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                  <text>•

Marauderettes win;
Me~gs loses, 8-6
Pages 3-5

•

0~0

Annual hike-bike
scheduled ~ay 7

Christian Athlete
chapter organized

Page7

PageB

tiKHIKE ·

e
Voi.Jl ,No .J
Copyrighted 1983

•

at y
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,

Wednesday~

entine
l Settions. 14 PQe••
20 C.ntt
A Mvltim.dia Inc. NeWifMIP:..,

April 20, 1983

Commission' reviews job training act
This program, according to Information from the
County Conunlssloners Association of Ohio " repeal$
and replaces the Comptehelts lve Employment
Training Act (CETAI as the vehicle lor preparing
and placing Individual$ Into jobs that will provide
them eronommlc Independence."
As explained by Jones. the Important emphasis of
the Job Tralnlilg Parmership Act is that It draws on
the private sector area for job training and does away
with the public service jobs which has been the
primary emphasis of the CETA program.

By Charlene Hoellich

.Sentinel staff
Preparations for- the Implementation of Job
Training P artnership Act training programs this fall
and the use of the $336,3741n lnltlallunding for Meigs
County were discussed at Tuesday afternoon's
m eeting of the Me igs County Board of
Commissoners.
Meigs is In a seven county area, one of 291n Ohio,
designated Service !Rllvery Areas (SDA), which will
have Private Industry Councils (PICs) as the
coordinating agency to Implement training
programs .
Others in this same seven-county area as Meigs are
Perry, Hacking, VInton, Athens, Gallla and
Lawrence. Specifications call for a minimum of
200,00l people In each Service IRUvery Area.
Announced at Tuj'Sday' s meeting was a conference
of the county commissioners from the seven-county
area May 7 at Lake Hope Lodge. Conuntssloners, at
that time, wtll take steps toward establlshjng the
· . Private Industry Council · , whicb wtll . .be the
coorcilnatlng agency . re;lion51ble .tot lmpleinentlng
· ihe Jobs Traftllng and Partnership Act programs
which become fully effective on Oct. 1.

"Getting someone training In an area where they
wUI be able to participate In a job is the goal of the new
program," Jones said.
In conjunction wtth the proposed job training
program and Its administration. Sidney Edwards,
new executive director of the Gallla-Meigs CommunIty Action Agency , Hazel McKelvey, assistant
director, and Bo.b Haner, CCA planner , met with the
commissioners.
Edw~~Tds noted more than $700,(XX!wUI b\' avaliable
In GaJlla·and Melgs:CountieS In educational ori.e nted
trajnlng piogr~s: He saki \he .CAA, aiready has a .
staff In place and suggested having somebody on the

.

PIC Council who would lean toward the Community
Action Agency as the administering agency.
The adminlstrat ion funds in the progra m for Meigs
and Galli a Count les total $107,454.
Longwalllng discussion
In other business, Betty Wells, president of 1he
Clflzens Organized Against Longwalling tCOALi.
discussed problems of residents in the Meigs-Vinton
area which they a ttribute to the longwa lllng of the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. She reviewed .t he damage to
water sou rces as well as structural damage to houses
and buildings and dis played severa l pictures.
She alsc told of the group's effot1s to have
geological and ert~lronmen t a l studies m a de to
determine the long term sutiare and water damage
of longwall1ng.
Commis sioners recently passed a resolution in
support of the approval of the mining permit flied by
the company with the Ohio Department of Na tural
Resources· reclamation division .
With the expectation that the fl('W landfiU will bpen
wltl\ln two weeks, Koblentz will arrange wit h the
county engineer lor llmestonlng the road .
Arrangements were alSo made \b ha ve a sign erected
neat the e ntrance a tid to revtew the rates.

Currently the .la ndfill charges are $11or cars and
stat ion wa~'Or!S,$2.25 for pickup trucks,$5 lor one to
three ton ttucks, $12 for packer trucks, and ~ for
SPill! loads. Those rates are expected to be revised
upward when the new landllll opens.
Commisscner Jones noted there Is an obligatiOn to
do some landscaping work on the Drenner property
to smooth out a sect ion disturbed by the SheUy and
Sands rnntractlng ftrm at th e lime the access road
was eonstructed. Drenner, It was reported, wllidothe
work himself and Ihe conunlssloners wtU confer with
him to determine a figure . The money wUI be paid
from funds due on the contract to Shelly and Sands
pending completion of t.he work.
C. E. Blakeslee of thl' Meigs County Planning
Commiss ion requested the county commissioners to
meet with tha t group, the Meigs County Park Board,
a nd .John .Jennings Associates. consullants, on
Monday .
A contract to ha ndle food stamps was awarded to
thl' Rac tnr Home National Bank.
All thr-ee commissioners, DavJd Koblentz, Manning Roush and Jones, were at the m~tlng along With
clerks, Mary Hobstettcr and,Mi\l·tha Chambers.

Bombing toll
placed·at 49
BEIRUT, Lebanon (APl - Searchers combed the rubble of the U.S.
Embassy today looking for more burled vletlms and a log book that might
he lp establish a firm casualty toll from Monday'sdevastatlngbombattack.
U.S. Ambassador Robert Dillon said today the current toll from the
explosion was 24 confirmed dead, Including nine Amerlt:ans, and 25 other
people missing and presumed dead. Eight of the missing are believed to be
Americans.
Dillon explained that the overall death toll had risen from 47 to 49
'' because we did not Include two of ourotflclal visitors In yesterday' statal.··
"It may be some days before· we realize the extent of the loss," he said.
U.S. Undersecretary of State Lawrence S. Eagleburger and Assistant
Secretary of State Nicholas Vellotes were flying to Lebanon today to escort
the bodies of the American bombing victims back home, DUion said.
One of the slain Americans was Robert ClaYton Ames, the CIA "s Near
East and South Asian analyst, official$ In Washington anilounced In a rare
identification of a U.S. Intelligence agent-working abroad.
U.S. Marine warrant officer Bill Hende.rson said Marines were trying to
recover the log book used at the bulletproof glass guard booth In the
embassy lobby. The names of everyone entering the seven-story building
are ente red In the book, which could provide the names of those Inside thP
e mbas sy at the time oft he fiery blast.
"ll It Is found. then we will have a final (casualty) count," sa ld Henderson,
of Artesia. N.M.
The explosion, which collapsed the facadeoftheembassy 'scentral wing
from the ground up to the roof, occurred about 20yards from the booth.
Police said 120 people were wounded In the explosion, Including 22
Americans. American University Hospital, where most ofthevlctlmswere
taken, said 66 Injured had been discharged while another 19 remained
hospitalized.
Dillon told reporters TUesday about 130 people were on the embassy
premises when the bomb went otf. Witnesses said many passersby also
were eaught in the explosion because the building faces a busy seaside
highway.
By this morning workers had removed tons of concrete chunks from the
embassy's top floors, enabtlng them to concentrate on the massive pile of
debris blocking the entrance.
The Stars and stripes. raised at sunrise Tuesday on a flagpole that escaped
the blast, was not flown today to avoid damage from the falling debris .
A crane lifted workers on a platform to the fifth-floor level where they
removed a torso that could be seen from the street. The bodies were
wrapped In plastic sheets and taken away In ambulances.

Reagan signs
Soc Sec hill .
-·

p

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan is ending two years of
bltter partisan confitct over Social
Security by signing a rescue plan
that raises the retirement age while
forcing workers to pay more and
r etlreestotake less .
Reagan was signing the $165
billion legislation Into law today In
an elaborate ceremony on the South
Lawn of the White House: Invt~
gulf'S ts lnclila'ed congressional lead·
ers of both partieS, members of the
reform commission which drew the .
blueprint lor the rescue package
and leadersofsenlorcltizl'nsgroups

~all.50states.

in aU, White Houae aides said,
about !OJ people had been Invited.
, Among provisions of the plan
Congress passed last month are:
·-Higher payroll taxes In 1984,
1988and 1989.
.
-A, six-month delay In July's
c;ost-of.llvtng inCrease In benefits.
-A first-ever levy on benefits
atlluent retirees.
~\--Ma!KitatoryJ;tlclaiSecurltycov·

erage for new federal workers and
employees of non-profit organlzaUons beginning Jan . 1.
-A gradual Increase In the
retirement age from 65 to 67 In the
next century.
The biggest Impact on the
program's beneficiaries-retirees.
dtsabledworkersandthelrrelatlves
-will be the delay In their annual
cost-of·Uvlng
from July
until next January.
That delay wW cost a typiCal
retiree who gets S4(ll a mo11th about
$14amonth,orroughly$111overthe
six months.
~·
The cerermny,
Reagan's
polltlc81 allies and opponents In
attendance, marked a tn.Ja! 1n the
01iaofng llklnnlshes the president
has been enpaed In wtth memllets
of Corljpua·'over &amp;tense, bUdget

Personnel
employed

MOST VALUABLE -Selected as most valuable In
Southern Valley Athletic Conference action in 1982-83
were, from left, Kyger Creek's IWger Stroud and

•
U.S. receives strong recovery stgn
WASHINGTON tAP) - The
economy grew at an ann ua l rate of
3.1 percent in the first three months
of this year, the fast est pace In two
years and the strongest signa l yet
that recovery from the 1981-82
recession had begun . government
ligures Indicated today.
The new growth ra te was hardly
robust tn comparison with ot her
recoveries of lhe last several
decades. And It was slower than the
4 percent rate government economists had projected In their first
estimate before the quarter even
ended.
However, the report was still
moderately good news after the
strlngofdecllnesand tiny gains tha t
had followed (he Increase at a ra teo!
7.9 percent In the first quarter of
1981, just before the rPCCsslon

with

I

began.
The Commerce Depar tment r.portro that lnflatlon·adjush'&lt;i gross
national product - the broadest
measure of U.S. economic activity
I'QS(' to an a nnual rate of $1.&lt;189
tlilllon In the just-ended January·
March quarter.
('
The economy had SUnk at ra lPS of
over;; percent in the final quarter of
I981 and the fh·•t three months of
I982 before ris ing slightly In the
second and t hlrd quarters and then
declining slightly In the OctoberDecember period .
Some economists say eontlnulng
relatively high Int erest rates could
help slow growth again in the
c urrent April ·J une quarl er.
Howeve r. Donald Straszhelm,
acting preside nt Ill Wharton Econometrics . said In advance of today's

Coal pipeline effects
WASHINGTON !APl- It has

been more than two decades s ince

the Ohio coal pipeline experiment,
but ltseflectsarestlll visible. says a
utUity Industry spokesman .
Testifying TUesday lor a bill to
pave the way for thousands of miles
of coal pipelines, Frederick L.
Webber,executlvevlcepreslctentol
the Edison Electric Institute, cited
thelmpactthattheshort-ilvedOhlo
pipeline had 6n rail rates.
"When the · Ohio pipeline was
placed In serviCe In 1957, the
competitive threat forced the raUroads !()Jowerratesforhaullngcoai
and forellnpollcy Issues.
by SLOO," Webber said.
·
It wu bnly after Reagan and
In 1963, railroads lOwered rates
~Speaker 11lorMa P. O'Neill
anotller61centsperton and~the
Jr.( O.Mall.,embraoedtherecom- · . amortization costs for the pipeline
mEndatnla of the National Can-· that had been built to carry coal
(Cootlnued on paae 10) .
from an Eastern Ohio mine to a

Increase

Eastern's Dave Gaul, t.'Ofllmnwn: Nor1h (;allla's
Eric Penick, back; 1md South&lt;'m'• Zww IJ&lt;•·Kit•,
MVP In llasko1 ball.

report that he expected th•• first

quartPr gutn to IX' a t an annualratf'
o14 .1 percent-to br followed by '"a
S('('Ond quartt•r that will br IX'th•r
t han t hat."
H.otx&gt;rt 01 ·t nPr, CommC'r&lt;'f'' s ch lcf

economist. said '" It 's •ti ll vPry much
up In the air'" as to whether the
~C'Co nd

quar1cr w ill mC'asur'C up to '

the first .
Whatever the growth ln the next
few months. t'!'onomist s agr('(' the
1~8 1 ·R2 recession Is Indeed ov&lt;'r.
thoug h they also say the rcco·1ery
could br wmk or could even br cut
shor1 by a variety of factors.
One of 1hose Is that huge federa l
budget deficits In the next few years
could set in motion a n economic
chain of events that would drive
interest rates higher a nd sevL•rdy

cramp economic expansion.

r~main

visible

utility plant on Lake Erie.
Detroit Edison agreed not to use
The pipeline wa.s shut down
coal delivered by slurry pipeline,
because of lower rates o!fered by
the Nl'\'1 YorkCentralreducedratei
railroads .
by 37.5 cents for the firs t 6 million
"AlthOugh serving the Clevela nd
tons per year tmnsported and 50
Electric Illuminating Co., the
cents per ton alter that."
effects of the Ohio pipeline were felt
Webber sa ld development of
by other utilities in the Great Lakes
long-distance coal pipelines now
States, such as Detroit Edison and
planned In several parts of 1he
Chicago's Commonwealth Edtcountry would have a similar
son," Webber told a hearing of the
Impact on rising rail rates.
surface transporlatlon subcommit'
tee of the Public Works and
He said proposed rules now before
the interestate Commerce ComTransportation Committee. .
·
''Today, Detroit Edison still ftaS In
mission which would allow ran.
effect what Is known as the "Lake roads to boost coal shipping costs 15
tariff," which Is a special reduction · percent a year above the rate of
In the cost of coal transportation inOatiOn wtU discourage a switch to
originally nigotlated between Decoal.
troit Edison and the raUroads In
"The risk to our Industry of the
1961. .. he said.
. proposed ICC rule Is awesome," he
"As a result of that tariff, wherein said.

Tea~hers and non-certified per·
sonne t werr 1\lred and resignations
accPpted when the Southern Board
of F.ducatton met In regular session
Tuesday nl!(ht.
Car la Shuler rt.oslj(ned as weight
training s upetvlsor and Howard
Ca ldwe ll resigned as junior high
foot ball roach. ·
The tx&gt;ard toncerntng tht• junior
high football position declared no
regls terf&lt;l r&lt;'•11fled employe has
applied lor thr position. The board
dlr!V·ted It s t '''asurer. l:lfonnle Hill to
advert Lsr lor a coach for lhe position
stipula ting that the Individual must
hold a n Ohio va lid ll'ar·htng ccrtlllmle. llw within Mel~.,; County and
tha t prt•frrcnce will br given tor
prrvlous football r•xjl!'rlencl'.
TPachf'rs given one-year con·
t rae I s werPTar ·lssn A.eavl:'r, Christy
Ca ldw&lt;'ll, CharLsset• Knight, Catherln&lt;' ntaPttn;u·, .Jennller Hill and
.John Vanft&lt;'f'th; two year contract
wPnt to Barbara fl&lt;&gt;egle; three year
contracts. Pamf'la Holt...'Omb, Donald Salmons. Shirley Sayre; five
.v mr contra~ts. Wlllltam Baer,
Jo•n y dPI .aval . Donna Sayre, Roger
Hous h, Jamps Wickline, Joyce
Thon•n . De lores Wolle, S=ne
Wolft•.
A continuing contract was
award('(t to Paula Co&lt;'hran .
ll o•arl teachers named for the
19R:~K4 school year were Ruth
Stmrns .. lames Wtckllnrand Larry
WolfP.
One year coni racts lo r extra
rurTic ulumwcnt to Barbara Bailey,
EchO advisor; Daisy Franz, year ·
book advisor. Donald Salmons,
senior play advisor . .Joyce 'll)oren,
lunc hroom supervisor, Sandra
Boothe, Title !XrnmpUance otfJcer,
James Lawrence, drivers educa·
lion , Lee f..e&lt;o. varl&lt;'!y show , Carla
Shuler, DPPF' coordinator and
chapter two grant coordinator,
.Joyce Thoren. now through coordlantor and handicapped coordlna ·
tor. Grace Grllfln, Title I secretary,
Dennie Hill. Title I treasurer,
James Lawrence a nd Michael
Winebrenner. junior high boys
basbetball coaches.Tammy Smith,
j~ntor high girL• basketball coach,
,John Vanfte&lt;:&gt;th, pep band advisor.
Grace Griff in Is to eoUect and
deposit activity money.
.
Non-cert illed employes employed were, one year contracts,
Thelma Salser. custodian , Virginia
Davis. coo~. Deborah HIU, teachers
aide. •
A continuing contract was given
to Ernest Spencer, bus driver.
The board empkyect the services \
of Davts-Qulckellnsurance Agency
as agent for school accident
Insurance and Interscholastic
sports Insura nce lor 1983-84, Larry
Smith to drive special education-b us
and kindergarten ·and Deibert
Smith to drive vocational student
!Jus and kindergarten .
John Muerphy was given permls·
slon to use the junior
high Jar
basketball· with proper supervlson
bY the pr_lnclpal.

�_,

Wed!• *y, April 20, 1983

Commentary (
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Courl Slrttl
Pnmeruy, Ohju

'H·tt!-UH

DF.VOTEDTOTHE

INTER~TOFTiff:

MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl~ht'r

I'AT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nl'w~

Editor

A. MF.r\18ER nf Tilt: A~t;•wluh•tt Prtss, Inland Pull .~ Prt'SJ' l\ ssul'iuti11D 11nd ltttr·"
Amt'rinUI Nt",.spaprr Publi~ht'n AI&gt;SIN' Ialiun.

Lt:rTERS HF OPINION IU't' "dntmt'd. The:y s hoold Ill' l etr~" than 310 "mrd NlnnJ(. All
art' !&gt;Ubjerl In edilin..: and must he ttlll n~ wllh llllmt: , a ddr t:~ll and kkphnnt:
numtwr . N•• uiUi,ICIM!d ldkn wlilbto publltdwd. Ldlt'n shuu ld 1M- in II•Htd IIIKI.f, wddrHtkla
lt'llt'r~

Pome!V\' Micldlepalt, Ohio

Students ot Uberal behavior he could not bring himself to find a
should be as Interested In Dart· · black man guilty. The difficulty
mouth College these days as with taking that position, or--allied
Charles Darwin was In the 'G aiapa· posltloru;, Is that one Invites
gos. Whatever one thinks about the precisely the kind ol condescension
political views ot the editors of the that ~rourages racism. What
Dartmouth Review, one should be faster way Is there to encourage
grateful tor the job they have done contempt than tosay,lneHect, that
In examlnln~ what lies on the you cannot reasonably expect
underside of the granitic liberalism black men to IJve up to the
standards of white men?
of the Ivy League.
A reporter from the Dartmouth
The latest round Involves a music
professor called WOllam Cole, woo Review, a girl · student. Laura
Is black. Why Is this relevant? Ingraham, attended Mr. Cole's
Because It Is widely assumed that music class, along with 150 reguhis behavior would not haye larly enrolled students. It ·must
tolerated If he were other than have been quite a show. He was
black. Years ago at a crimlnaltrtal late. He evidently forgot what his
In New York City one juror gave as course's name was, because be
hls reason lor voting not guilty that needed to consult the school

Why did they leave?;
where did they go?

'·

The federal government says the size of the U.S. clvUlan labor Ioree
dropped by 645,00&gt; individuals between December and March, a
phenomenon that l' producing much head scratching.
Why dld they leave7 Where dld they go?
The questions beccme even more perplexing when It Is lound that one ol
the usual explanations - a rise in the number ol discouraged workers . appears no longer to apply.
As student s of the employment numbers know, discouraged workersthose who have given up looking for a job- are dropped !rom th e work
·
force, no longer to be counted even as unemployed.
A rise In the number of discouraged workers, tberefore, would mean a
deellne in the size of the work force. But It didn 't happen . .
In !act, the number of discouraged workers !eli by 85,001 In the period,
which would, It ·seems, have the exact oppqslte affect to what occurred. It
would have enlarged rather than reduced the Work. force.
. .
Jack Lavery, chief ·economist at Mettill Lynch, believes thai a · · ·
"meaningfu l contributor" to the labor force shrinkage could be the
number of corporate programs to encourage early retirement. But, he
says, "It Is dlfflcull to envision this accounting for the magnitude of the
labor force decline."
The sltuallon could be a consequence of statistical error or the inabUlty
of-analysts to draw meaning !rom the statistics.
Lavery points oul the Ia \Jar Ioree decline accounts for almost the entire
0.5 percentage point drop In the clvUlan unemployment rate to 10.3 !rom
10.8 percent. That rate has been cited by the White House and celebrated
by millions as evidence that recovery Is under way.
Something seems odd too about retaU sales. "RetaU sales- who do you
trust 7 " asks CUtbank.
The Census Bureau says March retail sales rose only 0.3 percent from
the same month a year earUer. And at the same time, the bureau revised
WASHINGTON - Josef Stalin
February's sales downward by 1.2 percent.
once sneered at the power of the
Again, the possibility of statistical flaw Is being examined by those who
Vatican by asking, "How many
use such reports. One question being asked Is whether the Census Bureau
divisions does the Pope ~ave 7 "
Is too heavily laden with data from established stores, and
But StaUn's successors In the
underrepresents newer outlets, such as computer stores.
Kremlin don't share hls contempt
Anoth~r possibility, say critics, Is that the decUnlng dollar sales at gas
lor the leader of the Roman
stations lowered the dollar figu res. They say gasoUne sales, measured in
Catholic Church. In fact , my
dollars, declined only because prices decUned.
lntelllgence sources say the Soviet
Cltibank believes the Census Bureau. It suggest that one reason for the
leaders fear Pope John II more
Impress ton that retail sales werehlgherthan the bureau measured them Is
than any other human being.
that the public has heard mainly from department stores.
That's why Yuri Andropov's
"It has lo do with the tendency of the press to call oon executives of
KGB allegedly tried to have the
department stores and similar outlets," says Cltlbank economist Alan
Pope assasslna ted two years ago.
Murray. But these stores, he says, are only 10 percent of sales.
And that's why the Soviet hie·
He observes that general merchandise stores have outpertonned the
rarchy and their puppets in War·
average since way back In the middle of l!m. Retail sales ln general. he
saw are so worrled about John
says. have been sluggish. Just "' the Census Bureau says.
Paul's visit to Poland In June.

C!MR OF LEBANoN
.

~

ROCK SPRINGS - Plating eight
runs In the first Inning, the Meigs
Marauderettes girls' sottb811 team
notched their sixth straight win
with a 11&gt;-5 decision over Gallipolis
here Tuesday.
Junior Natalie Lambert, wtnner

noon Mr. Cole, after a few minutes,
catalog. He talked pretty much
suspended
Ill$ class to celebrate his
about whatever It was that came to
Indignation.
mind. He recited racial slights
The newspaper ~red. and Jater
during .Ill$ youth. He praised the.
the offer, to publish Mr.
reiterated
Irian who had the week before
Cole's
specific
complaints, but he .
attempted to blow up the Washing·
decUned
that
oHer. Now, tbree
ton Monument. Why do so many
months
later,
Professor
Cole baa
students take Ill$ course? Because.
rued
suit
against
the
newspaper,
the article alleges, It Is· a notorious
the girl reporter and the staff lor
gut course. I.e., you need not study
several
mruion dollars. He alleges
very high grade.
no
·
!actual
error In the stocy;
The response was electric after
reciting
Instead
a broken heart, and
the story's publication. At 8: ll In
the
rest
of
the
legal
boUerplate that
the morning, the story continues,
.
stands
for
Injured
dignity.
the professor went to he girl's
Laughable lawsuits, unhappUy,
domltory and banged repeatedly on
are not always to be Jaughed at
the door, using language one still
Cole has got himself a contltlgency
does not print in a famUy newspaper and men used not to use In · lawyer, and such mmiey as Is
required to pay C&lt;JSts Is being ral$ed
women's dormitories . That after·
through a faculty fund. A faculty
committee has been fanned, and
we see such dukes and noblemen as
the "Geisel Prolessor In the
Humanities," the "John PhliUps
Professor of ReUglon," the "John
Sloan Dickey Thtrd Century Professor. "·The Grtesel gentleman above
1s a soiomonlc character woo Is
best remembered for his statement
quoted last January Jn the Review
that If he had been ProfessOr Cole,
he'd have 'busted Ingraham's
kneecaps." I should think tht Geisel
should rename Ill$ chair the :
"Gordon Liddy Professor In the'
Humanities."
The prospects? Given recent
Supreme Court precedents, the
newspaper will almost certalnly
win on a motion for summary
dismissal. Then there would be a ·:
jury trial over Mlss Ingraham's .
newspaper story. Shernlghtneedto .
summon as many .as 150 stud!!nts .
· who . were Wtlness to the ldrid ol
tlilng' she wrote aboui; the ·president of the U!llverslty, who Is aware
ol certain dl1flcultles Involving Mr.
Cole; the faculty members who
voted to give him tenure In 1979
notwithstanding certain data avaUable to them. A long, windy trll\1.
resulting In her exoneration. Either
that, or the repeal of the First
Amendment.

Attorney may buy
Indian franchise
CLEVELAND (AP) -

.

_The Polish . government ts
Insisting that John Paul's Itinerary
Include a meeting with Gen.
Voycek Jaruzelskl, In hopes that
this will give the mUitary regime
legitimacy In the eyes of the people.
~The regime Is trying to dlscour·
age a meeting between the Pope
and Lech Walesa, the acknpwl·
edged leader of the outlawed
Solidarity. Any meeting between
those two charismatic Poles could
strike sparks that would scorch
Jaruzelskl and Inflame anew the
Solidarity movement.
• The Vatican Is resisting the
Polish government's attempt to
manipulate the papal visit. John

.•.••

I know It Is going to come as a dlHerence between war and peace,
surprise to some people, but the freedom a nd sla very and
Internal Revenue Service has a recession.· "
"squ~al", _ rule. It someone Is
"Did you say a nything else to
cheating on hls or her taxes, and yourself?"
.
you tell the IRS where to look, and
"Come to think of It, I dld. I sa id ,
they manage to collect the hidden • 'Rose, I'd like to see that blonde
money , you can get a reward of up t1002y's face when she sees Milton
to $50,&lt;XXI.
behind bars.' But that was just a
You would think that the tipster second thought , and It's not why
money Is what attracts Income tax I'm here today."
whistle blowers to the IRS, but this
"i understand that. You say
Is not always the case.
Milton cheated us out of two mUllan
"I would like to see \the man In dollars. Do you know where the
·
charge of tax cheaters.''
money Is?"
"1 am that person. May I help
"He spent a lot of lt. He had a
you?"
boat, he bought me fur coats,
"I want to tell you about a man jewelry, a nd a new BMW. Believe
who btlked you out of two million me .lf I knew It was Uncle !lam's
dollars over
years ."
money .l wouldn't have accepted
"Before you do, rruiy I ask you
why you are telling me.thls?'l
"Because I'm a patriotic Afl'\"rl·
can, and I feel everyone should P('Y
hls fair share of taxes, so we c11n
protect our way of life."
1
"That's good to hear."
1
"The person also happens:to be
my third husband. and you '11 rl~?ver 1
meet a more devious rat in Y\Jur
life."
'
"Then you have a perspnltl
·
motive In turning hun In?" 1
''There's nothing pe'rsonal about 1
lt. I'd ' turn him In If he were a
stranger. Anyone who runs off with
his secretary when he's married to
a '\'Ondertul woman who gave him
the '1e5t years ot her Ute deserves to
· feel ~full weight of JRS on hlm."
"Y say he's been cheating on
his tax for five years. Why dld
you come to us
"I foWid these
letters in his
cioset last week.
them. Have
you ever
cheap
perfume?
wprnen would
have
lawyer
like Marvin
•
not the
come here

five

"i-l,_arry· plunders the computer software lndus-

too:;:·;h~tory

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F1RES AWAY - Meigs' pitcher Natalre Lambel\1 won her sixth
straight game Tuesday night, 15-5 over the Gallipolis Blue Angels. The
victory edends Meigs' wtn .streak.

Marauderette reserves blast GAHS

oitt two doubles and three singles.
Julie Roush played long ball In

one strikeout a nd 20 bases on balls.
By Innings:
Meigs ..... .
. .. .. ..... 10 0 3 7 1 U-Jl l8
Gallipolis .... .... . ... ..... 4 0 1 3 2 4-1&lt;1 7
Ml•lgs' reserves !ravel to Warren Loca l
tonighl.

·

Earlier, LeFevretalkedwlthT!&gt;d
Stepien, owner of the Cleveland
Cavaliers, about a possible purchase of the National Basketball
Association team. Stepleri has
granted an option for purchase to
brothers George and Gordon G und
of Cleveland.

· . ·

sln~~~sh

went the distance for
Meigs and walked eight while
fanning one . Thr ee Ga Ili a
Academy pitchers co mbined for

Paul 'Is no political babe In the
woods, and he's not about to give
the Polish regime eveyrthlng It
wants.
Sources close to \he Vatican have
sketched out · to my associate
Lucette Lagnado a likely · com·
promise: Pope John Paul will meet
with Jaruzelskl as the PoUsh
government desires - but only at
the price of a meeting with Walesa .

be tor e 1\\ h 15 198j up '0 o r~l\1 '1muf'""~
conr r1bu: r1m o t ~ 60 000 ~L·e rf'qLw f'ci
Ler rrii Llll ~' ·~II '()(t'I.,,J lr...'l! r..O rn pii...•JP l iPJnrh
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PH . 9'12-2556

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Solidarity's underground leaders
have called for demonstrations
both on May Day, the traditional
socialist workers' holiday, and on
May 3, the 192nd anniversary of the
Polish constitution.

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homeless, and everyone else who
depends on our tax dollars for
support. If Milton baa to suffer
horribly for hls cheating ways, l
can live with that too."
"Well, Rose, I'll turn you over to
our crtrninallnvestlgators, and you
can provide them with the leads lor
a full Investigation. We can't teU
you how much we appreciate your
vfslt."
"! was only doing my duty as a
citizen." .
"We know that, and as a small
token of our appreciation we'd Uke
to present you with this American
Flag. It It weren 't for selfless
patriots llke yourself, our job would
be so much harder."

SURE

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any of lt."
"How dld you find out he was not
declaring his full Income?"
"I discovered he was also paying
for a penthouse apartment on Park
Avenue !or hls tootsle, and It
suddenly dawned on me It must be
coming out of the IRS 's pocket. So I
Immediately came down here to let
you know. I can't live with a man
who lies on hts Income tax return."
"A:re you aware that the IRS
pays rewards to people for turning
In tax cheaters?"
'Tm not here for the money . I
just want to help my country and
President Reagan and our fine boys
In the a nned forces, and the senior
citizens a nd the poor and the

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Procter &amp; Gamble will donore 10C for
each coupon redeemed by May 15.
1983, up roo maximum canrriburion o f
$250.000 . Th is money will be used for
research . medical services. and
educorionol programs rhor con help
brighren rhe furure of ram orrow s
chi ldren

O'Neill also told the newspaper
that there are "other parties alsQ
ve~·
terestedbutnobodywantsto
take o
the present (Municipal
Stadi
lease."

PEC·(A. L''· Q·f . ,J.Hf

~~-~w~ G~

Follrod had two triples, Barb
Hatfleld three singles. Daphne
Dillard and Canie Karr, each two
singles, and Klm Eblin a nd Lisa
Hoffman, each a single.
Hitters for the Blue Angels were ·
D. Hunter, a single and double, T.
Smith two singles, and S. Daniel.
M. Russ, and S. Guthrie each a

our

1. Redeem these Coupons-

.ma•k
to pped
2-2. Coach
- ~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;-~
crew ra
18 hitsWally
with Hatfield's
freshman r~J;;~;;;· ~

!·... Jodi Miller the hitting st~r. baQglng

both lntleld safeties, were .Halley
"We had s~veral good clutch hitS'
and Russell.
as five different gfrls had RBI hits.
Coach Rick Ash's crew put the The coldness contributed to
game out of reach early wheh poor fielding," commented Ash.
Crooks walked. Horton walked,
Gallipolis dropped to J.J overall
Snowden drove in one run wl th a . aild 0.31n SEOAL play. Meigs Is &amp;-0
single, Lambert brought home two overall and 2-0 in !&lt;?ague play.
with a triple, Buffington singled her
The Marauderrttes play this
home, Beth Gloeckner walked, evening at 4:30
at Sa lisbury
Barb Grueser walked, Harrison against Ironton.
s ingled hOme two more runs.
By innings:
Crooks walked, Horton drove In a Gallipolis ..
. .. U\U rn- 5 2 3
... ...... .......
. ..... M:!l 4x-l~ 8 6
run on a fielder's choice, and _Meigs
Evans tLP r and r·mn,.;son. Lambert (WPI
Snowden rea ched on an error.
and H o11on .

CanH p2Ways

Art Buchwald

' are 255days
Today Is Wednesday, Aptil20, the llOth day of 1983. There
\
,.
·
left In the year.
Today's hlghllght in hlsto);. :
On April 20th, 1'775; the \ lege , of Boston began in the Ame~can
Revolution\
On thJs dare:
In 1662, Con\ectlcut was grant~ a 1'\lYal charter.
In 1&amp;16, Cong!'!!SS established tbe terrttory ol Wisconsin .
In 1889, Adolf J:l_lller was born in A_ustrt~.
In 1977, President .Timmy Carter 'p!'OPO$ed a national energy poiJcy
designed to bring major cl!anfes to ~rk!'!'lll!e.
Ten years ayo: ~ United States ~urnil,d military recQnnalssance
filghts over North Vietnam despite a ban\on lhe filghts lil the Vietnam
cease-line agreement.
"
\ \
·
Five years af!:o: Soviet )tghter planes forcet\an ~If~ South Korean
alrUner down In the Soviet Union near the Arctic Circle.
.
One year ago: Poet and playwrtght Archibald M a
i\_lshdled
c t s lila BostOn
hospital at the age ol 89.
.
\
Today' s birthday: Supreme Court J ustlce .John Paul S . ns Is 63 years
.
\
'\
'Rose, It Isn't what
old. .
Thoueht lor today: "When you are
for o~ 1e ~ be with the matters, It's what te
same zeal as If It were for yourself." ...:l
Chinese ~CJ!I:Oilher (~ · country.
be ~~;;.h~~!~~
B.C.· 479 B.C.).
from the United
""

\

David LeFevre, grandson of the
late Oeveland industt1allst Cyrus
Eaton, might purchru;e the Indians
for more than $20 mllllon, the .
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported
today.
"There Is nothing deflillte," said
F.J. O'NeUI, the Indians' main
owner. "He's Interested and Is
trying to workout something. But he
hasn't done It yet."

,,,,. t•l

IRS squealers

Berry's World

·~

GALLIPOLIS - The Meigs
Marauderette reserve softball
team posted a 32-14 slugfest wln
over the Gallipolis Blue Angel
reserves here TUesday.
While evening their seasonal

A New

of all six Meigs victories; fanned
nlne .and walked 11 Inflvelnnlngs of
work. The contest w.a s caUed at
that point because o!·coldness.
Nancy Evans toed the rubber for
the Blue Angels, striking out three
and Issuing 11 bases ol baUs.
Hitters for the undefeated M_elgs
nine was LambeM with a two-run
triple and single, Robin Buffington
two singles, Cindy Crooks, Paula
Horton, Krls Snowden, and Jodi
Harrison each a stngle.
Getting the two GalllpoUs hils.

York attorney who Is a former , _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - Cieve1and resident Is considering
purchase of the American League's
Cleveland Indians, according to a
newspaper report.

•

Soviets fear pa.. -: :p-=-a=l_v..:. . . .i:. . . :s_it.: :.____~- ;:;: -: ;-7,J:-: :a:-: :ck:; : A:;- ;nd: :;:e~- ;:-so-; : :n
They're afraid the pontiffs vlslt to
hls native land wUI fan the flames of
rebellion in Catholic Poland !lames that were supposedly
_stamped out by the declaration of
martial law In December 1981.
The Soviet leaders as paranoid as
any Ideological fanatics; believe the
Polish-born pope's visit to Poland In
June 1979 helped to Inspire the
formation of the Solidarity move·
ment a year later. They are afraid
that equally momentous developments could follow his June visit.
So the Polish communist regime
Is taking two specific precautions to
prevent he papal vtslt !rom turning
Into a pollllcal disaster :

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3 •.

Marauderettes post sixth straight victorY

Wedneiday, Apr1120, 1913

iiMlW!I. nulprr!lliiUIIIti ~ .

.

Ponrero•· ,Middleport, Ohio

Pagr 2-The Dally S.llh..

The Dartmouth·ReviewL___wu_~lia_~;_F-:-:-.---::-Buc_k=ley=J~r.

' ~-

____

'"

.. "" "' .~., ;.:.
....... ,h,f, 10
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. "'"

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\I

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Page

.4 · The DailY 5entinal

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~.~·--· -

-

-. -

·~

\vecf,.B

Pomeror_ Middleport, Ohio

...

I y, April 20, 1913 ·'

Ladies share spotlight at ~VAC banquet :
By Kevin KeQy
· The league presented two of Ita
OVP stall
veteran coaches with top awards In
RIO GRANDE- Notlngthat"we boys' footblill and basketbaU. Nc;n'lh
no longer hear ol things UkeTitle IX,
Gail !a's John Blake led the Pirate
becauseweareallonequalfootlng grid crew to a 9-1 record and the
now," Bill Gray, general manager league championship In the 1982
ofWagnerBroadcastlngCo.,setthe season, whlleSouthern'sCar!Wolfe
toneforpresentatlonofall-Southern again copped coaching honors In
Valley Athletic Conference awards
basketball.
at Its annual banquetTuftiday nlgbt __ Accepting the award for Wolfe
at Buckeye HUts Career Center.
'' " were three of his players -Zane
Gray's comments carne as the Beegle, Rod Uttlef!eld arid Nick
league marie a first In Its 24-year Bostick.
history with presentations of most
In other coaching awards, Su·
valuable player trophies lor girls zanne Wolfe was also honored for
basketbali and volleyball.
her efforts In girls' basketball at
The winners of the basketball Sou~. while Connie Enslen
MVP for girls was state-ranked received the. award for roaching
. Southern player Mel Weese. while 198Z-83's Tornadoette volleybaU
Southwestern's Kim Jeffer3 was squad.
honored astheleague'stopfemale
Chosen as most valuable co- ·
volleyball player.
linemen In football were Kyger
PreseniBtlon of girls awards Creek's Roger Stroud and Dave
GaulofEastern.ErlcPenlck,North
began at the banquet last year.
Paul DUion, SVAC president and Gallla's top rushing man In 1!£2,
Hannan Trace principal, told the was voted most valuable back.
capaclfy crowd the league will
Beegle was twnored as the league's
renew Its football preview, tenta- most valuable basketball player.
lively scheduled for the final weeks
In league standings, North Gallla
of August at Kyger Creek.
took first pia~ In football, followed

;~

If)

by Kyger Creek. Eastern, Hannan
'l'race and Southern !led for Wrd
whlleSouthwestemrestedlnfoorth.
Girls' volleybaU stalidlngs saw
Sout)1emlntlrstplace,'followedby
SouthWesiern, Kyger Creek, Eastern, North Ga1lla and Hannan
Trace.
Southern kiOk the top spot ln boys'
basketball, with Kyger Creek In
second and Hannan Trace In third
place. A fourth·Place
arose
between North CaUla and Southwestern. with Eastern taking final
place. Southern also won ftrst place
1n girls' basketball, followed . by
Eastern, North Gallla, Southwestern, Hannan Trace and Kyger
Creek.
'0\eleagueselectedthefollowlng
torhonorslnfootball:
Dennis Teaford, Wade ConnoUy
and Rusty Flagg, Southern; Ga\11.
Mark Holter, TroyGuthr!eandditt
GrUflth, Eastern; Joe Gllbert,
Southwestern; Mike Beaver, Jeff
Barnes and Melvin Clagg, Hannan
Trace: Mike Mays, Bob Adkins,
Paul' -Hollingshead, Kenny Neal.
Penick, Scott Pickens and Matt

tie

GAHSdurn1

Meigs,·S-6

Kemper, North GaiUa; S - ;
Steve Waugh. Chuck VQglelaDdJ.D.
Bradbwy, Kyger Creek.
Boys' basketball selectloos
Beegle; Uttlefleld and llostlck; .Southern; Roger Bissell, Eastern;
Paul McNeil and Roger Wells, ·
Southwestern; Barnes and Robbie
Brumfield, Hannan Trace; An- :
lhony Blackburn, North Gallla; Jeff
Moles, Brent Love and Bradbwy,
KygerCJ;i!ek.
SVAC gltls' basketball pla)lerS
honoredwereweese,TonyaSalser, ·
Laren Wolfe and Amy Uttletleld
Southern; Dee DaUey and Angle .
Spencer, Eastern; Tonya. McNeal,
Southwestern; Usa Triplett, Hannan Trace; Tana Ge9rge, North
Ga1lla; and Amy Roush, Kyger
Creek.
Volleyball sqUad members recelvlngplaqueswereWeese, Wolfe,
SaJsei- and Cindy Evans, Southern;
Lee Ann Gaul and Janelle Ely,
Eastern; Jeffers and Bobble Hal·
ley, Southwestern; Triplett, !fan."
nan Trace; ArvlnaDonahue,North
Gallla; and Roush and OlrtsBeebe, ·
Kyger Creek.

After llulldlng an 8-1 Ie8d tbrotlgh
sbt: lnlllnp, the ('-all!poUs
Devlla beld off a five-run final

were.

trame outburst . by the Meigs
Marauders to wiD M here Tuesday.
Gallipolis, now 3+1 ~and ·
2-1-1 In SEOAL play, broke open a
tlgilt 2-1 game with five I'IIIIS 1n the
fourth tJ:ame on only two hitS.
Brian Clark singled In oot1t Tim
Madl1100 and Lynn Sheets, who had
walked, and Steve Skidmore followed with a walk. Tom Duncan
was .safe on a fielder's choice to
drive In another. Ken Russell \f..as.
out 4-3 but 4rove In the fourth run of
!hi! Inning on the play. Mike
Edelmann ended the big Inning
with a run-scoring single.
'lbe Marauders made a last-ditch
effort with ·liVe of their own In the
final trame. Mike Wlllord, Nick
Riggs, Scott Harrison, and James
Acree led off the Inning with four
singles to score two nms.
After two out, Eddie BlshliP
walked to load the bases aild Allan
King drilled a three-run triple. The
game ended when Scott Gheen
lined back to the mound.
Edelm&amp;IUI pliced the winners at
the plate with three singles In four
at bats with Steve Wolfe, Russell,
and Clark each ·singled.
Riggs had two singles In four
trips for the Marauders whlle King
had a triple and WUford, Hanison,
and Acree each singled.
Chris Burdette started on the
mound for the Marauders but was
relieved by BishOp 1n the fourth .
Together they fanned seven and
walked eight. Deroo Haner pitched
.for Gallipolis, strtklng out four, and

I

. 'GIRLS' MVPs - Trophi.., lor first place In girl•' basketball and
·voUeyball were presented for the first time 'lUftiday night during the
'SVAC awards banque(. Winners were Southern's Mel Weese, left,
;basketball, and Kim Jeffers ol Southw...tern, voted most valuable In
;voUeyball.

Ex-Reds come back to haunt old mates
.

.

HOUSTON (AP)-Itwasonlyhls
second hit of the season, so Houston
plnch·hitter HarrY Spilman wasn't
expecting a miracle.
But one out short of another
Houston loss Spllman hit, a fat pitch
from Cincinnati's Tom Hume over
the right field fence for a three-run
homer to rally the Astros to a ll-5
victorY Tuesday night.
The contest was one of only two
played In the Na tiona! League, as
bad weather around tile coo.mtrY
postponed ·st. Louis at Montreal,
Pittsburgh at New York, Chicago at
Phliad~lphla and Los Angeles at
San Francisco. In the other NL
contest , AtlaniB whipped San Diego
9·2.
Cincinnati had taken a 4-0
first ·Inning lead on a two. run homer
by Dan Driessen, a run-scoring
double by Johnny Bench and . a
passed ball by rookie catcher John
Mlzerock.Another passed ball by
Mlzerock gave Cincinnati Its fifth
run In the sixth Inning .
Prior to the ninth, the Astros had
scored on Phil Garner's RBI single
In the first. Dickie Thon' s solo
. homer In the fourth and his
run·scoring single In the eighth.
.
Thon had four hits.
BUl Dawley. appearing In hls
second game since helng called up
from the Astros· Class AAA Tucson
team. got hls second victorY In relief
of starter Joe Niekro.
Brav"" 9, Padres 2
Glenn Hubbard and Ken Smith
each belted two. run homers to back
Rick Camp's route-going pitching
as Atlanta downed San Diego.Camp
scattered eight hits. walked three
and struck out three.
ThP Braves. who wracked four
Padre hurlers for 13 hits. jumped on
fonner teammate John Montefusco
for seven hits and five runs In the
three Innings.
It was freezing around · the

: FIRST PLACE IN F'O(JJ'BALL - Eleven·season North Galllu
Coaching veteran John Blake, left, accepts the llrst place football award
~ Paige Sheets, SVAC lreasw-er, during ceremonl.., allhe annual
awards banquet al Buckeye HUis Career Center 'lllftiduy night.

'

American League - but It didn't
bother the guys with the hot bats.
In Baltimore, John Lowenstein
drove a tie-breaking, eighth-Inning
horner through a driving snowstonn to help Baltimore beat Texas
.4-2 'I'uesday night .
In Toronto, Uoyd Moseby
crashed a pair of (W(). run homers,
the second one beating Cleveland
9-7.
In Chicago, Greg Luzlnskl also hit
two homers to lead the White Sox tO
a 13-3 roUt ofthe New York Yailkees.
And Indoors In Minnesota, Tom
Brunansky's tie-breaking homer In
the sixth Inning triggered the 1\vlns
past Seattle 6-2.
The weather also wiped out two·
,
other AL games - Kansas City at
DetroltandOaklandatCaUforniaand four of the six scheduled In the
National League.
The game began with a temperature of 40 degrees. But by the end,
gusts of 35 rnlles"ll hour dropped the
wind-chill factor down to six
degrees. "I don't recall ever playing
a game In organized baD 1n less Ideal
conditions," Lowenstein said.
Two outs after Lowenstein's shot
off Charlie Hough, Leo Hernandez
nailed the Rangers' knuckleballer
for hls second homer of the year.
Lowenstein also drove In the
game-tying run with a third-inning
single.
Approprtately, Storm Davis was
Baltimore's startlng 'pitcher- but
not the winner. Sammy Stewart
pitched four innings of one-hit relief,
striking out four batters without
giving up a walk.
•
Blue Jays 9, Indians 7 _
It was as cold In Toronto as It was
in Baltimore. but ltdldn;t bother the
Blue Jay hitters, particularly· Mo.
seby and Cliff Johnson.
Johnson's two-out, two-run ho.
mer In the bottom of the ninth tied it,
then Moseby followed Buck Mar-

!Inez' lnfleld hit with his second
two. run shot against the Indians.
White Sox 13, Yank..., 3
The weather In Chicago was the
same as It was In Toronto - but
Luzlnskl 's bat was as hot as
Moseby's. The designated hitter for
the White So&gt;&lt; drove In five runs with
a three-run homer off Jay Howell 1n
the first Inning and a two-run shotolf
Bob Shirley In the eighth. They were
hls· first hOmers of the year for the
Wlilte Soli.
' Twins 6, Mariners 2
"It's a good feeling to get that one

•
' BASKEI'BALL COACHING
flONOR

-

. Sumnne WoUe,

mach ol the lfi&amp;.IIS edition of
$outhern .girls baskelbull, was
ilonored for coaching the first
flace SVAC learn at Tul'!lday's

over
Ohio
and ballln
lJ?wllng
Green.
Innings
ofState
one- run
victories
Washington, a sophomore from
Gary, Ind .. set a school record by
running l he 110-meter high hurdles
In 13.94 seconds In the Kentucky
Relays.
Bograd, a freshman from Glen
Rock. N.J., won singles m.atches
from Northwestern and Purdue

TOPs IN VOii..LEYliJUJ..
Souu..,.;,'s glfl!! also look llrsl
place In le~ standlnp In
voUeyball. ACC&lt;lJ¥1ng the team's
award · was Coach Connie
Enslen.
\·

. The Daily Sentinel
•
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A Dlvilklon ol Multlmed)a, lac.

Member : The- Associated Press, ID·

Marauders are to play the
tonight at
IrOnton, 'l'hursdaJ.o., Meigs travels to
Ravenswood. · GAHS wlU host
Athens today.
By Innings:

land Dally PreS:s AssoCiation and the
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Molp ...... .... .. ................... OOI 0Cll5-6-Hi
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Chuck Roast.... :~·...

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I~ ~ 1 l.adJ 0 ·~ a, Vickie Voa1h1n, Spreuls, Orwa
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Kansu Ctty (Gura J..{)J at Delrolt (WlJ .
0011 HI. In)
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Thursdly, frid11 i. Saltrdfy · A,lil 21st, 22nd ·, Urd

report ..
:Tile Cincinnati Enquirer reported
t$1y that the Bengals are schedttled to appear on national televlslim five t!(nes next season. The
sc!hedule Is to be released officially
t~y .
.
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~I play the Pittsburgh Steelers In
RZVertront Stadium on Monday, I
Oct. 10, and the Dolphins In Miami
oaMonday, Nov. 28.
:rhey'll also face the Cleveland
Browns 1n Cleveland's Municipal
Stadium on Thursday nJght, Sept.
15; the newspaper said.

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Belttmore 4, TC'kas 2
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SPRING SALE

'CINCINNATI (AP) - The C!n'
clnnatl
Bengals will play In two
Monday night football games this
year and one Thursday night
sgecial, according to a newspaper

'
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JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

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competitors while losing to a
Southern Illinois player. He. also
teamed with Tim Klitch towln three
doubles matches.
Schooley, a senior from Columbus. Ind.. finished second In the
Indianapolis Intercollegiate Tournament and tied for fourth In the
Kepler Invitational at Ohio SIJ!te.

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MURRAY

MAC spring athletes of week
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Pitcher Mike Yearout of Toledo,
Western Michigan hurdler Alex
Washington. Miami tennis player
Rick Bograd and Ball State golfer
Kirk Schooley are the MidAmerican Conference spring Ath·
ietes of the Week.
Yearout. a senior right-hander
from BartlesvUle, Okla .. pitched 12

over wlih. It lakes the pressure off,"
Brunansky said after breaking out
ofaslumpwithhisflrstbomerofthe ·
year, which broke a 2-2 tie with the .
Mariners.

I

8t . l..oldl 11 htomftal

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.

~~nN~~~nnnnnn~~

2~'X4")(8'

'\

P\iREX

lf.C

\

Detergent

Fruit Drink
..

\

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460z.
\

2/SI

72 Oz.

Box

$189 .
P•c.tomer
At '-ll's

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�•

• Pag1 _6 The Daily Sentinel
"HOUSTON (AP) .- Outftelder
Pa ul Householder worked out with
the Cincinnati Reds lor the firSt time
In more than a month Tuesday, and
said he's come a long way In
recovering from hepatitis.
The right fielder participated In
pre-game warmups wit}l the Reds..the first time he had.workedout with
the club stnce March 15.
Householder attended a January
sports banquet at a northern
Kentucky country club that has
been linked with 100 cases of

hepatitis.
Householder was placed on the
21-day disabled Ust and stayed
behind In Tampa, Fla., when the
Reds broke tralnm_g camp.
"I've rome a long way In two
weeks," Householder said Tuesday.
.''It's been a step at a time. I looked
forward togettlng&lt;iutonthatHeldtn
Reds land (In Tampa ) and that was
one step. Now I'm here. That's
another step."
Although Householder has come
ott
the _
disabled list, the_Reds have
__________________

Householder
• •
parttctpates
• __ warmups
m

..•

•

•

Wednesday, April 20, 1..,,.
,.
..,.
frustratJng."
'
.....~ ,.
not Indicated when they' plan to · been healthy.
TheRedsalsOJe!tPitcllerCIIai'l_!l!
return him totheactlveroster. They
''The biggest -thing to me was It
_..,_._
wouldhavetoc~aspottorhlm. tookawaytheopportiJ.nltyformeto PuleobehlndinFiorlda 10 ·~- HotisehOider, who went Into play Opening Day," Householder
atetromatmeeproblem.Puleolll!1
training camp trying to win the said. "Cesar was hurt, Duane
arthrascOPICsurgeryO!lblslaleefor •
startlngrlghtfieldjobhelostdurlng
(Walker) was hll',· If I hlld -been
cartllage damage early In
his ppor rookie seasoo of 1982, said healthy, I would have been playing.
tralnlng and was placed 011 tile the hardest part was know1ng he
"Granted, I would have had to do
dlsabledli'lt.
:, :.~·
might have started ()penlnj!-Dav.
the job ~ But I had started worldng
•
Rlght .fielder Cesar Cedeno was two weeks after the season ended to
" My knee teelsgreat,"PulliOsalit :
1
hampered ey a groin Injury, and get myself ready for spflni train·
from Florida. "And my arm feel!!~: .
rookie Jeff Jones started tn his tng. I had Hve months to prepare great It's just a matter of~ :: ·
place. Householder probably would myself, and tbls thlngtookthosetlve everything together...
;··, ~ ·
have been tn the Uneup H he had _
months
away
frbm
me.
That
was
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . t1. ·

By The Bend

sprln&amp;";

Pagl

atMGM
ented a book on Boden· Powell for
blsserVlceasthedlstrlctcha.lrma!l.
Lanny Tyree was given 'a PedrO
bolo tie by Pl1ll McCrery, MGM
dlstrlctexecutlve.
The Harmony Qlspel Singers,
who$e lead singer Is Mark Matson,
an Eagle scout, provided
entertalmnEnt.
RayandChecy!LaudermUtwere
presented their wood badge beads
and partlclpatlng In the ceremony
'Paul Benford, Barboursville,
W. Va.; AJ Mead, Huntington; Phll
McCrely, • Huntington; Charles
Henson, Point Pleasant, and Frank
Casto, Ponleroy. Wood badge Is the
highest traJntng a scouter can lake.
Mrs. LaudennDt Is the only woman
In theMGM Dlstlct to complete the
training. _

~ ~ -·

-._"..'f.~

. •.
"

•
•'

..••....

••

...

,,

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

,,

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''"

-· tonal

Lee Lee and choreographer Is Mrs.
Barbara Lawrence. A variety of
s inging, dancing and comedy will he
Included In the annual show.

.~ .

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~

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-·

....

-·

APPEARING TONIGHT
THROUGH SATURDAY
FOR YOUR DINING
AND DANCING PLEASURE

TOTAl SATISFACTION G UARANTEE
fu•~th i ng

ya "' b uy or lr;rogor it guo ro,.lood lor re~ ur
101111 tol ltlo ct lon ••tordlo11 ol monu lrJcl 11ror If y'o ..
010 not l(!lill lod ltt ll fj O &lt; will rophu o , • .,, Item with
tho tomo brand or 11 t ompDrablo b 1ond or rolu11d you r
p ur&lt; hlu• p df •

CO,'f'IIGHT IUl . THI· KROGfR CO . 1Tf:M5 AND PI ICU

GOOD SUNDAY . A!IR1t'17 . THIOUGH 5ATUIOAY , APRIL

23 . '"' · tN GAlliP;OUS 1\NO POMEROY STORES. l
Wl IUUIV' THE .riGttT TO LIMit QUANTITIES . NONE .

SOl o To [&gt;E A(,R$ .

als

•. •'

lv•rv••Y·

'

'.

.DON
. . DAY

'.

Low Prices_

.

FROM 7-11 EACH
EVENING

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES

Springdale
2% Milk -

ab, Diet. Cok.e
or Coca Cola

58

Gal.

..

STARTS FRIDAY

TREASURE OF THE
FOUR CROWNS

-·

38

8

Ctn.

movie will bt in 3-D.You

I ma~IPi' cl

up your l ·D &amp;111101

when purchasinca ticket.

•••••••••••••

. · Pak

.

99c
Sandwich or 2 99 C
Wiener Buns ..
,
Kroger
,
Cottage Cheese ~t;::

..

Crisco
Sh _ ning

KROGER

-lb.
Can

U.S.D.A. GRADE A

375 SHEETS PER ROLL

White Cloud 6
Bath Tissue ... .·... ·::~~

J69

.....·

·~~ 79C

:!t

1
DrinL

LIMIT I WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

Holly Farms
Chicken Brea.s t

i

I

Lb.

I

.

ChickenWITH
Bll!ast
Halves
RIBS

J

••

:

,-.,

.....
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..
.- ·~~

WHERE NEW IDEAS
COME TO UFE

"

.fresh
Pineapple

EASTERN GROWN

lb.

.'

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'

s· 28

7

-lb.

...
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•

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• ••

.

•.J

'

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.' ....'

• ·1,.
:,'

Fresh Made
Cheese Pizzas

,I

were areeten-

-•.

'cantata. Janice LIJie and Marjorie .
Mluluet- were ~~o~teus. Flowen '
om'!! provided by the Pomeroy

~'
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r'' ...

. '·.

\$

,.

...

\

\

12~1n.

:...
.., ..•

Quart

Pizza•..-. \

. ;._.,_
·

STRAWIERRY PIE GLAZE I·LB. PKG. , , 59C

,.

..

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~

/1'!.,.1,~

.,

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• •
...... . r;.
'

.

RetreUnt!!lta were served In the ·
churdl IOCial i:oom followln&amp; the

J, '
I

Jell Arnold; clarinet quartet, Dar·
cle Hysell, Sally Radford, Cheryl
Roush, Brenda Sinclair. Receiving
n ratings were In seventh grade clartnet b1o, Lisa Miller, Stephanie
MU&amp;m, Penny Dark; clarinet trlo,
Gina Scarherry, Denise Gtheaut,
Lois Davidson; trumpet, Melanie
Arnold; fiute b1o, . Aprll Dark,
Jenny Swartz, Carol Hendrix;
trumpet b1o, Jodi Wells, Patty
Ward, Tammy Staats. Receiving
Ill ratings were, In seventh grade
- clarinet trto, Lisa Frymyer,
Cindy Bailey, Wendy Swan. In
eighth grade - clarinet trio. Darcie

Hysell , Sally Radford , Candy
Staats.

r-;:=========;;1
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE. 011.
PHONE 992-5776
NOW OPEN FOR SPIIIIG SEASOII
Complete line of Wlllllble and boddi,.
plants, 100., pllnls llld hqi,.
~lUis. Also • llfll selectiolo of
sholbbtry llld lhlnllruM W..
.
OPEN DAILY 9 to 5
SUNDAY I to 5

.

.Flciwer Shop.

Omitted
DUne d Roaw ~~~ I,
LQas BotU\dt, wu IDIItted from the
1be

-t ~ d

Hocld'V ·Valley

Te*deal ~· NellonviDe,
dlu'l lilt flir
tall aDd wlntel'
quartel'•

- - --I

• • • • • • • • • • • WITH COUPON • • • • • • • • • • • • •

FREE Fish &amp; More®Dinner
when you buy one at the regular price.

Dinner i

'

1I
I

2 fish fillets, fryes, slaw(, 2 hushpuppies .

Valid thru: 1'1\ay 7, 1983
Only at Sllvt&lt; Bridge Plena
Stale Route 7, Gallipolis, OH.

I
I
I

I
I

The first. . .
the original

I
I
I

One

•'•Iii•••••••••

••••••••••••-I
FREE Fish &amp; Chicken Dinner
1
I
WITH COUPON

when you buy one at the regular price.

fillet, 2 whltemeat Chicken Planks,' lcyes (,slaw .

cart

.' ..

AVAILA.LE ONLY 'IN STORES WITH "'~~~
DELI·BAKERIES ,
THIC~ OR THIN CRUST

Michele Folmer. In eighth grade-

sax solo, Ertn Anderson; sax solo,

perwn, per

The cantata, "He Lives" by Joe
E . Parks was presented by the
Syracuse Olarge Choir at the
Methodist Church 011 Palm Sunday.
B. weeae was the nan:ator;
' Role Ann Jenkins, pianist; and
Mary Lisle, _ director. Speaking
parU were taken ,\IY RWI8 Moore,
BW Amott, Keni!Y, Buckley and
Aprll Hannon, wtifl_ soloe by the
Rev. Stanley Merrifield, Randy
lluddln&amp;. HCpe Moore, Opal IOoes,
Dennla Moore, and Mary Cundiff.
Jobn Llale an:l Judy Pape had a
duet, and Marybelle w~. JW
Puah and Ann Sauvage, a trio
number.
·
.
,
Ruth Crouch and Martha Moore

,.

Bag

Meigs Junior High Schoollnstru·
mental students competed Saturday In the Ohio Music Education ·
A&amp;90Ciatlon Solo and Ensemble
Contest held at Ohlo University.
Thirty·slx students, woo are .
!aught by David Bowen, took part
In the contest with 11 ensembles
and three solos. Five ratings were
given at the contest Including
Rating I, outstanding; Rating n,
unusual performance; Rating Ill,
acceptable performance; Rating
IV, poor, and Rating V, very poor.
Receiving a I rating were In
sevenlh gra&amp;! fiute trlo, Angela
·Sloan, Teresa John8oll, Klm Cal·
vert; ftute trto, Sherry Cooper,
Deeanna Henderson; Dena Man·
ley; brass· quartel, Kevin King,
Davlll Beegle, Shannon Slavin,

Cantata seen
.at local church

· ~~ '
t . ·-

Winesap
Apples

4·6·LB. AVG .

Whole
.Fresh Picnics .... ....

.

'

JUMBO B SIZE
PlANTATION RIPENED

~~i::J'la:!~e "$J29

....... .

..

9
9
·
C
Ice Cream.-~.,~~~·

Salad
Tomatoes ..

Music students compete and advance

,.'_

) Polar Pak

c

KROGER
GLADLY
WELCOMES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD$TAMPS

""

'

88

3

:i.~~--

•

banquet

Musical set Friday at Southern

for . .

,,

t

.,

--

ouAJIANT&amp;&amp; •·.

., .

··-

-~All gold·ooiOf'

Valid thru: May 7, 1983
Only At Silvor Bridge Plaza
State Routt 7, Ga"lpol~

'"'

'I ADD-A-_GOLDBEADS '

0 , 0 cMiliod 10 bO

14 KARAT GOLD
andareta~~~
atnC! quelity conn....
s,upero 11y1e ana lin~sh

\
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• • • • • • • • • • • • WITH COUPON ··· · • • • • • • • • •

,

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OAANGEBUR&lt;i s c . .

~
-,'·

·( · .
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14 Karat Original
Add-a-Gold Bead"
necklace with
this wrttten

14 Karat quarantee!

7

The Royal Crown Bottling Co. of Hanel, Gerry Mowery, Katlly
Middlepon and the Amerlcan McDaniel, Gale Osobrne, BW Slm,
Legion, Middleport Post, · was
Don Lowery, Sandy and - Doll
Hanning, Nellie and WalterHagy,
honored lor outstanding service to
Bob Smith, Shirley Smith, Tml
scouting.
'
The sUver anniversary award
Pennington, Sharon Matson, Gar·
was given to the 366!1th Main. Co. cia and Lanny Adams,' Diane and
Jim Oiler, Wanda and Steve 'Theiss,
FDS, W. Va. National Guard, Point
Mr. and Mrs. fulbert Schmoll, Jr.,
Pleasant lor sponsoring Troop 259
!or25years. certlllcateswWalsobe
JoAnn and James CouncU, and
presented to the Racine Home
Richard Richmond.
Members of the American Legion
National Bank. Bank Orie and the
Auxlllary, · Feeney-Bennett Post
Farm(!I'S Bank and Savings Co. lor
128. prepared and served thedlnner .
support of the scouUng program.
Troop 245, Middleport, had the . - - - - - - - - - - opening ceremony :.vfth Jeff Hawk,
Don Stein, Walter Haggy, Jr., and
Scott Hanning taldng part . Lauder·
mUt gave the lnvQCatlon.
Others attending the recognition
dinner were Bob Workman, Fred

were

r ~.

hell
thete
itomt
••111u irod to bo
ro oc!H r awo ilaD iolo t 1olo ' " oo r h l(rogo• St a r• 'e ot o Pt
&lt;II tpo d f i&lt; allv "lllod in tl-1 it ad II wo do run out of o n
od~o , ltod ito., wo w il l otfo r yo u rou r d to iro o l o
com por oblo it o m wh o " o.,oilablo &lt;olloulnt tho toMe
tCi illcllod which w i ll ont itlo
I.Owi"W'
puo choto th o od• ort itod itom ol rho &lt;l(~"orlltod P "' •
withi" JO dor t Only o, o ~•,.do r coupon ,.. ;u bo
D«op tod po r ilom pur c llo~td

~

Wednesday, Apil 20, 1913
,.

,;:f

.;__~_:_-~_:_.:::...:.._:_:::..:::.._=-:=~:.:...:::...::.._

ADV'ERTIS£0 ITEM POLICY

'fhe Daily Sentinel

$1.00,Q FF Seafood Platter
Platter Includes a fish fillet, 2 shrimp, 2 scallops, fryes, slaw(,
2 hushpupples.
•

•

Valid thru: May 7, 1983
Only At Sllv• Bridge Pima
Slate Routt 7, Oalllpolle, OH.

.

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f"

8-The Daily Sentinel

Helen help us

Wednesday, April 20, 1983

Family Medicine

By HEI EN B01TEL
DEAR HELEN:
Many atloptees fantasize abou '
finding their biological parents. S.
did I!
Since things sometimes hadn'l
~n top notch with my adopted
parents, I dreamed aboutmy "real
Mom and Dad." In my mlrtd they
had ~n tremendously In love, but
forced to part; and a "cru~l fatwr"
had demanded that I be given up,
while his daughter (my mother ]
wept and pleaded. I pictured her as
a sad, lovely woman who never
stopped 1hlnktog of how It might
hav~ been.
·
So much for dreams! Reality
knocked on my door one day, and
now 1 realize how lucky I was to
have been glven away.
My "mother" found me when I
was 23. Someone In the small town
where I was born gave her leads,
and these brought her, finally, to
my apartment.
She didn't hunt for me out of love,
but because she needed money .
She's a tough, brassy female who
admitted she wasn't sure which
man fathered me. I gather she later
became a part-time hooker, bE'tween marriages. She's now divorced again, and getting too old

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
AssJstant Prqfessor
· of FamDy Medicine
Ohio University CoUege
of Osteopathic Medicine
Breast MDk Best
For Babies
QUESTION: Why do so many
health professionals recommend
breast-feeding?
ANSWER: Last week I discussed the Importance of being

oaacteriaJ infection Ih the infant's
ANSWER: Because cow's milk
stomach and intestines. Breast
is harder to digest, you should try to
milk also transmits certain cells
wait until the infant is at least a
that produce antibodies to protect
year old. U for some reason you
the infant from a variety of other can't breasHeed the baby, try
infections, giving the breast-fed
switching to one of the formulas
baby added disease resistance.
especially prepared for feeding
QUESTION: But my baby
infants. Your family physician can
doesn't seem to get enough to eat give you direction in this.
when I breast -feed .
Next week I'll discuss when to
ANSWER: Paren~s olten per- introduce solid food into a baby's
ceive that breast -fed babies don't diet and how to make sure a.young
take in as much as a bottlt&gt;-fed child gets the nutrients needed for
''nutrition conbaby. What they need to realize is proper growth . U you have more
scious" during
that an Infant controls his own questions on breast·feeding please
intake with breast-feeding, therE-- write me and I'U send you
pregnancy. Nu'•
fore reducing greatlythe possibUity references for more information. ·
tritlonal concerns
"
are also primary
of overfeeding. When a baby Is - In a recent column on measles, a
given a bottle, the caregiver often . misunderstanding by my editor
in deciding whether or not to
keeps _offering the bottle until the caused an error in the printed
breast-feed. Human breast milk Is
infant finishes all of it . The baby information. The column mistaknaturally and specifically adapted
may
drink more than he actually enly identified the form of measles
for the new baby and can supply aU
f
wants,
which leads to the early tinder discussion as thret&gt;-day
of the child's nutritional needs for
formation of obesity. As was noted me1!5les. This error made me
the first four to six months of llle.
OFFICERS - 'lbe!e five Meigs High School Front ·are Shawn Eads, Jon Perrtn, Danny 'Thomas,
last week, once an excess number aware of the need to clarify the
For newborns, the first breast milk.
students
have been named officers of the new Meigs trl-captalns; (bad&lt;) Ruth Fry, secretary, and Jenny
of fat cells is formed, there Is no different types of measles for my
called colostrum, is especially
of the Fellowship · ol Christian Athletes.
Chapter
way to reduce this number. As long re~ers.
Meadows, ·treasurer.
important because it helps to
as a nursing mother is able to
stimulate the early growth of the
The most common form of
produce enough milk to satisfy the measles, often called "hard" mea infant. Colostrum meets the unique
baby's hunger, breast-feeding rE-- sles, is known medically as runeeds of new babies better than
presents a safer way to provide the beola. This Infectious viral disease
formulas based on cow's milk, and
Following o;everal months oi overall group activities; encourage Sonia Wise, Rick Wise, · Greg
baby's nutritional requirements.
better than milk from a mother
lasts from seven to 10 days, with a
athletes not only to attend FCA _.:raylor, Kim Roush, Brian Willis,
meetings by concerned parents, a
QUESTION: Are there times rosy raised rash appearing about
who has been breast-feeding for a
chapter of the Fellowship of
meetings but to bring a teammate;
Renee Willis, Scott Pullins, Penny
when breast -feeding Isn't a good the third or fourth day and lasting
few months.
Dewhurst, J enny Meadows, Ruth
Christian Athletes has emerged at encourage members to actively
idea?
All human breast mllk contains
for three or four more days.
Meigs High SchooL
worship and be involved In their Fry, Scott Harrison , Jody HamANSWER: On rare occasions,
different kinds of fat from what Is In
The other disease often referred
Interest and membership in the
local church; help create an
son, Brian Zirkle, Mary Jacobs,
breast -feeding may not be advisa- to as measles Is known medically
cow's milk. These make breast
atmosphere In which everyone
Dave Durst, Rhonda Zirkle, Lisa
new organization Is running high
ble. U the nursing mother has a as rubella. It Is also a contagious
milk almost always easier for the
feels comfortable to share; assist
Pullins, Shannon Stewart, )'lick
with the chapter being formed afte;
serious infectious illness ilke hepa- viral disease that often occurs with
baby to digest. In addition to the
Mike Olejarz, Southeastern Ohio
members In discovering how they
Bush, Patty Duffy, Kevin ~
titis, or if she is taking potent a rash, but the rash is flat and pink
milk's nutritional value, breastCoordinator of the Fellowship of can apply the principles learned at
dows, Jay Evans, D~ve Barr,
feeding fosters close mother-child · medication that might be trans- and lasts for about three or tour
Christian Athletes in Athens, apmeetings and continue to encourRoush, Kristin Batley, Rhonda
formed through the milk to her days. This form of measles Is
·contact, is inexpensive and a lmost
Haddox, Paula S"ondell, Trey
peared before parents and Inter- age part icipation from coaching
never causes allergy problems Jn· baby, she might be urged not to usually mild. Rubella is also known
staff members.
cassell, Tammy Thomas, Danny
ested students to outllne aspects of
breast-feed . In these cases, the as German measles, French mea- -the organization ,
the infant.
The group hopes to stage a · Davis, Mark H am~;nonds and Joe
• IL also gives an extra medical physician wUI carefully weigh the sles or three-day measles. Unlike
The purpose of FCA Is to present
ru-n-a-thon on May 28 and to- be
benefits of breast·feeding with the rubeola, rubella Is known to cause -- to _ athletes and coaches and aU
benefit to the baby.· Human breast
inv~lved In a spring . clean-up
potential dangers before making a
milk transmits to the baby a special
fetal_ abnormalities . II a woman
whom they lnfhieitce,;the .c.hallenge . program : A number of members
·
antibodicalied lgA , which is founq - rec&lt;immendaton.
. c·ontracts It - during - early . and adventure of rwelvllig _Jesu·s
have e.xpressect· a. wish ·to attend a._
QUESTION: When ca:n I begin
in orily loW quantitieS in' cow's milk.
pregnancy.
Ctirlst as·Savtourand Lord, seivlng
summer conference and fund~ will
using cow's milk or whole milk to
This lgA serves as protection from
Both forms of measles can be
be needed for that activity.
Him In their relationships, and in
feed my baby?
prevented through Immunization.
-Students in the initial member·
the fell ows hip of the church. the
Meigs County Ministerial Assocta- ship include Dan Thomas, Rick
Chancey, Mike Chancey, Jackie
tion sponsored the earlier meetings
of concerned parents leading to the
Welker, Chris Burdette, Maria
Chapter
of
the
FCA.
Averion, Rowena AVerion, Mark
new
Meigs
serving from ·o to 7 p.m . by
Sponsoring the Meigs Chapter
Falrrow, Brian Nltz, Randy StE'Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
are
Principal
James
Miller
and
wart, Linda Stewart. Lisa Allen,
POMEROY -American Red
of the Eastern Star, Middleport
high
faculty
members
Fenton
Brian
Jacobs, Barry O'Brien, Nick
Cross Bloodmobile, Wednesday,
Masonic Temple. Carry-out
Drummer
and
Larry
Riggs,
George Hobson, Shawn
Taylor,
Greg
1:30 to5: 30 p.m. at Meigs County
orders wlll be available from 4 to
Grimes.
Among
the
responsibilities
Eads,
Jon
Perrin, Karen Goggins,
Senior Citizens Center, Mul5 p.m.
of the sponsors are meeting
berry Heights, Pomeroy. Wa lkregularly with officers to pray,
in donors welcome.
POMEROY - Southern Lodiscuss
and plan the meetings and
-cal District kindergarten regisPOMEROY - Third Wednestration will be Friday, 8:15a.m.
day Homemakers Club 10 a.m.
to 11 a.m. and 1 to 2:45p.m. In
Wednesday. Dale Stoll will
kindergarten room, next to
present the topic, "Better Than
Southern Junior High. Parents
Store Bought"; potluck dinner
to take birth certificate, immuniat noon.
zation records and recent skin
Pauline Ridenour and Lora
test proof. No regular kinderDamewood
hosted a meeting of the
garten class on Friday; enrol·
Past
Councilors
Club of Chester
lees need rot accompany parCouncll323.
Paughters
of America,
POMEROY - Special meetents to registration.
the
Rev.
Paul
Miller
a
t
the
Ridenour
home.
,
Ing. Pomeroy Chapter ffi, Royal
Mrs.
Damewood
read
the
100th
Arch Masons, lllursday, 7:30
POMEROY- Music On The
REVIV1\L - 'lbe Rev. Paul Psalm and reports were given by
p.m. with work in thP most
Move, annual variety show of
Miller,
Center Hall, Pa., will he Margaret Tuttle, secretary, and
EM ADE
exce llent mas1Pr degree.
Southern High School will be 8
evangeUst for ·a revival to he held Opal Hollon, treasurer. Games
p.m. Friday in school auditol\prii22-May 1, 7 p.m. each evening were conducted by Erma Cleland
Pd,!\1 E: RClY - Magnolia Club
rium with direction by Mrs . Lee
at
the Rutland Bible Methodist and Dorothy Myers. Sadie Trussell
't'h•"rS.Iav. 7: 30p.m . at the home
Lee.
12 OZ. DART
.
Chun:h.
'lbe Rev. 1\mos Tllll•, son the door prize and refreshments
Myron Miller.
pa.!ltor, invites the public.
were served by the hostesSes.
Middleport
TUPPERS PLAINS
1 LB. ECKRICH
.
Ch ild l(:o nse•rv&lt;l tic&gt;n League,
Stamper Pull will be Saturday,
ThtJrselav. 7: 30 p.m . home of
Tuppers Plains Fire Station,
Susie
. Clarice Kennedy
registration at 6 p.m. $1 per car.

Christian Athletes recognized at school

Bend personals

ANN'S
CAKE DECORATING
Route 7·
Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
667-6485

Calendar

WED.NESDA 'r

Councilors
Club
.
meets 1n

1

THURSDAY

ha v

dP vol lon s;

new

be voted on,
com mil te e to

There wtll be trophies and
refreshments.
24 CT.
FLA1WOODS -

- Rock
Health Club will
Th•"rscla\1, \:30 p.m. at the
~~.en1ora Leifheit .
RACINEcancer! by
Stone, 7 p.m.
Racine Un
Church; no adrnls!ilon
offering wlll be

FRIDA

MIDDLEPORT - ~pa.ghe•ttl
Dinner wtli be

Jackson craft fair

There will
be hymn sing Saturday, 7 p.m.
at Flatwoods United Methodist
Church . ·

8 OZ. 12 SLICE AMER . PROC:

FT Sl NGLES.~.~~-$1.

~URALIZE~
COMFORT BY DESIGN

Enter Spring In
A Fresh Faahlon Wedge
A wonderful way 10 stan the season'
A slighil)' higher v.iedgl' with
o Hllrasting trim .. _rut!\,- Etbric

at, the show as well as exhibiting
cr~flsmen from many aeas in
central and southern Ohio. There
will be approximately 45 exhibitors
at
show. For further Information
Martha Walburn,
or Audrey Massay, 286-

uppers ... lightly padded sock.
Perlenly styll'd to c tpture the
spirit of Spring.

TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
SAT., APRIL 30. 1983-9
At The Gcillia Co. Faii'IIJOUnds
TEACHER: LOIS

NEW GREEN

DOWNING-CHI LOS
MULLEN INSURANCE

CAROUSEl
CONFECTIONERY
PH. 992-6342

Middleport

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

·You never had it this fresh!
..

..

' ..

•
•
iA\ fresh, clean taste unlil&lt;e any
cigarette I've ever!,~!:o. Te•~
New Bright has given smokers a
fresfl new taste e~rlence that
outshines menthol. Although they
weren't asked to write us, they
keep sending raves like these:

Yo1,.n new Br•ghr IOO's a·tr s ma ~h•ngr F1rv!lty ~1
tru ly refft&gt;Sh1r1q rncnthol •n ;, low tar o g rm.'ftf'l I

am ttlrrlled to

h~ve

YOI J\t(' (/O i c1 W!llllf ' / ()II
I I! W

rou nd Bngnr My search •s

over. rm convmc ccJ there really •s g1ear tast e If I
~ low "r CICJilrr'rtf'
Michael McNabb
( h,Jrtarrooga. TN

your l l, Hlrh

f3rlij~ll 1\ ,I

ctllill'.'(( I[H II/ , I [ J[ JI[I()n [0 I~ I!' ( l&lt;j. II( 'Itt'

r. 111111'~

Mervin Silverman
( if'VI'I.tnd

Of I

t vc on ly \ /lJOk1 ·d Bcr I'.OrJ ,.._, I /1 '( lq t '\ Mr ·nn l(l l
_ _., 'lll llf' tfl('V ·w lll'l'n o ut Ill llf'Vt 'f qn l l.t&lt; t..
BIIQ/11\ , If ( ' \0 ll(jlll

As I Ire my f~rsc Brrghr. my flrsr commenr wa s
"Ooooh res cerrrficr" tr casres so clean
Laurie Clrluello
Srony Creek.

CrrJrlf('/lf'\f

, jf]{/

L t\ IY I /(lV(' IIH '\1'

Barbara Norwood

flry.ln. rx

a

Brrghc 1S a ranrasucally re~&lt;"hrng taste I I have been a
smoker tor over 15 years

has the cleanesr. coolest
I have ever experrencedl

Robin York

PERCH 'FILLETS ......... ~.K.G_.Sl.99
12 OZ. CARNATION

~OT

COCOA MIX • • • • • • •BOX• • • Sl.49
Biscuit and Egg and
Sausage Sandwich With

3 LB. GOLDEN ISLE

CAN S}.85
SHORTENING •••••••••••••••
2 LB. GOLDEN ISLE POLY

BROWN SUGAR ........ ~~~-. sl.lO

ONLY

INSTANT TEA ............J!'_R. S2.69
OILET TISSUE ......... :~~~ s1.39

101h OZ. CHICKEN VEGETABLE
\

HARTLEY S

'

STORE HOURS

Mon.·TIIurt.-Sat 9-5

'•"'""'· 0n1 _,pon por
por ,._,_

J:ri.t.u

9-8

LUNCH MEAT.~ ......... ~!'.N. s1.4

..-mor II

·LIMITED
TIME OFFER

-\

Nowhere Else....
t'

.

~
Burner

'

CAMPBELL'S SOUP ... ~~~~2/79¢
12 OZ. ARMOUR CANNED TREAT

I"
I

ROLL CHARMIN WHITE

GRAPE JELLY ............~~~. 79¢
\

95~

SAVE 59(
'II,.._,
1l1lo coupon"""".,....... ~"'
onv pot~tclpeUnu IIUfiiO' c - ,.._ 1

'

34

fi~~J:::::-------

Coffee.

10 OZ. SMUCKERS

For further information. call: Board I Fun-y

804 W. Mllin
OH

In this week's Birthday Sale Kmart
has inadvertently listed the
Women's and Boys' Nikes. The
Men's Nike was the only Sneaker
scheduled to be promoted. We regret
'
. this has caused
any .nconvemence
e»ur customers.

AND

All OUT-OF-SEASON
CAKE PANS
25% OFF

317 N. 2nd

Final plans for the District 13
spring rally attheCarletonSchool in
Symcuse on Aprllll, were made at
a recent meeting at the Western
Sizzlln Steak House.
Members were reminded to take
gifts for the various sales and door
prize tables. A practice was
announced for Sunday at 1: ll p.m .
Esther Smith presided at the

meeting, with current officers being
retained for another year.
Members responded to roil caU bY
naming their favorite nowei-.
Officers' reports were given by
Helen Bauer, secretary; and Dorothy Ritchie, treasurer. Devotions
were given by Ms. Bauer following
lhe rltuallstic opening.
Members of UJe Guiding Star
·CouocU at Syracuse, the Perry
Council of New Lexington; and
Chester Council attended.

1 LBS.

PEACH~S -~ .................~~~- 99¢

$10.00 Per Per.on (PIUI
2 PROJECTS-1 8x20 C.1111111

HANDI\IIU\r-•

The Meigs County Genealogical
Society met at the Meigs County
Museum Sunday. The meeting was
called to order by June As!tley,
president. Reports were read by
the secretary, treasurer, and the
corresponding secretary.
The society is promoting the
restoration and clean-up of all
cemeteries In the county especially
the abandoned ones . Mrs. Hager,
Karen Werry, and' Keith Ashley
reported on various cemeteries and
their conditions. Several township
trustees and village mayors had
personally been ccntacted wiJ-_b.-nb
s~s gained w~sJl!!""f. The
chapter--plam----to- continue with
further procedure until results can
be accomplished.
Margaret Parker reported that
the reprints of aU three county
history books are still available.
The society Is pla!lning a trip to
the Ohio University Library on
June 7, leaVIng Pomeroy at 9 a.m.
Upcoming events are Scottish
Clan Games at Oberlin; State
Meeting of Palatines to America at

D of A

Columbus; and The Ohio State
Genealogical SocietY Annual Convention, also In 'Columbus.
Keith Ashley, June Ashley, and
Frances Roberts will. be honored
this year at the state ccnvention by
being accepted Into First Famllles
of Ohlo. This Is an outstanding
honor won by having proven one
had an ancestor living in Ohio
before 1~.
It was noted that the Zirkle
Famlly History Book Volume I is In
reprtot and available for $8. Also,
The Rose Famlly In America has
several pubUcatlons for sale.
~ June Ashley read several articles
f~
ubUcation ''The Genea·
logical He r ."
The door
, an eight generation chart, was won by Cella Bailey.
Refreshments were served by
Frances Roberts to members and
guests_ The next meeting will be
May 15 at the Meigs County
Mu~um at2 p.m . All interested are
Invited to attend.

HEAD LETTUCE .... 79'

29 OZ. DEL MONTE

CRAFTY

Genalogical Society

HEAD

4 OZ. NESTEA "BONUS PACK"

Navy.

992-2298. In Ga•pollo
,. April 28th

In ber column if you write to Helen
Bott.el, care of this newspaper.

•

1 LB. BOOTH

Available In
Red and

In
.

Got a problem• An adult subject

tor discussion? You can talk It over

-'

CABBAGE.. ...... f.o.~ .. 35'

RACINE - There '\'UI be
professional wrestling card at
Racine Junior High School, 8
p.m . Saturday sponsored by
Racine Firemen 's Auxiliary.
There will be six matches
Including All American Junior
Heavyweight title match .
Tickets at reduCed prices can tJi,
secured from Auxiliary
members.

,SChedLI1ed

JACKSON - The Jackson
. Guild will be having its Sptci~Jg
Craftiest at Canter's Cave
on Saturday, AprU 30, and ~UI10a}\
May 1. Times for the show each
are10a.m. untO 7 p.m. Members of
the local group will be represented

Mr. and Mrs. James Haggy and
family, Springfield, were recent
visitors of Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Burdette.
Spending Friday and Saturday
with Mrs. Pearl Jacobs were Mr.
and' Mrs. Wllltam Jacobs and Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Jaccbs and
daughter, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stewart, New
Albany, were recent visitors of Mr.
aitd Mrs. Wayne Pullens and Mrs.
·
Ann Mash. · .. ' Easter gliests of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Llsl&lt; , Syracuse, were their
children and families, John and
Janice Lisle, Todd, Scott and
Travis, Syracuse; Roy and Rose
Ann Jenkins, Kimberly and Rochelle, Mlnersvllle, and Keith and
Karen Lisle, Jason and Nicholas,
West .Jefferson.
An Easter egg hunt and baskets
were enjoyed by the children. A
rabbit cake baked by Mrs. Jenkins
·centered the dinner table. The
Keith Lisle family also visited with
ber parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
Johnson, Middleport.
Mrs. Carl Jel\klns of Vienna, W.
Va. recently ~!MDI a weekend at the
hOme of her 11011. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jenkins and daughters, Kimberly
and Rochella, and attended the
C!'llllllll at the forest Run ~tho­
db! C:hurch.

Tuesday's 'edition of The Dally
Sentinel should have read that the
1938 graduating class of Pomeroy
High School Is making plans for a
special reunion this year. Mrs_ Rose
Sisson is attempting to locate
addresses on Mrs. J . Stephenson,
Sophia Blazewicz, George Brickles,
Mrs. Russell Gibbs, Juanita
Warner and Miss Jesse Lambert.
Anyone with Information on any of
the group should contact Mrs.
Sisson at the New York Clothing
House during the daytime or at her
home 992-2431 in the evening.

SLICED BACON .........~~~-s1.19
JUMBO BOLOGNA ....... ~~- SI.

SATIJRDAY

.
Meigs organtzattons meet

I

for the trade, ·so I'm a "good
prospect." You see, she knows my
adoptive parents are quite wealthy,
and I have a fine job.
'I'fle idea, as you've probably
guessed, Helen, is that she wants us
to pay her for staying out of our
lives. She won't move to our town
and tell people s.he's my "real
mother" If we send her a "small
monthly check." S~e's glven us a
deadline of April16 for our decision.
I can't stand the thought of
blackmail, but the alternative
could be worse. How would we lace
our friends with that woman
bleating I!Verywhere that I'm her
daughter? ACCIDENT OF
BIRTH
DEARAOB: '
Betier a black sheep " mother
about town" than blackmail that
could grow with the years.
I'd say, call this woman 's bluff.
Tell her your friends already know
about her and they'd "really enjoy
meeting" a woman who tries to
extort money from her daughter.
Then add that you owe her nothing,
which Is exactly what she'll
receive, no matter where she lives.
When she realizes you and your
parents aren't easy picking, she
may move to greener pastures. If
not, make sure people close to you
are aware of the situation. It's your
best defense. -H.

Correction

LICED BACON ........ !.K.G•. SI.49
HAM SALAD ..............L.B~ SI.59

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

•

Her (dream come true' .

Breast milk best for babies

to

Parneft,y-Miclclleport, Ohio.

Wednesday, April 20, 1983

.

Chef

I
I
I
I
I
I

\\

-

___

They have a nrce. pleasant.
i~
fre5H ta5te which I've neve• rasced before.
--:;:::::;;....Brrgh trs chc most enJoy~bl e
Merit Menthol was OX unrr l la5c week when I
and del•ghcful crgarene I have ever had the
tried your Bright ctgarenes. and I made up my
pleasure to smoke Marte K~l~
mind to Y1'10ke Bright ~om now on.
C)
~gartoar. PI\
"IIY Colella
Toms
River. NJ
I lOve the clean 1res h tasr.e rr 1eaves rn my mou lh
It has no "aftertaste" and tharl great
Mary O'Brien
1 u5uauy smoke menthols. but I tove tnrs mrnty
Char lone. NC
fresh taste. Thank~ lor a really new and unrque
ta5ting ctgarene.
Joyw Perry
1 recen!ly purchased a package or yo ur new
Florence, NJ
IJI'004CI. "Bnght tOO's ... I must say that I truly en·
JO)!Cr;J the taste There was no 'empty" taste like
1enJoyed Bright&gt; verj much. I passed a (ew out
!.he Other low tar ogarettes I thoug~t lor a
to ~tends at work and three of them say !hey
moment that they really weren't tow tar II would
are switching ~om theirregutar menthol cigarette
lrke to thank the company lor such a wonderful
to Bnghts.
L Lavoie
Mary Stewart
tastrng ogarerr~
N,. ,hua. NH
Evc&lt;rrwrlle. IN

VIcki

I'm really not one fqr tryrng
new crgare"es. but t t&gt;Qvg~t ~
pac~ IQ try 8e!reve me, anght
rs a cqol and trght ]~sting
.;:::!::.:.::~:~ cigarette. 1 totally enJqyrq
them 1 h.!ve jmoked lk•ns0 n arrt.l
Hedges N!enthol lor )'l'ars Burl am surely gorng
co swrtch co Brrg'Jt I(JQI now
$harqn A Dlylor
Whe~lrn\j. WV
Brrgnt nas a crrsp, clean all around gOOCI rasce
Brrght was a brl~ht•dea t Th~nks lor rnakrng wch
an e•cellent
c•g rene r
r
1
· · ,.. 1P
~ast Dubuque. I~
Purchajed rwo pack\ or Y~!-!r new Brrght too·s and found the taste delightlut-smooih and. l•kr
you say lresh and cleilfl
l'f•l J, Geor!ll
art c~. Town, N'J

"F. ..,_

I am very pleased to t~ll you Bnghts arc ''
advertrsed very cool. tasty ahd relre5hrng. I rc.rty
enJ oyed them .. Evelyn c. llootli
Clearwater. FL

I
I
I

II
I
I

.

Warmng The s·urgeon General. Has Oetermrned
That Ctgarette Smoktng Is Dangerous to Your Health .•

'

7 mg,;'tar", 0.5mg. nicotin!_av. per c•garetle by FTC mert ••d.

&amp;.-..:~-~·~-- .. --........

•

�, . l'og1

10--The Daily Sentinel

a-.io

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Wedneiday, April 20, 1913

; Wednetday, Apil 20, 1983

-~ Police unearth two bodies, additional corpses expected
_, · NEW YORK (AP)- A muddy
.. · yard at the fonner home of a
paroled kWer Is expected to yield
. more bodies, say authorities who

tlessald.
Mu'l'hY declined to say how
many bodles were thought to be
burled at the site. The Staten Island

25bod!esmlghtbefoundaroundthe
100-foot-!ljuare hOmesite.
But a New Jersey pl'(lSeOltor,
Alexander Lehrer, who alerted

unearthed
of two young
. - women
andtheCO'l'Se5
are Investigating
three
- moreslaylngslnNewJersey.
•
The remains of two victims were
. , dug up Tuesday from a shallow,
common grave at the forme r home
· • on Staten Island of Richard Biegen- wald, who murdered a Bayonne,
N .J ., prosecutor In 1958.
Blegenwald has been held In
Tre!lton State Prlson for the past
. three m onths on charges stemming
~: from the shooting death of a New
Je~sey woman last summer. "We
have· reason to believe there are
more bodies out there, based on
Information provided to us, " said
wuuam Mu'l'hY. the Staten Island
· dlstrtct attorney .
Five bodies - three In New
Jersey and the two on Staten Island
-have been uncovered so far In the
Investigation, authorities said.
: The remains were found about 30
illches beneath a pUe of debris next
• to the Blege nwald garage In a quiet.
wooded neighborhood ·o f s ingle.. family homes. Authorities said
· · digging would cont inue today.
Murphy would not say how
authorttles learned there were
· bodies buried In the backyard oft he
: .home where Blege nwald had lived
- with his mother since his 1971
-· parole. But Blegenwald's lawyer,
Lewis Diamond, said his client 's
·co-defendant In the recent murder
case, Dheran Fitzgerald, 52, pro:vtded the lnlormatlon.
- Blegenwald and Fitzgerald were
arrested Jan. 22 and charged In the
murder of Anna M . Oleslewlcz, Jll,
: of Camden, who disappeared Aug.
•28. Her buUe t-riddled body was
: 'round later. - .
; The .Investigation of that murder
t.id to.tne'd!scOye ryot ihetwo bodles
- on Staten Island, one of New York
City's five boroughs, as well as two
other bodies discovered In New
Jersey during the wee~end . au thorl-

Advance newspaper
It had
Information
from a said
source
It
decllnedtoidentifytha t as manyas

Staten Island
authortties to the
graveyard,
calledthatreport"spurlous." He said there •was "the

'·New Concord
:ready for
..: .announcement
NEW CONCORD, Ohio tAP) · 'Annie Gibson says she's not sure
,;,l,low many customers to expect In
"her restaurant Thursday when Sen.
John Glenn arrives In New Concord
announce he's running for

:to

. president.
· But she's ~ure she doesn't want to
get caug~t s~orthanded or with an
·- e mpty freezef .
· · "We just Hpd to bring In extra
· help, " said MS. Gibson, C(H)Wner of
.: Johnson's res~urant. one of two In
· the easte rn O~to vlllage of 1,800.
"Thls Is a llttle~ace."
. . She said two orkers have been
added to the s -person staff for
• Thur&amp;lay and t t theusuitlorderof
20 Swiss steaks h i n doubled . .
.. Glenn, who
up In New
" Concoitl, Is sched led to announce
·' 'his candidacy for ·lhe Democratic
nomination for preSjdent Thu'Sday
In the gymnasium ~~ John Glenn
High School.
j
' ··: ' He wiU be joining forme r VIce
: · President Walter
Sen.
Alan Cranston of Ca ornla, Sen . ... Gary Hart of Colorado, n. Ernest
Hollings of South Ca ollna and
. , former Florida Gov. Reu~ln Askew
In ihe Democratic race. 1
.. As many as 2,txXJ p!!ople are
· expected to attend the a~unce­
:· m e nt and 3,txXJ are expec
at a
reception afterward.
Ms. G ibson said Johnson's i;VIU be
serving the Swiss steak siJI'Cial,
. sloppy Joes and. other dis hes\ that
are "easy to scoop up."
\
" The more we can get the m In
here and ou Ifaster. It will he lp," she
' : S;!Id.
"(But ) We're looking forward to
11." she added. "We're excited."
• Mayor Coleman Knight said New
Concord Is planning to display nags
-and that pollee were making plans
. to cope with traffic:
'. ." What we're doing Is just
. prtmplng the town up," Knight said .

M~dale,

•'

:; .

Reagan
(Continued from tiage 1 )

"mission on Social Security Reform
.Ill January that COilj,&gt;reSS was able
~ draft legislation to ave rt the
Impending collapse of the system,
·which serves 36 million
-· beneficiaries.
,', .. Prior to that, moves to refinance
:!he gtant retirement system were
"stymied by partisan arguments.
However, thls may not be the t.ast
-!he pubUc wiU hear about Social
Security. Alre!ldy, some ~mo- ·
· ~rats are ta!klng about moves to
·make a return toaretlremerttageof
'Q) a plank In ihe party's 1981
presidential platform. And some ,
,conservative Republicans contend .
.,tl)e· rescue pac¥age relies too
·heavUy on higher IJ!xes artd they say
'lilere IS more trouble a bead that wW
require more changes.
'

.,

?,

•

-

Business senices.
;=========;-r.:========:::-r.:========:;-r;:::::::::::::===;-rr========:;l

Blegenwald, 42. had retumed to
the boose to llw with his f!lO!het'.
Sally, after ser.ringl8 years of alit.e
term tor the lll58 shotg\lll murder',

any of the newly-uncovered slaylngs. Lehrer said he hopes to file
charges by the end of the week or
after the bodies are Identified.

PQSSiblllty of at least one more
body" at the Staten Island site.
Neither Murphy nor Lehrer des-crt bed Blegenwald as a suspect In

r.=-=======================================1
D ..I s· . I
The at y enttne

·. Roger Hysell

SHOE
REPAIR

ro.roy.-4S7it

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U1 !AelfiP-

1•

..,. "·""-'
"'-

IU - ' " -

1M LM...

U1..,....

__

,

! l UP....,I II "'Y

-

.

.

Gall Paul Buck, 60, Children' s
Home · Road, Pomeroy, died Tuesday morning at Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
- Mr.Buckwasbom Sept . 2,1922at
Pome roy the son of
Beatrice
Shoemake r Buck, Pomeroy, and
the la te Ben Buck. In addition to his
father, he was Preceded lndeathby
one granddaughter, Rebaka h Fa ith
Wa llace.
He was an e lectrician a t Philip
Sporn Co. He a ttended Middleport
First Baptist C hu rc h a nd served
with the U. S. Navy during World
War II .
He Is survived by his wife. Addle
Ma tson Buck: one daughter a nd
son-In-law, G loria and Bruce Wallace, Canal Winc hester; one son and
daughter-In-law, J on and Taml
Buck, Middleport; his mother,
Bea trice Buc k, Pomeroy; one
sister, Anna Dumolt, a nd one
brother, Benny Buck both of New
Lexington;
two grandchildren,
Buck Richard Wallace a nd Na tal te
Dawn Wallace, Canal Wincheste r.
Fune ra l services will be held
Friday at 1 p .m . at E wing Fune ral .
Home with th e Rev. Mark McClung
officiating. Burial wlll be in Rock
Springs Cem e tery. Friends m ay
call at the funera l h ome Thursday
from 2 to4 and 7 to 9.

Violet M. Plants
VIolet M. Plants, 6.1, Columbu s ,
died Tuesday In MI . Ca rme l
Medical Cente r , Columbus.
Born Aprtl2S, t9191n Rlpley. s he
was the daughter of the la te
J onathan and Jennie Chase.
She was preceded In death by her
husband, Donald L. Plants.
She was retired from the F&amp;R
Lazarus Co. where she was a
member of the 20- Year Club. She
was a lso a member of the Brown
Road Community Church.
Surviving are her daughters and
son-In-law, Donna L. and Dale
McNic hols, LaurelvUie, and Barbara Jo Plants, at horne; a
daughter-in-law, Dona!dl 11~-;~:~~~~:~e
Plants, Columbus; five g
ren; two brothe rs,
Alexandria, Va ., and
Chase, South

sisters, Nina Machler, Point Pleasant, Reva Vaughan, Middleport,
and Jane t Schannloeffel, Tonawanda, N.Y.; and many nieces and
ne phews.
Friends m ay call Wednesday, 7-9
p.m . and Thursday, 2-4 p.m . and 7-9
p .m . at the Held-Skunza Funeral
Home, 1166 Parsons Ave., Columbu~. where services wU! be Friday
at 11 a .m . The Rev . Lovell May will
officiate. Graveside services wiU be at 3
p.m . Friday In Suncrest Cem etery,
Point Plea,ant.

Ralph M. Rongen
Ralph M. "Reck" Rottgen, 58,
Ne w Ha ven. died Tuesday In Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Born June 20, 1924, at Lucasv!Ue,
Ohio, he was the son of Earl M.
Rottgen, Pomerroy, and the late
Dora C. Miles Rottgen :
Preceding him In death In
addition to his mother were two
grandchildren .
He worked 33 years at the PhUI(l
Sporn Plant · as a mainte nance
production superinte ndent . He
served In the U .S. Navy during
World War II a nd was a m e mber of
theSmlth-Capehart Post l&lt;IOAmerlcan Legion, New Haven.
Surviving In addi tion to his father
are his wife, Erma L. Hill Rottgen;
four da ug hter s, A ngela L. Marcinko, Boutte , La.. Sharon K
Roush. New Haven , Karen A.
McGuigan, Villas, N.J .,andCarolS.
Russell, Bidwell ; two sons , Ralph
M. Jr., Cleveland, Ohio, and H.
Michae l Goodnlte , Kingsland, Ga.;
two brothe rs, John M . Rottgen,
Mason, a nd Richard D. Rottgen,
Letart: three sisters, N e Ule Wright,
Pomproy, Shirley Southworth,
Trenton, Mic h .. a nd Rhea Martino,
Cleveland, Ohio; a special friend,
Joe Ka y,
Let art; a nd 12
grandchildren.
Funera l services will be at 1::.&gt;
p.m . Friday at Foglesong Funeral
Home. Mason, with the Rev. John
Campbell officia ting. Buria l will
follow In Broad Run Cemetery.
Friends m ay caU a t the funeral
home from 2-4 p .m . and 7-9 p.m.
Thursday.
There will be mUltary graveside
rites.

u••~..., .happenings

Meigs

bank and Bank One ot Sou·
theas tern Oh10 Nm. ona l Asso·
Cl fii 10n. to ca t~d 1n the Cl\ y of
Athen s . State of Oh10. under

H. L. Writesel

ROOFING

SHERMAN TIWS: Owner
RODNEY HOWERY: Auctioneer

Alll)lle$ of root wm. new

.
Terms of Sale: Cash or Check with PositiVe1.D.

or

and co nhrm ed. subiCCt to the
approval o f the Co mptroller a t
th n Currency. Wa shin gton.
D C dnd tor rhc purpose ol
VO IIIl(J u pon fl ny o tht&gt;r mailer s
1nc1den t al to th P pr opos ed
merq r&gt;r of the t'NQ banks A
co py o l , thA alo resa 1d aqrf!e·

NEEDS ATOUCH -I year old
split-leiiCI entry, 80% done,
with 5 acres You can save
several thousa nd by finishing
this one. 2 bedrooms, bath.
and a full basement .Asking
only $19.500.

..,.

Thooth we know you rest so
pooc:ofull1.
In God's """"'' homo so far

IWIY.

We low

you,

Very sadly missed by Flltflor,
Nont11fl Milliron: Brothon Mid
sisters. Ubtly. Jo Arrt. Conrfy.
Connie. Eddit and Plul.

64

__,.._

.. -

~

--

lANDMARK
614--992-2181

ALL 'eARPET
INSTALLED
WITH PAD
FREE ·

STARTING AT

$}295
•
PER YARD
INSTALLED

Admllted.-Ronald Thompson ,
Hartford, W. Va.; Annette Boyd,
Pomeroy; Genevieve Hill, Albany;
Pearl Little, Middleport; VIctoria
Prtddy, Pomeroy; Wade Smith,
Pomeroy; Bernice Smith, Uniontown, Pa. ·
.
Dlscharged..Jaclyn Shamblin,
Anna Duffy, Barbara DuVa U, Fern
Smith.

(

Program cancelled

KITCHEN CARPET

STARTING AT $8.99

The program, "Is M}' Name
There" to be presented by
Rutland Nazarene Church on
ro, has been cancelled due to
of a cast member.
Drol!l'wm WIU be presented
and date to tie

RUBBER BAC .
CASH &amp; CARRY S4.99

•

Doe

Houses

P&amp;S RBUILDINGS,
·
Oh
- ICto_!, -•
Ph. 614-Ml-SI!l

IO·&amp;.IIc

YOUNG'S

4-21).1 !fl!l pd

B~~"'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

\

~)\
,c.-Q

- Addona and .......Wnt
- -..and,....rworlo

HAVE YOUR TROPHY
MOUNT EO

~::uclc~

--l'lumblng and

S To 6 Week Sentice

olodricalworlo
(Fr.- Estimates)

On 411 Fish .
For More Information Call

The Taxidennv Shop

V. C. YOUNG Ill

New Lima Rd., Rufland. Oh.
PH. 742-2225

992-62! 5 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
·

l-28 -1 mo

11·26·tlc

MEIGS .

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-La-Boy
-Trencher
- Water
- Sewer
-Gas Lines
- Septic S1stems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478

•Footers
•Landscaping
•Driveways
•Farm Ponds
PH. 742-2407
Or 742-2068
4-13-1 mo.

!Sears]

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

FREE
EXTIMATES

No Sunday Calls

4·11·1 mo.. p!l.

3-l l ·!lc

MILLER

"CUT

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

hoe Service

"'

•Basements

SIDING

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.

WANT ADS

EX.CAVATING
•Bulldozer 8o !lack-

'Chain Link Fence
·carpelin&amp; •Painting

!Sears;
CATALOG MERCHANT
Pomeror.OH.

Gna &amp; Patty Gibbs-1lwnors

3

Anno.uncements

•
SWEEPER and 18wing ml·
chine ropail, . pons. ond
supplies.
Pick op and
delivery, Divi1 Vacuum
Ctooner. one hill mile u~
Georges Creek
Rd. · Colt
448-0294
.
Square D1nce every SatUf·
day from 9 to 1 AM . Country
Rock Sunday 7 to 11 PM .
Robert Picken's. East Dlt·
win, St. At . 881 .
Watkins Products for sale.
614-742 -2068 .
Beginning Karate Clan
staning Thuradey, Apr. 21.
7 p.m. at Carteton School,
John St., Syracuse, Oh . For
more informa1ion e~~lt 814992 · U .21 or 614 -992 ·
5896.

Our.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re-'
pair service and installation.
Residential
8o C.o mmerciel
Cell 742-3196

Auction o_,. Fri. night It
tt. Hortfqtd Community
Center . Truckloads of new
m•chondiM ovory weell.

drilling . Coil 614 -388vwetle,
8543, eh•llow
VInton, a••·
Oh . 1nd cora

-•come. Rlchorlf "•ynokla
Auctioneer. 271 ~3089 .

9

Wanted To Buy ·

WANTED TO BUY otdturni·
turo ond Antiquo of oil
klndo, coli Konnolh Swoln ,
441-31119 or 2111-1 967 In
tt. o-.lngs.

Wont to mow towns a,. do
yord wotk . Colt 441-7080.
E.potlencod typlot, wondng
tod.o typing in barh'ome. For
moro lnlormotlon coli 446·
3427.
HouHCIHnlng done .::cQrd·
ing to your needs. Celt
441-7836.
Ramoct.Ung. new conetructlon of any type. Call 8753275 01 4411-2314 .

31 H omea for Sele
4 bedroom brick repch. ··~
•cr• wtth bltck yard JWim·
ming pool. Approx . 31'1 .
mll11 from RevenWtood In
W.VA. Shown by appoint·
mont only. CoN 304-2735186 aher 5 p.m.
For ule b't owner-4 bed·
room, 1 Y, ltory alu(hinum
aiding houH. 2 1A acrn level
ground. Large kitchen . din·
ing room, forced air heet.
Separate large garage. 2
mile1 .f rom Southern High
School. Shown by· app~nt ·
mant only . 123.500. 814949 -2023 or 814 -949 2777 .
_ _ , - - - - - - - - lc 3 1bedroom house. Y2 atone
front with yellow vi"yl aid·
ing . 1 mile from Read•vllle.
1 acre ground . 110.000
cash or 816,000 land co·
tract with $3 ,000 . down a
balence et t150 , month It
10 ·pet. lnteratl . 8i4~423 · ·
59 57 anytime.

Buying Gold, Silver, Plad ·
num. Gold end Silver prl.c•• Garden• plowtMt with •rge
are the highll1 in two yMra, rototilfer sl~~: inch•• deep.
check our prices on gold • Reedy to plant . Reuter-614sUver, KfiP jewelry. Buying 992-2490 .
Old coins, 1crep rinas &amp;
silverware. Daily quotes ROOFING -Carpentry, r••·
eveil•b~ . Al1o coin• • coin onabla retel, Free a1ti·
supplies for sale. Spring motoa. Ca1304-773-5828 .
Velley Trading Co .. Spring
Volley Plozo. 446 -8025 01 ·WILL baby1lt in .my home. Mobile home, sale or rent. In
446-8026 .
pr81chool to kindergarten . good 1hape, 20'l.R .,1 child
low rat11, pie••• call 304- accepted, no pets, drunkt Of
dopa. Sala,1 1 room .brick. 3
We pey ciah for late model 675-1966 or 676 -11208.
baths. 6 room, 2 baths. 2
clean u•d cal'l.
Frerlchtown Car Co.
TWO men would like work. mobile home lots. 2% ecre1.
Bill Gene Johnson
odd Joba. lawn work , farm 6 rentals. Mason 3 bedroom
446-0069
work, brush cutting, etc . garage, 12 bedroom rental 2
acres . 3 / \ miles South Mid304-896-3313 .
dleport, Rt . 7 . John Sheets.
NIGHT CRAWLERS &amp; RED
814-387-0811 .
WORMS highest pricee
paid. lake JaCklon Bate •
Hou1a &amp; Lot. 3 bedroom.
Tackle, Oak Hilt . Colt 114l.r .. d.r., kitchen . New sld, _8_8_2_
-7_4,:,·~4,_8_.- - - - - - 21
Business
lng , roof. carpet . 614-992 I·
L &amp; L SCIIP Mooata. Now
Opportunity
6347 allor 3:30.
buying alum . cana-·&amp; glass. 1- - - - - - - - - - 1- - - - - - - - - Non ferrous metals . Top
10 veer oldt. good cohdl ·
tion. 4 badroomt, living.
I 44• 7300
C
I
pricet peld . I
v·
·
!NOTICE I
eat -in kitchen, full dry beaeTHE OHIO VAlLEY PUB- mont. rural water on 49
Corn planter &amp; 1 row corn L!SHING CO . recommends acres, pretty and private .
picker. Call446 -7732 .
that you do business with 614 _99 2 -7092·.
peaple you know. and NOT
BEDS--IRON , BRASS, old to send money through the
furniture , gold . lllvtr dol - mlil until you have invasti - 4 bedroom .- all &amp;lktric.
basement, garage, alum.
Iars. wood Ice bo xes. stone gatsd the offering .
jars , entiques, etc .. Com- 1 _:__ _ _ _ __ : _ _ _ _ siding . new th&amp;fmO-Iesh
·
,.
windows . 302 7th St . New
plete households . Wr1t1 : Own your own Jean - Haven , WV . 304 -882 M.D . Miller. Rt. 4. Pomeroy, Sportswear. lnfaht-Pr.eteen
.
2937
Oh . Or 992-7760 .
or ladies Apparel Store. · - - - - - - ' - - -- ffaring a II nIt io nally 171'x80' x162 'x82 ' lot . CitGold, 1ilver, 1terling, je ~ 0known
brands such •• Jord · ywater &amp; wan water. 2
welry. ring•. 9fd . coin1
currency. Ed Burkett Berber ache, Chic, lee, levi, Van · outbuilding•. fenced In beck
ilt . Calvin Klein . yard , septic tank. in GallipoShop, Mlddtepo11. 992 - derb
Wrangler over 200 other
F
N
h t
erry .
ear sc oo ,
3476 .
br.nd • . $7, 900 to • 24 ,600 . Iii
.00 304 - 616includel - begiQning lnven - &amp;12.500
..
Nice home an~ 6 to ZO acra1 tory, airfare for one ~o 5366
Mlddleport ·Chelhire eria . bfuhion · Centlii', training,
Easy ac'ce11, .woods _prefer'· .fhctu.res . grand openi.ng pro ·
rabley . Mid ~rice~ •20 to motions. Call Mr . KoStecky 32 Mobile Homes :
t40 Thounnd . 992-8177 . (501) 327-8031 .
for Sale
&amp;_

PH . 992-2178 " " ·"'

FOR FUTURE USE" ..

ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Lemley Drilling . Wetlr

'

4

985-3561

Giveaway

" SUCCEED" and 1upple·
ment your buainea• income
· by up and over 8 60 ,000 par
year Hlling tteel buildin.g1
for big proftta-contrectlng.
subcontracting. and consulting . Acquire a Dealerlhip from Wedgoor Steel
Building factory. " No Mid ·
dlemen" . To be cho1en,
applicant must quelify for
area available Call 1-800 ·
526-9240 .
1:=:=:::::====::;=

ANV PERSON who h01
anything to give away and
.does not offer or attempt to
offer eny other thing for ule
may place en ad in thit
column . Thera will be no
charge to the advertiHr .

All Makes

•Wathen •Dishwashert
Rangat
•Aefrigeratora
•Dryers •Free1era
PARTS ond SERVICE

TAt - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECk OUR PRICES .
CALL 446-71172 .

LAST BID

-Roofing &amp; Siding

BEST &amp; LAST BID

~-----------------]·

Curb Inflation
Pay ca. S h. f 0
CIa SS lfl e d s an

~

IQ]

SaVe I I I'

Nam•--------------------

'

Address,----------------

POMEROY, OHIO
• PH.992-2259
•

OHIO BOIID ISSUE MONEY WILL BE AVAilABLE SHORTLY. CAlL
FOil APPOINTMENT AND INFORIIATIOII ON ANY OF OUR OVER
100 PROPERTIES.

.

NEW LISTING - POMEROY - Nice 3 bedroom home with tuN
basement, two car garage, fire~e. Large ld, n~e lrunt porch with
view of the river. Now only $20,())).

1

POMEROY - II+ story lrame home with 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms,
basement. hoot and sile porches. and lor low utility bit~ it heats
with coal or wood furnace Asking $26.000.
·

I

MIDDLEPORT - Large klt thai goes hom street to street - with a
I I? story. 3 bedroom home. Has nl:e hardwood floors, and
carpeting, full basement. one garage apartment and possibly
another. $51.900.

i

SECLUDED AND QUIET. Bulin T01011 - New siding and eaves
~ves a nice appearance to th~ II? story home with 3 bedrooms.
formal dining room and a tree standing fire~ace in the i~ng room.
Make us an offer. $22.500.
COULD BE A SIIAU. DAIRY FARII - · 89.5 acres, wrth
apprn~mateiy 40 tilatlle acres, and 40 in· pasture. Some bmber
~nd. Se~~e~al fllOO outblidires and minerals go with the property.

House needs some work: $48.000.

RENTAL IIMSTMENT - Duple' in tr1i:idk!port $350 a month
gross rental income. Could be converted into a private home_
.

OFFICE HOURS 9 to 5 Dlilj - Ewni.. houn by IJ)pointment.
REALTORS
HtltiY l Clellnd, Jr., GRI .. ................ ............ 992·6191
.t.n Trussell ......... .......................... ...... ......... 949-~
Dotti1 Tu- .............. ... ................................ 992-!1692
Jo H~l ...................................... , ..............·... :. 91S.3335
Offict " ". " .. " ............................. --- ....... " .... "' 992-2259

..

SMITH ENELSON .
MOTORS, Inc.

a

l,j

•

i

lnsulatd

Wented to- Do'

1 ---'---~---~ .

~:,::ru,:~~.n~i.:--:;~~

AIID HOME MAINTENANCE
•Roofinl of •II typts
.
Rui,...lilf &amp; - Com~~~tn:ilt
'RomodtliOI
·
•stor'" Windows &amp; Doors
FlEE lSTIMAIES
20 Ytors hperionco
TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2134
or 949·2160

a

CLEAN USED MOBILE
RN - OON Scenic Hill• is
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALcurrentlylookingforaOirec ·
tTY MOBILE HOME SAL~S.
tor of Nursing. Salary com4 Mt. WEST , GALLIPOliS .
2·23-11(
3-7-llc
4-5-ttc
Long haired small cat, black . men1unte with experience.
AT 36 . PHONE 441 ·7274 .
excellent benefit package
----------------1r.::::::::::::::::l[:::::::::::=:=::i~::::::::::::::~ -4_4_
6 -_8_e3_2_._________ availeble. Including ratireFor u18.1 ecre with 12aeo
Puppiet part labador Re· mant. dlubllity, lite &amp; health
mobile hqme , ltrga , In
triever &amp; pan German She- in•urence . Please •end re - 22 Money to Loan
ground pool and foundltion
THE KROUNTRY KWB
pherd . Colt 614-245 -11485. sume or contact Girt 8 .and
for hou1e . Call 304-896 ·
•lessons
for further informatlon. Rt .
4721 .
•FiHinl Center
To good home-6 month old 2 Box 262, Bidwell, Oh HOME LOANS 12% fi•ed
278 w. loio
"-·tilt
·club •111ir
,"';' ~'\
Regittered Irish Setter . 4fi614 . Call 448 -7150 .
rata . leader Mortgage. 77 E. 14x70 Bayview total el.t:t\
(dubs shorttfttd tor ·· ~p
·
614
-742-2178 .
_rouna ptopi•)
, .-'
State , Athen1. Ohio . 1·614 - ric , 3 bdr., 17·,400. 12dJO
Get all the estimates
Need Countrv ·Wel1ern iid · 6 92 -3061, or 1-800-341 - LiberiV good cond ., $3,900 .
·ar•nd f11mes :
~
- .
you want, tllen call us. Norwegian Elkhound pup· dla
&amp; bau player t~nd female 6664 in Ohio .
CAll 446 ·0176 .
Sq11110 Two
MICG(t&amp;or
,
pies. 814-247-2606 .
We'll be your
vocalitt plays 1tTing instru · ~ ~:::::=;;=:::::==::;:=::
men! . Call 304-675 -7967 1Wilson
_'
·
OPEN 9 ID MON. tlvu SAT.
197&lt;11 Schulll 14•70 ' 2
11
-·
Dunlop
bdrm .. 2 baths, central air.
All Tjpes 'of Auto Repair,
4YJ old puppy. % pit bull. 'h hflor 6 .
23 Professional
P.G.A.
good cond., on rentel lot ,
Br1kls, iane-Ups, ttc.
german thepherd . Good
Free Estimates
Services
Rom
watch dog . 814-992 -3371. Umpiret needed for ~t~mmer
near Goodvear Plant . assuWork Guaranteed
SPECIAL
programs . Need people for 1- - - - - - - - -PinJ
mable
loan . French City
TRANSMISSION FILTER
A.S .A. Men'• League, youth
Ph .742 - 2328
Brokering
Serving. 446 Halt
Beagle
puppy,
8
w•k•
SALE
20%
OFF
AND_FLUI~ CHANGE
C&amp; L Bookkeeping
9340 .
Ask for AI .
old. lovaa kids . 304-882- programs !i -16 years old .
JOHN TEAFORD
ONLY 31.95 ,_,._,,
Salary I 3·18 per game Tax Return• It bookkeeping
4 ll I mo
3480 anytime .
Chester, Oh. 4-111 mo
depending on league . Adult• for lndlviduala &amp;. busineues . Priced to tell 1974 Kirk and college etudenu en - Short form I 15 .00
wood 12x60. good cond ..
·•·. .
-----.1t=========j;::========;ILEOPARO
cur male dog.
• .. · r
beautiful marking, 304- couraged to apply. Fill out long form• t20 .00 and up
16 ,900 . Call 614 -379 epplicetion at Cltv Manag - C010l Neal
448 ·3862 2617 .
93
7
2
89
5
J&amp;F
_ _ - _ _ · _ __
er' s Office, Gallipolis Munic I
[
CONTRACTING
THREE mi•od breed pup- ipal Building. 618 Second PIANO TUNING $6 oH plus 2 !ott &amp; a mobile home
•DOZER
pill, 2 males. 1 female . can Ave . G111ipolla a1 1oon 11 di1counn to eanior citlzen•- · 12~~:60 . 2 bedroom . with
·
•
..,....
I
·
c hurche• ~ • c hools . Ctll Bill
rural water, gu heat. H11
•BACKHOE
"" soon at tho v in PI po11i~e .
Ward Werd't Keyboard , some furniture , prh: e
I
RYDER TRUO&lt;
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
Pteuont , uk for Judy
SALES :NO EXPERIENCE 448-4372 .
~
RENTAL &amp; ONE-WAY
SIOYOI.
$12 .600 . Or 4 Jots &amp; mobile
NECESSARY to 1ell Avon . 1- - - - - - - - -814 ,800. Call 448 -1240,
I Loa! and on~&gt;-wai. low t1tes.
•LIMESTONE
--------------We'H show you how. Good Horse Shoeing . Calf 446 I top maintained trucks. Ri&amp;ltt
•WATER. GAS and
earnlngal Call 614 -388 - 9569 .
Nova Tri-Star motiile
·
-..,
·
t Ha d
SEWER LINES
6 Lost and Found
9046 or 614-992 -3690.
1-------,----- 1978
.
I SiltS, n.,.t equtpmen - n
•PONDS, RECIAIIAIION
home 12 ~~: 85 , all electric,
1
!rocks, furniture pads, NaWORK
Bookkeeping &amp; Tu Service unfurniahed, t6 ,000 . Cell
LOST *60 bill at Greyhound Need 2 ambitious young farm , tmall butlnetl. pro- 814 -256 -1736.
1
tionwidt Road Service. llov-.
•LAND CLEARING .
station 12 :30PM . Cell448- people . Mu1t be nett &amp; have f..sionaf and Individuals .
Write vour own ad and order bv mail with this I
inc tips and inSUillnce.
CONCRETE WORK
.
3759 .
own tran1portation. Good Tom Mo01, 614 -448 -0698 . 12x80 in good 1hape. make
'
coupon . Cancel vour ad bv phone when vou get I
IIONDfD I - GIJARAklHD
pay . Call for interview beoffer. Call 448 -0918 . •
results. Money not refundable .
446-9800
PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
Lost-Black labrador, Dan- tween 9 a.m . 8'. 12 p.m. PIANO TUNING -LANE OAville are1 Wednesday night . 614-992-6103 .
NIElS . Reliable service Reduced to . •19.1500 . l~te
Galli pol is, Ohio "" mo
992-7201
""'
Red and while collar . Re1ince 1986 A11oclate of 1980 Windsor 14x70 with
Mature lady to live in with Brunicardi Musi c Co . Phone 7.~~.22 eJCpando, 3 bedroom ,
1-----------~----------l word . 614-742 -2139 .
otdo1 woman . 304 -675 - 614-742 -2961 .
bath. air. staro. mlcro Loat-2 red mala fo~~: houndt. 1197 otter 6 p.m.
I- - - - - - - - -- 2wa'lle.
ttorage building snd
Mt.
Alto,
W.Va
area
.
If
seen
COMPlETE
more . E.~~:cellent buy on a
pi•••• call coUect at 814 · SOMEONE to cere for el quality home. Rodney-Cora
RADIATOR SERVICE
843-5241 .
derly man. 304·876-3336 .
Rd . Colt 614 -246 ·9229 .
From
ho
Smallest
Hoator
Phon•--------~--------Core fo the utpst RadiaLoat bleck puppy in vlcinhy
1979 10x!i6 trailer. tet fOf
Rt. 87. Leon. with red collar . 1 2
Situations
tor.
bu1ine11 , office . Central elr.
.
304
-896
-3383
or
)04
Radiator Speelalst
Wanted
heating . Some ahtlv~e .
372-4620 .
$3 , 800 . Call. 614 -379 ' NATHAN BIGGS
By owner. 3 bedroom home 2768 .
Riverview Nursing_ Care in Rio Grende. Oh . Call
7
Y11rd S11!o
Home . Now open for embu- 814 -245 -6274 or 614 - 10~~:60 mobile home 12,000
latory patientl . 24 hour ,245 -9617 for appointment . or b81t offer . Call814 ·258 Yard Sale Centenary Town- care . Aoom , board I
Ae81onebly priced .
9349 .
hoult R1. 141. F1iday 22 . loundl'/ . 304-773 -5882 . .
' Pomeroy, Oh.
Toole , flowers. dishe1 ,
Racine, 2 1h acre mini farm, 12.11.80 mobile home, 2 bdr.
Ph. 992-2174
quilt1 , jeans, garden plow.
••mocleled,
3-4 bdl .. 2atory Call 614 -246-6830.
Heve room end boerd in my
home for elderly. 814-992- alum . sided home . ·City
water, gas, Hwer. bell· 82 ,960 . up used mobile
8748.
ment &amp; 2 cafo garega. Across homes for sate. 2 bedroom.
WHI do yard mowing . Will from Southern HS . Call c ompletely furnithed .
furnish own mower and gea . 614 -379 - 2424 dl 814 - Ready to move ln . Brown ' s
949 -28114.
Trailer Park. Minertvllle, Oh .
614-882-3569.
814 -992-3324.
HoUn for 1111 4 bdr., 2 full
bathl, finished basement, 2 1 2x66 Vindafe mobile home
13
Insurance
nr gerage In the beck . SHn with 6 ft . e~~:pando living
by oppolntmont only. 203 room. wood burner. Situ ~
SANDY AND BEAVER In- Kineon Dr., Gotllpolla . Call a ted on 2 plus acre including
remodeled 1 room •chool
-· 4411 -1223.
aurance Co . hea o ... r.u 1- - - - - - - - - - building &amp; storage shed .
Mrvlclll for fire lnauranca
3 bdr. home In Addi1on Nice gerden spot. Soma
covorogo In Gonia County •malt
lot, newly rtmodaled, 1mall fruit h••· 814-912for elmost • century. Farm. new electric
plumbin·g, etc. 7164 after 5 01 614-992·
home end pereonal property
.
.,
• woodblirner, 803fi .
cover•• ere 1v1l1able to ,-urnPce
fully insuleted, axe. cond.,
6.
n1Mt lndividuel n"d1 . Con·
t•ct Eugene HoMey, agent . Mid t20 'a. Coli 614-592 - 1972 14x66 mobile honi'e.
7.
3 badrooma. u•• heat. very
Phone 388-81190.
· · 43&amp;9 .
8.
cloon . 614-992 -2185 from
In Middleport, nawty remo- 8 a .m . to !i p.m . end Ilk for
9.
Are yo~ paying to much for deled
homo with' flroptoco. Till!. Aftor 5 p.m colt 882 your ho1pltel-h11tth lneu- poa81ble
woodbumer. c;:lo.. 3892.
rance . Call Carroll to .Choolo
and otropplng.
"
Snowdon. 446-4290.
CoH _614-982 -U41 .
USED MOilLE HOME .
8711-2711 .
3 bedroom, 1 Yo bel h. g•·
1
Wanted to Do
11110. lui b o - 1, low MOilLE homo . whh 24x12
down paymetttl. M~m ..... eddilion, wall, 'h ecre on
flxocl to... qufol nol=
· • C,.b Crooti Rood, ti,IOO.
General Hauling and T~nh hood. ono milo '"""
- 304-171-1323, 304-ll?e·
"2372,
r - o t SoNTcl. Roll- lot. Cell 441-1112 and dopondobto. Call 446- 4:00 ~M .
71 -h -.- 2 ~ ·
3 1 8 1 - n 9 ond 5 .
'
Lo..,, I - •· ~ tOOfft, unt..""'.,_, 'It ecre
Auction \ every Tue1d1y
night, Cllfhmunlly Building, uwn M-tnv no yard to big gor-. ............, ...... with ct.MNI,. e.n.t. courtly
Hander10n,\Con8ignera wel- Otimoii . JIIollobtoondd-- copod- let; A..,.._ · 11\"0tod In Ohio.
come. Auct~ Lonnie Neal. dobto. F01 Ollimoq call HMt, """· 40'.. 11"""'· •11 .100. Cell oflor I p.m .
:104-llt-2712.
'
4411·31Bibotw..n9ondl . _4_ 2_1_7_._ _ _ __ _ , •
Cotll14- 317-~ 101 .
·
1

:

.. 608 E. MAIN

$19,000.

Veterans Memorial

Sizts from 6'x6' Up
10 24'•J&amp;'

1

Public Seta
• Auction

11

..

· Real Estate General

•

ALL CARPET ON SALE

UTILITY BUILDINGS

a

F'ag1

Riverside WJ Inc.

64 Misc. Merchandlaa

SPRING CARPET SALE

Middleport, Ohio

.

CALL US TO BUY OR SEU
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 843-5175
Or 992-2751 To LNw A llessap.

Housing
Headquaners

POMEROY

992-2196

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION CO.

RENTALS:
Letart-$220 plus deposrt
Racine-$150 plus depoM.
Plus ether occasiOflal renta~.

OUR SERVICES ARE WORKING. TRY US AND SEE. CALl
992-3876.

WE ALSO WORK ON
All OTHER APPLIANCES

New Haven, W . Va.

3 ACRES - Racine, owner wil help l1nance.

FI'IE POINTS AREA - 1976
Sc)lutt 14•65 like ~w trailer.
Lovely krtchen, dining .room,
gas furnace, ~rge frnnl porch.
New garage and almosi level
1.22 acres. $26,500.

AUTHORIZED
fACTORY SERVICE
G'ENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

New Homes - htensive
Remodtl_ing.
•I nsurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs_
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
oA!umirtttm &amp; Villjf Sidings
1S Yean Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
or . 992-22e2
' II J 1-tlc

Phone 882-2131

3 BfDROOII BRICKHOIIE - W.BJP. hardwood floors, I ~
baths, needs very little to make this home a "Ooll House". As~ng
$25.txXJ.

COUNTRY LIVING - 3 acres
goes wit~ this one. Fumace,
ftue for )1lUf woodburner, TP
w_ater, bath. 3 bedroom&amp; Near
Racine. Asking $27.500.

Misc. Merchandise

CONSTRUCTION

SACRIFICE - QUICK SALE - 2 bedrooms, bath, living room, &amp;:
eat-in ~tchen on first lloor. Basement has 3rd bedroom, ~undry ·
area &amp; e1tra room_Coocrete floor with shed at the end of drin ConventKJnal and FmHA linanong ~ble. As~ng $27,500. Male
your dfer. ow~rs loss can be your gain.

MIDDLEPORT - Sturdy 3
bedroom block home. Nice
bath, large modem eat-in
kitchen, natuflll gas furnace,
dry basement and le\lel-lot on
Gravel HiH fonjust $21 ,500.

992-279\ 10 ,,

ROUSH ·

NEW LISTING- Jor 4 bedrooms possilleon this ooe_Trailer wrth
~rge add-on on nearty an acre lot. Includes storage buid1n' Lit·
can have second trailer as extra income. Asking $12,000.

84 ACRES - Near Hemlock
Grove_3 bedrooms, oak lloors.
bath, eat-in kitchen, barn, and
stocked !ish pond. Frurt and
garden space. Want only
$75,000.

20. 1981.
Alrudy one yoor IIISIOIIO by,
And we niss you more each

Or

MOBILE HOllE - with ~rge add-on bulding, asphan dnveway.
Located on qu~t street out of h~h water in Rac~e. The living room
is eMtra large. There IS a cement walk and large c011ered porch, aS!
a metal storage buildin~ You can be 1n th~ o~ 1n two weeks klr
orly $16,900.

p~ygrnund

IN LINING IIIIIORY

Call: 949-2263

CENTRAL REALTY

a

Of R&lt;cw L lliliron llll1o dopatlod
from us ono 111r 110 tocfly, April

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

Real Estate General

RUTlAND - Vacant ·older
home that you can work on.
rooms, bath. atl util~ies and
large klt lor garden or

In Memoriam

~

"':';"'=

-

un.ted Stare s shall be filtll•ed

2

jog and painting, stonn
doors and windows.

Now renting 25 one bedroom apartment
unitt, renting, for 30' percent' of your ad'
justed inc:Ome under the Department of
Hou11ing' 8i Urban Development sectionS
program.
·

.

repair, gutters and

downspouts, gutter clean-

RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLY .

COUNTRY - ThiS sunny place
has a Heat(jater, dining, wood
kitchen cabi~t. I ~ baths,
carpetin&amp; and several garages
for worf&lt;shop. One acre on hard
road. $40.000.

th e rH OVI SIOn s o tt h e taw s of th e

PAT HILL FORD

VALLEY
ROOFING

_---------+----------+----------+----------1

- s&amp;K AUCTION

rnent. e&gt;o:ecuted by a ma1ontv of
PUBLIC HEARING
th e rf1rectors at each of rl'le two
PToposed Use Hearing of
Revenul!i Sharing. letart banlr:s . prov1d1ng for the
Townthip Tru11ee1 May 2. m erger . 15 on fif e at the bank
1983, 7:00 P.M. at lelor1 and rnay be •nspected dur•ng
bus •ness hour s
Folta.
Paui ·A 6amen
The public is hontby given
·
PreS•dent
notice ol .the ~Jl011unily , to
(4) 13.20 21.. 1514 4tc
make oral or ~en ~·­
lions 'reglllding P9tlibt&amp; ......of -Revenue Sharing Funds at
thil meeting.
Unused Rownue Shoring
Fund&amp;$1.990.16; Amount to
VIRGIL B . SR .
be received 11983)
21e f. . 1nd Sf
$2,462 .00.
(4) 20. 1tc
Phone
1-(614) -'992-3325
Public Notice
NEW LISTING - lh~ 5 room
home
IS in the country on one
BANK ONE OF
acre. New bath, carpeting, and
POMEROY. N.A.
SHAREHOLDERS'
2 car garage lar $13.500.
MEETING
Not1 ce •p hereby g1ven !hot
NEW LISTING - 6.96 acres
pur su an tt Q Call Olli S 01 rectors.
o,.rlooking Middleport wrth all
a spec1al meetng of the
ublities near. May divide lor
shar eho ld ers Of Bank One of
you.
Po meroy_ N A wil l be held at

PUI pose ol cons1denng and
determ• n•ng by vote wh ether an ·
il greemen t to merge th e sa•d

•

3-H · mo. od.

Public Notice

Cour t and Second Str eets.
Pomeroy Oh10 on May 17.
1983 at 7 30 PM for the

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

Call 843-5425

'

Gail Paul Buck

FISHERMEN!

20 Veers Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY-7:00P.M. At comer of Depot &amp; Main
Rutland, OH.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Area deaths

OaT....

1·13-tlc

EUGENE LONG
'Sid in&amp;
'Aoofinc
"Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodeling

AUCTION

CALL
. US AT 992-2156 TO APPLY.

ni.!m

We eleo repelr

4·11 1 mo

u,,.,,_,... ,.....,...,
o-""'-u.,,.,,_
__
u.... , ............
.,.._
,. ._...,.
.....,

llo!t-OOoo~

G..,., .,.,.,.. ~,

8!&gt;5o0&lt;1 S r .. , ~., ..

THE DAILY SENTINEL IS LOOKING FOR
YOUTHS INTERESTED IN WALK ·RoUTES IN
THE MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY AREA.
YOU CAN WIN PRIZES, EARN MONEY AND
BE1PART
OF OUR TEAM.
:I

CRIMI!: SCENE -'- "Offteer fll(!bard 'l'llltls&lt;m of!he 123rd 1')-eclnct
In Staten ~land
the area where bodies of two women we_re dug
up·Tueilday ~the former Staten·Island hom~· of a convicted murderer,
Richard Blegenwald. Aut~orltles believe as many as 23 more bOdies ·
could be buried near the vacant Statcn .Island house. 'The -rain ilued
hole, bottom. left, Is where one of the bodies was found. ( AP
Laserphoto).

d~Mon.

Sizas stlrt ·from 12'xl6'

·POLE 8ULDJNGS

.._.c. ,..,

311

Ufo•l••,..

Public Notice

CONe-

OHIO

...,_c-~

,,.. a.....,.
lN

12 ~"'"bo"' • IWII"'t

6ll· .... -

Qall .. c ..... .,
...... c-114

lJM
ll · hG
~~-·•-· "

..............--··

.. .....

41 E...,.,.,.•.,. '""

1 7 .,•., ........ ~~·
•• w ... ... , .oo

COlli . . . . , _

A~~ STEEL &amp;

, . . . . ._yclfl

ll • NOEoo o-.Won,.d

··~.~ ~

'*' repair end ..

end - '*'
We c:.n • .,
acid bolll'ld rod !lilt 1'11-

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

Pomeroy, OH .
Open 9 :00 to !j :OO
Mon.·Sot. ·
Clo•ed Thun .

f .ln .. ifi•• •IIHtll • "'' .~''"'' ' 1lu•

We

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

113 W. 2nd St.

I C..,&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt; l

SERVICE

St. -.. 124, Pomtror. OH .

Wri1t Dlilly

111C..~St ..

RADIATOR

GARAGE

PHONE
992-2156
Or
s-t.- C..SJifit;41 DIJC.

. '

.. . The Daily Sentinel

'Ohio

\
•

'

I

'

�~--~I

12-The

- ' ' - - - -- - - -lc1711 acru, good timber end
~er . No dwe~Hng . Num.,.
OUI buNclng · 3 '1. milft

Sentinel

They'll oci1t EverY nme
-~--

from Ravenewood . Cell

304-273-8185 oftor 8 p .m.

154

Equipment

1 coffee table
47.,.•18'h•18Y. l.n . ond 1
Building motlrtolo
ond to~lo 21• 18 Y.d0 'h block. brick, plpeo.
with llghtwolnutllnllh 130, w l ndowo , llntlll . Ito.
Wlntoro. lllo Grande;
32 ' 8 3 • ll74
7 plocoo brown Cleudo
Q. Coll814-248· 1121 .
underplnr1li{j for a mobile
homo Ulld iuot f
1 -8-Ul-LD~-Y-D_U_R_O_W
_N_H_O_M_E
off • 1 4•70 mobile home, 5 room• and bath, .• 2.1186.•
long plocu m .. ouro 32", eo. O..r modele, 1 -81.4ol&gt;on plocu 21 .. end 1 0
lnchtl acrou. entertock in
metal frame; wood grain
l lnloh. Coil otter 5PM. 448 - 66 Pete for Sale
3066 .
'
'
Flr-ood opllt &amp; c ut to
lenght . Pick o r delivered: We
honor HEAP Vouchers. Cell
614-258-1245.

6 · 20 A.;:rn woodl, overlooking Ohio River, city
schools. 448-3664 or 1-

6 prom dreiMI IIZII 7 -13,
'like new. Worn only once.
Coil 448 -9789 or 448·
3594.

61 3 - 423 - 892S .
OWnerI Agent .

acre, u . nejghborhood .
Green Elementary, midway
between Spring Valley Plaza
&amp; 0 .0 . Mclnty"' Pork. No
trailer a, will con aider financing . Alto beautiful 6 acre
hllttop building· site not
restricted . 112.000 or best

Real Estate
Wanted

Buying houMa and apart·
menta. Need properties with
favorable price 1nd terms.
Box 1109 Gellpolia, Oh.
45831 .

3 rm. end 4 rm . unfurnished
epartmenu. Utilities paid.
no pets, no children . Call
448 ·3437 .
Firat floor furlnthed apt.
utilities paid . depoait &amp; lease
r8qulred . Adulta, no pets.
Cell 11 631 Fourth Ave.,
GallipoUa.
1- - - - - - - - - 2 bdr. apartment park front
view, pert furn .. water peid,
1175 mo .. Call448-3919 or
448-0021 .
-

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION S. FURNITURE
62 Olivo St., Golllpollo. King
coal &amp; wood hnten with
!on *489. oa1 box oprtng &amp;
mattrell 1100, firm 1120.
tofa ·IOVIIIat &amp; chair 1199,
love teata 170. new coal &amp;
wood heetera a• low as
1399 with blowers, ue8d
coal &amp; wood heatere. new
dine1 Mtl 1100 a up,
refrige.rators, ranges, bunk
beda complete 1199. bun·
klet meHrn•• •40, cheats,
drilllera. TV' a. Call 446 ·
3159 .

1 bedroom apartment for

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
~ weahers. dryers. refrlgera·
Condominium 2 bdr.., 2 Small furnlihed houR In tors. r-anVet. Skaggs · Ap~
bathl. 'completely fur- city, adllltt orily: Cell 448· · pllencea. Upper River Rd ..
b•s!de Stone Crest ·MoteL·
nlshed. ocian .. front , dailY . _o_3_3_s_'---'--~-­ "448 -7398 .
maid service, 24 hr. security
guard. has 2 pools &amp; tennis Furn . uplteirt, 3 rooma &amp;
lAYNE ' S FURNITURE
cour11 . The Myrtle Beech bllth. washer-dryer. clean. Sofa, c hair, rocker, ouono
peta.
rsf
.
req
.
Cell
448
·
R8sort. Myr11e Beech, SC .
·man. 3 1ebln: (extra heavy
Call dayo 614·367-0480 or 1619 .
by Frontier), •885 . Sofa,
eve. 814 -446-3426 .
Furnlahed 3 rm . apartment chair and lovll•t. *276 .
Sofaa end chalri priced from
4 bdr. home in Che1hira. gas with private bath at 846 f281i . to •895 . Tobloo, *46
Second
Ave
.,
Oallipolia
.
heat, 1196 mo. C1ll WlaeRef. prefered . Cell 446- end up to 112&amp;. Hlde-a. ·man Agency, 446-3843.
beds , t440 . end up to
2215 .
*626 .• Aocllnero. $175. 10
2 bdr. houl8, 1tove a.
t350., Lamps from 128. to
refrigerator. carpeted, un - Garage apt . furnished, 1 $76 . 6 pc:. dinette• from
bdr..
*225,
utllltleo
paid,
furnished . Good location .
29'11 Noll. Ava., Galllpollo . •99 .. to *435 . 7 pc .• *1 89.
Call 448-3949 .
and up . Wood tab'- whh six
Call 448-4416 otter 7PM .
chairs 1426 . to f746 . Detk
2 bdr. hou111 in city . full
8110 up to 1225. Hutchoo,
1
bdr.
furn
.
6
mos
.
lease.
basement, carpeted , gea fur ·
*560. and up, maple or pine
nance. edulta, no peta . Call S60 dep .. utilities paid . no finish . Bunk bed complete
children , no peta. 1176 mo .
448 -0968 .
with mattreaua. 1250. and
Call 448-3867 after 6 .
up to U96 . loby bldo.
2 bedroom hou• . large
1110. Manreattl or box
Two
bedroom
apartment
R1
.
living room, kitchen &amp; beth .
springs. full or twin. 168 ..
Furnl1hed . Overlooking 218 at Mercerville . . Quiet firm. 188 . end t78 . Queen
Ohio River. Adults only. area, nice lawn, • 226 per seta, t196. 4 dr. chaeta ,
Brown 's Trailer Park . 614 · mo . unfurnished. Call 448- *42. 6 dr. chooto, U4. Bod
1167 doyo, 814-387-7218
992 -3324.
framea , 120.and 125 ., 10
after 6PM .
gun · Gun cabinets. 1360 .,
2 bedroom, ell new paint ,
dinette
chelro f20 . ond 126 .
NOW
LEASING
:
Now
duaome carpetlng . ~Depoait re ple• aptl . 2 bedroom. 1 floor G11 or electric rengee. 1326
qulrod . 814-992-3090 .
plan . air cond., aHached up to *376 . Beby magarage,
retrig.. range S. 1reooao. us &amp; U8 , bod
7 room country home. gar·
dishwaaher,
all deluxe, 2'h fromeo uo. *26 . • no.
age •nd glrden apace, ideal
king frame •so. Good selecfor middle·eged couple. C•ll mi . Rt . 68B *300 .00 mo. tion of bedroom suites.
448
·3046
day.
448-2802
614-949 ·2674.
cedar chests. rockers, metal
eves.
cabinets, swivel rockere.
3 bedroom houH for rent In
U18d Furniture .. bookcase,
Apt
.,
3
rooms.
Furnished
Mooon. 304 -773 · 5440.
f176 , utiNtleo pd. Adulto, rengu, cheira, end tables,
washers, dryers, refrlger~~ ­
THREE bedroom. 1 V, beth, 701 41h Avo .. Golllpollo, tora
end TV's. 3 mllea ou1 ·
Ohare
both.
448
-441
6
oftor
central air. 2 car garage. Nee
Bulavllle Rd . Open 9am to
7
p.m,
neighborhood . 2 bedroom 1
8pm, Mon . thru Fri ., 9em to
bath. fireplace. garage, overSpm , Sot .
Apt.
for
rent
.
HaH
double·2
looking the river, call 304 ·
448 -0322
bd
.room
Apt
.
Adul11
pre·
878-5640 .
ferred . No peta . 814-992COUNTY APPLIANCES
TWO bedroom houu, 2nd 2749 .
INC, Good uoad opplloncoo:
St., New Haven, 304-882 ·
1 bed rOom Apt . 1198. mo. washer. dryera, refrlg .. TV
2508 .
Including utilities. Equal lltl . 127% 3rd . Ave ., Galli ·
housing opponunlty. Con· polio . Cell ~46 - 1899 .
tact VIllage Menor Aptt.
42 Mobile Homes
Whirlpool auto weaher reel
814-992 -7787 .
for Rent
nice gu~rant11d •121 , GE
3 and 4 room furnlahed aptl. refrigerator White 1 e cu.ft .
814 · 992 -6434 or 614- like now •no. cell 4482 bedrooms, air cond., fur · 992 ·6914 or 304 -SS2· S1S1 .
nished and unfurnished. 2568 .
Color floor model TV e160.
beautiful Riverview In Ka nauga . Foster's Mobile Apertmenu . 304 · 876 - In good condition . Inquire at
Homea. C•ll446· 1602.
5&amp;48 .
421 Cypruo Ct .. Pt . Pt...
sent. WV .
1 bdr. furn . apt .. 6 mo . lease APAR"f:MENTS . mobllal -:--~-:-----­
required plua •so dep ., homll, houtea . Pt. Pl1111nt !5 pc . kitchen dlnnetta, 2
t17!5 per mo., no childrln, and Gellpolia. 814-446- IQf ... 1 chair, dining room
no peta. C•ll446-3887 aher 8221 .
eute with 8 chalfl, corner
coblnot . Coli 448 · 1441 .
6.
UNFURNiSHED apartment
1974 Trailer near Tycoon for rent, 2 bedroom. White Whirlpoolelac . range,
lake, 2 bdr. all electric,
•210 .00 Call Automotive Ultd only few monthl,
1160. dep. required . Call Supply , 8 · 8 . 304 -875- brond now. Coil 614 -268 614· 38S ·9763.
221S , 876-8753 .
1711 Iller 6PM .
rent . Col 448-0390.

Camper Treller loU for
summer. tecluded wooded
· area . Overlooking Ohio
river . Vic Brown. Mlneravlllo. Oh . Coil 8 ·1 4-9923324.

- - - - --lc 2 bedrooms in Racine. 814387-0288.
Mobile home. one bedroom,
lumlohed. • 1 50. month,
• 100. depool1. Rtloroncoo.
no children. 247-41555.
2 bedroom furniahed mobile
home . Adutta only. Paid
uUIItlea. depoait and referen -

ce•· required . No pete. 814·
99~ · 3847 .

1980 MobNo Homo, 2 bod·
room 12x41, axe. cond .
fumilhld with. underpen·
nlng . 304 -871 -3889 or
304-871-1885.
2 bedroom houae trailer,
Aahland · Upland Road .
f110 . .month pluo utlltlu .
304-878 -4088.

SMALL 2 bodrvom fur·
nlohod troller. Bll'detto oddl·
tlcin. f128 .00 per month
pluo utiHIH. dopoolt ,..
qulrod, col llooollo ot 304875-4800, 9 o.m. to 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday .

ONE bedroom ~panmentl
lor tho elderly. AM utll111oo
paid. Tenants pay 30 percent of their adjusted Income in this HUD aubsldlzed
apartment building . · ·Twin
Rivera Tower, phone 304875 -8879 . Equol opportunIty housing .

FIRST cla11 refrigerator, lit ·
cellent condition, 1200. Ma·
plo hutch &amp; bulfot, UOO .
304-878-6985 .
Seven piece dinette eet .
eJttre leaf, Sharp microwave
oven with ttand. Sewing
machine and cebinet, 304·
671· 7353 after 5 'p . ~.

Dynemark riding lawn
mower. 1 1 HP, '1 1h yr old ..
f8&amp;0 . Coil alter 6 , 814268 -8808.

81

Bleck vinyl recliner IS mot.
old UO. Weight bench with
110 lb . of walghto •eo . Call
814-266-8215 .
Johne Deere 214 riding
mower plus anow blade &amp;
ch.-ln, S2.400 . Gall 446 ·
4298 .
Good uHd 6 -V roofing tin, 8
It &amp; 12 It lengtho. Coli
388-9884 oltor 8PM . ·
Sme II riding lawn mower, 1
yr . old. mint Cond .. •400.
Coil 814-268-1379.

Prom driiiH 1l1e 7 . mint
.ureen, yellow f30 . Worn
once, paid- over 1100
Call 81 4-2411· 5817.

l~::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~· -1182.
- -

For ule metal culvert 8 Inch
thru 10 inch In a·t ock. State
opprowd 1 8 gougo 12 Inch
Furnlahed apt. adults. No 15.35 per lt.. 24 Inch
11Q.10 ft . 30 Inch
Poto. 304-875 -1463.
115.50 por II. Al•o pleltlc
culwrt In atock. 8 Inch thru
1 B l~ch . l inch •1 .80perlt ..
46 Space for Rent
12 Inch U .80 por ft . Ron
E~ana Enterprltee, 4 mi.
' COUNTRY MOBILE Homo South oiJockoo~ ~n ST. RT.
P~llc. Routo 33. North of 9_3 , 814-288·8930.
Pdm•oy . large Iota.. Cllll
992-7479.
Cedar wardrobe, antique
trunk. 3 . tlor glooa tlblo •
OfFICE -••volloblo. Will concr~~te picnic 18ble with
remodel . lor right tennent. bonchoo. Coli 814-218Soddlobrook Inn. P1. PI••· 1781.
lln1. 304-878-8278 .
Now &amp; Uood Troy Built
Tllloro. Swl•hor• lmplo47 Wanted to Rent
mont, 81: Rt. 7, North of
G•lllpoHo. Coli 441-04 78 ,
WANT 1o rOnt nloo lot lor
mobile homo 304-871- Wo1or woN drtllhlg rtg. Coli
8828 .
.
. .
81 4 -311-8143.
Furniahed ept. a~ults. No
Poto. 304·675-1453.

Musical
· Instruments

GUITAR . Weahburn. e111cel
lent condition, like
*200 . 304 -876-6986 .

69 For Sale or Trade

Farm Equipment

FARMA LL Super M .
Wanted -peru
for John
D-•· 304-89.8-3441 .

Wanted to buy tobacco
poundogo. Coil 614-2&amp;80863,..~

Vegetable plants &amp; potatoes
for 'llle . Oarnea Green ·
houN. letart, WV Bo111 82 .
304-895 -3400.
Boy •tout uniform , ti ze 12.
304·876 -2342 .
EARLY American Herculon
oofo &amp; chair. •5o .oo. 304 ·
578 -2797 .
CASH Regltter for sale,
304·875 -5696 .
HANDMADE &amp; docorotod
potato • onion bins. elao
many other item1, phone.
304-875 -3885 .
AKC rtgiatered Dachshund
pups, male Sa female, ' 'red'' .
Llirge square bales. 304 ·
89&amp;· 39!58 .
00 FRICkS 11wmill, all
ateel uw boy . Mowllne
power unit, 12" tewbtade.
*2200 . 304-875-8492.

71

Autos for Sale

71 Monte C1rio axe. cond.
Coil 448 -3771 .
1977 Corvetu loodad
43.000 mlloo, tS,DOO. Cell
1}1 4-692-8892 oltor li.
Foremant U18d Cart. For
leu expenalve cara . On S .R.
124 In Longoville. Oh . 814·
742-2734.

1977 Uncoln Town Car .
6 boby gooto. 3 dooo. 2 42.000 mlleo. Excellent
bucko. con . be raglotorod, 2 ccndl11on . U.700. John
re:glstered milking goeta .. Lyono. 814 -992 -3483.
304-46S -1821i.
1981 Buick Skylark . 4 door.
fully equipped . 1111cellent
63
Livestock
condition . 41 ,000 miles .
*5.600. 8, 4 -992-6082.

1976 Buick Elecue 2 dr.,
PS, P8 , AC, AM-FM
11 ,S50 or trodo lor cll1ttlo': I 11th Annual Bentley Pig 88 MUSTANG , good condifarm equipment of
Solo, April 27th, 7 :30 PM . tlon, 304-676 •2306 .
volua . Cell 448 -4537 .
Fayett Co . Fairgrounds, We· 1- - - - - - - - - oh!ngton C .H., Ohiq. Soiling )977 Trano Am, black.
160 11. Chain link
150 hood of Duroco &amp; T-1op. PS. PB. AC. IUIO·
304-676-5214 .
Hemp-Duroce croll breede matlc, AM · FM a track.
end Roglotored Duroc gulh•. 49,000 miloo. e4.000. 304·
Roger Bentley. 3112 Reo~o 882-3128.
Rd., Soblno. Oh 46819 . Coil I-..,---~~-~-513' 5S4-239.8. ·
. .
mlle.e ge.

Buoh hog In good ohopo
t326 &amp; older model Interne·
tlonal tractor (needa work)
11 .200 . Cell 446 -0855
daya &amp; 446-4257 even .
1- - - - - -- - -Now 2 row Ford com
planter . Call 814 - 379246S . ~

1---- - - - - - -

Furnished Rooms TRADITIONAL couch. choir
&amp; lovo ooot.
*1 50
304·875
-4B49
. .00 phone
For rent Sleeping Room•
end light hOUII kHplng
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
rooms. Park Central Hotel. 64 Misc . Merchandise
Coil 448 -0758 .

46

ponyo. 304 ·

.

4 year old Holatein milk cow
ond coil, 1 -•k old . 304882 -2403 .

Farmell c~b tractor culthtl·
tort, belly mower .1 .825,
Int . insulage chopper •&amp;75 .
Coil 448 -4157 .

71

Cub tractor cuttivatora •
plowa good cond. Cell 4414288.

1975 Sulek Elactro 2 dr ..
PS . P8, AC, AM-FM otero
.1.8150 or trede for cattle,
farm equipment of equ1l
value. €oil 448-4537.

For salt new • rebuilt farm
machinery . John Deere
baler with motor. 8 row
boom sprayer on trailer, Cub
Cadet trector, mower deck.
disc. plow 8t cultiavt:ora. AC
WD 4&amp; tractor • · plows,
Woods corn picker, gravity
wagons. used PU &amp; pull
rotary mowers. Myera cut
conditioner , manure apread ·
era &amp; fertilizer spreaders.
Howe's Farm -chlnery,
At. 1 24 &amp; Moyh- Rd .
Jockoo~. Oh. Coil 814-288 5944.
Mechanical tobacco transplenter . Plented VJ acre geve
teoo will oell tor teoo.
Also. Beluw planer 12"
brand new attll In carton .
Tung- groove attachments.

!:!!iuFi~~rt~n :;f· ::c~n:~

4769mlll nort8 Carmel Ad .,
Rt. 1. Recine, Oh .

NEW &amp; UHd Harveltore
Structures . Automated IIvettock feedi~g ~ computtr
feeders. Call collect 814586 -2280 . John L. Betto.

~=========::.l::::::::::::::::::::,J

~~~~~~~::.._~_

_:__.:
1973 Plymouth Duater,
alent 8 engine, at, pa, like
new, Keyatone wheels , run a
good,looker:od . 304-6763731, 6 to p .m .

1- - - - -- -- -

1981 PLYMOUTH Horizon.
Herd Reduction- Reg .. e111cellent condition , stand·
Rec .. Gr .. TOOGENBURG ard tranaml11ion air condiDeiry Goata, milkara. bucka. tioninQ, 35 plus MPG , 304wethers -' reaaonebly priced, 875-2415 after 6 p.m.
reduced for 4·H'era, FFA, 1- - -- -- - . ; __ _
etc. 304 -896·3328. Aloo 72 MONTE Corio. 360
fresh egge. Beuera. Longhol- automatic, power ateering,
low Rd . , Letart , - WV tilt wheel, cruiae control,
26263 .vinyl top, new paint. t1600 .
304-676-4181 .

REPOSSESSED Signl Nothing downl Take over paymonto 158 .00 monthly . NEW EQUIPMENT 2 pt.
4'd ' flolhlng orrow olgn. -tlllero 40' to as·. 3 pt.
~ew bUlbs, letters . Hale aeeders, King KuHar rotary
Slgno. Call FREE 1-800· mowaro 4 '. 5 '.8 " &amp; 7" lilt &amp;
828 -7448. onytlme .
pull. 3 pt. dlac 6'h &amp; I'll. 64 Hay &amp; Grain
potatoe plows, boom polea,
Self defroating refrigerator rear blades 6 ' &amp; 7', plowa 1
S1 00 . Automatic washer 6 &amp; 2 bottom, cultlvetort 1 •
mlxod hoy. First &amp;
dryer •1&amp;0 . Mayt•g heavy 2 row. post hole dlggera1 Good
Hcond cunlng. 11 .60 per
duty auto. w11her e100 . woven wire-20 rod rolls bola.· 814-992 -8036 .
Hoover portable 1 1 0 dryer t75. USED EQUIPMENT
U5 . 814-742 -2352 .
plowt-1 :2,3,4, a 6 bottom, Baled hay for aale . Never
~IY rake, m1nure spre1der1,
For sale-Fruit jart-Pintt and hoy blndeo, whHI dlac 8 &amp; wet. 11 .28 per bolo . 814·
quant, •1 .00 per dol .. 1 0. rotary mower1 . TRAC· 992 -2314 .
Lawn mower. lawn boy for . TORS MF 136 gao. MF 136
pertt, e6 .60 . Table tennis dol ., MF 160 goo. MF 36
65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
game, t5.50. Elec1ric foo1 · g11, MF 36 dsl ., Ford 4000
bell game, t&amp; .7&amp; . Aurora X g11. Ford 6000 dal .. JD LA
Leratours race car set-demo w -c ult .. JD 50. JD CD30
8, 2 cera. 17.50 . Aurora dol . INDUSTRIAL Ford &amp;36 WANT to loo01 tobacco
D•ytona 600 - fle~t track-2 backhoe, Caae &amp;SOC beck- quote, Maeon, Putnem. Cehoe , Case 1 1 &amp;08 dozer . bell. Call Morgan Woodlawn
Clrl, •4 .60 . View M11ter
projector with film , •8.60. Many other itema . Jim's Farm. Pliny. 304 -871 Wooden !odder. *4.60. 100 Form Equipment . Rt. 35 2276. 304-123-6S43.
lb. blrboll weight. *15 .60. Wett . Qellipolia. Oh Cell I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
446-9777 or 446-2484 .
I
Coli 814·992-2055 .
Amerk:1n Farm a. Ranch
Steel Building•. Cammer·
ciel S. Farm 40 ' •60'~t16 '
vertical well (1 2LL-20wl),
color roof end wells, one
20'x14' double slide door,
one welk-In door, four wal ·
lites , delivery · price
U .872 .00 . R . D. PAR ·
SONS , 119 W. Vo. Ava.
Rlploy, WV 25271 . (3041
372 -8991 .

ff, TH/511 STORY '!

STUCCO PLASTERING ·
textured ceilings commer·
cial and residential. free '
ootlmoteo. Call 614-2116 -

For ule Young pure bre'd
ChorloiSI bull . Cell 014·
258-88615 attar 8 o'clock .

For sale-Night crawlers .nd
minnowa. Bettys Carry Out
3 V, mi. South of Middleport
on Rt . 7 . 0p&amp;n· 7 daya a
woek. 614-992-2969.

I, THIS A STO R Y OR

see vou MAl t-J,
MF&lt;.. McKeE&lt;.

Home
Improvements

Autos for Sale

73 Oldo 98 41.000 mi .. PS.
PI, tHt wheel. elr. cruiae. 4
dr.. HT. Coli 446-7414
batwean 3 &amp;9 PM.
1977 Dodge Colt AT vinyl
top, newly pelnted, ell:cel·
lent gaa mileage. E111cellent
condition. Coil 814-388·
9B09 .
1 882 EXP. Excellent cond.
Tell.e over payments. 448·
46SO .
For Sale or Trade: 1977
Camero, 301 engine , auto.,
t .c., new tirea, 34,000 mi.
Cell 379-2728 .
For Sole or Trodo: 1 979
Comoro. 81.000 mi. Now
tlret, .3015 engine. auto . Cell
379 -2728 .
'79 Chevy Suburban. exc.
cond., V-8. auto. trenaP air
cond. 448 · 3637 eftef 5
~p-:.m
___
. - - - - -- - --::
1971 Oldo . Delto, 1800.
Col1448-0813 .
76 Ford Torino good cond.
Coil 441-11122.

1980 Dodge Chollenger.
Keystori'e wheela. Daytona
radials . all optiona. good
condition , 44,000 mllea.
U,800 . 00 . 304 - 8S2 2417.
80 CAMARO , air, AM -FM
radio tape, new tirea, excel·
lent condition. 304-6764198.
for Sale
71 Peter BUt air ride good
shape. ee.ooo. leave phone
number for cell beck, 814448-7077.
1- - - -...,-- - - -2'12 ton lrlternational cab
ovor,long wheel booa. cob &amp;
cheslie, •2 .600. new paint.
good cond. Call 814-3792t17.
71 Ford pickup, and .a 74
Pinto atationwagon . Call
814-268-8683 .
- - - - - -- - 1976 Da1aun pickup,
*1495, 304-875-2169.

73

Vans

&amp; 4

w:o.

71 Winnebago motor home ,
••ecutive bargain . e7 ,600 .
leave phone number at
614-448-7077 .
1974 Dodge Ram Charger
218 onglno •. 59.000 mi .,
ruoty body, •1.400 or boot
olfor. Coli 814-246-5892 .
1978 J11p PU 4•4. Honcho ,
V-8, auto .• new til'lls, many
e111tr11. t2,800. Call 44&amp;0511.

1975 Dodge Powarwagon,
ton, club cab , good
e;~~~~~~'i. ~ 2 . 000 304·

3.4

JEEP 1980 CJ6. 4 opoad .
new top, good condition ,
14300. Consider trade.
~04-273 - 3874 , S :30 ·6 :00.

14 ·

Motorcycles

1980 Yomoho YZ-80 dirt
bike, ucl. cond .• ·*426 . Cell
814-248 -6892 .

19i8
·
1971 Yomoho 850 twin 4
Muolone 80 •000 mi. , otroko. lolr cond .. *6110 .
1 owner. new paint, radial
tlroo, 8 cyt . Coil 814·3Ba. _c_
""-·8:_14_._2_4_5_·•_8_9_2_·_ _
1
8828.
198 · Suzuki 980 OL,
1 tin N!onte Corlo 29.000 12,991. lull dro... oholt
lctUIII mllee. e~tc. corid . Call drive, very tow mileage. Call
448-3297.
oltor
814.288-1141 .

a.

GE d
3
rv• 0 day guarantH.
*110. Hotpoln1 dry.r Nel
nice, 110. Coil 448-&amp; 1 81 .

1177 Yamaha 850. twin,
full dre11. otraa total over
1 800 .. ucollent •condltlon,
11400. con 304·875-4338.

tao c.,.vro1.,

1
cillaol ongino. tr...l. COMpli11 UOO
or trldo for - · • voluo·. Cell
614-271-2322.

81 AMC 8pirh ucellont
oondl11on, low mM.. go. now
tiroo. C,- 448-8372 otto.
!PM.
71 Ford Tlountlorblrd, good
oo-on.
P•• PI,
cn~IM

00Mrol, AM·FM l ·troclt, 2
tifu. CoH 448-8372
lftO&lt; !PM.

and
,
Mc•t'o1r1 for Sale

- -- - - - PAINTING · interior end
exterior. plumbing. roofing .
oome romodoling. 20 yro .
••P · Coii814-3S8 -9662 .

Moroum .Rocllng &amp; Spout·
ing. 30 veara experience,
tpecialiling in built up roof .
Coii814 -38S-9S57.

.]

Roofing, ahinglet, spouting
and aluminum siding work .
Insured , Free Estimates .
814-949-2688.
Hi Preuul'fl Cleaning . A,lum -

inurn siding. mobile homes .
wood. brick . undstone
bl,lilding and homes. Also .
heavy equipmen1 . Fully insured. Free estimates. 814- ·
949-2688.
RON'S Tetevlsion Service .
Specieliling In Zenith end
Motorola . Quuar . and
houte calla . Call 676-2398
or 446-2464.

. WE ALLOWED OUR5ELVES TO
BECOO: IJROWSY WHILE 001!
COMPff1TfYf5 WERE WIIJE
AWl/HE.~.. 50/IE FfiiEJfOL Y.

HA HA I LET ME

PUT IT

TO

YOU THI$ WAY, ANNIE..,. IT:S
THE SNAHE Y()(J OOifT SEE
THAT8/TE5

...~c~rr-NOT

F·&amp; le:'Tre8! Trimming , stump
rer:nov•L Cell 676-1 331 .

YOO.'

..

tiOTHIN6 IH tt;:RE AB&lt;'XJT
I'IARBUC.K~' FUTURE PtAN!i---BliT
t1ERE ARE THE SCHIEMATICG
FOR THE Ff080T! ••1'/HI(jj
f}E JIJ5T M 1.15f.'FlL:.".
;..,..,_~...,_

RI_NGLE'S ·sERVICE oxpe· .
rienced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpen ter. electrician, mason . Call
304 -876 -20SS or 676 4680.
Water Wells . Commercia l
end Oomet tic. Teat holes .
Pumps Salea and Service .
304-B96-3802 .

ALLEYOOP

Get your carpet in ship
shape . Waterremovel. FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614 -446 -2107 .

E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
insured. free estimates .
Phone 814-387-0838. coil
after 6 .
Starft'• Tree Work. lend• ·
caping, backhoe work, free
11rvlc11 with mowing . Go
anywhere . 304-&amp;78-2010 .
Painting interior or e111terior.
free estimates. Call 676 5344 "' 448-9326.
ROOFING . aiding, spouting .
remodeling , insured . Call
304-876 ·61 86 .

82

GASOLINE ALLEY
~

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh end Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446 ·
4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . Fomerly Dewitt ' s
Plumbing . Coil 614 -367·
0578 .

83

Excavating

WINNI E .

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna , po nds. ditches ,
basements, etc . Coli 446 4907 . Carter S. Evans
Trenaponetion .

WOULD NEVER
KNOW MY DESIGN
11-l PRODUCTION.

IF I HADN'T COME !lACK
TO THE PRODUCTION
DEPARTMENT WITH THOSE
e&lt;JLTS OF

EVIDENTLY
SOMETHING 15 .. .
l!lUT HE WANTS
TO WOR I&lt; IT ouT
HIMSE~F.

Lonnie Boggs, Exce~ ating .
Dozer. backhoe . dump truck. Work by hour or job.
Coll448-7903.

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
OEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR . Guaran teed work . Cetl anytime
614 -268 -8820 or 614 256 -1207.

BARNEY

SEWING Machine repairs ,
servH:e. Authprind Singer
Sales &amp; SeNice Sharpen
Scinors . Fabric Shop .
Pomeroy . 992 -2.2 84 .

86

\)

I'LL-5EE
WHAT I
CflN DO.
PAW

IT LOOKS LIKE

WE'RE FIX IN' TO
HAVE STONE-COLD
VITTLES AG'IN
TONIGHT

ED ' S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE cell City Furniture
304 -876 - 2608 01 448 0631 .
General Hauling

COULD VOU START
TH' BLESStN' NOW,
PAR50N?
'"·

1880 1 I ft. Boyllnor with 50
HP. Mercury motO&lt; end
Tonne•- troller. oil occ••·
Included . Cell 4481,311 ohlr I .

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 9oc . Avo ., Gollipolio .
448-7833 or 448-1833 .

3 HP Jollnson motor, 10ft.
olumlnum boot. 304·5782113 .

MOWREY&amp; Upholotory At.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant
304-875 -41 li4 .
•

.

-

MoiiOI'

()) DIYO Alton ot Ll'lll
81 Bln.!!Y Hill Show ·
11 :30 81]) CD Tonlgh1 Show
(I) An01hor Lifo
(I) Benny Hill Show
Cll H1n 10 Hort The
Herta board a luxury ocean
liner to inttlltlgatf 1 ~trial
oflewolthoflo. (RI (60 m in.l
(I) PBI Loti Night .
® All In 1ho Fomlly
rD Nightllne ·

e

.

e
•

INGYL

t1 I
YOU WOJLD N'T CAL.L

THAT P' ~ETT Y
5TEWA~D E~ TH it7,
WO ULPYOU ~

.•

I

tTYPAIR

Yes terday's

I

Now arrange the drded leners t o~
fofm the s urprlae answer, 11 sug·
gaoled by the above"col1oon.
·

"r xI xxr rxI I J

mer. A

(Answers tomorrow)
J umbleo: TH ICK WEIGH HECT IC MI OWAY
Answer : What Macbeth wondered when he
enco untered the thr ~e weird s is te rs WH ICH WAS WITCH

Jumbllllook

~o. 18, containing 110 puzrlel,le ua llab lt ror S1 .95 pot lpa ld
fnwn Jum*M, clo this newsp~per, Box 34, NOfW'ood , N.J . 07648. lnclud• your
,..,.., ~a. dp code and ma ke ehec:ks p.~ ya b le to Newspa pert)Ooll s.

BRIDGE
Oswa)d Jacoby and Jam es Jacoby

Aiding and abetting

.,.,.
NOU T II
• t~ Ill ' 1
• 7 ti ~~

partn(' rs .''
Her e xa mpl e hands arc a ll
for m atc h poinl pla ye rs but
the pnn c ipl es inv olve d

4 'l0-8l

apply a lmost as for cdull y to
r ub ber bridg e.
In t o d ay · ~ ha nd West led
the kin g. of hearts ugainst

tAK J\ 43

J·; A.ST

W E ST

• 9 6.
• A K .I:I

••n a

Sou th's four -spade ('on t ract.

. ,2

East knew that one is sup-.
pQsed to :,Jiay low fr om three.and drop p(,d t.ht' deuce .
• W(!s l s hifted tO the four. of
clu b:; at t ri ck rwo ami South
ra n· oH 12 t-rirks for a very ·
good match point st•orP

.. • ~ li

. Q lO S

+ )916l 2

4

SllliTII

4i A K .I H 2
• Q 10.

t Qn

M nry pomts out that West

+ AK

m1ght wd l hi1Yt' 1gnore d hts
par tner 's deuce and pl &lt;•vcd
his ilt:t ! of ll('arts at tr:ick
two , bu t t hat prinl'ipal·
blamf~
fo r lt•llm~ South
ma ke S IX i n s t,~; • d of just five .
ha d to ~o to Ea s t for no t .
havi ug atdr d his p&lt;&amp;rtn ••r in ..
m akmg the nght drt'is1ons.

Vulnera ble. Both
Dea ler: South
W ~:st

North

En~ l

S uulh

l 'as:-~

z+

I';I SS

:1 NT

Pass
P ass

4•

l'a ss

l 'a ss

••

East L'(JU I ~I tel l from hiS·

nw n hand that No rth 's dia m onds we n· goi ng to n m and
tha t 11 wa s up t n Wt· st to
ga the r in what lrll'k s he
rould. stm·e ht:'. l·~ a s l . h;ul no
puss1bh• l'&lt;in.l of va !ut•
.

By Oswa ld J acob y
a nd J a mes J acoby

T hus, E ast. should v •o l a tc ·

l ht.•

Ma r y Cook has a de lig ht·
ful a rt1cle in the ABTA quar te r ly entitled "' Aidi ng a nd
Abett ing .'"
It starts wilh: .. All bndge
players s houl d st ri v(' Lo
develo p the subtl e a rl of a id·
ing a nd a he tl tng th eir

ba~ l&lt;'

rlll l· &lt;HHJ pi &lt;IY his

d ght uf llt'art s tH tri i' k one ·
Hf' ('Oul d pl ay till' llHI L' rw xt
so t ha t 1f W&lt;'s t hrlclt hl' l'luh~
ace W t•st w ould kno w '
enou ~h

Lo C" as h

11

for

the

third dcfcm;Jblc trw k
jN ~~ W S I 'A I' t-: IIIO: N 'rJ. : HI ' Iti S I •:

Ali.'iN !

~~OAI"W
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

6 Landscape
7 Biblica l
vessel
type
H Fabn c
6 Or egon eity
9 .J a cket ~ l y l e
11 " The Roy
Wonder "
10 Parcel ou t
12 Greek island 14 Beastly
sound
13 Ma r ried
ts l. l
IH Ululate
19 " IO:ast
IS Underllikc
of Eden"
16 Individual
c.:ha rac.:ltr
17 P itche r
20
(~c islm ' s
19 O.K. r•l acc
sa s h
23 Hawaiian
21 Caviar
isla nd
22 Timcst pup
27 Nea rly
28 Small drwn 24 Arab ga rb
25 Torr id
~ Debto r's
bur den
30 Tongue-lash
31 Mine ca rt
33 F ool
36 Ma li gn
U Led a

1 51".!·point

Y cs tc rday 's. Answt •r

26

1-: n~ ll sll

:111 No1 w 1Jett 0r
:ta Ta K

:n Alway'

2M Pa int ing

prot·es.o. ;
:10 Pa rty " '
:12 Sh&lt;o bby
:13 Ado

:IK ln(l'rprel
1

:ml .ol'a llon
40 ze, l
42 N.Z. l&gt;arrnt .

cloistered
life

43 Mooring

place
44 Lari at

45 Race
46 Fa mous

f or est
DOWN
I " Vissi d ' - "
2 Enter

in mischief

4-;u:

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - llere's h o w to work It :
AXVDLB A AXR
II

L 0 N G F E I . t 0 IV

One letter simply otands fo r an o ther. In t h is sa mple A lo
used for the three L's, X for lhe t wo o·s. t•tc . Sin gle lc Hef! ··
apoatrophea, the le ngth and form at ion nf lhe wo rd a are ali
hiDts. Each day the cod e lette rs a re di ffere nt
CKYPTOQUOT ES

TZ

W E C N

NA

X I

V C KHXA

W' H

NOK CC H

PWFD

N

NO K CCN LUC
V C KHX A

p D

X"
"" "'

TC . - OQOX "I.X D QA .
Yeslerday's Cryptoquote: AN YBODY. P ROVIDED ~·
KNOWS HOW TO BE AMUSfr:G, HAS THE R IGHT TO TALl(
ABOUTHIMSELF .-BAUDELAIRE

,,.
'·

r1

Honey..,.._.

1 1:4111) MOVI!: 'Confooolon•
from Holldoy Camp"
1 2:00 (I) Burne ·&amp; ·Allin
Cil WO&lt;Id Ch.n\plonlhlp
Tonnll: lprtng Flnel

t

I

factor
5 Plead

Cil ESPN SporttContor
I1J NIWI/8portt/WII1her

Upholstery

IDLAY

Nowa

Need so mething hauled
away or something moved?
We'll do it. Call 446-3169
between 9 and 5.

601N6 TO I-IELP YOU
611/E UP 'IOOR BlANKET...
FIRST, HOWEVER:, I HAVE
TO ASK VOU A FEW
PERSONAL QUESTIONS.•

·

4 Sailing

CIJ MOVIE: 'Abaonoo of

I'M

lour ordlnory -

811n 8oerohof....

1 1:00 8 CI1 ()) a W ilD Ill IDi

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lanier. 304-676 - •
. 7397 :

lOur Jumbleo,

by Henri Arnold end Bob Loa

one -~~~-lqUMI. 101orm

3 Assist

JONES BOYS WATER
VICE . Coil A14.,1R''' 7•n•J \
or 814-367-0591 .

PEANUTS

Ut IICI. . illll -

min.)

1111 Tony Brown'o Journal

87

1-:._________

BORN--LOSER

Painting interior &amp; e111terior ,
wellpeper hanging . Insured .
Free estimates. 614-9492886.

11:00 • Cil (I) • (I) ® ... (j)
Now•
~
(I) Tic Toe Dough
Cil ESPN'o Horao Racing
Wkly.
(I) Anay Ortlllth .
I1J NIINa/SpoiU/WII1hlr
(I) 1111 3-2-1. Conlect
Chorlle'• Angelo
11 :30
CJ) l1l NBC .News
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Sea
Hornor
Cil Flehln' Holo ' Blues
Chosapaoke Bay. MD:
(I) Gon\lr Pylo
(I) Ill (D ABC Newo
• (I) cr!l CBS NIWI
(I) Dr. Who
(j]) Over Eaoy
7:00 e CIJ P.M. Mogozlno
Cil ESPN SporttCen1or
IJ) Carol Bumott
(I) Entortalnmon1 Tonight
l1l Chorllo"o Angelo
D Cl) Tic Toe Dough
(I) 1111 MacNoii-Lohror
Ropon
®NIWI
Ill I1JI Poopto·o Coun
81 Amorlcon Rlllom•n
7 :16 · Cil NBA Tonight
.7 :30 II CII Ko~tuoky Christi.tln
College
Cil NBA- Bookot blll: 1983
Opening Round Playoff
Gem a
(I) Bob Nowhon Show
&lt;Il D (I) Family Feud
(I) Buolnooo Report
(!D You Aakod For 11
1111 Computer Programme •
Cll IDl
Entortalnmen1
Tonlgh1
Ill Mejor l11guo BoHblll :
Plttobu'lh ot Now York
Meta •
B:OO CIJ MOVIE: 'Carbon Copy'
Cil MOVIE: 'Lieo My Feth••
Told Me'
(I) I Spy
(I) Crlo• From tho Ooap.
Pert II Conclus io n.
(I) GIIDl Fall Guy Colt bat·
ties '" odds to SI!Jvf? a ci r·
CU.I . o'angutah. lA) (60 ·
min.)
.
··
CZ)." Texaco Slat Th1118r ·
'Bob Hope and the Pe ople
Who Make Our World
l au gh.' Bo b loo ks at a century of comedy . focu!ing
on Mark Twain . Will Roge rs. J immy Durante and
othe rs. (60 m i n.)
Ill (]) ® Zorro end Son
Zorro Jr. falls for a flamenco dancer.
(IJ. 1111 Konnody Centor
Tonlgh1 ' Medea : Zoe Ca ldwell and Dame Judith Anderson sta r in thi t spec ial
presentatio n of Ro binson
Jeffe rs' adaptation of Euljfledes' ' Medea .' (90 min .)
8 :30 II Cil Mejor league
8oooball : Cincinnati at
Houaton
D (]) ® Square Pego
Wh ile trying to walk a round without her glasses.
Patty . bumps into Lauren
and breaks he r leg . IRI
9 :00 CII 700 Club
IJ) TBS Evening Newo
Cil Ill 1Dl Ryon 'a Four Or.
Gillian's desire to become
a specialist surgeon is lg·
nored by his fathe r. (80
min.)
l1l Facto of Life One of
Eutlend 's olde11t grad·
uates leaves Jo somethin g
in her wil l. lA)
lit Cll [!II
MOVIE:
'Avalanche'
9:30 Cil Yoatorday Show Veste r·
day's news become s t O·
day'11 Comedy 1n th is
program .
(I) Taxi To ny's date from
Shloogel a nnoun ces that
she is pregnant and To ny is
the tether.
(j) Wagner In Venlqe Or·
son Welles narrates this
s pec ial 'Wagner view' of
Ven ice.
1111 Rolloctlono of Medea
Tonight's · program inte r·
views three ma in c harec·
tera in Robinson Jeffers'
'Medea :
1 D:OO Cil Going For Leughl Comedians Paul Reiser, Ar·
sen io Hall and Barry Sobel
perform.
CIJ MOVIE: ' LOVI a1 Flro1
Bite"
Cil lntornotlonol Surfing
'The Women 's Matters
Championsh ip it featured .'
(I) Mojor Laoguo Baooboll :
Adtntl lit Sen Diogo
(I) GIIDI Dynolty A vortex
of swirling events s ignals
the poaa lble end of the Car·
rington empire . (80 min.)
[Ciooed Captioned]
l1l Quincy Quincy gooo to
Wuhlngton on beholf of
the propot8d 'orphen drug'
low. IRI(80 m·ln.l
1111 Newowotoh
10:30 CII Sler limo .
{!) ESPN'o Her.. Aoclng
Wkty.
(I) In Our Own · Bockyard
Tonight's program focut81
on the eventl at the"'Love
Canal In IQ78- 19SO. 180

Page- l l

ftV'MtNt ID1t ~THAT BCIWIIILEDWOIIO cWI~ .

~ ~ ~~ ·

e
e

CAPTAIN EASY
AND 6000 TO

62 Wanted to Buy
57

Motors Homes
&amp; Camp'rs

1971 Fleetwil"!g trave l
troller. 17ft.• *1 ;400. Call
448-9389 .

DAAOONWYND CATTERY
- KENNEL. AKC Chow puppieo. CFA Hlmoll'fln. Por·
lien and Siameae kittens .
Call 448-3844 after 4PM .

HORSES &amp;
876-6110 .

EVENING

(

AKC Doberman puppiee,
•&amp;o . 304-875-1822.

F~~niahed apt . $225 , utili ·
tlea pd., 1 bdr., adulta. Call
446· 4418 after 7PM .

1411160 3 Bedroom .
• 190.00. 1 4x&amp;8 2 Bod ·
room, • 1 7&amp; .00. Addlaon,
Qh. 448·0176.

j

1 -4 yoor old gelding cholt · ~
nut with dark mane end tell .
1 ·•PPY Fllty. veiy gentle . 4
61
vearo old . 814 •988 •3891 .

2 to 5 acres; flet , 12,760 per

36

79

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding oil broodo. AKC·
Aeg. Doberman• pupe efd
Doberm1n Stud Setvlce .
Coil 448-7798 . .

CoCker Spaniel ·male puppy.
8 wka. old Thursday. 1150.
Calloftor6. 814-286 · 1301 .

WEDNESDAY
4/20/83 .

oolo-19 ft . Trovelmootlr
trovol troller. 614 -742 · ·
2932 ottor 8 .p .m .
·

a~ ~8~B;8:·7~3;1:1:.::;:=:;:::===

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

offer. Call 814-379-2196 .

197S Torry Trove! Troller.
28 ' 2 door rtlridg .. o.c .• tub
With ehower. Cedar clo•t. :
Vorv cleon. 304-882 -3108. ~

Y.••• ··-

91 ACRE form , 2 1f1CII. 40
acr.. ptue 81 8CNI, will eell
..Pirlite or tog• her. All
utiNtln ovlloblo. 304-8752218 otter 5 p.m.

Television
Viewing

78

MiiC. Merch•ndfM

the Doily S!!ntinei-

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

20, 1983

Ohio

�•Pag1

.

Pomeroy . Middleport, Ohio

14-The Daily Sentinel

Nine inmates injured in Ohio prison ·fire.
. '

.

'

LONDON, Ohio (AP) -lnmates
broke out windows on the top two
floorsd a 63-year-old soap factory to
escape flre and smoke In the
buDding on the grounds or the
London Cnn-ectlonal Institute.
Nine lnffiates received minor
Injuries Tuesday while evacuating
thethnie-story building, said SuperIntendent Arnold Jago. Other Inmates had thrown ladders up against the factory.
''111ere were some rut hands,
spralnl!d ankles and a sprained
wrist or two," Jago said. "None of
the Injuries were a dlrect result of
either the fire or the smoke. They
were all due to or occurred In
evacuation of the bulldlng."
He said a doctor examined all the
Inmates. None were admitted to the
Infirmary.

The 10:18 a.m. fire was llrought
under control within 45 mlnutPO .
Jolm Callahan of the state fire
marshal's office was sent to the
scene, and Jago said be wauld
discuss the fire with him before
commenting on the cause or extent
damage.
The prison houses 2,1li6 Inmates.
Jago sald 127 Inmates and four
civilian employees were In • the
buDding when the fire broke out.
The fire was reported In a
basement area where 908!&gt;-maklng
Ingredients are stored, and smoke
spread through upper floors.
Soatl was made on the tlrst and
second !loors, and the third floor
was used tomakescrubbrushesand
brooms.
The buDding was alx&gt;ut 25 yards
from one fence
the prison

of

by !lree In the th~J'd.floor brulh
compound, but Jago said no one
aboot three years ago.
tr1e&lt;1 to escape the InStitution during factory
theflre.
• .
No ooe was Injured In that blaze..
The tnStitutlon bas one pumper _
"We put ladders up and told them
truck manned by two empiDyees
to break the wll)dows to ~ out of
and two IIIJn!ltes. Jago said It was .
there," J.ago said. "It was ' a very
IISed and that other ~ and
orderly evacuation and I saw no
equipment came to his aid from the
aut-of-control excitement. The In·
mates conducted themselves very . . London Fire Department and the
Centr81 'i'ownshlp Volunteer Fire
well."
Department.
The sarne building was d;!maged

area

NINE IN.JURED IN FIRE- Curlalna bUiow In lhe open windows
of the soap factory at London, Ohio Con-edlonal lnsdtuUon Tuesday
after a fire In the b~~~~ement forced Ure evacuation of lnmatell. Nine
Inmates were sUshtly Injured In lbe Incident when they were evacuated
from the upper floor of Ure bulldlns by firemen . (AP Laserphoto).

~1sc 4000 .Camera
Outfit

Take more pk:tures, more often In
mOre kinds of light. Takes Indoor
pictures every

Jlh seconds . Built-In

flash, ultra compact, and more .
Outfit Includes 2 film discs .

ELBERFELDS_IN POMEROY

Mayor's Court
. Two defendants forfeited bonds In
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Thesday night.
They are Robert ~hnelder,
Lawrenceburg, Ind.,$375postedon
a charge of driving while tntoxl·
cated, and $63 no operator's Ucense,
and Roger Jeffers, Route 2,
Pomeroy, $44, sp!)edlng.
·
David Htndy; Pomeroy,
.charged'
.
with assault; was _plilced on prol)a ..
lion for six months · and Charles
Eakins, Middleport, was fined $44
and costs on a speeding charge.

Pagt' 9

The
•

Bonds were forfeited by two
defendants In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hollman Tuesday
night. . _
Altred Roush, Letart, W. Va.,
forfeited a $450 bond posted on a
charge of driving whlle Intoxicated
and Wayne Little, Pomeroy, $50,
posted on an assured clear distance
charge.
Dale Herman, Middleport, was
fined $00 and costs, disorderly
manner, and $50 and costs, assault;
Dor Coates. Middleport, $10 and
costs, failure to"yleld; David Vance,
Middleport, $16 and costs, speedIng; . Sally Scanlon, Middleport,
placed on 10 days probation,
permitting a dog to run loose;
George McDaniels, · Middleport, 10
days jail sentence, disorderly
manner, and Don Lovett, 30 days
jail sentence suspended, placed on
probation for one year on a
disorderly manner charge.

IS

'1 S.(tion , 14 Paget

NEW CONCORD, Ohio (AP) -

Sen. JoJBI Glenn, saying "the Issue IS
leadership," today declared himself a candidate for president.
In a speech at Jolm Glenn High
School In his hometown, Glenn
called for a return to traditional
small-town values and new educational programs to guide Americans In ~ teclmological age.
The prepared telit of the former
astrona,ut's speech recounted his
boyhood In New Concord. He said It
was In the town of 1,800 that he
learned the value of community,
compassion and patriotism.
He said President Reagan touted

such traditional values during his
campaign but tailed to follow them
once elected.
"Two years ago, we elected an
admlnlstratlon whlch likes to talk
about those values. Unfortunately.
Its deeds have fallen far short of Its
words," Glenn said.
"The policies of this admtn1stratlon aren't expanding opportunity,
they're dlmlnlsQ!ng it. They aren't
promoting excellence, they're discouraging It They aren't fostering
compassion, they're reducing !t.
"Instead
a renewal of old
values, we see a return to old
Inequities." he said.

of

of scientific research, for appliludGlenn's announcement made
tng defeat of the Equal Rights
him the sixth candidate In the race
.
Amendment
and for falling to put
for the De(llocratlc nomination. His
Americans
back
to work .
entry may complete the field of
"All
across
this
great country.
active candidates, although black
we've
seen
millions
thrown out of
Democrats -a re discussing puttl!lg
work
and
millions
thrown Into
forth their own candidate.
Former. Vice President Walter F . · despair," Glenn said. "It's a
national tragedy and a nat lanai
Mondale was rated the early
disgrace- and 1 say we're going to
front-runner In the race, but both
put an end to It In November of
Glenn and Mandate have finished
1984."
ahead of President Reagan In
Glenn pledged that If elected, he
recent opinion polls .
would push for:
In declaring his candidacy today,
-Expanded funding of basic
Glenn criticized Reagan for reduceducation Incentives for science
Ing government school loan proeducation' and loans for higher
grams, tor cutting federal suppOrt

I'

Emergency runs
E ight calls were answered by
local units Thesday and on Wednesday morning, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
rep&lt;nts.
Wednesday morning calls Included 4:36a.m .. Rutland Unit took
Worley Davis, Dexter, to Veterans
Memolial Hospital; MiddlepOrt at
4:42 a.m. took Etta Thompson,
State Route 124 to Holzer Medical
Center and at 5:23 a.m., the
Pomeroy Unit went to Route 7
where a tractor- trailer driven by
Rick Glenn had jl!Ckknlfed. GlenJI
was treated, but no_transportation'
was required.
'
At9:&lt;17a.m. Tuesday, the Rutland
Unit took Pearl Little, Salem St., to \
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at
\
\
10:18 a.m. took Gall Buck from his
\
home to Veterans Memorial;
\
Pomeroy at 1:02 p.m . took Wtlllam
Ebersbach from 211 Spring Ave., to
Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at
4:54p.m. took Wade Smith from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial and at 11:39
p.m., Pomeroy took Chuck Relt·. mtre from Second St. to Veterans

of

Drug charges
results in
-pnson tenn

For loan lntonnatlon call
any BANK ONE office.

.

Compromise offered

MemoriaL

MBJTiJ18e licenses
Marriages licenses were Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Larry Clinton Holsinger, Jr., 21, Rt.
2; Racine, and Melissa Ann Ihle, 21,
Racine; JamP.S Christopher Bable,
.24, Rt. 2, Racine, and Joan Ann
Roof, ro, 836~ E. Malo St.,
Pomeroy.

.

Shots ring out: Marine

Weather forecast
Mostly clear tonight. Low around
30. Winds northwesterly 10 mph or
tess. Sunny Thursday. Hlghnear60.
Exlencled Ohio Forecut
I Friday ihrouP SundaJ:
Fair on Friday. Oulace of
lbowl!l'll '. SMurda.Y and So•nd!Q'.
lfllhllln lhe upper 1GB to mille
Friday and In
8Munlll¥ and ,.._
Sulldq. L&lt;!WIIn lhe mlcHIII to low
. • Friday 11*,'111111 and - lhe •

\

BANK ONE,M

lhe.

'

\

ilaturda.r and Sunday~.
\

\

I
'\

\

Member FDIC

·

, BANK ONE OF POMEROY·
. ' :EROY•RUTLAND•TUPPE.RS PLAINS .

--

BEmtJT, Lebanon (AP) -1\vo shots were fired
near the British Embassy today, sending Marine
guard~ , and bystanders diving for cover at the
bomb-shattered U.S. Embassy 7!10 yanls away,
Witnesses said.
"Apparently someone didn't stop at a _clieckpolnt,"
a secretacy at the British EmbeSSy told The
Associated Press.
U.S. Marine warrant officer Blllllend1!r8Qn said the
shots were fired al aboutll: 15a.m. (t: 15a.m.EST) by
sOldiers ·guan~~ng a s_u:etch of coastal hJahway
between the twoembasslel.
"The Lebanele arii"O' wu oh(Jc41nll' at a ~
Vl!blcle," he said, "and our people reacted to that by

deploying Wii'lbat poe!tlolla.'.

In
Hetldft;aon said none of the more than :m Marines
bulld1ng since Monday 's 1¥nblng had
Th~ alllll• 'raJrur out as relief workerS pulled anOther

fh~_.~n=~~=~of the
(\lnerlcan
Embassy,
Monday
afternoon
ldllec!

body a
.where
at Jeut

·

education.
-A national plan for. Industrial
expansion and environmental protection that wouldn't "pit one
region's ecology against another's
economy ."
- Farm policies that promote
exports.
- A solvent Medicare syslem.
- The Equal Right s Amendment
and an "economic equity act" to
guarantce women 's economic
rights.
-Keeping America 's mllllary
defense "the strongesl on eart h."
Bul the forme r Marine flghl er pilot
· i Continued on page 10)

Sen. tJolm Glenn

Jury.finds physician
guilty of manslaughter

WASHINGTON (AP) ..:.. Repeal of President Reagan's embattled plan
for withholding taxes from Interest and dividends Is edging toward approval
In the Senate; but just how and when the job wUI be done Is an unsolved
problem.
"I wouldn't break out the champagne yet," Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan.,
who backs withholding, warned repeal backers wbo are ready to declare a
Senate victory.
·
Thewlthholdlngplan remains law, scheduled togo lntoell'ect )uly l .And,
by the tlnne both chambers of Cnngressftnlshworkon theeffort the deadline
might have come.
Republicans, who control the Senate, thought their patchwork repeal
NEW TROOPER _:dames R.
measur-e endorsect'liy the banking Industry would win quick approval
HuttOn, 25, son of Munford lllld
Wednesday.lt would allow no withholding before July 1.1987, and only then
Peggy Hutton of Bradbury,
If both houses of Congress voted for It at that IInne.
gmduated from the State HighAlthough not_hlng In the agreement assures withholding would ever take
way Patrol Academy In Columeffect, that was not good enough for many Democratic senators. They
bus on March 25. Patrolman
demanded a chance to vote for outrlght repeal with no Its, andS or buts .
Button l• -currently stationed In
"I have iold thepeopleofl:.oulslana I amgotngto vOle for repeal and now
Ironton where he Is Uving with
we are helngdenled that right" because the GOP plan, said Sen. Russell
his wife, the former Sally
B. umg, D-La. So, Long, a master of the legislative process, rearranged the
Hayman. Hutton ts a 1976
Senate agenda to provide a straight yes-or-no vote.
•
grl!duate of Meigs IUgh School.
That created this situation:
He has two sisters, Jacqueline
-A vote today on Long's motion for straight repeal of withholding.
Hoover of Bradbury IUld dune
Republicans, who control the Senate, . expected to win that test. But
Powers of Middleport.
defection of a few GOP senators could result In a vote foroutrtght repealkilling the Republican compromise and forcing a veto confrontation with
Reagan.
Defeat of Long's effort could mean a vote later In the day on the GOP
compromise.
-Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan said the administration Is
"standing firm" to retain withholding. Regan said he opposes any delay In
the schedule that, starting July 1, requires that 10 percent of dividends and\
Interest be withheld for taxes.
1
Meanwhile, at the White House, spokesman Larry Speakes left the '.
VIrgil P . Phillips, 32, Middleport,
impression the GOP compromise might eventually he acceptable to
was
sentenced by Judge Charles
Reagan, who has vowed to veto any repeal . Tiie new plan, Speakes
Knight,
after entering voluntary
1
contended, does not repeal withholding but slnnply delays It
\
pleas
of
guilty
to four drug charges,
The GOP compromise on withholding would worsen the federal deficit by
\
to
a
term
or
not
less than two nor
more than $5 billion over the next 5~ years, and the figure could be at least
\
more
than
10
years
In a proper penal
twJce that amount.
tnsl:ltul:lonof
the
state.
1
Final details of the plan have yet to be written. But It would stlffen
Phillips was charged with . two
penalties for those who cheat on taxes dn their Investments; requ~ the
of sale of a controlled
Internal Revenue Service to compare tax returns with the 1099 forms on
which banks and other Institutions report Interest and dividends ; and allow
s~~~~~;~~ Talwln, a nd two counts
n
to prescriptions.
ro percent withholding on people who have been caught eheattng.
the charges. contained In a
Information prepared and
by the o!flce of prosecuting
att1orhev. Fred W. Crow Ill , was a
felcJn}\o! the fourth degree and the
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Presl· percent defense buildup to 5
dent Reagan, bowing to pressure percent, adding bUiions of dollars to
tlmee"•ere felonies or the third
from Senate RepubliCans, 1s o!fer- social programs Reagan wants to
lng Congress a new 1984 budget cut, and considering _larger tax
ACicori~lnls toprcJSe&lt;:utcJr's tnvestltieJrwo, Phillips adrnlt·
blueprint thal slows his rapid Increases than the president wants
selllngl~al·wln to Athird party In
to accept .
defense buildup and. backs down
sUghtly on domestic budget cuts.
a na'ADJruof tills year.
admitted he had
Three of the president's seniOt
Wednesday's meeting marked
Demoral to
aides - Budget Director David the first tlnnesinceJanuary that the .
eight-fold.
Stockman. White House Chief of president had signaled a serious
was passed at a
Stall James Baker Til, and presi- wtlllngness to compromise with
dential counselor Edwin Meese members of the GOP-controlled
~~~=~~~~Sept. oflast year .
presented the new plan to RepubU- Senate.
atsoso~~~~~~~ padtrom
he had
takenablankm
can members of the Senate Budget
The biggest opposition reportedly
the oHice of a
given
COmmittee on Wednesday.
came from four hardllne conserva·
For weeks, the Republican-led t1ves led by Sen. William Arm·
It to another
then forged
committee has been openly detytng strong, R·Cnlo., who are opposed to
the _doclor's
and passed
Reagan. halving his Proposed 10 the tax portion of ,t he proposal.
101
'
. .
.

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an application.

10 Cenr.
A Muhim.dlo Inc . Newspaper

Glenn declares presidential candidacy

interest lax ·repeal

a

Pag•· 14

'

at y

.over w~thholdirig

easiest

Meigs natil'e pla~·s
import.ant role in
{w;t shultle launch

.
etittne

•

Senate wrangles

.

.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 21, 1983

Copyrivhtod 1913

KOPAK

What's l'ooking?

Pagt" 3

Vo1 .32,No.4

busotrlce.
In a confidential report to Gov.
Richard Celeste, theOhloBureauof
Employment Services said aides to
former Gov. James A. Rhodes
''were or should have been a wane of
substantial deficiencies In their
management of Ohio's CEI'A
program since 1917," the newspapersald.

.·

Checking sweet snacks

e

of

''•

•

Capture Spring Colors

Ohio may owe CETA funds
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
might owe the federal government
more than $100 mllllon because of
alleged mismanagement of the
state' s Comprehensive Employment and Training Act program, a
newspaper reports.
The FBI 1s checking the state's
CEI'A program for possible fraud,
according to a report today from the
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer's Cnlum-

"•

Southern rips EH..~;
Meigs-Southern gaL"
post league victories

17Americans, and lnjun!d

130.

the~flely~~bl~u=t~!::~suc:~h~~=~~~~:damage::~~lha::::t

FORT MYERS, Fla.- FornnerGaUipolls physician
Arthur R. Fleming has been found gullly of
manslaughter In Lee County Circuit Court In
connection with the July 3, 1982 beating death of his
estranged wife, Audra McKinney Runyao Fleming.
Sentencing has been sel for May~ - The 58-year-old
gynecologist and psychiatrist could face a 1:.-year jail
sentence on the conviction.
A three-hour dellberatlon period by a two-woman,
lour-man juty resulted In the decision. climaxing a
ttial In which Fleming, originally c harged with
second-degree murder, chose not to take the stand In
his own defense.
Audra Fleming's relatives were quoted by the For1
Myers News-Press as being satisfied with the verdict •
''I'm perfectly happy with lt. l knew they would
bring In a guilty verdict,'' said Dennis McKinney, the
vlctlnn's brother, who resides In Columbus.
F1ortda slate attorneys said they do not bellevl?
Fleming planned Audra F1emlng'sdea th the night she
came to his apartment In south Fort Myers. Fleming
laid pollee he and Audra were attncked In the
apartment by an unknown man , who escapi'd In
Fleming's car .
Pollee later found evidence which showed Fleming
killed Audra . a former Meigs Cou nty n'sldenl and
Holzer School of Nursing studenl he married In 196!1.
following an apparent argument .
Joseph D'Aiessandro, a slate's attorney prosecul lng the case, said prosection established I hat Audra
came to F leming's apartment to seduce her husband
Into !'l'Veallng lnfornnation shecouldposslbly use In lhc
bitter property and custody battle that had e rupted

between the two since she flied for divorce In I!Jlljl.
Prosect ton claimed an argume nt broke ou I brlwecn
the two that turned to vlol••nce.
"She grabbed w \ frying pan and hll him. "
D' Atessandm said. "Tihlnk 1\udra hit him rna ybt'once
or twice. He look II out of hPr hand anctdubbt·rnl hcr. "
He then struck her "elghl or nine" times wllh lh&lt;'
pan, a nd In his ragc, slabbed h!'r six times In III&lt;' ba ek.
he added .
Fleming's defense cenl erm on physll'lans' lesllm ony that wounds on hls arm!-' wl're ronslstcnt with
thosethatcould be suffe red In an at lac k. Hlsaltorneys
believe the Flemings ' dinner dat e did not lndlca le a
confrontation situation. and that lh&lt;' a1111&lt;'ker alludm
to by Fleming m ay have cleaned himself nnd lh&lt;'
apart men I before Jpavlng.
"Bizarre lhlriw; happm In life,'' said E .G. Couse,
F"lemlng 's altorncy. ln his closing n•marks lo !lie jtuy
"Bul blzarrcdocsn'J equalgull l."
Firming. a Philippi. W.Va . nal lwand World War II
vet&lt;.'ran, moved lo Galllpolls with his first wife, Sylv ia.
now of Gainesville. Fla .. In l!lf&gt;l He was as&lt;oclalcd
wit h Holzer Hosplla l unl UJ96fl. wht•n tre cll vorcnl his
wife and moved 10 Florida.
He married 1\udra In 19T2 anct adop11~l mw of h&lt;'t'
sons from a pnovtou s maniage. In add ilion In having a
second son . In 19TI. afler martial problems a rO.'&lt;'. 1he
Fleming&gt;; fii&lt;'Ci for dlvm-cc. bul n'condlecL Following
Audra's filin g 'for divorce lh rec years ago, lhP ·sons
stayed a l variou s limes wllh r·elallw•s In Meigs
Counly .
More than a wC'f'k a ft~·r hf'r cl('alh .l\.uclra was hu tied

at Pine Slreel CPmcte ry' In Ga llipolis.

'Buy Ohio' gas bill inoving
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - A
"Buy Ohio" program for Ohioproduced, nalural gas now appears
to be on the fast track ·tn the Ohio
General Assembly .
The House approved 00-4 a nd sen 1
the Senate on Wednesday the
proposal which, sponsors say, holds
promise of lower monthly bills for

conswners.
Rep. Thomas P . Gilmartin,
D-Youngstown, the chief sponsor,
said the sudden movemment of his
bill, after It languished more than
two months, resulted from an
easing or concerns about Its
constitutionality.
The veteran· Mahonlng County
lawmaker told hts colleagues that a
recent decision of the U.S. Supreme
Court , In a West Vlrglnla case.
upheld a slmllar natural gas policy
In that state.
Under the bill, Ohloutllltles would
be encouraged .to buy Ohio gas,
cheaper than that shipped In from
out-of-state, unless they can prove
that the fon:'fgn purchases are
"more reasonable and prudent."
U the companies failed to meet
that test In hearings before the
Public Utilities Commission, then

they only could recover from
the price they would
have paid for Ohio gas .
Gllmaiiln, who said his home
town has the dubiou s distinction of
having the e nforcement of laws
against unscrupulous pharmacjsts
and permitting townships , by a
unanimous vole of lrustces. to
partlclpatelncounly -clty CommunJty lmprovemenl CorporalIons.
The latter measure was by Rep.
Frank Sawyer. D-MansfJeld, who
said o!flclals In his dlstrkl n&gt;-

consumer~

quPSted It to bolster economic
dc·ve lopment.
Across thcStal c hou S&lt;•, I he Scnat&lt;'
unanimou sly JXlSSI.&gt;d a nw as uJt•
allowing sludenls 18 or older who
are discharged by t he• Youlh
CommL&gt;Sion to l:x• assigned to
special program s in Ill!' puiJiir
sc hools.
Se-n .- li'C' I. ~' ls hCJ . D-Sha ker
Helghl s, Introduced a blll rf'qulrlng
the llt-ensln g or handgun dealers
and requiring handgun owners to
oiJialn ldenllflcallon cards.

Jury returns two indictments
The Meigs County Grand .Jury
met Wednesday In what Prosecutor
Fred w. Crow rn described as
probably the last session of th&lt;'
.January term and returned Indictments against two Meigs County

women.
Carol Baker, also known as Carol
Rose, was Indicated on a single
felony bad c heck charge. Baker was
previously convicted on a felony
theft charge . · An Indictment was
returned also against Terrie Manuel of Racine, charging her with

forgery. Both C'harges agalnsl
Manuel and Baker an• fclon !PS or
the four1 h degrct' r ar:•y in g a
possible pena lt y or nol lrss than six
months nor more than flvr vrars in
prison and a possible. fine ·or up to
$2JOO.
Crow Indicated he had planned to
present four c harges against VIrgil
Phillips to the grand juty, but I hal
was not necessary s lncc Phillips
appeared earlier In lhe day and
entered guilty pleas to a ll c harges.

bystanders take __.~over
workers found body parts mangled, making
Identification dlfflcult If not impossible.
In another development, Lebanese pollee said today
· they had released four passersby detained after the
bombing for questioning about what they had seen.
The WitnESses did not waver In their testimOny that a
suicide terrorist wearing a black leather jacket had
driven a bomb-laden black pickup truck Into the
\ err1bassyand died In the explosion, police said.
Pollee have been unable to pin the responslbUity ol
bombing on anyone, although a group called
Millfll'em Holy War clalmEd respons!bWty !or the
IS believed to4le made up of Shiite
·
extremists Joyal to lran.
~:~TIIe:g~•w=p

Press reporter Earleen F. Tatro, In an

apartment overlooking the embassy, said sh&lt;&gt; saw
Marines ruMing and crouching behind cars . Other
Marines were lying on the ground In combat position
with rifles at the ready, she said .
There was no !mmedlate Indica lion who fired the
shots.
The embassy has been cordoned o!f by at least one
company of :m Marines since the bombing Monday
afternoon killed at least 49.people and Injured 130.
The shots were heard about ll : 1~ a.m. (4:15a.m.
EST) .
ReScuers were searching for vlctlnns and .c lues to
the bombing In the rubble for the lourth day today as
American and Lebanese otllclals put out conflicting
c8.11ualty counts.

.,

1~-_:__------:-----~.:..-..;----~----'--'----"'-- -....;.,..---,------~--"~-~·-----'---'--- ~-

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