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•
Page--16- The Daily Sentinel

Pometoy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Hearing set. today for accused murderer ·

Wet weather to dominate Ohio

GAlLIPOLIS iOVP) - Charles ·
Lee, the accused murderer of an
Ewlngton girl, was expected to
appear at his prel1nllnary hearing
today at Ga!Ua COunty ~.J!VenUe
Court
The county shertffs department
has charged Lee In connection with
the murder of Barbara Twyman, 17,
whose body was found In a weU lour
mUes from Ewlnfton one week ago,
At a detention hearii\g Thursday,
Lee, a 17-year-old Point Pleasant
youth, pleaded not guilty to the
murder Chal'f'e. He was ,ordered
detained at the Ross County
.Juvenile Detention Center · In.
Ch!Ulcothe.

Wet weather wUldomlnate most of Ohio Into Saturday.
An Intense low-pressure area over IoWa wtu move northeast to the
northern Great Lakes by Thursday morning and Into Quebec on
Friday.
.
A warm front over southern IndianA and Kentucky will move
slowly northeast and reach the noz;tbeastem counties of Ohio by
Thursday mornlnf. A strong south-to-southeast air flow accompanyIn€' the front wUI not only push temperatures Into the !lOs and low 70s
tl'fis'a!temoon but wtu also brlnf In plentY of mo.isture from the Gull of
Mexico. Some locally heavy rain can be ex~ted over the western
half of Ohio.
A cold front extending south from the low wtu advance acrossOhlo
on Thursday and reach the Atlantic seaboard Friday. Cool Canadian
air behind the front will lower temperatures Into the 40s and 5Qs. ..
Friday.
Today's forecast calls !or an elfhty percent c hance of rain or
thunderstorm~ tonight Low . 50-55. Winds southeasterly 21).30 mph.
Thursday, 60 percent chance of rain or thunderstorms. High 65-70.
Extended Outlook
.
Friday through Sunday: ·
Chance of sh!&gt;wers Friday and Saturday. Fair Sunday. Highs
Friday and Saturday In the 50s. HlghsSundayol!i-55. Lows In mld-30slo
low &lt;lOs,

.Jesse.James Pyett, 38, Route2, Albany, entered a voluntary plea of
guilt}' to two counts of ooxual battery when he appeared before Meigs
County Common Pleas .Judge Charles H. KnlghtThesday afternoon.
The charges were contained in a bUI of information prepared by the
office of Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow JJJ which resulted from
an Investigation conducted by Prosecutor's Investigator Paul
Gerard, Shertfl's Investigator Gary Wolfe, Cynthia Mills of the
children's services and NeisonvUle Pollee ChlefGreg Smith.
Sexual battery is a felony of the third defree.
.Judge Knight ordered Pyen to serve a term of not less than two or
more than 10 years on each count with the sentences to run
consecutively. Pyett was remanded to the custody of the sherlfl to
await transporta lion to Columbus.

Some jobs begging for takers
techl)ology
officials
say.jobs go begging In Ohio,
"The situation regarding unfilled
positions Is comrilon throUfhout the
state," said WU!iam Papier, director of research and sta tlsllcs for the
Ohio Bureau · o.f E mployme nt
Services.
"Registered nurses, for example.
are repof1ed In scarce supply ln 68
counlles In Ohio," he said . " Health
industry-related , positions In creased from February 1979 to
February 1983 by62,000jobsln0hio.
In the same period, there was a net
decline of 376,000 jobs In the sta te."
OBES keeps no siatlstlcs on how
many unfilled jobs are available.
Undesirable working hours and
slim pros~ts for career advancement are reasons. cited for the low
number of applicants In nursln~ .
e mployment analysts say. The
medical fie ld Is expandlnf because
of more third-party covera~e
through Medicare and Insurance
firms, they say.

$2.7 million
released for
new b~ilding
RIO GRANDE - Funding for
construction of the new science a nd
math building on the Rio Grande
College and Community Collere
campus has been released by the
state's 0fflce of Management a nd
J
Budget.
Funding wlll mme to $2,767,558.
accordln!( 10 lnformallon jointly
tl!leased Tuesday by Rep .. Jolynn
Boster, D-Galllpolls. a nd Sen.
Oakley Collins, R-lro?ton .
Herman Koby, secrelarytreasurer of RGC' s community
college board of trustees, said this
mornlnr construction can possibly
begin In four to six weeks.
Remaining paperwork has been
sen110 the state archltecl's office In
Columbus and contracts have to be
signed, Koby added .
Due to a freeze on college a nd
unlversily capital Improvement
projects Imposed In March by OMB
Director Christina Sale, Mrs. Boster said the building's future was
briefly in jeopardy. She said she··
solicited support from Gov. Richard
Celestes office to obtain funding
approval funding for the Rio
Grande project.
Construction on the building,
designed to replace Haning Hail, is
expected to_ last 18 months. The
one-story, 26,500-square foot structure will house classrooms, laboratories, a greenhouse and other
facilities.
Community college officials , who
will be owners of the building when
complete. said a new bulldlng was
necessary because the 44-year-old
Haning was small and energyIneffic ient.

Marr~ges

.

an anonymous tip.
recovered, but the sl)erlffs departAn autopsy revealed Twyman ment has not revealed where it was
died from gunshot wounds to the lowtd or ~o it is registered to.
head and chest A weapoo allegedly . The weapon was taken to the
used In the murder has been B4J"(!au of Criminal Investigation

lor b3llstlcs testing.
Twyman, who was ·a student at
Buckeye Htiis Career Center, was
· reported missln~ by her family ·
March 21l.

Most of the unfilled jobs and new
onesbeingcreatedarelnthehlgh
tech and computer fields .

· Bi~

DECK CHAIR BRIGHTS-Super-charged HANG TEtr stripesand solids in aprimary
colorpalette to be pertectly co-ordinated or mixed in bright blocks of clear colo[

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
·

Savings Opportunity You Won't Want

ENTIRE UNE

1/2 PRICE

4!!..1.
•

To · M~~s

THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 9-5
FRIDAY, APRIL IS, 9-7
SATURDAY, APR1l16, 9-5

,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Calling Ohio Republican Party
Chairman Mlcliael Colley a political
knifer, Democratic Gov. Richard
Celeste derided a GOP poll showing
hJm to bethestate'smostunpopular
governor.
Celeste said resulls of the survey
released by Colley are lrrelevent.
"I don't think the issue is
popularity. I think the Issue Is
getting a job done In Ohio," the
governor said.
"If you're going to provide real
leadership In the state of Ohio, then
you have to work a t ltforfouryears
antl-not-stop on any one weekend,"
Celeste said, adding that he
considered Colley "the knife man
for the Republican Party."
celeste was questioned about the
poll after a news conference In
which he lifted a six-week moratorium he had ImpoSed on an
industrtal development financing
pro~am backed by profits !rom

s1 million worth

·~

-of diamonds
on display

$159.95

Ct. Diamond
Cluster Ring

1

$599.95

7 Diamond
Ladies Cluster

$49.95

Matching
Pendant &amp;
Earrings

YOUR

Page 14

•

the state 's liquor sales monopoly.
Colley said . Monday that a
statewide poll conduct€.:! for the
.party iast month by Market Opinion
Research of Detroit showed C~&gt;­
leste's approval rating as being
lower than any other governor since
the firm began polling the state In
the 1960s.
. "My view always has been and
I've expressed this repeatedly
dur;tng campaigns I think that there
are two kinds of polis. Those that
you' re serious ahout you don't
discuss publicly and t hose that you
discuss publicly you're not serious
about, " the governor said.
The Ohio Democratic Party is
reportedly conducting Its own poll
but results are not ex~ted to be
made public.
During his first three months in
office, Celeste pushed through the
Legislature a 90 percent Increase In
the-state personal Income tax rate.

at y
l

1 Section , 14 Pag es
20 Cenh
A Mvhimed 1a In, . New,paper

40 TO 50 PERCENT SAVINGS. COME IN AND SEE AU THE TRADITIONAL STYLES AS WELL AS
THE MOST. EXCITING FASHION LOOK.§ IN DIAMONDS. WE HAVE IT All - AT 40 TO 50
PERCENT SAVINGS - SOliTAIRES, aUSTERS, ENGAGIMENT AND WEDDING JEWBJiY,
MEN'S DIAMONDS, COCKTAIL &amp; DINNER RINGS, DIAMOND WATCHES.

Police
summon
Walesas

,.

GDANSK. Poland !API - Danula Walcsn. wlf&lt;'ofSo lldarHychief
Lech Walesa. "'t'nlloGdanskpollce
headquarlcrs wilh her hu sband
today, a duy after hew as QUl'St iont"'d
about a Wf'f'kPnd mt"f'ting with
fugitlvp un ion leadf't'S.

The summons ordf'ring Mrs.
Wak•sa to thl' polieC' station said
authorit lf'S wanlt'CI to quf'stion ht~r:
as a "wltm -ss," but did not SJX'('ify

the natun' of lh~ inquiry .
On W&lt;'Clnesday. h&lt;•r husband was
intrrrrogarf'd by fXJiiC'f' in Gdansk
for ahnost rive !lOUt'S about J secret
meeting with undl~ rgrouml union
leaders.
PRAYER LUNCHEON -Chicago Mayor-elect
flllrold. Washington, flanked by, . Irom . lei\, . Saul
Eplon, brother of Republlcan · candidate Bernard
Eplon; Chicago Mayor J aile Byrne, and Cook County
State's Atty. Richard Daley, right, allen~ 1m

•

"ecumenical prnyer luncheon" Wednesday dl a
Chicago hotel. Washington and Epton had prom&gt;&lt;ed,
win or klse, to get togulher lor a ·prayer brenkfa..t
folklwlng th&lt;• el&lt;wwn. The brealdasl was poslpont-d
unlll afiA!moon, nnd Epton did not slM&gt;w. 1!\I'
LllSerpho!o}.

Renegade ward bosses .insist
political machine will survive
CHICAGO 1API - Renegade
ward bo~ who fought Harold
Washington on hls way to City Hall
offered the mayor-elect their cautious suppon , but Insisted their
Democratic machine wUI survive
" like a cat with nine lives."
Hours alter defeat lng Re pu bllcan
Bernard Eplon, Washington re-peated his pledge Wednesday to e nd
the clout of Chicago's regula r
Democratic organization - the
machine - and replace It with a
fairer system of hirlng clly workers,
many of whom owe their jobs to
·
political patronage.
The City Council. meanwhile. sel
Washington's inauguration for
April 29, when he wUI become the
city's first black mayor.
Washington 10ld a news confere nce Wednesday that "the mac hine
ls.not dead -It Is mm1 ally wounded .
and like mosl wounded a nimals. It
will drift off Into the woods and die."
In an Interview on ABC's " World
News Tonight ." he said everyo ne
has a rlghl to expecl falmes s from
government.
"Black people ~1 Chicago have
not been 11-eated fai r. or any other

place I can lhink of," he conlinued.
"They expecl in me fairness. an
equal chance, a job. achanceatclty
contracls, a fair dlstribullon of city
services, opportunllies lo develop
Iheir neigTibOl·hoods. 'a better school
syslem - fair. open, cqual-lhal's
a ll. " he said. "We will do IhaL ..
" I think you haVl' lodisllnguish al
Ihis point between wha l lhe mayor
means and what he sa ldc ' said
Alderman Roman C. Pudnskl. a
pillar of Ihe machfnewho conlrols
an esl imaled 8tll palronage jobs.
··He tan as an lndependen t. What do
you ex peel him to tell you lf you ask
if Ihe machin• • is d&lt;'ad'! If hP says 11
Is, he's reful ing hi s who le
campaign."
" llhink lh&lt;' mayor Is trying to be
very, very tacl ful under a very
difficull sltual lon," said Pucinskl.
one of eighl Democra tic leaders
who defec ted openly 10 Ep1on . Or her
ward committeemen were accused
of helping lhc' Ftepubllcan secrelly.
"If he wanlssuppor1. I'll give illo
him," said Alderman Vllo Mar·
zullo, another Epton Democral.
Marzullo, who blasted Washington
on CB.'i-TV's "00 Minutes" on
Sunday, said h~ would nol lx' " an

obstruct io nist unlf'Ss thf'y makf' me
Lilf'."

Also offering suppon to Washington on Wcdnesda~· was Epton
himself - Ihough not In person . Till'
Republican left for a Florida
vacallon. skipping a promised unlly
lunc heon with Washington . Bul hP
S!'nt his brot hN with a note of
ronwalulationo.
Asked why h&lt;' cllrl no1 go to 1h&lt;'
luncheon. F.pton sa id ht• w as not told
of !hr lura lion unlilll was loo lair lo
a tlmd .
"I JoV(• Chicago. and anyt·hln g I

r an do lo l1rlp lhradmlnislralion, I
will. ..· F: pl un said. adding tiral h.was UfRirtg hlo SUjJJXll11'rs IO help
Washington.

F:vrn b&lt;'fol'{' Washlnglon topp!&gt;d
Ep1on with ~ 15 JX..'ru• nl of 'l'ut•s
daY's vot£'. manyobst•r-verssald thf'
ma ehinC' was fln lshe:.'CI b&lt;-:&lt;:a use !t

W alesa's dC'tenlion I)('Cun'f'd a
day aftcl; he disclos&lt;-ct I hal he mel

over

Jh~ Wl'!.'i&lt;P~d

Wilh fi VI' fugii!Ve

Solldtu· Uy leadC'r;s tryin g to revive
.thC' outlaw('(i \abor m ovenwnt .
l t was the Sl'('Ond tinw Wulrsa
wa.s drtain'cd s in N' his l'f' lensl'fn:rm ·
an 11 -month martial law lnll'rn-

mPnl in NovPml:x&gt;r . lit~ w;ts pirkt-od
u~ by polin• and clr ivt&gt;n ·amUnd
Gdcmsk for nlnp hours Dr'(: . Ill to
kf'{'p him from adclrf'!'is\ng a rally
outside.• t hr Lr• nin shipyan.t. whrrr

Solldaril)' WI" bo min i\URlJSI 1!'00.
Oy i-l nnounc ln g lhf' Wl"'f'krnd
m~ting , WalsPa ap~· cnt'CI to lJt•
trying to SL'l' how far lh&lt;• aulhorlllf'S
would allow htm to go In maintain-

Ing hls public rol&lt;' a s Sollclarlty
lpadf'r .
"A." a fn\' man. l ha vP a r!ghtto
mt'f~t wi th &lt;~nyont •, f'W'n cri minal
Plf'mf•nts. S(l long as lhP trll '\'t !ng h;ts

no cr lmin;ll inh·nt ." Wah--s&lt;1 tolrl
l'l'\JOI'tPI:.S aftPI' ht ' l'I'IUI'tlt'{( lo his
aparlml'nl Wf'dm-scla).' ('V(•nirrg.
His spokC&gt;srna n, Ado.rm 1\lna~
L.('Wski, said lht' :l~l- ~'P&lt; U ' Did labor
iP LHil'l' " didn't f'Oilflt Tll 01' dPilV " to
Ow {X11in· that lw mP! wit t; the'
So\ i(Writy uncli·r g nllllld . " ll r
simply rl'fusPd to rnak1 · nn_
v kind of
s_t ntf'mt·rH ."
As annPd f.X)Iil 't ' bu radlnJ \oV;IItosJ
off In a n\1 va n for qut&gt;sl inni ng, llf'
yt'l l&lt;~l to n·porlt•rs, " T•·II th, •w holt)
world thry an• brt•aki ng t ht•l dw .''

U ndPr I 1ollsh l&lt;Jw polin• rrwy

could no long&lt;'I'&lt;'OIIIrollh!' result s of
primaril'S as il dlcl in Ihe heyday of
Ihe laic' Mayor Richard .J. Daley .
"Of roursc, WI' don 't call il lhP

dl'tal n pl'(lph• for up to .tX hours
without rtl;rrgt·. ~ ~ tactic !lt~ •y used
Oflt'n ln dPali ng wi th Walf'Si t and
othPr la bor al·t i vi:-;t~ lM~ rm·p th('

mach InC'. you ca n appreclutt• that .··

lTI'allon of So ilclttrlt y . lhc• first

Puclnski '"lei. "BullhP mnrhlnP Is

lndrpC'ndc•nt unlun In tht·So\'iPI hiL~t: .
Ttw latx.H· ft'(Jeration wa ... outlmvrd

!Uw a cat with nlnr llvPs. It just won' t
go away .

In (ktoL&lt;T .

Ohio Power chief testifies against bill
Rep. Rocco J . COlonna, D-Brook
Park, is sponsor of the proposal
which would require that a plant be
90 percent complete before construction costs could be passed ·to
customers.
•
Among those testifying Wednesday night at the first hearing for
opponents was Charles A. HeUe r,
president of the Canton-based Ohio
Power Co.
Currently, ' the charges can be
pro-rated on monthly bills when a
plant is 75 percent complete.
Colonna's b!U also reduces from 20
percent to lOpercent the amount of a
utility's rate base which can
•

SUPPLIER WHO WILL BE HERE WITH THE CREAM OF HIS NATIONAL COLLECTION - ALSO AT

conslrucllon. th&lt;• u!UIIy incurscosls
which Inc lude labor. matrrlu ls, and
progress.
su pplies.
"~estrictlng CWIP In rale base
HP said thai lo pay for ol hcr
does have an lnvlllng look aboulll,
from the cuslomer's poinl oi view. cons I ruction cosls, lAP utllit IPs must
because II clelays the day of bormw money or L.sueSiock. which
requires payl11g lnl eres l or
reckoning." Heller sa id.
The customers. under exisllng dividends .
Financing cosls am up, and
law which the bill wou ld rtot change,
wind up paying thecosl o! the entire within lhe last Ill years. llclle r sa id
plant In the long run anyway, hP
mnstruct ion costs have Inc reased
polnled out.
four-fold .
He sa id thai lo shackle CWTP
" But when the shon delay can
cos I jobs and will greatly Increase . would hamper the abtllty' ofutUitles
10 borrow ix'cause it would mean a
the total cost 10 Ihe customer over
deterioration of Iheir credit ra.tlngs.
the longrun, how muc h Is gained by
Heller also touched upon claims
the gelay'? Who benefits? And who
that as Ohlo vies for new plants and
does this measu~ really hurt ,"
businesses and trlcs to retain Its
Heller asked.
lndustrtal base, adequate general Ing capacity is going to be required .
The O~io Ppwer,otflclal explained
"To brtng jobs to Ohio, we need to
that when a plant Is under
IT'presl"nt

consft1.1CI ton

work

In

assun.• buslness t.hut an &lt;~Ch'(tU&lt;~Ie
supply of electric Pnrrgy is avulla
ble loday a ncl will hra vaila bll' in the
futuw The CWIP pmvl, lon helps
providP that assumnCf' and thu s

he lps bring new jot"' lo ll hio, " ttc
said.
Hcllc•r denied claims by supporters of Colonna's hill . w tw Jestiflrd
C'arUcr. !hal CW JI' roncuuragf'S
unnecessa ry const n1ct ion .

"Nonscnst•. Any company th ut
undertnkrs unn('("C!f'{l construction

hoping for cv&lt;'nlual inclusion of
CWIP In rail' hase io rL,king
financial suieicle. Cons t llJclion is

expensive and fraug hl with risk . 11
requires up-fronl cash money 1from
the companies )·... he sa id . ·
The opposlllon hearin~s will
continue.

, Ohio representative will oppose coal measure

WATOt FOR OUR JEWELRY REMOUNT SHCliW APRIL 29 &amp; 30

WASHINGTON (AP) -

•

'

enttne

f .

COLUMBUS, Ohio !API UtUitles are attempting 10 defeal a
blll restricting their use of customer
money for plant conslructlon.

TO HBP CELEBRATE THIS OCCASION WE HAVE TEAMED'UP WITH OUR PRIMARY DIAMOND

Phor141 992-2635

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 14, 1983 .

C HOI CE

end

Charging fi'OSS neglect of duty
ani;! extreme c ruelty, Debra S.
Halley, Syracuse, has fJled suit for.
divorce from William ,J. Hallev.
Syracuse, In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. She asks
·custody of one minor chUd.
In the court the rntrrfage of Errol
Ryan Roberts. and Christina Kay
Roberts has been dissOlved.

Page 10

(:eleste calls Colley
Republican knife man

"Three Days Only"

16 Diamond
Heart Pendant

Page5

GAlLIPOLIS (OVP) - A judge has ruled ~uthorllies have probable
cause to ho ld Charles Lee II In 'COnnection with the murder of an Ewlngton ~
girl. Gallla Count}' assistant prosecutor Donald Cox said.
At a prel1nllnary hearing Wednesday, GaUia County JuvenUe Court
Judg&lt;' Thomas Moulton orderell the 17-year-old Lee, a Point Pleasant
resident, continued to be held at the Ross County JuvenUe Detention Center
In Chillicothe, according to Cox.
The prel1nllnary hearing was closed to the public at Moulton's order
because Lee Is a juvenUe.
Lee pleaded innocent at his detention hearing Thursday to a charge that
he kUled )3arbara Twyman.17.
Cox has tued a motion requesting the youth be tried as an adult In common
pleas court.
· Moulton ordered Lee undergo physical and psychiatric testing before a .
decision is made whether to try him as an adult, Cox said.
Although no da \e·has been·set. COx estlrna ted a hearing on the motion will
. be held in about two weeks .
.
.
.
Under Ohio law, Lee could be tried as an adult U It can bedeterinlned he
could not be reMJ?l!ltated In a juvenile facility .and that the safety of the
-- cornrnunlty requlres-he· be held past his-18th birthday.
.
. .
Lee was arrested by Gallia County sheriff's deputies eight days ago,
several hours after they found Twyman's body In a 40-foot-deep well off
Alice Road near Ewlngton. Investigators were led to the well by an
anonymous tip.
Twyman was killed by gunshot wounds to the head and chest, an autopsy
revealed. Investigators believe TWyman \\!aS kUled and then dumped In the
well.
Deputies found a gun they believe was used In thecr1nle. The gun has been
sent for ballistics testing at the Bureau of Criminal Investigation, but Cox
said he has not yet received results of the tests.

is having another big sale with .....

&amp;
JEWELRY

Food stamp cut
affects poor ·

Point youth
must undergo
•
•
examinations

r~riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iii~In~ves~ti:ga~t~ors~.w~e~re~led~to~th:e~w~e~ll~by~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~r:=

FURNITURE

New Meigs FFA
·officers chosen

Voi .31,No,244
Copyrighted 1983

UnderOhlolaw, Lee may be tried
as an adult If It can be determined
that he could not be rehabilitated in
a juvenile facUlty and that the safety
of.the community requires he be
held past his 18th birthday .
Ga llia County shertff's deputies
arrested Lee within hours of finding
Twyman'sbodyWednesdaylna
40-foot-well just otl Alic_e Rd.

Phillies top Mets;
Braves dump Reds

·e

Prosecutors wUI attempt to show
probable cause durlnf today's
hearing, which is closed to the public
and the media. Assistant prosecutor
Donald Cox has flied a motion
requestlnf Lee, be tried as an adult
In common pleas court .
.Judge Thomas Moulton is not
e~ted to rule on • the motion
today. Lee wUI undergo physical
and psychological testing before
Moulton decides whether he should
be tried as an adult
Moulton said he did not know how
Jong It would take to administer the
tests.

Sexual charges bring prison term

CLEVELAND (API - Despite
reports of hlf h unemployme nt ,
thousands of medical and hlph

, Wedr&gt;Mday, April 13, 1983

Monthly
Credit Termt
Available

Rep.

Douglas Applegate, D-Ohio, says he
wUl oppose a new effort th1s year to

I
1

r
JIEIJT QF ~
.... OutoltJJ wlllw.llaak CleiMid m,- or Mr.
andMn.llaak
D, PtrnwsU), WODber!tof.OOW~wllllltll
espa ki611 wM11 oxypa a&amp; ~ 800GIId IUIIIIIIII ...tence fair ol the
Pea•v.t l!:lemiiUry School. ftiiDI! - a llnl place wilmer In fifth
P'JIIIe compedtlaD .... then mtWed lata lap tlpll oii!Je fair, Tile b'oiiiiY
he baldl:wllir aWIU'ded for belt of .a-. 'l'llel'tciWSUjPI'A 11M eed
tile fair IIICijWOVJded call p,:t&amp;etl lilld the &amp;ruphy. Mn. Boan!i. Flllier
"-• fawl)' a~M~or.

pass legislation helping construc'tion of pipelines to carry coal slul'IY
!rom mines to utllity plants.
Among ~~ pipelines planned 1s
one that would bring coal !rom
Western coal fields to midwestern
'
utUitles.
That would be another blow to the
already ~ressed Ohio coal mlnlng
11\dustry, Applegate said Wednesday as a House subcommittee

----'---------- --

opened hearings on coal pipeline
legislation.
Because of federal clean air
standards, utUltles have•cut down
on use ol Ohio's high-sulfur cOal.
About 5,000 miners already are
out of work In Applegate's eastern
Ohio district.
"! can see coal sluny pipelines
closing down lhemlnes ihat arestUI
lett ," said Applegate, of
SteubenvUle.
,
The Public Works and Transportation Comtnlttee, of which Appl~&gt;- ,

gate Is a member, Is the second
House committee to get the
legislation.
The bUI was approved last month
by the Interior COI'TII'Ii' lttee, headed
by Rep. Morris K Udall, D·Arlz.
Udall said Public Works and
Transportation had obtained jurisdiction over the bUI tor 30 days bul
thathethen~tstogetclearance

from thepowertu!RulesCommlttee
to bring the bUI to the House floor.
The Rules COmmittee kept the

.. .

legislallon lrom gelling before the
House last year.
Rep. Bud Sh uster. RPa .. indicated that opponents wi!U ·agaln 1ry
to keep It ofllhe House floor.
Shuster, llke Applegate, a
member of the surface transjxlltatlon suiJcommlltee "of the Public
Works and Transporta lion COmmit tee. complained that his committee
was "relegated toasecondruyrole"
while' Interior had ' pr imary
jurisdiction.

�'·

~ornrnentary

.Jeane .I. Kirkpatrick has been
havln!' a I'Oiij"h time at the United
Nations lately.
Roogher than usual lor our much
put-upon ambassador, who makes
such a repeated publlc point of her
displeasure with an organization
that conununlst C&lt;il)nlvlng and
Third World lu espoiiSiblllty have
sta'c k£'d so effectively against
American interests.
This time out, she was hard
pressed llnlrig up support amOIIf'
even the nearest and deaarest ailles
on a complaint bi'Oiij"ht to the ·
Security Councll by Nicaragua.
Namely, that it is under attack by
Honduras-based, U.S.·baCkEdfUerrlllas seeklne to overthrow the
Sandlnlsta regime.
As ArnbassadtJr Kirkpatrick in·
terpreted !be' situation, Nlcaraguans are fifhtlngNlearafUIUISand
it is therefore entirely an internal
matter. The United States, or
course, would
dream of

614-99!-!151
l )1-:\- 0TE: r&gt;TO THE INTEKFJiT (Jt' THt : MEIG&amp;MASOI'i "RF.A

ROBE RT L. WINGETT
l'u bh NIWr

BOB HOE FLICH

,\ ,., , ~ tH n t ·I' u hi is ht• r / (unt rull t• r

OALE ROTHGEB, JR .
Nr-ws Edi tor
MF. J\Hi f-~ H.

,.f Thr Assnd:ttt'd" Prl"!i .'&gt;, lnJynd

,\nwr lo-;llt ..,;, . .,. !&gt; pilprr l'u h li ..h o-r ll A ~ ~ urllll i to n

I&gt;J.~ i h· Pr~.'&gt; r\ ~ ~· · · i11 t i "n

11 rod thr

·

I. E'ri" E RS Or I WINION art' ~o~ t•ku m t"d . Tht' y ~ hiJU kl bt&gt; lt-ss thiUI J00 "urd~ Inn ~ . .411
Hn' ... utl jt•t'l tu t'di li n ~ and must lw slgnf'd with rumw. addn•!ili a nd tr lrphuttr

h•u..r~

numt11•r N•• U tl.~i g nrd 11'\\l' rs wi ll
l~s m·s. nt•l p4'r ~tll&lt;J iil t h .

bt- t)Uh li~ h.-d . l ~ l ll'n

14, 1983

t&lt;hoould Ill' in ~· ·ld

bl ~ ~- ~t ddr~ lntr:

President waits for
his aides to catch up

never

becoming Involved In the internal

American response to the Nlcara·
guan revolution.
In the beginning, the Carter
administration made$216mllllon in
aid available. All to private inter·
ests. Another S75 million packaee
was subsequently slapped together,
most aeain eannarked tor the
private sector. Only $15 million was
Ill be atthedlrect disposalofthenew
govenunent.
Conservative opposition blocked
full congressional approval untll
May 19, l!m. By then; the
Nicaraguan revolution was nearing ·
Its first anniversary and the
revolutionary government - which
had inherited a wrecked \'C(lnomy,
an empty treasury and aSH bUUon
foreign debt - was approaching
7
·-- desperation.
There was more to the package,'
however, than the price laf. Fund
transrersweremadeconditibnalon
presidential certlflcation that the
Sandlnlstas were not rnaJdn.l( mJ.

attatrsolothercountries.Except,o!
C&lt;JUn;erconstructlwely.
And on !hat point, the ambassa·
dor recently delivered herself of a
telling observation - more so,
perhaps, than she realized.
" I don't know why the Cubans
should be relied upon Ill brlnf'
literacy tn Central America ."
She was speaking at·the t1me in a
broader context, suggesting a
cdmprehenslve Marshall Plan approach tD the problems of Central
America and the Caribbean. And
ber rererence was Ill the pbalanxes
of Cubans - stW there - wbo
, poured into Nicaragua after the
.July 1979 Sandlnlsta victory tD
assist, amone other projects, a
crash alphabetization campaign.
Butthequestionshe ralsedisvery
much to the present point
Why, indeed, the Cubans? We
don't have tnlookfarforthe answer.
Only to Washlnfton and the

· President Rea van, sometimes accused by hls critics of being a creature
of the aides around him, has been out ahead of h1s underlings th1s past
week - waitinr for them to catch up.
Dwl'ns of p&lt;YJple work for the Wh ile ~ouse to plan Reagan's schedule,
get him places on time a nd m ake sure 111! wants for nothing. When you 're
president, your time Is supposed to be so valuable that you never have tD
wait for anyone. Well, a lmost never.
Returninr from his Ma ryla nd mountaintop retreat on Sunday, Reafan
and his wife , Na ncy, and the ir week:end guests, Secretary of State and Mrs.
George P Shul tz, went by limousine from Camp David's Aspen Lodp.e to
the helicopter la ndine pad a few hundred yards away.
'The Reagans got out of the car a nd boarded the helicopter. Shultz
disappea red into a small bunker beside the landing str:1p·to use the phone.
His wife followed the Reagans aboard .
Lo ng minutes pasS&lt;x! as Rearan wa ited for his secretary of state.
Ma rine One , of course. has telephones aboard ; but conv~ rsatlons whlle
airbom •··arc less secure tha n those over land lines. Shultz was discussing
devl'ioprnen ls in the Middle East. where King Hussein of Jordan had just
_a]lllouncPd tha t his cffor1 to represent th~ Palestinians in peace talks had
&gt; colla psecL
.
·
Whi le ftwvan coo led his heels, Shul12 was' helping prepare a statement
for Reagan to issue when the helicopte r landed on the White House lawn a

·

'•

"

· which begrudged $15 mllllon to the
Nicaraguan governrilent lor recon· ·
structlon · later eannarked $19
-~
- . ' . . : . muuon IP destablllze it. The reports
. -&amp;.~
. . have not bojen denied:
--...
~
Central Americans knows thls.
~ And so, Ambassador Kirkpatrick,
do our friends and atues at the
United Nations.

HI'
r-"'·"'' ~111'~ ,

.........

LET CUSTER BE ~

Victimized refug........,_e_e_s----:::-:-:---:----~::--J~ac_k-:-And_er-,-so-::-n

WASIDNGTON - Nearly two
years ago, I reported the pitiful
story or Vietnamese refugees who
are beinf brutally raped, robbed
and murdered as they try to flee
their communist homeland · in
rickety boats across the GuH of
ThaDand.
Their cruel tormentors are Thai
pirates, SCOIII'&amp;" of the southern
seas, who carry on their plllage .
' " "'Iinder the nose of an lndltferent
Roya!ThalNavy.
The story caught the eye or
President Reagan. Touched by the
plight of the boat people, he
lnstrucledatopWhlteHousealdetD
direct the Navy to protect the
hopeless rcful',ees.
Despite thiscompasstonateorder
from the commander-in-chief, however; theworld'smlghtlestnavyhas
done nothing to stop the deprada·
lions ofthe Thai cutthroats.
So the carnaee goes on.
OutrapedStateDepartmentsour·
ces describe the assaults as "an
abomination" ... "crimes al:ainst

Berry's World

schlet in nelfhborlng countries I.e.• E l Salvador.
Wlthconserva tivecrlticscontlnu1ng to snap at his heels, .Ttmmy
Carter delayed in releaS~ the first
tunds untll Sept.l2. Ronald Reagan,
taklne ottlce four months later,
temporarlly suspended all ald. The
cuto!fwasmade permanentAprUl,
1981, by which tltne $81m111lono!the
packaee had been transferred,
most to private Nicaraguan
interests.
Early .on, there had beeri some
disCUSsion of dispatching 500 Peace
ColllS volun.t eers to NlcarafWl.
None ever got as far as Mlainl.
Letusbeperfectlyclearaboutone
point. The Sandlnlstas are Marxtsts, some of anespeclally surly cut.
Their revolution from the start had
an anti-Amertcan momentum, dlreeled as it was against a despotism
thathadbeentnstalledlnNlcarafWl
by the United States. The Washing·
ton of two ac~m~n~Stration.s has had
good reason to be wary of them.
But some among them were less
doctrinaire, and suttlcientiy realls·
tic Ill recognize that the United
States could provide assistance of a
kind and quantity the Cubans and
SoViets could never hope to approach. They would never have
fallen gladly intn American arms,
but,therc was at least the chance of
an accommodatlon based on mut·
ual advantage.
It was never given a chance. The
Nicaraguan field was left tD the
Cubans. All or Central Amertca, tor
that matter. The American effort
there is all tooobvlouslydlrectednot

~~~~
,~~
- - ~=~~~~~.but
tD
~
The Reagan administration

fe;v mlnu! rs later .

Tha nks lu the delay . Reaga n was a ble to stand before the news cameras
with a n appa rPntiy sponta neous - but actually carefully prepare~!
sta tement abou t developments in the Middle Eas t:
Shultz stood db crcclly to the sidi!"" ·
A co uple of niphts laler, the Rear.ans, who usua lly stic k closely tD their
ann ounced schedule, wa lked out onto the lawn four minutes early to board
the helicopte r for a brief fiif ht to the suburbs, where the president
commemora tE'd victims of the Holoca ust
ThP aircra ft revved its engines and prepared to lift off .
Then, the door opened again, the lights of the chopper's steps beCkoning
to a fleet figure dashing through the darkness from the mansion and onto
thP heli copt er.
It was .TamPs A. Baker Ill , the White House chief of statf.
· Known amonp Wh ite House staff members as a fastidiously organized
and punctua l administra tor , Baker had been cauyht off guard by tile
Rl.w•a!l' prem a ture depari ure. •

(.,

~~

humanity" .. . "something that
supposedly went out with Attua the
Hun."
A typical attack includes the
wantnn slaughter of ablebodied
men, rang rapes of the women and
theftofanylhingo!value -eventhe
clothes orr the refueees' backs.
IJi some cases , babies are tossed
overboard to drown, ap_parenUy for
the pirates' amusement Many
refugee boats are attacked several
times before the hall-dead sutvl·
vors !inally reac h safety in Malay·
sla or Indonesia.
Confidential State Department
cables examined by my associate
Lucette Lagnado indicate that U.S.
ottlctals, including Ambassador
.John Gunther Dean , have complained forcefully to the Thai
government atiout its !a llure to
crack down on the piracy.
Last December, Dean and the
ambassadors of other concerned
governments- Swllzerland, Italy,
NoJWay, Brttain a nd Austra lia discussed the situation with Thai

officials in Bangkok. "The suffering
of the refueees a t !he hands of the
pirates must be alleviated.'' Dean
tnld the Thais.
According to one cable, "the
ambassador s tressed to the (Thai)
naval authorities tha t concrete
results were needed," and added
that ll the pirate a ttacks were not
reduced, "the image of Thailand as
a country which followed humane
policies would be hurt." The Thais'
!allure, Dean warned dlplomatl·
cally, "eould have a detrimental
impact on a wide range of Issues."
Dea n characterized the Thais'
eUorts tD date as "dlsappointlnf."
When the Thai oUiclals asked tor
more money to fifht the pirates,
Dean pointed out that the current
$3.6mllllonproerambeingfinanced
by foreign governments was al·
rea d Y ' 'a s u'b s tan t l a 1
commltment. "
No one minimizes the dllficultles
involved. There arc as many as
50.!XXJ vessels plying the Gull of

ThaDand. Many ofthem are legally
registered fishing boats that make
up an important part of the Thai
economy. The s~r number of
vesselsandtheslzeofthegulfmake
policing the area a staggerln~ job.
The anti-poiracy proeram dependson airplanes tD spot apparent
pirate attacks and pinpoint' tile
location for Thai gunboats . But in
the entire month of November 1982,
accordlnf to the State Department,
onlytlvesuchslghtlngswercmade,
and in most cases the patrol boarS
either anived too late or went to the
wrong place beCause of faulty
directions.
The U.S. Navy has accomplished
even less- though it has the planes
and bellcopters needed to patrol the
gulf.
Footnote: The "rcfu~ee season"
is about tD resume. Rep. Stephen
Solarz, O.N.Y., has pushed.for a $5
mUllon appropriation to help the
Thai government in Its currently
lneflectlvewar on the pirates.

Art Buchwald

'Star Wars' _._
problem
_________________________________________
The biggest problem President

ultraviolet-infrared-telescoPICtoeaReagan faces in developing a "Star tnrs. The space people sayshe'sllest
Wars" defense against nuclear in the field ."
"And she's a woman . That should
weaponsisfindingtherlghtthlnklng
Amerlcansclentlsts!Dworkon lt. ln help us with the female vote in '84.
this admJnJstratlon a scientist not Bring her In for an interview. "
only has to have impeccable
"There's a problem, sir. Our
proCessional
credenttals,
rut
he
also
sec
urity check revealed she voted
"Fa ther, when are we going to get a satellite
has
to
be
screened
to
make
sure
be
for
.Tlnuny
Carter."
dish like everybody else?"
or she has the same conservative · · ''Maybe she was duped."
kleolqzy as the party.
"She's also on the Planned
For example, 50 scientists were Parenthood Board at MIT."
removed !rom advisory boards of
" Forget her."
the EPA when their tenns expired,
" I have a Nobel Prize winner in
beCa use they were considered astro-physics who is working on
"politically unreliable" by Reagan spontaneous combustion of hydroloyalists.
gen and fluorine at the Livermore
Since the "Star Wars" ~pt National Laboratory. "
Will require a lot more brains to
" What's wrong with him."
' perfect the system, it may be very
- dl!ttcult to lind I!OOI!fh pro-Reagan
r lence. Ten athletes will be picked to
111f• Carleton School a nd Meigs
scientists to get tlle proeram off the
represent Meigs County th1s year.
industries, inc. adu lt workshop
grouOO.
Ha ving community support for
ha\'c a Spt&gt;ela l Olymp ics team that
I can just Imagine the hustle and
the Special Olympics is a gret
w~l be comPI'Iing in both the
bustle now going on In the White
feeling. Thank-you to all of the
regiona l and s ta te level games this
House.
· •·
members or both the Southern High
spr b1g. l wou ld like to thank two
"Sir, here's the list of eminent
School Athletic Boosters and the
community groups who have doscientists thatcouldbecontacledfor
Meigs County Karate Club lor · our crash nuclear umbreUa
na ted money to support our team.
recognizing tbe worth or The River
The Sou the rn High School At·
program."
.
Racers, Meigs County's Special ·
hletlc Booster s bought short s and
.. AI\Y fOOd people?.. •
Olympic Team. Everyone is wel·
MJCks for each of our , athletes.
"They're tops in their field.
come to attend the events. The
Hav ing a unllotm adds g,reUy to our
Professor Heinz Hemlock is a
Rewonal Games Will · be , held
team splrlt and lo each athlete's
genius when lt comes to laser beam
Saturday
, AprU 23, at- Alexander
. · feeling of pride. Wc wlllall be proud
research. He'a just turned an
High School Ln Albany, beginning at
to repres ent Meigs County In the
enemy gJ•Ir!n .., II)'Stl!m Into oat9 a.m .
·
·special Olympics In ou r new
meal in lilllb."
·
Come cheer us on to do our best!
Uf\llOffilS.
.
"Great. Let's ~him up."
'lbanks again to Southern High
The .Me igs County Karate Club
"There Is Only one catch. He's .
dOna ted money to sponsor three School Athletic Boosters and Meigs
llfainst prayers tn school."
County Karate Club for their
athletes to a ttend the State0l)'ll1plc
"He doesn't sound like a team
support. - Laura Frederiksen,
Games held in Columbus in June.
player. Wboebehaveyou(IO\?"
'..
The Stilt e Games are a really Coach.
"Dr. Anne Marie rSlen. She has
excJting and broadening exj&gt;e.
done . extr!lOrdlnary work In

'

Letter to editor

Thanks community supporters

"He signed a petition last month
for a nuclear freeze."
"Dammlt, can 't we find any
Amertcan scientists who aren 't
bleeding heart activists?"
"Edward Teller?"
"He's already on the team. In fact
he's the leader o!theteam. Read me
out some other names. "
"ProCessor Nino Bertollnnl.
wrote the detlnltlve paper on
gamma rays- but unacceptable tD
Senator ,!esse Helms because he's a
member of Common Cause ... Dr.
Albert Ruben, subatntnlc particle
beam guru ... ardent supporter of
handflln control and against death
penalty ... Dr. Sarah Tllton,
microwave physicist at University

of Chlcago .. . son works for Tip
O'Nell."
"That's enough! There isn 't one
person you've mentioned solar that
could passmusterwlth ~he. Republican National Commlttee. But we
_have Ill have some scientists for our
'Star Wars' Proeram."
"I think I have one here at the
bottom of the list. Professor Dalion .
Calhoun the Third. He teaches
physical astronomy at the Oral
Roberts· University in Tulsa. He
wrote a book knockinf down the b~
bang theory of the creation of the
earth, and proved sclentlflcally 1t
came about just as it says in the
Blbie. ,Jerry Falwell recommends
him very highly.''
"Find out when he can start."

•

\

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

'(

'

-··- .,

SYRACUSE- Behind theone-hlt
pitching .of hurler Tonja Salser, the
Southern Tornadoettes of Coach
J ohn Dudding rolled to a 5-2 victory
over league contender Nonh Gallia
here Wednesday evening at Syra·
cuse P::uniclpal. Park. The win
boosts Soulhefn to 5-1 overall, while
giving Sout!Jern an und,lspu ted 4-l)
lead in the league softball standings.
Southern's senior righthander
Tonja Salser was perfect for five
and two-thirds innings before giving
up a slxth inning RBI double toTana
George, the Pirates' only hit . Salser
fanned four aJ]d wa lked just two
enroute to picking up the vlcttry .
Tana George, veteran hurler for the
Galllans, suffered the defeat with
two strike outs and two walks .
George gave up 12 hits to the potent
Southern diamonders.
In the first round, Southern plated.
one run after Becky Michael
walked, stole second, then rode
home on a Mel Weese s ingle.
In the second frame .Jenny
Bentley led off with a single,
Michelle Johnson drew a base on
balls, Mindy Hill lined an RBI
single, and Becky Michael lined an
RBI single for a 3-0 advantage.
Whlle Salser quieted the North
Gallla bats the Southern otrense
again went to work in the third
inning when Weese started a rally
with a looping double. After a minor
threat, Weese then came home on a
s harp grounder that was muffed by
the N. G. inlleld.
The Tornadoettes plated an
ln~urance run in the sixth inning on
two s ingles by Becky Michael and
Hemsley, followed by an RBI s ingle
by Weese.
North Gallla pla ted one run in the
tlflh on an SHS error, rwo passed
balls, and another error.
In the fourth George delivered her

double, knocking in D. Whit~ who
reached on a walk. ·
Southern hltters were Michaels
threesingles.J;Iem sley two doubles,
Weese two singles and a double.
Salser two singles; Bent ley a s ingle,
a nd Mindy Hlli a single.
Southern plays a t Syracuse
tonight then hosts Southwestern
Friday.
Llnescorc:

Soutl'e'n R&lt;s.......... .......... . OOl

back
breaker
ttie toalumni
in the fifth
inningas
proved
be the
collected the ·bulk of their 10 hit
a ttack.
Richard Davis had a double,
triple, single. a nd a wa lk to lead the
young Tornado ba tsmen with a fi ne
ba tting pe rfo rm a nce. ' Davi d
Eber sbach and Wendell Clark each
had s ingles to round out the reserve
hitting .
Llnescore :

'

..

Hendridcs 61h. and Hendricks, Scott WolfE'6th.

2

Jay Bostick \LP), Scott Wlck.Une 5th. Ch arlle
Wolfe 5th. and Darin Roush.

SALE -ON WORK OUTRTS
'

·,-

:

~

-

SATURDAY

FRIDAY
STUFFEO FLOUNDER
POTATO
VEGETABLE
ROLLS
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NON-ALCOHOLIC
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r:f;.~
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I'

8 OZ. NEW YORK
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$1 Q49

By The~~~

Press

What 's sauce for the Goose Is
sauce for American League hitters.
Goose Gossage, whose appearance on the mound is usually enough
tD guarantee a New York Yankee
victory, gave up the game-winning
hlt for the second s tra ight time
Wednesday night as the Detroit
Tigers downed the Yankees 7-5.
Gossage, who surrendered an
eighth inning three-run homer to
Toronto's J esse Barfield in his last
appeara nce , entered the game with
one out in the seventh with the
Yankees leading 4-3 a nd two men
on.
In other games Wedn!'S!Iay.
Boston pounded Kansas G:ity 18-4,
CalUornla Angels downed Sea itle
6-1. Cleveland beat Texas · 4-3.
Toronto downed Milwaukee. 7-2and
Oakland topped Minnesota 5-4 .

4, Rangers
3 home
Mike Indians
Hargrove
doubled
Chris Bandowith the tying run In the
seventh inning, then scored the
winning run on Ba ke McBride's
s ingle as Cleveland handed Texas
its second loss of the season.
Cleveland starter Len Barker.
2-0, posted his his six th straight
victory withou t a loss against
Texas , ti[s former team, In Cleveland Stadium .

ON FRIDAY FROM 4..t»

IT'S T.G.I.F.

"ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORf'

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

· 1Wc1 Sox is, &amp;yals 4
G len Hoffman had !l\'e hit s and
J im Rice had a homer and triple as
the Red Sox puunded out 21 hits and
took advantage of five Royal errors
in a game played In Kansas City's
sub-freezing weather, with a wind·
chll factor of 10 degrees.
The start ofthegame was delayE'd
48 minutes by a cold rain a ncl
Hoffman said that late In the game
the water looked like it was
beginning to free7_e en the infield.
i\ngels 6, Mariners I ·
Geoff Zahn tossed a four-hitter
and Doug DeCinces hit a two-run
hom er a.• theAngels·breezect to the ir
Anaheim Stadium victory.
Zahn retired 15 in a row between
the fourth and ninth innings . He had
a ll the runs he needed by the second
inning, when Ca lifornia took a 2.0
lead .

•

'"";==::::::::::::::::::::::::~
1

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And every Armstrong residential carpet is backed
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UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
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CI\LL US TODAY AT

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'

For Savings - SerlriS 600 and King's Wish

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RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
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APRIL
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I

""'

..

,

Both of th ese beautiful sculptu re d sa xo n ies
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yarn to help them r e t ain t he ir appearance
Sortn 600 '' a mullt·
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scu~tu"''
s a ~onr tn 13 natural
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Continues Through
April 23, 1983.

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against manufactunng detects ana backed
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OUR ASSURANCE
OF CARPET QUALITY

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ANIION ·' · I

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SUPER PRICES • SUPER SELECTION
LOT'S OF UNADVERTISED SPECIALS.
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ova THE PI lONE DURING BROADCAST.

RU I

TAX

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

&amp; 1 13.99

SALE PR'CE

This Friday April 15, 1983 W.Y.P.C.
Radio Will Be Broadcasting Uve From
The Rutland Furniture Store.

~

~

.. .. ... ..... .. ... ........021 150-910 1
Ra n~ n f'S : o.,,l ~nnt12rass !Wf l, StPV('

Soul her".~) .. ....... . ....... . .. 121 001 ."C-5 u 4
Non h C"'allla ................... £XX) 011 o-- 2 1 1
Banertai : Tonja Salser ! WP Jand Bentley.
T ana Geo1·ge ILP) and K. Montooth.

Southern reserves lost their
opener 9-5 to a group of former
Tor na does he re Wedn esd ay
evening.
Fonner Southern outflelcler Dave
Snodgrass picked up the win with
relief help from Steve Hendr icks.
Snodgrass s truck out six and gave
up five hlts enroute to the win .
J ay Bostick pitched well for the
young Tornadoes, but went only
four innings due to thls belng hls flrst
start. Bostick Canned five and
wa lked six, whlleScottWicldine and
Char lie Wolle tame on in relief to
finish the gam e .
Scott Wolle led tile alumni with
three singles and a walk for a
perfect night as did C. T . Chapman
with a two lor two rtlght plus a walk.
Charlie WoHe added a double, and
Denny Hill, Bob Dudding. and Da\'e
Snodgrass all tiad s lngles. Flve runs

Olt- ~

Alu mni

Yankees dump Tigers
_In«Jian.s edge Rangers

1

NI(l,HIG~ -~Ut4' LOB FltlM ~ HU .. , L.OOJ(s UI&lt;E ~S 1111

.,. iH&amp; ~IN&amp;Si fAKE IT SERloosl.'t'.'

Tomadoettes beatLa~y Pirates; reserves lose
BySCOTrD. WOLFE

Common knowledczge_________..:._· _n_on_c_ra_rff

Il l Court Strt'f't
Pnmt'ruy. rlhin

A

J1:!11!1day. April

·.

T he Daily Sentinel

P·AT WHITEH EAD

Page 2...:..The Daily Sentinel
Pon.-y Middkpclf, Ohio

•

co

Rutl.:md, Ohio
•

"

'

...

'·

�Sentinel

1983

Ohio

Householder ~ager to rejoin Reds· ·

I "

:J

•

Cardin sa id the la wyers expected
to get a la ir trial In the Columbus
court. and none of the lawyers said
he would seek a ve nue change.
Schlichter, 22, a former Ohio State
University football star, allegedly
lost $389,!XXl betting on basketball
games during a 1()-week periOd this
year and still owed $159,!XXl to
gamble rs when he turned to the
FBI, accord!Jig to law enforceme nt
sources and published reports.
Authorities said Schlichter con·
tacted ting
FBI inagents
and began
coopera
an Investigation
of
sports gambling after allegedly
being pn;ssed for payment of his
gambling debts. He reportedly
turned to a uthor ities after those he
owed threatened to te ll the Colts
a bout his betting.
Schlichter has comment about

another
playeronon
disabled
list,
to clear room
thethe
25-man
roster.
Householder played five Innings
In a game Tuesday between the
Reds' Class AAA Indianapolis club
and the Class AA Waterbury farm
team. He played ttve Innings In the
fie ld and was designated hitter for
both sides.

f

ill'

HAROLD BROOKS JR. CHARlES TIIOMA.&lt;; SWIFJ'
_

TAMPA. Fla. (AP)- Cincinnati
Reds outfielder Paul Householder
says be's nearly recovered from
hepatitis and Is eager 10 rejoin his
teammates next week.
The U.year-old outfielder said
be's been worldngootfora week and
feels ready to get back with the team
next week In Houston.
" I'd like to be up there, es~ally
the way things have been going,"
Householder said, referring to the
Reds' 5-2 start. "I'm feeling good.
I'm getting a lot of work In down
here.
"There's no comparison between
how I (eel now as to how I felt a
m onth ago."
Householder was trying to win
back the starting right-field job In
spring training when he became
sluggish and constantly tired. He
had a ttended a northern Kentucky
sports banquet last January that
has been linked wtth an outbreak of
100 cases of type "A" hepatitis, a
generally mild form of the disease.
But he didn't show sigr!s of trouble
until March 15.
Two sets of blood tests Confirmed
he had the disease, and the Reds put
him on the 21-day disabled list. He
was left behind 1n Tampa to work
back Into shape.
Householder comes oft the disabled Ust Thursday, but the Reds
aren't obligated to activate him
Immediately. They would have to
returnsomeonetothemlnors,orput

'

.JOSEPH SERIO

SAMUEl. ALASCL\

they pleaded not guDiy. From left are Hai-old Broob
,Jr., Charles Thomas Swift, Joseph Serlo and Samuel
Alascia. CAP Laserpholo) .

FOUR CHARGED IN GI\MBUNG CASE -

~e four men charged with gambling by lhe FBI In .a

ca•e Involving Baltimore Colts' quarterback Art
Schlichter arrive at federal court Wednesday where

rrial date set .for gamblers
parking garage to avoid re porte rs .
About an hour after the hearing,
lawyers for the four a ppeared In a
cour1 ha llway. but wouldn't comment on how their defenses m ight
proceed.
"AI this point, the re area number
of possible defe nses, ". said Robert
Cahill , attorney for Serlo.
Howard Cardin , a ttorney for
Alascla , refused to e laborate on
earlier statements tha t defense
lawyers would use a pattern. of
"ex te nsive gambling " by Schlichter to a ttack his credlbtllty as a
·Judge .John Holschu h set " 1ria l prosecution witness.
date of .June ti a nd advised lawyers
Kelt her Cahill nor Cardin would
for the four men that he intends to say whethe r they might call
stick to tha t da te.
Schlichter as a defense witness, but
None of the four - Samuel R
Ca rdin sa id , " At this point , It would
Alascla of Ca to nsvil le , Md ., and seem tha t Mr. Schllchte r would be a
J bseph A. Ser io, Charles T. Swift government witness rathe r than a
and Harold E . Brooks Jr .. a ll of defense witness. "
BAltimore - ma de a ny statement
Attorneys for the defe ndants
during the brief hearing, and aU
refu sed comme nt on the evide nce in
were whisked froni-! in u~derground · t)]ecase.
. COLUMBUS, Ohio !API Lawyers for four men charged with
gambling in a case involving
Ba,lt imore Colts qua rte rback Art
Sc hlic hter say they don 't plan to ask
tha t the case be moved .from Ohio,
where Schlichter m ade his reputa ·
ttDn as a candid farm boy with
extraordinary a thletic a bilities. The four men, accused in a
federa l grand jury Indictment of
c rossing stat e lines ' to promote
g ambling , pleaded Innocent Wed·
nesday In U.S. Distric t Couri .

Scoreboard ...
Ma}or

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Thu"*'a,·'i'i Gaml)l
Ch iC'ilRO

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l~'lfldfor!iOn I () j
t MI'( i : ol fl~ rm

Snn F ranC' L'll"

:J/maunyfy 'J(,cf, , 'KatJ&lt;d B•lloriny
w,Jj, the mOJI exfUiu'/e papen andIVOrJmaruhip

you could wbhJar

Subsc rllx' rs not d~ lrlngto pay tht&gt; carr !er m ay rc mll In ad van cE' d irect to
The Dally Scn!l nel on :1 , fi or 12 month

D II 'J.,'l.' 1Mon11'fu !ll, l H-il l

n l o at St

Lou! ~

basts. Credll wi ll e gtven c arriN e-ac h
m onth.

Middleport, Oh.

82 Mill Sr.

Ph. 992-2641

~~~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~i

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$}950
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52 WC'eks
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SEASON LONG ON

NEW YUHK Y/\NK E F~ -O!l l io' tnt&gt;o: l ltu

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1.1 Wtoeks ... ..'.. ... ....... ..... _. ....... $15.21
26 Wf.'eks
........ ...... .... .. .. .... .. $29.64
~ 2 Weeks .
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s1z• D

Callf'd UJI noland
Cn lumiJU ~

f-'oothu.lll-"' &amp;1.1"'

limn!-&gt; low undtso•loM,J t lralt d liJiol '!'i

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KA N!o\A." ~,'A'J'E - N ttm('(l floiJ l ~11'1 ~ ~l(
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FDIC•••

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New 7 pc. wood
dinette S!l~.·
REG. '399 .96

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SAVE '1 00.00

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$199 95
REG . '269 .96

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VILLAGE
PHARMACY

.

it~ goo

to. now

.•.your account here Is Insured up.to $100,000 by the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporatlon·- an agency
of the U.S.- ·Government.
SAVA with aafetr hera!

. JRD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

'

Chambliss drttied a two. run
hom er In the second Inning a nd
added solo blast. his third hom er of
the year, In the sixth.
Rick Camp, 1-0, gaveup Cinclnna ti's run as he managed to scatter 10
hits In 7 2-3 1nnings.
Dod~rs5,Astros3

Steve Yeager slammed a two.
run. two-out homer In the bottom of
the 14th Inning as the Astros
matched the National Leagpe
record with tttelr ninth consecutil'e
loss at the sta rt oft he season.
Derreil Thomas doubled with rwo
outs in the 14th off Frank LaCorte
and Yeager followed with his
homer. his second gam.,.wtnnlng
blas t In two nights.
.Joe Nlekro pitched 10 innings for
Houston before being relieved by
LaCorte. Nlekto aUewed three runs
on five hits. including ·a two- run
homer by rookie Greg Broc k.
Cardinals 9, Pirates I
George Hendrick went 5-for-5and

homered twice while Joaqu in
Andujar won his 12th consecutive
game over two seasons.
And u jar, 2-0thls season, shackled
P ittsburgh on seven hits and retired
13 batters In a row during one
stretc h. He has now a Uowed justone
earned runinl81nnlngsthls season.
Hendrick highlighted a 16-hlt
a ttack with an RBI single during a
fi ve- run flith Inning , a solo home r in
the seventh and a two-run blast in
the ninth .

r-==

DAN'S IN MIDDLEPORT HAS JEANS FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY

25% OFF
Girls' Jeans
BY LEE, LEVI &amp; CHIC

Padn&gt;s 2, Giants I

Sizes 4 -6X. 7 - 14. Regular &amp; Slim
Ter ry Kennedy knocked in 1he
go-ahead run to he lp San Diego s na p
Also Lee Young Juniors (Pre-Teen)
It s flv.,.game losing s treak.
Sizes 6 thru 14
.Sa n Diego's Eric Show yie lded a
OFFER EXPIRES 4I 21 I 83
leadoff home r to llghf.hltting Johnnle LeMaster on the second pitc h of
the game and th en settled down.
Lucas got the fina l four out s for his
fi rst save.
San Diego scored twice on Six to
l .ezca no's run-scoring doubt&lt;' a nd
Ke nnedy's RBI s ingle .
L _ _ _-:-_ __;__ _ _ _ _ ___;__ _ _ _ _ _ _.:__ __

,_:::::::::=::::___________:.:::;;:.:..:.::.::.=.:.:::.....:::.:._:__ _,_____ _;._____::______

LET THE COMPETITION BEWARE!
Riverside's Pure &amp; Simple Sale
11.5% APR Available On 1983
Models To Qualified Applicants

LIMITED
TIME
OFFER

LIMITED
TIME

OFFER

OFFER GOOD THROUGH APRIL 18, 1-983

L

E

T
T

H
E
C.
0
M
p
E
T
I
I

0
N

1978 MERCURY COUGAR XR7

4 door, VI engine, PS , PB ,
automatic, air conditioning, AMFM stereo, power windows,
power door locks, tilt wheel,
cruise control, split seats , 3
speed .
WAS
NOW

8995

1

'7995

1983 FORD, THUNDERBIRD

E
-W
A
R
E
I
•

Black·&amp; Silver, 2 door. 4 cylinder
engine, 4 speed trans ., power
s teering , AM radio.
WAS
NOW

'4395

1980 .FORD LTD
2 door, V8 engme . power steering
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conditionng, AM radio .
WAS
NOW

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1976 MERCURY MARQUIS

Stoc k N o.

1983 VW RABBIT

4 door , VB engine , power sleering
and brakes , automatic trans., air
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2 door Di esel , 4 sp€! ed tran s ., AM
radio, good tir es .
NOW
WAS

WAS

1

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NOW

Stoc k No.
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52707

'3395

White with red half vinyl root. VB
e ngin e , P S , PB, air condition ing ,

AM radio with Strack , tilt wheel.
good tir es .
WA S
NOW

1978 FORD RANCHERO
Dark red, VB engine, PS , PB, air
conditioning, AM -FM stereo
radio , sport mirrors , good ti.res .
WAS
NOW
Stock No .
1
3795
T367B
'3295

'1895

1979 FORD PINTO
2 doo r 4 s p eed tran s., AM radio ,
tull whee l cover s, white !iide wall

tires.
WA S

RIVERSIDE VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT SALE

"'

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3695

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10 rercent Ofl 01 Base Pnlf' O f All N('I'J Rabbtfs In Stock. fGTI
EH IUdf'd) O ffer Good lhru April 18

1979 FORD GRANADA
2 door tutone blue, 6 cyl. engine,
PS, · PB, air conditioning,
automatic transmission , AM
radio with tape, cruise Control,
WSW tires .
WAS
NOW
Stock No.
1
3895
BJI2A
'3195

1979 DODGE 4x4

5295

NOW

T 5l8A

'4495

1977 JEEP .WAGONEER 4x4
VB engine, power steering and
brakes, a.utomatic: transmission,

air conditioning, AM-FM rodlo.
WAS
NOW
Stock No.
1

3695

B40A

1980 DATSUN PICKUP
4 cyl . engine . .S speed trans .. AM
FM r adio . Good tir es .
WAS

NOW

Sloc k No.

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'4495

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steering, power brakes, rear step
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Stock No

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Stock No .

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'2495

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1981 FORD ESCORT

Black, V&amp; engine, PS, PB, air
conditioning, tilt wheel, cruise
control, AM-FM stereo 8-track.
split seat . power windows .
WAS
NOW
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( •..' 1'
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..

SAVE '70

ENLARGEMENTS

George Bamberger turned at the
even ts leading to the gam.,.wtnnlng
blow , namely four wa lks in the ninth
Inning that fueled the rally.
Mets reliever Rick Ownbey took a
S.5 lead Into the ninth bu Jexlted with
two outs after loading the bases on
three walks. J esse Orosco was
broug ht on and promptly wa lked
pinc h hitter Bill Robinson.
Tha t set the stage for Allen. now
().2, to face Diaz.
The homer was the flrst .of the
season for Diaz, his second career
grand slam ·and topped off his five
RBI performance . the fi rsr.ever for
Diaz.
Braves 6, Reds I
Chris Chambliss hom ered twtce
to knock in three runs as Atlanta
won its seventh straight gam e.
The Braves, who won a mOdern
record 13 consecut ive games to
sta rt last season. have not lost th is
year s ince dropping thei' opener to
Cinc innati.
-

·r

i

--=

r ·· - - - - - - - ---- - l

\

~~
~ .~

New 5
dinette.

CINCINNATI iAPl .- Neither
side cla imed victory, bu t both were
satisfied .with an out-of-court settl.,.
men! between the Cincinnati Ben·
gais and the city of Cincinnati.
. "I don't know who won or who
IllS! ," said City Manager Sylvester
Murray. " But I am satisfied that the
City got a satisfactory settlement for
its citizens."
. Mike Brown, assistant general
manager of the Ben gals, said, " In
&lt;\RY settlem ent agreem ent . there's
no feeling of victory . What we have
iS a working arrangem ent that -we
can plan on in tl)e fu ture. and .we' re
satisfied with it."
· In the ir 7-year-o ld . suit , the
Benga ls ~ l aln'!ed the city breach~
· •the team's lease frif Riverfront
Stadium by failing to build a
stadium club and failing to erect 400
sections of demounta ble seats for
football games during the overlap
between football a nd base ball
seasons.
In return for the city' s promisenot
to hold the Benga ls liable !ar rent for
any games not played as a result of
player strikes. the Benga ls agreed
to double their minimum per-game
rent payment to the ci ty from
$100,!XXl to mo.!XXl.

Bahr Clothiers

~· 'f I·; I'W'it.•.on. Jllltlu , ·. to Columl.tu.\ of thf'

rmm

•

No,subscrlpt!ons by mall permitted In
whe re hom e carr ier serYice Is

Wo•m.t'Md.,-',. Spurt.. ·rn.,_11oo.,.,
RA."iERAI.L

lrtii'IJ\;t fkma l lA 0 1 t ~l'

• 0

to w n .~

Transadions
1\rrwTk.,

-

By BEN WALKER
AP Sports Writer
Pa t Corrales figured a double
would do. Bo Dlaz's grand slam was
even better.
With Philadelphia t railing the
New Yor k Mets 9-61n the bottom of
the ninth Inning with the bi.ses
loaded a nd two outs Wednesday
night , Corrales,· the Phlllies man ·
ager, sent s peedy Bob Dernier tQ
pinch· run a t first base .
Dlaz ran the count to 2·1 before
unloading a grand s liun deep to left,
capping a five· run rally and
power ing the Phillies to a dramatic
1().9 victory .
·
In other National League games.
Atlanta downed Cincinna ti fi.1. San
Diego nipped San Francisco H , St.
Louts routed Pit ts bu rgh 9-1 and Los
Angeles beat Houston 5-3 in 14
Innings.
~
Allen , who lost 'I:uesday' s nig ht
game to Philadelphia by giving up a
lOth-inning
run,
sat In the
New
dugout
for 10
minutes
with
his York
head

Bengals, city
reach accord

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

The Daily Sentinei- Pag.--5

Diaz's blast dumps Mets; ·Braves drop Reds

In his hands afte r Diaz's blast.
Meanwhile . Me ts Ma nager

.. .. .. $52.80

Dall y .. .. ........ .......... ... ..... . 20 Cents

IHi t 111 !".ton

Nt :W Ylllt/\ t_; li\NTS- l'raclc-.1 f til n .lo·
IP I' , t ~ ' I"I S [\'1' f1lt [, IU lhr ~ ~~ 1\)..'ll ' h -:;

Ul \'foiiii N

\

W~dding Line Invitations

Pomero~Middleport, Ohio

Thu,..day, April 14, 1983

PIUf~ ES.

/1-V ~

.•

always choose ourfamous

.. ........ .. ............ ..$4.40

Monii'I'Ul

?,

Wi~

,.

SINGLE COP\'

ul

f'' (Kn'RAU.

N I\TIUN ,\!.I .EAf ~ t t t;

.,

"

D all y &amp;&gt; nllnel , 111 Co ur1 St ., Pomeroy ,
Oh io -15769.

On f' Month

fl i i('At ;n ClJBS- P illl ~ 'l:l Olr k ~ · Nolr"i .
p ltt·lu•1. nn tiM • ~ 1 riii,V dl.'i-111J lt ~ l list. 1!1·
r;allo'l' l l':uJI Mr.l'(k,tu, pltt'IM'I' , fl(lm Iow a
til ttw • An u•r!cJtn A~'\QI ·I u t lon.

Tun.n t•' m Nrow Yurk. ttl•
l 11 • 1 1~11 1 11 1 l ' hlr'lll:l l, 1111
{'ll llrounl. o .or M l m~ ·..u ta . ' " '
{l;tk l;uu l "' So •,oltlt•. I n I

[ J&gt;U t.o,

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NN.tlorn!J I A" ~I·

{'lt .,: o•lilllt l ;tl I\: 111111'1W'I', oil •

w t

r:5mari2Jrides

POSTMASTER · Se nd a ddress to ThE'

Onf" Ye ar .. .......... ......

l iN \(~ ' . routltd1 k.•r.

tl't rlloy'!t (;wm"'
1\art ~ II S 1'11 1' 11 1 l\1 1lw;1Ukl • •
To•x;t,, :11 Jh; tun 111 1

1-.J\.~T

an d announcem en /.1

733 Third Avenu e, New York , New
York 10017.

1

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4

t '"ind th_
" 'll \It o .ol l' lo•l'l' lilnd tSut

1'1 \llo · '! Uo

Branham Ne wspaper SaleS,

Only ll:umes !ICh«tuled

{liiri\lo:ll ll l P ltt:;hura:h. t ro •
1\ Ua nllt u l Phlladr lp hl:J, tn•
M Ohll'! •:t l at IIUU!&lt;Inn. 101
No'l,l' ~·ork 111 St l .ou l.~ . 01 1
'\:o 11 llh•lo(ll ;ot I ~"' r\ nt-w ~ o:. . 111 1
l ' onn nn;otl ;t l ~~~~ 1-'m tll 'l.o;~., , 111 1

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ciati on, Na tion al Ad ver ti sing Reprp-

Jo)idi&amp;y'~t l i amt'!lj

'l'hllr!idl&amp;}''!&lt; I ~ lUlU.,.;

your wecldiny inuilalion J

Am erica n Newspape r Pulls her.!! Asso-

On t' Wee k .. .. ... .... ...... ..... .. .,, ,,,.,$1.00

1)1•1rnlt

Mllw:n.rlu • •

every afternoon , Monday
through Frida y, 111 Court Street , by
t he Oh io Valley Publl s hh~g Commpany
·~ .Multl.rriedia. Inc .. Po'meto¥, Ohio
~ 5769. 992•2156. ·s~o nd claSs Pbs ta ge
paid a t Pome roy, Oh io.

S.m Dlt"KQ 2. Sim F w nL1S('O 1
l .rr; ,\n~ ·b ,; :,, lfcu slun :t. 14 lnn ln ~

On ly ~ /Un~ SC'I'll&gt;d ul!&gt;d

7. Ntw Y.-,r k :,

6ouncl6y lr acftlion

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

'l'oM·unr" 7. Mllwnuko-f' ~
n:okl;mol ;,, M l ruw o:.o ~ H ·I

j-Josw n Il-l. 1\an.-.:o-. t ·nv I
( 'nlllor rtill b, Sl•:tlt l•• I
I 111\V J::BOI• ~ 'll'h o~I U\1'11

.'Xo procedur e tJ 10 cfo,elj

A Dlvl.lllon Of MLIIUmedla, Int.

i"h.ll nd !.'lphiH II!, NPW Yor k !l

NPw

l ' )l'l.'l ' iaru l 4, T o•KH' ·;

.

Published

i\r l:rnua ti, ClnLirvlaT I 1

Y rN~ oTu r n •J
tl1 Fn r ~ · h01 o , t n o

W•'llllt'Mliay' ll l:ann'l'o

(USPS 14H60)

Householder saki that be would.
sleep up to 12 hours a day and stJU
feeltlrE&lt;ldurlngtheearlyphasesof
the disease.

Sl. Lou I ~ 9. PU I.~I IIJr~ll I

1

I 'h
llfJ
:1
I

7511
1\?J

The Daily Sentinel

Me mber : The Associated Pn:&gt;ss, In land Dall y Press Assoc iation and the

Wt'dl•'itdlu''11 (Oarnep;

't J

I
I 1-'1
1

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dayifeltaUttleblttlred. Butlt's not
llke before."

r-;::~"l~d~ldn~'t=~~n=o~t~lce=~:':!~~

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C'lnd nn.oot l
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111\o'f'iiON

T1•x;o1
Oaklanr\

~~

.,

Monl l'f'al

Majors

the case except a brief state me nt, .
Issued by his lawyer, which said he
was cooperating with federal
authorities.
Schfichter didn 't appea r a t the
hearing.
The
bonds. or

the t1rst couple of days I worked
out," Householder- said. ''The third

-,

'2995

2 door, 6 cyl . engine, power
steering , AM radio, lull wheel
covers .
WAS
NOW

'2795

5714 1

'1995

1981 FORD F-150

7895

'7395

1979 FORD F2SO 4x4

1982 FORD f·IOO

va engine, power steering ond
brakes, 4 speed tr.ansmisslon ,
AM.fM
stereo,
Explorer
package, mud and snow tires.
WAS
NOW

6 foot bed. 6 cyl. engine , l speed
tra.ns .. AM radio, rear step
bumper.

4995

1

'3995

WAS

16495

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Pickup , tulane paint , 357 V ·B
eng i ne, powe_r steerin g:- and
brakes, automatic trans .. AM·
FM stereo radio , air con .
ditioning , tilt wheel. cruise
control, rear step bumper.
WAS
.
NOW
1

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NOW

Stock No.
R·25

'5995

B

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w
A

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I

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•
•

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.........

'S.STEREO ·CENT
II

•·

.

••

.,

MIDNI~HT

•

20°/o to 60°/o OFF

~TDK®
SA-90 CASSETIE TAPE

$8 00

BUY TWO AND SAVE

Reg. $12.00

FRIDAY, APRIL 15th -12 NOON TO 12 MIDNIGHT

Now 2 Rolls For

BOSE
The new Bose" Model 2
$peaker.

·-------·- -- --- --

1
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. 1.
:· · ··-

.

.

.

.

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.......... ... "·~ -

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•

[B FJSHER

A supe rl at ive Fi sh er t hree- way design . The
ST 7 30 feature s a rugged 10" woo fer, 8"
pass ive ba ss radiator, 5" h igh -flu x mi dran ge,
.
and 3" fl ui d-suspe ns i" n tweete r

-._-

NOW

·•

.

$17900

REG. 1499.95 PAIR

REG. 1360.00 PAIR

REG. 1262.00 PAIR

.

PAIR

PAIR

. NOW.

.

.

$24900 . PAIR

1
'

· :-

YAMA·HA

: .

1

Reg.

•

. REG·: '22.0.00 PAIR
1 ONLY
NOW

$1· ·3'·9 00

··Now

J.V.C. AM/FM

.. ..

·~

STEREO RECEIVER

$l9800 · .·. ·.•

.. NOW

FULLY AUTOMATIC
REG.

1199.95

. NOW

REG. 1169.95

sgsoo

NOW

$}}900

NOW ·

19" COLOR
FULL REMOTE CONTROL

REG. 1399.95

REG. 1499.95

NOW

sgsgoo

Reg. '129.95

· NOW $8400

Alpine 7120 FM/AM
Cassette with Auto
Reverse, Hi-level "

REG.

. I

REG. 199.00 NOW

$S400

.

( 1 or.lyJ

-MAGNAVOX25" 'COLOR CONSOLE

AC-DC
Reg. $149.95

$17900

AMPEX-T120-VHS ............. ss.90
MAXELL-1120-VHS ....... :: ... S9:9Q
TDK-1120-:-VHS ............... S1Q.90

$}}900

-JVCHR6700 2-6 HOUR
REMOTE CONTROL
, Reg. 1860.95

BETA .
.NOW

AM/ FM
.~;;;:;:.6· ~"':: '7-, .CASSEITE RADIO

REG. 5220 .00

SONY-L830-BETA............ S13.90
SONY-l500-BETA .............. ss.so
. IRISH~l500-BETA ............. S7.90

NOW

ssgsoo

-SHARP-

- SONY-

YC9400 2-4-6 HOUR
Reg. 1769.95

BETA -- SL5000

NOW

REG. 1895.00

$59800

· ELECTRONIC TUNING

6" DOOR SPEAKER
List 549.95

1229.95

NOW

NOW

$2900

BUS~

.

1401 SYSTEM

,~ ,.e

$18900
JENSEN .

DOOR SPEAKER
Reg. '94.95

NOW

Alpine 7125 FM/AM
Cassette with Auto
Reverse

··

VIDEO TAPE SPECIALS
VHS

REG. 1199.95

.

.

$13900

67.9.95

~

·

$449.oo .

WALKMAN STEREO CASSETTE
FM TUNER PACK

5't&lt; Coa• 11

MAGNOYNE AM/FM CASSETIE RADiO
Auto. Reverse, Treble, bass
NOW

···...

NOW

. ..

CASSETTE DECK
DOLY &amp; SOFT TOUCH

MODEL CR-120
.METAL- DOLBY
REG. 1199.95

MG.
1

$49800

ELECTRONIC TUNING

5 BAND 40 WATT GRAPHIC
· OOAUZER/ AMPURER

Reg. $200.00

.

NOW

10' .if - 61
MAGNADYNE AM/FM CASSETTE
RADIO MODEL M21008 ,
NOW $8495
R~g. 1 139.95

.

$}3900

-MAGNAVOX25" COLOR CONSOLE

.

YAMAHA 1:&lt;-200

:. FlSHER CASSmE DECK

NOW

REG.
1679.95-

19" PORTABLE COLOR
TELEVISION

~3.4900

REG. 1550.00

ElSII

MODEL 4013
REG. 1149.00

REG. 1190.00.

NOW

1 ONLY

I

CASSETTE DECK

YAMAHA P~450
FULLY AUTOMATIC

70 WATIS PER CHANNEL

.•. .•. - ··· 1.,.....

!!r] FISHER
DIRECT DRIVE

50 WATT PER CHANNEL
REG. 1450.00

S25900

·

YAMAHA R -900
AM/FM RECEIVER

40 WATIS PER CHANNEL
REG. '360.00

iii -· -~-----~--

@rlc)

I

YAMAHA AM/FM .DIGITAL .
STEREO RECEIVER

PAIR

~

FISHER MODEL 6410
SEMI-AUTOMATIC

I

·-

30 Watt Per Channel
1260.00

~,.

· · ao o cco

I

YAMAHA- R-300
AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER

·SPEAKER .
.
10" 2-WAY SYSTEM

- -··· ·-'~-

•
t · ,-, .~· ~ ···"· ~--- · 0· '
- -·-··· ··-·=· · · · · - - - · . )
,~
- · ~j -r

-

.

The Bose®Model 301
SPEAKER

MADNESS SALE

NOW

$15900

$4900

PAIR

·· THIRD AVENUE
NO REFUNDS

PHON£ 446-7886
QUAtffiTIES UMITED .

GALUPOUS, OHIO
NO RAIN CHECkS

6")(9" 3-Way
Speaker .
System
$'39~5

. ssgoo
6x9 COAXIAl.. .
SPEAKERS

l

·,

Reg. 1109.95
NOW .

REG. '79.95
NOW

••'·'

•

PAIR

.

, ''

~·
·-

•100.WATT AMP/EO
•2 DIRECT/REFLECTING SPEAKERS
•2 ACCESSORY SPEAKERS

· Reg. 1470.00

NOW

$34900 .

�.
l'ag&amp;-8 The Daily Sentinel

Pometoy-Middleport, a,io

•

Beauty of nature

ThetravellngprtzedonatedbyMrs.
Colwell was won by Mrs. Ernest
Ward. Mrs- Denl.son won ttlel10stess
gtft. .
·
Flower arrangements for ottler
meetings were made by Mrs. Roy ::.:

Snowden, Mrs. James Nicholson,
Mrs. Vlrg11 Atldns, Mrs. Denison,
Mrs. Diehl, and Mrs. Eugene
Atldns. .
Mrs. Wfll!amson reviewed. aJ1
article from Organic Gardening

about starting seeds on the window
sW, and the need tor p1oper cootrol
of soU, llght, temperature and
moisture. Mrs. Weber gave tips for
Aprtl which Included cllecklng and
spraying rose busheS, getting early

Calendar

plants out, and preparing a cold
trame lor tlerb planting.

1HURSDAY

t
tg 1• •·

SOLICITATION ••
GRANTEE FOR NEW HEAD START GRANT

mended tile pastor of the St. Paul
and St. Jotln Lutheran Churches for

•

t

meeting was an

invitat ion from the Rutland
F tiendly Gardeners to ttleir open
meeting Apri l 'n a! the Rutland
Civic Center. Those planning to
attend arc asked to advlse Mrs.
.James Nicholson before April :n A
letter was read from the Gallipolis
Developmenta l Center rega rding
the volunteerservice recognitionon

A grant application kit may

Ap~~~bersrcsponded to rollcallby

300 South Wacker

naming seed s they enjoy growing.
Mrs. Virgil Atkins read "Easter,"
and poems on na ture fardevouons.
A repor1 was given on the recent
therapy progra m at th e Gallipolis
Developmental center by Mrs.
Eugene Atkins who at tended along
with Mrs. Carl Denison, Mrs.
Harvey Erlewinc, Mrs. Harry
Willla.nson, Mrs. Di&lt;'hl , and Mrs.
Virb~l Atkins.
Mrs. Vcmon Weber thanked the
club for the valcnllne plate given to

Chicago, Illinois

German

s.

be

TM

By Connie

•

The Department of Health'and Human Services announces that
$303,523 is available to provide Head Start Child Development
Programs to 159 children in Gallia and Meigs Counties.

~~~~~m;~r~s :~r\helnc~~~~

ot.es

• • OOtn 'l'

MESH FRESHNESS

RACINE - Souttlern Band
Boosters, Thursday, 7:30p.m. In
band room of Southern High
School, Racine.

c._

Administration for ' Children,
Youth and Famill'es

'

.

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange, Thursday, 7:).)
p.m. at tbe tlall. Baking and
sewing contests to be tleld.

Office of .Human Development SeiVices
Drive-

606()6

13th

Floor

POMEROY Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Pill Sorority• 6:30 p.m. Thurs·
day, Diamond Savings and
Loan, Riverboat Room, dinner
aiid meeting.

15, 1983.

The deadline for receipt of applications is June
An original and five (5) copies of your application are to

be sent to:

William F. Edgell, Supervisory Financial Operations Specialist
Office of Fiscal Operations
Office of Human Development Servl'ces

•

300 South Wacker Drive,
Ch'lcago,
· Ill'lnOIS
· 60606

BBGE and WHITE ........................... : .......... $17.99

POMEROY - Stlade River
Masonic Lodge meeting wlll be
7:30p.m. Thursday; elk stew for
refreshments.

heritage house of shoes

15th flloor

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

POMEROY - Historical Society trustee meeting, Meigs
Museum, will be 7: 30 p.m.
Thursday.

'

FRIDAY
POMEROY Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F AM, annua) ,in~Jle&lt;}
lion wW be Friday, 7:30 p.m .
wittl work in the fellowcraft
~· All Master Masons
··invited. ·
.,_ · ·

Michael birthdays

FINAL WEEK
FREEZER
TO SAVE!
SALE

ASTROTURF

Tara and Jeffery Michael
A party in celebration of the third
birthday of Tara Linden on Aprtl 2
-and the second birthday of Ray·
mond Jeffrey on April 3 was given
recently a t ttle home of ttle ir
parents, Raymond and Debora
Lawson
Michael,
Middleport.
An Easter
theme
was carrted out
with two b!lnny cakes, Ice cream
and fruit drink being served. An egg
tlunt was also conducted witt! the
prtze going to .Jason Hysell .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lawson, Racine; Mrs.
Charles Lawson, Racine: Mr. a nd
Mrs. Gary Miller, BellvU!e; Mr. and
Mrs. Hetman Michael, Middleport;
Huck Tracy, Pomemy; Maxine
Michael, Pomeroy: Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Gilmore and Jason, Travis and
Seth, Pomeroy; Joann McClintock,
Erica and Brian, Dexter; Cheryl
Hysell and Jason , Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. J im Alley, Junior a nd
Angie, Middleport, and Ray Eblin.
Pomeroy.
Sending gift.• and ca rds wRre Mr.
and Mrs. Ctlarles Ga llagher ,
Heather and Heidi, Carrollton; .Mr.
andMt s. Robert Bauman. J oey a nd.
Robert, Jr., Middleport.
·

BETTER
HURRY!

Happenings
lack Diamond Fest
schfduled. in Athens
ATIIENS - The second an·
nuai Appalachian Black Dla·
morid Festival will be held May
20, 21, and 22. The festival wtll be
at tt1e East State Street Recrea ·
tion Center.
'The festival Is to commemorate coal and tile coal miner.
There will be rides, concessions,
a flea market, arts and crafts,
and educational displays. 'There
w111 also be a Fun Run, Bid Mac
Eating contest, Coal Miner's
Daughter corltest, Little Miss
Coal Miner's contest, Grand
'Parade, and the world's Grea test Coal Miner contest and
Truck competition.
'The festival Is sponsored by
ttle Klweanls Club ol Athens and
ttle Attlens County Musewn. For
Information contact John
Combs at 592·Z115 or Ray
Skinner at 592·1886.

SQ. YD.

SYLVANIA
COLOR

-··
$1·99

• Saves s pace in your kitchen because it's compact.
• Goes almost anywhere- on a wall , on a shelf , in

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CHECK OUR PRICES

a corner.
• Perfect lor small kitchens, rec room s, dorms.
• Backed by 20 years of Litton qual1ty

and cook~ng perlormance.
Nobody knows more about

.

'
•100'11,.....,_
_
• AFC .
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PLAYER AND RENT S FREE!

microwave cooking than Litton.

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Z,llfii'H
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OVER 46 YEARS OF.
LINE . __ _ _
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___
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l

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TIMEX

WATCHES .......... $500 OFF

fPrl~n~ce~t;on;,~ln~d;..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=l
DRAMAMINE

TABLETS

•

12 TABlETS

Reg .

IJ.02

ONLY

co casual ...
go comfortably!

WHITMAN MINIATURE CORDIAL CHERRIES

p;,

oz. REG. 65¢ .................. Only 45 ~

"Sonnets"· . . . a perfe~t blend of soft ·
comfort and easy casual styling . . .
guaranteed to score compliments as well!
Look smart·with slacks,odresses or casual
wear. Feature full cushion InSOles for
added comfort.

KLEENEX

FACIAL .TISSUES
·-Y-

. • .

'

.

BOUTIQUE PRINTS

toc;NE by Coty

&amp;

$J.99

.80 OZ. REG. $5.50 •• • •• •••. •••••ONLY

SANO

•

MAALOX

"Sonnet"

Maalox

12 Oz.

Amber Nicole Blackston
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Blackston,
Rocks prings Road. Pome roy ,
hosted a party ·recently honoring
tllelr da ughter, Amber Nicole, on
her first birthday'.
A birthday kitty theme was
carried out with cake, Ice cream
and punch being served . Attending
were Mr . and Mrs. James F . Eva ns
and Mrs. Harold Blackston , grandparents; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Wears, Mr. a nd Mrs. William
Grueser , and Mrs. Dorothy Evans,
great-grandparents; Mr. a nd Mrs.

AN 1 ACI O

$).99
REX AU VITAMINS
Made ')II.
In

Amenca
.: '

Complete Stock

"I

01

MARGUERITE SHOES
'1he Middle ShQe Store In The Middle Blo&lt;:k"

POMEROY. OHIO

REG . $1.19

PRO

TOOTHBRUSHES ...... ?.~L.v. 59(
TYLENOL
EXTRA STRENGTH

~-__, CAPSULES
SO's
REG. $5.18

PAC MAN
.

~

ONLY

$Jl3
REG. $1.59

coMBs ............. ..ONLY.... 94c; .
0

Gas or Electric
RANGE

$299
YOU MUST SEE

THIS ONII

..

HAll'S

POMEROY · - 'The Shade
Valley Cowictl of Floral Arts w1ll

RO.III

•

19"
,

meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday night at
the 11ane of Allee 'Thompson.
'There will be a horticulture
exhibit with members to take
plants tor ldentlftcatlon. Stlella
Curtis w111 llave charge of a
worltshDP on arranging wittl
members to take plant

MciOII Af"120

Xt-100

COLOR
TELEVISION

$345

RCA

XL-100
19~'

n , ..

mate~.

-

COUGH
TAB.LElS

Mr. and Mrs. ~{any L. Battey of
Pomaoy elltertalned with a !amlly
dbmei folloWIII8 the-de\11Catlm &lt;1
thi!lr lfllldlon, ~Jan Mullen..
at the Pumi!ioy First Baptist
Church durlq the Palm Suriday
l8l'vllies.la!lla till! lOll &lt;1CIIuck and
Debt Mulien 11 MlcWeport.

79t;

OUR .BIG SALE CONTINU.ES...
STOP BY AND SEE Alt THE
' 'FURNITURE
VALUES WE HAVE FOR YOU!
.

MJdlen dedication

H/

•

I

Color

t I

40%0ff

{

POMEROY -There will be a
county-wide prayer .meeting,
Sunday at 2 p.m ., at the Hysell ·
RunHollessCII.w-ch.GlenBissell
Is ttle class leader.

•

PRICES l1UI10 THRU MONOAY

NAVY

"

PRICES THIS LOW AGAIN!

• 11'' tlr gc ... BIKk Mllrtl etwoma-Une'.
colotplcllfttubo

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Nelgler,
Route 1, MiddlepOrt, are lll)JIOWlC· ,
1ng the birth of their third son,
Matthew David, March '!7, at the
Holzer Medical Center. Tile Infant
weighed nine pounds, nine ounces
arid was 2linches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
Josep'!i' Steven and Patricia Ann and Mrs. Kelttl Woods, Route 1,
SmltliMorganofRutlandTownshlp Middleport, and thepatemalgrand·
are announcing ~ birth of ~lr . parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
first child, a daughter, Beatrice Nelgler, Route 2, Racine. Maternal
Ann, at ttle Holzer Medical Center, great-grandparents are Mr. and
Maret! 31. The baby weighed seven Mrs, Wesley Herrick and Ross .
pounds, 12 ounces and was 20 inches Sewsart, Sr., Mlddleport. Other
long.
sons of the couple are Scott, 12, and
Jason, tllree.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Burdette
are announcing ttle birth of their
Your "IEztra Touch"
second daughter, Steptlaille Denlse ,
Florist Since 1951
atttle HolzerMedlcaiCenter March
~
23. The Infant weighed six pounds,
one ounce arufwas 191nches long.
'
Gra ndparents are Mr . and Mrs.
FLORIST Robert B. Burdette of Pomeroy. and
Arby D. Mason, Mt. Vernon, Ind.
PH. 992·2644
M a tern a 1 great . g r e a t ·
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
grandrnotlle r Is Dilash Mason,
Your FTD Florist

POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogy Society wW be 2 p.m.
Sunday at the Meigs Museum.
Public Is Invited. Refreshments
wtll be served.

YOU MAY -NEVER. SEE

99

Neigler birth

"Sonnet"

SUNDAY

.

SUPER SPECIAL

Dennis Wol!e , Mr. 4llld Mrs.
Douglas Eblin, Doug, Maney, and
Dale, Mrs. Reta Eblin, Kim,
Tanunl, and Tracy, Mrs. Sherrie
Kane, Heather and Emlly, Mrs.
Bfl!nda Blackston, Jay Evans, and
Nick Riggs.

Burdette birth

POMERY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association
meeting w111 be Saturday at tt1e
Meigs Museum, 2 p.m. Special
invitation to . those planning to
retire within next five years. and
retired teachers not now
afflllated.

QUANTITY

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Mon!an birth

SATIJRDAY

IN STOCK!

-

Middle~, Qhio

Births, birthdays around Meigs

POMEROY - Ohio Valley
cOnunandery will confer ttle
Order or Red Cross and ttle
Order of · Malta at 7 p.m.
Thursday; take swords and
belts.

••

obtained by writing:

White
Regional Program Director

Pomero9

POMEROY - Meeting oC all
parents of both juniors . and
seniors of Melgs High School
lntereted In p)annlng and belp.
lng wlttl prom night activities,
7: 30 p.m. Thursday In high
sctlool library. Parents Inter·
es~ in helping, but who caimot
attend ttle meeting, please call
high sctlool 992·2158 and advise.

Mrs. Weber and Mrs. Vlrg11
Atldns served retresJunents in ;
keeping wittl the Easter season.

~
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·,

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Cli:a"d' ~~n\~,re

Thund!ly. April 14, 1983

topic of Rutland Garden .Club meeting

IS

The beauty of nature in ttle Bend . tier mettler , Mrs. Lawrence Mll·
area was presented by tile Rev.
hoan, an UJ member. Stle also
WUUam Mlddleswarttl in a slide
extended appreciation (or remem·
sertes at tile recent meeting of the
brances of her tlusband during his
hospita lization. A card was re-.
Rutland Garden Club held at the
home of Mrs. Chris Diehl.
_c eived from Mrs . Everett Colwell.
1 he showed pic·
Roadside
Titling Wa
hislk,'presentation
, "A
tures of fl owers a nd trees in bloom,
of ttle seasonal ctlanges , and of
picturesque nature s ites a long the

.

30's

.

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
\
Kennetl1 MiCullowgl'l , R.,h .

Ch•rlet Rllf!t , R, Ph

ROUfcl H•nlnt, If . Ph .

MOft . thru S.I . I 1DO .ll .m . 10 'p.m .
Sund•y 10·; so to 1; : )O.nd 5 to • .m .
,RUCRI,TIOHS
PM ••1 ·1t .H
1 . Mall"

FrltndiV StrY ice :

·

,

Porn t r O't' . 0 ,

I
'

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---·-------------Open N i thh lUI t

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Thursday, April 14, .1 983

Page-l(}...- The Daily Sentinel

Tenninate court cases

Meigs County happenings
.Emergency runs

Files appeal

Seven calls were answered by
local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medica l Service reporls.
At 2:51 a. m., Middleport took
Martha Searls, Fifth Ave., to
Veter a ns Memorial Hospital; at
2:24p.m .. Pomeroy took Ron Diles
from Wetzgall St., to Veterans
fv!emorlal: Pomeroy at 4:07 p.m.
took Gladys Cuck!er from Pomeroy
Health Care Center to · Vete rans
Memorial; Rutland at 4:56 p.m.
·. took . Pauline Perry, Route 1,
Dextl'r, to Holzer Medica l Center;
Pomeroy at 5: 35_p.m. took Frteda
F ields, E . Main Sl., to Vl'terans
Memorial; Syracuse, 8:25 p.m ..
Homer Graham to Veterans Memorial and Middleport at 10: 33 p.m ..
Margaret J ulian , N._Follrth Ave., to .
Veter;u;s Memorial.
··

Dorothy Seth. Pomeroy , has filed
an appeal against the Ohio Bureau
of Unemployment and the Imperial
Elect rtc Co. regarding a decision on
benefits.

The M(•igs County Retired
Teachers Associa tion will be held at
the Meigs Musewn Sa tu rday, 2 p.m.
, Special Invitation Is extended to
teachers who will be retiring within
I the next fl veyears, orthosealready
retired but not a member of the
association.

•

Deer dies in accident
Heavy damages were Incurred to
the front of a van driven by Michael
A. Baker, Route I, Long Bottom,
Wednesday evening when a small
buck deer ran Into the path of the
vehicle on County Road28. The deer
was killed, Meigs County sheriff's
deputies report. The department Is
~!so Investigating mailbox vandalIsm a t the Mike Epple res idenl'eon
Route684.

Wants anriulmen1
Gregory L. Johnson, Route I ,
Racine, has flied an action for an
annulment to his marrtage to Linda
Sue Johnson, Marysvilll'. It annul·
ment Is not possible, Johnson asks
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to award him a divorce on
grounds of gross negll'Cl of duty and
extreme cruelty.

Lamb and Pig Sale will be held this
Satunlay, AprU 16, at 7 p.m. at Ute
Gall!a Coonty Junlof Fairgrounds.
The sale IS being spmsOred by the
Southern Ohio Lamb and Pig
Corrun!ttee. These people see. a
growing need for pl'QI'not!on of hlgh
quality lambs and pigs to be
exhibited at all Southern Ohio
, County falrsc
Four-Hand FFA members !rom
Gallla, Jackson, V!nt'on, Lawrence,
Pike, Scioto, Meigs, Athens, and
Hock!rig Counties will be able to bld
on top quality animals that have
been pre-selected on Ute farm prior
to the sale.
Approximately 70 lambs and 35
pigs representing various breeds
wll! be consigned by the leading
producers In Southern Ohio. Lambs
will weigh 35-70 pounds and pigs
40-90 pounds. AuctiOneering servl·
ces will be provided . .

.
PROClAIMED ~ Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrew_s has
proclaimed AprU 11H6 Private Property Week In Pomeroy and urges
local citizens to Join with realton1 nationwide In Ute observance. A
procl_amatlon signed by Mayor&amp;lclrews In cooperation with Pomeroy
realtors, members of the Soiltheastem Ohio Board of Realton1 and Ute
Nat!orial Association of Realtors, marks Ute week-long ollllervance of
Ute oonstitut!ona! freedoms of Americans to own property. DOttle
Turner, pictured with Mayor Andrews, Is chairman of relaton1 ~or Ute
observance.

Officials warn-- medicare
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan adrrilnlstrat!on.ls warning
Congress that Medicare will go
broke by 1991 even II the president 's
proposed cuts are enacted.
Carolyne K. Davis, head of the
Health Care Financing Administration whlch runs the massive health
program, told the Senate Aging
Committee on Wednesday that
setting hospital rates In advance
under a system Congress passed
last month will delay Insolvency
until1990.
But even w! th the Medicare
changes In the president's budget,
which would mean l1,1rger out-&lt;lfpocket costs for heneflc!arles, the
t rust fund which pays for the
hospital Insurance portion of the
program will be exhausted by 1991.
she said.
New · projections presented by
Mrs. Davis lricludeuse of a payment
system calling for Medicare hosplta_l raies to be set In ~dyance. 'fhey
alSo consider changes fu 'Social
Security that will affect Medicare.
Using intermediate economJc projections, they show that at the
heginnlng of calendar year 1990, the
Medicare trust fund will be short
$8.4 billion.
If the president 's Medicare
changes are enacted, the projected
shortfall would beS.'ii5 million at the
beginning of calendar year 1991.

For more !nfonnatlon, contact
Jlril Clay, Animal Science ExtEnsion Spec!allst at the. Jackson
Agricultural Rese8!'Ch Center, 286Jim, or Tom Balmer, Chalnnan of
Ute commlttee at 643-2196.

NEW - 'These new olflcen1 of the Melp IDgh School Future
Farmers of 1\merlca hegon their dulles Wednesday alternoon ond will
preside for Ute tll83M .school year. Tl:!ey are, front, I tor, Ron Sinclair,
president; Daye Wondllng, vice president; Ttm GOkey, secretary; .leU
Brown, treasurer; back, I to r, IUch Van Houten, repor1er; LoMie
LeMaster, student advisor; Tim LeMaster, secretary, and Bryan
Hol.mail, parUamenb!flan.

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Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
Bv v1rtue o f an Ahas Or d ~r ot
Sal e 1ss ued o ut o t th e Common
Pl eas Cou rt of M e•g s Co unty
Oh1o. 1n the c: a ~ e of F1rst Family
M o rl qage Ca rp o ra11on . platn ulf . vc:; Ray E Just1ce et al
. def endants. u oon a Jud gm ent
there1n rem1erP.(\ be•nq Case
No 18.20 4 m sa•rl Cour t I w dl
oHer for sa le . at the fr0nt doo r
at the Cou n H uu~P 1n Purn eray
M Btqs Ccuntv O h1 0 on th e 7th
di1y of M ov 1983 . at ten
o'clock J m . tho to iiOWirHl

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8ti M II ll tDI II
8 1 UIIN&gt;IItlfW

Uo • •l~"ti Otllt

Sua.ym_,...,

UDI ~U- 00

pr[use&lt;i at 27 .30000
1errns of Snlo Sl 00000
c.lsh a t !I mP ol sale wr th the
batan c B on cash wrth111 th irty

(30 1 d ays al tor el ate of sa le.
D epO!'I T to he wa tved d sol d to
pl:t1nt1tf t1rst mon gagP. holder
Cannot be sold to r less than
two -thu d ·&gt; thf' apora •scd value
Jnmes J P10tf1tt

Sher1ft ol
Me1gs Coun ty
(4t 7 14 2 1 3tc

''Real Estate General

George S. Hobstetter, Jr.
REAL ESTATE BROKER
Office Phone 992·5739
216 Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

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1100

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GAil.IPOUS:358 S«ond A,e., 448· 1973
POMEROY: 12~ E. M,inSt., 992·2171

'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.
Pomeroy,_Oh .

S(iuare Dance every Saturday from 9 to 1AM . Country
Rock Sunday 7 to 11 PM .

-AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-4269
Dewoyne Williams

New Homes - Extensive
Remodellnc.
•I nsurance Work
•Custom Pole Bides.
&amp; Garoces
•Roofinl Work
oA!umi!Utl &amp; Vinyl Sidings

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

&amp; Scottie Smith

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

Ail llokes and Models
Antenna lnsblllation
House Cells lnd Shop
Service Availobte .

1 S Yeorl

Route 1
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

614-992-2181

YOUNG'S

Goorp S. Hobsloltor. Jr.
B!Oitor

Office: 992-5739
POMEROY - This home has
had lots of care. Can be 3 or 4
bedrooms. Aluminum siding,
storm window~low utilities.
Some lurn~ure iocluded in sa~
price ot $27,000.00. Storage
bUilding and frutt trees.
OWNER ANXIOUS to sel this
1977 Barrington home with
add&lt;Jn family room. Situated
on L88 acres on St. Rt. 143.
Thts home features 3 bedrooms. 2 bath~ kitchen has
double oven and is~nd range.
look at th1s one and make us
an offer. Owner will consider
part~! financmg.
EXC£LUNT BUY - th~ 3
bedroom ~ a great starter
home. Situated on St ·Route
124 on 60'xLOO' lot witl1
storage building. look at this
one today at only$20,000.00!!

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-lnsi
__ ,.anct...,.._

-Addont cmd
~:Kielrlt

wrork

........hlimatoo}
,_.

-l'lumbing and
(frN

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·621'5 or 992·7314
Pomeroy , Ohio

u nt .

W.

Williams,

Va.,

Or .

Fred

ava ngelis1 , April

15-17. 7:30 p.m.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
·· · ·
SERYleE

4

E~t~;perience

C~t

Giveaway
down tree for wood .

Call 446 -1820.

2 mate pu~art Iris h
Set1ar . black . Call 6 , 4 -246 -

AL TROM
LAST BIG

Roofing &amp; Siding
Get all the tegltl11111te

utimotes you want.
ihen call us. We'll be
your best and lalt
bid.

Bengie type dog . Call 446 -

BISSEL. L
SIDING CO.

~~t~~:~~~

254'4.-

Free t o good home. Terrier
beagle m il{ed, 10 incha• ~all .

' Call 614 -992·6506 .
'."." B...
6 " Uti.ful, Custom
Brown and white 5 m o nth
Built Garaces"
old male med. sized puppy
Call for free siding es·
t o good home . 3 0 4 -676 t' t
2646 .
949
2801
1ma es,
·
or
949·2860.
2 heating elements. towo•
No Sunday Calls
thermo discs lor l•igidairo.

Watllfblasting
Parking Lot Stripping
Spray Pointing
Taxtura Cootingo
Ft.ily l11!111'0d-F111 fstlCAU 614·949·2616

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We cen repair and re_ . IBdlltiA and heater ..,... We cen 11110
acid boll and rod out,..
dltltorl. We abo l'llpll1r

-OHIO BOND ISSUE IIONEYWJUB£ AYAILABL£sHoiiTLY:CNJ.
FOA APPOINTMENT AND INFOAMATIOII ON ANY OF OUR OYER
100 PROPERTIES.
NEW LISTING - Near Rutland! A remodeled 3 bedroom home
with dec~ng. Kitchen, dining and i ~ng room. Approximat~y 5
acres. Gas. !&gt;!at $26.900.00.
NEW LISTING - Great Bend Area - Rt. 338 - Cklse to new
bridge. Beautiful view of river. 1.34 acres ol nKe ~ying land
directly, across from Kaiser. 2-3 bedrooms. sun room, lrurt trees, •
two welt~ garden space. $22,500.00.

RENTAL INVESTMENT, ~ Racine - Price redueed on thts rent~
witll. three 2 bedroom units. Gross rent $450 monthly Most~
lum~hed. Reduced to $35,000.00.'
·-

Now renting 25 one bedroom apartment
units, renting for 30 percent of your adjustad income under the Department of
Housing &amp; Urban Development Section 8
program.

r_._
rt_,,

'MINE RUN

Savet II

446-9800

r Address---------

ffi

REALTORS
Henly l Cleland, Jr.. GRI ............. .. ................ 992-6191
-'-t Trussell ........ .................................... ;..... 94!1-2160
Dottle Turner .................................... ,............ 991-5692
)o Hill ,.........................................,... ............ m-3335·
Office .._............... .............................. ... ......... 991.2259'-

r ,wanlea
( )Announcement

19.

I.
J.

ol.
5.
6.
7.

•SEPTIC SYST£11$

•LIIIESTOIE
. .ATEI, GAS lftd

SmiLIIIES

·-~----

..,
· "Nloo.b7, 111'. ......,... but I'm
tm :Ditbot•llll.......,... Jllll'
- Cll!'t lily jllmMif oil"
I

1'----'~==--~u

Yard Safe 9 AM -6PM . Thurs.
&amp; Fri . 14th 81 16 t h . Ho me of
Mario n and Faye William s·
Fair fi e ld ec ru . Hoover
sweeper almo st new . Carou ·
sel 36 MM slide projec tor
and screen . clothing , numar ·
ous o th er i1ems . Ra i n
cencel s.

I

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1
1

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CarPor1 sa fe. 1086 Vine St ..
M iddleport . April 1 !5 . 16.
Good price s. to mething f or ·
everyone

1

I

ahak8r1, old pott
Jenny Lynd Bed .

cardt ,

9.

28.

10.
11 .

29 .

304·878-1898.

30.
Jt '

PORCH Sale. 1405 Ohio St.

1, Moving ute. Sand Hill Rd .

II
'

33.

.

Pt . Pl . atart1 Apr. 14th.
Color TV, ttove,ref . que"en
eize bed. living room aulte,
w11her, mlac. amall hemt.

Pt. PleaHnt. Baby Uemt,
j. . no. dlahH. Frldoy &amp; Slit·
urday, 9 to 4.

32.

.

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford· Community
Center. Truckload• of new
merchandiae eon.ry week .
Conalgmenu of new and
used merchendiae alwav•
welcome . Richard Reynold a
Auctioneer. 2715 -3089

9

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Otdfurnl·
t ure and Anti quet of all
kindl , ce ll Kenneth Swain .
the evenings.
Buying Gold , Silver, Plati ·
num . Gold arld Si lver prk:ea
are the higheat in. two yeers ,
check our prices on gold
ailvar, scrap jewelry . Buying
Old coi ns. tcrap ring• &amp;
silverware . Daily quo te•
av•ll•ble . Also coins 81 coln
auppllea tor ule. Spring

Volley T&lt;odlng Co.. Spring
Volley Plaza. 446-8025 or
446-8026.

Teecheu - Guerenteed in Come for aummer. Educa -

-- - - -

""tGHT CRAWLERS-&amp; RED

WORMS higheat prlcet
paid, lake Jackaon Bate &amp;

~-------~-----·--~---~
•

I will do babyaitting in my
home in Pomeroy. Call614 ·
992 · 3209 and lea ve
menage .

15

Schools
Instruction

6765'. 304.-88 i -328, '
1- - - - - ' - - - - -

Wanted euabllahed bee
hives and any bee keeping
equipment . Call after 6 ,

Lawn M ow ing no yard to big
or amalt. Reliable and depen dabl e. For • eatimate call
446 -3169 between 9 and 6 .

furniture , go ld, silver dollara , wood ice bok&amp;l, atone
)an . antiques, etc ., Com plete hQuuholdl . Write:
M .D . Miller . Rt . 4 . Pomaroy,

Oh . Oo 992· 7760.

Gold, 1ilvar. tterling , jewelry, rlnga, old co lnt &amp;
cu rrency . Ed Burkett Berber

Shop. Middlep ort . 992 ·
3476.
Want ed to buy. lnvuttment
property . Call 61 4 -992 ·

Lemley Dri ll ing . Water
walla, ahall ow gu, and co ra
drilling . Cn il 814 - 38 8 ·
8 6 43 , Vint on . Oh
Want to mo w l• wn s &amp; do
yard w ork . Call 446 · 7082 .
E~tpe rien ced typ ist wanting
to do typing in her h ome . For
m ora information c all 446 ·

3427.
Gardens plowed with large
rototlller Sik in c hes deep .
Re ady to plant . Aautor -614 ·

5868 .
---------------- 7 992 -2490
30

ft . 12

in .

614-992·3644 .

I

beams

Fint floor only . writ e giving
direction• . WiHen Pianos .
Box 188 , Sardis . OH
43946 . Pho ne 614-48 3 ·

1606 .

..

,.,,,,,

11

He lp Wantad

The Rio Grande CoiiStge
CETA Program i1 aeeklng
participantl for a cfauroom
skill traing p rog ram tor food
aerv lce paraprofenlonalt .
(Thla 11 not a ·quantity
cooking program .) 011io real dentt who have been un8m ·
ployed for a minimum o f
teven 17) "dey s should tele phone their local Ohio Bu·
reau of Employment Servicu Office for more detalla
end to arrtnge fo r an interview. Rio Grande CoUege Ia
•n Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Earn extra money selling

Avon. Col! 448·3358.

Now Interviewing: Local
reef estate flrm now in.ter·
viewing Real Eltete Saltapeople willing to work full
time . EKcellent comml11ion
achedule. Send retume to

PATIO ealo. 2 family, child -

a.

ren
aduht clothing , glluware. miac . 291 5 Spruce
Str. .t. Pt. Pll ..ant , Friday

Work SuperYlaor on con tract b1111 tor Melga Utter
Control Program . VIlli wOrk
with township truete1e. gen·
erel rel~f workera, per.on.
working out Court 'llnH.
community voluntHrl 1nd
atlltrt In helping cltton up 1 7
Uleg11 rur1l roadaide dumpt.
M~g• County 11 1n equal

opportunity omployor. Ap·

plication•
C•~

21

Busi ness
Opportunity

evell•ble from

Hynll. Molge County

Juvenile Coun. Courthou•.
Pomeroy, and ' Ire to be
returnild to Hysell at the
nmelocetlon noleterth•n4

p.m. Apotl 28.

'

leage on it? Tim• to tune
up-Len Daniela. Rutt1nd.

742·2951 .

.

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·~·

31 Homes for Sale
By owner. 3 bedroom holT..
in Rio Grande. Oh . C1ll

614-245-6274 o• 814·

246 -9617 for appointment .
Reaaonebly priced .

3 bdr. home in Add iton
amelllot . nMYiy ramo deled,
new electric plumbing, etc .
Furnance Sa woodburner,
fully intufl ted, uc. cond.,

Mid no ·a. Call 614 -692 ·
4359 .

In Middleport. newly remodeled home· with fireplace ,
possible woodbumer, c lose
to sch ool • and shopping.

Ca!l61 4-992 -6941 '

4 bedroom brtck ranch . BY!
acre• witl1 beck yard 1wim·
ming pool . Approk . 3 1h"
fnile1 fro m Ravenawood in
W.VA . Shown by appoint ·
ment on ly. Cal 304· 273 6186 after 6 p .m .
Nica home. end 6 · 20 acres .
Middleport. Cheahire area .
Easy acce11. wo oda . Mid·
priced . 20 ' a, 40 ' a. C•ll

6t4-992 -6177 .

For Nle by owner -4 bedroom , 1 'h atory aluminum
tid_
l ng house. 2'1• ..:; r~slevel
ground . 4r.ge kitchain. din ing room , tor ced air · heat .
Separate large garage. 2 ·
miles from Southern High
Scr,ool . Shown by ~ppoint­
··ment Onr9 L'- e2J .ISOO . 814 -

949 -2023 o• 614 -949·
2777 .

THREE bedroom, full baaemant . 76K120 lo t . Cl;tton .
cit y water . gu 11eat .

114.900. 304·882-3137.
304-773 -5860.

APPROXIMATELY 8 acre1,
small house. out bulldinga,
reas on able. call 30 4 -89&amp; -

3819 .

BEAUTIFUL view and uni que river fronta ge, lot~~ ted in
Pt . Plea111nt, junction of
K•nawha &amp; Ohio rlvert.
Three stor; house on large
lot with two story l'flnt•l on
ajoinlng lol. Pricad on in ·
SJMction . 304-676 -4671 .
ASSUMABLE 8 1ft percen t
loan . payment of $276. a
mont h . Three bedroom. fu ll
buement. garaga &amp; fenced
in ba ck yard . 304 -876 ·

3030
~2

00

676 -3431

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TAI · STATE MOBIL E
HOM ES USEO · CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
(;HECK OUR PRICES .
CAU 446 -7572 .

I NOTIC E!
CLEAN USED MOBIL E
THE OHIO VALL EY PUB- HOM ES KESSEL 'S OUAL·
LI SHING CO . r oco mm~nds tTY MOBIL E HOME SALES.
th111 you do business with 4 MI . WEST . GALLIPOLIS.
people you know, and NOT RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .

t o send mo ney through th e
mail un til you have investi ·
gat~~ the off ering .

lwulvrmvnc

BookkMplng &amp; Tn Service
ftrm. 1mal bualna11. profe .. tonal •nd individuate .

- - - - - - -te-

Are you paying to much for
you r holpital-haalth iniU·
ran ce . Call Carroll
Snowden . 446-4290 .

General Hauling and Tnsl1
removal Service . Reliabl e
and dependable. Calf 446 ·
3169 between 9 and 6 .

BEDS-IRON . BRASS. old

Professlon11
Set'ltices

Insurance

L &amp;. L Scrap Metal a.· Now
buying alum . can• &amp;. glut.
Non farrous metal1 . Top
price• paid . Ca ll 446 -7300 .

446-8204 or 446 -1467 .

11

Racine . 3 acre mini f•rm ,
remodeled. 3 -4 bdr .. 2 ttory
alum . aided home . City
water. gas. sewer. baaertMifnt &amp; 2 c8r garage. A croot
SANDY AND SEAVER In ~ from
Southam HS . Call
aurance Co . hu offered
614 -37 9-2424 or 614 aervicea for fire inaurance
949 -2864.
coverag e in GaiUa County
t or almott a century . . farm ,
lovely. 6 room1 . Double
home and personal property
garage. bMuttfully Ianda·
coverages are available to
caped area lot . Atop Rote
meet Individual needa . Con Hill, Pom . 40 ' s. 614 -985·
t ac t Eugene Holley . agent .
426 7.
Phone 388 -8690 .

13

18 Wanted to Do

EJCPERIE~CED •trv Form
RAIN or ohlne·lour ll,nlty worlto,. no,..d,lnkor. Apply
g.er•o• Mia, Gallipolis Farry. by Writing llok C· 1 3. tn care
acroaa from StauHer. Frld•y of Pt. Plto...,t Rogloto•. Pt.
!'loallnt, WV 281110.
'&amp; 8oturday, 10-8.
y·

The Deily sentinel
111Courtst.
Pomeruy, 011. 45769

Have care for elderly and
invafid1 in my home . Reeto -

Tackle. Oak Hill. Coil 614·
682·7448.

&amp; loturdoy.

Mill This Coupon wltll Remittence

Situations
Wanted

We pay caah for 18te model · Organ lessons Wllnted . Call
evenings after 8 . 614 - 992 clean uaed c1r1.
7200.
Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnaon
STARTING a female Martia'f
446 -0069
Artl clau in PI Lung Kung Fu
Pay· cash for used h)obile &amp; atreet deferiae . Sif!J .
hotnet or travel travel trail - Roger L. Burna. auiatant
era . Prefer 198&amp; and up . Call instructor S11rah Wade . For
information calf 30 4 - 676 614·446-0176.
7722-. H . no answer , 676 -

I
I
I
I lnaide eatate sale . April Bo• 1000 c-o Ga!ttpo!!a
I · 14-17. Sa .m.-5 p.m. at Oelly Tribune . Your re1ume
I Hocklngpor1 . Furniture. lp- will be held I n atrict
1 pllarce•. fin en1, diahea, col - confidence.
I l ectlon of 1111 &amp; pepper

8.

16. '

•POIDS, IECLAMATION

9046 or 814-992 ·3890.

noblo. 61 4-992·6022.

$20.00 and $40.00 ooch

Yard Sale

25 .
26.
27 .

12.
t3.
t4.
15.

•BACKHOE

111111011 IIIMMTtED
PHOIE JIM CUFFOID
l·
H -tt

20.
21.
22 .
23.
24 .

2.

•DOZER

. COICIETE WOIIt

17'
18.

t•lFor Rent

J&amp;F
.
CONTRACTING

•lAID CUAIIIIG,

1

( JFor Sale

PH. 992-5612
or 992-7121

JOII

7

6 Family Vard Sale Friday,
Saturday, &amp; Sunday . 3 miles
out Rt . 664 hom Rt . 7 . See
sign I .

T hese cash rates
inc lude discount

I
I
I

We'll ahow you how. Good
·aarnlngal C•ll 614-388 -

WANTED old pianoa . Payi ng

Garage Sale Fri. &amp; Sat . 9 :30
to 5 :00 . Lots o f goodie• .
baby crl b , chain nw . On Rt .
160 acrou from NGHS .
Rain or ahine.

St. II. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

MIDDLEPOIII - Nice home sle. Approximatiey 46 acres, with
water and electricity available. $6,000.00.

WARD I 614 ·446 -9780 or
614 -446-1462, cottoct.

Patio Sa ta anyth ing' toeverv ·
thi ng clot has to aile 18 . 9 to
6 , Thursday &amp; Friday , out
Rt.. 160 in Evergreen . l ook
f or baloonsl

Rager Hysell
GARAGE

Alto Transmlulon

Loat -ln Cheshire area . fe male dog with blt~ c k and tan.
tatt oos in both eara . RE -

8-1 Coli 446-8644.

2-llttc

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

2709 or 614 -992 -6239.

3 Fami ly M ov;ng Sale. Ga lli ·
p olis City limits, on hill
boaide at oc kvard . B aby
clothes. walker. swi ng , pillows. bedspreads. curtai n a.
glnaware . furni ture. jeans.
ga1 logs, range . some an t iquea . Saturday , April 16.

COAL

Gallipolis, Ohio """"

LAFF·A-DAY

New Hoven. W . Vo .

Write your own ad and order by mail with th is
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you ge l
results. M oney not refundable .

STRIP

PH. 992-2280

Of'£N 9 to 5 MOlt. t1rtt SAT.
All TJtltl of Allto lttpeir,
lrekes, Ton•Ups, ole.
SPECIAL
•UANSIISStOII FILTU
.AND FLUID CHAIIG(
ONLY 131.95 1.,..,,

882-2131

Phone------------------

Riverside VN Inc.

l'onwuy, 011.

Loat - Man c hestar Chihua hua . 8 inches, 18 in . long .
Ten t co llar. Looks like Min• ·
ture german shepherd . Tail
curls up .• Mapl" Wood Lake
area . Reward . 614 -949 -

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

S3000 ATON

271 • . llin

Phone

Lost and Found

FOUND : Small pu g type
dog . Blonde wlth black
marki ng1. 614 -986 -4244 . ·

., -------~--~--~-------Curb 1.-.flatlon
-Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and

992·2196
Middlepo•l, Ohio

RYDER TRUCK
RENTAL &amp; ONE-WAY
lbcat and one-..y, low rates,
top nllillUined trucks. Rllf&gt;t
sizes, rilltt equipment Hand
trucks, lurnlture pads, NatiorTWide Road Servict. Mov· .
inc tips and insuranct.

AUTOMAnC ·
TRANSMISSION CO.

6

~

l.!!J

Ge~Tanks.

1-IJ.tlc

;'~'t9 . chi tdren . 304-676 -

HOUSING FOR THE ELDE.RLY

J.•q . mo pel

PH. 742·2328

·~

gal. hot

pan Cocke• Spaniol. good

'Sidinc
'Roofin1
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Aemodellnc
20 Yurs Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 843·5425

4-13·1 mo.

'

water heater.

304 -882· 2024.

SUPERIOR VINYL
.SIDING

PAT HILL FORD

ASK FOI AL

'

DOG . about 8 montha o ld ,

WORf( GUAAAIITUD

fREE ESTIMATES

Raal Estate Genetal·

••

SIDING

·s andbl oetlng
·

1 11

614-245 -9162 .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.
ln41!strlll, Commeiclal.
Aesldentill , · Interior and

for -!111 furnacei
your wlrLng
needs;
re• ,:
pair service and in·
stallation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3196

2

tlonot utta. Call 304-882 ·
2485.

a.

2 puppies 6 w eeks old . Call

11·26·11t

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171
Y•Ima Nlcinsky. Assoc.
Phone 742-3092

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

SALES:NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY to 1011 Avon .

446 -3159 o• 256 -1967 in

Revival meeting . RiveNiew
Baptiat Church , Poin t Plea ·

, GREG ROUSH
PH. 992 -7583
or 992 -2282 I 1 t l Uc

lH IH1c

l1 8 lmopd

614 -742 -2068.

CONSTRUCTION

P1tios - Sidew1!ks New Consbuction - Remodellnl ~ Cntom Pole
Batns.

· ~'~r.~====~2-~l?~m~,~~~=======~'~"~"'~~30
~========·:•:"':fr=======~l~
EUGENE LONG
RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
22

NEED A LOT lor haler or house? 1.46 acre, nKe lilt witlllcaJ :
water and electr~ available. Would you belteve an asking price ot 1
. $1.000 for tn~ first lot? Cal for more detai~ .
.
·

The modem kltcheit ~~~ dls!ioiat, dlshwuher, trash
comp. ~nd morel Adjlclnt tci tile kitchen is • cozy breakflit room . full basement lnd Pltnty of1ttic stortit'ln the
houu1nd also In thel ur prep. This larp estllt has a
REDUCED 'PRIC£11mmedlltt possession. C1ll Iotan appointment.
.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Pho•• 742·3171
VeiN fl!c!nsly, Assoc.
l'llont742-30t2

Core to t~e Lar,.st Rldiltor.
Radl1tor Specials!
NATHAN BIGGS .
·35 Yrs ..EXperience

Ph. 9'12·2174

I

t::U:\ CITY LO\N &amp;. SAVINGS
\::I r::J aControl Data Company .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Oil. ___ __

RADI~SEIMCE
From he· Sm1lllst Httter

;s ·:a.- .

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - MtElhanney Hill - Country
living, 4 year old tri~evel home on approximatey 5 acres. l4
bedrooms, den, 24x12 living room, family room, 3 baths. central
vaccuum, utility room . 2.400 sq. feet ot living space plus 2 car
garage, llxl5.WO(!( room, full basement. 10\1% bond issue money
will buy th~ home. $56,000.00.
'

EXECUTIVE £STAT£ - LoVely two story brick home
sltuatod on 3\\ mes in Pomeroy with 1 breath-teklnl view
of the Ohio River. This home futures 3 spacious bod·
roo11s, with thll!ltSter bedroom havlnaa walk·out patio.
plenty of room to 111tert1in In lhe foflltatllvinaloom tnd
dlnlna room, tlso 2 lull end 2 half baths."

HH mo ·lld

446- 294.

-:--~~---

Real Estate General

COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!

known as Route 3

'Sears:
CATALOG ME!LCHANT
Pomeroy,OH .
Ill• &amp; Patty Glbb•-Owners
PH. 992-2178 '·" -"'

------------------+------------------+------------------+------------------j5649.

l l h e• • •'"''ll

SHOP LOCALLY

An organiza tional meeting for the

SYRACUSE. Ott.
PHON£ 992-5776
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING SEASON
Complete line of vegeuble end beddiflll,
plants, follaao plants and hancina
baskets: A.lso a Iaiit selec:tlon of .
shrubbery end dwlrd fruit t -.
OP.EN DAILY 9 lo 5 .
SUNDAY I to 5

Sizn from 6'•6' Up
to 24'K36'
lnsulatd Dog Houses

..

·--·.. · --..·--1

Organizational m eeling

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

...,.."

lll

O!Hbll iUO

J6G5q ff'l(as Road Pomeroy
0hlo·46769
1 hi' Ho,11 Fs tat r wa s np

100

Sizes start lrom 12'x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS

""Y

c -t~ •

• 1 '11 · 11 1c1

"'""'"'too II•"'

06 I Q"•omono lot

lnOot

7 0 lol oo.,eyeO. o
15 ,,..., &amp; Mot o"

'

~~
h.~ ~ nmno
48 5aooo fo • ~., ,

1 / Mo.,.·e+ioon_,.,.

.

S•••

5 4 Mooc M "~h """"
s~ llwofd•"' s~PI'~ ..
5 ~ "••• l o• S olo
6 7 M""':oiiM I&lt;IO..,.Mo

lleo&gt;f ' ' "' o wo nroo

4 l HI~" lao ~non
40 4JI:IIIlmtn o_lfl&lt; A. . o

I'WIIo C B~o u o •

P1 Auto olo t S olo

~

SWEEPER and sewing m• ·
chine repair , parts. and
supplies .
Pick up and
delivery . Davis Va c uum
Cleaner. ona half mila up
Geo rge s Creak Rd .
Ca ll

r
win
, St . PAt
. 681 . East Oar-==::::======::;t=========~lr=========;i-;::=========;1
Rober1
icke«'s.
Kitchen
Cabinets
RoofS&amp;W TV
ALL STEEL &amp;
ROUSH
Watki ns Producu for sale .
In&amp; - Sidln1 - Concrete

POLE BULDINGS

inaurance . Ple..a ..nd ,...
aume or coritact G•ry Brand
tar fur1her Information, At.

Park Dr.. Poin t PIHAnt.
large womens &amp; mens
clothing , also 14· 16 &amp;.

Publi c Sale
&amp; Auction

23

Page

••collont bon.tlt pochoga Tom-Mooo. 814-448·0898.
•vall•blo, Including roti,.ment, dtllblllty. Nle&amp; heolth Your pieno· heve aome mi-

FOUR family yard tale, 123

Call614-367-7101 .

1 " /n ~.•ifi • • d

61f o oS oloo &lt;n1o ..to

0 7 M o i&gt;O O HMIOII"' HOOI

w.,,.,,,

l J ·~·"'" ""·
1.A """"~" ' ' '"""'"'
1!&gt; s. ~"""

r'ICnliSes

You might need money for a lot of goo:!
reasons · to take care of unexpected bills, to
• fix up your home, or perhalll to take a well·
deserved vacation. Whatever the cause, City Loon and
Savings has the money to mret it.
. So stop by one of our offices, or call us. Find out how
qwckly we can supply money for your favorite cause.~
Because notiody knows you like we do.

Htl ~

10-S.Uc
hx

- Tre.ncfier

-Wiler
-Sewer
- Gas Lints
-Seplit Systems
LARGE o• SMALL JOBS
PH. 992·247B

Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

AN -DON Scenic HiHa ia
currently IOQidng fora Dlr.c·
tor of Nunlng . Salary .com·
mti"!IUI'Ite with experience,

Bo• 262. Bldwoll. Oh
46814. Colt 446-7160.

Au c t ion every Tuetday
night. Community Building.
Henderaon, Conaignafl\vel come. Auct. Lonnie Neal.

FREE
EXTIMATES
'Chain link Fence
'Ca rpetin&amp; 'Painting

- Batkhon
-Dump Trucks
- lo-Boy

New Holland, Bush Hcic

care Is unpredictable.''
She proJected that Medicare
outlays will Increase at an armual
average rate of more than 13
percent. between 1985 and 1995.

[~ear~

- Dozers

Authorized John Deer,

Help Wanted

12

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

'

12 Touc h

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Pit. 614-843-519i '

RrrOtfl"

The Meigs County Comm issioners a nd the Meigs County Litter
Control Board are seeking a work
·supervisor for the new county litter
control program .
, The county has rec-eived a $23.450
gra nt from the Ohio Department of
Na tural Resources to help clean up
· 17 iUegal rura l roadside dump~. The
work supervisor will wor k ' with
township trustees, genera l relief
workers, persons work.lng off court
fines , eommunlty volunteers and
ot hers to accomplish the task .
. Applications , for the post are
ava ilable !rom Carl Hysell at the
Meigs County Juvenile Court In the
· courthouse. Applications must be
returned to Hysell by 4 p.m. onAprll
25.

FISHERMEN]

Aeci~e.

7Jv•~ o&amp; o wo

1-::-=:-:-::-:-- - - - - -

B

I

5l ... ~ .... ~ ••

ule

die, toys. what-nots. wed -

·in serious trouble

~ I Oj ...,. ... hofd G&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;dt
f; 1 t l 1V"I10&lt;f oo (~ '"P"'" " '

and

yard

d i ng gown size 13· 1• . Fri day &amp; Saturday. 8 a.m . -5
p .m .

I

-

grandchildren,

family

toddlers, shoes . boots. ere -

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writt Oaill1 Sentinel Cllssifitd

a ,.,,~~u Oppo " '"'" T
22 Mo_, to ~ o· ~

FOUR

Mid-

111 Coutt St., Pof!Mro,. Ohicl 4~769

l I

Sadly miued by her child ·

lin Ave, Pt. Pleaaant , Can·
celled if rain.

great grandchil_ftren .

'

l l P,ootnooonoiS• .... ocu

Apd1. 1-6. 9-3. 3302 Frank:

ron ,

Dtpt.

L Jln~ &lt;I .. A&lt;&lt;t!"&lt;n l •

bodt·

ence Harden Potts who
p...sed away one year ago

3 Announcements

I"'J/' '" ,.,., .,,r l ilr•
,-.. u.. ,,.; , 11 , .,, .1,,.,,.,. ,. , ..l•m•~t• · •

11

rain - cenc~~tllf!td .

Flor -

todoy -Ap•it 14th. 1982 .

dleport; Mabel MUier, Pomeroy;
PhliUp Donovan, Syracuse; Jacyln
Shamblin, Hartford, W. Va.; Barbara DuVall, Portland; Ronald
DilES, Pomeroy; Leland aonch,
Pomeroy; DonaldDaV!dson,Pomeroy; Gladys Cuckler, Pomeroy ;
James Meadows, Portland; Frieda
Fields, Pomeroy; Brandon Spaun,
Pomeroy; Homer Graham, Ra·
cine; Margaret Jullan, Middleport.
Discharged-CharleS Kaptelna,
Gregory Taylor.

Projections from the CongresBy ahoppln1ln your home 1rN you uve on
sional Budget Office, which were
ill,
the wear and tear on your car and 1vold
made before the prospective paythe
hiZirdi of hllhWIY lnd freaw1y
ment plan was adopted, said
travellna. It pays to ahop where you live!
Medicare would run out of money In
19S7 or 19!18.
tan\1" an(! t ~men t s. to w1t
Sl fUAIEO 1n th e "l o wn sho p o t
"The passage of prospective
C he s t ~ r County o l Me1gs an d
payment, when coupled with the S!
rt! P. o t O h1 0 . and bo unded
enac lment of the National Commis- and deScr1berl as tallow s
Bcr nq tn Sec110n 36 J nd
sion on Socia I!:leeurlty' s recommendations . dramatically Improves the b~g1nn-1 ng · Jl IM Southwes t ~---------------------i
co rner o f a 2 7 acre tr oc t at r~ t r l
short term fina ncial situation of the Psta tc conv eyed to Rov H
54 Misc . Merchandise
health In surance trust fund, " Mrs. Pool~r and E" l s•e J Pooler bv
Public Notice
deeO
d
ated
June
8
1951
,
and
Davis said.
1rco rr1 ed rn Vot um0 166. Page
"Nevertheless, It does not solve :l79 M OH..J S Cot1n tv Duert
PU BUC NOTICE
The &lt;Jn nual rrmon Form 990
the bas ic solvency issue as, even Rec o rd s r,~ I P. I enrl' to wh1ch 1s
AUTHORIZED
PF f0r lhe Kll)blf' Fo unll &lt;lt •o n
with the passage of these revision• .... hcrrnv 1nad e thPnr P North 8A1nr1 1r1 F F1JIIl Trustf'e 1S
:J9 fj fi""PI rh,mcP Eas t 330 fre t
FACTORY
SERVICE
the fund will still beexhausted by the
avaddble to r pu bl•c •ns ped•on
r r~n · ,. So11 th 396 !Ho t to the
~ENERAL ELECTRIC
at Belll ard V Fu ltt Law Office
md ofthis decade."
u: r ~ ·r
ol th n publr c ron d
1 111/7 W SeconU S!1ee 1
thf'net'
Wes
t
330
tee
t
to
th
f'
&amp; HOTPOINT
Allee Rlvlln, director of the CBO.
Pometov. Oh10 4 5769 dLJ rtno
p t,1( f' o t IJC0 1nn1nQ to ntJH1tnq
sa id any set of options for Medicare
J dCr ~S f)U t Sllblf'CI !0 .-llllf'qfll requiJr Ousul&lt;'SS hours for a
penm l ol 180 days su bseq uf'nt
WE ALSO WORK ON
fin a nc in g " po ses diffi cu lt
hoq hWrly'i
to pu bl1ca!f on o f th 1s no t•c ro
ihr&gt; dhOVf' d!S Ctd)Pd 3 an ('
All OTHER APPLIANCES
t radeol'fs."
tr ac t tS pr:1r t o f a 27 a cr P uact 14112 13. 1~ . 15. 17, 18. 19
"Raising taxes could leave Medi- convtJyF!d
to to r mer qran tn t&lt;; hv 71&lt;
care Intact but only at considerable deed 1crordPd 1n Vol ume 166
POMEROv'
cost to taxpayers. Obtaining sav· Pvfte 37D M e1QS Coun ty Dred
lANDMARK

Supervisor sought

In loving memory of

• v ete1'8118 Memorial
Admttt.ed-~Martha Searls,

Yard Sale

TUPPERWARE .

and 4 p.m. on sale day, AprU 16.

· The

0 C• " ' n l l~•n Oo ,. ..,, • n •d ~-...~•1
lO ft ,_,...
lp•od •no&lt;lvan &lt;: • l

7

preada . 1heets &amp; misc . 2120
Monroe, Pt Pleaunt. Friday
&amp; Saturday , 9 a .m . If

•

R

The Doily Sentinel

CountyF~between2p. m.

!ngs exclusively through Increased
"Systemwide attempts to contain
r4ed!care cost·Sharing or reduced
medical care costs could ultimately
reimbursements could lead to a
result In slower expansion In
second-class system of care for the · services to most users of health
aged and disabled," she warned.
care, although the Impact on health

a.

Middleport, Ohio ·

Pomeroy

Business services

Anlm8.ls must be at Ute Gallla

The fifth annual Southern Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs-Mason Girls Softball Associ·
- atlon will be held a t 2:30 p.m.
Sunday at the R. C. Co. Bottling
", Plant. N. Second Ave .. Middleport.
All representatives of the summer
teague teams should attend.

April 14, 1983

·Lamb,
pig sale Saturday
.

Sixteen defendants were fined
M. Van Meter. Rutland, $:!l0 and
·- and eight ot)lers forfeited bonds In
costs, three days in jail and license
the Meigs County Court of Judge
suspended for six months, driving
·;Patrick O'Brien Wednesday.
while Intoxicated, and $50 and costs,
Fined were William Kauff, Long driving left of ceqter; David Bates,
Bottom, $21 and costs; Joseph Pomeroy, $:!l and costs. excessive
-. Poole, Pomeroy, $22 and costs;
speed for road conditions; Gary
William Williams, Vienna , W. Va .,
Oates, Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
$:!l and costs; Elmer McFarland,
three day ]all sentence suspended,
New Haven, $23 and costs; Richard
no operator's license.
Harrison, Middleport, $2i and
Forfeiting bonds In thecouriwere
costs; Terry Cullums, Hemlock Ralph Meister, no address reGrove, $18and costs, all on speeding corded, $43.55, posted on a criminal
charges; Bridget Gorman , South mischief charge: Jerald Hennon,
Carolina, $10 and costs, traffic llghl
Lyndhurst. Oh., $66.50 reckless
violatlofi; Mark Simpson, Racine, operation; Mike Gard , Reedsville,
$23 and costs, speeding; Menifee $68.55 on each of two reckless
Blevins, Pomeroy, $5 and costs, operation charges; Roy A. Pierson,
, unsafe vehicle; Donald Martin,
Leon, W. Va.. $32.50, Improper
Rutland. $10 and c11sts, speed_lng;
park.lng; Donald Mays, Little
William Lovm&gt;an,Hartford, W.Va., . Hocking, $68.55, and Francis An$27 a nd costs, and John Dearth,
drew, Long Bottom, $66.50, both
Alany , $:!) and costs, both on posted on reckless opera tlon
charges: Marty Foley, Syracuse,
speeding charges.
Daniel Shane, Cheshire, $50 and $41.50 failure to display valld
. costs, three days In jail suspended
registration, and Robert Petrie,
and placed on probation for six Tuppers Plains. $66.50, no driver's
months , no operator's license; John
license.

Saturday session

~.

OWN yo ur OW-:' . Jean ·
Sportswear, Infant - Preteen
or ladiet apperel store.
Offering nationally known
brand s suc h at Jordeche.
Chic . Lee. Levi. V•ndflrbilt ,
Wrangler over 200 other

brands . i7.900 to 124,600
i ncludes beginning inven ·
tory, airfare for one to
Fashion Center. training,
lixturet . grand open ing pro motlona . Call Mr. Dicklon

16011 882-61 64 o• t6011
268 ·1361 .
MINUT EMAN lndu atriea .
manufftctura of the new
minuteman wlreles sec urity
ayatem. Is looi'ling for the
rig11t people to introduce
rhll produ ct to the at•te of
WV
Ohio. Dealers Sa uias
people wanted. Very profitt ·
bfe . For additional lnforma ·
tlon call 304 -372 - 6644 or
write , C S. C Oittributing,
Inc ., 110 King Heights,

a.

E•ono. WV 26241 .

22 Money to Loan
'

For aale- 1 acre with 12x60
moblle home . large In
ground pool and foundatton
fo r house . Call 304 -696 -

47 21 .

1 4k70 Bayview total elect ri c , 3 bdr .. $7 .400 . 12k60
liberty good co n d .. 13,900 .

Call 448-0176 .

1968 Cherokee M o bil e
Home. 12 k 47 , good cond ..

$3.500. Co l! 446 -0706 . .
1982 Sc hultz " limited Edi ·
tion" . 1970 2 bdrm .. mi cro wave, diahwaaher, atereo .
Muonite aiding . Pr iced to
aell. French City Brokering
Service . 446 -9340 .
1978 Sc hultz 1 4 x70 2
bdrm .. 2 baths. central air ,
good c ond ., on rental lot ,
ne ar Good year Plant , aaau mable loon . Fren ch City
Brokerin.g s·arving . 446 -

9340 .'
Mobile 11ome with built on
addltk&gt;n &amp; shingle roof. 3
bdr . &amp; 2 bath. woodburner,
ru ref water . •v•tem . air
co nd .. approx . 1 acre mo re
or l e11 ' in Kyger CrMtk
School aystem . Call eve ' s

HOME LOANS 1.2% liud alter 6. 446-6297.
Stott. Athena, Ohio. 1-814· •2.950. ·u~ uaed mobile
592-3051 . or 1·800-341 - homea for aale . 2 bedrQO m.
c ompletely turn i l hed .
6654 In Ohio.

rete , Lvader Mortgage, 77 E.

Ready to move tn . Brown' a
Tr ..ler Park, Mineraville, Oh .

23

Professional
Services
C&amp;L 8ookkoeplng'

Till Return a &amp; bookkeeping
for lndiyjduala &amp; buelnttlll .
Short 1orm• •&amp; .00
Long forma •20.00 and up

614-992-3324 .

12xe·a Vl ndelt mobile .-.ome
with. e h . expando living
room , wood burner . Situ·
ated on 2 plut .:relncluding
remodlled 1 room achool
building &amp; atoroge ahod.
N~• g~~rden apot. Some

amoll fruit treea. 814·992 448·3882 7164 all"' 5 o• 814-992·
6035.
PIANO TUNING t&amp; off ptuo
diacou nta to 11nlof citizen• ~ USED MG81LE HOME
churchea-•choola. Call . Bill 676 -271,.
C1&lt;ol Noal '

,Ward

Ward 's

448·4372.

K•v.board.

Horu Shoeing . C.. 448 9589 .

1977 14•70 WINDSOR . .2
bedroom, total electric. with
wood burner, 304 · 87&amp;-

8930 or 878·3348 .

,.

�---'-·___....._._

Pog8

12- The Daily

---Thunday, April

Sentinel

32 Mobile Homes

They'll Do It Every Time

for Sale

with light welnut finlah t30.
32x53- 174 ploceo brown
underpinning for 1 mobile
home used jult 1 year ceme
off • 14.:70 mobile home.
long piece• meeaure 32".
ohort plocos 21" ond 10
inch•• acroa1, entertock in •
metal frame, wood grain
finloh. Colioftor &amp;PM . 4483065.

Golden P,.llmloo m••· Ideal
children;

well

broke.

Yoorilng filly, holler broko.
well m.tnner.t. 304-67642-1'7.

1979 Mobile home. Yz acre
with chainlink fence .
Cou my water, call after 6
pm, 304 - 576 - 2792 .
$15,600.

=::------ - -ic-

1 76 ecrea, good timber end
water. No dwelling . Numer o ua building lites . 3 'h miiH
from Rlventwood . Csll
304-273-6185 oftor 6 p.m.

a. Acreage

6-20 Acres wooda. over·
looking Ohio Rlvor. city
ochoolo. 446 -3664 or 1613 - 423 - 8928 .
Owner/ Agent .
36 acrea at Rodney on W.T.
WatiOf'l Rd . Owner financing ovolio blo. Call446-8221

after 6 weekdllya.

~;:;~~~;:;:~~~~r-;~~~~~~~~~~
42 Mobile Homes
45 - Furniah4!d Rooms
for Rent

TWO bedroom trailer, ramodeled, some utilities paid.
Coli Mr . Rhoodoo at 304675-6080, 6-8 p.m.

Furnished apt. adults. No
Potl. 304-675 -1463 .
Furnished apt. adults. No
Poto . 304-675 -1453.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park , Route 33; North of
Pomeroy . Large Iota. Call
992 -7479 .

44

Lot in Bradbury, very good
loc:etlon with trailer hookup. All utllitiH. eeptic tank.
Coli 814-992-2602.

2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apart ·
ment1 . *200 per mo . or if
income is *10,000 or le11
HUD available. A-One Reel BUSINESS building, 160
Estates. Ctrol Yeager, Real - Jrd. Ave. Gallipolis, 304ior. Coil 304-675-5104 o• 676 -1468, oftor 6.
876 -6386 or 876 -7786 . .

5236 .
THREE miles out Sandhill

Road, 2.8 acres, call 304 675-3244 oftor 6:00p.m.

109 ACA ES, mo~e or len,
louted · Tribble Roed, 8
Mlln ' back of Arbuckle.
$30,000. 304-876-1838.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Buying hou••• end epar1·
ment1 . Need propertiea with
favor1ble price end terms.
Box 1109 Gallipolis, Oh.
46831 .

r--:::::::::--,~~

Apartment
for Rent

OFFICE opocoovolloblo. Will
ramodiJI for right tennent.
Saddlebrook Inn. Pt. Pleeoant . 304-676-6276 .

3 rm . end 4 rm . unfurnithed
apartments. Utilhie1 paid,
no petl, no children . Cell
448 -3437 .

n

Auto

•*·
rldilttor.
441-4848.

Slemeae ktttana. Call 114-

• · c.n

r

1871 Te&lt;ry TriiVIIi Troller.
28 • 2 door Nfrldg.. o.c.. tub
wltlt olio-. Coder clooot.
Vwy cleon. 304-1112· 3&amp;01 .

· ..

•.

59

For Sale or Trade

,.

·&gt;
7:00

..
......
'•.
.
' •·•J.

62

71

Wanted to Buy

Autos for Sale

·

~

•:

....··.

Wanted to rent tobacco
poundogo . Coli 614-3792642 .

Spring Special Lawn mower
&amp; rototlller tune up, oil
change. new tpark plug,
edjuat or replace breeker
poinu. service air cleaner,
sharpen mower blede. saf·
tey check 113.95 plus tax.
Free pick &amp; delivery in
Gallipolls-Eurreka tree . Neteon &amp; Sons Service Center.
Euroko. Oh . Coli 614-2661643.

61
Buoh hog In good ohopo
t32&amp; &amp; older model International tractor (needa work)
t1 ,200 . Coli" 448. 08156
doyo llo 446-4267 evon.
Jivldon'o ·
Farm Equipment
448- 18711
Long trector1 , Vermeer
round baler • complete line
of bale hendllng &amp; feeding
ecce11orleal A new ·line of
rakes, Teddera eB75.00 S.
up and Dlac Mowen
t2260 .00.

Remington 11 00 sho1gun. 3
Inch megnum, 30 Inch full
choke barrel!, vent rib . Call
614-388 -8169 .
Uaed carpet with pad
12x22 . Coi1446-3617 .

"'
Ford, AC, PS. PB,
aun
etereo ayatem.
mag whoolo. $6,000. 304676-4848 .

STUCCO PLASTERING •
textured celllnge commercial ond reoidontiol. frM
ootlmotoo. Coli 814-2881182.

1874 DODGE Chorgo•.
$146 . 400 engine, 51,000
miloo, for porto or ropolr.
304-67&amp;-3&amp;74.

PAINTING - interior end
exterior, plumbing. roofing.
aome l'llmodtling . · 20
oxp . Coli 614-311-9182 .

1- 4 week old Holotion holler 1971 Plymouth, 9 poocoif. Coli 614-388-9334 •noer Wagon, 318 autooftor IPM.
matic, PS , new tlr11, new
brakea, new tune-up, 304Good Work pony, harne11, 676-3614 .
uddlo, 2 whool cart. Coli
614-388-9328.

Marcum Roofing • Spotrting. 30 yeera experience.
specializing In bulh up roof.
Coi1614-388-9867.

63

Livestock

Aneu• buiio 1 to 3 yro. old,
oxcellont blood line, Slate
Run Forma, Jockoon,Oh.
Coli 614-286 -8385 o• 614286-1787.
'

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

J-----------

3 yr. old Ouertet" horse
geJdlng, will coneichtr trad ·
ing for mare. Call 387 0669.

Non registered Quarter
horn gelding . Very apirited,
$425 . Coli oftor 6, 614379-2144.

72

Trucks for Sale.

1978 Joop 'h t PU , V-8 ,
auto , 4 -WD, PS, PB, many
extrea. C1ll 446 ~ 0616 .

7:30

Y"·

lrwin 'a Oteu Service rnakll
replectmentl 'i neuletld unIt• acreena. Jtorm windOWI
for reeidentiel or commercial. Coli 614-2&amp;6-8844.

8:00

·ANNIE

RON· S Tolaviolon Service.
Spociolizlng In Zenith and
Motorola. Quazer. 1nd
houoo coilo. Coli 1176-2398
or 448-2464.

First floor furinshed ~Pt.
' .
Tobacco S. corn spr1yers.
utilitie11 paid , deposit &amp; lea sa
SWAIN
71 Peter Bitt air rid~ good
required . Adults, no pets . AUCTION llo FURNITURE 1-;;Hi;;;;jj;,:;:-;;-;;;;,~j";,;, wagona, rotary tlllera, rotary
sh.epe . 18,00.0. Leave phone F llo K TIM Trimming. otump
Cl,lttara . . IHders, . tob.e cco
Coli ot 631 Fourth Avo., . 62 Olivo St,. Golllpoilo. King 2 Utility trailers, one
coat· &amp; wood heaters with with metal frame &amp;Xe. one 11111tera. bladea; getea. cultl· 13 month old reg.H011~in number for call back. 614 - romovol. Colll711 -t331.
Gelllpoilo.
fan 1469, 18t box spring II u· haul type all metal 6x8x8 . vatora. diac, plowa • wcood 1 bull, Olendell Son from 446-7077.
Boo1meker Dem. Tom Rock
RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpo2 bdr. apartment perk front maf1:re .. 1100, firm 1120, Cell614-379 •2823 or 61•- burners &amp; plaltictankal
1111 us to get 1 complete line
Holst-.in. 304 - 875 - ~308.
1975, 2 tOfl· flat bad Chevy rlef'!C~ roofing~ . Including .. ~
vi•w. part furn ., water paid. - s~f• ~ love~eet.A ch,lr 119,, 379~ 2114 .
t ru ell . 8.2 2 60 r -:-. P..o.rte ~II
of P•&lt;!•-.S.:. Sorvico.-. ·
. ·: roo
n .75 mo ., Coll446-3919 or love .seati 170; new coal II·
160 white welde·r. 300 ·amp Hoblrt hot t1r application. ·oarpe·n._
tar, electriClan·. meaOn. Cilll ·. ·
448 -0021 .
wood heaters 81 low as Antique Oak Reproduction
hens, e2 . mounted on wheel a 11200. 304-178-2088 or 678furniture, full line. J n atock. Uaed Equipment: 3&amp; Met· hena.
I 399 with blower~ , uaed
one ynrold. 304-411B- 1610.
4560,
Furnithed apt . 11226, utill - coal &amp; wood heatera, new also Antiquea. Paul Conkels 11y, 3000 Ford. IH Hydro each . le11
70. N.H. grinder . mixer. ,A mi. off At. 2. onto State
t;iel pd., 1 bdr ., adults. Call dinet aeta $100 &amp; up, Antlquea, Tupl)!rt Plalnit.
Gravity wagona, 2-corn At. 87. Wendell Fauver, 1982 S10.
outomotlc. Water Well•. Commercial
446 -441 6 after 7PM .
refrigeraton, rengea, bunk
air. atereo. gauges. 8.600 1nd Oomeatic. Teat holes.
bade complete 8199, bun- For ule-Night crawlera and pickero, whool dloc, rotary 304-896-3879 .
1 bedroom apartment for kllll mattresus 840. chettl, minnows. Bettya Cerry Out h011. 2 II 3 bottom plows. EIGHT -•k old pigo, good milea. perfect condition. Pump• 81111 end Service.
must oell. 304-675-6438.
rent . Col 448 -0390 .
304-898-3802.
dreaaera, TV'a. Cell 448- 3 1h mi. South of Middleport poet auger . A complete line folr otock, 304-676-3308.
3169 .
on Rt . 7 . Open 7 days a of Southeaat lmco.
Smell furnllhed houH In
Get your ce'rpet In ahlp
wook . 614-992 -2969 .
!1- row com planter, 9 mo.
city . adult• only . Call 446 - GOOD USED APPLIANCES
ahape.
Water removal.
64 Hay Grain
0338 .
- weahera, dryera, refrlgera· 4 piece bedroom set m1ple, old . Colt Appolou 11o
FREE ESTIMATES. FURNI73
Vena
8r
4
W
.
O.
Woiker . Coli 6 1 4 - 3 8 8 - l - - - - - - - - - TURE ClEANING . CAPtore. rangea. Skagga Ap· llko now. 992-6068 .
9025 .
TAIN STEAMER 114-446Furn . upsteirl. 3 rooms &amp; pllancea, Upper River Rd.,
Good
mix8d
hay.
Firat
a.
76
Dodge
van
customized
.
bl'th, weaher-dryer. clean. bealde Stone Creat Motel. Moving out of state will Hll
2107 .
.---no peu, ref . req. Cal 446- 446-7398.
Turf Trim power propelled Formoll Cub llko now on- oecond cutting. e1 .60 por _c_._u_8_7_6_·-:-2_3_9_8_
1
1819.
E llo R TrN 'S.rvioo. fully
lawn mower. 22" blade, glne, juat rebuHt with culti - bela. 614-992 -&amp;035 .
all exc . cond. , l == = = = = = = = = 71 Winnebago motor -h ome. lnaured. frll eatimltll .
Brigga StraHan motor, exc . vetora.
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
•1
.850
.
Cell
after
I
,
814
executive
bargain
,
e7.6Q&lt;;I.
Nearly new 1 bedroom Sofa . chair. rocker, otto· cond,purchaled new 1982
Phone 1114- ~87 -0638. con
66 Seed 8r Fertilizer leave phone • number It otter
unfurn . epertment with man. 3 tablet. (extra heavy for t249.96 will
11.
for 379-2868 .
614-446-7077.
atove &amp; refrig .. near HMC by Frontier). 168&amp; . Soft, $195 .150. New tabletop gas
t1 19 mo., water Included . chair end loveaeat, 127&amp;. ttove. 2 burner. all attach- New 2 row Ford corn
1972 Dodge Von . 318 . 3 8to11&lt;'1 TrN Worl&lt;. LondoC.ll446 -3617.
Sofa a 1nd chelra priced from monto 118 .50. 1. boy'o planter. Coli 614 -379 - WANT to loooo tobacco apeed. Rune good. e350 . coplng. bocl&lt;hoe work. , _
1- - - - - - - - - - $286 . to $895 . Tobloo, e45 parke coat. size 38, 84.50. 2488 .
quote, Mlton, Putnam, Ce- Coli· 6 t 4-992 -2478.
oorvlcos with mowing. Go
.
Furn . efflency '81)t. in Rio ond up to •126 . Hid•· • · Ladloo coati. oize 14, 16.00
boil. Coli Morgan Woodlawn
onywhore. 304-1176-2010.
Grande. all utilltlea paid, bedt,8440 . end up to ea .. vegetable food grinder, Tractoronly68hra. llkenew Farm . Pliny, 304-876 1976
Dodge
Poworwogon.
1180 mo . Call 446-6167 .
$626 ., Rocllnoro, •176 . to 4 grater ottechmonto , d!tc. turing plowo ond cuiti - 2276, 304-523-5S43 .
'A ton. club cab, good Painting Interior or ••terlor.
1- - - - - - - - - - 1360., Lompt f.am t28 . to $8.60 . Sunbeam oioctrlc vetort. Coi1441-8123 .
1- - - - - - - - - - condition
." 82,000. 304- " " ootimo111. Coli 17&amp;·
Furnlahed amell effiency 1 e7&amp;. 15 pc. dinette• from tkliiot. 18.50 . Koti, vopo .8344 or 448-8328.
676-2377.
profelllonel type gentleman $99., to $436 . 7 pc .. 1189. rizer $2 .60 . 114-992 - Fermell cub alngle row corn
only. Coli-448-0338 .
llo boon plontor. Complete
-~·-· ·
end up. Wood table with aix 20&amp;5 .
77 FORD 250 4-whool with fertilizer attachment,
1 -~-------choiro $42&amp; . to t745 . Doole
Plumbing
drlve . excellent condition. I 82
$150
.
Cell
614-&amp;83-81135.
Furniahed 3 rm. 1per1ment 1110 up to U25. Hutchoo, Red worms. •3.00 lb. or will
8r
Heating
71
Autos
for
Sale
cyl
,
4
opood
.
13.800.
304with prlv1te b1th · et 846 1610. end up, maple or pine ltllenilre ranch 1500. 814882 -2619 .
8 HP .Grovoly troctor with
Second Ave., Gtlllpolls . flnlah . Bunk bed complete 949-2779 .
electric atart with rotary
Ref. prefered . Call 446 - with mattre11e1. 1250. and
JEEP 1980 CJII. 4 opoad.
CARTER ' S PlUMBING
2216 .
up to $395 . Boby bodo, For sale . 200 Locuat lfllltl. plow llo cultivator, 32 ln. 1976 8ulcl&lt; Electro 2 dr.,
new top, good condition.
AND HEATING
PS,
P8,
AC.
AM
-FM·
otero
mower.
duel
tlr•••chelna•
1110. Mattre11e1 or box Clyde Smith . 614 -896 Cor. Fourth ond Pine
wogon. e3.000 fl•mo. Coli ... , ,8!0 or trade for cenle, 14300 . Conaider trade.
:-"
Garage 1pt . furnished, 1 springe. full or twin. 118 .. 1283.
farm equipment of equal 304-273 -3674, 8:30-&amp;:00. Phone 446-3888 or 446 446-1670 .
bdr., $226 , utilltloo pold, firm, 118. and 178. Queen
4477
.
value. Call 448-4637.
294'1r Noll Avo., Golllpollo . seta, 1195. 4 dr. chetta, 7 formel drean1 . Sizea
Call 446-4416 oftor 7PM .
$42. 6 dr. chooto. $64 . Bod 3-r2 . All colo&lt;~ . Prlcoo- •10 . VAC Cuo Tr~ctor. 1500.
JIM ' S PlUMBING llo HEATInquire at 31218 8owioo 73 Oidt 98 48,000 mi ., PS, 74 Motorcycles
fromoo, UO.ond $25 .• 10 ond 120. 614-949-2578 .
ING. Fomorly Dowltt'o
PB. tilt wlloel. olr. cruioo. 4
Rd . Ooxtor. Oh.
Apt. for rent . Half double-2 gun , Gun coblnoto. $360 .•
Plumbing. Coli 814-387dr.. HT. Coli 448 -7414
bd .room Apt. Adults pre· dlnono choirs UO. and 125, Topp" for pick-up. 8ft. bod .
0676 .
ferred . No pete . 81 4 -992 · G~torelectrlcrengea. 83215 Al1o RCA color T.V. and M.F. 1 OBI with cob ond between 3 llo9 PM .
duoio,
2883
houro.
18.4-31
2749 .
Honda 50 mini bike, gOod
up to 1375 . Baby mo- kitchen cabinet . 614-992tlrts . Ntw ldu com picker f 979 vw Rabbit deluxe. 4 cond., UOO. Call 441 '
troooao, 126 llo $35 .
7730 oftor 4 p.m.
83 Excavating
oupor ohollor pull typo. 2-30 dr .• 4 opd .. 43.000 mliao.
1 bed room Apt. 1198. mo .
UO, f26 . llo
-;;::::;::;:::;::=;==== ln . rows . 6 kill brotherl oxc. cond . Coli 614-24&amp; - 7322 .
includ ing utllitiea. Equal fromoo
king framel50 . Good ••II••'"" I ~
gravity btda with wagone. 8557 .
houting Opportunity . Con- tlon of bedroom oultoo. 55 Building Supplies
19S1 Kowoooki 440 LTD.
John Bean meter flow pump
tie l VIllage M•nor Apt1 . ced" ch11t1, rockan. metal
eklctrlc atert, 1500 mllea, DOZER WORK By Tod
model 500. Ellloon rolling 1980 Dottun 210. 32.000 lot of oxtrn . $1 ,400. 114- Hanfte . ponda. dltchea .
614-992-7787.
cabinets, swivel roc:kert.
cultivator. I row. 2 flat mlloo. otondord ohift. exc . 985-4238.
beHnMnta, etc . Call 441 Uaed Furnl1ure .. bookceae,
Building meteriiiJ
Efflency apartment in Mid· rengea, chalrt. end tablea. block, brick , nwer pipes. wagon bed1, IIZI 7x1 6 . cond a gas mileage .
4907 . Carter • Evtna
dloport. 992 -5434, 992 - waahera, dryera. refrigera- windows , llntela . etc . Andrew Croaa. Racine . 614- $3.400 . Oioll 614- 24&amp; - WANTED: Sot of pointl for Trenaportation .
6811 or 114-2411 -&amp;600 .
5914, 304-882-2666.
1974 Horley Oovldoon
tors end TV't , 3 milea out Claude Winter~, Rio Grande. 247-2862 .
. lonnie Bogga Exca111ting.
8)(175 . 614-742-2487 .
lulovllio Rd . Open flom to 0 . Coll814 -2411-6121 .
Horae corn planter 3 pt. 1976 Toyota Corolla
1 bedroom, furnished apt. In -tom. Mon. thru Fri .. Sam to
Dozer, backhoe . dump·
hhch. John D.. ro 6 mowing 11.000 ·mi . now broket
Roclno. No polo. 614-423- ei)ln. So(.
truck
. Worl&lt; by hour "' job.
Hondo
380
t1110.
Good
BUILD YOUR OWN HOME _mochlno . 32 -1Q gel. milk clutch $1 ,400 . Cell 446 8287 or 814-949 -2121 .
.
441-()322
oond . Afte• 5 p.m . 114- Coli 448· 71103.
5 room• end bath, 12.9915. oont. 114-992-1793.
4158 .
742-3084.
See our model1. 1-1143 and 4 room furni1hed tpta. Used dryert 11verel to 886-7311 .
NEW llo Uood Horvootore 1877 VW Rabbit 1 ownor. 1977 Kowoookl ' KX400, 84
614 -992 -5434 or 614 - choo11 from elao OE wether
Ela~trl~al
Structurea . Automated li- ox. cond.. 12 ,3711 . Coli 6.000 mlloo. Very good
992 -8.914 or 304 -882 - ilo dryer IVICidO poir e2110.
8r
Refrigeration
vaatock fHdlng~·computer 44&amp;-4198.
_2556 .
cond . Ponlol Forlng. $1100 .
Guerenteed 30 daya. Cell 56 Pete for Sale
toadoro .. Coli collect 814614-285-1207.
614-9112-8388.
A partmen11 . 304 · 67 &amp;.
Oottun 200SX. loodod .
885 -2280. John l . Botto.
DEPENDABLE WASHER5548.
11,4-992-6137.
COUNTY APPUANCES .
1981 YAMAHA 1.110 DRYER REPAIR. Guoron,•
1- - - - - - - - - - INC. Good uood opplioncoo, HILLCREST KENNEL • Koolo &amp;4 " IO&lt;ogo blower.
Mexim. shaft drive. MW
APARTMENTS . mob i le wether, dryere. refrlg .. TV 8oording oil broado. AKC John Dnre 13 hoe groin 1879 Oodge Omnl. 2 door tlrot. 2 holmott. $1800. tNd won.. Coli anytime
homes, houaes . Pt . Ph111ent ooto. 627'n 3rd . Ave .• Golli- Reg. Doberm1n1 pups efd drill. 3 point hhch 200 gol. hotch bock. 4: ~pood. g,ood excellent condition, 304- 814 -2&amp;6-8620 or 814286- 1207.
~
Doberman Stud Service. aprayer with 8 row boom. condition. 30 pius mil eo per 882.-3331 .
ond GoMipoilo . 614 -445- polio. Coli 446 -1699.
Coli 448 -7795.
8221 .
Tim Rock Form. 304-875- gallon. 17.000 mlioo. 814 SEWING Mochlno ropolro.
4308 .
8S5· 4281 oftor 11 :30 p.m .
New HouHhold Furniture,
1973 7110 CC motorcycle. ilrvlca. Authorized Singer
UNFURNISHED oportment •om.• appliances. onl lump DRAGONWYNO CAnERY
excellent condition. e1 1110. Solot llo 8orvico Sho"*'
for rent, 2 bedroom. oum 11200, choop. Inquire • KENNEl. AKC Chow pup- SEVEN ft. mo-r wltlt 38 1871 SUPER laotto. VW. Phone 304-178-4382.
Sclnoro. Fobrlc Shop,
CFA
Hlmoloyon,
Porploo,
Ferguaon. hydraulic control. lhlrp • clean. rune eood,
1210.00 (:oil Automotive Apt. 1188, Jocktan Eo1otoo.
Pomoroy. 882 -2284.
aian and Slame11 klnena. good condition 304-882 . $1898 . phono 304-878 sur·piy . 8 -5 . .304 -en 74 HONDA 380. 1300 . or
412"3 .
3104 .
22 8, 676 -6753.
Sewing machine brand new Call 446-3844 oftor 4PM.
boot offer . 304-871-2010. . ED'S APPLI"NCE REP"IR
orglnol price 1340 aolclng
SERVICE col.l City FumHuro
ONE bedroom apartment• 1128, portoblo wooher 11o 1.,,...,...,...,...,...,...,......,~-'1--,...,..._,,...____~ 78"Ciiov-Luv.goodcond . 26
304-675-2108 .
fo r tho oldoriy. AI u~litleo -dryer 1 yr. old axe . cond. r
milel per gallon on gla.
paid. Ter-ants pay 30 per- 1150· oo . No checkt. Coli
304-678-43118 . .11"800.
75
Bo•ta and
cent of their odjuoMd in- 814-388-8133 .
86 General Hauling
Motor•
for Sale·
7i
Novo.
cyt
.
out.
"•no.
co'meln thla HUD subakll11d
oxo. oondhlon. 304-87&amp; 1p1rt~nt .building . Twin
'·
3817.
Rivera Tower. phone 304- 54 Mia~ . Mer~handiae
Boot dock •1 00, Toildo JONES BOYS WATER SER878-6679. Equoi opportunfood IColal I 100. Coil 448· VICE . Coli 814:387-7471
Ity houalng .
15 prom dre••• 11111 7 · 13,
4731 or come 'to Pony Keg or 114-317-011111 .
Furnlahed one bedroom Ilk• new. Worn only once.
to ....
oportmont In ~oint Ploooont, Coli 448--1 719 or 448Nood oomothlng houlod
o• ..,_thine mowd7
v..-y cloon ond nice. No poto. _3_89
_4
_ .- - - - - - 1
We'll do it. Coli 441-31811
304-678 -13BI.
bot\oNnlondl .
NIC!. 2 bedroom duplox
JIMI WATER SERVICE .
ertmtnt. ~nfurnlahed ,
C1H Jim Lenior, 304-178ono, 304-878 -4624 oftor
7317 .
.
'•.
.p.m.

.I

. I'LL ~ET TH' ~IHERG'LL HAHA! I'M
AFRAID LAWR
1!E A LOT HAPPIER
IS RIIREL'I HAPPY'
flHEtl Y' FINALLY
CAN TELL 'EM ABOUT WITH MANAGfmT.
ANNIE!YM t£W PROJECT,

Houin for Rent

Condominium 2 bdr., 2
b1ths, completely furnished, ocean front , delly
meld service. 24 hr . aecurity
guard. hAl 2 poole &amp;. tennis
courtl. The Myrtle Beach
Rooort, Myrtia Hooch , SC.
Coli doyo 814-387 -04BO or
ovo. 114-446-3428 . •
2 bdr . houoo In Goilipolio.
Coll814-387-0828 oftor 8.

4 bdr. home In Chuhire. Gil
hoot. e1 96 mo. Coli Wlumon Agency. 441-3143 .
2 bdr, houoe In city full
b11em.,t, carpeted &amp; gaa
fumence. eduhs. no petl .
Coli 448-0958 .

2 bdr. hou•. ltove &amp;
refrigerator, carpeted, un1\imlohad. Good location .
Coli 448 -3949 .
2 bedroom houae. Laroe
living room. kitchen llo bath.
Fu rnlahed . Overlooking
Ohio Rlvor. Aduito
Brown'l Trailer Pa1te. 81 992-3324.

onlx.

2 bedroom houte, completely redecorated. carpeted. ltOfm wktdoWI end
dooro. Coli 814-1192-3090.
HOUII for Nnt, 504 E. Mtin
St..; Pomeroy, Oh. Ploaoo
ooll . 814 -982 -1144 botw.,.. 10 o.m. llo 6 p.m.
'

2 bedroom home, large lot
on doad ond St. In Aaclno .
Wall·to wall carp.t. Depoalt
requ)rad , Avoliobio Moy 1.
614.423 -8257 "' 114 949•2121 .

8:30

.

Coufttry Home, Snowville

oroo~ Mole• ochooio, 4 bod·

10omo, living, dining, kitchon:lloboth. Woodhoot,goo
bechup, 1pring water.
Gordon opoco, lorgo born,
chlc~on hOUIO, reforoncot
roquirod, dopooH . Phone
614,8S -1883.
HouN tor ...,t, 302 11th
-Stroft. 2 bodroomo, good
oondldon, 304 -87&amp;-8323.

42 ""oblle Homea
·

for Rent

1 bdr. tum. apt ,, I mo', lleM
roquhd piuo no clop ..
117! por mo .. no child...,,
no poto. Coll448-3867 tltor
8.
Camper Trailer lcptl for
aummer. aecluded wooded
eree. Overlooking Ohio
rlv«. VIc •rown, Mlnln'·
vtllo. Oh. Coli 81 4 •882·
3324.
..,.-- - ' - - --ic2 bedroom• in Rliolno. 614367-0211.
TWO bedroom lrlliler. kltchti'l furnlehed. coupiea
o'!ly. 1110.00 month, rotoronooo. 304-178·1078.

lao Vegas. NV
(I)
ill) Too Clooo for

·m

FiftLJ bucks

for atwodollar ho~se

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

.

e

2 bedroom• . eli' cOnd .. fur~
nlthtd end unfin'n lahed,
booutiful Rlvorviow In Konauge . Foater' a Mobile
Homoo. Call 446-1802.

(]J Top Rank Boxing from

.

II?

WINNIE
SORRY

,.YOU'RE FORGIVEN .
\TWAS SHORT

I COULDN'T GO TO

THE CONCERT WITH YOU
THE OTHER NIGHT, ANN
.MARIE,

NOTICE. PERHAPS
SOME OTHER

13UT I

HAD MADE
OTHER
PLANS.

BARNEY

JOGHAID !!

'IOU
FERGOT '/OUR
SCHOOLBOOKS

BALLS 0' FfRE !!
I ONLV GOT
TWO HANDS

•.

.of..l4

-•Y

r,

EFFICIENCY oportmont, 1
aduH, utllltloo pold. prlvoto,
304-178·2083 .

87

Uphol1t1ry

. ,.
•~

2-8ft. PU topporo 188-t l l.
1·1\&gt;i ft. fiberglon topper,
Iiiio now. 1200. Cell 441·
73U .
.

Otolllo=-.1
.........
eon
:se. uoo.

For ...,t SIHping Roomo
ond Hght hou• kaoplng
moma .. Park Centrat HoteL
Coli 4411-0788.

"-kotllot ..- .

houot
247-

lncl ••""·

.,
I

• •' It

••

I'LL KNOCK ON E:VERV
POOR! I'LL HEI.P ALL TI-lE
LITTLE KIDS II&gt;! il!E ..
WORLD. WJ10 CAN'T.GIVE
UP THEIR BLANKETS ...

'(OUR HEAP DOESN'T

EVEN FEEL WARM !

~OWREVI U.....,._ lit. ' .•
lox 124, l't. .....iont
•·
304-871-4164.
• '

-·

(]) Nightllno
1JD MOVIE: 'Incident on o
Doli&lt; Stroot'
·
al (12) l..lot Word
•oun•moko
12:30
(2) 11) Loti Night with
Oovld ~ermori
I]J Jeok Bonny-ShOw
(J)
boll: 'Tho Old Boll
it G•m•·

e

ae ..

TRISTATE .
• .
. .
U"HOUT!RY SHOP
•:
1 113 loc. Aw .. Gollipoiif.
'.
4411-7133 "' 441-1133.
•'

, I

'

PEANUTS

Comfon Monroe fi nds the
Q!&lt; l of his dre ams. (R)
I!J Cll tJD Simon llo Simon
I]) illJ Mystery! We. tho
Accused .' Paul finds hap pi·
ness with Myra . (60 min.)
[Close. d C optioned]
9:30 IJ Cil Cil Steve Londoburg
Show Steve performs several comedy sketches with
guetts Lise Sutton, James
Martinez and laurie Suo .
(]) Ill ill) It Tokoo Two
Usa·s blind date sweepa
her off her fe et until aha
learns his in ten tio ns .
1 0:00 R (2) Cil Hill Stroot 81uoo
Cept. Fur illo is caught be · '
tween a superior and a
counc ilman 11nd Coffey
deals with a Vietnam ve·
tare n who is holding ~dl 'Os·
tego. (R) (60 min.)
C%J Great Pleasure Hunt II
Discover t he pleasure s vou
can buy when mo ney is no
obje ct.
(2) MOVIE: 'Silent Movlo'
Cll lll (12) 20/20
D I]) tJD Tuokor'o Witch
Rick and Amanda searc h
for the mining g irlfriend of
a_pop l inger. (60 min .)
CIJ AV.ngert
[II Newewatch
til) INN Nowo
10:15 [() TBS Evening Nowo
10:30 (I) Star Tlmo
illJ Holooouot: Artloto/
Image Tonight's program
is e tribute to Jew ish ar·
tists who surv ived a nd per·
is hed during the Holocauat.
til) In S•oroh of.. ..
11 :00 .. (}) (I) • Cll ® Ill !lll
Newi
(}) MOVIE: 'Excollbul'
Cil Nowo/Sporto/Woothor
I]) Dovo l(lion et Lorge
illJ Sign OH
fJl Benny Hili Show
~1 :30 G (}) 11) Tonight Show
Johnnv'• gu asti are Priscilla Bernas and Mickey
Rooney . IRl (60 min.)
(}) MOVI~ : 'Tho Soo
Wolve••
(I) Anothor lifo
(]) ESPN SportoContor
[() Cotllnt
[() Bonny Hill Show
D I]) Quincy A l(oCk
co ac h is charged with n&amp;.g llgent
homic ide
and
Quincy 11 called in to in vest_i9ote . (A) (80 min .)
()) PBS Loll Night
~ All In tho Fomlly
... (12) Nlghtiino
Ill Honoyrnoonoro
12:00 (I) Burne llo Allan
Cll MOVIE: 'The Deadly

.

-. '

. . ·.

;:00

· Cil uat word

• ()) MOVIE: 'McCloud:
The Day !ll•w York Tu•nad
Blue•
I]) Sign Off
()) 1 Morrlad J011n

THI~.

Now IUTOngll lhe elided letton to
fonn lhe IUif)rioo · U IUQ·
goaled by tho obo"" colloon. ·

· ) KI

ill 700 Club

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

THEY KePTCA~i.IN&lt;S
HIM A C~ACKPPT
U&gt;JII \.. HE

H\1

(lOY - (R)

••II

I--------'--

ISTAPOLj

Kahenamoku Chemp•on·
ship is presented.
\]) Good Neighbors
illJ Inside Story Hedding
Carter examines press pe r·
tormance involv ing one
major news .story .
9:00 IJ Cil Cil Glmmo A Brook
One of the Chief's officers
dec ides to announ ce he's

1---------:--:-

·..

I I I

el) lp Cova ~~g~ of th·~ D~ke

ve

e.

BOJAN

·m

a.

41

Nowo
(2) MOVIE: 'Hanky Tonk
Freeway
~ Tic Tee Dough
Cll Andy Griffith
Cil Nawa./Sportt/Weather
(I) (DJ 3-2-1, Contect
Ill Ch•rlle'li Angelo
G (2) Cil NBC Newe
(}) MOVIE: ' Doctor It S..'
(I) MOVIE: ' Rolling Homo'
C!! ESPN'o SporttWomon
CIJ Gomer Pyio
Cll Cll (12) ABC Nowe
Cll IJD CBS Newt
\]) Or. Who
(DJ Ovor Eooy
G (}) P.M . Megorlno
(]) ESPN'• Sportoforum
[() Corol Bumon
[() Entertainment· Tonight
Cil From Pregoncy . to
Puberty
D Cll Tic Toe Dough
\]) (DJ
MocNoii-Lohror
Roport
tJD Now•
Cll !lll People's Court
I!IIStorTrek
8 (}) Lie Dotoctor
(J) ESPN SporttContor
[() Bob Newhart Show
Cll D Cll Family Feud
I]) Bu•lnooo Report
'(D You Aokad For It
(DJ Lilt Chanco Garage
Cll (12)
Enterta inment
Tonig_!lt
G ClJ Cil Feme A well ·
known Broadway star trie•
to buy Lydie ·o lovo. (R) (60
min .)
(}) MOVIE: ' McLin1ockl'
(}) MOVIE: 'Mirror, Mirror
(I) I Spy ,
(!) ln•ldo the USFl
[() MOVIE: 'Murphy'o Wa r
[() al (12) Benton Benson
ge11 a w orking vacation
aboard e yacht. IR) [Closed
Captioned]
D Cll CHI Magnum. P.l.
\]) illJ Sneak Provlowo Cohosts Ne al Gabler a nd Jeffrey lyons take a look at
what's happ ening at the
mQv ies.
·
MOVIE: 'Ac rooo tho
Poclflc'
(!) lnt'l Surfing Champion·

e

1913 Yoll-otono oolf.,..., • .••
tolnild troller. 16 ft.. .,ad .
cond ., ooldng 11,100. Coli
·
614-387-0132 . .
••

' ;..

60 in . con1ole stero exc.
cond . with AM -FM redlo.
S-track tape player Ia tum
table. Coli 614-246-9398 .

Good uaed Sears refrig . with
Ice maker, 1130 . Cell 44.6 1478.

8:30
EVERY $1NGI..E ON!? OF THEM
HAS T~ ()?e HcADSHS ON.
W/10 IS TAIS GUY, ANVI'JAVf

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

Advent wide acreen TV. ex.
cond . Coli 446-4303 .

PHARY

G (l)(J) tiJ CilllD CII !lll

Motore Homes
8r C•mper•

t

-

to fcrrn

EVENIN-G

197~ Itt. truck _
C.mper. •
furnace. etove. alnk. tiHpe ' ·.....
4 . 3114-1112-2888.
.

Now llo Uood Troy BuiH
Tillera . Swithera Imple- ·K Electric Guitar, t1 00.00
ment, St . Rt . 7. North of Cell 304-676 -6123.
Golilpolio . Coli 446-0475 .

lour orllirtlrY -

THURSDAY

C•mping
Equipment

79

~.

4/14/83

78

1 -:3-:-8:--:8-·8_2_11_3_·~----~
I

c:lJWJroiD~~r~w:oai't:
Ut_._ .....
ono- tooodl-.

Television
Viewing

R_. .ir

Joop outfh wlloolo, ongln•.

Yowng rabbit ec.&amp;o ... or
•4.00 for more than one.
Coli446 - 8~22 .

46 Space for Rent

Lott for aale located 6
minutea from Holzer Hospi tal. Approved Subdiviaion .
Coll448 -2314 oftor 4: 30 .

and location . 614 -992 ·

. by laiTy Wright

1 Radbono coon hound.
Woikor pupo. Cllil 814-!1792700.

1----,--"--------

bedroo m fumi t hed
1 acre lot 6 mi . from Holzer mobile home . $180 .00
hoapitel . Jult aff At. 160 month , deposit required.
out floyd -Clark Rd . 700ft. 304-675 -7308 .
Coll448-0390 .
1 -----~---

1 acre on Mlddlepon tide of
Flood road . Beautiful view

Reg. mele Pood~. 9 n,oa.
old . Coli 8t4· 248-9498.

KIT"'N' CARLYLE'!'

A!(C Doberman puppioo.
Fi,.wood apllt a cut to uo. 304-678-1822 .
lenght . Pick"' delivered . We 1- - - - : - - - - - - - - ' - honor HEAP Vouchers. C.H 'Golden Pelimlno mere, ideal
614-2116-8245 .
for children: woN b•Oko.
Yo~rllng filly, hoitor b.ako.
woll monnorad. 304-878Warn 12 volt electric winch 4217.
with all ettachmenta. 8,000 ~:~~=~~~;j====
lbo . cop. 3.000 lbo. Holot. 57
Now coot ISOO. Will ooil for
lnatrumenta
eeoo. Coii446-4900.

33 Farms for Sale

35 Lots

for Sale

1
coffee table
47'1:ox 18'1Jx1 5'1r ln. and 1
ond tobio 28x18'1Jx20Y,

1 Ox66 CASTLE "\Obilo
home. P8rtly furn ished, 2
bodroomo, 13300 . 304 773 -6063 .
for

54 M isc. Merchandise

1913

PMIIJTIBW8fhere:

THE (

I I I Xr I )
(Anlworl-)

Yesta•day·ol Jumbles: ~ATHE POUND ElEVEN SYLVAN
Anawer: What he aald wt'len the psychlatrlat eeked
whether he had trouble making up hi s
mlnd -"YES ANO NO"

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

South wins contract
NORTH

not been able to ex plain. he
bid three spades.
East might well have doubled North 's four-heart call,
but he w as so happy to be off
th e minor suit hook that he
passed. It was well that he
did pass. South had bid like
an incura ble optimist . but he
played t he hand well enough

4-II ·U

+94

'fl9 7
t A86 4
+ Q8752
EAST
WEST
• 75
+J 108 62
'fi K8654
'fl 2
tKJ &lt;073
t Q
+ AKJ94
10 3
SOUTH
+A KQ3
'fi AQJ 10 3
t 952
+6

to bring his contract across

+

the goal line .
West opened the king of
clubs and shi fted to a diamond th at was won by
dummy's ace. Now cam e the
first key play . South r urted a
club Immediately.
Then he cas hed the ace
and king of spades and
ruffed a . th ird spade ·wi th
dummy's seven spot . Next
came another club ruff, East
discard in g a spade. Then a
ruff of the queen of spadl'S
with dummy's last trump
whil e poor East had to follow with his lasl spade.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

,.,

West

North

Eut

South

2 NT

Pass
••

J+

3•
Pass

Pa~il

Pass

P.ass
Opening lead·

•K

~ast

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

West's two no-trump overca ll was one of those unusual
no·lrumps designed to show
both minors . East wasn 't at
all happy ahou t having to
bid a two-card suil, but he
responded like a proper

partner .
South might have doubled
to show a good· hand w1th
both majors, but for som e
reason or other that he has

was now down to five

trumps and ·had l o r uff .
South over -ruffed and was
down lo two diamonds a nd
the A-Q of trumps. He led a
diamond and East had to
ruff his partner's trick a nd
lead a low trump .

South finessed hi s queen
succe:!iSfu ll y for his ninth
tr ick and still held the trump
ace for hi s contract.
Note thai a trump shift by
West at trick t wo would
have spoil ed Soul h's play
provided East held back his

kmg.
(N t;W s i~API': It b: NH: I U'RI S Jo~

ASSN .)

&amp;M.wd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Muslim 's
faith
3 K eep quiet

ACROSS
I School subj .

S Hacienda
brick
10 Pallid
11 Portly
13 Ca lumny
14 Punish by fi ne
15 Trilby, e.g .
16 Burrows
17 Shinto templ e
18 Upright
principles
20 Coa l 21 Eng lish

river

4 Odin's .son
5 Fit for

plowing
6 Cupolas
7 Hesident
1suffix I

- Yesterday's Answer

H Son~ sponl&lt;ul -

cu ..~ l y
9 Becharm

19 -· Barrell
22 Stup's

12 lnformJl l
term uf
address
16 Swiss

riggi ng
support
23 Quarrel
24 Tropi cal
crocodiles

22 Diminutive

rtver

25 Savoir-faire
27 Conunander
29 Cubi c m eter
:10 Scope
34 E lk

:16 You (Ger . !
37 Rec line

·'·

prefix

23 T heatrica l
segment

25 Garcon's awnt1"77"""+---11-+ 28 House !Sp.l
27 E ndure
28 Border
29 Part
3lllove I Lat . l
32 M ake lace
33 Regrettable
35 Halted
37 One and only
38 Unabridged
39 " Bus Stop"
playwright
40 Diaphanous
•41 Czech

..

.

river
DOWN

I Jumble

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's
11

how
AXYDLBAAXRJ,ONGFELLOW

to

work

It :

One letter ol mp!y stands l or anot her. In this samp le A la
used lor the three L's , X for lhc two O's, el e. Si n gle l eiters.
opootropheo. the length and lol'matlon of lhe words are oil
hlntt. Eoeh day the code 1ellero are dift'erent.
CltYPTOQUOTES

X

HBI PS WW S

NGWMBPW

D X YS L
WMXW

- · D D S

X

G L

X ZJ

MSXUW ,.

NMB

X

DXZ

TBBV

MXLZ ' W

NBDXZ

X

KB W

BT

XZJ

M S XQ

HE IS INVARIABLY IN A HURRY.·

BEING IN A HURRY IS ONE OF THE TRIBUTES HE PAYS
TO UFE.-ELIZABETH A. BIB~

.,

.' .

. ...
••

.

Q S V P C J

Yeaterdlly'a Cryploquole:

.....

k

I ' •' '•

...1\ • l'·
, ,~

�. •1~The

Pan ten~y Middleport, Ohio
(

Daily Sentinel
.

.

'

lhunday. April 14, 19iiJ .

.

'

Food stamp cuts would hit "poorest of poor' :
~

WASHINGTON (APJ -The$1.1
billion President Reagan wants to
cut from food stamps ne&gt;II year will
come mostly from the meal budgets
of millions of poor Americans,
rather than a clampdown, as he
clalms, on "waste and corruption."

from nearly~ million of the nation 's

according to .a report Wednesday by
congressional bu&lt;lget analysts.
The ri!port.\heslarkes! to date on
the Impact of the· 'food stamp
proposal. shows the plan slashing
$190 million lp ~neflts next year

poorest households. Overall, It says,
the cut would take $874 mllllon from
nearly two-lhlrds of the 7.9 mlllloil
households now receiving the nutrt·
lion assistance.
Rep. Leon Panetta, [).Calif.,
chairman of the House Agriculture
nutr1tlon subcommittee, said the
Congressional Budget Office find·
lngs clearly refute the admlnlstra·
tlon's position that the spending cut
would not hurt those who need .the
fOOd ald. Instead, he said, lthlts "the
'poorest of the poor."

Tax resisters given support
PHilADELPHIA (AP) -Quakers are taking the lead In a growing
movement that subjects members
to a painful dllemina -obeying the
law or following their pacifist beliefs
by refusing to pay taxes that go to
the military . .
When most Americans meet the
l~temal Revenue Service deadline
FTl&lt;!aY for filing ll]cometax returns,
upto10,troforms from Quakers will
contain adjustments for withholdIng the "war tax," saldBUIStrong,a
member of the Religious Society of
Friends' War Tax Committee.
"I used to think three years ago
that thls was an ott-the-wall,
peculiar obsession of a handful of
particular Quaker s," said Strong,
who has chosen to keep his Income
below the taxable level for three
years.
"But we're convinced now that
this Is moving to the center. You're
getting people who are thinking
about It for the very · first time.
That's exciting," Stropg said.
Other churches are beginning to
Join the movement, Strong said,
adding he's particularly heartened
by support from Roman Catholics.
"We're 100,000; they' re50mllllon.
When our concern statts bouncing
back' as their concern, don't you
think we feel good?"
• Some members of the two faiths
were preparing to join In protest
today, when several hundrCd protesters planned to turn over their tax
money io the Ca tholic hospiCe
Brothers of the Good Shepherd
during a Quaker witness and
· afternoon rally a t City Hall , .
The protest was among 70
planned across the country, with
thOusands of Quakers participating,
said Strong, 53, who Is on Jeaveirom
hJs job as a trust officer at a bank to
advise tax resisters.
Quakers, who abhor killing and
live by the creed of "God In every
man," helped lead the struggle to
free American slaves In the early
19th century . Some were Imprisoned for refusing to fight In World
War I; others persuaded Congress
In 1940 to establish a conscientious
objector provision to the draft laws.
The Quakers' tax resistance has
taken many forms.
Some have refused to pay a 3
percent excise tax on their tele-phone bOis, which Strong cla ims
raises $2 billion 'year for the

a

Hogenauer, 70, says he hasn 't paid
taxes since 1948.
"I've lived a life of pr inciple and
I 'Ucontinue to stand by It," he said.

I

Agriculture secretary John overpayments ... For everyone's
Block disagrEed. "We stand on the sake, we must p1t an end to such
statements we've made before," be waste and corruption."
At the same time, the president
told The Associated Press. ''There's
a substantial savings to come bun Promised that "Our standard liere
reducing the error rates, and that's wtllbe fairness ... thai the taxpayers
what we're proposing."
hard:earned dollars go only to the
Reagan, in his Slate of the Union tn!ly needy; that ilone of them are
addresS Jan. 25, said he was turned away."
Six clays later, Reagan proposed
determined to stamp out fraud and
waste 1n ~ailed entitlement cutting food stamps, estimated to
piograms. •1And, I am sorry to say, $12 blJilon In the CWTent fiscal year,
there's a lot ofltoutthere. In the food · by that same $11 bllllon figure he
star'np-program alone, last year we claimed as corruption or error.
ButtheCBOanalyStssaldtllatcut
Identified almost $Ll billion In

Weather forecast
Seventy percent chance of show·
ers tonight. Low 45-&amp;1. Winds
southwesterly to westerly 10-20
· · mph. Friday, mostly cloudy and
cooler with a 40 percent chance of
showers. High 50-55.
Exlended Ohio Forecast
Satunl~ through Monday:
Genet'lilzy fair. Hlgllci45-M Satur~and Sunday and 52-62 Mon~.
Lows mostly In the atfi.

Jobless'rate given
WASHINGTON (AP) -Here is a
list or the unemployment rates In
&amp;Orne Ohio metropolitan areas In
February, as reported on a season·
aUy unadjusted basis Tuesday by
the Bureau of Labor StaUstics:
AAron. 14.3; Canton, 17.5; Cincinnati, no figures avallable; Cle\leland, JJ.l; Columbus, 9.9; Dayton,
12.4; Toledo, 14.8; YoungstownWarren, 20.1.
Statewide, the February unem·
ployment rate was 14.5 percent, up
from 12.2 percent a year earlier.

W-eekly ~nnonette

Science fair winners

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•

Retrain~¥g session set

EXCELLENT
SAVINGS THIS WEEKEND
ALL
OVER THE. STORE
.
AND AT OUR MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

LLOYD

for furloughed .miners

Two Day Sale!

SUMMER FURNITURE

ALBANY - Sou thern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs Division will
begin a comprehensive retraining
program next week as the first step
In recalltng 1,400 furloughed employees to resumP full mining
operations.
Harry Lester. vice president
general manager of the division
said, "Most of the Meigs employees
who were furloughed have been off
the job for four to six months. We
st rongly beli eve that a reaequalntance with equipment operating and safety procedures wlll
help eliminate accidents and permit an orderly resumption of coal
production In the safest and most
efficient manner."
. Lester . announced a tentati ve
retraining schedule that ca ll s for
supervisor, technical and elerlcal
employees 'to begin sessions on
April. lB.- Retraining sessl~ns for
United Mine Workers-affiliated
employees should be phast'&lt;i in,
starting April 25.

MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS

"FIBERCRAFT" is an exclusive outdoor fum~ure fabric
developed by lLOYD and proven through many years of
successful use. nhas an 'air-cooled' weave that remains
pleasan~y cool... .even when exjXlied to the sun for long
periods. The fabriC IS easy tv clean w~h warm soap and
water. The f~briC also_has a natu111l "give" because of
steel Wire retnforc1ng 1n each hor~onal strand.

.

Sizes S(34·36],. M (38-40)', L (42·44) and XL (4&amp;48). Good selection of colors.

Thermal. Zip Front Hooded Style ............ Sale 115.00
116.95 Zip Front Hooded Style .......................Sale 113.00
'9.95 Pullover Crew Neck Style ....................... Sale 1HO
'9.95 Sweat Pants To Match .............., ............ Sale 17.50·

119.95

Reg. '82.00 lo-Back Chair ......Sale lfi9.00
Reg. 193.00 Hi1h-Back Chair ...Sale '79.00
Reg. '162.00 l.oon&amp;IIH' ........ .. Sale '137.00
Reg. 1176.00 2 Seat Glider .... Sale'l49.00
Reg. '245.00 Canopy Swing .. Sale '208.00

SALE!

BOYS'
SWEAT ,: SHIRTS·

YOUR CHOICE
ONLY

Sizes S (&amp;8). M (10·12), L (14·16). XL
(18-20). Solid colors.
Springfoot

• Serta Perfect
Sleeper q uti ted
lnnersprlnl{ ·mattress

Made

by

lfi.95 Crew Neck
Pullover ................... Sale •5.30
111.95 Zip Front
Hooded ................... Sale 19.00

• Styles, Fabrics, and Colors
Reg. 1756.00
to fill most decorating needs Queen or Full Size

TAPE AND
RECORD SALE

BOYS'
KNIT SHIRTS

Weekend Sale Prices on our entire stock

S12es 8 to 20 1n a w1de sele&lt;:tion Qf styles lor
everyone - Crews. Tank Jops, Cut Oils. Dressy
Knrts and p~nty of kmts to wear w1th "'ns. Buy
what you nee&lt;! now and save. Reg, price $4.95 to
$14.95.

Tapes and lP Albums. Instrumental~
Country, Pop, Jau, llue Grass, Religiou~
Mo~e Sound Tracks

Boys' 14.95 Knit Shirts.. .... : .. '4.07
Boys' 16.95 Knit Shirts ........ '5.67
Boys' 18.95 Knit Shirts ......... '7.37
Boys' 112.95 Knit Shirts ..... '10.57

Reg. 15.79 ........ .... Sale'4.65 ·
Reg. 17.79 ........... Sale 16.25
Reg. 110.79 .......... Sale '8.65
Reg. '13,79 ......... Sale '11.05

and pre-recorded S.Track and CassettE

Special rack or new SP&lt;ing Bradley,
Douglas Marc and l&amp;K Sportswear.
Ptjy/ootton blends, 100% p(jyesters and
poly/gabs Jackets, Slirts, Pants, Knrt Tops,
blouses and Vests.
M~ sizes 3/4 to 19/20.

Reg. $14.00 .... .......... Sale $11.19
Reg. $19.00 .............. Sale $15.19
Reg. $25.00 .............. Sale $19.99
Reg. $36.00 .............. Sale $28.79
Reg. $41.00 ' ............ .. Sale $32.79

SAVE FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY

Beautdul new colors for spring and summer. Polo
shirts, kn~ tops, l:louses and tllnk tops. Mohths
sizes thru size 14.

Reg. $4.00 ...............................Sale $3.19
Reg. $6.00 ...............................Slit $4.79
Rea. $9.00 ..................... :.........Slit $7.19
$13.00 ...........................Sale $10.39

lee and Wrangler Boys' llerlim• .All are
pre-washed, ~llligflt lei and boot !tares. Reguor

ozes and Sims 8 to 16, HuskiOS 8 to 18 and
Student Sizes 26 to 30 "'"' w!h 30 to 36 1nch
lengths. Stock up noo

$2295 'DENIM
JEANS
Choose straight leg or 1m flare

$}733

KNIT
SHIRTS

LITTLE BOYS'

SUMMER
.SHIRTS

Tremendous-. of sl)les and c:okn. Ctew

netks, shirts will colto~&gt;, tlnk tops, , ..-ott..
dress! IIW. CISUII$ and jeans slirts.

c.m...,

V.n HMen. Wtongter brard• Sizes S, M.Land
XI,. ~ price, $695 Ill $19.95. Hen!'s how )1)11
saw:

Tank Tops, Mid Shirts, Kn~ Tops. Jerseys and
Sweat Shirts. Months Sizes to Size 7.

'
SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

$399

O!Oo.

USE OUR FREE PARKING LOTS

becamf' nrcessary,

LPS t£&gt;r said,

because of th e downtum In the
nation 's ("C(}nom.v and 1hf' reduc('d

demand
ca u .~PS

for elect I'lcltv , which

a corresponding decline in

lhed&lt;•mand for coal. He pointed oul

som e' employees wlll !t'turn to work

that Amf'rlcan E:lectric Powrr sold

a t Meigs In dlffr rmt positions than
th&lt;' ones from · .whfrh they W&lt;' l'&lt;'
fur·toughed .
13c'causr of the unrc11alnty of thr
economy. no S]X'Ciflr da te has .V&lt;'I
been finalized for thr I'('Surnptlon of

13.7, po•rce nt lf'SS elec1 ric energy In
-1~1!!~ than It had ·- in 1~ 1. and that
cont in uit y of production will be
con!ingf'nt upcm sustalnf'(l highr r
h•vPis of t'('Onomlc activit,\· In thf'
r f'g lon.

/

....."._,.,

'

Lester explained that. becauSf' of
provisions of the National Bltuml·
nous Coa l Wage Agro'&lt;'men t of 1981.
' It Is necessary to rebid nf'a rly all
job!; at the thrC'&lt;' mines. Flcca usrof
thl' rPblddlng, It Is poss lbi ~ · that

has IJ&lt;oen added .
Furloughs a t the Meigs Division

Weather forecast

eU~rl•ltlr
C~!O[ CIRO

review thP samP topics .

tncrpas('d hum tnJ to 700 tons per
hour. and a coal cleaning circuit

Additional CCC funds sought

basic styles. 14Y! ounce f'lo-Fauk
Blue Denim' that won't s~rink,
stretch or pucker. Pre-washed too.
Waist sizes 27 In 42 with lengths
30, 32, 34 and 36 inches. Save
Th~ Wffi!end.

MEN'S

Men's 16.95 Knit Shirts ...15.49
Men's 19.95 Knit Shirts ..... '?.~
Men's 112.95 Knit Shirts •110.29
Men's 114.95 Knit Shirts . 111.88

~0 .. 10Y,

SoulhC'rn Ohio Cottl mana~£'mf'T)!

also pla ns a meeting with officials
of the three United Mine Workers
loca ls .on Monday. April · IH, to

Celeste lauds early accomplishments

MEN'S WRANGLER

BOYS DENIM
JEANS

Boys' 114.95 Jeans ........ 111.66
Boys' '17.95 .Jeans ........ 113.96
Boys' 119.95 .Jeans ....... '15.56
Boys' 121.95 .Jeans ........ '17.16

SUMMER TOPS

mines to full ope ra lion. a nd re\1l'w

goa ls a nd obl ec tl ves fo r the
di,1sion .

Meigs motorist has accident

C"OAT AND
JACKET SALE

LITTLE GIRLS'

kick-off to the retraining program,
to describe plans fo r restar11ng the

Gallia man dies in home fire

.,

JUNIOR

Lightweight Spring jackets and all
weather coal5. Windbreakers, vinyl
rain jackel5, poly/cot1on jacket~
. Junior s~es S, M, Land 5/6 TO 15/ 16.
Re&amp; $6.00 to $79.00.

Its exempt and non-exempt C'm·
ployees at 2 p.m. , Sund ay, April 17,
at the Rutl a nd Civic Center. at a

coa l production a t the Meigs
&gt;Division, l.Rster said. He Indicated,
however. that It Is posslble thatcoal
produclloJl could resulll(' as earlv
a·s the Wl'&lt;'k of Ma y 2. One of the
hlghll~hts
of the back -to-work
process at the Meigs Division will
be the Initial start-up of the newly
l'Xpanded and r&lt;'nova tNi RaC'Coon
No . :1 preparation plant. The
capadty of this plant has bl'&lt;'n

flu! the higher food prlt't!s were mor·•· than wiped
WASHINGtoN (AP I - Wholesale prices, driven
out by the good news on Prtergy Pxpenses. Throverall
downl!Y cheaper aU, fell 0.1 percent in March and 4.1
energy price dcdlm• outpaced the previous month' s
percem, calculated annually. for they&lt;•ar' s flrst thrw
2.9 percent drop. Em·r·gy prices had faliPn 4.2jl&lt;'ret•nt
months , the government said today.
HOUSE GUTI'ED - A house along Ohio 7 near seen this morning. Smoke reportedJ.v killed the
In I he .la nua1y rt•purt.
Energy prices overall fell 3.2percent for the month.
The only dark d oud on tlw t•ncrgy front today was
Addison was gutted by fire Thursday night, leaving
buDding's tenant, Ralph "Pappy" Bush.
the fourth straight decline. Gasoline pri&lt;'C'S tumbled 6
near-*eletal remains of the two-story structure, as
·
thc2
.:1 percent im:J\ 'aSC' pust(l(l for na tura I ~as pr\C('S.
per~nt and ·hOme heal ing oil prices dropped 7.6
Those
prices had risen :1.2 jX'rcf'nt in the pr l'l't'Oln~
percent. For the quarter, energy prlecs overall
month
.
plunged 34.4 percent at an a nnual ratP.
'lltt·• t•nr•,·gy prk'f'S rcp o11C'd 100ay W( ~l '(' fll ' l uall~' for
Not since 1976 have wholesale priers fall e n for a full
F'l'bl·uary;
those calculat ions lag a month lx•hlnd Ill&lt;'
calendar quarter. the Labor Department said in
rtosl
or
the
lndPx . DepartmC'nt ana lyst s say Pncrgy
releas ing today's price repor1 . The economy's
An eyewtmess at the scene said
ADDISON (0VP) - A 55-year· Home.
cornpanif's rl'por t thf'ir prices too lat f' for indu!-ilon In
January-March performance was the best for an)'
old Addison man was killed in a !Ire
Investigators believe the blaze this morning the blaze was not
ltll' most cun,•nt monthly 01('asun •.
quarter
since
1952.
which swept through his two-story began in a first -floor room when hot immediately noticeable when traEnPrh')' pr\('(&gt;S havf' fallen In n &gt;Ccnt m onths largl'I.V
The
report
lent
fresh
suppon
to
roconomists
'
home Thursday night, according to coals rolled out of a fireplace. vrlllngdown 7about the lime thefire
IJt.'t'aUso'
of worldw ldP cuts In cr1.1dt' oil prices. But
predictions
that.
for
all
of
1983,
innation
at
the
·
the Gallipolis Fire Department.
Firefighters found Bush' s body In was reported. When hP returned In
thus('
r
rductlons
arf' not PX JX'Cicd to triggt'r furthf'r
wholesale
level
may
be
Ipss
than
1
pcreent.
whic
h
.
tha t _direction 15 minutes later, the
Dead is Ralph E. "Pappy" Bush, this room.
rl'lail
prin'
cuts
;
lndf'('(t , many oil companlf'S hc1vP
would
be
the
economy's
best
showing
sine&lt;'
I
hP
55, Rt . 3, Cheshire.
According to batalllon leader · entire structure was a blali'.
n
'l'l'
llt
\y
st;1rtf'd
raising
pricc•s to r'f"tail d Pi.d~ · rs .
mld-19005.
A neighbor who was also at site
Frank Swanson, who Jives Bush. the house, owned by Jay Hall.
Prlco•
l'hangt'S
that
show
up In the produN'r prh•
As for last month , food prices roSI'0 ..1 p&lt;'rcc·nt . thC'ir
today said there was no electricity in
nearby, noticed the blaze at Bush's was a total loss.
m
r-a...,
UJ"C'
arf'
a
~ood
barom(•h~r
or how food. en&lt;'rg}'
second monthly rise. Vegetabll' priCPs soarC'&lt;I 21..1
house, about one mile north of
Four tanker trucks and 22 men the house.
;tnd
o
t
hf'r
commodity
pril'i:'S
wt
ll
m ovp a t thC' !'PiaU
percent in an apparent reflection of bad !'!'Owi ng
"He usuaily went to l:x'!l when It
Addison on Ohlo7, and called the !Ire responded to the blaze and stayed
It
·vd
.
'11w
Co
ns
um('r~
Pric('
lndC'x
.
though, ch('&lt;.' ks for
weather in the agricultural regions o!'Callforn!J .
got dark ," he said.
department at 8:11p.m.
untllll p.m.
a
bromlf'r
rangP
of
IIPms,
Including
housing and
Beef and veal pr1ces rose 3 percPnt: por·k prlcC'S
The house was engulfed In flames
nwd
leu
I
ca
rr,
than
doP"
I
h('
wtlOil'sa
iP
pr'icf'
rnrasu rt'.
were up 0.8 percent. Poult ry prices tumhled 2.9
when firefighters arrived nine
percent.
minutes later, according to Ray
Bush, battalion chief of the GalllpoA pickup truck driven by a hound on Ohio 7, three-tenths of a
lis department
Syracuse man was sllghUy dam- mile south of County Rd . I, when he
Bush's body was not discovered
aged In a single-vehicle mishap on lost control on wet pavement .
He went off the right side of the
untll the fire was extingutShed,
Ohio 7 in Gallia County Thursday.
The Gallia-Meigs post of the State pavement and up a n e nbankment .
accordlilg fo the battalllon chief. He
AKRON. P hlo !API - G&lt;Jv.
1·1&lt;' propos&lt;'!! lncn•aslng o'&lt;luca - public schools and about 14 IX'I'C'C nt
Highway Patrol IdentUied the
was dead at !he scene, apparenUy
There were no injuries or
Richard Celeste says he Is pleased tlon s jX'Ilcling aboul lJ percent for
fu1·'hlghcr education nex t year.
from smoke Inhalation, he said. The
driver as Roger E . Eblin. 20.
cita tions Issued.
with his first thre(' months In office
_body was released to Willis Funeral
Troopers say Eblin was southand that he can Jive with being
unpopular for raising state Income
taxes 90 percent .
"I want to be liked. We all do," the
governor told the Akron Press Club
admission policy a t state parks had
on Thursday. .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - A Wilkowski said.
"Popularity count s, but II ·
been
raised
by
some
priva
te
Lt.
Gov.
Myrl
Shoemaker,
who
Is
legislator wants the Civilian Conser·
organizations
as
a
way
to
generate
shouldn't
be the sole yardstick by
vatlon Corps budgeted for $15 also director of the Natural Resourfor
the
park
system
.
which
a
person
Is measured. I want
more
money
mUllan over the next two years, ces Department, told the House
"Some
states
ha
ve
that
and
I
to
be
popular
as
a governor, but I
saying this would help curb unem· Finance subcommittee he had ruled
think
in
some
of
the
federal
national
be
respected.
would
rather
ployment and protect natural out suggestions that admission be
"I didn't Imagine I wasgolngt obe
parks they have a system like that
charged at state parks to help fund
resources.
popular
when I said we needed to
also.
But
It's
not
something
that
we
Democratic Rep. Arthur Wll· the agency.
feel
appropr1ate
to
do
here,
Napier
raise
state
taxes. I didn't expect to
"Lots of people want us to charge
kowskl or Toledo asked a panel
be
popular
when I said 'no' to
said.
working on the Natural Resources admission fees, entrance fees to the
"In
the
first
place
people
pay
ibuUdlng a new1 a hospital (In
Departrrient budget for the $15 slate parks. This Is not going to
Mentor) ."
·
through their tax dollars to support
happen as long as I'm director."
· million.
Ceies te said he Is unco n~rned
the parks and should beabletoent~
The department's budget pfo. Shoemaker said Thursllay.
,
them for free. And second of all even
about moves to repeal the tax
poses expansion of the CCC from
Wllllam Napier, deputy director,
increase.
•
If we wanted to, it requires such an
current spending of $1.7 million to 8ald the possibility of endlng thefree
bur¢en
tocoilect
the
"Most
of
the
talk
Is
coming
from
administrative
$2.3 million next year. That would
I'm
not
sure
we'd
make
politicians
and
that's
an
easy
game
money
that
boost bun about 120 to 420 the
I
to play," the governor said. " You
anything anyway '" he said.
numbell or unemployed youths
AlthOugh
admission
to
state
can
say what you want. but a! some
enrolled in the job training
Is
free,
there
are
charges
for
parks
you've got to say what you
point
Mostly cloudy and cold tonight .
program.
would
replace (the tax I with."
·
servlc(!S
such
as
boat
rentals
or
Low ~35. Winds westerly to
Wilkowski, who sponsored legis·
camping.
,
··
northwesterly i0-15 mph. Partly
latlon creating the CCC, saki In
Celeste said he Is proud oi the
Gov. .Richard Celeste's $Z7.6
sunny Saturday. High around 50.
seeking more money, "It will aFreSt
accomplishments ot his cablriet and
billion spending plan Includes $15&gt;1.6
Extended Ohio Forecast .
further environmental ' decline,
the Public UtUitles Commission. He
mlllion
lor the Natural Resources
Sundlw through 'l'ue8da.y:
delerlorlatlon and abuse and to .a
also praised his !Jroposed state
Fair Sunday. Chance of showers. Departme~t. canpared with $140.6
certain extent reclaim the environ·
budget, the largest lil state history.
ment. It wUI teach the work ethic, or bmclentonns M~. C,han&lt;le mllllon spent by the agency this
"I know some ot the educators are
theuseofthesaw, the hammer, the or showers ~- HJchs In the year, an Increase ot9.9pe~nt.
not happy with what we propOsed.
Shoei'nal!er said the budget would
. varklus power tools !hat. . are mld-40a to mkH4II Swaclay, warm
But I wOOid not t1Ulmlt a Wdget that
available-to the Clvillan Conserva· Inc to the Jnld,lltll to lhe nild-81B add f.lX},txXl a year to current
would be based on unrealistic
expenditures In thedlvlslono!parks
Monday and Tuellday. Overnight
tlon Corps."
economic projections. I say to them,
REVIEWING IUS . TERM. - Ohio Govemol" Rlclsanl CelCHte
and recreation to help deal with
"And It also tends to allevlate Iowa In tbe mJd.:illtl to low b earJy
'This may not be all you wan.t, and
ge!l&amp;urea
118 he ~pealuo to Junior SUld senior high school students
unemployment to a certain degree Sunclay, wllmllnl to the 308 early deteriorating equipment and facill·
It's certainly not all you asked for,
In Akron. Earlier th€Cieveland DeniOCral reviewed his first
'Thur!lday
ties. It alsoadds$500,(XX)annually to
by at least providing some measure Monday and to the mJd.3tl8 to
but It Is real money, not Allee In
three
monllll
tn office In lUI addre!lli hefore the Akron Press Clu~. ( AP
· this year' sspendlng level oi$250,001
ofemplllymenttosomeo!ouryoung mld-40a~.
Wonderland money like before,"'
Lallerpholo
).
for renovation ol pm:k facUlties .
• ~ people.ltlsapfOKI'amlhatworks,"
Ce1e8te said.

MISSES

SPORTSWEAR
SALE

Southern Ohio Coa l Co. Is plan·
nlng to hold a "general session" for

Wholesale prices drop

• Rowe Lifetime Limited
Warranty your assurance
of quality .

· GuanJs taken hos~ ·
PriTSBURGH (AP) - Armed Inmates took two guards hostage at
the Western Correctional Dlagnas:·
tic and Classltlcatlon Center tOday,
and state troopers surrounded the
penlteniiJary, authorities said.

Tornadoes post win;
· Marauderettes keep
winning streak intact

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 15, 1983

mUJtary.

Others refuse to pay 36 percent of
their Income taxes, claiming 28
percent goes to the military and 8
percent represents Interest on the
Social Security trust fund whJch
they say goes to the military.
And some have also withheld an
additional 17 percent of their taxes
that they say covers the cost of past
wars, Including veterans payments
and war-related Interest on th(•
national debt, Strong said.
"For others, withholding 53
perrent Isn't enough because they
know that nomatterwhat taxes you
put in, they go to the military. And
they refuse all taxes, turning In a
olank 1040. That's a crimina l
offense," Strong said.
A Quaker in Seattle, Irwin

was based on changing the benefit
!onnula and delaying cost-of-~
Increases - as well as making tile
$1ates, rather than Washington,_pay
for em&gt;rs excEeding 3 percent ·111
processing federal funds,
Rep. James Jeffords ofVennoni,
the suboommlttee'sranklng Reput).
llcan, joined Panetta In releaslnl
. the report Both said II should
convince Congress and the Amerlc
can public to oppose any new cuts a
program that has a~ady beell
slashed by more than $3 bllllonsln~
Reagan took office.
· ·

OPEN FRIDAY Till 8
SATURDAY Tll15

-----·-·-·-·- ---

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