<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13764" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13764?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T14:25:43+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44861">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e8f91cd151f7813d586ce8a5055958e2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b615bab7382b440d0a920e0c0a408b5c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="43068">
                  <text>•

1-. t»A~~A~ ~A~'1~~ A~'4A
~

~M

.'

Inside todny's Sentinel...
Elway Denver bound...Page 3

TV"

race

Edllorlal .... ' .............. ' ......................... ·~· .. .... ............. Pllp z

TilLE Fla.
n1q11 11.1111

PANTYHOSE

Society ............ .. ...................................................... Paa- 5-7·

.

r.

NELSON'S REG. $4.78

~-

'

oloto. 1.0. window and

··-pocket.

•a••

•'

.1-TIU PLUTIO ·
.IUIZD

•

e

ri~fKY tw~d .coins. Clutdt
opens up ID croci~ card

'4••

..............;.,....................................... ............ P

. s-4

•

Outoldo triple !,..,..
rovldea ••o full ·
ength pocbtt far cur·

'5.~~.

Chester alumni activities ••. Page 5

Area deathl ............................ ............. ........ ... ...........P.lp U
.Clallllfte. ............................................................. P.,_ ...10
Colnlcs ................................................... :.............. ...
11

at

Vo1.32,No.13

Pomeroy

Copyrighted 1983

•miiiLL I SWAB IOLIEIS

•

enttne
•

3 Section• , 18 Pag es
20 C.nh
A Multimed ia Inc, Newspapet

Middleport, Ohio, Tueaday, Moy 3, 1983

Two men get
•
pr1son ternts;
•
continue one
case Monday
•

Boll &amp; Swobo Not Included

'4''

IUSIOIL CLOWIS
PORCELIII FIIIRIIES

06'1t" High

'
.
•Yellow and white
•Boxed

•Size 10'' x9"
•Auorted Color•

•Boxed

'5'99

.

'

59~

•a••·,

. .KIIIt ff- on doat ond catt
up to S monttit. Aldt In tick
control.

·

,·

WIUEIITO
OU'J ,.IIT
• HAM)YIAIIMICKIT

8

AC/DC
Portable Cassette
Recorder
S4NVO

• , 2~

• wtitTIWALI.~III
• PDL. .NII CLDTH

Help promised storm victi01s

• Ultra Slim Design

• •Male and ·Female ·
•Boxed·
•BV." High

•
•
•
•

AC/DC with Adaplor lncl~ded
Buill-In Condenser Mike
Auto Slop al End of Tape
Autom!ltiC Re.cord Level Clrcullry
'
.
"
.
.

$2 .95
.1 .

TOIITO WEI·

· .·.·. · .

SLIM 2

NELSON'S REG. $29.95

-c;:;OCOLATES

IIRTROIIC IOLDEI lUST
12" OSCILLITIII Fll

1 L.,, lox
I

.

Rain hasn't hurt here - yet

a.mpler

---Weather:,--'- -

•3 Speed push button control
•Quiet, side to side
oscillat ing movement
•Vertical angle ad ju st men t

•Removeoble safety gr ill
for easy deonln g .

IIISIO MAIERS

'

'

··1··
-•••••
....
....

I' 'Ill&amp;

•'ItilL

COSIETIO •
Ill liD 111$1 SET

Two men were sentenced to penal guilty to one count of forgery and .
institutions and a woman's sentenc- one count of grand theft and was
sentenced to a tenn of not less than
ing was continued until June 13,
when they appreard before Meigs onenormorethan!lveyearsoneach
County Common Pleas Judge count, the time to run concurrently.
Fassnacht was remanded to· the
Charles Knight Monday .
custody of the sh~rltf to begin
John W. Barnett, 19, Harnden,
who plead guilty to a c harge of serving hls sentece. He will be sent
breaking and entering was sent- to a correctional facllty In
enced to a term of not less than one Colwnbus.
According to prosecutor's investinor more than five years and was
gator,
Paul Gerard, the forgery
remanded to the custody of the
charge Involved a check which was
sherltf. Barnett will be sent to the
lomado Monday shouts lhal he can't lind hl~ dog. tho• animal was
TORNADO VICI1M SEARC~ FOR DOG - Wavlnlfhls lll'lll!lin
wt1tten In Oct. of 1982, bearing a
Ohio State Reformatory at
apparenUy hurled under the robhle of a shattered moblle home, one of
frustration, a resident of lhe mobUe borne park In Weston , Ohio hlt by a
forged s ignature.
Mansllied.
dozens destroyed. (AP Lllserpholo)
The grand theft charge Involved a
Barnett ls a repeat offender under
fraud, In the amount of $8,500 of
Ohlo Law and as such wits not
several persons who believe they
ellgible·for probation . ·
were investing in coal developme nt
Barne tt was charged in a bill of
in the county. Gerard further stated
information prepared by the office
tha t Fassnacht is presently on
of the prosecuting attorney Fred W.
probation In Clearmont County on a
Crow Ill, and resulted frornn an
By PAUL ALEXANDER
help people who lost thelr homes
Thcr(' also WPn' numr1·ou s unconday" 10 produce .the unst.ablc
similar theft charge.
incide nt (a break in) which OC·
As!ioclaled Press WrUer
and personal belongings, and we
firmed touchdown reports - sev·
condlt
Ions.
Terrie Manuel, 20, Racine, e n·
curred March 10 of this year at the
Gov. Richard Celeste - touting
wUI do evecy thlng we can to
cral ln Richland Counly, Lall a ville
The weather service sa id tornado
tered a voluntary pleas of guilly to a
Noble Hamon resldene&lt;;! &lt;m SR 143.
expedite those cla ims," Celeste
the northweste rn ()hlo town or
In Ross County, Notwalk a nd
louchdowns
occun'Cd
a
t
Weston
In
Barnett was represeted by Leor · charge offorgel)'.
Weston, where one person was
sa ld .
Clccyv lllc In Huron County, VermilWOod
Couniy,
G'rrenwlch
In
Humn
Manuel had been indicted by the
nard F. Holzapfel, Wellston and
Diane Moravek, meterologtst for County, north or Was hington COU ii
kllled by a tornado Monday- today
Ion In Lorain County, Humn In E ric
grand
jucy Aprtl 20 In connection
Fred W. Crow Ill prosecuting
promised to help victims with
the National Weather Service, said
County and ncar Mohlcanl..odgc in
~~ Fayette County and
House
with an Incident which occurred In
attorney represented the State Of
insurance settlements and said the
a cold front over Ohio ''combined
Ashland Counly .
Broadview Heights In soulhc m
February.
Ohio.
state would do what It could to help· /wlth heating from thesundurtng the
County
.
Cuyahoga
Manuel sentenclngwascontlnued
Ray Fassnacht, 53, orlgnlally
Four Ohioans died and a t least 25
'111e unpredict able weather was
untl) 9 a .m . on June 13 and was
!rom Clearmont County, but lately
others were Injured by the Monday
epitomized in Notwalk, near Lake
released on a $l,OOJ personal
residing on Ball Run Rood In Meigs
storms, (See relaled story and
Erie, where an unronfi rm('(! torrecognizance bond .
•
County, entered voluntruy pleas of
pictures on page 8) which spawned
nado a nd other high wi nds caused
tornados or funnel CIOiold sightlngs In
widespread .properly dam og&lt;" but
10 counties - trom Wood County in
no serious In juries .
So far, Meigs County has not been drastically llffecled by heavy
the northwest to Cuya boga County
Sgt . Robert Musser sa ld most of
rains and high water, officials said today. .
In the northeast and Ross County In
the
damage was cau!'l'd by lho• flrsl
The Melp County Offtce of the Ohlo Department of Highways said
south centra l Ohio.
stom1.
whic h swcpl through arountl
this momlng thai no stale hipways were closed by water. 'll1e Meigs
~or 8 p.m . EDT
VIsiting Weston today, where
J::Vlp.m
.. bul "upunlil id0 or7. WI'
County Department of Highways reported that County Road tO closed
National
Guard
troops
had
pa
·
had
ril{ht
to todiffm•nl stom 1fronl s
Showers
In the LangsviUe area and County Rood 5 wa• closed betwou1 lbc
trolled two tornado-battered trailer
movP
through
. Otw ttnw, WP had
Bmdbury School and Rou~ t:U.
parks where more than 50 mobile
ha
!I
up
1
0
I
.he
s
izf'
of:)! )-f'f'n l piP&lt;'f'S or
Upriver truck !ann~ bowever, have ent'Oim!A!red problem.• with
bomes were damaged or destroyed,
morr,''
the Inclement weather In that they have been Wlable to set many
Celeste said lnsum nce help would
1110 heaviest damag(' was in llw
young cabbage and tomato plants. One fanner said he had to throw
be a top priority,
Wood
Counly commun ity of WPs ·
out some 25,000 cabbage plants due lo wealher condllloo.~.
"Our firsI movewtll be toexpedl te
ton , aboul :t5 miles soulhwcsl of
insurance a pplications. That will
Toledo In n011hwcs1cr n Ohio.

Council takes no action on park request

.....

10f,$1H

.... •

By KATIE CROW
year .
Sentinel Staff WrUer
Counci lman Bill Young informed
Pomeroy Council was asked by
council that :.lO feet of hose to nush
Kim Shields, the v illage consultant,
down streets could be purchased for
to endorse a program toestabllshan
approximately $300. Council agreed
industrial parkin Pome roy or In the
to the purchase.
county.
Young also noted tha t ditching
Councilma n Larry Wehrung in·
was needed on P leasa nt Ridge, up
formed council Monday night that
Spring Avenue, Welsh Town Hill
Shields had notified We hrung there
and Fisher Street. Young also
was a posslbillly grant money · announced tha t ooorwas working
would be available for such a
on the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.·
project.
Young reported that progress L•
. Wehrung noted there is land
being made on lighting the
available In the county for an
audi torium.
Industrial park. No action was taken
Young suggested tha t when the
by council.
lighting ls changed In the downtown
Following a suggestion by Coun- area that possibly the lighting a t the
cilman Jolm Anderson, cou.nc il
tenniS courts cou ld be converted
directed Village Solicitor Fred
!rom the present lighting system to
Crow draw up a resolution to form a
low sodlwn lights.
nine-member board for the im·
Councilman Bruce Reed In·
provernent of downtown Pomeroy.
fanned council that the architect
Through the board, It's possible a
from Columbus will be here
federal grant can be secured.
Thursday morning to detennlne
Councll agreed to sell the village's
what It wW cost to renovate the
1979 Chevrolet cruiser, recently
SECOnd and third tloorofthenewclty
replaced by the purchase of a used
building for potential renters.
highway patrol vehicle .
We hrung to ld councU that he had
Following Anderson's sugges: received a call from H. Whitlatch,
lion, council agreed to advertise the
who js Interested In placing six horse
old cruiser for sale. Sealed bids are shot pits at the mlnl park.
to be received by May 16.
Whitlatch, Wehrung · said, is
Council discussed street paving, ."very Interested," and asked that
and are to llst prlortty streets.
councllmel\ let him know It council
Anderson suggested the lower was Interested.
and middle parking lot be paved .
Whitlatch lold Wehrung tbat he
Mayor Clarence Andj'ews noled
would bold tournaments during the
that patching of the parking lot
summer months.
would bedooe soon. AndenionDR...ted
CouncU was unable to make a
that It has lleenpatchedandthekills deciSion becau~ II Isn't sure which
no longer sealed. He S\lilll'lted that property surrounding the mini park
a portion of .the lot be dooe each
the vtlJage owns.

Fronls: Cold,....

.

_.. ···--·--

. .ftTUII
.
IIU.....
"'"
...........................
•M ..... •. ..... , . • , .....M

•Muolcal Bonia
•Muolcol Guitar
•Muolcal Mandolin

~-

'

·-·

No.HP2111

'3'9
2· 113 Qt. Whistling

........................
~

YOUI ClfOtcl

TEA KEmE

..

.

••.•••,

Ohio forecast
E ighty percent - Chance of rain tonight. Low 47·52, Winds
northwesterly 5-.15 mph . Partly sunny Wednesday, High~.

Extended forecast
Extalded Ohio Forecasl - Thursday through Saturday :
Generally fair through the period. Highs from the mld-509 tti mld.ffis
Thursday, In the 00; Friday and mld·OO; to mid· 70s Saturday. Early
morning lows 35 to45Thursday and Friday and In the 40s Saturday.

WITIIMD

At-a-glance

1ft--

""* . . . .

;

'599
Attw•••···

Y-c:.t

..

''

;

WEATER FORECAST - The Nallonal Wealher Service predicts
shower!! fo~ New England, the Eastern Seaboard all the way down to
Georgia and for the western part of the Greal Lakes region Tuesday.
( AP La!lerphoto)

lull length.

tai-Ty
- or-·
·clotlnf
plaattcc••rkoopOo.ch.

Here is a capsule view of the severe weather that hit Ohio Monday
and the Injuries and damage caused :
.
- Weston, Wood County, one killed, 15injured when a tornado hit a
_
.
traller park.
-Broadview Heights, Cuyahoga County, one killed, three Injured,
when a tornado damaged tour houses and blew vehicles off
Interstate 77.
-Columbus, Franklin County, one killed, four Injured, when
w1nds blew a tree on a car containing a WOlfi811 andherfourchlldren.
-CMi-les Mill Lake, Ashland-Richland county line, one drowned

· ~with

..

after boat overturned.
-Huron, Erie. County, one Injured when high winds damaged a
trailer park.
-Lattavllle, Rolls County, two injured, four houses and IWo
mobile homes damaged In high w!Ms.
. · -Greenwich, Huron County, property damage from tornado
touctulown.
,
Uncontlrmed tornado touchdowns and property damage In:
-NOIWalk and Celeryvllle, Huron County.
-Vennlllon, LOrain County.
-Wuhlnglal Court House In Fayette County. ·
-8everal spots In Richland County.
-An area near ·Mohican l...o&lt;lft.,ln .Uhland County.

Announce ~leanup dates
Clean-Up week In Middlepor! will be hfld Monday through Flday; May 9 to 13. Residents are uked 10 clean up their yards and lots
. and depoalldebrlll aJonathecurbln.tront otthelr hornes.'lbevtllage
street department will provide tree p!Ckllp eervtce during that week
beginning wilh the tint ward on Monday and conllnulng lhrouih 1114!
.· remainder of the wards thro!J8hout the week.
·,

Cou ncil has asked Crow to
determine wh ich properly the
village owns. Young said If counc il
did nol do anything wit h the park
this year, they should cons ider
selling it.
Council commended the Eager
Beavers 4-H Club for the work Ihey
did cleaning up the mini park.
Young announced Ula t Wyllls Hill
Is now In good condition a nd thai on
Pleasant Ridge Hill Rood, nine
residents of the area are wanting
city waler. Young felt there Is a
posslbillly that a grant cou ld be

MARY KEBI D

ot&gt;lalnPd for Ihe projecl .
In other mailers, a Blul' Cross
rcprcsmta tlve wil l me&lt;'t with
cou ncil a l th&lt;• ncxl meeling to
discuss the cost ol hospltallz&lt;tl lon
Insura nce for village cmploy&lt;'&lt;'s .
Councilman Bell y Baronlck said
then• Is a drainage problem on
Sycamore Street. She was advised
Ihat not hing could bedoneabou ll h&lt;&gt;
situa tion due to tb(, street level.
Elaronlck asked tha i no pa rking
signs be pun:ilased. and Ibat signs
also be crcc led Informing 1he public
(Conl lnued on page 121

Ill bela1 congratulaled by Emeol Sanders, H&amp;R

BIOcli eeWI!e dlredor, for receiving approval of her appUcallon .lor
earollrnellllo pi'IICI:Ice before thO lntemal Revenue Service. Applicants
far llde poelllon m~ P- a written el&lt;lll1llnlltion admlnlsiered hy the
IDierDal Reveaue Service. Aa a Block employe, Mn. Kehler hu OIOre
!hall l8e houn of "'-'tt 1a11ruct1on Including a .tlll"daa oourse In
preplll'lltlaa for the enrollment examlllalloll. Kelllllr, for the p...t 15
yetll'l, hubeea I~ lllllrudorolaeverlll tax ifhools lind oernlnan In the
.lrkeu!IQ' area. 1D lldclllloa 11be Ill ••W•nt m~~~~ager oll.he local H&amp;R
Block~

..
,.

I,

'

•

�·Tuetday, Nay 3, 1983

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomenty Middleport, Ohio

Commenta1-y
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pom ~ roy-, Ohkl
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~~

f!m~

~v

,...,...._,.__..... f'""T"ESi! d.~

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publl:ooht•r

BOB HOEFLICH

"PAT WHITEHEAD

General Manager

Assistant Puhllsher; Controller

DALE ROTHGEB , JR.
New~

Editor

A MEMBER of 11le A.wx.:lld.ed Pmf'i, Inland DaUy Preti 1\..'Jsoclatlon and the
Amertt211 New!ijpaper PuhiL..tler.ri

LETI'ERS OF OPINION

an~

A~JCiailon .

welcorrM..-d. They shouJd be leN! thM 300 word.&lt;~ long.

AD ldten1 are subject to editing and ma..t he "IKJled with name, od~ and lc&amp;ephone
nwnber. No unsigned lett~rs wm be published. Letteni should he ln good tasW. add.ri!Rslnl ii-'MM!~J, not per~nalJtles .

Tuesday, Nay 3, 1913

Did you hellr .Dodd?
themselves with the most con.·
grested stretch of lgnQrance and
sentimentality ever delivered this
side of a junior high school oration.
Ask a perfectly simple questl6n.
Should the United States, or should
It not, help at Latin American coun·
try that Is seeking to protect adem·
ocr;~tlcally elected government
against rebels armed by the Soviet
Union and its satellites? No - you
don't, really, need any qualifiers.
You need only say, Yes, the United·
States should, or No, the United
States should not.
Senator Boyd attempted to
drown out these simple questions
by historical generalities of breath·
taking innocence and Irrelevance.

The response to Mr. Reagan's
call to Congress for ~ore aid to El
Salvador was given by Connecticut
Sen. · Christopher DOdd - In the
name, it Is s~(d, ol the Democratic
Party. It that ls so, then the Democratic Party has become lncoher·
ent and illiterate.
I'd like to see the FBI's Abscam
Corps revived, with beaut11ul maidens strapping little polygraphs on
the bare and tlngUng arms of, oh,
Henry Jackson, and Pat MQylllhan,
and Sam Nunn, to whom It would be
whispered, "Tell me, dear, did you
go along Wlth what Chris Dodd said
about aid to El Salvador?" All the
oll in Aratpa would not bring such
gentlemen as these to associate

Productivity concem,s
are·on the rise again
· Concern over the inflation ·recession crisis of the past lew years has
pushed aside the Issue of productivity, or production efficiency .
But as recovery proceeds, productlvtty concerns are rising again,
because If productivity doesn't Increase, inflation certalnly wlll.
From 1945 to 196.'i·. adecadeof rising prosperity, U.S. productivity rose at
an ·average annual rate of 3.2 percent. By the late 1970s it dropped to less
than 1 percent. And then, there was no growth at all.
Could it be mere coincidence that inflation and repeated recessions
accompanied the slowdown and cessation of productivity gains? Hardly.
Productivity is rising again, but nobody can say for certain If it Is doing
sb because the recession got rid of the weakest companies and scared
labor and m anagement into restraint and responsibility.
But wlll it last? Probably not, suggests the Committee for Economic
Development, unless the nation develops a long-run productivity policy
·that involves labor, management, government and consumers.
1
To increase productivity, governm en t must spur saving and investment
through simpler taKes, strengthen support for basic ~earch, and end
useless regulatory barriers. And business will have to make productiVitY
gains a central goal of long-range strategy, foster entrepreneurship and
risk taking, and provide workers a nd managers with real incentives to
cooperate for more elllclent production.
The CEO Is a public policy group whose trustees are mainly corporate
chief executives and university presidents, but their assessment of
productivity makes conclusions everyone can understand .
You cannot, _e xpect a Oeiler life for m&lt;;&gt;repeople uniess the same amount
of Input produces more and better goods and serv ices:
That wisdom was ignored for many years. More and more people
wanted more lor less, producing the only possible result, a cessation of
material progress, the precise opposite of what was desired.
People sought to spend rather than save and produce capital. Labor
sought to get a bigger share of a pie that had ceased growing. Managemen t
sought to squeeze out profits without investing in research and
development.
Wjlat began to occur since 1965. was the dismantling o! the industrial
wealth m achine that Americans had built up over a hundred years with
hard work, material sacrifice, innovation and risk-taking.
The United States, which led the world in productivity gains- which,
had taught much of the world- began falling behind the rates of gain in
Japan, Italy, France. Sweden, West Germany and others.
The recession, it is widely believed, knocked some sense into American
heads. Management is said to be rr\ore far-sighted now. Labor Is said to be
more aware of the need for high quality work. People In general, It is said,
.are more aware of the need to save and invest rather than borrow and
.consume.
Will the new thinking stlck'1 There Is no assu rance. the CEO seems to
suggest, unless government and business, ·and Individuals, too, adopt
· policies and practices aimed specl!ically a t improving productivity.

Berry's World

- ~~.

Example?
modern times revolutions, some
"It ~tral America were not- bloody, some bloodless, but not for
racked with poverty, the~ would that reason less than revolutions. It
be no revolution. U Central Amer· . ·w~s revolution that brought Muslca were not racked with hunger, . sollnl to Italy, Hitler to Germanythere would be no revolution. It and yes, Lenin to Russia; and whlle
Central America were not racked we are at It, De Gaulle to France.
with Injustice, there would be no Revolutions are not necessarily a
revolution." Comment: The most sign of human desperailon. They
Intense eomblnatlon of poverty, can be a sign of human vanity, arrohunger a'~!" InJustice in the world gance, contempt. Pol Pot's revolu·
today fiourlslies In Chin~' and Rus· tion In Cambodia brought to
sla, where-there is no revolution, fQr cambodlans what Castro's revolu·
a reason as simple as that those In tion In Cuba brought to Cuba. Rev0.
power use that power to see that Jutions as often as not increase,
revolutions do 'not happen . Com- rather than mitigate, human misment: In nations generally judged ery. Senator Dodd mlght read
to be advanced In respect of Mr. Burke on the French Revolution.
Dodd's criteria, there have been In (!Jurke, Edmund, 1729-1797. ~rltlsh
statesman.)
"We must make vloJ.ent revolu·
tlon preventable by making peace-ful revolution possible." That
sentence, which students of rhetoric would classify as leftover Sorensen, Is empty of thought. How do
we go about, In El Salvador, mak·
lng "peaceful revolution possible"
other than by backlng those forces
lhat waged a peaceful revolution by
calllng elections and proceeding on
a social program? A social program Interrupted, however. by a
violent revolution that could not
care less that it had been preceded
by a peaceful revolution any more
. than, say, Chinese Maoists care
that a peaceful revolution . has
transformed Taiwan into a land of
relative plenty and freedom . In
Greece during the '40s, what was It
that permltted a gradual, peaceful
revolution -except American support to help the Greeks suppi'I!SS the
violent revolution?
So what does the alleged spokes·
man lor American Democrats
courisel'1 Brace yourseH: that we
not proceed in Central America
with the sam e Ignorance we
showed of what was going· on, in
1963, in Indochina.

a

Enemy of .the. ..._p_o~o.;.;_·r_?.. ·:,__
the elderly: The cuts " have not focused on issues of age per se (and)
presidential budgets have protected the aged more than the non·
aged from budget cuts ...
Nonetheless, substantial reduc·
lions in benefits _;1-nd services for the
aged have been proposed and
enacted, with the low-Income aged
attected the most."
As the president has repeatedly
tried to explain, his budgets don't
·actually provide less money lor the
elderly and the poor; they just slow
down the increases. But with the
ranks of the elderly Increasing yearly, the practical effect is serious
cutbacks. For example, the Urban
Institute's analysis notes that lJe.
neflts for the elderly will rise by $38
billion in this year's budget over
1982's. Most ol this, however, con·
slsts of locked· in Increases In Social
Security that are beyond the admin·

WASillNGTON - The oldest
man ever elected president of the
United States has turned out tb be
the worst enemy that elderly poor
Americans have ever had in the
Whit e House.
President ~eagan hasn't lnten·
tlonally s ingled out the low - lnco~.
elderly to pick on; he is not persOn·
ally mean or heartless. But the
budget cuts he and his determined
penny plnchers have made are
hurting these elderly people the
most.
An unpublished study prepared
by the prestigious Urban Institute
in Washington documents the situation. It 's titled, "Older Americans
in the Reagan Era."
· The study, reviewed by my associate Tony Capacclo, lays out the
basic contradiction in the Reagan
ad mini stra tion' s handling of
budget cuts in programs that affect

Willwm F. Buckley }~.

.

•

~

..

"They slly his new wife can talk as fast as that
guy on the Federal Express TV commercials/"

~~: ffoday

in history

Today Is Tuesday; May 3, the l23rcl day of 19&amp;'3. There are 242 days left in
the year.
Toclay's Wghllght in history:
On May 3, lB02, Washington, D.C., was incorporated as a city.
. , On 'this date:
In 1494, Christopher Columbus discovered the island of Jamaica.
':
In 19Z3, Navy.Ueutenants Oakley Kelly and John MacReady completed
: : . the first transcOntinental air flight when they landed at Coronado Beach,
Calll.
: : : In 1944, synthetic quinine was produced at a Harvard University
: · : laboratory.
: · : . And, 1n 1975, President Gerald Ford commissioned the world's largest
: . · warship, the nuclear aircraft carrier Nimitz, at Norfolk, Va.
. Ten years ago: 'Despite a cease-fire agreement; heavy fighting was
: : reported in ~!rut between Lebanese tr&lt;Xips and Palestinian (!Uerrlllas.
: . . Five years ago: An Installment of the memoirs or former President
·: ·Richard Nixon was published stating that the Watergate scandal which
: ·tOppled Nixon from office had badly damagect U.S..SOvJet detente. .
:
One year ago: Argentina .c ontlrmed the slnldng of the cruiser General
·. Belgrano by a British submarine In the South Atlantic, with at least 123 of
· : the 1.00 crew members ~ to have l!eEtt rescued.
• . 'I'oday's birthday: Former 'middleweight and welterweight boxing
• . champ Sugar Ray Roblnsqn is 63 year5 old.
·
·
' 'Ibought for today: " Fortune Is not on the side or the fainthearted." -Sopb:lcles, Greek dJ'amatlst (about 495 B.C.· 400 B.C.)

&lt;·

'.

Nolan Ryan fans 12, leaves tilt with injury
By IIEHSCIIEL NtiSENSON

AP S.,uris Writer
The Cincinnati Reds have lillally fielded a
power-packed lineup ... with Gary Redus aild Eddie
Milner supplying the power hitting and Ted Power
su'pplying the power pitching.
. Power, a burly 2S-year-old right-hander, got his
first start of the season Monday night - he had
pitched only lour Innings previously- because MariO
Soto, the ace of the Reds' staff, was alllng. He came
through with his first complete game In seven major
league starts - Power was 2-4 in parts of 1981 and
1982 with the LOs Angeles Dodgers - as the Reds
defeated the Philadelphia Phillles 5-2.
"I wasn't sure I could last nine innings becau~ I
hadn't pitched very much," said Power, who tamed
the Phillles on seven hits.
!II other NatiOnal league action, Nolan Ryan struck
out 12 in 72-3 innings before suffering was appeared to
be a severe hamstrtng pull as the Houston Astros
edged the New York Mets 3-2 al)d the Pittsburgh
.Pirates defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-1.

lstration's control.
benefits.
As lor programs over which the
- Elimination of the minimum
White House does have some say, floor under Social Security for per·
"benefits for the aged have risen by sons retiring alter Jan. 1, 1982.
$5.2 bUUon less than was expected . - A five percent cut In state Me·
·
under prior policies," the study dicaid funds.
says.
-Elimination ol26,000commun·
And In some crucial areas, there lty service jobs held by older
have been actual cuts in available citizens.
- Cuts In real-dollar funding lor
benefits, not just a smaller-thanexpected increase . The study cites social service grants (11 percent) ··'
these examples:
and mass transit subsidies (33
~ Tightened eliglblllty and repercent).
duced benefits in the food stamp
The salient characteristic of the
program have amounted to a cut of Reagan administration budget and
about 23 percent In pre-Reagan tax cuts Is that they hurt the poor
and benefit the well-to-do.
benefits.
- Grants to the states lor low"As is the case for the population
income energy assistance have overall, the Reagan tax cut has
been reduced one- third in real benefited the high-income aged
dollars.
more than those with lower In- Rent increases for tena nts in comes, and the spending cuts have
subsidized housing have meant an
affected the low-Income aged much
effective 15 percent cut in these more than the middle and upperincome aged," the study notes.

yesterday, and he heard from a people on each side. What about
friend at the Pentagon that the So- you, Dumbarton?
viets were violating the SALT n
"Tt's an option," Dumbarton
treasy when it came to under· said. "And I don't want to take
ground testing."
away our bargaining chips. The So"! wouldn't put It past them," I viets have , got us outnumbered
said ordering another beer.
when It comes to conventional war,
"You know what we have to do? " so If we up the ante and announce
the guy on the next stool said. "We we're prepared to fight a limited
have to rethink MAD, the Mutual nuclear war it will give them someAssured Destruction strategy thing to chew on."
we've been using for the past 20 yeI said, " What really gets me sore
ars . It's not working any more. 1 Is that Congress Is dragging its feet
say we sit down with the Soviets in · when it comes to spending money
Geneva, otter them a zero option. tor a good defense. Reagan knows
and If they don't take It, tell them to what the country needs better than
buzz off."
anybody."
'.'How do you feel about a limited
The guy on the next stool said,
nuclear war?" I asked him.
"You better believe it . I saw hirn In
''I'm not against it, as long as we 'Hellcats of the Navy' ttie other
don't ldll more than 40 or 50 million night on TV, and the man really has

· Art Buchwald
the guts to stand up to the
Russians ."
Dumbarton refilled our glasses.
"I think Reagan has what it takes.
But I'm not too sure about 'Cap'
Weinberger."
" Why not?"

"He's too lig ht. He could he
knocked over by one SS 191ntermedlate range missile. You want a big
guy in that position who can take a
lot of punishment when he gets hit
by a n ICBM."
A guy at the end of the bar said,
"Anybody hear the Baltimore Ori·
oles score?"
Dumbarton said to him angrily,
"Watch your language, buddy.
There are ladles In this bar, and If
you want to talk dirty you can go
drink somewhere else."

·Injury-, led orr the third Inning with his third home run
of .the season to snap a 1-1 tie and Milner followed with
his first of the year.
•
Aslros 3, Mets Z
Nolan Ryan stnlck out 12 batters and scattered
nine hits before leaving 1n the eighth Inning with a
pulled hamstring and Ray Knight drove In the tytng
and winning runs with a horner and sacrtflce Oy.
Ryan, who struck out 10 or more in a game for the
146th time 1n his career and broke Walter Johnson' s
50-year-old major league career strikeout record last
week, boosted his career total to 3,521 as he leU to the
ground alter firing a third strike past WaUyBackman
lor the second out 1n the bottom of the eighth with
runners at second and third.
The Astros snapped a 2-2 tie in the eighth against
Mets starter Mike Torrez on a single by Dickie Thon .
a stolen base, an lnlleld hit by Jose Cruz and Knight 's
sacrHlce fly. Knight's second home run of the season
had tied the score in the sixth.
"I'm going back to Houston on Tuesday and let my
doctors exam ine the injury," said .Ryan. who has

.3.521 career strikeouts. "It woyldn 't suprtse me If .I'm
out at least two to three weeks. As soon as my leg
touched the ground It just popped. It was like
somebo1y shot me.
"I didn't feel anything all game long, No tightness,
nothing .I never had an Injury Uke this. Pulling a legis
a pretty serious thing to a power pitcher. ·It's got me
worried. "
Pirates 5, Dodgers I
Rick Rhoden scattered nine hits, Dave Parker and
Lee Mazzilli each drove in two runs and Tony Pena
homered tor Pittsburgh . Parker, who had driven in
only one run all season. collected his RBis on a
grounder in the first inning and a double in the third .
Mazzllli and Lee Lacy and each collected thrre hits to
pace Pittsburgh's 14-hlt attack against J erry Reuss
and two relievers. Lacy, the NL stolen base leader.
swiped his 14th and 15th bases but ~lsowascaught for
only the second time this season.
In American League action Kansas City defeated
New York, 4·1. and Toronto downed Texas. &amp;-5.
Milwaukee whipped Chicago, 84.

GALLIPOLIS SECTJOi'iAL BASEBALL TOl iRi'iAM E.IIIT

Boston eliminated
by Milw,a ukee five

SYM MIS VmEY I7-ll'

Mov I -

~ : 30

P.M.

By MIKE O'BRIEN
AP Sports Writer
MILWAUKEE !API - Sidney
Moncrief. who showed again why he
might be the best guard 1n the
National Basketball Association,
a lso Is a pretty fair prophet.
About 10days ago, Moncrief told a
teammate that he thought 1he
Milwaukee Bucks not only could win
their playoff series with Boston, but
beat the Celtlcs in four games.
The Bucks achieved the lmproba·
ble - some might say the
. unthinkable - Monday night. Led
by Marque$ Johnson with 33 points
and Moncrief with 25, the Bucks
whipped the Celtlcs 107-93 to win
their ()est-of-seven series In four
successive gam es.
The capacity crowd of 11,052 at
the Arena, picking up on a tradition
of Chicago White Sox fans, taunted
theCeltics with organ -led renditions

"'""'

KYGER CREEK 11·8)
May 7 - 1:110 P.M.

SOUTHWISTIRN iJ.IOI

· SOUTHUN (12·2)

May 5-

~30

NORTH GAUIA

(6-~)

"""''

P.M.

May 7 - 1:110 P.M.

..

All GamtS To Be Played On The Field
of lhe Desi~n~ted Home Team

1:

GAWPOUS SECTIONAL SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT

.

,.•. ,,1

SOUTIIE!Ift (1-3)

May~

!ASTERN

- 4:30 P.M.

t2-5- l)
May 10 - 4:30 P.M.

SOUTHWESTERN (4-9)

WINNER TD
CHilliCOTHE TO PlAY WINNER
Of COAL GROVE SECIIONAL

May 12 - 4:30 P.M.

KYGER CREEK (1-5)

1111 9 -

~ : 30

Johnson and led 4&amp;-37 at hal!tlme.
Ceitlcs Coach Bill Filch, desper·
ate tor more scoring punch from his
guards, started reserve M.L. Can
in place of Ainge to open the third
quarter . But Carr couldn 't stay with
Moncrief, who broke free for two
quick layups as the Bucks widened
their lead to 53-38 less th an 2\',
minutes into the third quarter .
The spread reached 67-47 late In
the period before the Celt ics, using
various forms of trap defenses.
briefly closed to within 10 points.
Nuggets 124, Spurs 114 _
Kikl Vandeweghesconed37points
and Mike Evans added a career·
high 23 to help Denver stay allve
against San Antonio.
"The hole we dug for ourselves In
the first halfwasaimost lnsurmoun·
table," said San Antonio Coach Stan
Albeck, referring to a 22-polnt
halftime deficit . "Give Denver
of "Na-na -na-na! , Na- na -na - na ~
credit . They had their backs to the
Hey, He-ey, Goodby!" at game's
wall and ca me out and played a
end.
great garne."
The · Celllcs trudged to their
The Spurs now go back horne [or
dressing room as losers of a
Game 5 on Wednesday night .
best-of-seven playoff series for the
Evans sank tht-e&lt;' jumpers as the
first time in the tranchlse'sglorlous
Nuggets ran off 10 straight points to
history. The Bucks. who won a
take a 26-14 lead with 4: O:ltefl ln the
best-of-seven series for the first
opening quarter . Evans. who
time In five tries under Coach Don
played only half of the q uarter .
Nelson. advanced to the Eastern
scored 1:1 polnls and Denver held a
Conference finals against the 76ers.
4[).29 edge a t the end of the period.
starting Sunday in Philadelphia.
Johnny Moore , who ted the Spu rs
Elsewhere in the NBA playoffs, with Tl points. had 1:l of thern in the
Denver cut its deficit to 3-1 in the third quarter as San Antonio cut the
Western Conference semifinals defl~lt to 98-8.'i at the end of the
with a 124-114 victory over San quat1er. In the final pcrlod, the
Antonio. Los Angeles, leading closes t the Spurs got was six points
Portland 3-1, plays host to the Trail
in the las I mlnule.
Blazers in Game 5 tonight .
Celtlcsguard Danny Alnge, booed
almost every lime he touc hed th&lt;&gt;
ball alter Nelson had called him a
"cheap-shot artist" last week. said
he cou ldn 't imagine the Bucks
playing any better.
The Bucks fell behind by eight
points early. but quickly recovered
behind 15 first-quarter points by

For Home
Insurance

Chances are your home 1$
worth more than you teal·
1ze . and would cosllar

more lo replace. pe'rhaps
50 % to 60%. than JUSt a

lew years ago
Has your hom e 1nsurance

kepi pace w11h the sieady
nse 1n conslrucl10n Costs?

We 'll be happy to he lp you
lind oul ti's p~rt of our
serv1ce as an Independent
1nsurance agency repre·

sen11ng Slate Auto
Gl've us a call You 'll hnd
we·re lrtend s you can

depend on

·:-~~
-

llervtoote

.J&lt;j
State Auto Insurance

.--------------.1-------------

PM.

HANNAN TRACE (2·7)

AU GAMES PIAVIO AT GAlliPOliS

John Elway will play football at Denver
ByWAVNESIATER
Allsoclated Press Wriler
DENVER (AP) - Stanford
quarterback John Elway, who
threatened to play professional
baseball rather than join the
Baltimore Colts, has signed with the
Denver Broncos, saying "I'm glad
to be playing lri tbe NFL."
The Broncos acquired ' Elway
from the Colts Monday for offensive
lineman Chris Hinton of Northwestem - the fourth pick overall In the
National Football League draft the Broncos' 1984 first-round draft
pick and quarterback Mark
Herrmann.
Etway, picked No.1 by Baltimore
In the draft, had said he would sign
with the New York Yankees
organizatiOn rather than play for
the Colts.
"I'm definitely thrllled to be
here," said Elway, who new to
. Denver for a news conference
Monday night. "It's something' I
didn't expect to happen. I'm glad to
be playing in the NFL and I'm glad
to be playing for the Denver
Broncos."
·
Edgar F Kaiser Jr., owner of the
Broncos, said Elway was signf!! to a
series offlveone-yeareontracts, but
he would not disclose financial ·
terms.
Kaiser said he had contacted
Colts' president. Roben Irsay on
draft day, made a tentatlveofferror
Elway and was told "to keep In
touch,'' be saki. On Monday, Kaiser
called Irsay again· and completed
the ctealln day'lolli nesotlatlons.
.''The tl'llde was good for both
football teams," Denver Coach Dan
Reeves said. '"'bey (theColts) were
happy with what they got and we
were h4ppy Wlth what we aot.
"I think this Is a great.deal. I'm
glad, llrst of all, that be's In the NFL,
and It he's playing In the NFL, I

.'

•

Power had· only two bad moments against-the
Phillles.In the first inning, the Phillles got a single,
walk and double from the first three batters, good for
one run.Pitchlng coacli Bill Fischer came out and
talked with Power, who promptly strucll out Mike
Schmidt and Tony Perez and retired Garry Maddox
on a gi'O\lnder.
· With two out in theseventlj, Power gave up a single
and double, bringing out Manager Russ Nixon.
"I had no intention of taking him out." Nixon said.
"I wanted to &amp;lve him a break, let ' him get his
thOughts together again."
"Russ gave me a second chance and I was able to
tak.l! advantage,'' said Power, who got Pete Rose on a
grounder.
While Power, who was pu rchased from the
Dodgers' Albuquerque farm club In the Pacific Coast
League last October, was becoming the first pitcher
to go the route against the Phlllles this season. Gary
Redus, fresh off the disabled list, hit two home runs
and Eddie Milner hit one.
Redus, who had been out three weeks with a groin

_;;____.___;;__~_;;__J_a_;,_~-k_A_n--"de_rs_on

Buy him a drink
It used to be Hyou went Into a bar
you could always find an argument
over the merits of a pro football
team. But now, thanks to Ronald
Rea,..n's constant drumbeat con·
cerning defense weapons, he's got
the whole country talking about
whether we can win a nuclear war
or not.
I dropped by "Dumbarton's Bar
and Grill" the other afternoon for a
beer. The .man on the next stool
said, "How do you think we'U do
against the Russians this year?"
I couldn't tell which side he was
on so I played it cool.
" lt's too early to tell. It depends If
we can harden our Minuteman sllos
in time to put our MX missiles In
place."
"Exactly what I was thinking,"
he said. "Of course the commies
could stllt crawl through our win·
dow ol vulnerabUlty."
"Yes, but if we get the B-1
bomber built, sei up our Pershing
and cruise missiles In Europe, and
develop a tricky 'star wars' defense, we can zap their land-based
air attack before it gets of! the
ground," I said.
"How many nuclear warheads
do you think we need to smash
them back, if they launch a first ·
strike attack?"
"We've got about 10,(XX) now.I'd
say we could use another 5,00! just
to be on the sale side. Even If they
knock out 7,(XX) we could pulverize
them wtth the other S,!XXI."
.
"You know where I think we're
making our big mistake?" he said.
"We're trying to match the Soviets
missile tor missile. What we should
do Is go ahead with single-warhead
Mldgetman that the Russians
couldn't hit beeause we'd spread
them all over the country. There's
something to be said for not puttiilg
all yO)Il' MXS In one dense pack."
Dumbarton who was washing
glasses s"'d, "A guy was .In here

Poeneroy-Middleport, Ohio

team," said Reeves. "But we'll
thank God he's going to play with
have to be balanced to win. !like to
us. "
believe a quarterback can carry a
Reeves, a fonner player and
team
a little bit, but it bolls down to
assistant coach with the Dallas
·
havlngagoodsupportingcast."
Cowboys, added, "He has a quality
Elway finished second in NCAA
I've seen In only one other
career
total offense with 9,0'10 yards ·
quarterback, Roger Staubaeh. He
and thlrd with 77 touchdown passes.
can win a ballgame strictly with his
He also set NCM records of 7lW
arm. He's the best quarterback I've
completions in 1,243 passes, only
seen since I've been a coach starting
3.13 percent of which were inter·
In 1970."
Elway said be spent Monday
morning "sitting by the phone"
alter learning from hlslaw:yeroftbe
talks between the Colts and the
Broncos.
Elway, an All-AmeriCa at Stan·
By The Aaaocla&amp;ed Press
ford, Is considered one of the
BASKEI'BALL
premier passers In college football
SPRINGFIElD,
Mass. (AP) history.
Forwards
Bill
Bradley
and Dave
But he also Is a top baseball
DeBusschere,
teanunates
and
prospect who hit .318 in a six-week
roorrunates
on
the
New
York
stint lastsumrnerwiththeYankees'
Knicks' champiOnship teams of the
minor-league team 1n Oneonta,
early
1971);, were inducted into the
N.Y. El\yay said before last week's
NFL draft that he die! not want to Basketball Hall of Farrie.
Also installed were former Cln·
play !Or Baltimore, but the Colts
cinnatl'Royals' star Jack Twyman,
selected him anyway.
Elway' s Jaw:yers refused to talk to Unlve~slty of North Carolina Coach
Colts offlcjals, however, and an· Dean Smith, and two pioneers of the
nounced they were close to signing a modern· game, now dead, referee

cepted. another national standard .
Elway , whose father Jack Is head
football coach at San Jose State,
passed for more than 200 yards :Jl
times in his career- another NCAA
record - went over :nJ yards 10
times and 400 yards twice.
His 1982llgures were 262 completions. 4ffi atte mpts, 3,242 yards and
24 touchdowns.

Sports briefs•. ;

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

multiyear contract with the
Yankees.
At the news con!erence, Elway
said that unless the Colts traded him
this wi!ek to a West Coast team or to
a leagueconten4er bewoukl go with
the yankees.
''If notlllng happened In one more
-week, I was going to sign with the
~ankees," Elwaysald. "lt'snot that
I tlnlght, 'God, not the Yarikees,'
but my wete.tetoce was to play

MEMBER'S
EMERGENCY
SERVICE
(New Usting)

proteulonal rootball. ''

Reeves l8ld Elway coold start tor
the ~roncoe next IM!IIIIOII b!lt would
have to oust the. team's No. 1
quarterback, Steve DeBerg, for the

job.

Lloyd Leith of San Francisco and
Amateur Athletic Union head Lou
WUke.
BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - Pitcher
Nolan Ryan of the Houston Astros,
who became baseball's all-time
strikeout king last week,' was
named the National League Player
of the Week.
Ryan struck out live Montreal
batters last WednesdaY to push his
cateer total to3,509-one more than
Walter JohnsOn.

.

"ObviouslY this Improves the

TUPPERS PLAINS
DAY
NIGHT
COLE'S SOHIO 667-3109

667-3097

The Automobile Club of·Southelstem Ollio ·
Pllclllr ttouu, 10 l Union
Atllenl, 011.

WEDO

Aqiii'IM

BRAKE
.
.

)'DU Ull !al'lt

01101111)1~ ~nq

..,,IIIJ

ll.lft !f;N:IIOf\

r1 1 Stet! Bfllfd 'uti

f!Qhlcf IUI\ll lf'IQ 10
l!•~fltl I IIII tOIO •
f CMI '1 WI oiOOilJ 11'!' \

WOitK

W•ll'l Mf ]4

tnt IQid
P'OCNW

l'riiiiiOfl

M

I] I l!t 01/1 11'11)\1
r,tOI~I

.

PlS!I~IJ

hltw.,.

Plvtlll4fll

-- -.,_.,-·U.U NICI

ALIGNMENT
ON MOST
CARS .

$}375

Pl7 ~/701ll )

IJ

16.9S
J7,ts

P20~J701li J

63.tS

PI7S / 80RI J
1"18~ / BOR

n.u

P17 !1/HR1~

.o.u

. PIB ~JHR 14
l'tq:,;Hill4
P20S / 70A 14

6!1 .ts

..."·"
.,
n.u
....,

P20 ~/7 ~R I&lt;I
P11 ~/7&gt;N

P22S/7!tR

no:.·n

~R

67 .ts '

lA
I~

t:, •

P21~ JHR1~

PnS/7 SR IS
f"'2J:. J7~R I)
'• · "-"'"" """ ~ '

, ...

11.95

n .u

" ·ts
. . . . .... ,.. ...
~

,... , ,. , ,.,,, , ,. ., u , ~ ••

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
Pti . 992-2094
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Front End Alignmen.t Most Car•

608 E. Main

B111k• Service

�Page 4 The ' Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

'

MAY 9, 1983. 4:00 P.M.r· ------,

WARREN 'LOCAL· •

------.
MAY 5, 1983, 4:00 P.M.I-----·....J

FAIRlAND

·.·

MAY 11, 1983, 4:00 P.M.f-------1

BEL"
.:__...,,, --------.,
May 5, 1983, 4:00 P.M.r-----·....,
GALLIPOLIS
MAY 9, 1983, 4:00 P.M.r----,-J
SOUTH POINT (2)

•-home field

BOYS' ..AA"' SECTIONAL
AT ATHENS HIGH SCHOOL
BELPRE

1~5-1

May 7. 1983. 1:00 P.M.

h--------,

May 4, 1983, 4:00 P.M.
PORTSMOUTH WINNER
May 11, 1983. 4:00 P.M. t - - - - - - - 1
AT UNIOTO

MAY 5, 1983, 4:00 P.M.
May 7, 1983, 4:00 P

Majors

Signed Karl Morlan.

w- .J....PcL___D 8

[lost on

12
9 .571 12
9 .~71 11
9 .s.r,o
Y.!
10
10
!'.0)
1 'h
lf)J\476 2

Nf'W Vnrk

10

12

4YI

2'h

~

11

411

:!

""'""

WEST DIVISION
1.1
9
California
1.1
9
Oakland
Kan!kl':l c uy
u
'
12 II
T••xa.'
Mlnnt'!lOia
II 12

~lll

-

.rtll
.579

-

522:
.478

2~

"

·""
.m

4fi ~

Oilc'jij!O

''

Sl&gt;llfl](l

17

II)
p~

Mondll)''~ fOIVllf'fl

Torunlo 6, Tl'x.as ~~
Mllw~ukN• lt, ChlrnRQ 4
Hafl.'ill.&lt;i Clly 4. N~· \ 'nrk I
Only J:IUTlt.."i !iC/tcdUI«&lt; •

Tt•ll !t.• 1Ma 1lr l 1 h al T oronlo 1Got1 0

'l 11 at

Haltlmon•

iF"IanagiUl J.01, 1n 1

Oal&lt;l anr! (Undf&gt;r4'fl011
(FA'kmley 2-11. 111 1

Mllwaukil£'

1·11 a t Elu sion

1I&gt;on or IWI

a! Chicago

N('W York il\k&gt;ltlln~•r 1~11 111 Kan.s.u
Clly 1!i!&gt;llllortr II- t l. n 1
Dl.1roll 1Pt&gt;TI)• l-01 111 Sean tP 1Your~~~: 2·
1

ll. (01

GIYM!

TeJ:.as at Tommo. 1n1
Cattrvrnl&lt;t al Bttltlm.Jn'. 1nl
OilklMd ut Ooslon, tnl
Mllwaukl'&lt;' al ChlriiUfl, 1n 1

York

a!Kansa~

City. 101

w_.l...Pd._ t.:o

st . l..ouls

ll

6

Phlladclph.Ja

11
II
9
"

H
fl
9
JJ

n

0\k:~

.&amp;17
10)

~~

-

V,
l
2Y,

. ~71J
~"ro

.316
.H

li

1

Wf)]T DrvEJON
Atlanta

15

~

-~

Lo1 A n ~
ClnclnMtl
San DklJO

I~

7

.Em

Houllon

&amp;.n F'ranciM'O

-

I

L1

11

.~

~

10
9

I~

.Clfl

15

.375

6
8

7

1!1

.3~

9

Houston J. Nt&gt;W York 2
Clnclnnalt ~ Philadt.'lphht 'l
l'lti&amp;Wflh 5. Lot A~letl I

A&lt;qw""

Ken Gn!l'ne, dPfenslvf' blck. lrom thE' Sl .
Louis Card!na!J In exchange lOr tn.Jn:l and
cl£t\t h round draft choiCl'S In 1984.
STATE-Announ ct•d

""

res\gnallon of Davt&gt; Rllchle, head fooU.all
ouach. who will auume a roachlnli: job
with tht' Montreal Concon:ls or thl' Cana·
dian F"oolball Leag\1('.
HIGH OOVNTRY ATifl_.E'TIC CONFER
F:NCF.- Nanw.d Margie McDonald

~·.o.,...
(BrhmM 1~1 at

Mlantii
!Sanderson J.lL lnl

Mts.~URI-Anoounct"d lhl&gt; redJ(JIItllon
of Col:'fle JooP.s, (Wiistanl bukdball coach.

Leaders
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BAffiNC t.-r. at t:llllst·TKenncdy. San
Dk?J, ,:QI; 'Jt&gt;eor~ , Phlladclphla. .370:
Dl:tw10n, Mnntw~:~l, _J'IG; Oesit&gt;r. Clnctn·
11111 ...1'!2; Hmdrlck, StLouis, .344.
RU!'I&amp;Garwy, San ~ . II; Sclvnld! ,

!1:

Montreal

rSwan l ·ll. 1n1
ClndnNIII tl)utore ~·,11 at Philadelphia
rBy~rom IH.ll . rn 1
St. Loul.l Jf "onK-tl l ·ll ttl San Olf'RO
!Dravocky J.ll. jn~
1,1\lburih (Bibby HI at Lol AftQf'IR
(Pft'la l-11. 101
Chlr:HaO ('l'twl loc41 at San F'rand.'K'O

1-4\. tn)

w.--.,·.a..,...

Atlanta, 22: Hcndridt ,
21; TKmnt'dy, San Dl~. 21:
f;l(&gt;ndl , L1nctnnall, 111; DaW!Ol, Montreal.
17: ll'l"'!"e'L, l'hlladl&gt;lphla, 17,
IIITS-BonlllH, San Diego, :U: Tl&lt;enoody,

Hwston at New York.

..

Sa n Dk-Ko. :U: nester. Cincinnati.

(n ~

C1ncinNIIl al PhUadfalphla. (n \
St . l..ouiA at San Dko(to. (nl
Plll!lbull!:h at I.DJ An~ tn\

Garwy, San 0~. 29 : Thon . l ~slon.
OOUULC h JRay. PIUsbuJl[h . R: ~t,rr .
C'lnl'tnuu, 1; Wasnlllrton, AUanta, 7: 5
1'\rl' tk~ with &amp;.
'ffi\PLJ.: S.Oaw.., , Monh':'lll. 3: GA.'t"'l .
Sll.h.lts, J: Mon-no. Jlous ton. l IJ are
tied with '1
UOME RUNS-Murph y, Atlanla, 7;
GUf'rn'nl, I.JJS ~. 6: Hmdrlck,
SiLootJ, 6; Scnmldl, Phlllldr-lphla, 6: 4

PITCHJNC IJ declslo'nll-Gak!. Clndn·
nail, J.O, Unt. 'l . ~; PPl'r'Pl , 1\tlanla, 4.0,
1.~ 9 an&gt; tiM wlfh . ~

um

SfRlKEOLriN-C.rllon. Phlladi&gt;lphla. 5.4:
ctnctnnat ~
:M: McWlUtanu.
Phuburgh, :1); Soto, Cln&lt;"IMatl, ll; Va-

L.o. AnReiH. :n
SA vts.Hume, ORCin nail. 4: SHowe,
U. A~lel . 4; 6 8J'tl lied Wllh 3.
I(JIZ!~!la.

AMm'iCAN U!'AGUE

BATTING (:m Ill bltsi-C&amp;rew, Callfor·
nla • .4ro; l.lrnf1, KaMa, a~ . .tw; Shcl·
by. Bllllrmno, .:m: Thornton. CleveiiiOd,
.:116: Elotlls. Bailon . .:11.'1.

MoNa(• 8porta Tnr•ctMu•

DOUBL.ES-Bn!«.

_..._
IU8I!MLl.

l&lt;ansu

Boaa. lloltm, 8;

KANSAS CITY ROYI\l.S:-Piaced Jer-ry

Marttn, outtlekler. on tbf! ~ dllilbled
Ita!. Rfc;'.W Don Hood. pllehtr, trom
Qrrlaha or thr Ame1C!an Auoclallon.

BREWERS-

Oluck f"'.ir1tor, pttcner, ·rrom VIJK'OUYI!f'
the Pac.llk' Cout Lell\lf'.

«

Nollaool..._
NEW YORK MI:IS-Ptacfd Bob BallOr,
~. on tr..!Wiy liiul*'d U•t. ret·
I'OM.'l!Yt to Mil)' 1. R«allel Jolt
Oqwnckl. sMrtltciP. rrom 'lldewater ot
thto IJIW'rnatlOnll

I.e....,.
_......

NfltloMI Htdey l.etllllf

HARTFORD WHALE::R,S-;-Named Emlk&gt;
f'rlne!t pre!lkt!nt and !lm~al ,maneaer.

Qllellec,..... ~--~
111REE RIVERS DRAVEVRS-N..-ned

-·

Calllomta,

».

Yount , Mil·
waukfe, 32; C.utlno, MlnnelltU, 31;
BoeRs, Bolton, JJ: Brett. Kal'llols Clly , 29:
Molllcr, MilwaUkee; :11.

Transactions

t'OICt't ... tbl _, two . .

Clry,

12;

SHendeBmJ., Sea~. 8;
Buah, MlnMIOta , 1; Hrtlelt, Mlnnnota, 7;
Samp!to, Tf'XN, 7.
1lt1PJ..IS.CWillrrl, Detroit. 4: Evtau,
Bos!m. 3: Tabft. CleYtl.nd. 3: Wtnftekl,
New Yorll. l : 9 are lied wtlll 1
. HOME RlJNS.L.ynn. Cautornla, 7: Cas·
Uno, Milneta~A. ~ liCira.. Callbnia,
6; 5 are Ued wtlll 5.
S'rol.EN BA.SES.Jcna:. SH.Itle, M;
W'Wlllm. KanMa City, 13; Garda, 'fu.
ramo. 9; MDIIV11. OUJand. 9: B&amp;ytor,
~ YA t CoWN, Tonlnlo. ,I; RHI!n-

...._OM!ond.l

PITCHING 13 dedlllontt ·n.~&amp;.:~. Bl.l·
., .,.., ... !.LUI, !.&lt;1; ......... Collltintla,
l&lt;l, 1.111&gt;, 3.1~ M ........... llaltbron.. l&lt;l,

um.

J.U: Motlltt, Ton:lnto.

o.oo; Ptcry,

Detroit, ~ l .tQl.

:H), J.IXII,
u~: Sta-

tm. Mlllllllukel!, 3(1, UXI). 3.2).
~ Taroato, .tl; Nor111, ~
DIY-. ~ "27;

a

Mon1l. Det:rott,

z.

a:

fUPittl, New y «II.

SAV£S.IIIollloy. - . I;

AN

pitched just tour .Innings before
beating the PhWies.
Power, a6-foot-4rtghthanderwho
got Into the starting rotation
because of an llljury to Mario Soto,
had only two uneasy moments, In
the first and seventh Jnn!ngs. ·
In the first, Pete Rose singled.
Gary Matthews walked and Joe
Morgan doubled.
Pitching coach Blll Flscl)ercame
out, talked with Power, and the
pitcher than struck out Mike
Schmldt and TOny Perez and got
Garry Ma!ldox on a groundbaD.
He was ahead 5-1 In the seventh
with twoouts.lvanDeJesusslngled,
and ptnchhltter Bobby Mollnaro
doubled tn a run.
'
Cincinnati manager Russ Nixon
rushed to the mound.
''I had no Intention of
him
out I just wanted to give him a
break and let him get his thoughts
together again,'' Nixon said.
Redus has been on the disabled
U.st since Aprtl12 with a hamstring
tnjur:y, but says the Injury Is better.
Asked wl)y he, too, has been
languishing In the minors despite
major league credentials, 'BeE!uj;

tak!n&amp;

will probably
lower
the oddsa on
the
Home,
who has
contracted
fever,
Lukas entry. But Marfa Is suspect
because of his inablllty to keep a
straight course.
Lukas Is a part owner of Marfa
along with Texas businessmen Bob
French and Barry Beal. They
named the colt after a small tO)Vllln
Texas, which, Incidentally, Is cele- '
brattng Its centennial on Derby day.
Lukas' stable appeared go Into
decllne untO Marfa, Balboa Native,
and Total Oeparture carne around
In recent months.
Balboa Native, owned by Robert

rePlied:
"(Ken) Grl1!ey, (George) Foster
and (Dave) Collins.'' referring to
the Cincinnati outfielders who
flna)ly were traded. ·
_ '"lbey're three gfud reasons.' •
Cincinnati took a 1.0 lead In the
first on Cesar Cedeno's twO&lt;IUt
double and an RBI single by Jolmny
Bench. The Phlllles tied It In the
bottom or the tnntng on Morgan's
double scoring Rose ·
Redus led oft the third with his
third home run of the season to snap
the tie, and Eddie Mllner followed
with a homerthatgaveClnclnnatla
3-llead.
The Reds added two In the fifth to
make It 5-1 on Redus' second homer,
a pair of singles and a sacrlflce tly.
Molinaro doubled In the Phlllles'
tina! run In the seventh.
Phillies manager Pat COrrales
said "It was just too much Redus
and too much Power. We played
wen but got outgunned.' '

Golf action begins today
The JayMar Thesday and Wednesday evening golf leagues wlll
start play Thesday and Wednesday
of this week.
Tuesday's league Is composed of:
D. Mllls, R. Follrod; B. Nelson,
Steve Story; J. Thomas,Jr.,J.Hall;
J. Thomas Sr., Pat Wllllamson;
John Thomas, Pat Hlll; Jim
O'Brien, L. Boggs; 1\1. Boxdorder,
P. Barnette; D. Rupe, C. Northrup;
L. Powell, D. Crow; R. Morgan, G.
Harris; Jim Anderson, R. Karr; J .

COmpton, P. Roush.
Wednesday's league Includes: H.
Van V.ranken, C. Sayre; B. Freed,
R. Reynolds; B. Mlll, J. Musser; H.
Karr, P. Kelly; D. Dutton, G.
Morris; C. Ingels; C. Matthews; 0.
COnnolly, K. Frecker; R. Graves,
W. Grueser; D.·Fitch, L. Sayre; D.
COnley, G. Snyder; B. Ashley, M.
Childs; J . Anderson, D. Dixon. 1'he
schedule wlll be posted In the
clubhouse prior 1Q play.

H. Spreen, has won twoofflvestarts
this year, Including the Louslana
Derby March
The son of Native
Royalty "Is a one-dlmooslonal
horse, a stayer who's going to run
down horses In the stretch,"
according to Lukas.
Balboa Native Is coming off a
seventh-place !lnish tn the Aprtl16
Arkansas Derby, but he could be
running at the finish If there Is a
realistic pace, Lukas S&lt;~id.
Total Departure, owned by Reblot Stable, was beaten by a head by
caveat tn last Saturday's one-mile
Derby Trial. The son of Greek
Answer !lnlshed fourth in the Santa
Anita Derby after scoring his first
victory this year In the Baldwin
Stakes at Santa Anita March 23.
"The Derby Trial was his first
race in 20 days," said Lukas. "He
ran a strong race Saturday."
Jorge Velasquez rides Marla,
Sandy Hawley wlll be aboard
Balboa Native and Pat Valenzuela
has the mount on Total Departure.
With an expected field of 20 for the
$250,(XX).added Deroy, Other Chief
rivals include Sunny's Halo; the
Arkansas Derby winner; the Woody
Stephens entry of Caveat and
Churrunlng; Slew O'Gold, winner of
a division of the Wood Memorial.

n

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-9811)
A Dlvi.tlon of Multimedia, Inc .
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday,lll CQu rt Stree t,.by the

Ohio Valley Publishing Company · Mul ·
Umedla, Inc .• Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. 992-

2156. Second class postage: paid at Pomeroy, Ohlo.

l a nd Dally Press Assoclaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·
soclatio n, National Advertlsln2 Repre--

Branham Newspaper Sales,
73.1 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address to The

DallySentlnel,lll Court St. , Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Ca.rrler or Motor Route
One Wet. 1 ..... .................. .. ..... : .. $1.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICES

Dally ............. ................... 20 Cfonl5
Subscr ibers not desiring to pay th e car·
rler may remit in advance direct to
The Dally Sf"n11nel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Cred!1 will be given carrier each
month.

No sul,lscrlptlons by mall permiU("d in
town§ wh ere hom e carrier serv ice Is

available.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inolde Ohio
13 Weeks ............... · ....... · ...... . 114.04

~I~

Weeks · · ...... · ...... · · ................ 11 ~· 21

..

... ..

SALES • SERVICE
LEASING • TRAINING

Qtillor&gt;"'"&gt;.

-City,
· ~
&amp;
Caudill,
,......~ ~-BNrd,
Ooklllld, ~

ftllmt. M

.'

I

•

;\

-

• Play Action, Adventure
·
And Ctaulc Board Gllmes
• u.. lnelant-LDildlng
Program PakT 11 Cartrtdge8
• Help Teach the Klda

• Low.t Cut-in Speed

• AtiiiChelllo Any TV

Print In Color and Save sso

• Suoc mlully Testeel at
Rocky Flats, Colo. '

........
,...,
·--~

Creale Incredible graphics and prin!
alpllanumetics In four colors with ·

our 8818-pJiced CGP-115 Color

.5.
1999

Graphics Printer. Built·in commands ·

CALL TODAY

·J.B00-255-5111
AM Miuw.IH H.taua
fOR

• L•m to Program
With Color and Sound
• Set Up 1 Budget
-e Keep Important Fl...

Sole Ends 8/2e/13

• Patented Rotor

Dill

Alan Wallace of Canal Winchester, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, Middleport, has completed a three weeks course of
extensive training at the Fire
Protectpn School at Chanute Air
Base In Illlnols.
The course Included techniques of
extensive search, victim removal
from tunnels, cave-Ins, building
collapSes, smoke filled buildings,
air craft entry; commercial air

craft, and the various tools used to
release trapped victims of highway
accidents.
Wallace is employed at Rlckenbacker Air National Guard Base In
COlumbus as a crew member on a
rescue truck. He teaches automobile rescue to many of the
surrounding fire departments and
for the Ohio EMT program, and
recently conducted classes for the
Middleport Fire Department.
Bruce, another son of the Walla ·

organi?ati~ns

ces, who also resides In Canal
Winchester, uses his spare time to
coach athletic teams. This past
winter he coached a team from the
Christian High School which was
undefeated during the season, but
defeated In tournament. With the
State Highway Patrol In Meigs and
Gallla Counties for several years,
Wallace Is now supervisor at
General Motors Fisher Body plant
in Columbus.

have meetings

simp111y plotting.

28-1192

Slaven is a grand'iOn of Eltzabeth
Slaven of Middleport and a nephew
of Jack Slavin, Syracuse, and Harry
M. Slaven, Galllpoll.s .
Members are qhosen on the basts
of scholarship, activities and moral
character. Initiation for new

MIDDLEPORT--Michael D.
Slaven, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Maynard D. Slaven, Grafton, W.
Va ., Is one or 36 students named to
the West VIJ:glnla Chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa Honorary for the .
li&amp;l-83 academic year.

members will be held at West
Virglnla University on May 14.
Founded at the College ofWUUrun
and Mary In 1776, Phi Beta Ka·ppa is
the nation's oldest honorary and is :
considered the highest academic :
honor student can attain in the :
college of arts and sciences.

a

GE·n ERA L. STDR ES
Satisfaction Guaranteed
SALE DATES: WEDNESDAY, MAY 4
THRU SATURDAY, MAY 14
202 E. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO
STORE HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 9-8; Sunqay 1-6

Don't Forget...... MOther's Day, May 8th

.j-

and zinnias, as well as trees and
amount of education or kind of job
shrubs.
you have makes no difference.
I
Mrs. Thompson had a program
neither does your rellglon or Ufe
Donations were made to the
on
backgrounds displaying several
style, but the Important thing Is the
Meigs COunty Chapter of the
and giving InstructiOns on conlove and personal support given to a
American Cancer Society and to a
needy young mart formerly · of · structing them . Styrofoam. tex- special child.
tured paint on board, muslin
Further Information may be
Pomeroy, at the April meeting of
covered board and trlponta designs
obtained by writing Adoption Prothe Laurel Cliff Better Health Club
were displayed, along with rope
ject, P. 0. Box 1046, Athens, or
at the home of Jean Wright.
sculpt ure.
calling 1-800282-5567.
Iva Powell presided a t the
Mrs. Crane received a blue ribbon
II was noted by Ellen Rought that
meeting with Donna Gilmore giving
for
a
religious
arrangement.
Mrs.
pictures
of the poppy royalty wll be
devotions reading "God Works for
Thompson and Mrs. Lewis ,erved
taken . this week with Mayor
Good;" Polly Eichinger, "Little
refreshments.
ClarenCe Andrews. PoppyDayswiU
·· Sparrow;" Mrs. Wright , "A Mothbe May 26-Zl and 28 and Mar:y
er's Prayer;" and Mrs. Powell,
Martin and Mrs. Rought will speak
"Prayer in School.''
on WMPO May 21 at 10 a.m on
Officers' reports were given and
poppies.
games were played with Mrs.
Edward Harris of the Ohio
Lanny Hankla, a junior auxUlary
Gilmore winning the door prize.
Department Mental Retard tlon
member, will be sponsored In the
Re!restunent were served by and Development, Athens office,
blke-a-thon. Support was also given
Mrs. Wright and Ruby Frick,
was guest speaker at the Thesday
by Harris, the guest speaker, and
assisted by Beulah Ochier. Others night meeting of the American
Mayor Andrews to the bike:a-thon.
attending were Eva Robson and
Legion Auxlllary, Drew Webster
A yard sale wsas planned for
Geneleve Ward .
Post 39, Pomeroy, at the post home.
Thursday,
Friday and Saturday at
Introduced by Peggy Harris,
the
Burger
Chef In Pomeroy with
child welfare chairman, Harris
Veda
Davlsaschalrman.Artlclesof
spoke on "Adopt a Special Child,"
clothing to be donated wlll be picked
slhe · handicapped, physically, menup by Mrs. Rought or Loretta
tally , or emotionally. Most are older
Elaine Grogan was thetoploser at
Tiemeyer.
children, stx to eight.
the Monday night Five Points
It was decided that the Auxutary
He corrunented that a special
exercise class, with Janet Russell,
will
give two $100 scholarships this
chlld needs a family to provide the
Peggy King, Mary Roush and
year and $100 to the Carleton School
love and security that every child
Beverly Smith tying for runner.-up.
for playground equipment.
needs
and
wants.
Many
special
At the Thcsday morning diet class
A luncheon wlll be served by the
children for various reasons have
at Mason, Patty Roush lost the most
women on Memorial Day following
become
separated
from
their
famiweight, whlle at the exerclo;e class
the regular public services on the
lies and feel unloved and Insecure as
Julla Nichol was the top weight
parking lot at 10 a.m. and visits to
a result.
loser. Jo Ann Newsome is lecturer
the
cemeteries.
He talked about adoption noting
for Sllnderella.
The
slate of new officers wUI be
that Ills much easier today than In
presented
at the May meeting and
thepast. "Youcanhesingle, manor
~en, ~omen
delegates
and
alternates to the state
woman, married or divorced with
conven
lion
will
be selected at that
Plans for organizing a prayer or Without children", speaker
time.
commented. He noted that the
chain were made during a meeting
of the Loyal Men and Women's
Class of the Middleport Church of
r------------~---------;
Christ.
Mildred Riley presided a t the
m eeting. For roll call members
named a vegetable of the Bible.
Devotions by Mildred Hawley were
taken from Romans 12. Helen
Reynolds had a reading on the
Grundy Mission in VIrginia regardIng the choir which wut go to VIenna,
Austria, to sing . Reports were given
on theslckandshutlnsofthechurch.
Re!reslunents were served by
v~ NO
Eleanor Lohse, Mildred Hawley
alld Beulah Roush .
I. Do you own your own home~

Better Health Club

Winding Trail
Garden Club

Clshinon
a growing

and wind
turbines
1
provide an ideal solution.
We have the best:

Firernanship course completed

TEST
OUT
RICH.

DEALERS
WANTED I
market!
Energy COlliS
818 soaring ...

Classes having reunions, and the
membel' In charge are 1933, Clarice
Allen; 1938, Vic Bahr; 194.'!, Opal
Eichinger; 19&lt;l8, 'Kathleen MoiTis;
and 1953, Eleanor Leonard.
Alumni are asked tomeetwlth the
decorating committee on June 3 at
the school to help prepare the
reunion tables.
For tho¥' who did not receive a
letter, reservations are to be maUed
by May 30 to Mrs. Dean, Route 3,
Pomeroy. The Chester Elementary
PTO wlll serve the dinner. Letters
:were sent out to au alumnl this
week .

LADIES'

Ladl..'

ALTZ GOWNS

SCUFFS

• 10"&gt; Nylon. 65%
Kodel· Polyester 35%
Cotton
• St ... S, M, l, &amp; X.SIU!I

• Assorted styles and c:"Oiors
• Sizes s;·Jo

LADIES'

Reg. 249.95

Civic beautificatiOn projec.ts, one
at the 'Meigs Couitty COurt House
and the other at the In!lrmar:y, were
planned during a meeting of the
Winding Trail Garden Oub at the
home of Mrs. Allee Thompson.
A tree will be planted near thE\
· Revolutionary War statue at the
court house. The flower beds at the
Infirmary wlll be cleaned and
pll\llted on May 11 with members
being asked to meet there at 5: 00
p.m . to help with the work..
Ruth Moore and Addalou Lewis
were named to the nominating
committee. A report on the recent
county association meeting was
given by Peggy Crane and Mrs.
Thompson who presented the
program .
Mrs. Thompson gave devQ!Ions.
. Meinbers displayed homemade
containers In response to roll caD.
Gardening tips given by Mrs. Crane
Included spraying or dusting roses
as new growth appears, appllng
pre-emergence herbicides for crab-

2. Has your home increased in value?
3..Have you paid off any part of your
original mortgage?

DO

If you've answered "Yes" to all of the above questions,
continue with this test. You cmild be on your way
to becoming rich.

4. What is the current value of your home?
5. Multiply this amount by .8 and write it here.
6. How much do you stiU owe on your home?
7. Subtract answer 6 from answer 5.
The amount you've written in #7 is the amount you
could borrow anytime you need it from City Loan and
Savings. With that kind of money at your.disposal, you're
a lot richer than you may have thought,
Contact us today to learn more about our reduced
homeowner loan rates.

r.:n:\ orv LO\N &amp;. SAVINGS'
\:I r::J a Control Data Canpany
\

GAUJPOUS:358 S«ond Ave.. 446-1973 ·
POMERQY: 125 E. Moin St., 992,-2 i 71 .

\

1!1'1155 ~11nuu, pllilltlllll &amp;nnWllll uke

'lhlox, cOsmos, petunias, marigolds

DO
DO

'"

.

.

Billfolds &amp;
Clutches

SUNDRESSES
• A....,..edPrlnts
• Sizes S, M, l

• Choose from many

styles and rolon

anvas Casuals

Loyal

Oulolde Ohio

r~an~d~P~la~y~F~e~ll~ow~,wln~~ne~r~o~(~th~e~B~lue~~~~ ~~~~:~:~~:;:.~:·~~~· ~~·;:~::~:~:~~:~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Grass.

send $1 dues to Kathryn Windon,
Route 3, Pomeroy.
Officers are Harold Newell,
president; Norman McCain, first
vice president; Margaret Brown,
second vice president: Dale Kautz,
third vice president; Roy Christy,
fourth vice president; Betty Dean,
secretary; Dorothy Karr, assist ani
secretary; Kathryn Windon, treasurer; and Betty Newell, assistant
secretary.
On the decorating committee are
Vic Bahr, chairman, Bertha Smith,
Mary Rose, Donald Mora, Blll Wlll.
Howard Knight, Starting Massar.

Slinderella

One Month .. ........... .... ....... ...... ..$4.110
One Year .......... ..... ................. $52.80

13

The annual banquet and dance of
the Chester Alumni Association has
been announced for June 4 at the
Chester Elementary School.
Dinner will be served at6: 30p.m.,
and the dance will begin at 9 p.m.
Music will be provided by the Guy
Thoma Band .with Red Carr as the
caller. The banquet and dance is a
week later than others scheduled In
the county to permit Chester alumni
to attend other reunions.
Price for the banquet, dance and
alumni dues Is $7. For those not
planning to attend, alumni may

Phi Beta Kappa accepts area man

a

~enta tive,

:: : :.:: : :

Chester alumni activities scheduled

Legion Auxiliary

Me mber : The Associated Press , In·

~~ ~=~~!

T1!81day, May 3, 1983 :

Page-=5 . -

-

531 JACKSON PIKE -RT.35 WEST
Phone 446-4524

The Daily Sentinel .

By The Bend

County

Bem~.y1 ,

~l"l'W .

[)apclll

:n:

RUNS·CuflnO, MIMl.'IIOtu, 19; Bren,
KIIOMII Cl1)', \8: Yount , Mtlwaultoo, 11;
Downtna. Callfoml&amp;. 17; llerTUIZ8rd. Chi·
cago, 16; EMumy, Baltimore. 16.
RBI·ly!'l'1, CalttJrnla. 21; Brtol:t, Kan1U
City. »; .Kittlf&gt;, Chlcqo. 31; c...stlno,
MlnnetOta , I!J: Rl«'. Botton, 19,

Ollcaeo at Slrn Franl.Uro
Allantl 11 Montrul. tnl

Anlft

Atlanlu , 17 :

Murptzy ,

York. 7,

111 New York

Houston tNickro 0..21

MILWAUKEE

elll'('U

dlrfoctor.

EMIIM!', Cincinnati, 10; S..~. Los Anaelt_"!! , !l: Morrno. Houston, 7; WIJ.oion, NPN

OnlY aamcs sehOO\lled

...,_

CH ARGERS-

an• lk'tl with ~ STOU:N BA.SE:s:Lacy , Ptlt.'lbuf11h. 1!'1;

MondAY'• Clr.mt~~

U.uk~

DI EGO

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)'"'- ''It'sa
quality game not a quantity game,
but we think we have the quality,"
says trainer Wayne Lukas, who
feels he isn't just playing a'numhers
game In the Kentucky Derby.
The Callfomla-based Lukas wlll
be the first to saddle three horses In
the Derby since 1946 when he sends
Marfa, Balboa Native and Total
Departure to the post at Churchlll
Downs In Saturday's 109th running
of America's most famous horse
race.
"There'snopressurewhenyou're
here and you have one that can
run,"sald Lukas, who saddled
Partez and Muttering In the
previous two Derbies without suecess. "But when you're here with a
horse that can' t run lhere's pressure. I think they belong."
The most highly regarded of
Lukas' charges Is Marla, a niin ·
bunctlouscolt,whohaswonthreeof
nine starts this year, including the
Jim Beam Spiral Stakes and the
Santa Anita Derby.
Because Of Marfa, Lukas' entry Is
the llkely favorite .tor th~ 1 y. -mile
test for 3-year-olds. The withdrawal
Monday of highly regarded Copelan, who was Injured In the Blue
Grass Stakes last week, and Noble

RBI ·Mur'Ji!Y.

F.AST DIVJiiON

Ntw York

S AN

~Is.

NATIONAL UJ\GUE

J'llllburan

lillfA)i, and Donald Ray Richard, guard .
NEW l:':NGU\ND PATRI~ed
Bob Fisher, light mel. and Jeff Plen,:e
ami Mlkf:o Jet.ulln. punters.

Bonilla, San Diego. 16: Mattt\(&gt;v.i~. Phlla·
delphia , 16: Morpn, Phlllldclphio , 16.

llrlroll at SM!tllt', 1n1

Monlre~

Dan F'ullt'l', line tacker, Chuck Ganoon
and Mark Pukro., iadtles , Greg Poole.

PhiiOOr&gt;lphbt,

{_"k.-Jf'lllfld AI MIME"!!II II, I n1
N~·

CINOI''NAT I BENGALS-S.Igned Gary
Call. Oanyl Drake, Jim Guslt~fsoo. Mllu&gt;
Haffey. G\ll:rr1 Smith and Stt-ve Su llivan,
wide rt'C(&gt;\ven. J ohn Chr1st~r. pumer.

1tvc

10n1sr.n:J.. l 1, tnl
Ck.'\'(I]Md i!Jiylt'vm 1.11 111 MI!UlftiOIII
ICw;tUio HI , tn1

Wedruwd~·~

wa tved umar Parrtsh. cornerback. and
acqul.n!d Robtie Mahlouz, quartcrtlack.
from thf New Orle&amp;N Saln16 on waivers

FA IRMONT

II . In I
1John

RUFFI\LO 81llS-AMOUnced tht' reI U't'ment ol ls(ah Robrrtson. llnebal'ker.

()()lUGE

1\IHday'l (iiUll(W

r...ll n!ornlll

to a

mu.Jtl·)'ear contrnct .• • _
N.UO ... Foadl&amp;ll Leque ·

By The ~d l"reaA
AMERICAN I....EAGUE
t : I\.1.\T DrYISION

Mllwauk•~·

~"~C~M"~Uard ,

By RALPH BERNSTEIN ,
AP Sports WrUer
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Where
have Ted Power and Gary Redus
been?
Power, a ClncbmadReds pitcher,
and Redus, a Reds outfielder, are
rookies at ages when maily players
are In thetr prime.
Power, 28, and Redus, 25,
combined Monday night to trigger
the Reds to a 5-2 victory over the
Philadelphia Phlllies.
Power pitched a seven-hitter for
his first complete game In seven
major league starts·.
Redus hit two home runs, and
played some outstandlng defense.
Power has been bouncing around
In the talent laden Los Angeles
Dodgers' organization. The Reds
purchased him last November.
"In Los Angeles there just wasn't
any room forme. Theytelttheyhad
people with better stuff. From now
on I'm going to try and show them
they're wrong," Power· said. "I
never got four starts In a row and
that's what I need."
He hasn't exactly been setting the
world on !Ire with the Reds, h•wtng

"We've got quality,'- Lukas

Scoreboard ...

May 3, 1983

Redus, .Powers pace Reds
-in 5-•2 victory ove-r"Phillies-

'

GIRLS' ..AA"' SECI'IONAL SOFrBAIL TOURNAMENT
MEIGS ill

ruesc~ay.

• Reinforced lot
o N. . tllldiM
• St.. pftltt to

• Assor1ed colon

• Slz• 5-10

llledlamlllll
medium lo1811

$
lastlc Tumblers
&amp; Chinet Plates
• Pl•tn-

9~ ln., 18 ct.
• Tumbltn10 oz.. 1S ct .

r~1
~~

Handi-Bag.
Lamon Scentld 2 Ply

Trash and Gra"' Bop

• 16 1at.
• Z4 count

Toll Kllch•n Can Baes
• 44 Qt.

• 34 count

~

YOUR

• 4 oz.

o Reaular •ad
EXIra Body
• 7 oz.

• Sll•tr powdered
and double prol«tion

�Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport' Oh'10

TI

I

ol

-

#My 3, 1983

U,...
f, ,._,
3, 1913 •

'

PllllleiOf

Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Poge-7

MTM has consistant hits ·on television
c Phil ip Morris Inc. 1983

By FRED ROTHENBERG
AP TeiMIIoa Writer
NEW YORJ&lt; (AP) - AlmOSt
anythl!lg worthwhUe In televlslon
today goes back to " Mary Tyler
Moore" - not the actress, but the
classic comedy and the production
company that bears her. lnltlals,
MTM Entero~The best dralnatlc series today is
r· - "Hlll Street Blues." Before that It
/ was "Lou Grant" Both came from
MTM. "Hill Street" won the Enuny
ln . 1981 and 1982. "Lou Grant"
copp00 the award the two years
before.
'This season's top new dramatic
series Is "St. Elsewhere," and the
classiest of the new detective shows
Is " Remington Steele-:" Both are
MTM productions. (Both are on
tonight on NBC.)
The top new comedy on CBS Is

'

. I

.
c

i

I~

•
tor .. Dennis Raftj)poulos, di&lt;ltrlct superintendent oul
ol New York City; Raymond Hwnmel and Lane Daniels. Mr. and Mrs. Hummel were In Meigs County
from 11M171o urn and Ol'lanbecllhe local church. They
now reside In Muncie, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Leggo were
In Meigs County from I!l&amp;llo 196'7. Daniels Is an elder
of the local Jehovah's Witnesses.

WEU ATl'ENDED - Over 1800 residents ol
Ohio, West Vi!'glnla and Kentucky attended a Circuit
Assembly ol Jehova's Wltne!ises held Saturday and
Sunday at the Meigs High ~hool. Numerous speak·
ers and classes were held during lhe two day session.
Pictured at the assembly are,lront, l.lo r., Mrs. June
Hummel, Mrs. Gladys Legp, Curtis Leggo; back, I.

. In the nation's service
McKinney
Airman Brtan S. McKinney, son
of Bernice Vanmeter of 35 Riverview Drtve, Middleport, and Sa·
muel E . McKinney Sr. of Pomey,
has graduated from Air Force
basic training at Lackland Air
Force Base, Texas_
During the six weeks of t:rlaning
the airman studied the Ali Force
mission, organization and customs
and received special training In
huma n relations.
In addition, airmen who ·complete basic !raining earn credits
toward an associate degree In
applied science through the Com·
munlty College of the Air Force.
He Is a 19ll0 graduate of Meigs
High School, Pomeroy.

Hanning
Spec. 5 WalterS. Hanning, son of
Hartsell C. and CoraM. Manning of
121 M. Alturas, Tucson, Ariz., has
arrived for duty at Camp Casey,
South Korea.
Manning, an armor crewman
wl th the 2nd Infantry Division, was
previously assigned at For1 Car·
son, Colo.
His wile, Sheila, Is the daughter
of Harold D. Jordan of 319 W_Ohto,
Fountain, Colo., a nd Rom a Jordan
of Route 2. Leon, W. Va . .

Smith
Mark S. Smith, son of Vernon L.
and Janet R Smith or 618 First St.,
New Haven, W. Va., has been appointed a sergeant In the U.S. Air

Force.
The new non-wmmlssloned of·
fleer completed training In management. In leadership, human
relations and NCO responslbilltles,
before being awarded this status .
Smith Is a parachute specialist at
Seymour-Johnson Air Force Base,
N.C., with the 4th Component Repair Squadron.
He Is a graduate of Wahama
High School, Mason , W_ Va.

,;rth

Lund b

"

Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lund,
Ramsteln Air Force Base, Germany.areannounclngtlleblrthofa
son, Brandon Sean on April 6. •
The Infant weighed seven pounds
and was 20 Inches long . He was
born on the birthday of his mother,
the former April Fraser of
MlddlepOr1 .
·
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Ernie Fraser, Stevens·
ville_, Mont, and maternal greatgrandparents are Mr . and Mrs.
Dale Jacobs, Middlepon.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ford Lund, Stevensville,
and the p aterna l great ·
grandmother Is Mrs. Evelyn Roblnson, KaUstel, Mont

Returns home
POMEROY --Mrs. Esther (Scottie ) Hayes has returned to her
Pomeroy home after spending the
past two weeks at the Holzer
Medical Center and a week at the
home of her daughter, Sandra
Roush, New Haven, W. Va.

"Newhart," also !rom MTM. AI·
thOugh NBC's "Cheers, " this sea·
son's most praised comedy, !sn 't
!rom MTM,Its Independent producers, Les and Glen Char Ies. learned
their craft at MTM, working on
"Phyllis" and "The Bob Newhart
Show ."
And the forces behind "Taxi,"
which won the Enuny for best
comedy three years running, also
can be found on the MTM famlly
tree.
Jlm Brooks and Allan Burns

cre!lted ' 'The Mary Tyler Moore
Show." "Rh&lt;xlil" and "Lou Grant."
Ed Weinberger and Stan Daniels
worked OII"The Mary Tyler Moore
Show" ana- created · Its spinoff,
"Phyllis."

"MTM has a deserved reputation
for taste, class and content without
sacrl!lclng commercial appeal,"
says Josh Kane, a programing
executive at NBC and now CBS.
''There Is an atmospllere of
creativity and lndependerice there
that brings out everybody's best
work.''
Durtng a recent Interview at
MTM with Greg Hoblit. coexecutive producer of " Hill Street
Blues, " It was Impossible to Ignore
the screams and pounding from
down the haiL "That's just the
wr1ters disagreeing with each

~~~~~~;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

1

MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIAL

CAROL'S
COIFFURES

Mason, W. Va.
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
773-5352

At wit's end

Buy a piece of the rock
By ERMA BOMBECK
Everyone is scrambling these
days r.o pick up the slack caused by
federal budget cutbacks.
One otthem Is the National Parks
Service.
They've come out with what 1
consider a great Idea to maintain
our natural heritage; a gift book
where individual citizens can buy a
piece of the park for all to enjoy.
's how It · wo ks At G
d
Here
· ·
·· - f · · ·
ran
Canyon· for exam-pie · $1200 wIll b uy
a ne w mule• a vi s Itors onna on
oc 000
Center will se t Y0 u ba'c kInf
tl d
...,, . an
a picnic table has a prtce tagof$450
each.
For those of you on a tight budget,
you can get In the act too. You can
· - adopt a pothole for 80 cents a foot
Before you say, "wha t kind of p-lace
Is th~t for a donor plaque?" let me
explain. Granted , a pothole Isn't a
stalnied glass window over the altar, but the nation has a compulsion
lor llxlng lis roads. And none neede
It more. If every pothole were
stretched together In one conilnu·
ous line It would stretch from the
road at the e nd of my drtveway to
wherever I am going. And does.
Every winter the holes empty
out Every summer, we flU them
again.
Five years ago, I offered a solu·
tlon for potholes that no one picked
up on. I suggested we call together
every two-year-old In the coun try
and say to them, " I want you alliO
take a nap this afternoon . Lam go-

lng to pull the blind and close the
door so you can re&amp;t. Under no condillon are you to go outside and fill
up a bucket of sand and flU In the
holes In the streets. I mean It! If I
catch you putting In sand and
stomping around ln It with your
Sundayhardshoeson,you're golng
to get what-for."
Every pothole-In this country will
be IUied In bY 2 p.m. the same day
at no expe_nse to anyo_
ne.
Two-year·olds are the greatest

VALUABLE COUPON

15 0/
Off
/0
WITH COUPON

ALL PERMS
Offer Good
TUesday th f "d
.
rU rl 3J

yet no one wants admit
r~so:ur~c:e~o=f~n:at~u~ra:l~e~n:e~~w~e~ha:v:e~,JJ~~~;~~~~
' ~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~J
lt .

10

10 DAY SALE
STARTS TODAY!

SHOP
DUTION
DRUG CO.

&lt;

Calendar

TIMEX
WATCHES

TUESDAY

C..1111n1 Women''

MIDDLEPORT - Lodge 36..1,
F&amp;AM. 7: 30 p.m . Tuesday; lei·
loweraft club meeting at 6: 30
p.m. In basement; refreshments
after lodge.

t101 1T Gold wrful!

AMITY'

OR

JONTUE

FRENCH
CLUTCH

SPRAY COLOGNE

f.op1n11on f11n!l

1122 11 GOIG wi'W"• II
r1ct . L. . tt.e• !land

'o•

SUTTON TOWNSHIP Trustee meeting, 8 p.m . Tues·
day at Syracuse Municipal
Building.

sgss

Colgate~

Players Kings.
Regular and Menthol

BEDFORD - A meeting of
the Bedford Township Trustees
has bee~&gt; set for6p.m. Saturday
at the c lerk's home.

Jiappenings
BASHAN - The Bashan Volunteer Fire Departrttent w1U
hold a public tool auction Satur·
day at 7 p.m. at the Bashan Fire
Station. Refreshmenls wU be
available.

-

Lodge meeting
POMEROY - A special ses·
slon of Shade River Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, w1U be held at 1:30 p .m.
Saturday with work In the Master Mason Degree. RefreSh·
ments wUI be served.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
, FTCmethod .

Bake sale
POMEROY - Bake sale and
rummage sale old IGA parking
.Jot. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . Wednesday
by Mary S))rlne 37, White Shtlne

of Jerusalem .

•

LYSOL

OEOOORANl
Cl£ANEA

SATURDAY

Tool auction

•

nicotine av.

.
"'

.'

POMEROY - Unity Singers,
Coolville, wUI be at the Vander·
hoof Baptist Church at 7 pm.
Wednesday to brtng message In
song; public Invited.

New

12 mg " tar : ' 10

SAVE!!
(

WEDNESDAY

_,

other, " Hobllt said.
The wr1ters and producers at
MTM say the fertUe environment
starts at the top. Grant Tinker, now
the cllalm)an of NBC, began- the
company and named It after h!swlfe
(they've since divorced), Mary
Tyler Moore. When Tinker moved
to NBC, Arthur Price beCame head
ot MTM, and he 's maintained
Tinker's phUosophy of providing a
comfortable, non·lnterfertng ellrna te for people to work.
In the recently released Televl·
ston Audience Assessment survey,
which surveyed TV's emotiona l and
Intellectual stimulation, ' 'Hill Street
Blues" was the highest scor1ng
series. A popcorn program like
" Fantasy Island," from producer
Aaron Spelling's stable, was near
the bottom -

For all the years of love.
Mother's Day is Sunday, May 8.
Give Mom an FTD'" Big Hug" Bouquet
In a Pfaltzgraft' Stoneware SeiVing Dish
with brass-plated carry 'n serve rack.
.' .

~{4...

FLORIST

""""IIGS CO.'S OLDE8T • FINEST"
241 EAST MAIN
POME'ROV.OHIO 4117et

114/192·2844

Sa\4 your thoughts With spedal

PHISODERM

LISTERINE
ALLERESl

S~IN

ANTISEPTIC
32 oz.

•

CLEANER
rr••"' S t trl l
or Atgul11

80 '1

...$188

DUTTON DRUG CO. ·
MIDOI.EPORT. OH.

122 NORTH 2ND AVE .
PH. 992-3106

�/

3, 1983

..

..
1983

Storins .kill 7, flood

Ohio

•

4

Business ~enrices

'

9

Wented To Buy

n

••
•

wltlj

TORNADO MOVES THROUGH OWO- One of
several spawned by a weather front moving through
Ohio Monday touches the ground neat Washington

Cowi House In central Ohio. FCMJr deaths were reported during the st&lt;inns although there were none
&amp;'IOOCiald with this tornado. ( AP Laaerphoto)

23

trailer parks. A man believed to be In his 8l5 was
crushed when a tornado tossed his traDer Into another
residence. At least 15 people were Injured, authorities
saki.
Police In St. Clair Shores, a DetrOit suburb,
patroUed damaged areas to warn people away from
live electrical wires Oil $!reels, In yards and dangling
from rooftops, according to officer Albert DeGrande,
who said a tornado there dld alxlut $600,000 Ill
damage.
.
The twister ripped the roof from a motel and also
ltfted several boat houses from their foundatkm along
Lake St. Clair, he said.
A tornado spun through Chautauqua County In
western New York, destroying about 2D dweUings,
kUling two people and Injuring three others,
authortttes said. Another person was killed Monday
night In Cayuga County when strong winds topJ)led
his mobtle home and II rolled down an embanlanent,
officials said.
,
Meanwhile, some areas l:)etween New York and
Texas rernall!ed under tornado and flash flood
watches today.
Yesterday as many as 60 twisters ~d high winds
were blamed for seven deaths, dozens of Injuries and
mUilons of dollars In property damage In Michigan,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York and Ontario.
In Caillornla, rescue workers today were searching
rubble In the farm CO{ll'n,llll!ty of Coalinga for victims
of an earthquake fell alohg a 45().mtle stretch from
Sacramento to San Bernardino. It registered 6.5 on
the Richter scale.
Rain and thunderstorms were forecast today from
northern Florida and the central GuH Coast to Lower
Michigan and the northern Atlal\ttc Coast region.
Yesterday, thunderslorms accompanied by winds
gusting to 60 mph Washed out brtdges In Arkansas,
and the rain was still faDing early today.
Thousands of displaced Missouri residents
including those from dloxln·talnted Times Beach were waiting for rtvers and streams to crest.
In Plymouth, Vt., about two dozen people were
urged to move to higher ground as water from the
Woodward Reservoir looked as though it would spill
over
earthen dam and flood tb!!tr homes ..
Temperatures below 70 were forecast today from
the northern·Paclflc COast through the northern and
central Rockies to ihe lower Ohlo Valley and lower·
Great Lakes.

an

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE
992-2156
Or
Clusififld Dtpt.
Write 01illy Sentinel
Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, OflilL45769

I

C al~ cll ~ an0 1

2 "'......_..

iPM&lt;Ionad•OM• I
ll) .. d 1ft I(IWOIIUI

J ...................... '
4

a...... ..

!&gt; " ..... "~·
I l"'•• n &lt;l f o~•\41 1
/ Yoo6 lo ... l paKI 0&gt; o&lt;luH•I

.

a P .,~&gt;o&lt;

11 g.,., ~• • • O""cn~Mv
22 lol e,..• ••l"*'

1J "'"'''""~••So"'"'"'

'" "

""""""

-

Jll lo" lo Ac ••-v•
li Aool f OIOOoW""'"'

t.z

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

I 1 Holp "l'l'onood
I 2 S• o- ood "l'l'onl od

' J "'""''
""''i •., •MnQ
141u
, nou
I I&gt; l&lt; h uolo
l l lhdoe !V Io C I! Mopo"
I 1 M• &gt;&lt; • ..n• •w o
IIW.., O.o1 1uDo

0 1 .. .,... ... _ .. , .. ......
O) loo ono! Qo - 0
U.&amp; pat om..,l laolton o
0 ~ '"'" "hod lll oeon o
• • Spo t o ' "' llono
0 1 Won ood O&lt;&gt; II ono
u ..... ~ -~· .... ~~­

5 1 . ... ....... .
51""~'"'"' •.,. ........... .
51
SS·foo S."' ' """

f""" ..

f j,,. . ; ,; ,. ,,, .,.~···

"'~ ' "'""S oOt

12 T•wc-o too Soli
7JV.., olo 4!'"D
1 4 loll gt .. CI'Ciot
1&amp; 8 oo11 6 Moonro
10 .&amp;uoo hnt 6 ~conn•••

55 &gt;1u~a.ng s~ ""'' *"

J l H&lt;Omn l"' Sal •
l2 'll oU o I"I&lt;Omn ' "'S olo
lJ r.,... , '"'Solo
) 4 . ... . ~ . .. . ........ ., ..

' ~"~ •~ '"" oc s..-

11

51 H&lt;&gt;Y...,oi4G,...4o
!&gt;2 Cll I V 1o ~~~- E" '"""''"'
5) "" ' "~~ . .
5 4-Moo.:: ~o~ .. ~ ....OO•u

v..,. ...... .

"""' '"~'"

11
Je Comp~r~~ fQu•~.,....,

-. ·-:
..: """WG:ziiii. -

'~ijft;,-

11 f ''"' f

81 H&lt;Ome i OT.p oo••""~"
8' "luOTobm~ loHoo .urog

qu"'m'"'

6~ w an,.4 oohy
l l l o.. .,oc•
11 4 H.. I Otoo~

es

8 l toc• •ol&lt;n!l
84 f ......... .

Sud 1o ''"''" "'

.. ... l••••

~o~~

• • •• Co~•• ,•

...... c - 114

A&lt;M C-

,n

'"'
"',..._,
tel l -

• 46

a••.,.....

lll
lU
1 45
1M
141

CM oh ••
v.. tG"
II "'O."'&lt;IIo

....
' " Clout ..
JU ....... ~.

Gwv •" O"'

2 41 lA1.., F"'O.

. .. b ..
Wol ouo

, 19
, .,

) 1'1

I

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

!
I

1

.
SEARCJUNG THROUGH THE RUBBLE .

EuSauter searches through the remains of his
!'roadvlew Heights home Tuesday morning where

xene

his wile, Florence, died Monday when a tornado hit.
Four homes In this Clevela.nd suburb were destroyed
In the violent weather. (AP Laaerphoto)

II

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
I cou pon . Cancel your ad by phone when you ~et
II res ults. Money not refundable.

I
1 Name
I
1
1

I Phone
I

Print one word in each
Circle
space be low. Each in1 tit ial or groop of figures
Ad Wanted
I counts a s a word . Count
I name and address or
1 phone number if used . Wordo I ifYou''JIOU
ll get better results
describe fully ,
Il .res.erves
give pr ice . The Senttnei_T~o~~~~+-+~±'.::.::f---l
the right to
class ify , edit or rej ect .:.T.:•.:•.:s+--+-.....:..+.:.:.:~--!
1I any
ad. Your ad will be
I cpuf
in th e prope r ·-rl~o~J~lj__J!~~~~~~~
lassification i f yOu' ll I check the proper box
These ca s h rates
1,
I below.
1nclude discount
1

.
--+-+.....:.+.....:.-t--i

I

l
1
1
I

(Jp ' " . . . ..... ~

s.. "'• ... - ... ~

'' 00

Up""'"""

io\v.,'9' 4 -•d o 1M' 1&lt;"•1

II 1.
I 2.
I l
I .
I•

1
I
I
I

1
I
I

aecllon
~~k.

el...,...

jLOQIIed

bJ the evetGow froin Alum

(AP I mrpiiCJto)

·I

II
-- - - - I
. - -· ~ I
---- I
-- 1

n
n

5.

14

6.
1

15.

- - -·-

---·-·
•

GARAGE SALE : Fri. , May6,
9 to 4 , 360 Dobby Drive .
Maternity clothes . baby
clothes. car IBat . gas grill
and misc.
GARAGE SALE , 114 Ki·
neon Drive. May 4 -6 -6, :.Jim
BeEem bottles . tables ,
chairs . bar and stools ,
copper kettle, misc. items.
YARD SAlE. May 6·6 . On
Eno-Vinton Road. off 664 .
Car, motorcycle •nd misc .
CLAY TOWNHOUSE on old
Rt . 7 . Tua.s . 1 - 7 . Wed . ,
Thur., Fri. 9 to 7 .

~;

I

ll .
l 4.

1
1
I

- -·- -

H.

· \

Pomeroy, Oh.

ISears I

U.S. AT. 50 EAST
GUYSVilLE. OHIO

Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Buslt Hoc
Farm Equ.ipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

i

C. L.

$26,000.00.
135 ACRES - Secluded in
Rutland Township. SeVl!ral
nice home sites and bam. Ap.
prox. 39 acres wood~oo. Ask·
ing $49,000.00. 1'.111 consider
reasonable oHer.

1
1

"""*oy. c.!.

TRAN~,~~l~fitlf.R
AND FLUID1 CHA NGE

•Landscaping

Also

•Form Ponds
Or742-2068

ter coree. We c:iln tiliO

L~.~~·~~ Rates

lddbollandrodout,..
dletort. We IUo replir
G• T....

J

Kitchen Ctblnets- Roof·
ina - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Potios Sidtwtlks NtW Construction - Rt·
modollne - Custom Pole
.Borns.

CHARlES S~YRE
AND SON

•frl'endly Servl' e

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

NO SET UP CHARGE
IN THE COUNTY

992 • 2196
Middleport, Ohio

Transmiaslon

4-13·1

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
_

PAT HILL fORO

7

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

PH. 742-2407

RADIATOR
SERVICE

loat 2 Walker coon hounds
9 Milo, 304 -676 -3133.

Pomeroy, OH.

•Driveways

•Footers

We cen repW and ,.
core radiltura and hee-

OPEN 9 Ill SIION. ttru SAT.
Ali Types at Auto Ropair,
Brohs. Tun .. Ups.olc.

St. Rt. 124.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

4·2l l mO. pd .

dogs. 1 male, 1
Lott in Bailey Run
found cell 814·992·

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Back-=

,_ Senrice
•Bale!Mnts

Chester. Ohio
Ph . 985 · 4289
Dewoyne Wllllomo
&amp; Sconie Smith
All Makes and Models
Antenna Instillation
House Calls tnd Shop
Service Available

1·3.J:!c

AUTOMATIC·
TRANSMISSION CO.

•BuUdo- •

l41;~~~o~;t~iShopping Center .

S-27-1 mo.

EXCAVATING

Lon&amp;

742 ·2 328

Bo~:~~eO~. 45743

985·4193 or 992·3067

Yard Sale

~--------~---------~\---

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

Painting
Sandb1as1ing
Waterblasting
Parking lot Stripping
Spray Painting

TeKture Coating•

Fully 1n111rod-frw Estiimllls
CAU 6 t 4-949·2686
.t-19·2 mo

H. L. Writesel

ROOFING
All types of roof Willi, I1IW
or ntpeir,
and

autters

downspouts, autter c'-'ing •1111 peirrtitW. stomt

doOB aild windows,

All Work Gueronteed
"Free Estimates"

• ,

Call : 949-2263
Or 992-2791 1011,

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Vinyl' •

Aluminum

'

SIDING

BISSELr
SIDING CO.

-Doltn
-Bickhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo·Boy
-Troncher
-Woter
-Sewer
-GIS Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992·2478

"Beiutiful, Custom
Built Gara&amp;8S"
Call for free sidin&amp; es·
timates. 949-2801 or
949-2860.
No Sunday Calls

3- H·ttc

4·11·1 mo.·tHI

'::=~==~~===:

MIUER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For ell your wlrlng
needa; furnace• re· '
peir aervice and lnatollotlon .
Reald8ntlal

a. Commercial

MINE RUN

LAST BID

STRIP

Roofing &amp; Siding
Get all the estimates
you want, then call us.
We'll be your

COAL

SJ()OO ATON

BEST &amp; LAST BID
Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed
Ph . 742-2328
Ask for AI.

PH. 992-2280

Cell 742-3196

2-21-tlc

J.J.!Jc

-----------1f-----------t--------- --j
"CUT OUT

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes
•Wa8herl •DIIhWIIhen
Rangea
•Aefrlgeret:ore
•Drvera .,:,Hzers
PARTS ond SERVICE

J&amp;F

OHIO

FOR FUTURE USE"

CONTRACTING

VALLEY
ROOFING
AND HOllE IIAINTEIWICE
'Roolinl ot oil typos
Rtsidtntiol &amp; ComMen:iol
'Remode1in1
'Stor10 Windows &amp; Doors
FREE ESTIMATES
20 YArs Eaptrionce
TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742·2134
or 949-2160

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC S'ISTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATU, GAS end
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK

ODED I IOIK GUMAIII((D
PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201
Hlfc

4-20·1 1M pd

H ·tfc

-----------1~----------+----------i

~
l•tw•

~

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

·Lusons

'Fittinl Ctntor

~.

'Club opolo

' '·

l&lt;lobs sllon•IM'I lor .

JC!IItl pMpll)

I

'Brond Nomos:
Squort Two
IICGIIIOr
Wilson
Dunlop
P.G.A.

1

Cord of Thanks

Thank you for your kind nan
a. thoughtfulneas during the
death of Hattie Arm1 .
Spacial theoks to neighbor•
• frlenda for flowers , food
and prayera . Alao Rev. Kittle
&amp; Dr. Ridgeway . Gc;Jd blau
you 111 . Gertrude Hall.

3

Announcements

4 1l 1 mo

I

Yard Sala May 2 · 7 , 9 -6 . AI .
664 7 miles from Cheshire . . YARO •alo. 9 ·8. May 6· 6· 7 .
Clothing . furniture. beds- Clothing, bike , antique• .
preads . curta i ns, knick sawing machine, school
lm•cks, much more.
d11k1. bottles. much more .
13 Center St. Maaon
Yard Sale Firat Time Ever . 6
, Familv . Glassware. house: TWO family yard 11le. 1 mile
hold, clothing &amp; furniture. out Jericho Rd . Pt . Pleasant .
' 2112 mi . eal1 of Pon:er of SR Clothing and misc . riday
664. May 4 ,6 &amp; 6.
9 - 3 . Watch for algns . If
Taln-cenceled.Garage Sale Mon- 2 to 4, 9
til 1 Old 160. 2 mllaa from .
hoopitolot Jock Naeto. oigno
on right. Lodiea, mono. ond
kid clolhoo . boyo ond glrlo GARAGE nla . 1209 Sond ·
joano 10 to 14, lodloo jaono 8 hill Rd . Pt. Pleaaent .
an up. new 4•4 tiro for Ford Tue1di!V &amp; Wednesday , Mev
truc k. chain 1aw, ne welect· 3rd . lo 4th . 10 till 4 .
ric guita;, kid record plover. Furniture , home· interior ,
good clean clothea. many
YardSalaKooni•SailorRd . itema .
et Vinton . Tuoo. &amp; Wad . 9to
6 . Port . TV, din ing room oot, PORCH sale, rain or shine . 2
otero, boby turn ., mloc.
mllea off 87 , leon - Baden
Road . Starting Saturday
Rummage Sale opon•orod through Saturday .
by
HennenClub
Trace
Athletic
Boo•tero
ot !he Old
Jeans. appliances . crafts ,
boob, etc . Below Hartford
Mercerville.
Oh onS Rt.
Quart
a r State
11 t.l218.
on, bridge. Watch for signa. May
Friday &amp; Saturday, May 6th 4 &amp; 6 . Rain Cancels .
&amp; 7th , 9 to 7'
New
Merc handl ...
Carport 11le lhru Friday , 9 to
6 . Rain or shine. Gallip o lis
Garage Sale 1 Vt mi. past Ferf)l . Watch for aigna .
Holzer on Rt . 180 . May 4th
&amp; 6th. 9 -6 . HUI't &amp; Neal 's.
Yard u le May 4 , 9 to 7.
2001 Marquene Ave . Pt .
Yard Sale lower Rc 7 . Pleaaant. WV.
below Clipper Mill Bo• 103.
Mon .. Tue .. &amp; Wed . Wright
Public Sale
8
Residence
&amp; Auc1ion
Yard Solo 1103 lo 1106
Teodora Ave ., ·Gallipolis.
Thurs . May 6th . Antiques. Auct ion every Tuesday
boys &amp; mens clothing . &amp;.
night. Krodel Park Club
misc . itema.
Houu , Pt . Pleaunt WV .
Au c t . lonnie Neal . Call
Porch Sale Rain or Shine.
614· 367·7101 .
Must tell everything. Mite.
Items , clothes . Graham Auc1-ion avery Fri. night at
I after
S c hool Rd -1at . rd . on rt . the Hartford Commun ity
Grn. Elem ., laat haute
Center . Truckloads of new
on It! . Coil 448 -9268 .
merchandiae avery week .
Conslgmenu of new and
YARD SALE Oft 141 on
uted merchandise always
Lincoln Pike, 2nd trailer . welcome. Rich.,rd Reynolds
Thuro . &amp; Fri ., 6th &amp; 8th . Auctioneer. 276 -3089 .
Pans and dlshea, toola. lawn
mowen. clothaa, misc .
Complete Auctioneer Service . Also do appfalsals .
YARO SALE . 36 Grape ,
licenaed &amp; bonded' t o sell.
Wed., Thur~ .. Fri. Furniture,
Houaaholds, farm furnishclothing, houaehold goods. ing• &amp; R..l ••tate. Over 26
blke1. llnle of everything.
yaart eJe:perienca in buy ing &amp;
aelllng new , UIBd &amp; antiquB
4 FAMILY Yard Sale. May
furniture . 614-992-6370 .
4 -6, 9till 8 . Watch for aigna,
Ray Waugh, Hamll1on Rd ..
New Auction on RoutB 62,
268-6006 or 266· 1224 .
Arbuckle . The old P . A .
Sayre ' s Furniture Store ,
SEVERAL Family
Rum·
every Friday night , 7 :00 .
mage Sale , Gallia Manor
Bring your own chair .
Building, 655 Buhl Monon
Auctioneer Col. Bill
Rd ., Fri. lo Sol .. 9 · 6 , Adult
Ohlinger .
and children 's clothes, baby
bed, boolu, craftl , misc .
itemo . 448 · 764&amp;.
9
Wanted To Buy

SWEEPER 1 n d lOWIng
machine repair. part a, and
suppllaa . Pick up and
delivery, Oa~ia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
George• Creek Rd . Ceil
446·0294 .

GARAGE SALE. MAY 4 ·7 ,
9 till 8 . 234 Jackson Pika.
Loti of bookt , clocka ,
McCoy pots, A"on coliac ·
tlon, nower1. mite. clothing
end others. 446-8380.
I ---------~
GARAGE SALE : 503·808
Circle Av • . Acrou from
The Meiga Co . Flah and Spring Velley Plua . Wed . •
Oame club will have mtm· Thura. 9 to 8 .
berahlp fl1hing derby Sat.
Moy 71h. S!lrling II B l .m. 4 FAMILY Yord oele, Rt .
until2p .m . Stanlngplacaat 2 1 a _ 0 n 1 • f 0 u r t h
CoolvlllelendlngonHocklng
m It • · w1 d · · F r 1" 9 : 30 · 6 ' 00 ·
Rlv.r . Th.r. will be 1 e5.0
Nice clothe• . children • .
en1ryfnforHchperaon. AII adult , woodburner, chain
fllh wiH be liVed end pllced aaw. furniture. houHware1,
In f11h end gamelehe for
cumins. Aeln ufu;ela. ·
fllhlng derby dey . AI
fiahermen are welcome to THURS.- FRI . 3 mi . on Rt .
eri.,.d end join club.
688 , turn left 1/ 2 mile 1 at
len e . Dlshea , clothing ,
furniture .
We are trying to keep the
cemeteryatLetanFellslni11
prllen1 condit.i on, but muat
depend on those lnterelted
to help . Send to Clartnce
Norrlo , 23282 Hill Rd ..
Racine. your iol coro money.

•

WANTEO TO 8UY Old
furni1ure 1nd Antiquet of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
4411 · 3169 or 268· 1967in
the evening1 .
Buying Gold. Silver , Platinum . Gold end Silver prices
ere the high .. t in two year•.
check our prices on gold &amp;
aHver, scrap jewelry. Buying
Old coint . tcrap rlnga &amp;
allverware . Deily quote1
available. Alao colna a coin
tuppUea for ule . Spring
V•lley Trading Co ., Spring
Volley Piau . 446-8026 or
4411· 8026.
We PlY caah for late model
ciNn uaed cera.
French1own Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnaon
4411· 00119

'I

Electroni c • repairman
needed to work in retail
store. must have experience
&amp; tools . We provide good
loc at io n, c u s t o mer . Ideal
opportunity for an As1i1t·
ant . Sand resume to P.O .
Box 3 4 2 . Gallip o li s. Oh
466 3 1 .
Dependable drummer f o r
est1ablithed rock group,
seriou s inqu es only . call
676· 31 13.
Chriatia n Tenor singer and
or pianln for loc al Go1pel
Group . Phone 614 -9864192 or 614· 992 ·6888.

12

Situetions
Wanted

I have room , board and care
for thfl Rlderly . 614 -992 6022 .

Wo uld lik e to do babysitting
in my home . Racine area .
Any age. 614 · 949 -2779 .
- - - - - - - - · lc Will babysit in your home or
mine . Referen c es. 614 949 -2639 .
£'lperienced painter will do
exterior or interior , very
reasonable. Free Eatimates .
304· 67 6· 124 2
13

insurance

By owner. 3 bedroom home
in Rio G rande . Oh . Cell
614 - 246 · 5274 or 614 ·
246 -9617 tor appointment.
Reasonably priced . K11hryn
Jon&amp;s , Box 63 . Rio Grande.
Oh.
4 bdr .. 2 full baths, fin ished
ba s ement . 2 car garage .
App o intment only . 203
Kineon Or . , Gallipoli1 .
446 · 1223.
In Middleport, newly remodeled home with fireplace,
possible w oodburner. cloae
t o sc hools and shopping .
Coli 614-992 ·6941 .
Modern ho me. 11 rm . &amp; 2
bath , on 2, ~tcre lot, At. ~26 ,
6 m i. S. Of Ri o Grande . Call
614-379 -268 3 .
3 bdr . 'ho me in Addiaon
sma ll lot, newly remodeled,
ne w electr ic plumbing , etc .
Fu rnan ce &amp; wood burner,
fully insullated, 8.11.C. c ond .,
Mid 820 's. Call 614 ·692·
4 3 69 .
3 bdr .. 2 full baths. central
air , firepla ce, large lot , close
to town . Call 446 -2699.

3 bedroom 1 'h bath , garage,
full basement , low down
pa yments, auumable fiJted
loa n . qu ie t neighbOrhood,
o ne mile fr o m hospital . Call
446 -1152 after 4 :00PM .
By Owner , 3 bedroom home

SANDY ANO BEAVER
Insurance Co . ha t ofter&amp;d
service• fo r fire insuran ce
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century . Ftrm.
home and pereonal propar1y
coverage• 11re e11allable to
meet individ u al needs .
Conta c t Ray Wedemeyer ,
agent. Phone 388·8249.
Are you paying to much for
your hospital· health in t u ~
ranee . · Call Carroll
Sno wden, 446-4290 .

18 Wented 10 Do

in ·Rio Grande , Oh . Cell

614 · 2 45 · 6274 or 614 ·
24 6 -9617 for appointment.
Rea sonably pric ed . Kathryn
Jones. Bo.11. 63 , Rio Grande,
Oh .
HOUS E FOR SAlE in Middleport . Newly remod.eled
ho me with firepla ce, ponl·
b le woodburner . close to
sc hool• and shopping. Call
614·992 ·6941
Co..,e iy , 6 rooms . Dou-ble
g&amp;rage, be autifully 1Andtc 8ped .areA lot . Atop Rose
Hill, Pa m. 40 ' s. 614 -9864267 .

General Hauling and Trnh
removal Servic e . Reliable
and dependable . Call 446 3169 between 9 11nd 6 .

House in Syracuse . Oh . 3
bedroom• . with carport on
o ne third ac re lot . Reduced
10 8 24 ,500 . 304 · 762 -e488
afte r 6 p.m .

Lawn Mow ing no yard to big
or small. R e liable and
dependable . Fo r estimate
c all 446 · 3169 batween 9
and 5.

8 roo m house, 21ota, double
garage, goo d locatio n. 680
S . Sacond. Middleport . Call
614 ·992-2602 .

Lemley Drilling . Water
walla. ahallo w gas . and core
driiHng Call 614 · 388 ·
8543 , Vinto n . Oh .
Need anything ha uled. Call
446 · 4861 .
Mowers , chain saws repaired , lawn S. garden
tractors are speciali1y .
Nelaon &amp; Sona. Call 814 266 - 1643 loc nted 'll mi.
Sou1h of RoUer Dam at
Eureka .
Mother will babysit in her
ho me on Edgemont Or .,
G•llipolia . By week or day .
Call 446 · 7364.
Conc rete work , driveways.
aidewalks. patios. Brick &amp;
block , etc . Free estimataa.
Call 448 ·4393 or 614-268·

1J:.t7.

WILL mow lawn• In P t .
Pleeoanl, 304 -675·3244.

TYPING at home, or 1emporary oflce till in. by
el11:perlenced eacretary .
Reaaonable rataa . 304-6764831 .

0

For ~ale by Owner-76 acrea.
alm ost sal f. t ufflciflnt . 3 ·4
bedroom ho rne, wood heat,
y o ung fr u it Crees . large
garden. po nd . barn , work shop. chicken house . Plenty
o f w oo d s . paaturtt , open
fields . Mineral fight a. Eaeily
acc euible . 1 mile weet of
Langavilie o n SR 124. &lt;!ail
742-2860 After 6 :30 p.m .
6 roo m &amp; bath , largegard4m,
100x100 lo t . Space heatora . 614 -992 · 5242 . L. . d
contrac t .
For ule by owner · 4 badroom , 1 V2 1tiry aluminum
aiding house . Approx . 2 VJ
a c res level ground . la(.Q,11
kit chen, dining room. forhd 1·
air heat. Separate la•g•
garage . 2 mlle1 from South·
ern High School. Shown by
appoint. r:nant otdy .
e 23 .600. 614·949-2023 or
614-949 -2777 .
3 bedroom. brick, large lot,
1 '12 baths, full baaemenl, 2
car gara g e . Collage Rd ..
Syracute . By appt . 614992· 6133 .
2 bedroom houae in Herrl·
1onville. Remodeled Inside .
$6,600 . Pho no 614 ·928·
4417.
.

Rom
Plna

BEDS -IRON , BRASS . old
tu1nltutt . gold . oliver
dollan. wood lea boxes.
atone ·jen, entique1, etc ..
Complete householdt .
Write: M.D . Miller. Rt . 4.
Pomeroy. Oh. Or 992 77110 .

SALE 20% OFF
JOHN TEAFORD

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

ALL LENGTHS IN STOCK
B FT . ...... ...... .. .. ........... .. .............. '9.95
10FT . ... ..... .... ...... .... ..... : ...... .'.... '12 .20
12FT . ... ... ... .............................. '14.46
FT . . .. .. ..... ............... .. ..... ....... ''8.70
1 FT . .... .. .... .. ........ : .. ............... . '18 .90
18 FT . . ... ... .. .. .. ......... , ....... . .. ...... '20.90
· 20 FT . ....... ....... .... ... ~ ......... .. ... ... '22.96
ADDITIONAL 5% DISCOUNT IN APRIL - CASH • CARRY
'

CHAIN UNK FENCING NEEDS
. '
...
II . I · cP~-; ..·

814,992·2181 .

4 FAMILY Yard Sola, May 5
&amp; 6. Tuppan Plain• Arbaugh
Addition. Clothing . Avon .
mlac .

~~~~D~N~·~LY~3~1~.9~5~1~·14~-H~c~~==~====1~-l~l·lk~~;======~··~ll~·ll~&lt;~~==;~~=~~~·~'":":'~

ALUMINUM ROOFING

POMEROY LANDMARK

I

Will open &amp; c lean sw l ~mlng
pools. Call 446 -4896 after
6 :00PM .

PIANO TUNING · LANE
DANIELS . Reliable service
ain c e 1966 . Ass o ciate of
Communl1y Service Coordi - Brunicardi Music Co. Phone
nator Social Service poai· _6_1_4_·7_ 4_ 2_ ·-:2-:9-:6-:1-:.- : - - - tion for a 140 unit 1
apartment comple.11. . Ouelifi- PERMANENT hair removal
cation• Bachel o n degree in Pr o feuiop el Ele c trolysit
eoclal work , experience in Clini c. A .M . A . approved .
asailting individuals with Or . re1errals . Monday ,
problemaolvingaituationa. Wednesday , Friday. bY
Apply a1 GMHA 640 Buck- appointment . 304- 676 ·
ridgo Rd ., Bidwell . Oh 6668
46814 on or before May 11 .
1983. An equal Opportunity
Employer .

lost and

Chester, 011. 4·11·1 mo.

1g

home anytime , fenced In
back verd a. reference•
evollable . Call 614 · 388 ·
9766 .

Help Wanted

Need more take home PAY ?
Sell AVON . Coli 446-3368 .

lOST - Black and tan half
German Shephard . In

Kitchen

PH. 992-2178 &gt;IB-nc

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

8

PHONE :
1-304-773-5634
Mason, W.Va.

Gna&amp;PI!tr~

AND

2 male pups , Garman
Shepherd, ml&gt;ed. 304·8715·
9716 .

•Vinyl Liner
•Fiberglass
•Stainless Steel

S&amp;WTV

SALES &amp; SERVICE

271 ... ....

FREE
EXTIMATES
'Chtln Link Fence
'Carpetin&amp; 'Ptlntina

CATALOG MEICHANT
Pomtroy,DH .

Jh. 992-2174

mil

PERSONAUZED
POOLS '

.ISearsl

54 Misc. Merchandise

I

\

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 992· 5739
Cheryl Lemley. Assoc.
Phone 742· 3171

I1

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
\\ ·
111 Courtst.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
\

PRICE REDUCED!! - You
can't beat ·the price of this
lovely 3 bedroom home. Alumi·
num sid i n~ storm doors and
wiooo"' low, low utilities.
aose in to shoppin~ located
on East Main in Pomeroy. Call
npw as the price 1s ONlY

CEDAR AND BRICK RANCH
- Situated on 7 ~ acres.
Cathedral ceilings, haoocrafted
redwood trim throughout 3
bedrooms. lamily room. formal
living room has fireplace and
adjoining 1s the dining room.
Kitchen has oak cabmets
snack bar and d~hwashe!. Full
basement has fireplace. Call
now to see this lovely home'

I1
I

30 .

From he SNlltJt' Htlltr
Core to tbt llr~trt Aldla·
tor.
Aldlttor Speelalrt
NATHAN llGGS
l5 Yrs. ElpttiMice

BOGGS

S. Hobstetter. Jr.

NEW LISTING- PomeroyGorgeous 3 bedroom home,
l'h baths. forma l living room
and dining room. Eat-:n krtchen
has disposal, dishwasher and
eye-level oven. Fam1ly room
w/ fireplace large attic and
basement Nice back yard
Shown by appointment only.

Yard Sale

1

19 .

Call 843-54255·2-2

Broler

I
1
1
I

18 .

OOMPLETI
RADIATOR 5E1V1C1

'Sidine
'Roofinc
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodelinc
20 Ynrs Experience
In Home Aret
FREE ESTIMATES

REALTY

• . - - - ··

26.
27 .

B.
9.
10
II

I ,..
I 15.
I 16.

F1.00DED - Motort.la J111Me Monda, before
deci®IJ not to travel BC1'11118 a Ooodecl poJUoaoiJdChway fU aear Circleville. One car sHe llalled In the

••.
n

10.

I :~
II
I1

_, _ _ _

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

HOBSTETTER
Office: 992-5739

Wil do baby ai1tlng in my

PIANO TUNING f5 oft.pluo
discounts to aeni or oitb:ene·
c hurc hes ·sc hoolt . Call Bill
Ward Ward ' s Keyboard.
446 ·4372 .

11

-

~

P r ofessional
Services

C~ l Bookkeeping
Tax Returns &amp; bookkMI)ing
for Individuals &amp;. ·butlnetMI.
Shon forms N .OO
Long forms t 20.00 end up
Corol Neal
448 · 38112

Real Estate General

1I

1s .

lodlolo

' JJ

1

1"1 .

UJ

l .....

1 4 1)(1

1

! Wa n ted

l'l.w!l.....,

Th &lt;Hiia¥_,_

I

! For Sal e
lA nnouncement
J F or Rent

IU
1 ft

Uptol!&gt;-&lt;1•

I

I

• 11

...... .
ll.,.lo..,.
C....... ;t&gt;o

'300

1

1

o...

5 11 ........ (k., ...
J1l ... _

Oooo ~Of"'' .. , _

I
I 7

I

-

Llp ool!O ... oo ~•

I
.

•.....,._

WV
3().4

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

I

Address

~o~~

Moto~Ce

ft~,....,., .. ~ euomo
. ,ftt ~ o; llogoo&lt;

Curb Inflation II
.Pay Cash for II
Classlfieds and II
Savel- I I
I

I

.. ,..c,.,...,

Goi.- CeuM'f

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

1

,., , ,., ''"'

f· "'"" ;,.1! ;,.,,.,,,.,.,,, .•. ',.,,""Jl'"·' .

to loen

HOM E LOANS 12% fixed
r1te . Leader Mortgage.
t: .
State. ~thens, Ohio. 1.814692· 30&amp;1. o r 1·800· 341 65&amp;4 In Ohio .

losses total · millions
By DEAN FOSDICK
A.....,eled J&gt;ftea Wrtler
Doz.ens of tnmadoes knifed tllroogh 'the Great
Lakes reg:lon In the biggest outbreak thl,s season, with
high winds flipping small bulldln'gs lntn the sky,
killing SfM!II people, Injuring at leasl45 and causing
millions ot dollars In damage.
MeanwhUe, thousands of displaced Mlssour1
residents - Including those from dloxtn:tatnted
Times Beach - were waiting today for raln·swollen
streams to crest
An estlrnated 60 twisters caused dozens of Injuries
Monday In Mlchlgan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York
and the Canadian province of Ontar1o, otficlals saki.
Tornadoes or high winds killed four people In Ohlo
and three In New York.
An estimated $3 mwton In damage was caused In
southeastern Michigan by tornadoes, heavy rain and
hail, officials said. Estimates of the Injured Included
251n Ohlo, one In Mlchlgan, seven In New Yorkand13
In Ontario.
In Mlchlgan,' as many as :.&gt; homes were damaged
and another 10 were destroyed on Harsens Island,
about 35 miles northeast of Detroit, said stare pollee
Lt. RusseU Beamish, who estimated local damage at
$2.5 million.
Elsewhere, thunderstorms accompanied by winds
gusting to 60 mph saturated Arkansas, washing out
bridges and closing roads. More than 3\4 Inches of
rain had laDen In some areas by 7 p.m. Monday, and
the rain kept faDing early today, officials said.
Farther north, more than 1,000 famlUes were
evacuated In Mlssour1's St. Louis, Franklin, and
Jefferson Counties as the raln·swoDen Meramac
River Inundated areas Including Times Beach, where
a flood In December spread dioxin-contaminated soU
throughout the lawn. The rtver wasn't expected to
crest until later today, otflclals said.
Monday's lomadoes were spawned by a lingering
cold front centered today over Lake Huron, said
Nolan 'buke, a meteorologist with the National
Weather Servtce' s Severe Storms Forecast Center IIi
Kansas City, Mo. The violent weather resulted when
warm air along line from
the front collided·
Ontario to Texas.
·
,
.Tornadoes were sighted In 10 Ohlo counties but the
he;~vtest ·damage was · In Weston, about 35 miles
southwest of .Toledo, where twisters sbredded two

22

608 E. MAIN

POMEROY,-OH.
PH. 992·2259
-

llontlor tin illlurdly.
r-.·,~t
tiny E.
Jr.
~-99Z-tl91

T-. M,..
99Z·5it2
,_T.......
lloltit

Jo Hill. 115-3335

'

'

.....aNO I'IOVlDB PIIYACY liws
PIOTtldiON POl CHILDUN • PITS"

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION
PH.

112-22

4-151 mo.

HOUSE &amp;. large lot for sale
•• Ia in Hendereon. 304·
.875 -8408 .

Earn t700· f1600 monthly
commlulont &amp; multUevel
bonua . Work from home
fud~ part time. New Weight
lou progrom holpo people
eeelly ahed unwanted
ounda . 1891nventorv
· nveitment [equlred . No
peri nee; needed . Loc1l
BUYING poplfblcko &amp;
comlco. C•tt 304· 11711· aupe~vl1or train• you . Call
4411·,1988.
1238, elk for Cherter.

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CAR&amp;·.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 448 ·7&amp;72.

r.

Wed.~

mtte
43 . Rein or
114·1182·38111.

Small hou se , eight acres.
outbuildinga ; mineral rlght1,
roooonable. 304·89&amp;-3819 .

INOTICEI
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHINQ CO. recommend•
th1t vou do buslne11 ~lth
peoplo you know. ond NOT
to Mnd mOniV through the
mell until you have lnvettl ·
glted the offering.

Gold , oliver , ourllng ,
jewelry. ring e. old colno &amp;
cu,.,ncy. Ed Burkett Barber
Middleport . 992·

"~"

Opportunity

I

32 Mobllli Homes
for Sale

CL·EAN USEO MOBILE
HOMES · KESSEL'S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES,
,4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
' AT 35 . PHONE 441 ·7274.

•

�.

. '.

.

..

~·

32

Mobile Hom••
for Sele

They~ll

r----

Do It Every Time

'

LAYNE'S ~UIINITURI
iofo. CMir, rocbr, ottO·
men, 3 tllbln, Coxtro """VV
by Frontlorl. UBI . 8ofo.
choir oncl lowoool. *2715 .
Sofeo end cholroJlriC8d fro"'
1288. to alii. Tobin. 148
ond up to 1128. Hldo-o·
bodo.l440. end up to
115215 .. Rodlnero. f175 . to
1380 .• Lampo from 128. to
1715 . I pc . dinett:•• from ~
191 .• to 14315. 7 pc .. 1188.
and up. Wood toblo with ol*
cholra 1428. to 1748. Dolk
1110 up to f221i. Hutohlo. i

On ;ented lot in Bidwell
14•815 all electric . Coli
814-3B8-9984.
19159 El Cor 2 bdr .. moatly
furnlahed . carpeted. appliances , good cond ..
$2 ,200 . Cell 814-398·
8849.
1978 Holly Pork' mobile
home. 14x70 with centrll
eir. new drepH. new carpet.
Owner willing to leaae
present location. including
Coii448-97B6.
B:30Bidwell
· 3 :30..
pelture on SR &amp;&amp;4,
Evenlnga, 814-387-7110.

ATI:R.
'lN

"

-TNE'ii:iii&lt;,. ,iit;

;;-~.

""",;

.

~~

"'"";at
•·._
a

WH4:1'Ef7~
RJI&lt;Ii01l£1/
A7 ~ ---

·
./;'t:P

·s;

.,Q"

-~.
~- ~

~~

wtth

:;:·

~

...

~

, , --------;;-

~~~~;;;~~~~T~~~v~~~~~;~

Mite. Merchendl•

Sofa • oholr. Foir cond .
1315 .00 . Coli B14·982 ·
31180.

I ~'MoW

~

CAK'T

~ •.0.5!1-'f~.

~1f4e

lklf Do

lJ} '

1m

you

~..._.

12" 20 ft . wldo flongo
l· boom, 1130. &amp; ft. otool
mo~r box, 11DO. 30487&amp;-3452.

;t
.
;

1
1

-""' ........
,.([ . __.~- ,

~

Vtt\ Sir.(.;:

t

~'6 ~.,
"ii, _
t ..

'
'

81

3 row Allis Chalmers no till
corn planter. exc. cond. 4
row John Deere
A corn
planter. good cond . 10 ft .
tranaport disc . 273-4216 .

494

62

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY: 1 Chorololo
Polled Bull Calf. around 800
lb . 2 Hereiord Springer
Heifers. cloae up. 448 3828.H

lw:;:N;;!i)Ti)iii[p~J,;h,;
1!.";..:~~·~~il:~::UY: John

1 ueere
M ..T . for
parts tractor tires.
Iron lug wheels for Fermall

~~H~.~Pi;h;;.~3;;8-8;'-9(;3~6-;;3;.-;;,~;;;.

Y ,":-• .• ·:

ru;

I!W~~r ~~oN·~~·:; tv~$,::,.r·""_.- -·~~~L~
:..n~
W::;.j:;;,;~;,u,,~.

; :,; -;·

2 bedroom. oil now paint.
oomo corpatln,.. Dopoalt
roqulnod. 8.14-9 2-3010.
N!co 2 bedroom houaefor
r. .t. Eoatom Dlotrlct. 1180.
p 1u o . dopoolt . 8 to4 -849 ·
80 1
2

2211
. ------1-2 bedroom· furnlohad Apt.
1180 . month . You poy
utllltloo . no . dopoolt .
614-949-2S75 .

I&lt;;]

hom• ' - - Pt Ploount
ond '~olllpoll~. t14-448·
8221 . \

.dryornloapolr
2
. 30 doy gulrontoo.
Ho1:point
180, Ken-

,•
••v•

1 ,
;--;

' \I

'" ~ ~~·
-~--~ -

t~~~:a~~,b;-.;,;;-;;;;;;

AP.~RTMENTI. moblloiW~hJt~•td~~~·:tr.l~'~:h~·t~~=

'

~~
~

~

~

j:!
~·

1rr -c~~
:.. 1-- 'q '

(1r'f\cio.....
.:::

:.erE

~'

t:~=MEjtl~!~;,~··~
~-r-·~R

Aportmlnto. 304 -878 · l:'.o~~
Coli 44118~41.
. "
1-1•_••_1·~---------

\
•

Wllhoro ·• 30
dryoro,
all
ouorontood
doyo. Coli
114-2158-1207.

'&gt;1
1

Home
Improvements

,;.~,.•~u TO RENT: ~'•• ·
turo . ~Ph. 448-2109.

WO!lK~

FOR SALE: Roglotorod
Polled Hereford Bulla .
Brooding ogo. 448-2109.

1978 Ford Muateng Hatchback. excellent body con~.
302 Y·B engine. 4-opoild;
12.700. 304- 773-62B4.

Regl8tered Angus Yearling
Buill . GOEBEL ANGUS
FARM . Coolville, Oh.
1· 8 14· 687 . 3B3B .

19B1 . Plymouth Horlion .
aut. front wheel drive, axe.
cond . 304-1636.

I---------God ldl h
11 It
0

r

ng orH, ce a er

·_6_· _8_7_15_·1_3_08_._ _ _ __
1Dairy goats . Alpines . La

72

66 Sead &amp; Fertilizer
FARM ADVISORY 5ERVI·

CES Grein &amp; liveltoc:k
marketing. soli teating. crop

planning, bookeoplng .
financall plennlng . T . M .
Ari - Services, Inc. Call
814 -448 -0898 or 304 87&amp;-8140 .
WANT to lease tobacco
quota . Meson. "Putnam.
Coboll. Call Morgen Woodlawn Form, Pliny, 304-8762278. 304-823-8S43 .
IIIII

:::::::::::=:

71

A .u toa for Sale

1978 Corvene d1rk brawn.
factory alum. w~ll,
exc . cond .. low mileage.
many extras. Cell 448 049B.
l--------~B H d p
d
19 2 on I rt 1u I HMn·
9 400
1
tlaiiP. new , .f e m d..
eAI:!,,.FC,.~utno pro,o o' t c'P~~ Ii
- ·
•
·
446-7417 .
T- t~p .

1972 Ford 'II ton pickup,
new W . Va . in1pectlon
otlckor, 1860, 304-876 4B93.

1- - - - - - - - 1968 Chevy 'h ton truck,
good condition. 1971 Ford
truck . 304-8B2-3146.

1----------

1968 International dump
truck with 1.000 gol . water
tank. 304-7.7 3-63113 .

Vans &amp;

4 W.O.

1976 CJ-6 Joop . 6 cyl. .
hordtop, 12,000 . Coli
446-8&amp;02 altor 7PM .
1981 block CJ -1 Joop .
em -fm rJ!dio, carpeted .
1974 gold SuP!'r bug VW.
11 ,000 . Coli ' 814 -742 2308 .
79 FORD F2150, 4 -whooldrlve. Jtower ueerlng.
power brekea, air condition·
lng . A·M · FM. 4 opted.
14,800 .. 304 -87&amp; -1646
after e.
.

1-------..---:- 74 M t
I
1974 18ft. trl houl Chryoler
o orcyc ea

boot• troller with 19715 90 _ . . . : . . - ' - - - - - - - HP Chryeler motor with
S
power lift . ome
• 1 • 1982 Handa 450 cuatom,
e3,0003f1or ell. Call v 1 4 ~
mi. . oxc · cond..
, 3_8__
7 ..
-oe-:--'·--·-:·:· ----......- 2.000
11 ,2&amp;0. Coli 448 -2350.
7
! ·:.~~~~o.,. . . Ford Grande elr. PB.
1974 Yomoho 210 dirt bike.
• euto. V ny top.
,
. good cond ..
132 &amp;. Coli
Coli 448-88B2.
· 448 -3t92.
1972 Chrysler exc . co.._d ..
119&amp;. Call 814-2415·91570 . , 1980 Honda CR 80 dirt
biko. oxql. cond .. 14&amp;0. Coli
77 Grand Prl• block Int. • 814-245-15B92.

••t:

h

;u

~~~

VIU

;)I1 ~
t"

~-:~~,; - c::

·cr.~
"• .
. ..

I

'

··

ext .. good cond .. 157.000
mlleo. Coli 448-4292.
' 72 BUICK Eloctro 4 DR .
Hordtop , Mlcholln tlroa.
CMmoto Control AC . . .DO.
Ph. 441· 2891.
&lt;
1988 CHEVELLE.88 388, 2
dr HT, PS, PB, Ph. 288·
8B38.
1811 Buick . Dloool. Toke
over poymonta or will tlllto
... DOD. 814-887-11344 or
1114-37B-8318.

I I I I I XX ]
(AniWOB tomorrow)

I Jumbles:
CHIME SURLY ASYLUM GIBBET
Answer: What ignorance at th e beach
be -

YE5, "5Mi'n1,'
C\J
l IIHOW - miT'S
CONTINUE TO PLACE
~HY 1/rY
THE HUM/IN EQUATION
A%1GNMENTG
A601/E POWER ilNO
IH THIG COUNTRY
!IORLO DOMINATION! ARE GUCH ABREEZE!

()) Philip Marlowe, Prlvoto
Eye 'Tho PoncM. · Marlowe
confronts s yndicate hit men
while guarding a gangstQ.~. -·
marked lor death.
()) MOVIE: .'Tho Doer
Hunter·
(I) I SpY
·
(J)
(121 Heppy Doyo Fon·
zie convinces Ashley to at- .
tend h8r parents ' anniversary party. (A) )Closed
• Captioned!
• (J) ® Walt Olonoy
Cl) (ll) Novo 'The Case of
the UFOs : Tonight's program sifta the evi.d ence for
and against the existence of
UFOs . Ill) (60 min.) [Cioood
Captioned)
1\'ij)VJ~ : 'Uieguord'
8 :30 (() e!D Lovomo. Shirley
Laverne bids farewell to Carmine . )Closed Coptioned)
S:DO e
Cll Cil flemington
Staele Laura is hired to protect some je~els but a mysterious man arrives to c laim
them. IAI 160 min.l
Cl) III!OVIE: 'Mioolng'
Cl) 700 Club
(J)
•
ID Thr11'1
Company Jack emplOys Mr.
Furley to stop a Nevy cook' a
schema . [Closed Captioned)
Ill (J) iJD MOVIE : 'Tho
Hunchbac~
of
Notre
Dame'
(1)- ~Am.erlcon PloyhouM
'The Rothko Conspiracy.'
Tonight's teleplay is b&amp;sed
on the life of artist Merk
Rothko. (90 min .) !Ciosod
Captioned!
(ll) Diamond• In tho Sky
· 9 :30 (() •ID 9 to 6 Violet. Dor·
alee and Aoz panlcipate in
the company's talent show.
1D:DO GCIJ(I)St. EIMwhereDr.
Morrison 's wife goes into la~
bor and Dr . Craig discovqrs
his son e•perimenting w ith
druga. 160 min.I
C1J Gymnoat~o: USGF
Single Elimination ChamplonohiJI
(J) • (JZ Hort to Hart The
Harts discover an art forgery
ring. 180 min .) [Closed Cop·
tionodl
(ll) Newowatch
.
eiNN Nowa
10:30 (J) Stir Time
CIJ TBS Evening Newo
(() Firing Uno
(ll) Forum
e1n s..-ch oL .
11
8 Cll Cll Ill CD liD • Cl2l
Nowa
Cll MOVIE : ' Southern
Comfort'
1IJ MOVIE: 'Hiotory of the
World, Port I'
C1J ESPN SportaContor
Cil Nowo/Sporto/WIIther
Bonny Hill Show
I 1 :30 e Cll Cil Tonight Show
(l)AnothlrUfe

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 448-38B8 or 4464477
JIM '6 PLUMBING 8o HEATING. Fomarly Dewitt'•
Plumbing. Call 614-3670678.

®
•

= '".
...........
~

..

·~

,YJ "

THE ONLY REASON
CREATING TROU&amp;LE
THAT HE!; ~EEN MAKING

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna , ponda , ditches,
basementa, etc. Cell 4464907. Carter&amp;. Evans
Tranoponatlon.

ADVANCES TOWARD .4\E ...

AND I'VE REoiECTEP
HIM!

lonnie Boggs Exc•vating .
Dozer , backhoe. dump·
truck . Work by hour or job.
Call 446,7903 .
Russell'• Tree Trimming ,
304-773-6228.

:oo

a

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

(()....,
111

()) Catlin•

BARNEY.

DEPENDABLE WASHER·
DRYER REPAIR . Guarantied work . Call anytime
~14-268·6820 or 814 ·
2&amp;8-1207.

THAT'S JUST TH'

WAV I LII&lt;E

SEWING Mochlno ropalro .
oervlco. Authorlzod Singer
So loa '8o Service Shorpon
Scluoro . Fobrlc Shop,
_P_om_•_ro....y_._9_92_·_2_2_84_._ _

MV SOUP-·

''NICE
AN'
CHUNKY·"

(J) Quincy Quincy and
Sam are held hoarage in a
priton riot . IRI (80 min.l
C1J PBS Late Nltht
liD All In tho Fomlly
1D NithUinl
Honoymoonlro
12:00 (I) Bumo • Allen
.•
C1J USFL Football: Artzono

'IOU OUGHT
TO NAME IT
'' LOWEE1.Y SOUP''

ee

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Whist club winner
NORTH
\PAQ 52

WEST ·

taro'
e

\0 98613

12:30 e

•Q•

I!

(I)

Cil Late

Night with

(I) MOVIE: ' ...All lho
Mett:Me'
(I) , . . Benny Show
C1J MoMIICM lind Wlftt
'Croat end Double Crou:
McMillen poeoo 11 on ••copod convict In order to

e
. PEANUTS

··~"

1------------ 1-----------~

JIM&amp; WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lenior. 304-87&amp;7317.

....•·
...

'(OI)'Re· m,Wi.V RI~T.
MAaclE, IJUT lrr' ~
LOOKS WEI~P

a

llt ABC News Profile
• TwHigltt
' 1 2:48 Cll MOVIE: 'Tho8~-

z- •

0. .
1:30

r;[-

'·

!ll::W.......~Ie

'

·'

a nd enjoyed the game as

SOUT H

• K76

+K 6 2
North

West

I+

Pass

3 NT

Pass

Eist
Pass

South
I NT

Pass

Pa ss

Openipg lead : • 1

Cll; NIC

N-

He was a n e frective player with u style a ll his own .
He could rind w ays or making contracts that would
Cli.Jde most driclarers: ·
hand he played
Here is
at th e Regency Wh ist Club
shortly before his dea th. We
won' t sa y he took the bes t
play. but he did take the winning one.
He won the hea rt with hJS
king a nd ducked a club to
East A heart came back. He
won in durnmy , came to his

ha nd with t he king of c lu bs
a nd led a spade.
West ducked : Costas was

in dummy with the queen
By Oswald Jacoby
and Jame1 Jacoby

He laid down the ace of

General Costas Platsis.
mentioned yesterday, was
one of nature's noblemen.
Whe n he entered a r oom ,
everyone's (ace lit up . Whe n
he played bridge, the game

was always a pleasure for
both his partner and his
oppone nts.

c lubs. bul West showed oul
Then he cashe d dummv's
ace and ki ng of diamorid s
a nd las t high heart and

threw West in with a heart
West took his two good
hearts, bu t sinrc he wa s
down to s pad es he had to
give Co~tas his ninth tr ick
with lhc king or thai suit
( NEWS I~AI' E H

..

fo:NTERP IUSE ASSN)

~Nw'H4'
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

1 Gem (ace
6 Arrived
10 Bouque t
II That is

DOWN
1 Temple
or church

2 Zodiacal
s ign

(Lat. )
13 More
attractive
14 Concise
15 Shrill cry
16 Kicker's
asset
18 " All the
Presid~nl's

3 Society
affair

4 Uncle (Scot.)
5 Sauce
wi lh lish
Yesterday 's Answe r
6 Quoled
20 Beef c ut
35 Goodly

7 H~ier wit
8 17th-century
E nglis h inn
"
9 Perfwne
19 Run aground 12 Proffer
Z1 Conjunc tion 17 " Leaving
22 Abnosphere
_ Jet
· Z3 Lab animals
Plane"
24 Non-paying
activity
26 Fruit
drink
%'7 Beatles
movie

23 Haze
24 Unsullied
25 Answer
26 Touch
28 Nilolic
tribesman
30 Twenty
31 Curts in fabric

nwnber
37 D.C. lawmaker
(abbr.] .
39 Italian
radio-TV . •
ne twork ,

28 Missing
Z9 Snake

30Type
of lotion
32 Belgian
resort

33 Camper's
item
34 Vitality
Part
of a body

aa

38 Sports
setting
Register
1

'Gigi'' star

..

Force unit
Metallic
,1

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's h ow to work It: · .
Ct

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One lette r oimpl~ otonds lor •another. In Ihis sample A fa ' .
used lpr the three L's, X lor I he .two O's, etc . Single !ellen.
apoetrophea, the 'length . and formation ol tho words are all
hint!. Each day the code le nera are different.
· ;. ·
CRYPTOQUOTES

CE

CM

LCERUPE

AIC NIWI Profile
(JI News

much as anyone we. hav e
ever known.

a

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

-..ohlpmont.
~"!.!h.!.""'"'?'. _gold
(R) (80 min .)

-•;

·-

"J 10

\P K7
t 9753 2

.

Dovtd Lottormon

whenever he could find tim e

• QJ 8 6
• J 10 7 3

• 10'

Morv Hortman, Mory •

H-

He played rub be r brid ge

EAST

• J 8~

• A 10 3 2

He came to thi s country to
represent Greece in th e
United Nations back in 1946
or '47 and stayed on . unli l
his dea th this pasl Feb . I. as

the representative of Greek
shipping interes ts .

tAK
+A 9 8 5

(J) MOVIE: 'Blood Alloy'
(J) Nlvlrtllno
(!§ MOVIE: 'Tho DntNC·

ED'S APPLIANCE · REPAIR
SERVICE cell City Furniture
304-876 -2808 or 448·
0831 .

~ - 0~ - 83

• Q9 4

01 Doldond

1

,.

•

a

Painting. interior &amp; exterior,
brush or spray, corliinercial.
reeidential , mobile homes .
ofter 6. 304-876 - 1128 .
L.M . Johnson .

'

Jolft h.hirnbklGMM~ F•Ciublfld ...... Ma.Aght.-.ISup.r Jumbeeli....,mot'lth.
FG' , _ ..,.,... ..... IIX ..iun'IMe I.Ofll'l Flin Dub, dO 1tlll :4W
r ,loa 5241, 0""
c.nnf ~atbt. New Yaft, N.Y. 10161lnducil ,...- M.,., dhs1 .nd rip codl.

e

Painting interior or exterior.
free estimates. Cell 676 5344 or 448-9326 .

co uld

"B LISS-TEA "

lll!nL ...

1180 18ft. Boyllnorwlth 150
HP Moroury onglno, oil
19B1 VW' Robblt, 3S,0DO, IOOieoorloe Included. Coli ~~;::;:=:;:;:~~====
.. '
om·fm, •lr, oruloo. IIIDO. .+M-1318 otter 8 .
1
.t.loo 1178 Oldo ·Cullooo
87 Upholatery
Su prom I, om - tm , olr. 1·11" Torry """ boolt, 80
. .
*4BDO. 81 4·882· liP M""..., ......... Mer·
3110.
oury trelllntl mOtor. TonnooTRISTATE
_ _ on....,. M_be
.;·'•
UPHOLmAY IHOP
1tl1 VW Robblt, 304-171- ·- n to opp,..,lotad 11 81
I
I 113 Soc . Avo .. Oolllpollo
11U.·
'Gilrfleld Aw .. OoiNpollo.
448-7833 or 448 · 1833. ·

cru1...

~ ~i~~,f~
·,~
~~!!!'"=
·· --__:;~...J

ANNIE

1979 Elonoro Honda. oxc. ~ ~;=::;==:;:;:=;;::::
·I·
cond. Coli 814-38B -8673 · 86
GenerefHeuling
otter 8 ·
o
1981 HONDA 9 DO cuatom,
ahowroom condition. JONES BOYS WATER
U ,OOO . Coli 304 _8 :)' 8 . SERVICE . CoH 814· 3872181 .
7471 or 814-387-0891 .
Need oomothlng houiod
76
Boete end
owoy or oomethlno movod7
We'll do h . Call 448-31 &amp;9
M Otora f. or S ele
botwun a and&amp; .

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

Now arrange the drded letters to
form the aurpnaa answer. u aug·
goaled by thollllove co~oon.

a

E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
Insured, free eatlmates .
Phone 814 -367-0838 . coli
after 6 .

84

Answerhere: THE (

a

1 97 7 Ford F · 1 50. 4 '!' d I::;:;::=:;::==;::===
4 -speed . good cond . 83
E cavat1'ng
12,800. 304' 773-62B4.
~

73

18i;:o:_lnl

,
llt P-'o'o Court
eau.rTrol&lt;
7;16 (I) NBA Tonight
7 :30 e Cl) Uo Dotoctor
(I) NBA s..Ctltboll: 19B3
Confel onco
Semifinal'
Ployoff Gom•
(I) Major ~uo llooebell:
..._
It Montreal
(I) • (J) Family Feud
(I) Buolnou Report
()J You Aokad For It
(ll) a...t Chela of tho .
World
(lt
Entertainment
Tonight
8 'DO 8 Cll Cil A Teem Tho ATeam trie s to thwan the hijacking of a jumbo jet. (60

Get your carpet in 1hip
1hape. Water removal. FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 814-448-2107.

82

[]

J I I

&lt;»

R~

Water Wells . Commercial
and DOmestic. Teat hole1 .
Pumpa Salet and Service .
304-896-3802 :
.

1~.7"9" Dodge ~ T Power
"!~.·:;::~ · good cond ..
· Manachas. Togga. gradea I ~;;
.C all 614-379 end pure brodo. 304-876· 1.£vo7.
1"920.
2"1:! T International Cab over,
long wheel be1e, cab &amp;
64 Hay &amp; Grain
ch•11i1, new paint, good
cond .. 12.700 . Coli 814379-2817.
Ear corn for ule . 1 , 200
bushela . 18 acres of corn 1'980 CHEVROLET DUMP
ground for rent at Broad TRUCK. PH . 388 -93DB.
Run. 304-882-2882 .
--------------~ - 1978 Douun . Long bod.
1 OCI"or more boloo of hay. 83,000 miloo. New 9 -ply
NOrman · Grueser . tlree. very good cond .
11 .996. 814-949 -3093.
Minersville.

.. '

~YURGASI

&lt;» Nowo

F 8o K Tr01 Trimming. otump
removal . Co11 .8 .7 5-1331.
RINGLE ' S SERVICE ~xpe­
rienced. roofing. Including
hot tar application, carpen·
ter, electrician, mason. Call
304 -876 - 2088 or 876 4660.

Trucks for Sale

·

ILURPPEj
I I r

(I)CoroiB(1) Entortlllnmont Tonltht , l v,oste~rday·s
(!) Chartll'l Angela
. ( ) ) Tic TIIC Dough
(I) I)J) MocNoii-Lohror ,

~m~l~lt~a~::_~·~·~!~~."'!~'!:'~~- ~~: I

Livestock

63

Cllortle'o Angelo
Cl) Cil NIC N -

I NOBATl
I KI) (j

(I) ESPN SporlaConter

RON'S Television Service.
SpeCializing in Zenith end
Motorola~ Quezer. and
houoo colla. Cell 676-2398
or 446-2454.

t37DD .

Newo~Sparta~WIIthor

® Studio a..

(I) Thll WHk In tho NBA
(I) Gomer Pyle
(I) e ()I ABC News
Cl)
CBS Nowo
(I) Dr. Who

7 , 00

Hi Presaure Cleaning .
Aluminum siding. mobile
homes, wood, brick, sandstone building and home1 .
Alto heavy equipment . Fully
intured. Free estlmatea.
814-949-28BB.

~~!!~ · 27.DOO

ESPN'o llpoltalurum
Artfto( (Jrtfllth

e

and aluminum _siding work.
Insured, Free Eltimatea.
814-949-2888.

1981 Chevette , 4 door,
1utometic, AM-FM. after 4,
304-773-676B.

MOVIE: 'Zulu Dewn'
Tic Toe Dough

~'7:'6VIE: ·Paoi-·

FOR THI!!

----------------d
Roofing, shlngt.1, apouting

72 VW Bootie. 1996. 304·
46B-1928.

Cll &lt;» e t1l

CI) llllouaht I WM T..lor:
A Short History of Mol

U~Al

Painting Interior S. exterior,
wollpopor Mnglng. lnaured.
Free aatlmata1. 614-9492688.

7&amp; MONTE Carlo. 78 Ford F
160 pickup, 304-676 ·
6281 .

1977 Plymouth Fury 4-door
sedan, low mlle.ge, will Mil
cheap. 304-773 -6363.

e

HOW DAile VOU
INSINUATE HE

Concrete work. driveweya ,
sidewelkl, pa,loa. Brick &amp;
block etc . Free eatlmates .,
Call 448-4393 or 814-268·
1787.

1982 PONTIAC Bonneville.
In lhowroom condition, le11
then 10,000 mlloa. otlll
under fltctory wenenty. fully
equlped , air conditioned,
wire whMie. pow•r doors It
wlndowa, IB,&amp;OO.DD Phone
304-1578-2889;

19BO _F2,:,~

e

8:30

Marcum Roofing a. SpoutIng. 30 years experience ,
specializing in built up roof.
Call 814-388-985 7 .

1978 MERCURY Zoypher,
2 door, 4 cyl ., .-utom.a tlc
tranamiuion.- power ateer·
lng, 4 new redial tires .
304-8715-3354, 8715-4437.

~:&amp;:3:8:8=.====~=·==l:&amp;8:6:·:2:2:8:0:.:J:o:hn=L:.:B:"":':·:.~'i~~!~··~~~!!:~~~~~~~

~~~~~1~I;~!~i\i~ ~~~;;;:;:~~;~·;·~;~:~ f~t:~l~ -&amp;.3~~

(!)
(I)

I~

19B1 DODGE Omnl,
31 ,000 mil••· etlndard.
AM·FM , 14 . 000 . 00. or
prlc" nogotloble, 304-8757142.

Call814-246-6347.l iiiiiiiijji

"/r /,;

(I)
(I)
(I)
(I)

PAINTING· lntarior and
eJiterlor, plumbing, roofing,
tome ro,.,.odollng , 20 yro.
oxp. Coli 814-388·9862.

9 N Ford troctor. 304-B96·
3471 .

eNewa
CIYCil e

Far •••• rear apoller tor ...
Pjlntloc Flroblrd, will fit any
pro 19B3 model 1215 .
304-87&amp;-3781 .

___

::..,..

.

STUCCO PLASTERING te~~:tured ceilings commercial and ruidentlel. free
oatlrrioteo . C&amp;ll 814-268 1182.

PiiiiEiillJivw

i~

Auto Parte

B:OO

\1 ·

' 1// ..:..(..!..L;I..J

Vie~

&amp; Accenorles

up to 1398. Boby bodo.
1110. Mattreasee
bqx
aprlnga.
full or twi_n,or118
.•
firm, 188. and 178. 0uMft
lOti, 1198 . 4 dr . Chilli.
142. 15 dr. choato, 154. Bod
tromn. *20.ond 126 ., 10
gun . Gun ca.blneta. 1.3~15_0.:.
dinette chaira 120. and •zti.
Gasorelect:ricrengee. '~~__: !. ·
up to e376 . Beby m•·

,-..

2romodolod
bedroom houu.
lnoldo .Newly
Noor
. D-rrtown. 11DO. dopoalt.
Cell oftor 8 p.lft. 814-992-.
88B8.

78

Me A~~ SO I CAN 00..
~ 1\
A_~rSMnH ~ j ·
!1:11

Television

12' olumlnum boolt (MyeroJ
pluo Elgin motor 8 or 7Y,
h.p. 1380. 814-742-2102 .

IHiNK MAY&amp;e '.,txJ CO® &lt;il.. if&gt;

12 atoblla now itvolloblo for
boordlng horooa. Alao fire
wood by cord or ton .
814-742- 2720.

fromoo
• 130.
troaaoo,120,
1215 1215.
• 138,
bod
king tromo *&amp;0 . Good
MlectJon of bedroom auitea.
1977 Win door 14•70. 3 41 Houses for Rent
44
Apartment
coder cMato. rockoro. motel
bdr .. with utility building. - - -- - - - - - for Rent
coblnoto, owlvol rockero.
exc . cond .. 113.900. Call
u.-d Furniture .. bookceae,
Thr" room house wtth bath UNFUI'NISHED apartment rang ea. chairs, ·end tablee,
before 3PM , 44&amp;-7613.
on State Route 87. Phone for rllnt , 2 bedroom . waahera; dryers, refrlg~fl ·
1972 14x86 Mobile Home. 304-4158-1042.
1210 .00 Call Automotive ton end TV's . 3 mllee out
3 bedrOoms. ga1 heat ,
Supply. ~ - 6 . 304·676 · Bulavllle Rd . Open 9am to
partlel'y furniahed , under- 2 bedroom houu, 1 acre, on 2218, 675-8763.
6pm. Mon. thru Fri .. 9am to
pinning, back porch, exc . Kanawha River , llt . 62
6pm. Sat.
cond . Phone 614 - 992 - So.uth . 304-876-7641 ONE bedroom aportmonll 446-0322
2166 between 9 &amp; 6 ask for evenings.
for the elderly. All utllltiel
Tim. After 6 Phone 304· 1::::::::==::::==== paid. Tenants pay 30 per882· 31592 .
cent of their adjuated
42 Mobile Homes
Income In thlo HUD oubold·
USEO MOBILE HOME .
for Rent
izod aportmontbulldlng .
BuilcUng materiala
671-2711 .
Twin Riven Tower.{hone 64 Misc. Merchandise block. brick. sewer pipea.
windowa, lintels , ·etc.
304-876 · 8879 . quol
79
Mobile home. 2 bed· 1 bd 1
8
1o
opportunity hou1ing.
Claude
Winters, Rio Grande.
room, unfurnished , .YJ acr.r. urn . apt.. mo. 11e
1 co f f o o to b 1 0 0 . Coll814-246-6121 .
wtth chelntlnk fence . county required plu• 160 dep ..
water, lo c ated In Ohio . •176 per mo., no children, FURNISHED one bedroom 4 7'11•18 'llx16 'II ln . end 1 1:;::::;=::::=~===
e16.600 . Callafte~ 6 p.m. nopets.Call448-3667after apartment In Pt. Pleaaant . end table 26x18 Yu 20'h
Extra nice, adultt only, no with light walnut finio6 130. 66 Pets for Sale
6·
304-676 -2792 .
pet I!. phone 304-676-1386. 32K63- 174 plecea brown
underpinning for a mobile
2
bdr
.·mobile
hor'ne
for
rent.
MOBILE homo. 1400. ell
ONE bedroom apartment,· homouoodjuat1 yoorcamo HILLCREST KENNEL.
electlrc. air. 2 bedrooma. GE Coli 448-3106.
402'11 24th. St. Pt. Ploe - off • 14•70 mobile home , Boarding ell broods . AKC
waaher &amp; dryer, extra nice,
aant,
phone. 1-614-992 - long piec:ae meaeure 32". Reg. Doberman 1 pup• afd
Furniahed
&amp;
unfurnlahad,
2
c all 304 - 676 - 7666 or
bedrooms, air cond., baauti· 6B6B .
1hort plece1 21 " and 10 Doberman Stud Sittvice .
876-2886 .
inchll acroea. Interlock in e Call 446· 7796.
ful river view In Kanauga.
0
NE
bedroom
apartment
in
Foater's
Trailer
Park
.
metal frame, wood grain 1------ - - - 19BO MOBILE homo , 2
Henderson , e1 &amp;0 per flnloh . Coli oftor 6PM. ORAGONWYNO CATTERY
bedroom, 12x46, IKCellent DeluJII 2 bdr . Windaor, month. 304-876-1972 .
446-3086.
. KENNEL . AKC Chow
.,qonditlon. furnllhld with dining room . 1 Vt beth I.
puppiee , CFA Himalayan,
"Underpennlng . 304· 675 · convenient location. Rt. 7. Unfurnished 3 bedroom Knauff. Coal S. Firewood Peraian and $lame" kit3869 or 6 7 6 · 6 685 No pets . Call 814-246 - centre·l ai.r. water paid . Prlctl reduced M•y-July . tena . Call 448-3844 after
.
Fleetwood
4,
6818.
t2&amp;D . month . 304-676· Pick or dallvorod. We honor 4PM .
9
1 70 3
1 81
,
2 _~_4.- - - - - - HEAP Voucihoro . Cell 814:· 1 --'--~~....,.-~___,..bedroom 2 ' both, oil olec. 1 --~--~---~ ~_
288 -8246 .
SeolpointSio,;;aiekliteno. 2
pariiallyfurnlshed •14 ,600. 3 bedroom trallillr Y.:t mile off 1·
mala . 3 tomolo . Full
304· 773·6046 .
Rt . 7 on Bulovllle Addloon 3 room furnished apartRd . Addloon, Oh. Nice V. ment, clean nice yard, gas 6 prom dree1e1 aizes 7-13; blooded. $60 . •8ch . No
1978 14x70 3 br Liberty acre lot. e200 per mo. Call and water paid . Adults. like new. Worn only once. checko . Call 814 - 992 ·
Phone 304-87&amp; -2661.
Cell 448-9789 or 446- 2807 .
mobile home in exc . cond. 814 · 388 - 9~66 otter 8PM .
3694.
1- - - - - - - -on large lot, 2 outbuildings,
good location in Gallipolis 2 bedrooms Mobile Home in
Racine. 814-387-0288 .
46 Furnished Rooms For ••le metal culvert 8 Inch 58
Fruit
Forry. 304-676 -6311&amp; .
thru IQ inch In stOck. State
&amp;
Vegetables
10 11 86, 2 bd .room mobile
approved 18 gauge 12 inch
1979 $tarllng_mobllehome home In Raclni uee. For rent Sleeping Rooms 16.3l. per ft .. 24 Inch
and
llghJ
hou••
keeping
14x70. ~ br . central air ,
underpinned, cream color, _8_1_4 _-9_9_2_·_6_8_6_8_.- - - - rooms. Park Central Hotel. 'ti o : 1 0 per ft . '36 inch
•16.60 per ft . Alao pl81tic Plantsforsale . Mostvegeta·
Cell 448-0768 .
exc. cond . 304-676-6639 . 1
culvert In etock. 6 inch thru bleplantsnowready . Sweet
TWO mobile homes for rent
potatoes a. peppers later .
All electric home, available on Rl . 2 about 6 minutes Sleeping room •126, util· 1 Blnch, 8 inch e1 .80 per ft ., C
o118 :30 a.m . to B a.m. or 8
on Ohl o S traet, reason• bl y from_ town
_. . Call
_ after 8 . ties paid , aingle mala . Share 12 Inch 13.60 por ft . Ron
304
876
277
to
10 p .m. except ~ed .
Evans
Enterprise•
,
4
mi.
priced . Call after 6 p .m . 1 _____
v_-'------- bath , 919 Second Ave . South of Jockoon on ST. RT. evl'ning
after 8 :30 . Good
1·
Golllpolio . C 0 11448-4418
304 876 6711
plonll 8o full count. Will be
.
.
'
UNFURNISHED troller for oltor 7PM.
93, 814-2B6-&amp;930 .
selling in Pomeroy starting
rent In Henderson, 200 per 1- - - - - - - - -Friday May 6 . No Sunday
month. Garbage, water&amp; lot Furniahed apt . adults . No New &amp; Uaed Troy Built sales.
33 Farms for Sale
Dwight Spencer, w.
Tlllera . Swlahers Imple- Shade Rd .
paid . Phone 304 -87&amp;- Poll. 304-676 -1463 .
2048 .
ment . St . At . 7 , North 'of
Galllpollo . Cell 448-0478.
Furnished
apt
.
ad!Jitl
.
No
142 acres . close to rio Two bedroom mobile home.
Grande, good houae, barns, kitchen furnlahed. 1 1m111 Peto. 304-876-1463.
69 For Sale or Trade
Water woll drilling rig . Cell
soma limestone&amp;: coal. Call child ecceptod. 1180 plua
814-3BB-B643.
448-2699 .
utilltiel ,' ratarencu re · 46 Space for Rent
qulrod, 304-878-1076.
Mettr~11 • -box apring new,
FO~ SALE : Reg . Quarter·
FARM for llle, 30 acrea,
12x12 rug. Call448· 0618 . horse atud colt, 14 mo. old,
Broad Run Road , call 2 bedroom trailer, •150
red roan turning grey, wall
304-882 -2407.
month and utilities, 304- COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Cub tractor with cultivators mannered. will have gelded
Park, Route 33 , North of
87&amp;-40BB.
11.760. 1976 Now · If oo desired . 446 -7496
P.om6roy . Large lots . Call plow
port car tor sale e660, all in after 6 p.m .
992-7479
.
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
good cond . W•nt to leel8 1- ----------'43 Farms for Ren1
Small ofHce space in tobacco poundage will pey
Pomeroy . Cleland Realty . cooh . Call 448-4288 .
6-20 Acres woodl. overlooking Ohio River, city PASTURE. Gollipoilo Ferry. 614-992,2269 .
7 ft. treated picnic table1 .
schoola . 448-3564 or 304-876 -6110.
THE former Moore's Store Rio Ridge Runners 4 - H 61 Farm Equipment
1 · &amp;13 - 423 - 8929 .
Garage on 3rd. Street , Pt . Club. Coll814 -246-6347.
Owner I Agent .
Pleeeant . Equipped with
Bush hog i.n good shape
44
Apartment
hoist, tire changing equip- Wood chips or mulching , 6326
1 acre lot 8 mi . from Holzer
&amp; older model Interne·
11
0
1 pic~up loed. You load
for Rent
ment. wheel balancing
hoopltol. Juot off Rt. 180
tlonal tractor !needs workl
it. Call 44&amp;-9740.
machine
end
more.
For
more
out Floyd-Clark Rd . 700ft. 1- - - - - - - -- 11.200 . Coii448-0B&amp;B
information contact Wayne
Coll 448 -0390 .
do
yo • 448-4267 oven .
1
pure
breed
male
Siamese
2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart· Kincaid. 304-675-2460.
kitten 10 wks. old, wormed,
One lot 40x130 . Call menu e200 per mo. or if
1&amp;0. 1 let bunk bedo. 160. 1979 20·c Mooooy Forgu·
Income i1 e10 .000 or leu
876-4391 or 448-403B .
son end lOader, plow, disc.
Call 448-8&amp;08.
HUD available . A-One R.. l 47 Wanted to Rent
cultivator, tines, bu1h hog.
36 ecre1at Rodney on W.T. E1tate1 , Carol Yeager,
Electrk: chain sew, like new, gordon blodo. 110.600. Coli
Watson Rd . Owner flnanc - Realtor. Cell 304 -876 448-·2971 .
830. Cell 676-2636 .
lng ovalleblo. Call446 -8221 _6 _1_0 4_ . - - - - - - - WANT TO RENT : Pooturo.
Ph . 448-2109 .
1
after 8 weekdaya.
Amana 17ft. rafrlg . avacado 58 Case Vac. Wide front end
Flrlt floor furinshed apt.
I 160. fire piece 1et with Iron with 2 - 14 ·plowa , utility
1 .4 acre lot in Bradbury utilities paid. deposit B. lease
120. Coli 448-2429 .
gOod location. trailer hook required . Adults, no pets .
trailer.
up all ' utilities. Hptlc tank. Call at 831 Fourth Ave .,
Gold carpet 17h 4 ln. by 14 For Sale John Deere corner
Galllpollo.
814-992-2802 .
61 Household Goods ft . 5 ln ., like new, $126 . plant11r1 2 Snd 4 row. 8 row
Nuoroo unlformo B.1 0 .12. 300 gol. tonk boom oprayor,
1 bedroom apartment for
Call446·4017 .
Ford cuhivator, Ford rotary
rent.
Cell
448
-0390.
36
Rul Estate
SWAIN
hooo 2 8o 4 row. 8·1 0-14 ft .
Wanted
19884-cyl . motoltop, CJ -8 wheel dloc. pull dloc. pull
Small furnished hou .. in AUCTION 8o FURNITURE Jeep
; 440 John Deer'e plows, used blade, Stockcity, adults only . Cell 82 Olive St ., Galllpolll . I
Dozer. 3 pt. tobacco utter. land acoop, fertlllzerspraad446 -0338 .
plecewoodlivlngroomsulte Ph. 814-268-8789 .
ers , 10ft . culltpackera.
Buying houMI and ·apart· 1-::---- - - - - - - with linch flat erma a399,
wheat drills. Cub Cadet
mtnta. Need propertlea with Furnished 3 rm . apartment bunk beda complete with A I
0 kR
d
I
tractor with mower deck.
favorable price end terms. With private bath at 846 bunkles •199, 2 piece
ntque •
1pro ucton
Box I 109 Galllpollo. Oh . Second Avo .. Golllpolla . antron living room oultoa furniture, .full line In stock, TO 20 Fergu1on trector,
I trailer for gard•n trator.
46831.
Rot. prefored . Coli 448- t199. antron recllnert •ee. • I10 AnIIques. Pau I Con k11
haylngoquipment.frontend
A
tlqu
Tupp.r.
••
pt.l".
other
recliners
tSO.
maple
n
•
·
2216 .
dinette lit I t179 • love llltl
loahdor fflorld8 N Fdord tractor.
Vldlo Dloc Ployor-1350 . ot or o
roo lng equip00 1280. box
Furnished efflency apt .. in 170. hldo·o,._d
AI so b e d room au It e . s ee mont. Howe'o Form Mochlna
mattresS
twin
or
spring•
Rio Grenda. utilities paid .
full a 100 set regular-firm aher8p .m . at784Brownall ary. Rt. 124&amp;MayhewRd.
Coli 448-01&amp;7 .
Jockoon . Oh , 814-288 ·
A
Mlddl
t
41 Houses for Rent
1120, maple dlnoHo cholro
vo.
opor ·
6944 .
Efflencey epartmint, prl~ t35 , wish stand• 134 ,
vate bath, 1513 Third Ave., maple rocker• e&amp;e. 7 piece Exercl1e bike, like new eeo.
MPdern 3 bdr . ranch. Golllpollo . 1138,1ncludoo chrome dinette •t 1149. 1 1 Wliher. 2 dryeu e85 . NEW 1i U1ed Harvestore
garage . carpet , Rodney elect • wotor. Coli 4411- piece dinette Mt 189. und "Needs minor repair ." 1 Structure• . Automlted
~droom suites. reflrgera- anap on ,., drive Impact llveatock feeding -computer
eree . Deposit &amp; references 4222 between 9 • 6 .
tora, ranges , chest, wrenCh 1100. 614 -992- feedert. Call collect 814required . e285 per mo.
lllac:kburn Realty , Cell Apt . for rent . HaH double-2
dre ..en
, wrln,erohooo.
wash era,
4,48-0DOB .
Coli
dryoroo,
bd .room Apt. Aduttt pre- TV'o.
ferred . No poll. 814-9B2- 448-31&amp;9.
4 bdr. houoo. 2_!!otho. good 2749.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople
looetlon. 2 mi. from Hol1er
~
MM . Center. Dep. r~~qulred, 1 bed room Apt. *198. mo . · WllheJI. dryere, refrig'era13110 mo. Coli 614-248· Including utllltlei . Equal taro. rang••· Skoggo Ap· 1'~'
• liE.
~~~~~jy~li
' ~~
1-:;",.i~F'~-~._
9170.
•
!~"-•, W~~ .. ;
:.:;:,. )'."'
houalng opportunity. Con· pllonooo. Uppor Rlvor Rd .. "-.~
~"'~"! ..,
&lt;
'IJLDI ~ -;:-M
tact VIllage Manor Apte . beside Stone Creat Motet.
8 liM HOUSE . Bulovllla. Ph. 614-892· 77S7.
448-739s.
..,
448-3437.
1 • 2 bedroom opll. 114- COUNTY APPLIANCES.
..-j
2 bedroom house . large 8B2·15434. 814-992-8814 INC . Good uood eppHoncoo,
~~_K;
.;.;:;.·r
~
.
~TAfiDI
N'
!'... • " ~2!'1lhilng room. kltchon • !loth. or 3D4-8B2-2B811.
weaher.
dryer~.
refrll··
TV
"liw'ii
:;.;.r..
~Uf'l
1/'.
~- ~!
- Furnllh'ed ·. Overlooking
ooto . 827'11 3rd . •• ··
?Y~!:I.1
r_
Ohio lllvor. Adulu only .
Brown'• Trailer P1rk .
814-tl2 -3324.

'.

75 Motora
loetlfor
1nd
Slle .

•
'
by • · - Wrtnht
rK...:IT-'N:.:.'_c_ARL._,..-V-LE_"'
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-_.--:-'.,.·:'f-~---'1-1

Cldor werdrobo, •ntlque
trunk; S tlor 1lou tllblo •
concrete pfonlc table with
benohoo. Coli 814·211B·
17118.

~:~~-mattre
. ·;~....:~t:~:~:J!::
.... 1260. and

-=:;e;.;:,-~~-:.:0
..
s-a

Mtty 3, 1983

Ohio

&amp;•

51 Hou•hold Goodt

2 Iota • e mobile homo
12•80, 2 bedroom , with
rurel weter. au h11t. H11
some furniture , pilce
112,1iDD. 0•41ote• mobile
114.BDO. Call448-1240.
Trailer • lot on' Aeccoon
cr..k. Small down pey·ment. eaoumebe loon. 1182
per.. mo. Coli 814 -2681448 eve's.

..

WISE E S D

EU

DSJSCoc·yF,

B S M S D 0 S . ~:
ERGY

E. U
\

OSJSCOS

LCERUPE

BSMSOOCYF .

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

OUWSOE
CYFSOMUII
· •
Yesterday'• Cryploquole: IT lSN'T ENOUG~ . TO ~'
SAFEGUARD POSTERITY; WE MUST AI.')() PROVIDE A' .':,
POSTERITY TOSAFEGUARO.-UNKNOWN SOURCE.
, ··:

..

�Page

r--......._Local briefs:--.. Council ...
Eastern yearbooks on sale
Eastern High School yearbooks are now on sale at the high school
for $12 a copy, Scott Wolfe, yearbook advisor, announces. Only 100
copies of he book remain on hand .

Concert slated this evening
One hundred Instrumental students of the Meigs Junior High
School, directed by David Bowen, wUl appear In concert at 7:30p.m.
this evening.
·
Selections by the seventh grade band wlll' Include Ocala March, ·
Air and Allulula, Slightly Misty, Pirates Parade. Smoky MOUntain
Suite, Festival March and Dlxleland Blues. Numbers by the eighth
grade wUl Include Freedom Gate Overture, The sOund of Music,
Calypso Holiday, VIllage Charm, Pep Rally Rock and the American
Spirit Ovcerture.
..
The concert will be staged at the Meigs Junior High School
Auditorium In Middleport.

Southern board plans special meet
A special meeting of the Southern Local School Board will be
held at 7 p.m. Wednesday In the high school cafeteria.

Emergency runs
Three calls were answered by local units Monday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reports. At 2:01 a.m.. the
Middleport Unit took Francis Lulkhart from ln'l\-2 Brownell Ave., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy a t .8:52 a .m. took Harry
Davis, 299 Spring Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and at 5:15p.m.
Rutland took Travis Grate to Veterans Memorial.

Couples to end marriages
A suit for divorce and four actions for dissolution of marriage have
been flied In Meigs County Common Pleas Court .
Mabel A. Sprouse, Portland flied for divorce against Charles T.
Sprouse, Portland.
Filing for dissolution of marriage were Merwin Eugene Smith,
Pomeroy and Marjorie Smith, Pomeroy: John C. Eblin, Rt. 4.
Pomeroy, and Debbie J . Eblin , Rt . 4, Pomeroy; Danny Wayne
Robinson, Pomeroy, and Rebecca Sue Robinson, Pomeroy; Richard
Kevin Dalley, Rutland and Pamets Jean Dalley, Rutland.
Granted a divorce was Mary Kelly from Michael W. Kelly on
charges of extreme cruelty and gross neglect. The plaintiff was
restored to her malden name of Mary Sauer.

Cage tilt set this evening
A basketball game between members of the fOurth anc:1 filth grade
at Harrisonville and their mothers will be held this evening at the
school at 7:45. Admission is 25 cents and refreshments wUI be sold .

Gallia driver cited ;:lfter wreck
A Rt. 1. Galllpoils man was cited ,fpllowlng a two-car accident on
Ohio 248 In Meigs County Monday night .
The Gallla·Meigs post oftheStateHighway Patrol cited Charles L.
Shaver, 35, for stopping on a roadway.
Shaver was ·reportedly stopped on Ohio 248 over a hillcrest a t 8
p.m. when his vehicle was struck In the rear by a car driven by Glenn
M. Douglas, 25, ReedsvUle.
Shaver's car was slightly damaged and Douglas ' car sustained
moderate damage.
A car driven by Van A. Wolford, 22, Rt . 1, Middleport, received
moderate damage In a slngl...car mishap on Meigs County Rd. 3.
Troopers say Wolford was southbound at 3: lJ p.m. when he lost
control, went off the right side of the road and struck a bridge.

Area·deaths
James E. Province
James Elijah Province, 84, 38211
Zuspan Hollow Rd.. Middleport.
died at 8:05a.m. Monday In Holzer
Medical Center.
Born Sept. 20. 1898, in Wirt
County, W.Va., son of the late
William Enbert and Mai'y Mar·
garet Hughes Province, he was a
boilermaker and engineer at the
James M. Gavin, Kyger Creek and
Philip Sporn power plants and a
member of Boilermakers Union No.

667.
He was married twice. the first
time on Nov. 7, 1917, to Mary Caro
Dearth, who also preceded him In
death In 1955, and the second time to
Lots Jean Chick, who survives,
whom he married Nov . 8, 1957.
Surviving are two sons, William
Edward of Gallipolis, and Charles
Otis of Canton; 'tour daughters, Mrs.
Wilford (Mary) Miller and Mrs.
Raymond (Illa) Ruble, both of
Waterford, Mrs. Olin (Pearl)
Knapp of Syracuse and Mrs.
Denver (Margaret 1 Biggs of Pomeroy; two stepdaughters, Mrs. Roger
(Nancy) Snyder and Mrs. Allen
(Diana) Davidson, both of Middt...
port; 23 grandclllldren, 41 great·
grandchildren and a great·great·
grandchild.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Friday In Smith Chapel
Church, Beverly, with Rev. J.D. _
Finnicum officiating. Burial will be
In Smith Chapel Cemetery. Frtends
may call at Miller's Home for
Funerals In the former Warehime·
Funeral Home from 4-7:ll p.m.
Thursday.
A prayerservlcewfllbeheldln the
funeral home at 7: ll p.m.
Thursday.
The bodY wlll lie In state In the
church one hour prior to the service.

Freda Berry

Tun a..y,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel

ca,ter, and Mrs. Melissa Stephens,
Bradenton, Fla.: four sons. Edward
F ., Lancaster; Ralph C., Pickering·
ton; Lawrence D., Valdosta, Fa .;
Mel, Ball !more: 2:1 grandchildren,
42 great ·grandchUdren, 13 great·
great·grandchlldren; a sis ter. Mrs.
Adrah Tewksbary, Buckeye Lake;
a brother, Lawrence Graham , St.
Petersburg, Fla., and several
nieces and nepheWs. ·
Services wtll be held at 10: :Jila.m.
Thursday at the Johnson·Smith
Funeral Home In Balt.lmorc with
the Rev. Raymond Dunlap official·
lng . • BUJiat will be In Violet
Cemetery. Friends may ca ll at the
funeral home from 1 to 9 this
evening and from 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9
p.m. Wednesday.

Emergency runs

Hike-bike route announced

(Continued from page 1 l
Carol Layh, c,hillrman of the Bradbury Elementary School ers wlU head south op St. Jlll43 to
how council ls using the funds
where everyone wW take a rest St. Rt. 7, malclngalettturnootoRt
ninth annual "Hil!e-Bike for Re.
receiv\!(! frofTJ the permissive tax.
stop.
7 theY wW bead back Into Pometoy
tarded Citizens" being hel(l 011 Sat·
She was asked to contact Meigs
Leaving Bradbury Elementary via Mulberry Hts. (Hospital Hill)
urday,blay7,todayannouncedtbe
County Engineer Phil Roberts to
School, riders wW conUnue on . and be ret\U'nlng to the Jr. High
see If the county couktmake the sign route for participants.
Registration for the Hike-Bike COunty Rd. 5 to Township Rd.174 building between 3 and 4 p.m.
for the villill5e.
(Shotgun Hollow), turn left on
Shpuld there be a heavy l'8ln at
It was noted that In the ordinance will begin at 9 a.m. at he old Pomeroy Juhiot High School, 346 E. Main
Township Rd. 174 and ride toSt. Rt lunchtime, parents are asked to
passed on buUdlng inspection, a
:124 ¥d Into Rutland. They wW i'lde · -:-Pklk ~l}lldren at Pt.~.
report is made to the mayor of any St., Pomeroy.
will
leave
from
this
locaBikers
tlu'ollgh Rutland and take New Arrival at !,be fort should J,Je at 12
buUding'that needs Inspection.
and
turn
right
on
E.
Main
St.
Lima
Rd. to Ft. Meigs (Forest noon. Shouldltberalnlngthelllmition
A building needing attention was
Acres) where everyonewfllstopfor lng .ot the Hike-~. Saturday;
riding through downtown· Pomementioned · Monday night. The
roy, going to Middleport and riding
· Mlly 14 ls scheduled as a l'8ln elate.
a lunch break.
matter was referred to the building
lunch,
rides
wiU
leave
Anyone wlshlng turther lnforma·
Following
to
Hobson
aild
through
Middleport
and safety committees and Fire
Ft.
Meigs
on
County
Rd.
3
and
head
tlon
about the Hike-Bike or who
take
a
light
turn
onto
County
Road
Chief Charles Legar.
for
Harrisonville.
There
wiU
be
.a
needs
sponsor sheets may con(4ct
Clerk Ellen Rought said Legar 3 and proceed to State Route 7.
rest stop at the Harrisonville El... Mrs. Layh at the Carlton School,
They wUI take St. Rt. 7 to County
has requested a hot water heater for
mentary School and from there rid· 9!1..!-6683.
Road 5, maklr.g a left turn onto
the fire station at a cost of $150.
County .Rd. 5 and proceeding to
Council approved the request.
·
Meeting With council Monday
night was Paul Gerard. discussing
the Big Bend Regatta.
Gerard asked council's permls·
sion to conduct the regatta and use
GALLIPOLIS - . Gallia County
County Juvenile Deientlon Center old Barbara Twyman was c~~sco-·
the upper parking lot for concession
Judge
Thomas
Juvenile
Court
In ChUllcothe.
vered In a 40-foot-deep WP1! on Allee
stands. He also mentioned Lynn
Moulton
decided
Monday
thai
17JJo.
Assistant
County
prosecutor
Road,
four miles west ot Ewlngton,
Street as a posslblity if necessary.
year·old
accused
murderer
Cha·
nald
Cox
represented
the
county
at
where Twyman resided.
Council approved the request.
the hearing and Galllpoils attorney
'I'wymB.n, a student at North GalGerard told council there won't be rles Lee II will be tried as an adult.
Lee, a Point Pleasant resident , Hamlin King represented Lee.
lla.' High School attending voca·
boat races this year, but a contract
Because the hearing was held In tiona! classes at Buckeye Hills
had been signed for next year. He will be bound over to the adult dlv·
juvenile court, It was closed to the Career Center, had been reported
said a carnival wlll be held behind islon of the common pleas court,
public and no reporters were al· misSing to the sheriff's department
the junior high building 11nd Ohio Moulton said after the 45 minute
hearing.
Power Co. was placing permanent
lowed to attend.
March 20.
Lee was released shortly after
Juvenile court officials sald the
electric service behind the junior
An anonymous tip to lnvestlga·
the hearing when his grandparents
hearing was the first of its kind In tors led to a search ot the area
high building.
posted 10 percent of a $150,000 bond
Gallla County .
around Allee Road, several miles
Gerard said the regatta commit·
Moulton was expected to con· south of the Gallla-VInton county
tee have rented space for 13 set by Moylton.
Lee's case will reportedly be con· slder results of Lee's psychiatric line., Twyman's bodY was dJsco.
concession stands thus far.
testing, which was not made public vered late on the afternoon of April
A letter commending council for sldred by the next county grand
jury.
by officials last week.
6. A preliminary autopsy report In·
their supporl of House Bill 4 and
Moulton
set
Lee's
bond
at
Lee
was
arrested
by
Gallla
Senate BUI 28 was received from
dicated she had been shot twice,
Sen. Eugene BranstQOi and read by $150,000. secured. The youth has County sheriff's lnvestlga tors April m~e In 'the head and once In the
been incarcerated at the Ross 7, shortly after the body of 17-year· chest.
Rought.
The btlls relate to pricing practi·
ces of Columbia Gas Co. of OhJo.
It was Indicated at the last
meeting of council that bills wlll
services and Devrick said the
limit the company's practice .of . MASON (OVP) - Voters In the
the city may tqse its charter.
response to the story has been
automatically passln'g onto consu- Bend Area town of Mason go to the
Deverlck said hi&gt; wfll accept the
•'phenOillenal.•'
mers the cost of high priced gas polls today to elect a mayor,
job as a write-In candidate l,f no one
He has received calls from as far
purChases.
recorder and city council , but for the
else volunteerrs, as has Recorder
away as Honolulu, HawaU and
Police Chief George Stitt reported first time In the town's 1Z7·year
Lois Test. In addition, several
Brttlsh Columbia, and one woman
that his department made51arrests history, the ballot Will be blank.
citizens have Indicated they wiU.
from
Illinois even offered to move to
last month, drove 5.155 miles and
No one filed foroffke In this year's
serve, if elected by writ... In vote.
Mason
and become a 'candidate
used 455 gallon of gas.
municipal election, and Incumbent
),)(,verick is urging every eligible
If
It were possible.
herself
Stitt asked that a wire cage, · Mayor Cecil Deverlck was in·
voter In Mason to cast their write-In
·
Mason
boasts a population of
scanner, gun rack and lights be formed by West VIrginia Secretary
votes at the city building today.
1,432.
Qty
officials are responsible
purchased for the used police of State A. James Manchin last
Polls will be open until 7:30p.m.
tOwll's
four pollee officers,
for
the
crulserrouncil purchased. Stitt said week that unless 20 votes are cast,
Among
the
candidates
who
have
sewer and water division and a
he needs a scanner in order to
volunteered to run for electlo!l are
$70,000 budget.
·
monitor calls fr;om Mason . Council
Granted
·
Incumbent'
councilmen
Richard
approved the request.
Ohlinger and Russell Barton, RoSteve Hartenbach, meterman,
FARMINGTON,
Conn.
(AP)
bert Mossman, Don VanMeter,
reported that he issued 950 ticke ts
Despite
a
difficult
economy,
Terry
Chapman, John Sisson and
Two actions for divorce and two
during last month . Hartenbach
is
malntalrl·
American
business
Reed, and Stanley Harbour,
George
for dissolution have been flied In the
asked for meter parts whicll'council
ing its support. of charities,
Erma L. Turnbull, Olson Wright
Meigs County Common Pleas
approved.
to
the
chairman
of
according
and
Charlotte L. Yonker.
Court.
Mayor Andrews' report for the
The mayor said he understands
Filing for divorces were Flint R.
month of April showed receipts In . one firm's contributions and
grants committee.
there exists yet another slate of
Greer. Route 1. Long Bottom, from
the amount of $4, H5.50. Council
More than Z70 organizations In
write· in candidates, but he has not
Debra D. Greer, Cambridge,
approved the report.
13 states are sharing Emhart's
been lnlormed of the names on that
Idaho; and Bessie M. Fisher,
19&amp;1 outlay of $787,555, an
list.
Middleport,, from James Paul
[Increase of 3\-2 percent over
Deverlck urged voters to cast
Fisher, Middleport. Both charge
their votes for the person, rather
1 grants made by the firm In 1982,
gross neglect of duty and extreme
says vice president John Budd.
than for the political party.
cruelty.
A change in the next lmmuniza·
The monies will go to support
The Mason election story was
Filing for dissolutions were
lion clinic of the Meigs County
cultural. civic, educational and
circulated throughout thenatlonvla
PearUe
F . Jewell, Jr. Route 1,
Hea lth Department has been
health orga ni zatio n s
the Associated Press and United
Rutland, and Judy Ann Jewell,
announced.
nationwide.
Press International news wire
Salem Street, Rutland; and Sandra·
instead of giving Immunizations
K. GUIUan, R'ledsville, and William
on Tuesday , May 10, the depart ·
J.
GIUUan, Reedsville.
ment will give these immunizations

up

FRUTH
p

ONE

STOP

SII)PPING

ONE

STOP

SK)PPING

Mason voters face blank ballot today

En'd marriages

Immunization
changes noted

this Friday on May 6. Hours are
from 9 to 'n a.m . and from 1 to 3
p.m . No appointment is necessary.
Charges are: polio, 50 cents; DPT,
50 cents: measles, mumps, Reu·
bella, or any combination there.
$2.50.
No one will be denied tmmuntza·
lions due to their Inability to pay.
The next regular Immunization a f.
tcr May 6 will be May 24. Parents
arc urged to have their children lm·
munized before they begln school
as required by law.

Literary club
meets Wednesday

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted .. Richard Eblin, Pomeroy ; Lloyd Gibbs, Mason; Connie
Manley, Middleport; Hazel Shain,
Racine.
Discha rged· ·Wllllam Morris,
David Brlckles. Hazel Weimer,
Estell Collins, Wald Smith, Hollie
Green.

Prices In EHect
May .3rd
Thru May 15th

~

FU&lt;

BffiTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Boyd, son,
Beaver; Mr. and Mrs. Terence
Brennan, son, Wellston; Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Finnicum, daughter,
Mason.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

DISCIIARGEN MAY 2
Franklin Adams, Stacy Alex·
ander. Justin Boyd, Freda Crump,
Hobart Deweese Jr., Mary Finley,
Barbara Hayman, Mrs. David
Hudnall and son, William Jamer·
son, Noel Moore .. Kelly Parsons,
George Stiffler. J ean Warner,
Michael Woods.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, 011.
PHONE 992-5776
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING SEASON
Completlline or ..,..table 111d bedtlirw
plants, loli• pilnts and hq;rw
baskets. Also a lar&amp;e selec:tion of
shrubbery and Mrd flu~ tnes.
OPEN DAILY 9 to I
SUNDAY I to 5

~~

We Reserve The Right
To Limit Quantities

Not Responsible
For Printing Errors

~~Et;IU~()~

MOTHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY MAY 8th

BASIC

A NICE GIFT FOR

TELEPHONE

•MOTHER'S DAY
•GRADUATION
•FATJIER'S DAY

•

FOR WALL
DESK OR TABLE

L.C.D.
PEN-WATCH

TIDE

•FCC Approved
•Last Number Memory Redial
.•Soft Touch Buttons
•Mute For Privacy
•Rinpr ContiOI Switch

DETERGENT

$12

Family Size 10 lb. 11 oz

Gin BOXED
AT A NEW
LOW
PRICE

~~19 $688

•Rotary Compatible Dialing

1

Hospital news

Local units answered six calls
overtheweekend, theMelgsCounty
Emergency Medical Service
t'Cporls.
At 9:56a.m. Sunday, the Pomeroy ....-------------------------1(
Unit took George Thompson, Dl
Spring Ave., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 6:25 p.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Pearl Ash from
VIllage Green Apartments to Veterans Memoria I.
On Saturday· at 10:42 a.m .. the
Middleport Unit took Allee Brickel
from 620 Laurel St., to Veterans
Memortal; Tuppers Plains at 11: 31
a.m. took Roger Balser, Tuppers
Plains, to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg; Pomeroy at3: 24 p.m.
went to the Meigs High School for
Sylvia Landers who refused treat·
ment and at 10:52 p.m., the Racine :
Unit took Hazel Pro!!ltt from Route
338 to Veterans Memorial.

The Buckeye Union Insurance
Co.
ot Columbus has filed an action
F'fllda Bailey Berry, 87, E. Clltf
for
money against David Jenkins,
St .. Baltimore. Ohio, formerly of
Meigs (:ounty, died Monday iii the Racine.
The Insurance company alleges
Lancaster Hospital.
th'l_t
tlie defendant was negligent In
Mrs. Bailey was a member of the
that whUe he was working on an
Rutland Church of Christ and or the
automobile
he spilled gasoline
Auxiliary at the VeteransofForelgn
causing smoke, fire and water
Wars 1516at Lancaster.
damage to the resjden~ of James
Surviving ate three daughters,
Diddle InSured by the plantltf. They,
Mrs. Ed (Dorothy) Bishop, Chaun·
ask
for reimbursement from the
cey; Mrs. Florence Jackson, l.an" '
defendant In theamountof$6,160.46.

j

"

Lee will be tried as an adult

Thf&gt; Middleport LiteraryCiubwill
meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. P hyllis Hackett . The
book ,1-evlew will be presented by
Mrs. Betty Fultz.

Money action filed

,_., 3, 1913

· MAGIC
WALL
WALKING
OCTOPUS

MR. NEAT LEAKPROOF

30 GALLON PLASTIC
TRASH BAGS

SUNBEAM MISTEE
MIST STICK II
CURLER
MOTHER'S
STYLER

77t;

Box of 10

DAY
SPECIAL
Reg. 19.95

.
EA.
Throw Against Wall or
Gll$5 And Watch It
Slither Down To The
Floor. Wash Occasionally
For Best Results.

59~

Suppt.mont to Point Pleasant R•t•r. Gallipolis Dally Tribune · Pomeroy Sentinel • The Pul,.m Post

OUR BUSINESS
BEGINS WITH
FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS

2501 Jlckson Ave.
!'111~1 ,..,'-'!111, W. VI, , , ,

.
)

Give her Lollely·to·look·at Lingerie
Our fabulous collection of sleepthings
and understatements are sur~ to delight
any Mom! From feminine confections to
everyday loungers and practical pieces
you'll findJthe ideal gift for her here!

p

FR

CY

"THE EVERYTHING STORES"
1.0t Stxlb Aw.
H~~~j~W..~a ...

112.5 Main Street
It

.

. Mitt~-. ~· , '-!~·

I

J

o I '

364 Jackson Pike
Gtllipoltl, Qlllq

'

ALL STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEKI
FREE PARKING!

120 w. 2nd St.
. Wellst.on, 011io

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="147">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2734">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43070">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43069">
              <text>May 3, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="272">
      <name>bailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1494">
      <name>berry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5628">
      <name>province</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
