. This way there would
be no crushers at this point where
they are loading the coal on barges:
Swisher Coal Company took this
me thod In Jackson County. We

ha uled a nd loaded the coa l on
barges dn the riverbank down from
Smith Buick at Gallipolis .
He had a crusher and power
plant and conveyors mounted on
wheels. He kept a tractor there an.d
as the shovel moved up to the coal
he would pull this equipment up so
the shovel could reach this bin on
this tipple on wheels and crushed
the coal. It went in a btn that held
about 12 tons; from there It went on
a belt to the trucks. That way all the
dll1 was In the pit . This was a
wonderful piece of equipment. This
way the coal was ready for the
barge.
So as you know, after 40 years at
the mines that was the best,
cleanest way to get..coal to the
barges. . ... , ....
If these companies don 't consider
prepar! pg tltell; lm! 'II tbe plts 1~ey
could forget this Kerrs Run project.
-Ben Batey.

Limitations needed too ______
Last week, I spent three days a t a
m eeting of the board of directors of
Coalition for Appalachian Ministry
(CAM). During t.h ose three days we
spent most of our time dealing with
land ownership. la nd use and abuse
a nd the effects of !he current
economic condition regarding the
people and.'the land-of Appalachia.
When I got home, I sat down to
read the papers to catch up on
Meigs County news. I noticed tha t
the Pomeroy Cha mber of Com·
merce and at least two of our local
legislative bodies e ncouraged the
granting of the mining permit to
_Southern Ohio Coa l Company for
continued longwa ll mining In Meigs
and Vinton Counties.
.
This morning, I went to the bank
and discovered a pet.! lion asking for
the gra nting of this permit. I am
deeply troubled by all of this action.
Not because I am for COAL and
against Southern Ohio Coal Com·
pany or for Southe rn Ohio Coal
Company and against COAL, but
because I am for the people &lt;:1. the
world, especially those who ·live In
Appalachia.
' I understand the concern of the
people whose land , .ll,ulldlngs and
ponds are being "ilamaged. I
understand the plight ol the
unemployed miners. I understand
the need for the mines In the
economy of this county. I unde r·
stand that longwall mining Is one of
the safest methods of mining
currently known .
, ·.
BUT, I also know that w ha t
happens In Meigs a nd VInton
· Counties will set a precedent for
governmen\111 approaches to long·
wall mining throughout Appala·
chla (Pennsylvania, Ohio, West
VIrginia, VIrginia, Kentucky, Ten·
nesaee and Ala~ma) . Long gone
are the days when we can say what
happens In Meigs County affeCts
only Meigs County.
The Council of Southern Moun.

I have mentioned the document
of Michael Novak, addreSSed to
those . Amertcan. Catholic bishops
who flirted Impetuously with the
notion that moral e nds could be
served by - In effect - unilateral
disarmame nt. Mr. Novak's docu·
ment, called "Moral Clarity In the
Nuclear Age," Is engrossing prtm·
arlly i)ecause of the cogency of Its
moral argumentation. Butlt Is also
valuable because of .Its superb
collection - and colla tlon - of
tacrs.
We all ~now of someone, either a
private or a public figure, who has
made a great moral point about
his/her refusal to pay taxes for the
purpose of "subsidizing nuclear
arsenals." Those who feel that by
. subtracting from their taxes the
money that goes to maintain our
nuclear arsenal wUI leave them
much better off are In for a terrible
disa ppointment. "E xpenditures on
the research and production of
nuclear weapons by the United
Sta tes since 1945 have been est!·
mated to be less than S400 billion,
about $12 billion per year. In fiscal
year 1983, U.S. expenditures on
nuclear weapons constitute nine
percent of the military budget , 2.9
percent of the entire federal
budget, a nd about 0.6 percent of
G.N.P. Compared to conventional
arms, nuclear arms are vastly less
expensive ."
This Is not a moral argument In
favor of m ainta ining or augment·
lng our nuclear arsenaL But It Is a
sobering re minder of the cost of the
alternative. A reminder which,
moreover. would confront us far
mm·e dramatically than a! present
wi th the argument abdut whether
we should spend the Incremental
dollar to Increase In Europe the
conve ntional strength of NATO

powers sufficient t&lt;r ' equal the
strength of the Warsaw powers, we
would need to Increase spending so
dramatically as significantly to
interfere with state wel!artsm.
The ai-gument so frequently
heard that we are engaging In an
arms race that ,perverts humane
priorities Is simply mlslaken. "The
percentage of world gross economic product being spent on arms
has declined durtng every year
since 1967 .. . In 197!1, the last year
for which figures are available, the
world spent 5.4 percent of Its gross
economic product on arms, down
from 6.7 percent a decade earlier ...

THE

l'RE~I~ENi

• 60 M\I..I..ION

tiona! forces while, part! passu,
diminishing our nuclear forces?
spent on health and welfare
No, says Mr. Novak In address·
programs of vartous sorts durtng
!ng tbe bishops. But It doeS mean
1983 was 51 percent, artd on defense
that we shOuld be aware of the
programs, 26 percent ... In the free
probable consequence of doing so.
And so ' little bY Uttle, at the
nations, monies from all sources
spent on health, education, welfare masterful hands of the author of
and other human services exceed this document, we reach moral,
montes spent on weapons by a theoretical, geopolitical and factual
conclusions. TheY· come down , at
factor of about 20 to one."
Again the question Is asked: Does the end, to this : Is It not an act !lf
this mean that we who believe In
moral Injustice to refuse to help
using force If necessary to preserve others, even as you would help
Western freedom and !ndepend· yourself, to resist aggression? U It
ence should shrtnk from the Is unjust, then prudential !actors
challenge of Increasing our conven· guide you In avoiding a maxlmlza·
r-----~------~tlo~n~of~~~~------·--____
In the United States, for example,

••. COR~tTION ... MAKE
TMAT ~110 MII..\..ION ...

l'io f'K'OPOSING

1

·c ... .

IN .!\\~ FOR
EL. SALVA'POR .. •

(

'

~he ,portion of the f¢eral budget

-.

~

,,,1-\0LPON ... \T'S U?TO
~H77 Mli..LIOI'I " ·

-~wPI! ..

.

'"""*

.

•

ANOTHER 10'11 FOR BENCH - Durtng a game
againSt the .C hicago Cubs Sunday, ClndMatl Reds'
third baseman Johnny Bench got three hits, drove In

wrong·doers. So the departme nt
has been judiciously leaking stories
to the effect that thE' cocaine·ln·
Congress sc~
nd I is really' nothing
to get exclt a ut.
This Is nonse se, of course. l! the
lawmakers who piously procla im
their outrage a t na rcotics a buse are
themselves indulging In Illegal
drug use, the public is e ntitled to see
them prosecuted to the full est
extent of the la ws they have passed.
Here's wha t Hubbard, who
worked closely with my assocl~tes
Jack Mitc hell a nd Indy Bad hwar,
managed to accomplish :
•
- Arrest of the cocaine rtng's
three leaders, one of whom has
been cooperating with a grand
jury.
- Seizure of $250,000 worth of
cocaine.
- Recorded evidence t hat then·
Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr . dis·
cussed narcotics.
- Evidence from three wit·
nesses that Rep. Ronald Dellums,
[).Ca lif .. purchased Illegal drugs. ,
- Evide nce aga in st o lhe r
m e mbers of Congress, Incl uding a t
least one check used to pay for
drugs.
,
- Sworn testimony before a
grand juty and the Hou se Ethics
Committee.

ta lns, CAM, Coa lition for Religion
In Appalachia a nd others · are
wa tching Metgs County closely to
see what happens In Ill is case. I call
for a reasoned approach to this
complicated dilemma we are ln.
True. we need the money the
mines bring ln . True, we need to
protect the propeny of others. I do
believe that SoJI\hern Ohio Coal
WASHINGTON - I seem to be In show ·and-tell 'with his TV a udience.
Com pany will try to deal fairly with
a relatively sma ll mlhorlty, but for But that Is a n Issue for a nother day.
the property owners. Bl!f what
the record: I thought the pres!·
We have heard so many statistics
about the resources that get
denl's speech last month was a In recent months on comparative
damaged and destroyed that beflrst ·rate effol1 . He la id out the levels of U.S. a nd Soviet a tnis that
long to all of us? Water Is not a local
disturbing facts on Soviet military most of us have been pretty well
a nd personal problem. The aqua·
expansion; he defended his own numbed by the figures.· Even so,
firs that get destroyed belong to all
defense budget: a nd In ~Js ,;:losing accepting the presldenl's figures as
of us. How does Southern Coal
few mlnules he touched upon the . accurate, we have to regard the
Com pany reimburse you a nd me
stuff from whic h "Star Wars" are situation as deeply disturbing . T his
for lost or polluted water.
made . I found It Impressive.
was the president's lita ny:
I favor Southern Ohto Coal
But the reaction around here
Since 1969, the Soviet Union has
Company bein g granted a permit
ranged between he-hum and ho·ho.
built fi ve new classes of tntercontin·
for inlnlng · tn Meigs and Vinton
House Democrats rushed to ap. e nta l atomic mi ss iles; we have
Counties. But I also want some
prove a budget tha t Would make
guarantees before hand about how
hash of Mr. Reagan's defense
the world of my chlldren and your
proposals. Media ·critics cried
children are going to be taken care
"politics!" On the day after the
of. We need to know
about
speech, 20 senior correspondents
subsidence and Its effects on our
were Invited to one of those
na tural resources.
not·for·attrtbutlon briefings a t the
Let's not get on a bandwagon.
White House.' My brother lords of
le t's move slowly, deliberately and
the press asked questions that
with a reasoned approach. The
curled across the table with a little
world Is looking at Meigs County.
spin on the ball: " U you were ihe
As far as longwall mining . Is
Soviets, . wouldn't you regard the
concerned you a nd I are impOrtant
'Star Wars' stuff as a n escalatlonol
as tl'll! leaders In Washington, D.C.
the arms race?"
Let's work together to get the
For my own part, I faulted the
permit approved but let's also wor k
president on one point only. The
together to put strtct limitations on
White House lately · has . been
that permit.
ma king a great thing out of
Let's scrutlnlze Southern Ohto
" tightening Internal sec~rtty" and
Coal's dealing.. wlih the property
" prot~ lng classHted matter." It
owners and let's scrutinize the , seemed a bit unsettling for the
· ptoPerty owners' dealings with
president himself then to·dlsplay.
SoUthern Ohio Cllal Company.
tOp-secret sateUite photograph,s of
More Importantly, let's scrutinize
Soviet Installations In Cuba and
the effects of longwall mining on all
Grenada. Either the photographS
of us - all over the world. - Harold
never should have been so class!·
James Johnson, Director o1 Cttrls· . fted in the first place, 'or the
tlan Education,
president had no business playllig

..

routed Sail Francisco 10.2, and Dale
By BRUCE LOWfl'T
Murph¥
home~ to pace Atla nta ·s
. • AP Sports Writer
f3
vic
tory
ovet San Diego, St , Louis·
When you're hot, )IOU ' r:e hot
doubleheader agalilst the Mets in
Whe n you're not ...
The Houston Astros a nd the New York was ra ined out.
It was J ason Thompson's two· run
Pittsburgh Pirates finished last a nd
next·to- last, respectively, In the homer, breaking a 7-7· tie in the
National League's spring training ' seventh Inning, that killed the
standings. But when the gam es Astros on Sunday. Dale Berra. with ,
began to count , the Bucs turned a double, a nd Richie Hebner, with a
single a nd a sacrifice fly, also drove
thin~s around while the Astros
In two runs apiece for the P irates .
continued their losing ways.
Dodgers 3, Expos 0
On Sunday, Pittsburgh made It
Fernando
Valenzuela, blasted out
five in a row on thewinning slde-at
of
the
Dodgers·
season opener by the
the expense of the Astros who, at~
Jowly
Astros,
began
paying a return
for 198.3, are off to their worst start
on
LA's
mllllon.&lt;Jollar
contract with
ever .
seven·hlt
shutout,
striking
out five
a
In the rest of the NL Sunday,
batters
and
not
issuing
a
Mdntreal
.Johnny Bench twice crossed up
walk
as
the
Expos
absorbed
the
ir
Chicago's lntentlonal·walkstrategy
by driving In three runs as firs t loss of the 'year.
Greg Brock, Steve Garvey's
Cinc innati whipped the Cubs 7-2,
succesSor
at first base , flexed his
Fernando Valenzuela pitched a
seven·hltter as Los Angeles bla nked muscles a nd hit his first major·
Montreal J.O, Gary Mathews' three· league home run for the Dodgers.
Phlllles 10, Giants 2
run homer capped Philadelphia's
Philadelphia
·s Steve Carlton was
eight. run seventh inning as thE' Phlls

'

That's a pretty Impressive re·
cord for any investigator. But given
the Justice Department's timidity
In the whole Capitol HUI drug
scandal , the last thing the officials
wa nted was to reward a cop who
played such an lmpol1ant role in
na il ing congressional cocaine
pushers.
So Hubbard. the vetera n Invest!·
gator , was quietly blacklisted.
Already transferred within the
Washington pollee department and
given the clear Impression that he
was out of favor for his successful
pursuit of crtme In high places.
Hubbard has now bee n informally
- but effectively -barred from a
job where his ta lent s might un·
cover mow embarrassment for
government officials .
In documents filed In a federal
court suit, Hubbard said he was
told that he had· become a "political
hot potato." And a n EPA official.
Mic hael Brown, was quoted In one
court docume nt as saying: "The
last thing we need here Is a guy who
Is going to smear his face with
ca mouflage paint. put a knife In his
teeth a nd Infiltrate under cover of
darkness to a hazardous waste site.
This backha nded tribute to Hubbard's professiona l skU! was sup·
plemented by the actions of•another

EPA official, Peter Beeson, head of
the crtmlna l enforcement office
a nd thus the man who would be
Hubbard's boss . According to the•
court documents, Beeson ordered ·
subordina tes to classify Hubbard ·
as " unqualified and .unsuitable " for
EPA, a nd to Ignore his military
record a nd the veteran's prefer· ·
e nce law In conside ring his
application.
·
· Footnote: Beeson and Brown
referred a ll questions to an EPA
counsel who did not return several
telephone calls.
IS TIHS POSSIBLE?: The Republican National Committee Is ·
reported to be suffering financial
strains. But committee officials
aren't exactly poor·mouthlng.
.They c laim they're cutting back on
staff a nd programs only to save
money for 1984 . And they still plan
to spend $21.5 million this year.
But GOP sources say the com·
mlttee Is a t least relatively hard up.
The party spent too much last year,
a nd now has $1.5 million In loans to
pay back for their 1983 congres·
slonal campaign expenditures.
Since January 1. about . 100
committee e mployees have · tieen
let go, and education and training
progra ms have been sha rply re- .
duced.
•

Introduced none. The Sovie t Union
has put 200 new Backllre bombers
in the a ir; we have built no
long· ra nge bombers since the B·52s
or. 25 years ago. The Sovle)s now
have displayed 1,300 land·based
Intermediate missiles; we have
deployed none. Since 1974, we ha ve
produced 3.000 tactical combat
aircraft; the Soviets have produced
twice as many. In this period we
have produced 27 atlack subma·
rl nes, the Soviets 61. We have
produced 11,200 armored vehicles.

the Sovie ts 54.000.
The a postles of pooh·pooh may be
co rrect In saying that when the
forces of our· a llies are put on the
scales , the apparent Imbalance Is
less dramatic. Even so, t)le Soviet
threat to peace In the world Is
plainly ominous, and the Sovlets'
deployment of so many lntercontin·
e nt a l mi ss il es Is es peCia lly
disturbing.
The pooh·bahs or the press
scoffed a t the futuristic stuff, but
the years have taught me the rtsks
of incredulity·.
·

a bout as sharp as Vale nzue la.
pJt ching eight innings. ,catterlng
s Lx.hlts. strtklng_our U batters a nd
walking tlire&lt;&gt;:The Giants ' two runs
off him were unea rned.
Carlton and Bill Laskey were
ser vi ng up goose eggs until the
seventh Inning . whl'n the P hillles
f't1lpted for eight runs. two on Tony
P erez' double, two on Pete R ase's
s ingle and three on Ca ry Mathews'
homer.

••

'SUCH~ fAlSI:. VII.E,BASE.tMUC'JOUS, DEfA~ract SLANPR.~IEUR!
'I

.T

m an .

Noles . 26, wa s sehedUied to pitch
for the Cubs today In a 12: 35 p.m .
game against the Cincinnati Reds.
A mino r knee injury that he suffered
during the Sat urday disturbance
made his appearance questiona ble .
" He seems to be all right." Cubs
Manager Lee Ella said, follow ing
Chicago's 7·2 loss the thP Reds on
. .
.·.
Sunday.
·The arrest came after('lOI!cewPn'
called 10 Flanigan's Laridlng. a bar
not far from Rivetiront Stadium,
la te Satlirday nigh!. That was
several hou rs after the end of t h&lt;'
Cubs · Reds game .
Arresting police officer K . Coh&lt;'n
:sa id Noles a nd Scott Munnlnghoff. a
former Cincinnati high sehool
basehall player a nd minor leaguer .

Bra•·es ~. Padr&lt;'53

Craig McMurtry's first major
!&lt;~ague start was a memorable one
- a victorv. tha nks to Dale
Murphy's poY.w a nd Steve Bedrcr
sia n's first save of the season.
Murphy drove In three !1lns. two
of them with a homer in the fift h
Inning. a nd Bedrosian took over
a fte r McMurtry. who had scat!Pred
five hits. st ruck out three a nd had
not a llowed a n earned run through
seven innings. could n't get anyone
out in the eig hth .

home tw,o !1lns . Rawley. who
winner , bobbled a hases -loaded
By JIER..~L NISSENSON •
became a fu ll·timc stal1 er last ..t uly
grounder by Charlie MoorE' a nd Ted
AP Sports Writer
after
spendi ng his first 4 1h big
Simmons scored to tie the score44.
Alter one week of the 1983
then Gantner greeted rookie Bob league seasons as a r~liPver . struc k
baseba Useason. the Texas Rangers
Tufts with his triple. German out seven and waiked two in
have to rate as the Ame rican
recot·dlng his fourth complete game
Thomas, Cecil Cooper and Robin
League 's surprise team.
In
21 starts . Butch Wyncgar singled
Yount added solo home runs for
The 1982 sad·sack Rangers fin home
the only run he needed In the
Milwaukee. Orioles 13,1ndlans 2
Ished sixth in the AL West with a
fourth
Inning. off Toronto aC&lt;' Dave
Eddie Murray drove In four runs
64·98 record, 29 .games behind the
Stleb .
with four hits, including his first
first ·place California Angels. But
White Sox 7, Tigers 5
homer of the season. and John
under new Manager Doug Rader,
Ch
icago
rookie Ron Kittle drove
Lowenstein drove In three with a
the current edition has galloped to
In
four
1
11ns
with a homer a nd a
double a nd trtple as the Orioles
live victories In Its first six games.
LaMarr
Hoyt sca ttered
s
ingle
a
nd
ra pped out 14 hits, seven for extra
The latest - and most dramatic
six
hits
in
8'1·3
innings.
Detroit ace
bases . Murray, whose firs t·lnn ing
- came Sunday wtren the Rangers
.
Jack
Morrts
had
a
4·3
lead
when the
tra iled the Boston Red Sox Hl after 'RBI s ingle was the 1,00lth hit of his
Sox
scored
four
times
In the
White
career. a dded a single in Balli·
2~ Innings but rallled to win 9·7.
Inning.
filth
more's five-run thhd, doubled a run
"The breaks went our way, but we
Stories by VancP Law. Tony
across In the fifth and hit a two· run
made som e breaks. too, I guess 1'111
Bernazard
and Harold Ba ines
homer In the eighth .
trying to say our start this season Is
produced
the
tying run. Greg
Yankees 3, Blue ,Jays 0
not a fluke," said thhd baseman
Lozinski
singled
to give Chfcago a
Shane Rawley fired a seven-hitter
Buddy Bell, who hit a two·run
54
lead
a
nd
Baines
scort&gt;d whe n
for his first major league shutout
homer lil a five-run thhd inning a nd
Morris
uncorked
a
wild
pitch while
and rookie Don Mattingly doubled
then sing led to start the eighth.
faci ng Kittle. who then singled
evrntually scoring the winning run
Luzlnskl home. Kittle hit a th ree·run
on BUI Stein's pinCh single.
homer In the first Inning .
In other AL action , Oakla\1(1
Twins 6, Mariners 3
pounded California 114, Milwaukee
• Designated hitte r Rand y Bush
downed Kansas City 9·5, Baltlmore
belted two homers and drove In
crushect Cleveland 13-2, the New
three runs, while ,John Castlno and
York Yankees blanked Toronto3.0,
CJNCINNATI (AP) - The Cln·
Gary Gaettl also homered, all off
the Chicago White Sox defeated cinnatl Reds expected to call up
44·year·old Seattle staner Gaylord
Detroit 7·5 a nd Minnesota beat Infielder Kelly Paris from their
Perry, who gave up six runs on
Seattle 6-3.
Class AAA Indianapolis farm c lub
seven hits through 61·3 Innings.
A's 11, Angels 4 1
t(XIay.
Minnesota starter Brad Havens ·
The Reds opened a spot on thei r
Left·hander Bill Krueger broke
held the Mariners toone run ..., Dave
Into the major leagues In style when roster by sending pitche r Greg
Henderson's homer - until the
Oakland staked. the 24-year-old Harrts to Indlanapalls on Sunday.
eighth.
Harrts,.whodlylded time between
rookie !9 an early nine-run lead and
whipped the Angels behind a 14-hit CinCinnati a nd Indianapolis last
Local bowling
a ttack, Including three apiece by yearoafter being acqulred from the
stcy11ne -u.s Lane.
Mike Davis and Wayne Gross. NewYorkMets,wasbelngusedasa
Momln&amp;: Glorlet
Krueger, who never pitched above long reliever on the Reds' staff.
M""'h Ill, 11113
I'lL
Class AA In the ·minOrs, was
Reds Manager Russ Nixon said T._.,
Custom Prtnt ............... ....................... 16a
promoted to the ~·s roster last week the club wanted to give Hanis a
Stmtnons Olds, Cadillac
and Chev . ................... .. ... ................ l lJ
when Rick Laniford w~s p}a&lt;;ed on chance to do some pitching. ·
TN! Mctgs. IM .......... ............... ........... l07
the disabled list. 'He went .seven
Parts. 25, was ,acqulred from the The F.:abrtc Shop ......... ........................ !Ill
Innings In his debut, alloWin8' nlrle·., •Sf. tlOuls Cardlna!S'orl March 31. He . · ·M'errt Amsbo11'
Ha.lr Designer ................... ... ............. 86
'hits and four,runs.
·
· appeared In .12 spring .trai!)lng
High UxliVIdual game- Carol Waugh 220;
Brewen9, Royal8 5
games f!lr St. LouiS this year, hitting
June Lambert 188; Ann Grover 181, High lnditvlduat .tnree-aarncs Jul'l('
11m Gantner drllled a bases· .Diwlthortebomerunand!lveruns
Lambert :!11; Ann Grovor 513; Carol Waugh
l~ded triple In the sixth Inning af~ batted ln.
. ..
~92 .
a tw(T()Ut error by KansaS City s
Harris' demotion leaves the Reds . High team same - Metp Inn 816; The
Shop 'l'J6: ,.,..,., Company 776..
,
Geld Glove sec&lt;iOO basem8ft Frank .with.
pitchers Qll their 25-man . Fabric
Htah ~am three-gamtS - The M eigs Inh
White a llowed thetytngruntoscore. roster. He can bec'alled up again In :w!: 1Wo'e Compony 227~ CW.tom Prtnt
2232.
White a slx·tlme Gold Glove 10days.

I

·t

CINC!NNATI (API - Chicago
Cubs pitcher Dickie Noles fa ced
arraignment today on charges
resul ting from a weekend dlstur·
bancc at a Cincinna ti bar.
Noles was jailed overnight Satur·
day on misde m eanor· c harges of
assault , disorderly conduct while
in toxicated and resisting arrest ,
according to Cincinnati l)JiiCl\
Noles allegedly a ttacked a polic&lt;'
ofncer who was arresting a nother

were asked to leavrthr bar af1pr an

altercation inside with a bar
employee. Noles a nd Munninghoff
were outsldP wh f'n police arrivt'(l .
Cohen sa id Munnlnghoff push('(\

" 1 took the chance of getting the
double play with a slow runne r
1Bene h) , " Ella said. "... I know
Bench Is a great hitter. I respect him
very much. I just went with the
situation ."
•
Bench. who came Into the game
hitting .412, rapped the first pitc h to
left field for a two· run double tha t
chased ,Jenkins, 0.2, from the game.
Fate wasn't finished with Ella this
day. One Inning later. "ith reliever
Warren Brusstar trying to snuff out
what was already a two-run Reds'
rally. Cincinna ti wou nd up with
runners on second and thhdand j ust
one out.
There's no need to ask who wa s

due up next wit h first baseo(X'n . And

suiTf'ndf'ring

him against a wall when he told him
not to go back into the bar.
" I was fighting with him tMun·
ninghoff ) when Nolescameupfrom
ilf.h!nd me and sucker·punched in~
on the s!d(' of tlw fa ce. put m e In a
choke holdannd put mcdownon til&lt;'
ground," Cohen sa id.
Both me n wr rr a rrestt&gt;d on thr
sam0 c hargf'S . Noles was J'C'lcasrd
from ja il on $ti.'i0 bond at about II
a .m . Sunday. pollee said.
Noles evidently tWisted his right
knee duting 111~ Incident and was
examlnf!(! at a Cincinnati hospit a l.
Ella said the right -hander from
Cha rlotte. N.C.: wi ll start for the
Cubs today un l&lt;'ss his knee begins to
bothe r him .

·twO

rune

&lt;IIQGES?' .:
~

•

T'

•

1

~J11AC KSON PIKE · RTJ~

Phon! 446·4524

F:lia said Nolps will lx' disciplined
IJV th&lt;' Cubs. alt hough the punish·

,,:w nt Msn · t b&lt;'en dccidf!(! on

"Tha t .wil l cOm P artn ··( V i~trwith
hi m," E\ia said following thf' ganw
Sunday. " I fr \1 discipli na1-:-.· acti on
\Vas just iflf'd in this casr. and lJa llus
~ G rt'(' n , Cuhs gpru:-ral mana gPI'I

agre&lt;xl.
" He (Noles! isn't too happ;· ovt•r
tht~ situation . Hr knows hP did a
no·no
Th e (i.font 2. I!XI pouml Noles was
acqui red by tl!P Cubs on[)('(·. H, l!IHI
in a trade wi th thl' P hiladPiph ia
Phillics. l-Ie wa s first promot &lt;'&lt;l to
the' major \t •:1gli&lt;'S h.v thr Philli P" ln

. tuly. 1979.

The new edition of your phone book goes to
press soon.
· But before the presses roll , be sure you 're listed
correctly.
Or tell us if you'd like more listings (the kids. a
relative, your spouse. for example).
After all, it's your phone book. When you. see
your name in print, it ought to be the way you
want it.
So, if you want changes or additions , let us tell
you what the charges are, if any. Just call our
business office now
·

General·
Telephone

•

unearned runs

and Oil&lt;' hl11h£' rt~st of the way .
The Rt&gt;ds ' thhd straight victory
gove thPm a 4·1 record.

Do we have
your name right?.
Now's the time
to tell us.

Harris sent out;
Paris to join Reds

FRANCE

more

3.

Nixon wasn't surprised when EUa
elected to use the same strategy and,
try for the double play - again:
loading the bases for Bench.
"The situation called for It ·
again, " Nlxon said. "They were still.
looking for the double play. He
1Bench) got the pitch he looked for
both iimes and he didn't miss it ." .
This time, Bench lashed a one-run:
single to left for a comma nding~
lead. and Dan Driessen polished off.
the rally with a two-run single.
The single gave Bench three hits
and lhre&lt;&gt; RB!s for the day, and a
.467 avcrape .
" He' s a hec~ of a hit ter," Ella
said. "lks off to a good stan. He's
tough, even w hen he's In a slump."
Ella wishes he could say the same:
for his hitters. who have been
mostly sUem while the Cubs
dropped the ir first five games.
" Wc' t ~· jus t not hitting. That's
b&lt;&gt;en the strength of our ballclub
since day one of spring training,"
E ll a said .
'l11e Cubs got just thrE&gt;e hits off
Berenyi, 1· 1, who wmt 7 1·3 1nnings
before rain delayed the game.
11ellcver Ben Hayes finished I!P.

Rangers post fifth victory

Stuff of Star wars ______· _Ja_m_es_J_.K_i....:._lp_atr_ic_k

\

three runs a nd now has a butting aver age of .476. The
Reds-- beat the Cubs 7·2. (AP Luserphoto) .

Hot Pirates remain un·b eaten

·Congressional ,drug-u·s er ___J_ac_k_An_d_e.rs_·on_
WASHINGTON - This Is the
story of a cop who was blackmailed
for doing his job too well.
The honest cop Is Michael
Hubbard, a Was hington, D.C. ,
pollee detective with solid expe. rlence In narcotics a nd organized
c rime Investigations. He was one of
500 applica nts for 24 coveted jobs at
the E nvironmental Protection
Agency's office ofcrlmtnal enforce·
ment last year - a nd was told
confide ntially that he was a mong
the top candidates. ·
The jobs were recently filled after a congressional committee
accused the EPA of dragging Its
feet. But Hubbard's name was not
on the list.
Why? Simple e nough: Hubbard
was the stubborn bird dog who ·
tracked a cocaine ring through the
ha lls of Congress. to the Intense
e mbarrassment of a lot of people In
high places. Two a lleged rtnglead·
ers are being extradited from
Australia for questioning about
thetr· big shot customers on Capitol
Hill .
The Justice Department, already
sma rting over criticism of Its
questionable behav ior In the ABS·
CAM operation, has shown reluc·
lance to pursue yet another Invest!·
ga ll on o f co ng ress i o n al

Bruce Berenyt pitching shutout
ball.
Cincinnati's Gary Redus hit an
Infield single with one out and Eddie
MUner doubled, brtngtng up thE'
All·Star shortstop.

Weekend disturbance
shelves Cubs' Noles

•

I

"

ClNCINNATI (AP) - It . just
wasn't Lee Ella 's day .
Twice Sunday the Chicago Cubs'
manager follOwed baseball wisdom
and elected to Intentionally walk
CinCinnati Reds shortstop Dave
CQn~lon and pitch to ,Johnny
Bench with the bases loaded .
Both times the move backflred, as
Benc h delivered a palrofkeyhits in
a 7·2 vlctory over the winless Cubs.
Afterward, both Ella and Reds
Manager Russ Nixon figured the
Cubs had done the right thing in
setting up a possible Inning-ending
double play, even If It meant
pitching to the hot·hittlng Bench .
" What are you going to do•" Ella
said, able to smile about the double
backfire. "Which Is easier, pitching
to Concepcion or Bench• Both can
hit."
The first chance for E lla tp
employ his strategy came In the
slxth Inning. with Chicago starter
Ferguson .Jenkins a nd Cincinnati's

The facts, Ma'am_-.--_____,___w_u_lw_-m_F_.B_uc_k_ley_J_-r.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Ohio

Bench paces Reds' 7-2 win

Pomerof M' I U F. t, Ohio
Monday, April Tl, 1.913

-

\

P~111eroy-Middlepol't,

Monday, April 11, 1983

(ij i#l

WEST

�.

Monday, April 11, 1983

Pomervv Middleport; Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

Page

Invaders break Boston'swiri streak
By The As8oclaled Press
Combine a vastly Improved
nJMing game with an opportunistic
1defense and the result Is usually a
vjctory - whether the football Is
played In the spting or the fall .
The Oakland Invaders rode that
formula to a 26-7 decision over
Boston In a United States Football.
· LeaguegameSunday.snapplngthe
Brea kers' lour-game winning
streak before a rain-soaked crowd
of 7,!1!4 at Nickerson Field.
Oakland. 3-3, had averaged just
100 running yards in its first five
games, but the Invaders picked up
186 on !he groupd against . the
Breakers. Too Torosian led the
charge with 14 carries lor 77 yards
a nd rwo touchdowns.
The In vaders, who forced just
eight turnovers in their first five
games. also recovered three Boston
fumbles and Intercepted TWo
passes.
In other USFL games Sunday, ·
Chicago beat Birmingham 22-11,
Michigan bombed New .Jersey 21-£
lind Philadelphia ripped Los Angeles 17-3. On Saturday night,
Tampa Bay edged Denver 22-16 _In
bvertlme.
: Arizona is at Washington tonight.
· "When your ruMing game Is
going well, their linemen have to
tead run a little bit, too," said
Torosian, whose touchdown runs of

2 and 12 yards were set up by ·
turnovers . "That makeslteaslerlor
our linemen to pass protect."
"We haven't been getting any
turnovers,'' said Oakla nd Coach
,!ohn Ralston. "We've probably
been getting one a game and that
really isn't enough to get much done
In this game ."
The game started in a light rain
but ended In heavy wind and rain ,
but Boston Coach Dick Coury said
the weather had nothing to do with
the BreakerS' second -loss In six
games .
"If it had been sunshine II would
have been the same score the way
they played a nd the way we
played,'' Coury said .
Before a crowd of 17.648 at East
Rutherford , N ..!., New Jersey
running back Herschel Walker ran ·
well for the second straight week,
but Michigan harded the Generals
their fifth loss in six games .
Walker, who had rushed for 177
yards In the Generals' 35-21 victory ..
over Arizona the previous week,
charged for 133 yards on 26 carries.
But . Panthers linebacker ,John
Corker registered six of Michigan's
eight sacks of New ,Jersey quarterback Bobby Scott to keep the
Generals at bay.
The Panthers, 2-4, took a 7-0 lead
after Ira Albright fell on a blocked
punt In the end zone and Mlchlgan
also scored touchdowns .on Bobby

Hebert's 25-yard pass to Derek
Holloway and Ken Lacey's 9-yard
run.
Quarterback Chuck Fuslna com·
pleted 21 pi 37 passes for 214 yards
and one touchdown, leading the
Stars over the Express. The win was
the fifth In six games for Philadelphia, tying the Sta'rs with Tampa
Bay tor the best record In the league,
while Los Angeles fell to 3-3.
Rookie Kelvtn Bryant, the
USFL's leading rusher, gained 81
yards on 21 carrtes and srored
Philadelphia's first touchdoWn on a
2-yard run In the second quarter.
Tim Spencer, who ran tor, 106
yards, gave Chlcaro. 4-2 with a
three-game wiM!ng streak, a 13-£
lead with a 2-yard touchdown run In
the third quarter, and Kevin Long
clinched the victory with a 1-yard
TD plunge with 1: 55 left In the game.
Reggte Collier scored a toudhdown tor Birmingham, 2-4, on an
11-yard bootleg in the second pe'rtod,
but he was sacked six times by the
Blitz de(ense, including once In the
fourth quarter for a safety.
On Saturday, Tampa Bay quarterback ,John Reaves completed 38
ot 63 passes for 357 yards; and Greg
f3o9ne scored on an ll:yard draw
play in overtime for the Bandils.
Brtan Speelman's 3J.yard tleld goal
for Denver, 3-3, with 45 second left In
regulation, sent the game Into
overtime.

-,

:.&lt; ~

. " . -l

... --

_B y The Bend

\

\.
SUPPING THROUGH - Boston Breakers' Tony Davis ( ~) sUps through a hole as Oakland
Jnvuders' Dewey MtoClaln (52) starts to move In to

slop him during second quarter United States
FoolbaD League action Sunday afternoon at
Nickerson Field in &amp;Mon. (AP Laserphoto).

.Meigs places
fifth in relays

Scoreboard ...
Majors

0- 11 at Los All£('11&gt;5

1 01 , 1n1
Only Mlln'IP!; ~e hvdu~'ll

1flcu_~~

1'ueedll.r't u~

~hall

Matjnr l .elllJUf'

By Tit!• ib.&lt;ooCI.atH Jl'noM
MIERH 'AN lEAGUt:

Sl . LoUis Ill PIUJIOOrpn

N1w York HI Phllln:Wiphla
Chlra10 at Montreal

YA"iT UIVL"!oiON "

"'
('h'\1'1illld
f-l~llllrtHII~ '

1~r

lloustUfl

2

C\111'\Mall 111 A.UunUJ
San Francl.-o al Sar1 Dlcvo. l n l

L l'l't . G II

·-·

'l'tolllllll l

6111 ~I

~,&lt;,

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Bu.&gt;1110
1)1•11'011

No'" Vt~rk

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Uoustoo " ' I.oF Mlfo,"l·~ os. tn 1

USFL results

1
:1

t\:1.'1

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Mtn f'II'Sj ll ,l

:t

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1

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l

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Sa&amp;unky'11 {iunr
Ta mp.~~ Blly :n, ~nvt'r 16, {Jf
s.ndii.,J'I Ganw.
l l1 1ralo(O 1.!, Bamllnto~ham It
Mlchipan 11. New .ll'r'Soi'Y 6
fMkland :a'.. ~too 7

K:Hl !i-!1" I ' l h

11

~11

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Phllmtl•lphta 11. l.a!i Anat'lffl :1

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Moad11,)"8 IO"fflf'

Siloturday'M (;llfl1'umlllu 7. N I'W York -1
l'hlt·a.:v ut !)(&gt;troll . pp:J . min
C~·w•l:tntl M. 1\ul!lnYm• 4

Arvona al

Wa~&gt; hinglOn ,

1n 1

~em-day.

( 'nlllum ta 10. Oakland ~

April II
l'htllldrlphla ttl Gaktlnd -~ ·• ·
!UIIII~. A.,..e 11
l:)l,l vN 111 Blnn(Jlilham
Chirujl(J rt f Mk'hla;:'an

Tt 'li.IIS IU, llusiOO 3

WMhl~lon at Ntow . l~·.v

Si:•H itli• .l , MIJV1('l!(Jia ~
Sunday'" •• lllllt'!t
Chknj!O l J)l•tl~ll l "I
No"&gt;'' York :1, Tumnto U

lblton 111 ArltDna , tn t
, Mottd~, April Ill

Kansu ~

fl tv 5, Mltwaukt'f' '.l

I a.; !\ u~· lo·s al 1'amtM• Bay , •n ·

NHL results

lt.:illlrnon • 1.\, Clt•vl'l••flll 'l
Tt•llas 9. BosiOI) 1 .
MllwaukN• ~. K11nsa .~ l1t y ~
O.ik)11r11l 11 . Cn !Uullllll 4
Mlnnt•:ootu ti, Sl'oult li:• :1
•'lond-.,V'Il G&amp;lllftl
lk1~ l u n

NMtonalllodwy LP.aaw
DMMo• Sfn\lflnM
CfteM. ,ol fol¥r.)
Ounel

! 11~1"!1 1

~h at ~n.~ City
t nl
S!•atlk' t Yuu rv.: I 0\ al Californ ia t.lol\n
I ut , tnl
Only ftltnlt '!i ,;t;hl-'t:luk-,1
t'ut!llldii,Y'" HIUTif!li
M'll~~o:M ukt'' 111 Tnll.lnl u

N.\ ' . bltlll(k•ni 6, Walihlf'IMlon 2
~

Vant'OU)Iff ~ . C'11~111)' ~

1\alltn•ln ' 111 Ollral'!l
l lo~ ton al Kl.m..a s C tt y , tnt
St•allk• 111 Ca li fornia . 1n1
Mlnnf'!tfllot 11 1 Oakland , t nl

N.Y. Rllnat'n 9, Phlladrlphla l

Chlcaii'O 1. Sf. Louis 1
COunt. I
~IQ' ,

I

I

.101
.li€1

I

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:1

.400

21,)
J

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tl~

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lft'l Altg"INI

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San IJicslo
sa n Fruc:I!W.'U .
llouaton

2

2

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!K!rk&gt;s 3-1

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! .nuts~.

( .... of Sew'~~)
o.... l

n.....,, Afrtl14
DuNalo at Boetoo

8a&amp;urda.)''lll Gllll'lN

St .

__

Calli[ary 4, Vancru\l(lr 3, err.· Cilpary

-

.fill1

Crr.

Mil\nl'!Kita S. Toronlo f .
Mlni.Hota
Wins !M!rk&gt;s l-1
Chlrago !\, St LouiA 3. Chlcagu wlru;

Mm Uf\'ISION

Atlanw
Cln&lt;'tnnll!l

.\pi'IIO

NY . IY_
Iall(k&gt;n; 6. Wa.sh~ton 3, N~·
Yotk l'o1fl.:j !l('fie.l l-1
lklston 2, QuNX'C I, Bos!On W1n.o; i~ei"'NN

o um -

~

Nrw

York w1 n..~ !ll!'rlf'! .l {l

NAnONAL LF.AGtJJo:
t:A."!T llM'IION
\4' I. Ptt . (ift

Chk·ago

.l o

TomniO 6. Mlruw'!«JUI 3
Edmonton t WIMllX't[ 3, f.dmomon
Wins !Wtb :1-0

'l)•X!IS HI ( k•IK'IIInd

Ntw Ymk
Sl. Louts
Phllildt•lph iCI

:l, Uotton I

Dutr11k1 4. Monlwlll 1. Buffaln whL~
~·rlf's

l').·t ru!t 111 Nl'w York

J))II RtlUI)Ih
Monlt1•u l

I

~...,. . April

o~·onllrtl l l \ 1,

N.Y. Raneen Rt N.Y. Islandcrs

Nt'W York 0

MIRTL'!!Otlll If 0Jk:II8Q

Atlanw ti, San Diego !I
CinC'InNitl 8, Chk'ai!O 4

C.laary at Edmonton

PlttabJrMh 1, HoustM 0

F'lid!Q-, .4pt II
BuNalo at BolD
N ..Y . Rar\arOI'I at N.Y. I•landera
Mlnnena at O!Jcqo

0~UMt

Moo!real 7, Los Anal'~ 1
PhiJIJdclpl\la ~. San FrtU'It'llco ~

......,..• o~

Atlanta "· San Dtetro 3
Clrdrw:~o~~ 11 7, ~aao ~

Cli lfl'ary a! Edn'lcllloo

Transactions

Plttabura;h 10, Houston 8
Lol AnfeR l. Mcntrelll 0

PhlLidf.'lphla, 10. San F'ranctaoo :t

Z.
.....

_st . l..oo.HI a1 New Yortl,

ppd., raln.

~·.o

Olk'aeo (Noel 0.01 at ClftclllNlU !Ptice-

""'

San Dk"[(( tl .oilsr ().{)r al Atlanta

"l)j)\

•

!Per-

·•

W-..d&amp;p.tl'l'l

llo\IIBILW.-

N............
'1

NEW

YORK

*=

•

MET'S-Jl'urehal!d thf

contracc ol Mark BratUey, outfttlder,
item 'l'ldf!'Wall!r 01 the IntemaHINJ

..,.....

ATHENS- The Sheridan Lady
Generals ran away with first place
honors here Saturday In the Bulldog
relays held on the Ohio University
track.
Coach · ·Gordon Fisher's Marauderettes finished fifth In the
seven-team meet. Final standlqgs
were Sheridan 100, Marietta 74,
Logan 73, Athens 57, Meigs 37.
Federal-Hocking 18, and Miller six.
Points were tabulated by team
finishes In each event rather than
Individually.
Highest lln!sh among the Meigs
gtrls was the combined long jump
which came In second. Competing
were Dreama EngUsh, Rhonda
Haddox , and'Paula SWISher.
In the combined shot put, Meigs
had a third place earned by Karen
Goggins, Sherry Russell, and Dawn
Thomas. The combin~ high jump
also came home third. They were
Mae Nakamota, , Neece, and
Haddox .
Both the 400 meter and 811 meter
relays squads finished fourth . They
were comprised of Linda Stewart,
Swisher, Haddox, and Charmele
Turner.
The sprint medley team made up
of Swisher, Stewart, English, and
Melissa Howard also came In
fourth.
Next meet tor the Meigs girls Is
Tuesday against Wellston and
Warren Local.

Meigs spo1'18 schedule

-_ Met!r.,.-u This IIw..

k

' April
Lotan at Metp (var. baSe. ); Meigs al
Logan (Var. SOft.); Melts at Logan (res.
blue.): Lot!an a&lt; Meigs (res. !1011.1: Federalllocldf11! al Metgo ( j . - high lrack) .
Tuesday, Apr1112
Kyger Creek at Meigs (var. soft); Warren
Loclll and WetlaiOn al llfl&gt;lp (var. boys and
girls lrack); Soulllem at Mellis 1m. brule.).
w...-ay, April u
.Tacb:m at Melp (var. base. ); Metg:s a1
.Jac~ (var. lOft); Melp at .Jackson (res.
lle.9e.l. ,Jock!on al Me\gs (res. soft.);
Wetlalan and Ravenswood 01 Me•- (junior
htgh lrackl ."
,.. · ·
Thilnday, AprU 14 .
Meigs al Soulbern (var. bose.); Melp at
Southern lvar. !Oit.)j Eulem a1 Meigs(,....
lle.9e.j; Fairland ana Eutem al Melp (var.
boys lrockf.
.--.-,., April u
Melp •t Waverly (var. bue.) ; Waverly a1
l'40ip (var. 'd .)

--...,,Apottl
Melp II Oolt Hill InvitatiOnal (9::1)) tvar.

boys al1d !lirillraCk).

'·

Monday, April 11, 1983
Poge-5

Ministerial council plans county program

Darlington, S.C. Harry Gimt won on !be flaal &amp;wo lajJ8
by pe!l!lng Darrell Waltrip. (AP Laserpboto).

EARLY COlUSION - Pole nftkT Tbn Richmond (2'7) and Terry Labonle ( 44) oolllde In !be lint
lap of Swlday's n111111nJ1 of !be TranSoudt 1100 at
'
.
.

Spivey paces North's victory
'

CANTON, Ohio (AP) -Youngstown Rayen's Kevin Spivey's lJ
polnls earned hlm · Most Valuable
Player honors In the North-South
Class A·AA Cage Classic game,
even though he mlssed the second
quarter.
Because au players In the
·North-South · eJass A-AA Cage
Classic game had to play a!least one
quarter in the first haH, the 6-loot-13
Spivey was scoreless during the
second eight minutes.
The north had a 92-89 overtime
victory Saturday In Memorial Civic
Center.
The South, led by the outside
shooting of .John Loyer of GaBon
Norttunor, jumped to a 1!).6lead.
The North took lis first lead with
2: 18left In the second quarter on a
drive by Dan Olinger of Ridgewood.
The South scored the first two
second-halt baskels to go ahead
41-34. The North theri came.back.
Dan Christie of Oak Harbor, a
heady player with nine assists,
from
scored
. a 30-!ooter
.
'
. the
. wing

with 15 seconds left in regulation to
tie the srore at 78-78.
With lour seconds left, Spivey
blocked a shot from the right wing
by Fogt, and the game went Into
overtime.
Tuslaw High's Fred Nell, Stark
County's leading scorer In 1!1!2·83,
put the North ahead to stay, 84-82,
wlth a layup. Nell added a pair of
tree throws with 12 seconds left to
make It 00-87.
Spivey, selected MVP on ~ ot 24
votes cast, mlssed 13 regular season
games this year because of scholastic lnellgtbillty. He averaged 19
points and 13 rebounds per game.
His 30 polnls equaled the Canton
A·AA game record set by David
Zeigler of Coshocton In 1978.
The Class AAA North basketbaU
team defended lis title, downing the
South All-Stars Rl-~ behlnd most
valuable player Eric New5Qme's
spunky play an&lt;j ~ P.Oints.
Newsome, the smallest player on
the smaller of the two squads at 5
.feet, lOinc_hes , received 18of23vot'l5 .

to win MVP honors.

The senior from Toledo Rogers
High sea~ 10 or h!S .points,
including six in a row, In the
third-quarter when the North took a
28-19 advantage and the lead tor

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Ray·
mond Floyd says there's only one
way to win a major golf championship- "give yourself a chance."
Floyd did just that In the third
round of the weather-plagued 47th
Masters galt tournament Sunday.
So did Craig Stadler, Seve
Ballesteros and Tom Watson.
· All have won before on the
demanding 6,!MX;-yard, par 72 Augusta National Galt Club course,
and only three shots separated the
quartet at the start of the final roiind ·
today.
Stadler was the most familiar foe
for Floyd because they met twice In
sudden-death playoffs for big paychecks within the last eight months.
Floyd outlasted Stadler on the
fifth extra holefora$300,00lprlzl' In
South Africa last December.
Stadler had claimed $100,00) for
edging Floyd on the fourth playoff
hole In the World Series of Golf at
Akron In August.
Today's rubber match was for
less money - $00,00) - but more
prestige, and It wasn't a two-man
race by any means.
They were paired in the final
twosome of the day,sharlngthe lead
at &amp;-under-par 210 following Sunday's round In which Stadler had a
69: best scoreoftheday, and Floyd a

71 .
Ballesteros, thedashlngSpaniard
who won the 1981 Masters, was only
one shot behind aftPr a n
Watson, Seeking his third Masters
title, had a 71 for 212.
Jodie Mudd. who turned professional after winning low amateur
honors In this tournament last'year,
had a 72 and was tied with Walson.
Two others were In striking
distance at 213 - Gil Morgan and
Keith Fergus.
Morgan, one of six players
stranded on the course by darkness
Saturday, came back Sunday . to
complete his second round with a
tournament -leading 70-137. He then
ballooned to a 76 In the third round
and Fergus-shot a 74.
Arnold Palmer, who stole the
show in the opening round when he
got In the chase with a 68, fell apart
Sunday.
Palmer, 53, finished his second
round with a bogey and came back
in the afternoon to post a fat 76-218,
despite an eagle 3 on the 13th.
"11 all just came a pari," Palmer
said. "All the · things I'd been
working on seemed to go astray ."
Alter having the second round
rained out Friday and then suspended by darkness ~turday, the •
weather finally changed, bathing

. MAROON AND GOLD BASKETBALL
CAMP APPUCATION FORM

body," said North coach Ron
Niekamp of Lima Senior.
"We played the way we had to
play to win and It was a heckolalot
of tun," Niekamp said ot the North
squad which shot 52.7 percent from
thefleldon39ot74 attempts arid87.5
percent at the IJ,ne.
"They were unbelievably quick
and they shot very well," said South
coach John Grunkemeyer of Mount
Healthy High, who hoped his team's
height advantage would cancel out
the Norih's speedsters.
The South hit 34 ot 67 from thE: field
for 50.7 percent and 67 percent at the
foul Une.

Retired teachers conference planned
'

Retired teachers of 15 Southeastern Ohio Counties are Invited to
attend a conference ol the Ohio
Retired Teachers Association,
Thursday at the Ramada Inn,
Marietta.
The conferene theme, " Charting
the Course" will locus attention on
questions and answers relevent ,to
tl1e.status ot retired teachers.
Daniel Ackerman, Springfield.
state president, and Irene BraMon,
Bidwell, president-elect will be the
speakers.
.
. Presiding officer ' .will - be. the
Eastern Area ORTA vice president,
Phil Barty, Canton, with Margie

Address ............... ... .... .... .. ............. .. .. ... ...... ................. .

The special needs of parents and
tamllles ot handicapped children
wiD be the toplc ot a worksllop April
29 at O'Bleness Memortai Hospital
for nurses, social workers and other
community professionals.
M. NeD Macintyre, a professor of
medicine and pedlatrtcs at Case
Western Reserve University and a
recognized authority on mental
retardation, Is the featured speaker.
Til!! day-long program Is called
"parents ot handicapped children:
Intervention techniques for professionals." It Is aimed at persons who
work with families of handicapped
children, Including special education teachers, social agency personnel, guidance counselors and health
care workers.
The parents' perspective wUI be

A l'()('ket trip
HOUSTON tAP I - Pro basketball teams are seldom happy on the
road and on one occasion . In Ihe
1982-83 season. the Houston Rockets
of the NBA were downright
miserable.
They were fly lng from Oakland to
Portland, Ore., normally a one-hour
flight, but lhls lime It took six hours.,
Sevente&lt;&gt;n pieces of luggage were
lost along the way and after the
plane landed, the busdrivertookthe
team to the wrong hotel.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
CoUnty Salon, 8 and 40, will
conduct Its 18th anniversary
diMer at 6: lJ p.m. Monday at
the Middlepori temple. Guest
speaker will be Departmental
Chapeau Ruth Kruger. Partners
are to take tlckels, plus one large
gift and one-small gift.

(USPS 111-M I
-' Dlvllton of Multimedia. lae.

Publl5tled--every afternoon , Monday
through Friday , 111 Court S1ree1. by

the Ohio Valley PubUshlng Comm~ny
· Multimedia. Inc., Pomeroy, OIUO
4~769.y.992-2l56.\ second class poslage
paid ilil Pomeroy, Ohio .

Height .. .... .' ......... .... ............ ............ ...... .. .. .. . Weight.. .. . Age .... .
T-Shlrt size (circle! S M L XL .... .... .. ............... Phone No.
Parents' Name ... ...... ..... .. ... ... ..... ....... ..... .. ...... .... .... .. .. .
Please check one ot the following:
.
- - Enclosed-find a check lor S30 to enroll the above student In
camp tpr 1983.
- - Enclosed tinct a check for-$15 to enroll the above student In
camp tor 1963. I understand that the remaining $15. must be paid
before the first camp session.
Date ... .......... . ................ ........ .. .... ....... ....................... ........ .
Signed (parent or guardian ) .. .... ............ .... ........ .... .................. ·
Sessions wUI be held from 9 to 11: lJ a .m. and 1 to ~: 30 p.m.

POSTMASTER: Send addres.!l to The
Dall y Sentinel , 111 Court St. Pomeroy
Ohio 45769.
'
'

One Week ....... .. ... .,,,.,.,,. ,.,,,.,,, ,Sl.OO
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One ear .. ....... ........ .. ..... ..... ... $52.80
SINOLE COPY
!'RICES
•
Dall y .... ...................... ..... .. . :lO Cents

Su bsc rlber!i not desiring to pay lhf'car·
rlfi"r may rell,\l.t In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel o n 3. 6 or U month
buts. Credit will e glvel') carrier each
month.

M.UL SUIISCRtPTtONS
Inside Ollie
~~ ~••ks .. .. ........ ... ..... ......... Sit.Oil
~2 weeks ... .................. ....: ...... $27.30
eeks ... ........ ..... .. ...... ......... $51 t8
1
..
. .. .'...... 115.21
~2 w..... ...........................:....m:tif

POMEROY - Meigs County
Garden Club Association will
meet 7: 30 p.m. Monday at
Trinity Church. Program by the
Bend 0' the River Garden Club;
refreshments by t)le Chester
Garden Club.

PORTLAND - Portlant PTO
meeting will be 7 p .m . Monday
at the school.

......... ............................. m.21

. 992·2156

ot

---r

~ :~ks :··- ~~~~ ~. .~

THE DAILY SENTINEL

RACINE - Racine Vlllage
CouncU will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at village hall . Included on
the agenda wlll be interviewing
representatives of consulting
tlrms tor water syste m
improvement.

CHESTER - Games Party,
Chester Community Wives Club
will be at the Chester !Ire hOuse
Monday night, 7 p .m. Proceeds
to be used tor assisting needy
tarnllles. Information, call Jane
Coates, 985-4327; or LOa Van
Meter, 985-3951.

No subscrlpllons ~Y m1111 ~rmttted tn
towns where hom e carrier service Ls
available.

CALL US TODAY AT

MIDDLEPORT - Revival
will be at the AshStreei Freewill
Baptist Church beg!Ming Mon·
day through Apr1116 at 7:30p.m .
nightly . Norman..Tl!Ylo.L is th_e
evangelist. The public Is Invited .

RAClNE - Racine Junior
High School Athletic Boosters
will be 7 p.m. Monday at the
school. Special Invitation to the
·sixth grade 'parents who will
have children participating In
the junior high athletic program
next year . Officers will be
elected.

SUIISCRIPTION RATES
a,. CaiTier or Mowr ROUk

WITH WARM WEATHER COMING UP A NEWSPAPER
ROUTE IS AGOOD IDEA! YOU EARN MoNEY WHILE BEING OUTSIDE, WINNING GREAT PRIZES AND MEETING
GREAT PEOPLE. ·
'
ROUTES IN POMEROY. MIDDLEPORT, SYRACUSE.

vlded by the fifth and sixth g rade
band under the direction of
David Bowen. . Science fair
projects wlll be on display and
awards will be presented. New
officers wUI be lnstaUed .

'- POMEROY - Image Seeke1'
Camera Qub will meet Monday
7: 30p.m. at the Meigs Museum ,
Pomeroy.

-

York 10017.

Date of Birth .. .. ... .. .......................... .. .......... Current Grade .... .

presented by Diane Gen_t, a Cleveland physical therapist who expertenced the birth and death of an
abnormal child. Also spealdng are
Dr. William Carlson, assistant
professor of pediatrics at Ohio
University's College of Osteopathic
Medicine, and Nan Heiskell, a
registered nurse with the Ohio
Department of Health.
Topics to be covered Include the
parents ' acceptance of an abnormal
child , reactions of other famliy
members and friends and ways In
which professionals can help the
family. Case studies and a videotape of counseUng sessions with
parents of birth defective children
will also be presented.
Registration fee for the workshop

Calendar

The Doily Sentinel

elation , NaUonal Advertising 1\epresenlatlve, Branham Newspaper Sales
733 Third Avenue, New York, NeW

Ater, Columbus, executivedlrector,
to participate. Tite program will
feature a panel discussion and
comments by ijelen Alexander,
American Association of Retired
Persons, Retired Teacher Divlslon,
Senior Program Specialist, Field
Services, of Washington D. C.
Workshops will be held for chapter
officers and committee chairmen.
Members of the Meigs C(lunty
Association who will be participatIng are VIrginia Carson, president;
Rachael Downie. -vice president;
Be'inlce Hoffman, treasurer; Helen
Smith, secretary; LucUie Smith,
legislative chairman; Kathleen

Handicap workshop set at O'Bleness

Augusta Natlo!ljl.l In warm, blight
sunshine Sunday.
Both Floyd, who tied Jack
Nicklaus' 72-hole scortng record of
271 when he won the 1976 Masters,
and Stadler, who hopes to join
Nicklaus as the only player to win
consecutive Masters titles, said
they won't be playing each other
today, because there are too many
other good players In contention.

Amertcan NiWspiPer"Pilltsliefs Mci6

tiona! and the radio broadcast
March through .Tune as well as the
pulpit exchange arrangements tor
April 24.
Reporting lor the youth of the
Council on Ministries was Lynn
Slater who noted that country and
western hymn books are being
purchased, a long wllh a memorial
plaque lor the Rev. Robert McGee,
and that plans are being made lora
weekend retreat at Camp Francis
Asbury.
Clark gave devotions on the
theme " Hop&lt;'" with congregational
singing of .. Are Ye Able?" accom·
panied at t.he plano by Thomas.

Eastern Star tnspectton

·
ACTIVE • !l'hese three vocal music students of Meigs IDgh School
have been busy beading nwnerous activities of lltecholrthis year. They
are Steve Patlerson, vice president; Julie Spencer, president and JeH
Carson, secretary-treasurer.

Member: The Auoclated Press In·
land Dall)l Pres! Association and tbP

Name .. ...................... .. ......... ... .... .. .......... .. ... ... .. .... .... ...... ... ..

secretary for the parish. Mrs.
memberShips. More memberships
United Methodist ' 'Seven Nights
are
needed
In
the
co-op,
Robinson
Seevers
ls a graduate ~f the
of Witness, " a county-wide evange,reported.
Healsoadvlsed
that
there
Bible College. Office
Cincinnati
lism program , will begin Aprll 17
will
be
no
food
deUvery
on
Aprll
21
hours
are
Tuesday
through Friday,
and continue through Aprll 23 at
because
ot
a
Senior
Citizens
9
a.m.
to
noon
.
·A
workshop for
seven churches through the county.
program,
but
that
orders
wlll
be
with
the
local
churches'
dealing
Plans for the services were
that
day
and
on
Aprtl
28
for
three
phase
study
on
"Directions
taken
aMounced by the Rev. Richard
and Expectations" was announced
delivery on May 5.
Thomas at a recent meeting of the
with the Rev . David Hartis, dlstrl ~t
The
Rev
.•
Tames
Clark.
reporting
Meigs County Cooperative Parish,
.program
assistant, to be the leader.
'
tor
the
education
committee,
noted
CoUJ)cll on Ministries, at the Racine
from each church will be
Involved
the
Southern
clusters
are
that
Wesleyan Church. Local pastors
jolning
in
conducting
confirmation
the
la
y
leader,
the admlnlstraMve
will conduct the services with
board
chairman,
the pastor-parish
classes
through
Pentecost.
Classes
special music to be arranged by the
are each Wednesday, and informarelations committee and other
host pastor.
tion may be obtained from Oark.
lntersted people. The date wiD be
The Rev. Robert Robinson,
the
Rev.
Mark
FlyM,
or
the
Rev.
a
Mounced later.
reporting for social concerns , noted
Mrs. Sauer noted that she has
Stanley
MerrUleld
.
that he will be attending a
Kennlt
Walton
presided
al
the
been
Invited to attend a conference
conference serrtinar on human
with
Mtldred
Ihle,
secretraining
event at Delaware May
meeting
needs with conference communicatary,
and
the
Rev.
Florence
Smith,
Frank
Dorsey. Emporia,
t3-14.
tion chairperson, Robert Storey, In
Kan.,
wUI
be
the speaker. She
gtvlng
reports.
treasw-er,
charge. Reports were gtven on the
Fay
Sauer.
director,
aMounced
distributed
sheets
listing J!Crsonnel
district ·wide lenten communion
of
Bradbury,
responsible
for
the
Contact devothat
Cheryl
Seevers
service held at Heath Chw-ch. 'I'I!e
will
succeed
.Janice
McGee
as
offering taken there was distributed
•
among the food banks In the county.
Plans for a workday at Camp
Francis Asbury, the camp site for
Nearly 150 members and guests
shop, Pearle Canaday, .Joan KalUnited Methodists was dlscussed as
representing 19 chapters attended
dore. Joan Stewart. Bernice Hofwas the food co-op which has 142
the 76th aMual inspection of
fman, Marjorie Rice. Lois Pauley,
HarrtsonviUe Chapter, Order of the
Norman Will. Harold Rice, Charles
Eastern Star, held Thursday night
King. Doug Bishop, a nd Dana
at the Masonic Temple .
Hoffman.
Chapters rcpresE'nt ed ..,.,. er£'
Pauline Atkins, worthy matron.
Scott, pre-retirement chairman;
Athens. Albany, Thea, Euphemia .
and Charles King, worthy patron,
Thelma Dill, publicity chairman:
presided. .Ioyce Malone, deputy , Eudora. E:vangPline, New Marsh·
Maxine Philson, membership
fie ld , Pomt'roy, Mlncf\r . Valley.
grand matron , was welcomed and
chairman.
Racine . RelncrsvUie, Webb, Ma·
escorted to the East as was Sharon
The Washington County RTA will
rletta . Cheshire, VInton, Mason.
ChriStopher of Mt. Sterling, .t he
be the host chapter under the
Dun can Falls. Mt. Sterling,
Grand Adaho!theGrandChapterof
direction of Margaret Brown,
Macksburg.
Ohio, and Lena Smith, grand
president. The ORTA district direc- representative of Arkansas .
Ruby Diehl , Hele n ,tohnson.
tors are Albert Durose, Gallipolis ,
Bernice
Hoffman. and Lois Paul&lt;'Y
Also introduced were 12 visiting
and Byron W. Steen, Caldwell.
were
the
sunshine pages. with the
worthy matrons and eight visiting
The meeting will begin at 9: 45
of!eri"li
going
to !he OES home
worthy patrons. Harrisonville pa sl
a.m. and will conclude by3: 15p.m.
m alntennncc fund.
matrons and past patrons wel Advance reservations are required
Charldene Alkire and .la ne Wise
comed and commended for loyal
and may be secured by .sending$7to
service_ were SteUa Atkins, , Lois . sn ng "One Day at a Time."
_tlie Ohio Retired Teaehets.As~ia' ­ Thompson, Sh!lt'on _,tewell . Grade
Rltualls ll c wm'k . was e'empllfled
tlon ; P . 0 . Box 00056, ColUmbus.
Wilson, Rutli Erlewlne, Pauline tor· rwo candida teS: .fcnn1fl'r and
43209, or by telephonlng614-236-8935.
,lames Sht'&lt;'IS.
Atkins, Allegra Wlll. Avanelle
George, Donna Nelson. Betty Bl-

good.
The North now has a 6-2 edge In
the games that have been held here.
"Newsome Is not very big, but
there Is a lot -of talent In that tiny

Floyd, Stadler tie for masters lead

"

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY - Pomeroy PI'A
will
Morlday ·at 7: :JI p.m. A
special ~P~ ; ~ lie PI'O-'

meet

POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Commandery 24, Knights Templar, will meet 7 p.m. Monday ,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Order of .the temple will be
conferred .
TUESDAY
- PoMEROY - Eastern Bat\d
Boc)stel'!l · will meet Tuesday 7.
p.m. in band room of high school
for election of officers for

' 198.1-84.
\1 ..

'

·_· ·"Happenings
'

'

POMEROY ··The Meigs
County G~ banqUet wW be
FridaY. at 7: l5 p.m. at the

. s.uot.icy

E~

Sdllol.

any Meigs County Grange mas·
lei or 1rom Opal Dyer, ~7or
742-~ The stealtdlnnerwul)le
.erved by the Salisbury PI'A.

1"ic::tet aUIS eaeh (11'1! oo ialetrom . ·

'.

Is $15. Registration infonnation and
materials mav be obtained from
Tri-County Community Action
Agency . P .O. Box 91, Athens.
Persons Interested In attending are
encouraged to pre-register by April
22. The program will begin al 8: 30
a .m . In the hospital's conference
rooms .
The workshop Is being sponsored
by the Rural Infant Intervention
Program, 'J'ri-County CAA. Consortium for Health Education In
Appalachia Ohio, Athens Genetics
Cllnlc and O'Bieness Hospital with
financial support from the Athens
Kiwanis Club and Athens Chapter of
the March of Dimes.

Pioneer Day
at Marietta
April 23
&amp; First Meellng

Pl(lneer Day '83, a celebration of
traditional arts, crafts, music, and
dance will be held Saturday, April
23, !rom 1 to 5 p.m. on the campus of
Marietl!l College, In Ohio's firstrl ty,
Marietta.
Over ~ artisans wUI be demonstrating crafls and skillS from the
rich folk heritage of the Appalach-

Fee . . .
. $17.00
You Pay
6.00
Only .
. .. $1t .OO
'IOU SAVE

Ian ~glol).. ln~l~dect ~ll):le~[l_l!_lning

weaving . white oak baSketry,'
gunsmithing, musical .Instrument
const.ructlon, blacksmithing, and
many more.
The "Hot Mud Family" will he the
featured musical entertainment for
theoneday festival. 1'legroup,with
six a lbums to their credit, Is
enlerlng their second decade together. They are noted tor their
expressive vocal harmonies and
hard drtvlng fiddle tunes. Along
with another group, "Hot Shandy"
they wiD be' giving both afternoon
and a n evening concert
performance.
A Revolutionary War period
reenactment group, Col. ,Joseph
Crockett's Western Battalion, will
be presenting living history demon·
strations, miUtary drills. and camp
!Ue representative ot the pioneer
era.
Other eYents scheduled lor this
family-oriented ceiebrallon in·
elude: a publlc square dance, the
Marietta College Folk Dance aub,
a clogging workshop, outdoor
games and contests-, a chlcken
barbecue with au the tlxlns, and •
more .
Pioneer Day '83 ts ~red by
.the Mari~tta College Social _Plan- •
nlng Board,-wlth !he cooperation ot
the Marietta Tourist and Convention Iluree.u. The event IB tree and
open to. the publlc. For additional
infonnatlon contaet 'The Marietllr

Tourist and Cor]ventliln BweilU'•
(614) 374-5178, or Moon Mullen
374-7095.

.'

Registration
&amp; First
Meeting Fee

to JOin

So many people m1ssed JOining
Weight Watchers'" tor only six dollars that
we're offering them orie last chance th•s year.
You'll probably never agai n be able

Watchers· lor only s1x dollars .

so don't 1 this opport umty
Re member, Weigh I Walchers' 1S !he most
successful we1ght lo ss pr011ram 1n 111e world 1
• NEW MINI-MODULES

a.t GOLD CARD S.vlngs
.
Toot Alter you attend 8

• Our Eat•n g Management
techntques wtll help you Iackie
you r wetght pr obl em s and over·
come th um

-'&lt;a, you'll receive $1 .00
off INCh Mekly ..-tlng

'"unUI Sept. 10, 1983.

• OUR EXCLUSIVE
PEPSTEP PLAN .' "

DISCOVER THE ASTOUNDING

Thts opttonal progr am rn c lud es

WEIGHT WATCHERS•'

a n el1e chve exorc •se rour •ne
thal's easy an d lun to doC¥n d

PROGRAM NOW.

,.

• NEARBY ClASSES.
Only Weighl Watchersf\1 makes 1t
sostmple to lose weight by h&amp;v1ng
classes close to where you

w11l make los•ng we •ght more
OO iOya bl e

• " EATING ISN'T
CHEATING"
YOu don't have to sH.H vl··

work or hve . .And rerMmber .

yourself to lose wo1gh\

you can attend classes

Dtscoller hqw our c rea ltve loo d
plannr ng arid our del tc •ous
rectpes Wil l sahsty your oattnq
Ftor ,..,. Mar~ needs wh tle you learn 10 lose

every day ol &lt;he week once
you 've paid a single weekly

meeting tee.

~ A.rea 01ri!CICir W81Qhl SB_OStbly .

Cl!er "*' 1ft ilfiiS 20. «l 70 117
Ot1tf p)d 1111111 AQnl JJ. •!il:l

'-

,eitfi1

WeuJI'' Watc hlln lntl!rnat .Onfl 1.-... 1'183 ow nur
ot we.gn1 w atcne•waod Pe ps u~o u.~:w" u1 •~

CLASS SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS
St. Peter' • Eplacopal Church
541 Second Avenue
Tue: 6:30p.m.
·
Wed: 9 a.m.
1

'
•

�Page

~The Daily Sentinel

No til day Saturday
By JOHN C. RICE
No Til Day Scheduled - Saturday, Aprill6 at 10 a .m . a Nq Til Field
Day has been scheduled for the Roy Holter Fann . The field day will be
conducted along State Route 7. .Just watch for the signs. Included In the
field day will be demonstrations with a no til corn planter and a no tU forage
seeder. Calibration of a field sprayer and weed control will be discussed.
The program wlU probably run lUll p .m .
Occasionally I get calls regarding time and I believe it is time forme to
take some lime to discuss lime with you.
In my opinion, lime comes before fertilizer for most crops. Llme does
the following: supplies calcium and some magnesium: makes phosphorus
and m agnesium more availa ble; increases favora ble microbial activity
which Increases the release of nrtrogen, phosphorus, and other elem ents
from the soil organic matter: results in better soil structure and tilth. Ume
needs can only be dPtermined by a soil test. Some liming materials are
burned lime, hydrated lime. agricult ural lime. slug lime, superfine, and
several others.
The quality of lime is measured by It s TNP /Total Neutralizing
Power) and the fineness o f !,'Tind or particles. The finer the liming
materials. the greter the surface area and the faster it r eacts with acid soil.
Extremely coarse material. larger than w hat will go through an eight
mesh screen. is not considered because it reacts slowly in the soil. The
standard or base is as follows: 40 percent will pass through a 100mesh
screen. 5V percent through a 60 mesh screen and 70 percent through a ro
mesh screen . A ro mesh screen. l believe. refers to 20 holes per square
inch.
When ren ting land, it probably would be wise to soil test first and ,
negotiate a price la ter. I have seen rent al ground require five tons of lime
per acre. This wUI reduce yields and be very expensive to correct We have
a book in our office that lists thecom pa ntessellingllme In Ohio. !I you have
questions on June from d ifferent companies, gtve us a call. Do y ou have
your Agronomy Gu ide yet? They are $2. The infonnation in the Agronomy
Guide is extensive and up to date.
Spring F lowering B ulbs - Within l h ~ next few w eek s the landscape
will be colored w ith spring flowering bulbs, Including' cr ocus, snow drop,
grape hyacinth, daffodil, hyacinth and t ulip. Although the bulb contains
enough food for the first growing season. a light applica tion of fertilizer low
in tilt rogen can be applied when the plant first begins to grow in the spring
and again after flowering to help Insure a quali ty plan t for the following
year . A fertil izer high In mtrogen will ca use lhe bulbs to rot, so a good
source of this nutrient is bonemeal since It releases nitrogen slowly.
As soon as tne flowers die, cut off the flower heao, leaving the leaves
and stem Intact until they yellow and die. While the leaves are still green,
they are producing the food that Is stored in the bulb for next year's plant
development and growth . The longer, the leaves remain. the better the
chances for good flower display the following year .
Bulbs can be left ln the ground until the flowers produced are of
inferior qu ality and-or quantity. Tulips and hyacinths usually require
more frequent dlgrJng and dividing than most ot her bulbs. Som e of the
srriaUer bulbs, such as crocus, snowdrop and grape hyacinth are left
undfsturbed for many years.
When It is time to dig and di vide bulbs, daffodtls and hyacinths are
lifted as soon as tne leaves y ellow and die but tulips are not dug until the
bulb mat turns brown . Shake soli from the bulbs and divide with a sharp
knife. They can then be r eplanted lmm~'diately or spread out to dry and
stored In a cool, dry , well -vent il ated place. until planting ttme in the fall.

Stiversville News Notes
~'recta

Carpenter
M r. and Mrs. Victor Durst, Scott ;
Jason and Kelly, The Plains, spent
a Sunday with Mr. a nd Mrs Robert
Durst and Tom.
Mr. and Mrs T im Wilkin son,
Shawn and Kevin, Columbus. spent
a w eekend with Mrs. Fannie Durst
Mrs. Ruby Bryant and Debra
spent a weekend In Buffalo, W. Va .
with Mrs. Myrtle Lewis and famil y.
Gene Carpenter Is a patient at St
Joseph's Hospita l In Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Va n Meter,
Hlnldey, w. Va . s)J('nt a r""ent
weekend with Mrs. Ada Va n Meter.

Brenda Jones. Radne. was an
o~ernlght guest of PPggy Smith on

Friday recen tly .
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp and
grandson shopped I n Ravenswood
reeently.
Mr. and Mrs . Raymond K erns
wete business vtsitm-s In Middleport on Monday .

• Mr. a nd Mrs . Lawrenee Lipps
and Toni , Little Hocking, and Mr.
and Mrs . Harold Roush. Racine.

were guests

of

Leota

Birc h

recently .
Mrs. Fannie Durst and M r. and
Mrs Monty Proffitt visited a recent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs . Shan
Wells, Nelsonville.
Dale Lawson made a business
trip to Columbus recently.
Mrs Linda B urford and family,
Buckeye Lake, Ohio called on Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Bryant and family a
t-eePnt Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry R ichard,
Long Bot tom . shopped tn Ripley a
r ecent Saturday .
Mr. and Mrs. John Prater. Lana
and Darr ln. visited Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Abels. Long Bottom,
f['('Cn t!y
Mrs. Neta Curtis attended a
meeting of Avon group leaders in
At hens on Monday

Alfred Social Notes
S und ay Sc hoo l a t tr nd a nee
March 13 was 42 ; church attendanc-e 17. March ro Sunday School
atte ndance was .'!R; c hurch attendance 12.
Nina Robln5on and Thelma
Henderson attended Chester UMC
revival March 18.
M axine Yost . La ncaster. visited
Genevieve Guthrie March 9 and 10,

· and

acco ~pa nied

her to hf'r doctor

for a check·UP
Oara Follrod and N ina Robinson
visited Wilma Swart z. Athens. M rs
Swartz fell recently and Injured her
baek .
.
Alfred Livestock Club met at the
hom e of Lee Ann Robinson . March
20. Livestock projeets and moneymaking prjects for the Meigs Fa ir
were discussed. A county 4-H bake
sale will be held at Kroger' s In
Pomeroy, Aprtl2. Baked goods and
colored Easter eggs will be
featured .

Members present werr Lee An n
Robinson, Lisa and Eddie Collins, ·
WUI Poole, K elly Whitlatch , Tim
Dorst, Chad Rotlerts·, Lori and

Honor Roll
The fourth slx w('('ks 2f3dlng prn(Xl honor
roll of thr Portland Elelll('ntur'Y School h11s
bfoen llnnounCf'd Ma.klng a ~:track' of "A" or
abow In all their s ubjt"Cts to bfo l'lamro to thP

roll were:
FirSt Rfiid&lt;' -

Ry an Adams, Clu'lo;Tlt'

Cooper.

Second grad(' - Nick Adams. Mottht&gt;w

Groggel. Kenny HlZPI', Krlsty RlZ('I'. BarbiC'

Roush, Vlrglnla Pickens, Shawn Wol!t.&gt;.
Third graclt' - Joshua Codll('r, Mlcha€'1
Hill, G1enda Holter, Anih e'w Mahlman
Fourth grade -

Mt&gt;lanie Adams, Junk•

Beegle, J&amp;yion COOfl('r. Chris Harmon, Terri

Hill.

F ttth l(l'Bdt' - Susie Sprouse, SJvoti Roush,
BeckY Roush, JilliOn Qul~en . Tanya MeR·
dowl, Nancy HunT, Rae Lynn Dalley.
Sixth gradl' - Sa brina Mahlman, Tinvny
Tll'llord Junior Smllh, Down Johnson.
Debbie 'Gi'ea thou~. Rya n Evans. Bf&lt;'ky

Evans.
L.O. - Mlchat&gt;l Boso, Velll'5Sa Young.
Spf&lt;'IEII Ed. - Oov1d l...awr;on.

'

Monday, April 11 ' 1983

. ..

Shooting leads t~_ rock t~owing incidents

County Agents Corner

By

'

Pomeroy Middlepor1, ~io

- Scott Burke, Paul Col lins, and
Robi n White. Leader s and parents
pt'eSI'nt were Rose and Charles
Carr. Teresa Courtney , Marcia
Guess, K eith Ann Whitla tc h, Wil bur and Bill Robinson, M artha and
Joe Poole, and Rendall Roberts.
Lee Henderson Is recovering

MONTGOMERY, Ala . (API -

;:~t.le=d~~ ·~'fe~ ac':.,";::,;';::~~
clothes (Xlllce officer shot a neelng
black man , prompting a crowd of
angry blacks to throw rocks, bottles
and bricks at poll(:e cars.
The black leadersalsocalledfora
' federal Investigation of the Saturday night shooting of Bobby .Toe
Sales, 23, of Montgomery. He was ln
fair condition Sunday ln the
Intensive care unit of Baptist
Medical Cente", hospital spokesman Dale Bro,.n saJd .
Investigator Ralph A. Conner
shot Sales once in the lower back at

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parker,
Syracuse, vi sited Mr. and Mrs.
Wilber Parker, Martha and Will
Poole.
Joseph Poole has accepted em ·
ployment at Rlckenbacken AFB,
Columbus.
Herbert Stearns received word
that hls son-In-law, who w as Injured
In a I!!'Uck accident lasf fall, died
F eb. 'n.
John Clvlnee and Charles Yost,
Lancaster, spent weekend· ' of
March 5-6 with Genevieve Guthrte
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yost.
A.!tred UMW members, Gertrude Robinson, Florence Ann
Spencer, and Nellie Parker jOined
Rev. Thomas for his monthly
worship service -at Arcadla .Nura·
ing Center March 8. Scripture was
from Matthew 15: 22·26 and the
sennon was on faith. The UMW
Members sang two songs.

The incident markl'd the second _
time in six weeks that violence has, ·-i
sparked ·racial tension between ~ :
Montgomery police and blacks. · • •

Swindall contlrmed reports of
rock and bottle throwing but said he
was not there and therefore could
not comment further on 11. Swindall
also refused to say why Conner
stopped Sales.
Mayor Emory Folmar said
Sunday night be would not corni)1ent
on the shooting unW a city co~
meeting Tuesday.
The Advertiser, a Montgomery
newspaper, reported In Sunday's
edlllons that an a,ngry c~ ot
three dozen blacks stoned pollee
patrol cars at the scene and yelled
racial epithets at Investigating
Officers.

TEAFORD

'

.On Feb. 28, 11 blacks from Ohio
and Michigan were arrested and
charged with attempted murder In
the beating of two white plainclothes
officers and the slloottng ot one
them.

Flood watches and w arnings
were posted In New Jersey, New
York, Conneetlcut, Massachusetts
and VIrginia as waterways tneliea'
above flood stage.
Sunday's rainfa ll totaled 2.3
Inches In Boston. 2.5 Inches in
Springfield. Mass., 2.54 Inches in
Newark, N.J., and 3.57 Inches at _
Monroe. Conn ., on t,h e Housatonic
•
R iver.
"The land Is drenched, there's
nowhere for that water to go but Into
the r iver s," said pollee Capt.
Thomas Mulcahey In Passaic, N .•1.,
where residents w ere bracing for
floods on the Passak· and Pompton

large IIi.

rivers.

I I ' ''"l l " "'" ' "'""' "''~ .. no~
' 1, -M...
III O&gt;&lt;I •""h• noe l

' ' n.. ,. •. ,, n.,p.,... ... ,,,
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4 '"" ..... .

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I ~ ~~

. &gt;'Dh

161!• ••" 1'11!1.11\ll•u~ ..

......... " ' "IJ"

2111-DJ lbs. - -40. Butcher Sows ti-4!l,
Butcher Boars :B-40, Feeder Ptas lby the
h..d)40.50-51, _,Lambs 1111'62.

!&gt;I
M"'""' ''"" ""' '""
'&gt;~ ' """ lo Vru o •n•~ •

II &amp; '"' Rop•"
I M CO "'V"'n I~"''"''" '

p.,.

s .... ...... ...

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C oll ooC G,. niJ

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Ul

y,.,, .. .

14~

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f,~ ~. . otR "~ """ '

4!&gt;1 .....

c .., . .. o...
• •ollooO•II
Woln,.o

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IU1

.........
,._Hu...,

~ ....

(O I Oft

9l

llu tlolo

Onoot.o•'"'.,.,.,.

1

'

WE

ALSO WORK ON
All OTHER APPLIANCES

1300

' "· ~dh .. ~·~~·

S ., GOy•"-'""'
w&lt;&gt;o&lt;ll- """I

Public Notice

••oo
&gt;100

nter\1

ol Ht(lhWdy

218 • . loin

Bv 0Hlrr n t I ht n oar d ol
E {1LICJ I 1iln

Hr ll T r~ a su r Ar .-- 1
Sou Th!-'rn Loca l ~ 1

D"lll ' IS

School Orstnc t

- -.. and , . _ , --Gc;10elli work

olochlcalwort.
{Fr.. E1tlmates )

SPECIAL

V. C. YOUNG Ill

TRANSMISSION FILTER
AND FLUID CHANGE
ONLY '3 1.95 114 , ,

992·62t5 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

11 2'6 ttc

•

. AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
inc - Sidln&amp; - Concreto
P1tios Sidowolks Nt• Construction - At·
modtlinc - Custom Pole
Borns.

"lowest Rates

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

Around
"Friendly Service
GIVE

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.,

US A TRY

Route I
Lon1 Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067

742-2328
l JO I mo

L2 Zl)llc

Acttng
Pr obdte Judne

131 28 141 4 It 31C

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
To' Blddofo
Subjoct' Pun:hoe of School

a..

Fo' Thelloerd of the Southern
Local School Dillrict
Box 178, RICine, Ohio
46771
Sealed pro posal ~ .wdl be
rece•ved by th e Bo,1rd ol

of lhe Sournqr n

.

ope ned

by the treasurer of sard bo ard
as oroYtded by law ~or o ne ! 1)
7 1 pAssenger sc hool b us.
accord mg to specrftcatrbns 'of
sa1d Board ol Educatron
Separate and mdE!penCont
b1ds w1U be rece1~d w1th
re !&gt;pecl1o I he chass•s and body

6 weeko . otd 992 -5818 .

949-2263
992-279] , .,,

Call :

To good hom8. Female pup
4 months old . Terrio r &amp;

t£

o ld

Painting
sondbiasting
WatBrblasting
Parking Lot Stripping
Spray Painting

acid boil and lOCI outra·
~'-- . We also -'"'r
-·~·
•..,.._
Gil Tanka.

PAT HILL FORD

Texture Coatings

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio

For all your wiring .

&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

~~::::::::::::~~~.,~,~~==C=A=LL:6::14=·=9=4~9~-2~6~1~6~~~::::::::::::::~'~'~'"~~====~~~~~~'~"~"~'~
1 13

' 232m~

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

St Rt 124, Pomeroy, OH .

UTILITY BUILDINGS

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
ollliESTONE
•WATER, GAS and,
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, REClAMATION
WORK
•lAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK
BOIID£0 &amp; IWJRit GUARANTEED
PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
992· 7201
3 J.ll&lt;

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also

Transminion

PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121

lnsulatd Dog Houses

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BEAUTIFUL, one year old.
full blooded . Norewelga n
E lkhound . male . very
fri end ly , loves people &amp;
children. has ha d ell shou .
need11 good hom e tn cou n try . 304 -8B2 -281 1

STARTING AT

All Makes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Ava ilable

Racine, Ott .
Pit. 6t4-843·519i

11} 61fc

6

Jllllm~pd

INSTALLED

STRIP

304-676 - I 046

S30

7

1

Narn•----------~--------- 1~----------~

••
•
I

II

I •

•
'

,

I

.
·
E

.. 0-r,t .
1 Jl\ll

I

by Hannan Tra ce Athletic
Booster C lub at the Old
Quaker State Station . Mer ·
ca rville on 218 . Friday &amp;
Seturdav. 1 6th &amp; 16th, 9 -6

3 Femlly Garage Sele M on .,
Tues.. W ed . Damewo od ' •
r .. idence, John St ., Syra ·
cuse , Oh . Kitchen applian ·
cas. tool s. elec . heatera ,
floor scru bber. lavatory ,
hou~ehold items, men ' s &amp;

women ' 1

. .

I
I
l
I
l

17
18
19 ,
20

II

2t .
22 .
23 .

I
I
I

2•.
25.
26 .
27 ,
28

8.

9.
10.

t3 . - - - t4.

31. - - - - - -32 .
33.

16. - - -- - -

35. .

15.------

I
·m
IULIGI '

~

l
1
I

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

_____,__

)

HAVE YOUR TROPHY
MOUNTED
5 To 6 Week Service

On All Flth .
For Mort lnforlltltion Call

The Taxidermv Shoo
umo Rd.:·aii(lond..'iih.

New

PH. 742 ·2225

J 211 1nm

Au ction every Tuead8y
night. Community Butldtng,
Henderson . Co,n tlgners wet ·
come . Auct . Lon nie N eat.

Aur;tion every Fri . night at
'the Hertford Communrty
Center . Truckfoadt of new
merchandise

every

week .

Conalgmenta of naw and
used

merchendlse alweya

welcome . Richerd Reynold s
Auctioneer. 276· 3069 .

Card of Thanks

9

Wanted To Buy

ftower•, end pra.,.rw. your

lfirectfons.

Win., Pillnoe.

concern . woo groritly •PPN· llox- 188. Sordlo . · ,OH
·1 elated . W.H. Lowmon ond 43946 . Phone 614-483 1106 .
. fomlly.

.... --·--------!.-----~---~ ·. .~-----'--- '--~-------

694 -6876
1

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS 1 2 o/o fixed

rtiiO . Loader Mortgage , 77 E.
S tata . Athen s. Oh 10 , -614 -

592 -305 1. "' 1-800-34 16554 1n Oht o
Busm ess &amp; Sec ond Mort ·
gnge loa ns. Equ 1ty Resou r ces .In Oh10 1 ·800· 992 ·
2351.. our o 'f Oh1o .

1-800 641 5286

23

Professio mil

Services
C&amp; L Boo kk Mpmg

&amp; bookkeeping
to r Individuals &amp; bu sinesses .
Short tnrms S5 00
l onn t o rmR S20 .00 and up
Car ol Nolll
446 3862
TuK Roturns

PI ANO TUN I NG $ 5 o ff plus
dtscounts to somor ci t110ns -.
church ns· sc hool !l Call Bil l
War d

Ward 's

Kevbottrd ,

44 6 4372
Hor su

S h oe in ~ 1

Call' 446

9 569
Your p•n no hnve somo ml
ln arpJ on 1H T1rno to tune

up

' t.1111

Dnntels,

RutlAnd ,

742 2 95 1

• cHQI!I hQIV

Ca ll

31 H omes f o r Sa le

earn i ngs !

6 14 · 388 ·

CO MPANI O N u ruently
noedod . night timo rn Pt
Pleasan t tuOA . c n1130 4 675
LA DY to help care l or rfltlrtl d
co uple Hours 3 - 11 p m
C oli 304 -676 ·3172

Si1uation s

Writ caro to r the olde rl y 1n
our homu Trained &amp; e~~:pe ·
rMiftcad. LPN c lU e given
814. 9 92 -7314

In Mtrlrllnport newly ramo ·
dolnd homu w1th firo 1Jiace ,
p o ss i blo woodhumor. c lose
to sch ools and shopprng,
c.11 Gt 4 992 -694 t .

Bv o wnor 3 hodroom h ome·
Rio Grande . Oh Call
614 245 5274 or 614 ·
2 4 5 9517 for Appoi ntm e nt .
Hull!w nab ly pn cu d

rn

3 hdr h omo in Addi1 on
sm ul l lot newly remodeled .
now ol oc trtc plumbing . etc
FuttHIIl CU &amp; wo o dburner ,
fully insulated . oxc . co nd . ,
M1d S20 s CAll 6 14 · 592 ·

4369
Will ctlre for th o eldorlv .
Room , board , and loundry

773 ·6882
Have care lor elderly and
invnlids in my homa. Reas o
nable 614 -992 ·602 2

13

Insurance

S ANO Y AN D BEAVER In ·
surance Co
hu offered
services f or fire insurance
coverage m Ga lll a County
for almo1t 11 ce ntury . Farm ,
home and pononol property
coverages are a-waiiBble to
meet indiv idual needs Con t act Eugen e Holley , ag o nt
Ph one 388 · 8690 .

your hospital -hea lth insu·
r anee
Cal l Carr ol l
Snowden . 446 · 4290

15

Schools
Instruction

Colt 614· 367 -7101 .

.

.

Unemployed bllt skilled . tal ·
en ted or educated? Malie en
oppo rtunity ior yourself.
Learn how to bocome 11 ptud
c onsultHnt in a seminar
thro ugh Ohio Univors1ty ' 1
Ott1 ce of Con trnuing Educa ·
tmn , M emorial Auditonum ·
Lo wer Level . Athens. Ohio
4570 1 Wr1ta o r call 614 -

SAlES NO EXP ERI EN CE
N ECESS ARY to sol i Avon .
W e ' ll sho w you how Good

Are you paying t o much t o r

THE family
of Dorothy property . Call 614 · 992 ·
Lowmen wlshtl to tKptiH 6868 .
their ain ce re' thenkl to Dr. I -----~---~· 7
Morgan and Dr. Harder, to 30 ft . 12 in . I~ beams.
ell the nurn1 and nuraealda • 114-992·3144.
and upecleJJy to tlw glrlt on
the lth. ftoor 11 Hol•r WANTED oldplonoo . Poylng
Hoopltol far their hetp. To t20.00 ond t40.00 eoch.
•••rv ono who oont cerdo, Flrst·ttoor only, write giving

34. -- - - - ·- - --

111 CourtS!.
Pomeroy, Oh. 457"

Gall• po lis
Daily Tribune Your ru sumo
w1ll be h e ld rn st11 c t
conf idence

Organ les1on s wanted . Call
eveninga after 8 614 · 992 -

7200 .
STARTING a female Mart ial
Art s class in P1 Lun.g Kung Fu
&amp;. 1 t reet defense Si fu ,
Roger L. Burn s. assi11ant
in11ructo r Sarah Wade . For
inform•tion cell 304· 675 ..
7722 . If no answer, 675 ·

Wanted to buy. Investment

----------

Remltt•nca·
The Dally Senllnel
.

.

Send res urn n to

1000 c -o

6766 , 304-BB2 -325 1

Mall This Coupon with
.

8

i

'l-1-i
,,,.&amp;_ '·

1

....................... .... .... ...... .......... .... ...... 992·2259

.

I

I,
.I

29. ~-~--~30.

11 .
12.

Hit~~--·.................................... :...................3335

FISHERMEN!

I

I Announ cem ent
) For Rent

c lothing . jeans.

soma new i1ema

,,

!For Sale

REALTORS
·
lllclty E. Cllltnd, Jr .. GAl ..................... ............ 992-6191
,_, Tlllilfll ..................................... ............. 949-2660
T~ .............. .... ................... ............ 992·5692

~ ~A

Wed . 13th.

Porch Sale April 13th, 9 :00 ·
4 00 . 122 Union Ave . Ram
or lhine .

.

f:

M oving Sale Bakery Supp ·
has .. new c lo t h es , ~r , CD .
furnrt ure , etc . 20 1 8 111 Eut ·,
ern Ave , Rea r Tue. 1 2th &amp;

Rummage Sale apon sored

Phone----~------------1

I Wanted

sch edule

W anted

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

I
I

Now l ntlHv tewmn Ln c al
rea l esto t o firm now tntor
v1ewmg ReAl Estnto Sn1os. ·
peop le willing to wurk full
time . E~tce ll en t co mmiss ion

Yard Sale

I

.Addr,ss----------1

These cash rates
tnclude discount

NEEDED: Penons "' Gnllla
County to pr ovid e t ump o ry
ca r e in own home t o uHiivld
uals with developrnrmlnlllt s
abi littes . Receov11 sAinry ,
room And b oa rd foo and
frmge bonef1ts. Traimng pro VIded. Call 446 -7 10 9 be ·
twee n 7 and 8PM fo r tunhor
mfo rmnlton Buckeye co m rnuntty Sorv•c os is 1111 equa l
opportunily omp loyur

12

PH . 992 -2280

1•

Av on Call 446 . 3358

2770
Lost orange stripBd cat ,
bobbed ta il . 9 m o nths old,
vici mty Ptu\1 Drtve . Reward ,

COAL
00 ATON

I

Earn extra mon ey soiling

9045 o• 614 -992 3690

Claudia .

I

RENTALINVESTIIENT - Racine- Pnce reduced O!l.lhll rent~
,;th three 2 bednrom units. Gross rent $450 montlt~. Mostly
furnished. Reduced to $35,000.00.
'
MIDDlEPOll - Nice ·home site Approximatley 4.6 acres, w~
water and etedrcity available. $6,000.00.
.

KITCHEN CARPET
STARTING AT S8.~9 ·

Great Dane black, femal e
Reward tor informa ti o n
lead ing t o recovery Colt
FOUND · M othen nng lden ·
tify . 614 -992 -7646 esk for

MINE RUN

Wr i t e your own ad and order Oy mail with this
coupon Cance l your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundabl e.

NEED A LOT lor !railer or house? 1.46 acre, mce lot with LCCO·
water arxl ele&lt;lric available. Would you bel~ve an askingpnce of
$1.000 tor this firs! lot' Call lor more detai~ .

PER YARD

Lost and Found

446 -2042 .

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for .
Claislfleds and
SaveLl I. .

..

$}295 '

v•...

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

Bo~t

'r

~

34 · 675 ·

2200.

. . .______________________ ....:r-------------1

1-- - - - - - ---1

reparrs

&amp;t Scottie Smith

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

3/4 lfc

2267

n &amp;eds

ONE female spayed Beagle,
3
old . coli 304-882·

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 98~169
D ~wayno Williams

Srzes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x 36'

BLACK and white, 12 Inch
screen . works . but needs a
liut e wo&lt;k . Small Ste•eo
with spea kers on rh e aide ,

S&amp;w Tv
AND

Sizes start from 12'xJ6'

594 -6876

Help Wanted

The Rio Grando Coltog o
CET A Program IS seeknlg
participants f or a classroom
skill tra ing program for fo o d
se rv ice pllrttproteuionH is
(This is not 8 quantity
cooki ng program.) Ohio rosi ·
dents whp hn vo beftn un em p loyed for a minimum of
seven (7 ) day s sho uld to la
phone 1hetr local Oh10 Bu reau ot Employm ent Servi ces Office l or more dotnlls
and to arrange t.o r an tntor ·
view . Ri o Gumd8 Gallego is
an Equal OppofHll1 rty
· Employer

67 5-3867 .

Call for free siding es ·
l'tmates 949 2801 or
'
949 • 2860
•
No Sunday Coils

Residential

'

11

FEMALE Irish Set1er, 1 year
o ld , good wrth ch ildren , cal l

" Beautiful , Custom
Bu'IIt Garages"

needs; furnaces re·
pair service and installation .

F&lt;Myl.--frooEstiimolls

NEW llsntlt - lltDDLEPOITr - McEihanney Hill - Country
Jiving. 4 ye.lt old tri~~l heme on apPrOJimatey 5 acres. 3-4
bedrooms, den. 24xl2 'hvtng room, lam1~ r0001. 3 baths. centr~
vaccwm. utility room. 2.400 SQ..Ieet oiiMng space plus 2 car
garage. !hiS work room, lull bisemeftt 1014%borxl issue money
wrtl buy this home. $56.000 00.

ALL CARPET ON SALE

614 -

Free
good
Terrior
beagl e mixed: 10 mches ta ll

NEW LISTING - Great Bend Area - Rt. 338 - Ckise to ni!W
bndge. Beautijut view ol river. 1.34 acres of mce layi ng land
directlj acrass from Kaiser. 2·3 bedrooms. sun room. !rut! trees.
\'Jio wens. garden space. $22.500.00.

SPRING CARPET SALE

CASH &amp;'CARRY S4.99

Giveawav 3 Terrier puppias,

NEW LISTING - Near Rutland' A femod~e~ 3· ~droom horne
wrth deckrng. Kitchen, dtning and i ~ng room. Appro•imal~y 5
acres Gas real $26.900.00

Mlac. Merchandise

Gol d, sliver . sterling, 1e
welry, nngs . old c oins &amp;
currency . Ed 8 urk eu Barber
Shop, Mi dd leport . 992 ·

does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing tor u fe
may place an ad in thts
co lumn. There w ill be no
charge to the adveniser.

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"
Or

oppon unity tor " vourseli .
LeRrn how to become a pa1d
co nsultant in a 1emiar
through Ohio Universitiel
Ol ft ce of Contmumg Educa ·
ti on , Mernortel Auditonum ,
lo wer leve l, Athens, Oh
45 70 1 Wrrt e or call 61 4 -

ANY PERSON who hos
anything to g 1ve away and

All types of roof work. 111111
or ll!pair, gull~ and
downspouts. gutter cleaning and painting, storm
doors and windows.

I l ll li t

Unemployed but sk1lled. ta l·
entad or educated7 Make en

Oh . 0• 992· 7760

ROOFING

Now Homes - Extensive
Aomodetinc.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole BidiS&amp; Garoces
•Roolina Work
oAiumimm &amp; Vinyl Sldinas
15 YeoB b:perience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
or 992·2282

LISHING CO recommend•
that you do busmets w1th
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mAll until you have tnvetti ·
gated the offering

BEDS · IRON , BRASS . old
furn iture , gold, silver dol ·
Iars. wood tee bo~tes . stone
jars. antiques, et c . Com pht1e hounholds . Write :
M .D Mill er. At 4 , Pomeroy ,

Giveaway

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
THE OHIO VALlEY PUB ·

3476 .

OHIO BONO -ISSUE IIONEY WILL BE AVAilABLE SHOITrLT.CN..L
FOR APPOINTII(NT AND INFOAIIATION ON ANY OF OUR OVER
100 PAOPEITrlES.

New Haven, W . Va .

LooaLSchQol Dr slnc t o f Rac!,!1e,
Oh•o at t~ e Treasurei"s offtc e
un ttl 12 00 noon on Apnl 29,

4

21

68 2-7448 .

16 - t 7 , 7: 30 p.m.

H. L. Writesel

~ ~~~~~~~~~~

a.

Revival meeting, R1vervi ew
Baptilt Church , Point Plea ·
sant . W. Va .. Dr. Fred
William•. evangelist, April

OHIO
.
. PH.992-2259 ·

Phone 882-2131

FREE

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

painting &amp; remodelmg . Cell

446 -9281 .

NIGHT C RAWL ERS
RED
WORMS h ighest prices
paid . Lake Jackson Bate 8t
Tackle, Oak Hill Call 614 ·

Square Dence every Satur·
day from 9 to 1 AM . Country
Rock Sunday 7 to 11 PM .
Robert Pickett's, East Dar ·
win, St . Rt . 681 .

pG

Conltru"ction will do drive ·
wa.v t . aapt'lalt , concrete.

614 -446 -0176 .

Pharmacy .

~OMEROY,

,.

WITH PAD

) ... 2· 111()

l l ·t!C

Lawn Mowing no vard to bi11,
or small . Reliable and depen·
d• ble. For e1tlmate celt
446 -3169 between 9and !5.

ers. Prefer 1 965and up. Call

Fruth

pills'

949 - ~665 .

tiOB E. MAIN

Now renting 26 one bedroom apartment
units. renting for 30 percent of you'r adjusted income under the Department of
Housing &amp; Urban Development Section 8
program.

ALL CARPET
-INSTALLED

' water

20 Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES
Cal l 843-5425

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Tobocco Moricet, N . 26th I------~--St . • Hun tingtvery
on , Set
WV&amp;. clean
We pay
cash
for late model
Indoor-Outdoor
used
cars
Sun. Special dealer let up
Frenchto wn Car Co
83.00 . Tables &amp; rack• fQr
9111 Gene Johnson
rent. 26 cents admi11ion . 4 46 ·0069
Call 304 -623 -2131 fo • 1-_:__:__ _ _ _ _ __
more info rmation .
Pay cash f or used mobile
homes or tre~l trave l trail ·
Reduce safe &amp; fast with

If mtereated

446-9800

-

l s/C hari P.S H Knrght

Farm Equipment
Dealer

General Hauling and Tush
removal Service . Aaliable
and depandatile Call 448 3169 between 9 and 6 .

446 -3159 or 256-1967 in
the evenings, ·

Gobeae capsule• &amp; E-vap

'Siding
'Roofing
'Gulter &amp; Oo111n Spouts
' Remodeling

New Hollaoo. Bush Hoc ·

1 B ·Wanted to Do

ture
of all.
kinds,1nd
call Antiques
Kenneth Swain

SWEEPER and •wing ..w...
china repair. pans. •nd

-------"""'---l----------+-------'----+-----------1 S.dog)had initial s hotsca. (Hous9
ll
RADIATOR
GHEEN'S
MILLER
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
to
home.
PAINTING
INC.
SIDING
Colt 6 14-992 -6506.
SE~V ICE.
Industrial, Commercial,
ELECTRIC
B·s· SELL
year
Brittany spa .
;
cE.;!r:r
~=:~~i~~~ial, Interior and
SERviCE
SIDl NGCO. TWO
niet, 304 -67 5 -1379 .

Real Estate General

154

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Otdfumi -

poodle mi•ed Been wormed

t
t

Gallrpoli s. Ohto 1 " ' ••

RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLY

1ft{)

EUGENE LONG

Authorized John DHr,

Riverside VW Inc.

1&lt;1 \ G 11 . 18 25 4r c

"-oy, Ott.

.OPEN 9 Ill 5 liON. llru SAT.
All Types of Auto Rop.oir,
8rtkos. Tuno-Ups, etc.

-Plumbing and

in c lips and lnsurcmce.

Box 1 76

4 1\ I

BOGGS

- Addano and rwmodolng

RYDER TRUQ&lt;
RENTAL &amp; ONE-WAY
local and one-way. low rail$,
top marntatMed trucks. R111tt
sizes, right equipml!flt. Hand
trucks. lurmlure pads, Na·
tiO!NIIde Road Service. Mov-.

O ht o

Pomeroy , DH .
Open 9 :00 to 6 :00
Mon .-Sat.
Clooed Thurs.

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OH 10

•

the es tat P a t Joseph Lee
Srt!l r&gt;rl u•.old deceased lat P of
Su!1 o n To wn sh •O M e1gs

1983 and at thaT tr rne

POMEROY
LANOMARK
614-992-2181

!O b 1ddm o.; , ~r P o n t If' 111 1hn
o ff 1\P o t lh1 ' l l fil '&gt;l orr·r R,1c me

r LH&lt;:; I:iW I 10

Seclion 4 511 76 ol ThP RP
vosf'd Cod~ anrj all n rhn
p~H!tnf'n l
p rov1S10ns o t ldw
Spf!Ci flc ar.on&lt;; and Hlf; tr uc l• o n&lt;;

•S tt al or and Ar1mJn ts tra tfl x ol

Countv Ohr0

~...
.._..

Public Notice

IYPf' and wo ll S!i't lr1 th a1 th ~ bu s
whp11 dSSPrnhlf'd o.H l d 01 tOr II)
deiM'r y com ply w• th all '&gt;l hr)OI
r11 SI J1tt SPf'll ftc&lt;l!lons all sal f' ty
IIJIJtlldtt uns Jnd t.t ur f&gt;n t Oh tO
M tn11""1\lln srn nrl flrd s lor Sc hoo l
8o1s cons!nt Chon o f Thr Oeporl ·

foeld and Yolan J Sm terf reld

-~ .. ,...... ... I!Midlll(.
135-Dotls I Clotlles 0. Potldo

''!&gt; "",.,. .... I
Sl't R-c, ,.,,..

u......

U~O ~ I "-"'k

Rou te 1 Mo ne1svolle Oh10.
•457 63 wqs Jppor nt ed A(Jmm -

JilL CIWI IOIJI(S. .$Z.OO -~
MIIGIItalllfC.flltF--.!!IOC

• ••• Cnd4o lQ4

I Aveta'l&lt;' 4

U4-14 Quick Machine Quilb
UHISIIion Home Quittinr
UZ·Quitt OrieJnols
13Udd a Block Quilb
129-Qulei 'n' Eny Tttnslors
128-(nllitttN Potchworlt Quitb
126-Thrilty Crolty flowtrs
121-Piliow Show-Oils
JIB-Crochet with Squores
117-Eay Art of Nlldltpoint
ll4-C4mplolt Archons
112-Pria AlclttM
111-Eay Art of Hairpin Crochet.
110.16 Jilty Rucs
101-lnstant lbcrome
107-tnstant Stwinc
106-IMtant Fashion
104-lnstant M...,
IOJ.J5 Quilb for lodty

Educahon

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
ltENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

...... c~ w11

• • UC&lt;O&lt;IoRU

""'"'"-"
..
Up l&lt;t I ~ W ,, ~.

ME!IQS CounTy Proba te Cow r.

The Daily Sentinel
llo. 163, Old CMIIu Sll., Ntw

lttl"lf'''

~ ()'""'

Case No 24060 Jamf&gt;s Sa uer

·

II

Go~'"""'
c ... ob•o

u~

1Sfi
6 43

.......... ... 8,,

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF JOSEPH LEE
SATIERFIELD, DECEASED
c.. No. 24060 Doekot 12
1'11_20 353
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF AOICUARY
On Mar c h 2 l 1983 rn lhf'

Needltcroft Dttll

'I I &lt; ' I

"" "'~' Cnun&lt;v

~·•oCuol•ll4

I~'"'"'~'"

Public Notice

Doubl~ dramatiC, coz~! Cr{)chet afghan plus ptllow
Easy shell strtches rn J coiOIS
hom ~me11can lndian·mspned
deSig n Croc het handsome
atehan plus pillow of synthelrc
worsted. Pahern 7159: dii!C·
tions, color ideas
$2.50 lor each pahern Add
501 each paHern lor postage
and ha ndling . · Send to:
All(t Broab
J -t ·; ·

'" JI 10•/o• / oII&lt;

~~ 8&lt;1011 II.

··.....

6 ! I' "

•~ !ipO&lt;
1 ' ""'"'''" '"~n•
Ofi
o o,, ~ .n o

Indian-Inspired

Ytn, NY .10113, Print Nome,
and cutlers 3&lt;.1'M,I.25.
Aoldrm, l!,, Ptlttm Number.
Spnnpr COWl! (by the head) 295-420, Col&lt;&gt;
Yes! I wanttoseemorecrafts, send
plus call pairs {by thE&gt; unlo ~96. Veals · me your new 1983 NEEDLE CRAFT
{choice 1111&lt;1 prime) ~.liO. Baby Calves.tby
CATALOG. 150 designs. 3 free·
lhe -~4tH!~, Baby Calves lby the hOad)
panerns OnlyJI.50
!16-66.
HOG PRICES: Hogs (No\ 1 barrows and

/II/IIIU

MftiMO
1 6 "' " lftPo"' R &amp;cc • .,.,,,.,

14 r,(.,,.;;O.Oih

' ' ""'""'" ~ ' " 'k"'
4M' """'"'""' I ,. R.,,
• u " " t. • • •

I } Mo..,"'"""' ""'
·~

( I" " • fwd I"'J! I ' ' " ' , ., llw

l••·

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

44 "'""'""""'1m ~ •n•

1 0 H, ,., • ., ! o '""'~'

57·&amp;1.50, 500 to 600 lbs :»62 .75, til) to 700 Jbll.
~2. ~1. 700 to 8XI lbl. f7·58..'ll, tm to ovt&gt;r
43-!16.

gUll)

·~

··· s ...
} 1 ...., ......

M " M,., c ~anol.,,
"~ ' "" ''"'~ s .. pp1,,..
!&gt;f
· ~ · s •••

~]

F~el' He11("rs: Good and Chol et'. 250 to :nJ
lbs. 57-62, :nl 10 400 lbs. :515-60.50. 400 to !ll Jbs.
M-00, ~ TO 600 lbs. ~ 50-61, &amp;M) to 700 lbs.
51·58.Ml, '700 to b lbs 47.50-~7. tKD to ovt'r
47 51.111.
F~r Bulls · Good aOd cOOlcc, 2:iO to l.Il
lbs. 61 ·71, n to 400 ltM ~-67. 400 to 500 lbs .

Slaughter Bulls I OVt'f' HIXJ lbs I 52.~.
Slaughter Cows: utulties •2.5().50, canrW!'ni

IJv . ..... wn

I "'""'I '"'

4 I ' • ' ' " " "' lOrn I

.:J.ml.50.

A'niENS uvt:l!TOCK
April ~ ltlt!S
CAII'LE PRICES: Feeder Steers (~
and choice) ~lbs. ~.M-63.50, m700 lb5.
~58. Feeder Hellen (good alid cl'l&gt;k.'el
m:100 tbs. 47-55.50, 500-700 tlls. ~42~.
Feeder BulLs (ROOd and chok.'t'l IDI'!OO lh.&lt;r.
~7.rl.50, 5(10.100 Ills. 57 . ~:11l. ' • .

. . . .......

" ~""'' '" ~ ""'
4J M"'"'" "'"'"'' ho " ""I

co.

thfo head 3148.

II ..... . ~·

~

~1 CR lVII. ~"" "' ' 'I&gt;M p m• •"

:09 ' "'

..

Olo 'II•W•nt o,j

Gollpollo, Ohlo
AprtU, t 11!3
Feeck&gt;r Sl~rs : Good and c hoice.~ ro ,'K()
lbs. 63·72.50.lKllo 400 lbs. 6'2·71 400 to !'AXI Ibs.
61 -1!1.75, m to tiD lbs. 58 50-67, tiOO to 700 lbs
~7-lli, 700 to 800 lbs. ~62.50, tnt To over

Cauk&gt; 290-4~ .
Cows &amp; CalVE's Combtnatlon m.~
Top Hop, JU to m lbs. 46.7~47 75. Boa11
as.to r,o, Sows 400 lbs. and up 47.!1}-49, Pigs by

Housing
Headquarters
54 Miac. Merchandise

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

b 1 " """'~"~" r..... n.

16 llro1 1 "•'• w 0.,.n

Market ·
reports..

Holstein S!('('r!l and Bulls 300 To 8XJ lbs .
47.00.M.50, Bulls l ,W) Jbs. &amp; up 48.5().51.50,
Slaugher CbWS, utiiiUes 41.»46. ~. Canr.&gt;~
and C'lllters 32.50-41
Veal Cai\.1.'S, cholct' and prtme, 100 to .1 ))
lbs. f0.50-90.!KJ, Baby Calves 4G-100, Spt1nW?r

1 " "'" "' o,, Sol o

l } ... ,.b.ell n n o o&gt; I&gt;M ~ IIo

I I ' "'"" ' ' " Solr
H 11,,,,., 11 1,.on.,.qo

Evacuations were reported ln
VIrginia and Conneetlcut. High
winds and heavy rains knocked out
power to !00 Conneetlcut homes.
F urther west, in West Alton, Mo..
authorities say It may be three
weeks before the 300 to 500 people
who were forced from their homes
by a broken levee can return. The
levee ruptured Friday and' let In the
waters of the swollen Mississippi

. omo vMLEV LIVE8l'OCK

OUR SERVICES ARE WORK·
lNG. TRY US AND SEE. CALL
992·3876.

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION CO.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

RACNE - Mooernlookmgone
bedroom home. Storms, oak
floors, tub bath, aluminum
sidin&amp; and 62x1 19 level klt.
$14,500.

NEW LISTING - on Rl 33
toward Rock Spnngs. 1.5
acres, 3 bedrooms. forced a~r
furnace, carpetm&amp; equtpped
krtchen, 2 porches &amp; garage.

1 13 W . 2nd St .

• II l mo pd

YOUNG'S

Remodeled
okler home w1th 3 bedrooms.
carpebng, palto, porch and
garden May sell on bme. What
have you down or trade

$39,000

SHOE
REPAIR

t..-----"'-----1~-----,.----+----------+-----------1

POMEROY

NEW LISTING - Attracbve 3
BR lamrty home with over 2
acres Has equ&lt;pped stejl'saver
krtchen, 2 baths &amp; eKtra ~rge
liv1ng room with weodborner
All publ1~ Just outside of town.·

Oh.

Ph . 992-21H

4 S.tlc

NEAR RUTlAND - ThiSoners
real~ nice. 5 yrs ~d. 3
bedroom;, fireplace m lamrly
rm, 2 car garage with shop,
sun deck and one n~e acre.

97 ACRES - Or· Will dr~de.
New gas well, 7 room house.
I \? balh~ gas furnace, modern
krtchen. basement. barn and
outbuikJings. ·

Pomeroy,

PARTS ond SERVICE

•DOZER

~·

. . .. .. ~ .... . . . , 1 .. . . . . . . . .
~

''"•I•••""'"' ~ • .,; .. ,.,

•Refrigerator~

•Oryert •Fr. .zen

RACINE AREA - 80 acres
about han is tractor bnd.
House remcid~ed. new balh.
fireplace, basement and some
timber. Reduced lor you About
$700.00 an acre.

PHONE 992-2156

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

•Welhers •Dialtweshen

APPLE GROVE - On a hrH ~Is
this 1970 Cardinal 11x60
trailer. Good coontry road w1th
ma11 and schoo bus rts 1.79
acres lor JUst $12,Sllll

..•·

--

985-3561
All Makes

- Oozors
-Bockhoos
- Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Woter
- Sewor
- Gu lines
-Septre S1$tems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478

9

Announcements

suppliea.
Pick up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum I---------~
Cleaner. -one half mile up Buying Gold . Silver, Plati ..
Gaorgea Cr8ek Rd. Call num . Gold end Sliver prices
446· 294
are the highest in two yaara.
check our prices on go ld &amp;
Fran ' s Refund Club Meeting ailver. scrap jewelry Buying
April 28th . Open to the Old cotns , sc rap rings &amp;
public . Information nil ti lverware . Deily quotu
614 -448-0337 .
av•ilabla. Also coins &amp; coin
supplies for sale. Spring
Outstanding 200 D•lera . valley Trading Co .. Spring
Anliquea-Craft- Fiee Market Valley Plaza. 448· 8026 or
41 the ' Huntinglon Pride &amp; 448 -8026 .

PULLINS
EXCAVATING.

RADIATOR SEIMCE
From ho Smallnt Htller
Coro to the IJt;pst Radii·
lor.
Radiotor Specilist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yn. hperilttco

Rangea

POMEROY - Th~ 1bedroom
home ~ tn good condition. Has
_ful basement mce krtchen. gas
FA furnace. I 'h baths and

....'

CDMPI.ETE

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

$8,500

SLIDELL, La. I API -Residen ts
River.
Another major stonn Is brewing
Central Plains and the Mississippi
of this New Orleans suburb packed
A Natlonal Weather Service
over the western Plliins, forecaster
Valley will get more rain. The
sandbags and cleared out some of
foreeaster In Kansas City said the
.lack Hales said early tpclay. The
system should move to the East
their be)onglngs as the Pearl River,
worst of the rains are over- untll
storm system won't Influence
Coast by the end of the week, Hales
enrorged by days of rain, crept past
Wednesday.
said.
weather unW Wednesday, when the
the record level set In a "100-year
flood" ofl979.
· Civil Defense officials warned
that the homesof25,oo:Jpeoplewere
in dan€er, and aU major highways
between Louisiana and r.9llsslsslppl
In the SlldeU area were virtually
closed by Sunday evening.
An estimaied 3,500 residents fled
from low-lylngsubdlvlslons by noon
Sunday followlnr televised evacuation warnings. The water came up
fa st during the day, and m any
people who waited until afternoon
had to get out in boats. Thousands
more continued In their fourth day
of non-stop sandbagging.
Water stood up to l'i feet deep In
som e streets Sunday morning, an
estimated 700 homes were flooded
and officials said the worst was yet
to come.
St. Tammany Parish President
Bruce U nangst sa id another 12
Inches of water was expected to
,-,11(,- flood the area by Monday afternoon.
The Pearl reached a record crest
of 21.2 feet Sunday m orning and
•
began to fall. I t w~s expected to fall
to . 2lJ:4 . feet by 7 a. m . Monday
morning, the · National Weather
Service said . Civil Defense spokesrna n Sam Morton said a 22-foot
SANDBAGGING - Workers buUd a smaU levee
Slidell, La. as the rising West Pearl River sent 2,000
of
sandbags
to hold back flood waters Sunday In
crest, tw1ce flood stage, had been
Jlei'SOIL&lt; from tbelr homes. (AP Laserphoto).
predicted.
Meanwhile, the driving rain· . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : _ - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - storms thatdevastatedDixlewrung
themselves out over the Atla ntic
coast today after causing at least
one death and drenching New York
City, w here 3.381nches ofraln feU In
Or Wnt e Oallly Sentmel Clau ified Dept
Central Park and only the sea lions
II I Court St .. fOIMfGJ. Oluo • 5769
appreciated It.
'

The Daily Sentinel

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

NEW LISTING - 7 room
frame home in Pomeroy, out of
all tloods. 2 lots, 3bedrooms. aH
utilities, tub bath. carport and
small garden. For a qu ~k sale

,

3

t·----------~----------"TT----------,-----------1

Phone
1-(614)-992· 3325

Ali but four defendants. were
cleared last month by a Montgom ery district judge, but a state
grand jury Is reviewing the evl·
dence against allll.

.
.
Busmess services.

'llfJ4 ..

The Daily Sentinei-Pa¥-7

,.

Vti!GtL B. Sll . IEIUOI
2h[ . 2ndSt.

New Orleans p~ck sandbag~, clear belongings

rrom a sevPre cold .
Pearl . and Donald Randolph
v isited Beatrice Bentt, Lancaster,
Dorothy, Eldred and Marie Hess.
Dalton . Dorothy Hess Is m aking a
good reeovery from eye surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ritchie
celebrated lhe first birthday · of
their son Larry at thei r home
March 20. Present were Janice
Kestner. Dorothy and Bob Ritchie,
Sara and Garland Caldwell , Janet
Con nally, Marlene and Michelle
Donovan, Martlyn , Wllbur,andLee
Ann Robinson, Bill and Dorothy
Robinson .

about ll: 35 p.m. Saturday, pollee
Chief Charles Swindall said .. Tbe
shooting occurred ln a predoml·
nantly black area on the edge of
oo..ntown Montgomery.
State Rep. Alvin Holmes, who Is
black, said Sunday be ~rrnined
after talklng wJth relallves and
friends of the wounded man tbat
Sales "was just walking oo..n the
street" when confronted by the
officers.
But Holmes urged calm, a plea
that was echoed by Albert Saqkey, a
county leader of the N a tiona.!
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People .

Porn-,; Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Apilll , 1983

t

Lovely, 6 rooms Double
garago , beautifully la nd• ·
capod aroa lot . Ato p Rose
Hill, Porn 40 's 614 · 986 ·

426 7
-lc 4 bedroom b rick ranch . 8 Y2
acre s with back yBrd swim ·
ming poo l
Approx
3'/l
milli s hom Raven swood in
W VA S hown by appoint ment on ly C all 304 - 273 6 1 66 ahur 5 p .m .

Cosy 2 bdr ho me partially
remodeled , 1 ni ce country
acre. vorv Rfordab le Re·
duC6d S1 3 ,5 00 Call 742 -

2390
~-

-

~-

------

THREE had,oom . full baao ·
fJ.'f.IIH, 75 " 120 lo t , C htt o n ,
CITy wnto r . gfl s heal .

514,900 304 -882 -3137 ,
304 773 ·5860

---·--APPRO XI MATELY B acres,
small h ou !io, out bui ldings.
r eason nbl e. c all 30 4 · 896 ·

38 19.
House f or sole or trade ·
equal value for house in
.country. 1 acre end halt
more or less. No phone , may
be aeen at126 Lavne Street ,
New Haven . W Va .

32 Mobile Homos
lor Sale
US EO M OB IL E
576 ·27 11 .

HOME .

STUDENTS t or croc h ut
1969 SCHULTZ
cl assu . Begin s. Apr il 12 , lof t
•
304
·773 ·52 16 .
or right handed in !i ~ruct io n .

Call 304-676,4667
'

1 B Wanted to Do
Gerden1 ploWed wtl:h large
rototlller six inches deep.
Reidy to plant . R ou1er· 614 ·

992·2490.

. ,.
'

trailer ,

.'

1977 14·x70 WINDSOR , 2 . "
bedroom. total electri c. w ith
wood burner , 304 · 675 ·

8930 or 676 -3346 .
CASTLE mobile . ·
h ome . Partly furn ished, 2
bedrooms . S3300 . 304 ·

1 Ox6 5

773 ·5063 .

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

61 Household Goods

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

SWAIN
AUCTION S. FURNITURE
82 Olivo St .. Gollipolia. King
coli a. wood heetert with
fen l.t69. Mt box apr.ing •
manreu 1100, firm e120.
tofa-loveHet &amp; chair e199.
love eeall 170. new coal &amp;
wood heatert •• low 11
1399 with blowers, uted
coal &amp; wood healers, new
dlnet aet• •1 00 &amp; Up,
refrigerator•. range•. bunk
bed• complete e199, bunkie• manreue• e40. chena,
dre11ora, Tv'a. Call 446·
3169.

TRI - ST ATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED· CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CAll 446 -7572 .
CLEAN USED MOBIL.E
HOMES KESSEL'S (:IUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPPLIS .
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274.
For ule-1 acre with 12x60
mobile home . large hi
ground pool and fou ndation
for' house. Call 304 -696-

64 Mlac. MerchandiM KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

14x70 Bayview total elect·
ric, 3 bdr ., $7,400 . 12x60
liberty good con d .. 93,900 .

Coli 446-0175 .

byL.arryWrtgllt

F.:.::.:::....:.---::::::::=:::---,

1 . c a f f e e t a b l"e
47.,..x18'hx15'h ln. ond 1
end table 21ix18'hx20'h
with light walnut flnlah f30,
32x53- 174 p i - brown
underpinning for 1 mobile

I fiNe A t::ilTeN ...
I'M USQ) 'fo HAilt

with e.acptmdo. 3 bedroom. 2

HOUSE, six rooms, bath.
built in kitchen. dishwnher.
city water. gae. large garden
s pot , storage building .
9150 .00 month , near
Stauffer, Gallipolis Ferry .
Call 304 -675-5595 .

bath. air. stero. microwave.
S'torage building . end m ore .
For a fam ily looki ng for a
l1t1e extra in e mobi le home must see. Rodney -Cora Ad .

Call 614 -245 -9229 .
1974 Kirkw ood mob ile
home c ompletely fumisMd .
36 .000 BTU ce ntral air
co nd . . 16JC10 porch with

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

awning , new underpinning
and e small building, very
very oxc . cond, &amp;8 , 500 . Call

614 -388 -8434
388 -9809.

2 bdr . large trailer partially
tu m .. 1 mile out of Gallipolis
of At . 68 8 . Call 614-245 9 170.

o r 614 -

Cherokee Mobi le
Home. 12x47, good c·o nd .,
$3 ,600 . Call446 -0706 .

1966

2 bdr . un turn . in Cheshire,

utilities
4229 .

1982 Schultz ·" Limited Edi tion " . 1970 2 bdrm ., mi cro wave. dishwasher, stereo,
Masonite siding . F&gt;riced 1o
sell. French Cily Brokering
Servica, 446-9340 .

' .

33 Farms for Sale

Call

446 -

2 bdr. trailer out At 160 in
country . Will accept children
and pets. Call446 -0167 .
2 bedroom mobile home.

1978 Schultz 14x70 2
bdrm ., 2 beths, Central air,_
good cond .. on renlal lo.t ,
near Goodyear F&gt;lent , anumable loan . French City
Brokering Serving, 446 ' '9340
.
., 92,960 . up us ad . mobile
homes for sale . 2 bedroom.
completely f u rnished .
Ready to move ln . Brown's
Trailer Park , Minersville, Oh .
614 -992 -3324 .
1972 14x66 mobile home.
3 bdr., ga1 h98t, very clean .
614 -992 -2166 , BAM to
6PM aik for Tim, af1er 6PM
882 -3692.

paid.

Call 446-0766 .

·

Camper Trailer Iota for
summer. secluded woOded
area . Overlooking Ohio
river. Vic Brown . Miners·
villa. Oh . Call 814-992 3324 .
-.
·
-lc 2 bedrooms tn Rac inG. 614 367 -0288 .
2 bed. fum . 1 child. no pots .
$150 mo .. New Haven .
304 -882 -2466 .

Adults only, no pets. dep. &amp;
ref . mq. Your ulil. are paid. 2
mi. out St . Rt. 143. 992 3647.
r
Mobile Home . Partially fur nished . Adultaonly , no peta .
614 -949 -2638 .
THREE bedroom. bath &amp; V:z.
unfurnished. $200 . plus util ities . TWO bedroom partly
fumished $160. plus utili ties . Glenwood, 304-676 2441 , 676-9073 .

176 ac res , good timber and
water. No dwelling . Numercue building sites . 3% miles
from Ravenswood . Call
304 -273·5166 otter 6 p.m. 1 ------~""'"""':=TWO bedroom trailer on
Ashton - Upton· Rd .
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
FurnIshed - unfurnished.
150 .00 month plus deposit utilitiel, 304 -676-4088 .
6 -20 Acrea woods. over looking Ohio River. city TWO bedroom trailer on
achoola . 446 -3664 or 1- Ashton - Upton Rd .
613 - 423 - 8928 . Fu rn ish ed - unfurnished,
160 .00 month plus depoail Owner / Agent
utilities, 304 -676-4088 .
36 a cres at Rodney on W.T.
'Watson Rd. Owner financ - TWO bedroom nailer, kil ing available . Ca11446 -8.2 2 1 chen furnished , couples
only, $180 ..00 month, referafter 6 week dB y s.
ence•. 304·676 -1076.
1 acre lot 6 mi fro m Holzer
hospital Just off R1 . 160
out Floyd-Clark Rd 700 ft. 43 Farms for Rent
~ Call 446-0390

lota for 1111ie located 6
minutes from Holzer Hospi ·
tal . Approved Subdivision .
Coli 446 -2314 after 4 •30
lols for nle 'In Raci ne.
614 -949 -2340 o r 614 949 -2571 .
lot in Bradbury, very good
lotlltion with trailer hook up . All ut ilitie!. septic tenk
Call 614 -992-2602 .
THREE miles out Sandhill
Road, 2.6 acres. call 304 676 -3244 after 6 :00p .m .
109 ACRES . more or less.
. lo cated ·Tribblo Rnftd . 8
·· Miles back of Arbuckle
&amp;30 .000 . 304-676 -193B .

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Buying houses and apanmentt . Need propertiea with
fevOfable price and term1 .
Bo• 1109 Gaiipolis, Oh .
46831 '

41

Houses for Rent

&amp; rm . hou.a 928 First Ave. in

Golllpolia. Call 448 -3946
after &amp;PM .

.

2 bMroom houae . L1rge
11\lln g room, kitchen S. both.
Furnlehed . Overlooking
Ohio River. Adultl only.
Brown's Trailer Park. 614992· 3324.
2 .bedroom houee. com·
pletely redecorated. car·
peted, ttorm Windows and
doora. Call 614-992 -3090.
. Houae for rent. 604 E. .Main
St.. Pomeroy, Oh. Ploill
coli 614 · 992 -11144 bo t - 10 o.m. • II p .m .
HouM for ront, 302 15th
2 bedroom•.. good
condition. 304-876 -6323.

str..t.

FOR rent. Pasture , 304676 -5110

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr . Regency Inc. Apart·
men1s 8 200 per mo. or if

8ft . meat cue. 8ft freezer,
income is $10.000 or leaa 14ft. produce caae, other
HUD available . A-One Real mi.c . •tore equipment. Call
Estates. Carol Yeager. Real- 614-367-0378 between 10
tor. Call 304-875-6104 or &amp; 4 .
676 -6386 or 676-7786 .
6 prom dre•ae• sizes 7 -13.
3 rm. and 4 rm . unfurnished like new . Worn only once .
apartments. Ulililies paid, Call 448 -9789 or 448no pets . no children. Can _3_6_9_4_._ _ _ _ _ __
1
446 -3437.
For aale metal culvert 6 inch
First floor furinshod apl , thru 60 inch in stock . State
utilities paid , deposit &amp; lease approved 1 6 gauge 1 2 inch
required . Adults. no pets . 86 .36 ,per ft ., 24 inch
Call at 631 Fourth Ave., 810.10 per tt: 36 inch
816.60 per ft . Also plastic
Gallipolis .
culvert in stock . 6 inch thru
2 bdr. apartment park front 18 inch , 8 inch,, .80 per ft .,
view, part turn .• water paid. 12 inch 83 .80 per ft . Ron
$175 mo .. Call448 -3919 or Evani EnterpriseS, 4 mi.
South of Jackson on ST . AT.
446 -0021 .
93. li1 4 -286 -5930.
Furnished apt . e226 , utili ties pd ., 1 bdr., adulu. Call Cedar wardrobe, l!lntique
446 ·4416 attar 7PM .
trunk , 3 tier glass table &amp;
concrele picnic fable with
.1 bedr_o ain ·a partment for benches . Call 614 -256 1 788 .
.
rent . Call 446 -0390 .

JACKSON ESTATES ' Equal
Hqusing QpportuniW ' has
O.ne bedroorn aru,llrttnQif)ts
r:ent atdrting a; $167 per
month and two bedroom
apartments rent sterting at
8193 per month. 8200
deposit . Call 446 -2746 or
leave message.

45

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping room $116. utili ·
ties pd . single male. 1her,e
beth . 919 2nd Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 446-441e after
7PM .
For renl Sleeping Rooms
end light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Holel .
Call446 -0766 .

46 Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Parle., Route 33, North of
F&gt;omeroy . large Iota. Cell
992 -7479 .

New &amp; Used Troy Buill
Tillers . . Swiahert lmple ·

OFFICE space available. Will
remodel tor right tennant .
Saddlebrook Inn, Pt. Pleasant. 304 -676-6276 .

Advent wide screen TV.
cond . Call 448-4303 .

I

•:r.·

ment. St . Rt . 7 , North of
Gallipolis. Call 448-0476 .

Cl.,..,..., ......

r61

47 Wanted to Rent

Doberman Pincher pup, female, 12 weeks old. $60 .
Call 992 .7458 or 388.
9900

l - - ' -- - - - - - -

Wanted to rent tobacco
poundage. Call 814-3792842.

Farm Equipment

:'~h~,;;~~~ ~it~~i
·,,ini•iuiiairi•i•ilu~nii
~ ~
71

Jividen-•
Farm Equipment
446 -1676
long tractors , Vermeer
round baler &amp; complete line
of bale handling &amp;I faediOg
accenorleel A new line of
r•kea, Tedders $876.00 &amp;
up and Disc Mowers
&amp;2250 .00 .

~

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

wllh Major Hoopie

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1971 SUPER Bootie, VW.
llhorp S. cloon. runa good,
.1895. phone 304~8714123.

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CH~I'1"Y

'

1980 CHEyY Monzo. 4 cyl~ .
otondord ahlft, 37,000
mlleo, 32 to 38 MPG·
304-676·1714 .

! .. ,_
w~-1 .1i 1982 810, V6 automatic.
y
,oir, ltoroo. gougoo. 11.800
UOI~:~~~:;'"\
mllu. perfect condition,
LP.&lt; ,[El
must aoil. 304· 11711·11438.
1

._

DRIVE' ¥--II

1 974 Vamaha Enduro dirt
bike. 2.900 miloa. Coli 468·
1997 .

1978 Suzuki 660 h .. bean
wrecked, make ~offer . C.ll
458-1997 .
---'--------1977 Hondo 660-4K fair ·
lng. windahield. electric
atart. alaay btlr. excellent
condition. e1 .800 . Coli
814-446-3758.
1980 XR 600,1.200 miles,
very ex;cellent cond . •
t1 ,095 . Call 814- 388 8434 or 614·388-9809 .
Honda 60 mini bike. good
cond ., UOO . Coli 4467322 .
C-70 Hondo, 1980. 116 mi.
Excel. cond. 446-0462 .

Pa.

1.::::::::::::=====-t=========:..J
614 - 2511 · 6~46 .

74 · Motorcycles

1978 Hondo no Super
1974 Buick Electra, 4 dr., $port . Foring S. bock reot.
price e800. Call betwMn 7928 miles. Exc. cond.
3 •30 S. 8 •00PM , 814 · 387· f1,600 . 814-992-3644.
0136 .
1978 Hondo 760K, block.
1982 Dodge Mirada eAcall . neW tlre1 and extra1, axe.
cond, 19,000 mi., crulu, ell cond . Aoklng 1,250. or
extr11. Must 1811 , •&amp;.924 . O.B.O. 949-2181 .
Call 448·0047.
19B1 Kowo11kl 440 LTD,
1981 AMC Spirit ••c. oloctric oten. 1600 miles,
co:nd~. PS,
low mileage, lot of IXII'OI .• 1,400. 614t4,600. Coli 4411-8372 ,
985-42311.

Powell 2 row, 3 pt. hitch
tobacco tranaplenter. Com - 1977 Cutla .. .Qiupreme ,
plate with water lenks, like _good condition . New bet·
newcond.WiiiMII t or• 2 00 . tery, new tranami11lon. Call
614 -992-11810 or 614.
it aold by April 15. Robert 992-6B54 .
Hill 614-949 -2103 .
1977 Dod•o Colt atotlonNEW &amp;: Used Harve•tore Wlgon eutC:. 992-7180
, .
Structure• . Automated IIvestocl1. faeding -'computer 1972 Buick Skylerk. V·8
feedara. Coil collect 1114 · outomotlc, new palnt.goo4
6B5-2280 . John L. Betta.
cond. 89,000 miles. f9711 :
814_949.2212 _

firewood epllt &amp; cut to
lenght . Pick or delivered. We
honor HEAP. Vouchers . Call

1

Autos for Sale

1976 Buick Eleclra 2 dr.,
PS . PB, AC . AM-FM atoro
81.860 or trade for cattle,
farm equipment of equal
voluo. Call 448-4637.

Tobacco &amp; corn apraye;a,
wagons, rotary tillers. rotary
c uttt.rs, teedera. tobacco
..... , •• bled••· a•tas, culti·
vetors, dl1c, plowa &amp;. wood
burners &amp;: plaetlc tank• I And
•• ua to get 1 compJete fine
of Parts &amp; Service.

Kenmore wether&amp; dryer aet
$176 .. Kenmore apt . 11ze
aulomatlc
eso.. HMeytag au·
•100
tometlc
., oov~r por·
1able •126 ., Hoover port•·
b I •
d r V or $ 7 5 .,
614-742 -2352 . ·

...r:"..'. ', ••

Hay &amp; Grain

HAY 11 .60 per bale, 876 ·
1304 .

good
tiona! t:fda'; !needs
81 ,200.
:_v_
days &amp; 446 -4267 evan .

Whirlpool 17 cubic ft . gold
refrigeretor . 2 door. &amp;160.
814-992-7352 .

~~[J ·.,

63

54

eJ~.

Vans&amp; 4 W . O.

73

1976 Dodge Poworwagon.
'A ton. club cab. good
condition, 82,000. 304876 -23-77.

Regiatered Quarter Horta.
Ruth Reevea . Also grade.
Saddles. bridles. winter
horae blenketa, Weatern
boots. 614·89B·3290.

1----------

1848 F-LEETLINE ChiV·
roltt. 4 door Nden, go'od
condition 304-812·3388 .

1878 CHEVY Monzo. Y·l.
flower oteerlng , power
br~kll. olr·condltlonlng,
AM-FM OIIMtte, good condltlon. U&amp;Oo.oo. 304·
171-2181 .

·
:
.
'

~ :
~iiiii~iii~

~
H

B1

orne

BORN LOSER

76 MONTE Corio, 78 Ford F I - - - - - - - - '
160 pickup, 304·8711STUCCO PLASTERII\jG • ·
11281.
textured ceilings commer-..
70 VW. good motor &amp; parte, clel end residential, free
price *300.00, phone 304- oatlmotea. Coli 814-268·
1182 .
876·2BB6 .

1981 Jaep CJ -6 . Block.
am-fm. carpet, like new .
814-742 -2308 .

Livestock

1977 STAR CRAFT fold out
c.mper. Sterdul't Swinger.
lloop18,11ko n -. 304-8911 3347.

'ImprOvements

Wanted lend auitable for
planting corn, with in 10
mile• of Crown City . Cell
266-8689 .

Good quelity hay. Never
wet. Contact Opal Flt1pa·
lrick, St. At.889 , Wilke•·
ville, Oh. 61"·1189-3785.

4 piece bedroom set maple,
like new . 992 -8068 .

a e

1978 CHEVY 1 ton. Now
360 motor. clutch end steel
bod. Good rubber. t t ,296 .
304-676 -2897 .

62 Wanted to Buy

For sale or trade Nubian
male Registered and Pedigree with excellent blood
lines. this male could upgrade your goat herd . If no
one wants him , will b8
castrated and eaten . $66.
Call 669 -3674.

Wooden dining room tnbla
with 6 chairs. 8300. firm .
Call 614 -992 -3917.
·

S I

Farmell Cub like new en· 1973 Frod F-1 00. 4 a peed,
gine, ju1t rebuilt with culti- like new tirea. good c:~~·
vators, all exc . cond .,' 68,7-00 . miloo , 81~·vo
·t1,860 . c:;·an altar 8 , 614· 3489. •
'
' ...
379•2668 .
.
'
1976 Douun pickup
New 2 row Ford c.o• 1 t1800. 304-676-2169.
planter . Call 814-379·
246B .
1975, 2 ton flat bad Chevy
truck. $2260. Portable
Naw 1983 12 HP Ford weldor. 300 amp Hoban
tractor with 42 in mower. mounted on wheel• e1200.
986·3906 .
304-458 -1810.

Female Doberman Pinscher.
12 weeks old. Good blood
line, good marldngs. 6143B8 -9 900 or 614 -992745B:·.
.

Antique Oak Reproduction
furnilure , full line in itock,
also Antiques . Paul 'C onkel•
Antiques, Tuppers Plains.

Autos for

197B Chovy Monzo. VB,
power •tearing, power
brekea. air condition, AMFM ca•Httl, good cOndl·
.andplowo.Jo~nDHre2S.4 tlon. 82600. 304 -878rO"J' comer plentera, culti - 2988 .
paCkers . wheel-pick-pull - - - - - - - - - dilk. aeedert. Ford buu
saw, Ford large splined
Trucks for Sale
pullie1. Ford 2·12 in . plows. 72
3 ~ottom plow1, haying
equipmant. poet hole 1978 JHp .... t PU. V-8 ,
diggera, corn picker~ . culti- auto, 4-VI(D, PS. PB., many
vators, and hey elevators. oxtroo. Call 448-0616 .
Howe'a Farm Machinery,
Rt. 1 24 &amp; Mayhew Rd, .1 878 Chevy half ton_-ohort
Jackoon. Oh ZBII-5944.
bod with u_tlllty bod a. cop.
New point. 11.600. Coli
4 row ·corn planter. 9 mo. 4411-8108.
old . Colt Appalon I.
Wolkor . Call 814-~BB- 1974 Chavy Scottodalo ,
9026 .
good·cond. 448-0462.

Pets for Sale

:32~

71

New &amp; Uaed Farm Machinery. Farmell cub •nd cultlvetors, Allie Chalmers WD 4&amp;

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow puppies, CFA Himalayan. Peraian and Siamese klnen• .
Call 446-3B44 altar 4PM .

1------_:___

,.

!YI••·

•Y·

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg. Dabermans pups afd
Doberman Stud Service .
Call 446-7796 .

36" Sears 10 H.P. Riding
lawn Mower , 8600 . 258 6674 after 3 :30 p.m.

Household Goods

Farm Equipment

Used Equipment: 36
3000 Ford, IH Hydro
70. N.H. grinder • mixer,
Gravity wagons. 2-corn
pickara. wheel disc. rotary
hoea. 2 &amp; 3 bottom plows,
post auger. A complete line
of Southult lmco.

See our models. 1-614 BB6-7311 .

51

hi ..._UJ.N.&amp;rwo..

~~~~~~::::::::;:;~=~==:;=;:~1

BUILD YOUR OWN HOME

Former Diamond Direct Distributors have started more
profitable and realistic busi:
ntl .. . For more information ,
cftll 614-886 -8078 or write:
P .O . Box 130, Chesapeake,
Ohio 46619 .

BUSINESS ' building, 160
3rd. Ave . Gallipolis, 304 676-1468, after 6.

. LAYNE' S FURNITUR E
SQfs, chair. rocker, ottoApt tor rent . Half double-2 man, 3 tables, (extra heavy
bd .room Apt. Adults pre· by Frontlarl. $686 . Solo.
tarred . No pets . 814 -992 · chair and loveaeat. •276.
2749 .
Sofa• and chairs priced from
&amp;2B5. to t896. Tobloa. •46
1 bed room Apt . e198 . mo. and up to $125 . Hide-a·
including utilities. Equal bedt.*440 . and up to
• "2" R 11
housing opportunity . Con ·
g
v ..
ec ners. $175 . 10
tect Village Menor Apta . .360 ., Lampa I rom .28 · 10
.7 • •
dl tt
from
614-992-7787.
"
pc . 7ne ••
.99IJ ··. to
.436
. pc., .1'9 .
Efiiency apartme"t In Mid · and up. Wood table with alx
h I .425
.745 D k
dleP!)rt. 992-5434, 992 c •"
· to
· oa
5914 , 304-B82-2588.
f1t0 up to $225 . Hutcheo,
t650 . end up, maple or pine
Apt . for rent In Middleport . finish . Bunk bed complete
New paint, new cerpet. with mattreuet, *260 . end
614 -992 -3690.
up to 8395 . Boby bodo.
t1 10. Mattrouea or box
1
Apartmenu . 304 -876 aprlng
, full or twin , &amp;58 "
5648 .
.
firm. t8B . ond HB . Ouoon
1911 4
'
·
dr. chaata,
APARTMENTS , mobile aata,
142. 6 dr. choata, t54 . Bod
homes, houlea. Pt . Pleaeent
tromea. 120.ond 8~6 .. 10
and Gollpollo. 614-446 - gun
- Gun ciblneto, 1360..
8221 '
dlnattocholral20. ond 126 .
Ga1 or electric ran gee, 132&amp;
UNFURNISHED oportment
up
to U75. Boby mofor rent , 2 bedroom,
trtOMI. 125 &amp; 136, bod
*21 0 .00 Coli Automotive _fromea
120, •25 . a. f30,
Supply , 8 -8 . 304 -676 · king fro me t60. Good aolac2218 , 675 -8763'
tlon of bedroom aultea,
ceder chelta, rockeri, metal
ONE b~room 1pertment1 Clblnetl. lwivel rockert.
for tho elderly. All u~lltleo Uood Furni1Uro .. bookcua,
paid . ,Tenant• pay 30 per·
rengtl. chairs, end tablet,
cent of their ;,adju1twd In · · Wllhoro. dryoro. rotrlgiro·
come in thl1 HUD aub11dlzed to;• and
3 rrillel out
ep•rtl't'\lnt bulldlhg. -Twin Sulavllle Rd. Opan 9om to
Rivert Tower, phone -304·
.876 ·6879 . Equal opportun - 8pm, Mon. thru Fri., Sam to
Spm, Sot. .
lty housing .
___:_,.___::___
446-0322
Furnlahed one bedroom 2 WOrking rafrlgorlltora for
;;nrt~mont I~ ~olnl Plooaont, oolo. Coli 814-3711-24118 .
liol'.celo'i,ii·n.:'"1.j3"naijen..lco. Nopota. "
..
.,~-·~uu .
Uood drl••• ··ov•r•l to
chcoaofromoleoOEwooher
2 bodroom
corpated,
l dryor IYOCido polr USO.
newtv paint• • utra ,nice GuorontAd 30 doyo. Coli
ond quiet. 304-878-1812.
614·2118-1207.

__

Warn 1 2 volt electric winch
with 811 attachments. a:ooo
lbt. cap . 3 ,000 lbt. Hoist .
New cost 8800 . Will sell for
$500 . Call 446-4900 .

Five acTea with mobile home
hook-up, all utilities. Vinton
area, $60 mo. Call 304346 -3740 Wetter Smi1h .

51

•

Male Sealpoint . Himalayan
nudered, beautiful house cat AKC Doberman puppie•.
loves children. 4 new spoke _3_0_4_·6_7_5_·_
1_B_2 _2_.- - - locking wheel covers. 19 in . 1
portable Sylvania color 1'J CFA Regiatered male Sealwith stand. Call 8ny1ime point Himalayan Cat , declawed, 2 years old. 304·
446-9416 .
576-2069 iltter 5 :00 p.m.
Picnic tables. Order now for
summer, excellent Mothers~ BABY rabbits, pruabred
Mini-lops, phone 304-676Day gilt. Call 446 -4B23 .
1920.
Spring Special lawn mower
S. rototiller tune up, oil AKC aolid black German
change. new aperk plug , Shepherd puppies. Cham·
adjust or replace breaker pion Bloodlines. have both
points , service air cleaner, parents. 304-675 -2944 .
sharpen mo~er blade. safteycheck 813 .95plustu .
59 For Sole or Trade
Free piclc ~ delivery in
Ga~ipolis - Eureka area . Nel ·
son &amp; Sons Service Center,
Eureka, Oh .' Call 614-256- 1975 Sulek Elactro 2 dr ..
1543.
PS , P8, AC, AM -Filii otero
$1,860 or trade for cattle.
2 rooms carpet . Call 446- farm equipment of equal
3528 call aher 6PM. valu-. Call 446 -4537 .

Furnished small effiency 1
profes.-ionel type gentleman
only. Call 448-0338.

Two bedroom apartment Rt . Wsnt to rent house or trailer
218 at Mercerville . Quiet in country, small house . Call
area, nioe lawn. 8 226 per 992 -5418 .
mo . unfurnished . Call 446 1167 days, 614 -367 -7218"
after 6PM .
~
~4erufiandlaa
Furnished apt . 8130, 3
small rooms , no utilities pd .
701 V1 Fourth. Gallipolis
Call 446 -4416 Bfler 7PM .

Locu1t post, straight and
solid very reasona_ble priced .
·C:all 446 -799l e!lytiri\e .

WE TOOl&lt;. ONE OF THESE GPIDGEH
APART OV·I"~ AT THe LAB. LOOK-

1878 Bit . truck comper• .
furnece. lltove. link. IIHPI ·
4 . 304-882-2688.
. .

6 rooms and ba,h, $2,995 .

56

DEADLY
·VISIT.•.

1977 Nomad 18 ft . trovel ,
treiler. Self contained. A-1 ·
cond. 814 -112-3184.

Building Supplies

TO ALL CONTRACTORSwa aro able to glva controctors price on ·all building
materials. DaUvarv avallebe.
Gellipolia Block Co .• 1 231h:
Pine St. , Gallipolis, Oh 4462793 .

ONE:
L..AST

Buy foctory dl...n: Light-:
woight, flbergloll Soomp .
13' • 1 I' t-ol vollors • ·
now 19' 8th wfle!ll, Clll now
toll ,,.. 1-800- 348-4982
for fnte brochure and "'"'

Building materlalt
block. brick, eewer pipee.

.,

1:00 • (2) (]) a

6R01-HER
WILL
RETURN
-FOR

'

q.~

late 1980 Windsor. 14x 70

EVENING
. MY

Equipme~t

For •ale-Night crawlera end
minnows. Benva Carry Out
3 1h mi. South of Mlddlopon
on Rt. 7 . · Open 7 doyo o
wook . 814-992-2989 .

0 . !tall 814 -246-6121 .

4/11/83

~7~a=~c;:a=m=PJ::;.n~~=== ·

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

Cl~uiteWinters.
Rio Grande.
w.i
ndowa , lintels.
etc.

Auto Pert•
&amp; Accee.'oriee '

iN MV~!

off 1 14x70 mobile home.
long pJec" me11ure 32".
,hart plecea 21 '' and 10
incheaacroea. entar!ock In •
metal frame, wood greln
finlah . Coli otter OPM. 448·
3065.

55

78

Television
Viewing

cou~se

1h1ii NEW ,Gumbo :
Muddlro, 175., ;104·&amp;711: .
2897.' .

Fe.\U..~, rr~ ~ !

home uMd jullt 1 year came

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- wuhers, dry'''· refrigerator~, rangee. Skaggs AppU-.nces, Upper River Rd .,
b..lde Stone Crest Motel.
448-7398 .

4721 .

oF

Mouday, Aprilll, 1983.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WANTED~ Set of poln11 tor
1974 Harley Davldton
SX178 . v"1~-742-2487 .

1981
MIKim,
1
2
t rea,

YAM AHA "60
u
ohoft drive. new
•-1 t1800
,,.. m•• e,
,
;a~~l~ti n~ . condlllon. 304-

3 1
1----------

1978 YAMAHA 10. f225 .

304-882-21183.
1981 Yemoho ~';'- 100.
good condition, 304-1171122 1
I--•- · - - - - - 1980 Hondo CM 400 A,
windshield, lugg-a rock,
beck ,. 1. color-';..atched
1
•ddlebogo. outomatlc, excollent for womon, 304 8911·33113.
1981 Hondo CX 1100 Dolu•o. wlndohlold, ocljuotoblo
beck rnt. luggage rack.
excellent condl11on, 3048 33113
8 I·
.

,.

7v

Auto Ptrte
&amp; -Acceeaoriee

?

PAINTING · interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing.
tome remodeling. 20 yra. · •.
oxp. Coli 81 4 -3B8-9862. -

I

Marcum Roofing &amp; SpoutIng. 30 years experience,
apecieli1ing In buill up roof.
Cell 614·38B-9867.
Irwin's Gla11 Service makes
replacement• Insulated un·
ita icre•n•. •torm windows
for residential or commercial. Call 814·268-8644.
RON ' S Televlaion Service .
Speclollzlng In Zon~h ond
Motorol1 , Oua1ar. 1nd
houM collo . Coli 678-2398
or 448-2464.
F &amp; K Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Coli 876-1331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpo·
riei')Ced' · roOfln·g. incl~ding
hot tar application, carp8n·
ter. electrician, m ..on. Call
304-676-20B8 or 676- ,
4580.
Water Wells. Commercial ~ ·
and Dom11tic . Te1t hole1.
Pumpa Salel end Service.
304-896-3802 .

a

ALLEY OOP
Y'I"'EAN,_!_
CMI'T vu

IT AGAIN?

Gel your c1rpet in •hip
th1pe. Water removal. FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 814-448-2107.
E &amp; R Tree Service, fully ~
inaured, free ea'timate1 .
Phone 814 · 387-08311. call '
efter 6.
;
St~rk'a . Tree Work . Landt· 1
caplng, b1ckhoe work, free _,
Mrvice• witll mowing. Go' 1.
onywhero. 304-678-2010.
"
Painting interior or e•terior,
frH e1tim1t11. C.ll 876-. •
5344 or 448-9326 .

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 4464477
JIM ' S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Fomerly Dewitt'l
Plumbing. Call 614·3670578.
83

Excavating

Lonnie Boggs Excavating .
Dozer, backhoe. dump truck. Work by hour or job.
Call 448-7903 .

_____

COME ON , DANNY.
YOU DON'T HAVE TO CALL

ME "J.\A 'AM"
LIGHTEN UP A
BIT, WE'RE IN
THE PRIVACY

·~
;;:

DOZER WORK By Tad ' ' '
Hanna , pond1 , ditchel , ..
baaementa, etc . Cell 448- ~.
4907 . Carter &amp;. Evan•
Tran1portetlon.
::

OF MY HOME

'·

B4

NOW.

NIY LATEST
DESIGNS.

BARNEY

SEWING Machine repaire,
Mrvice . Authorized Singer , ,
&amp;. Service Sharpen ~~ •
Scinon . F1brlc Shop , •. ,
Pomeroy. 992 · 2284 .

s....

AUNT

stJKEY!!-

·.

-ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE coli City Furnltura
304 -875-2808.

NOW, WHAR IN
THUNDER DID

THAT OL' MULE

RUN OFF TO?

DON.! SHE
k'NOW IT'S
TIME FER
SPRING
PLOWIN'?

a

..

General Hauling

.'

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE. Coli 614·387-7471
or II 1 4·3117-0591 .

'

•

I '

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli "Jim Lonler . 304-876 7397 .
B6

VERA. BUT I
AN XIOUS
TO KNOW WHAT
YOU THINK OF

AM

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

DEPENDABLE WASHER ·
DRYER REPAIR . Guoron tHd worl&lt; . Coli on'ltlmo
614-256-8820 or 614 258 -1207.

85

OI&lt;AY, MI SS .. .
ER ... l M EA N,

PEANUTS
'·

M : H. Repair

·'·
•

.

· NOTICE

WHEN DID Tl1 15 HAPPEN?

FOUR MINUTES A60!

ANvnliN6?

~:

Complete Mobile -Home repair work, Phone 614-742 24911 .

.,

;:=:;::::;:::;:===== •..,'

=87

''

Upholatery

I

•,_,;:; ,

- - - - - - .,

I

2·1ft. PU top...,. 118-1811.
.
TRJ STATE
1
1-1~ ft . 111•,..•• 10flper,
.'
UI'HOL8TEIIY SHOP
1. . - · UOO. Coli 441- : 1113 Joe. Ave .. Oelllpollo. I'I
......
441-7833 or 441-1133.

lae;:CiiiiivEnE.'"h.;.;
nu ..
1111.·
·-~~E, hatch·
- · outomotto. 4 door
AM-FM rodlo. Coli otter
p.m. 304-n:t-1718. .

POUII

I """""'·
2221 .

olumlnum olot
.,.0, 104·1711 -

MOWREYB Upholltery fit .
1 So• 124, Pt. Pl•unt ,
304-875-4114.

-•

I

(]) ® m II2i

Nowa
CII Tic Tee Dough
(]) Andy Griffith
CD News/Sports/Woathor
Cll.!III 3·2· 1. Contact
f)) Charlie's Angels
1):30 U ill ctJ NBC N·o wa
(}J Kamikaze . ' Missio n ·of
Death.' This World War II
tactic is examined through
perso nal testimony end interviews .
ClJ Making of ' Ro lf,!ero of
tho Lost Ark'
CI1 MOVIE : 'Man Eater'
(]) Gomer Pyle
CIJ Clli!21 ABC Nowl
0 (J) ID CBS News
(I) Dr. Who ·
(l]) Over Easy
7 :00 U CIJ. P.M. Megezina
ClJ Envelope Pleaoo ...
'Awards Show Preview .'
Charlton Heston and oth·
ers discussthe 1982movie
award nomina tions.
® ESPN' s lntlde Batobe ll
({) Carol B.urn'e tt
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
CD Charlie's AnQala
0 (J) Tic Tac Dough
(I) (l])
MocNeii-Lohrer
Report
®News
Ill ill! People's Court
fl) Star Trek
7 :30 U Ill Llo Detector
Ill Fraggla Rock Visit tha
world of Fraggie Rock underneath the basement of
an eccentric inventor.
C2J Screening Room
® ESPN SponaCenter
C5J Bob Newhart Show
CIJ a III Family Feud
(]) Bualness Report
® You Asked For It
[)) Inside Business
1m (12)
Entertainment
ToniQbl .
8 :00 U w CD Love. Sidney
Wh ile repairing a do ll
ho use, Sidney and Patti become temporarily blinded
~ acetone spray.
Ill MOVIE : ' For Your Eyaa
Only'
ill MOVIE • 'Z'
CD I Spy
.
@ 2·nd Annual Legendary
Pocket Billiard Stars
(I) Portrait of America:
Puerto flico
·
CIJ (1) 1!21 Barbaro Wolters
SpeCial-Barbara intt:ffvie~s
telev ision stars Robert Mitchum , Linda Evans and Eddie MU'Jlhy. (60 min .)
c'llllll Archie Bunker's
Place BA rney's quest for a
mate leads him to e video
dati!!iJ servi ce.
(]) (JJJ Frontline 'After the
Crash.' Tonight's prog ra m
mvestigates the fi na nc 1al
and lega l aftermath Of several air disas ters . (60 min .)
[C losed Capt io ned]
fil
MOVIE •
' Maltase
Falcon'
B•30 0 Ill C1J Family Ti.e s
Elyse 's relattonshlp With
the rt~st of the fa mily is
strained by her com mitment to____good causes
g (]) 110) Foot in the Door
J onah 's tw is ted Knee puts
a kink in Ji m end Harriet's
vacation p lans
9 :00 0 Ill (L) MOVIE : 'Captur!_
of Grizzly Adams'
CD 700 Club
® USFL Football : Arizona
at Wnhington
(5) In Defense of Freedom:
U .S. Marines
I]) II) 1!21 65th Annual
Academy Awards Prese ntation L1za Minn el li, Dudtev
Moore, Waite, Manhau
and Richard Pryor host th e
annual Oscar awards pre·
sen tation fr om th e Dorothy
Cha nd le r Pavil io n, l os An ·
ll!'les. CA.
O ([ HiQJ Alice Avindict1ve
wit8 sells her husband 's
~_eorts car to Me l.
(9] (]]) Great Performance•
'W egner's Rin g · Siegfr ied
(Acts 1. 11 .and Ill )· Siegfried , the hero withoul fear.
finds h 1mself destined to
kill the dragon th at gua rds
the ~ld (3 hrs.j
9 :30 0 w ® One Dsy at a
Time Fran ci ne co ns Ann
mto goi ng to Paris. (A~
· 1 0 •00 C5J TBS Evening News
0 CIJ ® CBS News
Speciel ' Eye o n ~e d1a , Pn ~
vote lives . Public Press.
Several members of th e
Journalism fie ld examine
t he public figures ' righ ts to
privacy. {60 min.)
f)) INN News
10:15 1Il MOVIE • 'Sword and tho
Sorcerer'
iiJ MOVIE : 'Cieah ol tho
Titans'
10:30 CD Star Tlmo
f)) In SearCh of....
1 1:00 0 Ill
(J) ID Now a
([) All In the Family
C1J Nowo/Sporto/Wotthor
Ql Bennv Hill Show
1 1:30 G Ill CD Tonight Show
Jo hnny's guests are Tonv
Rendall , Sarah Vaughan
and Or . Lawrence Kuznetz.
(R) (80 min.)
CD Another Lifo
([) Cetllna
III e1!21 Nowo
Q (J) Tropper John M.D. A
con men end hi s girlfriend
provide Trapper and Gonzo
w it h the chance to practice
psychiatry end medicine.
(R) (60 min.)
® Allin the Fomlly
fll Honeymooner•
12:00 Ill MO'I/IE: ' Rich end
F•moue'
CD Burna &amp; Allen
® ESPN SporttCentor
([) MOVIE: 'Tho Joker Ia
Wild'
(]) Bonny Hill Show
· Cl) PBS Late Night ·
® MOVIE: ' Tht Booton
Strongler'
(l]) Sign Off
Gl ill! Nlghtllne
1111 Gunomoke
.
·
-, 2 ,15 ill MOVIE: 'Lunch Wagon
Glrlo'

·::a.,...~-­

Enjoy lhe /
mounlalns

~-

INJOT

~

['XJ

I [J

"

IDAGOIAj
I I r

WHAT 5CME HU5!!oANDS
WOUl-D 1.-ll&lt;e TO DO
WHE~ THEW~ WIVES GO
· TO THE COUNT~Y.

I
KJ . I

tOOUBIT

J

Now arrange the circled letters to
term the surprise ·answer. as sug·
gested by tne abOve cartoon.

I

"[I]

Answer here:

rn KI I XJ"

(Answers tomorrow)
FINNY ALWAYS FELLOW
Answec Some gossips would rath er listen to dirt ,
than do th is-CLEAN IT

Satun:lay. I JumbleS : TAC KY
1

Jumble Book No. 11, tont.lnlng 110 puu:tes, lsa~allabla for S1 .95 pottp.llkl
h'Oft!IJwmbM, ctothls newspaptr, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. 1nclude your
name, addreu, dp codt end mekt cheeks Pl'flble to Newsp1pe~~ ·-·

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Score is hard to beat

WEST

EAST

Sou th sim· e while il will be
easy to tit• . it will be hard to
beal. "
Oswald &gt; " A lol or South
players will respond one
spade to lhe club openin g. In
that cas(' North will rebid
one no·trump, play it th~rc
and score just 90 ."

• 10 7 '3

• Q94
9K4

Jim: " The hand is shown
he re because it illustrates a

NORTH

4- ll -85

• A2

• J 10 9 6

•JB4
• AK 72

• A72
t A 10 3

tK 9B2

+J6 &gt;

+Q 9 4

SOU Til
• KJ 86
.Q 8' 3

principle or bidding that is
followed by a great majority
or experls: respond one
heart rath er tha n one spade

West

E11S1

So ulh

wlth four cards in both
major suits."
Oswald : "The point here is
that, with the modern tend ency to open four-card
m ajor suits only as a last
resort by responding with a

.11'-'as..'i

Pass
I' ass

Pass

hea rt you ma..ke -it Ca!Sy t.o
lin d a H lit in eith er hearts

tQ 6

• 10 8 3
Vulnerable: Neither

,.

Dealer: North

Pass

Opening lead• +3

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jec oby
Oswald : "There is nothing

to the play at two hearts.
South Is going 10 lose two
hearts and t wo di amond s,
but will bring home an over-

in a

trick and plus-140
match point game."

or spades . WhCn you re.sp011d
one spade you are likely to
lose I he heart suit entirclv."
Jim: "Improve the sOuth
hand by giving him K-Q
instead of Q-6 of dmmond s
(II high card poin ts instead
or eight ). Should he respond
one spade the heart suit
would slill be lo•t. North 's
r ebid would ·be in no-trump
and only eight tril'ks would
be made."
Os wa\il
" Wtlh
lht•
imp rowd hand &lt;~ml ttw ('or-

ree l heu rl response

four

would

and

hearts

make

Jim: " It will also be a almost surely would be- btd ."
good sco re for North and . [ NF.:WSI'AI'!o~ U f..:NTEIU' It! St-: A.~'\N 1

~..,

.. r

by ,THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Antitoxins
5 Automaton
10 Her cules'
ho rse
12 Vtolet od or
tn pcriwncs

13 - story
1tall tale 1
15 Poem

DOWN
I River in
Maine
2 Eat away
3 Kttchen
dcvtcc
4 Without
defec1
5 Horseman

Yc~tcrday's i\11swcr A &lt;J

6 Eye

14 llldige!lt'e
8 /\way
19 Turkish flag
from camp 22 Ship or 14!!2
9 1\adar's
23 Disfcattli'I'CI
20 Women 's org.
rclatiVL'
24 Not kn ow 111 g
21 Gutdl~l
II He ott,tcd 25 IJmm roll
22 1\ussian
Kin!(
26 Strauss i)pt.•r;t
nvcr
t' aruk
28 Flock
23 ( ~er nwn
16 Observe

' 7 Slab

17 Shelter
18 Puzzl.cdoer's aid

:ltllllu11d er Is l. .
31 ll&lt;'i11 g
Clllployni
:12 /\sl'cnded
:16 llidt•
:~s

Peer Gynt's

mother
:19 l.ummux

e n ~ravcr

26 Lorelei
27 City in
Jud ah
28 Chinese
dynasty

29 Obese
30 Part or
' Los

· Angeles
33 Milkrish
Gold ISp.)
35 Bite
'
31 Chase
game
40 Expunge
41 Picasso's

support
42 Cauti on
43 Slit; cleft

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - llere'M how to work It:
1o

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFI!I.LOW

One lett er &amp;imply stands ror another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's , x ' ror the tw o O's, l' l C. Single letters,
apoalrophes , the le ngth snd formatior1 a ( the words are all
hiDII. Ea&lt;h day lhe .ode leiters are diffe re nt.
CRYPTOQUOTES

RNW

GUDYMF
RYJ

G U RG

C QNMQG

DYGQ .

U.

GUW

MQJ

FLWWGWFG

WKW N

ARJ W

'F QE0

G Q

ll EG

1. .

TWWPU.WN

R

Yesterday's 'Cryptoquole: 'TIS NOT HER COLDNESS,
.FATHER, TIIAT CIDLLS MY LABORING BRE6ST; IT'S •
THAT CONFOUNDED CUCUMBER I'VE ATE AND CAN'T
DIGEST.-B.S.BARHAM

•I

�.CHESTER ElEMENTARY - Consen&lt;atlon poster Winners at
Chester Elementary School were front row left to right, Stephany
Gardner, first place; Tina Mt-Grath, second place; Leigh Ann
Redovlan, third place; poster contest. Second row I tor, WUile Hill, first
place; Kristan Renee Heines, second place, essay contest. Back row!Wy Miller, SWLD Associate Supervbor.

Robert, killed In World WarD, and
several brothers and sisters.
Surviving are a daughter llnd
son·ln·law, Margaret Jane and
.Tilsei?h Kelley, a son, Donald
Wetzel, Columbus; three - grand·
children, and a niece, Kathryn
Crow, Syr3CijSC.. Funeral arTailgements are being completed by a
Columbus funeral home.

Howard A. Wilson. 72.- Route 1~.
near Po111eory, died Sunday at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was born on Nov . 4, 1910 in
Columbus, a son of the late Harry
and Bertha Slane Wilson. He was
also preceqed in death tiy two
sisters, Dorothy Hadrick and
Mildred Wilson.
Surviving are his wife, Rachel
Runyion Wilson, Pomeroy; three
sons. Carl H., Racine; Charles D., ·
Middleport, and Paul H. Wilson of
Wisconsin; four daughters and
sons· In·law, Ida and Frank Martin, ·
Middleport; Cora and· Lawrence
Lee. Pomeroy; Betha and WiUiam
Soltesz, Columbus, and Rachel and
Dennis Craig, Louisiana; a sister,
Blanch Mashall, Robertsburg, W.
Va. Twenty-eight grandchlldren,l2
grreat-grandchlldren and several
nieces and nephews also survive.
Mr. Wilson was a chief engineer
on the river for theO. F. Shear's Co.
Servjces w1U be tl_eld at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Rawlings-CoatsFuneral Home with Mr. Ron Moyer ·
and Mr. Robert Miller officiating.
Burial wiU be In Meigs Memory
Garden . Friends may call at the
funeral home at anytime on
. Tuesday.

Elizabeth E. Vlgar
Ellzbeth E. Vigar, 89, of near
Racine, died early Sunday morning
at the home of her daughter, Mrs. ·
Earl Shuler.
Born on April 4, 1894 In ,Jackson
County, W. Va., she was the
daughterofthelateW.J.andJennle
Myers Berdine. She was a retired_
State of Ohio employe.
Besides her parents, she was
preceding in death by her husband,
Pearl, two brothers and three
sisters.
She Is survived by her son· in·law
and daughter, Mildred and Earl
Shuler, Raclne; two sisters, Helen
Roush and Maxine Conn, Gallipolis; three grandchldren, Nancy
Carnahan, Racine; Richard Shuler,
Athens, and Ellen Swartwout,
Deering, N. D.; and eight greatgrandch!dren.
She was a member of the Racine
Baptist Church.
Graveside services wlll be held at
the Letart Falls Cemetery at lla.m.
Tuesday by the Rev. Don Walker.
Burial will be In the Letart Falls
Arrangements are
Cemetery.
being made by the EWing Funeral
Home. There are no callng hours.ln
lieu of flowers, biends are asked to
contribute to their favorite chanty.

Helen Dean Wetzel
RIVERVIEW SCHOOL - Conservation po5ler winners at
Riverview Elementary School were front row I to r, Christl Adams,
first; Cynthia Smith, second; ,Jared Spencer, third, IJ(J5ler contest;
st.'COnd row, Mr. Kessinger, fourth grade teocher; Grace Weber, sixth
grade teacher; Mykal Schmidt, first place; Usa Driggs, second place,
"''''ay contt'M. Back row, Roy l'lliUer, SWCD Associate Supervisor.

Mrs. Helen Dean Wetzel, 85,
Columbus, died Sunday at a
Columbus nursing home following a
llngerlng illness.
She was the daughter of the late
Morgan and Miriam Evans Dean,
Syracuse. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Earl; a son,

Will elect officers

Meets Tuesday

Election of officers for the next
school yeiu will be held when the
Eastern Local Band Boosters meet
at 7: :Jl p.m. Tuesday In the band
room of the high school.

_A regular meeting Of the Chester
ToWnship Trustees
be held at
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Chester
Town Hall . '

1'1~\INS

- Conservation poster winners at Tuppers

Plains Elementary Schoo l wen ,, front ruw llu r, Mary Pullins, first;
Brandl Van lluskirk, second; Mandy Han-Is, third place1J(J51ercontest;
second row II" r, W~'tldy Halar, sixth grade !Rocher; Amy Hager, first
place; Jayne Ritchie, second pllu:e es....ay contest . Hack row, Roy
!11lllcr, SWCD associate supervisor.
·
•
·
.

Name Eastern contest Winners
Co nserva tion postN contest
prizi.'S were awardro In Eastern
local sc hool district by Associate
Sutx•rvlsor Roy Miller of the M ~lgs

were "Plants, How They improve
Our EnvlronmPnt." It was used to
make students aware of what the
earth would be like without plants.

of the poster contest a nd Amy
Hagr·r. Tup)X'rs Plains Elementwy
was co-champion in thr ('Ssay
con tpst . Each girlJ'l'('Pi vC'd a 1roph y
from thC'district

Firs t, S('('Ond. a nd third p\a('t'

winn ers in each school for the poster

eontPSI wrrr Strptmn:v Gardner,

When our cuatomen; come in
to the Farmers Bank, they know
• they can depend on ua to pro·
fessionaly handle all or their bank·
ing needs.
The Farmen; Bank haa been
serving people of Pomeroy and
• Meigs County since 1904. And
we are the only community owned
bank in town.
And that gives our cuatomen;
even more confidence. to bank
with us. For all of your bankina
needs come to the Farmen Bank .

Fl'ivcrview E lcml'ntary School.
Fur thP essay m ntesl. first and
second plat'(' rt 'S~'{' ! ivrly wrn•
Amy

HagPr.

.l ay nr

Ri tl'hir.

'1\Jptx•rs Pla ins; Willie I-IIII. Krlstan
RenC'&lt;' Heines, Cheste r t::lcmcntary; a nd Mykal Schmidt ami Lisa
Driggs. RiverviPw E l!'mentary.
Prizes fm• th is year's contests
w('rP $3, $2, $1 '"spectlvely for the
poster contest and $2 a nd Sl for the

essay contest Each first pla ce
winner rt_x_•pivt~l a blue ribbon,
second pliice a red ribbon a nd third
place a white r'ibbon . Each students
doing a poster or essay recelvro a
penc il from the district.
The them&lt;• for thi s )'mr's contests

NEW COLOR

;;.

'~

Misses Sizes. ·
·.

2/85~&lt;1'

SLII

OOiivo Salad

liA.,, IOIIUQ( AND CO ..

The Community Owned Bank

Satiifaction_,uararoteecl or your money bock
•

•Caul iflower
•24 Ot . Jors

NELSON'S REG. t16.99

YOUR CHOICI

$129

•
•Swln Che&lt;:olot•

•White
•Yellow
•Devllt Food

$16 99

·YOUR CHOici

•'

"•'.

. NELSON'S REG.
111.99

'

.

2 Troy• To Packaga

10 IOISEISE
YOUR CHOICI

~-··~

MODIL·HI1too

• Helps remove tobacco smoke, OCIOrt , duet,
even pollen I rom lhe air.
• Costs only pennies a diY l or continuous 24
hour uttge.

.,49

-t· ...............

IIRDEI
HOSi

No . 6101

,_,.. ... .. .. ...... '15·"

•L- Mftl,

NILSON'S RIG. t1.99

"

recircu l ate~

· Decorator Ivory
•R... ,_,...... '... ..... tlt."
•A~

\

·

• Quiet, energy enlclent motor
cleaner. fresher air.
• C~"mnlent onlofl switch.

3.00

'1299

Your Coat
After Iabate

•Curtain aod Hook Sets
•Auorted Fashion ond Colors

YOUR CHOICI

'299

'2.,

Attracts birds with this classic styl ·
ed bird bath . Made of weather resls ·
toni plastic. Bose may be weighted
with sand or grovel for addit ional
stability .

NELSON 'S

PUSIIROOI
•Brown Palmyra
Bristle

2.PIECE
EXERCISE SUIT

I

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NILSON'S RIO. 99'

SUPER II
AID CAT FLEA

'599

Full

Nothing to adjust. Nothlnt tO apply . NQtht~g ta do .

$}8 99

· -~

....., - Miltl lull pnce ••llJf•ll cl

I I P • • OC$ "OIIO.l II..C. Sf.II"'( I.S
IIIIo_.,.. {Jio '100'&gt;

flolletlnt 1&lt;&gt;1&gt;- No

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p,., po..:o ~...,,

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rnent • One Stzo Fill All .

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.

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m o to r , ele ct ros t at ic

·~:~;~·~: un scontad fi ll Of . O n / o ff

.' Jir

and b ft . ca rd .

Flea and tick collars. Als'o
available, Super II Puppy
.and
Dog Collars.

SUPER ILUE

• Sets In
Seconds

.......

lllw Ftltinl
Sill GPIIIII T'tilt!
~

59~

...

IIIIITIY

.

YOUR
CHOICI

your

HOURS:·

•

-

6'/, Cb, Can
AHt."Piavon

-SuperB·

•

Tummy-Shaper hill •

!

10

StON wttere purc:hUH:

favorite oxen:IM moy boo, you'll get
more out of If when you wear vour

PHONE:
Mon.-Tuts.·Wed.·fri .' 9:30 to 5
Ohio) 992-2178
Thurs. 9:30 to f2
W. Va.) 773-9577
Sat. 9:30 "to 2

oo,(

jj.. "'" :101. .

- - - - ... - . . . . ..... )C I M J ...

•-tly I The ~ret Is a miracle
• I p .,re -Ia! lf1al hOlds you In
shape a'1Cl k -J.": In shape while
sauna action
1 Its figure·

.

Refund

•-' - ''( ,.0 _ _ _ __ ., _ ,, .....,,.., O&lt;tf• • O"&lt;l o 1/1) 1, 1(1&gt;11 •••- "•"'v"
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Greill &amp; Patty Gibbs

108 W. Main St., Pomeroy, OH.

01' 11 ~ '"' I ~

efl lcl enl

• No Mixing

Beaverton. Oregon 97075

Whether yOu're a riton or a womon, -·
simply slip on thto maglfal belt and
watch tnchel vanish from the op-anco .01 yiwr
and hlp*-. ln-

Authorized Catalog Merchants

PURIII100
CIT FOOD

p 0 80• 4390

IEOPIE.E IELT WITH SIUIIICTIOI .

71LG1542

Pn c~t

_

NILSON'S RIG. t3. 99

super II Fle1 I Tick Call1r

It while you 'WOrk or relox. lody heat It 1eal·
ed ln. bce11 ·body moltture It shed. For that
." greot -to•be~allve" f"lln;. Sound tlmple? It ltl
Two Wf11 plan Includes : one stretch slzesult (fits all .
man or women) plu1 64 page bercitelook. Stock
No. 712.

WAS '24.99

'299

--------M;w--------------

Unlqu•ly d"lgn.d tc work like o tteom both - in
the privacy of your home. Ju1t slip into your b:er·
else Suit'wllh Sauna Action . NothiM9 to plug ln.

HS 1940

'.

79~

·;.:·

~.'

'~

3-Ring
Tomato
Support
33" H,lgh

.............l

, ......... .n·~

REG. $26.99

CovArAd litter baM with built In
Clecm A ir Mo chme lo help ab·
so rb and destroy odors Envrgy

•14"

C~h.-ftyiftll

l

'2199

.

Pllten Only

WfiQt

Sears

NILSON'S REG. 11'.29

.J1411l'E
In seven
colors
for spring and summer
fashionT -·

I

NOW

99°

IORELCO
OLEIIIIR

New

11 to 16 Cb.

,

It;!A
PLASTIC ICE CUBE TRAYS

rI

~~'j
;/;

DUIICIII HilES
CAKE Ill

$999

. -·

$29.99 ';

~

STEP UP c;HAISE

A-rtalll S' Poka
Your Choice •

NOW ONLY

',
'/

I

STEP-UP CHAIR

I

"

.•.

ISears I

•Giardanlero
•Pepperonclnl

POPPEI RIIIT

POMEROY OHIO

1 129.99

You can
count on

•

~---~

$1399

'

11LG1433l

Bank-

,

(b.

~
---..

.

I

Now$8499

Farmers

PICKLE YEIETIILES ·

Weather -resistent wide polypropylene webbing
colors matching molded crms &amp; feet
•Color yellow or Brown

5'/o (b.

99e

'~

Junior and

$}99 9

WAS

,

5

'I'

It's lawn and Garden Week at
9LG794!6
Sears catalog order desks, and to
celebrate, we've reduced many
green-up and clean-up necessities
in our "lG" lawn and Garden
WAS '27.99
catalog supplement. Choose most
anything you need to give your lawn
NOW
a well-manicured look for the
Summer months ahead. So hurry, ·
spring into action and place your
71LGI915C
order today.

faces DWI charge

/

BELMOIIJ GROUP

AND
STYLES

Thru April 23rd .

:
...... . ..., .................

REDWOOD CHAIR

•
---

$}599

Racine driver

J

IRIQUI
POMD IEIT
s....-

Phone
to place an order
Prices Effective Now

"1

PEIROSE .
HOT SIUSIIE

I

IN OHIO 992-'2178
IN W. VA. 773-9577

Two vehicles were damaged and
one drlvey a q ·ested on cha rges of
driving whUe lntox lcatro as the
result of an accident near the
lnterSf'CIIon of E . Main Sl. . and
Sycamore St .. In Pomeroy at 8:18
p.m . Sunday.
Pomeroy Pollee report that a car
dJiven by .lohn Tuttle, Racine.
a ttempting a left turn from Main to
S¥camore ran Into the path of an
oneoming jeep dnven by Ted W.
Smith, Route l, Racine. There were
moderate damages to both vehicles
and Tuttle was charged with driving
whUe Intoxicated, pollee report .

~~~~~~~~d

TIGHTS AND LEOTARDS

For clean-up
and green-up,
choose selected
lawn and
garden items ~~~~9
and save
NOW ONLY

ment.ary School, was co-champion

E IPrnc•ntar;.·: Christ i /\clam&lt;;;, Cy nthia Smi1 h and .tared Spenct:!r,

\

•

trie r tSWCDi .
Stt·phany C:arclncr, Chcsf('l' F. ie-

1oM tllreqh l(llrll 1lth, 1113
rlpll r111"1tl. We 1r1 111 responalble for lfllllfl(lllllul

en•tltJ

trron. llny h hllon.

sears

Saturday admission : Anna
Duffy, Syracuse.
Saturday dlscharges : .Jaunita
Wamsley, Leonard Haning, n,
Donna Casto, and Mable Brown.
Sunday admissions: .John AI·
bright. West Columbia· Anna
Roush, Syracuse Leota 'Cooper
Syracuse: Robert Deemer'
Syracuse.
'
Discharged: John Albright.
~

Tina McGra th . Leigh Ann HC'dovian, Cheste r l::l!'mcntary School;
Mary Pullins. Brandi Van Buskirk.
Manrly HarTis. Tuptx•rs Plains

.Willie IJIIIttltlll lalf.

DANSKIN AND HANGTEN ..

Dedication of a new sword and
veil will beheld at 7; 30p.m. Tuesday
when Harrisonville Chapter. Order
of Eastern Star meets at the temple.

Veterans Memorial

Soil and Watl'r CunsPrva lion Dis·

SALE STARTS TODAY

To dedicate sword

Southern Local Band Boosters
Will meet at 7: :Jl p.m. Thursday In
the band room of the high school.

TO: THE POMEROY SENTINEl

Emergency calls

w!U

Meets Thursday

.

'

COLUMBUS - State Represen· residential treatment Pl'liil'&amp;m tor
youth With serilus subslal1ce abUse
tatlve Jo!ynn Boster- has an·
nouncect state funding for the problems: InCluding alcohol and
Bassett House In Athens has been . drug abuse. .•
The lncrea~ fl,mdlng was relnerell$ed by more than $21,000.
The Bassett House, wider the quested by the ·Department from
the state controillng· board due to
Department of Youth Services, Is a
placement in Bassett Hause at a
larger number of clients than
Units of the Melgs County
originally anticipated.
The incre015e In funding to
Emergency Medical Service ans·
wered one call Saturctay afternoon
$127,1XXJ wiU alloW Bassett House to
and three on Sunday. At 1: 18
provide an additional 288 days of
Saturday afternoon, the Syracuse
service to drug and alcohol depend·
unit transported Anna Duffy from
ent youth.
her College Road residence to
Weeklong revival set
Vete.rans Memorial Hospital. On
Sunday the Middleport unit went to
A week-long revival wiU begin
Headquarters Bar at 12; 01 a .m . for.
thiS evening at The SalvattonAnny,
.John Albright who was taken to the
115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, wtth
Middleport Pollee Station and then
th~ Rev. Chuck McPherson, fonner
later transported by the squad to
Meigs resident, Kingsport, Tenn.,
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
as speaker. There wiU ~ special
10; 23 a .m. the Syracuse uniJ took
vocal and Instrumental music each
Leota Cooper from .John Slr\!l't to
evening. Services w1ll start at 7: :l)
Veterans Memorial
Hopsital.
p.m. The public is Invited.
'
'

Meigs County happenings

TUI'I'EHS

'
SUP~LEMENT

Increase Bassett House fun&lt;js

Area deaths
'
Howard
A. Wilson

'

Monday. April 11, 1983

Pomet oy Middleport, Ohio

11 Cb.

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