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                  <text>bv Dick·Cavalli

WINTHROP
MY ~D SAY6 1'HAT LA6r

"M'f&lt;ST

~Ya:

Page 2

FIRST1 HE 6l..IPPED IN
tHE 5HOWt=R ~D ·
BAN~D Hl5 H~D.

TIJESDA.Y WA611-IE
Hl5 LIFE.

e
Southern
graduates
'83 class

teams announced

Early Meigs County
Memorial obseroance

Page 5

Page 6

ALL SEOAL girls

Coal tipple issue

•

at y

en tine
1 S.ction, I 0 Pages
20 Cents
A Muhim.dia Inc. Newspaper

Vei.32, No.28

Copyriphtod t983

WHEN HE: WENT OUT 'V Tl-le

HE: CAME- ~ INTO

... AND HE:15 f!&gt;E:EN

OF ~E TIRES weRe FLAT. ••

tHE HOU5e AND
WENT BACK 'TO 8~D.. .

'THERE eVER SINCE.

CAR. HE RXJND 'THAT TWO

,
By CHARLENE HOEn.ICH
" We must look at our graduation as a sunrise Instead of a sunset , and
as a beginning, not an ending" w sa the advice of Cindy E vans,
valedictorian of Southern High Sc.hool, in her add,ress to the 63 gradua tlng
seniors Sunday night.
Evans defined success as "not how far we get, but the distancewewtli
have traveled from where we start." She spoke of the necessity for taking
an optimistic view of t he problems to be faced in moving out into the world
and the need for an enthusiastic and positiv e approach in reaching for
solutions.
She ur ged fellow graduates to always take time to enjoy life, w ork
toward getting ahead, but to Uve life to the· fullest, always stopping to

.

Priscilla's Pop

by .Ed Sullivan

WILL SOW:a.IE PLEASE
GET THE PHONE" I'M
TIED Ul".'

WILL 50MEON&amp;

PLEAg:" ANSWER
THA1' PHONE
PI
• •

HAZEL.' ~ISCILLA.

CARLYLE.'

WILL YOU
PLEASE

ANSWER

THE PHONE?

.' • .

• ...

-

.. .~
. .,,
--

--~
-:- . . .~

IT 5TOPPEC7 1 WHY r;.Q SIMPLE
THINGS LIKE THAT HAVE TO BE
SO COMPLICATED?

DUSTY CHAPS

'

.-------...;......_b..,::y Art &amp; Chip Sansom

'~smell

the roses."

I

·

In her talk to the class , Melanie Weese, salutatorian,.gave a resumeo!
news happenlngs since the gradua ting class of 1983 entered grade school in
1971. She spoke of world and local events, mentioning accomplishments in
sports at Southern over the past severa l year s. She reported that31 percent
of the graduating cl ass will be furthering its education , and described the
challenges of the days ahead. She said people who enjoy success have to
plan to keep on succeeding, and that as each goal Is achieved, must look for
a new one and keep on scrambling. "That's what keeps life inter esting,··
she concluded .
Becky Lee gave the Invocation following the processional to " Pomp
and Circumstance" played by the band. Other selections by the band wer e
" Truly" and "Hea rt Light. "
J am es Adams, principal, recognized several students for academic
excellence and noted several scholarships which had been awarded to the
-~tu.dents .
- Bobby Ord, superintendent, presented the class to Gary E vans,
president of the Board of Education who presented diplomas to the
graduates. The benediction was by David Salmons before the recessional.

Woman charged
in home break-in
The M eigs County Shert!f' s Department reported the arrest of
Nancy King, 30. Rt. 1. Middleport, in
connection with a breaking and
entering which occurred at the
Woodrow Engle r esidence on Shade
Cove.
King w as tak en into custocly by
Sgt. Randy F orbes and investigator
Gary Wolfe Sunday evening shortly
after the department received a
report of the breaking and entering.
King is being held in Meigs County
J ail on c harges of receiving stolen
property . Some of the items iaken
from the E ngle breaking and
entering were r ecovered at the Klng
res idence.
warrants are being obtained for
at least two other suspects beUeved
to be involved in the case.
In other department action, John
WUliam Trout, 34 and his wife
Carolyn Jane Trout , .lOofGa!veston,
T exas were . arrested on tilgutive

I

1'

from justice charges in Galvestoa
County T ex as charging for gery .
A 1975 Cadillac, stolen in Galveston has beenrecov eredaswellasthe
stolen tag that was on the vehicle.
Both w ere loclged in M eigs County
JaU. They are to· appear in County
Court M onday.
Harold Graham , Harrisonvtlie,
notified the sheriff' so!ficeSunday at
12: 30p.m . thatduringa severewind,
rain and hail storm , the front
columns on his resid ence, cement
block walls and a m acl\inery shed
were damaged.
Gr aham said ~e saw a black
runnel -shaped cloud about 40 deet
from the ground coming toward his
r esidence. Hail stones could still be
seen an hOur after the storm.
M eanwhile, Ricky Eugene Lunsford, Shawn David GUmore and
Danny Haggy, entered goUty pleas
last F r iday in Common Pleas Court
(Continued on page 10)

READYJI'ORTREBIOMOMENT!I!mda¥lllp&amp;al
. F"*om HIP School were ..,.....,.. ......., lor,

'

OU'ISTANDINCl -

il

Stcphoutlt•

&gt;U'e

pictured before they movt.od l11to hu.cculnun•alt• and comnu·nct!ment

TOP STUDENTS - Cindy E vans and David Salmons were
selected as the most outstanding girl and boy in the 1983 graduating
class of Southern High School, and were recognized during the
commencem ent program Sunday night.

activities at M eigs lligh School Sunday t•vcning. They were voted by the
faculty as the 1nost oul..tandb•g girl nnd hoy of the senior class. M iss
Houchins is n dau ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Slt•vc Houchins, Middleport,
and Carson l• tht' son of Mr. and Mrs. lh•n•ld Carson of R&lt;•utt• I,
Middleport.

154 seniors graduate at Meigs
w hich a r f' ou1 s for l hP lak ing. W nlk
sucrPss uni£&gt;Ss ·yot l have somf'lhlng
door.
proudly
across th&lt;' lhrcshold of your
to com pare 11 . to. And what ·or
"Behind the door to the future lies
" The class of 198.1 is determined
lll' W
bt&gt;gl
nn l n g , '' Avf' rl o n
SUCCf'SS'~ SUCCf'SS I s rrl ati V(' IO ('UC h
to succeed," said K ris Snowden, our goals; our dreams whlr h can
cunc
ludl•(l.
per son. When yuu a n-. content with
va ledictorian of this yea r 's gradual · only occur through our act ions. We
llilcca la un •a ll• was hC' Id a lso
ing class when she deliver ed her should set our goal s and st rtve to what you have and w ho you arc, you
Sun
day for t ht· MPigs High senior s
have al h levcd succl?ss ," sh£' st atl'CI .
achi&lt;&gt;vc them . Let no obstacles
addr ess at annual commencemenl
with
Rotx•rt Melt on, mi nister of the
Averion urged hC'r c lassm atPs to
stand in your way." Avcr lon told
exerci ses held Sunday evening at
M
lddlcport
ClHtt'&lt;'h of Christ. as
her classmates. She advised class- l'xpress lhc ir appr cda tlon to ail
Meigs High School.
'
S
IX'ak
cr.
The
set-v irP moved lmmewho have touched I hei r l ives du ring
Snowden recounted l he cxpe· ma tes not to be discouraged by
dla
tPly
In
to
commPnCf'nwn
t.
I he yea r s to this point.
fa ilu res whi ch. she said, are
r iences of the class beginni ng with
D
iplom
as
Wt'rP
present
ed the
" The doo r to tht:&gt; fu tur e swings
blessin gs in dlsgu is~.
fres hmen year of 1979.·She pointed
gradual
f's
h,V
Rotx
•rt
Bart
on,
~rC'sl ­
" If you don' t fai l. you will n&lt;'VPr wide open. Behind thi s door liPs a
out how mos t of the g-roup spent the
dt'nl
of
lhr
Meigs
l.oca
l
Sc
hool
new wor ld, a world fiilccl wi th
year acquainting themselves with know success . You wil l nPvPr know
Boa
rd
.
tnlasu res ancl rK'W adv0ntun •s
sc hool polic ies and personnel ix'fore
developing inf o ind ividuals duri ng
the sophom ore year.
Independence broadened du ri ng
the junior yea r of the c lass as
mem bers initiated plans for their
future with som e cont inuing· In
academ ic courses while ot her s
enter ed various vocalional. business and work prog-ram classes.
Snow den said class m em ber s had
Edwa rd Wery, salu taiOt Ian, In his remarks sa id,
!mined va luable academic and
By KATIE CROW
"
T
he
l crm educa llon Is tts('(l ln dPs l~-,&gt;i1a t r I he num be r
social know ledge dur in g their four
" We hav e come l o the end of a very diffic ult
of years of for ma l tra ining tha t onP hi1s eornp l!•lt'(l lna
years at M eigs High, bu t most
chapter in the book of life, our high school years , but
i mportant. she said is " we have
the futu re won't begin until we rea lize I hal a part of sc hool stlu allon.
" In a broader st•nst• howf'vcr , C'(lu r atlon In volves
learned to know ourselves ."
our lift&gt; is ending." Thai's whal Eliza beth Ann Collins,
much
mot·c !han the nu mbc1· Qf yrars su('C&lt;'ssfuily
Salutatori an Rowena Averlon, In
va led ictorian. told the gr aduating class In her opening
com
pleted
In the sc hool room. SomMne else has
her address, told class m embers
rem arks at the 26th annual Eastern High School
defined
true
educa tion as 'Learning to change the
they now stand between two doors
commencem ent exercises Sunday .
things
In
one's
envi ronment tha t shou ld ix' and can be
- one, the door of the pas t w hich Is
Miss Collins continued, " There are m any thin gs
changed.
and
learni
ng to adapt himself to lhc things In
quickly c losing. and the other the
tha t we will leave behind as we move toward the
environm
ent
that
should not or ca nnnl ix' changed .
his
door to the futu re with decis ions to
futu re, but along with the thi ngs that we leave behind
~
II
to
the
ulti
ma
te
good
of himscll and his fpilowmen.'
be made leading them to the second
are also the things we wil l never for get.
"
In
this
hroiJd
sense
tTLJC' educal\o n Involved not
" When w e look back we .m ay not remember
acq
uisition
of
know
lt~l gl' In I he class111om , or
onl
y
the
geom etry postulates or F rench verb conj uga lions.
elsewhere.
bul
lhP
w
iSP
usc
of this k no w l cd~e .
but we will never forgel l he smil ing fa('('s and sp&lt;'('ta t
"
How
m
uch
ed
ueutlo11
should om• have?
friends who added so much to our lives . Caught up in
Gent&gt; rally speaking. o n~ should ltav~ as much
the whir lwind of gra du ation, none of us has ye t fully
educa tion as his abilit y and apport unity wil l allow. To
r eali7.ed just how big the step is that we arc abou t lo
say that r vrryone should havr thC' sa me amount of
take.
educa
tion is not true. T he rearcon&lt;··ta lcnt .two-ta lcnl .
" The future truly lies deep w ithin the hearts of
and
fi
ve-talented
indiv iduals. and melt should get as
each and everyone of us. By taking on the assets o f
much
education
as is profllabll' to hi m under tht'
responsi bil ity and decision m aking the years to com e
circumsta
nces
tha
t he m usl li ve.
·
wi ll be eased of difficulty for each of us.
"
The
amount
of
ed
ucation
I
hat
mch
Individual
" We have been guided by many people during ·
should get depends on ma ny fa('tor s of per sonal
our high school year s. Our parents and families who
nature. some of which I bellcvP dt'p&lt;mds on the
have loved and ca red for us must now allow us to
individual
him self.
make our own decisions.
"
Tht&gt;
personal sa lisfactlon of know ledge Is a
"Ou r frt ends and cl assm ates who hav&lt;&gt; kepi us
dividend
that
ca nnot be mcas url~l In do llar s and
smiling must keep that smile even alter we leave. Our
cents.
faculty, school board m em bers. administrator s, and
" The one thing tha t is com mon to all success ful
communi ties who have ali taken m any steps tow ar ds
is an unlirtng drive and determination to
individuals
educa tional improvement must continue to stress the'
succeed.
So
regardless of the level of education tha t
importance of fundamentals.
ay
be
abl e to achieve, remember Give life all
you
m
"To aU of these people -a nd above all to Gocl , we
thai
you
have
and true success w i ll be yours ."
extend a very sincere and heartfelt ' thank you .'

By BOB HOEn.ICH ·

Mike c-ay, ·Sheila Harrill,
Roter Bflllell,

26th annual graduation
conducted at Eastern

noma

Fnnk lllld

"The things that w e have learned wlth your help
will guide us while deciding when the time is for
endings and the time is for beginnings.
" The confidence of success often brings about
real success, you have helped us to build up this
confidence.
"We will play a very important role in the future
of the world for we are willing to learn and bulid upon
the talents which were gtven to us."
ln closing she said, " I'd like to read you a quote
wt111en by a late 19th century doctor, 'The
philosophies of one age have become the absurdities
of the next and the fooUshness of yesterday has
become the wisdom of tomorrow.' "

,

The welcome was givt' n by De ron Lance Jew ett ,
president of the cl ass and introduction of speaker s
was m ade by Da vid Eldon Gaul. v ice pres ident of the
c lass.
The sixth grade chorus. under the direction of
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead , ins~ ru ctor. presented vocal
numbers, "Climb Every Mountain," and " Race t o the
End ." David Janson, prlnclpai , r ecognized the top 10
schol ar s and presented the graduating class.
Acceptance of the class was made by Richar.d L .
Roberts, superintendent, and the conferring of the
diplomas was b:t Bernard Shrtvers, member of
(Continued on page 10.1

.

'

�Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
PQmeroy--Midclleport, Ohio

Commentary

•

ld,mb. ~&lt;tar'". 0.8 mg. nicotine av. per c1garette by FTC method.

Moudoy, #IGy 23, 1~

FindlandizationL_____..:. ____w_t_·uia_m_F._B_uc_k_ley_J_r.·
The Daily Sentinel

considerable, and In the past few
Two reports, one from The New the room If you mentlooed the word
weeks one thing has become
York Times' John Vlnocur, another "Munich," _for so simple a reason as
absolutely clear In Europe. It Is that
from pefiJns present at the meet- they were acting without reference
Ing last week In Canada or the to the enduring Jesson or Munich. consolidating socialist domestic
sentiment Is against deployment of
Bllderbergers (the European equi- The apparent impatience with the
the Pershbig and cruise missiles
valent of the Council on Foreign word "Flnlandfzatlon" precisely
nfiX( December no matter what the
Relations) confirm what It Is that Issues from their Intuitive luiowlthOse who use the term "Finlandl- •edge that Flnlandfzatlon Is a real Sbvlet Union does.
In the excellence roundup In The
zatlon" are talking about. There Is a thing, like hellle5.
In Northern Europe there are five New York Times, we are conhuman disposition to find dreary
the repetitious use of words accord- powers that belong to NATO: fronted, nation by nation, with this
Ing as they describe exactly one's Holland, Belgium, Norway, Den- most extraordinary change of heart
wealuiess. It Mary says to John,
mark and L~mbourg. The lead- by the northern socialists, alongside
ers
of the socialist parties ·0f these . creeping capitulation by the Social
"You are drlnldng too much," he Is
likely to snap back, "You're always countries have for one reason or Demo&lt;;rals In West Germany- Now
saying that" lt Mary has spoken the another, primarily the economic In such situations as we confront we
truth. During detente and the mess they created. been voted out would not expect our allies to say:
VIetnam War, liberals would leave of power. But their lnfluence Is "It Is correct that the United States

Ill ( :ourl Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST 01' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

tllh

t~m~ r'"T"'--1~-r• t"'T"W:Sd·~

.

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
l"uhllshu

BOB HOEFLICH

Pi\T WHITEHEAD

Gt&gt;nera l

Assistant l'u hllsh e r / C ont rollro r

,\l ana~f'r

DALE ROTHGEB, ,JR.
Nf'W!Ii Ed itor

.o\ ME!\ffiER of Thi' ASHOCiat(&gt;d Pres~', Inland Dally Pn~ A."iHfk·latlun and ttw
American Newspaper Puhllldttl"!'' i\.&lt;;MC\aUon.

LETI'ER."' Ot' OPir-.lON

IU"e welcomed . They !ihould bt&gt; InN thiUl 300 word!'! km«.
are subject w editing and must hf• signed with name ,~ and teiephorH.•
numher . No UI\IOIA'f'ed letteno wW be puht.Loiht.-'d. Utters shouJd be in good ta.Hte. adctre.
sin« k'ii.M,"S, not perNOnalltlco; .
i\lllt-ot~ni

c

Reagan, O'Neill:
opposite ends of
political argument

·•.

I

nm~e.'I.L BE ONE Gi:AI-IP C~MHEN~IVE
FINAl. SiUt1't OF fUNeTIONAL. lU.ITE~AC"f...

)

r

•

!

~
" If it weren 'I lor these arguments on foreign
policy - life wouldn 'I be worth living. "

•
~Today ID history
. · Today Is Monday. May 23. the 143rd day ofl983. Thereare222days left In
.,._ the year.
: : 'roday's highlight In history : On May 23, 1937, the U.S. Supreme Court
~ upheld the censtltutlonallty of the Social Securtty Act.

•(

.

~;.... Letter

to editor

\

.

;.; : Favors Minersville tipple

'

.

:. I would like to answer Mr.
• Neutzllng's letter about the coal
: tipple at Kerr's Run. First. I would
like to ask hlm how come they
didn't finish that loading tipple
being built at MinersvUie? The
company said it would be loading
1,000 tons a day. -A coai blirge holds
900 to 1,000 tons of coal. How many
employees do you think they would
need at that tipple at Kerr's Run? I
say not over three people.
You say, Mr. Neutz!Jng, the ceal '
would be wet when they bring It Into
the barge to be loaded. The

,

company says the coal would be
crushed at the plt and washed at the
loading tipple. Running l,CXXJ tons of
coal a day at a strip mine you don't
need over eight or 10 men altogether. I happen to put all my life In
loadtng coal. 1 luiew aU of the
Neutzllngs, ·the old generation were
coal miners and they were wonder·
ful people. But, please, don't believe
everything these coal operators tell
you. I say, let them finish their
tipple at White Rock at MlnersvUie.
-Ben Batey.

-

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SE ABLE iO ~At' 11".. ,

. l:~r;r;,g~
,·~~I

. j lSul'-y~
'~·-~ sc~

0

0

------__;--..,._-------.......1

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•&lt;A

E'
. l'!ltl

@198~--iw.-~1\ULME

At the public troug"""h
______J_ac_kA_n_de_rso_n
WASHINGTON - The U. S.
Synfuels Corp. Is one of the biggest
government boondoggles of all
time. Created In 1980 to encourage
the search for alternatives to fossil
fuels. It Is funded bY the taxpayers
but without the restrictions that
apply to other pu~llc agencies.
Synfuels was given $15 billion to
spend. The Arnertcan people wlll be
lucky If they get a nickel's worth of
return on their Investment.
In a sinfully unrestrained orgy of
spending, Synfuels officials have
lavished money on the mselves In
huge salaries, outrageously generous fringe benefits and luxurtous
quarters that would shame a sheik.
My associates John Dlllon and
Corky .Johnson found these examples of the way they've been

slurping at the public trough :
-Salaries: A $40,CXX!consultant 's
report ordered by the cerporatlon's
blg shots In 1981 recommended that
top salartes be Increased to a high of
$190,CXXJ a year. Since Synfuels Is
exempt from federal centro! of pay
scales, the recommendations are
being lmple menied with gusto.
Eight Synfuels officials earn
more than Cabinet secretaries.
Five others are paid at the $69,CXXJ
Ca binet level. F'lfty-flve of the
agency's 177 employees make more
than $50,CXXJ.
Sy nfu e ls President Victor
Sehroeder is paid $135,CXXJ a year.
His wife, Kathryne, earns $4:i,CXXJ a
year as a specia l assistant to th~
corporation's chairman. One vice
president , Leonard Axelrod, makes

$1&lt;E,CXXJ. Two others recently got
raises that put thetf salaries above
$70,CXXJ a year. One we ll-paid
executive Is Ed Cox, who married
former President Nixon's daughter
1'rlcia. As general counsel and
secretary, he ea rns $76,CXXJ a year.
- F'rlnge Benefits: All Synfuels
employees are allowed to sock slx
j\ercent of their salaries away In a
savi ngs-retirement plan - with the
government contributing 50 percent more. The corporation also
pays the full cost of medical and
dental Insurance - unheard ol In
other government agencies .
- Luxurious accommodations:
Synfuels headquarters is esconced
i.1 four floors of prime office space
in downtown Washington. The
building Is equipped with sauna

You've

nlst China have "deteriorated" ask~ the president: What do you
say to those critics who say that
your foreign policy has been very
unsuccessful so far and that It' s
produced nothing'?"
Whoever ~s ked that question (the
tra nscript doesn't say) obviously
belongs to what might be called the
Camp David school of foreign
policy: He likes blg, ga udy agreements, with lots of bear hugs and
other " photo opportunities." The
fact that the Camp David agreement bogged down and Is currently
getting nowhere Is discreetly
Ignored.
Mr. Reagan was too polite to
challenge his queslloner's lmpllclt
assumption, choosing only to protest mildly that such ·criticism
produced "a very distorted picture." He pointed out that In
Lebanon "Beirut Is no longer being
shelled on. a dally basis around the
clock," and "we are down to
negotiating the withdrawal of foreign forces after eight years ol
combat and Invasion and harassment ." He also Insisted proudly
· that the NATO aillance had never
been more solid, and added that the
same was true of our relations with
Japan and our other Asian allles. As
for the pace or the arms negotiations, he recalled thetheSALTtalks
had taken seven years.
Fair enough. But If we can resist
the normal human Inclination to'
cencentrate on positive developments, we will soon realize that the
real test of any foreign pollcy Isn't
so much what does happen as what
doesn't. And It Is here that thE
Reagan foreign policy really
shines.
In the nearly two and a half years
since Ronald Reagan '_s Inauguration as president, the borders ofthe
communist world have not ex•

- -~--

---------~--

panded by a single square yard. In
the disastrous administra tion of
Jimmy Carter. the Soviet Union
Invaded Afghanistan, saw Its Vietnamese puppet occupy Cambodia.
effective took control of Nicaragua
and even staged a successful ceup
on the tiny but sovereign Caribbean
Island of Grenada. Under Gerald
F'ord, we watched South Vietnam
go down the drain at last. quickly
followed by Angola and Mozambique. Richard Nixon was so busy
holding hands with Chou En-lal that
he barely noticed when Libya (and.
for a time, Chile) changed sides.
~-•-"Sut where In the world has a
cemmunlst flag been raised lor the
first time, or a significant power
made common ca use with Russia.
since Ronald Reagan moved Into
the White House'? On the centrary,
Russia's Nicaraguan satellite Is
complaining loudly about guerrilla

Invasions from Honduras and Costa
Rica ; there are s ignificant rebel
force s Inside communist Cambodia
near Its Thai border: Mozambique
and Angola both have their oands
lull with domestic uprisings not fa r
short of civil wars; and not even a
hundred thousa nd Soviet troops
have yet managed to quash· the
resistance of the Afghan people.
Whose hand, do you suppose, Is
behind these variegated yet oddly
similar Impediments to the Krem lin's plans for world hegemony?
And yet here' s another statistic
for you : Since Reagan became
president, not . a single American
soldier, sailor or airman has died tn
combat anywhere In the world.
Carter blotted his copybook In the
Iranian desert. los ing eight American soldiers In his abortive attempt
to rescue the embassy hostages.
Furt.her back. every admlnlstra-

It

i.

I

I

'hare the spirit.
'hare there res11me1~,..

i

I

•

baths, squash and racquetball
courts a nd leases space tor $.'ll a
square foot - 50 percent higher
than less elegant offices leased by
the Genera l Services Administration for other agencies. Synfuels
officials signed a five-year, $10
million lease.
To achieve the appropriate degree of splendor, the Synfuels
sheiks spent $522,919 refurbishing
their headquarters. The costs Included $14,661 for the services of an
interior decorator, $374,739 for
furniture and $83,260 for carpeting
in the executive suites.
- Consultants: Though clearly
top-heavy with well-paid · professiona ls, Synfuels s tlll felt the need ol
outside help a nd hired 13 censultants at tees ranging up to $600 a

Foreign policy~_r_e_c_o_r_d_____;_al_ia_m_A_.R_us_h_er

worsen and relations with conlmU·

1

•• · ANV NOBO'VY WIL.L.

I

NEW YORK (NEA I - During
President Reagan's recent "minipress conference" with six journalIsts In the Oval Office, one of the
reporters- asserting that the arms
talks are stalled, the Middle
Eastern situation has "gotten

Berry's World

(&lt;~

)

0

Alter a brief lull, President Reagan and House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill Jr. have resumed their roles as symbols of the opposite ends of
political argument In the nation's capital.
This time, though, O'Neill, D-Mass .. Is Increasingly seeing himself as a
sort of a one-man "h.vth squad" when II cernes to Reagan.
O'Neill comes by the role easily_
· He talks of himself as the leader of the Democratic Party, "until such
time as my party has a presidential nominee." He feels a particular
responsiblllty as the censtltutlonal officer of the only branch of the national
government still under Democratic control.
But more to the point, O'Neill feels he Is the guardian of the Uberal
tradition of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the New Deal , a tradition that
Reagan and hls conservative allies have trted to dismantle as being the
root of skyrocketing budget deficits .
O'Neill thinks reporters are letting Reagan get away with too much.
After Reagan's news conference last week, O'Neill grumped that the
White House press cerps was ·'playing softball a nd throwing slow pitches. ··
He added that Reagan "wa~ fouling them off."
O'Neill, though, has resumed hls game of hardball.
F'or the first two years of Reagan's presidency, O'Neill could do little
more than watch as Reagan's troops on Capitol Hill rolled to a sertcs ol
victories.
Last !aU's congressional elections changed the picture a blt by
Increas ing the Democratic majority In the House and a llowing O'NeJU to
tighten hls grip on the chamber.
·
There were eve!!' rare signs ol bipartisanship early this year In passing a
rescue plan for the aUing Social Securtty system.
Now, however, Reagan and O'Neill have begun trading rhetoric at
almost a mldcampalgn level of Intensity.
Reagan last week attacked "deficit doctors" In Congress who are
"getting ready to operate on your wallet ."
O'Neill became upset with Reagan's latest round ol attacks, and aides
satct'The speaker directed them late last week to draw up a "fact sheet" to
back up O'Neill's contention that Reagan's pollcles are hurting the nation .
"I believe It' s cruel, the program ol the president ol the United States,"
O'Neill said on the House floor last week.
. The cencerns O'Neill cites follow a direct line from the New Deal.
"The promise or full employment , a promise of 13 mUllon jobs'? Thirteen
mUllen unemployed out there," O'Neill says.
O'Neill says he Is upset by the way · Reagan "sweet-songs" middle
America and blue-collar workers. "I don't like the way that It' s done, to be
- perfectly truthful. Because It' s the person who earns $:al,CXXJ or $25,CXXJ a
year, the fellow that handles the shovel or the fellow that drtves the truck,
hls famUies are being afk'Cted."

&lt;
~

BY 1'1-\E YEA~ '2033 WE \NILL
SEE THE l)L.'TIMA'TE fi!.ESUL.T .. ,

I fi6URE. 'TI-\A'T IF 'Tl-\15
~eN9 CONTINUei · ••

should deploy, unless the Soviet
Union withdraws, but we are
s,cared to say the truth." Rather
than speak plain language, spokesmen lor Norway, .Denmark and
West Germany are _saying - Is
there a more accurate term lor Itwhat the communists wish them to
say.
1. "The United States Is being
Inflexible." How? Because President Reagan began by saying we
would not deploy our weapons only
provided the R usslans withdrew
their weapons. Then, In the spring,
Mr. Reagan pulled back from zero
option and said we would be willing
to dlmlnlsh the deployment pro
tanto as the Soviet Union withdrew,
missile (U.S.) for missile (Soviet).
Why Is It that the soclallsls are not
accusing the Soviet Union of
lnflexlblllty? Remember: The objective is to restore the balance of
power In Europe as it stood up until
1979.
2. "We do not really trust the
United States' leadership. " That
charge might more plausibly be
made if the Amertcan bishops were
running American defense policy,
.b ut what Mr. Reagan Is doing Is
living up to a pledge made by
PPCSldent Carter at the behest of
Europeans. Whom DO they trust?
The Soviet.Union? Since they speak
only of their distrust of us, It
becomes, once again, clear that
they are frightened to speak
objective truthS.
3. "After allis said and done, the
United States Is just as bad as the
. Soviet Union." In a recent declaration, the Norwegian Socials called
first on the United States to respect
the sovereignty of Nicaragua, and
only as an afterthought mentioned
theSovlel Union'sdlrectlnvas!onof
Afghanistan.

lion since Kennedy's has witnessed
the death In combat of members of
the U.S. armed forces. But not
Ronald's Reagan's.
So Reagan's foreign policy has
been "unsuccessful'?" Only If your
Idea of "success" Is communist
coups and new People's Republics.
In those terms, Reagan has Indeed
been a howling failure.
An1 has his foreign policy
"produced nothing?" Right again
- there has not been a single
American killed In battle since that
windy day in Washington In
January 1981 when Ronald Reagan
looked from the West Front of the
Capitol down the Mall and across
the Potomac to Arlington Cemetery
and swore to defend the United
States and Its ConstltuUon. Who
would like to try to Improve on his
score?

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

�4 The Daily Sentinel

Page

Mol.,..

May 23, 1983

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

MilkH.pcwt, Ohio

Soto fans 10 in 4-3 victory

Twins, White Sox, Angels post victories
By BEN WALKER
AP Sports Wrler
Ron · Washington knew what to
expect from Boston reliever Luis
Aponte.
"For two years. I got him out
easily in winter ball," Aponte said
with a sigh. "If aced him quite a bit In
Venezuela and I always got him out
with a slider."
This time, Washington got even.
The Minnesota shortstop, hitting
only .186 a• he led off the top of the
13th inning, drUled Aponte 's first
pitch of the game into renway
Park' s left-field screen to lift the
Twins to a 4-3 victory over the Red
Sox.
In other Ame rican League
games, Chicago stomped Ka nsas
City 11·3, Detroit dr illed Texas 12-5,
Toronto blanked Baltimore 5-0,
Milwaukee topped Seattle &amp;-0, New
York beat Oakland 4-2 and California hammered Cleveland 9-2.
Washington's confidence also got
a boost from the blast, which was his
first of the season. He had only one
run batted In before the home r .

Washington played 11 years in the
minors before breaking Into' the
majors as a rooklelastseason at the
ageof30 . He hit .27llnll9games last
year, but was beaten out o1 starting
job this year by Lenny Faedo, who
suffered a pulled leg muscle. .
The gam&lt;'-winning homer spoiled
10 innings or fine relief by Boston ·s
Bob Stanley. Aponte feU to 3-2 while
Ron Davis, whopltched32-3innlngs,
improved to 2-1.
J 1m Rice accounted for all three
Boston runs with a two-run homer in
the !lrst inning and a solo shot, his
e ighth of the season, In the fifth .
Minnesota's Tom Brunansky tied
it at 3-3 wlthasolohomer In !he sixth.
White Sox n, Royals 3
Harold Baines belted his first two
homers of the season and drove In
three runs to highlight Chicago's
H;·hlt attack. The White Sox were
also helped by five Kansas City

errors.
Greg Luzlnskl homered for Chi.
cago, his thlrd blast in the
three-game series with the Royals.
Larry Gur~. lasted just t.hree
Innings In sufferln~~ straight

loss.
11gers 12, Raagers 5
Glenn Wllson homered twice and
Tom Brookens wimt 4-for-4 with a
llOmer as Detroit pounded out 18
hits.
The game was tied ~5 In the
seventh when Lance Parrish
singled In the go-ahead run and
Wilson followed with a three-run
homer. Brookens homered in the
eighth and Parrish added a two-run
double.
Larry Parrish and Bobby Johnson homered for Texas.
Blue Jays 5, Orioles 0
•J 1m Clancy halted Baltimore on
three hits, the second straight day
Toronto shut out the Orioles. Dave
St!eb did it on Saturday.
Clancy, 4-2, struck out four and
walked two and got hitting support
from Rance Mulllniks, who drove in
two runs with a triple and a double.
Cliff Johnson also homered as the
Blue Jays beat the Orioles for the
third straight ilme.
Brewers 6, Mariners 0
Five Milwaukee player~ homered

Welch breezes to 5-0 victory
By ;\s!lociated Press
It was billed as The Showdown.
But the Los Angeles Dodgers played
" F ernando Hideaway" and Tom
Terrific might just a' well have
stayed home.
Fernando Va lenzuela of the
Dodgers was scheduled to star1
Sunday against Tom Seaver and the
Nf,'W York Me ts - until Saturday
night's ra lnout played games with
the teams' starting rotations.
Tom Lasorda, the Dodgers'
manager, opted to go with Saturday
night's scheduled s tarter, Bob
Welch, and hold Valenzuela for
IDnlght's game in Philade lphia.
Mets .Manager George Bamberge~
chose to bounce Ed Lynch and stick
with Seaver.
It was no contest. Welch stymied
the Melson a two-hitter - Seaver's
single In the fifth Inning and Danny
Heep'sdouble in the ninth- and the
Dodgers breezed to a 5·0 vlctory,

raking Seaver for three home runs,
a two- run shot by Mike Marshall and
two solos by Steve Yeager.
E lsewhere Sunday in the National
League, Cincinnati edged Chicago
4-3, Montreal blanked San Fran·
cisco 2-0 and Atlanta defeated St,
Louis 7-5 II) 11 innings. Two games
were rained out: San Diego at
Philadelphia and Houston at
Pittsburgh.
Welch, working on a no-hitter with
two out in the fifth Inning, chose to
try and sUp a low-Inside fastball past
Seaver. He c hose wrong. Seaver
lined the 2-1 pitch cleanly Into left
field . ·
Ye ager, replacing Injured
catcher Mike Scloscia, hit his fUth
and sixth homers In the third and
eighth Innings, the most he's hit In
one season since 1979.
E"pos 2, Giants 0
Montreal's Charlle Lea walked

six San Francisco batters and
scattered only five hits In eight
Innings before Jeff Reardon took
over and nailed dQwn hls thli'd save.
The Giants committed five errors, and both Montreal runs were
unearned. "Even with the errors,
we didn't score any runs, and you
don't win too many. games that
way, ·· said San Francisco Manager
Frank Robinson. "But we gave
them two runs, so the worst it should
have been was 0-0."
Braves 7, CardlniLis 5 .
Bruce Sutter, St. Louis' relief ace,
was vlctlrnlzed by his own in1ield as
the Bravel; completed a three-geme
sweep of !lie Cardinals.
He walked Brett Butler with two
away in the 11th inning and Butler
stole second . Then shortstop Mike
Ramsey threw away Rafael Ramirez ' Infield 1\ltandButlersprtnted
home with Atlanta's winning run.
Ramirez reached second on the
error and scored on Cia udell
Washington 's single.

Scoreboard ... - Earns
district
honors
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KAN SAS CITY HOVAL.I i-f{('('all«t Bud
1Um•k , pllt'hr&gt;r, from Omaha of Utt&gt; Afn('r
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first biut'ffWl , Omaha.

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A Meigs junior Shawn Eads was
crowned the district's 400 meter
champion Saturday as he set a new
school record (his own record 1with
a time of 51.3 at Ironton.
Also moving onto regional competition this Wednesday at Muskin·
gum Is the girls' 400 and liil meter
relay teams. They finished fourth in
-both categories In the distrtct. The
team Is comprised of Paula
Swisher, Linda Stewart, Rhonda
Haddox, and Carmele Turner.
Narrowly missing qualitylng tor
the regional was Turner In the 100
meter 'd ash, coming In fifth, one
spot back from thf' quallfytng
position .
Eads came In fifth in the 200
me ter dash while the Meigs boys'
3200 relay team of Mike Kennedy,
Craig Slnclalr, Chag Williams and
Jon Perrin finished fifth. The 1600
relay team, made up of same as
above e xcept Eads for Kennedy,
came In seventh.
•·
Kennedy also tln!stu!.'i seventh in
the !m meter run. Eads has now
won the SEOAL meet, sectional,
district, and was named the most
valuable player In the SEOAL
(boYS) ,'

·BookmakerS
will appear
in court today
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Four
Maryland men accused. in the Art
Schlichter gambling case were
scheduled to appear In federal court
at 1:30 p.m.' today, and their
attorneys were to notify the court of
any plea-bargaining arrangements .
The four, to whom Schlichter says
he lost Sll9,00J between January
and March, are to go on trial June 6
In U.S. District Court here. Today's
hearing was to give Judge John
Holschuh an opportunity to rule en
motions prior to the trial.
Schlichter, a reserve quarterback
lor the Baltimore Colts, was
suspended Indefinitely from the
National F:.ootball League last week
by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle
because of the gambling Investigation. HJs attorney says the former
01\lo State University star Is
undergoing therapy for compulsive
gambling.
Those c harged in the case include
Joseph Serlo, 24; Samuel R. Alascla,
30; Charles T . Swift, 41; and Harold
Brooks. 26.
No plea arrangeme nts have yet
been made In the case, but the
Columbus Citizen-Journal today
quoted unnamedsourcesclose tothe
case who said plea negotiations had
been held.
U.S. Attorney Christopher Barnes
would not comment on specifics of
the case, but told the newspaper,
"Just looking at the statistics, the
vast majority of federal cases are
pled (plea bargained) ."
Robert CahUl, who represents
Serio, told the newspaper he has

been negot~ting with prosecutors
on a possible plea bargain. Attorneys for Alascla and Swift said it was
possible they would discuss plea
arrangements with federal officials
today.

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L.A&gt;fl'bvn', !nflcolrk'r-ootfit'ldtr.

~Iebel,

Becky ·Eichinger, Kelly Ginther and Aleahla
Holsinger. Back row - Lori HudMD, Krlsll Gaddis,
Coach Pl\!11 Douthitt, Margaret Homer, Tammy
Calaway, Angle Spencer and IJnda 'lboma.

Melissa Thomas,

7 6ers defeat Lakers

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS I &lt;!1·966 I

A Dlv~lon of Multimedia, Inc.

PHn.ADELPHIA (AP ) - CUnt
RJchardson' s change of shoes at
halftime proved slgnlficant as the
· Philadelphia 76ers beat the Los
Angeles takers In the opening game
of the National Basketball Associa- ,
tlon championship series.
Rlcliardsor1, having · made the
switch to ease hlsachlrtgfeet, scored
10 points In the third period when the
76ers rallied and went on to beat the
defending champion Lakers, 113-

Publlshl'd every afternoon. Monday
through Frida y, Ill Court Stre&lt;et, by the
Ohio Vall(&gt;y Publishing Co mpany· Mul tlmedla . In c .. P om eroy, Ohio 45769. 9'32·
2156. Seco nd class poslag t&gt; pa id a t Po·
meroy. Ohio.
Membf&gt;r: The Assoclaled P ress, I n·
la nd Oaii.Y Pre ss Assoc l,a ton and th{'
America n NeW spaper Publisher s As·
so clatlon. National Advertis lnJZ Represen tative, Branham Ne wspaper Sales.
73J Third Avenue, New York, New

York 10011.
POSTMASTER : S&lt;&gt; nd address to The

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Dall ySentlnel.lll Cour t St. . Pomr roy,
Ohio 45769. .

The Lakers, who heat Philadelphia In the finals twice in the last
three }'ears, get a chance toeven the
beSt-of-se\ien series In· the second
game here Thursday nl,l(ht .
Moses Malone scored '1:1 points
and grabbed 18 rebounds , whlle
Andrew Toney contributed 25 points
an,d Julius Erving 20, but Richard·
son appeared to receive most of the
accolades.
RJchardson, a 6 foot, 3 guard from
Seattle, was scoreless in the first
half and wasO for 3from the field. He
had a valid excuse- a badly bruised
bone In the small toeofhlsright foot.

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MAI L SUBSCRIPTIONS
ln~ld e Ohio
l:l WCf' kS .. .............................. , $\4 .04

" It was klUing me during the first
half when I wore low shoes. I put on
high shoes at haHtlrneand they were
more comfortable," he explained.
He went on to make It uncomforta ble for the Lakers, who hadn't lost
the opener of a seven-game playoff
In theit previous ntne .. RichardsOn
shot 7 for 12 and added a free throw
for 15 points.
The Sixers, who trailed at
halftime, 57-54, broke the gameopen
In the third quarter with an 8-0 spurt
that turned a tie into a 7().64 lead.
Richardson hit an 18 foot jumper to
start the rally .
The ·Lake(s , who are. trying to
become the first ·team to repeat as
NBA champions since the Boston
Celt!cs of1968-69, kept coming back.
They sliced the lead to 70-66, but
Richardson hit a 17-foot jumper.
L.A. edged to within threeat74-71,
and Richardson swished an 18-foot
jumper, stole a pass and drove for a
layup, widening the 76ers' lead to
78-71 . The Lakersgotto!ll-75,and the
man In the hlgh shoes hit another
long jumper.

26 Wet:' ks ............................... $27.30
52 Wt.'ek s .............................. $5 1. 48

Outside Ohio
13 W('ek s .: ......................... ...... Sl:J.21
26 Week s ................ ... ..... ....... $29.64

~============-L~~~~~~~~~~~:

ROCK SPRINGS - With a
fivl'-run uprising In the fifth Inning,
the Meigs Marauderette reserves
ended their season with 11 consecu ·
live wins and a 9-6 triumph over
Logan In a game played here
recently .
Cqach Wally Ha tfleld' s crew
started the year with two one-run
losses and have been spotless since.
Although SEOAL standings were
not complied, the Meigs reserves
didn't lose a single game to league

PRE-REGISTER

TINY TOT NURSERY SCHOOL
2-S YEARS
Sessions Available Two or Three Days A Week
AGES

9:00 A.M. • 11 :00 A.M. OR
1:00 P.M. - 3:00 P.M.
LIMITED SESSIONS

toes.
Barb Hatfield was the leading

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL:

liltter for the little Marauderettes as

TEACHER, SHELLEY LAW
304-273-9489
or 304-273-8165

she clubbed two doubles and a
single. Other hitters were Daphne
Dillard with a triple and Jodi MU!er,

rI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Meigs Fellowship of Christian
Athletes will hold a four mile
inarathon run on Saturday, May 28,
at Meigs High School beginning at
11 a .m.
Entry lee Is $3 and entry blankS
may be picked up at Meigs High
School. Entry tees are to be mailed
to Fenton Taylor at Meigs High
School
• Participants may be age five to 16
and 17 and up. Trophies will be

When you need a vacation

#

......

"He looked close to being beat in
the seventh and eighth (Innings ).''
concurred Cubs Manager Lee Ella.
"But he kicked it In In the last two.
When you've got a power pitcher . - - - - - - - - - - - like that, you let hlm stay if he feels
strong enough. He's their ace."
Rookie Gary Redus paced the
Reds eight-hit attack with a homer
- his seventh - and a double. He
also scored twice. .
Asked whether he was surprised
at the sudden power In his bat,
Rrous replied that hitting major
league pitching is a matter of
selection.

·. HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE. OH.
PHONE 992-5776
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING SEASON
Complete line of vecetable and beddina
pllnts. loti~&amp;~ pllnts and hlnaina
baskets. Also a 11111 selection ot
shrub!lefy. and dward fruit t11es.
OPE" DAILY 9 'to 5 .
SUNDAY 1 to 5

ROYAL OAK PARK

Open Mem_orial Day Weekend
SAT., SUN., MON., MAY 28, 29, 30
AT 1:00 P.M.
CLOSED MAY 31st
WILL RE-OPEN JUNE 1st

Weds. thru Sun. Open at 1 :00
Closed Mondays - Tuesdays
These Hours Are In Effect
For the Entire Season

-

Wind Indicator

Logan ............................. W1 nt 1-6 4 'l
Meigs ...................... ... .... 100 :fll x-9 R 5
FetE (l.P) and Krannltl . Hatfield ~WP)

and J. MUicr.

awarded to the first place winners,
male and female In each age group.
Also, the youngest male and female
and the oldest male and female
par1lclpants will receive tro[lhles .
All runners a re encouraged to
pre-register by May 21 . They may
register the day of the race.
however. For additional lnforma·
tlon call 992-2158.
Below Is an e ntry form .

Woolly Warms
Barometer

Ground Hog

Name .............................................. ....... .. " ............ Age .... Sex .. ..

Address ...... .... .................................... .... ........... ............. ·· ........ ·
............ ........ ..... ........ .... ... ....... .... .... .
'

· Yes ...... No ..... .

··.

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•

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FREE LOVESEAT
pc. living raom IUIW.

$39995

PORTLAND
MEMORIAL DAY CELEBRATION
'

SUNDAY, MAY 29th·
.. FREE ADMISSION"

•

Physician &amp; General Surpon

I'

OFFICE HOURS: Tuesday 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Office located at 271 N. 2nd, Micldleport OH.
(Behind Villace Pharmacy)

At Buf(irwton Island Park. Portland, OH.

•,

Ph. 992-2255 (Middleport office)
If n6 answer, call:
In Point Pleatant 1-304-675-5267

Name -School
Yr.
Natalie Lambert · x, Meigs ..... .. ........ ...... ....... .. .. .. ........... .......... 12
Kirn KottTliJ . x, Logan ........ , .. .. .. .. ............... ...... ... ... ............... . 12
Lisa McCort . x, Logan ........................................................ ..... lO
Rhonda Pendleton, Waverly .... ........... ........ .. ..................... .' ....... 12
Linda Whitehead, Ironton ........................ ......... .... ...... ...... ... ... .. 11
Nancy Evans, Gallipolis ......... .................. ................ .. ............ 12
Angela Mollica, Athens .. ......... ................. .............. ............. ...... 12
Crystal Patrick, Waverly ......... ... ...... .. .......... ............ ............ .... 11
Renee Halley, Gallipolis ................................ .. ............. .. ......... . 11
x - Una'n lmous
SEcONDTEMt
Paula Russell, GaU!poiis .. ....... ....................... ....... ... ................. 10
Kim Hayes, Ironton ....... .... .......... .. .... ..................... ................. 11
Teresa Barnes, Athens ....................... .. .. ...... .. ........ .. ................ 11
Carrie Cook, Logan ........ ............ .. .... ......... .... .......................... 11
Kelly Check. Waverly ... ........... ... .............................................. 12
Dee Vermillion, Logan ....................... .... .. ........ .. ... .. , ......... .. ..... 12
Cindy Crooks, Meigs ............. .. ..... .. .................................... .. . 12
Sherry Russell. Athens .. ....... ................................................... 10
Krts Kroner, Athens .... .............. .. .... ............ ...... .... ... ....... ......... 12
Karen White, Athens .... ....... ... ..................... .. ................... ....... 12
HONORABLE MENTION - Angie McFann (LOGAN) , Judy
Komarami (JACKSON), Nancy Adams (WAVERLY). Mary Lyru
Jones (IRONTON), Paula Horton (MEIGS). Penny Balle &lt;ATHENS)
and Shelly Dodson (GALLIPOLIS) .

me," SotosaJd.

"Sure I'm surprised -I've never
hit that many that quick," he said.
"It's a matter of getting the pitch you
want and then you can't help but ill\
the ball . But my power Is even
surprising me. I used to barely
make the fences."
• The Reds scored twice In the first
inning off losing pitcher Chuck
Rainey, 4-4 .

Please' Indicate )Vhether you would like to enter a one mlle run on
the above date.

Whene.rty
youAmerlc8n
buy dlla
new
2

RIOfARD L. SLACK~ M. D.

(GIIW&gt; SOFTBALL)
FIRSTTEMI

"I told (pitching coach BW)
Fischer that I didll 't think I could
f!nlsh In the sixth or seventh. But
then I figured as long as I have a
lead, Iwtllstay !n.ltthey'regolng to
beat me, they have to do it against

Marathon run slated May 28

Funseth wins PGA seniors event
ear Uer rounds of 66 and 67 on the
6,606-yard Pinehurst Country Club
No. 2 cdurse. His 198 total was 18
strokes under par, matching the
lowest 54-hole score ever posted.
Miller Barber also shares the
record on three consecutive rounds
of 66 In ·the 1982 Suntree Classic at
Melbourne, Fla .

All SEOAL G~rls'
softball selections

Julie Roush, and Kim Eblin each
had singles.
Hatfield fanned eight and walked
11 whlle Febs struck out three and
walked nine for Logan. The five run
filth was started on Hatfield' s
one-out double, four walks, and a
hases loaded single by Miller.
In Meigs' final at bat•on the year,
reserve Checyl Burris came off the
bench to pinch-hit, drawing a walk
and stealing second. A pinch·
runner, Gina Follrod, scored when
Hatfield doubled .
By innings:

·· ····················· ··-············

PINEHURST, N.C. (AP ) -Rod
Funsethmadejustonebogeyduring
the Inaugural $150,00J Hall of Fame
tournament for PGA seniors,
matched the lowest score In the
h]story of the tour and won the
tournament by nine shots to collect a
$25,00J prize.
· The Napa, Calif., native fired a
seven-under-par 65 Sunday after

batting against Mark&gt; Soto Is
that he. throws the ball so bard It
travels twice as last when hit. 1be
bad lll'WS Is trying to hit lt.
"It was a tough game, a vecy
tough game," the Clnci!IMti 11ght ·
hander said after scattering just
tour hits and striking out 10 to give
the Reds a 4-3 deCision Sunday over
the Chicago Cubs In a game tw1ce
delayed by rain.
"You warm up and then you have
to sit down for almost an hour," he
said. ''1l!En you warm up again and
you sit down again," be concluded.
But over the distance Solo, G-2,
made just two mistakes. The first
resulted in a two-run homer by Jay
Johnstone In the second inning that
knotted the game at 2-2. The second
mislakewasa3-2deUverythatLeon
Durham turned Into his seventh
horner o1 the season to pull the Cubs
wlthln 4-3 in the bottom or the
seventh.
"When he (Durham) hit it, I knew
It was out," said Solo, who moved
lrito second place on the National
League strikeout list, tolallng 66 to
PhUadelphla' s Steve Carlton's 77
this season.

Marauderette reserves finish
season with 11 straight wins

52 W£&gt;eks ................................. $.'Hi.21

When you want a va ca ti o n ,
c hances are you dese.rve it! And you
deserve the mon ey to get you w h e re you're
going- and keep you th e re awhile - in style. So
phone us . If you 've got an itch to travel , we 've got
the scratch! Call today.

fttootdln~t

of
tht• Eastt'fn l.e!tKUI•. Optloni&gt;d Purn AI·
tRmlnuto, pllt"tJJ:.or, 10 f'orT1ood OC tht• Jlll ·
t•lnC' Coast Le!lflUI' 'l"rlldi.'d Sid MOf\Rt',

l&gt;ltdv·r. to th&lt;&gt; SIU1

Beth Berkldmer, Rhonda

0

PtiiLAD ELPHIA l1 UI LLI I-:S-Roclllkd
lbtJ

EASTERN SOn'BALL- 'lbe Easlem Eaglelie
soflbaD learn cornpleled a line $eason reeenlly.
Pictured are, front, Lori Ritchie, l(rls Wilson, Lea
Ami Gau:, Bealla Deeter and Patty Jones. Middle -

DOESN'T UKE CALL- New York Yankees Billy Mariln argues
wtlh second base umpire Durwood MerriD after Oakland A's · BIB
Almon, left, stole second base in I he elgbth Inning Sunday aftemoon at
the Oakland Coliseum. The Yankees won 4-2. (AP Laserphoto).

.,

,.

ClUCAGO (AP) ~'lbegliodnews
a~t

homers.

\'l'fl a nti Bill .loh.ruion, p hc h('fli. from tlkPh!IH!Fiphla Phllllt'S fll r Wlllll' Hr•man

N.\TIONAL I.Er\(U/E
t:A.~T DIVI&gt;liUN

,

to back Mike Caldwell's seven-hit
shutout.
Cecil Cooper's two-run horne!' off
Gaylord Perry, U, opened the
scoring In the thin!. Gorman
Thomas , Ted SimmOns, Ed Romero
and · Jim Gantner belted solo
Caldwell, 4-4, struck out none and
walked one for his second shutout o1
the season.
Yanlt.ees4, A's%
Rick Cerone's RBI single snAPPed
a 2-2 tie in the top of the ninth,and
Jerry Mumphrey followed with a
sacr!ftce Dy to 1Ift New York. The
rally was fueled when relleyer Tom
BurgmeierthrewBertCampanerts'
sacrifice llwlt Into center !leld for an
error.
•
RonGuldry.~3. tooka2-0ieadlnto
the eighth before Tony PhliUps
singled and Rickey Henderson 1\lt
hls thlrd homer of the season.
Angels 9, lndlmM 0
Bruce Klson tossed a four-hitter
and Daryl Sconiers smacked a
three-run homer to trigger a
five-run fourth inning.
California broke open·a scoreless
game by belting Len Barker, 4-3, in
the fourth. Along with Sconiers'
homer, Bob Boone, Doug DeCinces
and Tim Foil doubled in the big
inning.
DeClnces had four hits and a
sacrifice fly whlle Rod Carew raised
his major league-leading average to
.449 with three singles.
Klson, &amp;-1, struck out five and
walked two.

The Daily Sentinel-Pug-S

Bluegra11 Music By:
Shade Valley &amp; Bluegrass Heritage
Sponsored by: Proffitt's Grocery

,.

1:00 P.M. to 6:00 P.M.

502 Second St., 446·4113
One Block West of Court House

Picnic Area ~vallable

:·

L..----------'----------...J,
. ''
'

,. .

''

You don't need to be a weather
expert to predict your electric bill.
Every month you get an electric bill. And
every month It'S different. Because your elec·
trlc usage varies with the changing seasons.
usually, It's up In the winter, down In
spring, up again In air conditioning season,
and down again In fall.
·
so how can you put together an Intelligent
household budget If you can't predict what
your electric bills will be?
switch to our Equal Payment Plan.
With the EQual Payment Plan, we'll bill
you a fixed arnount each,month based on

your average yearly electric usage.
Your account will be reviewed every six
months to see that vour budget payment Is

l~~~~~;~~; ;~g~~s~~~;.eeWt¥: ~~~~~ev~~~;,

receive a settle·UP blllbr a credit. '
Want to smooth out the ups and downs In
your electric bill and take the guesswork out
of your budget? Get on the EQual Payment
Plan.
· How? Just contact us. We'll take It from
there.

we give it our best.

OHIO POWER COMPANY.

.'

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.·-..
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�Page

~The Daily Sentinel

Calendar
TIJESDAY
CHESHIRE
Cheshire
Kyger sixth grade recognition '
will be Thesday, 7::llp.m. at the
school.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Holiness Association wUI
be holding Its monthly rally at
the Chester Church of the
Nazarene on Tuesday, May 24.
The Rev. Herb Grate will be the
speaker. The public Is Invited to
attend.
- HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will meet Tuesday, May 21, at
the town hall at 7:30 p.m. The
Sloan fa mily will be lea tured In
musical numbers. All members
are urged to attend. The blood
pressure clinic scheduled for
May 24 will not be conducted.
POME ROY- XI Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty, 6: 30 p. m. Tuesday at the
home of Annie Chapman, meetIng and picnic.
HOBSON - A revival wUJ be
held at ·the Hobson Church of
Christ in Christian Union Tuesday through May 29 at 7:30p.m.
nightly. Evangelist is David
Smith and song evangelists wUI
be Tom and Teresa Moore.
Pastor William Crabtree Invites
the public to attend.
HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
sonv!Ue OES Past Matrons wll!
meet Tuesd ~y at 7:30 p.m. at the
home ol Bernice Hoffman.
CHESTER - The Meigs
County Holiness Association wUI
hold Its monthly rally at the
Chester Church of the Nazarene
on Tuesday. The Rev. ' Herb
Grate will be the speaker. The
public Is Invited to attend.
POMEROY - The junior and
senior auxiliaries of Drew Webs·
ter Post 39, American Legion,
will meet Tuesday at 7::ll p.. at
the post home. Mrs. Gerald
Rought assisted by the juniors
will present a poppy program.
MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
dleport Chamber of Commerce
will meet Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m.
at the LaSa lle. The Rega tta and
the membership drive will be
discussed.
POMEROY - Past Matrons,
. Pomeroy Chapter 186 OES will
meet Tuesday at 7: 30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Alfred C w.

Ash birt
Mlck and Stephanie Ash, Syra·
cuse, announce the birth of their
second child, Matthew Justin, born
May 12 at Holzer Medical Center.
The Infant weighed eight pounds
and two ounces and measured ~Y.i
Inches In length.
Maternal grandparent.• are Mr.
and Mrs. Bobby Ord, Syracuse.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Ash, Syracuse.
Maternal grea t-grandparents
are Mrs. Wilma Hinerman , New
Haven, and John Ord, Akron .
Paternal great-grandparents are
Mrs. Thelma Hawley, Minersville,
and Pearl Ash, Pomemy.
The couple are also the parents of
a son, Michael, age three.

Pomc:or Middleport, Ohio

Cancer Answerline

Smoking does interfere
with body's immunities
A regular feature prepared by the
American Cancer Society to help
save your life from cancer.
QUESTION: Does cigarette
smoking Interfere with the body's
Immune system?
ANSWERIIne: Yes, according to
researchers at HaJVard University,
Massachusetts General Hospital ,
and a leading pharamaceuttcal
firm. The researchers analyzed
circulating T -cells which play an
lmportan t part In controlling the
body's ability to ward otf cancer
and other diseases. They studied
the T-ceUs In heavy smokers and In
nonsmokers. They found lrrel!lllari·
ties In the T-cell functions of heavy
smokers that suggested their immune response was undermined
and might lead to tumor growth. On
the other hand they found that the
Irregularities disappeared In the
heavy smokers six weeks a!ter they
stopped smoking.
QUESTION: What are the symptoms of colorectal cancer?
. ANSWERIIne: There are certain
conditions considered warning signals of this type of cancer, but a visit
to one's doctor must be made for the
correct diagnosis. If you notice a
change In bowel habits, experience
persisting abdominal pain, or find
blood In the stool, go at once to a
physician for attention. These
cancers are highly curable when
detected early.
QUESTION: What is the differ·
ence bi!tween a "simple" and a
"rad)cal" mastectomy{
ANSWER!Ine: Breast cancer Is
currently treated by several dltfer·
ent methods. There Is no one
approach suited to the needs of all
patients with breast cancer. The
decision regarding the extent of the
surgical procedure, the use of
radiation therapy, chemotherapy
or hormonal manipulation Is based
upon the findings of the local
physical examination, additional

studies, the kind of cancer reported
by the pathologist after microscoplc examination, the age and
preference ot the patient and the
Considered judgment of the respon·
Sible physician. Each patient with
breast cancer must be Individual!zed. All women are encouraged to
discuss· with their physicians the
options available, the details ot the
recommended approach and the
reasons tor the specltlc procedure
being recommended.
Whenbreastcancerlsfuund,the
appropriate operation may vary ,
As a general rule, lesser proceduri!S
which preserve the breast are
usually reserved for very early
breast cancer- called Stage I -In
which the cancer is small and there
Is no clinical evidence ot spread to
the axUiary lymph nodes. These
procedures may Include removal of
the tumor and some adjacent
breast tissue (lumpectomy, tumorectomy, partial mastectomy, ty.
lectomy). or removal of the quad·
rant (25 percent of the breast)
which contains the cancer and
partial removal of axillary lymph
nodes (sampling), or complete
axUiary lymph node reoval. The
above surgtal procedures are fre.
quentiy followed by radiation ther·
apy to the remaining breast tissue
on the same side.
Surgical procedures which remove the breast oodes Include:
1) Simple or Total Mastectomyremoval of the breast only.
2) ModJtJed-Radical Mastectomy
- ~moval of the breast and the
axUiary lymph nodes.
3) Radical Mastectomy - removal of the breast, underlying
muscles and axillary lymph nodes.
When a breast Is removed, every
attempt is made to obtain the best
cosmetic and t!Je functional result
to fac!Utate possible reconstruction.
For more lnlorma lion call Meigs
ACS at 992-7531.

Mark Memorial Day with a gift
to Meigs Unit of Cancer Society
On Memorial Day, the ACS of orial Day. Such a gtft not only
Meigs County Chapter honor the honors the memory of others, It also
memory of those who hav!' gone Insures the best hope of a long,
before, Including those who have healthy life for you and your loved
died of cancer.
ones.
Cancer will eventually strtke two
Your gtft helps cancer victims; It
!amities out of three. Unless the educates the public to the early
current cure rate lmpmves through warning signs of cancer; it funds a
research, two out of three victims basic research Into the treatment
will die. The English writer, John and ~ure of cancer.
Donne, said It best: Ask not for
It you would like to give a
whom the bell tolls ... It tolls for thee Memorial Day gtft, mall to American Cancer Society, Meigs County
Many families have adopted the Unit, P. 0 . Box 6!rl, Pomeroy, Ohio
practice of making a gttt to the 45769.
American Cancer Society on Mem-

Middleport Presbyterians attend
Scioto Valley meeting in London
Several members of the Middleport First United Presbyterian
Church were In London Tuesday to
attend the Sciota Valley Presbytery
meeting.
Going were the Rev. Wanda
Johnson, Hal Johnson, daughter
Vonnie, Mrs. Jack Sorden, Mrs'.
Dwight Wallace, Paul Haptonstall
and Kenneth Welch.
Afternoon speaker was the mod·

erator of the General Assembly
from Atlanta, Ga., the Rev. James
H. Costen of Johnson C. Smith
Seminary of Atlanta.
The Middleport group visited
briefly with former members of the
church, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell
Probacso, London, who were attending and working at the church
that day.

.....

.
had become man's chief occupation. Few of our old soldiers stUI had
any parts of their uniforms. But one
had a nfe, another had a bass drum
and still another had a "tenor"
drum, the small kind we now calla
trap drum.
The one crossroad In our vUiage

now

Forest Run

UMW

United Methodist Women met at
the bonne of · Opal Kloes with , A)iprox!mately 50 attended the
Margaret .Eichinger as assistant Forest Run United Methodist
hostess.
Women mother-daughter banquet
Mrs. Klbes presented a reading,
"Somebody's Mother," and Helen Tuesday evening.
Nancy Me-·td gave lnvocaTeaford led the devotions from the tlon . preceding
'"'"'
dinner. Attending
book, "Perfect Peace." Dw1ng the
sec~·ry's
'~""
repori ' It was s tated were mothers, daughters, and
that 183 sick and shut-In cans.were grandchildren of the Forest Run
made. "Have a Good Day" tracts Church and women of the Minerswere ~·~buted.
ville Church were special guests.
uuou'

dent, was presented In the sanctu·
ary. She ·conducted a responsive
reading carrying out a theme,
Portralto!Molhers.·Readlngswere
given by Mary Neruie, Hilda Yeater
and Edith Sisson. A skit was given
by Mrs. Hollon with Klrn and
Rochelle Jenklt!s playing children;
Jennifer Arnold, a teenager; Sandy
HB.wley, a bride; Faye HamUton
the
nd
and Klrn Sayre as mo r a
chlld· Kathleen Scot! and KJrn a nd
Roc~lle Jenkins as grandmother
and grandchllctren. Roseann Jenh
a1
klns and daug ters sang -s ever
songs and Betty ElJackwood sang,
"Because."

"·,
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The Daily Sentinel
~-

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ELECTRIC
SERVICE
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.PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF GRACE L JI VIDEN, DECEASED
C..eNo. 24068
NOTlCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF RDUCtARY
On May 4th 1983. tn th e
Me•gs County Probate Cour t
Case No 24058 June Sherod
8708 Ranch Or1ve. Chester land Ohto 44028 was ap oo •nted E)(ecutn.: o f the estate
o f Grace L J1v1den de.ceased
late of Rac•ne. Me•gs County
OhtO
Robert E Bu ck
Probate Judge/
Cle r~

tNVmNG
SEALED BIDS
NOTlCE FOR BID
The Tuppers Platn s-Chester
Wafer Otstflct tS •nvotmg btds for
a 1983 Model one ( 1) ron cab
and chaSSIS truck with the
followtng spect ftca ttons
60 ca b to rear axle
Duals on rear - w•th mud
and snow ttres
6 ply mes. fr ont and rear
Sta btl •ze , Bar from and rear
Jr West Coast mtrrors
Rubber fl oor mat s
Heavy duty v1nyl seat
· Spa re wheel and 6 pfv ttre
Heavy duty auxt llary rea r
sprtngs

V-8 -350 360 Engone
Power steertng
B1d s will be opened June 6
1983 at 1 00. at the Tuppers
Pla,ns Ch es ter Watet 0 1stnct
offtce. 39561 Bar 30 Road.
Reedsville Oh1 0 The D1stn ct
reserves the rtgh t to reJect any
or all btds

i51 23 30. i61 6 J lc
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Power Inc
No 3
Lane Rou1e No 1
Ohto 4 5776 ha s been
coal mtntng petrn tt
D-0049 10 conduct coal mtn
•ng opera t ton s tn M etgs
County Sutton Townshtp. Sec tton 2 on the propert tes o f
Edward and Ruby Baet and
Janet Grueser
The permtt area tS lor.ated on
the Chest er 7 5 m•nu te USG S
Quadrangle and encompasses
10 2 acres The perm•nee has
ob tatned a road permtt to m.ne
wt thin 100 feet nf CDt '"'·"'l Rn:u1
30 at the loclltlon orescnbed
Coal
County
Shade.
1ssued

CARPET
$)295
Good Sclcction Of

....
IN

loot ... '""

Ill

IQ

IIIO:.W
fll ........

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J'll ""-""

IU-0..1

w.o.....

Jq

111

c- ..

u-··"-• Onoo..,_,_
n._..,.__
Upton-•

..

17 IJ~&gt;""'"' ¥

lJpool!lWo.do

Su~'-"'"

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tl oo
••oo

Public Notice

above The road permtt tS valid
fro m May 11. 1982 to May 11

1992

'

l'he co'a l mmmg perrntt h S~S
been rfJ\ItS ed to comply w tth the
current law and rules tS availabl e for publtc revtew at the
DIVI ston ' s Ot strtct OH1ce tn
Athens
OHto and at the
DtviSton s Columbus off•ce
Any wrttten comments or
request s f01 tnforma l conferen ces should be sent to the
01VtS10n of Reclamat•on. Foun·
latn Square Butldtt"lg B-3
':olum bus. Ohto 43244

Public Notice
NOTlCE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPOATATlON

Cotumbua. Ohio
MIV t3, 1983
Contnlet Btl• Leg..r
Copy No. 83-670
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
FR-000Rt121)
SR-981(31
Sealed proposa ls wtlf be
rece•ved at th e off•ce o f the
Otrector of the Ohto Depart ment of Transportation. Colum ·
bus Oh•o. until 10 00 A M ,
Oh to Standard Ttme. Tu esday
June 14 1983 for tmp rove·
ments tn
Parts 1 thru 5 tnclustve are
off ered as one con tract an d wt ll
be c onstdered on the basts of
the total amount btd

Porto 1 lhru 6
Gal !ta and Metgs Cuunltes.
Oht o on one Bndge o n U S
Rou te 35 Sectton 17 31 . and
two brtdges on State Route
2 18
Sec t tons 12 37 and
13 13 m Galha County, and
four bndges on State Route 7,
vanous secttons on Me•gs
Countv. by ovetlaytng wtth latex.
modtlted co ncrete. and other
1elated work
Protect Length 958 54
feet or 0 182 mile

Work l ength teet or 0 324 m11e

1 708 54

The Oh1o DH'partment of
Trans portatton hereby nottftes
all btdders that tl will afftrma·
ttvely tns ure that tn any contract
entered tnto pur suant 10 tht s
adver1 tsement. mtnofl ty bus•·
ness enterpnses Wtll be af,
forded full opportun tty to sub·
m1t b•ds rn re sponse to tht s
,nv, tatton and wtll not be
dtScrtm tnated agatnst o n the
g rounds of race. color or
nat tonal ongtnal tn cons tdera tt on lor an award
" Mt n,mum wage rat es for lhts
pro,ect have been predetermtned as reqUired by law and
are set forth 1n the b1d
proposal
"The date set lor com pletton
of thts wo rk shall be set forth tn
the btdcltng proposa l "
Each btdder shall be requ1red
·to ftle w•th hts btd a ce rt thed
check or cas hter s chectc for an
amoun t equal to five PW cent
of hil bid, but tn no event more
th an fifty thousand dollars. or a
bond for ten p.- cent of ~bid.

STARnNG AT
INSTALLED
WITH PAD

Good Selection Of
GRASS CARPET

payable to th e Ot rector
Btdders must apply on the
proper forms. f or qualtf tcauon
at teast ten days pnor to · the
date set for opentng btds tn
acco rda nce w 1th Chapter 5525
Oht o Revtsed Code
Plans and specl ftca tt ons are
on ftl e 1n the Department of
Transportat•on and the offtce of
the Otslrtct D eputy O~rector
The Otrector reserves the
rtght ro retec t any and all btds

SECTION 3 That

=&amp;

sa'd

loan 1n the amoun t aforesard
shall be borrowed at and
tnl erest at such rate not
NOTICE TO ·
ex ceedtng ten percen t per
CONTRACTORS
annum. as may bestgned by the
STATE OF OHIO
Clerk tn her award of satd loan
Columbuo. Ohio
at prtvate sale such tnrerest to
MIV 13, 1983
be payable at matunty Sa•d
ContrKI 11.- IJigel
loan shall be dat ed as of the
Copy No, 83-563
date of borrowtng. shal l mature
UNIT PRICE
on June 1. 1 98 7 and shall be m
CONTRACT
such denom•nat1ons as may be
requested by the purchaser of
SR-OOOR!891
Sealed proposals wtlt be such loan
rec etved at th e offt ce of th e
SECTION 4 That such loan
Duector of the Oh to Depan - shal l be executed by the Mayor
ment of Transport atton Colum - and C le r~ and bear the seal of
bus. Ohto un til 10 00 AM . the CorporatiOn shalt be paya·
Ohm Standard Ttme. Tuesda y. ble at the Farmers Bank ar1d
June 14, 1983 for 1mproveSavtngs. Second Street. Pome·
• ments tn
roy. Ohto and shall express
Athen s and Metgs Countoes . upon thetr lace the purpose for
Qh,o. on ATH-S A 681 -iO 00- wh1ch they are borrowed and
4 36) -State Route 68 1 tn that th ey are borrowed pur suAthens County. and MEG-SA
an t to th1 s ordtnance
124 -(8 70) -Stat e Route 124.
SECTION 6 Th at satd notes
MEG -SA 124-i11 8 1- 12 14 1- shall ftrst be offered to the
State Rout e 124 tn th e Vttlage
off tcer ,n· ctiatge of the Bond
df Ru tland. and ME G-$ R
Aeltrement and 1f satd off tcer
68 1-i4 75 -7 891 -State Route refuses to take such loan. they
681 on MetgS Countlf by shalf be borrO\Ned by the clerk
r esu rf ac tng wtth asphalt
at not less per and accru ed
conc rete
tn terest and an tnteres r rate not
Pavement Wtdth ~ Vanes · exceedtng 10 percent per
ProtACt and Work Le ngth annum The payments of such
78.725 feet or 14 91 miles
loan shall be patd tnto the
The OhiO Departmen t of
proper fu nd and used for the
:r, ansportatton hereby not1ftes purpose alo'resat d and for no
all btddets that 11 wtfl afflrma - ot her purpose. and for whtc h
ltvely tnSllre that on any co ntract
pUipose sa1d money ts herebv
ent ered tnt o pur su ant to th ts
appropnated
adverttsemer-t1. mtnonty bu s•SEC rtON 7 Satd loan shall
nes s en terpr tses will be a! ·
be the full general obltgatoon of
forded lull opport unity to sub- the V1llage of Pomeroy 8nd the
mil btds tn resJX)nse to tht s fu ll fatth . cred1t and revenues of
tnvt taliOn and wtll not be the same The par va lue to be
dtscnmtnated agatns t on th e recetved frorn.the loan shalL to
grounds o f race color or
the e,xtent necessa ry. be used
nat•onal 0119 1n tn co nw1eratton
o nly ~fbr tfie rettremen t o f satd
lor an award
loan at matunry, together wtth
· Mtntmum wa ge rntes ICu thts tnterest thereon. and h er eby
protect have been predeter·
pledged for such purpose
mmed as reqwred by law and
SECTION 8 The voter s of the
are set fonh tn the btd
Vtllage o f Pomeroy have vo ted a
proposal '
on e mtlf tax levy for the
The dme se t for complet•on operattng the ftre department of
of thts wor k shall be set forth tn the Vtllage of Pomeroy The
1he btddtng proposal ..
proceeds of sa td levy are
Each btdder shall be requ11 es hereby pledged to pay the
to ftle w1 th hts btd a. ce ntfted
prt nctpal and tnterest of sa td
check or cas h1er' s ch eck for an loan dunng the penod when
amount equal t o five per cent Satd loan shall run The funds
of hil bkt, but tn now event denved from satd tax levy shall
more than f1hy thou sand dol- be placed tn a separa te and
lars or a bond for t., per cent dtsltnct fund whtch together
of tMI bkl. payable to the wtth tntere st co llected on same
Otrector
shall be trrevoc abte pledged fo~
Btdde1 must apply, on th e the paym ent of the pnnc•oa t
proper lurms fo r ~ualtft c attons and mtere st of satd loan 1n
at least ten days prtor to the antoctpatton o f wh1Ch they are
date set lor openmg btds 1n borrowed when and as the
accordance wtth Chapter 5525 same fal l due
Ohto Revt sed COde
SEC TION 9 It •s hereby
Plans and spect ftcattons are deterrruned that aU acts co ndt on f1le on the Department of ltons and lhtngs requ~red to be
Tran spor tatiOn and the o fftce of done precedent to and •n the
the 0 1stnct Deputy Otrector
borrowtng ot mon tes 1n ord er to
The Dt~ec tor reserves the make them legal. valtd and
rtghtt O retect any and all bidS . f?mdtnq obltgat ton of the Village
WARREN J SMITH of Pomeroy have lit~ppened
DI RECTOR been done and performed 1n
Rev 8-17 -73
regular and due form as
requ tred by law. and rhat no'
15) 23. 30. 21c
hmttarton of •ndebtedness ot
ta)(at ton. e11her Statutory or
constttuttonal. have been ex Public Notice
ceeded tn the borro'Mng Of sa1d
mon tes

SECTION 10 The Clerk ,
ORDINANCI! t134
hereby authonzed and dtrected
TO IORAOW MONtES to forward a cemf1ed copy of
FROM FARMERI BANK
thts .Qrdtnance to the County
ANO IAYINGBINTHEi'RIN- Aud
ttor of Me•gs County Ohto ~
aPAL OF •20.000.00 FOR '
'
SECTION 11 ' This ordtn ance
THE PURPOaE OF PURCHASING FIRE APPAIIATUI Is hereb\t declared to be an
AND TO DICI.AAIIIG AN emergency measure necessary
WHEREAS. tho Village's of.

RUBBER-BACK TWEED

1~e

Public Notice

EMERGENCY ORDINANCE.

CONGOl!UM

S20.000 QO lpnhe purpose of

, purchasmg fi re apparatus
SECfiON 2 Th at the satd
loan shall be dated approxt·
mately the ftrst of Ju ne 1984.
and shall bear tnterest at .the
esttmated rate of ten percent
~ 10 percent) per an num. paya bl e annually unttl the pnnctpal
su m ts patd and shall mature tn
four substanttally equal annual
WARREN J SMITH tnstallment after the JTIOney IS
DIRE CTOR' borrowed The onteres t to be
. oatd semt -annually
Rev 8- 17 -7 3

f•cer has certlfted that the
maxtmum maturity of loan to be
borrowed for the puroose o f fire
Bpl!)aratus .as ten years. and has

est1mated

the

ltfe

of

the

IMprovements as ten years. and
the loan to be borrowed tn
antictpauon thereof as four
years IS sold publtclv. otherwise
one ';flar.

NO'N THEREFORE. BE IT
ORDAINED bv the Counc1l of
the V1llage of Pomtrov. Meigs
County Ohto·

for rhe immed tate preservatJO n
of the publt c peace. health and
safety o f satd Vtllage for the
reason that the tmmedtate need
to borrow monies}'teretn autho·
med 1S necesSary to prO\Itde
funds for the pur chase of ftre
apparatus wht ch ts " urgently
needed to afford for protactton:
whertifore. thts ord1nance shall
take effect and be tri full force

imme:dratelv after •ts passage
Clarence Andrews
Ellen J. Rought
Clerk

SECTION t That&lt;1 is hereby
deemed nocossa"( that Counc'l i5J 23. 30. 2tc

Mayor

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

storm

GHEEN'S

Slz~

Painting

!roll 6'd' Up
to 24'136'
lnsulatd Doc Houses

.

·-

Ph. &amp;l~l-5191
.

&amp;Vicinity

&amp;Vicinity

Beckyard oola: Mon .. Tua.,
Wad .• May 23-24-26,7 o.m .
tot!p . m .lnotda~roln. 1136
2nd Ava., Gollipollo, lour
flmily. Item• offered : antlqun lnctpdlng ook bed,
ook 2 pieco jHI~or oot. buttor
bowl, pockt1wotch, !ointing
couchl 71'o, pootcordo. pic-

TWO family yard .. t.o. 1 mile
outJorlcho Ad . Pt. Ploo .. nt.
Clothing oncl mloc . rlday
9 -3. Watch lor olgno. II
rain-canceled.

Industrial. Com1111rcial.
Residential , Interior and
hterior.

Sizes start fro• 12'116'

P&amp;S llcine,
BUILDINGS
Oh. ·

.... :·Gaiiipoiii... ·· ---- ··.... P1.Pieiilaiit ·----

PAINTING INC.

!
.

'

10 &amp;tic

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

Sandblatting
Waterblaating
Parking Lot Stripping
Spray Painting
Texture Coating•
F~ lnanod-f"' EllCALl. 614· 949·2686
4-t9 2 IIICl

Yord Solo. Wodneodoy ond
Thurldoy. 2t!th ond 28th .
Everything . 412 Lowlo

'Chain Link Fence
'Carpetinc ·~aintinc

Pomeroy ,OH.

PH. 992-2178 ""•

-

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

c.ov.,···

- Trencher

[Sears[

Water
Sewer
Gaa Lines
Septic Systems

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

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

LAIGE or SMALL JOBS

PH . 992-2478
SIJJmo

PH.

pd

882-2276

·'

•Lowest Rates
Around
'Friendly Servie
. NO SET UP CHAfiGE
IN THE COUNTY
742-2328
4-21 -llc

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
. SIDI.NG

'Sid ina

'Roofing
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodeling
20 Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 843-5425
5 2·2· mo

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

oloctricot (Floe Eolimatoo)

MIN. 6 TON

r . 1nd St.

985·3561
All Makes

•Weiher~

•Dishw•shers
Range•

PHONE

·~efrigere1ora

304-273-5665
304-273-5303

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomoroy, Ohio

~· 1~ - l

11 ·26 He

mo

FOR PROFESSIONAL
TERMITE AND
PEST CONTROL
SERViCE

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

CALL :

TERM INIX
INTERNATIONAL

TON

PH. 992-2280

1-(6141·992·3325

NF« LISTING - 3 apart·
ments, partly furn~hed. 12
rooms, 3 baths, natural gas
furnace, and lots ol new
paneling. For a quiCk sale. will
take $23.500.

ALL LENGTHS IN STOCK
B FT ............................ ....... .. ....... ' 9 .95
10FT... .. ................................... ' 12.20
12FT........................................ '14.45
14FT. .. ..................................... '16.70
16FT.......... ...... ..................... ... '18.90
18FT........................................ '20.90
20FT .......... .. ............................ ' 22 .95
AODITtONAl6% DISCOUNT IN APRIL - CASH &amp; CARRY

POMEROY LANDMARK

LOTS - All util~es in
Syracuse. Also a 2 bedr0001
mobile home on Rt 124. Want
$23.500.
NO SIGN ON YOUR PROPERTY
IF YOU WISH. CALL992-3176
TO SnL"i

PHONE:

4 n 1 mo

'

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

•OOZ~R

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SF«ER LINES
•PONDS. RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofin&amp; - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks Now Construction - Remod•lin&amp; - Custom Pole
Barns. ,

R.!Xlfing &amp; Siding Co.
" ·
Routt I
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
ll20.11c

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Homes - Extensive
Remodellnc.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bld&amp;s.
&amp; Garaces
•Roofing Work
oAI001i1M111 &amp; Vif1)1 Sidines
15 Years E•perlence
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992 -7583
or 992-2282
tI

II Uc

St. Rt . 124, Pomeroy. OH.

Authorized John Deer.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

New Holland. Bush

Hoc

Farm Equipment
Dnler

Alao Tranamiaaion

PH. 992·5682

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

or 992-7121
3 211!t

I 3tlc

VERY REASONABLY
'I• Acrs - 2% Story, 3 bedrooms, 27 Anne St .. Breezy
Heichts. Pomeroy, OH.
fOR SALE AS 15

Contact : Don I. Dailey
131 Wtst Main St.
P.O. Box 109
Chillicothe, OH . 45601
775 -0106

PH.

Real Estate General

SEE ONE OF THE

"CLELAND GANG"
To
Or Sell!

COMPlEI'E

OHIO ·
VALLEY .
ROOFING

RADIATOR SERVICE
From he Smallest Huter
Core to tht ureest Rldia· '
tor .
Radiator Sptciaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

AND HOriiiE MAINTENANCE
'RoolinJ ol oil typos
Re11dentiol &amp; Commorciol
' Gutton &amp; Downspouts
"Siorm Windows &amp; Doors

FREE ESfiiiAJES
20 Yt1rt hp11ienct

TOM HOSKINS
Ph . 742·2834

Pomeroy, Oh .
Jlh. 992 -2174

or 949-2t60

S-lO·l mo

2 26-tfc

-Am]
•• ntl

Roofine • Siding
Trouchs,

Down Spouts
Windows - Doors
For "All" Your Home

Ph.

992-5433
S·l61 mo

• S&amp;W TV

u..

AND

CLELAND REALTY, Inc.
608 E. l1in St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Htnry E. Cleland, Jr.. GRI .................... 992·6191
Dottle Turner ....................................... 992·5692
Jan TrusStli ...... ........... ...................... 94t-2660
Jo Hill ................................................ 9J5-44H
OFFICE ................................................992·225!1

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chtsttr, Ohio
Ph .. 9811-4289
Deweyne Wllllomo
• laottla Smith
All lakes 1nd llodtls

Ant11na lnltllllllon
Hou11 Cll11 and Shop

Service Awlllllle
4 ·~

''

I mo. pd .

pd

{Ai.U

HOME REPAIR

6 yr old male lrith Setter .
good with children . Call
614 -256-1256.
Kittens to good home. Call
446 -0318 oltor 6:00 .

4 white kittie1. 6 will . old .
Coli 614 ·266 -8494 .
Hamster, 4•8-1149.
K1ttena. Long Haired . 814·
949-2488.
3 lorig haired White kittens.
Large Montgomery Ward
refrigerator for parts . 814·
742-2460 .
2 mala kittens 1 black . 1
white. 614-985· 4120 .
THREE blue -grey. 2 block flo
white kittena, adorable,
304-676 -4631 '
HALF Siameae, male kitten,
about 4 months old, needa
good home, blakish in color,
304-675 -3037.
KITTENS, tong and short
hair, delivered to Pt . Plea ·
unl, 304·4118 -1540
TEN week old pupplea,
mother reglster•d English
Sheepdog, phone 304 -896 ·
3492

lost and

LOST 8ulov1 ladles wriat
watch . In vicinity of Krogers.
Nelsons. Sears or Eberbech
Hardware on Thunday May
12 . 1114 -992 -2941 '
LOST -male Blue Tick
Hound . 10 mile-leon vlcin·
ity . Reward . Call anytime,
304 -876-2028 , 676 -321115,
614 -992 -3663

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Au c tion every Tueaday
night . Krodel Ptrk Club
Houte, Pt. Pleasant WV.
Auct, Lonnie Neal. Call
614-367 -7101

Buaine1s
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISH(NG CO . recommenda
that you do bualne•• with
people you know, and NOT
to und money through: the
mail until you he"e ln~estl·
gated the oHering.
Country CIITVOf.ft for sale by
owner, Upper Rt . 7 in
Kaneuga. Ohio. C-U 4·6·
2192 or 446-9171 .

22 Money to Loan :
HOME LOANS 101h% flxad
rete. Leeder Mortgage. n E.
State. Athen1. Ohio . 1 · 114 ~
692 -306t. or 1-800-341 6554 In Ohio .

AUCTION every Saturday
night, 6 p.m. Mt . Alto
Auction Bern . Consign ·
manti taken every Saturdey
1 :00 till 11le time. Em me
Bell Auctlnoar. 304-42B·
8177 .

Poy cooh for Uood Mobile
Homo or Troval Troller. Call
814-448-01711.
'

Wantad To Buy

Good uoad ltwolry, ollvtr.
gotd. dlomondo, esc . Wo oloo
buy. Hll • trade guna.
Frank 's Pewn Shop.

Good uood &lt; lowatry. dlo·
mondo. gold • lllvar · We
oloo buy , 1111 • trada guno.
Oun Sh001. Rutland Amort- Fronk' • Pawn Shop, 406
con Legion t p .m. Sun .• May 2nd. Avo .. Golllpollo. 4482 2 . A b ool u !•I y loot o ry ..:0..:84__:_0_.- -- --::-:--:-:
choke guno only.
BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
tumltura, gold, ollvar dol·
lera. wood Ice boxee, atone
jeri, endquee, etc.. Cam·
plato hauooholdo. Write:
M.D. Mlttor, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
ANY PERSON !"ho ...o 0~ . Or 882-neo.
anything to glvo IIWIV end I ..:G..:o_ld-.-~~-~-.-..-.-rft::-n.:..~-.-:l•·
d - not offer or attornP1 to
offer ony -1hlng torula -try, rtngo, otd co nt flo
-" In thlo currency. Ed lurltatt lar~r
Ia
may P ce
an wll
aotumn.
There
be no Shop, Mlddltp'o" . 112chorge to
adverttoor.
3478.

23

Professional
Services

C&amp;L 8ookkHping
Broad range of bookk..ing
and tax servic11 available to
tuit your buslnett needs.
Corol Neol
44e-3U82
PIANO TUNING t5 ollpluo
dlacountl to aenior citizena·
church~t - schooll . Cell Bill
Ward Ward 't Keyboard ,
448-4372 .
Will open • clean swimming
poolo. Coil 448 -4896 otter
5 :00PM .

,,
Wil do baby sitting in my
home anyt lm,.. fenced in
back y8rd &amp; · reference•
ovalloblo . Call 614 -3889766.
You can make money selling
AVON . Coli 448 -3358 or
1114-386 -90411 .
Wanted; Reli1ble b•bvsltter
for 5 S. 12 veer olds tor
summer months . Mon .-Fri.,
7AM -4PM Coli 446-4979
after 4 30PM Prefer some·
one In town or near HMC .

PIANO TUNING-LANE hANIELS . Reliable aervice
Iince 19815 . A11ociati of
Brunictrdi Music Co . Phone
614· 742 -2961 .
PER MANE NT hair removal
Profellionel ElectrolyaiJ
Clinic . A M.A. approved . Or .
referrels . Monday, Wedhet·
day . Friday. by appointment
304·675·6668 .

31 Homes for Salt!

Secretary· Bookkeeper im·
mediete opening for respon ·
tibia person full time Will
require light bookkeeing .
typing. ftllng . Mull bo able
to work independently tllary commensurate with
exp Send reaume to Ohio
Residential Serwlces Inc .
P.O. Bo• 938 , Geltlpolio, Oh
46631 '

4 bdr , 2 full baths. finiahed
basement, 2 car garage .
Appointment only . 203 Kineon Dr.. Oallipollt. 441·
1223.

Registered Nurae unique full
time position available
working with M.A. adults in
a resldantlataettlng. Mute be
able to dealgn policies and
procedures Community
health eKp. desired . Knowl edge of medlcede, ICF ·MR a
plu1, ex c . starting aalery .
Liberal benefits package
Send resume to Ohio Ae•identlel Servic11 Inc. P.O
Box 938 , Gallipolis, Oh
46831 '

By owner 3 bedroom home
In Rio Gronde, Oh. Call
614 ·246 -5274 or 614 -248 96t7 for appointment Ret ·
1onebly priced

ClEAN re1pecteble l•dy to
live In at nights with elderly
wom1n . Phone 304-876 ·
8787 .
'
MANAGER trelnee for
Goodwill retell store, Apply
It Southwe~rern Commun Ity Action Center on VIand
St. Pt . Pleasant . Tuesday,
24th ., only . Between 11 .00
end 12 noon . end 1:00 to
3.00 p .m .

Will do baby sitting In my
home Racine •ret Any ege .
6t4-949 -2779

Announceme11t1

t.,.

Wanted to buy . New, u11d &amp;t
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete hou1e·
hold1. Call Os~y A. Martin
614-992 ·8370 .

Complete Auctioneer Ser·
vice. Alto do appratula.
Ucenaed a. bonded to 1111.
Houteholda, farm furnish ·
lnga • Reel estete. Over 25
yeara experience In buying &amp;
Hlltng new. u11d e. entique
furnlturo. 814 -992-8370 .
Olby A. Mortln .

===========I
SWEEPER and sewing ma·
chine repair. p1r11,
oupplloo.
Pick up
datlvtry, Dovlo Vocu
Clnntr, ona hall mit.
Gaorgeo Croak Ad .
448-02114 .

Diemond1 . gold banda, cl111
rings, tllvtr coins, 10-14
karat scrap jewerly. Tawney
Jewerlera, 2nd. A~e , G1lli·
polio, 448 · 1815.

WANTED-person ~ to bruah
hog lot on Greenbrier Estltel. Pt. Pleasant. phone
304-676 -6786

9

'

446 - ~~~6~ono Johnoon

Auction •~ery Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandiM every week
Conalgments of new tnd
uaed merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 2711-3069 .

' .-... ...
..
_.................
.
' '

3

Giveaway

2 female white kittens, 6
wko . old. Coli ,14-2686687 .

6

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

'

21

Frenchtown Cor Co.

4

1 0 mo . old pen Border
Collie, good with children .
Call 614 ·266 -1969.

U.S. RT. !iO EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Call: George Gum

=..-.:'ar~==

PH .992 -3005

BOGGS

"Free htimates" ...

2e.

$2.700.00 or Best Offer

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201
l 1·1\o

Repairs ...

1ft _ , rl cr.tes c. fill·
llr IIIIo ptlllll) . . , ' jllll
.... ..,17,1177.

Cafpeted. bathroom witll
shower. cas or elect. refria..
furnace, &amp; lot. Water heat.-.
ranee. sink, cas. eloct .. or
blltery lichts, sleaps 6, excellent condition.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Housing
Headquarters

IR MEMORY
.les11111id IIIli the IISW·
rKtlon llld tilt lift; hi thll
"""""'
""'111111
~
ht
.
. ....in)Ill
bt llvt:
M1 11M1a1• IMIIIIIIII
"""""'
ill !It 111111
tilt. bllihltll
tltil7- St.
Jolin C11!111r It, ..,. 25 I

TRAVEL TRAILER

IIOHO£D &amp; WORJ( GUMANTEED

Real Estate General ·

IN THE WOODS - 3 acres

2 TM

fOR SALE

18 FT. WILD CAT

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

1-304-773-5634

otd ltamo; ,booko. IHI!Hir· 9
Wantad To Buy
bit eke. magazinea, man' 1
cloth .. tajH\1. toolo. recordo. WA~TED TO BUY Old lurni ·
lampe. furniture, bookc11e. ture and Antique• of all
over-etuffed chair, coffee •
kinds, call Kenneth Swain.
matching ond tabtoo, oet of 446-3159 or 2156-1987 In
end tablea. 4 swtvel kitchen the evening•
cholro. Duncan Fife two· tlar
table. other chairs • ttblea , Buying Gold. Sltver. Pfatl ·
pair wlngbacka, stereo num. Gold end Silver price•
ltend, TV atand,magazine are the hlghe1t in two years,
rack. curtain•. ten tpeed check our prices on gold &amp;
bike. full aize rtd velvet titvar, tcrep jewelry. Buying
bedapread, Iota of kitchen Old coins, 1cr1p rino• &amp;
Items, delentofltemsunder silverw1re. Deily quottl
•1 . Anything left on Wed . av1ilabl1 . Also coins &amp; coin
will be haH price . Ple11e do supplies for aale Spring
not block driveway . Come Valley Trading Co., Spring
ond bring o friend . We'll be Volley Pion , 448 ·8025 or
looking for you. Not reopon · 446-8028 .
aible for accidents .

r---------1 ~~~==~========~ clean
We pay
c11h
for. late model
used
can

6t4 -992 -2181

IMPRESSIVE - Modern 3
bedroom brtck 2 hreplaces,
large famiy room, 2car garage,
l!QUipped kilchen, 2~ baths, 2
pafus.· and large lot As~ng
$125.000.

kitchen, near BurllnWJam, lor
$21,500.

•Fiberglass
•Stainless Steel

5131mo

24x65. On~ $38,500.

plus 14x70 !ratter. eqUipped

•Vinyi Liner'

C. l. Kitchen

PRIVATE -A real quiet p~ce
1n the woods N1ce 14x 70 Hot ~
Park, full length porch, extra
frame room, power plan~ i8
acres, fences, and large storage

6 LEVEL ACRES - With water
tap, electric, septic tank, and
natural gas. On state road near
Reine

I

54 Misc . Merchandise

SPECIAl - 3 bedroom home
with bath, TP water, carpetm&amp;
modern kijchen, full basemen!
and large yard at Hemklck
Grove lor $26.000.

BARGAIN - Large home with
several garages and storage In
the country on hard road. II!
baths, Heat~ator. furnace and
ooe acre for $40,000.

PERSONAUZED
POOLS

992 -3325

2 73-tfc

Calle

•·~tfc

Ma1on , W.Va .

'
ALUMINUM ROOFING

Phone

•Drvera •Fruzers
PARTS and SERVICE

At Our New Phone Number

-

REAUOR '

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

$275 PER TON

V. C. YOUNG Ill

$3()0° A

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

AT
NEW HAVEN. W. VA.

pd

TEAFORD
2lb

U-PICK-UP

-Addono and ..mocloltng
-IIDoAng and gullol work
--ConcNM worlt
-PklmiMng ond

Reel Estate General

VIRGil B. SR .

DRIVEWAY SLAG

No Sunday

WILL mow llwn• in Muon
ond Clifton aNo. 304· n311442 .

~rS~t~r~"~'~·~P~o~ln:t:PI~e~a~N:;"':·=~

1------=-------

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Gara&amp;es"
Cafl for frH sidin&amp; tS·
timates, 949·2801 or
949-2860.

&gt; 18-1 n~

·',I

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

SIDING

~, ..c.'

-Backhoes
- Dump Trucks
- Lo- Boy

Mother will bebyolt In own
homo . Very reooonobte. RaiINnceo ovollobla. Cott 4;484047 .

glo
... tram
Iron ea
kottla,
6 leg oak
ture
. dapra11ion.
table. gluaware, ftrnltand,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS

-Dozers

Grta &amp; l'ltty Gibbs-Ownon

·'

of the Vtl lage of Pomeroy to
borrQI.AJ 1n the pnnctpal sum ot

)llinti~

Call: 949-2263
Or 992-279\ 1

l· ll-rtc

..
·•
·•..

••

Public Notice

O..TIIIIko.

Middloporl, Ohio

CATALOG MERCHANT

..•'

1700

UTILITY B,UILI)INGS

doors and windows.
All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

992-2196

.,

"-M-

.......

All types of roof~­
or rtlpair, r,vtters and

inc and

PAT HILL FORD

FREE
EXTIMATES

III •UIM

o•-... '1 - di - MftOI

GOt.D SEAl.

'$499

---

. ,.......0.__.

, .. ,

••
a...... "'"""'
IIMH IIOflooo

Public Notice

Public Notice

... Mop.,..,

no ·-~
-c.....

II''~

.._c.'*"'
,. ......

IIQ

113 fu• ••n•t
11'1 Et.o:o&lt;col lo A..Ot .... lt "'~

.....

'"

Clot-•

If lilt II

lN y..,,.,
241 " .. o•.,.,..
211 o..., ... o...
ll'l

az ..,_..,,.. .....,.,..

tQuo~.,.ftl lno

Public Notice

i51 9. 16. 23 31c

11 f ...., t ...........
ll I'IIMIII&lt;IIOIU'I
lll• .. n od

!'''""'' "

A-CW.IIH

.... c.....,..
Jl7

.,, ........

1 7 ... _ ...,. . ......
II W_IO.,ToOo

f n ll"'t ' fll jl I ''' o•

M61twCyeleo
..._,. .. MGrtwo
AuiQ I"O&lt;to a Au:elt&lt;U•o
Auto"'''"

II ,...., .. olo•ft-o

_,_

lrru o/io·d tlfiJl l ''' "' o·r lit•·

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

downspouts, autter Clean•

IC:id boil lind rod out ...
dloiiOiL We llleo r...,.Jr

[SearsI
,,

f

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING

Occupied Japen, and other

111 Covrt st .. Po•ror. Ollio C57&amp;t

11
"""" ..,, ..
12 fouc:hfooiM

71
11
1 11
1'1

n•~....,.,....,~

'l
....... ~ ' -""
I YM4 IH O~•"' •• •~•o~e • o
9

-..wo-o

5lC
I _TVai'IHool'I"'P.,.."'
u
.....

•-wc-.llleo

Clll742-31

"
c..
''"-.....
........ ......,.,

- . ........ lllldhea·

...

Write DIIIIY Stfiltilltl Cllssifitd

·--

We _. ...,... lind ,...

~ ~ · stallation .
Aceldentl•l
• Commerclel

PHONE
992-2156
Or
Dept.

.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

d your wiring
'" nccde; furnaces re· '
:; . palt aervicc 1nd In·
For

bperlancad mochontc will
odiuot 3 flo 4 cylinder mo1or·
cycle corbo. •16, fully
ron- . Coll448-0208 .

au•·

. MILLER

~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.,

At the cemetery one of our
part-time preachers spoke briefly
and said a prayer. No ortglnal
muskets were lett among the old
soldiers. Nor was any of them able
to be an alert member of a tiring
squad. So four younger men were
chosen, dOMed borroWed Modern
Woodman of Arnertcan Lodge
blouses and fired shotguns on
command.
Each family went to Its own
graves, added Its QWn flowers to
those already growing and visited
briefly with others.
Somehow we au beUeved the last
war had been fouihl. We wbo were
children then could not know that,
within a tew years, In the prime ot
our Uves, lllOISt of ua wOUld 110 to
another war and not all would come
back. Still leu CUIId we envlalon a
time when we would send our !10118
and iJ'&amp;nd!ona to aWl more wars.
Now, trom our own experiences,
we who are old and trail remember.
And we wonder now how many
more a-rations will have to
endure the ordeal ~ loltnc our
finest, the Ordeal of Pllttlni flowers
on the II!'IWI of our :Young dead
whole love wu oun.
So
we remember, 88 we
knew 10 many YMr'IIICI that war II
' terrible delldly thJna, but that
valor llu lti OWIIIJ'BCj and iltxY•
Let .Ill remember alwayt,'

recent retreat which _they attended
and plans were made for a worship
service to be cOnducted by the
women on May 2ll.

A program on refugees was
presented and plans made to help
needy people through sending food
and blankets when the Asbury

'

The following article on the
observance of Decoration Day In
Meigs County many years ago, was
· written by Ian F. Howell, a native,
·• who worked tor Columbus newspapers for a number of years.
A copy of the article was found
among Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion Auxiliary papers was .. downtown, " On one comer
this year by Ellen Rought.
stood the general store. Within a
Howell writes ot the observance block In different directions were
In Downlnglon. He Is a World War I two churches, one parsonage, the
veteran. His son served In World . township hall on Its shade lot, our
War II and In the Korean War and ·doctor's house and office, a harness
his grandsons served In VIetnam. shop, the post office, the school
The article reads:
house and a blacksmith shop.
The time was the early years of
On Decoration Day morning we
our century, before 1914. The place all met In front of the store. One ol
· was our small sou them Ohio the old soldiers had already begun
. , , village, midway between two to play Marching Through Georgia
county seats, Isolated from both. and Dixie on the fife while others
'!be event was our simple, Informal "tuned up" the dru111!1.
observance of Decoration Day'
Meanwhile the rest of ua The term Memorial Day, com· children, fa!hers, mothers, and old
prehenslve and appropriate as It Is, soldiers' widoWs - gathered flow·
~ : had not yet come Into general use,
ers from yards and i!lrdens. One of
. at least not In our neighborhood. the chief concerns waa whether or
• ·.Our old soldiers had reminded the not the flowers, especially the
rest ol us of what Gen. John A. peonies, would be at their best.
Logan had said about strewing
The cemetery waa about a mile
floors on the graves of fallen away, at the top of a hill.'Most~ the
comrades. We jolned them ln this old soldiers, the mothers and
. act ol remembrance. About a dozen fathers, and the children were able
·' of them still survived In our area.
to walk the distance. OneoldiOidJer.
In our Ume and place, old soldiers had a surrey, and 011e or two
. . were, by deftnltl011, thole who had iluates appesred. So llllllt ~ ua .
served In the Civil- War. This wu walked, and the few Who could not
before traglc and costly global war were carried.

Maf. 23, 1983

lW~gsgroupsnw~~----~------------.
Mrs. KJoe5, Mrs. Teaford and
Followlng the dinner, a progra~
Asbury UMW
Linda Ferrell reported on the prepal'I!CI by Evelyn Hollon, pres -

Public Notice

Memorial Day past article a part
of papers discovered at Post home
'

Monday,

12

Situations
Wanted

COLLEGE lludent wonll to
mow end trim 11wn1. Cell
304-676 -6392

13

ln1urance

SANDY AND BEAVER lnturence Co . hll offered
nrvicea for tire lnaurance
cover1ge in Oellle County
for almo1t 1 century. Farm ,
home and per1on11 pror.rty
cover•e•• are avelleb • to
meet individual rteeda. Con·
ttct Ray Wedemeyer, agent .
Phone 388 -1249 .
Are you paylno to much for
your hoaphel ·health lnsurence . Cell Carroll
Snowden, 448 ·4290.
1B W
d t 0
___
•_n_t_e__o__o_ _
1

3 bedroom . 1332 oq.ft ..
under construction. Ivy Dale
Subdivision. KCK contrac tors. Inc Call 814 · 387 ·
0631 or 446 - ~769 .

JBR 2 full beth , centr~l air,
flrepl•ce, large lot, close to
town Csll 4•8 -2699 after
6.
3 bdr . home in Addison
small lot, newty remodeled ,
furn•nce &amp; woodburner .
fully inaultted . axe . cond .,
Mid t20 ' o, Call 814 -692 4369.
HOUSE FOR SALE in Middleport . Newly remodeled
home with fireplace. pouible woodburner. close to
schools end shopping . Call
614-992-8941 .
3 bedroom home at 123
Garfield Ave ., concrete
pool. full basement. 2 flre placta . 2 Yz betht . new
cerpet. 2 acre lot from S R
At. 7 to river . Owner will
consider fln•nclng with low
down payment end 9%
interest. Cell 448· 1548 .
lovely, &amp; rooms. Double
u•rage, beautifully lands·
caped area lot Atop Ro1e
Hill. Pom. 40'o . 814·9B54257 .
7 yelrt old. 4 milea out of
Recine. Bi -level 2 c•r gar·
age attached . 3 car garage
un-attached . 3 ecrH with
good drilled well end much
mo ra 614-843 -6360
Owner trenaferred. Must
aell. 3 bedroom ranch . Quiet
country living, acenic view .
Pomeroy 089.900 614992-6420 .
House. 2722 Lincoln Ave.
Pt . Pl . Appolntmont Only.
304 -676-4074
HARTFORD , WV-One ofthe
old11t • better built home•
in thit area e. In A-1
condition. Three bedrooms.
3 Yz botho. formal living •
dining room . New kitchen
12 ' x30 '. Full flnlohad bailment. This home hu Men
reatored &amp; h11 btaofcharm .
Must 111 . to epprecfate.
Extro Iorge lot . Coli 304876 -3030 or 6715-343t .

CLIFTON WV-Unflnlohed 3
bedroom, 1 W ~tha. well
lnouloted. olumlnum oldlng,
olectric wlrad, oaptlc oyotom
•
lorga tot. Only
t22,0000 .00 Nlca plopLow• Mowing no yard to big orty. Col 304-878·3030 or .
or omotl. Aallobta ond clapon- 1.e:.7
.:.6
.:.·.:.34
__:_
3 _1._ _ _ _ __
dablo . For aotfmata, oollt ·
448-3159 bat-on 9 ond 11. For Sot. ly Owner, -.oumoble at 8 percent lntereat, 3
concrwte work. drlvewey1. bedroom home whh vinyl
- a t k l, palloo. Irick • lidl•g. lull otaa b u - t
block, esc . F... . ootlmetao. and both ond ~. tocoteclln
Coll448·4313 or 814-2111- Loo• · lodan Rood. Pltona
1717.
304-468-1888 oftar I p .m .

Gener•l Heuling end Trash
removal larvtce. Aatlable
ond dependable. Coli 448·
31119be1_.,·9ondll .

�'

'

Mm1odav. Nay 23, 1983

Paga

Mol

8-The

h.,,

31

DICK TRACY

Television

WELCOME

EIGHT acres, small h9ute, .

•• rilineral rights, 'educed
p~ ico, 304-B95-3B19 .

/JII$'f !JUS $7t)D-- ·
NO/JiiiiVCH

bunk bede complete wtth
bunkloo 11 ••· 2 place on-

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARs .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446:- 7572 .
-

1973 Carrage house mobile
home 7011112, AC. W &amp; D
hookup, dishwasher. 2 bdr ..
2 bath . Call after 6. 614 682 - 7277 01 614 -6B2 7262 . Be1t offer ..
1976 Naahua mobile home
1211160 with underpinning
and air conditioner, total
electric, $6, 000 . Call 614 245 -5811 '
1976 14x70 Windsor , 3
bedroom, 1 % baths, -fur ·
nishod. 811110 Utility building .
Deeth in familv must sell .
Call 446-7612 cell before
J :OOm after 4 call 446 7847 .
2 bedroom trsiler 1et up on
rentad lot on Bulaville Rd .
Underpinning, out building.
kitchen appliances, wood burner. S4,900 or best offer .
C•ll 446 -0978, 8PM -8PM .

1959 Elko• 10x50. i bd, ,
mostly furn .. carpeted . Call
alter 5, 614 · 388 -8549 .
1980 1411170 Fairmont Mobile Home. e lectric, 2 bdr.,
1 112 bath, unfurn ., underpin ning, air, utility building.
Johnson MH Park . 614388-9704 .
1 2x60 Schultz mobile
home. 2 bdr .. large kitchen.
e111pando. new scotchguard
carpet . really nice ~ 614379 -2727 .

1978 Kirkwood 14x70 mobile home, 88.600 . Call
814-388 -9038 .
8x36 trailer $1 ,000. 614742 -2306 altar 6 p.m.
1 4x86 2 bedroom Homette
mobil home . New carpet and
linoleum throughout . New
Coleman gat furnace. A.C .,
front porch with awning,
back deck, underpinning.
E111cellent condition . Alking
$7,300. 614 -949-2715 .

1972 14x65 Mobile Home.
2 bedroom•. gae heat, par-

tially ~ furnlthed. underpinning, beck porch. axe. cond .
Phone 614 -992-2155 between 9 lr 6 Ask for Tim .
After 6 phone 304 -882 3692 .
1974 C•rriage HOuse 3
bdr ., 2 full baths. sliding
glen • doon. good cond ..
S5.BOO . Call 614 -992 8610 .
1973 12x66 Mobile Ho.me.
3 bedroom , gas heat, partially furnlahed , iront porch,
fair cond., undar pinning .
16, 000. 614-992 -5701 '
U'SED MOBILE HOME .
576 -2711 .

- - - -- - - - - n
1972 12x62. 2 bedroom
furnished . excellant condltio"n. 304 -876 -7976or 6765422 .

197714•70, 3 bedrooma, 2
fuji baths, 810,000 . 304676-2949 .

33 Farms for Sale
'

112 •cr.. ne1r Rio Grande,
hou•• a. building1: Will 1ell
ail or port. Coli 448-2699
lfttr 6 .
41 ACRE form with 19711, 2
bedroom all electric mobile
home. In good condition on
Thomes Ridge. Coli 3048'[11-'3280 and aok lor Ron
Hlekmon .
Business
Buildings

'

FOr ''"t or 11le butlnets
bulldl'lO cont1in1 3 bedroom
e"'. upttelre 11 arrangemitntl for 1 or
2 buainetMI
dOWn-telra.
Stle
can also
lncludo 2 rontol troll oro . Call
448 3•88
. .. ·
OHice troller 8 ft. 1 35 ft .
Sult1bt tor conatructlon
olta II d oHico . Hove bottle
gaa fu 1ce. • .c ., bath room,
2 buill In d11ks. Day1 call
81-t -982-2181 - Ev.nlng•
11 1!4 892 2841
814
co
•
•
or
·
01
182· 3$ ·
REAL ootote for oole by
owner, Building now being
uood fOr buoln..o. 7 room
aplttf"ent, 2 bedroom
hout• \o rent for eKtre
lnao,.. Approxlmotoly 1
..,. 91 ground. gocd woll,
city ~tot on Crab Crook Rd.
Coil " ·J04-1711-1108 for
appohttment.
·

81

lull 1100 oot regular-firm
t120, maple dinetbl chairl
t35, wooh atondo 134.
moplo rockoro .S9, 7 piece
chromo dinette aot 1149, II
piece dlnmo 001 fBI. uood
bedroom oultoo. roflrgoro-

Knoufl Cool •
pri- Nduced
Pick or doll-od.
HEAP vouchoro.

wringer washers, TV'·e.

----------

dryerea. Ill ahbes . Call448·
3169.

5 prOm dr•ue• 11111 7 · 13,
like new. Worn only once.

tora, ranges, chest. dreenrsr ' 281-82415 .

2 lot1 &amp; a mobile home
1211160, 2 bedroom, with
rural water. gas heat. Has
some furniture , price
&amp;12 ,500. Or 41ots&amp; mobile
s14,800. Caii446-1240.

1978 Schultz 14x70 2
bdrm .. 2 batha, central air.
good cond ., on rental lot ,
near Goodyear Plllint. auumable loan . Franch City
Brokering Servic e. 446 9340.

6 :00

Improve~•

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
!;Jofa. chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tablaa. (extra heavy
by Fron.tiar). *885. Sofa,
ch1ir and loveaeat. *275.

STUCCO PLASTERING
toxtuNCI collingo aom,_·
ci1l and ruidentill. frae ;
oatimoteo. Coli 114-2111182.

Firewood
Moy-July.
wo honor
Coli 114-

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. 30 yeare e•perienca.
_.tolizlng In built up roof.
Coli 814-318-88117.

Products that vou can buv
every day are examined.

(!) ESPN' a Inside Baaobell
Cil Carol Burnett
Cil Entertainment Tonight
CD Chorlie' a Angela
D (]) Tic Toe Dough
(]) l1ll MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
®News
81 Cl2l People's Court
@II Star Trek
7 :30 Q ill Ue Detector
Cil Fragglo Rock Visit the

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§~§~~89fa,andchairaprlcadfrom
*286 . to *8$t6. Tablea. *48
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
6 -20 Acres woods. overlooking Ohio River. city
schools . 446 -3654 or 15 1 3 - 4 2 3 - 8 9 2 8 .
Owner/ Agent .
35 acres at Rodn ey on W.T.
Watson Rd . Owner f~nan cing available. Ca11448 -B221
after 6 weekdays.

One lot 40x130 . Cali 6764391 or 446 -403B .
2V2 acres off acceas road one
mile east of 1-76 interchange
for International Airport,
Sanibel -Captiva and Ft. Myers . Florida . $40 . 000 .
owner financing or land
lease with over-ride. Princi P•Is oniy-614-992 -3381 alter 6 :30 and weekends
614 -992-3453 .

44

A

partment

for Rent
2 bdr. Regency Inc.• Apartmenta $200 per mo. or If
inco,.-.e Is $10,000 or leu
HUO available. A-One Real
Eatates, Carol Ve~er. Realtor. Call ,304-676 -6104 .
Small furnished houae in
city. adults only , Call 446·
0338 .
JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal
Housing Opportunity' haa
one bedroom apartments
rent starting at $167 per
month and 1wo bedroom
apartmentl rent atarting at
1193 per month . Cell 4462746 or leave me11ege.

Furnished apt. , 131 V2 4th
.Ave-~ Gallipoli1,. 2 bdr ..
' 1.,4 Acre lot in' Bradbury; 8186 mo ., wiuer paid. Call
good location, trailer hook- 448-4418 after 7PM .
up, all utilitie1, 1eptic tank . I- - - - -- - ' - - -Coi1614-992 -2602 .
Furnlohed apt .. 1136 2nd
Ave., Gallipolis. 2 " bdr ..
FIVE acres land, down pay- $196 mo .. water paid. Call
ment and take over pay- 446-4416 oftar 7PM ,
ments, city water &amp; electric 1- -- -- - - - - - on land. 304-676 -2449·.
Partially furnished 3 rm ..
utmties furnished. Call 446TWO acres, septic system, 0111 or 446-3733 .
well. fJeotri·c hooh · uP. V2
m ile from New Have!l. 304- Second Ave . 2 or ·3 bed :
room.-. across tram Pic Pac .
BB2 ·335B.
$190 plu1 utilities . Call
446-4222 between 9AM &amp;
&amp;PM .
36 Real Esta1e
Wanted
Apt . for rent . Half double -2
bd .room Apt. Adults preBuyirig houses and apart· '•rred . No pets. 614 -992menu. Naed properties w ith 2749 .
tavorab£8 price and terms.
Bo• 1109 Gallipolis. Oh . 1 bed room Apt . $196 . mo .
46631 '
including utilities. Equal
housing opportunity . Con tact Village Manor Apta .
614 -992-7787.
1 bedroom apt. 614 -9925434 . 614-992 -6914 or
304-BB2 -2666 .

41
3 bdr . house. cent . air,
Addison. Oh. $260 . Call
614-446 -0176 .

3 bdr .. house 2 fireplaces,
swimming pool, fence, patio, garage. central air . Sell.
rent or trade. Carol Yeager,
Realtor. Call 304 -676 5104 .
MODERN 3 bedroom, fam ily room, near 1chool1 &amp;
hospital. Referance &amp; d•p oslt required. Call 304 -8754338.
House for rant In Point
Pleasant. 304-676-7163 .
TWO bedroom house, 2nd .
St., New Haven , 304 -882 2505 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furniahed &amp; unfurnished, 2
bedrooms, air cond., beautiful rivar view in Kanauga .
Foster' s Trailer Park . 446 1602.

New 1 bedroom ba11ment
apt . in Rutland vicinity .
$200 . month plus utilities ."
Depoait &amp; referencn requi•ad . 614-742-2306 .
Apartman11 In Pomeroy .
Call after 6 p.m. 614-992 7511 .
.
Apartments . 304 - 676 5648 .
APARTMENTS. mobile
homes. houset . Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolia . 614-446 8221 '
ONE bedroom apartmentl
for the elderly. All utilitie1
paid . Tenants pay 30 percent of their adjusted incoma in this HUO sub1idized
apartment building. Twin
Rivers Tower. phone 304676-6679 . Equal opportunity hou1ing .
ONE bedroom apartment,
402'Y2 24th , St. Pt. Pleasant,
phone, 1-614 -992 -586B .
ONE bedroom apartment.
t226 month. all utilitie1
paid. 304-676 -2595 .

Small trailer for 1 person
utllltiea paid. dep _ req ..
Kanauga, Oh area . Call
448 -7406 .

45

3 bdr . trailer for rent. Call
446 -1052 aftor &amp;PM .

For rent Sleeping Rooma
and light house keeping
rooma. Perk Central Hotel.
Call 446 -0756.

2 bedrooms Mobile Home in
Rocino. 614 -367-0288 .
10 x 66 , 2 bd.room mobile
home in Racine area , 614992 -586B .
2 bedroom mobile home .
Approximately 6 mile• from
Middleport or Pomeroy .
614-992-6858 .
2 bedroom furnlahad mobile
home. Adults only . Utllltlet
paid . No peta. Deposit &amp;
reference• required .
Loutlon-S .R. 143. 61 4 ·
992-38•7 •her 15 p.m.'

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping room e126, utiltlet
paid, single male. Share
bath. 919 Second Ave.
Gaillpollo . Call 4441-4411
1fter 7PM .
Furnlahed apt. •dultl. No
Peto. 304-8711-1483.
Furniahed apt. ldultl. No
Poto. 304-675 -1453.

46 Space for Rent

and up to 112&amp;. Hict.-1 bedo.l440. ~nd up to
*526., Reclinero, *178. to
*350., t..mpa from •28. to
*76 . 6 pc. dinen11 from
&amp;99 ., to $4311.7 pc. , *189.
and up. Wood table with 1h1
chairs •426 . to *746. Oeek
*110 up to t226. Hutchea,
*660. and up. maple or pine
finiah . Bunk bed complete
with manreJSea. *260. and
up to *396. 81by bada,
*11 0 . Matt:reaaes or box
springs, full or twin, •sa ..
firm, 168 . and 178. Queen
1et1, 1196. 4 dr. cheat1.
142. II dr. chooto, *64. Bod
lramoo, 820.ond $26._ 10
gun · Gun cabinet1, .3150.,
dinette chairs •20. and •26 .
Ga1 or electric rangea. t325
up to *376. Babymetr&amp;IHS,
825 &amp; 835. bodfromn no,
825, &amp; 830, king frame no.
Good aelection of bedroom
'"·litcu, cedar c:htltl,
rockers, metal cablnttl,
1wiv.el rockeft.
U1ed Furniture -- bookcase.
rang11, ch1irs, end tabltl.
waahera. dryere. refriglrlton and TV' s , 3 miles out
Bulaville Ad. Open 9am to
6pm, Mon . thru Fri ., 9am to
6pm, Sat .
446-0322

Cedar w1rdrobe, antique
trunk. 3 tier gl111 table &amp;.
concrete picnic t1ble with
benchoo . Coli 814-261 1718.
Fireplace lnae,rt. twin blowere, · automatic tharmoltat,
ttill in factory carton.
1560 .00. Ph. 614-2661216.
Cheap carpet. It you h•ve
rent•l property or rent, don't
mind slightly Irregular
~lrpet, you Cln 11ve money.
Pricea at1r1 *2.99 sq. yd.,
!192-6173. 10-6.
Cordless telephones ideal
for u•.• •roUnd. Yo~r home.
f•rm. buiine11: etC. No
wlr'ea, receive or make calla
from 1 distence of 1500¥700
ft. from the bile unit.
Frank '• Pawn Shop, 406
2nd. Ave.. Galllpolio, 4460840.

59 For Sale or Trade
1973 Ford F600, 900x20
tiraJ, 4 speed plus 2 tpeed.
12 ft. bed, axe. cond. Will
trade for a pickup truck give
or t1ke difference. Prefer 81
or 82 Ford 150. 614-9492013 .

1970 TOYOTA Corona.
good motor, good body.
* 476 · 304"675 "3133 ·
IB CAMARO 327, good
·
od ·
304
Intenor,
go
tires,
·.
BB2-2483.

= =-==..::;;;::::u::===l

=

3 piece br. tulta complete,
•300. Call 614-256-6544.

MODEL OK 1029-2 Duncan
kiln, 8 shelves , po1ts S. 1tilt1
includ~d . le .. than 2 years
old. moving mu1taell. 8600 .
304-773-69B9 , 01 773 5134 .
ROTOTILLER. 6 HP, e100.
Three HP pu1h mower, t3&amp;.
304-676-5057 alter 5 .

.367 mag ., .25 auto .. 2
C8'a, ground plane and
powerpak, tool1, 1151n. tlret.
bicycle. 44B-1835.
Antique Oak Reproduction
furniture. full line in atock.
alao Antlque1. Paul Conkalt
Antiquat. Tupptrl Plains,
Flowert for Memorial D•YNorth 2nd. St. Middleport.
Open 9-8. Cliff'• Place.
8 U CK

atove wi'th pipe •nd 111
hookupo, 304-675-8809.

with 6 way blade,
&amp;ICc. cond .• t12,100.
614-446-4537.

SEARS Kenmore di•- 56 Pets for Sale
hwasher. 1vocado, butch art
block top. portable. 304675 -5096 .
HILLCREST KENNEL Boarding ell breeds. Selling
LADIES jeans, size 7 to 11, Happy Jock Dog Food . AKC
e~~:cellent condition, other
Doberm1n: Stud Service.
items. call 87!;-79BO
'
Call 448-77911 .
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
- KENNEL. AKC Chow pupploo, CFA Hlmoloyon. Persian lnd SlemiH kittena.
Call 448-3844 oltar 4PM .

Female English Setter and
MAYTAG automatic pupa. Call 814-38B-B36B .
waaher, works good, *76 .
Hospital bed with mat1resa. Walker Pupa, 9 wekl old,
186. 304-675-3180 .
UKC • PCA Roglotared.
Phona 3B8-B194.
Maytag H. D. auto waaher1125. Moytog IUIO. • 86 . 1 mala Him1l1yn crqm
Auto. wether "8nd dryer . point cot-2 yeoro old. 0200.
e125 . Rolrig, U6. 814- Aloo 1 fornolo Hlmolrn Tor742-2352 .
tie point. 1 YJ v••r• old.
0200. 614-892-8747.
1966 Ford ton and halt.
dump truck 1850. Tandlem Treeing Wolkor pup. RegisTroller 1625 . 304-882- tered. Night ch1mplon
3327.
ltock. Mel• or fem•le. 1150.
114-992-7888.

57

Musical
Instruments

Truck1 -for Sala

78 Ford F-150. 4-WD. good
cond. Call 614-387-76B6.
1 989 Chevrolet 2 ton aingle
axle dump truck. Call 81 4 379-2871 .

Farm, 170 acrea
houae. timber &amp;. gaa
near Aio Grande. Clal
8108

1~U~~"'jod~~~r~1~;~:~~~

Structures.
NEW &amp;
veatock
te1der1.
5B.5 -2260 . John L. Botto.
Tractor· f•rmall 8 .
tire• and
oound 304-882-3488,
anytime.

77 Chevy 4x4 Vl ton pickup,
12.250. Call 446-8608.
1970 Ford pickup. P.S ..
p tb ., automatic trana., overlo•d aprings, 360 motor.
Goocl cond. •176. 8141811-4124.
1918 FORD truck. 1976
Honda. CL 360, 1100. each.
804 28th St. Pt. Ple11ant,
304-676-6230.

55 Building Supplies

REPOSSESSED SIGN I Nothing downl Take over payBuilding material•
menta $68.00 monthly . block, brick. 11wer pipes,
4'1118 ' flaahing arrow sign . windowa. lintels. etc .
New bulbt, lettert. Hale Claude Winters, Rio Gr•nde.
Signa. Call FREE 1 -800- 0. Cali 614-246-5121 .
626-7446, anytime.
Build·your own Early AmeriVERY nice pleypen, also can home, .2 or 3 bdr.,
1utomatic cradle 1wlng. in- 12,995. Call 1-814-BB6fant walker . 304 -876 - 731 1 . See our model.
7770 .

" AMERICAN of Mortlnovllle" chett, dresser &amp; twin
mirrort, like new, 1 V. yelrt
old, originally e1500. will
oalllor t3~0 - Call304-8758636 after 6 :00.

72

Wsnted to 1811e tObiCCO
poundage. Call 814-268-1
1156.
Tobacco poundee will PlY
30 canto a pound. Call
614-388-8251 .
Tob1cco pound•• will P•Y
30 centa 1 pound. Call
614-3BB-8251 '
Wanl to buy to~acco poun·
dage, Will pey 3&amp; centt. One
wook only. Call448-9777 or

;63

4;4;6:::-2:::4:::B~4~·=:.:::::;===
Livestock

73

Vans &amp;

4

W.O.

1970 GMC church , buo.
Good condition. 0800. 614982-3690, Joy Clark.

74

Molorcycles

1979 Elonor• 2110 , oxc.
cond. Muot ·oell . Coli 4481 2107 ook lor Clint.
18811 Honor Dovlcloon loot
yoor pon hood. flrot electro
glide, 03.1100 firm . Call
441-32311.

Roglotorod Polled Heroford
bull, 14 moo. old, oppro.
weight 700 lbo. Coli 4481848 or 446-4472 .
Harley Davidson wide glide.
Coli 448-0038 .
Horooa for oalo . 814-992 1102
1979 Yomoho 850 Special.
10,800 milet. New tlre11nd
Average 25-30 lb . wa•ning bottery . 11100. 814-992pig1 f40 . 1 held . 684 near 2382.
Porter . "Ohio . 814-3457·
_0-:::6-:::31_._ _ _ _~--- I 1980 Hondo Prelude. Swim~
minu Pool. 24 h. round
REGSTERED &amp; grade wolk- obovo ground. Pump. 1800.
lng horooa. L. E. Koloter, firm. 114-992-7880 .
304-1176-2178 .
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~11880
HONDA CR .250
Efeinor. 79 Ch.vrolet Bluer
'
........ ..
Cheyann1. 17-40 tlret, lot
of oxtroo. 304-8711'· 3292 .
71
Autos for Sale
19!!J KX 1211 Kewoookl,
••Cellent condlth)n~ must
1011. 1800. Coli 304-88224187 or 882-2822 .

=

-

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

1880 HONDA XR 100 •
troller. 11400. Ph- 304111-41111, Mondey through
Frldey.

r~~~t~o~w~n~.~C=o;ll~oft~o~r;.6.

OE 1vac1do refriger1tor Hke
new *171. 30 in. IYICedo
oloc. ronge 3 yro. old 0110.
other refrlgeratora, weahen.
• dryoro 080 on~ up. All 30
dayo guorontood. Coli 4488181 .

43 Farms for Relit
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
• Wllhera, dryWI, retrigera4 bedroom ferm houM . tort. rahge1, lluagga Ap.
Fenced p11ture, outbulfd· pllonceo. Upper , River Rd.,
lng1, Pot~ble land contract. booldo Sto~o Croot Motel
441-7398.
.
.
218-887-10117.

1877 C,opric Clooolc Chovralot tS.OOO. 1177 Buic:i&lt;

Skylork o1 .100. 11711
phlvy luv 0700. Coil 4481114.

te71 Chevrolet Manto

c.. 2 •

.. "· "'· rw:cc.

AM·FM l·track, oxc. cond.
Col1448-7131,

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 448-3888 or 445·
4477

83

~ DON'T GEE VMBUC~5 ' WARD

AND HER MUTI. .. LOOKG AS
IF THE FALL DIDN'T HURT
TfiEM EITHER ...

mo""-

...1\N' LOOII,
TNERE'5 ALMOST
LI HE A 6LOW
UP AHEAD...

ALLEY OOP
LOOKS LIKf' A
Mf'f'nNGOF
SOME KIND
W1THGUZ!

SAY, r'LL Sf'T TH.b.T'S TH'
GROUP TJdi&gt;.T TRI E D TO
GET OUR A"tTEI&lt;iTI O'I I&gt;.T
iH' Lt.r.KE!

GASOLINE ALLEY

That was f~st! Gideon
snaps
his
finqers
once,
and off
J~dt,j

... j~si:: like
a little doq!

He should have
snMped his
f inqers tw ice!

\fofl f ::,•.,

runs ... l~~~1cr

.
I'll MOVIE : 'Train Rob berS'
8 :30 0 (I)® Private Benjamin
Be njami n enters a raco
agains t the general 's daug hte r. IRI
9 :00 CIJ 700 Club
O(]) lfOM•A•s•H Whe n a
colle~ e track st ar JOins the
4077th, Kl1nger schedules a
race for money w1th a nval
MASH unit. IR)
(j) UD Great Performance•
'The Mystenous Stranger ·
A p nnter' s apprentiCe daydreams h1 mself mt o a medieval cos tlo and meets
someone w•th mys terious
powers (A) (90 m1n.l
9 :30 (]) Not Necessarily The
News Th1s sho w prom1sos
to be overyth1ng tho current
news IS not
0 (]) (!0 One Day at a
Time Ann and Sa m go on
the•r honeymoon.
10:00 (1) MOVIE : "Person•! Best"
(1) MOVIE: 'Seniors'
0 Cl) ® Cagney and
lacey The pollee proc•n ct is
confronl ed by a van oty of
problems IR) 160 mon I
fi)INN Naws
10:30 ()) Star Time
(]) TBS Evening News
(]) Welcome Home Ton•ght' s progra m looks at a
group of Vietnam vete ran s
dedicating the new Vietnam
Veterans memonal
[[1 Newawatch
fll In Search of.. ..

.. OR

News
(!) ESPI\I SportaCenter
ffi Newa/Sporto/Woather
(]) Dave Allen at lergo
® Travelling Hopefully
@II Benny Hill Show
11 :30 0 (}) ffi Tonight Shew
Johnny 's gues ts are Richard
Benjam in, Gary Shandiong
~and J an Stephenso n. !AI (60
min .)
[f) MOVIE : ' S .O.B.'
CIJ Another lifo
(]) Catlino

HA~ ~ I RDIE

~EEN

PUTTIN6 ON
WEIGHT LATELY?
i.O~ OF WEIGHT ?

(]) Soap

0 (])Trapper John. M.D.
(]) PBS Loto Night
® All In tho Family
Nlghtllne
til Honeymooners'
12:00 ill MOVIE: "Richard Pryor
live on the Sunset Strip' ·
()) Burno &amp; Allen
(!) PKA Full Contact
Karate from Denver. CO
Coverage of the Ughtweli;lht
Contenders bout featunng
Tommy William s and Norris
Williams is presented from
Denver , CO (90 min .I
Cil lt'o a Long Way to
October Part 1
(]) Nlghtllne
® MOVIE: 'Great Scout
end Cathouse Thursday'
Mary Hortman, Morv
Hortman
12:30 D (}) CD Lete Night with
David Lenonman David's
guests are Sandra Bernhard
and circus performer Mickey
Antaleck . 160 min.)
CIJ Jack Benny Show
D (]) Columbo
g
ABC News Dna on

• en

WHV AIN'T
WE HAVIN'

FRIED

'CAUSE '/ORE
UNCLE SNUFFY

WON'T BE HERE··

--AN' NEITHER
WILL TH'

CHICKENS

CHICKEN
TONIGHT, AUNT

LOWEEZV?

e

SEWING Mochlno ropolro,
oorvice. Authorized Singer
lioloo • Service Shorpon
Sclalor•. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 1182-2284.
ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE coli City Furniture
304-1711-ZIOB or 446 0131 .

en

Ono .

JIMS . WATI!R SERVICE.
Call Jim Lanier, 304-87117387.

87

Upholstery

TRIITATE
UPHOUITERV IHOP
1183 lee . A.,. .. Goi~polla.
441-7133 or'Me-1833.

WHAT THAT PICNIC
"TUR:NED INTO WHEN
IT 15E6ANTO

IJ I

I LUFFIT j

D~IZZ L E .

rJ r .

Now arrange the circled leners to
lonn the surprise answer , as sug gesled by the above cartoon.

A[lXXXX]

Print answer here:
Saturday's

(Answers tomorrow)
FLIM SY BELON G
as he w a s about to leave lor
wo rk- TIME FOR THE " BUSS '

I Jumbles:
MOUTH QUEST
Answer: What he sa id

Join tt. JumtJt.lcwtn F1n Club ....:11 ..-..lb etQN.woni S.,.. .IUrnbtiM ""'Y mor'IWI.
For.._ ..,..._wrihlto: JumbM L--. F.nctub. tlotnlsnew D p r. ao. sz•t. O•Md
CWtlfll S tltk:Jn. New 'for\ , N Y 10163. tnctu01 }'1M Mme, Mtdrft1 lind tip cads .

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Avoiding a squeeze
NORTit
• 10 s 4 2
• A 10 ti 5
+ A KQ9

e

PEANUTS

BUT I'M SO MUCJ.l
BI6GER ,n iAN THE
REST OF YOU ...

Tl-!15

IS

50

EMBARRASSING ..

Twilight Zone
1 :00 CIJ I Marrlad Joon
(]) ABC News One on One
g()tN-o
1 :30 D
CIJ NBC News
Ovarnlgh .
'Atlantic City'
(})
ill MOVIE: 'Who Ia Killing
the Grut Chefs of
Europe7 '
()) My Uttlo Marglo
(!) ESPN' o lnoldo BoooboN
(I) NaWS/Sign Off
D ()t CNN l;loodiiM Newa
2 :00 (I) Boot of 700 Club
([) MOVIE: 'Angela Wooh
Their Faceo'

MOVI~:

trump tha t is always goi ng
to be use less "
Oswald : " North's doubl e

!I·Zl-83

of fou r clubs was for takeout
al lhough he would not be
unha ppy if pa rtne r e lected
to lea ve it m. Soulh's four

., .,
•s

WEST

no-trump call w3.s- Black-

EAST
• 9 76 3
• J 9 72
• J 10 • 5

• 83

t H

wood a lthough most experts
play it wit h some othe r
meaning ln this situa tion_"
J im: " In a ny event Norlh
was a good soldier . He bid

.KQIOI7142
SllliTII
• A K QJ

fiv e hea rts to show his two
aces. Soulh looked over his
20 high -ca rd points and
made what we consider an

.KQ4
• 8 J2
• AJ 3

illJ Frontline

11:oo u rn rn o (]) ® m Cl2l

Elec1rical

DEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR. GuorontHd work. Call lnytime
114-2111-1820 or814-2661207.

Entertainment

[f) MOVIE : 'Partners'
[}) MOVIE : 'The Pluton ium Incident'
()) I Spy
(!) USFL Football : Birmingham at Michigan
Cil
01
(J2I
MOVIE :
'Jacqueline Bouvier Ken nedy'
0 (]) ® Square Pegs
Lauren and Patty go to bat
{I)

BARNEY

711

12ft. olumlnuin bOat-UOO.
7 h .p. Tod WIIMomo
f278 . 114-742-2171.

0' L16tff, 5ANOY"'

J .A.R . Con1truction Co.
W1ter Linet. Footers ,
Drain•- All kind• of Oitc;111ng.
Rutland, Oh . 114-742 2903.

JONES IOYS WATER SERVICE . Coil 814-317-7471
or 114-317-0111 .

11 ft . 1871 Torry boll boot.
80 - HP Mercury motor,
po-r · trim, otoln- otoe1
prop .. 23ibo. - MOHCUry
thruotor. live bltlt wollo.
Ten"""' drive on t111ller.
Coli 814-317-0131 '

... LUCHY FOR UG THEGE ROCKS
CliVE OFF THAT FUNNY KfNO

Lonnie Bogga Excavating.
Dour, blckhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. C811•
441-7903.

811 . General Hauling

8oal8 and
tor Sale

601 TOFINO ·
THEM t&gt;E FORE
THEY FiNO
THEIR WAY
OUT OF HERE ...

' \..A... I

EKcavating

&amp; Refrigeration

!

I KJ

for the1r favorite teacher . {Rl

DOZER WORK By Tod
H1nne, ponds, ditchea.
booomonto. ate. Coli 4484807 . Corter &amp; Evona
Tranaportltion .

84

CD

Bob! A g alaxy of notables
help Bob celebrate h•s BOth
b1rthday at Washington 's
Kennedy Center . (3 hrs.l

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . Fomerly Dewitt••
Plumbing. Call 614-3870676 .

1880 HONDA ZOO Twin
Star. axoalant condition,
. .60. otter 1 :00, 304-837.
21'71.

Motors

1874 Choreor 311 outo ..
new ti..... many new part1,
Nftl good, 0400. Coli 4410713.

Plumbing

DAPIL

Tonight
8 :00 Q (1) ffi Happy Birthday,

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
piece cuttom lit your home.
GuarantHd. Advanced Gutter, IDoy 614·692-4016,)
lnlght 4114-698-8205 .)

&amp; Heating

1874 HONDA Cl 380.
'400. Pho,.. otter 11:00.
304.171-1100.'

~58 - 1207 .

1D

E &amp; A Tree Service, fully
lnaured. free ••tlmatet .
Phone 614-367-0636, call
after 5 .

82

1980 ODYSSEY. excollont
condlllon. 11110.. 304-1713773.

QE waaher &amp; Hotpolnt
wa1her nearly new condition. alto other washers &amp;
dryer _ Gu•ranteed. &amp;14-

®You Asked For It
(ill Moneymakers

--------u
- Get your carpet in thip

REMODELING. roofing.
p1inting, interior • &amp;llltetlor.
free Htimates. 304-8762440.

·~-=----

(]) D (]) Fomily Feud
CIJ Business Report

RON'S Tolovloion Service.
Spociallzlng In Zenith and
Motorola. Oua11r. and
houu caH•- Cell 578-2398
or 448·2~114.

Coli 304-6711-12831or concrete and black top ..ti·
m•t•, metal building and
fence erection colt. Alao
buying and selling heavy
equipment. Pleeaent Meadows DlttrlbutOrs end
Sain.

I I I

Pittsbu_!llh at Atlanta

GENE'S CARPET CLEANING SERVICE. Aacomriler1ded for profe11lonal
ateam cle•nl,n g. Scotch
Guard-Froo Eotimatoo. Coli
Gone at 614-992-6309.

shape. Water removal. FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTAIN
STEAMER 814-446-2107.

AZERC

(!) ESPN SportaCenter
Ill Major League Baseball:

Water Wall•. Commercial
. lt1d- DornKtlc~· Tes.t .,. h.oi~·­
P~:-~mpt s ·alet , •h.d .·Sirvice~
304-8911-3802 .
Pecan coffee table •nd 2 end
tables, e&amp;o tor all. Call
446-4762 .
.

Unecrlllnble four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

world of Fraggle Rock underm~ath the basement of an
eccentric inventor.

84 , VOLKSWAGEN. ·.~,u ..,o; ---~~~.--------~
304-676-2068.
F &amp; K 'rroo Trimming, otump ·
removal. Colll711-1331 .

54 Misc. · Merchandise
AWARDED new contract.
Army surp lua clothing, .denim 14 oz. p1nt1 $10 .•
(rental surplu1 clothing
$6.00 dozen). new t·shlrta
$1 .60 up . Sam Somerville'•· 7 mile• a81t Ravens ~
wood . Open Friday, Saturdoy, Sunday 1:00-7 :30 p.m.
lt977 750Triumph, 5 opoed
chopper &amp;1 ,000.) 304-8753334 .

Hi Preaeur~t Cleaning. All,lm·
inum aiding. mobtle h'o mea,
wood, brick, aand1tone
blMidlng 1nd hom••- Alao
heavy equipment. Fully inlured, FrM estimatet. 614949-21BI . .

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing, including
hot tar application. carpenter, electrlol1n, muon. Call
304 -6711 -2088 ·ar 876 4560.

TWO mobile home• for rant
on At. 2 about 6 minute•

2 bedroom trailer with add·
on•ndgarageonRt. 21boVI
old Y, 1200 month unfur·
nlohod, '2211 , furnlohod.
plus utHitleo, 0110 depooH,
304-8711-324B otter 7 .

79 OMNI, oxcallont condition. AM-FM 1tareo. new
bonory. good tlroa. •2600.
304-876C6B17.

75 DODGE von.
cu1tomized-to trade for car
of equal value, or take car on
trade in 304-676-6809 .

2 bedroom 12x80 fur ·
nl1hed , a . c .~ with dryer.
e176 . plu• utllltie1 and
dapooit . No peto. 614-9927479 .

12x60 furolr, waohor, dryer.
1175. pluo utilltleo. depooH
end reterenc11. 304·8764874.

1977 Oldo Cutlaoo ""S"" 2 dr.
ht., 360 eng., eir, at .• am-fm
8 trk., A-1 cond. Wllloccopt
trodo or U,7911. 814-8873086.

'ftfi~N}fj)1t ~ TIIATSCRAIIBLEDWORDGAIIE ,
~ ~ ~~'"
byHenriAmoldandl!oOLoo

e

PAINTING • lntorlar ond
o}rtorlor, plumbing. raoflng,
oomo remodeling- 20 \rra.
oxp. CoH 114-388-111112.

Coli 441i-B719 or Ul3884.

8W(])II(])®• Cl21

No·
(}) MOVIE: ' Blackboard
Jungle'
()) nc Toe Dough
(]) Andy Griffith
CD Newa/Spom/Woother
(]) l1ll Studio See
Chor1ie'a Angelo
6 :30 D (}) CD NBC News
()) MOVIE: 'The Cowboy"
(]) Gomer Pyle
(]) • (J2I ABC News
D (]) ® CBS News
(])Dr. Who
® Over Easy
7 :00 Q [f) PM Magazine
[f) Conoumor Reports

eprlngs • m1ttre11 twin of

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESS.EL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 35 . PHONE 446-7274 .

w
-tilt out. EC.
. air,
woodburner,
toylcent
electric,
new carp throughout. un darpinning . outbuilding .
$11 . 500 . Coli 614 -245 5406, 446-0212 .

EVENING

Iron llvlngroom tultoo 1188,
entron reclin.re •a&amp;. other
rocllnoro . .0, mo.... dinotto
Nlo 1179, lovo ooou 070,
hido-o-bod 1280. box

for Sale

1976 14x70 Peerless MH,

5/23/83

e

70St70N-- ·

32 · Mobile Homes

Viewing

SWAIN .
AUCTION • FURNITURE
12 · Olivo: 8t., GolllpoHo: 1
piece wood living room oulto
with Inch flat ormo Ute,

-""'NY'PEOPLE
WArr Ar 7Hiii

gerilge. out. buildings, pond

34

··L' .

The Daily

Ohio

overbid . Hi ~ spades wer e
. s.olid. but he hcl,d only four

Vulne ra ble :· Both

of thi.'m ." -

Deale r : West

North

West

t :ast
Double l'ass

Pass
Pass

a•

Pass

Pas.&lt;;

Pas~

4.

South
4 NT

7+

a

time and

l o n~

finally

dcddcd W f:'s t had to have an
c ighl-l·a rd club s uit for his

lour leve l pre-empt. So he
ruffed a dub with dummy's
10 or tru m ps "

+K

Opeping lead

Oswald : "South took his
ace of clubs a nd led two
trumps. Then he studil-d for

Jim : ·· Now it was East's

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

Os wa ld: "On«! of the most
interesting wa ys to defend

lurn to lhink . Finall y, he
decided he could not afford
to throw either a heart or
diamond a nd carefully ,
undN ruffcd ."
Oswald : " This underruff

or trump discurd cooked

against a squeeze in two
s uits is to disca rd a trump in
order to reta i n ~ pro t ecti on in

South's goose . Wh en he led
ou t his last two trumps,

both your s uits."

befor e

Jim: "This isn't r eally a
trump discard . More proper ly it is an underrurt with a

t~~,

,. "t

dumm y

had

to

disca rd

Eas l. who simply
copied d ummy 's dis&lt;:a rd and
sell he g rand s lam ."
(N ~:WS I'AI't-: 11 lo:Nn:HI 'Iti St-: ASSN.)

s('

lly THOMAS JOSE'H
U Fruit decay
DOWN
1 One of the

ACROSS
I Spanish
beUe

5 Winged
·11 Jewish

Curiea

2 Bedeck
3 Old London
terror

month

1% Tranquil
13 " - Around

4 " Raiders
of the Lost

the Clock"
IC Musical

"

composition

15 Exasperate
I&amp; Game pieces

5 Agree
6 Italian
(Scot. )

II Lace around

2t Before
(prefix)

8 Shred
9 Went in
10 Clerical

residence

ZJSuggestion
Z2 Pinafore

IC Mter-illnner

statesman
7 Alder tree

17 Reindeer
(Ger. l

Yesterday 's Answer

candy
19 Sagacious
22 Unden tree
23 Cheerful
24 Corne into
25 Capitalillt'a
street

~~~~

%7 Neptune, e.g.
Z9 Medieval
guild

30 R.N.
31

Wading bird

3i Choler
31 Osiris's

father

~~~~~~

Z3 Wave's top
Z5 Thin
2a Present
Z7 Levantlhe
boat
28 Here (Fr. )
Z9Greek

3% Vitality
331ndian
mulberry
34 Toby

35 Whistling
sound

37 Famous
drama

critic
Considerably

39 Assuage

co Go through
again

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - llere's how

to work

It:

AXYDLBAAXR

II

L 0 N G F E I. I. 0 W

One leller olmply stands for another. In thlo sample A 'lo ' ·
used for the three L's, X for lhe tw.o O's, etc. Single lettero,
opootrophea, the length and · formahon of lhe wordo are all
hints. Each day the code !ellen are differ~nl.
~·
CRYPTOQUOTES
.'

BCAZ

ABMPVA

FECZJVQ

FQV

AZFQZVH

ABMPV . - ACLQYV

RN

LEOECGE •

I

Yealenlay's Cryploqmole: HOW BEAliTIFUL A DAY~ JjE .~

WHENKINDNESStoUCHESI'r.-GEORGEEUJSTON

: .

�.,

· Page

1G- The Daily Sentinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mol relay, Nay 23, 1983

Homebuyers .rush
to secure loans

Area deaths
Harry L Erwin
HarryL.iCotton1Erwin,56,Rt.4,
Athens, died Saturday night at
Doctor' s Hospital, Nelsonville.
Mr. Erwin was born a t Radcliff,
son of the late Paul and My rtle Ball
Erwtn. He was also preceded In
death by two brothers, Donald
Erwtn and Pau l Alfred (Junior)
Erwtn.
He was an employed at the C. L.
Williams Construction Co., as a
carpenter. .
Survivors Include one. brother,
Carl E. Erwin, Rt. 4, Athens; ·three
sisters, Helen Natale)'. The Plains;
Mary Mlller, Tampa, Fla., and
Dorothy fu&gt;gers, Hollywood , fla ;
close frtends, William and Alice
Mitchell and fam ily of Rt . 4, Athens.
funera l services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Hughes
funeral Home, Athens, with the
Rev. R. E. Smith officiating . Burial
wUJ be In Graham's Chapel Cemetery. Friends may call a t the funeral
home today from 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9.

Adena M. Bradford
Mrs. Adena M. Bradford, &amp;1,
Lincoln Heights Pomeroy, died
Saturday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A homemaker. Mrs . Bradford
was bor n on Aug. 6, 1899 a t
Chllllcothe, a da ughter of the la te
William a nd J enna freshour Thomas. She Is survived by thr&lt;'&lt;'
daughter~. Ruby Guinther, Pomeroy; Pat Placentiljo, Marion , and
freda Harley, GlenAllen. Va ., and a
son, Ralph Bradford, Columbus.
Nine grandchildren and 13 great·
grandchildren also survive.
Memorial services will be announced later by the E wing Funeral
Home.

Rickey A. Layne
Services for Rickey A. Layne, 22,
Cheshire, who died Saturday a t the
Holzer Medical Cenler, will be held
at 2: :ll p.m . Tuesday a t the Ewing
funera l Home.
Mr. Layne was born Nov. 29, 1961
at Pomeroy, a son of Virgil and
Mary Haggy Layne, now of Che·
shire. Other survivors are a brother,
Rusty Layne, Cheshire; a sister,
Mrs. Ron (Desslel (cql Couch,
Elgin, Tex .; a niece, Angela Fisher,
Elgin, Tex.; materna l grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. James Russell of
Middleport, and paternal grandparenl~. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Layne,
Cheshire. Several a unts and uncles
also survive.
Mr. Layne was a 1919 graduate of
Kyger Creek High Sehool and
altended the Jackson Manpower
Training Sehool.
O!flcla tlng at services will be the
Rev. WIUiam Curfman. Friends
may call at the fun eral home unlll 4
this afternoon and from 7 to 9 this
evening. Burialwlllbeln GraveiHill
Cemetery at Cheshire.

Emery H. Cart
Emery H. Cart, 65, of J ackson,
died Sunday at the Dayton Veterans
Administration Hospital.
Born In 'Milton, W.Va. Aug. 31,
1917, the son of Ihe late J o hn S. and
Edna Cartmlll Cart .
He was a World War 11 veteran
and a m ember of the Veterans of
foreign Wars and AmVcts of
Jackson.
Survived by his wife, Rll a
McMannis Car1 ; two sons, Bill, of
Columbus and Kevin, of Jackson;
two daughters, Cathy Cart. of San
Anlonlo, Tex . a nd Christine Yuhas
o!Toledo.
Also survived by fou r sisters:
Myrtle G looon , of Hurricane,
.. W.Va.: Eleanor Cart, of Arcadia,
Fla.; Alzada HalfhUJ, of Cheshire;
and Helen Morrtson, of Hunlington.
W.Va. Three brolhers: Okey, of
Pomeroy; Pete, of Pedro, Ohio; and
RJchard, of Michigan.
funeral will be 1 p.m . Wednesday
at the Mayhew funeral Home In
Jackson with the Rev. Ken Kephart
of!lciatlng. Burial will be a l Fairmount Cemetery In Jackson.
Friends may call at the funeral
. home4 to 9 p.m . Tuesday.

Arman Hart, Jr.
Arman (Saml Hart, Jr., 37,
Guysville, died Sunday at O'Bleness
Hospital In Athens.
BornatC!em, W. Va ., hewasason
of the Rev. Arman and Eva Hughes
Hart, Sr., Guysville. He was a
member ot the millwright local
union 175(i, Parkersburg, have
served as an otftcer, a member and
past master of Savanna Masonic
. Lodge4661n Guysville, a member of
theHartBrothersBlueGrassBand,
a ·member of the National R1tle
AssociatiOn. He attended the Valley
Bible Center Church In Guysville.

He had served In the U.S. Army.
Survtvlng bes.ldes his parents, are
hls wife, Judy Ashcraft Hart: a son
and da ughter, Gregory Allen and
Deanna Rae, both at home; two
brothers, My ron (Pete) and Heman
(Tib ) (cq 1. both of Guy~Jlle; two
sisters, Carolyn Jones of CoolvJlle
and Daytha L. Hess, Dublin.
Services wlll be held at 1 p.m .
Tuesday at the Valley Bible Center
Chu rch with Nell Bellville officiating. Burial will be In the Carthage
Church Cemetery at Guysville.
.Masonic services will be held at 7:30
this evening at the White funeral
Home in Coolvllle Where friends
may call after 7 this evening.
Friends may also call a t th!' church
one hour prior to services .

The hopeful llomebuyers began
llnlng up outside banks and savings
crush .· of would-be homebuyers, and loans as early as last Wednes·
some of whom had lined up day. A total ot 449 banks stateWide
beginning last week In an effort' to are participating In the pi'Ogram.
get a llmlted supply at state-~ wUJ be nothing If I get my
low-Interest mortgage loans.
bouse, ' said Wilma Townsend, who
At8a.m.acheerwentuptro the along With her husband, James,
crowd at Buckeye Federal Savings camped outside First Investment
&amp; Loan Association, where allneo! Co. in Columbus since ,7::ll a .m .
ll2 peoplestretched halfway around Satun:lay.
the buUdlng.
"There's only so much money
"We did It," said Trlsh Hendrick· avallable," she s;~Jd. "My husband
son, who with her husband, Mark, ts brtngtng the hlbachl. We plan to
was first to arrive at the bulldlng at eat here, sleep here and use the
10: :ll a .m . Frl!lay.
bathroom here If that's what It
As the gtJard unlocked the door,
takes."
the couple hugged and kissed .
Steve Broussard, who waited
'"Thank you Jesus, " Hendrickson ahead of the Townsends, said the
said.
only reason he began his walt at 5
1bree applicants were admitted p.m . Friday was greed.
at a time to the building at a time,
"I figure I can save about $150 a
where bank officials · accepted month on my mortgage with the
payment on closing costs and flied reduced rates lflcangetoneofthose
outlorms .
loans, " Broussard said. "Greed Is
Under State Issue I, which voters my main motivation."
approved last November, lending
Some bankers said they wJU sign
InstitutiOns will dole out S:llOmllllon up about twice as many famllles as
In mortgage money at 9.98 percent they expect to be able to accommolnterest rates, more than two points date, because some won't quality.
below the 12 percent average
John Boeblnger, president of the
nationwide. The vlglls are neces- Akron Area Board of Realtors, said
sary because the money wlll be most applicants will likely !mow
Issued on a strictly enforced Within several days whether they
llrst&lt;"Ome, first-served basis.
qualify .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio ·

Panks opened their doors talay to a

Marge M. Kelly
Marge Michl K.elly, 57, formerly
of Midd leport, died unexpectedly
Saturday at her residence in Miami,
f la.
A 1943 graduate of Middleport
High Sehool, Mrs. Kelly had been a
resident of Florida for a number of
years.
A daughter of the late WUIJamand
Anna Michl of Middleport, Mrs.
Kelly Is survived by two sisters,
Mrs. Betty Archer of Middleport,
and Mrs. Esther Wherley, Cleve·
land ; a brother, Joe Michl, Steubenville. and her husband, JamesKeU~ .
Severa l nieces and nephews also

•

WArriNG FOR MORTQAG~ - Two women walling for the
Monday opening of a bank iii Gahanna, Ohio coverthell' belongings with
plastic to protect them from an approaching ralnstonn. The women are
part of a crowd of over 100 people who were walling Sunday for tbe bank
to open to apply for 9.98 percent home mortg&amp;~es being offered. by a
slate hond. ( AP Laserphoto).

survive.

Family m embers are · In Flordia
where se!'Vices were to be held
today.

'•

26th annual graduation·
Eastern Local Board of Education . A solo was
presented by Anita Bet h Teaford, member of the
graduating class.

-Meets Tuesday ·

Eight ca lls were answered by
local units over the weekend , !he
Meigs County E mergency Medical
Service reports.
Sunday calls Included 3: 17p.m. ,
Racine Unit, Aimand Ca ug hery to
Veterans Memorial Hospita l; 3: 58
p.m . Tuppers Plains, William
Barton trom Route 7 to CamdenClark Hospital, Parkersburg; Syracuse, 7:42 p.m ., Troy Manuel and
Chris Allen from an accident on
State Route 124 to Veterans MemorIal; rutland, 9:10 p.m ., Rutland ,
Kethel Hatfield, Dexter, taken to
Veterans Memorial.
Runs on Saturday Included 1:08
p.m ., Tuppers Plains Unit lor Alvle
Green. Hickory Lakes, treated but
no tra nsportation; 6: 51 p.m.,
Tuppers Plains, Aletha Barton,
treated In Tup)lPt's 'Piatns; 8:37
p.m .. Middleport for Robert Ste-

Woman
I Continued from page 1)
on charges of breaking and
Pntertng .
They were each sentenced to six
months lo five years to Columbus
Correctional facUlty .
The sentences were all suspended
and each placed in Meigs Conly Jail
for 45 days. aftet· which time, the
defendan ts wlll appear In court lor
final d!.'te nnlnat Ion.
·
James Jackson, Jr., charged with
breaking and enlerlng was sent .
enced to six months to five years
wlth the sentence suspended. Jackson was plaeed on probation lor two
years.

wart , taken to Veterans Memorial;
Rutland at 9:08p.m., to Route 143for
a motorcycle accldenl taking floyd
and William Brown to O'Bleness
Hospital In Athens .

The Ladles Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will meet Toes·
day, May 24, at 7: :ll p.m . in the
dining room at the hospital.

•

Voi.32,No.29 ·
C.,.,rithtod 1913

Sentinel staff
Middleport CouncU agreed to make appllcation for
a new Ohio Department of Natural Resources grant
lor park landscaping after meeting with vJllage
consultant Kim Shields Monday night.
The program, he said, Is part of the new jobs
legislation. In Ohio, $3 million wJil be given 1n the
gtanls with $20,000 to $~,000 a reasonable amount
which Middleport might expect to receive If Its
appllcatlon Is approved. The grant would provide
funds for shruh&lt;;, trees and park related equipment.
In Middleport, not only would the community park be
an area of improvement, buttreescouldbepurchased
and planted In the downtown area.
The program Is 100 percent grant rnimey -and
Middleport would sland an equal chance with other
towns and .clties In receiving a grant, Shields said.
Counell agree&lt;l to proceed with the application. If
successtul, the plantings secured through the
programwouldhavetobelnthegroundbyOcto~rl.
Shields also discussed posslbilltles of ll.llng another
application tor a 50 percent grant with the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources for the develoP'
.. ment of recreation .facljltles along the river.
_

Public inspection

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

An outline of expenditures of the
Title VI-B program wUI be available
for public Inspect ion and Input from
9 a.m. to 3: 30p.m. Wednesday at the
hlgh school otflce In the Sou them
Local Sehool District.

MECHANIC ST. -

POMEROY
.,

sauaa on
our
cost
auto 1oans1

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Dlscharges--Esta Daylong, Thomas Dorst, Shirley Diddle,
George Molden, Shelby Davis,
Barbara Smith, Rachel Ekllch.
Sunday Admissions-Walter Barrett, Dexter: Jacob Clnereskl,
Minford; Kethel Hatfield, Dexter;
Cathy BaiC\Win, Racine; Christopher Allen, Middleport .
Sunday Discharges--Mary Derenberger, Wllllam Stewa rt.

l

Weather forecast
Partly sunny today. High 72 to 76.
Clear and cool tonight. Low 48 to 52.
Sunny TUesday. High In themld·7&lt;B.
The chance of ra in Is 20 percent
today and near zero percent lonlght
and Tuesday.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday - 1\
chance of showers on Wednesday.
Fnlr Thursday and Friday. Coot
Highs In the mld-Wo. to mid·71loi.
Overnight lows In the ~ to
lower !lOs.

•. ., !

,

- our lOWer rata 111111e
now aareatana to IIIIIIUI

PORTABLE

We..re.alize that when "new car fever" strikes, it strikes hard. We at The Farrners
Bank want to help you cure that fever. Therefore, we are offering our lowest
rates in years of 11.9%* financing on any new car loan. All you have- to do is
make your best deal, then bring your purchase order to one of our qualified ·
loan officers. ·

GAS

GRILL ,

CUT $1 ()()00

ISears I

Authoiizad Catalog Merchants
Greg &amp; Patty Gibbs

I 08 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH.

fHONE:
(Ohio)
(W. Va.) nl-9577

WASHINGTON (AP) - Rising
guollne and housing costs sent
consumer prices up 0.6 percent last
month, the btaest jump In nine
months. tllegovern!llE!IIt said talay.
For the first four months of 1983,
·however, coosumer prices rose at
an annual rate of just 2.1 percent.
Many eoo~tomtatS !!BY inflation for
all oll983colild match -crbi!ttrrJut year' a
percent and one
anab-11 called the Apr1llncre8Se "a
ll!mpOrary blip,"
I
.

"Customer subject to loan approval.

22R23737

Fo

.Farmers

Bank.
'

.

u

Meml&gt;.r FDIC

Your Community Owned Bank

,I

I

·,

loans granted under the program .
Council entered Into an agreement with f loyd G.
Browne and Associates for design a nd engineering
supervision of property on General Hartinger Blvd.
which has been designated as a housing development
site and for the draw ing of a map which will show
placemen: of water lines of the town . Cost wUI be
$20,000. This action came after Shields addressed
council stating tha t the property adjacant to General
Hartinger Park had been strongly designated as a n
additiona l area for housing development when
a pplications for HUD money were filed two years
ago. He said only a m ajor s ituation would bring about
a change In HUD officials redesignating that land for
another purpose. Suggestions had been m ade.
especially by councilman Bob Gilmore. l.hat the la nd
In question be used lor further development of
recreational facllltles due to Its proximity to the
present park.
·
Street problems
One resident a ppeared before council last night to
discuss a t length sa fety on the downtown streets. He
said he Is a native of the community and he wasn' t
critical of the pollee department. Howeve r, he
· commented that It ts unsafe to walk through town a t
night , In contrast to years past. He told council his

!

•

...

. wile had been grabbed by a young man and had,been
subjected to a n off color comment recently when she
exited from a doctor's offtce in town . The resident
charged persons loitering on the stre&lt;&gt;ts shout
obscenities at motorists a nd hassel the elde rly. wives
and small children on the si reets.
The resident warned that he will do what he has to
do to protect his wife. family and property a nd will
take whatever consequences are involved as a result .
Officials acknowledged that are problems on the
streets but Counclbnan Dewey Hmwn am1sed the
resident not to take the law in his own hands. Horton
pobtled out that the vJllage ha.• ordinances ~vemlng
..U IYJICIS of offenses. He urged the resident and oChers
1o sign warrunls agu1nst offenders. WIMm otfenders
have to pay ftnes and servv j..U senlmces lor their
acts. they ivlll decide that the acL• are not tun
anymore, Horton said.
The m atter was referred to the sa frt y committee,
councilmen WJIJJarn Wa lters, Jack Satlt'rfleld and
Horton, for recommendations. 'llte t'('slclent was
asked to conttibute what suggestions he has for
Improving the problems.
A second resident appeared beforP council to
compla in about va ndalism and the racing of cars at
early morning hours on fifth St.
tConlinued on page 101

Additional
loan funds
available
CLEVELAND lAP) - The sta te
will offer mot'!' low-lnl eresl mort gage lonn• nex t month to ftrst-timP
homebuyers. Gov . Rlchanl CeiPste
says.

'

LONE CUSTOMER - Only one person walled in
front of Bank One, Pomeroy, to secure astat...funded,
low-Interest mortgage loan. Pictured Is Steve

CoHman, Mason, who walled In front of the bank lrom
~: 30 a.m. tmtu lhe doon; oponed.

G-J-M board seeks criteria
used to select new members
Koebel, althoug h the board recommended he be seated for a nother
term.
The new mem bers wUI assume
their posts July 1.
In other action. the board agreed
to allocate up to S200 to the .state
association of ment a l health boards
to study a plan which would reduce
In making the decisions earlier the number of648boards in the state.
this month, mental health director ,
The plan, developed by an ad-hoc
Pamela Hyde picked two persons committee of the Ohio Council of
recommended by the board and Community Mental Health Center,
three which were not. She a lso did
proposes 16 menta l health planning
not reappoint current member John board districts for Ohio.

The Callla-J ackson-Melgs 648
board wants to what criteria state
officials used to choose five new
members lor the board.
Members voled Monday 6 to 1,
with one abstention, to send a letter
to the Ohio Department of Mental
asking for the Informa tion .

Under the plan , !he Gallia·
.Jackson-Meigs 648 board could be
combined with another board or be
placed In a new planning district,
according lo Berna rd Nlehm ,
director of the tri-county CommunIty Menta l Health Cente r .

•

Niehm and board members
engaged In a lengihy discussion on
the mer1ts ul the plan .
Nlehm said the plan Is "a starting
point " from which to consider
needed re forms In the sta te's mental
health progra m .

I '

Around tht• stale on Monday,
hundrL'lls of would-be homebuyers
stood In li nes at banks . which began
to lend from the $.l:JO mllllon ra ised
by a sta tP bond sale for low-Interest
m ortg•gc loans.
Cclest&lt;•salcl Monday !hat another
$100 million In low-lntPrest mort gage money will ix' madP avai lable.
" Most flrst·llm&lt;• hom e buy&lt;'rs for the first time In five years - can
walk In 1to oa nks a nd sav ings and
loans) and gt' l a loa n for undl'r tO
percent. 1lla t mr.a ns businPSs for
Ohio." Cclcsle told a luncht'Un
m et'ting of tht• Clcw laml Association of Bmadcas t!'rs.
He sa id thr s tair· also pla ns In l"i.'me
:S:ll million In bonds to flnancP ltomp
rPnova tion ano weatherlza lion.
"Our goa l Is to add additional
money for slng!P-famlly homt•
purchases. pruvldc some funding
for hom&lt;' lmpmvemcnt s a ncl pmvlde funds for ta rgpt ar!'as. rspec la lly Cleveland , where the re a re a
large number of low-Income ho·
mc'llwnr rs, ·· Celeste sa id .
"The overall lmpael Is that It will
hPlp 8.001 to IO.IXJO pt'Ople to own m·
Improve their own home," he sa id .
Last year, passage of Sta te lssue1
created the Ohio Housing F inance
Agency , which sells the bonds to
raise the mortgage funds . The first
S.nl million is being loaned at a 9 .~
percent Interest rate.
Catherine Ferrari. spokeswoman
for the agency, said the Interest rate
for the additional $100 million won't
be determined until the bonds are
sold, but that It wlll be lower than
prevalllng commerrlal rates.
Ms. FPrrarl also sa id Ohio
resident s will be able to get up to
$15,0001or home Improvement s.
The stale could Issue bonds
tota ling $438 mllllon lor low- Interest
mortgages this yea r .

index _has biggest jump in nine months

'
iimung-upot retail prices.
Medical care costs matched their
Gasoline prices, down generally 0.5 percent Increase of March, well
for the last two years, had tumbled a below the pace such prices had set In
tun 1 percent In March.
t)le preceding months. Even so,
Also responsible for last mopth'~ those costs have soared 9.9 percent
Increase In the Consumer Price In the last year.
Index was a 0.5 petcent gain In
Consumer prices civerall rose a
housing prices.
modest 3.9 percent In the last year.
Food prices wen! up, too, but the. · It April's 0.6 percent lle8!1011aily
0.5 pe1t1:11t rile was ott from adjusted Increase held steady for 12
Ma.rdl's0.6pes cent hike. F'rellltndt straight months, the yearly advance
and \llftJblp ctllla, reflecting the would be 7.2 percent. The annual
ICardtles broulht on by tan,.n•Jiy , rate reported by the department !s
cold and wet conditions In much of based on a more preetse calculation
lhe countJy, rose 1 pel eent, down
monthl,y prices !han the figure
fn:m the wbopplna u pel cent made publlc.
'
Increase ol the.pft'VIuua montl!- IJj
. Co118111Tle1' prices roile a tiny 0.1
the Jut two mmllw. tnshveptable Pi'! ~·t In March after falling 0.2

J...araey ""''' mlbJe for the April
rile, the Labor Dl!plrlment said In
todly'a report. - a 4 l)ll'tenl rile
In .....,.. prit!el. the n!lult ol the
ledera1 pawaet's IIJdrel..a·
llaDcm tax lillie April I and a jjaleflll · pr~ces ..verllen 17.7percent.

HOURS:

Mon.-Tues.-WedAri. 9:30 to 5
Thurs. 9:30 to 12
9:30 to 2

By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVP staff
Faced with less federal and slate money available lor mental health
setvlces, tl\e Gallla-Jackson-Melgs 648 board decided Monday to stop
funding three agencies It currently supports and cut Its allocation to the
tri-county Community Mental Health Center.
The board adopted a fiscal year 1!flol budget whlch Includes $344,1071ess
for direct setvlces than this year's bud~t. The fiscal year begins July 1.
Seven agencies are funded by the 648 board this year but three ot them the Retired Senior Volunteer Program In Jackson, the YMCA of Jackson,
and the French Art Colony in Gallipolis- wlll receive no money after July
1.
The three agencies received $7,&lt;XXI this year.
The 648 board will continue to tund the Jackson Board on Aging, the
Jackson Child Development Center and the Rio Grande Community
College Counseling Center for a total of $.1&gt;,200 In fiscal year 1984.
With an allocation of $1,997,937, the Community Mental Health Center
remains the biggest contract agency of the 648 board . The center's
allocation was cut about $337,000 from last year.
The budget was adopted from recommendations made by the board's
combined program and finance cornmlttees.
Rev. Frank Hayes, a program committee member, said committe
members reluctantly recommended dropping three agencies after a
lengthy process or prioritizing services.
"We came to the realization we do not have the funds available lor these
agencies," Hayes said. ·Members opted to make cutbacks In the "preventive" mental health
services these agencies provide, he said.
"We put our money on the basics, " program committee member
Roberta Holzer said. "These are the things we feel are most Important ."
Prlorltlzln!1 services became more critical this year because of'a change
In how the board spends Its funds . Members voted In February to purchase
Individual setvlces from Its contract agencies rather than tund broad
programs.
In purchasing services from the mental health center, the program and
finance committees agreed to make direct mental health care the number
one funding priority, according to finance committee member Jim
Mourning.
As a result, tbe board wlll purchase services In such areas as
psychotherapy, counseling and Inpatient treatment .
Speclallzed services for the elderly and programs In speech pathology
and audiology will be purchased only If more money becoll'!es available,
Mourning said.
'!be center also generates about $500,(XX) a year which it can spend as It
pleases, Moumlng said.
In additiOn to cutting allocations to Its contract agencies, the 648 board
slashed Its own administrative budget about 24 percent lor next ye!\1'.
The reduction would be closer to 38 perCent, but the board may bave to
pay unemployment benefits to four employees whose jobs will be abolished
as a cost-cutting measure, according to board administrator Dan
Schwendeman.
The board voted last month to eliminate positions for two social service
workers, one planner-evaluator-grantsman and one public lnfonnatlon
ott!cer.
Board otilclals·saJd they must go through tbe cMI service process to find
out which employi!es wllllo6e their jobs.

Co~sumer price

YOU MAKE TilE DEAl AND lET OUR EXPERTS TAKE CARE OF
TilE REST .

$}8999

Jogging and bicycle paths were discussed as
posslbilltles. Shields lndlc!lted such a grant should
stand a good chance of approval since the community
has been criticized lor not developing the rtvertront
area. Shields Indicated that things are happening with
the railroad but said that he would have to discuss
these thilfgs In executive session. Council apparently
hopes to use the property formerly used by the
rallroad to develop a riverfront program. Application
for the grant for such a program must be flied by the
last of June, Shields said. He also Indicated that this
would be the type program that could be effectively
carried out over a three year period. It Is expected
that the vJIJage will also proceed with an application
for funds on this program.
During last night's m eeting, Mayor Fred Hoffman
reported that the fortner I.G.A. b!!Uding, purchased
recjintly by Greg Gibbs, operator of Sears Store in
Pomeroy, Is to be extensively enlarged to house
another business .In addition to Sears. That business
will employ some 20 people.
Mayor Hoffman also reported the state had
approved the setting up of a small business loan tund
from HUD·monles, (about $122,(XX)). Council gave the
first reading to an ordinance establishing the
eoonom:Jc pevelopment tund to receive paybacks on

648 ·board stops
funding July 1

Sq. Yd.

1 S.dion1 , 18 Page•
20 Cenh
A Multim.dia Inc. Ne-•pop•r

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 24, 1983

By BOB HOEFLICH

P.ut down a shiny riew
VInyl floor from Elber•
felds Warehouse. We
stock quality A1111strong
and . COngoleum· Vinyl '
floonng in 9 and 12 ft.
widths.

$349 TO $495

I

at
en tine
e
Park landscaping grant funds sought

VINYL FLOOR
COVERING

FROM

R «'&lt;'Oio-'11 iv-t• Chester
t•ourwil nwmberl'i
I I lip,(',•,

(Continuedfrompage 11

The prbcesslonal and recessional were presented
by Eastern High School Concert Band. The Invocation
and benediction were given by Rev. ~lchardThorrias .

Meigs County happenings
Emergency runs

Reds edge Cards;
Cedeno suspended

letters to editor

or

percent In February and rising 0.2
percent in January.
In advance of today' s report , Ted
Gibson, an economist at San
Francisco's Crocker National
Bank, said the OllltlCipated Apr11
jump In prices would be "a
temporary blip In the Index.
The bright lnfiatlon news has been
widely atlrlbuted to the serious
recession, from which the economy
Is rebounding, and theworldwldeoll
glut, which has produced a 14.1
percent drop In the record gasoline
pr1ces of two yeiu-s ago.
Energy prices generally have
lieen tinning up In recent months ,
however, and that show~ In .last

month's Increases lor gasoline and
natural gas, up 1.8 percent. fuel oil
pricefell2.7percent, a lmost half the
record 5.2 percent drop of March.
The department reported these
other, seasonally adlusted, delails
of last month's price activity:
· ~Transportation costs, which
Include gasoline prices, surged
upward 1.1 percent, t~e first
Increase In that overall category
since October. Automobile ftnance
charges fell 2.8 percent, their ninth
monthly drop in a row. Neiv car
prices declined 0.1 percent while
used car prices rose.0.2 percent.
-Clothing prices rose 0.2 percent.
-Entertainment costs fell 0.1

percent.
Largeiy responsible for !he 0.5
percent gain In housing costs overall
was a sharp 0.8 percent Increase In
the department's ~?a lculatlon, ol
homeownershlp costs.
In January, the department
changed the way It measures
homeownershlp costs by calcuiB.tlng how much homeowners would .
charge If they rented their homes.'
The old calculation, which took
Into account home prices and
mortgage ra tes ra ther than a
" rental equivalence" calculation,
had been criticized as OVeT·
emphaslzlng swings In those two
areas.

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