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••

Area deaths

:

Wed...day, 'April 27, 1913'"

Sheriff. gives
• •
Itmerant
•

•

Cuba K. Little

First United Presbyterian Church
where he served as an elder. He w~mg
was a 50 year member of Valley
Meigs County Sheriff, James J .
Grange.
has received tntonnatlon•
Prol!ltt,
Besides his parents, he was
that
a
rOVIng
caravan olpeople have
preceded In death by his wife ,
beeri
obsa'ved
In the Chillicothe
Gladys, In 1981 , two brothers and a
area
and are .headed lor the
sls)er.
southeast sector of Ohio.
Surviving ar: two daughters and
According to Sherllf Protfltt the
sons-ln·law, Mary Helen and Bob
caravan Is traveling In a group of
Jones, Wellston, and Nancy and
Gary Hanold, Columllus; a approximately l~ pickup trucks and
brother, Chester of Oak Hill. and are 'l'epOrted to be rooters and
driveway ~;ealers. They are leaving
four grandchildren.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. ·behind numerous complaints of
Thursday at the Jenkins Funeral gross overcharging foUiowlng low
Home In Wellsotn with the Rev. estimates and shoddy work.
Sherlt! Prol!ltt urges all Meigs
John M. Taylor officiating. Burial
Countlans
to be on the alert. If home
will be in Ridgewood Cemetery.
repairs
are
needed the sberlt!'
Friends may call at the fuheral
suggests
that
reputable
Individuals
home from 4 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
be contacted. The sherlt! also
advises that should anyone Insist on
sollcltlng business to .call the
Ross R. Roush
sherlff s office at 992-3889.

Cuba K. Little, 72. Route 4,
Pomeroy, formerly a resident of
Cheshire, died Tuesday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
He was horn Feb. 10, 19U In
Rutland, a son of the late William
and Allene May Manley Little.
Besides his parent s. he was
preceded In death by a son. Delbert;
&gt; daughter in infancy; three
IJrothers, Jess, Loren and Bennett
and a sL•ter, Effie.
Mr. Little was a ret ired maintenance workers of the Chesapeake
and Ohio Railroad.
Surviving are his wile, Mary E.
Durst Little; a son anddaughter·in·
law, Donald and Lois Little; a son.
Kenneth; a grandson, Rick Litt le.
and a granddaughter, Donna Litt le.
all of Route4, Pomeroy, and several
nie&lt;.'es and nPphews.

Funeral services will be held at
10:JJ a.m. F riday at the Raw lings·
Coats-Blower Funeral home with
the Rev. WIUiam Uber officiating.
Burial wi ll be ln the Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may
call at the funeral home between 5
and 9 p.m. Thursday .

Henry Reno Keyes
Funeral services lor Henry Reno
Keyes. 92. Canton. who died Friday
morning In Westbrook Park Nursing Home alter an extended illness,
wPre held Tuesday in Canton .
Mr. Keyes is the brother·in·lawol
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Sw ick, Pomeroy,
and the son-In-law of Jesse Swan, a
patient at the Pomeroy Health Care
Cenler .

·.-·.

1

Pomeroy-Micldleport, Ol!io

Page-16-- The Daily Sentinel

. He is survived by hls wile, A.lma
Swa n Keyes who he married 47
years ago. lour daughte rs, Mary
Thibedeau and Margaret Stanton ,
both of Glouces ter, Mass., Gladys
Saw iPr, California; .Janet Ken ·
drick, Canton; rour sons, Henry,Jr ..
Gloucester. Mass; George and
Briena of Canton, and Paul of
Pomona. Call!.
Also survlvng an:. rwo brothers,

George of Det roit, Mich., and
William C. of Columbus. He was
prPCeded in death by a daughter,
BessiP Stillman, and a son, Howard
Keyes.
He was a retired employe of the
Don Mellett Homes, Inc.
In Canton lor the services were
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Swick, Anthony
Cardillo and son, Shawn .

Corli!'ts E. Jacohs
Corliss E. (Pet e) Jacobs, 82, Cast
Seventh St., Wellston , formerly of
Pomeroy, died Monday nlght at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Jacobs wa s born In the
Fra nklln Valley Community In
.Jackson County, Nov . 15, 1900, a son
of the late John and Oklla Cherring·
ton J acobs. He was a retired
employe of Columbia Gas of Ohlo
and was a member of the Wellston

Ross Raymond Roush, 87, 19 Neil
Ave., Gallipolis, died Tuesday
afternoon, having been In faDing
health fort he past year.
Bam April '1:1, 1895, in Sutton
Township, Meigs County, son of the
late E.E. and Jessie Darst Roush,
he taught school In Meigs County for
several , years, bad a clerical
position with New York Central
Railroad during World War I, and
was employed for :r7 years at
GaUipolls State Institute, retiring in
1961.
He was a member of Grace
United Methodist Church, where he
taught St. John's Bible class, and a
member of Modern W&lt;XXIrTlen of
America.
He was twice married, the first
tln)eon July 19,1915, to Clara Pear)
Holter, who died in 1921, and the
second time on Aug. JB, 1923, to
Ethel Shato, who survives.
Also surviving are two sons from
the first marriage, . Ralph of
Columbus and Howard of Phoenix,
Ariz.; two 'daughters from the
second marriage, Mrs. Louts (Opal
Imogene) Cheek of Westpori,
Conn., and Mrs. William (Wilma)
Brown of Gallipolis; six grandchild·
ren and two great-grandchildren;
and a sister, Mrs. Laura Morris of
Gallipolis.
.
He was also preg&gt;ded In death by
seven brothers and a sister.
Funeral servl~ will be held at 1
p.m. Friday In Grace United
Methodist Church, with Rev.
George Wolf!brandt and Rev.
James V. Frazier officiating. Bur1al
will be in VInton Memorial Park.
FriendS may call at Willis' Funeral
Home from 6-9 p.m. Thursday.
The body will lie In state In the
church one hour prior to the service.
Pallbearers will be Jeff Brown,
Chris Brown, WOllam Sbato, Chip
Runyan, George R. Plants and
Thomas Lear.
Honorary pallbearers will be
Lawrence Holliday and Bill
J enkins.

Meigs judge to discuss marijuana
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court .Judge• Charles Knight will be
Interviewed on "Homegrown," Ibe
next Installment of WOUBTV's
"Fo rum " publlcaffalrsprogram, to
be aired at 10:30 p.m. May 3.
Hosted by Athens County Municipal Court .Judge Thomas Hodson.
the program will look at the
marijuana farming Industry In
· southeastern Ohio and enforcement

of laws designed to prevent growing
the Illegal cash crop.
Knight wUi be Interviewed along
with Athens County Sherif! Robert
Allen; James Randlse, lnvestlgatlon chlelfortheBureauo!Crlrnlnal
Investigation; community
members
and abemarijuana
grower.
WOUB can
viewed locally
on
Cablentertalnment channel10.

. Spring sports teams
continue busy slates

Page 6

e
Voi.32,No .10
1913

Ni\110NAL HONOR SOCIETY - 'l'hb1.een
studeals at Soutllen) Jllgli School were recently
Inducted · In the N41lonaJ Honor Society. New
members are, first row, J.r, P~ Haris, Lee DDI,

lions. Some sectors of manufacturIng are continuing to suffer from
The stock market IS riding a wave depressed product prices and weak
of optimism fiowlng through the demand. Airline and steel compan·
U.S. economy to historic highs, but 1es are reporting losses for the latest
at leastoneanalyStthlnksthebestls quarter, while oil companies are
yet to come.
showing sizeable drops In proflt.
U.S. Steel Corp. said Tuesday It
The Dow Jones average of JJ
Industrials jumped 22.25 points lost $118 million compared with a
Tuesday breaking the 1,200-mark profit of$8Jll)llllon in the comparafor the first time ever. The average ble three months last year. Bethlehem Steel Corp. reported a $175.2
ended a hectic trading session at
million loss, more than double the
1.~.4ii. surpassing the record
loss 1t reported a year ago.
1.196.30 set last Friday.
Donald Trautlein, Bethlehem
. Tl)e. market manag.ed Its big
ch'
alrmah, Said steel shipments and
gains despite dismal earnlngs
prices
reinalned "very depressed.''
reports from Industrial corpora- ·
By ROBJ!]lT BURNS
AP &amp;•sfness WrMer

first quarter.
·
Among oil companies, Gulf Oil:
Corp. reporled a 36.8 percent profit;
drop; Phllilps Petroleum Co. said:
Its earnings fell 32.8 percent~ and.
Atlantic Richfield eo: reported a
14.3 percent drop. An exception to
the trend was Standard 011 Co. of
California, which reported a 34.8
percent jump in net Income.

In other economic developments
Tuesday:
-Robert S. Strauss, a former
u.s. trade representative, told a
Senate committee that creatiOn otaDepflrlment ofTradewouldglvethe.
In New · York, Eastern Airlines United States a single .voice Inreported It lost ,$00. 7 mililol) In the . International .pollcle!!.

Meigs County happenings

Gulf of Mexico

Maniage licenses
Two marriage licenses were
Issued in Meigs County Probate

Caribbean Sea

Admltted--Shane Ingels, Middleport; Lucy McCune, Pomeroy;
Nancy Patterson, Syracuse; Goldie
Clendenin, Portland.
Dlscharged··James Meadows,
Ronald DUes, John Bechtle.

Court.
Licenses were Issued to Lester
William Wise, 49, Middleport, and
Shirley Ann Haning, 39, Middleport; Lawrence Dewlght Carpenter, 67, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, and Lena M.
Knapp, 68, Langsville.

Emergency calls

tr;;;;;;;;;~~;~~~~~t5;fa~~~;;l
The Pomeroy Fire Department
New COirsa&lt;Je
was called to the Smith-Nelson .

GUATAMAl.A.
EL SALVADOR

Minor fU"e damage

Four calls were answered by local
units Tuesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service repor1s. At 12:'17 p.m .. the Pomeroy
Unit took Jeanette Diles~ Kingsbury
Road, to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 12: 36 p.m. took
WOllam Wallace, Coal St., to Holzer
MedlcalCenter; R.aclneat9:43a.m.
took GoldleCiendenlnofStiversvUie
to Veterans Memorial and at 9: 57
.
p.m. the Tuppers Plains Unlt took
Altha Barlon, Tuppers Plains, to
Camden -Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg.

Motor Co., East Main St .. at 12:20
a. m . Wednesday where an acetylene tank had caught fire In the
garage. There were only minor
damages.

Beautiful Ones·
Cross Y6ur Heart ·

1

Hl'rl' 's ;m t..' lcg;mt gift to show 1\lOill

tl""·

you rcmcmhcrl'cl h&lt;·r
The Ti" ue
Box Buuquct
It '; a l&gt;t•autiful hr"ss·pl:ttcd h:tsket gorgl·ous

~~~i!~~~
And whl'n tht.' flowt'r s ttrt• gone, mom ccm

itrranJ,!t'lllcnt of fresh, l'olorful flowers.

·
Soft Cup
. ·
(Pvailable In wh~e an_d beige)

$

'\

2()0AJ OFF ALL-WOMEN'S

POMEROY

FLOWER SHOP
'Tht•

SHOES THRU MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 8

P~ .

992·2039
Or 192-5721
'

.~E ACCEPT AIL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS, AND WIRE ROWIIIS

•

*
'·
•

Lightly Llned(available in beige) $10.99'
Matching Panty (available In white and beige) $5.50'
···a '·~ r..-.

,AP II • I Writer
AlthoUgh a government report of
a big Jncreueln worker productlv'
tty Is good news tor business, It
doesn't neceUarlly mean companleswnibequlcktorehlreworkenu
the economy lr!qlroves, · ewnom~ats
say.
.
1be Bureau ol Labor Statlstlal

HARTLEY SHOES
STORE HOURS

Mon.·lhln.-sat 9-5 .

Fridly 9-8

\

. POMERoY, OHIO.
Ph.992-5272

saidW~tbatpmluctMiyln

non-tann bullnellf!S ~ ·4.8 per'

.

percent ; Lucas. lo.:l per&lt;'&lt;'nt : Mahoning. 18.7
percent; Marton. t5 percent ; Medlna. !2.6 percent .
Mercer . 16.7 percent ; Miaml. t2 percent ;
Montgomery, 11.8 percent: Morgan. 19.9 p&lt;.•rcent;
Morrow, 16.3 percent; Muskingum , 1!\.t Jl"rcmt;
Ottawa. 18.2 percent ; Paulding, 14.9 percent ;
, Plckaway. 10.7 percent.
Pike. 19.3 percent ; Portage. 1!\.1 percent: Pt1'bl&lt;&gt;.
12.1 percent ; Putnam, 17 JX'I1'cnt ; Riclllanci . l H
percen t: Ross. 14.2 percent ; Sandusky , H p&lt;.•rct' nt ;
Seneca 16.5 percent ; ShPiby 17.2 percent.
Stark, 16.:1 percent ; Sunm1it, ! 2 .~ [X'rc&lt;'nt;
TtumbuU, 17.8 percent; 'l'u sc;u·awa s, 1~.li fX'Il't·nt;
Union. H.l pem:-nt; Van Wl'rt. 14.1 p&lt;•tn•nt ; \' ini on.
19.4 percent; Wan-en. 12.2 fX'rccnt ; Washing'! oil. 15.3
percent; Wayne. 11 .8 percmt : Wlll lants. lB
percent ; Wood, 12.:1 p!'l-cr•nt.

Instead a public lund to help Central
American governments stop leftist
gun· running In the region,
House Republicans are trying to
delay a Vote on the proposal.
Although som e Democrat s
praised the generally moderate
tone of the pres ident's speech,
others disagreed with what they
regarded as his over-emphasis on
military assistance.
Sen . Christopher Dodd of Connecticut . responding for the Democrats. catted Reagan's policy of
increas ing military a id to El
Salvador and support lor counterrevolutionaries ln Nicaragua "a
formul a lor failure" that can only
lead to "a dark tunnel of endless
Intervention.''

Dodd, a member of the Senate
Foreign Relations Commit tee and a
Peace Corps volunteer In the
Dominican &amp;'Public from 1966 to
191i8. urged instead a negotiated
sen tement to the Sal,.,adoran
conlllct.
"Amer ican dollars alonp cannot

buy military victol'y, " said Dodd,
who argued that the sour't:e of
revolution In Central America was
not Cupa or the Sov!ci Union. as the
prPSident ha~ argued, but poverty
and In justice.
"The painful truth is that many of
our highest oi'flclatsseem to know as
little about Cent rat America in 191\1
as we knew about Indochina in
1963," Dodd said. "We cannot afford
to found so lmpor1ant a policy on
lgnoran&lt;'&lt;'."
Sen. Edward M. Kenn!'dy. D
Mass .. said he was "deeply concerned that the president 's ovro·a tl
policy Is a prescript ion lor a wider

weir."

Ran~·

Cotdwmer. ll 1\riz.,

Commlt tec, sa id he thought the
·p,'f'S ldcnt "deflnlt&lt;•ly changed some
mind~ lx'l:au sP Ow Amf&gt;ric&lt;lll pt._"'O·
pic ha w•ix'&lt;'n tx•li Pvl n ~ lhL· Ill's lhl'y
r r ad In the nt"\.VSpapPr ~1nd now th ey
have 1hf' I n1th ."
A ndy M('ssing. PXt'('ut ivt' t li l'tX'tor
or lhl' ConsC'tvatlvL' l 'a UCtiS, said
th at now, if l'o ngn' ss wit hho lds t he

aid llP; tgan lm~ t"f\IUL'Sh'(l , " ll' s

Congress' fault if 1·:1 Satv"dor got&gt;s
communist "
Reag an's proposH l to boost mil ·
llary aid to E l ~ tl v ador ll~· $ L10
mUI!on has r un int t1trouhiP In both

Ow HouS(' and S&lt;..na iP. S.O tar. only

However. Republicans saki they
$:KJ mill ion or thf' Hid ltl l t'le
em baUir•&lt;.J Sa lvadora n an11 _\· ha.'ii
felt the president's speech Md
helped him build support In Con·
txoen approv L'(I .
In his. ~ j.)f'( "&lt;.' ll. H.t•agan said thP
gress and around the na lion .
Unit f'(l Stat f's has " a vit; tllnlt ·n·st . a
"There was a not tcmble lack of
suppo rt lor those who would just
m oral duty a nd il slllf•mn rt'sponsJ·
turn their back and cut and get out. " · bl lity " f{) block ('Om m unlsr t •xpan
slon In lhP r{•g iun . ~Jut aga in
said Sen. Charles H. Percy. H·lll .
d{'&lt;'ial·f'd that ht:' has no p lan s t (J~C'nd
chai rman of the Senate Fort'&lt;'lgn
in U.S. l'urnbat t rcx 1ps.
Rela lions Committee.

Plans underway
for Scipio Twp.
Industrial Park

wife."

RETmFS FRIDAY - Norma Loui!te Jewell, business service
officer al the Meigs County Wellare Department, Middleport, wW
retire Friday after 38 yeal'!! of service. Mrs. Jewell began .her
employment with the Dlvbloo of Aid for Aged under the late George
Chlldtl, who wu sub-division manager on Nov. 13, 1946. In Iflll6 the
Division of Aid lor Aged merged ·with the Melgs County Welfare
Department and Mrs. deweU has been with the wellare department
since thai time.

Th~ dcvclopmenr of an lndust rial
on ton ot anhy drous amrnoniit
park Is underway tn MPigs Count y's
K t'nnt'UY poinll'll out lw 1\11!-. mt-1
Sclplo Township.
wHh product•r j.!J"oups all ovt• r thP
· Bill Kennedy of Sclplo Ventu r~· stutC'. l-It" has alsu nwt wi!l1 th&lt;·
Co .. explained the deve lopment h&lt;• gen('rn l assemhly and puh li(' uti li
Is establishing on approximately 20 ties to naml' a ff'w . T ht• Dq &gt;: 1rt rnc·n t
acres of hl~ property Tuesday to or D&lt;_-.vc\opmc nl Is al sn working
Meigs County Commlss lon~rs .
wlt h Kennedy.
Kennedy said he plans to drut
In ul ht•r busl lli 'S.':I, .JC'n nh 1 1~'-; was
approximately 100natura lgas wells also lnstrucled to lnw stigal&lt;' fX&gt;SSI·
to supply an anhydrous ammonia blllti!'S of obtainl ~ g Ohio DPpa rtplant that will constructed on the m e nt of Na tural HI•sout't'f's g ra nt s
site.
for county rN..·n •arlon p ro jt '(' fs . ~
Kennedy also noted that a Comm L'\s\oners will mf'( 'l w ith
reclamation plant will be ready Jenn ings on May 24 .
wtthln 30 days and the anhydrous
Bob Wlngl'tl met.wit h the lx•a•Tilo
ammonia plant should be com· inquirv abuut various bllX'k ~ra nt
pleted wtthln a year.
programs that may l.lf' avail able•.
Kennedy wUI supply the commis- · Thf' c'ommlsslonf'rs said thf'
sioners with additional Information county has not ix'!:'tt not lfiN:I :1." to t hP
on the project In the near future .
amount of money that m a.v tx·
James J ennings, counsultant. ava llable lor block ~'rant s, but
discussed various county projects shou ld receive notification wi thin
was Instructed to assist the Scipio the nPxt :Ul d" ys and will ' lart
Venture Co., In pursuing economic receiving applications aftt'r Ihat foi·
development grants for the Indus- fisca l year 19R:I.
trial site In conjunction with the
Qll(' bid was n "•f'( •ivf'd for l)itum l·
county.
nous materials. Submltt ing tt11• llid.
Contacted this morning, Kennedy which was accept&lt;-d was Ashland
sa ld 5,00l acres of land has been Petroleum Co. for the mon th of
pledged to produce gas wells as well May.
as pledges !rom 1-!'0duces of shut In
Bids on employe health insurance
gas.
were received from llrogan·
Kennedy noted It takes 40,00l Warner·, Ins., Pomeroy and l11ue
r uble feet of natural gas.to produce
(Contlnued on page 81

recovery Is under way and\~e fact . automakers bad combined profits
unempiO)'JTlent.
from January through March of
David Ernst. vice president of that output Is rising more rf~Pidly
\
$970.3 million.
Evans Economics Inc., a forecast- than employment. "
Ing firm In Washington, D.C., says
A separate report Wednesday
But more.airlines reported losses
'
. with Pail American
working hours wtlllncrease before saldflrst-yearpayscalesnegotlat~
Wednesday,
World Airways saying It lost $79.6
any substantial rehiring · takes this year by uniOns felll.4 percent.
Together, the reports could mean milUon In the first quarter and
place.
Jerry Jaslnowskl, chief econo-· a pickup thls' ye8f In earnings lor '\Trans World Corp. poSting an $82.3
percent
mtstlorthe National Association of business and lndustt:v.
~on deficit. Three domestic
The llllhe!' productlvtty Is an
Ford Motor Co: reported Wednes- alrllnes, Western, Republic and
I!IICOW'8iiJI&amp; ·alp for ln1latlm and Manutaclurers, said, "'The producday a first.quarter report ot $211.2 Fiontler Holdings, also reported
COl ponte proats. But It Is unlikely . tivity improvement reflects hoth
·
the
!nCr~
ootput
·
l1!lW
that
·
mllllon, anq the four largest U.S.
los~for the first quarter, as did
.
to mean a quick Improvement In

cent In the Jan\Ull')'-Marcb quarter.
It was the biggest gain In two years.
The report, which measures the
amount o1 goods and services
prodlleed In an hour's paid working
time. !lllld output roae 6.2 percent
while W0!1dn&amp;: hours roee U

'•

•

Sen.

chainmm of th f' Scna tC' lntC'lllgrnct:'

Higher_productivi~y doesn't mea~ · jo~less improvement
ByROBERTBURNS ,

\

ff'!!V A mPriro S.•nd., Lon•."

106 Buttorout Avt.
Pomeror.Oh.

Special Introductory Bra Prices

BERKLEY

WASHINGTON (AP ) -Despite
President Reagan's warning that
" the safety o! our homeland" Is at
stake ll:t Central America, his
proposed miiitary aid package lor
E l Salvador and CIA support lor
Nicaraguan rebels remaln under
attack in Congress.
In a rare foreign policy address to
a jolnt session of Congress Wednes·
day night , Reagan declared that a
leftist guerrilla victory in Et
Salvador could undermine U.S.
credlblllty around the world, and he
called lor bipartisan backing for his
Central American policies.
The first test of the speech's
.impact could come as early as
today. The House Intelligence
Committee was expected to con·
slder a proposal to cut off CIA aid to
Insurgents fighting against the
leftist Nicaraguan government.
That proposa l. sponsored by Rep.
Edward P. Boland, D-Mass .. com·
mlttee chairman, would terminate
covert U.S. support lor the insur·
gents within 45 days and establish

to hold office to preserve their
history. The city was chartered 127
years ago by the General Assembly
of VIrginia," Pratt said.
Deverick said he wiU accept the
job as a write-In candidate 1f no one
else volunteers, but said he would
rather spend the next few years '
"having a little leisure time with my

"I haven't told my wife this , but 1f
It comes down to a place where my
name Is written In, I will continue to
serve," Deverlck said. "I can't sit
back and· watch the town revert to
the county because then we'd lose
f!Vety advantage we've got."
Several months ago, the city
council voted to rp.lse the salaries of
town ot111clals toattractcandldates,
Deverlck said. The mayor's pay
was raised from $20 a year to Sl.'iO a
year, the recorder's salary from $25
a year to $100 a year and cttycouncU
salaries from $5 a year to $2.50 a
meeting.
,,
But there were stW no takers.
"They're all afraid of the responsibility they're getting Into that they
, won't be able to meet It," Deverick
said.
.
"We have been burdened down
with problems that accum)llated
over anumberofyears. We' reatthe
..
point now where we're just about to
''We are pleadlngwith the citizens
break even. But we would all like a
little bit oflelsure'tlme oow."
of Mason to exercise their prtvllege

Sunday, May 8

'

Pacific Ocean

'

CORKY

Send theTl£lle Box

COSTA/ i'
RICA

MASON, W.Va. (API -Despite
'
hefty Increases In municipal salar·
les and a ple11 from the secretary of
state, nobody wants to take charge
of this tiny community, which could
lose Its Identity if no one runs for
office in next week's election.
"We have absolutely no Interest In
any ol!lce," said Cecil Deverlck, a
67-year-old retired accountant who
has been mayor for two years but
now wants to step down to spend
more time with his wife.
The five council members and
recorder In this Ohio River com·
munlty say they don't want to
remain In their posts either
The officials are responsible for
this town of 1,432 and Its four pollee
offlce(s, sewer and water division
and $70,&lt;XXI budget, Deverlck said
Wednesday.
When no candidates filed lor next
TueSday's election to replace tbe
current o!llcers, Deverlck sooght
advice from West VIrginia's secretary of state.
"We told h1m that under ChapterS
of the state law, If 2G votes are not
cast, t)Je city can be dissolved. And
' • with no one on the ballot, there's a ·
good chance they won't have 20
votes," said Deputy Secretary of
Staie John Pratt.

.URALIZEJt

place il boutique t issut' box in sidt' to dress

Auglalze, 13.7 percent; Belmont. 18.1 percent;
Brown, 18.2 percent; Butler, 13.2 percent.
Carroll, 19.1 percent; Champaign, 11.8 percent;
Clark, 13.6 percent; Clermont , 14.7 percent; Clinton.
11.5 percent ; Columbiana. 17.9 percent ; Coshocton.
14.9 percent; Crawford, 18.3 percent; Cuya hoga, 12.1
percent .
Darke, 12.2 percent; Defiance. 16.5 percent :
Delaware, 10 percent; E rie 15.5 percent; Fairfield,
10.9 percent; Fayette 14.9 percent; Fulton, 16
percent; Gall Ia, 16.6 percent ; Geauga. 12.3 percent .
Greene 10.2 percent ; Hamilton. 11..1 P'l.''Cent ;
Hardln, 13.7 percent; Harrison, 18.7 percent; tlenry,
t7.1' percent; Highland. 12.3 percent ; Huron , 19.5
percent; J efferson. 15.6 percent; Knox, 13.5 percent.
Lake, 16.5 percent ; Lawrence, 16.8 percent;
Licking, 14 percent; Logan. 13.9 percent; Lorain. 17.6

No interest shown
in Mason election

Sleek bras and matching panty from Playtex

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

up any room in the hou st•.
A &lt;Jllil'k call t11 Pt Jmcn \)' Fl11wer Shtlp ~tntl }'t lUr b.llKJUet is tin it~ way altnl lSt :lnywht· re in the U.S. Ask for the T iSMIC Rox Rouquct. And remember,
with p,,,ncrt l)' Fltlwcr Sht&gt;p. tlw fltlwer.; ~1I W~t~~ L'tlme in St 1 mernin~ ;1S pretty
ns rht' fit 1wcrs lht·msl'lvt·s.

'2 Se,t ions, 20 Pages
'20 Ce nts
A Mult imed ia Inc. Newspaper

·Reagan warns 'homeland safety at stake'

UNITED STATES

The Rev. Ed MingUs and the
Buchtel Choir will ·be at the Eagle
Ridge Community Church on
Sunday, May 1, at 7:30p.m. The
Rev. Carl Hicks, pastor invites the
public to attend.

Veterans Memorial

enttne

at

state's 88 counties, 26.7 percent. Hancock County lrt
northwestern Ohio had the lowest rate, 8.2 percent,
according to the figures.
Adams is one of nine Dhlo counties with jobless
rates of more than 20 percent The otbers include
GuerD$eY, 20.5 percent; Hocking, 22 percent;
Jackson, 20.7 percent; Meigs, 20.2 percent; Mof!ue.
20.2 percent; Noble, 21.5 percent; Perry, 21.7
percent; and Scioto, 22.4 percent.
Bes;:tes Hancock, four · other counties have
unemployment levels of less than 10 percent. They
are Franklin, 9.4 percent; Holm"li, 9.9 percent ;
Madison, 9.6 percent; and Wyandot, 19.9 percent.
Other counties and their March jobless rates are:
Allen, 14.9 percent; Ashland, 14.2 percent;
Ashtabula, 19.9 percent; Athens. 13.8 percent ;

-

You
Mother's D~y

hold ~ ii

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Despite Ohio's jobless
rate falling In March, Meigs County's jobless rate
remained one of the highest In the state at 20.2
percent, the Ohio Bureau of Employment Servces
said Wednesday.
The rureau saki Ohio's jobless rate was the lowest
one-month total so far this year, but still above
unemployment levels of one year ago.
Wllllam Papler, director of research and statistics
for the OBES, said the March rate compared to
February's 14.5 percent. The statewide unemployment rate for March 1982 was 12.3 percent, he said.
The bureau said Ohio's jobless rate remains above
thE' national rate, which was 10.8 percent for March.
The OBES does not adjust Its rates seasonally.
Adams County In south-central Ohio continued to
have the highest unemployment rate among the

. ·speakel'8 named

Marriages licenses were issued in
Mel~ County Probate Courl to
RoMy Joe Hatfield, 30, Hartford,
W. Va., and Carol Lynn Humphreys, 23, Hartford; Eddie Ray
McClure, 22, Letart, W. Va., and
Belinda Sue Ross, 2.'1, Middleport .

•

Jobless rate remains high in Meigs County

Kalby Baker iuid Rod UUielleld; second row, Amy :
LIUiefleld, Dorothy Womer, Jane Manuel andC&lt;Jre)- :·
McPhail; back, •MicheDe Johnson, Urell WoUe, :
Bruce .Johnson, Becky Lee and Rusty Flagg.

Stock market reaches historic highs ~·

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
around 55. Winds westerly to
northwesterly 1().15 mph. Thursday, partly cloudy with a30percent
chance of showers. High 8().85.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Frldlly through SWida.v:
Fair on Friday. Chance of
•wers Satunlay and Sunday.
Hlglill In the 70s Friday and
Salunlay and In the mld-"108 ID
mld-80!1 ~ . Oventlglit lows In
the mJcH08 to mld-508.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 28, 1983

eopy,;ghtod

COMFORT BY DESIGN

wc ave tissue bo x. thit t

Page f)

Pages 34

Weather forecast

Granted license

Ohio's latest
lottery winner

Class reunions

I,

'·
' I

\
.

\

r

Eastern, Amertcar and USA!r
earlier.
The oil lndustry extendC'd its
pattern of generally lower profits
for the first quar!~•·. Exxon Corp.
reported a 26.3 percent increase, but
several other oU companies lncludlng Shell 011 Co., Sun Co. a nd
Tenneco Inc. - reported big
declines.
In other economic development s
(Continued on page 81

�•

.

:Comme~tar~ .

.

'1983

......,

Pa
2-llw.......,
Sentinel
.
'
Pomeroy Middleport~ a.
Th..,.day, April-28, 1983

Eastern whips Wildcats, 14-6

At stake in Salvado..L-r_ _ _ _w_il-:-lw_m_F_.B_uc_k_ley_J-:--r.
Ill «'u 11 rl Sl rt•t•l
runwrtl)', Otllo
DEVOTF.D TO THE I~Tt: Rt: ~T Of' T il t:

~j:b

_\IEI(;s - VI,\~U:'Iri

Bm~ ~._."""T"", r-r""ES!

~v

_\HE,\

d·-==-

ROBERT L. WING ETI'
l'uhli .. hf•r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

fi.f'nt•ra l

1\s!&lt;il-;tant l'u hlh!ht•r / ( ·on I rnl k r

:vlana~tf'r

DALE ROTHGEB , .JR.
~''"-'S

E ditor

A MEMREH of Tht• .\s.•;od;dt•d l'n.,...., Inland Dally Prt'W'i ,\.'OI';odatlon and the:'
,o\rJM!rtcan Nf'wspaper Puhl bhif·l")oi ,\,..,,.;ot'latlon.
LE"J'TERS Ot~ OPISIO:"' :uv wt•kmll!'d . 11wy !ihotdd I~~&gt; It""" ihM 300 M"lN"l:b. long-.
All leUrrM JU"f' . . uhjf•d to t-d.llin g- anti miN tw ~~ wllh namt', ~and Wk'phont•
numher . No u~llt'l1fd k•lk'rs wm ht· puhllshf'd. lA•Ucno-shou.ld tx• In a:ood ta.&lt;U, addfflf·
slnR IH"Uf'foi, not pt.'l'l«)naUtie!';.

These words are written before
. the president's speech, but alter
what one might caD The Salvador
Weekend. One lost count. but there
must have been W radio, television
a nd newspaper features that lo- ·
cused on the Salvadoran crisis.
Behold, a few observations:
I. Let us suppose thai, beginning
tomorrow, Nlcar~gua and Cuba
ceased to exist . Or, If thai requires
stretching tl\e tmagthation beyond
Its capacity, let us suppose that the
two countries were not governed by
Marxist governments deterffilned
on revolutionary upheaval. What
then would our policy be toward El
Salvador?

Surety, one characterized by that
fatalism we tend to Indulge when a
Lattit American country bas Itself a
revolution. Civil u-pheavals IIi Latin
America are as routine as elections
In America. Mostly they.~nd to be
quick, even surgical. Of the 150
coups d'etat In Bollv!a, the over·
whelming majority have been
bloodless. But at the other extreme
there are upheavals of wrenching
violence. Those who believe that
the ubnost depravities of the
century took place In Hitler's
Germany, Stalin's Russia and Pol
P?l's Cambodia are correct only In
the rhatterof scale. A student of the
civil war In Colombia In the '40s or

of the. clvU war In Mexico fqllowlng
the downfall of Porflrlo Dillz has a
taste of how Latin Americans tend
to behave when politically excited.
What Is happening today In El
Salvador Is, however shocking to
Western senslbUities, as Latin
American as enchiladas . .Not; of
course, for that reason any less
horrifying. But not, on the other
hand, something that can be made
to go away by lectures from the
Department of Health and Human
Services. When Argentina produced Juan Peron, It was one of the
wealthiest per capita nations In
Latin Amertca. When Cuba produced Fidel Castro, that was also

On the nation's
natural gas
pricing policy bill
'The writer I• chalnnan, Columbia Gas of West VIrginia
By MARVIN E. WIUTE
We In the natural gas Industry are very concerned about the financial
hardship that ma ny utulty customers face today, and the Reagan
administration has recognized the proble m , too. But the natural gas bill
that the admini stration has proposed In Congress would not bring prices
down any tim&lt;' soon. Instead. It would a llow them to rise further.
Action by Congress Is badly needed to deal with the natural gas Issue,
and It should be directed to the heart of the problem- which Is that the
price of natural gas simply Is too high.
The Natural Gas Polley Act of 1978 (NGPA! slllrted us ,t oward a
desired goat of a frre mar)&lt;et for gas- by a gradual removal of ma.ny
strlfllng fed era l regulations: What we have today, however, Is a situa tion
where t here Is more gas available than Is needed by gas customers, but the
price keeps rising. This Is because the way the act works Is to!nfiuencegas
prices only one direct ion - up. What we need are adjustments to reverse
that steady upward movement.
The admlnl stra llon believes the ·way to lower costs Is to remove
federal price controls a t the wellh ead of all gas - both "new " gas,
developed sln&lt;'e 1977, and ·'old " low·cut gas. This Is what we In Columbia
believe to he the most serious flaw In the administration bill. The price of
"old " gas, under present law, would remain under federal controls, and we
b&lt;&gt;lleve that should not be changed .
The administration's theory Is that we would get a lower average
price for all gas by allowing producers to get a higher price for the "old."
low-priced gas while permitting the principal purchasers - Interstate gas
supplier companies- to negotiate a lower price for the " new," or more
expensive gas.
The administration expec ts this result from a provision In Its bill to give
either the purchaser or producer a one -shot cha nce to tennlnate a
gas-pu,..,hase contract - through a "market-out" clause -effective In
!98.'i.
Based on Columbia's experience , It Is extremely doubtful that
producers would agree to negotiate lower prices on cmitracts covering
"new" gas Immedia tely after enactment of lhe Adm!nlst!'atlon proposal.
Producers ca n be expected to try to ma intain high prices for " new" gas,
particularly for gas that already has been deregula ted (such as the most
expensive. very deep gas 1 for as long as possible. or at least until 1985when
buyers. could exercise the "market-out" option .
At the sa me time. producers of "old" gas would most certainly Insist
on higher prices for tha t less expensive gas If It were deregulated. And If
the original purch aser did not match a higher offer for the gas. the
producer. aner IM'xt year, could cancel the contract an~ sell it to the
highest bl&lt;)der.
The result as we see It will only be higher, not lower. consumer prices
If "old" gas price oontrols are removed al the same time all controls an&gt;
lifted on " new" gas. Columbia Is against deregulation of any gas not
already Intended to be dereguhited under the NGPA because this would
ra ise the price to consumers unfteeessarlly.
Cor rective legislation Is urgently needed, hoWever, from Congress to
gtve gas suppliers more flexlbUity In contracts with producers.
Spec ifically. such legislation should Include these provisions:
- In all contracts that· require a gas purchaser to accept or pay a
producer for a minimum percent agt&gt; of contract volumes, there should be
a limit of en percent on such "take-or-pay" obligations for three years.
-A market-out option on gas -purchase contracts should be effective
Immediately on passage of legislation. but only for gas already
deregulated or scheduled to be deregulated - not "old" gas.
" Most fa vored nation" clauses should be banned In both existing and
new gas purchase contracts as against public policy. These clauses permit
gas contracts to automa tically " track" the highest prices paid to
producers under other gas contracts, are anti-competitive and have a
te ndency to ratchet prices upward Irrespective of the pu,..,haser's market
conditions.
- Contracts covering more than one price category of gas should be
considered as separate contracts. Currently. when It becomes necessary
to reduce gas "takes" from a producer with both 'old" and 'new" gas, and
thereby lnc,..,ases the percentage of high-cost gas delivered to the buyer
and ultimately to the consumer.
The complex b!ll that I he administration has proposed 'Inevitably
means there w!ll be lengthy congressional debate. But financial hardship
on consumers rt'sultlng from the current situation, prlmartly Involving
Inflexible gas-purchase contracts. makes !I essential thai Congress act as
promptly as possible to relieve the burden on consumers.

'fi

l~t

\ll

Feel dragging p.a___r_o_b_e_______·J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rsp_n
WASHINGTON -Attorney General William French Smith has said
his No. 1 priority is cracking down
on lllegal drug trafllc. He might be
Interested to learn that some of his
own Justice Department people
have been less than enthusliistic
about the Investigation of drug
deal!ng In the halls of Congress.
For months, while a federal
grand Jury has been hearing
testimony about narcotics sales to
members of Congress and their
staffs, Justice Department officials
have been playing down the
explosive evidence.
But with the extradition from
Australia of two suspected ringleaders, Douglas Marshall and
Troy Todd , the fool-dragging off!·
clals will soon havenoplacetoh!de.
The heat Is on the Justice Department - a nd the prominent politicians who have been accused or

purchasing na,..,otics.
Perhaps the first question the
attorney general should ask his
subordinates Is why Marsha ll and
Todd were allowed to skip the
country 10 months ago. Undercover
de tect ives caug ht them red handed , sell!ng $15,&lt;XXl worth of
cocaine In the home of Ma rshall's
father, Sylvan. a prominent Washington lawyer. Yet the charges
against the two were suddenly
dropped. allowing them to flee to
Australia.
•
Another matter the attorney
general should ask a bout Is the
mysterious withdrawal by prosecutors of a crucial grand Jury
subpoena Issued to Capitol Pollee
Chief James Powell. His. men had
cdllected lnformaton about drug
use In the Capitol. but the gra nd
jury's subpoena was withdrawn
after It had been served - beea use

Let's all pi~ch in
As "Clean Up Ohio Day" Is
nearing. we are urging that all area
reside nts share In the splrU of
cleaning up Meigs County, this
Saturday, Aprilll.
U each of us can doh!sor her pari
In controll!g·lltter, we can make our
county a clean, sale and beautiful
area In which to llve. So, get
Involved and see what . . Meigs
County can do to stop litter.
Vartous area groups ha\le already mel to finalize plans for this
state-wide .clean-up campaign.
Some groups scheduled to partie!•

•

pate are as follows : Eager Beaver
4-H Club; Meigs 4-H Pleasure
Riders; Busy Clovers 4-H Club;
High Flying 4·H Club; Merry
Makers 4-H Club; Meigs Marvels
4-H -Club; Mountaineers 4-H Club;
Allred Livestock; and other area
organ!zatons. REACT also wilt be
helping with the safety procedures.
Let's all jolne In to put l!tll!r In Its
place! Remember, Utter Is a
"people · problem," and It takes
people to contain lt. "L!tll!r doesn't
Just go a way! " ·- Tim Clemens.

of a phone call fmm Powell to
prosecutor Daniel Bernstein.
Part of the evidence the grand
jury wanted has apparently disappeared. A secre1 investigative
document seen by my associates
Jack Mitchell a nd Indy Badhwar
states. " It has been indicatt'd that
these records (the Capitol Pollee
data 1 are no longer complete, and
that the U.S. Attorney's office will
withdraw Its subpoena." This, of
course. Is preclseiywhat happened.
Sources close to the case estimated that a thorough follow-up on
the allegations given to the prosecutor could have resulted In as mal),y
as 100 witnesses being called before
the grand jury. There was no such
effort to brea k the case.
A year ago. an eyes-only memorandum prepared for the attorney
general's signature ordered his
lieutenants to form "Law. E: nforce-

ment Coordinating Committees ...
to focus on the social environment
which has helped to create the vast
market for illegal drugs."
CONFIDENTIAL FILE: A secret Pentagon report gives a
scorecard on U.S.-Soviet competition In nuclear weapons available
for use In the Pac.lflc area. ·In 12
separate nuclear weapons systems
In the Pacific, the United States
leads In just two: canier fighter
planes and surface-to-air m!ssUes.
The Russians hold the advantage In
short-range surface-to-surface missiles. artutery, rockets, tong-rangP
surface-to-surface missiles, naval
surface-to-surface missiles, submarine surface-to-surface missiles. naval guns, torpedoes, landba sed fighter -bombers and
land-based heavy bombers.

Tips for lonelyll[__t_r_a_v_e_le_r_s____L_ow-:--e_u_w_in_ge_u
Having made a trip from Florida
Georgia welcomP center near the
11 will surprise you to know just
the drtver who speeds up when you
Florida state line, then no rest stops
how many minor Irrit ations you
atte mpt to pass and won't let you
by myself, I thought It might be
useful to you lf I passed on a few
until you reach the South Carolina
will find whe n you are traveling
back In your old lane. When you
traveling Ups gained by my
welrome center. It's a long dry
alone. There Is t he man a head who
have to fall In behind him, he
experience. Who knows? Some day
spell and I Intend to speak sharply
slows down to 30 or 40 miles per
promptly returns to his old speed of
you may have to make a long trip
about It to Jimmy Carter or Sena tor
hour until you pass him. Then he
45 or 50. Then you are forced to stay
by yourself and this Information
Sam Nunn al the fi rst opportunity. I
zooms past you al 70. only to
hehlnd him or you will be faced with
earned the hard way some day
know peanuts and national defense
resume his sna il-like pace a few
the sm e situation aga in. He Is a
may prove valuable. For what It's
are Important but so is a burst
miles up· the road. Or I he driver
cousin or brother to the driver who
bladder.
•
. who won't stay In the right lane.
creeps along consistently. He Is
worth, I offer It free and clear.
After the first hundrell or so
\{eep a close eye on your florid
They seem to think the left lane Is
particularly Irrit ating on the occamlles, don't begin talking to
friend . Maybe he knows the
made for real drivers like them- slana! construction detours where
Interstate better than you and
selves . They won't let you pass and · he seems to enjoy the challenge of
yourself. Your comments will have
little effect on fellow travelers.
knows of a service station that
as i have a phobia about people who
zooming along ~ miles under the
Truck drivers will continue crowdmight 1Je used as a convenient
pass me on the right, l assume . . speed limit. He Is probably the
lng your tailpipe and cars will
oasis. Or you might have a grea ter
other people feel likewise. The car
same driver who brags that he has
contthue to cui In too close. Drtve
sense of security or peace of mind If
that passes on the right Is out of the
never had a wreck In his tlfe. He
defensively but not loudly. There Is
you carried some sorr' of empty
field of vision of both the average
doesn't count the number of cars
ilo quicker way Into some strange · container In your car. In order not
car's mirrors . Therefore, It gives
that have pll!'d up behind him.
booby-hal.ch than to hold long and
to offend sensibilities you can label
me a creepy feeling to pass or be
Maybe I was traveling on slow
loud conversations with yourself
the container "Old Port." I don 't
passed on the right side . The guy
days when pollee work was light
about the qualifications of other
mean as In "Old Port Wine" but
who persists In holding the lefl.lane
but I came from Florida to the West
motqrists, truck drivers and motoragain "Any Old Pori In a Stann,"
Is to me the real menace of VIrginia turnpike and never saw a
You will be surprised althe sense of
!nterstste tra vel. He should be
l?"trolman. Where the old turnpike
cycle riders to be on the public
highways. DQn'l be too startled
physical security II gives you lf · banned from the highways!
formerly started at Princeton,
your florid friend's kidneys do not
Then there Is the driver who there Is a large neon sign that
when you are a mile or so from an
exit and drlvlng sedately In the
function on the same time-table as
won'f let another car pass. I don't reads, "Speed limit 55. Strictly
right hand Jane If . some eager
yourself.
know whether It Is Intentional or not enforced."
homegoer zooms past on the berm.
but the result Is the same. This Is
Brother, you better believe It!
He probably has a cold one waiting
l f ) I H &lt; - '~'-"'
In the refrigerator and Can't walt to •
liJ{) -fi.ll~ V/r,~ ~
get home alter a long day In the salt
()~If" I
1'\JW In '"'
mines. Be sympathetic to his
' ' l~f\lii.I~R I~ " ·
needs, although he probl!bly scared
'f1 nt-,

iltJ!f

Letter to the editor

'1"11'6.11 1\t:.' Ill it Llt~IH.OIIITY

niNVV" vr .VW~"'\1'\01....

true. In Cuba, ne\rer mind the
tyranny of Batista, who asked for
h!mseH and his entourage only
power and wealth - muc!l tess
wealth than· the leaders of democrane Mexico and democratic
Venezuela have Insisted upon for
thetr demanding selves.
Thus the notion that what Is going
on In Salvador Is a fight for hiunan
welfare Is Eastern Seaboard Uberatlsm at Its · gooiest, thoughtless
worst. El Salvador's Is, simply, one
more revolution. But what makes It
distinctive Is Its auspices.
2. Without Cuba and Nicaragua,
the probabll!ty Is that the government would have eliminated the
rebels. "Probab!llty" Is here the
best word for It, because the
government of Salvador - never
mind that !I was democratically
elected and represents Indisputably the majority of the people of
Salvador - Is most fearfully Inept.
The m!lltary Is lacking In resourcefulness, In elan, In dash. It Is acting
rather like the Union Army at the
beginning of the Civil War, the
army that drove President Lincoln
to distraction. In such a situation, a
small, well-led , unscrupulous band
of terrorist-minded gunmen can
accomplish fears not normally
associated y.oith small bands of
revolutionists.
3. What then are the responslb!lltles of the American government•
That depends on two factors, one of
them hlslllr!cal. The first has to do
with the Important question: Is
there life left · In the Monroe
Doctrine? That doctrine ·was laid
down when Karl Marx was five
years old, and can't be blamed on
the Central InteUigence Agency or
on Reagan's love of poverty. It
gui&lt;!ed American policy up untu Its
abandonment alter the Bay·of Pigs.

youroared
Into a past
hearonheart
when
he
yourattack
right where
you never expected a car.
~ obserVant at rest stops. Size
up your fellow travelers and pick
,one with the expression of one who
has many mUes to go. U possible
strike up a conversation and find
out whee he ls going. If be Is from
Canada or Michigan and has a
florid ocmplexlon walt outside In
your car untu he comes out, then
follow him. Let him act as your
pacesetter then you can say tp any.
patrolinkil who might stop that you
were only keeping up with tr~. It
might world I stress the tlorld
complexion because he probably
takes high blood presaure medicine
too. That II Important, especially If
you are traveling Jllll'th on Inters~te 9!1 throuah Georgia. 'There Is a

f't:K'C'

~ lolt.r'l.'f.IJ

By SCO'IT WOLFE
Righthander Mike Collins who
suffered a severe ankle sprain
Sunday bounced back to pitch three
and two thirds of shutout basebaU
Wednesday enroute · to a . 14-6
Eastern vlctocy over SVAC foe,
nannan Trace.
.
"Colltns' feat was very courageous since he was on crutches
Monday and Tuesday. Collins told
me all day at school that he was
ready Ill pitch. Being leery of his
ankle, I was skeptical about him
playing, but when the situation
arose he was our only hope. Tonight
he prov€d 1o himself and many
others that he could do the job,"
stated Coach Scott Wolle.
Perhaps overshadowed by Collins' effort . was the fact that
Eastern's bats pounded out 10 hits.
E:very E:astern player contributed
to the win led by Lany Cowdery's
three-hit, four RBI performance.
Cowdery had two singles and a
double, Mark Holter two singles,
Ray Maxson a single, and two
walks, and Jay Carpenter a two
RBI double. Troy Guthrie, Bob
Malson, and Steve White each
..

.-

The Daily Sentinel

The

C»!io

,

CLOSE PLAY- In this Mike Gibbs' action photo Hannan Trace's
Daniel Bays narrowly beats out an lnlleld hit as Eastern flrstbaseman
Dave Gaul (18) awaits the throw fr~m third baseman Troy Guthrie.
~m's Ray maxson prepared to back up the play as the ball can be
seen a short distance from Gaul's glove. Eastern carne from behind to
claim a 14-' triumph.

KC back in race
after 8-4 victory
CHESIDRE - Four unearned
runs alter two outs In the third
Inning carried the Kyger Creek
Boticats to anB-4 SVACvictory over
Southern here· Wednesday alternoon. The win pushed the Bobcats
of Coaches Clarence Barber and
Jake Bapst back Into the loop race.
Junior righthander J. D. Bradbury
held the Tornadoes to ·only two hits
through the first six Innings before
tiring In the seventh. ·Steve Waugh and Larry Edge
banged out tWo singles apiece and
Anthony.K!tchen;'Bany Mattheivs,
Duane Abshire. and Pennington ali
singled for the Bobea ts.
Zane Beegle had a double a nd

Racking up their
seventh consecuth.je win, the Meigs
Marauderette reserves scored
eight runs In their final at bat to
defeat host Logan here Wednesday,
21-15.
Coach Wally Hatfield' s nine, now
7-2 on the year, took advantageof24
walks to make the most of seven
hits . Combined with the varsity's

Beulah remits
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Round Six, ridden by Reyes Matias,
won the featured eighth race at
Beulah Wednesday to pay $7.20,
$2.40 and $2.20.
Second was Camp Robber for

single to pace Southern, Tony Riffle
had a RBI triple, Paul Harris a
single, and Dave Eb&lt;irsbach a
single to pace Southern's weak
attack.
Bradbury struck out six and
walked five to post the big wln.
Kyger Creek Is now 3-2 in the league
and 8-5 overall.
. Porter and Beegle combined for
seven strikeouts and five walks as
they also pitched well but the poor
fielding cost them a chance of
victory.
KYitCr Creek .... ... .... ........ MI 210 x-8 8 2
· SouttK&gt;rn ....... ......... , .. .. ..... 00) '001 -3--'1· 5 4
Bauer\es: J. D. Bradbwy 1WPt and Y~l
Myei-s. John Porter (LP, Zane &amp;.ogle 4th and
Zane Beegle, P aul Harris. 4th .

record of 10-0, the two Meigs girls'
teams have won 17 straight games.
Hitting for the little Marauderettes was Julie Roush witll two
singles and a home run, Barb
Hatfield with a double, a nd Jodi
Miller, Holly Miller. and Teresa
Pratt with a single each.
Roush not only was the leading
Meigs lady a t the plate. but she also
hurled the distance with a fivehitter In striking out one and
walking 10. The Logan pitching
waked 24 and fanned four .
The Meigs reserves play a t home
Friday when they host Jackson.
By Innings:
Meigs ....
.. .. ...203 c.m A-2t 7

ClNC!NNAT! l AP)- New York
Mets' right-hander Mike Torrez
made It clear from the start thai he
wanted this one badly.
"You could tell from the first
inning that he was serious about
going out there," said Danny Heep,
·who drove In the winning run In the
Mets' 2-1 victory Wednesday over
tile Cincinnati Reds.''! haven't seen
h!rn throw so hard, even In spring
training. He was really pumped
up."
With good reason. Torrez had a
chance to reverse his slow 1983start,
give the Mets their first roadvtctory
of the season 1!110 games , and come
out ori. top In a pitching duel With
·. Reds starter Joe Price.
Torrez held the Reds to one run on
just th
hits over the first eight
Innings, hlle Price shackled til&lt;&gt;
Mets on e run and five hlt.s over
that s
Th deadlock was broken In the
top o the ninth. Price retired Dave
Kingman to start the Inning , then
walked George Foster on a 3-2 pitch.
Huble Brooks singled to center,
moving Foster to third, and
Cincinna ti Manager Russ N lxon
brought In Tom Hume to pitch.
The Mets countered with pinchhitter Danny Heep, who hll a. 1-1
pitch 'deep to center field for a ,
sacrlflce fly, scoring Foster.
J esse Orosco cameout ofthe Mets
bu Upen to get a save In the ninth and
snap the Mets' fou r-game losing
steak.
"The best thing about today was
Mike Torrez coming out and

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two hits and just one earned run.
Meanwhile, Eastern came to life
In the sixth with a b!g seven run
rally. Maxson and Jewett wa !ked,
Holter singled, Carpenter walked,
Cowdery singled, Bob Malson
· walked, Steve White singled, and
Troy Guthrie singled for an 11-6
lead. Easll!rn added three In t~
seventh to claim the win.
Hannan Trace pitchers Jeff
Barnes and Teny Cline combined
lor 10 walks, five strikeouts, and
gave up 10 hits. Barnes suflered the
loss.
Eastern plays at Federal HockIng Thursday, then travels to
Southern for a rematch with the
Tornadoes on Friday. HT Is 4-7 on
the year. EHS Is 24· L
Unescore:
HT .....

.. .. 3111000-6 34

Eastern ....

..... 310 073 x- lt 10 5

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HEAR THE REDS A~L
SEASON LONG ON

Batteries: Jewttt. CoiUns t WP I 4th and
WhJte, Cowdery. J . Barnes tLP\ , Clll"'£' Mh
and David Barnes.

Mets trim Reds, 2-1

Marauderettes post 21.-15 win
WGAN -

·added clutch singles.
Hannan Trace hitters were Da·
nlel Bays with a single, Billy Swain
a single, and Doug Kirk a single.
Hannan Trace plated three un·
earned runs In the ftrst Inning off
Eas~m $tarter neron Jewett on
two walks, t;wo errors, and a Kirk
single.
EHS came right back to knot the
Score at 3-.3 on watj(s to Maxson and
Jewett, an RID single by Hol~r and
a two run double by designated
hitter Jay Carpenter.
Carpenter, also hampered by a
severe ankle sprain batted from the
lett side due Ill his InJury Instead at
his usual right-handed alignment.
Both clubs scored single runs In
:he second, then Coach Brett
WUson's crew went up &amp;-4 with
single runs In the third and fourth
Innings.
·
With one run In, one out and the
bases loaded, CoUins was caUed
upon and proved Ill be the stopper
for the Eagles. Collins went on to
fan three, yielded Just one hit, and
did oot walk a single batter the rest
of the way. Jewett In his outing
walked seven, fanned five. gave up

WMPO 92 FM

12997

pitching a great game." said Heep,
batting .400.
Torrez, who spent the last eight
years In the American League,
picked up his first National League
victory since Sept. 7:7. 1974. He
dredged up another btl of trivia by
driving hoine Brian GOes IQr the
Mets' first run with a llflh-lnnlng
single - his ftrst hit since that same
game In 1974.
'The Reds changed his thinking In
the SIXth when Dave Concepcion
walked, took second on a sacrifice .
and scored on Cesar Cedeno's
double just out of Foster's reach In
left field to tie the game 1-1.

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REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic s ubsidiaries of thr•

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
of Racine In the sta te of Ohio, at thee lo se of business on Marcldl. 19KI, publlshl'ftln
response to call made by Com ptroller of th~ Currency , undN title 1 ~. U nltNI St a tPs
Code , Section 161.
)
National nank ltr gtn n NurnbPr 4
Charter number 98 15
• - - . - - - Statement of Resources and Liabilities
.. . .. ....... liX·I.IIOO .tXI
Cas h and due from dlspository Ins titutions
......... .
........ I. H!\ 2, lXXI. IJII
U.S. Tre&lt;tsury sec urities .. .. .... . ................... ....... .......... .. .
Obligations of other United States a nd polit ic al subdi vi s ion s
.. I ,'lti:t.tltKJ.Otl
and political s ubdivisions ....... ..
.. ............... ..
....... IK .tltXJ.OII
All other sec urities .............. ........................ · ........ · ........ ·
Federal funds sold and secur it ies purchas Pd under
agreements to resell ........... ...... ........... ... ...........
.. .. .. ........ . ~. ltKJ.IItXUitl
Loans. Total (excluding unearned In come I
.. tt.ti?:I.OOO .OO
Less : Allowance for possible loa n tosses .................. 21t.IIOO .IJII
Loans. Net ..... ... ............ .. ...... ........ :.. ........ .
. ........... t 1.4tiVKXI.OO
Bank premises, furnitur e and flxtur~s. and ot her asse ts
. . . .. .. .. . . . ... 261. 0011.1)1)
representing bank premises .. .................. ..
..... lii ,OIXI.tXI
Real estate ow ned other than bank pre ml s.e s
........ , .. . . . ... I t o,O(XJ. 00 - - -·
• -- t--All ot her assets ............... ..... ..
................. .. ........
1 7,71i~&gt; . 01Ki . IJII
TOTAL ASSETS .............. ..

VI
Ill

--........
-....
Ul
&lt;(

Demand deposits of Individual s, partnerships
. . 2,tri!J ,O!Kl .IIIJ
and corporations .... .. .. ............................. .. .... .. . .. .... .
Time and savings deposits of Individu a ls, partnerships.
and corporations ..... .... ............... ..
.. .... ........ ..... , .. ....... ...... I:I . ~K4.0lKI . OO
Deposits of United States Govern m ent ....... :--· ..............
.. .... . t9 .1KKI.OO
Deposits of States and political subdivisions m the
United States ..... .. ... ... .. .. .............. ......... ..........
. ...... ............ 62:1,000.00
Certified and officers' check s . .. .... .. .. . .. .. .. . . .... ... .
.. .................... :11 ,IJIXI.Otl
Total Deposits .:...... ....................... .......
. ...... ................... . J o .~~lli, OlKI.OO
. Total demand deposits .... .. ........................... ........ 2,:197 ,[1011.00
Total time and savings deposits .............. . .... .. . ...... 13.&gt;99.000 .110
00
....... .. ...... ...
- - -•
Iii . OH ~I .0110.00
not e and debentures

•---1- *~;~{~~~!~~:~:~ri:s ;~~~~~di~;;·~~t;~;·di~a;;:d · · ···

~~:\ .ooo

....

Co mmo n Stock
.
No. shares authorized 5,000 (par va lue )
....... l ~ ;,.mlO.OO
No. shares outstanding 5,000 (par value) ............... .
:;)Q,
...........
12:, .ooo.&lt;JO
Surplus .............. .. .. .. .... .. ..... ... .. .... ...... .. .. .. ............ .
O&lt;(
profit s and reserve for contingenc ies and
wU Undivided
other capital reserves .. .. ........................................................... 1 . 4~ti. \XIO . OO
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ....... ....... ............. .......... ....... .......... 1.671;,ooo .oo
----+-TOTAL LIABILITIES AND E:QUITY CAPITAL .......... ... ..... . ..... 17.76o ,OO:J.OO - - &gt;-&lt;(

........

--

.

I

Amounts outstanding as of report date :
..
.
Standby letters of credit, total ........... -. .. .. . .. . .. ........... .. '............... ... 96,11011 .00
Time certificates of deposit In denomtnat Ions of
$100,000 or more .. .. .. ....... .. ............ .. ....... .................. .. ............ .. I , 120.1KJO.OO
Average for 30 calendar days tor calendar month ) e nding with report dat e :
Total deposits ............ ..... :...... ................. .. .. ....... ........ ..... .... .. ... ... 15.90:&gt;.1100.00
We the undersigned directors attestlhe correctness of this statem ent of r·•·sourres
and llabU!t!es . We deClare that It has been examined by us, and to th e beAt of our
knowledge and belief Is true and correct.
·
John T . Wolle
Carroll R . Norris - Directors
Clarence V. Price

'I. Gary P . Norris. Cashier of the ahove-named bank do hereby declare ih at this Report of Condition Is true and correct to the best of m y knowle dgea and· bel et.
Gary P . Nor ris
April 25, 1983

�•
-----~--

Page

The Daily Sentinel

4

(.

-Tomadoettes win
third SVAC title

By KEI'l'H WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS -In. Meigs
High Schqol track ~Y, the
Meigs girls whipped AlelW!der
72-38, but the boys were defeated
by the Spartans. · •
Freshman Dreama EngUsh won
both the 100 and :aJO meter runs
whUe serilor Renee WU!Is won the
100 meter hUrdles, teamed with
Carol BaUey, Kristin Balley, and

200 120 0-5 fi 4

Batteries: l.a rPn Wolfe 1W P1 , Tonj&lt;~
SalSer 5th a nd &amp;ontley . C. Swisher 1LP 1 and
D . Shartlger.

;.u..

- Earlier this week Southern picked up two more league
by defeating
Southwestern 17-1 and North Gallla 11-5.
Southern jumped to 4-0 lead In the first agains t Southwestern Monday
and never looked.back en route to the Impressive viCtory .
Southern hitters were Karen Hemsley with two doubles , M el Weese
two triples and a single, Debbie Michael a double, and singles by Tonja
Salser, Jenny Bentley, M ichelle Johnson and Becky Adkins.
Hoover doubled for t he Highlanders, while McNea l and Camburn each
singled .
Salser was the winning pitcher with two walks and three strllkeouts.
PHillips suffered the loss wit h six walks and two strikeouts. Phillips
suffered the loss with six wa lks and two st rllkeouts.
Against North Gallla. Southern awoke In the latter iMlngs to overcome a
shaky start and claim the 11 -5 win.
Southern hitters wer e M el Weese with two Singles and triple, Karen
Hemsley tWQ singles, Debbie Michael two slngies, Jenny. Bentley two
singles, and singles by Mic helle Johnson, Tonja Salser. Laren Wolfe, and
Becky Michael.
Justis singled twice, Mont ooth tripled, and Michelle George singled.
Laren Wolfe was the winning pitcher with four strikeouts and six walks.
Tana George suffered the loss wit h four st rikeout s and two walks .
Southern pi'IYS Waham a tonight.

...... , .. :... fXn 042 U--9 9 1
K C ..
. ....
. ..... ... .... ., .
.
. ~n 110 fl.-~ fi 4
Ball pr ll &gt;s: L ai'PIJ WOlff' f Wf' I. 'T onj&lt;l Sal'il' l' .1111 a net 1)(- nll~· f '. Swl ~ hl:'r fLP) and 0

South!Jrn .

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

. .. ......... ... ..... --·

ShaM i j.,'f'r .

Meigs girls remain unbeaten
By KEITH WISECUP

Lambert doubled home two more,
Buffington walked , and Gloeckner .
singled home the final tally.
" We capita lized on their mistakes and had some good solid hil s
when we needed them. Lambert Is
r eally putting the ball across the
plate. Logan has a rea l tough ball
club," commentf'd As h after the
game.
Lambert upped her record to 9-0
as she fanned six and wa lked four.
Cook went the rout e for Logan and
struck out six while walking 11 .
Hitt ers for the Marauderettes
wa s Lambert with a single and
double, Snowden two si ngles,
Grueser a double, and Horton,
(~loeckner. and Han ·tson each a
single.
Courtl'r il•!l L ogan with a single

ROCK SPRINGS - The M e l~ s
Marauderettes kept their unbeaten
skein alive at 10 and took over sole
possesslon of first place 1n the
SEOAL as they handed defend ing
champion Logan a 11 -4 setback
here Wednesday .
Meigs traUed 3-1 going Int o thl'
home half of the fifth when the sent
16 batters to the plate and scored 10
runs to win going away.
Coach Rick Ash'scrrw goesto S-0
In league play while Loga n, who
suffered their first leagup toss In a
year and a half. dropped to 4-1. The
Lady Chiefs are 7-2 overa ll.
The big Meigs fifth began r olling
with one out when Krls Snowden
walked, Natalie La_mbe11 slnalrd,
'
Robin Buaainton walked, Beth
''
Gloeckner
walkl'll.
Barbbanved
GruesPra
walked , Jodi
Harrison
'
si ngle to score two, Cindy Crooks
walked. Paula Horton got on bv
.. an
error, Snowden slngiNJ home two,

and
doublis
e. bracketed In sectiona l
M eigs
tournament play with Fairl and,
Ga llipolis, Warren Local, and
Relpre. The dra wing i s to be h!'ld at
Ironton thi s Su ndav.
M eigs plays ai . home tonight
. agamst AlcxandPr m a non -league

oion SJgn•up
Le~slated Sunday
0

.

Stgnup for lhP Melg~ County
American legion basebal lt€'am will

~ld

at

FeeneyBennett
PostSunday
128, i\at
merlbe
2:30p.m.
thP
can Legion Home In Mlddlepm1 .
This Is the 19th year for the
county to have the America n
L egion baseball progr am and it is
open to all Meigs and Ga ll i a player s
r egardless or whether parents have
American Legion affiliation. Play ers must be atleasil9 after August
1. The team Is co-sponsored by
Feeney-Bennett Post and Dr ew
Webster Post 39, Pomemy . Those
registering are to take a bl11h
certificate and a $7 registra tion fee.

1111

8:; innings:

.Inn n 2 0 I- ·I ~ 4
. .... !01 II HI lJ N- 11 H 5
C1KJk 1I .P l and VPrmllllon. 1.amtw•r1 1WP1

Log .u1. .. ·

Ml'lgs . .... .....

Thunda~April28,

SAFE AT HOME - Cindy Crooks slides safely into home from
second on a b118e!iloaded single by Krls Snowden. Meigs won Its I Olh In a
row, 11-4, Wednesday nlght.

Logan defeats Meigs

~

M'jOI'S

) _....__
NATilNAL LFAG UE
&amp;ASI 01\'miON
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St . l.ouls 7, Los Anla'les 6
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'O !ICafiO 5, san D~ ~. 1U lnnin.~tS
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NPW York a t TeM$; 8::ft p.m .

In Wednesday's Sentinel. the
person running In a track photo
taken from Tuesday's track meet
was incorrectly ldentlfled. It was
Paula Swisher In the 800 relay and
not Renee Willis In the mile rel ay.
0

IA&gt;troli at Oakland, 10: J:l p.m .
&amp;Ill more at Sea t11P, 10:35 p .m .

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MONTREAL (AP) -The record
book said Walter Johnson, 3,50!
strikeouts. Best ever. The old
newspaper clips said it was
unrnatchable.
But In N.olan Ryan's mind, the
measure of a fastball was the one
Sa,ndy Koufax threw.
Ryan was resting comfortably In
front of a bank of television cameras
and a largegroupofnewsmen. On a
clear Wednesday l'jfternoon lri
Monttlial, the Houston Astros .
right-hander had broken Johnson's
55-year-old lifetime strikeout record. It was only natural to ask what
this strikeout king thought of the old

one.
" The only thing I know about
Johnson Is what I have read In the
newspapers,'' Ryan said. "I looked
hbn up once In the BasebaU

~----.;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~~~~~~~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~

the little Marauder s and was
r elieved by Rod Roush In the sixth.
Shawn Baker pitched the seventh.
They combined for three strikeouts
and six walks and hit one batter.

Encyclopedia, but all that gave me
was his slats. It didn' t say too much
aboutthe man."
What that revered book of
baseball statistiCS said about that
orlglnal Hall of Farner was that he
had struck out 3,50! batters in a
21-year career with the Washington
Senators, ending In 1927:

Myers hurled all the way for the
winners and fanned five while
giving up (our walks.
Leaglng Meigs· at the plate was

I~"r:"'::Ito:,.:'":"·======================~

-~ -

off

Our Reg. 9.97

OJ

W

Our Reg. 149.85

.6 .97

Our

Reg. Price

Fruit Trees
5-6' foot potted trees. Avatlable tn assorted
kinds.

127.97

K-Gro"' 25-3-3 Weed And Feed

lV2·HP 23-lnch Lawn Mower

Maximum quality fertilizer with weed control. Covers 5.000 sq. M. ·For h e al! hy lawns

3Y?-HP lawn mower with reco tl-start engtne.
side disc harge and 22" cutting blade.

DECORATIVE
PINE PARK

6
Our reg. 5.97

2 •97

SAVE

ITJ

Decorator Pine Bark

1" over 3 cu. ft

Cover

4.97
Rose Buthes
Assorted

types in gallon contatner.;

Sale Price

7

4" Potted Gwanluma
Cotorfi.JI gerantums for flcMoer boxes. borders and 1
1

e:gssm
50' Rut.ber Garden Hose
50'x 1h" rubber reinforced h ose
Our UJ, H - Noule .......... 1.57

The Daily Sentinel
I USPS 141-IMl

.

1\ Dlvl"'lo• of MuiUmedla, Inc.
Published ("Very afternoon, Monday

through Friday. l ll Court Str('('t, by thc

2
For

Our Reg. 33.88

88¢

!lmedla. I nc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 4fl7m. 992'2156. Second class postage paid at Po-

Bedding Plant Pack

Member : The Associated PrE"Ss, In -

Flower and vegetable
plant&lt;; t or y o ur garden

mcroy. Ohio.

land Datly Pr t'Ss Assoclaton and the

22.97

Our Reg. 1.77

97¢

Your
Choice

Amer ican Ncwspapt-r Publishers M ·

soctatlon. National Advertising Representative, Branham Nt'wspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue, New York , New

York 10017.
POSTMASTER: !iend addr'Hil to The
Dally Sentinel, lll Court St. , Pomf'roy ,

Ohio 41769.

,YOU.

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SVBSCRIFriON RATES
By Carrier or Mocor Route
One Week ....... .. ............. ,.......... $1.00

You might l1et!d money for a lot of goo!
reasons: to take care of unexpected bills, to
.
. fix up your home, or perhaps to take awell·
·deserved vacation. Whatever the cause, City Loan and ·
Savmgs has the money to meet it.
.
. So stop by one of our offices, or call us. Find out how
qwckly we can supply money for your favorite cause.
Because nobody knows you like we do.

One Month ................................ $4.40
One Year ....... ... ......... ..... .. ...... ~2 . 80

A gift of Russell Stover Candies will bring a smile to Mothers, Grandmothers
and Aunts on May 8. Choose from quality candies 11111de of fresh, wholesome ingredients selected with the greatest care. "Only the finest" for her
on this special dJJ.y.

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dall y .... .............................. 20 Cen11

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rle-r" may_remll lfl ·adv.anc£&gt; direct to
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No subscriptions by mall ~rmllled In
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IMide Otllo

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......

GAJ.LIPOLIS: 111! Std'!\(1 A\·e.. 446-1973
I'OMEHOY: li'f&gt; F..lloin St.. 992·217t

•

_..,, .

Bos10n at Calltornia, IO:.JJ p .m .

BONE

Chf.•tm. Thompson 1WP' and Tru C'CO.

~~--~--~~--~--~~~~~~~==--------

II

Ryan breaks
strikeout

. . . trrl 100 0- 4 4 6

However, hunters In t.he cen tral
and northeast regions were against
it.

Hwlll Cfl 2. Montwal 0

Spring!

~W!IeciiOn

approved the proposal for deer
hunters to wear blaze orangP.

h

.i"ll

Ohto Valley Publishing Co mpany · Mul·

Wrong runner

Col!ncU

Many hunters said then that they
did not wantto be told what to do by
the state.
At hearings this winter, sportsmen in the southwest, northwest
and SOIItheast partS of the state

Sa n D~ 10, Chk!IIW R
P1u sb.Jrgh 3, San ~~ rancl-.ro 0
Cinctnnatl 7, NN' York U
•'llanu. 10, Phll.!Q'Iphla -1
t..or. Anwk&gt;s J, St . Lou~ 1

River Down results
CINCINNATI (AP\ - The fea ·
tured race at River Downs was
captured Wednesday by Ben Rode
Hard, which turned the six furlongs
in1:131·5 .
Ben Rode Hard paid $6.80, $3.80
and $.140, while Press · Me ~ow
finished second to retum;$( 20 and
$3.~. Irwln'sAim pald$4 to show.
· The 7-5 dally double paid $37.50.
The trtfecta of 6-5-1 paid $.520.80.
The crowd oi 3,078 bet $354,910.

~~~- Wllldllfe

. "If it saves one life. It's a
worthwhile law," said Steve Cole,
chief of the Division of WUdille.
The blaze orange proposal had
been rejected several years ago at
public . fish Md game hearings.

.ili'l -

~

Houstoo
7 1.3 .J50
San F'ratl('i§CO
6 13 , .316
~·" o*""'

For
Mother's
Day

approved a law that stipulates
hunters must wearelthet ahat,cap,
vest or jackeHhat is colored, hunter
orange In thfs state.
WUdlife officials have been advo-

DAYTO'N. Ohio (AP\ -If you're
going deer hunting In Ohio thfs year,
nltd something blaze orange to wear
during shotgun and primitive wea-

m .:n1 w1

.5

O.k-....

·New For

. ............ 1!'12 201 x- 14 10 1
ll arrtson t l.P 1. Bus h t2f, BurdC'Itr-161 a nd

Meigs Marauder r eserves commit ted some costl y errors and dropped
a 14-10 decision to the Logan
r eserves here Wednesday.
Rick Wise stated on the hill for

Scott In the iong jump, Perrin In the
300 high !lurdles, and Sinclair,
Perrin, Mark Hanunond, and
WUllams In the 1600 relay.
Seconds went to Troy Bauer In
the pole ·"''uit, Bret Howard, 110
high hurdles, Sinclair, 100,
Ke~y. 1600, and W1111ams, 200.
Thirds.were Kennedy, 3200, Allen
Terry, !Dl, and Jerry Brevlck, UO
higlt hurdlE$.

·'

oleic

The Daily Sentinel- . Page-S

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Ohio deer hunters must wear orange garments

Scoreboard

Baker with a single and double.
Baker now oens a .600 battlng
average with 12 hits ln20at bats. He
reached base all four times against
Logan and scored .four runs.''' "'
Otliers hi tUng safely for Meigs
was Wise with three singles, Dave
Hoover wllh a triple, and Bobby
Spiers, Lee Powell, and Roush with
a single apiece. York led Logan
with two singles and a double.
Meigs plays at home against
jackson· Friday.

By KEITH WISECUP
LOGAN - The Meigs Marauders fell behind 6-1 after two Innings
before losln~- first place Logan,
14-4 here Wednesday .
With the win, the Chiefs stand at
4-0 in league play .and are . 9-1-1
overal) . They ·pulled a stunning
upset last week over I ronton, 4-3.
Meigs is 2-7 overall and 04 In loop
action.
Senior . Scott Harrison toed the
mound ior M eigs and was relieved
by sophomore Nick Bush in second.
Junior Chris Burdette finished
after taking over in the sixth . They
combined for four strlkeouis and
eight walks.
Junkballer Thompson went the
distance lor Logan as he fanned
seven and walked five.
Hitter s for the Marauders were
Dave Follrod wl th a tripe and
Harrison, Scott Gheen, and Dan
Thomas each had a si ngle. Nelson,
Spence, and Dicken all had two
singles for the winners.
Coac h Ttm Saunders' crew take
on non-league foe Alexander tonight a! hpmr In hopes or ending
their current seven-ga me losing
strea k.
By Innings:
Mct~ s
Lo~ an ... .......

Rhonda Neece towtn the 1600 relay,
and finished second In the 400.
Other Meigs girls winners were
neece In the high jump, Paula
Swisher in the long jump, Karen
Goggins, shot put and second In the
discus, while Swisher, Unda Stewart, Rhonda Haddox, and Char·
mele Turner teamed to win both the
400 and 800 relays.
Finishing second was Dawn
Thomas in the shot put, Penny
Dewhurst In the IIJO, and Haddox In
both the high and · long jumps.
Thirds went to Mae Nakamota In
the high jump, Sherry Russell in
the discus, Llda Riggs In the 1600,
and Stewart in both the long jump
and 200.
the boys' competition, Junior
S wn Eads won the high jump,
1 r 200, and 400 whUe Mike.
Kennedy teamed with Craig Sinclair, Chad Williams, and Jon
Perrin to win the 3:aJO relay.
Other boys' wiMers were Keith

1983 ·

•

M.~igs thinclaids split

CHESHIRE - Southern's Tom adoettes claimed their third straight
SVAC championship here Wednesday evening with a close 9-5 triumph
over Kyger Creek In girls ' fast pitch softball action. Southern Is perfect
inside the league at 9-0 and 11·2 overall .
Tralllng ~-0 after two innings Coach John Dudding's championship
squad came through with big rqllies in the third and !lith !Mings.
Kyger Creek plated two ru ns In the first on walks to Carmen and Wise,
a passed ball and a two R B I si ngle by A. Rainey.
In the third SHS took a 3-2 lead on a M ichelle Johnson err or, a Mindy
Hill single, a two RBI single by Karen Hemsley and RBI single by Laren
Wolfe. KC tied the game at 3-3 with a single run, but theTornadoettes came
back with four In the filth to regain the lead.
Southern hitters wer e Karen Hemsley with a single and triple, Mel
Weese a hOme run, Tonja Salser a double and singles by Becky Mlcheais,
Laren Wolfe, Jenny Bentley, ~c helle .Johnson and M indy Hill.
Kyger Creek hitters were A. "-lney with a triple and single, Vickie Wise
a single, Carla Swisher a single. and Nibert a single.
Laren Wolfe! started for Southern and picked up the win with relief help
from Tonja Salser. They combined to fan fi ve and walk eight. C. Swisher
suffered the loss wit h no strike outs and one walk.
·
Llnescore:
Southern
..... rm 04 '2 ll-9 9 1
~
KC .... ... .. . ... .. .

-

• Tl,tunday, April 28, 1983

..

13 Wooks ...............1 ...... ... .... .... 11~.1!'

:zj; Woeks .......................... .. ..... $27.JO

o,.a Mi..... tt.. '

52 Wocks ........... ... .... ........ ....... II!U8
o.wde Ollila
13 Woeks ........ .... .............. ... .... 'lUI
:16 Weeks ..'...... .. .... ................... S2t.64
52 Woeks ........... ... ................... 11!6.21

.......,.,,o,

'

•

•

..

DO

6.7'7

Our Reg. 6.97

Our Reg.

.4 .97

·4 .77

K-Gro·· lllant food

5-lbs." all purpose plant fOOd to

.....

enrich growth. Add water. Save.

I

'·

.

U?J
Our~

6.57

Sale Price

1.97

20-Lb.• laWn Food

3.97

6-10.5 Garden F•rtiiiZer

50·Lbs. • Play Sand

10.6-4 lawn food plus weed con1101. For gr~ner. richer towns

18-tbs.' &amp;-10.5 fertilizer for large&lt;
vegetables. HelpS plant growth.

Screened. pre-washed play sand
kids sand box. Shop now.

.....

�Thunda~ April 28, 1983

28, 1983

Schools
91ake
plans
for
reunioris
Pomef011 Alumm
-'
Tickets for the Pomeroy Alumni
Association banquet a nd dance,
May 28 are on sale at Swisher and
Lohse and ,the New York Clothing
House.
The tlc.k ets for th\' dinner and
dance are $8 each for alumni and
guests. For the dance only the
tickets are $4 each.
The banquet and dance will he In
the Meigs High School cafeteria.
Applications for the scholarship
available to the child or grandchild
of an alumni are avalla ble from
Jane Wise, J oan Williams or Sue

Zlrkle.
William s

He nr y

Ha rrison

(Tippy) Dye of Port Charlotte, Fla.
will be. attending the 50th annlversacyofhlsgraduatlngclassandwlll
speak at thebanquetonbe~ofthe
class.
Next planning session will he at
thehomeofMrs. Zirkleat7:lJp.m .,
May5.
.
.
1

School.
.
Racine or by sending money. and a
sell·add~ stamped envelope
to Barbara Pierce, ~. State
Route 338, Racine. Tickets must be
obtained before May 24.
A~slon lor the dance, 9 p.m .
to midnight,. Is payable at. the-door.
The Paul H. Carnahan Scholarship or $500 wtn he awarded to a
Harold Roush , class oli933, will graduating senior of Southern High
be· speaker at tile annual Racine
Those unable to attend the dinner
High Schoolf Alumni .Association · are asked to seruf$1 dues to Mrs.
dinner and d flnce May 28.
Pierce. A record Is ·kept on those
Dinner will be served at6p.m . by sending dues only.
•
members of the junior class and
Classes hav!lng reunions are
their mothers. Tickets for the 1918- 23-28- 33-:1!-43-48-53-~73dinner are S6 each and wUI he on 78 and this year's graduating class
sale at the VIllage Cut Rate In will he honored . Ura ·Morrls Is the
only living graduate of the class of

Ractne Atumnt

Calendar
THURSDAY
RUTLAND - An organlza·
tiona! meeting of the Rutland
Youth League will he Thursday
at 6: 30 p.m . at the Rutland Civic
Center. P arents of players are
asked to attend.
POM E ROY - Shade River
Lodge 453 will m eet In special
session Thursday a t 7 p.m. All
master masons are Invited .
Refreshments will he served .
POMEROY Riverview
Garden Club will m eet Thurs·
day at 8 p.m . at the home of
Maxine Whitehead. Members
are asked to bring Items lor a n
auction.
POMEROY Twin City
Shrlnettes will m eet 'Thursday
at 7:30p.m. at the horne of Mrs.
Harry Moore, Middleport.
POMEROY - Meigs county
Women 's Fellowship of the
Churches of Christ "111 meet at
· the Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
ter Thursday at 7 p.m .
POMEROY - OAPSE Chap.
ter 453 at Southern will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m . a t the high
school lor electlon of officers .
FLA1WOODS - Searchlight
Singers will he at Flatwoods
United Methodls Church Revival, 7: 30 p.m . Thursday; Rev.
Benny Stevens speaker eacli
evening through Aprll30; public
Is Invited .
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees meeting 6: 30_p.m .
Thursday at Rutland Fire
Station.
POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Commandery 24 will meet 7: 30
p.m. Thursday to confe r the
order of the temple. All sir
-knights are Invited.
ROCK SPRINGS -

Rock

1913.

Middlep~rt Alumni

Springs Grange will have open
meeting Thursday, 7: 30p.m. at
the hall for an observance of
National Grange Week. There
will he a quilt display, cake
walk, and door prizes: Mary and
Roger Gilmore will give variety
musical program . There will he
refreshments. Meeting Is open
to the public.

'

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - 1 Dance will he 8
to 11 p.m. Friday at Rutland
Civic Center with music by
Unlimited; $3 couple, $2 single.
RACINE - Racine PTO will
sponsor a tool auction, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Racine Junior High
School with Dan Smith as
a uctioneer; refreshments will
he sold .
POMEROY - Star Grange
778, located on County Road 1,
will hold an open house beginning at 6 p.m . Saturday with a
potluck supper. The event is a
family oriented evening and the
public is invited .

SATIJRDAY
HARRISONVll.LE - Harrisonville Youth Leagues wtll hold
practice sessions Saturday all
p.m. All coaches and Interested
parents are asked to attend .
POMEROY - A film . "Super
Christian" wUI he shown Saturday at 7: lJ p.m. at MI. Hermon
United Brethren Church, Texas
Community. The publiC is invited to attend .

SUNDAY
EAGLE RIDGE -The Rev.
Ed Mingus and the Buchtel
Choir will he featured at The
Eagle Ridge Community
Church Sunday a t 7:30p.m . The
Rev. Carl Hicks, pastor, Invites
!he public to attend.

Happenings
Sign-ups slated for softball league
MIDDLEPORT - The MeigsMason Girls' Softball Assocla ·
tton (summer league) will meet

Sunday at 2: 30p.m. at the R. C.
Bottling Co., Middleport . AU
coaches are asked to attend .

The annual Middleport High
School Alumni banquet and dance
will be Saturday, May 28.
Dinner wtll he served at 6:30p.m .
at . the Middleport Elementary
School and the dance will he 9 p.m.
to 1 a.m. at the Meigs Junior High
School.
The banquet and dance Is $10 per
alwnnus and $8 for a guest. The
Susan G. Park Scholarship will be
awarded to a graduating senior.
Students whose parents or a parent
were graduates of Middleport High
School are eligible tor the scholarship. Applications may he obtained
from Mildred Bailey, Route 1,
'Middleport; Lots McElhinny, Mary
L. Boggs, Mlddle!llrt. They must
he returned b)' April lJ.
Reunions WUI he co.nducted by
the classes or1943, 1968, 1963, 1968,
1953, 1948. 1!0!, 1938, 1933, 1928, 1923,
and 1918. ·
Reservations must he rrtade by
May 20 with Carolyn Grueser,
Treasurer, 1625 Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457!9.

Student becomes fourth
.family member at OU

Singing
scheduled at .

Clair Alan Morris, who will
graduate from Southern High
School on May 22, will be the fourth
child of Mr . and Mrs . CarlS. Morris
to .atlend Ohio University .
Cla!Pwill join hJs sister, Carol. a
senior~ majoring in psychology, and
Carl C .. a junior, majoring in
industrial technology, ori the Athe ns
campus for the
..
19~84 ·school year. Anothe r sister.
Carla is a graduate of Oh io a nd now
a teacher at Southern Local Hig h SchooL Clair plans a careev. . ln

area churches
The Catrlers, a ~u~ of· Christian m .u sicians from Belmont, W.
Va., will be featureb at an
all -musical servtce sund&lt;ly night at
Portland United Methodist Church.
The groop will also be singing at
the morning worship services at
Bethany and Sutton United Methodist Churches, but they wtll have a
lesser part In thn!le two services
than In the evening service at
Portland.
A covered-dish dlruler will pre,
cede the evening service at 6:00.
The Carilers will be the guests or
honor at this dinner. Those who
attend the dinner are asked to bring
READY TO•START- Fifteen monlh old Seth Baker pictured with
something light and easy to tlx,
. hl8 molher, boanle Baker, Is ready lor the big day. The Tiny Tech
such as sandwiches, a salad, or a
Daycare Pn!sclJool, locatOO at the United Penleoostal Church, 835
dessert, and their own utensils:
South
Third
Street,
Middleport,
wtll
open
Monday.
Hours
are
from
6:
30
a.m. tO 5::11 p.m .
,....:._ _ _..:.__.,;_·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

to open

Wilkesville
servtce set

He is a four-year member of the .
Induslrlal Art sC!ub, has been on the
scholarshp team and during high
scoot pursued the four-year college
preparatory curriculum .
He Is a member of the Kera
Modeler's Club of Ravenswood. w.
Va., 'the Acade m y of Model Aeronautics of America, the National
RIPe Association. and the Am erican Motorcycle Assllcla ton. MorriS
is a m ember of the Sutton United
Me thodist Church . and raises
Herford cattle on the Morris !rum .

avionics enginN'rlng.

Glaze has 86th birthday

HONORED - A surp~ gesture honored Mrs.
Raehel Elberfeld Downie Tuesday evening when the
4-H season klckofl m eeting was held at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center. Mrs. Downie was honored for
having served as advisor lor 25 years of the Meigs
County 4-H Pleasure Riders Club. She was presented
with an engraved plaque and a cake and corsage

Daycare
center

A Tiny Tech Daycare Preschool
Center will open Monday at the
United Pentecostal Church,
Middleport.
Clark Baker, pastor, -will he
administrator . The school will he
open dally from 6: 30 a. m. to 5: 30
p.m .
Persons wishing to registe r their
children may stop at the c hurch
.and pick up a registration form.
The opening special rules are,
one child for five 'days, $25; each
additional child per family, $15;
dally prlces for registered c hild , $7;
drop-Ins, $8; each additional child
•
per family, $4; drop-Ins, $5; half
day price, $4, drop-Ins, $5; each
additional child per family , $3,
drop-Ins, $4.
An Ohio Evangelist who conduct~
Registrations Is $1 per child.._
Agape (a Greek word meaning The
Older children who are left at the
Divine Love_of God) across Amercenter will he taken to their
Ica, James BonDurant, will he at
respective schools by van to
the Wilkesville United Methodist
Mlddle!llrl, Pomeroy and Mason
Church for an Agape evangelist
City. There wUI he a charge of $1 a
service, May 8 through May 15.
day for this additional service.
Meetings will be 7: 30 each
Persons who wish additional
evening and the $isson Family or ·
Information may stop at the church
Patriot wlll he guest singers !or the
or call 992-3824.
services.
BonDurant Is an approved evangelist of the West Ohio Area o! the
United Me.thndlst ChurCh. He has
pastored Methodist churches lor 15
years, has conducted numerous
evangelistic services and has
Meigs County students, Adam
spoken at youth and family camps.
Martin,
D. R. Smith, Clara WhitHe was on a mission tour to Haiti
tington, Mary Mlller, and Arland
and Honduras and toui-ed the Holy
Blevins,
joined other junior high and
Land and the Lands of St. Paul. He
senior high students at the Gallla
also spent three weeks preaching at
Christian School of Cheshire for a
conventions in South India. He was
trip to Washington, D. C.
the founder of the BonDurant

·carrying out the green and while color scheme o14- H.
The gn)up a1!;o sent a green and white boutonniere 1o
E. J. Hill who has worked with the club over I he
years. Pictured al the presentation, Ito r, are Rlchle
HWII, Kenneth Hunt, Mrs. Downie, Judie Mees and
Betty Jo Hunt.

Th e 86th birthday of Mrs. Gra&lt;Y
Glaze was observed Sunday wit h a
famiy gathering at ihe home of Mr.
and Mrs. Willia m Radford.
Frcm her three sons una ble to
attend. Ha rry Glaze of Louisiana,
Carl Glaze of Texas, and Geor gp
Glaze of F lorida, s he received
telephone calls.
Family m embers at tendingWC' IT'
Beula h Glaze. Sue Cu nningham a nd
c hildr&lt;'n, Kenneth a nd R ichard, Mr.
a nd Mrs . .John Garsteck. Te rry and
Jeannie , Cleveland; Mr . a nd M rs.
Dcnald Pullins . Kimberly. Mr. a nd
Mrs. Brandon Smeck. Ma tt. Paul
and St acy, Columbus; Crystal

Glaze, Parkersburg; Dcnna Glaze.
Virgil Glaze. Middleport ; Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Stewart, Jared a nd
Chris. Syracuse; Mr . and Mrs .
Roge r Gilmore. Athens; and Belva
Glaze. Mr. a nd Mrs. Larry Romine.
P om e roy.

AT 5:30 P.M.

ATHENS
AUTOMOBILE CLUB
OF SOUTHESTERN OHIO
8'1 COLS . RD ., ATHENS

593-6677

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WATCHES

25%
VILLAGE PHARM.ACY
PH. 992·6669 \ .
f

WANTED
Saves space tn your k1tchen because t! 'S compac .
• Goes almost anywhere- on a wall . on a shell. m

a corner.
Per1ect for small kttchen s, rec room s, dorms.

RCA VIDEODISC PlAYERS START
AS LOW AI

Bac ked by 20 yea rs of Litton q~ al ity
a nd cooking pe rform ance.

" WE RENT VIDEO DISCS"
Cl;tECK OUR PRICES

Nobo.:Jy knows more ai;&gt;Out
microwave cooking than Llt!on .

OH.

I

You As
One of Our
Customers

~ --

Complete Service ·
Department....

•PlAQUES
•PEN &amp; PENCILS£TS

"AT THE PLAZA

MIDDU:POR
STORE
8311ll ST.

~

I

YOU MUST SEE
THIS ONE!

Gift Ideas·
For
That Perfect
Mother On
Her Day

•JEWELRY

Mothers Day May 8

$345

COLOR
TELEVISION

•BIBLES
•BOOKS

OFF

N• .2ND .AVE.

$

Approved
Credit

Color

MAYS

\

TELEVISION

YD.

Skating times scheduled in Rutland
RUTLAND - Skating, 2 to 4
p.m . Sunday, Rutland CiviC

DRIVER TRA.i NING
SCHOOL

MONDAY, MAY· 2nd

Walk-a-than in Pomeroy
POMEfl,OY - 'The Meigs
High School will have a walk·a·
thon Saturday beginning at 9
a.m . The event Is being spon-

@;

New 5 Pc.

Students travel
to Washington

Agape ministry In 1969 and Is now
executive director of the ministry.
'fl\e Wilkesville church has been
Involved In preparations for these
services tor several weeks. Pastor
John P. Lewis Invites the public to
attend.

The Daily Sentinei-Pt!ge--7

J

•

'
\

.

'

I

•

�•
Page

8-The

'',
Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport,

lhuncloy. April 28, 1983

Ohio

'

Thunda~ Apri128, 1983

Finance committee Homemaker becomes ;Mayors finist, ~~ases
latest millionaire ( -J
given leaner bill
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (API - A
$a! mUllon -$40 million while LBO
• rewlitten, slightly leaner version of
says the rota I will be about $1(1;
Gov. Richard Celeste's budget bill
million .
was presented to the House Finance
Meanwhile, the FinanceCommJt Committee on Wednesday.
tee continued hearing testlrriony
MatthewV. Filiplc, directorofthe
Wednesday on the taxation part or
Legislative Budget Office, outlined
the governor's budget.
changes based on recommendaThe Ohio State Bar Association
ti ons
of
f our
fin a nc.e
cam e out against one provision
subcommittees.
which levies a 4 percent excJse tax
Although some appropriations
on fees charged for business
were increased and others cut , the . services, including those provided
net effect was slight . The difference
by lawyers, accountants and archiwas a $189 mlliion reduction from tects, among others.
the record $27.6 billion proposed for
John Carnahan of Columbus,
the 1983-198,&lt;; biennium in t he
presid&lt;'n t-elect of the state bar, said
governor ' s bill, F ilipic said.
the tax would place a disproportionThe LBO chief said the revamped
ate burden on medium-size and
bill L• ln balance, based on curren:
small businesses which do not have
revenue projections. But he sa id
their own lawyers and accountants.
because of economic uncertn mty, It wou ld be passed on to consumers,
"The prospects for swing can be
he said.
very, very substantial."
fa'!i!han also said the excise tax
Fillpic estima ted that the state
ru tW:!Ioul of federa l tax policy as
will end the first year of the
stated in the Internal Revenue
bi&lt;'nnium on July ; , 1984, w ith a
Code.
balance of $5.3 miUion and the
"Under the feder al taxing
bi&lt;'nnium a year later wit h $102.5
schem e, legal expenses which are
million.
an ordinary and necessary part of
His figures are based on assumpcarrying on a tr ade or business are
tion the sta te will appropr iate $Cil
glven preferred treatment by being
million in the next biennium f9r . the subject m atter of a deduc tion
ca pitalimprovem ent s debt se rvic~.
from the businesses' taxable InHe split the difference on w elfare
come," he sa id.
caseload projections by his own
Similar testimony wa s heard
office and Cel este' sOffice of B udget
earlier from represen tatives of
.
'
and Managem ent, he smd.
Ohio' s architects and certified
public accountants.
Fill pte' s o!flce and OBM a t times
The Finance Committee plans to
serve as adversaries in legis lative continue hearings this week and
fiscal deliberations, but norma lly
next beforr considering amendare not very far apart.
m ent s. The budget, which stU! mu st
They a re split over the projected
be considered bY the , Senate, Is
fund ba lance a t tr.e end of the
t.cnta ti vely scheduled for a House
current biennium. OBM projects
vote M ay l l.

Higher productivity
t Continued f r om page 1r
Wednesday:
-A Conferenc" Board su rvcy
sa id financial executives at indu strial corporations believe the U.S.
economic recovery will be sustained at least through 1984. The
execu tives expect the econom y to

grow 2.1 per cent this· year and 4.1
pe-rcent next year. The Conference
Board Is a business-sponsored
research group,
- The Commerce Depa,rtment
sa id the number of jobs dependen t
on exports fell by 1..1 million fr om
191'0 through 1982.

Partly cloudy tonight wit h 40
percent c hance of scatter'-'\l showers or thunderstorms. Low 50-55.
Winds sou thwcsterrly 5-10 mp h.
Sixty percent chance of showers or
thunder storms tonight. High In the
mid-70s .
t
Extended forecast
· Satunlay through Monday:
Chance of showers Satunlay and
Sunday. Fair on Monday. Hlglt' in
mid-OOs to mld·71l'i Satunlay and in
60s to low 71l'! Sunday and Monday,
Lows ln mld-40stomld-50sSatunlay
and Swtday mornlngs and from II••
mld-30s to m,id-40s Monda.¥ .

On PM Magazine
Richard and F'ail h MerC'di lh and
the OJX'ra lions of thf'ir business.

Meredi th Manor, wrre ft:'atu red on
PM Magazine Jt 7 last PVrnlng nn
Chann~i :1.
M r and M rs. Meredith ha VP
opcr a1C&lt;l Mrr('(lilh M anor nt~ar
Parkers bur~ for almost 20 years . ft
is IlK' only accrC'dltcd school on
horse ma nship ln t he nation. Horsrs

!Area death!
Hattit~

D. Armes

' Mrs. Ha tt ie D . Armes, 86,
Symcuse, died WC'dnesday a t
Veteran s M emorial Hospita l.
1\ housewife, Mrs. Armes was
born May 2, 1896 In Kentucky. She
wa' preceded in death by her
parent s, her hu sband, .Jonathan
Arm es, and six children. Surviving
are a daughter -in -law, Mrs. Clifford
!Gertrude) Hall , Sy racuse, and
several nieees and nephews.
She was a member of the
Syracuse Chun:h of the Na?.a r ene.
Setvices will be held at ~ p.m .
Friday at the Sy racuse Chu rch of
the Na?.a rcne with the Rev . J ames
K itt le officiating. Burial will be In
the Letart Fa lls CPmctery. Friends
m ay ca ll at the E wing Funeral
Home any ! lrne aft or 12 noon on
Thursda y . Tho fam ily will be

$]95
PLUS

TAX

derly manner, and Milford w.
Leonard, Reedsyllle, a $47 bond,
speeding.
Fined were Bruce Gheen, Vinton
Ridge, SOO and costs, !lrlvfng while
under suspen$1on; Andrew Bauer;
Middleport, $10 and costs, failure m
yield the right of way; Sally
Scanlon, Middleport, and BW
Reeves, J;'omeroy, $2S and costs
each, permitting a dog to run loose.
George McOaitiel, Middleport, was
glv"" a 30day jallsentenceon atheft
charge.

SUNDAY SPECIAL
Pork Chops
and Dressing
Scalloped Potatoes

Dailey's
Country Restaurant

Forfeiting bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Wednesday , night were Robert
Venoy, Jr., Route 2, Pomeroy, $63,

Payments needed

Racine, Oh .

949-2515

JUST ARRIVED FOR SPRING AND
SUMMER SAVINGS

Blue and Orchid
Coordinate Groups
By REDI

Emergency runs

Two calls were answered by local
Persons owning lots at Beech
units Tuesday, the Meigs County
Grove Cem etery are being asked by
E m ergency Medical Service rethe cemetery trustees to submit
ports. At 2:58p.m ., the Rutland U nit
payment for cleaning of graves.
took Clinton Faulk!romMeigsMine
The charge is $5 per grave ' alid
2 to Holzer Medical Center and at
may be mailed to Pat Thoma , clerk
4:55 p .m . the Raclne Fire DeP&lt;!rtfo the cem etery trustees, ·Pomeroy
Village Hall e P om eroy . All chec_k ~­ . ment Went to Morning Star Road to
ex tingo Ish a bruSh fire.
·
·
are to made payable to Beech Grove
Cemetery Trustees.
The tru stees also advised that
only two artifical plants are
Meets this evening
permitted on each grave and live
p lant s are to planted next to the
Middlepori Youth League w ill
stones.
meet this evening at 8 p.m . at
Middleport Park.

Admit led--R uby Halliday, Rutl and; Bridgett ~ing , Racine;
T ammi Parsons. R acine: Roger
Clark, Pomerciy ; Franklin Wells,
Long Bottom; Rose Reynolds,
Middleport: Thelma Chase, Albany; Don Woods, Pomeroy; E lva
Grueser, Pomeroy: Michael Hewitt , Port land; Hollie Green ,
Pom eroy .
,
Diseharged'-Harry Young, Char les Kapteina , Michael Salser, Jr.,
F lorence R eynolds, Barb Snyder ,
Ra lph Frank, David Ballard.

I

\

45769

·s

Robert E Buc "'

Proha1P .lL.dQe /Cir· rk
.1 A 151 5 3rc

14! 21

'1Business
MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

$3()00

ATON

PH. 992-2280

PERSONALIZED
POOLS
•Vinyl Liner

*Fiberglass
•Stainless Steel
PHONE:
I ·304-773-5634

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On April 14. 1983 1n 1he

a ppo1n teJ 1:.-.ecutor ol 1he
es1a te ol Beul ah T Ewmg.

Me1 gs Coumv ProQate Court
Case No ~ 087
en am1n H

Ewtnq 3QO Four!
. Pomeroy Oh10 45769 was

C. l.

PHOTO
SPECIAL

eutter

downspouts,
cleaning and paintirw, storm
dom and windows.

1~3

RYDER TRUO&lt;
RENTAL. &amp; ONE-WAY
local and on&amp;-way, low rates,
top maintained trucu. Riehl
sizes, richl equipment. Hand
trucks, furniture pads, NatiolloYide Road SetVice. Mow- ·
ing lips and insur.mce.

·lessons
•Fittinl Center

*"' '"'t"

(c lubs peoP'e)
shonlflld for
·~
youn&amp;
. '.r
"Br1nd N1mes:
Squart Two ·
11.1
M•cGre&amp;or
1 ~

i

Wilson

Dunlop

·

THE BEST vO:vos m . You bet'

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

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

Industrial, Commercia l,
Residenlial. lnterioi and
Exterior.

·siding
'Roofing
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
•Remodeling

271 W. llain

Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 843-5425

CAll614-949-26e6

· 3·4·1· mo pd

4 19 2 mo 11

\\

985-3561
•Refrlgera1orl

PHOTOS ,BY HONEY PORTRAITS

.
1

•·

•

oFMIDDLEPORT
sHoEs

U.S. AT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Duler
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

., 992 -2282

I·] tiC

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
ina - Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks Now Construction - Ao modelinc - Custom Pole
Barns. ·
·

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

I? 7[) tlr.

OPEN 9 to 5 MON. thru SAT.
All Types of Auto Ropoi•.
Br1hs. Tune-Ups , etc.

,,,.t.t.,.

,•

HAVE YOUR TROPHY
MOUNTED ·
S To 6 Weak Serv'ce
On All Fiah.
For More Information Cat!

'
Real Estate General

The Taxidermy Shoo

New lima Rd., Rutland, Oh: PH . 742-2 225
l-28 ·1 mo

Georae s. Holrstetter. k

54 Misc . Merchandise

ALUMINUM ROOFING
ALL LENGTHS IN STOCK
B FT·............... ... .......................... '9. 95 .
10FT.... ..... . .. . ....... ...... ........ . , .... '12 .20
12FT ......... '...................... . ........ '14.45
14FT ........... ... .......... .. ........... . .. •16 .70
16FT....... ..... .. .... . .............. .. ...... '1B .90
18FT. , .............. ..... ........... ........ '20.90
20FT................................... , .... '22. 95
AODITIONAL.5% DISCOUNT IN APRIL - CASH Ill G"ARRV

- Addano and romocloling
- llooltng and f1U!10• wooic
--Cona• .. ~
- Plumbing and
tlactrieal wadr:
(FrM Eetlmates)

V.

POMEROY LANDMARK
614-992 -2181
Real Eatate General

CLELAND REALTY
6os E. MAIN

81011r
OffitO: 992-5739
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- Two story, brick, 3bedroom
home, features a large l~rng
room with hreplace, spacious
dining room and equipped
krtchen. lo,ely woodwork
throughout P•i&gt;ate patio, cen ·
tral heat and air. Garage with
storage bid&amp; Excelent corner
lot wrthrn walking d~tance to
town. Call lor appt
NEW LtsnNG - EXCELLENT
BUY - IN TOWN - Nice
relttodeled t'Ml story, 7 room, 3
lledroom home. Basement, 2
car carport and nee · front
porch for 'iew of river. Only
MOBILE HOME -:- 1974
Freedom 12'x65', two bedroom
furnished, total t&gt;ectric. Air
oond.. ~orm windows. Asking

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 99H259

$7,000.00.

by

Appointment.

,-cAEAGE - Off Route 7, II
acres m/ less. Ut~ities available. Asking $10,000.00.

Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI ....... ............. 992-6191
DoHie Turner ............... .......... ... : .. .. ..... 992-5692
Jean Trussell ................................ ....... 949-2660
Jo Hill ................................... :....... :.... 985-3335

'I

Yard Sal ~ April 29th . 3 mil es
below Eureka . Clot hes all

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

MEIGS.
EXCAVATING
•Bulldozer &amp; Backhoe Service
•Basements
•Footers
•Landscaping

3 Family Yard Sale , M ay 2 &amp;
3 , 9 to 4 , 71 3 Pine St ., Rio
Granda . St er o. 2 ro c kers ,
bunk beds , r. lawn mowor,
floor la mps . met a l lawn
c h a irs, gl11sswaro . dishes .
j ewelry , pans, wome n 'i clo thing &amp; many m isc . items .

•DrivewayS
•Farm Ponds
PH , 742-2407

Yard Sole 29th -3olh . 1 •;,

Or 742-2068

1-I=========~

Garage sa le April 29th and
30th . 9 t o 4 . First houso on
Ie fton l eading C reek Ro11d .
Middleport .

II 26-llc

Yard Sale . May 2 &amp; 3 . First

St . pul Pomeroy Elemen tary . Rain or shine .

YtltN lllclnslty, Ass«.

l'tt!ino 742-3092 .
a.,t l.tnllly, Assoc.
Phont 742-3171 '

'

-

3

GARAGE sale. 2221 Jetter ·
so n. Friday&amp;. Saturd8y , lot s
o f nice clothes for children .

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing ma ·
c hine repair . parts, and
supplies .
Pick up &amp;Jld
delivery . Oavls Va c uum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd .
Call

446 -0294 .

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

Tiny Tack Day C11re. Pre school. 836 S . 3rd . St .
Middleport. For more info .
ce ll between 9 a .m . and 3

12'd6'

p.m.

UTILITY BUILDINGS
lnsulatd Do&amp; Houses

P&amp;S BUIL'OINGS
011.

4

i'rl.6i4-14l-5!9C -

1----------(

'Friendly Servia
NO SET UP CHARGE
IN THE COUNTY
742-2328 .
4-U ·tf(

992 -

11

C&amp;l Bookkeep i11g
Tax Returns &amp; bookkooping
tor lndividu11ls &amp; businesse1 .
Short forms $5 .00
l o ng forms $20 .00 and u p
Caro l Neal
446 -3862
PIAN O TUNING $5 off pl us
discounts to senio r ci tizen Schurche s- schoo l s. Call Bill

Wa rd Ward "s
446 -4372 .

UIIAI

Key board ,

Will open &amp; c lean swimming
pools . Call 446 -48 95 utro r
5:00PM .

Help Wanted

Wil do baby siHing in my
home anytime, fen ced in
ba ck yard &amp; r ef eren ces
available Ca ll 614 - 388 -

EXPER IENCE

N ECESS ARY t o se ll "von .
We ' ll show you how . Good
earning sl C11 l l 614 -- 388 -

PIAN O TUNING -lAN E DA N IE LS . R e liabl e service
si n ce 1 965 . As!loc ra te of
Brunica rdi Mu si c Co Ph ono

Cli ni c . A .M .A
appr ovud .
Dr . referra ls MOndny. Wod nesdav . Fridav . by app oint me nt. 30 4 -675 -5568 .

9045 0&lt; 614 -992 -3690
Bartende r wanted . Apply 1n
person . No phone ca lls
Meig s Inn . Pomeroy, Oh .
SAY yes, sell the bo·s t. Avon ,

304 -675 -1429 .
SIX opening s f u r 55 years {)I
o ld er appli cant s to work fo r
Senior Person al Service ,

Southwestern C ommLtnity
Actio n . Mu st be a Wes t
Vir gini a resident a nd meet
OMB povertv levels . S3 .35
per hour. 30 h ouJS perwook
Apply · Pt . Pleasa nt Job
Sevice , 225 6 th . St Pt .
Ple asant .

BANDS , apply n t An c hor .
320 Ma in St . Pt Ploa!IAnt.
304 -675 -9759 .
Situation s
W an l ed

12

31 Homes for Sa le
By o wnm . 3 bt:ulr oom homo
Rio Gnmd o , O h Call
614 -2 46 · 521 4 0 1 6 14 24 5 -9617 for appoin tme nt
F\lasomtbly priced.

in

4

bdr .

2 full baths , finistwld

basEII~HWII ,

2 r..nr gnrago
App ornt mon t o nly 203 K• nao n Or . . Gnii !J)Oiis 446 -

1223

In M idd lep o rt , nowl y romo
de led hom o wi lh lir Oilla cn .
pOSSibl e woodburnm . d ose
lu sc hools and shoppinu

Coli 61 4 992 694 1
Modern homo . 11 rrn &amp; 2
bath , on 2 Rete lot , Rt 325 ,
5 mi. S . o f Ri o Gmndo. Call

61 4 -379 -2683

mow h1wns in !he
Por tland - Lon[) Bo1torn nreo .
Phon e 843 · 5379

Will

I ha11o ;oo m , boord and c are
for the elderly . 614 -992 -

6022 .
W o ult.l l1 ktt to do baby sit1i n1-1
in my home . Raci ne nroa.
Any age . 6 14 -949 -27 79

ca ro fo r th e olclorly .
Room . board and laundry
30 4-773 -5882

Will

Lovely, 6 ro o ms Dou b ht
gA rano . beautifully lnnds ca pod area l ot . Atop Ro se
Hill. Porn . 40 "s 614 -98 5 .
4 257

Hou se in Sy•nc uso. Oh . 3
bodr oo m s. with cnrport on
ono th ird ae ro lot Reduced
"' $24 .500 304 752 84 88'
nl to1 S pm
8 roo m h ou se . 2 1ot!l. d oublu
goragft. !JOOd l o c ~t 1 on 680

S . Second , Midc11 oport Coli
6 14 -992 2602
'
6 roo m &amp; bath . largoumden .

In surance

10011. 1 00 lo t. Spnco heat -•
6 14 -992 -5242 lund
co ntr nc l

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co . ha s offered
services fo r fir e insunmce
cove rag e in Ga llia County

TWO plus acres , 3 bOdroo m
htick &amp; al uminum ranc h
h o us e . se patule dining
room . farnity room w i th

13

______ ,___

ur s.

for almost a ce ntury . F11rm.
home and p e rson a l pr oportv
co verag es 1uo avoiloblo to
meet individuol noods . Con tac t Ray Wedemeyer. anent .
Phon e 388 - 8249 .

Are you payin g to much for

fire plocA .

2

bath s.

largo

de ck . Also includtJS o ld
farmhouse . s m o keh o u se
with c el lar . Ca ll 30 4 -77 6 86 16 w uo kday s . or 304 4 58 - 10 92 Ofl wtt oko11rh . o r
304 - 67 5 - 18 38 a nytim~ .

your hos pital -heAlth in!Ju Ca ll Ca H o il
Snowden . 446 -4290 .

THR EE bo dr nom hou su l o r
sale , 2 lots , possible finnn c
ing by FHA . wo ll msuiiJtOr.l .
3 04 ·773 -9 1 10 .

18 Wantod to Do

Sma ll house. eight acre s.
outbuilding s, m ineral rinhts ,
rnasonable . 304 · 895 -3819 .

ran c tt .

remove!

bottles. je ans.

la wn Mowing no y8rd to big
o r small. Re liable and d epen dable . For ostimata ca ll
446 -3169 between 9 and 6 .

THREE miles up Route 35
Henderson .

ture. hounhold

Furn i -

Service .

Reliabl e

and dependable . Call 446 3 169 be tween 9 and 6 .

item1, 2

pic kup trucks. paint sprayer.
sendan, miec . tools . Begln ing M onday May 2nd . 8 ;00

o.m.-1304 -675-7617 .
TWO familv y11rd sale . 1 mile
out Jericho Rd . Pt . Plea.1ant .
Clolhing and misc . riday
9 -3 . Watch for s igna. If
ra in -canceled.

Lemley , Drillin g . Water
w ell s. shall o w gas. and core
dr ill ing_. Call 614 -388 ·
8643. V int o n. Oh .
Garden s plowed &amp;

Gallipolis

area

tilled .

only . Ca ll

446 -2300

B

-Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Mo wers. chain saws re paired . lawn &amp; garden tra c tor~ are specia lity . N elson &amp;
Sons . C11ll 614 -268 -1 543

Au c t ion every Tuesday
night, Community Building,

Giveaway

Henderson. Consignera wei ·

White male neutered cat.
litter box trained . Call 614 ·

Call6t4 -367 -7101 .

248 ·9492·,

Auction every Fri. ntght at
thft Hartford Community
Canter . Truckloads o f new

- : - - - - - : - - --

ShopN•rd Cottle ml&gt;ed, B
mo. old, gqod wlth children.
Colt 4411-0888 ..

Small dog p,art le•gle, fe , mole. Call 448-8864.

'

4 puppies part German
·Shepherd. Call 448-2252 .
.3 female PUPP.ies pan Blue

healer &amp;t part German Shepherd, 8 w•lka old. Coli

' 814-245-8f18.

Men's l•rge 1hlrt1 • pantl

olza 34-21 . Cal MonorTuea
otter 8, 814-318-8751.

merchandise every week.
Conslgments of new and
used merchandise alw1y1
welcome . Ri chard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 275~ 3069 .

9

lo cated

V1

mi.

South of

Roller Dam a1 Eurek a,

mow laWn• in

len, wood ice boxtl, st~ne
)Irs. •nttques. etc ., CDm·pleta households . Writ• :
M .D. Millar. Rt. 4 , Pome~oy ,
Oh. 0• 992-7760 .

CL EAN USED M08rlE
HOM ES KESSEl 'S QUAlITY MOBILE HOME SAlES ,
4 Ml WEST, GAlliPOl!S ,
RT 35 . PHO NE 446 -7274 .
ri c. 3 bdr .. S7.400 . 1 2x60
liberty good rond ., $3 .900 .
Ce ll 446-0175 .
2 lots S. R mobi le h ome
1 211.60 . 2 bed ro Om . with
ru. f8 1 wate r, gas hettt. Ha s
some f u rnitur e. price
$12, 600 . Or 41ot s &amp; mobile

Pt.

Pleasant. 304-676 -3244 ,
TYPING at home , or tefllpor ary ofice fill in. by axpe ·
rian c ed secretary . R eason• ·

ble rotea .-304 -675 -4631 ,

1 2x60 i n good s h~pe . moke
of ler . Call 446-0978 ,
198 2 Governor 14JC70 . slid ing glass doors from porch .
top quality underpinnin g .
816,000. Co" 614 -367 7644 .
Trailer &amp;

Business
OpportUnity
'

BEDS -tRO.N. BRASS, old
furniture. gold, ailver dol-

TRI - S TATE MOBIL E
HOMES . USE D - CARS .
TRU CK S G A l l!POU S .
CH ECK OUR PR ICES .
CAU. 446 -7572

914,800 . Ca ll 446 -t 240 .
WILL

21

Wanted To Buy

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

141170 Ba yview tota l ole c t -

Need anything hauled . Call
446 -4851 .

come. Auct . Lo nnie Neal.

10·6-lfc

.Around

614 - ~92 - 3824

COUNTRY lanoa, Rt . 62 &amp;
Tr i bble Road, Ma so n
County. Live bands, c log ·
glng. square dancing, Friday
&amp; Saturday nights.

Up

'Lowest Rates

Middleport .

3476 .

YARD tale , Corner , Smith&amp;
locus t St . Henderso n . Fri dav &amp; Saturday , 29t h · 3 0th .
.9 till 1 Furniturtl , Avon

above

Shooting Match everv Fri day 7 :00PM . Robert Burns
home, Harrisburg -.
f - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 Adam~:ville Rd . CB II 614 ·
246 -6449 .
• 11 1 m~prt

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

Shop,

Professional
Services

Gonerot Hauling a nd Trash

Chestet, Ohio
Ph . 985 -4269
Oeweyne William•
&amp;. Scottte Smilh
All Makes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calis and Shop
Service -Available

Racine,

ite'ms .

Gallipolil. 10 -?

Pomeroy , Ohio

Sizes from 6'x6'
to 24'136'

At . 218 on Krinftr Ad .
Guns. tool s. garden trac tor .
c loth es a ll sizes , misc .

Sale Fr1 29th . new summer
clothes cheap. other ite ms .
2018 % rear East e rn Ave .,

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Gold , silver , sterling , ie ·
welrv . rings , old coi n s &amp;
c urre nc y. Ed Burke tt Barber

mi .. of1

4-JJ.J mo

C. YOUNG Ill

Sizes start from

sizes
knick . kn
ac ks , tocur
tains ., spreads
10AM
7 ·
Garage Sule 171 3 C htn1 tnu1
St .. Gallipoli s. In all o y. sov
e&lt;el lomllles. F&lt;l &amp; Set . April
29 , 30lh, 9-6 .

992 ·6215 or 992-73 14

$22.000.

fE.B

Yard Sele St . Rt 218 a nd
Orc hard Hill Rd. Sa t. Apr il
30th . 10 to 5 o'c loc k .

: .1 1• 11c

CARPENTER
SERVICE

l &amp; l Scrap Metal s. Now
buying alum c ans &amp; glasS .
Scrap metals. Top prices
paid . Call 446 -7300 .

23

SAlES NO

dishwuher, dinette c hair s,
a ntiques, m isc .

Also Transmission

YOUKG!S-,

68~ - 7448 .

592 -3051 . or ·1-800-341..
6554 in Ohio .

Garage Salft 1 069 Second

First One, 588 H on ey su c kle .
J ea ns . clo th es . pot s &amp; p ans .

AND

~,,il,.

Open Mon. thru Sat., .EYenin&amp;s

124, Pomeroy, OH .

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

TRANSMISSION FILTER
AND FLUID CHANGE
ONLY 131.95 1.,..,,

'

PE RMAN ENT hai r remova l
Pr o foss io nHI Elnc lrolysis

Yard S11 le Friday 939 SA ·
co nd Avu., Gallipolis . SomH ·
thing for evorvono .

GARAGE

SPECIAL

HOME lOANS 12 % fixed
rate . Leader Mortgag e, 77 E.
State. Ath ens . Ohio 1-6 14 ·

Inquire at Best West1:1 rn
Mot e l in perso n . Be tween 9
&amp; 3 . wee kday!! .

&amp; Fri . Starting at 10 :00 .

Roger Hysell

r

Fr~nc~town Car Co .
B1ll dene Johnson

&amp; Saturday 9 -5·, 504 Fourth
Ave .. Gallip olis . Rain o r
sh ine.

Yard Sale 3482
Kathy
S ! ...
I~====~===:j· GBIIipolis.
Families
Thurs

Ptrmsroy, OH.

30~ - 67 8 - 3639

614 - 742 - 2~51

Rumma ge Sale a t V inton
Full Gospe l church 418
Main , St. , Vinton . M ay
2 .3 ,4 , 10 :AM until 7. Some ·
thing for 0110ry one

Route I
Lone Botlom , OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992 -3067

St. At.

11c he, Chic. lee. levi , V•n ·
derbilt , Calvin Klein .
Wn1gler over 200 other
br11nds . 17,900 to 92 4 ,500
includes beginning inven lory, airfare fo r o ne to
Fashion . C~:tn ter , training ,
fixtur8s, gran d .o pe ning pro mptions . Call Mr Keenan

9755 .

Two F8mily Yard Sa le Friday

Ave., Gallipolis . Thur s.· Fri.,
9 :00AM to 6 OOPM . New
quilts. spr eads, c ush ion s. 1
Singer electric se wing ma ·
chine . 1 blind st itch sewing
machine, clean clot hing all
sizes , some size 18- 20 .
Misce ll ean o us it e m s .

S&amp;W TV

•

3·7·\h:

-&amp;J-

11 1111 t:

•'

For all your wiring ,
needa; furnace• repair aervice and inatallatlon.
Reaidential
8o Commercial
Call 742·3196

heritage ·house

Lvve··

N·ew Homes - Extensive
Remodeling.
•Insurance Work
•Cuslom Pole Bldgs.
'&amp; Garages
•Aoofin1 Work
•Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings ,
15 Years bperience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7 583

FISHERMEN!

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

~OMEROV:, OH.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

household items

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7 121

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

BOGGS

4-5·1fc

.1

\~LBERFELDS
D'~Pl._ STOR~
E
\

•Free1ers

PARTS and SERVICE

'

\

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•Drven

"

\

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

matching
drap8e. plenty ot clothing S.

11

Painting
Sandblasting
Mortarblasting
Parking Lot Stripping
Spray Painting
Texture Coatings
Ful~ lnsultd-Free Estiimates

bedspread with

t-::========::;1

4151m o.

your own Jean -·
Sportswear. Infant-Preteen
or ladies Ap-.,arel Store.
Offering a ll nationally
known brands sucl'l 111 J ord •
OWN

22 Money to Lodn

Oh .

- Sewer

AUTOMATIC ·
TRANSMISSION CO.

GHEEN'S

Cherry , Vin1on ,

Clothing,

3 Family Yar~d Sale April
30th. 10AM to 4PM . 1 1h
miles of1 Rt . 7 o n 2 18
Portable sewing mac hine,

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION
PAINTING INC.

Rt. 160 Evergreen . lawn
mowers. air conditioner.
c loth i ng , variety
of
everything .

tr ac tor ,

~'\ "'"'\

EUGENE LONG

Yard Sale May 2 .3. 4 . Old

equipment. lawn
misc. Items .

c.ou'&gt;···

PH. (304) 882.2276

Yard Sale

41 1 tm ~ pd

J ll ·ll(

Business
Opportun ity

We pay cash for late m od el

5 family , April 30 , May 2 ,3 .

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

No Sunday Calls

446 -8026 .

7

- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-to-Boy

- Gas lines

Buying Gold , Silver , Plati ·
num . Gold and Silver p.rtces
are the highest in two yean ,
check our prices on gold S.
silver. scrap jewelry . Buying
Old coins. scrap rings S.
silverw•re . Daily quotes
available. Also coins &amp; coin
supplies for sa le. Spring
Vallev Trading Co ., Spring
Valley Plaza, 446 -8025 or

NIGHT CRAWlERS &amp; RED
WORMS highest p r;icea
paid , Lake Jackson Bate S.
Tackle. Oak Hill. Cell 614·

tra ctor

SIDING

---~----­

446 -0069

Bo len

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

446 -3159 or 258- 1967 in
the evening•.

part Pointer puppies , 304·
675 -5241 or 675-5702 .

701

-Dozers

.CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS

· 2·26-tfc

SALE 20% OFF
JOHN TEAFORD
Chester. Oh. 4 tS -1 mo

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

- Trencher
- Water

21

Wantad To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old lurniture and Antiques of all
kinds ,· call Kenrieth Swain.

Shepherd ,

Yard Sale Centenary Friday
April 29 Only. 9 to 5 .
layette, infant , childrens,
teens &amp; women clo thes .
Chest of drawers, tricycle .
toya, and misc . items .

r;:========~
l1

J.lJ.ftt

Page-9

Daily Sentinel

clean used c ars.

PART German

n u,

992 -7201

FOR ALLYOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

Pomeroy, Oh .
Ph. 992-2 174

Ram
Pin&amp;

Range•

PHOTOGRAPHERS HOURS:
. FRI., 11:00 a.m. Til 7:00 p.m.
\SAT., 10:00 a.m. Til 4:30 p.m.

GOOD house or outside cat.
304 -675 -2295 or 675 ·
1304.

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD

992-2196

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

20

All Makes
•W..hen •Di-"wa.1 hers

FRIDAY, APRIL 29th
SATURDAY APRIL lOth

Heavu du1y' full tize coil bed

BONDfD UIOiiK GUA!!ANIUD

Middl•port , Ohio

PH. 992-2 178 '·" ·"'

MOTORS, Inc.

P.~ .A .

acid boil end rod out radietonr. We aleo repair

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

CATALOG MERCHANT
Pomiroy,OH .
Grotll &amp; Patty Gibbs-Owners

SMITH NELSON

'· ~\

·club spalr

can repair end re-

core radilltonl end ~wa­
ter cooes. We cen aloo

949-2263
992-2791 10 , ,

ISearsi

RADI.ATO!l SERVICE
From he Smallest Heater
Core lo the Larcest Radia·
tor.
Radiator Speciaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

Con.nie is 'etting carried away
Aprtl29 thrij M~y 7! And we're of-·
fering you a terrific sienitured
bac for buyinl just one pair of
Connie shoes. That's all it takes!
You 111 your choice of your favorite styles, Ill loaded with COmfort and fresh, fashion details.
And the durable canm bal is
c.r11t for so many uses. Get carrttd 111111y with Connie and the
baa's on us. Comein soon while
supplies last.

Free klnens. Call446-4999.

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, AECLA~TION
WORK
•LAND ClEARING ,
CONCRETE WORK

PAT HILL FORD

FREE
EXTIMATES
·chain Link Fence
·carpeling ·Painting

446-9800 .

W, 2nd St .

We

Call:
Or

1he advertiMr.

Gerbils. Call 446-7764 .

CONTRACTING

ISears I

4-11 -1 mo

FREE!

charge -1~

6135 . ~fo:r_•:•:le~.~6~1~4:
··9:9:2~~=======':=":':::•::'~~· ~·~pr~i~n~g~s

G•Tanka.

All Work Guaranteed ·
"Free .Estimates"

·r.Rl
~

Pomeroy, OH .
Open 9 :00 to 5:00
Mon.- Sat.
Closed Thurs.

BUY A PAIR
OF CONNIE
SHOE AND GET A
SIGNATURE ·BAG

doeanotofferor•nemptto
offer any other thing for ule .
may place an , ·ad ifl t.his
column. There will be no

late ot Mu lt&gt;euv
Pomero y. Oh 10

RADIATOR
SERVICE

All types of root worlt, new
or "pair, gutters and

AND HOME MAINTENANCE
•Roolin&amp; of all types
Residential &amp; Commtrtill
"Remocjelin&amp;
"Storm Windows &amp; Doors
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Years ExPerience
TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2 834
or 949-2 160

Kitchen

SHOE
REPAIR

ON THE "T" IN MIDDmORT

10 9 ""' you the best casual style going.
Get reocty for free-\Nheeilng,
good ~rnes
IMth 0 newy knotted vamp in

Get all the estimates
you want, then call us.
We'll be. your

Proba le
JudqeE/ Cie1k.
RoiJert
Buck ·
14 ) /1 28 1515 3te

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING

COMPLETE

conn1e:s
got 1tl

Avenue.
&lt;5769

PERS.ON who has
anyt"ing to give away and

ANY

free Estimates
Work Guaranteed
Ph.742 c232B
Ask for AI .

servtces

Gallipolis, Ohio J " 2mo

~r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
I

deceased

9

Roofing &amp; Siding

BEST&amp; LAST BID

•

Riverside VW Inc.

orchid~hprts

_

Public Notice

Givo~way

4.

J&amp;F

')

DATE:
TAX

t:l(ecutmt o! th e esta te of Harvey
E Starkey dPceaserl late oi
Roult· 4 Po•nf'roy Oh1 0

Public Notice

Conn"' takes good old Yo- Yos comtett one step better

$]95

PLUS

.

On Ap nl 14th. 1983. 1r1 the
Metgs Coumv Pr obaw Courl
Case No 24 0 81 Oma G
S1ar key. Route 4 Pomero'.'
Oh1 0 4 5 769. was aopo1n teo

With Coordinating
\~-.a
Tops
'r'

'

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~

•NO AGE LIMIT
•LIMIT 1 PER PERSON
.ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY
•SINGLE OR GROUPS TAKEN

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

'

. NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Blue Slacks and
Mini Skirts,
Blue, White and

(Continued from page 11

Linda Bentz was granted permlsslon to attend the OhloAssoociation
of Municipal Court Clerks on May
16-18 in Columbus.
Richard Jones was named to the
serve on the County Investment
Committee. ,
The commissioners will m eet on
May 4, at 1: 30 p .m .
•

Public Notice

MasDn,· W. Va .

Plans ...
&lt;;:rosso! Central Ohlo. The bids were
tabled undll May 2.

PHONE'992-2156

4-20-1 rM Pd

Meigs County happenings

''FREE''

SATURDAY

ON FRIDAY FROM 4-6
IT'S T.G.I.F.

'

$100 bond, dlsor.

IN
LIVING
COLOR

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

'·

reckless operatlo!). Fined were
Clarence McDaniel, Jr., Rutland,
$375 and costs, dliving whlle
Intoxicated, and $50 and costs,
disorderly manner, .and Keith
Musser, Pomeroy, $213 and costs,
assault on a police officer; $313,
resisting arrest, and $63 and costs,
disorderly manner. - ·-· ·•

Public Notice

The

LAST BID

dliving while

8x10

appea red in a number of forell(n
count•·ies . Richa rd M ered it h or
near Pom eroy and hP ha s been a
fll'quent vi sitor to M eigs Count y .

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

PomeroY,

MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Or Write lbillr Stllillll Cbnitil4 O.,t. .
Ill Court St:. Po•1o'j. Dlilio t57&amp;g

Intoxicated, $375; Marie PhWlps,
Racine; $46, speeding, and John
Thabet, Mason, W. Va., $163.

'J t"'E'S£mt from (ito ~• p.m.

and riders from the Mano r havp

FRIDAY

Mankin,

I

Veterans Memorial

Weather forecast

port, forfeited a

The Daily Sentinel

posted on a c~ or passing on a
double yellow line; , Jack fanner,
Ashland, Ky., $63~ speeding; Setty

Three defendanis forfeited boilds
and four others were fined in the
court ot MlaDeport Ma}'or Fred
Ho~ Wednesday night.
.
Roy Buchanan, ReedSviUe, forfeIted two $C!f) bonds posted on
charges of driving whlle Intoxicated
and two $aJO bonds posted on
charges of driving while UDder
suspension; Glen Vance, Middle-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - J"or a 41-year-old homemaker who
usuaUy isn't lucky enough io win at bingo, a million-dollar lottery
prize w as a shock, but a most pleasant one.
Mary Anl1 Becker, whoSI\fdshe getsneJVouswhenslJ)TOUndedby
people, seemed dazed by the attention from 1eporters and ·
photographers after the announcement Wednesday that she had
become the Ohlo Lottery's 19th millionaire- and the first since 1979.
Hearing she beat 825,®tn-one odds, Mrs. Becker's knees gave
way and tears moistened her eyeglasses. Asked how she felt, the'
new millionaire's first response was a single word: "Numb."
" I t's more than I've ever seen. Jcan'tevenwinatbingo," she said. ·
Mrs. Becker lives in a rented house in Dover with her husband,
Daniel, a 41-year-old tool and die maker at Empire-Detroit Steel. She
boujlht two tickets tn the Wheel of F ortune game, held from Nov. 8,
1982, through March 31.
Mrs. Becker said she never believed she would win.the big prize.
" I was·figurtng on winnlng one of t he six ($5,(XX)prizes)," said the
Sandusky native with two grown children and a 1-year-old grandson.
She said her first priority wiU be to buy a houSI' after mom than 22
years of marriage. The Beckers also may take a vacation, but were '
uncertain what else the money might go for.
Mrs. Becker received a $5,00) check Immediately and will get
another for SJj,oo:J soon, said lottery spokesman Robert Walczak .
She gets $.'JJ,oo:J a year for W years, with $10,(XX) withheld for taxes.
Mrs. Becker was notified April 15 she was one of 10 finalists
selected from 436 people who won extra-,ticket prizes in the Wheel of
Fortune.
Mrs. Becker said she couldn't thlnk of anything negative about
winning a million dollars, but added, " Ask me in a couple of
months_"
'
Her husband said he planned to keep hJs job and doubted they
wou ld be plagued too much by money -seekers.
The lottery agent who sold the winning ticket was Jack Conkle,
who owns with his wife the Dover supermarket where Mrs. Becker
shops. The Conkles will get a prize of $10,00l.

Pomeroy

!NOTICE!
THE OHIO VAllEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommend•
that you do buslnen with
people you know. and NOT
10 11nd money through the
mail unlil yDu have lnvaltigated the offering,

lot on Ra ccoon
down pay·
ment, auu m abe loan , S182
per . mo . Call 614 -256 -

Creak.

Small

t 446 eve' s,

Ori rented lot in Bidwe ll :
1 4x65 all electric . Call 614 - ~ , ~
38B -9984 .
'
1978 14x70 Ek:ona mobile
home, 3 bdr ., *9,000. Call

446 -3243 afte, ,6,

I,

.

.

•

"'

�·.,_..

•
Page-l~The

32

Daily

. '·

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

Mobile Homes
for Sale

&amp;1 Household Goods
Twin size canopy bed com·
pleto, •125 . Cali 814·2-45·
6824.

1973 New M oon 12x61J ;
wahser. dryer, disllwasher,
stove, refrig .. AC, WB ,

$6, 000, axe . co nd .
614 · 266·657 2.

3 Early American chairs, 1
AM -FM B·tr.Ck atero cabinet e•c . CQ nd. Cell 446·
7650.

Call

19 59 El Car 2 bdr .. mostly
furnished. carpeted, ap·
.pi iances . good con d . ,
$~.200 .
Ca ll 614 -388 ·
8549 .

GE wa1her &amp; dryer nice pair
t226, 30 day guarantee.
Hotpoint dryer 860, Kenmor~ dryer 860. Call 4468181 .

USED MOB ILE HOM E.
576 -2711 .

••

-:========= ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~~~~
_

33 Farms for Sa le

35 lots &amp; A c reage

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mobile hom e in country .
Adults preferred . Referen ces req uired . 6,4 -992 ·
2272 .
10 • 66 , 2 bd . room mobile
hom e in Rac ine area . 814 992 -5858 .
1980 MOBilE home. 2
bedroom. 12x 45 . excellent
co ndition , furnished with
underpenning . 304 -675 _3_8_6_9_o_r_6_7_5_-6_ 6_ 8_ 6_._ __

5 -20 Acres woo dS, over·
looking Ohi o River, ci ty
schools . 446 -355 4 0 r 1·
5 , 3 . 4 2 3 . 8 9 2.6 . 1
TWO bedroom fu mished
Own er/ Agont .
mobile home . privete loca ·
1 acre lot 6 mi . from Holze r tion . Jertc ho road. S1 7!5
hospital. Just off Rt . 160 monlh , depoait required ,
out Floyd ·Cia'k Rd . 700ft . 1 _3_0 _4_-6_ 7_5_-_7 _3 _0 8 _. - - - Call 446 -0390 .
,.
UNFURNISHED ""iler for
One kll 40 x1 30 . Call 676 rentri Henderson . 200 per
4 39 1 o'r 446 -4038.
month . G•rbage·, water &amp; lot
Paid . Phone 304 -676 35 acres at Rodney on W .T. 2049 .
Watson Rd . Ow ne r finan c ing available . Call446 -8221
44
Apartment
after 6 weekcilys.
for Rent
1.4 acre lot" in Bradbury
good location , tr ail er hook
up a ll utilities, se pt ic tank , 2 bdr . Regency Inc. Ap.art ·.
614 -992 -2602 .
monts 82 00 per mo . or if
in come is 810 ,000 or less
171 ' x80 'M 1 62 'M 82 ' lot . HUD available. A-One Real
City water &amp;: well water. 2 ES1ate!l, Carol Yeager, Real ·
outbuildings, f enced in back t o r. Call 304 -675 -6104 or
yard, sept ic ta n!! . in Gallipo · 675 -7786
li s Ferry . Nea r sc ho o l. 1- - - - - - - - - $ 12 , 600 .00 30 4 · 675 · First floor furin ahed apt ,
5355 .
utilities pakl , deposit &amp; &amp;ease
required . Adulta, no pets .
Ca ll at 631 Fourth Ave ,,
36 R ea l Estate
Gallipolis.
Wante d
1 bedroom apartment tor
rent . Cfll 446 -0390 .
Buying houses Md a part · 1- - - - - -- - - ments . Need properties with
Small furnished house in
favorable price and terms . city, adults only . Call 446 Box 1109 Galipolis. Oh . 0338 .
456 3 1 .
Furnished 3 rm . apartmen1
with private bath at 846
Second Ave.. Gallipoli1 .
Ref. prefered. Call 446 2215 . •
41
Houses for Rent
Garage apt . furnished. 1
bdr ., 8225, utilities paid,
29 % Neil Ave .. Gallipolis .
Mod ern 3 bdr. ranch , gar - Call446 -4416 after 7PM .
age, carpet. Rodne y area .
Dep os it &amp; referen ces re - Tw o bed room aperanent At .
Quired . $285 per mo . Black - 2 18 at Mercerv lle . Quiet
bum Roo ltv . Call446 ~ 0008 . artUI, ni ce lftWn , S 225 per
mo . unfurnis hed . Cell 446 ·
Sevon r oom tarmhou se near 1167 doys. 614 -367 ·7218
Gallipolis . Garden . build - af1er &amp;PM .
ings , coun ty ro8d , rura l
water , $235 . C11ll 614 -658- Furnishod apt . $200 . utili373 0 .
ties pd .. adults. 607 2nd .
Ave ., Galipolis . C111ll 446 2 bedroom house large 4416 after 7PM .
livflg room. kit chan &amp; bath
Furn is he d Ove rlo o k ing Furnishe d ef fi e n cy apt ., in
Ohio River. Adults o nly
Rkl Grande. utilit ie1 paid .
Brown ·s Trailer Park . 6 14- Coll446-0157 .
992 -3324 .
Apt . for rent . Half double -2
2 bedroom. Bll new paint . bd .room Apt. Adults pre some carpeting . Deposi t re . ferrad . No pets . 614 -992 quired . 614 -9 92·3090 .
2749 .
House in Gallip oli s Ferry, no
pets. d eposit required . 304 6 76 ·64 4 3 or 30 4 -6 75 131 5'.
S IX room ho use, ac re, Rt .
6 2 South . Pt Pleasant .
Phon e 3 04 , 675 - 754 1
e venings .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 bdr. furn . apt .. 6 m o . lease
required plus &amp;50 de p ..
$176 pe r mo .. no children ,
no pets. Ca11446-3667after
6.

.
·
:
.

3 bedroom modular located
o n River lot in Cheahire .
, C-A. d is hwasM r. 2 baths .
· Call 61 4 -367 ·0690 .
: Mobile home furnis hed on
· Rt. 36 West. deposit re : quired . Call446 -4229 .
,.

Mobile home unfurnished in
Cheshire , utilities paid . Call
446 -4229 .
2 bdr . mobile home for rent .
: Ca lf 446 -3 105
' Furnish8d &amp; unfurnish ed , 2
' 'bedroom•. olr cond ., beaut I·
'fu l 'rive-r view in Kanaug o.
Foster'• Trailer Park.
Deluxe 2 bdr . Windsor ,
' dining room, 1 Y:r baths,
convenient location, Rt . 7 .
No pe11. Col 614-246 51HB .
Camper Trailer loti 1o;
summer. secluded wooded
area. Overlooking Ohio
river. Vic Browf"l, Miner•.,;lle, Oh . Coli 614 -992 ·
3324 .
I
- - , - - - - - -- - lc2: bedroom• in Racine . 61 4 ·
367 -0288 .
2 bedroom furni•h•d ·mobile
home . Adulu only. Paid
utilities, daposl1and reference a requir~ . No peta. 614 992 ·3647.

·~ W.......
1"
·;:.:..".,;.:...::.;;.::.;.;::-.__ _ _ _ _ _ _""'
~:.,..'~_;,
· '-'"'".;_,- 79

&amp;4 Mise. Merchandise 1.... -r ' N' CARLYlE "'

1 bed room· Apt . 5196 . mo .
in c luding utilities . Equal
hous ing o pportunity . Con tac t Village Menor Apts .
814 ·992-7787.
5 room ups-tairs unfumist'ltd
Apl . in Middleport . 8150 .1
month . 614 -992 -6692 .

----------------1
Apt. and trailer In
Middle ~

port . 614 -992 -3590 .
1 &amp; 2 bedroom aph. 614 992 -5434. 614-992 -5914
or 304 -B82 -2586 .
2 bedroom furnished apt . in
Mlddlapor1 5176 . plus utili ties . Days 614 -992 -6646,
E•enlng s 614 -949-2216
Apartment s . 3 04 -67 6 5648 .
APARTMENTS . mobil e
homes. houses . Pt . Pleasan1
and Galipolis . 614 -446 ·
8221
UNFURNISHED apartment
for ren1 . 2 bedroom .
$2 10.00 Call Automotive
Supply , B-6·. 304 -676 n1B , 875 ·6763.

.45

Furnished Rooms

home used j~at 1 year c•me
off a 14•70 mobile home.
long pieces measure 32",

inches
serosa. 21''
entertock
1hort piece•
and in10a
metal frame. wood grain
finish . Call after 5PM , 448 -

3065 .

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Ca ll446 -0756 .

Firewood split &amp; cut to
lenght. Pick or delivered . We
honor HEAP Vouchers. Call
614-256-6245 .

Sleeping room 8125. util ·
ti es paid, Jingle makl . Share
bath, 91 9 Second Ave .
Gallipolis. Call 446 -4-416
aite r 7PM .

5 prom dre11e1 sizes 7 -13,
like new . Worn only once.
Coli 446-9769 or 446 3594 .

Furni !l hed apt .. adult s. No
Pets. 304-675 -1453.
Furnished apt. adults. No
Pets. 304-675 -1453 .

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pari! . Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992 -7479 .

For sale metal culvert 6 inch
thru 60 inch in stock. State
approved 16 gauge 12 inch
$6 .36 per ft ., 24 inch
$10 .10 par fl . 36 inch
$16 .60 per ft . Also plastic
culvert in stock . 6 inch thru
18 inch , 8 inch 81 .80perft .,
12 inch 83 .60 per ft . Ron
Evans Enterprises, 4 mi.
South of Jackson on ST. AT.
93, 614 -286-5930.

Cedar wardrobe, antique
trunk. 3 tier glass table It
concrete picnic table with
OFFICE space a vailable . Will benches . Call 614 -266 .
reniodltl for right tennent . 1788.
Saddlebrook Inn, Pt. PleaNew &amp; Used Troy Built
sant. 304 ·676-6276 .
Tillers . &amp;wi s hers lmple ·
ment, St . Rt . ' 7 . North o1
G.allipolis . Call 446 -0476 .

ft4erubaedlaH

Water' well drilling rid . Coli

51 Househol.d Goods_ 614-3il8 -8e43 .
SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Oaltipolia . 6
piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat arms 8399 ,
bunk beds complete with
bunkiea $199 , 2 piece an tron livingroom suites s 1 99 .
an1ron recliners $99. other
recliners 880 , maple dineHe
11ets 1$179, love sea11 870.
hide - a - bed $260, box
s prings S. mattress twin or
full 9100 aet regular -firm
&amp;120, maple dinene chairs
$3 5. wash stands 834_,
maple rockers $59 , 7 piece
chrome dinette set 8149. 5
piece dinette set $89, used
bedroom sui.tes , refirgara lors , range s, c h e st ,
dressers , wringer washers.
TV' s, dryeres. &amp; shoes . Call
446-3159 .

New 1983 White sewing
machine free arm model
with built-in stretch stich ,
zig zag patterns, makes
button holes. monograms.
much more. We are over stocked with this model. we
mus1 decrease ou r inven tory. Factory 20 yr . guaran tee . Reg. price over $300,
your cost only $80 . Call '
614-3B6 -B918 out o1 town
call collect . Free delivery to
your home.
9 in. model A South Bend
bench lathe, 1 1 6 volt or 3
pha11 motor $1 ,600 . Call
614-246-5871 .
4 -1 5)(36 Gumbo mudd era &amp;
whee ls . Call 614 -38B 8159.

2 tickets to the Journey
GOOD USED APPLIANCES concert , Charleston Civic
.l washers, dryers, refrigera- Center. 'May 1 . Call 446 tors, ranges . Skagg1 Ap · 8262 .
pliances, Upper River Rd .,
beside S1one Crest Motel Mattress &amp; box spring new .
446· 7398 .
1 2• 12 rug . Coli 446-051 B.

1----------

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker, otto man. 3 tables. (eJttra heavy
b~ Frontier). 8686 . Sofa.
chair and lovesea1 , S27!5 .
Sofas and c hairs priced from
8285 . to $895 . Tables , $45
and up to $126 . Hide-a beds , $440 . and up to
8525 ..· Recliners. $176 1o
8350 .. lllmps from $28. lo
S75 . 5 pc. d ine ttes from
$99 .. lo $435 . 7 pc ., s1B9 .
and up . Wood table with six
chairs $425 . to $745 . Desk
8 110 up to &amp;226 . Hutches.
$550 . and up, maple or pine
tinish . Bunk bed complete
with mattrenes, $260 . and
up lo $395 . Baby bads.
$110. Mauresses or box
springs. 1ull or twin . $68 ..
firm . 868 . and 178 . Quean
seh, 8196 . 4 dr . chests,
842 . 6 dr. cheats , $54 . Bed
frames , S20.and 826 ., 10
gun - Gun cabinets. $360 ..
dinette cha irs 820 . and 125.
Gas or electric ranges. 8326
up to S37!5 . Baby me tresses. 826 S. $35 , bed
frames $20, $25, &amp; $30,
king frame 860 . Good selec tion of bedroom suites,
cedar cheats. rockera, metal
cabinets. swivel rockers .
Used Furniture ·· bookcue,
ranges. chairs, end tables,
washers , dryers, refrigera tors and TV's , 3 mile• out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
6pm. Mon . thru Fri ., 9am to
6pm. Sat.
446-0322
COUNTY APPLIANCES ,
INC . Good used appliances,
washer, dr~ers , refrig .. TV
seb . 627% 3rd. Ave .. Galli polis . Call448-1699 .

. 6 HP Sears Craftsman riding
mower, in eMcellent condi ~
tion . $260 . Call 61 4 -3BB ·
9809 after 9:30 PM .

NEW kero1ene halter,
22 ,600 BTU , with 6 gallon
fuel can &amp; pump. all 1or
8176 .00 . 4 Used tires.
F-78-1 !5 steel belted radials,
plenty wear left. $48 .00 .
304·675 -1383.
USED Lawn Boy 21"
mower. good running condi tion . new blade . 304-676 6437 .
12" 20 ft . wide flange
1-baam, 1130. 5 ft . steal
monar box . $100 . 304 ~
875-3452 .
SALE Thursday, Friday. Saturday. M .J . 's Ceramics,
Fairview Rd . Camp Con1y.
Pt. Pleasant . Galze &amp; specialty glazas 20 percent Qff .
GreenWare 10 percent to 26
perc on~~~· · !-!'!·;;~-;;: ·· i
phona ~u" - • ·
"

55 Building Supplies
Building materials
block. brick. sewer pipes.
windows . lintels , etc
Claude Winters . Rto Grande.
0 . Call614-245 ·5121 .

8:00

STUCCO PLASTERING textured ceiling• ·commllrdal •d relidentNII. free
aetlmotel. Coli 814· 258 1182 .
• ..

HORSES 11o ponys, 304 675-5110 .
Parrot, cages. •ed S. supp lies. Wholesale prices . Call
675-5695 .
AKC registered Poodle puppies, phone 304-882 -3447 .

Multivox MX ~ 20 electronic
piano, brand new cond ..
8600 . Call675-7196 .

3 long formal . Size 7 , 8 , S.
11 . Call 614 ·388-961 1 ef ter 4 .

Fender F-56 12 -string gui tar . 304-675 -4077.

Musical
Instruments

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

Browning auto. 12 gauge 28
modified Belgium made
mint cond . S660 . Call 614 388 -9611 after 4 .
243 cu1tom heavy varmit
rifle Browlng douglu ac tion , double XX barrel. tri
pod. 24 power lepold scope ,
$800 . Call 614-3B8 -9611
after 4 .
Compound bow fully
aquiped . Cell 614 -3B8 ·
9611 after 4 .
Cub tra ctor with cultivators
plow $1,750, 1975 New port car for sale· 86150, all in
good cond . Want to leaae
tobacco poundage will pay
cash . Call 448-4286 .
7 ft . heated picnic tebtes.
Rio Ridge RunnMs 4 -H
Club . Call 614·246 -6347 .
Good used 5 -V roofing tin, 8
ft . 11o 12 'ft . lengtho. Cell
614 -388-9684 after 6PM .

I

•

-

I ,,..,o.,,

ru UD
""

ill

~~~==·-:::·:w·:·,=·-=
·=
"'':":•:••:":"::;:=========::J
00

61

71

Farm Equipment

Autos for S11le

59

For Sale or Trade

1981 Buick Diesel. Ttke
over payments or will teke
S6.000 . 614 -667 -6344 or
614 -378-6369 .
- - -- - - - - - 1979 Oodge Omni. 2 dr .
hatchback. 4 speed. good
4ft. drag pipe bush hog . ex: c . cond .. no rust, 30 plus.
ctinditiOn. 304--676.-6930 .., .p .g . 12,800 . .61.4-986- .
or 304-875-3346 .
4251 .

NEW &amp; Used Harvastore
Structures. Automated li veatock 1eeding-computer
feeders. Call collect· 814- ·
586 -2260. John L. Betto .

NEW Holland 268 hay baler, 1981 Buick Skylark, V-6,
$1 ,600. Ford 841 tractor, auto .. p.s.". p.b .. a .c .. cruise.
1$3,000. Siders Equipment, am-fm 11ereo. $6 .000 . 614~
304-676 -7421, Henderson, 992 -5082 .

wv.

LiveStock

1981 vw Rabbit. 304-6758153 .

e~~tcellent

8 :30

Morcum Roofing • Spout·
ing, 30 yeora uperience.
apecielizing In built up roof .
61
- --4.388·98&amp;7
----Coli
. -Concrwte work. drlvew.,y 1,
oldewolkl. polioo . Brick •
bklck eiC. Free e11·1rnat11.
Coll4411-o4393 or 614-2581787.

7:00

BORN LOSER

7 :30

Hi Preasul'l!l Cleening. AlurT.inum aiding, mobile homes,
wood. brick. 11ndstone
building and homes. Alao
heevy equipment. Fully lnaured, Free estimates. 614949-2886 .

8 :00

RON 'S Te.. vlaion Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar. and
houoe collo. Call 576-239B
or 446-2464 .

ANNIE

.HILL OOH'T REC()ft!IZE {(IE?
AWIN6 WHAT AMI.IHACH~
AND HAIR DYE CAN 00! THE
LAST TIME 1'/E MET WAS KINO
OF E~811RRIJ551Nfi
ME.•

FA. K Tree Trimming. stump
removel. COII675-1331 .
RINGLE' S SERVICE experienced roofing, including
hot ter application, carpen·
ter, electri~ian. mason. Call
304·876 , 2088 ' or 6764680, '.

WHY AP.E 'rtJU
5TOPPIN: f1DO?
GOME:THIN'
I'IRONG?

..BUT YOU OOM'T HAVE
YOUR 5POORY
S/llf/(!C/1 AROUND
TO HElP YOU

THIS TIME.-'

79 FORD F260 , 4-wheoidrive . power steering .
pOwer brakes, air conditionFor Sale or Trade : 1979 ing , AM- FM , 4 speed.
Camero, 61.000 mi . New $4 ,BOO ., 304-676-1546 aftirea, 306 engine. auto . Call ter 6 .

I=========

Bush hog in good shape 379 -2726 .
*326 &amp; older modellnterna · '79 Chevy Suburban , ltlllC . 74 Mot!3rcvcles
tional 1ractor (needs work) cond ., V-8 , auto . tran1 ., air
11 .200. Call 446 -0865 ,cond . 446• 3637 altar 5
days &amp; 446 -4267 evan.
p.m .
1980 Yameha YZ-80 dirt
1979 20 -c Maasey Fergu- For Sale or Trede : 1977 bike , e~~tcl . cond ., $426 . Call
son end loader. plow . disc . Camara, 306 engine , auto ., I_6_1 _
4 ·2_4_5_-_
5_B_9 _2._- - - cu ltivator. tines, buah hog ,
a
.c
.,
new
tires,
34,000
mi.
1971
Yamaha
650 twin 4
garden blade. 1$10,500 . Call Cell 279 -2726 .
446 -2971 .
1troke, feir cond., $660 .
11_8_~_4_-2_4_5_-_6_8_9_2_.- For ule Farmall Cub good 1976 black Monte Corio one 1 -C-•_
condition cultivators only, owner. v ~ a 360 engine , 1977 Herley Davidson low
11 .BOO . Call 614 -256 · bucket seats, 81 ,700 or belt rider. Call 446-7016 weekoffer. Call 614-388-9370 .
6230.
days after !5PM.
1978 Corvette dark brown,
T-top, tactorv alum . wheela. 1982 Honde 450 cu1tom,
exc. cond .. low mileage , 2 ,000 mi.. e~~:c . cond ..
with Major Hoople mony utroo . Coli 446· 11.250. Call 446-2350 .
04 98.
•
1981 YAMAHA 650

==========-.t.:========~

1970 Chewlle SS 427 . Call
446· 4154 or 448-8839 .
197B B.onnovlllo PS. P8 , tilt
wheel. cruiM control. AM~
FM atero. *200 r8bata. Call
448-9478 oflor 6, wookd•v• anytime Wl'"'enda.
1974 VW Supor BooUo,
excellent condition, (no
rust), no m~henical problemo. Coli 814 -246 ·9588.

Ju

t
Hondo Prelude enentlally new. 8 .400 mi. , electric sun roof , 5 apeed,
AM· FM tope, etc. Coll446·
7417 .
1874 18ft. tri houl Chryalor
boll• troller wllh 197180
HP Chryiller · motor wllh
powor llfl. Somo e•troo,
U,OOO for oil. Coli 814387·0631 .

1

MaXim, sh1ft drive, new tire,
2 holmell , axcollonl condition , 11700 . 304-8B2 _3_3~3_1_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
....-.-HONDA 360 • runo good,
,.
1260.00 , phone, 304·5782010 ·
1981 HONDA 900 cuotom,
ehowroom condition ~
*3 .000 . Coli 304-6'111·
2861 .

76

Auto Parts

ALLEY OOP

You're
hold in'

upth'

Too late,ol'manl
· Any junk what
pass th' qate
git mash'!

line!

Corburotor ond lntoka monl·
fold for '79 Ford 351M ,
31M-171·o4077 .

1----------·
·
3!10 Turbo Tronomiuion .
304-175-8o441i.

--WINNIE

TO VERA
CONVINCE ME MY
5U5PICION5 AIIOUT
HER.
WORK

..

Electrical

BARNEY

SEWING Machine repain ,
aervlc8. Authorized Singer
Sales It Service Sherpan
Sciilors . Ftbrlc Shop .
Pomeroy. 992-22B4.

''TOOTHPICK" BARLOW··
HOW DID 'IOU EVER
GIT A NICI&lt;NAME
LIKE THAT?

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE ctll City Furniture
304 · 676- 260B or 446 0831 .

!==========
8&amp;

'
JONES BOYS WATER SER ;
VICE . Coil 614 -387 -7471
or 614-387-0811 .

JIMS WATER S,ERVICE
Coil Jim Lonler, 304 · 676 ·
7397.
.

87

Upholatarv .

TRISTAiE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc. Avo., G•llipolll.
441-7833 or -441-1133,

''

"

PEANUTS

THIS I!ASEeALL TE;.M HAD
A
REAL LOUDMOIITH ON IT...
ON TV LAST,N16HT
THE
MANA~ COULDN'T TAl(!:
,---'1
IT, 50 HE PULLED THE
LOUDMOUTH'S CAP DOWN
OVER I-llS HEAD !

I SAW SOMETHIN6 FUNHV

MOWREYS Upholllory Rt.
1 lo111. 124, Pt. Pleeunt
304-176-4.154.
.

~-----~~--~---~------------~-------------------------~~-------------~----------'

N-•

(J) MOVIE: 'Blood Feud'
Port 2
II (I) (ID Magnum, P.l.
(I) SnNk Pr.viewl Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
fray Lyons take a look at
'The Hunger' end 'Somethi ng Wicked This We-;
Comas .·
(]II Governor C•leat•
•
[ll Benaon Benson's
brother Russell comas to
town. (R) (Closed Cop·
tioned]
f.D MOVIE: 'Thl Mloflto'
B:30 11) 1884 Gamel 'An Olympic Update .'
(I) Good Nolghbora
(!Jl lnllde Story Hodding
Carter e~~taminel pren perfo rmance invo l ~ing one
major news story.
GIII2i Condo
9 :00 D (1)
Gimml A 8rNk
Nell pertuades a delicatessen owner to let a young
shoplifter work off her
, debt .
I]) 700 Club
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
L11 VOII!I• NV
G (I) (ID Simon llo Simon
A.J . and Rick are hired to
recover 11 trained dolphin .
IR) (60 min.)
(I)@ Myltery 'Wa. tho Accused.' Paul decides to
make a run for it and M~ra
agrees to go with him. (60
min.) [Closed Captioned]
• II2J Too CION for
Comfort Henry dis covert
his 1riand·s bride-to~be it
young enough to be his
daughter.
9:30 0 (1) (I) ChNrl The
Coach brings hit new girl1·
riend 10 Cheers. (R)
(ll Not Nece1aorlly Tho
New• This show promiaes
to be everything the current news is not.
Ill Ott Tokeo Two Sam·o
new computer diagnoaes
all his patienta' 1111 and
Moi!.Y_ loee1 a key witnen .
10:00 D (ll &lt;II Hill Stroot Bluea ·
The temporary return of a
brutal narcotics cop end
the iuuance of prom isaary
notel causes unrest at the
ototion. (R) (80 min .)
(ll MOVIE: 'I' m Donalng AI
Fell All Con'
(I) I Thought I Woo Toller.
A Short Hlltory of Mel
Brooke
(I) • II2J 20/20
• (() (ID Tucke(o Witch
(I) Avengero
!ID N-IWIIOh
.INNN_.
10:15 (() TBS Evenlna Nowo
10:30 (JJ 9 .. r Time
@ Oppermann•
•In SNrchof....
11 :00 • CIJ (I) • (I) I)J • (!2)

N-•

General .H auling

Need aomething hauled
.awty or something moved?
We'll do it. Coli 446 -3159
betweon 9 end 6 .

~

ALLGOOD'5 OFFICf.l
I WANT HER TO

&amp; R11frigeration
DEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR . Guoran ·
teed work . Cell anytime
614 - 266- 8820 or 614 ·
266 -1207.

a

rn

.We has
decide not
-"-''"' t'sell 'er!

I WONDER IF THAT

WOULD EVER HAPPEN
IN

REAL LIFE ;..

(() Women WeiCh
Cil NIWI/Iporta/WNther
(I) Dove Allen II ll'lle
·
• -.!!Y Hill Show
1 1:30 • Cil CZJ Tonlghl Show
(f) MOVIE: 'Z'
I]) Anolher Ute
Ill E8PN 8port1C.n11r
(() Cetllno .
(I) loop
• (I) Qulnoy Quincy 11111
In love with 8 beautiful
ung widow. (R) (80 l'l]in,)
PBILIW Night ..
All In lhe Fomlly
(JJI Nlghttlne

Now onango the Clr&lt;lod lollorl Ia
fonn the aulplilo an1,.., u aug·
QO!Iod b)' the above cortoon.

·1 1:41

l

I.

I I I l )[ XI X)

Answerhere:THE (

.I

Yasterclly s

( - - . lomonow)

Jumbles: GAUGE

DIRTY

NETHER

INDOOR

.Answer : Who was thllt ghost wh o appe11red at the

.

door?- A DEAD RINGER

Jumllll Book No. :zo. cont1k'llng 110 puuiM, 11 n•ltab.. lor S1.t5 poatpeld
trom Jumbll, clo this newspaper, Bo• :W. Norwood, N.J. 07MS. lncklde J'OI.W
Nmt, ~·.
code lind m•ILI checkl
ablt 10 New
.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Bad assumptions
NORTH

t -211 · 11~

+AK
¥Q861

tJB 2
+U 12
EAST

W\lST
+QI 0 8 2

+1 s· ~ 3

¥A J y
• g1 6
+Q 10 3
SOUTH
+J 9 I
¥ K 10 3

.. 7 52
t 10 5 I J

+KJ

t AKQ
+A., 6 3 4

Vulnera ble : Both
Dealer : Soulh
Wesl

North

E~st

South

Pass
P11ss
Pass

2+
3 NT

Pass
Pass

2t
Pa!tS

a vaila ble tricks . It l oo~ed as
if he would need lhree beart.s
to score his game. so lie led
dummy's four of hea rts at
tric k tw o.
East ha d been doing some
thinkin g of his own while
South was co unting. He
kne w that SOuth he ld no
more tha n three hearts. One
had to be lhe king . If another
was the 10 it was as s ure as
death a nd taxes tha t South
would play it on East's nine.
If West he ld tha t 10, however, then East 's rline a~nd jack
. we r e eq ua lS, and a little bit
of fa lse-carding seem ed to
be in order.
·
East played his jack of

I NT

Opening lead: +2

h ea rt s~

South 's king he ld the Irick
and now South led his ten or
hear~ . lt lost to East' s ace,
as expected, a nd bac k ca me
a spade .
South's side e ntries in
dummy were gone, but
South th ought he was on safe
gro un d for t hree hea rt

trick s.
He never got e ve n a sec-

By Oswald Jocoby
end James Jar oby
South didn't appreciate
the spade lead. The de fense
had started Lo a ttack his
most vulnerable spot.
He co uld co unt tw o
spades. three diamonds and
one club as hi s immediate ly

ond heart tric k. He came to
his ha nd with a diamond , led
his three of hea rls , rincssed
dumm y·s e ight against ' th e
nine spot he was sur e was
over in th e Wes t hand and
went down two.
(NF.W SI•APER

fo: N'fto~ RPRIS I!-:

ASSN)

~ruwVHd'
by fHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Paramour
6 Be on
one's feet
11 Nimble

8 I love il.ul.i
9 Jus t out
10 Adams

14 Kent's
g irlfriend

12 Carved gem 17 Carried
13 Tyrannize 18 Spacious
15 Conger

19 Joie de vivrc
ZO La rgencs.'
Yeste rday is Answer
21 Editor 's
%2 Endeavored
tenn
Z9 Famous
35 Norsecpic
%5 Descended 22 Dross
name
36 Stitc h
%6 Longest
23 Heavy
in m coiCinC 37 Tiffin drink
river
reading
31 Allude
38 Work unit
in ~""ranee
24 Nothing
33 Signora's
39 Des.&lt;ert
%7 Rage
Wr . )
residence
ite m
28 Last word
34 Utah city
40 Strife
27 Served
Z9 Attraction
~~n-n-~
~~~--30 Create

16 Mana ged
17 Filleted

32 Naked 33 College
in Iowa
36 Volunteer
II Bizarre
42 Allevia ted
43 Stake
· 44 Broadway
offering

DOWN
I Recent
2 Fairy-tale

· creature
3 Vesse l
4Tree

5 Censure
6Partof 1.
&lt;14 acroos
7 Uttle shaver L-..L.....I.-L-..1....-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's how to work
" AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

ll:

One letter limply atonda lor anolhe r . In lhi1 iample A lo
used for the lhree L'a, X lor the two O's, •t&lt; . Single letters,
apoelrophes, the length and rormalion of the worda are 111
hlata. Eoch doy the code letters ore dlffere nl.
CIIYPTOQUOTES

H~moonero

l'hillp Morlowe, PrlvEye 'finger Mon .' Mlrlowe
becomes the prl me ausp8ct
In lhe de11h of o city oHI·
cl•l.
12:00 (J) lume • Allen
·
(() Crleo . From lho Deep,
Port II Conclu1lon.
(I) Nlthttlne
.' 9 MOVII: 'Ambueh Bay'

·~t..utWotd

,.

FO~ A SWEATE~ HE

THOU6HT'THI:!i WA'S
THE ~16HT SIZE.

510(

DOZER WORK By Tod
Hanna. pond• . ditches ,
ba1ements. etc . Cell 4484907 . Car1er &amp;. Evans
Transportation.
'

84

I GIZZA~

CV I Spy
11)' li11iqe the USFL
(J) MOVIE: 'The Soulhlrn

Painting intertor or ext_erior,
free estim1tea. Cell 6755344or446-9326.

&amp; Accell!3ries •

1-------......:.-

1.·1/N"NIF .•

Stark's Tree Work. Lands caping, backhoe work, tree
servtces with mowing. Go
anywhere . 304-676-2010 .

Lonnie Boggs Excavtting .
Oozer. beckhoe , dump truck. Wortr. by hour or job .
Coll446-7903 .
·

I KJ

e

~Man'

~ :~ES~~~~~~~

73
Vans &amp; 4 W .O. ,
l- - - - - - - -- 1974 Dodge Rom Charger
218 engine, 69,000 mi .,
rusty body, 81 ,400 or best
offer . Call614-246-5892.

t:i

TIXYS

e

JIM'S PLUMBING llo HEATFARM ADVISORY SERVI · 7 3 Chevy half 10 " 65 •000 lNG . Fomerly Dewitt ' s
CES Grain S.. lives1ock mar- miles, 3 0 7 3 speed, $ 1 •400 · Plumbing . Call 814-387keting, soil testing, crop _c_a_ll _4_4_6_-3_6_1_2_ . _ _ _ _ 0676 .
1
1
nancail
. T.M . ·Ari
planningplanning
, bookeeping.
11 - 1966 Chevy -' ton PU , 6
Services . lnc . Call614-446 - cyl., 4 speed. $400ortrede 1 o"ll
0698 or 304 -676 -6140.
1or equal value. Call 6.1 4- I o..:J
Lmy
388 -8797 .

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

·~-::=-- -

eon..

e

1981 DODGE Omni ,
31,000 miles. standard, 1 --'-------~­
AM - FM, $4,000 .00, or Painting , interior&amp;. exterior,
Registered Quarter horse price negotiable. 304-676 - brush or 1pr1y, commercial.
mere, 6 yrs. old, sorrall . Call 7142 .
residential, mobile home1,
614-245 -5815 .
after 6, 304 -675-1128,
1978 MERCURY Zoyphor, L.M . Johnson.
2 door, 4 cyl. , automatic
64 Hav &amp; Grain
transmission, power s,teering , 4 new radial tires . 82
Plumbing
304 -675-3354 , 675-4437.
&amp; Heating
Ear corn for sale . 1 . 200
bushels. 1 6 acres of corn
Trucks for Sale
ground for rent at Broad 72
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Run . 304 -882 -2682 .
AND HEATING
1979 Chevrolet PU truck.
Cor . Fourth and Pine
exc . cond .. V-8. auto .. PS .
Phone 446-38B8 or 44665 Seed &amp; Fertilizer 42 , 000 a c tual miles, 4477
84 ,300 . Coli 446 -4063 .

7_1
___A_u_to_s_f_o_r_S_a_le_
Farm Equipment

M~ . oso .

80 CAMARO , AIR, AM -FM
radio tape, new d;es, excel- 1~---------­
lent condition, 304-676r Water Waifs. Commerciel
4198
and Domestic. Teat holes.
Pumpa Salas and Service.
19BO Ford Fiesta , 27.000 304-B95-3802 .
miles, s1ill under warranty,
$3700 . 304 -875 -3634 .
Get your carpet in lhip
shape. Water removel. FREE
1979 Olds Cullan, V-6 ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
auto, air, am-1m cassette, 4 CLEANING . CAPTAIN
new radials $5400 . 446- STEAMER 814 -448·2107.
1387 .
E &amp;. R Tree Sa rvica. fully
1977 Ford Thunderbird all insured . free eatimatea .
power $3,000. 304-676· Phone 614-367-0636, call
3470 anytime .
attar 6 .

JOHN Deere A tractor.
Farmall M. 28 " rim &amp;. tire.
304-696-3471 or 8953441 .

Deoth.' Thlo World War II
tactic ia examined through
peraon•l teatimo-ny en'd interviews.
(f) MOVIE: ' Mirror, Mirrot'
(JJ Tic T110 Dough
Cll Andy Oriffllh
(I) N-a/Sporta/WNihlr
3-2·1 ,
ct
@)l'unecl-ln
Chorlle'o Angelo
(1) &lt;II NBC Nowa
(I) MOVIE: 'C.rbon Copy'
(JJ MOVIE: 'WhMI of
Fortune'
lllhjo 1000
CllGom., Pyle
(I) • (JJI ABC Nowo
(I) l1D cas
(I) Dr. Who
!ID Over hoy
• (1) P.M. Mogozlno
11) ESPN'o Sportoforum
Cll Coral Burnett
Cll Entertainment Tonight
&lt;II Chorllo'o An11111 1
G (I) Tio Too Dough
(I) !ID
MocNeii· Lohror
Report
l1D NIWI
II2J Peoplo'o Court
e&amp;torTrok
G CIJ lie Detector
Ill ESPN Spor11Centor .
Cll Bob Newhart Show
(I) G (() Fomlly Feud
(I) Buolneoo Report
l1D You A1ked for It
!ID IAII Chene• Gorago
Ill (JJI Bluogr111 Special
• (I) ffi F1me Reardon's
favorite student qU:estions
his abilities aa a teacher
and Julia is visi1ad by
Iormor claumotes. IR) (80
min .)
Cil Stondlng Room c;Jnly:
Wllllo Nol.oon ond Fomily
Willie performs with a
band made up of fam ily
and friends .
Cil MOVIE: 'Terzan, the

w

Roofing. ahinglea. spouting
and aluminum 1iding work .
ln1ured , Fr•• Eatimataa .
614-948 -2888 .
•

1974 Chevrolet station
wagon . Fully equipped, one
owner, clean. Caii614-9926B62 .

AC no till corn planter, 4
row . Air-platefen, monitor
insecticide, big discs, excellent condition . 614-986·
3B31 .

WANT to lease tObiCCO
. Mason . Putnam. Ca Reg . P.A Plott 11 mos. old quota
b&lt;III . CoiiMorganWoOdlawn
male •1ire. Nite Ch . Walkers Farm . Pliny , 304 -675 Cha.rlie Brown Dam . 2275. 304-623-5843 .
Walkers Gypsy Proven
Cross $200 . 304 · 575 - 1=
1o1o.
I~

61

A GOOD ONE.
I FOUND HIM 5NE-Al&lt;ING
AROU&gt;JP Tl&lt;E CA5TLE

Painting interior &amp; exterior.
weiiiJIIper henging. lnaured,
Free eatimatea . 614-9492688 .

66 CaseVac. wideirontend 1977 Uncoln Town Cer.
with 2-14 plows. utility 42 ,000 mllu . Excellent
trailer . Call614-245-5347. cohdition. 16,700. John
I
lyons. 614-992 -3463 .
Ford tr1actor with diak, l __:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
plowa, brush hog , and 1975 Buick Century , V -6,
swarm o1 bees with aupp-. runs good, body rough . 23
lio1. Coli 614-266-6540 or m .p.g . Asking $600 . 614614-256 -6616.
742 -2187.

63

Hc~E'5

••P·

·

l 1~

CAPTAIN EASY

PAINTING - inllfior ond
olrtorior, plumbin~ . roofin~ .
some remodeling. 20 yrs.
Coli 814· 388-9852 .

•

Angus bulls 1 to 3 yrs. old .
blood line, Slate
Run Farms, Jackson . Oh .
Call 61 4-2B6· 5,395 or 6142B6 -1787.

Locuat pos1 -7 f1 . long . Call
446-4699 .

1 afyhan bedspread . afghan .
1able tenni1 table 860 . Call
614-388-9811 otter 4 .

0

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
· KENNEL. AKC Cho¥¥ pup pies. CFA Himalayan, Par sian and Siamese kittens.
Coli 448 -3844 after 4PM .

Pet• for Sale

57

1- - - - - - - - - -

.,

(l) Komlkozo ' Miuion of

H!3me
Improvements

X)

(J

• CIJ (() ,. (() l1D • tlZ
N-

81

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Dobermans pup• aid
Oobermen Stud SeNice.
Coli 446 · 7796 .

56

;THURSDAY
EVENING

11th Annual Bentley Pig
Sale. April 27th, 7 :30 PM .
Feyett Co. Fairgrounds, Wa shing1on C.LH ., Ohio. Selling
1 60 head of Ourocs 81
Hamp-Ourocs cross breeds
and Registered Duroc guilts.
Roger Bentley, 3112 Reeds 1979 Honda CBX, real nice
Rd .. Sabino, Dh 45619. Coli $2,000 . Good tires, new
513-584 -2398 .
battery. 304-676-1 600 .

Soundeaign stero separate
cobone1s with cabinet, like
new. cost $700. will sell
$300. Call 446 ·6683 .

lo\leseat.
16cu .ft . refrlgera
USEO FURNITURE
Sofo.· Il•
t·or . Corbin &amp; Snyder Furnl ·
tur.a. Call446 -1171 .
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

ONE bedroom apanments Kenmore ~~laaher - dryer
for the elderty. All utilitiaa $160 set, Women Friend
paid. Tenants pay 30 Per· dryer *96, portable washer cent of their adjuatad in- dryer sat 1$176, May1tg
comB n this HUD subskfized wringer wuhar *96, refrig ·
apartment building . Twin eratora low as 876, 30 in.
Rivau . Towar, phone 304 - electric _range •as, bruk ~
675 -8679 . Equal opportun - 1ut Ht with 4 chairs $56, 6
ity hou"ng.
new cheet of dr.Wen starttng at 885. 1 •ntique oak
FURNISH ED ono ~edroom alnin_g set . antique chel1 of
apartmsnt In Pt . Pleasant . drawers with deck good
E"tra nice, adutts only, no cond $125 . Skaggo Appllon peu. phone 30-4-876 -13.B6 . coo Upper Rl110r Rd . Coli
448-739B.
ONE bedroom epartm\lnt .
402'h 24th. St . Pl . Plao - GE' haNeSt Qold 12 ,CU .f1 .
san l, phone, 1 ·814 -992 - refrigerator. a lao used
5860 .
washers &amp; dryers. •II gua rontoed 30 doyo . Call 81 4 ·
ONE bedroom apanment in 256-120?.
HenderS on , 8160 par
month, 304-676•1972.
Now Lolyboy dlnolto 101,
wall mfrrar, m1rbl1 top
Unfurniatwd 3bedroom'cln· living room tobleo. 1700 for
ual air, wator peld. 1260. all . lnqulto ot Jlt:kJon Eotmonth. 304-876 -6294 .
ataa Apartmenta, Apt. B&amp;B.

Stove end refrigerator
&amp;36Q . both, Sony stereo
$125 ., Sofabed $50 .• fi"' ·
place insen $300 . All in
fair-good cond . 304-876 7769 before 2 p.m . or aiter
10 p.m .

Television
Viewing

W ILL PAY
AUTHOI:!ESS

. 4/28/83

Iwt:Jttf!

Philco 22 '' console color TV,
304-875-2815.

L IKI;' WE PUT
D IC K TRACY !

1 Ul iilty IJoiliu. Coil 614367-7297 .

Ddyoooy T.V. gome with
voice modular. Warrenty on
entire set. 6 tapea: 8200.
614-B92-207B, Judy .

cWhEDD
1nt1 111NGia
y ce,
never
worn,
gown
• veil,
of
size 8 . Gave $360 ., will sell
for t250. 304-675-3628 .

DICK

'
Motou HQmes •

V IS I T - -

Fioh Hook loke Now Open
Dolly 8 o.m . to 8 p.m .
Fishing. cemping. 1rcade
room. en.Cks. Under new
mane~ment . 12 mUeafrom
Pt. Ple.unt ~m Rt. 87.

Ber with two stool• for
llle -614-992 -5878.

April28. 1983

&amp; Campers

Antique Ook Reproduction
furniture , full llrie in atoclc.,
1l1o Antlquee. Peul Con." 'l'
Antiquee, Tuppere Plein•.

Coppertone no fro at refridg·
8100 . P~sh button electric
stove. coppertone *715 .
1
coffee
ti' able Both - 8150 . 614 - 247 ·
47 Y,x18Yrx16% in . and 1 " 4292 .
end table 26x18 Yzx201f2
with light walnut finish $30. 10'•7' metal building . U1ed
32x63- 174 piecee brown o'n e y•ar · -~ 135 . Call614 underpinning for e mobile 992-6356 .j

MOBIL E home. 14x70, all
el ecti rc , air, 2 bedroo ms. GE
washer &amp; dryer. oxtra nice.
call 304 · 675 -7656 or 675 2686 .

FARM for sale, 30 ac res.
Broad Run R o ad . call 304 ·
662 -2407.

•

. I

&amp;4 Misc . Merchandise

79 Mobile hom e, 2 bed room , unfumished, V2 acre
with chai nl ink fence. county
water. loc ated in Ohio .
$ 15.500 . Call after 5 p . m .
304 -576-2792 .

76 Acres. barn &amp; o ut bui ld ing s, all m ineral rights. to ·
bacco base , remoc:Mie d fArm
house , located Cra b Creek
area. 304 -675 -3030 or
675 -3431 .

.

, Ohio

JNLS
VS

CNLGL

W

WGL

KDBS CG A ,

MDDT
C 'NI.

NWXVCH

XBHVSI. !HH
J

DP

.M .

CNL

J .

H CWC L

G B HHLR R

TJVSTRI.H .

,

Yestmlay's Cryptaquote: THE TIME WILL COME WHEN
WINTER WIU. ASK US. "WHA.T WERE YOU DOING ALL
.mE SUMMER."- BOHEMIAN PROVERB

�•

Page 12-TfM Daily Sentinel

Thunday, April 28, 1983

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
~.

ELBERF.ELDS IN POMEROY
.

.

END OF THE MONTH SALE
FRIDAY, APRIL 29TH AND .SATURDAY, APRIL 30TH ·

SAVE 25°/o ON ALL
CHAIRS IN STOCK

SALE

E.O.M. SALE!

LITTLE BOYS'-OUTFITS

BOYS WRANGLER
JEANS ·

Berkline Feather Glide

Wallaway Recliners

Berkline Rocker Recliners
Berkline Swivel Rockers
Rowe Modem Occasional Chairs
Rowe Swivel Rockers
Rowe Wing Back Ocelasional Chairs
Large Selection of Fabrics
Nylon-Dacron-Vinyi-Herculon
Modem-Traditinai-Early American

Two piece knit outfits, sunsuits,
bib overalls and one piece out·
fits.
Sizes NB to 24 mos. and 2 to 4..

Basic and fa'shion styles - most all
are boot flare. Broken regular sizes 8
to 12 and student sizes 26 to 28 limited quantity.
112.95 to '18.95 Values.

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

lf2 PRICE

PO'S

Red Heart

E.O.M. SALE

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR

,,..

E.O.M.

LADIES' SLIPS
The quality yarn

Qual1ty Stuffed Shirt brand junior .
sportswear. Shorts, skirts, blouses
. and pants.
Junior Sizes 3 to 15.

. I , ..
'

,-f: , ·.,
(~.... '11j

1~ 1
1

If!}

~ _.\. \

I~'·

S4.0() .........Sale S3J9
ss.OO .........Sale f6.39
s13.00 ..... Sale Sl0.39
Sl8.00 ..... Sale '14.39

Special group of full slips, half
slips, camisoles and teddies.
Sizes S thru XXL and 32 to 48.
Reg. JG.OO to 114.00

E:O.M. SALE

Redheart Wintuk
$}69 Knitting Yam

Reg. su.oo ........Sale '8.79
Reg. s14.00 ....... Sale '11.19
Reg. m.oo ...... Sale '16.79
Reg. f29.00 ...... Sale S23.19

1/.
\

\

· mothproof · 317
oz. skein · 41 ply nandknitting yarn.
Non-allerg~nic

'

$1·29 SKEIN

.

WHILE THEY LAST

\

.

7~ PRICE
SALE

E.O.M. SALE

MEN'S &amp; BOYS

Sl 59

E.O.M. SALE

LITTLE GIRLS'

LIITLE GIRLS'

SUMMER SHORTS

TUBE SOCKS

Summer Outfits

Springfoot quality- white with colored tops. Including scpool colors. Boys 7 to 11 Men's sizes 9 to 15.

SunsUits, two pc. short outfits, col·
ored bibs in poly/cotton blends,
knits and terry.
Complete range of girls' sizes.

$119

Denims. seersucker, poly/cotton blends,
terry and knits.
Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14

''

11

'.

Reg. '3.50
Reg. '5.00
$
Reg. 7.00
Reg. '9.00

Reg. 17.00 to 120.00

1.89 Sweatshirt Grey with Color Tops ...... S!.49

1

SALE

PRICE~5 59 $}599 ._,~
TO

............. Sale '2.79
............. Sale '3.99
.
............ Sale S5.59
............ Sale '7.19
' .•. '
..... .,,
.'
\

(

~

E.O .M. SALE

REDUCEo20%

Active Sportswear

YOUR CHOICE

5

$ 99

MISSES
SPORTSWEAR

Rose Bushes
Superooted or Redi·plant packaging. Twenty -live varieties of tea
roses, floribundas and climbers.
Also three new roses for 1983.

20o/o

f'~~~$13 59 TO $4559

!

u

One size fits all sizes lOla 13. Choose
bulky knit orion stretch or I 00% ny·
lon stretch
knit. Excellent
. QUality. Big
of colors.

.......... s1.19
..... s1.59

SHOP FRIDAY TIL
SATURDAY TIL 5

Short sleeve styles in neck sizes 14 'iz
to 17. Solid colors- stripes . checks .
in an excelent selection of colors. full
cut·and tapered models.
, I 14.00

Van Heusen

Shirts ................. sl0.99

\

'

I 16.00

Van Heusen

Shirts ....... :......... sl2.59

I 18.00

Van Heusen

Shirts ................. sl4.19
19.00 Van Heusen

Shirts ................. Sl4.99

DRESS SOCKS
Bal)lon
Bulky Knit

N~w Cars, New Trucks, New Tractors, Nei:fJ Mobile

DRESS SHIRTS

I

MEN'S

,

VAN HEUSEN

\

E.O.M. SALE

E.O.M. SALE

MEN'S 59,95 CREW NECK
r

SWEAT SHIRTS

Springtoot brand 50% cotton, 50% polyester for easy wash·
ing. Sizes S (34-36), M (38-40), L (42·44) and XL (46·48).
Solid colors.
· ·

$788
'

,

10:00, A.M. to 4:00 P.M.

E.O:M. SALE!

One rack of Trissi, Devon, Dotty
Mann, Boston Traveler and l&amp;K.
Knit tops, skirts, slacks, jackets,
golf skirts ~nd blouses.
Reg. 117.00 to 157.00

E.O.M. SALE

51.50
52.00

..

Reg. s23.00 ......... Sale st8.39
Reg. s29.00 ......... Sale s23.19
Reg~ SJ6.00 ......... Sale szs.79
Reg. '44.00 ......... Sale SJ5.19
Reg. sss.oo ......... Sale S46.39

SALE

JACKSON &amp; PERKINS

r1

Meigs County Fairgrounds

Jacket dresses, jacket/skirt suits, two piece
sets, party dresses, crystal pleated styles
and sundresses.
Quality brands like Joan Curtis, Happenings,
Better Half and Brit1sh Lady.
Petite, Misses and Half Sizes.

Sizes S (6·8). M (10-12). L (14-16) and XL (1820). Group mcludes $?.95 fleece lined active
short · $7.95 sweat pants and $7.95 matching
sweat shirts. Navy or grey. E.O.M. Sale.

SAVE 20%

SAVE

Dress Sale

BOYS WRANGLER

WALLETS
Good selection of tri-fold and bifold
styles in basic colors. Buy now for
graduation and Father's Day gifts.

LADIES'

COORDINATE GROUP

MEN'S ROLFS

•

8-TRACK TAPES

Special sale prices on our entire stock of pre-recorded 8·
track tapes. Pppular, mck, religiPus, country and sound
tracks.
•

Reg. '5.79 ............... :...... Sale
Reg. 57.79 ......... ...............Sale
Reg .. '9.79 ..................... Sale
Reg. 512.79 ........ ............ Sale

$4.05
'5.45
56.85 ·
58.95

USE OUR PARKING LOTS
ON MECHANIC ST. AND
·sECOND ST.

Homes, New Motorcoaches, New Motorcycles, New
. Campers, Boats, Tires an_d Much More!

Live Radio Remotes - concessions - Entertainment

FREE PARKING
B~JM«j &lt;!lt.e 'WiuJJe d}.c;.,;J'I

FREE ADMISSION

RAINO.ATE - MAY 7,, 1983 . . ·
I

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