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                  <text>A\aetday, April25, 1913

-

....--- Local briefs:----.
Local units were kept on the move over the weekend, answering
nine calls C1ll Saturday and Sunday, the Meigs County Emergency

Medical Service reports.

.

Sunday calls Included 12:48 p.m., Pomeroy Unit, Adena Bradford,
Mulberry Ave., taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; tt48p.m., the
Racine Unit took Ella Scarbrough, Bashan !Wad, to Veterans •
Memorial; 1:39 p.m., RuUandUnltforCharlesKaptelna,Horner Hill,
takelt.to Veterans Memorial and theTuppersPlalnsUnltat io: 16p.m.
took Douglas Gaiter, Success Road, to St. Joseph Hospital ln
Parkersburg.
OnSa11,1rday at 8:52a.m., Rutland took Kenneth Carman, Mudfork
!Wad, toV~teransMemortal; Raclneatl: 36p.m ., took Edna Shields,
StateRoote338, to Veterans Memorial; Middleport at3:35p.m . took
Mary Bacon, Third Ave., to Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 9:56
p.m. treated Rusty Jones at Southern Junior High School but
provided no transportation; Tuppers Plains at 10:32 p.m., took
Tammy Baker from Success Road to St. Joseph Hospital. '

8 &amp; E probed by sheriff
•

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is lnvestiga tlng the
breaking and entering of Village Cut Rate ln Racine.

Entry was made sometime Saturday night by crawling through a
window In the back door. Ta~en were a palr of panty hose, pens and
sane sunglasses.
··

Schoolcraft pleads guilty
Robert Troy Schoolcraft appeared before Common Pleas Judge
Charles Knight and plead guilty to charges of breaking and entering
of Barr's Service Statton on Jan . 26.
Sentencing is continued untll9a.m. on Monday, May16. Schoolcraft
was released upon a $1,00:J personal recognizance bond. Prosecuting
attorney Frederick Crow Ill represented the State of Ohio and
J ennifer Sheets represented Schoolcraft.

Name fishing derby winners
Rick McClelland, Nakuma Tyree, both of Middleport, and Randy
Wood of Rutland, were the winners of the Blue Gill Ftshlng Derby O
sponsored by Sons of American Legion Rutland.
··
McCleUand caught the largest fish· 6'!. tnehes long, Tyree the
smallest· 3~ inches long and Wood caught the mostfish, a total of 20.
The ihree winners were presented money which was donated by K
D &amp; D Drilling (Dean Harris) .

Middle(tOrl PTO meets tonight

---·

-~ --

I Cancelled .

Area deaths

r

Weekend emergency calls

-

A~tttheparkcommltteof

. Ptmeroy Vtllage · CouncU schedull!d for . this evening has been

Kenneth Cannan

Dr. Robert Brown

Funeral services lor Kenneth M.
Carman, 62, Rt. 4, Pomeroy~ who
died Saturday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital were held at 1
p.m. today aJ the Hughes Funeral
Home, Athens~ The Rev. Leonard
McVay officiated and INrlal was tn
New Marshfield Cemetery.
Mr. Carman was born at New
Marsh1leld the son of the late
Emmett and Estella Robinette
Carman. He was also .preceded tn
death by one sister, Eltzabeth
Zt m mer ·man and two
grandchildren.
Mr. Carman was a retired
carpenter and a veteran of World
warn.
He Is survted by hls wtfe, Dora
Carman; one son, Dennis Carman,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy; four daughters,
Lots Hartley, New Plymouth;
Nancy Butcher, Murry City; Debbie Carman and Carolyn Doherty
both of McArthur; 11 grandchild·
ren: one brother Howard Carman,
Athens, and one sister Frances
Lovsey, New Marshfield.

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Brown,
accQmpanted by Dr. Harold Brown,
left early Sunday by plane for Fort

Stanley Rea
Stanley Rea, Triadelphia, W. Va.,
formerly of Pomeroy, died Aprll19
I&lt;?Uowing a brlel Wness.
He was a son of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Rea of Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, VIrginia,
two daughters, a son, nine grand·
chUdren, a brother and sister, Don
Rea and Aileen Wehrung, Pomeroy, and a sister, Ernestine
Faulkner, Jacksonville, Fla.
Attending the funeral held QJl
AprO 22 from here were Mr. and
Mrs: Harlan Wehrung, Mrs. Tom
Werry, Mrs. Larry Bunce, ~Mrs.
Larry Thomas. Burial was ln
Parkvtew Memorial Gardens.

cancelled.

Worth, Tex., where!heywerecalled
by thedeatholthelrson, Dr. Robert

Brown. Dr. Brown dJed ~·
edJy at his home in Fort Worth

Meet Tuesday ·
The Past Matrons of Pomeroy
Chap\er, Order of the Eastern Star,
wUl ~at t11e borne of Mrs. Dale
Smttb, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.

Board to meet

Hospital news
v...-~Bclthl

Saturday AdmtsaloiJa..Donna
Hayman, Racine; Sblrley Hackett,
Pomeroy; Edna Shleldl, Racine;
Michael Salser, Jr., Racine.
Saturday Discharge$.. Keith
Setker, Dwight BUrton.·
Sunday Admlsstons-·Mena
Bradford, Pomeroy; Charles Kapo ,
teina, Pm!eroy; Ella Scarlrwgh,

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Garden club meets Tuesday

SJOO

The Bend of the River Garden Club will meet Tuesday, Aprll26, at
7:30 p.m . at the Meigs Inn . Dean Barnltz wtll serve as hostess.

'PI:('I AI.!
21"• " TE RRY

OH KAN Club meets tonight

BA
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The OH KAN Colo Club will meet In regular business session this
evening In the Riverboat Room at Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
A social hour and trading session wlll precede the 8 p.m. meeting.
Election of club o!llcers wlll be held. Following the meetlng a coln
auction will be held and refreshments will be served.
Persons Interested tn coins or paper currency are Invited to
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(W. VI.) 773 •9577
.
.

'2 S.C:tions, 14 Pages
'20 C.nh
A Muhim41dia Inc. N.wspap.r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 26, 1983

Copyright.d 1983

Major housing project gets approval
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel sWf
Major steps towards the development of another
housing complex In the town were taken by
Middleport Village Council Monday night.
Counctl voted unanimously to award the Holley
Brothers a contract for the !llllng of a four and one
hill acre lot ·on General Hartinger Parkway,
adjacent to the Hartinger Park. The Holley Brothers
were low bidders on the project at a prtce of $83,000.
Fill will be needed for three and one half of the four
and one hal! a~res of the village owned property. The
bid of the Holley Brothers was tabled at the last
meeting because some complaints had been lodged
against the firm on ihe previous project of the
company ..the development of a water tankl'9Pd
accompany systems In the Vlne St. area. Mayor,Fied
Hoffman last night Indicated that relief !or those
complaints had been worked out.

~lan11ers

Council then moved to establish the use of the four
and one half acres on Hartinger Parkway with Mayor
Hoffman suggesting that the property be set aside for
a housing development. The village has some$200,000
In HUD money which can only· be used for on s ite
Improvements ln relation to additional housing. He
said there may be. other moneys available for on site
Improvements If the village decided to use the
property for a housing development.
Councilman Dewey Horton indicated he favored
use of the property as an extension to the Hartinger
Park area, but he would go along with the housing
suggesti!Jn since there are funds earmarked for the
property as long as it Is designed for hou sing use.
. CounCilm1111 Boh GUmore said he Is agalnsl using
the land for housing, just because there Is money
designated for on•site bnprovemeni. Gtbnore said
development of the sle lor housing appellled 10 he

"grabbing" just because there is mones av~le lor
on site lrnprovemoots. GUmore questioned the need
lor more houSing and siUd that once housing has been
buDt on the property, Ills gone forever lor use as 1111
addition to the community park.
.
Councilman William Walters said he receives
frequent requests from prople needing housing and
commented that if the Jown Is to grow. the big need
wtll be for more housing over additional park space.
Councilman Carl Horky suggested the develop
ment of lhe m artna Into a more extensive park
facility and Councilman Horton suggested a contact
be made wit h the commun ity park assoc iation to
discuss. development of tile mar ina lnlo a larger park
facility and also the establishment of a pa rk in thf'
vicinity of the abardonr&lt;l railroad pmperty. Mayor
Hoffman indicated he believes the U. S. Corps of
Engineers has m a tching funds for thPdevelopmenl of
parks In areas such as the martna .

Council voted four to one ln favor of establlshlriglhe
Hru11nger Parkway l'roperty Into an area for housing
with Gilmore CflStlng the dissenting vote and Jack
Satterfield, Horton. Horky and Walters favoring ttt.t
action.

At the request of Mayor Hoffman, council voted to
advertise lor bids on a 1974 truck no longer needed by
Lhe vUiage. It was voted to invite Betty Wells,
president of COAL, to appear before the next meeting
of council to outline the damages caused by
longwa!llng mining processes.
Requl'lits objedion
John Koebel, local Columbia Gas Co. manager,
asking council to object to House BUI4 which he said
will take away lhr home rule of c'Ommunitles In
esta blishment of natu ral gas rates. The Consumers
Counsel had a request on Mle I hat the village endorse
House 81114.
(Continued on page 10)

Utility
debate
gets hot

get

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Sen.
Mic hae l Schwarzwa ld e r, DMeigs County has 50 bridges which have sufficiency rat ings below 50
Columbus, launched hls a ttack
percent and with replacement costs totaling $1,694,100.
loday on a law allowing utllltles to
This Information was gtven to members of the Meigs County Regional
charge cons llfll('rs lor new plants
Planning Commission by Meigs County Engineer Philip M. Roberts.
under construction but not yet In
In presenting his annual report, Roberts polntedoutthatwhtlethe bridges
service.
listed are below the 50 percent sufficiency ratings, they are safe as long as
Tht• "construction work In prothe posted weight ltmlts arepbeyed. He lndlcated his department is keeping
gress'' provision would be repealed
a close watch on the bridges and asked that anyone thinking that there might
under a bill he Introduced . It was
be a problem wtth a bridge contact his office lrnmedtately so that an
assigned !or Its first hearing to the
Inspection can be made. Replacemellt of all of the 50 bridges Is an
Senale Judiciary Committee, of
lmposslbU)ty d·ue to costs. The departpment must work wtthlh a budget
which he is chairman.
artd manpower range, Roberts reported.
11ep. l1oCCo J . ColoMa, O.Brook
In his report also, Roberts listed all of the county roads and wha I steps
Park, Is sponsoring similar but
need to be taken with them. Total cost tnvqlved would be $712,639.20 and
slightly less strlngenl legislation in
again the departrnen t, Roberts satd, due to the number of workers and
the House .
finances must progress doing what it can under the llmttatkms. The
He would a llow utUlttes to charge
estimated costs does not Include equipment maintenance, Insurance Qn
for CWJPoncea facility ls90percent
workers and other Indirect expenses, Roberts said.
·
mmplele Instead of I he present 75
Roberts reported the county now has 150 mlles of blacktop roads and 100
percent.
mUes of gravel roads. His department expecls to blacktop an additional nine
Colonna· s bUl has had several
miles of roads this year and perhaps, get more roads reading !or
hearings before I he HOUSI' Utllltles
blacktopping. Roberts also reported that Meigs County has some 20m lies of
Committee and another Is on tap
roads which qualify forfederal help In being lrnprovedwtth25percentofthe
Wednesday night.
costs to be provided locally and 75 percent by the government. These
Sc hwarzwa ldcr Said he expected
Includes entrance roads to Pomeroy and Middleport, he satd.
a crowd of 200 or more for hill
Ttm Knopp, director of economic and community development of
hearing, mostly members of the
Buckeye H1lls-Hocktng Valley Regional Development Dlstnct , spoke on
Ohto Public Interest Campaign.
INSTRUCTION
MiddlepOrt
firemen
are
bag
syslem
which
they
purchased
for
work
tn
programs Including block grants and the jobs bUL He noted the jobs blllls
OPJC l.s a consumer-oriented
shown_receiving Instruction on the use of a new atr extraction.
actually just providing agencies with a little more money to continue their
group whtch claims CWIP already
operations and does not make public service jobs. mandatory although
has cost utility customers $liO
they can be worked out under the bill. He recornn'lended ·qutck action on
million for conslructlon on plant~
EDA fund applications as well as j~bs bill applications since processes
which are years away from
appear to have been speeded up.
Actually, groups benefitting from the
completion and other nuclear
programs wiD have to do about a normal year's work of processes Involved
Twenty-one members of the Middleport F lte D£&gt;partmcnt attended a n cxtracllon class
facilities which may never come on
tn about a 90 day period, Knopp said.
Sunday in Middleport to rece ive Instructions In the use of a new atr bag system for auto accide nts
line.
C. E. Blakeslee. executive dlrector of the commission, reported the
and rescue work.
The group said ln as(atement that
group has a budget of~ lor this year and wlll ask lor a $4150 budget for
The air bag, purchased from department funds for a ppi'Oxlmately $.1,rxxl have a force of 11 7
lheuiUttles' Investors, and oot their
1984.
tons and can be used In pulling steeri ng columns, sta bUtzlng overturned vehicles, bending sl&lt;'&lt;'l
cuslomers, should bear the risk of
Chairman Thereon Johnson, who presided, urged County Engineer
bars and beams, lifting extremely heavy loads and moving rubble, elc.
new plant construction. OPlC said
Roberts and Robert First of the Meigs Sol! and Water Conservation
Bud Sanford , retired Chie f of.the Sharon Township Fire Depat1ment, Worthington, a nd Allen
the present law removes risk from
District work closely In some areas which might benefit the county. First
Wallace from the Rlckenbacker Fire DepartmenL. Col umbus. were the lnsJructors. Wallace Is a
utilities because they can charge
reported his agency can now make recommendations on the best plan to
former Middleport resident.
cons~mers for them.
follow on projects wuch as the road to the new landflli and Indicated that a
Sanford demonstrated the use of the air bags as well as other rescue equlpmenl owned by the
The first - h~ar lng on SchWdl'Z·
seeding program should be upcoming.
dPpartment. He said although no tool is made that will hand le all situa tions with t~ealr bags, ~ long
walder's measure was set aside for
. The gr&lt;JUp. dlscu8!Jed the 001 Jldot road from R&lt;lUte 3310 the bridge at
wtth what Is already available In extraction tools, about every si tuation ca n be handled .
supporters of hts CWIP repeal blii,A
Ravenswood and whUe IIUle hall been accomplished In speeding up the
Jeff Darst. Middleport Ftre Chief, said a n air sheer and and possibly a heavier port -a -power
spokesman for utUitles gave their
prtXlP'!Sf"' hwolved, It was noted tiW the state's Dnanclal position Is
and com-a-long need to be purchased . The air bags and other equipment are available 10 all
side Monday at a news con!erenC(!.
considerably bnproved.
departments of the surrounding area should the need arise, Darst sa id.
Calling CWJP "a politica l foot·
A meeting with Ohio Department of Highway officials was
The a ir bags will be carried on the department's rescue vehicle.
ball," WUitam R. Forrester, man·
(Continued on page 10)
ager for rates and regulations of
Colum!Ns &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
Co .. said some politicians argue that
elimina tion of CWIP wUI save
consumers money.
He said CWIP saves customo&gt;rs
Staubltz, who was euphoric when
because of other trips Int o It by other
Green, via a ha m operators' radio
MOUNT VERNON, Ky. (AP) late Monday - ln good spirits and
money
over the long run because It
two divers on the second rescue
club members, would have moved
network.
good health -more than three days
Rescue .appeared to be only hours
allows
utllltles
to save Interest on
mission returned with the note. said
to high ground when it not Iced water
The four dlvers returned to the
away today for eight spelunkers · after they started a weekend
money lheyotherwb;emust borrow.
tile cavers were. a little cold after
rising after Saturday's sudden
cavern, taking with them food , dry
trapped for more than three days by
mapping mission.
Either way, the customers, by law,
having been In the cavern's
storm.
clothing
and
heat
packs.
They were, ·said Tom Staubitz, a
a swollm stream Inside a southeast·
must pay construction costs, he
5s..degree temperatu re for so long.
The note, confirmed the belief, he
More than two dOU'n rescuers
said.
colleague outside the cave, "ltvlng
·
em Kentucky cave.
bul there were no medical
said.
outside the cave had used up to five
The key totherecoveryef!ortwas
the tlle of Riley.·'
Summing up, Forrester quoted
The party entered the cave
problems.
There had been no contact wtth pumps to drain water from the
pumping out the water that blocked
from an auto parts commercial 011
headline
The
note,
labeled
with'
a
Saturday.
but authorities were
the explorers !rOO'l Cincinnati cavern, located ln an Isolated hilly
the entrance to the cave, according
television : "Youcanpaymenow,or
that said "HELP." was signed by
unawareof lhetrotible untUSunday. ·
between 11 a.m. Saturday and 5: 50 section of Rockcastle b&gt;unty, about
to Trooper GObert Acclardo of the
you can pay me later.''
Bush, a research chemist . It read :
That's when two members of the
p.m. Moiiday, when a scribbled 50 miles south of Lexington. Burch
Kentucky State Police post at
Although C&amp;SOE has an appealJn
"8
cavers
waiting
1,!0J
feet
up
team who stayed outside the cave,
message, saying all were sate, was . and o!!1clals 'at the scene had said
the Ohto Supreme Court, from an
London.
stream tram here. Leave dlvlng Barry Pitcher. and Butch Stockel·
the Water level had been dropping at
He satd a six·lnCh pump was . found In a tool box about 1,800 feet
earlier rate caselnwhtchCWIPwas
tanks here. Only need for entrance.
man, wen I for help.
the rate of two or three IncheS per
Inside the flooded passage.
not allowed, the 'i:ompany seeks a
brooght to the .cave niOUth ln the
Been here s ince 11 a.m. Sat 4·23.
Four divers making Monday's hour.
pre-dawn hours today to help
new rate hike before the · Public
"We were concerned Saturday
Staubltz identified stx members Now Mon 4-25 12 noon."
the third rescue attempt !1nally
, workers speed the water removal.
Utilities Commission of $!1!.8
night," Stocke!man satd. "We were
Staubitz, vice chairman "of the
!trough! word that they'd made of the party, all Cincinnati res!·
The level, measured at 2:! Inches
mUiton.
physical contact wtth the eight dents, as Cary Bush, 45, and Jack Greater Cincinnati Grotto, the club expecting them out at mldnl~h~ : "
when the new pump was tnstalled,
Of that total. $41 mWlon is for
to which the explorers belong, bad
explorers about 10: ~ p.m. EDT, Hissong, 45, the co-leaders: Marie been
had to be brought below17tnclies 10
CWIP.
Forrester said he realized
Vent, a doctor and the lead diver
a beacon of optlrnlsm all day,
more than 17 ,hours after the first Rocklin, 28: MarY Crapsch, 26;
ensure sufficient air for the cavers
lhat $41 · mW!on "sounds very
lor the Wa~n County Cave and
Jacques Ramey, 30; and Jolm · even after the ftrst diver who
attempt had ended In failure. ·
whlle tmverslng the stream.
large.'' But he cited ligures showing
Rock Rescue Team, spent about stx
entered the cave, George Vent of
'The cavers' were found &lt;11 a dry
"All blr came out and reported Wisher, age unknown.
that It amO\Ints to 5~ cenls of each
hours ln the cave ,Monday morning,
Bowling Green, b~ht out word
.Shelly Page, another member of
all the vlctkna ate In i!)lid lltape,"
ledge late Monday - In aoad aplrlw
customer
doUar, or less then
beginning at 5: 30a.m: EDT.
that he had found !JOihtng but
uld Jbn Burch, c.wdlnator ~ the the club, identUied the last two
one-third
the
amount the ratepayl'r
• and aooct health- more thin three
He said he traveled l,!Ol feet Into
fiooded passages and caverns.
day~ afler thl!y ltartA!d a weelU!I'ld
Wlll'i'l!ll County
llld Rock ':"Jllorers as Jeff Gardner, age
would
be.
assessed
If his bill were
the cave and found nothing bUt
He had been teUing reporters that
'taxed.
Rescue Team. He waa rnonttortng unknown, and JW Vedder, In her
mapping mt.sston.
flooded passa~. ·
the team, familiar wtth the cave
They
found on a dry ·~
the elfoiU at his ~~o~ne 1n Bowling :¥8, also of Cincinnati.

.R escue just hours away for eight cave·. explorers

63 " &amp; 81 "
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MEASUREM 1r.
PRICIP II·

I:Af'H

ALMOST
UNBELIEVABLE!!!

Sears

•

Sentinel~

The Gallia-Metgs post of the State Highway Patrol InveStigated
two !raffle accidents tn Meigs County this weekend.
Two cars sustained moderate damage when they collided on Ohio
124 near Syracuse at 8:25p.m. Saturday, according to the patrol. ·
Troopers say Dolores G. Grtffln, 48, Racine was traveling west
and preparing to tum right into a private drive when Dantal S.
Nease, 20, Rac~I~e, at.t empted to pass her vehicle on the right and the
cars collJded.
A car driven by William H. Casto Jr., 41, Delaware, received
moderate damage ln a mishap on Ohio 7 Sunday.
.
Casto was northbound at 3:37 p .m. when he struck and killed a
deer which ran Into the path of hls vehicle.

NOW ONLY

at

•

Bs BOB HOEFLICH

Patrol probes two accidents

CUT '250°0

Voi .32,No.8

•

bridge report

The Middleport Chamber of Commerce will meet Tuesday , April
26, at 7: 30p.m . at the LaSalle Hotel.

\

e

Rally set Tuesday

~

Chamber session set Tuesday

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Page6

tlon

The Meigs ·County Holiness
' - Association wlli hold Its noonthly
Hazel M. Mills, 82, Little Hocking,
raliy at the Pomeroy Olurch of the
dJed Sunday evening at Camdm
NazareneTuesdayat7:30p.m.
Clarlc Memorial Hospital, Parkers- . r------~-----'---'--------...-­
bUrg, following and extended
Ulness.
Mrs. Milis was born ln Meigs
County the daughter of the !ate
Sidney and Jane J.3arnharl Bailey.
Her Husband Stanley preceded her
In death ln 19!ll and one son, Duane ·
In 1953. She was also preceded in
death by three brothers and three
sisters, Ruby, Elsw9rth and Curmon Mills and Vlrgte Marcinko, Ora
Hicks and.Cora Augabrite.
She was a member of Little
Hocking Church of Christ.
She is survived by one daughter,
Mrs. Lee (Mary) Wallace, Little
Hocking; one sister~11 Thoenen,
Ttce, Fla.; nine grandchtdren, five
-VHF ANTENNAS
-STAND-OFFS
great grandchUdren and several
nieces and nephews.
-UHF ANTENNAS
-ANTENNA
Funer.al services will be held
-LEAD-IN WIRE
-COUPLERS
Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the White
Funeral Home ln Coolville wtth
-ANTENNA BOOSTERS -MOUNTING BRACKETS
evangelist Steve Fucchl o!!1ctating
assisted by Jeff Rich. Burial wiD be
ln Rockland Cemetery, ~!pre. ·
Friends may call at the funeral ·
MECHANIC Sl- POMEROY ..
.
home alter 6 p.m. Tuesday.

Eastern theatre
presentation set

Colts draft Elway

Letters to editor

Long Bottom.
Saturday evening. Cause of death
Southern lAlcal Board of Educa·
Sunday Discharged .. Gerald
was reported to have been a heart
will meet In spelcal session •
Morris.
attack. Funeral servtoes were held · Tuesday at 7 p.m. In the hJgb school
today In Fort Worth and burial w111
cafeteria.
be In that ctty.

· Middieport PTO wui meet this evenu;g at 7: 30 at Mlddleport .
Elemmtaty School.

I

/

. SJll
·

SIUlN

31 -1Nilt1 X 9fi I

KNIT FABRICS

MT MIST POt Yl

IRIGULAR 'I ' )

SJ 00

QUI.Ll
BArn

UNII

IHI CltUI~I
• Of I XPlRIS

ss" •:,\.

·

cave

were

�..
Tuetday, April 26, 1983

•

•

ROCK ·SPRINGS ·- Natalie
Lambert onee again pitched and hit
ber way Into a hero's role as the
senior righthander hurled a twohitter and banged out three hits for
flve RBI's In leading the undefeated Meigs' girls softball team to
. a 7·1 deelslon over Athens here
Monday.
Coach Rick Ash's nine, now 9-0
over all and 4-0 In SEOAL play ,
handed the Athens team their first
league loss after three wins.

Solomonic amendment..____w_il_lia_m_F__··~B_uc_kley
__
. _J_r•.
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court SlreE't

.

DEVOT ED TO THE 11'-'TEREST OF THE MEIG!H.. i\.SON ,\REA

~~

.

Bm~ ~L-..,...•r'T"'ER=·~

~v
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhll!oiht•r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

As!'IIManl Puhllsht&gt;r/ ( 'ontroiiPr

GenPrlll Mana(lfPt

DALE ROTHGEB, ·IR.
NewM Editor
i\ MEMBER of ~ A!wM:IIW!CI P~. 11\land Oauy
i\mfr1CM New~per J•uhll'lher.o Alifiocladon.

~ AJ.IIioclat1on and

Effective on the first of July,
something called the Solomon
Amendment goes Into effect. It ts
an . attempt by CQngteSs to cope
with those young men who have.
refused to abide by a law passed by
another Congress - requlrilng
draft registration; the Idea being
that ln the event of a national
emergency, the government slqlld
know who and where are the people
who wUI be called upon to defend
the country, even as their fathers
answered muster In the '40s, whose
fathers did It In tum dwing the
First World War.

We are all tamtllar with the
response to the draft registration
legislation of 191ll. About 94 pereent
of the JSoyear-&lt;:~lds clocked ln. Six
percent did not, and thatlsdeflailce
of the law on a very large scale. The
question arose, What to do about
such large-scale defiance of the law·
In a society that believes In a) the
rule of law; and b) the proposition
that no man Is abOve thf&gt; law?
Rep. Gerald Solomon of New
York attached an amendment to a
defense bill specifying that students
who have not registered will not
qualify for any federal loans. Fifty

American colleges (out ol 5,000)
have announced that ln one way or
another they Intend to frustrate the
law, mast .conspicuous among
them the University of Minnesota
and Yale. Minnesota got !rom a
lower court a temporary restrainIng order on blzam! grounds,
namely that the Solomon Amend·
ment violates the students' Fifty
Amendment privilege against selfIncrimination, and Is otherwise
disCriminatory against poorer stu·
dents who apjjly for federal assist·
ance while wealthier students
don't.

the

he-

lllno ~o~~ueo, not ...,......nt,.,..

An overwhelming
influence
on the
.
economic climate
Some people believe lnOatlon,wlll return and areposltlonlngthemselv~JS
with caches of gold . Some say It ' sdead, and they Invest In stocks and bonds
·
and other long-term securities.
But for good or bad, and whether It worsens or lnnproves, lntlatlon
remains an ove n.lihelmlng Influence on spending and Investing decisions
by govef!llllent, Industry and households.
You can measure tt In the extremes of Investment advisory views.
The consensus of forecasters credits President Reagan's administration
with bringing Inflation under &lt;;ontrol. But the tears show, and·advisersare
growing rich warning people that In Ration and Interest rates will rebound
with the fury of Mount St. Helens.
In West Palm Beach, Fla.. Investment adviser Martin D. Weiss
contends Interest rales wtll reach aiHinne .hlghs this year or next, with the
prim~ rate hlttuig 28 perceri.t to 30 ~rcent. .He says gold wm fall to~l50an
ounee,.that the siock market wUI reach a new low, that unemployment will
rise to 20percent ormore, and that General Motors. U.S. Steel.and Dupont
could "go belly up."
You have extremes of the other end too, but the point Is that Amerlcans
are having a difficult time bel.levlng that economic moderation can return
as a way of llle . They have seen too much of unstable Interest rates and
prices.
.
You can see the "ghost" of lnna tlon In sluggish retail sales, Including
automobiles. February retail sales were down trom till' year before and
· March fell a bit more. And you can see It In the rather low levels of
consumer IJJstallment c redit expansion. People remain uncertain, or
perhaps unable, to spend heavily.
In the bond market, for the Drst three months of the year business sold
$12.7 billion In bonds, up 175 percent from the $4.6 btllloon of the first
quarter of 1982. according to Moody's Investors Service.
Wtth Interest rates down, companies feel they can refinance. Top grade
corporate bonds dropped from 16 percent to 11.5 percent over the past two
years. They haven't fallen nearly as much as btterest rates, and thll most
widely c(ted reason Is fear of Inflation. Investors In bonds get a premium
yield of6 to8 percentage points over the lntlatlon rate. That premium Wled
to be only 2 to 4 points.
There Is another Inflation fear - that lntlatlon wtll be conquered. In that
case. Investors say, It Is wise to nail down the hlgh rates - whlle, for
example, tax-free municipal bonds can be bought at 9percent, equal to 18
percent for those in 50 percent tax brackets.

Letters to editor
Upset with hunters
Dave Diles' letter ahout hunting.
There Is something to be said on
Dave Diles' stde of the Issue. A
horde of people with traps, bows
and arrows and guns are descend·
lng on private property to hunt and
rummage a round. Some of the
people who come are very nice and
polite but a good many are not so.
Most people are willing to share
the good things of life with their
fellowmen but tlll'y do not want to
be obllga ted to furnish a play·
ground for the public. I have seen
, hunters cllnnb fenees one after
another. This year we found three
tree -stands on our property put up
without asking .
Deer hunting Is a pressure
activity where we Uve. This year
there were hunters·here from as far
away as VIrginia and New Mexico.
The state has a gel permission rule
but It has little effect on hunters.
The state mal\es all the rules and In

A 2. 7 percent tax rate
WASHINGTON - The nation's
banks have been getting some
unwelcome criticism lately. President Reagan has publicly accused
them of misleading the public on
the Interest -withholding law
they're spending mtlllons to repeal .
Mol'@ bad publicity came In a
recent study showing that the 20
biggest banks pay an average
effective tax rate of 2. 7 percent on
their domestic Income - less than
the poor widows the bankers have
been weeping such crocodile tears
over.
What's really shocking, though,
Is that some banks have been
caught cheating their customers.
Yet a network of federal laws and
regulations protects the Identify of
'(

Mister

the guilty banks .
In 1978. the ·General Aecountlng
Office - the Investigative arm of
Congress - was given authority to
monitor the government agencies
that regulate banks . But the same
law forbids the GAO from giving
Congress and the public details of
lax regulation, Including the names
of banks that have been caught
ripplrig off their customers.
For example, the GAO recently
Issued a sketchy report which
disclosed that durilng a slx·month
period In 1981·1982 the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp. quietly
excused 15 banks from paybtg back
S1.2 mtlllon bt credit Insurance
premiums Improperly charged to
thousands of customers. Credit

robot~o....L·

pay taxes whlle poor atudents doa't ·

need to. As for self-lncrimJIIatloa,
that Is done by the )'111111( man wbo
falls to i'egtsll!!'. Hls faDure to dQ 10

]ai:k Anderson

lnsuranee Is t~e little-noticed but
lucrative add·on that lenders
charge so that loans wDI he paid off
If the ho!Tower dies. Obvlously,lt's
a convenience for the banks, which
don't have to go after a borTOwer's
estate to get the balance due.
The 15 banks had tacked on credit
Insurance premiums In violation of
the Truth·ln·Lendtng Act. Under
that law, a lender Is required to do
three things before charging for
credit Insurance:
- Inform the borrower In writing
that the Insurance Is optional.
- DisClose the total. lump-sum
cost of the policy.
- Obtain the borrower's signature on a request for credit
insurance.

My associate Tony Capacclo
learned that 5,500 eustomers Wl!re
cheated and that the averaae
length of time the 15 banks were
allowed to collect premiums In
violation of the law was 28 months.
Though bOth the FDIC and GAO
retuS!!d to give Rep. Frank Annwt·
zlo, D-Ill., the names of tile
offending banks on request, Internal FDIC rues provide some ot the
shocking details:
·-One bank failed todlselasc the
optional nature of the lnsuranee lor
21 months, while eollectlngflOO,(XX)
In Illicit premiums.
- Another milked borrowers for
$95,000 In premiums that Involved'
Truth-In-Lending violations over a
four ·year period.

__________A_r_tB_uc_h_wa_ld_

Widget was ver}o excited and told
readout. "Glitch on shoelace hole
me to c;ome over to his sneaker
maker, third robot malfunctioning
factory right away. "I just hired
on line one."
my first robot system, and I want
Widget said, "It would have
you to see It."
taken me a month to find out who
The gate to the factory wa•
was screwing up my shoelaee holes
closed, but when I drove up to It a
II I had a human being on the line.
volee, almost human, said. "Can I
Now I know In matter of seconds."
help you?"
"What will you do?"
"I'm here to see Mr. Widget,"
"We'll dump hlnn, and replace
and I gave my name.
him with a rohot whocandothe job.
In 10 seconds the voice reThe sneaker union would 'n ever
sponded, "You may drive to the
allow me to fire anybody, no matter
main building and park In visitor's
how bad the person was screwing
slot gumber two."
up my shoes. Nice work, Turnbtll.
Widget was waiting at ihe door,
I'm going to make you a vice
aU smiles. He put a plastlc card Into
president."
a slot, a doOr opened, and we
"Thank you, sir," Tumbtll's
walked Into his factory . There
voice synthesizer said. "Any dee!·
wa9D't a human being In sight, but
slon on an assistant microprocessne•kers were flying off the
sor to help me In packaging?"
assembly line and being stuffed
"I'm taking It up with the board
Into boxes.
"IT'S PRETTY NOISY, " I said.
"DOESN'T BOTHER THE RO.
SOTS," Widget yelled. ''THEY
DON'T KNOW THE DIFFER·
ENCE BE'lWEEN MACHINE
NOISE AND MUZAK."
We went up !Orne stairs to a
glass-enclosed booth.
one percent of the managers who
When Widget shut the door be
make more than Ul,&lt;XXl a year are
(
saki, "I want you to meet my
women! Lack of strona equal
Muter Robot, TumbW. He Is
employment enforcement, lack rJ.
respect, chlldcare and pension
PI'OIP'anuned to program the robots on the'fioor."
plans are all serious problems we
want to corTeet.
Tumblll 1ave me a steely look
Responsible employers should
and reluctantly put out his arm
which I shook .
·
take the necessary steps for
"How many sneakers did we
employee advancement to avOid
make todal(, turnbW?" Widget
dead-end jobs. A eomparatlveuked . •
worth study would be one way to
Tumblll's lights blinked, and a
achieve progress for clerical
employees.
deep VOICe said," "12,890."
It's time our employers, public
Wldaet rubbed hls hands. "I used
to make that many In a~. And 1
officials and the public ai Iarae
recognize 'the office worker for tile
had to pay overtime for three shUts.
respected and Important penon
Now l can manufactW'I! the same
nwnber bt a day, and I don't even
that she or he Is In tile business
have to worry ·about the robots
world. Knowing that there are
thousands rJ. women who work In
talclne IDree bre&amp;ka. No SOCial
aecurlty, no ·heelth care paymentJ,
offices across the CQUJitry who are
no pe!l.llons," Wldpt laid, patting
standing up for our rtahta and
Tumblll'a back. ""114 every one o1
demand~ more tluln a speCial
day once a year Is very Important
my robots ts tax-depreciable,
to me. Tile Jma&amp;e rJ. Natlonlll • wiiiCIIII more than I could say tor
Secretaries Day lsdeflnltelycbanamy ex-wortrers."
"My problem
lng! ..,. Donna M. Mon1.&amp;.
:I'umbll1 ltlrted •lllttlnl out

my opinion the state's main
Interest Is revenue. Some changes
should be made so as to give private
landowners some of the license fee
beeause they furnish till' game In
most cases.
1 understand that West VIrginia
Is considering some kind of leasing
arrangement for people who want
to permit hunting.
One of the letters talked about a
piece of beef steak coming from an
animal that had to be ktlled. Thla
was to justify killing for sport. Just
beeause you eat It Is not justification. That steer was not set crazy
with fear. I saw a deer with Its leg
hanging as It ran away.
I saw an Instance of a deer dying
from a gun shot and It suffered and
rolled and crawled as It died a slow
death. I like the wild animals and
do not want to see them treated any
worse than . necessary . - Gayle
Price.

That argwneat Ia about u
COO&gt;peWnc u a cunplalnt llletl by
rlcb studellts that !hey are belli&amp;
cllscrlmlllated apbut by bavln&amp; to

Is not only an ad ol selflncrlmlnatldn, but an ostmlt.alloos
act of self-lnCI'ImJnatton.
·
Yale's deflana&gt; takeS a more
florentine fonn. It will go ahead·
81\d accept federal ·money, but lor
thoee students who forfeit It ~
vtrtue olthell'contumacy, arrangements wDI be made to come up with
the missing money by getttna It
from local banks. It Is the position
of Yale's president, Mr. Gt.amattl,
that the students will be punllbed
by having to pay the dltlem~ee
between the federal grant rate ol
Interest and the eorilmercla! rate,
or about two percent to ~
percent.
Now here exactly Is the stipulatEd procedure' under the Solomon
Amendment. As always, a stqctent
applying for federal aid will need to
fill out, a~ swear to, a fonn that
eonslsts primarily of a questionnaire. To the Question Is already
asked wDI be added one that asklln
.___ _ effect: "Have you registered lor
the draft, under law such ·a nd
such?" If one student says that he
has not done so, then the money
that goes from Wasl!lniton to that
college Wlll be reduced by the
amount that would go to one
student.
Now among the complaints~
often lv&gt;a"'l . by men who fiiiiC)I
themselves clvU libertarians Is that
the college Is belng dragomed Into
·acting'as a sfli'I'Qgateol sOrts tor the
go\&gt;enunenr.'That's tl;ie; 11 Is. And ··
It's true that .In an Ideal world the
division between government and
educational tnstltutloos should be
as· impenetrable as the Berlin Wall.

LEtTERS OF OPINION are welcoMed . 'lbey MhooJd
than 300 wordA kMI«·
Allletlenl are 8uhjed tn edHin&amp;" and mu.&lt;tt he "lped wtth nune, ad*eM and ~lephonf
nwnher. No lll'fllped let:Cel'!'l ..WU he pu~ . Letkns llhould be In I(IOd IU&amp;e, .,.....

1 have read two responses to

next week, Turnblll. ·As I told you,
the board has ordered me to put a
freeze on buying new
microprocessors."
''Why Is that?" I asked.
"We're making more sneakers
than we ever made before ..But we
can't seem to sell them."
"Maybe the reason Is that robots
don't wear sneakers."
"What does tbat mean? "
"Well, you've laid off your
workers and now they don't have
money to buy sneakers."
"There are lots of workers In
other factories that need
sneakers.''
" Yes, but they 're being replaced
by robots as well . Robots are great
for what they do, but they're lousy

consumers.''
Widget looked over at Turnblll

nervouSly. "Don't talk so loud," be
whispered to me.
" I don't care," I said.
..
'"Ibis country's success was
based on the fact that the people
who made our products cou1c1
afford to buy them. You've replaced your workers With robOts
and you're saving a fortune In
salaries, but you're now up to your
ears In sneakers."
" But II I don't have robots
making my sneakers, I can't afford
to compete with the soeakel'll that
are being Imported from abroad,"
Widget said tearfully. "What
should I do?"
"Why don't you ask Tumbtll? "
Widget hlt several buttons on
Tumblll's head.
Turnbtll blinked sevet"al Urnes
and then said, "I'm sorry. I'm bt
production - not sales."

Lambert, now 8-0 on the mound
this year, fanned four while
walldng four. Her counterpart,
Kroner, faMed six and Issued J.1
base on balls. Kroner had no-hit
JackSQn last Friday.
·Other than Lambert's two singles
and a double, Beth Gloeckner and
Cindy Croo~ were the only other
Marauderetles to hit safely as they
each collected a single . White and
R ussell each had a single for the

Meigs loses fifth

FOULS OFF PITCH - Paula Honon of Meigs louis oil a pitch
' durln1 Monday's victory over Athens. The MaraudereUes posted tilelr
·• · ninth straight vlctory.
•r

:~ Alummi team tops

iEastern, 10-6

•
·,•
By SCOTT D. WOLFE
Federal Hocking on Wednesday
• . EAST MEIG S - A former
and Thursday, the n travels to
, all·star line-up led the Eastern
Southern Friday.
Alumnl to a 10.6 baseba ll action .
The very tough alumni team
Spilt TwlnbW .
·. consisted of such fine players as
The Eastern Eagle reserve
'• Johnny Beaver, Brian Bissell, Rob
baseball team split a double header
•.• Smith , Mike Bissell, Charlie Rll·
with Trimble here r~ntly, 'drop, chle, Rod Spurlock, Gary Griggs, .plrjg )J!e.Jij'st contest 2H5 llefore .
;~ Greg Cole, Mike Ha uber' a nd
coming back In the nightcap. to
• Charlie Weber.
·
claim a 9-4 triumph .
~
Southeastern all·star Charlie Rit ·
Despite a disastrous 11 -run first
: chle went to the mound for the
Inning that saw the Eastern
· alwnnl and came hom e the winner
defense make seven erTors, E ast·
with relief from another flrebaUer,
e rn didn't give up and fought back
: Rob Smith, who pic ked up the
to a respectable finish In the
- same, Ritchie fanned six and
opener. Ironically all of Trimble 's
, ,, walked four, while Smith chalked
runs proved to be unearned off
, up three strikeouts a nd three
sophomore starter Steve White.
, walks.
White wa lked just six and struck
~·
Jerry Larkins suffered the loss out nine. Stegman claimed the win
- for Eastern desplte a good effort.
for Trimble with nlne strike outs
·. Five unearned runs led to the
and eight walks.
. Eastern downfall as the EHS
Eastern hitters were Jimmy
' eommltted six erTOrs.
Weber with two s ingles a nd a
.J
Larkins fal;lned five and walked double, Ray Maxson two singles ,
..four.
Tom Everett a single and double,
Deron Jewett came on in relief to and singles by Steve White, Jerry
fan three and walk four. while
Larkins. Bob Ma lson smacked a
•• Roger Bissell finished the game by triple for the Eagles .
• retirilng the side In order.
In the second game Eastern got a
''· David Gaql led Eastern's attack much better start, talking a 3-0 lead
with three singles, while Ray
a fter the first Inning. Pitcher Tom
.; Maxson had a triple , single and two Everett helped his cauS(' with a
~. walks. Troy Guthrte doubled and
two-run double In that frame .
' , Deron Jewett singled to round out
Everett turned In a fine pitching
the EHS hitting.
effort, giving up j ust four hits, six
Brian Bissell led the Alumni with walks, a nd five strike outs. McCiel·
~ a two RBI triple and a single,
land suffe red till' loss for Trl!]'l ble.
brother Mike Bissell doubled, Rob ·
Eastern hitters were Bob Malson
· Smith singled , Charlie Ritchie with a home run , Tom Everett with
.• singled, Greg Cole singled and
a single a nd double , Steve White a
1
Mike hauber singled.
single, J eff Newell a single, and
Eastern plays a t Kyger Creek Ray Mru.son a single.
tonight, hosts Hanna n Trace and

ATHENS . - A five-run fourth
Inning wiped out a Meigs 2·1 lead
a nd sent the Marauders to their
fifth straight loss this year 8-2
Monday to the Athens Bulldogs.
Coach Tim Saunder s' Maraud·
ers. now 2-5 on the year fell to O.J in
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
action.
Chris Burde tte suffered the loss
as the starter ·gave way to Dan
Thomas In the fourth . Nick Bush
came on In the sixth to goet the final
out. They combined for · fou r
strikeouts and 12 base on balls.
Lovett pitched for Athens until
the sixth when McAllister came on
to preserve the win. They. fanned
six and walked elgtir. -- .
Hitting safely for the Marauders
was Nick Riggs with a triple a nd
Scott Harrison. Trey Cassell. and
Scott Gheen each collected a single.
Kooksey was the big ma n at the
plate for the Bulldogs as he banged

two home runs, each two-run
blasts.
"We just couldn't seem to get the
big hit," said Meigs coach Saund·
ers. as his Marauders stranded 10
runners.
Meigs plays their first game a I
home tonight when they host
Ravenswood at 4:30p.m .
By Innings :
Meigs . ..... ... . ................ 001 100 D-2 4 ~
A~ns .......... .. ................ 001 ~ K-8 3 0
Burdette ILP\. T homas 1-1 1. Bush 16!. and
Folb'od. Gheen 151. Lovf'tt (WPI , MC'AUI.s!er
i61 a nd Bake r .

Reserves Win
ROCK SPRINGS - in a wild a nd
woolly seven Innings , the Meigs
Marauder reserve baseball squad
pulled out a 14·13 win over the
Athe ns reserves here Monday.
Meigs had jumped to a 13·1 lead
after three Innings. but It took a
no-out run-scoring single by freSh·
m a n Shawn Baker to drive In Rodd
Harrison with the winning run In

a

v

'

'!..ll 101 x-7

Kronf'r jl.Pr and

By SCOTT D. WOLFE
Southern spotted Southwestern a
3-0 lead In the first Inning then
Iough t back In the third with a big
· seve~ run o utburst to ol~lnn a n 11·5·
SVAC trlumph.:6ver Southwestern.
In the first, a walk to Troy
Daniels, David Nida reached on an
error, Randy Layton walk'ed, Gary
Baker walked, and Jeff Burleson
singled for three runs.
In the meaning Rob Cunningham
ca me In to pitch for Tony Riffle who
was having chest pains. Cun ·
nlngbam pitched shut out ball for
the ne&gt;&lt;t three Innings finally being
touched for two runs In the fifth but

only after the Tornadoes had ta ken
a 7·3 lead.
Cunningham 's fbte effort earned
hlnn the win as he struck out three
and walked only.two.
in ihe Tornadoes: big third Inning
Cunningha m reach.id. on a n error
wiih one out. Paul Harris singled.
Joe Wolfe si ngled , a nd .Jim Hupp
drove home two runs with a line
single to left center .
Wade Connolly then blasted a
tremendous three run homer over
the left fie ld fence.
Brian Allen then walked, stole
seeond a nd was driven home by

Leaders
AMERICAN lJo::AGUE
BArt'ING 4'25 1111 bnlsr Un-11. Kan!'iilS
City . .456: Cartw. Ca\lfornlu • .45!l: ll u.~
sry, CIC\II." land, .421: M(f'.(I IJY, Toronw,
f)7; Shl'lby, Bah lnt01'1 '. -f rl

RUNS : Downing, C ~tltfor nl a. H. Br•r'f t.
Kansas Cit y, 13; Casti llO, M\nrwsota. 13.
Caetll, Mln~ a. L1: [l(&gt;rruv.ard. Ch1
t·~ . 12.
RBI: Cllrl'W. California, l~t: Arl'll. K;•n
sas Cl!y , 14: Kllfle , Chk'IJSiu, 14: l.yM .
C'.a llfornl tl, 14; 'nlorntoo. Ck"'•:hmd. 14.
HITS: Car!'W . Califor nia. !"•: Cast!no.
Mlni'W'SOIR, 'l.l; How. Jb;ton. n Brf'lt ,
Kansa! Clry, 3); RlpkJ;'n, Bll lllmon&gt;, n.

TCrw.• ~~~~. Zl.
OOUBLE!;: Bl"l'rt , Kansa.~ City, !I;
l:lo@, Boston, 7: SHmdi:'I'!IOO, St&gt;un ll&gt;, 7:
Bll~ h. Mlnnesolil . ti: CUJ5X'I' . Mltwuukt••.

1i: Krbek.

M\n ~ a.

G.

11UPLE: CW\Ison, ()(&gt;Jroll . t IJa\llf'S ,
2: Evans . Boston.:!: Yount . Mil

Cb\C'~ .
WliUkl'll!,

2.

HOME RLJli.'S: Casl!no,

.\1 1~ a .

"i:

Lynn . Ca lifo rnia .~ Kltt k'.

l ll k'll,k'l)

·1.

S"IUL£N llA..'\~')i: J ( h JJ., Sf'1111 1r. II.;
G !U'('Ja. Tonmlo. 7; \YY..' It-.ort. K rt nsa .~
C'lty. 7. C'ollln., , 'foronlo. 1\: Mlluv!s, fl ak
land. fi.
Pn'OU NG 1:1 tJI~·l~IO ns t l:"ut"!iC'h. Citll

HU ~S('I).

~

2

Lamlx&gt;rt 1WP 1

and Hor·ton

Fifth Strulght
The Meigs Ma rauderPtte reserve
soft ba ll tea m won its !Ut h straight
game he n"' M ond ~t .\' w ith a 10-4 v.~ ln
Fres hma n .Julil' Rous h won hc'r
SC'Cond game of the yPa r against no

Baker was Mr . Une Dr ive at thf'

plat e as he.r a pped four single'S a nd
walked In fi ve trips to t:he plat e.
Othe r Meigs hitters were Mike
Chancey a nd Hanison with two
sing les and a doubl e ea ch. Bob
Spiers and R ick Wi se eac h had a
double , and Lee Powell a nd Chris
'f!t.nnedy eac h singled .
Rod Roush s taned on the hil l for
Coach Greg Drumme r' s &lt;'rew and
hurled until the sixth when winner
Wise came on. ·They combined
fanning eight a nd walking nine
whte hitting a batte r. Athe ns·
pitchers fanned five and walked
six .
The Meigs reserves. now 2·2 on
the year, play a t Southern's
rese rves tonight a t 4: :JO.
By innings:

losses as shP wpnt thP routr . Shr
fa nned none whil&lt;' issuin g rig ht
wal ks. F'alyrr a lso tailed to fan a
lx'ttPr whilP i.qsuin g rwo w alks.

Hitter s for

.\l it·Curnt}';,
Hnu ... h . W ist-

~l nw a rtl tll ( I .PI.a ndM nr l in

(Iii

1 \\'1" 1. :.m il l\ n rn.

Marau · ·

ra pped a s in glr.
Coach Wall.'· 1-la t fic lcfs crew ,
~· p n r . play tonight ;11
Salisbury ;1ga inst tllC' Eastern
varsity girl s' tC'am at ·1: :10 p.m .

now 5-:l on thf'

For Home
Insurance

. .f()J ·lH -1- I J ti ti
. 7 1 ~' lUI 1- J..I H ~

.

M d g1-.

th£' lill lr

del'f'II PS Wf'l'f' Barb Hatfield w ith a
si ngle. doub\P. ami triplf': Roush
had :1 single and triplr, Hall .\ ' Miller
and Kim I&lt;blln Pac ll pounciM out
two slng iC'!".. G ina F ollrod had d
t ripl r. ;~ nd .lo(H MillC'r, Tcn·sa
}Jratt . and Uaphnr Uillard ecu·h

~

fJ

!&gt;

'
~

-;_v •.

Southern tops Southwestern

~,,.,...

T on.v . R i f~lp 's single. T wo v.•a \ks at1d

doubles by Da vid Nid a a nd Ga ry
Baker plated two for the Hig hland·
e rs in thr fifth .
lh t:he ·fifth a flr·.ta n Allen single.
a nd sl~gi£. bYJ ohn Porti'r'a nd 1.a nP

IJcr.egle nettf'd t\'1..'0 more run s·fot· i tw ·
Tornadoes. ThC'n two morf' W('t'C'

11dded In the sixt h on Jim llupp's
wal ks, Wade Connolly's slngir , hi s
thh·d hit. sac rifice fl y by Bria n
Allen. a nd squ&lt;'Pzt' bunt by .J oh n
Portl'r.
Porter also added a duubiL•In the
ga me In addit ion to pit&lt;·hlng the
final two Inn ings for lh&lt;' save. Will
Ha islop added a singiP for S.W.
Sout he rn is now 4.() in tlu• lra gur
a nd 8·1 ove rall.
Sc1UihWPSI(' t'll ..
:IIXI lT!11 II- ~~ 7 2
S. 1u lh£'rn ...
. 007 tltl x- 11 l'l 2
Ha ndy l .ay wn !1 .!'1. Wll! ll u\~ lnp 5th :1nd
T t'tW O a nl r lf&gt;. Tunv Hlfflt •, ltoiJ ('u nnln ghalll
'lnd ' 1\o'IP, Jotm i•rjrw r· tit h rmd Zam• l~'t'l--( 11·.
.lim ltupp 6th, D rU'Inn Hou.•.;h 71h.

fm nl11 ..1.0. I 1100. .1.10: (;ura. t&lt;n n\!1:- l'lh .
'I·H. UlXI. 2.fll; Hl¢'dlt. Ntw York, .I ll.
LUI!. '1.11 ; SU('b, Tolunlo. ] I. 7"11 ~ l 41

HOW
MUCH IS
ENOUGH?
Ch&lt;Jnt 9s arc you r ho m~

1$ •

wor1h r'TJOt e lt1&lt;1n you reai IZC an d w o uld cos t lnr

mor e to replaco perhap s

SO "o to 60°u . than

jU S1

a

tew year s aqo

Has your

lllSw &lt;.wcc

homt~

kept pnce w1111 1t1e s1eddy
r1se 1n cons truc t1 on costs'}
We 11 be t·wppy to help you
!rnd o u t It s PeHI o l our
serv1ce a s an mdepondcnt
rn su ran ce agency repro
sentt ng State Au to

G•ve us a call You'll l1nd
we ru lfle n cJ s y ou Cdn
depencl on

RR£Gt:ER~
~ourance Servl-

!--LHIKEOt.JTS: l'lly l('\'1'11 , r lt "Vt -tlttkl. 2'1.
S' il'b.. Toront o. 1!2. Kl.'iOf\. Ca liforni a, b.l:

7..ahn , Calllornlu , 1!1; Norrt.~ . Otll&lt; i!UHI. 111
SA V t~S : Quls(•n!X'n)'. K a nSlt ~ r uy . 1:
Spt\ln('L C)PVt .. and. ~ . Ht•a.rd. OakiMd . .1:
Caudill . ~a llll" , 3: llD avl.~. Mlnnt'SOIU . 'I;
~~~Icy, Ul:f&gt;lon, .1.
NATIONAJ. l..EAGUJo-:
1

RATilN G

12'i II! Oa ts1 :

Ht, V .

Slate Auto Insurance
'"' "'i1 , ••

A

,.

lr'1""'0 t•t•

Nt.,..

YOt"k..444: llf'nctrlck. S1.l..ouls . ..'11 1: Kt 'f1
Sa n 1)\c'Jf(l, .:Ill; 1-\'rcz.I 'IUIIIIII'Iptlla,

I'll 'II)',

.:n:l:

0\IUTlb)l&lt;;.&lt;l, 1\!IMUI , .J72.

Rt.:NS

r:a".-' 'Y . San Dlo-,..'\'1 . 1.1: Gut·t

n 'f'U. Los 1\n C'.'h '!l.

1.1. U ornc.'f . 1\tllllll&lt;t.

1:1: Schmlcl l. P l\lllldl•lpllla. 1.1; IJI'Oiic , IM
1\nJI{.'Ies , 12.
llAI. K,..nnt'lly SivJ nlf1.,'0 . 17 ll t'f1rlr
ldr. . Sl.l.oul~. 1~: G IJC'tTt.'m. I.D: 1\ nj;~~•l t ~ .
u : Knl$t hl. lltJ.J Stnn, 11
HITS: Blmlll11, San Dll"t:"' · ? o, Kn lf\o{f)'
:-;un D~. 24 : G~ nT'm. l .oti An,... lt~ . 21.
ThOn,Hou slon, :Z.l; Cna. HOU!! IOI'I . 'l..!.
OOUBLES · JHay. Plns~ rgh . ~ Wu ~ h
ln~o:too. Allan111. ~ -

TiliPI.J:!'.

Dll\\'11011 .

Mtmlrt'HI.

.t

~11111nery ,

1;

San l:lltogo, 1, G!'l''t'll , S !.l~ nu.~ .
L...u ·y, PIU!itAJil&lt;lt 2: Sf•ttvl'l' Ntw

York. 2: Washlll5(1oo . i\1lanla , 2

~:over Monday wedding

SALE
ENDS
APRIL
30!

fielder Jeff Jones to lndlanapoUson
a 24-hour recall.
. However, the Reds did not name
Householder to Jones' place on the
roster.
"I've been full strengih for a week
or 10 days but I don 't have any
projection on how I'll do because It's
comple tely different In a game
sltuat.lon than It Is In practice, " said
Householder.
· Householder sald he was sur·
prlsed when he learned his wedding
day was the same day the Reds
planned the annual exhibition game
for amateur baseball.

(

a

!X'O 010 0- 1 2 '!.

~t hem. _

Mf'tgs

OV('i" A t hens' rPservPs.

the bottom of the seventh.

A th(•n~

bert drove In P aula Horton. who
had walked In the sixth with a
double to end the Meigs scoring.
The Ma ra ude retres have a n off
day today but host the Loga n ladles
Wednesday a t Sa lisbury .
By Inni ngs:

&lt;I&gt;'

~Game takes precedent
CINCINNATI (AP) -Outfielder
··Paul Householder spent his wed·
·~ding night In centerfield for the
'~' Cincinnati Reds In an e xhibition
·game but he says he dldn 't mind.
·· Householder's career was short ·
ctrcutted during spring training
when he fell Ul \VIth hepatitis. He
·'was one of nearly 100 Infected at a
sports stag at the FortMltchell, Ky.,
'' Country Club shortly before spring
·~ tralnlng. He said hewas delighted to
be back In uniform.
Before the Reds 54 exhibition loss
Monday to the Detroit Tigers,
Cincinnati optioned rookie out·

only Athens hlts .
Meigs jumped out to a 2·0 lead In
the first on three walks. Lambert' s
sacrifiCe fly. and per!e&lt;'t squeeze
bunt by Robin Buffington .
Three more In the second ca me
a bout when after two out s, three
walk s. an error . and La mbert's
two-run single put Melgs a head 5-0.
A run·scorilng single by La mbert
plated another In the fourth ,
scortng Crooks from third. Lam ·

in row

Secretaries Day
April 27 is National Secretaries
Day. For many of the nation's 14.5
million clerical workers, this day
has traditionally meant lunch out
with the boss, or aeoupleof roses on
the desk In the morning.
However. this year on NSD, I'm
joining with 9 to. 5, National
• Association of Working Women In
•• breaking with that tradition . Office
workers across the country are
calllng for RAISES AND ROSES!
: Why• Beeause the fact Is that a
"free lunch and nowers this one day
doesn't b!!glil to eompensate for the
job Inequities that secretaries,
bank tellers, typists, admtnlstra·
tive assistants and receptionists
lace the other J64 days rJ. the year!
In )955, women earned 64 c\mts
for every $1 a man earned. Today
It's oply 59 cents. Women office
workers In partleular brlng home
an 4verage of ~.(XX)
year
COml!llred to the $17,(00 brought
ho!llll by male clerical wori&lt;ers.
• Eighty percent of all clerical
work6ts are women . But less than

Page-3

Marauderettes post ninth straight victory

Comnienta•"Y
Ponwro,, Ohio

The Daily ~ntinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohio

In our Aprll27, 1983 "Last Week
Birthday Sale" advertisement,
·on page 1, the 600 High Speed
Film pkg. of 2 Is Illustrated with
a factory rebate of '2.00. The
rebate offer Is In error. The
correct advertised sale price Is
•1•.17 per pkg. of 2. ·
We regret any lnco.nvenlence
this may have c·aused our
customers.

- -

-

WE DO
BRAKE
WORK

ll r u~r '~'"~ ~''" G l' '•N ''
Ofl Qui

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~

l'l fo 'r ~Ofll] Wl~ l~11 ~ 11

1' '1·~ SI !:4 I

•'

ALIGNMENT
ON MOST
CARS

5- S.S.9S
56 . CIS

P l/~t!IO !o! tl

51.9S

P I A', r fiO!ol I I
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Pl /'o f /{) ~ 11

l':j 1:\ CITY LQ4.N 8.. SAVINGS
GALIJPOIJS: lit! Soon! Avt., 4411-1973
POIIEROY: 125 E. Main St .. 992·2111

'&gt;· I~

'~JI" ' loll

~ I}IJUI ,u loii1IO'

$}375
\::I r:J aCaltt'OI Data Company

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POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
608 E. Main

Ph. 992-2092
Pomeroy, Oh .
Front End Alignment Most. Cars
Brake Service

\ ' 1. '

•

Is obvious ...._ I ileed a bigger horse!"
'

\-.

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•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Dally Sentinel

..

Tuu •·~,,.....,
"-" 26, 1913

T•

f. .

PtlnMH'oy Middleport, Ohio

d!•y, April 26, 1983 .

_....,.._

•• 11•

Majors
•

Allantl

s

7

7

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11-/

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1

7

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8

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1'7

7
7

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Kansas City
8
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New York
G'levf'land

Calltlrri a
Oakland
Tl"Xas

11

Milll'll'SOI&lt;~

· II
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Chicago
Sl&gt;an l(&gt;

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DPtro11 4. St:•cut k&gt; 1
Olkll20 9. Clf&gt;\·r land 1
Kansas nty 7, TDnlnlo 1
Mllwauk£1(&gt; 3, T('X&lt;IS I
Calltlrnla 7. Bal!lrml'(' .1

12
12

ctnd!Uiiltl
San D1eRo ·
Siin Fr.u~ctsro
Hrusron

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Monday',.. c;IMI'W
Los r\ng('k&gt;s M. St. Louis 0
Only If~ !K'hPWK-d
"'-b,y',. Ounu~
»ou ston i l&lt;n&lt;'ppf't' O.:l 1 at Monti'Nil
rGuUI&lt;'kson 1·11
San ~ •Montl'fu!I'O" 1-11 a1 Chicago
·lfta lnr,o R-31
San F'mnclsro 1 Bt't'Lninll! 2-l t at Pitts
!Nf'Rh IMt'WIIIiams 1-21. t nl
f\:{'\1,• ' 'ork ISC':J \ 'P1 " 1 ~ 11 at ('lndnnal i
IBE_.rmy i l •\1 . I Jl l
PhUit!k'lphia tCtu"bi«&lt;50Jl 0. 11 at At
lanl!l tPmv: :J.n 1. 1n 1
I.D!II .\njl('\(1!; IHOOIOrt IH 1 at Sl IJJui'
iSilJPl'f" ) .(II , I Jl l
W~ '"'G IIIl'lffi
San Fr .u1ctsro at Plll!ibul}.!h
N~·

Los

York at C'lnC'Inn.ari
at Sl lou.l~

An ~

Houston at Montn-aJ
san 0\E'fi:O at Chic a~

Boston 4.. Oak litnd 2

..

·

Lo!; An~li's

AMEHifAN JE.\GUE
ENIT IHV'I!ION
W L Ptt. GB
Baltlrnorf' '
9
7 .56.1 -

IA'If1Jit

..'1Sf

NEW YORK (AP) -The lowly

\\'mT dVIliON

II)' 'l'hP. A.....t•ed l"f'lllll

....,.

.DI

MinrK'SOta Ill Nrw Y« k. pJI:l rHin •

Phllack'lphl a a t Atlan1a

Mo~' s GIUJW'
MlrlllE'SOta at Nt&gt;w York. 1n 1

Only ~ar'll£' !;l'hed.JJ.;od

'i'ue8d!Q''" Garm"'
Minnesota 1Cas11llo 1-fli n1 C'IC'\'&lt;"Iand

·.

! Sorms~m

O.J 1
O!.IC'oli:!J tHor'

11·31

a•

:vlllwauk(l(&gt;

Transactions
M--'s!4ports-rn..-.1M
.....EJW.L

I Haasi}{I J, 101

Kansas CJ~· 1r i urn J-0 1 u1 Nf'Vo' \'ork

NatloNII ~ape

NEYi YORK

!Rigtlt'ltl l-0 1, In!
Torolllo rSt k&gt;b l- l 1 a1 T&lt;&gt;Xn ~ 1Sml1hs0n

2-01 , 1n 1
B.al111'00ll:' 1 IPaliTM'f fi·Ot a t Oakland
•_UnoE!wood l·l t. 1n 1
Boston 181'(7.11n I-l l at Sc-altk' rP('Il'\' 12!', tn l
Only li:ilrl"ll'S ~ led

..

"'~sG~

ln!CrlllltionaJ l.eaR\Ir.
roo'I1W.L
('...._. F.U..U l.ellp;w
BRrriSH COLUMBIA LIO~Sent Ty ·
ron Krys, deferul\-·~ ead, to !he T~!o

.,....

Clll&lt;'awJ at Mllwa ukt&gt;(&gt;, 1n 1

Chark's R.lgg11l5, detenslvP \11\('ll'lan . and
f'.Mlf"~ ThomPson. tlf(ht end.

Kansas Cll\• at 1'\'t&gt;W York.. 1n 1
Toronto at 'T&lt;'Xa!&gt;, 1n 1

~

Ototrolt at Califor nia, 1n 1
B.alllml}ll' ut Oaklalld, 1n 1
Boston at Sl&gt;attiC'. 1n 1

Nt.tiiiMI S.kabal A
COL DEN

NATION.U. LEAGUE

STAT ~

Al Attles gE'I'Icra!

9 .. 4 . EB.I8466'1
Y,

C'A M PB El..L

9
6

~

7

,,.....
WARRIOR S-

Nam&lt;d

EAST DIVtiiON
W L Pet. GB
Mootrpal
St . l ....(aJJs
P hUadt':lphJa
Plllsbut"RII

MLI'S-Rew:alk&gt;d RoM
from TidEwatCT or lilt

ReyrDl~ . e!ltr-her.

AtRQnauts ror ,Jo Jo Heath, C'OI"nertNlCk
Nalional F'OOiball U"IIR\II"
WA S HI NGTON
R EDSK I NS-

MIIUI('S()I a at Cl('vel.and

.00
.46:.!

3

"'

manager.

ooumE

UN I VER S IT'i -

Aru'""""'
tiM:' resl(l:nation

Par

5 ,~

Baltimore takes-quarterback ·John Elway

Scoreboard ...

OPN!Op-lnc.

'

The Daily Sentilwl
..
.

.I

of Danl"lY Robl&gt;ns, hl&gt;ad
bBSketball coa&lt;'h.

In today'sNatlonal Football League
Baltimore Colts who selected AU
draft and, with Elway listed by the
American Art Schlichter a year
experts {IS "In a class by hltnself. "
ago, drafted qilarterback Jolm "a franchise" and so on, lt seemed
certain he would be their unquestiE lway !rom Stanford University.
Los Angeles, choosing second, oned choice.
There . was only one problem:
took running backErlc Dickerson of
, E lway had no desire to have a
I.SU as Its No. i pick.
Elway, the AU-American Boy, the horseshoe on the slde of hls helmet.
Don't' bother drafting me, was the
Stanford University quarterback,
the Joe Nama thor Terry Bradshaw message he sent out. He said he
wanted to play lor a West Coast
of the ' Ills, ls the dream of every
team , or for the Dallas Cowboys.
scout and coach - except maybe
Or for the New York Yankees .
Baltimore's.
E lway ls more than a football !dol.
'The Colts owned the No. 1 choice

KC Bobcats top Wildcats, 54
DuaneAbshlre's lnfieldhltscored
Barry Matthews with the wlnplng
run as visiting Kyger Creek edged
Hannan Trace, &gt;4ln extra lnnlngs
Monday night .
Brett Wilson's Wildcat squad,
through )Jlttlng b:' Jeff Barnes and
Danlel Bays, led the Bobcats
throughout most of the game and
tied lt In the ~enth Inning.
Barnes collected two hits, a single
and a double, while Bays contributed a double In extra base hlts.
KC'sSteveWaughandChuckVogel
recorded
hlts each , with Larry
Edge adding a double.
Bobcat starter Edge struckout
four and walked seven. He was
relleved by Brtan [VIccarley, who
struck out lwo and walked two. For ·
HT, Barnes struck out five, walked
two, wtth Terl)' Cline ln relief
lqlocklng out three and walking

two

three.

Yogi Myers was catcher through·

Oneonta. the Yanks' Class A tann
team In the New York-Penn
League. In 42 games, Elway batted

HeplaysbasebaU, too-apparently
well enough to merit consideration
as a major leaguer. One que!ltlon
was: howmuchwouldlt taketokeep
E lway from jumping sports? Published reports sald hewasasldngfor
about $1 m!Ulon a year.
George Steinbrenner, boss of the
Yanks and tre..-spender extraordlna lre, reportedly was talk)ng about
offering something In that neighborhood. He also gave Elway a llttle
taste of the good llfe last summer
when he pald E lway a reported
$140,0Cll to play the out1leld lor

.out the game for KC, whlle Gary
Kirk stayed behind home base for
the Wildcats.
The win puts KC'soverall record
at 6-5and2-2withln theSVAC, while
HT ls 24 on tbe season and1-3 ln the
league. The Bobcats have scheduled a series of home games thls
week: Eastern today, Southern
Wednesday and HT on Friday.

r-;==========::;i
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.318.

IM those numbers paled beside
hls accompllshments as a quarter·
back. He holds the NCAA retard tor
career completions (7741 . for :zro
yard passing games ( ~) and the
lowest percentage of passes lnter('ellted (3.13) .
And that, ln turn, had teams
j&lt;X;keylng lor position In the Elway
Derby, most prominently the San
Diego Chargers. ·

LOOK VIIHA JS HAPPENING AT

Under The
Dome
Wed. · Fri. •....... HAPPY HOUR 4-7 P.M.

Wednesday Nite •..... DROWN IN DRAn
Thursday Nite •.............LADIES .NilE

Party To The Sounds Of

•ROADWORK'
Point Pleasant

Rt. 62 North

Bengals seek
quarterback,
ru.pn~g })ack
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals are hoping that a
!ront Une quarterback or a runningback or some defensive players are
stW left when their turn comes up In
the National Football League's
college draft today.
Clnclnnatldoesn'tget tnplck untD
the 25th selection but Pete Brown,
Clncln!!at!' s player personnel director, was hopeful Monday nlght.
"It would be my guess that one
might be there. Which one, I don't
know.''
'The Bengals, unsure of backup
~uarterback Jack 'Thompson, were
looking at quarterbacks Dan Marlno, ToddBlacklege,J!mKellyand
cornerback Leonard Smith trom
McNeese State.
'"The guys who might slide (be
Ignored In the early rounds) are
Marino, because hls senior year
was less than totally successful,
though. stU! a good one, and Kelly,
because It depends on the medical
Interpretation of hls shoulder ln·
jury," said Brown.
Blackledge also might not be
taken In the early rounds since he
was not as thoroughly scouted as
others. The NFL dldn 't know he
would pass up hls senior year at
Penn State, Brown said.
"I think we'D stU! be able to get
some good football players." said
Coach Forrest Gregg.
Besides quarterback and corner·
back, the Bengals also wUJ be
looking for a linebacker, a passrushing defensive Uneman and a
~running back.

NIW\Pft.PlR

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EXAMPLE -OLD COATS, PORCH SWINGS FURNITURE. APPLIANCES,

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�Tuetdcly, April 26, 1983

•• •

,,

The -Daily Sentinel

By Th_e -Bend

I

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6

RADIATOR
SERVICE

''

Middleport Literary
Highlights of the _early life of
George Washington, with emphasis
on his travels In the Ohio Terrttory,
were given by Mrs. Helen Hayes at
the Wednesday meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club at the
home of Mrs. Ben Philson.
Introduced by Mrs. Forest Bachtel, program chairman, Mrs. Hayes
used books by Irving on the Jl!e and
times ol Washington. She told or his
crossing the Ohio River at Great
Bend and the monument there
which marks the spot of his
encampment, as well as other
places along the Ohio River where
he visited.
For roll call members gave
comments on the program followed
by a discussion on the life of
Washington.
Mrs. Richard Owen, president,
conducted the meeting.The next
meeting wUJ be May 4, the place to
be announced later.

lpation, and Mrs. Nan Moore,
Information and protective service.
The chapter recently entertained
with a tea for all pre-retirees at the
Meigs County Museum. Miss Lucll!e Smith explained House Bill 216
now pending In the Ohio l{ouse of
Representatives. . Members are
asked to contact the president to
sign a petition now being circulated
In regard to the bill. Literature on
pre-retirement was distributed
with the public relations chairperson offertng an explanation of the
material.
The next meellng of the chapter
will be at.12: 30 p.m. on May 21. Ali
Interested persons are lnvlted.

Mar gare t

Parsons,

co -

chairpersons on community partie-

FFA Week
observed ·

Delta Kappa Gamma
DINNER - Ruger Bissell and Sharon Grlfftth rehearse their
dance scene In the "Bloody Tumlp Saloon," In preparation for a dinner
theater presentation, ''The Saga ol Sagebrush Sal," a melodrama,
Saturday night In Eastern High School auditorium. Dinner, by
reoervatlon only, will be served at 6:30p.m. The play will begin at 7:30
p.m. and Is open without reservations. D!nnertlckets may he obtained
by contaettng Carolyn Tripp at ·66'7-394.1. ·
·

Girl Scouts list activities arouncl M:eigs.
Reedsville Junior Troop 1015
Two handicapped children, Melissa Coyle, live year old daughter
of the Rev. and Mrs. Charles Coyle,
Middleport, blind since birth, and
Sab_rina Drake, Reedsville, paralyzed, have been "adopted" as little
sisters by the ReedsvU!e Junior
Troop 1015.
The scout troop w!U remember
the girls on their birthdays and
special occasions with cards and
gifts, will visit them occasionally,
provide some recreational activi ties, and take the girls on picnics.
Meeting at the home of their
leader, Donna Good, the group
enjoyed a field trip doing tree and
plant Identification with Monld
Good as the Instructor. The outing
concluded with a wiener roast
planned by Mon!d and Jayne Good,
a member of the Cadette Troop of
Racine.
Mary Ash of Cadette Troop 1115,
also met recently with the troop to
talk on the requirement for a
junior, how she can earn badges
and patches. Sl!e also conducted a
class on songs, and taught some
sign language.
Plans are being made for a trip to

As a part of the observance of
Future Farmers of America Week,
the Southern High School FF A
sponsored coloring and poster
contests In all elementary schools
of the district.
Theme for the contest was
" Vocational Agrtculture, EducatIng Through Experience." Prizes
at each school were $5 for first , $.1
for second and $1 !or third.
Poster contest winners, first
through third, respectively, Racine
Elementary, Melanie Lyons, Eliza.
beth Smith, Mayle Yoacham;
Letart Falls, Timmy Powell, Joey
Gray, Carol fisher; Syracuse,
Michelle Harris, Chris Stout, Tonya
Ingels; Portland, Junle Beegle,
Chris Harmon and David
McM!I!!an.
Coloring contest winners for
grades one through three, first,
second and third, respecllve!y,
were Syracuse, Rene Russell,
Alicia Custer, Tucker Williams;
Racine, Gary Ryan, Denny Clark,
Brenda Ash; Portland, Rachel
Rose, Jerry Lawson, Glenda Hoi·
ter; Letart Falls, Kyle Wickline,
Corey H!U, Cory Rowe.

Camden Park in the near future.
Sallsbury Brownie Troop 1220
During a meetlng of the Salisbury Brownine Troop 1220 held
Saturday at the Enterprise Uni ted
Methodist church, the third year
brownies continued work on the
"World of Weii-Beipg" dabbler
badge. As part of the badge
requirement , they w!ll participate
In the "Clean Up Ohtu Day_,.. April
30.&lt;This will also count as a part of
their community project work.

The brownies have also been
working on the "bridge to junior's
patch." A rrtp was recently taken
by the girls with the Salisbury
Junior Troop 1100 and they wUJ be
attending one of that troop's
meetings to explore the idea of
being a junior scout.
PJans are being made for an

overnight campout. At the next
meellng posters lor "Clean Up Ohio
Day" and a craft for Mother's Day
will be made.

Members present . from Meigs
" County were Mildred Hawley, Jo
Ann Hayes. Donna Jenkins, Nan
Moore, NeU!e Parker, Maxine
Philson, Mary VIrginia Riebel,
Faye Sauer, Carolyn Smith, Rebecca Zurcher, Anna Elizabeth
Turner, Roberta Wilson and DOrothy Woodward .

Preceptor Beta Beta
Betty Ohlinger was elected presi·
dent of the Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Ph! Sorority
at a recent meetlng In the Riverboat
Room of Diamond Savings and
Loan Co.
Other officers elected were Jane
Walton, vice president; RubyBaer.
treasurer; Marjorie Crow, secretary; Velma Rue, corresponding
secretary; and Norma Custer, city

Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m. will
meet Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Dale Sm!!h.

POMEROY - OAPSE Chapter 17 of Meigs Local will meet ·
Tuesday, April 26, al7: 30 p.m. at
Meigs Junior High. Therew!!l be
election of officers.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
LaSalle Hotel.

POMEROY - Ladle&gt; Auxll·
lary, Vet.-rans Memorial Hospl·
tal, will be 1'uesday, 7:30p.m. In
dining room. Hostesses will be
Betty Christopherson, Ire ne
Christy, and Nettle Hayes .
Speaker will be Glenna Runnel
(captain, retired) of t'he Salvation Army.

RECEIVED SPEClAI.IST CERTIF1CATE - Pam Harden of
Hacine received a onc~yetu- Secretarial Specialist CertHJcate from Rlo
Grand.e College and Community College Provost/ Academic Dean Dr.
Clyde M. Evans. Harden was among the lnitlal certtl!cate recipients at
Rlo Grandc.1'he Secretarial Specialist CertHicate program Is designed
to allow the student to enter the job market early whlledeveloplng their
skiDs on new modem &lt;'Qulpment during evening hour cla.....,s. At
completion of the o~c~ycar program the student has the option of
continuing into an !L&lt;isoclate degree Secretarial Science field.

POMEROY - The Bend of
the River Garden Club wUl meet
Tuesday at the Meigs at 7:30
p.m. Dean Barnltz w!ll serve as
hostess.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. There will be
work In E.A. degree. Refreshments will be served.

POMEROY - American l.Rglon Aux!!!ary, both junior and
senior, Drew Webster Post 39,
will meet 7:30 p.m. 'l'uesday at
the hall. Edward Harris will
speak on adoptable hand!·
capped children, Meet!ng Is
open to the public.

There was a surprise party
Satutday In obse1va nce of the 90th
birthday of Mrs. Esta White. Keno
Hii Farms, Long Bottom.
Over 50 relatives attending and
presented her with gifts. Hostingthe
affair was Mrs. Enna Cleland, a
niece from Chester. A decorated
cake Inscribed, "Happy 90th birth·
day, Aunt Esta," was served along
with cheese and cracker trays,
punch and coffee.
Attending were Nora Damewood,
the 92 year old sister of Mrs. While,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Black, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Black of Akron, Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Newell of John·
slown, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Casdorph and
Donna Higgins and husband from

POMEROY\ - OAPSE Chapter 17 Meigs 'j..ocal will meet
Tuesday at 7:309 p.m. at Meigs
Junior High. There will be '
election of officerS.

POMEROY - Past Matrons,
Pomeroy Chapter, Order o! the

'

Happenings
Recrerarion commission applicati0ns
MIDDLEPORT - The Mld·
dleport Recreation Commission
Is stU! accepting applications for
the position of park director, ure
guards, swimming instructor.

Applications may be picked up
at vUiage hall. Deadline ror
applying for any of the positions
. Is Thursday.

a.m. untO noon. All area restdents In need of clothing are
welcome.

Da te chahged

l

.

ffieettng

IOf
POI\fEROY - The. April 28 · Methodist ChW'Ch has been
meeting of the Willing Workers
cancelled.
Class ot .Entetprlse UnJted
··

L--------...----------------..1
I

The girl of the year was elected
and will he announced at the
Founder's Day dinner Thursday at
the Holiday Inn, GaliJpolis.
Wednesday the members served
at the bloodmobile canteen. Maida
Mora gave a program on
personalities.
A dinner preceded the meeting
with members wearing hats of
ortg!nal design. They were judged
with first place going to Mrs. Baer,
and second to Lillian Moore.

Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Well
of Charleston, Mr. and Mrs. Duane
Will and Davis from Polnt Pleasant,
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Newell of
Athens. Faith McCaln of Marietta,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Zull from
Riuland, Mrs. Clark lhle, Mrs.
Donna lllle, Lois, Melissa, Kathy,
David and Paul of Racine.
Will lam Frecker, Charles
·Frecker. Marcia, Adria and Maria,
Mrs. Sharon Michael, Matthew and
Kimberly from Mlnersvl!!e, Mr.
and Mrs. Owen Damewood, Norman McCain, VIolet Smith of
Reedsville. Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Newell of Chester, Christie Shepard, .Mr. and Mrs. John Newell,
Jeff, Scotty, Misty and Michael
from Long Bottom.

1

Seven members of the Southern's
Band participated ln the Ohio
Music
nd EEducation
bl cJunior
t High Solo
a
nsem e on est held re\ cently at Ohio University.
There were seven solos and one
ensemble. Flveratingswereglven
at the contest including Rating I,
outstanding; Rating II, Unusual
per1ortnance; Rating III, acceptable j)(!rfortnance; Rating IV, poor,
•lid Ratillg V, very pOOr.

Receiving a I rating were Diana
Simpson, alto saxophone, and
Bruce Wolfe, xylophone solo.
Pam Ash and Kim Stobart,
clarinet soioL~ts, each received a II
rating, a.s did Heat.her Shuler,
trumpet soloist.
Keiile Mullen, flute soloist, rece!ved a III rating. Patrece Circle
and Kellle Mullen performed In a
flute
.. duet for comments only.
I·

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for almost a century. Ftrm,
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coverages are available ro
meet individual ntteds. Con tact Ray Wedemeyer, agent .

Shepher~ Collie mixed . a
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co11446 ' 0696 ..

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Replenishing of the food bank and
the need lor soap and washing
powder ln thestockwas discussed at
the recent meetlng of the Pomeroy .
United Methodist Women at the
church.
Plans were also alscussed lor the
annual mother-daughter banquet,
which has been set for May 10 at the
church, with the meal to be served
at 6:30p.m. A request for the UMW
to purchase new chair covers forthe
choir was made. Distribution of
cookies and annual May Day
activities were planned.
Meetlngs announced lnc!uded the
Washington seminar, May 1-7; the
West Ohio Annual Conference at
Lakeside, June 12-16; School of
Christian Missions, July 11-18;
Athens District United Methodist
Women at New Lexlnglon, Sept.-29;
United Nations Seminar, Oct. 2-8;
World Community Day, Nov.4; and
West Ohio United Methodist annual
meeting, Nov. 12. It was announced
tha~Carolyn Edwards will present a
program ori nutrition ln September.
Fifty-three sick calls were reported durlng the past month.
Dorothy Downie had devotions
with emphasis on friendship. A
plano prelude by Martha Husted
opened the meetlng. Officers'
reports were given and Ada Warner
took the least coin offering.
Bernice Carpenter presented the
program on "Through It Ali God .. A
Few Women," noting that Christ
appeared first to the women after
his resurrection.
Mrytis Parker, Evelyn Clark arid
Norma Parker served
refreshments.

Authorized John Deer,
New Holland. Bush Hoc
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Farm Equipment
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Ph. 985-4269

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All Makes

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Office: 992-5739
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
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kitchen Lovely woodw01k
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PH. (304) 882-2276

Chester. Ot1. 4·18 1 mo

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614-992 -2181

POMEROY, OHIO .
PH. 992-2259

J""'REi rv

Open Mon, thru Sat.. Evenings by Appointment.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr. , GAl ..._................. 992-6191
Oolite Turner .............. ...... .................. 992-5692
Jean Trussell ....................................... 949-2660
Jo Hill ................................................ 985-3335

PARTICIPATED- Seven ban~ _ memhers of Southern's Band
recently partlclpaled in ihe Ohlo Music Education A.ssoclatlon Solo and
Ensemble ConteM h!lld at Ohlo UDrverslty. Parllclpanls were, front, l-r,
Palrece Orcle, Kellie Mullen; back, Diana Slm[l!IOn, Klm stobar1,
Bruce WoUe and Heatlier Shuler. Absent was Pam Ash.

.

"Love Story," "A Little Suite," and: :
"Rainbow Connection."
· , :
· "
•
1
The Meigs All-County Band
concert held March 21Hncluded stx '
Jllembers from Southern Band.
Participants Included Kel!le
Mullen, Teresa Shuler, Jodie Harrts, Diana Simpson, Linda Proffitt
and Kern Beegle. They were
selected upon the recommendation
of John VanReeth. band director.

YOUNG'S

I

If you want a home to be proud ol, this Is it. Solid brick wnh

''

shutters, 2 latge porches, old world charm. dutch doors, 3 •
bedrooms, 217 baths, living room, dining room, study, ple~ty
of closets centfal heat and air condition. garage. The Cltne
House on 'a large corner lot in Middleport. Owner will help li·
nance. Call for appointment.

R.C.S. Real Estate Co. '

Bill Childs - Branch llir.
Phone: 992-6312
Evtni••s: 99H449 ·

592-3051 .

23

Services

are the highest in tw o years .

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS
Sizes start from l2'xl6'

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson

,., "",

- Addont ond ..modollng
ond ...,., wool&gt;
- Conattt 'liY'M:

--"11

davsl

-Plumbing ond
oloct.....l _
(FrH Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

class;fy, ed;t or reiecr 'oo
anv ad . Your ad will be To 3,
put In the proper
~
ctasslficat;on if you'll

Pomeroy, Ohio
.

ll -26·r1c

AUTOMATIC ·
TRANSMISSION CO.

2~ lllln
'

I ...;_

...11=•

I'IIIMroy,

ott.

~l- • ~ .---

oPOt 9 tD 5 liON. ttwu SAT.
All Tlptl of Auto Ropoir,
Br1k11, tuno-Ups, otc.

SPECIAL

TRANSMISSION FllllR
AND FlUID CHANGE
ONLY 131.95 1.,..,,

check the proper box
below .

i

I
I

II
I

.

( !Wanted
I I For Sale

. ~"

'

SHOE
REPAIR

..-.

t•• ·~l"" ·~
,,.
S9 .00 1 re.

_t... ..

( )Announcement
( ) For Rent

l. - - - ----- - - 2. - - - - - - - - - 3. - - - - - - - - - - - 4. --------------

5. - - - - - - - - - - - -

6. - ----- 7. - - - - - - - - - - - -

8. - - - - - - 10. ___:.----------11 .

12. -------------13. ------~--.:..·

to

t h1 La r1est Radi1 -

I,

33. -

15. -·- - -------t6. --~--

3A. -- - - - - --

35. _ _ _

PERMAN ENT hAir remova l
Pr o ln ssional Ele c trolysis
Clinic . A .M .A approved .
Dr . reforrals . M onday . Wod ne!lday . Friday . by appoin1
ment. 304-675 -5668 .

o ld

~iall~tacv

Oh. o, 992 -7760 .

31 Homes for Sale

3476.

614 -245 -6274 or 614 -

Nice home and 6 to 20 acres

246 -9617 for nppoimm'ont .
Roeaonably priced

Mtddteport -Cheohire oreo .

Easy accesa. woods prefer rabley . Mid priced 820 to

Ra cine, 2 1J, acre mini farm ,
remodel ed, 3 -4 bdr .. 2 sto ry

*40 Thouund. 992 -6177.

alum. sided home. c;,,

=
_

Help Wanted
'

SMITH
NELSON
T:
MO.ORS, Inc.

By o wner. 3 bedroom hom a
m Rio Grande , Oh Call

ovoitoblo. Coli 614-388·
9766 .

water. gaa . sewur, bu su
mont &amp; 2 co r""""" · Aero"
from Southern HS . Cllll
614 - 379 · 2424 or 61;4 _
949 2854
-----------------3 bdr . hom e in Addi son
small lot . newly remodel ed .
new electric plumbing , etc .
Furnance &amp; woodburner .
fully in su lated . axe . con d ..
Mid IS20 ' s. Call 614 · 592 -

'.

SALES :NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY to sell Avon .
We'll show you how . Good
earnings! Call 814 -388 -

9045 01 614-992-3690.

Bar1ender wanted . Apply in
per1on . No phone calls.
Meigs Inn . Pomeroy,

orr

SAY yes, sell the best , AvOn.

304-675-1429.

SWEEPER and •wing machine .rep1ir, pert•, end
auppllet.
Pick up end
delivery . Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one halt mila up
Oeorgea Creek Ad .
C•ll

12

Situations
Wanted

4411 ·0284 .
Riverview Nursing Care
Homt . Now open for ambu late~
patients. 24 hour
cere . Room. board &amp;

Shooting Match every Fri·

I' doy 7:00PM. Robon Burno
I home. Hlrrltburg 1 Adomovlllo Rd . Coli 614· laundry. 304-773-6882.
'

'11:2:4:5:·5:4=4~9=.=====

Hevt room and bo1rd in my
home for elderly. 614·992-

I 4
Giveaway
6748.
11- - - - - - - -

-- -------- 1

10. - - - -- - - -

BEDS-IRON . BRASS .

Wil do baby 1i1ting in my
home anytime, fenced in
b,ack yard S. references

1111
II~ARNAMI
I
18. - - - - - -- - I 3 Announcements
19, - -- ------ - - I

23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31 . - -----------32. - - -- - - - -

614-742-2951 .

furnilure . gold , silver dol lars , wood ice bo1H11, stOnf:l
jars . antiques . etc , Com ·
·plate households. Writ e :
M .D . Miller , At. 4 . Pomeroy .

11

17 .

I
I
I
I
I

NI ELS
Aelinbltl 51Hvico
smce 1965 . Assoc tat e o f
Brunif:: Rrdi Mu sic Co . Phone

L &amp; L Sera p Metals . N ow
buying alum . cans &amp;. glass .
Scrap metals. Top pricfls
paid Call 446 · 7300 .

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. hptrience

2 26 11c

21 --- - - ----- I

PIANO TUNING LANE OA

682· 7448 .

R1di1tor Specilist

T

22 .

6'00PM

tor.

These cash rates
Inc lude discount

I

NIGHT CRAWLERS &amp; RED
WORMS h ig hest prices
paid , Lake Jack11on Bate &amp;
Ta ckle. Oak Hill. Call 614 ·

~

Ph. 992-2174

20 .

Will opon &amp; clean 11wimming
poo ls. Call 446 4895 11ftor

.~

Pomeroy, Oh .

I'IY , \nl

..

9. - - - - - - - - -

·'\G'".

4---.t-,.-•-•

446 -0069

COMPI.ETE

Core

446 4372

Gold. silver. sterling , je
welry. rings , old coin s &amp;
c urrency . Ed Surhett Barber
Shop, Middlep or t . 992 -

I

Pr inf one word in ea ch
space below . Each In·
f i fil!ll or group of f igures
counts as a word . Count
name and address or
~j
,
1
phone number if used . Yoral day I .. _-_ __
d~'Vs,
You 'l l get better results --.j...:.~j.:lu:::_:•Y..:j.:'::.:-=f_;_:;
if YOU describe fully ,
_ ...
give pr ice . The Sentinel To 1S
, ,\1\1
reser.ves the right t o..-_.••
~-!-1.- ~+---i

PIANO TUNING $5 ott plus
discounts to senior citiums churches -schools Call Bill
Ward Ward 's Ko,.b oa rd .

446 -8026 .

'Siding
'Roofing
'Gutter Down Spouts
'Remodeling
20 Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 843-5425

RADIATOR SERVICE
From he Smallest Heater

C &amp;L Bookk eeping
To.11 Return s &amp; bookkeeping
tor Ind ividua ls &amp; busine sses .
Short forms 95 00
Long forms S20 .06 and up
Carol N eal
446 -3862

Old coins. scrap rings &amp;
silverware . Daily quotes
available . Also coins &amp; coin
supplies for ule SpmlH
Valley Trading Co ., Spring
Valley Plaza . 446-8025 or

10 &amp;He

iiiil

I
I

I

Will moW lawns in the
Portltnd· Long Bottom area.

ANY PERSON who hoo
anything

'o give aw•y and

doe• not offer or attempt to
offer eny other thing for 1111

Professional

num . Gold and Sil"er prices

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

I
I

o• 1 800-34t

6664 in Ohio .

Buying Gold , Silver, Plati -

- l
- --------------------Curb Inflation f-------------------1
EUGENE LONG
Pay Cash for
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
Classifieds and
&amp;
Savell I

Phone

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Real Estate General

HOME FOR SALE -- REDUCED IN PRICE
wu sso.ooo
NOW 14-4.900

HOME LOANS 12 % fixed
rote . leader M ort gAge. 77 E
State, Athens . Ohio . , -614 .

the evenings .

Racine, Oh .
Ph. 614-313-5!91

•

------~~----~ - t=====~

f' rl ~~~

~-y

1

Real Estate General

608 E. MAIN

Wanted To Buy

446-3t59 or 266 -t967 in

Address· --------------------- 1 1-------------------1

992-6215 oo 992-7314

CLELAND REALTY..,...,--.....£!

22 Money to Loan

275 ·3069 .

WANTED TO BUY Old furni ·
lure and Antiques' of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain ,

Sius from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsulatd Doe Houses

Nam•------------11

).24 tic

ADDITIONAL 5% DISC:OUNT IN APRIL - CASH &amp; CARRY

9

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Write vour own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
resul1s . Money not refundable .

Also Transmission
PH . 992-568'2
or 992-7121

54 Misc . Merchandise

ALL LENGTHS IN STOCK
........................................... '9 .95
10 FT .................................... .... '12.20
12 FT ............ ... ........ ... .............. '14.45
14FT ..... ............. ........ .. ... ....... .. '16 .70
18 FT ....... ... ................ .. ............ '1 8 .90
18FT ................. ........ .. ........ .. ... '20.90
20FT ......................... .... ........... '22.96

Auctioneer ~

Or 742-2068
4-13·1 mo

.llwltAttr·

Riverside 'M Inc.

acres ·m/ less. Ut1lities avatla·

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc:.
Phone 742-3091
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171

415·1mo

LISHING CO . re comme nde
that you do businun with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you hAve investi ·
SJllted tha oHedng .

tt------------------~------------------~~------------------+------------------1 check
our prices on gold &amp;
silver. scrap jewelry. Buying

ACREAGE - Off Route 7. I I

WE ALSO WORK ON
AU OTHER APPLIANCES

p;fa;;2~~~g;

"'""

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·

AuCtion every Fri. ni ght at
the Hartford Community
Center. Trucklo•ds of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new "-nd
used · mercblmdise always
we!colne, Richard Reynolds

MEIGS.
EXCAVAtiNG

Business
Opportuni1y
!NOTICE!

Call614-367-7101 .

4 \ lln,o pd,

ll,lt c

-

$7,000.00

b~.

- Gas lines

Auct io n every Tuesday
night, Communily Building ,
Henderson . Consigners wel come. Auct. lonnie Neal.

- Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

1

fll1af1Gh1l

21

"FENCING PROVIDES PRIVACY PLUS
PROTECTION FOR CHILDREN &amp; PETS"

~1

304-895 -3313

- Sewer

c,OI)r, .. ·

I

TWO men would lik e work .
odd jobs, lawn work, farm
work , brush cut1ing , e1c

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

•Bulldozer &amp; Back·
hoe Service
•Basements
•Footers
•Landscaping
•Driveways

,...

P.G.A.
Ram

MOBILE HOME - 1974
Freedom l2'•65'.1wo bedroom
lurnished. total eteclnc. A11
cond.. storm w•ndows. Ask1ng

AUTHORIZED
fACTORY SERVICE
Gl:NERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

~
.._.....

Wilson
Dunlop

iJ.
:

676-1966 o• 675 -5208.

- Water

CHAIN LINK FEN.CING NEEDS

\'!(~

WILL babysit in mv home .
preschool to kindergarten ,
low rates , pleue call 304 ·

29th and Sat . 30th . Blon ·
dena nloved to Tyree Blvd ..
in Racine. Typewriter, wrin ·
ger wether, gas range, gui tar. tools . collectibles . much
more.

-Dump Trucks

"•

'

.

Need anything hauled . Call

446-4851

Huge yard sale -Friday April

-Lo-Boy
- henchu

FOR.All
- YOUR
. . YARD
.
. &amp; PROPERTY .

..

•

446 -2300.

9 to 6. 614-266·6031 . 1

·-.

·".. "'1 l-~
·
~·

!tlubs shortened for

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding es·
tililates. 949-2801 or

..

THE KOUNTRY-' .•KLUB
·
·

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282 11

Gardens .plowed &amp; tilled ,
Gallipolis area only Call

-Backhoes

15 Yean Experience

CATALOG MERCHANT
Pomeroy,OH.
Grea &amp; Potty Gibbs-Owners
PH .. 992-2178 l " ·"'

il9 ·2 m;oo

'Fit!int
Center
"Club Repair

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Kathryn Miller hosted Thursday's meeting of the Magnolia Club
and had devotlonsuslngmaterial by
Norman Vlncent Peale.
A letter was read from lrts
Kelton, residing In Virginia, who -·
has been ill. It was noted that
Georgia Watson has been hospitalIzed and is now recuperatlng at
home. A get-well card was signed
lor her.
Doris Grueser gave the program
on presidents and other famous
people. Games were played with
prizes going to Ella Smith, Margaret Rose. Cora Beegle, and Darts
Grueser. Refreshments were
served.

.

"lessOns

SIDING

:Sears

Parking lot Stripping
Spray Pointing

3275 or 446 -2314 .

mile Teens A uri Ad . off At . 7 .

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- Dozers

New Homes - Ertensive
Rem ode line.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
oA!uminum &amp; Vinyl Sidincs

FREE
EXTIMA YES
·chain Link Fence
·carpeting , •paintinc

Sandblasting

•Washers •Dishwashers
R•nges
•R efrigeraton
•Dryers •Freezers

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

\Sear~

Painting

4·.5·tlc

Vinyl &amp; ~luminum

Magnolia Club

GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.
Industrial, Commercial,
Residential. Interior and
Exterior.

Remodeling, new c onstruc tion of any type . Call 675 -

Big Yard Sale April 27 thru
30 . Kids S. adult clothes .
bookl, stero, furniture , an ·
tiques. tools. TV, 68 GMC
van. all kinds ot misc . items .

PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
992·7201
J-I ll&lt;

4-21 ·Ut

Lemley Drillin'g . Water
wells. shallow gas . end co re
drilling . Call 614 · 3888543 , Vinton . Oh .

Yard Sale

Yard Sa,le Centenary Friday
April 29 Only . 9 to 5 .
Layette, infant , childrens ,
teens &amp;' women clothes .
Chest of drawers. tric)'cle .
toys. and mise:. items .

BONti£D &amp; WORt( GUARANTHD

742-2328

J.7·ttc

J.J.rlc

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

•
------------------f-------------------f-------------------+---------------'----f------....!---------1f-.;_---------------l

•

'

-Al TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

BO.GGS

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or smalL Reliablfunddepen dable . For estimate ca ll
446-3159 between 9 and 5 .

304-676-7730.

-

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

FISHERMEN!

MINE RUN

a·FT .

I

::~'"l""'-

Sentinei~Page-7

LOST, tenet. cat like animal.

-·

Plano accompanists for the
soloists were Teresa Shuler, Mrs.
Carla Shuler and Ron Ash. Thts
was the first time In several years
that the Southern Band was
represented Jn this contest.
TheSouthernBandper1ormed!n
a spring concert on Ap1'!i 7 at the
high school. Thirty-five band
members INere featured tn selec· tlorut o! "The Rlngn!aster," "Ice
Castles," !'Festive Overture,"

_, __

'OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING

LAFF'·A·DAY

Writesel

ROOFING

«;!!Il

GaaTanka.

Pomeroy UMW

South.ern Ban,d mem bers parttC't
• ;,f)yate tn competttton
• •

• d
Sl • A
Cl
. Oth tng ay set at a V3t10fl
rmy

POMEROY - Free clothlng
day ·wlli be he)d at the Salvation
Army, 115 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy Thursday from -10,

counciL

90th birthday celebrated

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Holiness Association will
hold Its monthly rally ar the
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene Tuesday at 7:30p.m.

POMEROY- Meigs Athlet!c
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the high school.

two.

new members.

Calendar ·

TUESDAY

Founders' Day was observed by
Alpha Omicron chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma, when It mel April
18 at the Wesleyan UMC, Racine.
Membership chairman Jean
Wam led the program. She conducted a quiz on national and local
founders and showed slides from
the Delta Kappa Gamma building
In Texas, depleting early paintings
and collections.
·
Ladles of the church served a
baked.- steak dinner to 29 members
a_nd
gyests, Carolyn Snowct'en
and Christine Roush. ·Nan Moore
gave devotions. Other members of
the hootess committee were Faye
Sauer, chairman, Geneva Nolan
and Donna Jenkins.
President VIola Gettles con·
dueled the business meeting. She
congratulated Susan Will on receivIng a DKG scholarship and announced there would be a summer
planning meeting. · The society
signed get-well cards lor Howard
Nolan, Merry Dawn Simmons, and
Beatrice Rinehart.
Next meetlng wUI be at Lake
Hope, Sept. 19, with inlllallon of

H. L.

repair IHid ntcono radllltuts end flee.
w .,.,..., We """ also
edd boll end rod out I'll·
ditllora. We also 1'11p8ir

Groups meet around area ·

Retired teachers choose officers
The Meigs County Chapter of the
Ohio Retired Teachers Association
has elected new officers.
The group Includes Mrs. VIrginia
Carson; president; Mrs. Rachel
Downie; vice president; Miss Helen
Smith, secretary, and Mrs. Bernice
Hoffman, treasurer. Chairpersons
named lnclude Miss Lucl!!e Smith,
legislative; Mrs. Thelma DU!,
public relations; Mrs. Kathleen
Scott, pre-retirement; Mrs. Max Ine Philson, membership; Lee
McComas, reservations and hospl·
tallty; Mrs. Ann Webster and Mrs.

We

1

members, whether they own a
microwave oven or plan to buY One
In the future.
The class will concentrate on
cooking techniques. All persons
who attend who have microwave
ovens are asked to bring two Items,
your owner's manual, use and care
book and recipe book and a
microwave-cooked food (appet!zer, main dish, vegetable, fruit,
etc.) and the recipe for the dish.
There wUI be a $2 charge for the
class. Participants who bring a dish
will only be charged $1.
For more Information, contact
Dale Stoll at the Meigs County
Extension OUice at 992-6696.

-~

. .. _

4

-:::::::::::::::::~;:::::::::::::::::~-------------------r;:::::::::'
::::::::~;:::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::~-·-4_6_
: 3_8_9_7_.___________
r
,
·White male neutered cat,
'I

Do you use your microwave oven
just to heat up leftovers• Does
cooking In the microwave oven
seem confuslng and comp!!cated? · ·'
If you would like to Jearn about
cooking In the microwave oven,
come to a Microwave Cooking
Class at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, May 3,
at the Riverview School In Reedsvllle. The class Is sponsored by the
Me!gs County Cooperative Extens!on Service. Dale Stoll, Meigs
County Extension Home Economist, will teach the class. Margaret
Brown Is chairman of the
arrangements.
The class Is designed for all
interested homemakers and famlly

~

_

April 26, 1983 _

Page

Cooking school set

Business services .

-

TUMda~

The Daily

Poulei'Oy-Middkiport, Ohio

==========
Phono 843-6379.

11

4359 .

In Middleport. newly remo deled home with fireplace.
possible woodbumer , close
to schools and shopping .

Call 614 -992-6941 .

Modern home. '1 1 rm . &amp; 2
bath, on 2 acre lot . Rt . 326 .
6 mi . S. of Rio Grande . Call

614 -379-2683 .

Lovely, 6 rooms . Double
gjrage, beaut ifully lands caped area lot . Atop Ron

Hill , Porn . 40 's. 6 14-986 ·
4267 .

10 year olds, good condi ·
tion , 4 bedrooms, living,
eat· in kitchen , full dry base·
ment, rural water on 49
acres. pretty and pri vate .

614 -992 -7082.

House in Syracuae, Oh . 3
bedrooms, with carport on
one third acre lot . Reduced

10124.600. 304-752-8488
after 6 p .m .

TWO plus acres, 3 bedroom
brich &amp; ·aluminum ranch
hous8 . separate dining
room . family room with
fireplace . 2 b1th1. large
deck . Also Includes old
farmhouse , smokehouse

Ij
moy ptoco on od In shlo 13
Insurance
column . There will be no 1;_-------~--~-'--­
113 w. 2nd St.
11 Mail This Coupon with Remittance
I' charge
to the 1clvertiMr.
Pomeroy, OH.
1
,Tht DillY Stntlntl
I
Art you peylng to much for with colter. Coli 304-776Open 9:00 to II!OO
t.
111 Court St.'
I !'On Collie &amp; pan Border your hooplsot-hoolth .lnou• 8818 . weekdayo. or 3041
Mon.·Set.
Oh
I Collie pyppioo. Coli 814- nnce. Ctll Carroll 468 ~ 1092 on weekends , or
· 1
Pomeroy,
• 45769
Clol8d Thurs.
304-676-1838 anytime.,
Snowdon. 4'1·4290.
1, 2&amp;8-6772.
L-----..:'·~11;:·1.:'":::.·.1 J. ... - - - \ - - -... ~~~~~--~--,.-~-..,_. ~-----------------I

�ft.

" The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every.Tiille

31 Homea for Sale
THREE bedo-oom hou .. for
aate, 2 Iota, poatlble flnanc ·
lng by FHA. wen lnaul,ted.
304 -773-9118 .

61 HouHhold

~.~

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

,a

TNE,VeW IIOJ{ES~ /NSTAUJ:Q,··SOMJW
~- WIIE!lE R:JES 7NE·ms-TtHAN !'In 7HEMAI/. "P

j;,IY&lt;!~ II

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S OUI'.L·
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 36 . PHONE 446-7274 .

164 Mlac. Ma'rchandll8

USED FURNITURE Sola,
~rl
to v' Mot, 1·8 ·~ · It · •••
goretor. Corbin a Snyder Fuml·
ture. Coll448 · 1171.
5 mo. old tocllner block
vinyl, Ieora weight bench
110 lb. of . wolghte. 180
ooch. Call 814-258-a216 .

Sm1ll hou1e, eight IK:rn,
outbuildings, mineral righta,
reuonablo . 304,895-3819 .

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED· CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRI C ES .
CALL 446·7672 .

:['IFill

. ~l rmJ;;n n
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Rowlolgh produc1o. Sholdoo
organic producto, Sleek D.lo·
mod llnoment, venlllo, opl·
ceo, ointment, mecllcoted
vapor oprey . 814 -812·
_7 _82_ a_._ _ _ _ __ _
1OdYIMY T.V. game with
voice modular. Worronty on
entire
set. I tapaa. e200 .
Kenmo r e waaher pdryer
e1a0 • t. Women Friend · a14-982-2078, Judy. ·
dryer t96 , porteble walher·
dryer Mt '17&amp;. Moytog HANDMADE a decorated
wringer washer. •sa. refrig - potatQ • onion bina:. also
many otMr lteme. pho!le.
er~;tora low ea e75. 30 ln.
olectrlc ronge
brook · 304-676-38a&amp;.
foot Ht with 4 chatra 165. 6
new chen of drawer• atart · DOUBLE mattrooo &amp; boK
ing It t85. 1 antique oak eprlngo, U5 . LOWIMit &amp;
dining aet, antique ch•st of chair. t76 .Two oval breidad
drawera with deck good. ruga. 176. Phone 304-67&amp;·
cond 1126. SklggoApplion · 6828.
ces Upper River Rd . Call
448-7398 .

""' - •
"615Ne , 190

c".:i

83, 900. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~

Wrealted 1 Ht Fonl. ,_,..,

54 Misc . Merchandise

Liberty
..
2 lots good
&amp; a cond
mobile
home

8 8 in . 8'and 1
0
8
47'hx18Ytlii:15V:.
1
c
f
f
t
b
1
1
end table 25lll18 '12 x20 h

1 2x60. 2 bedroom. with
H
rural water, gas heat. ••

wtth light Walnut flnieh t30,
32•63" 174 plecoo brown
underpinning for · e mobile

tal surplus clothing e&amp;.
dozen), 14 oz . denim pants
*10. Sam Somerville 's,
New Ere, .Eeat Ravenswood.
Junction lndopondance
Road-Route 21 , Open only

114~7112.

Houses for Rent

44

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WHA'TSO EVER
Ms. QUEE N.

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MOVIE:
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CAPfAIN EASY
ALL CONTROL OF
YOUR NUCLEAR.

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(I) Dr. Who
(J!J Ovor Eaoy
7:00
Cil P.M. Mogoalno
(II ESPN SporteCentor
(I) Cerol Burnett
(I) Entertainment Tonight
CIJ Chertte'o Angell
(I) Tic Toe Dough
(I) (J!J
MecNoi~L.eh,.r
Rep&lt;m
liD Nowo
• iiJI Poop'-"• Court
g Ster Trek
7 :15 (II NBA Tonight
7:30 8 1lJ Lie O.toctor
(II NBA Beokotboll: 1983
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PhlladeJphlo ot Atl•nte
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World

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BORN LOSER

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WHY THE SUDDEN
INTEREST IN
VERA ALLGOOD'S
WORK?

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YOU'RE AN
OHIC£/JOY
HERE,

BARNEY

I'D A·COME VISITIN!

SooNER, SNUFFY,
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8:00 G ClJ Cll A Teem B.A.
shanghai• his fellow A
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llJ Philip Merlowo, Prlveto
Ev• ' Finger Man.' Marlowe
bacomes1he prime susPect
in the death of a city official.
·
llJ MOVIE: 'Ambor Wovoo'
Cl) l Spy_
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ahopp ing r.Ttilll thre•tens to
put ·the C u·nninghilms out
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Captioned]
Ill (I) liD I, Leonardo Richard Burton hosts thi l
s pecial look at the meny
talents of Leonardo Da
Vinci . (60 miri.)
Cl) [I) Nove ·Adventures of
Teenage Sc ientists.'
IIIII MOVIE : "Ryen 'a Dough·
tO( Pert 2
8 :30 Cll Cil iiJI Levorno a Shlrloy
Laverne tries to rescue
Squiggy from kidnappers .
(R) [Closed Capt ioned)
8:00 G (I)CIJ Remington Stoolo
A man who claims to be a
CIA agent seekl Reming ton and Laura's help in order to stay alive . IRI (60
min .)
(I) MOVIE : 'The Four
Sellon•'
Cil 700 Club
(I) ClliiJI Throo"o Company
Janet end Mr. Furlay be·
liewe Terri's date !a a mur·
darer. (AI [Closed Cep·
tioned]
C1 (I) (JD MOVIE: 'KIIIIoy·
Cll Amorloon Playhouee
'W inga .' Tonight's program
is an adaptation of Arthur
Kopit's play about an aging
avietrlx. (90 min .) [Clo sed
Captioned]
(J!J Gmt Railway Journoya
8 :30 (I) ClliiJI 8 to a Ooroloo 's
boyfriend arrivet to take
her back to Tennellae. (R)
10:00 8 Cil Cll NBC Whlto
Peper: Crime end lneenlty
Edwin Newman reports on
the role of ps yc hiatric telti·
mony end the walidlty of
the Insanity defenae . (80
min.)

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DEAL.

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Yesterday·,

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Jumblea: EXERT CASTE DEPUTY BOBBIN
Answer : When It Comes to \lacatlo ns, a girl can go to
the mo un tains and see the ste(lery, or go to
lho beac h a nd do lh ls- ~ THE SCENERY

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Unlucky expert

iiJI

(I) MOVIE : ' Doctor at S.e'
(II 1 883 NFL Oroft Rovlow
(I) Clltl21 Hart to Hart Jon·
nller dlacovors oh e has a
bag that hold s e fonune .
IRI (80 m in.}ICioood Captioned]
(J]J Nowawetoh
SINN Newo
10:30 (I) Stor Tlmo
(I) TBS Evening Nowa
Cll Firing Ltno
(J]J lnolde Waohlngton
Mark Shieldo hoots t his
look et behind the scenea
In the nation 's capital.
Ill in S.oroh of....
1 1:00 • Ill (I) . . (I) liD • II2I
Nowo
(I) Going For l.aughl Co·
medienl Paul Relaer, Arotnlo Holt end Borry Sobel
perform .
(II ESPN 8)KirteCentor
CIJ Nowo/8P.Orte1Weethor
(J]J Forum
Benn~ Hill Show
1 1:30
Cil CIJ Tonight Show
Johnny' s
gueltl
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Semmv Oivla ., Jr. and
Chorlel Nelaon Reilly . (60

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A MAN WHO HAS A
IN A !51 6

Blackwood to locate all the
aces and kin gs. but he rea ll y
needed to lind out about the
queen of spades.

ToniQ!lt

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WO VLI7 YOU EXPEC.T

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CIJ 3-2· 1, Contact

PAINnNO • fntorlet Otld
.oaMriOr, .,-bing, rOoilltlg,
· r.-Hno. 20 yn.
ext~. ~all 114· 381-HI2 .
M-um 11-g

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(I) MOVIE: The Twelve
Chelro'
()) Tic Too Dough
(II ESPN't Sporutol'llm
CIJ Andy Griffith
Cll Nowa/Sporta/Weethor

STUCCO . PI.ASTIItiNQ ,

1 :00-7:30
p.m. 304-676·
1717.
Friday,
Saturday.
Sundey.l1·
ca•
448-:4313 or
3334.
-;:;:;;;:-;;;;::;;:;;;.--::;:;;;
some furniture, price
. i-. Rent
·
Farm Equipment 71
Autoa for Sale
Pojllllllti intirlor a .,.lOll lor.
t12 ,600 . 0r4fot 1 &amp;.mobile
•v•
homeueedjusttyeerceme WEDDING gown &amp; veil. of 61
1---w
e . _ ~llllglng. l-.
$14 .800 . Coll446 -1240.
off 1 14x70 mobile home. chantilly lace, never worn .
Free Htl-1. 614•141·
TWO bedroom house, 2nd 1 bed room Apt. '196. mo. long piece• me..ure 32",
tiza 8 . Gave *360 ., wiU Mil Bush hog in good shape
•
$326 &amp; older modal Interne- 1976 Buick Century. V-u , 21H.
12x60 in good shape, make St. , New Haven, 304 -882 - including utilities. Equal short pieces 21" and 10 tor 1260. 304-876-3828 .
2606
.
.r
housing
opportunity.
Con·
inchll
aero
...
antertock
in
a
tional tractor (needa work) run1 good. body rough . 23
offer. Call 446-0978 .
tact Village Menor Apta. metal frame, wood grain 3 kitchen bor otoolo, ••col· 11 .200 . Call 446 -0866 m.p .g . Alklng •800 . 814 · R...tlng. llolngloo:. .J II lior111
end olumiMim oldl2.::"·
finloh . Colt otter 6PM. 446- .lont condition, •so, 304· days a. 448 -4267 even.•
12 ~e60 mobile home, 2 bdr . Unfurnished 3 bedr.oom.cen- 614-992 -7787.
742-2187.
tral air. water paid . *260 . 1- - -- - - - - -tn ..•red, ' ' " Est
I.
306.6 .
875-6174.
Cell 814-246-6830.
month. 304-676 -6294.
;
6 • toom upltr.inil un fl•:n i1hftd
- - -- - - - - - - I r:nr ule new &amp; rebuilt farm 72 MONTE Carlo. 310 81 4 -149-2HI. •
Firewood split • cut to Phllco22" console color TV. 1· --'m"'~chlnery . John Deere automatic, power ltHrine,
1982 Govern or 14x70, alid - 1-H-o-u o_o_i_n_G
_a_l_lip_o_li_s_F_o_rr_y_. n- o Apt. in Middlt;Jor e1 ~U .
mor.th . 814-992 -G 92 .
lenght.
Pick or delivered. We 304-676-2816.
baler with motor, a row tilt wheel. CNill coMrel, HI PruouN Cleenina. Ahn·
ing glut doora from porch, pets. deposit rsquired. 304Vouchera.
Call
honor
HEAP
boom
a prayer on trailer. Cub vinyl top. new paint. e1100. i.... aNiint, MObi..........
top quality underpinning . 675 -6443 or 304 -876w.... . ltrlclr., sanl!lataRe
814·268-8245 .
$15,000 . Call 614,·367- 1316 .
Stove and refrigerator 'Cadet tractor. mower-deck. 304-676-41111 .
lluilillrlg
""" homoo. . Alee
45 Furnished Rooms 6 prom drestes aiJ:es 7 · 13, 1360.' both, SonY stereo disc, plow &amp; cultiavtora. AC
fuly In·
1126
..
Solobed
150
..
fi..,.
WD
'45
tractor
&amp;
plows,
74
PLYMOUTH
,
8200.
304·
7644 .
......... F- ntlmot. .. 114·
like
neW.
Worn
only
once
.
piece
inaert
e300
.
All
in
Woods
corn
picker,
gravity
676-2766
.
Trailer &amp; lot on ' Ra ccoon 42 Mobile Homes
For rent Sleeping Roome Colt 446-9769 or 448948· 2Ma.
· Creek . Small down payfeir ·good cond . 304-676- wilgons, used PU &amp;. pull
and light houH kHping 3694.
for Rent
ment. auumebe loan . 8182
7789
before
2
p
.m
.
or
aiter
rot•rv
mowen.
Myera
cut
76
GRAND
Prb:;,
e2100
.
rooma. Park Central Hotel.
RON ' S Tolovtalon SirM ...
per. mo . Cell 614·266 ·
10 p.m.
conditioner, manurespreed·l -'i_rm_,_3 _0 _4 _-6_7_a_·_3_8_2_8_.- Call 448-0766 .
nle
metal
culvert
8
inch
For
Spoclllaina
In Zenltto """
1446 eve 's.
ers &amp;. fertilizer spr•llden.
Howe's Form Machinery, 80 CAMARO, ~IR. AM -FM Moterola . Quuar. anti
1 bdr. furn . apt ., 6 mo . leau Sleeping room $126 , util - thru 60 inch In stock . State
1972 14x66 mobile home . required plua t&amp;O dep ., ties paid. single mala . Shan' epproved 16 gauge 12 inch 55 Building Supplies
Rt. 124 &amp; Mayhew Rd. radio tape, new tires. exc~ ­ h - cells. Call 678 -:1191
3 bedrooms, gu heat, very • 176 per mo., no children, beth. 919 Second Ave . •&amp; .35 per lt.. 24 inch
Jackson. Oh . Call614-286 - lent conditiO", 304-176- 0&lt; 448·2414 .
t10.10 per ft . 36 inch
clean .· 614·992·2166 fro m no pecs. Call446-3687 efter Clolllpollo. Cell 446 -4416
6944 .
4198
F &amp; K TrM Trimming, - p
e1 6.50 per lt . Aloo pleotic
8 a .m. to 6 p.m . and ask for 5.
Build ing material•
after 7PM .
culvert In stoCk. 6 Inch thru block, brick, nwer pipes . 1979 20-c M111ey Fergu· 1980 Ford F'-oto. 2_7 .000 r.._.... Cotii76·1A1.
Tim. After 6 p.m call 882 3692 .
3 bedroom modular located Furnished apt. a~ultl. No 1 B inch , 8 inch 11 .80 perf1 ., windows . linteh . etc . tori end loader, ploW•. disc, miles, still under w1nenty.
RINGI.E"I SII'IVICI ......
12 Inch 83.80 per ft . Ron Claude Winters, Rio Grenda ; cultivator, tines, buah hog, $3700. 304-875 -3634.
on River lot In Cheshire. Peto. 304-676-1453.
roetlfag. · in...,lllno
Ewans Enterprises, 4 mi . 0 . Cell 614-246-6121 .
\)SED MOBILE HOME . C· A. diahwesh&amp;r, 2 betha.
gordon blade, $10,600. Cell
South of JJackaon on ST .
1979
Oldo
Cutlon,
V·
l
676-2711 '
Cell 614-367·0690 .
IMot
.
.
epplloation.
·
446-2971 '
Furniahed apt. adults. No
RT. 93 . 614·286-6930 :
auto . air. am-fm c·a uettl. 4
Pets. 304-675-1453.
MOBILE home . with 24.11.12 Camper Trailer Iota for
56 Pets for Sale
601 Ford mowing machine. new radials e8400 . · • •·
411H.
Cedar wardrobe. antique
additton , well . V, acre on summer. secluded wooded
diac . 16x8 utility trailer. 8 1387.
'
trunk,
3
tier
glen
table
&amp;
Crab Crook Road. 16 .800 . •••• · Overlooking Ohio 46 Space fo~ Rent
HP Massey Ferguson riding
concrete picnic table "'!i!h
304-676-1323. 304-676 - river. Vic Brown, Mlnera- l - - - - - - -- - lawn mower !needs work). 19.77 Ford Thunderbird aH W - Wollo. Com-rc'-1
HILLCRES.T
IIENNEL
·
b.o ncheo . . Call 614 · 2~u.•,
m _i.
. ·
· · 1.;i~i Oh . Call 614-9U,
and
Toot
- ··.. ·
Boarding ell broods.· AKC ;979 ,· Duster and 1966 poyvor 13.000. · 304-171.· .PUflljN
. 8otoo and
.servtco
1768.
·.·
.. ' . .-.
·
Reg: OObe; inena pups afd Chevy_.·: fn,edt . ~O rk) .'· Ca.ll 3470 onytlin•- · ·. •
COUNTRY
·
MO:BILE
Home·
304-lti
'
HC!2:
.:
.":
.'
79 Mobile home. 2 bed 446.-7504 .
New &amp; Used Troy Built Doberman· Stud Service.
1979
H·
a
ndo
CaX,
real
nloe
room, unfumished , V2 acre 2 bedrooms in Racine. e'i4- Port., Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call Tillers . Swishen lmple'· Call 448 · 7796 .
with chainllnk fence , county 3.67 -0288 .
82.000. Good tires. new Gat your carpet in tlhlp
992-7479 .
shape. Water removal, fREE
water, located in Ohio. I-:_________
ment, s •. Rt. 7 , NOrth of
battery
. 304 -675-1500 .
DRAGONWYND CATTERV
ESTIMATES. FUR.NITURE
Gollipolia. Coli 448 -0475 .
f16 .600 . Cell after 6 p.m . 2 bedroom furnished mobile
63
Livestock
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pupCLEANING . C,APTAIN
304 -676 -2792 .
home. Adults only . Paid OFFICE space available . Will
pies, CFA Himalayan , PerSTEAMER 114-448-I,D?.
Trucks for Sale
ut ilities, deposit and referen - remodel tor right tennant . Weter well drilling rig. Call sien end Siamese kittens.
72
Saddlebrook
Inn,
Pt
.
Plea·
614·388-B643 .
1976 ELCONA house ces required. No pets. 814·
Call 448 -3844 eher 4PM .
11th Annual Bentley Pig
unt. 304-676-8278 .
E a R Tree Sorvk:a, fully
trailer. 14x66. good condi - 992-3647 .
Sele, April 27th . 7 :30 PM . 1978 Ford 160. 4-WD, with Insured. free eulntatea .
New 1983 White Mwing
lion . 304 -676 -6870 .
Fayett
Co.
Feirgrounds.
Wa
Ford
camper
top.
e3,100.
machine free arm model 1 yr. old melt Seal Point shington C . H., Ohio . Selling Call 614-3B8pl611 after 4 . " " - 814-H7·0131. loll
SMALL 2 bedroom tur·
·Ofteti.
with built-in stretch stich. Himal8yan tovea children.
niohed troiler. Burdetteeddl· 1 ____ a_n_t_e_t_o_ e_n_ t__
1ig zag patterns, makes makes nice house cat. Call 160 head of Durocs &amp;
33 Farms for Sale
tion, $ 126.00 Per • month 1·
Hamp-Durocs cross breeds 1972 Ford PU good cond ,
button holes. monograms, 446·9416 .
plus utilrtles, depoait ra·
T- Wort: l.otNII·
and Registered Duroc guilts. no rust, new p1int• . new
I I WQfil, .....
quired, call Roulie at 304- Wa!1ted to runt 2 rc.o.&gt;m apt . much more. We are over- HORSES &amp; ponys. 304 · Roger Bentley. 3112 Reeds tires. new battery. 302 V-1 cal 1M "f. be
••. . - w1t11 mowing. Go
91 ACRE farm. 2 trac11, 40 676 · 4800, 9 a.m. to 4 p .m .. unfurniahed or trcailar in stocked with this model, we 876 -6110 .
Rd .. Sabino. Oh46619 . Con _e_ng:.i_n_•_
· _c _a t_l_4_4_6_·1_6_2_2_. _ anywhere. 304-678-2010.
Middleport. Will pay resona- must decrease our inven acres plus 61 · acres. will sell Monday through Friday.
1
613-684-2398 .
Factory
20
yr.
guaran
tory.
rent
.
1
lady
only
.
614·
ble
separate or together. All
1979 Chevrolet PU truck,
tee. Reg. price over eJOO, AKC registered Poodle puputilitiea avaHible. 304-876 - :TWO bedroom moblla 742 -2363 .
8JCC. cond ., V-8 , auto ., PS , Painting interior Qr ••terior,
phone
614-882
-3447
.
sale
Young
pure
bred
plea,
For
free Htlmoteo. Coil 875 ·
your COlt only e80. Call
home, 304-878-4046 .
1- - - - -- - - - 2288 after 6 p .m .
Charloias bull . Cell 814 - 42 ,000 actual miles . 6344 or 448-8325 .
614 -386 -8918 out ot town
$4,300. Colt 446-4063 .
Parrot,
cages.
18ed
&amp; supp· 266 -6665 after 6 o'clock .
call collect . Free delivery to
alwrphaaijlww
76 Acres, barn &amp; out build ·
lies. Wholetale prices . Clll
your home .
ROOFING, oilllng, ~g.
i'nga, all mineral rights, to ·
876-6696 .
7 yr. old gray Reg . Quarter 73 Chevy hoH ton 66,000 renwdellng, lnsuretl. C•ll
bacco base, remodeled farm 44
miles, 307 3 opeed. $1 ,400 .
Apartment
51 Household Goods
304· 176·&amp;115. '
Metal building . Call 446- -;;:=:::;;::=~=== horse ttallion . Alao 2 Y'. old Ca11 f 46 -3612.
house , located Crab Creek
-:
' gelding aired by Super Chix.
for Rant
328t '
er01 , 304 -676-3030 at
57
Musical
Cell 446-3413 .
676 -3431 '
77 . /CHEVY . ton pickup. Poiotlng. lmorior &amp; • . . - .
Instruments
SWAIN
bruwh or aprey, corrimeNial,
9 ln . model A South Bend
For Sale Reg. Polled Shor- 128'00. firm . 304 -876 - reaklential, mobile hMtea,
·2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart" AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE bench lathe. 116 volt or 3
thorn Bull . Phone 446 - 3628.
menta $200 par mo. or if 82 Olive St .. Gallipolis. 6 phe10 motor 11 ,600. Call
aftor 5, 304 ·87.5 -1 128 ,
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
0658
.
income is *1 0.000 or 1111 Piece wood living room suite 614 ·246 -5671 '
L.M. Johnton.
Fender F-66 12-string gui1978
Chevrolet
C10
HU D available. A-One Real with e inch fllllrms t399,
tar. 304-675-4077 .
Registered Appaloo .. Geld · pickup, 8 foot bed. big 10 a
Estates. Carol Yeager, Reel- bunk btda complete with Spring Special Lawn Mowing. coming 3 year old. ideal Scottedele package, 360 4 82
6 -20 Acret woods. over- tor. Call 304·876· 6104 or bunkiea t199, 2 piece en- ers &amp; Rototlller tune up, oil
Plumbing
horae for 4 · Her. Call after 6, berrol. PS, AoTT:, .. ·''~~~".~·
looking Ohio River. city 676 -77B8 .
tron livingroom tultel e199. change. new spark plug,
.&amp;
59 For Sale or Trade 304-876 -1038.
41.600
milea,
_!lOad."~~
: , [ - .;___ _ Haating
achools. 448 -3664 or 1 antron rec:; liners *99, other adjust or replace breaker
tion. 13696
. Pnono
30.4,/
__ _ _ __
6 1 3 . 4 2 3 . 8 9 "2 8
Firlt floOr furinahed apt, recliners •eo. maple dinette points. •rvlce air cieaner.
676·3624
.
.
Owner/ Agent .
utilities paid, deposit S. Ieese .eta e179, 1ove nets e7o, · shlrpen mower blade, saf 65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
CARTER' S PLUMBIIIIO
required . Adultt, no pets . ~ ldo - o · bed ' U&amp;O, box tey check, •13 .96 plus tax. Reg . P.R. Plott 11 mos. old
AND HEATING
male
aire
.
Nite
Ch
.
Walkers
1 acre lot 6 mi . from Holzer Call -.t 631 Founh Ave .. springe &amp; milrtNII twin or Free pickup snd deliver in
73
Vans
&amp;
4
W.O
.
Cor
. Fourth end Piftl8
Charlie
Brown
Dam
.
hosPital. Just off Rt. 1 60 Golllpolio.
full e1 00 .I tt regular-firm Oalllpolia-Euraka area . Nel·
Phone
446-3188 or 848·
Welkers
Gypay
Proven
FARM
ADVISORY
SERVI
·
out Floyd -Clark Rd . 700 lt.
e120. maple dinette chalra son &amp; Son• Service Center.
. Coli 446-0390 .
1 bedroom apanment for e36 . Wllh stands 134, Euroko. Oh 614 -268 -1643 . Crou $200 . 304 -076 - CES Grain &amp; livestock mar- 1974 Dodge Ram Charger 4477
1070.
keting, soil testing, crop 2-18 engine. 59.000 mi .. ·
rent . CaM 448 -0390 .
maple rockera 1159, 7 piece
planning. bookaeping , fi - rusty body, •1 ,400 or best JIM'S PLUMBING a HIAT ·
2 to 6 acres, flat, $2,760 per
chrome dinette •t e149, S 4 -16x36 Gumbo mudders &amp;
~
lNG . fomerty Dowltt"o
nenceil planning. T.M. Ari · offer. Call 614-246-6892.
a c re. eJC . neighborhood. Small furnithed house in piece dinette set *89. used
. Coli 814 - 388 · ~~
·===== Services, Inc. Call614 -•46 Plumbing. Col 614-317. Green Elementary, midway city, adults only. Call 446- bedroom suit11. reflrgel'll - wheels
8159 .
01171.
0898
or
304
876
81~0
.
1978
CJ-7
Joo,.
V-8,
auto
..
:- between Spring Valley Plan 0338 .
tort. ranges, chest ,
quadratrac. hard top. com .
6 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park . No
dreasera. wringer washers, Amana 28 ' cu.h . freezer
trailers , will consider tlnanc - Furnished 3 rm. apertment TV's, dryeres, &amp; shoes . Call e200. 5 horae power riding 61 Farm Equipment WANT t o lea• tobacco plately camaflaged . will•cExca1111ting
quote. Maaon, Putnam. Ca - rifice . 12.700. 304 -773 · 83
: ing . Also beautiful 6 acre with priwate bath at 846 446 -;)169 .
l1wn mower e150 .. good
bell . Call Morgan Woodlawn 9111 '
· hilhop building aite not Second Awe ., Gallipolis.
cond . Call 448 -8608 .
Ferm . Pliny. 304 · 676 ·
·. restricted, e12 .000 or ~at Ref. prelorod . Call 446- GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Mechanical tobacco trans·
DOZEtl WOitK By Tod
offer. Call614-379 -2198 .
2216 .
- Wllhara. dryers, refrigere - latarus 17 cu .ft . frost free plantsr. Planted Y, .ac·r e gave 2276. 304 -623·6843.
74 Motorcycles
Han"• · po~tda , dltattea ,
tora. ranges. Skagg1 Ap- refrlg ., almond color. used 8 8600 will sell for $600.
beo. .ento, Ole. Cell 448·
One lot 40•130. Call 675 - Garage apt. furnished , 1 pliancet, Upper· River Rd ., months . with new ice
Aloo. Beloaw planer 12" I =
~
4391 or 448 ·4038 .
4907 . Cener &amp; hono
bdr ., S 226. utilities paid, beside Stone Crest Motel. makar, $450. Call 446 · brand new still in canon. I === Ttllll~
Tr.naportatioft.
29'h Neil Ave .. Gallipollt . 446 -7398 .
7497 .
1980 Yomoh1 YZ-80 dirt
Tung-groove anachments.
1 .4 a cre lot In Bradbury . Call 446-4418 eltor 7PM .
excl.
con4.,
t426
.
CaU
bike.
eno. Firm on all. See a1 71
Autos for Sale ·
Good locatkm, trailer hook ·
Ld nftie Bog• Excwell g.
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
2 tickets to the Journey
614-246 -6892 .
Dor-er, b•okhoe, .....,_
up. All utUities, septic tank . Two bedroom apartment Rt . Sofa, chair, rocker. otto· concert . Charleston Civic uwmill north of Racine.
4759mill
nort8
Carmel
Rd
..
Coli 614-992 -2602 .
218 at Mercervlle. Quiet men, 3 tables, leNtra heavy Canter, May 1 . Call 446 - Rt. 1, Rac ine, Oh .
For Sale or Trade: 1979 1971 Vamohl 1&amp;0 twill 4 trudl. Wort ~ hour at jeb. ,
Camero, 81 ,000 mi . New atrOke. fair cond .. e110. CoH 448 · 710i.
area, nice lawn. *2215 per by Frontier), f885 . Solo. 8252 .
tlreo. 305 engine. auto . Call Colt 614-245·1882.
171 ' x80 ' x152' x82 ' lot . mo . ~u~n~f~urn.iahed . Call446· chair and IOYIIUI, e276.
AC
no
till
corn
plenter,
4
City water &amp; well water. 2 1167
814 -367 -7218 Sofe1 and ch1lrs priced from M1ttre11 a box spring new,
379-2726 .
row . Air· platele11, monitor
outbuildings. fenced in back l..aft8~
Electrical
t2B5. to 1895 . Toblu, e45 12x12 rug. Call448-0518 . Insecticide, big discs. excel·
1981 Suzuki 850 GL. 84
Y.a rd. septic tank. in Gallipo- 1.,.__ _ _:!.__ _ _ __
For Sale or Ttade : 1979 $2,99&amp;, full dron. lhoh
and up to t1215 . Hide·• ·
• Refrigeration
condition
.
61
4
·985
·
lent
·~
lis Ferry. Near school , Furnlthed Apt ., 3 rooms . beda . e440 . and · up to a HP Soaro Craftoman riding 3831 .
Camero. 61 ,000 mi. New drive, very low mileage. Cell
~..
!12 , 600 .00 304 · 675 · $176 . utllltin pd. Adulto. U25 .. Rocllnoro, •17a . to mower. In excellent condltires, 306 engine, auto . Call alter 5, 814· 251 · 1141 .
o366 .
701 4th Avo., Golllpollo , U50., Lampo from 128. to llon. 1260. Coli 814 -388· N.H. 846 Round baler. 860 379-2726 .
DEHNDAILE WAIHEI'I ·
:. -;::;::::::::;;::::::;::::;::::==== hhoro beth. 448 -4416 oltor e7&amp;. 5 pc . dlnattll from 9809 ahor 9:30 PM .
DltY'I'I REI'AIR. G.,.-..,.
lbs.
bale•
.
Limited
use
.
1977
Hortey
DaYidoon
7 p.m .
.• -:
'79 Chevy Suburban, axe .
•99 ., to U35 . 7 pc .. t1 B9.
Baled approx . 400 be let. cond
rider. Call 4d-701&amp; - t-..:-rtc. Cell • ...,.._
36
Real Estate
., V- 8 ~ 'auto. tr1na .. air dayt
and up. Wood table with alx . Antique Ol!k Repro4 uction •e .ooo . 614-949-2631 .
1fter 15PM.
814'115 · 5120 or 814·
cond . 446 -3837 alter &amp;
Furnished apt. • i'OO. utili - cholro 1425 . to 174&amp; . Dook furniture, full line In ttock,
""
Wanted
2at-1207 .
p.m.
tiel pd .. odultl, 8C:'7 2nd . t1 1 0 up to t22il . Hutohea, alto Antiques. P1ul ContJ,ela
176 Kawaaakl etrut or dirt
NEW &amp; Used H•rvestore
Ave .. Gallpolio. Colli 448 - e650. end up, maple or pine Antiques, Tuppers Plains .
Structures. Automated li· 1976 Chevy Impale exc. blko. $300 . CoH 44a-4123 . SEW1fll0 Machine r...-.,
flnith . Bunk bed complete
-.
Buying houses and apart- 44H!i after 7PM .
veatock feeding -computer cond
. will consider trade ln . 1982 Hondo 410' cuatom, MrvitoO . Au-IOd ...... r
with mattr111e1. e2&amp;0. •nd Fiah Hook like Now Open feedero. Call collect 614·
ments. Nftd prop.nies with
sotoo as-· a....,.n
Furnished
efflet'cy
lpt.
,
In
614-388-8797.
Call
up
to
U95
.
Baby
bedo,
Dolly
8
a
.m.
to
9
p
.m
.
:;
favOrable price and terms .
585 -2260 . John L. Botto.
Sciuen . Pe-.ric IHf .
2.000
m
i..
•••·
coM
..
Rio
GrAnd•.
utlll\le1
paid.
e110 . Mettre1111 or box Fishing .. camping, arcade
:• Box .. 1109 Galllpoito. Oh .
•1.2&amp;0
.
Call
441·2350.
P - y. llla-2284 .
,
Colt 446-01·n .
sprlnga, full or twin, eea.. room, snacks. Under new 4ft. dreg pipe bush hog. exc . 1976 Fiet X-19, excellont
·:- 46631 '
condition
.
Cell
448-5185
.
firm, •ea. and t78 . Quaen management. 12 milea from condition . 304 -876 ·6930
0
.
1981 YAMAHA 110 ED'I AI'PLIANCE IIIP,Iot)l
Apt . ku ront. Half double-2 1011, 1185. 4 dr. choota. Pt. P'-ount on Rt. 87 .
or 304-676-3348.
Maaim •.s ...aft ...... new tire, 8EitVICE c .. City F u - o
1
bd.room Apt . ,\dults pre2 helmetl, • - t - .
•42 . 5 dr.
chooto, e21
•u.., led
1876.. •eso.
Ford ·auto
Torino
ferred . No pe ·~ r . 6 • 4 -AY:t- fram••·
~-'
e20.end
1 o ~==========J.:::::::::::::::::::~ cond
.• PS.good
Call tion , •1100 . 304·182 · 304· 116 · 2501 or 44~ ­
a.:JI .
'
(0\ ,
2749 .
gun . Clun cablnata. U60..
446 -1522.
3331 .
dlnetto chalro UO. and Ua. OUR BOARDING HOUSE .
with Malor Hoople - -- -- - -- :;. 41
Houses for Reri't
Gao or ot•ctric rongeo, 1321 l"f&gt;~•
MD ••• "~[Jk~Jlf
For Solo or Trade : 1877
81
~partmentt . 304 · 875 ·
General Haull"'
'·'•
up . to 1375. S.by mo· , 1;;.~.':."1'~' .o.·~ ::vr::".""
~"-'- •.~...' "~ .
L"'-O~i: -:-~· Camero. 305 onglno, auto., 75
Boata and
3648 .
1
&lt; - :i bdr. houoe In city , full
troa~e , u.a &amp; . 13a, bed v .~.;; ;;·.~~,(1.; u_~t \ ,,. .....
; ~!~ ~~" a .c .. now tl""· 34,000 mt .
Motora for Sale
i;;
Call 279-2728.
!: basement. c.~rpeted . fur· APARTMENTS , mobllo lromoo UO, U5, &amp; UO. ~.;;;;~:;.~v~1 ; : ~ &lt;,&gt; ~··,: ..
JONEI 10'1'1 WATIOR 114 ·
• _ riance. adultl. no pett. Call homes. hou1e1. Pt. Plea11nt king fromo t50. Good......
~".~.. !!~~"'"';.:~~[/!E}
.~f;.,V:ri.!l:,
'1978 black Manto Corio one
" '"'- I!
VICE. Coil 114-387-74711
tlon
.
of
bedroom
ouHoo,
Arrlliz
.r
..
v~-NI
II(
I
•
u.
~ 446 ·0968 .•
and Gallpollo: 814-448·
0&lt; 114-387 ·0181 .
:
175
HP
Mercury
outboard
coder ch•ot•. rockcira, m•tol
LEI
. "i~ (,Up:~·1,;'~~,
~ ~.R ow~er. · V -B 350 engine.
&lt;.
8221 .
motor.
with
·
tow
hours.
c1c
P.l
1
:1
II'
bucketouto.
t
1,
700
or
boot
bl
1
1
PModern 3 bdr. ranch, gar·
co noto. ow vo ro oro.
.;:-.,;;;
;~
. ; ~. .
~~~
offer. Coil 814-388-9370.
1t1inteu atMI prop. all M:· N - oornothlng ~ ......
, .,~~~~(}0/11
~~
.., ~
ege. carpet, -Rodney area. UNFURNISHED aportm~nt UHd Fumlturo .. bookceee,
caatoriea. 12,100 firm . Call ., aoM«&lt;jlng ._..,j7
"''
y;..
-~V'
.J 91 ~ . .;,;,.:
.Deposit &amp; references rt · for rent . 2 bedroom, ranges, chalro, ond tableo,
Wo'M c1o tt. c.n 44.. 11 It
h
d
lr'·
Mill
"'
I
~
·
;f.
l(.
,.,._
:,..,.1978
c
......
tto
dart.
brown,
8
.
1
4-388
-9931.
· qulred . U85 per mo . Bleck· e210 .00 Call Automotive woo era. rvoro, .. ,.ore·
-··
./..
T· top. foctory alum . wheelo,
_batssun 8 IfNI 1 .
~ f...
· '"""
v .::. ~~~
burn Realty. Coii448 -0oo8 . Supply, 8 -a . 304 -878· tore ond TV'o. 3 mliH out
Bulovlllo Rd. Open Sam to
11 / / 1 ~~ I ,;:;;;
,;__
. oxc. cond.. 1- mlleego ,
2218 , 878-87&amp;3 .
JIMI WATIII SEIIY!CE .
,..rtt
2 bedroom hou• . Large
::~: ~:,~· thl'll Fri .• Sam to ~~ ~: ~
~~
o4e~. extras. Colt 448- 76 &amp; Auto
ca• Jim l - r. 304 ..711 ·
ACC8150riea
llvJng room. kitchen &amp; bath. ONE bedroom ep.nmenta
'
•
. 7317.
Furnlahed . Overlooking lor tho elderly. AI utllltloo
-Ohio River. Adult• only. . pold. Tanonto pay '30 perI - 42,000
11177 Uncoln
.~.
mlloa.
FORD ' truclc-. 1200. 1111 17
· Brown'• Troller Pert. . 814- cant of tholr edjuoted In- CO.UNTY APPLIANCES,
U,._..tery
INC
.
Good
ulled
appllancea,
condition.
·
te,
700.
John
11172
and bocll, - d . - ,
882-3324 .
como In thla HUD ouboldlled
1
~~ 1
Lyono . a14·892-3483.
don . Stop ltumper. t50.
op.ortmont building." Twin wuher, dry9ro, rolrlg., TV ~IA" , ,~~2 bodroo'rn, oil new point . Riven To-r, phono 304- eeto. 827~ 3rd'. Ave.. GotH;
•
~
·
,
,,
,..
~~~t~~!;•ISt'
attonw-on:i".
_304_·_1_75_·
_2_1_11_1 .,
. ..._.,..._
.
TtiiiTATE
•
1
;.::..
· ·~
'fl • .,
r.
1 . ~. some carpeting ~ Deposit re- 8'7&amp;-a879. Equal opportun · polio . Call'448•1 888.
UI'HOliTIIIY SHOI' '
...._
'l.._
~·'(:
..JI'good . Dopot
•
. qulred . 814·9112· 3090.
lty houalng.
•
n.
lvo Crorneeno . lold
carburetor
ondFord
lntelco311M
-nl·. 1113 loc. Avo., Oolli!IOIIo.
'GE horYOet gold 12
cu.' ft. I :::o~-"-t' ' , ,~
_
'-.·! ~ '
llr\
••·•
lor ' 79
441-71133 or 441-183:11.· •
7 room cOuntry home, gar· FURNISHED one bedroom rolrlgorotor, . oloo uoed ~~ ~
I
"
~
~~~
.
1879 Gronodo 302 V-1, 4 304·87~·4071.
ego ond.gorden opeoo, ldoal apartment In Pt. Pl•aaant. woohe;o a dryorf, 1H
"";&gt;,_
C
door.
p
.o
..
p.b
..
a.c
..
.
.,..fm
MOWIIIYS
u.llafotary
lit.
0
~Or mlddiO·eged fiOUpie. Cell
Extra nice, eduha only, no rentHd "30 daya . .Coli 14· · '
~i~
\nll ~ORT"'
- e o·, oxcllint' conditiOn. 310 Turbo Trenomluiolt . 1 . . . 124. . .. " ••• ~.
_114 ·848·2a74.
petl, phono 304· 875· 1 38a. 258•1207,
;: M;;~ · ~;;.; .
.
'f•llo
13,800. 814•882•aoas.
304·871, 8441.
304·1711-4 114. .
'
41

Television
Viewing

:I HAVEN' T FOUND A NY

-~.II In ooetl-·

-·

•ea.

:~~~r;~sp~:;:~~:::~:.j;:;,~

14•70 Bayview total elect·
ric , 3 bdr:. f7 .400. 12x60
Cell 446-017S .

A,ril _26,1983.

Ohio

''

e ())

11:48

IC1J

YA K 6
t 72

Puer10Rioo
Cli Nlgh1ilne

(JD MOVIE: ' 81tdman of

Alootru'
tD 1Aot Wonl

·

. Mary Hertmon, Mery

Hertmen

As a.oy one can see, with

spades

+K 8 4 3
• Q lit
"1 0 8 2
tJI09 6 4
+ Q 10 6

yg 7, 3

• Q 8.
+J 9 5 2

SOUTH

+ A9i&gt;l
Y Q J4
t AK 3
+ A7

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wes t

North

Eiis l

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pu.,

P .lS..'i

Opening lead· +J

for any dec larer. Now see if
you ca n· figure out how the
unlucky expert managed to
go down
His down fa ll started when
Wes t made. (he ra ther silly
openin g. of tlie jac k of
trumps.• Not. that West had
any good opening. but most
pl ayers would have decided
that the jack of trumps
should not be wasted on the
openin g lea d.
The U.K studied that lead
lor some lime. Could it ~ a
. singleton"&gt; He decided th at it
wasn'l. Could it ~ a fan cy
lead from Q· J doubl eton'
Possible, but not probable.
Finally , he played low from
dummy. Easl promptly put
hi s queen on his partner's

jack.
South won and led a small
tru mp. No w West produced

By O.wald Jacob y
and Jame1 Jacob)'
Her e we see the unlucky

expert at what may well
have been hi s unluc kiest.

He sat South and pushed
to a rather unsound g r a nd

slam after

brea kin g . evenly

there were an easy 13 tr icks

. EAST

WES"J;

+J2

North's jump

raise. Of course, he did use

the deuce. Some flv ~ min-

utes later the U.E. decided
that West"s ori ginal trump
holding'had ~en J · I0-2. He
finessed a nd lost to East's
10.
(NEWSI'AP Eit ENTE RPR ISE ASSN.)

~~"""'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Corday's

7 Floor
covering
8 J apanese

victim

6 Trojan king
II Tolerate
12 Outlandish
13 Irritate
15 Isle (Fr.}
II Speck
17 Produce
%%Ready
for battle
25 Fulminated
21 Pour '
27·Topof
the head
28 Map within
a map

statesman

9 Maca w
tO Shea athlete
14 E ndless time
t7 French
playwright
18 Double-&lt;juick
19 Culture
mtodium
20 French head
Zl Hea venly
Barbara
22 Seed coating
23 Indian lady
24 Va por

Yesterday's Answer
Fa mous
36 Not up
physicist 37 Base fellow
30 Became 3S L.a ughing
a wa re of
sound
3Z Deer
39 Circle
34 Piquant
seg ment
35 Parisian
40 Rive r (Sp.)
gi rlfri end 41 Meadow

~

30 Lorelei
31 Scattered
carelessly
l3 Man's

nickname
34 Chinese
pagoda
37 Elia
tZ Eagle's home
USpooky
t4 Slage
scenery
45 Old hat
DOWN
I Creche
figures
2 Man's name
3 Ceremony
4 Stir

5 Looked after
I Placard

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work · It :
II

Hon~oonere

MOYIE: 'Conleeolono
from Holldoy Cemp'
12:00 (I) MOVIE: 'A-noo of
Molloe'
()) Burna a Allen
(II U8FL Footboll: New
JlrtMIY 11 Chlollgo
C1J Portrait of Amorioe:

I

NORTH

+K 8 6 3

AXVDLIIAAXR
LONGPJ!. LLOW

~

letter aimply atandJ for another. In this 11m pie A· io
for the three L'l, X for the two O'a, el&lt; . Sinal• lottoro,
apootrophu, the tenath and fonnatlon of the words are all
hlnto: Eo&lt;h day the eode letten ore differen t.

u...t

CRVPTOQllOTES

VEH
BJ

ELPFHJV

JXWHVEBYO

VEB YO

.
VELV

vx
BJ

E B F' H
YXV

VEHPH .
HPBT .
EXAAHP
y eateniay'a Cl'ypiOquole: ONE OF TilE BENEFITS OF .IN·

FLATION IS TIIAT ~OS NO I..ONGER GET SICK ON A
NICKEL'S WOR'Mf OF C~Y .-ANON

�--i=- ·-··-

10--The

Sentinel

26, 1983

Ohio

Private accountants
checks expenditures
for CETA programs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Private acrountants have· been
hired to determine whether the
state must pay back $100 mUllan In
· federal Olmprehenslve Employment and Training Act funds.
TheO&gt;ntroutng Board on Montlay
approved an Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services contract
with Peat, Marwlck, Mitchell &amp; 0:1.
for a review of the CETA programs
·since 1975.
.
The $193,280 wlll cover the first
. phase of the study and will be paid
with federal funds. The second
phase is projected to cost another
$156,(0J.
Agency otflclals said the sta te
may rme the federal government
more than $100 mUllan because of
alleged mismanagement of the
CEI'Aprogramduringtheadmlnls·
tmtlon of former Gov. James A.
Rhodes.
OlntroUers were told private
accountants were needed "to deter·
mine the true extent of jeopardy the
state of Ohio faces and then to
resolve as favorably as possible to
the state those adverse claims.''

Additional registration
.scheduling dates set

Jerry Hultln, a consultant lor the
bureau, said the matter Is not
expected to pose a problem in this
fiscal year which ends June 30.
"If you're talking about before
June of 19851 think the process could
be well under way and significant
fomial findings could have l1een ·
made," he said.

Controllers were told that audits
required for the program had not
been earned out on schedu~ during
the prtor administration.
Hultln said Ohio might owe the
federal government more than $100
rnUJJon . ·
"I'm saying It could go beyond
that. The unaudited periods cover In
excess of $:130 million of expenditures. It Is entirely based on wh;lt
percentage of those expenditures
are found to have been Improper or
Improperly documented, " Hultln
said.
The U.S. Department of Labor
asked the state to justify grants
ques tioned In a prellmlnary audit
report for1975 to mld-l!Bl.

Meigs County happenings
Pie auctioin slated April 27
A pie auction will be held at the regular meeting of the Long
Bottom Olmmunity Association which m eets Wednesday, Aprtl 'Zl.
at 7 p.m . at the community buDding. Members are asked to brln_g a
pie.

Couple seeks for marriage license
A m;~rilagc Jlcense was Issued In .Meigs County Probate.Court tq
Christopher Scott Queen. 21: Rt ; 1, Shade. and Mary Lynn McCoy. 18. ·
Pt. Pleasant.

Court actions filed Monday
A suit for money a nd an action for dlssoiutln of marriage were
flied In Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
A suit In the amount of $6,677.95 was fUed by K. D. &amp; D. Well
Service, Inc., Logan, against Royse Drilling Inc., Olney, Ill ., for
work and services provided.
Sara W. Dean, Athens. and C. Richard Dean, Athens, filed for
dissolution of marriage.

Veterans Memorial infonnation
Admitted: Barbara Snyder, Langsville; Barbara Florence,
Pomeroy; John Bechtle, Middleport; Wanda Mohler, Middleport;
Earl Denny, Sr., Pomeroy; David Ballard, Long Bottom; Gladys
Sigler, Middleport; Ronald DUes, Pomeroy; Hazel Weimer, Racine,
Sandra Stanley, Pomeroy.
Discharged: Shirley Hackett, Bridgett Roush.

Emergency .squads answer calls
Four calls were answered by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service Monday .
At 10:14 a.m. the Middleport unit went to the Stonewood
Aparlrnents for Gladys Sigler who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, but not admitted. The unit returned to the residence of Mrs.
Sigler at 2: 28 p.m. and again trnsported her to Veterans Memortal
Hospital where she was admitted. At 6: 31 p.m. the Racine unit
transported Zane Beegle from Southern High School to Veterans
Memorial, and at 9:35 p.m . t~e Rutland unit took Sandy Stanley
from HarrlsonvUle to Veterans Memorial Hospllal. z '
At 4: 26 p.m. the Ruiland Fire Department answered a call for a
chimney fire at the Depot StrEet residence of Bob Stewart. Damage
was minor. It was reported.

Loose dog owners beware!
Residents of Middleport who conllnue to let their dogs run loose
will be prosecutE'\'!, Chief of Pollee J . J . Cremeans warned. Tuesday.
The pollee chief said that Ihe vUJage has an ordinance In effect which
requires that dogs be confined and prov ides a penalty for allowing
·
them to run loose.

Hearings set for liquor sale
Two hearings on the sale of liquor wtll be heard today by the
Hearings and Appeals Dlvlson of the Ohio Department of Liquor
Olntrol at the Meigs County Courthouse.
The first hearing Is scheduled for 11:30 a .m . ln regard to a request
lor a liquor llcense m ade by Charles Clinton Callaway, Tuppers
Plains.
The hearing on the license requested by Charlene Doczl, Salem
Center, will be held at 1: ~p. m.

MILLER'S ANNUAL QUES'DONNAIJtE DRAWS LARGE
RESPONSE - 'lbe mallll have been heavy at the Waalolqtoe omce ol
ConJll'eii8DUUI Clarence MDler as a ft8lll&amp; of lhe recent nallollalilllues
questionnaire mailing aenl to all Te,lth Conp ' Nl Ditllrlcl
retlidencl!fl earUer lhlll monlh by Repl'l!lll!ntallve Miller. The
Congressman Is shown going over some of lhe relums with a member
of his Wasbil)gton otalf. RelqJts are llilll beln&amp; tabulated so If you
haven'l sent In your response there Is sjlllllme lo do so.

·Southem FFA takes
Par! in judging contest

Members of Southern FFA reture Farmers of America (FFA)
cently participated In showmanBanquet was recently held at
ship and judging of general livesCanter's Cave 4-H Camp In Jackson Olunty.
lock at the annual State FFA
judging contest.
FF A members from 25 chapters
Participating ih showmanship
representing Gallla, Ja,!'kson, Vln·
Included Jim Hupp and A. J .
ton, Lawrence, Meigs, ·Athens,
Wlllharger. Hupp's responsibility
Hocking and Perry Oluntles at·
was to show four hogs at a time for
tended the banquet to receive
a pertod up to one and on.e-hatr
Dtstrtct 14 FFA awards and
hours . Hupp received a gotd·· ratlng . · recognitions.
and trophy. He will receive' his
Chapter Awards received bY
trophyattheStateFFAConvention
Racine FFA Chapter were NaOn Saturday. April 30.
tiona! Safety lind National Chapter,
Wlllbarger, showed bei'J steers, . SJlperlor; area BOAC; mar!&lt;etlng,
For his effort~ he recelv~ a brotl2e'
second _place and cooperatives,
rating.
third place.
David Salmons received first .
Members of the livestock judging
team Included Alan Crisp and Troy
place In agricultural processing,
second place In placement In
Ward . Their responslblllty was to
judge hogs, sheep, and beef, and
production and agrtcultural sales
and service and third In prepared
place the animals In first, second,
third and fourth place according to
public speaking. Raney Armes
the animal's ability to produce
received third place In specialty.
meat as desired by the consumer. It
The Dlsbict Banquet Is planned
Is not known at this time how well
and presented each year bY the
Crisp and Ward -performed.
District 14 FFA officers. Current
Alan Crisp, Ralph Fisher. David
officers are, Mark Hager and Dan
Daines, Buckeye HUis Joint VocaSalmons and Kevin Dugan partie!tiona! School; Todd Jeffers, Alexpated In a test on cooperatives held
ander High School; Lisa _Plaisted,
at Alexander High School. They
placed fourth In District 14. The test
New Lexington High School; Krls
consisted of multiple choice quesCline. Logan High School and Greg
lions dealing lth the varous aspects
Bolen, Meigs Hlgt) School.
of cooperatives.
District 14 advisor ls.Larry Marr.
Instructor at Rl\Cine ts Aaron
Meanwhile, the District 14 FuSayre.

Planners

Presenting

'-GUESS~
1_~ · 'LIVE AT . 0

Give your kitchen, bath,
family room or any room in
your house a shiny new
look w~~ quality Armstrong, Congoleum or GAF .
vinyl floor covering

Under
The Ddme
SPECIAL GUEST1

STAFFHOUSE ROAD BAND
~.

Tickets Available At Tat's $8.00
Point Pleasant

Rt. 62 North
' '

first grade for the fall of 1983.
Parents are to provide at the time
of registration; a record of lmmunl·
:zatlon wblch should show tour
DPI's, 3 pollo sabin, 1 measles_
(rubeola) (after first birthday ), 1
rubella (German m easles) and a
recent tuberculosis skin test, within
one year before entering school.
These Immunizations are required ·
bY laW. Ablrthcertlflcatealsomust
be presented.
All parents expecting to have
chUdren enrolled In the fall as
kindergarten students or as new
enrollee students In the first grade
are urged to register their chUdren
at the appointed times al)d places.
. QuestionS concerning the registration may be directed to the
principal's office of the res~tlve
schools included: Middleport Elementary, Robert Morris, 992·3387:
Pomeroy Elementary. Robert
Morris, 992-2710; JiVrtso
. nvWe Elementary, Greg ~Call. 742-~
Rutland Elementary, John Lisle,
742·2666, and Salem Center Elementary, Charles Holllday, 742-

3113.

Major housing
(Continued from page 1)
Oluncllman Gllmore said his gas
buts are constantly raising and
Indicated he would have to go along
with the Olnswners Counsel In an
attempt to stop the increases.
Koebel replied that the theory of
"heating or eating'' is as old ~
history. Hesaidunderthepresent
rate system, the gas · supply
producers are making money, not
the gas company. He noted that gas
company personnel work con. siant!Y tcymg to. proVIde- the. best
possible product at-the best possible
prtce. He charged that House Bm 4
Is not the answer to the rising cost
problems and would destroy the
home rule policy which the present
counctl has follrmed .
' Counctl voting four-to-one opposcasting
the dissenting
vote.Gilmore
Ing House
BUI 4 with
Councilman Horky reported he
has been In touch with Solicitor
Bernard Fultz with the suggestion
!rom a surveyor that a title search
be made on Hudson St. so that
planned surveying can be carried
out. Gilmore discussed another
fatal accident on Middleport Hill
and questioned when planned work
fiY ·the village would take place.
Mayor Hoffman Indicated that he Is
securing prices on the Improvement. Gilmore also repOrted that
Fenney-Benneti Post 128. American Legion, Is planning to honor the
late James Stewart and Edward
Bennett who are winners of the
Olngresslonal Medal of Honnr.

GUmore said that it Is unusual for a
town as small as Middleport to have :
to such w1nners. Officials Indicated
that they wUI cooperate with the
post In whatever way ltplanstogoln
honoring the two .medal winners.
Gilmore also reported on his eftort
to locate a buDding for a coll)ll1unlty ·
civic center. Oluncllman .Sal&amp;ertteld reported that tl)e rerrul.lnder of
the new street lights will be Installed
probably during the first two weekS
In May.

r-.~~~~~~~~~m·~

, Weather forecast
Clear tonight. Low near 52. Winds
southerly to southwesterly 10.15
mph. Wednesday, partly cloudy and
breezy with a :Jl percent chance of
showers and thunderstorms late In
the day. High near 00.
Exlended Ohio Forecasl
'lbunday lllrough Saturday: .
Fair on'Thu~ and Friday and
a chance of showers Saturday.
mp. 1n the mld-0011 1o mld-'7&amp;.
Overqlgbt lows In die tOs ~
and Frlda,v and
tolhe

rnld-114111 Sa&amp;urday.

Vinyl
Floor
Covering

· HarrtsonvUJe Youth League will hold a practice session Saturday
at 1 p.m . All coaches, players and Interested parents are asked to
attend.

6:00 p.m.

hear~f:.:...:..~':n__:nt:::.~':-1 )c.._

recommended bY Consultant James· Jennings and chairman Johnson
spoke on the urgency In getting state routes In Meigs County Improved.
There was a brief discussion on the development of the Portland dam site
as a recreational area.
Roger Michael reported county tax maps have been completed for aU 12
townships and four out of the five villages with Pomeroy the only vutage
yet to be completed. It should be done by the end of this year. Michael
reported that all deeds have been researched and explanatory material
recorded. He displayed copies of the maps which may be purchased bY the
public. All property transfers are being recorded so that records are
updated, Michael stated. The house numbering system was discussed with
· Michael reporting utlllty companies are going to the system for their
billing addresses. Englll~r Roberts litdlcated that he plans to Install signs
llstlrig not oitly the road number, but !he road names throughout the
county.
.
Eleanor Thomas said plans and specifications on the new Mulberry
Heights housing project for the elderly have been completed and sent to
potential bidding firms. A groundbrealdng on the project Is expected to
take place about June 1 and construction time Is nine months. There are
already some 40 applicants for the 46 units which wUJ be constructed In the
complex Mrs. Thomas reported.
Olrrunlssloner David Koblentz reported that strong Interest has b;.&gt;en
demonstrated In the Utter control program for which the county received a
grant. A supervlsor Is to be hired In the near future and a number of groups
are expected to take part In the local action of Clean Up Ohio Day tl1lS
Saturday. An application of the Leading Creek Olnservancy District lor an
FmHA $250,000 loan for Improvement and expansion of water supply
facilities was given the commission's stamp of approval.
The next meeting was set for 3 p.m . on July 24.

Call Saturday practice

Sunday May 15th

Meigs Local Sch!)Ol Dlsti1ct Supt.
Dan Morris has aniiOIIIICed scheduling for tlle registration of
kl11dergarten or new enrollees of
the first grade, those who did not
· . attend klnderg;~rten In Meigs
Local.
Parents of !he Salisbury School
area are advised that their children
are to be registered at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Following Is the s'chedule for"
reglsiratlon: Monday, May 2,
· · Pomeroy Elementary, 8:30a.m. to
11:30 a.m. and noon to 4 p.m.;
Tuesday, May 3, Middleport Elementary, 8: :Jl a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
and noon to 4 p.m.; Wednesday,
May 4, Rutland Eiementary, 8: 30 to
11: :Jl a.m. and noon to 4 p.m.
Kindergarten' age students from
the Harrisonville, Salem Center
and Rutland areasaretoreglster at
Rutland.
Any chU.d whose firth birthday
falls on or before Sept. 30, 1!1l3 may
be registered for kindergarten for
the fall of 1983. Any chUd whose
sixth birthday falls on or before
Sept. 30, l&amp;'l, may be registered for

Stocked in 9 and 12 ft. widths.

$3 49 $4 9S
TO

Make your secretary glad
she's your secretary.
· Seaebirla Week Is April24-30.
~ lhe Fl'[)® StCmaria Wedl Bo\lquet.
Amnaed In U\ exc:huiYe FI'D ~ caddy with
dec01ativt mug.

~i4.-

FLORIST

"l!lotEIOS CO.'S OLDEST. FINEST"
24; EAST MAIN
POMEROY,OHIO 467S9

Sq. Ft.

EL~ERFELDS WAREHOUSE .
MECHAN.IC ST. - POMEROY

e 141992-2844

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