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· 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.

�Textbook in

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THI': ISTEKEST OF THE

t11b

MEIG~· MASON

AREA

......

ts~m~ ~ -r.~d·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl!itwr

BOB HOEFLICH

PA.T WHITEHEAD

(lit&gt;R('tlll Mana.-e r

Alislstanl Puhlllih t- r / ( 'on I rollf:' r

DA.LE ROTHGEB, JR.
~t&gt;ws

Editor

A \t f:MHER of n.,. ,\-x:iatrd P~. Inland DaUy
.\mulcan Newspapt'r l~uhll shl~ n; .~iation.

l'r~

A..'lftodaCion and lhe

WASffiNGTON - U the high
school course that once was known
as "Civics" stlllls being taugllt, a
superlative textbook could be put
together !rom the continuing struggle on Capitol HW to enact an
Immigration bill. The battle has
everything a teacher could ask.
At bottom Is a constitutional
provision: Congress has power "to
establish a unUorm rule of naturall·
zation ," Out of that power enierges
the power to ri!gulate Immigration,
a power that llrst was exercised badly l!xerclsed - In the notorious
Allen and Sedition Laws ol17!18: It
seems unbelievable today that

I..E"'TER."' OF OPII'i10N art' welcomed . llwy V.oukl bto le!IM than 300 wurdJ,; lonK.
All ldl.eni ~ ~uhjt&gt;..t «• edltlnK and muM 1M! !'ilfl;ned with naJile, addreHit and \elephone
numher. No ur.;ll{ned lclk'N wUI he publl&lt;ihed. LA•tter.4 ~ould bf&gt; ln fOOd _&amp;aHte, addreK,&lt;~Ina; Mut~

•

James]. Kilpatrick

Civtc~s--------------~--~PQlitlcal system really works. The

Congress ever could have given a
president the unlettered wwer to
expel any allen he deemed "dangerous," but such was the law of that
time. Students ougllt to know about
such things.
That !lrst Immigration act lasted
only a couple of years belore It was
wiped all the books. In 1875
Congress enacted a law baring the
Immigration of prostitutes -and
convicts. In 1882 exclusions were
expanded lor reasons Involving
disease, erlrnlnal records, moral
turpitude and the prospect or
subversion. That same year saw
enactment of the Chinese Exclusion

Act, a law that stayed on the books
until 1M!.
It wasn't untlll~ that Congress
established fixed quotas based upon
national origin. ThOse quotas remained generally In elfect until the
system was aboUsbed In · 1005.
Meanwhile, In 1952, Congress
enacted the basic Immlgratlon and
Naturallzatlon Act that O!lce again
Is the subject of Intense debate on
Capitol Hill.
'
Last week the Senate voted 7r.18
for a compreheilstve bill that would
rewrite the baste law of 1952. The
bill provides a modellorthesl)ldent
who seeks to understand how our

Letters to editor
A dedicated teacher
If praise Is going to be passed
around let us give some of It to the
teachers of Eastern .
I know of one teacher a nd I a m
sure there are many more who do
not teach for their paycheck and
quitting lime only as was stated In a
previous letter to the editor .
There Is no quitting time~ They
stay after school working with
students In varjous activities. When
they get home In the e.ventngs there
are papers to grade, lesson plans to
pre pare for the next day. and
numerous phone calls from pupils
having problems.
If they weren't dedic ate d
tea chers, they would work at jobs
wll.h less hassle, more pay and be
more a ppreciated.
I personally know an Eastern
tea cher who uses part of her

summer to paint her school room,
buys a nd Installs her bulletin
boards and the supplies for them.
She does this to have an attractive
room lor her students.
Should a student graduate from
Eastern who does not know how to
write his name (as was also stated
In an earlier tetter), do not blame
the teac hers. Somebody •else
goqled!
.
I am sure Easiern has hard
working dedicated teachers otherwise why are there so many
Eastern graduates making good
grades and graduating !rom leadIng colleges and universities.
Meigs County alone has a judge,
doctor, numerous teachers, etc.
who are Eastern graduates. Thank
you, teachers~ - Mary Roush.

More response sought
How many people remember the
Memorial Day services that were
held In Kerr's Run In the early '20s
and '30s?
My mother has had a good
response to the article you put In
Sunday's paper, but still not like she
expected, but I must say s he has
e njoyed getting In touch with the
different people and talking over
old times.
. The three sycamore trees that
are across from the former bookmobile were planted In honor o! the
three men who lost their lives !rom
that Immediate area.
They were Ktmney Thompson ,
1898-1918, which still remains on a
plaque at the base of the one tree.
There was a Charles Bumgardner
but we don'! know any dates on him
as his plaque Is gone. But we have
had ca lls from his relatives, he also
was killed In 1918.
We can't seem to find out who the
third marker belonged to. The
marker, plaque a nd a ll , Is gone.
U anyone knows for sure who the
third plaque belonged to, please call
and let my mother know.
A lew years back, when the river
bank was In the process of being
cleaned, the trees were abOut to be
cut down, a nd Velma Plkkoja
called the proper persons to have
them saved .
The area where the trees are was
known as the VIllage Green- back
then . The students from Kerr' s Run

school . would march double file to
the trees for memorial services.
The soldiers (as they called them)
would he there In lull uniform, they
would have a s~h. 21 gun salute
and the taps, and slowly raise a big
nag, then the students from Kerr's
Run School would sing songs.
The one that everyone seems to
re m e mber most was "Rall y
Around the Flag, Boys."
They all agreed that they had
quite a time that day and It wsa
considered a "Btggy" In Pomeroy
back then .
We again want to .ay there Is a
chance that maybe this area can he
restored to the way It was. And upon
talking to Mr. RoHght or the
American Legion, he says the
Legion Is - behind the Idea of a
restoration, If we can only get more
public response.
So, If the people of Pomeroy
VIllage and Meigs County would
like to see a beautiful river bank ,
like Mr. Harlan Wehrung - up In
that area, please let us hear from
you.
There Is a possibility of getting
that ramp taken out of there along
with the tracks , and a posstbtltty of
having a big memorial put up there
with all WW I vets from Pomeroy
area, with their names on it .
So I stress again , please give my
mother, Mrs. Allen tMattle Keiser)
Ball a call at !m-2314 . - Mrs.
Barbara Stahl, Letart , Ohio.

-

.,,

Seeks unii'ed effort
As a new resident of Southeastern
Ohio, I have joined many •people In
miserably enduring structura lly
unsound byways a long the Ohio
River.
· These roads, made from bituminous materials, requiring matntP.
nance from time to time, yet, by
cause of structural unsoundness.
~lng more lm ~rta nt measures
of attention, are becoming as
detrimental to vehicles and their
occupants as the poorest unpaved
roads that cross Meigs County.
· Admitting minor effort at great
expeose with little sucess has been
spent, these bituminous roads,
thgugh main routes for commuting
to and !rom commerc.lal·
noncommercial areas, haven' t
been truly maintained .
: I believe the purpose of Inventing

roads Is to m ake It easy, pleasant ,
more direct , and most Important ,
safer to travel to town, business,
work, recreation and home. The
only safe quality about these roads
Is the tack of trees In the way~
According to my research, "The
World Book Encyclopedia" tells
how the state procures finances lor
roads by taxes levied on motor fuel
(lf'hlch went up). registering motor
vehicles, property tax, road use tax,
and some states require special
lees !rom trucks and buses, such as
weight-distance or a ton-mile tax.
Our taxes are united by the state,
but . united we control the state~
Can we unite and use It to create
structurally sound passage and
needed jobs? - &amp;&gt;nedtct Anthony
Andrew II, P.O. l'lox 402, Racine,
Ohio 45m.

Useless energy schemes
WASHINGTON - The highsalaried executives of the U. S.
Synfuels Corp. might be lorgiven
their wastrel ways II they were
$pending the taxpayers' bi!Uons on
alternative-energy projects ol actual or even potential merit.
Unfortunately, they're squanderIng money on grandiose schemes of
so little promise that private
Industry wouldn't touch them with
a stick unless Uncle Sam was
picking up a bUI. In fact, the major
aU companies have abandoned
synthetic tu~l ventures even with
the lure of governnment loan and
prtee guarantees. That's how little
Btg Oil thinks or synfuels' future .
This leaves the Synluels Corp.
with $15 billion to hand out - and
only second-rate programs to spend

By IIRUCE LOWITI'
Al'Sporta WrMer
,
For the Cincinnati Reds, the Price
Is right - again.
·The Clnclnnatlldt·hander, thrust
Into the Starting rotation by earlyseasontnjurtes, thef!sldellnedMayl
with an elbow Injury, returned to
action tor the first ttme In three
weeks Monday night and went right
ll the St. Louts batters, throwing
hard for six Innings to help the Reds
edge the sagging Cardinals 2-1. .
Elsewhere In the Natlonall,eague
It was New York 4, San Francisco 3;
Montreal 3, San Diego 1; Atlanta 6,
Pittsburgh 3; Los Angeles 2,
Philadelphia 0, and Houston 3,
Chicago2.
''Three weeks allis a long time,''
Price said. "I went out therewith no
thought of being tentative. I had to
find out If I could throw hard tram
the first pitch.''
The Cards, dropping their fourth
In a row, got only one run on three
hits olf Prlcewhen George Hendrick
walked and came around on
second-Inning singles by LonnlP.
Smith and Ozzle Smith.
The Reds won on Wayne Kren·
chickl's bloop two run double and
some clutch defensive play.

Dravecky, It was Montreal's eighth
hit and it prompted San Diego
Manager Dick W1lllams to summon
Luis DeLeon !rom the bullpell.
Tim Wallaeh loolu!d at DeLeon's
first plteh, then sent the second one
Into the left·D.eld seats for his lltth
home run of the season. Carter
singled home the Expos' other run.
Braves l,l'lnlles S
BOb Horner and Clauclell Wa·
shlnglpn each ~e In two runs and
Pete Falcone, with six Innings of
six-hit pitching, was Atlanta's
winner In his llrst start ollhe season.
He allowed solo horne runs by Steve
Nicosia and Bill Madlock.
The Braves got a second-Inning
run' olf Rick Rhoden on a single by
Bruce Benedict and two In the third,
Brett Butler, Bob Murphy and
Horner each hitting a double In the
burst. Washington hit a two-run
triple In the sixth and scored on
Horner's single.
Dodpn Phllles 0
Fernando Valenzuela checked the
Phlllles on foor hits and Steve Sax
provided the Dodgers with some
punch, scoring one run and driving
In the other one.
Valenzuela, who struck out seven
batters, now has beaten every NL
team In his brief career In the
Mets 4, Giants S
New York Manager George majors.
Sax trlpled and scored on Ken
Bamberger, who used to count on
Landreaux' s grounder In the nrst
Nell Allen as his stopper belore Allen
Inning and hit an RBI single In the
fell apart and wound up In the
ninth after Steve Yeager singled and
starting rotation, has a new saver In
Bill Russell bunted him to second.
Jesse Orosco.
A!llro8 3, Cubs~
Ray
Knight's
twi)-run, · sixthThe Mets' reliever put two meri ·
doUble
propelled
Houston
Inning
aboard with nobody out In the ninth
the
Cubs,
who
managed
only
past
Inning, then got the next three
folir hits off Joe Ntekro and two '
batters to preserve the Mets'
relievers·.··victory, built on George Foster's
Leon Durham homered olfNiekro
fourth-Inning homer and decisive
In the seventh and Jody Davis
eighth-Inning sacrttlce fly .
homered off Frank LaCorte In the
In his last 12 appearances, 26
eighth before Frank DIPino nailed
Innings' worth, Orosco has allowed
.
only 0 ne run:-.Ovefilll, his -earned' · down tile v(otor:v.
1n
the
ilectstv•&gt;
slxth,
the
Asttos
run average is'0.67 over rT InningS loaded
the
baseS
with
two
away
on a
covering 14 appearances.
triple
by
Dickie
Than
and
two
walks
Expos 3, Padres I
before Knight ripped a liner olf
With the score tied In the eighth
shortstop'
Larry Bowa's glove lor
Inning, Gary Cart(\t beat out a
tworun5.
one-&lt;lllt Infield single off Dave

measure Is a produc:t of give-aDdtake, ot trade-offs, of hall·lt;&gt;aves
that are seen as better than none.
The Senate approved a quite
similar bjlllast year, but It died lor
want ot lavorable action In tile
House. Nadine Cohodas, writing In
Congressional Qua~rly, put a
whole textbook In a paragraph:
"The legislation died !rom a
combination of aliments - opposition !rom Hispanics, organized
-labor, the businE!!lS community and
civil rlghts groups; an unenthusJa.s.
tic House leadership; and lack ot
time."

A key provision ol the 1982
proposal, slightly revised In the
Senate's 1983 version, provided for
sanctions against employe"! who
" knowingly" employ aliens who
are In the country !llegally. To
many o! us, the provision makes
sense. It Is the lure of a job that
draws thousands ol Mexlcaris and
other Hispanics to take the risks ot
illegal entry. But to spokesmen lor
Hispanics, the provision Is Intolerable; they see It as a path toward
discrimination, as Congressman
Tony Coelho said, against anyone
who has "dark hair, dark eyes and
dark skin."
The bill's chief sponsor In the
House, ROmano L. Mazoll, D-Ky.,
eontrlbuted to the lessons at hand.
The bill failed, he said, because of
"the search for perfection." Labor
wanted a bill that would' perfectly
protect workers, Hispanics wanted
perfect language on sanctions, and
others wanted perlect provisions
lor amnesty, U the same lorces
contend In the same way this year,
the. bill may fall again, but In the
98th Congress the prownents have
one thing working for them: They
yet. have time to-marshal votes lor a
bill; Imperfect though 11 may be.
that Is the best bill we are l!)tely to
get.

~··

not per.iOnaliUes.

lack Anderson

It on. Five of ..th_e_s-:lx--:ftn:-a-:-IJ-st-s_u_n-:d-er--f-u-el_s_bec_a_u_se_o_f_se_r_lo_u_s_d-el-tc-1-en-c-le-s--te-rms--of-tts--lo_n_g--t-erm--eco--n-o-rnl-c

consideration for the second round
or Synfuels' largesse were rejected
by the corporation the first time
around.
My associates John Dillon and
Corky Johnson have obtained
Internal Synfuels document that
show the dubious chances for
success of the expensive projects
the agency Is considering. Here are
two glaring examples:
- First Colony Is a consortium
that wants Synfuels money to
convert peat Into methanol In North
Carolina. One member o! the
consortium Is the Energy Trans!tlon Corp., of which ClA Director
William J . Casey Is a founding
Investor.
Originally turned down by Syn·

In management structure, First
Colony bounced right back with Its
hand out. It now has the distinction
of having received the llrst " letter
of Intent" from Synluels, promising
$455 million In loan and price
guarantees.
.. ..
Yet Internal documents stiow that
Synfuels still has some reservations
about the project, mainly because
First Colony's price expectations
are considered unrealistically
optimlst 1c.
"The First Colony project Is
considered a high risk project
based on (Synfuels') methanol
price projections. which are lower
than sponsor expectations," says
one Internal evaluation. "The pro·
ject Is a relatively high risk one In

vtablllty."
·
Despite these misgivings, Synfuels o!llclals OJ{'d F1rst Colony's
appttcatton. Now the · General Ac- ·
counting Office Is lnvestlgattng and ·
wants to know the corporation's
"legal authority for allering price
guarantees o! up to double current
aU prices as 11n Incentive ... "
- 'The- North Alabama coal
gastncatlon project Is backed 1n
part by Santa Fe International, a
companyownedbythegovernment
of Kuwait .
Interior Secretary James Watts
reeenlly barred Santa Fe Internationa! from holding U.S. gas and oil'
teases, because the Kuwaitis don't .
allow Americans to hold energy
Interests In their country.

I was walking by my son's room
the other day and heard him typing .
"What are. you up to?" I asked
him .
"I'm writing my memoirs on
what It was like to be your son."
This pleased me, and I said. "I
hope I come out all right In the
book."

"I'm sure you will." he said .
"Hey, Dad, how many times should
t say you took me out In the barn
and whipped me with your belt! We
don't even have a b8rn ."
"My editor said In order for the
book to sell I'm going to have to
write a tot of stu!! about how you
beat me up and locked me In my
closet when I did something
wrong."
"I didn't lock you upwhenyou did
anything wrong."
"I know ihat, but he wants a st.ory
like the ones Gary Crosby and
Christina Crawford wrote about
their parents. He says the reading
public wants to know about the
prtrvate tile you· lead , as opposed to
the public Image you have. All the
kids are writing one now and
they're best sellers. Would you
mind If I portrayed you as a rotten

Scoreboard ...
Majors
ByThe~Pn.

AMERICAN I.Eo\GUE
E.\ST DIVI!IION
w LPtli.. GB

Boston

16

BallirTIOI"('

23

17

Mllwaukef&gt;
New York

~

17

22

Toronlo

O..O.IM&lt;!
Detroit
~T

,S'7'9 -

·.m"' -

\6

:ll

19

"'
17

21
21

.!WI
.~t3
.461:

1~

2~

·~

.447 r,

DIVISION

California
Ookland

Texos

"

tB

21
21

"
19

.WI -

.525
.525

I
I

Kansas City

17

tB

.486

2Y,

Mlniii'SWI

19

Zl

.IS2

4

Chic""'

"" ""

""'""

.e

Sl . louis (LaPoint 2·U at Clnrlnnatl
tBereny\ 3-4!. tnt
.
P\tlsbur"'!h tMrWWtams 4-ll at Atlanta
!Camp l-31 , In I
Chlcqo (Rulh\'('f'l 1-21 at Houstoo
1SC0rt 0.11. tnt

w.................

Sl , Loub ar C\nf'lnnatl

San Frant'l!ro at New York
P\ttsbtrrgh al Atlanta
[..{Is Angelfs at Philadelphia, tn 1
San DIERO at Montreal , tnl
Cbk·ago a t Houston. l nl

:;y,

.:m 7Jh

Monday'A Gamt~~

Toront o 4, Detroit 0

IL resulls
-l'ftldonal

"! never laid a hand on your
mother."
"I can't say that. My editor said
people are not going to plunk down
$15.95 for 'Rebecca o! Sunny brook
Farm.' "
Okay, so I strapped you with a
heit and I Ilea t up your mot her.
What else did I do to you ?"
" I'm just getting Into the sex stuff
In chapter four . Do you think tl I
wrote you used to bring show girts
home at 3 o'clock In the morning
people would believe II?"
"I'm sure they would. But don't
you think that's going a bli far, even
for a best seller?"
"My editor suggested the Idea.
You don't have a big reputation for
m essing around , and this would

really come as a surprise to the
reader. It can't hurt."
"It can't hurt you, but It sure as
hell can hurt me," I yelled at him.
Don't you have anything good to say
about me In the book?"
"I had a chapter on how you
bought me my first bicycle, but my
editor made me take It out. He said
people might get contused alter the
stuff I wrote about you dumping a
bowl of mashed potatoes on my
head at Christmas time because I
gave you some lip." . .-··
"Why didn't you wrlte I threw you
In a cold shower with all your
clothes on because you only got a B
In math?"
" Hey, that's good. I'll say I got
·

6, Chirago 4
Kansas City r,, Texas 2
CaiUornl a 3, New von: o
Cl&amp;kland S, MUwau~ 4. 17 IMtnp
Seanlf&gt; 3, Oeveland 2
'l'ueellay'!l Ganw
O."'mlt rUJOOr ()..It at Tormto tMora:an
0.31. tnl

Art Buchwald
pneumonia and you never even
bothered to visit me In the
hospital."
"You'd sell out your own lather
for $10,tnl."
· "It's not just the money, Dad. My
editor says II I let It all hang out
Barbara Walters might even Interview me on '20120.' I wouldn't have
to live In your shadow any more."
"Well, If It means that much to
you, go right ahead with the book. Is
there any way I can help?"
" Yeh. There Is one thing. Could
you buy me a word processor? If 1
could speed up my typing I could "'
have It out by Chrtstmas. I'll pay
you back as soon as my agent sells
the book rights to the movies." ·

Ml nrte~KXa i BCastUio l ·lt at Baltbrnrt:&gt;
tMr(:nogor 4-2L tnl
Boston IBlrd 1-11 at ChlcaRO jKO()Sman

HIJ.j nJ
TMas {Smllh.'Dl .1-21 a t Karws City

(Splltlor1'f 1·11. tnt
New Yor11 tstUrk&gt;y 2-J t 111 Callfornll'l
( For.J('hl-31, m1

CJ('IIf'land ISormsen ;n; t at St-atU«"
I YOU11!r,-l),(n t
Mllwa~ rHaa.'l l-11 a1 Oakland tUn·
dffwocd :t.ll. lnl
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19 Iii .st.1
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19 17 - ~
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14 I ~ .tin
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14 19
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!WI)Iidq'a GMM!I
Syracu~ 8. Pawtucket 7
Chark.'$1011 7, ColumbU.'I 4
TideWatw 6, Toledo 0

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Rochescer 12. Rlchmol'li 10
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1'1d!!water at 1'oledl
Rk'tlmond at RoctK"s~
Pawtuc'kf'l at SynK"UM'

We. ....... 0Mili'JI

CoNmt..a at Charleston

al Toronto, lnJ

Rk:hrraoOO al Rocht&gt;!IIPr

TideWatw at Toledo
Pawtudu~

Mlnlll'!XX.I at Ballimort', tnt
Bo!!IOfiBt

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21

Columtus

Mllwaukel' at Oakland
0Miand a1 Sea!Ur.
])(.'ti'Qt

S4udlnp

~. . . l#-11(111!

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Tt:&gt;xa.s at Kansas Ctry, tn l
Nl'W York at CaJUornlll. In I

NATIONAL L&amp;\Gllt:
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.4:19 u

CINClNNATI R.EDS--SuspendP Ceur
Qodrno, ou~. wtthoul ply tor rhrw
days anct nnect tllm hll ror mtutna ttlt'
team plane alter be rftUied to ny hOmE'
wlt h tht lf'am ~wr be dkt't 't haw a

tldltt .
NEW YORK ME'T'S--&amp;rll Jotrl Sff'ar111,

nn1 ~ 1ass

__ _

ratclter , to the INf'll.t· mlmr·leagUe' IJ'alntng f.'OfT1Pif'X In St . Pfltenbur'i- na. . to
rorYinue ll'habUIUitlon on hlJ intul't"d
rtah' etOOw.

HOOIU!\'

a.

HARTFORD
WKALERS-App:lkltll'd
Larey . P~IO aaalstanl ~I rnanaee-r
and n&amp;rnfd Bob O'Oc.'ke'f' dlrf(10r ct hX'It·

,....,.o...

(Wt&gt;lsh ().1J.

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

N..._.U..-e

...

Lat A.JIFin 2. Phlladtolphia 0
NN York t. SAn F'Tanellro 3
Montreal san DleF 1
Atlanll " Pitt~ 3
lbJtm l C'hkiiO ~

s.n DlriO

Transactions

4lf.!

.
~·GameA
t'lncllilltl :1, S!. LoulJ I

(Lollar 1·31 11 Montreal

eoy~rstlon..

(n)

G

ATTENnON MOM &amp; DADI

B

c

GALLIPOUS BUSINESS COLLEGE

Today in history

-

"

San FranClJCO t Krukow 2-21 at Nrw
' York (lynch 2-1\, (nl
Los A~\e!! (Pen&amp; 4-1) at Ph11adelphla
tCIU'Isll!n!IOO 1-l\ , tnr

rather?"

"Do you have to?"
"01 course I have to. I got a
$10,(0) advance and they don't p~t
up that kind ol money unle"'',y.ou
really blow the whistle on your
'parents. You should read chapter
two. I tell how you made everyone
laugh at a speaking engagement,
and then you came home drunk and
-dumped us all out of oilr beds and
· Today Is Tuesday, May 24, the 144th day o!l983. There are 221 days len In made us scrub the lloor."
the year.
"I never did that and you know
Today's highlight In history: On May 24, 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge it."
opened, linking Manhattan and Brooklyn.
"Gosh, Dad, It's only a book. My
pn this dat.e:
editor loves II - almost as much as
· in ~6\5, the Dutch West India Trading Company bought the Island of chapter lhnle where I have you
beating up Mom."
MQnhll itan lroril natives lor $24 WOrth of goods.
"You've got me beating up your
In JB.D, the tirst passenger railroad In the United States began service
mother?"
beiWI!f!l. ~lttmore and EUiot's Mllls, Md., a 13-rnlle hip.
"I don't say you really hurt her.
• In pl!i• Samuel Morse. transmitted the lll'st public message' by
But I tell hoW we kids used to hide
telegr~ph, sending It tram Washington to Baltimore.
.
. :And 1n 1941, the Gennan battieSillp Bl5marck sank the British battle under the blankets so- we couldn't
cruiser Hood In the North Atlantic, with l,:DJ Uves lost.
hear her screaming."

- ·-

z.

Mlnnes&lt;U 12, Baltlmorl' 4

Making of a best seller

Airport incident
draws suspension

Price is ~ght;
Reds edge Cards

Commentat-y
•

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CALL 441 4387 or 992·7844
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~~

-

"We're not running - we're Jogging!''

The Daily Sentinel · Page-3

PontenYaJ Middleport, Ohio

Tw-.:' J• May 24, 1983

'

I

GALLIPOUS BUSINESS COLLEGE
. . llo. 7Wl-04721

CINCINNATI (API - Outfielder feels he has to have priority over·
Cesar Cedeno has been suspended people who beat their brains out
without payforthreedaysand!lned famine Innings today, that's his
$1001or missing the team plane after problem," Nixon said.
"I'm tired of people treating me "
he refused to fly horne from Chicago
with the Cincinnati Reds because he Ilk ~ I was still with Houston,"
didn't have a llrst-class ticket.
Cedeno said Monday. "It's time I~
Cedeno, who was not available for defend mysell. l reallydtdn' twant to
comment after the suspension, said make a big deal of tt. But If Russ
belorehand that he thought Reds does, that's okay."
• Manager Russ Nixon was punishing
. Pitcher Marlo Soto. who earned
his sixth victory Sunday afternoon,
him.
"Everyone else can hurt around said he also felt slighted .
here and It goes by tine. Obviously,
"They sa id the nlne guys In
he doesn't bellevethatl'm hunlng ...
first-class should be the guys who'
He wants to punish me for some played their butts off. I pitched the:
whole nine Innings," Soto said.
reason," Cedeno said.
Cedeno hasn't played since May 1 'How come I was in the back. too?"
12when hecomptatned ofstlflness In
Nixon sa id thE're were no plans to
his shoulder. He was 0-for-21 the
trade C«teno a nd he never dis·
previous week as his batting cussed It with Wagner on Monday
average dropped to .272. Various evening.
·
Injuries have kept htm outofl6olthe
"I knew I had to ~a ve a lot o(
Reds · 40 games.
patten&lt;'&lt;' hut hl'drcwmeto thePnd of
The suspension may cost Cedeno it . I felt something had to be done. A
as much as $ll,OOJ. based on his slap on the wrist was not enough. He
SUSPENDED - Clnclnnali Reds' ouUieltfer Cesar Cedeno enjoys
can appea l and he probably wlll." .
estimated $1100,(0) annual salary,
a laugh dwtng batting practice In Clnolnnatl Monday nllbl. Cedeno was
The Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
Nixon said Cedeno's dispute with
suspended for three days without pay after he refused lo Oy coach out of
The Reds saldCedenocouldre joln Starr involved a club ru!P that
Chicago Sunda): night while most of the Reds were Oyng tirst class. (AI'
Injured players must rPpat1 to th(•
he club lor their game Thursday
Laserpholo ).
here with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
training room early.
"Cedeno was late and got ho[ with
The club statement n'ferred to
incidents of "misconduct" at WriLarry Stan·. I told Stanlwouldtake
gley Field and O'Hare Alrpot1 In
care of it and l dld,"NLxonsatd

~

Twins rout Orioles;
Seattle edges Indians
By BEN WALKER

homers by Hal McRae and John
AP Sports Wrtler
Wathan and a two-run single by
The Minnesota Twins expect . Amos Otis.
home runs and have been getting
Red Sox 6, While Sox~
them. They want complete games
:Tony Aim.as' homered twice and
and llnally got one.
rookie Mike Brown, 4-3. pitched a
Tom Brunansky and Gary Ward seven-hitter.
each homered twtce and Dave
Almas. who now has seven
Engle added a solo shot while Frank homers, put Booton ahead 1-0 In the
VIola became the first Minnesota second Inning with a home run and
pitcher to go the dlstancethlsseason added a two-run shot In the third.
as the Twins routed the Baltimore
Greg Luzinskl homered for the
Orioles 12-4 Monday night.
fourth straight game- gtvlng him
In other Amerlc!lll beague action. six home runs for1he season - and
Toronto blanked oetrolt 4-0. Basion · Tony Bemazard ~!ted a solo blast
beat Chicago 6-4, Kansas City for Chicago.
topped Texas 5-2, California deBooton's Carl Yastrzemskl broke
feated New York 3-&lt;1, Seattle nipped a n 0-for-19 streak with two singles.
Mwinen! 3, Indians 2
Cleveland 3-2; and Oaklan\1 edged
Milwaukee 5-4 In 17 Innings.
Bob Stoddard and Bill Caudill
VIola , 2·2, allowed eight hits and combined on a seven·i\ltter for
struck oilt seven. He had snapped a Seattle.
personal eight-game losing streak
Stoddard left In the eighth Inning,
last week In beating Oakland 16-5, leading 3-1. after yielding Julio
though he wasn't able to finish the Franco's one-out triple. Caudill
game. Nonetheless, that eflort a llowed Rick Manning's RBI single
made his job against Baltimore a before recording his ninth save.
Dave Henderson scored Seattle's
little easter.
VIola, who allowed a two-run first run when he escaped on a
homer by Cal Rlpken and a solo shot rundown on second baseman
by Gary Roenlcke, has now given up Manny Trlllo's throwing error.
12 homers In 53 2-3 Innings this Henderson singled In the second
season.
Mariners run.
Minnesota displayed plenty of
Angels 3, Yankees 0
long·ball power, too, starting In the
Geoff Zahn tossed a s'lx- hltter and
fifth Inning. Brunansky - •who Rod Carew raised his major
knocked In five runs - hit a two-run league-leading average to .450.
homer, Engle followed with another
Zahn. 4-3, escaped a first -Inning
homer and Ward socked a three- run j;tm when Dave Wlnneld singled
job In the fifth inning.
and Don Baylor doubled him to
Ward, who also doubled and third. But Zahn retired Steve Kemp
singled, smacked a solo homer and to stay out o! trouble. Zahn did not
Brunansky added a three- run s hot In allow a New York hit after Baylor
a ninth as Baltimore lost Its fourth doubled In the fourth Inning.
straight game.
Carew went 2-for--l . Including a
The seven home runs tied the run-scoring double.
Memorial Stadium record, accomp1\'s 5, Brewcn~ 4
lished three Urnes previously_
Rickey Henderson's two-out sin·
Blue Jays~. Tigers 0
gle In the bottom o! the 17th Inning
Luis Leal and Randy Moffitt drove In Dan Meyer from second
combined on a three-hitter for base to end the longLost game In the
Toronto's ·third straight shutout , majors this season.
setting a team record of rT
Meyer singled off Jim Slaton, 5-1,
consecutive scoreless Innings.
to open the 17th and went to second
Leal, 4-3, pitched eight strong on a sacrifice by Davey Lopes, who
lnning:s - allowing Detroit's hits - had homered twice In the game.
before running Into trouble In the Daryl Clas grounded out, Tony
ninth. Molfltt recorded his fifth Phllllps walked and Henderson
singled In the winning run, ending
save.
Wlllle Upshaw. Ernie Whitt and the live-hour, 17-mlnute marathon .
Lloyd Moseby homered off Milt
Oakland had been just one out
Wllcox In the lourth Inning.
away !rom victory In the ninth, but .
After Whitt homered In the sixth pinch hitter Roy Howell hit reliever
- tying a team record lor home runs Steve McCatty's llrst pitch tor a
In a game- WUcox threw two Inside . three-run homer to put Milwaukee
pitches to Moseby. who started to ahead 4-3.
rush the mound but was restrained.
Lopes then hit Don Sutton's first
Royals 5, Rangers 2
pitch In the bottom ot the ninth lor a
Dennis Leonard wlthsteed a game-tying homer , forcing the
shaky ltrst Inning and turned In a extra Innings.
line effort belore leaving because o!
a sore knee In the eighth. Leonard
gave up two runs on three hits In the
llrst but allowed only two more hits.
Quisenberry went the !Ina! 1 2-3
Innings lor his ninth save.
Kansas Clty managed just four
hits off Charlie Hough' and Dave
Schmidt. But tho5e hits Included

Insurance

Gtve us a call You'll ftnd

CINCINNATI (API -, Another
Dragon captured thP feature racP
Monday at River Downs by threelength., and paid $15.40, $5. and$4.00.
George!! was sa-ond a nd paid $:1
and $.1. a nd Olympic PrlncP
returned $9.00 to show .
The t ti!C'Cta eomblnation of ~ -7 - 111
paid $510.00 and thP 7-7 dally double
of Unrut!led Sail and Rtehmond
Road paid $~.80.
The crowd of 3,021 bet $441,456.

~ER@~
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For Home

-SPECIAL NOW THRU
MEMORIAL DAY

~·~-----------------~
,,

Chicago between C«tenoand Nixon. ~;::::::::=======:;
trainer Larry Starr and StevPCobb. I
traveling secretary.
Nixon met for 1 ~ hours Monday
with c lub president Dick Wagner
a nd priva te ly wi th Cedeno
aft erward.
When Cobb gave Cedeno a
boarding pass for the airplane's
coach section. the outfielder de·
manded a first-class ticket, then
stormed out of the atrpon after
Nixon retuSI'd to (ntercede for him.
wit nesses sa id .
" I tried to talk to him . but he
walkea away." Cedeno said of hts
Su nday night plea to Nixon.
· "I did walk away,'' Ntxon sa id. "I
didn' t feel that he shou ld IX' shouting
Chances are your home IS
at me across the airport . It belongs
worth more than you rea linside the club."
tze and wou ld cos t tar
more to replace , pe"rha ps
The nln&lt;' ava llabl&lt;' first ·class
50% to 60%. than JUSt a
seats on the C'hlcago-to-Cindnnatl
lew years ago
flight - which ta kPs less than an
Has your home tnsurance
hour - we regiven to regulars Gury
kepi pace wilh the sieacty
Redus, Eddie Milner. Dave ConCPp·
nse tn cons truclton costs?
cion, Dan Driessen and .Johnny
We II be happy to help you
Bench, pitchers Tom Humo. Frank
ftnd out ll's part ot our
servrce as an tndependent
Pastore and J oe Pr!CP and Nixon .
tnsurance agency repre "There were only nine s&lt;•a ts
sen ling Stal e Auto.
(available ! In ft,.,;t class, a nd If h&lt;'

Front End Alignm•nt Moet Cars
Service

.,

Pomeroy,

�•
Page

4

P,.!M'f

The Dally Sentinel ·

Tuesday, #lay' 24, 1983

Middleport; (J,io

Tuesday, May 24, 1983

Schlichter spared court appearance
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (APJ - Suspended Baltimore Colts quarterback An Schlichter apparently has
been spared being called to testify In
federal court about his gambling.
Schlichter, the former OhiO State
standout, was expected to be the key
government witness against lour
Maryland men at their scheduled
U.S. Distr1ct Court tr1al June 6.
They Initially were charged In a
six-count Indictment or hying to
collect gambling debts run up by
Schlichter.
But threeofthemenchangedthelr
pleas to guilty Monday In a plea
bargain arrangement. U.S. Attorney Bill Hunt recommended
charges be dismissed against a
fourtll defendant.
Samuel Richard Alascla, 30, of
Catonsvllle, Md., and Harold E.
Brooks Jr. of Baltimore pleaded
guUty to one count of the gambling
lndlctment. They admitted collectIng $ill,[XXJ from Schlichter at the
Port Columbus Airport on March I.
Joseph A. Serio, 24, of Baltimore,
pleaded guilty toaldlngand abetting
in the a ttemp( of another debt
collection on March 9, In which

Schlichter said he was broke and undergOing treatment for ctmpUJ·
siVe gambllng at a hollpltal.
could not pay.
Schllchler, 23,sawllttleactlonasa
Other charges against the three
were dropped In the plea Colts rookie la$t - - after being
the fourth player drafted In 1982. He
bargaining.,
Hunt recommended that charges was suspended Indefinitely Friday
againstCharlesThomasSwlft,41,of by NFL Comrnlssloner Pete Rorl,ielle
·
Baltimore, be dropped. U.S. Dlstlict beca~ of hls wager1ng.
Schlichter had acknowJed&amp;ed
Judge John D. Holschuh took the
prosecutor's recommendation gambling away $:119,00&gt; on various
sporting I!'Vents In the first 2¥.,
under advisement.
months of 1983. Rozelle said he also
Hunt recommended probation for admitted placing bets on at least 10
Serio but gave no recommenda tlon NFL _g ames, none involving the
Colts.
for Alao;cla and Brooks.
His attorney, Jack Chestei, said
The three men were ordered to
maintain weekly contact with most of Schlichter's betting was on
probation officials until they are basketball games. He said SchlichNATALIE LAMBERT
CINDY CROOKS
sentenced at an undetermined date ter Is undergoing "Intensive ther·
PAULA HORTON
by Holschuh after pre-sentence apy" at an uiKilsclosed hospital
ALL . LEAGVE SELECI'IONS - Three Springs Rd ., Pomeroy, lhe team's main pUcher;
investigations are completed. All "outside the state of ohio."
memben
of the Melp glrl8' 80ftbaD team~ lor Cindy Crooks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Chester
said
Schlichter's
care
three could be sentenced to up to five
.U
leque
hoaon Sunday Include Natalie Lambert, Crooks, ,Middleport, and Paula Horton, daughter of
was
being
supervlsedbyDr.
Robert
years and prison and fined $10,[XXJ.
daup.ter
of
Mr. 8lld Mra. Clareooe Lambert, Rock Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Horton, Mlddleport.
Custer
of
Washington,
who
specialThe m en and their attorneys
refused to comment after the Izes In treating compulsive
proceedings and left Immediately to gamblers.
fly back to Baltimore. Bond was . In suspending the Colts' quartercontinued at $25,[XXJ each for Brooks back, Rozelle said Schlichter could "
and Alascla, $15,[XXJ for Serio and apply for reinstatement after the
WAVERLY -TheMelgsMarau- Cindy Crooks, Jodi Harrison, Julie
girls' softball (varsity and reserve )
1983 season. Chester expressed
$2,500 for Swift.
derettes, playing without the serviwas 26-6.
Roush, Kim Eblin, Joyce Stewart
Schlichter did not appear at the confidence that his client would be
ces of four starters, enctea a and Jenny Meadows.
By Innings:
hearing. His lawyerearllersald he Is rehabllltated by then.
brllllant season clinching seonc
Meigs
..... ...... ............... . 211 1l4 4-15 t1 2
Strlethenburder led Waverly
Waverly ....... : ................ OOJ 010 0- l 5 8
place In the SEOAL with a 15:1 win
with a single, double and triple.
Hatfield tWPl and Horton. Check tl..P ) and
over Waverly here Monday.
Waverly ttnlshed the year at 3-9 In
Patrick.
Meigs, ending the year at 15-4,
league play.
played without Krls Snowden ,
Hatfield, after going S-2 with the
Carol Smith, Natalie Lambert, and
reserves thls year, fanned five and
Beth Gloeckner, but added a few
walked only three batters. Her
He began racing sports cars In are Teo Fabl, 'l:l, the record-setting
girls from the reserve team.
counterpart, Check, fanned one and
1972, moved into the Formula Ford pole-position starter; Steve Chas·
Most notable of those was walked three.
series In 1978 and first came to sey, 38; Chris Knelfel, 22; and Derek
freshman Barb Hatfield, who only
Coach Rick Ash and Wally
Indianapolis In 1981. He did not Daly,30.
ttve-hltter,
went
ttve
for
pitched
a
Hattleld
combination record for
make a qualification attempt that
The oldest rookie winner- and
five
at
the
plate,
and
drove
In
five
year or In 1982, but he put his the most recent of six rookies who
ru~.
March·Coswortl1 racer Into Sun- have won at Indianapolis -: was
ot her hits, sne knocked a home.
day's l'kar starting field with a
.
.
Graham Hlll, wbo was '51 when he ·
· run, triple and three singles. Other
four-lap qualification average of won the race In 1966. The youngest
Meigs' hitters were Robin Buffing195.941 mph last Saturday.
rookie winner was Frank Lockhart,
ton, single and double, Payla
Bedard, who lives In New York, Is
who was 24 when he won In }g:a;_
Horton and Barb Grueser, two
20 years older than the youngest
singles apiece, and singles each by
rookie, AI Unser Jr.
"l know the end will come
somewhere a long the line," Bedard
said of the constant danger In
Tournament se\
.
.
racing. "But; liS they say, you can
get hit by a truck while you're
A ASA sanctioned softball tournacrossing the street; I did get hit by a
ment will be held at \'&gt;{lddleport
car. But toavoldthethlngslnllfeyou
June 4 and 5 sponsored by the
really wan! to do is foolish. I'm not Team ................................ W. L
K.D.&amp;D . Softball team. The top
Logan .......... ............... ...... 11 1
going to worry about lt."
lour teams will receive team
For the record, Bedard has never Meigs ............................ ..... 8 3
trophies !'rom the spo~ors and the
Athens ..... ................ ... ...... .. 8 4 first three top teams will be
been Injured In a race car.
Besides Bedard and Unser, 21, the lronton .... ....... ..... ..... .. ......... 4 7
awarded shirts. Persons are to
These Hours Are In Effect
son of three- time winner AI Unser, Waverly ........ ............ .......... 3 8 contact Dennis McKinney at 992For the Entire Season
the other rookies In Sunday's race Jackson ......... ............... , ... .. 3 8 6981.
Gallipolis ...... .. .......... .. ...... ... 3 9

Meigs gals ·take second in SEOAL

r----------------------------------------------

ROYAL OAK PARK

Open Memorial Day Weekend

CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP) -

WU Culmer hit a tllree-run homer In
the third Inning to put Charleston
a head to stay, as the Charlles
defeated Columbus 7-4 In International League baseball Monday .
Charleston' s Kevin Rhomberg
s ingled, stole second and reached
third on an error by Columbus
catcher Brad Gulden. Tim Norrld
then walked and Culmer followed

SAT., SUN., MON., MAY 28, 29, 3Q
AT 1:00 P.M.
CLOSED MAY 31st
WILL RE-OPEN JUNE 1st
Weds. thru Sun. Open at 1:00
Closed Mondays - Tuesdays

FinaiSEOAL
softhall·stBrtdings

Charlies dump Clippers, 7-4

HowToGetA
Good Gov't Job

with hls home run, his first of the
season, lo put Charleston.ahead 5-3,
a lead It never relinquished.
Mike Jeffcoat was the winner,
Improving his record to4-2, and Bud
Anderson got his second save of the
season.
The loser was Roge.r Erickson,
whose record dropped to 2·1.

Immediate Openin~
$8;342 To $57,500 a Year

Gallipolis Shrine · Club , Clown Unit

JEEP
and

rt.o port OOfore midni ght Soturdny . Send
name, address and d ate ofb1rth to Gov-

The Daily Sentinel

Serv ice,

©GE2 t98:J

(1 1SI'l!IIU-IMIUJ

A nlviNion of

New ~

De pt 000, 107 De lawa re Ave., Su ite
1470 . Buffalo, NY 14202-:.1073 . Please
e ncl o~ e o nf.' dollar fo r immed iatt!
a irmlulifin;t class s hipment

Multlmedl~&amp;,

lnl' ,

Publl stwd t•wry aflcomoon , Monday
thr ou ~ h F'r ld1:1y, Ill Courl Sfl'f'PI , by thr
Ohio Vullt•y Publl s hlnll Company · Mu l!lmcdla , InC'., Pomeroy , Ohlo45769, 992·
2156. St•oond class pos t a1o1 1 ~ paid at Pomer'O_v, Ohio.

----

,•

Mcmbn : Ttl(' AssoclaU•d f"'n•ss. In·
land Dall y Prrss AssOC'Iaton and lht'
A.mer1 cnn Nrwspa!)('l' Publl sh('t's A. ssoc lntlon . Natlon&lt;il Advt-rl!s lnR Ht•pre sentatl vf' , Rranha m Nt•wspaj)('r Snlcs,
73..1 Thi rd A vr nul'. N(•w York , Nl'w
York HMI1 7.

'

Plus

DEMOLITION DERBY

-~- -

GAWPOUS
- ·--:\
BUSINESS COLLEGE
. Call Today!!
446-4367 or 992-7644

Gallia County
Junior Fair
Grounds

.

SUti.,CRtt"rtO~ l\A1lF.S
8}' ( ' arrter or Motor Houlf'
One Wt-t•k .......... ... ... .... .. ........ $1.00
Onl" Month
......... $4.40
One Y ea r ........................... .... S.';:l.SO

SINGLE CO P¥
I' RICES
Dall y .. ..
.... ... ... . 10 Cents

JEEPS $10.00 Entry Fee
CJ5 CJ7 -

Welcof)le to the Age of Computers . Become part of it
with a challenging and well
paying job. Learn the important skills here. Ask for a
free brochure.

Su bscribers not d C'sl rln~ot to pay thrcarrlt'r ma y re mit In advanC(' dire-ct to
T ht' Dull y St•nt"ln~l on .1, 6 or 12 month
ba!ii lS . Cr('d lt will be Mivf'n carT ie r ca (·h

mont h.
No slliJS('t"lpt lons by mal l }X'rmii!C'd In
towns whPre humr&gt; car r ll'r srrv lcP. Is
avaltahlf' .

MAIL SU BSCBIPTIONS

4 Miles West
Gallipolis, Ohio
on U.S. 35

Saturday, June 4, 1983

We Teach
Success!

PO~TMI\ S TF.i H : Se nd addrt•ss to Thl'
Oall v Sf' n1lr1t&gt; l, I l l Court St ., Pomt•roy,
Oh io' 45769.

Stock - No Headers · No Bar Tires - 3,000 lb .
Stock · No Headers · No Bar Tires - 3,500 lb .

TRACTORS $10.00 Entry Fee
1600
1600
1750
1750

lb.
lb.
lb.
lb.

DOD

lmddt• Ohio
U W(lc•ks .
.................. $14 .M
26 Week~ . . ........................ $27 .30
~2 Week s ..... ........ .. ......... .... . ~li .4 R
OutMide Ohla
13 Werks .......... ............... ...... . $15.21
26 Wt&gt;~k s .
. ....................... $29.64
~2 Wee ks .
................... . $56.21

TlJE&lt;;DAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Holiness i\SSOC1a tton will
be holding Its monthly rally at
the Chester Church or the
Nazarene on Tuesday, May 24.
The Rev. Herb Grate will be the
speaker. The pu bile Is lnvlted to
attend.
HARRISONVILLE - The
HarrisonVIlle Senior Citizens
will meet Tuesday, May 21, at
the town hall at 7:30 p.m. The
Sloan family will be featured In
musical numbers. All members
are urged to attend. The blood
pressure clinic schedu led for
May 24 will not be conducted.
POMEROY- XI Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Ph! SororIty, 6:30 ·p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Annie Chapman, meet ·
lng and picnic .
HOBSON :.... A revival will 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 will
be Tom and Teresa Moore.
Pastor William Crabtree Invites
the public to attend.
HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
sonvllle OES Past Matrons will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
home of Bernice Hoffman.
POMEROY - The junior and
of Drew Webs·
ter Post 39, American lkgfon, ,
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p .. at

senlor.&lt;~uxtllarl~s

TOPS 1466
Shorty Wright was the winner and
Judy Eblin, . the runner-up, In the ·
balloon rontest of TOPS . 1466,
Rutland, a weight loss actlvlty
which concluded last week. Wright
also lost the most weight for the
week and was presented a ribbon
and a dollar, with Gloria Oller being
the runner-up. Booklets entitled
"Eating for Better Health," were
given to the members by Wright. A
new contest to run' through June 29
was started at this week's meeting
with Phyllis Clay losing the most
weight, and Judy Eblin again being
the runner-up .

Pull Starts 2:00 p.m.

The grand opening of "The
Bargain Corner," sonsored by the
Maso~ United Methodist Church.
will be Friday and Saturday from
9:30a .m . to 4 p.m., and will be open
every Friday and Saturday thereat- .
ter at the same hours. New Items
will be added continually.
The "corner" Is at Pomeroy and
Second streets on U.S. 33 In Mason,
and will feature good used clothing,
baby's and children's It ems,
purses, jewelry, books, dishes.
linens, knick -knacks, etc.
Also for sale will be new crafts,
placemats, dolls, stuffed animals,
crocheted and knitted articles.

POMEROY - The Twin City
Shr!nettes wtll meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs .
Edna Slusher, Kerr St.,
Pomeroy.
POMEROY - ~embers of
Drew Webster Post 39, Amerl·
can Legion, will meet at Beech
Grove Cemetery at 6 p.m .
thursday to place flags · on the

Waves of veterans.

TOPS 1456
S;&lt;ndy Sergent became a KOPS,
the status of achieVIng tile goal
weight, at this week's meeting of the
TOPSOH 1456at Rutland.
She was presented a penny for
each pound lost by each of the
members. Linda Bailey was announced as the winner of the ribbon
contest a nd will receive a charm.
Best losers over tlle past few
weeks have been Brenda Pettit,
Joann Eads and Ollie Hill. Runnersup have been Sharon Meadows,
Linda· Batley, Frances Hysell and
Cindy Harten bach. Carolyn Biggs is
a new member.
The club meets every Tuesday at 6
p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center and
newmembersarealwayswelcome.

Bake sale
Southern LoCal Band Boosters
will hold a bake sale Saturday, May
28, beginning at 8 a .m . In front of
Racine Home National Bank.
Panents of band students, Includ Ing elementary students, that ca~
contribu te baked goods are asked to
call one of the following numbers,
949-2891, 949-21!;6 or 949-2362.

.

Recognition of charter members sided at the meeting with plans
being made for participation In the
highlighted the 49th anniversary
Chester Memorial Day parade.
meet !ng or Chester Council 323,
Members are to meet at the Chester
Daughters of America, at the hall.
Ada Morris, organiZer of the grade school at 1 p.m . A plano stool
council 49 yea rsago, was escorted to donated by Elizabeth Hayes In
memory of Violet Hill. Essa
the altar where she was crowned
Warner, and Pearl Hayes was
queen by Betty Roush, presented a
acknowledged. The stool had been
corsage and a 50 year pin. Prior to
made by Willoughby Hlll. It was
organizing the Chester Council,
noted that Nina Windle had heart
Mrs. Morris had been a member of
Theodoru s Council, Pomeroy . surgery and Edna Reibel had
Injured herself In a fall.
Helen Wolf sang "Red Roses ," with
At the June 7 meeting, thene wUI
Keith Ashley at the plano.
be Initiation and officers a nd
In response. Mrs. Morris thanked
members are asked to wear white.
the courtcll for the recognition and
Refreshments were served to
commented on Its growth and work
those
named and Cora Beegle,
through the years.
Charter members were seated In Thelma White, Fern Morris, Mary
Showalter, Margaret Amberger,
the center of the hall Cora progr;.m
Margaret Tuttle, Virginia Lee,
In tlleir honor. Each one was
pnesented a gift and had a response. Goldie Frederick, Esther Smith,
Poems In thelrhonorwereread by Lora Damewood. Mae Spencer,
Ada Neiltzllng, Goldie Wolfe, Mae
Eileen Martin, Erma Cleland.
McPeek. Ethel Orr, Pauline Riden Dorothy Ritchie, Betty Roush,
Virginia Newlun; Helen Woll-. a nd . our, Ma rcia Keller .. sandra Wlilte.
Carolyn Holley who had charge of Alta BaUard, Sadie Trussell, JoAnn
Baum, Charlotte Grant, Opal Hoi·
the recognition.
Presented 25 year pins and a Jon , and guests, Eileen Clar)c,Janlce
single red rose by Mrs. Roush were Lawson, Margaret Eichinger, and
Mary Donna Sims, Guiding Star
Dorothy Ritchie, Eleanor Leonard,
Council
124. Syracuse.
and Doris Grueser.
Mary K. Holter, councilor, pre-

Sorority installs new officers
New officers were Installed at the
recent meeting QJ XI Gamma Mu
Chapt ~r of Beta Sigma Phi Soror1ty
recently a t the home of Charlotte
Hanning.
Installed were Mrs. Hanning,
pneslde nt; Linda Riffle , vice pres!·
dent ; Ruth Riffle, recording secretary; Libby Sayre, corresponding
secretary; Carol Adams, treas·
Ut'('r; and Mrs. Evelyn Knight,
sponsor. The Installation was con·
dueled by Ronnie Ritter , vice
president.
Plans were made for the Tuesday
night meeting at the home or Annie
Chapman , where the losing a ttendance team wlll host a picnic wtth
Martha McPhail and Iris Payne,

co-chairmen.
The cultural program, entitled
"The Modern World , Trends a nd
Movements," was given by Jane
Daggett. Kay Atkins a nd Janet
Peavley were hostesses.

l

1t
Brandi Reeves
Brandl Nlkcole Reeves, daughter
of Margie and Bob Reeves. was
honored with a pat1y on her fifth
birthday recently at her Chester
home.
A Papa Smurf cake decorated by
her mother was servl'!l with Ice ·
cream , potato chips and ot her
refreshments. Gifts and ca rds were
presented to the youngster. ·
Attending the party In addition to
her parents were her brothers.
Robbie and Bryan; hl'r grandpar·
ents, Mary a nd Roy Gillilan; Bill
G!llllan, Tom Gillilan. George and
Linda Gillilan and Lee; F'reda and
Russ Holsinger and Crysta l; Donna
.and Mark Gillilan and J et ... my Alan .
and Vlt' kl and jack Gillilan .

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE. OH.
PHONE 99B776
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING SEASON

Complete line of Ye«•table and bedding
pilnts. toliaee plants and hanging
baskets. Also a large selection o!
shrubbel)' and dward fruit trees .

OPEN DAilY 9 to 5
SUNDAY 1 to 5

Our interest rate on home equity loans
just took a turn for the better. .

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER
SINCE 1949
Hearing Tpsls
Medical Relerro/s

Home Appointment•
Al1o Available

444 W. UNIOII,lTNIIIS 594·3571

•

BATTERY
SALE
Special luy On
Motorvator .. 40

Our 53.86 -With Exchange

29.97

2 FREE PASSES
Per Car Entry will be
Issued to Pit Area Only!

I

Malntenance.free battery
meets manufacturer's
specifications. Variety of
sizes for many U.S. and Import cars, light trucks. Save.

Location -------~------------- Prize money _ ______
Mall to:

....

Drlvor'l Nlme= : : - - - - - - -- - - - - - - Street Address ____________ County _______

OH., Ph . 992-7161

POMEROY -Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet 6: 30 p.m ..
Thursday at the home of Clarice
Krautter . Members to take
country store items .

Chester Council honors
its charter members

..........

Show Date -----~-------------- Entrlealimlted to the l!rst40cara .

N. 2nd

POMEROY Wildwood
'Garden Club will meet Wednesday, 7:30 p.m ., at the home of
Mrs. Mary Nease, with Dorothy
Smith as co-hostess.

CHARTER MEMBERS - Recosnlzed at the 48th annivlli'!IBr)'
celebration of Chester CouncU 323, Daughte"' of America, were these
charter members, left to right, front , Ada Bllloell, Letha Wood, aad Ada
Morris, and back, Leona Hensley, Elizabeth Hayes, and Zelda Weber.

Under6 ..... . ... FREE
6 . 12 . ... .. ' ..... $2.00
Adults .. ..... : .. $4.00

DEMOLITION DERBY -OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK
(Fill In 1nd mall promptly . PLEASE . PRINT.)

Age
City, State, Zip
Phone·...,--,-.,..--1have read the rules and accept the dects ~ on of the Judges as final and elect to use the ground or uack In Its pre aent condition. I agree to hl'llt my car at the race area and algn In at least one hour prior to ahowtlme or 1will be
lnollgiDie to runt
Eni'Y F" $10.00 to oct:ompony entl"(.

THURSDAY

.Reeves birthday

trar ; Mrs. Joseph Cook historian;
and Mrs. Dale Dutton, librarian.
Mrs. Gene Yost gave the national
defense report . Mrs. Ron Reynolds
reported on the trip to the National
Society of the Daughters of Amer- .
lc;&lt;, Continental Congress, Washing·
ton D. C. which she and Mrs . Clyde
Ingels took in April . They served as
delegates from the chapter.
Memorial Day was noted and the
chapter regent urged that all schools
and churches plan something to
commemorate the occasion.
The annual picnic was announced
for June 10 at tlle home of Mrs .
Dwight Milhoan. Members were
reminded that renewal of magazine
subscriptions are due at the June
meeting.
A dessert course was served by
the hostesses. Mrs. Jolmson, Mrs.
Eileen Buck. Mrs. George Morris,
Mrs. James O'Brien. and Mrs.
Reynolds .

Open Daily lQ-9; Sun. 1·6 ·

Mail entries to,152 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 Phone 446-2716

GENERAL
-TIRE SALES

POMEROY - Past Matrons,
Pomeroy Chapter 186 OES will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Alfred Crow.

Mr. and Mrs. PauiJ.Anctrewsand
son, Christopher, of Westervllle,
were recent guests of his mother,
Mrs. Paul Andrews, Long Bottom.
Barbara Andrews or Columbus was
also a recent guest of her mQther
here.
Mr . and Mrs. Karl Kloes of
Syracuse spent the weekend In
Columbus, going especially for the
wedding of their granddaughter,
Darcy Kloes.

Demolition Derby Starts 7:00 p.m.
Evel"(body ~ays at Gate,
Except Wreckers with
~river &amp; Helper

'

MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
dleport Chamber of Commerce
will meet Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m.
at the LaSallP. The Regatta and
the membership drive wlll be
discussed.

Personals

Natural Aspirated M ini Rail
Open Rail
Natural Aspirated Mini Rail
Open Rail
rA_d_m-is-sl_o_n_F_e_e_A_t_G_a_t...,.e

Mrs. Robert Ashley was elected
regent of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution during a
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Thereon Johnson recently.
Others elected were Mrs. Ron
Reynolds. vice regent; Mrs. Clar·
ence Struble, chaplain; Mrs. Gary
Moore. recording secretary; Mrs.
Vernon Weber, corresponding secrtary; Mrs. Thereon Johnson,
treasurer; Mrs. Pearl Mora, regis·

the post home. Mrs . Gera ld
Rought assisted by the juniors
will present a poppy program.

. .
Newsof TOPS organ1zattons

Bargain Corner
opens in Mason

WASHINGTON rSpeciHIJ - It's tru{• .
More th1,1n 150,000 U.S. federal, state
a nd loca l job openings, both ski ll ed and
lmsk illed. are cu rrent ly ava ilable . All
wh u wish to app ly should write for free

ernment -Empl oyment

DAR elects officers

Calendar

Bedard oldest rookie in Indy 500
INDIANAPOLIS tAP)- Patrick
Bedard, at 41 theoldest ofsix rookies
In Sunday's Indianapolis 500,
learned a long tlrr)e ago to avoid
what he calls a race driver's
greatest illusion - that bad things
happen only to the other guy .
"All of us, sometime, get our first
gllmpseofmortallty ," saysBedard,
who will start his first Indy race
from the middle of the sixth row. " I
know I'm not made of iron and steel.
"! first had that realization
walking across the stree! In New. port Beach, Calif., In 1972. l was hit
by a car. That reordered my
· priorities. It got rill of the .ch!ldlsh
thought thai nothing bad will ever
happen.
"Secondly, when s&lt;imethlng llke
that happens, you realize what's
Important In life. Auto racing is a
whole lot more Important than I
thought It was," said Bedard, who
started out as a writer and Is stlll a
columnist and editor-at-large for
Car &amp; Driver magazine.

The Dclily Sentinel-Page-S

On Sale Wed. thru Sat.

Signed --------------------~-----

I 85 Upp~~ r Ri ver R[J.. G~ II ipoIi s

Dote'- - ' - - - - -

'.

Thafs a lower rate than we've
been able to offer in some time.
But hurry. This rate Is only good
through June 15.

~:?)
CITY LO'\.N &amp;. SAVINGS
a Control Data Company
GALLtPOLtS;.358 S&lt;&gt;cood Ave, 446-1913
POMEI!OV: 125E Main S! . 992·2171

�The

-- -- ------ -

-- ---

·----~--

..

-

Sentinel

·v. Mat 24, 1983

d

· Tt ,

,

'1 1,000 evacuees leave homes
'·.
:: · By'llleAssoclaledPress
· More than 1l,(XXJevacuees waited
for swollen rivers to recede in
Mississippi and Texas today as a
.week of brutal -storms L Including
toFnadoes that killed 10 people ·g:ive way to fair skies and offered
the region a chance to dry out.
• · At least three tornadoes touched
~ Monday In Texas and Louisiana. along with another In Pennsylvania, but no injuries werereJX)rted
and damage was minor, officials

:iiald.

. ' About 6,300 people were driven
from their homes by floodwa ters in
Mississippi, and another 5,000 In
Texas, but the pattern of violent
weather appeared to be over, at

least temJX)rarily, Hugh Crowther,
a Jlleleorologtst with the National
Weather Setvice's Severe Storms
Forecast Center In Kansas City,
Mo., said today.
" It looks like they'll be getting a
respite for a time," Crowther said.
"There's nothing very major In the
weather picrure for Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi for the next
couple of days - just some
scattered thunderstorms."
In southeastern Texas, where
tornadoes beginning Friday left
about 1,000 famllles homeless and
killed 10 people, 5,000 residents were
evacuated along the San Jacinto
River about .'l5 miles northeast of
Houston. The river was flooding 4

Pamenry Middleport,

·Business senrices

"Cit'Jittinc

•paintin&amp;

, to 24'136'

lumaci, &amp; lot. Watorh~ter.
canp. sink.
elect .. or
bJttery lichts, sleeps 6, excellent condition.

cas.

!Sears!
(;ATALOG MERCHANT
Pomeroy,OH.
Gr. &amp; Pllty Gibbs-Owners
PH . 992-2171 '"-"'

lnsulatd

$2.700.00 or Best -Offer
PH .992-3005

10

WES'IWOOD, Mass. (AP) Four young men risked death to
saveamantrappedinaburnlngcar,
Wiling him free just before the gas
tank exploded, then used a technique they saw on television to
extinguish the flames on his body,
authorities said.
"These kids desetve a lot of
credit," said Fire Lt. Robert Wood
after the rescue of Richard Salerno,
_21, of East Falmouth. "'l1!ere Is .no

question they saved his life."
David Langdon,' 19, of Dedham,
pulled Salerno from the flaming
wreck on Sunday, and with the help
of friends rolled the burning man oo
the ground to help put out the !lames.
Salerno was reported in critical
condition today at Brigham and
Women's Hospital In Boston with
third-degree bums over 50 percent
of his body.
"I guess !_knew to roll him on llie .

STRIP
COAL

Vinyl

&amp; Aluminum

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

-

"Beautiful, Custom
Buill Garages"
Ca II for free siding estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.

..

...

I(

m

would provide 5,000 to 6,000 of the
30-year mortgages being granted
through 449 institutions statewide.
Under the agency's ru les, homebuyers wanting to ta keadvantageof
the low-interest loans could not have
owned a house for at least three
years and were required to have a
sates contract when applying. There
were no Income limits, and price
lim its on the houses varied dependIng on location.
"Approximately 6,000 buyers
applied for and will be able to
receive loans," Gov. Richard Celeste sa id late Monday. "VIrtqaUy
all of the $300 mllllon avallable
through this program has been
allocated. "
"The tow Interest mortgage loan .
program has allowed thousands of
Ohioans to realize the American
dream of owning a home. It also will
crea te nearly 10,000 construction
related jobs throughout the state,"
Ce leste said.
The sta te wUI offer more lowlnteres l mortgage loans next month
to flrst -tlme homebuyers, Celeste ·
said. He said that another $100
mllllon In low-Interest mortgage
money will be made available.
Officials sa id t.he interest rate lor the
additional $100 million won't be
determin ed unt II the bonds are sold.
but that It will be lower !han
prevailing commercial rates.
The state can Issue bonds totaling
$438 million for low-interest mortgages this year, a figure set by the
Interna l Revenue Service.
The Hendrlcksons sa ld they were
buying a bl-level home "in the
mld-40s," and sa id the dl!ference
from sta ndard mortages with 12
percent to 13 percent interest would
save them $50 a month.
Hendrickson sa id be had "butt~rf­
lles, heart palpitations - the whole
thing" while waiting. "I Imagine
anybody buying a house would have
a jittery feeltng. It was definitely
worth II."
Most other would-be homebuyers
agreed that the dlHerenceln Interest
rates made It JX)sslble lor them to

pu rchase homes.
" It would have taken us a long,
long time to huy a house without
this," said Keith Maine, 23, who
works for the Velvet Ice Cream Co.
In Utica. Maine was first to apply
when the doors opened at the Park
National Bank In Newark.
"My wife Is very excited. We
talked about buying a house after we
got married two years ago, but there
was no way. Interest rates
18
percent, " he said.
Jerry Stover, vice president of the
Huntington Bank of Toledo, opened
the doors of the downtown office
early.
"Standing In Une out here wasn't
pleasant, I'm sure, but It was the
most lair way to do this," he said.
Jim and Marte Rosebrook, who
waited In line at Chtlllcothe, said
they eltpect~the lower tnte....Strate
to save 0, $900 a year, about
$25,000 over e life of the 30-year
mortgage.
"That's worth spending the night
out here for, " said Mrs. Rosebrook.
Scott Sheridan, promotion manager for a Toledo television station,
had waited In front of the First
Federal Savings &amp; Loan Association
of Toledo since Friday night. He was
second In a line of 44 hoping to get
some of the $4 million the Institution
had to lend.
"This Is not a good way to do It,"
Sheridan said, "but It' s lair."
In city af!E'rclty, thosewhowalted
said they first were afraid the lines
might become unruly, but found
most of their companions friendly.
"Waiting In Une that long ,is not
that much fun," saki Blll Phegley of
Mansfield, who began hls vigil at
5:30a.m. Saturday. "But when you
meet such nice people It makes It
easier."

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio iAP) -An
elementary school secretary wbo
aJ;llll!ared nude in an amateur photo
seelion of the J une lssile of Hustler
magazine has been fired by the city
!K:hool board.
The decision to lire Mary-Kate
fW;ley, a ro-year-old secretary at
Highlands Elementary School, was
made by the booard Monday
atfernoon In an eme~ncy session.
.By permitting the publication of
"lilt nude photograph .and text
concerning certain aspects of her
Sll¥lJil) conduct," she exhibited
,;Immoral conduct, neglect of duty
aillffallureof gOOd behavior," said a
1Jc;lllrd statement.
lief action was "hostUe to the
~are of the school community,"

the board said. The firing was
effective Immediately.
Ms. Haney's lawyer, James
Lagos, was refusing comment on

the case Monday, said a secretary at
his law firm, and Ms. !Janey could
not be reached for conunent.
"I think the board feels school
children shouldn 't come into contact
with something like this," Said
board President Sam Lambert.
He. said that If her Job did not
require contact wtth chllciren, the
board might have made a dllrerent
decision.
She was suspended tram her Job
Wednesday, . the &lt;lay after Highlands Principal Richard Yontz was
alerted to the photograph by a

telephone caller.
Her photograph appeared In
amateur photo section of the mens'
magazine. The section pays $50 per
photo that Is published.
HusUer usually does not pay legal
fees lor people who pose in the
mag@ne, said David Kahn, gen-

eral counsel.
"Whether or not we would on a
specific case, I don't know. I
obviously don't think It (the firing) is
fair, " he said, "I don't think 11 '
reflects on her abWtytodolter job."
Springfield pollee officer Barbara
Sclwltz was suspended Jmn the
poUce force last year for posing lor
Playboy ·magaz!ne, but" later was
reinStated.
'

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17 Uphol01oo1

........., '"' "·~ ·

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"-HC-300

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a.......

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711 ..........,
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UPICilll....-110
UPIGI!iWfl&lt;" ...

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

nJ -

Ill

111!1

!l:n

Tanka.

PAT HIll FORD

" - " ......
lot.,.
l u llolo&gt;

Card of Thankt

On••--

l ~-llO ~..,--

Soo .. ,,~-1 "'"

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF LENORA L.
SPENCER. DECEASED
Caoo No. 24104
NOTICE OF
APPON)'MENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Public: Notic:e

Spnng s Road. Po meroy . Oh10

45769

On M ay 6. I 983. 1n
MEI GS County Probate C
Case No 2 ~ 10 4. Wolbur " " ''"Y-1 151 17.

Robert E Buck
Pro bate Judge/

24. 3 1. 3tc

Clerk

r--------------~-------I

!

1 •

84 " x 30" head and t a1tqate
Bed to be of 8 guage stee l or
heavter. w· steer fl oor a nd

I
I
I

Interlaced und erstruc tur e W1th
Manual !handle) con trols 1n
cab
2 Front Mounted 16 ton or
lafQE!f tel eS COPIC h01SI
3 lf4 c.ab protector w1 th 4'

w• ngs
4 Cab IKJht s. 4 corn er lights
and 6 re llectors
5 M ud fl ap s. fr ont and

ao,h~c·

1
Nam•---------1

beh1nd rear wheels
6 Wheel base 84" cab to

I Address---------

axle

or S\.JII able for body ! I 0 roo t
1P81n!edl Omi:J ha Orange du mp

1 Phone __________________

booyl
7 24,.900 GVW or heav1er
8

: Pr int one word i n each

I
I
I

s pace below . Each in·
Ti t ia t or g roup ot fig ures
counts as a word . Count
name anCt address or

Ad

Wanted

01 0

_

classify , edit or reject _T.:o_2_S+-+-+--+--!
1I any
ad . Your ad will be
I pul In th e proper tr~o~J~Sj__~~~!!:~~!J
classificat ion if you'll I check
the proper bmc
These c ash rates
I below .
·
include discount
I
!Wanted
I
I For Sale
I
)Announcement
17
I
J For Rent
I
li .
I
IY,
I I.
~0 .
I ~
'1 1.

II
I
I
1

5.
6.

I

1.

I

3.

n

4.

~3 .

~· -

15 .
16.
11 .

i.

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1
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I

!

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II.

30.

12 .
11 .

1•.

31.
l2.
11.

15.
16 .

34 .
35 .

:~ ==

1
I,

I

1
1
1
I
I

I1

Mail This Coupon with Remittance

j

The Dajly Sentinel
111 Court St.

1

1

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

I

.

I

I

.

lbs I beam tr o nt

9 ,000

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

Ph .

992 -5433

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
GR ~SS EQUIPMENT CD.,
Pl.intiff.

•••
RANDOLPH
FRALEY . ET AL..
Defendant a.

No. tB,390
- NOTICE OF SALEPursu ant to an Orde1 of Sa te
ISSued by th e Common Pleas
COUl l of M e1gs Co unty. Oh 10. I
wJII otter for sale at putik
auct 1on on t he 18th day of

June. 1983. al 10 45 A M DST
on the step s o J the Co1H t House
of sa 1d coun ty 1n the Vtltage of
Pometoy Oh1o. the followu'g

On May t 6. 198 3. m the

Probate Co urt.

Case No 24111 . Add1 e R
Buck. 33 120 Children's Ho me
Ad . Pom eroy. Oh 10 45 769 was
b ecu tmc

of

d escr~be d

real estate
The fotlowmg real es t ~ t e
Situated 1n the Viltaqe of

the

es wtA of Ga t! A Buck. de·
ceas ed. tare o f 33 120 Child -

M•ddleport. County of ' Me1qs

and State of Oh•o. and des
cn bed as lo ttows
In ·l ot No 9 7 •n Pal mer's
Add•t1on to th e VIll age o f

le n's Home Ad Po meory. OH
4 5 76 9
Pr o hate Jurl ge/

Step

luel

50 gallons
13 4.000 lbs

m1nt m um

a.ooo

muiH·Ieaf rear s pr tngs

16 Comb1nat1 on front &lt;tnd

rP.ar d lf ec t1o•nal hphts
17 Traff• c hazard SWit Ch
18. Sack-up l•ghts.

19 Dual

electr iC ham s

20 Hea ter and defroster
2 1 TINO speed wmdshteld
w1pers and washers .
22 PO'¥\Ier steenng
23 10 00 x 20 12 ply Iron!
Tires. h•ghway tre ad, 7" 11ngs
24. 10.00 • 20 12 ply rear
!Ires. o n and off road tread
2 5 One add l!ton al 7" nm and
11ng
26 Cash spoke wheels
2 7 Heavy du tv c lutch
28 Heavv duty brake booster. wth 7" rear bra~es
29 Heavy duty bumper and

tow hooks .

30 L Hand A H. Ae-Tr ac 6•
16 statnless steel m1rrors
31 77 Amp battery, heaw
·'

60

al t ~na tor.

Amp

or larger

33. Ca b grab handles, L- A.
34 . V1ktng T·Bar dnver's sear
wtth companron 2 man.

36. Heavy duty factory rem·
forced 1rame
36. Color· Omaha Orange

property conveyed by An na l
Sayles and leander R Sayles.
her husband, to Marv J G1aves
by deed dat ed November 18
19 1 I and recorded 1n Book
1OS, Page 15 of the Deed

Public illotice

t a n~

fr on t spnng capac,ty ·
11 .000 lbs rea• sormg
capac•tv
15 Au.l(.r,ary
lbs

Sheff1eld .• now 1nco rpor ated
1nt0 and a p art ttl the V11t age o f
Middlepo rt . Me 1gs Coun ty
Dh1 0 Ancl b e1 n g th e sa me

C le r ~

(5.1 2.1 31 . (61 7 3 tc

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF RONALD J .
BROWNING, DECEASED
Caoo No. 24106.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF ADUCIAAY
On M ay 6 .' 1983. 1n the
M e1\1S Col m ty Probate Court.
No

Case

24 105.

Dale

Records

Countv.
Oh10. and the sa me propertY
des cnbed .n deed from Mary
Jane Graves to W P Graves an d
Mary J Graves dated Sep ·
tember 24. 1926. an d ro·
corded 1n Book 129. Page 250
of sa•d Deed Records
Reference Deed Vo l 273.
Page 489 Deed Recor ds Me•gs

L

Brown•no 40 4 10 Laurel Cl •ff
Road Pomeory. Oh 10 45769

of

M e1gs

Co unTY. OhtO

Te rms of Sat e Cash lor not
than two-th•rds of the
appra•sed value Appra 1sed at
$55.000 00
JAMES J PROFFin .

w;:.s appo1n tP.d E~&lt;ec ut or ol the
FISt at"' o f Ron ald J Brown 1ng,
decPasoo . tat e of 4 D4 10 l aurel
Ct tff Road. Pomeory. Oh•o -

less

45 769

SHE RIFF OF

Roben E Buck
Pr obate Judg P./
Clerk
151 17 ?4 3 1. 31c

From he Smallest Heater
Core to the Ltrcest llldiator.
Radiator Sptciaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

992-3325

'ph. 991 -1174

Pomo10y , Oh.

2.26-Uc

In Memoriam

MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
t51 17. 24. 3 1. 3tc

POOLS
-~tVinylliner

___

Residential &amp; Commercial
"Gutters &amp; Downspouts
"Storm Wtndows &amp; Doors
FREE ESTIMATES

PHONE:

1-304-773-5634

20 Yean bperience

Mason , W. Va.

TOM HOSKINS
Ph . 742-2B34
or 949-2160

C. l.

Kitchen

J.7·tfc

5-20 I mo p&lt;l

4 27tmo

___:::,::::::....~_

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof inc - Sidine - Concrete
Patios -:- Sidewalks New Construction - Re modeline - Custom Pole
' Barns.

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING
AH types of roof wott. new
or repair, gutters and
downspouts, gullet' clean·
ing and painti.. storm
doors and windows.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

All Wock Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

Route I
lon1 Bot1om, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067'

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE . OHIO
Authorized John Deer.
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
D11ler
Farm Equipment
Parts

&amp;

Service
l ·l!lc

12·20-t!c

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.
Industrial, Commercial,
Residential, Interior and
Exterior.
Painting
Sandblas1ing
Waterblasting
Parking lot Stripping
Spray Painting
Te~ture Coatings

'lowest Rates
Around
•friendly Servie
742 -2328

CALl 614-949-2686
~

Aloo Tranomiuion
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121

Hl ·!lc

19 2 mo II

Real Estate General

J&amp;F

YOUNG'S

HOBSTEITER

CARPENTER
SERVICE

REALTY

-Ina
- · · and
..,.... w..tc
-Caucle
'olllllOI4I:
- Addone and

Geo. S. Hobstatter. Jr.
Broker
Office: 992-5739

POMEROY -

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

NO SET UP CHARGE
IN THE COUNTY

F~~ lnsull!d-F~~e Es1omotlls

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

"""._'~and

olodrioalwoolo
(Fr• ~stlmatu)

Beautiful2 sillY

hame home in excellent

V. C. YOUNG Ill

condition. 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths. lo'ely dining' coom with
bull-i n ch1na cabinl'l and
window seat Fmm~ l~i ng
room. lamily room and full
basemen~ 2 car heJited garag~
Nestled in the maple trees on
nice size lot Sale pnce reduced

992·62tS or 991·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

11 ·26·1k

DRIVEWAY SLAG

to $55,000.00

U-PICK-UP

OWNER Will HELP - On th~
1977 Bacnngton home. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, iol'ely
kitchen has island cango.
Sjtuated on 1.88 a{;res. Sale

AT
NEW

HAVEN.

W. VA.

$275 PER TON

price $36,900.00.

MIN. '6TON
PHONE
304- 273-6565
304- 273- 6303

Volm1 Nicinsly, Assoc.
Pit 742-:1092
Chelyl Limier. Assoc.
Ptt. 742-3111

CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS 1nd
SEWER Lli~ES
•PONOS. RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK

IIDIIDlD &amp; WOIII GUARAIIltED
PHONE Jill CLIFFORD

992-7201

J-11·

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Homes - ExtensiYI
Aemodelln1.
•Insurance Wort
oCustottt Pole Bldcs . •
&amp; Gtra111
•Aoofinc Work
oAiumiiUn &amp; Yinyt Sidinp
15 Years Eaperience

GREG ROUSH
PH . 992 · 7583
or 992 · 2282 II ·11 ·11(
"

. ..

•

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

ALUMINUM ROOFING
ALL LENGTHS IN STOCK
8FT. ........ ......... ......... .. .... .. ...... . .. '9. 96
10FT . .................. ...... ............... '12 . 20
12FT... ......·.. ..... ...... .. . , ........... ... '14. 46

'

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

14FT. · ·· ··~·, ............................. .. '16.70
111 FT. ................. ....... .. ............ '18 . 90
18FT .. :.... .. ........ .. ......... ..... ... ... '20.90

Of HA!IOUI BUIINSID~

Who I'I$Md ,_, Sil .
Y..s AID Todly.

.

20FT: ................................. : ..... '22.911
ADDITIONAL l'llo otaCOUNT IN APRIL - CAIH &amp; CAIIIIY

37. One AM /F M Radto
38. The from of the envelo pe
enclos1 ng !he btd must be
marked. "D u mp ~. Truck .J~1..d:,

'

1

charge to the advertl1er.
4 whtlo klt1leo, II wkl . old.
Catl 814 - 2~8 - 11494 .
Hamiter, 448- 1149.

Long haired white klttena .
' Call 814 -387 -06B1 .
Femel411 lri1h Setter 8t Spaniel 1 yr . old·. Very gentle .
Coli e14-255-8286 .

Smell type watch dog and 1
German Pollee puppy . Cell
446-3171 .

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING
· AND HOME MAINTENANCE
'Rooiin&amp; of 111 typos

*Fiberglass
-~rStainless Steel

S·l2· l mo

-----------,.,·,,,'
-~
.------~---~- :
IN LOVING
MEMORY

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who h81
anvthlng to give away 1nd
does not ofiar or attempt to
offer 1ny other thing for 11le
m1y place an a~ In thla
co lumn . There will be no

COMPlETE
RADIATOR SERVIa

64 Ml.c . Merchandite

2

4

5·16·2 mo

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF GAIL P. BUCK
DECEASED
'
C.o No. 24111
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

appo1 nt ed

Gun 1hoot at the Rutland
American legion Suday May
29th at 12 p.m . Ab1olutely
factory choke guna .

Call: George Gum

At Our Ntw Phone Number

PERSONALIZED

Call : 949-2263
Or 992 -279\ 10 _,,

Public Notice

11ght
mountP.d. m •n •mum cao acl!y

12

32

2400 bstom A,,
PH. 4-46-7826 5-24-1 ""

3 Th e Olive TownshiP Trus·
1oos may a cce ptt hf"? low est b1d.
o r se1 ec1 the best b1 d tor the
1ntended pw pos e. and reserv e
the 11ght to accept or re1ec t any
or all bn1s &lt;~ nd /o r any OaJ I ..

11 366 cu tnc V·B gas
enptnP. or larger

duty.

O'DEU TRUE VALUE LUMBER

Robert E Bu ck

9 18.500 lbs 2 speed rear
a.l(le
10 5 speed syn cro mesh
tran sm iSS IOn . d irecT 1n ftft h

front

• Al!acnments
• Hetplut advice

2 Oel1 very m ust be m ad e by
the succes sful bid d er. · 120
d ay s aft er b•rls ar t" aw ard ed. or
b1d IS VOid ed

axle

Circle

0
~~~'+
~~~*~~~~~
if . vou descr ibe fully,
II res.cr"ves
g1ve pnce.the
Theright
Sentinel
ro ~r~o~1~S+-f.~~;,~-~

1I phone
riumbe
r ifres
used.
You ' ll get
better
ults

tractors.~

Pt opes aI No 1 ..
1 B•dder 10 fu rn•s h thetr own
b•d forms. hs t•ng h1d p 11ce as on
l1ne •tem s-pecd• cat10ns sheet.
as advert 1sed

M e1gs County

Gun Shoot. Rutland A,.rican legion 1 p.m . Sun .• May
22 . Ab1olutely factory
choke gun1 only.

" Fre~ Estimates" ...

5·1ll mo

1 000
1100

• Maintenance

Curb Inflation I
I
I
1 Pay Cash fc;r
1
I
I
1 Classlfieds and I
!I
Savel I I
!I
Writ e vour own ad and orde r by mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you vet
results. Money not r e fundabl e .

Roofing : Siding
Troughs,
Down Spouts
Windows - Doors
For "All" Your Home
Repairs ...

HALF Slam ..e, mete kitten ,
about 4 months old , needs
good home. blll!kiah In color ,
304-!176-3037.
KITTENS , tong ond 1hort
hair, delivered to Pt. Plea san1. 304-46B-1640 .
TEN week old pupplet.
mother registered Engliah
Shoopdog, phone 304 -895 3492 .
3 baby kittens. 304 -675 2474 .

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
MOTOR VEHICU:
DEALERS
tn accordance w1th SectiO n
30 7 86 of the Oh•o Rev1sed
Code. -seated b1d s wil l be
rece•ved by the Ol1ve Townsh1p
Tr u stees. long Bo11 o m. Oh1 o.
45 74 3. on or oeforr. Jun e 1.
1983. the b1ds w11t be opened
June 1. 198 3 730 PM . Fu e
StatiOn. Reed svill e. and read
aloud for the followmg veh1cle
Each b•d to meet the cond1110ns
and spec 111Cat10ns as follows
Propoul No. 1 ISingle Axle
Dump Trud&lt;, 19B3 Modotl
1 One 1983 model dump
tru ck w1th Peabody Ga11on or
eQtJ tvatent dump body 120 " 11

SWEEPER ond -lng mlchlnl repair. part1, 1nd
IUppliel .
Pick up and
delivery . Oavi1 Vacuum
Cleaner, one haH mile up
Goorgoo Crook Ad. Colt
44e -0294.

HOME REPAIR

llOO

3627.9 Rock Spn ngs Road .'

Po mP-roy, Oh•o 4576 9 was
aPPOint ed Ad m1n1strat o' of the
estat e o f lenora l Spen cer.
rl eceased . late of 364 25 Rock

3 · Announcement•

4-21.1 rno 1x1

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

pd

MILLER
ELECTRIC
_·SERVIC.E .

,__

J.IJ.t1c

~---·-···-·"'·'

'g fo o loo..,

Public Notice

TERM INIX
INTERNATIONAl

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re- ' •
pair service and In·
stallation .
R ·l isidential
Be Commercial
Call 742 - 3196

'- - - - - -- -- - - - - ----1

13 [o c.a.OI"'!!

I. a . .....

1l1o ·

,. 1o•l 1t111 ~·'

M•tl Ce.. M'f
"''"C-114

ue "'• a......

I I H....,o l....,oa •0-1110
12 Plum'""' " H&lt;o olt"t

1"'1:''' ,.," ,.,

111: h •lo• joho •t•·

1.

' ~CC:.~:!': ,.
add boll and md out·rai diators. We also repair

,GellooC'""'""
.,.. c-•'•
1M
IU
l 1'9

Htilllll!r " ·

1 1 h• mlq u op"'"" '
n W... Md ooa"'
l l l -ol oct

CALL:

S-13·1 mo

!E~C~ re-

' Gu

}7 ,_ .,,., ftOpOM

01 .............. ......

(~,

l o ~-~i fi •·o l

~

1 ...,.....,.,...Goo do
S2C I l~ l.lll ... ., l • .,.pmuo

SERVICE

- Gas lines
- Septic Systems .
LARGE· or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478

RADIATOR

--=------,.:;-

~ · .... .., . ... h ........

J 1 Ho..,.. to. S olo
l1 M ol&gt;"• Hom .. '"' Sol~
J J , .. , . .... s ...
34 I "''~"" lu!lllon(fl
n loiOIAr oo-., o
11 lllul (""'" Wo olul

·~

Jht

TERMITE AND
CONTROL

PEST

~ Sewer

Headqu;;;sior

were

~ecretary fired over Hustler pose

"~ ~~ I ~•~•• ,.,..,~ m•&lt;l ~ •nu o

Anno~""""'~"''

,I

.

'""COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) - It 's
n9t often that a savings a nd loan
office breaks out champagne for
C].I.Stomers and opens Its doors at
12: 01 a.m., but then people don't
often line up for three days to apply
for a home loan either.
The long walt, often In the rain,
was worth It, sa id some of the
hundreds of Ohioans who waited for
banks and savlngs and loans to open
Monday to get cut -rate loans, at 9.98
percent Interest, under a state
housing bond program. More loans
will be made when more bonds are
sold. officials said .
'
·:~ Cincinnati, Business Men's
Fetleral Savings and Loan Prest~t AI Humbert opened hlsdoorsat
12:01a.m., saying he wanted to suvr
eustomers another overnight wall.
· Humbert, who also hired off-duty
;XlUcemen to protect those In line,
sllowed up just before midnight with
several bottles of champagne. Hr
S&lt;ikl !hose who braved !.he element s,
Including heavy rains during much
of !he weekend, desetved a drink .
"We had a little champagne
cetebra llon about midnight. They
were In tl,l'menpous spirits. They a ll
~re cooperative and friendly with
each other. I think they probably
ma-de some rela tionships that will
lllSta long time," Humbert said.
- '!Thank you .Jesus," said Mark
Hendrickson, 26, who stood at the
hl'ad of, a 112-person line outside
E!Uckeye Federal Savings and Loan
ln. doillntown Columbus when Its
dOors were opened at 8 a.m.
' 'We did It, " sa ld his wl fe, 1)·Jsh.
who since 10:30 a. m. Friday had
joined her husband In the vigil in an
al)ey behind the savings and loan.
·: -Monday was the first day finan cial institutions could lend from a
million fund raised by a state
bond sale, and most TCJX)rted large
crowds for the first-come, flrst~ed loans. Some hopeful homeb~ers had lined up as early as
Wednesday, officia ls said.
itaymond Sawyer, executive director of the Ohio Housing Finance
Agi&gt;ncy, estlmat,ed that the money

31 Home• for Sale

'

tng Funoret Home. Ve10r0na
Momorlll Hoopltel end tho
Pomeroy ond Middleport
Emergency Squed .
Tho Keith G. Aelker. Sr.
Fomtty.

D-avno Wltliomo
&amp; Sco«io Smith
All !lakes 1nd Models
Antenna Installation
House Cllls and Shop
Service Available

PHONE 992-2156
, We

-

.... "

.' '""""""'"'

6,000
home
applications
filed
.. .
.-

.. ....

6 pupplel, •melt breed . 2
klt1on. Colt 814· 388-9900.

Or W1ite O.illy Sentiflll Classified ~t.
Ill Court St .. Poll'lttOy. Otlio 45769

~- · -

FOR PROFESSIONAL

Backhoes
Dump Trucks
lo- Boy
Trencher
Water

J.IJ .tfc

10

2·13-tk

- Dozers

No Sunday Calls

of Southwestern Pennsylnnla Sunday afternoon.
Emergency centers were set up to _assess damage
and aid vlctlfi)s&gt; ( AP ~rplMitoj . -~ _
-

PH . 992-2280

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

SIDING

announcements. .

The Daily Sentinel

$3()00 A TON

PH. (304) 882 -2276 ~ ts l ""

ground from seeing It on IE'levlsion,"
said Langdon, who was burned
himself during the rescue. "His
arms and the upper part of his back
were burning. We tried to keep him
talking by asking him his name and
address."
His father, Frank, said the
teen-ager saw the technique Illustrated by comedian Dick Van Dyke
on a series of TV publlc service

,
11

MINE RUN

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

Four young men credited with saving life

Doc Houses

~16 J mo

" FENCING PROVIDES PRIVACY PlUS
PltOTECTION FOR CHILDREN &amp; PETS "

1911 In J~ were flooded Monday with
water from lhe Peart River. (AP Laserphoto).
boret

Chnttr,

Ph. 986-4269

INGS
P&amp;S 11aBUILD
• 011
Pit :~-..i's 191
_.

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

WET RIDE - Two YOIIIII resldeuts ol nonhea8t
Jackllon, MIM., ahandcm ~ to peddle lbelr way
down a Oooded streel. An estimated 1100 bomes and

parts

1

'
'

4 bdr.. 2 tun belho, flntohed
baa.ment, 2 car .. ,....
Appointment only. 203 ltiMOn Dr.. Gollpotlo. 4411223.

':

~~ ..c.~
c.Oil'&gt; ···

WEATHER BEATEN - Ken Wetlton, 16, sits In
what Ill left of his sister's bedroom )\londay In
'OTeenshurJi, Pa. after" iornado ripped through

' ' " . '
.... '....
. '.. .

The Daily Sentinel-

r:::::::::::::::=:i1r===~::::===:==~iir:::::::::::::~==rr;:::::::::::::::::11 Tho Fomlty of ~lh O. ,....,...-.\IIMft((l~."'-."-­
FOR SALE
All STEEl &amp;
S&amp;W TV
:.'~~ ~~rw.r=~lk;.~~ -----·oiiiilpoiis--- --- -- Thurs. &amp; Fri. Moy 2_8 , Zl-1--------- - .ISearsl
Movlng Sale, furniture , 3 bedroom, 1332 eq.ft .•
18 FT. WILD CAT
POLE BULDINGS
AND
~~~=. ~~=d%rn~;
&amp;Vicinity
clothu
, big auortment under conatructfon. Ivy Dtlle
11011112
116
FREE
TRAVEL
TRAILER
Sim sttrt
. '
APPLIANCE
~::'J"'.!'!i;.:'!:;,~~=!i
misc . iteml. 428 Hedge- Subdlvi1Jon. KCK contr.oEXTIMATES
wood, Goltlpotto, 9AM tit?
to••· Inc. Cell 114-317·
Carpeted, bathcocim with
UTILITY BUILDINGS
SERVICE
sorrow .. Spoclel lheriko to
"Chaln link Fence
0831 or 441-17118.
lllckyord
11te:
Mon
..
Tuo
..
shower, cas or elect. refria. .
Sizu from 6'x6' Up
.
Ott'
Rav. Clyde Hendoroon. ·Ew-

feet deep aver a dam on Lake
Houston and just half a foot below a
record level reached in 1979.
Mississippi Gov. WDUam Winters, who took an aerlal toor to
assess flood damage MOnday, said It
was as had as he feared It would be.
"We've got severe residential
flooding at Jackson. Much oflt In the_
Delta !llld north Mississippi Involves
agricultural lands. ... There Is noi
going to be mt~ch agricultural
activity for some time."
The Pearl River at Jackson,
where 5,000 people had fled, was
more than 10~ feet above flood
stage - the second highest mark
ever recorded -and climbing.

CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS

.. ..

.

Ohio

~''

oflloll't...-llaro

•Dry-.•F..PAATI lnd IEIIVICE

814·982·2181

1-

'

I

•

.......

•W111h. . •Dtoh-ohe,.

POMEROY LANDMARK
.

985-3561
All Maket

EUGENE L.ONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
"Sidina
'R«10fina
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts

•Rtmodeliitl
20 TIITI hptritnCI
In Home Aru.- -

FREE ESTIMATES
Call 843-542 5
5-2-2·

11'10. pd.

6

lOST: 2 red 81 white m•l•
fox hound• . Cot1agevllle ·
MI. AI
LOST - mate Blue Tick
Hound. 1 0 mile-leon vicinIty . Reward. Cell 1nytlme,
304-676-2028 , 876-3286 ,
814-992-31163 .
I 50. Reward dead or alive .
loat small bleck dog 181t
seen in TNT arn. Po11ibly
looking for ine1ter Dick Hell.
Reward will be paid 617
Burdette St. Pt . Pt. WV.
Public Sale
Be Auction

Au c tion every Tue1d1y
night , Krodel Partt Club
Houle, Pt. Ple•••nt WV .
Auct. lonnie Neal. Cell
814-367-7101 .
Auction every Fri. night 1t
t he Hert1ord Community
Center. Truckloeda of new
marchandiJe every week .
Con1igment1 of new and
u11d marchandlll alway•
welcome. Richerd Reynoldt
Auction•r. 276 -30&amp;9.
Complete Auctioneer Service. Also do eppral ..ll .
licensed &amp; bonded to sell.
Houeeholda, farm furniah inga • A11l eltate . Over 25
years experience In buying &amp;
telling new, used &amp; antique
furniture . 614-992 -8370 .
01by A. Martin .
AUCTION every Saturday
night, 6 p.m . Mt . Alto
Auction Barn . Consign ment• taken every Saturday
1 :00 1111 1110 limo . Emmo
Bell Auctln. .r, 304-428 8177.

9

Yard Sale May 26 a 28. 2
mile• from Centenary on
Grahlm School Rd . Baby
furn . &amp; misc . itama.

Lo1go 3 F1mlty Garage Solo. I - - - - - - : - - - - - Thur .. Fri . &amp; S1t ., 9-7 824 By owner 3 bedroom home
DHnie Dr .. OaiHpollt acro11 in Rio Grinde, ·Oh . c.lt
from Mlnko Aulo Soloo, &amp;t4 -2411-11.274or814 -241·
Rl.36. Topopteyoro. CB.Ioll 96t7 for oppolnlmenl. ANof nice clothing, much more. 1onably priced.

Wod. Thur. F1l. lob oii -3-B~R2:._f.:_u_lt-:-b-ol-h-.-.-.n-l-,.--:,-elr-:-,
cloth•• 1izea 5 S. 7. baby fireplace. large lot, cto" to
clothat, exc. item1, priced to town. Call 448-2899 aft•
oolt. 633 41h avo. Galllpolla, 8 .
0.
1- - - - - - - 3 bdr. home In Addieon
small lot , newty Nmodeled,
fumance • woodbumW',
fully inaulated, exc. cond ..
Mtd uo· •. can 114-5924369
.
8t Vicinity

··----;;¥ -Pieiii-iln't ---- -

TWO family yard ule . 1 mi!e

out Jericho Rd. Pt. Pteuant.
Clothing and misc. rld1y
9·3 . Watch for signs . II
rain -canceled.
Yard Sale, Wedn11day and
Thurodoy, 2111h and 281h.
Everything . 412 lawis
Street. Point Plea sant.

3 bedroom home at 123
Garfield Ave ., concrete
pool , full b81ement, 2 flreplaicll . 2'1a barha. new
cerpet , 2 acre Jot .from SR
At . 7 to river . Owner wll
conaider fin1ncl ng wkh tow
down payment end .,,
intereat. Cell 448-114t.

HOUSE FOR SALE In Middleport . Newly remodeled
9 -ftmlly gerege sale , furni· home with fireplace,
ture, tools, clothing all tizaa, ble woodburn1r. cioN 40
infant on up. bedapreads. 1choolo and ohopplng. Colt
curtain• &amp; mite . Rt. 2 N. 614-992-6941 .
below Forrest Hill s Ceme·
D ~·l ovely , 8L.- rooms.
tary. Pt · Pt · w 8 d - Th ur. Frt·
llf tl 1oundo
garage.area
-au
Y aRIDHc•ped
lot. uAtop
Hill. Pom , 40 ' o. 814-111114267.
17 Miscellaneous
- -------7 yean old. 4 miiM out of
Rac ine. Bi -tevet . 2 car Mrattached . 3 car OArate
Pi ck your own Strawberries , age
un -attached . 3 acr11 with
ready soon. Unemploy,d , good drilled well and muoft
clubl or anyone wlahlng to moro . -8 t 4 -843 -53110.
by quart to ea rn rnoney .
Please cell for details thit Owner trantferred. M'-tat
week .Happy Hotlow Fruit sell. J bedroom ranch . Quiet
Farm . 304 -678-2028 .
country living, ecenlc ¥J.tw.
Pomeroy. 159,900. 814992-6420 .
18 Wanted to Do
Hou1e, 2722 Lincoln Ave.
Pt. Pl. Appointment Only.
General Hauling and Tra1h 304-876-4074:
ren1ovel Service. Rel iable 1- - - - - ------::-and dependable. Call 446- EIGHT acret, •mall hou.e.
3159 .~twee n 9 ~ nd 5
garage. out buildings. pond
8t mlnerel r:ightJt~ Ndund·
hperienced house painting price. 304-895-3819 .
·
and lawn mower repair , verv
raaionable rates . Call ·4 46- HARTFORD. WV -Ona ofthe
6688 .
old11t &amp; better built home.
in this area &amp; in A· 1
Will do odd and e nd jobs . condition . Three bedroome,
raa1onable. Call 614-367- 3 1/ 2 bathl, formal living a
dining room . New kitchen
7708 .
12 ' •30 '. Full flnl1hed bee•
WILL mow lawn 1 in M uon ment . Thi1 home has been
and Clifton area . 304-773· re stored &amp; he• k:Jt1of charm.
6442.
Must ne to appraci•••·
EMtra large lot. Call 304·
676 ·3030 or 875-3431 .

po-

t-==========+==========-1
9

Wanted To Buy

Good used jewelry, silver.
gold . diamonds. etc. We elao
buy .. 111! &amp; trade gun1.
Fr~nk ' l Pawn Shop .
Good ·u.l ed jewelry, dia monds. gold S. silver . We
1110 buy. 1ell a. trade gun1.
Frank ' s Pawn Shop, 406
2nd. Ave ., Galllpoli1, 446 0840 .
8EOS· IRON . BRASS, old
furoiture, gold, sliver dol ·
lara, wood ice boxes , ltOnf
jert, antique• . etc .. Com ·
plete . households . y.'rite:
M .D . .l\1lller. ·Rt . 4 . .Pomaroy,
D-h . Oo 9'911 -7760.
Gold. 1ilver, sterling , jewel ry. ring a. old coins &amp;
currency . Ed BurkeH Barber
Shop , Middleport . 992 ·
3476 .
Wanted to buy . New . u1ed 8a
antique furniture . Will buy 1
pieca o r com plete houn·
holda . Call 01by A. Martin
814 -992 -8370.

••II

Lost and Found

LOST tan Chihuahu1 brown
no11, white blue on face .
Cot! 446 -31B8 . or 448 1147.

8

Wod .• Moy23-2,4 -25. 7o .m.
toe p.m . inti de H rain, 11315
2nd Avo.. Golllpollo, fou•
family. Item• offered : en·
tlquoo Including 01k bOd.
oak 2 place parlor lit. ~utter
bowl, pocket watch , felp tin_g
couch. 78'a, poatcerda, pic·
·ture frames. depre .. ion
gilA. iron kettle, 15 leq oek
tllble, gl..lware. flr!'IJtlnd ,
Occupi..t Japan, and other
old items; bookl. paper·
backa, megaain11. men'•
cloth ., tape1, toola , record1,
tampa. furni1ure. bookc111.
over-•totfed ch1ir, coffH &amp;
matching end tablea. aat of
end tablet. 4 awiwl kitchen
chairs, Duncen Fife two-tier
table, other chair• &amp;. tlblet,
pair wingback•. stereo
stand. TV 1tand,magaaine
reck, curtalna, ten apeed
bike. full •ize red velvet
bedapread. to-. of kitc hen
ltem1. dozena of itema under
*1. Anyth ing left on Wed .
will be hetf price. PIHae do
not block driveway. Come
end bring a friend . We"ll be
looking for vou. Not reapon lible for eccldentl.

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old furni ture and Antlqutl of itt
klnd1 , call Kenneth Swain ,
4411-31119 or 2111-1987 In
the evenlnge.
Buying Gold , Sitve•. Ploll num . Gold end Silver pricea
aN the highe.t In two yeara ,
check' our pricea on gold •
allvar, scrap Jewelry. Buying
Old coins. .crap ring• •
ellvarwert . Daily quote•
avellablt . Alto coina .. coin
oupplloo for 11te. Bprlng
Valley Trading. Co., Spring
Volley Plozo . 445 -8025 or
445-8021.
Wo poy cuh for lllo model
cleen uMd car~.
Frenchtown C1r Co.
Bill O.ne Johnoon
441-0011
Diamonds, gold banda, Cl111
rlnga, allver coins, 10- 14
ktrll ecrop (ewerty. Towney
Jowertore. 2nd. Ave.; Ootll·
polio, 441-111111 .
Pay oooh for Uoocl Mobllo
Homt or T11vel Tr-. Colt
1114-441-01711..
·

11

21
Help Wan1ed

Bus iness
Opportuni1y

INOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends
that you do butinen with
people you know. end NOT
lo send money through the
You cen make money 11lling mall until you have invusti AVON. Celt 448 -336B or . gated the offering.
814 -38B-9046 .
--------Country Carryout for ule by
Wanted : Reliable babyslner owner, Upper At . 7 In
for &amp; &amp; 12 year oldl fo r Kanauge, Ohio . Call 448 ·
aummer months. Mon.-Fri., 2192 or 446 -9171 .
7AM-4PM . Colt 448-4979
after 4 :30PM . Prefer some22 Money to Loan
one In town or near HMC .
Wll do baby sining In my
home anytime. fen ced in
back yard &amp; refaranc11
available . Call 614 · 38 8 ·
9786 .

Secretary -Bookkeeper immediate opening for re1pon·
1ible penon full time. Will
require light bookkeelng,
typing. filing . Mu1t be able
to work independently salary commensurate with
exp. Send re1ume to Ohio
Rllidential Service• Inc.
P .O. Bo• 938 . Geltlpolls. Oh
48631 .
Regl1tered Nune un ique full
time po1 ltion available
working with M.A. adultl in
a re1idential1ttting. Mu1t be
able to design pollcle1 and
procedures . Community
health up. de1ired. Knowledge of medlcede, ICF-MR a
plut , eMc. starting telery.
Uber1l benefits packtge.
Send re1ume to Ohio Re1i ·
dentiel Service• Inc. P.O.
Bo• 938 . Gell lpollo. Oh
45831 .
Wanted pen time baby1itter
In Kanaugaarea . Pl1811 ~end
your name and 3 references
to P.O. Box 264 , Chaahlr•,
Oh 45820 .
CLEAN rospocllbto lody 10
Uve In at night1 with elderly
wom1n . Phone 30•·676 ·
8787 .
WANTED-person to brulh
hog lot on GrHn brilr Eat ·
ate1 , Pt . Ptaaaant . phon•
304 -&amp;78-117&amp;5.
Someone to care for elderly
man in hla home full time.
304 -&amp;75-3336 .

I==========
12

Situations
Wanted

Will do beby olt1lng In my
home. Racine eree . Any age.
814 -848 -2779.

13

lnturance

SANDY AND BEAVER lneurance Co , hal offered
Mrviclt fo i fire lnturence
covorooe In G1tlli County
for olmoll • cen1ury . Form,
home arid personal property
covtrag.. are available to
meet indlvlduel needa. Con·
tac1 R1y W-m•ve•. ogon1.
Phone 388-8249 .

1------Are you
to much for
pt~ylng

your hotpllll· heof1h lnouronco. Cttl C1rrot1
Snowden , 4411-4290:

HOM E LOANS 10%% fixed
rata . Leader Mortgage , 77 E.
State , Athen• . Ohio . 1· 614 ·
592 -306t , or 1 -800-34t ·
8564 in Ohio.
23

Professional
Service s

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Broed range of bookkeeing
and tu eervlcea available to
1uit your bu1inen naeda .
Corol Nool
448-3B82
PIANO TUNING 06 olf plu o
di.counts to 1enior cltlzenschurchll-sc hools . Call Bill
Ward Ward 's Keyboard,
44&amp; -4372 .
Will open IIi clean 1wimmlng
poot1. Call 446 -4896 after
5 :00PM .
PIANO TUNING-LANE DANIELS . Reliable ~ervlca
since 1966 . Ano ciate of
Brunicardi Mu1ic Co. Phone
&amp;14-742 -2951 .
PERMANENT h•lr removal
Profeuional Electroly•i•
Clinic . A.M.A. •pproved. Or.
referrals . Monday. Wadnetday, Fridly , by appointment.
3d4-876-li588.

32 Mobile Homeo
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOll~!
HOMES . USED - CAlli ,
TRUCKS , GALLIPOL!I .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
448 -7672.
CLEAN USED MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'&amp; QUALITY MOBILE HOME 8ALE8,
4 MI. WEST, GALL!POUI,
RT 36 . PHONE 445 -7274.
2 lott S. 1 mobile home
12•60. 2 bedroom, whh
rural water , ga• heat. H81
so me furniture, price
• t 2. 600. 0• 41oll • moblto
t 14.BOO. Coli 445 -1240.
t 975 14•70 Poo•looo MH ,
w -tilt out, EC , cent . air.
woodburner. total electric,
new carp throughout, un·
derpinnlng . OfJtbuildlng .
&amp;11 ,500 . Call 814 · 2416406 , 448 -0212 .
1978 Schultz: t 4x70 · 2
bdrm .. 2 btths. cantril air,
good cond., on rental 'ot,
nnr Goody11r Plent, aiiUmeble loan. French City
Brokaring Service. 4&amp;19340 .
1973 Carrage houn mobile
homo 70• 12. AC, W &amp; D
hookup. dlthw .. har , 2 bdr .•
2 bath . Call after 15, 8144
882 -7277 •• &amp;1 4 - 5127262 . Belt offer ..
1976 14x70 Wlnd1or, 3
bedroom, 1 V1 beth1, furnilhed , 8 x1 0 utility building:
Death In family mutt Hit.
Coli 446 -7613 coli before .
3 :00m after 4 c.all 4417B47 .
2 bedroo m treller aet up on
rinted lot on Bulavilla Rd.
Underpinning, out building~
kitchen appllenc11, wood~
burner, $4,900 or belt otfeh
Call 448-0978. IPM-8PM .
1969 Elkor 10•60, 2 belt.,
mostly furn ., carpeted. Cell .
ahor 6, 614-38B-854t .

1980 14x70 Fairmont Mobile Home . electric, 2 bdr.;1
1 Y, bath , unfurn .• unde;,ilnnlng, air, ullllty building.
CLIFTON WV -Unflnlohod 3 Johnoon MH Parte. 114t..droom, 1 11J baths. well 3B8-9704 .
lnaulated. alum in um aiding.
electric w ired , septic syltem 1976 Kirkwood 14•70 me· •
A large lot . Only bllt homo. •8 .500 . Coil .
t22,000 .00. Nlco p1oporty. 614- 3B8-9038 .
Coli 304-1175· 3030 or &amp;753431 .
Lolo 19BO Wlndoo•. 14.:70
wllh 7.22 .. pendo, 3 bdr..
For Bale By Owner,' a11uma- 2 blth. hou11 type furnit~re~ .
ble at 8 percent interftt, 3 centnl air, atero, micro~ ..
bedroom home with vinyl wave. and more. ExcelfeOt '
1ldlng. full 1111 baaernent buy on quality home .
ond both end 'h, locatod In t1t. IIOO. Aodnoy·Cotl Rd,
Loon- Baden Aoed. Phone · Call 1114-241-1229.
·
304· 411'1 -1888 ehor 8 p.m.
8.38 trailer 11,000. 114,
3 br, total electric, tharme 742-2308 oflor I p.m.
p1n wind ows, 1 1h baths,
Cl tll lty room , ai r· cond, 1·4x815 2 bedroom Hornetti'J.o
carpet. etove. refrig. dla- mobil home. New c1rpet n .·
hwtlher, wood-burner can linoleum thr"ughout . New ..
be uoocl . doublo· goroge, eel- Coleman gaa furr\ea1 . A.C ., ·
lor a 2 outbullcltntio. drMted trant porch with IWI!In.. '
well or ctty w1ter, on 1 ecre, bock deck. unde&lt;plnnln..
· I mlteolrom Pl. Pl. on At. 2 . E•ceHonl condlllon. A*N
304-BtiB -33"8- Moving.
t7,300 . 8t4-84t-271t.
•
31 Hornet for Sale

..
I

'
"'

�Ohio
32

Mobile Homes
f or S a le

They'll Do It Every Time

64 Misc. Merchandise

1

tabla
4 7 Ya k18 ~x 115 YI ln . and 1
end t able 21h18"AA x20'12
with light welnut f inlah J30.
32x53· 17 4 piece a brown
underpinning .for a mobile
home uHd just 1 vur came
off a 14x70 mobile home.
long pieces meaeure 32" .
ahon piecea 21 " and 10
lnchtl acrou. enterktck In 1

1972 14 x65 M obile Home.

2 bedrooms, gas h aa1, PJr·
tlellv f urn ished, underpinnin g, b ack porch , axe. cond.
Phone 6 14-99 2-2 155 bo·
tw. . n 9 &amp; 6 Ask for Tim .
After 5 phone 304 -8823692 .
1"9 7 4

Ca rr iage

HOuse 3

bdr .• 2 full b aths , sliding
gla11 doo r1. good cond,.
16, 800 . Co li 6 1 4 · 992 6610 .

maul fr•me. wood grein

flni ah . Coli after IIPM. 448·
30611 .

1973 12x6 6 M obile Home.
3 bedroom, gaa heat, partially f1,1rnishad, f ront porcl'l .
fair cond.. under pinning.
$6.000 . 6 14 -992-5701:
USED MOBI LE
676 -2711 .

HOME .

1977 14x70. 3 bedroomo. 2
l ull baths. 810.000. 30467 6 -2 949 .

~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~;;~~;;~
~
- - - - - -- - - - 42
33

Farms for Sale

142 ecreo near R; o Gra nde.
hou se &amp; buildings. Will sell
all or part . Call 446-2699
after 8 .

46 ACRE farm w;th 197 6. 2
bedroom ell electric mobile
home. in good condition on
Thomas Ridge. Call 304676 -3280 and ask f or Ron
Hickman .

fl /

34

Business
Buildings

For rent or sale businen
building conta ins 3 bedroom
apt .· upstairs &amp; arrange ments for 1 o r 2 businane•
downstairs. Sale can also
include 2 rental trailers. Call
446 -3888 .
Office trailer 8 ft. x 36 ft .
S-u·i tabla for constru cti~n
site field office . Have bottle
gea furnace , a.c ., bathroom.
2 built In desks. Days call
814 -992 -2689 . · Evon ingo
cell 614 -992-2941 or 614992 -3301 .

Mobile Homes
for Rant

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light houu keeping
2 bedroom mobile home. rooms. Park Central Hotel.
ApproJiimately 5 miles from Call 446 . 0758 ,
Middleport or Pomeroy . !- - - - - - - - - 614 -992-6868.
Sleeping room eUII , utlltloo
paid, t ingle "'ele. Shire
2 bedroom furnished mobile bath, 919 Second Ave .
home. Adult• only. Utilities Galllpollo . Coli 446-44111
paid . No pet s. Deposit It aher 7 PM .
re ft~ren c as required . 1- - - - - - -- - l ocation·S .A . 143. 614 - Furnished apt . adults. No
992-3847 after 6 p .m .
Pets. 304-876-1463.
------~- - lc - 1 -----------·
2 be dr oom 12JI60 tur - Furnished apt. adults. No
niohed. o.c .. w01hor-dryer. Peto. 304-675· 1 453 .
$ 175. plus utilities and
depooit . No pe11. 614-992'- 1.
7479 .
46 Space for Rent

I-=;:;:;==::;:::=;;:::==

TWO mobile home• for rent 1-C
- O_U_N_T-:R-:Y-:-:M
c:-::
0-:8-:IL:-:E
:-:H:-o-m
-o
on Rt. 2 about 6 minut es Park, Route 33, Nonl'l of
fr om town . Call after 6. Pomeroy. large lot&amp;. Cell
304-676-8277 .
992 -7479 .
TWO bedroom. 12JI 60 fur ni'ahed, air. wa1her. dryl-r ,
$175 . plus utilities, deposit
and referanca1. 304·6764874 .

49

For Lease

Tract ors. trallera. flatbeds •
vano. Call 614-448-6209
between 8 -6. Monday thru
Friday .

REAL e1ta te for sale by
Owner . Building now being
used for busineu. 7 room
apar.t m ent, 2 be dr oom
hou 1e' to· rent '"' for · e}l tra
inco ine. · Appr Oximately 1
acre o f g rou nd. good well.
cit y water on Crab Creek Rd.
Call 304 -67 5 -6609 lor
eppointment.

no.

rv·•.

MODERN 3 bedroom, lam- 1 bedroom opt . Penlally
Uy room, near schools It furnished . Carpeted. In Midhospital. Reference • dep· dlopon . 1155 . month. deposlt required. Call304-676- oolt, pluo utllltioo. 814-9924338 .
.
7177 .
TWO badroom houae, 2nd. Apartments . 3 04 - 676 St .• Now Haven. 304-882· 5648 .
250 5 .
1 7:-:-::-:-:~-----APARTMENTS. mobile
9 room hou se, Perk Or. homes, houtee . Pt. Pleennt
S3 26 month , ref . req. 304· ond Galllpollo . 1114·448 875· 2886.
8221 .
ONE bedroom apanmentt
for the eldertv. All litllltloo
42 Mobile Homes
pold. Tonento pey 30 par·
for Rent
cent of t heir. 1adjuoted ln_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _,.:;
e - como In this HuD
ouboldlzod
eponment building. Twin
Furnlahed 6 unfurnished, 2 Rlven ,Tower, phone 304~
bedroom•. air cond., beauti- 871·81179 . Equol opponunful river vlaw in Kanauga . lty houaing.
FOst er' • Trailer Park. 446160;l.
.
ON Er bedroom epanmtnt,
·lc402 Yo 24th. St, Pt, Piouant,
2 bedrooms Mobile Home in phone. 1· 814·982-1851.
Recine. 114·3117-0288.
ONE bedroom oponmont,
10 x 81. 2 bd .room mobllo U25 month. oil utllhloa
home In Racine •rea . 614- poid, 304· 871·2181 .
992.·1888.

G E avecedo refrigerator like
new •111. 30 ln . avacedo
alec . range'3 Yfl. old *1150.
other refrlgeretora. Wllhera,
&amp; dryoro 190 end up. Ail 30
days guarentMd. Call 4488181 .
Whirlpool weoher 1611. GE
wuher 195. 2 WhirlPOol
wuhoro llka new 11711
each, Kenmore drfer
GE dryer 11110, Phllco refrigerator 195. Olbaon refrigerator frolt frH •as.
Penncrett r efrigerator
t110, 5 pc. bedroom oulte
'295. onflnlsh cheot of
dril-ro 185. 8,000 ITU olr
condilionar 115, 1·0,000
BTU olr conditioner • 110.
40 I~ . electric range, 30 In
gaa tande like new I moe.
old 1111, box opringo •
manrna f45 . amoll kitchen
ceblneta 30 ln . wldo by 30
·ln. high t31. tk•ao• Appliances, Uppor River Ad.
1
0elllpollo. Coli 441·7318 .

•ee.

~----------------------~
_,

clol end realdentiol. 1rH
eetlmetn . Call 114-2118·
1182.
•

MAYTAG outomot i c
woaher, worko good, t711 .
Hoapl1ol bed wl1h mottrHO.
185. 304·1175-3180 .

PAINTING • interior ond
exterior. plumbing. ~g.
eome ,.modeling. 20 yro.
exp. Coli 814-318-8152.

STUCCO

commer·;

tr
"•

wallpaper hlngirig. lneuntd.

appt . 304-882-3224.

Free eatimatn. 1114-949·
211811.
Rooting. ohlngl•. apoutk\g

882· 261 3 .

and aluminum· tiding work.
in1urlld . FrH E1tlmatn.

4187.repeira t25 . 304-875·
tome

Automatic

wether, needa

10 ft. alum. flat bottom
b..t. 3 hp motor, good
con d. Call after 5 , 304-6782193 .
Bookcaae waterbed t22&amp;.
304-675-6323 .
.
Antiq'ue walnut 46x60 aix;
legged Queen Ann table,
with 2 leovea. 4 aide chalro,
2 arm chalrt. After 15.
304-676-6882.

Fireplace insert, twin blow·
ers, automatic thermostat, Complete Nt World Book
still in factory carton . encyclopedia~ with child
8550 .00 . Ph . 614- 266· craft and dictionary set.
1216.
304 -8911 -3867.

. 357 mag .. .26 eut o.. 2
CB' t , ground plane end
powerpek. tools. 16 in . tirea.
bicycle. 446-9636 .
Infant loveaeat-car aeat for
babies from birth to 20 lbt ..
like now $15. Call 446 0765 :
6 pc . dinnette set. Velvet
chein -awiveL 1200. like
new. Other misc . items . Call
446-41.38.
Antique Oak Reproduction
furniture. full line in stock,
alto Antlquea. Paul Conkel•
Antiquet, Tuppers Pleins.
Flowera for Memorial Day .
North 2nd . St. Middleport .
Opan 9 -8 . Cliff's Ploco .
Ma'(1ag H.O. auto washer·
1126. Maytag auto. $86 .
Auto. washer and dryer.
8126. Refrig . $66 . 614 742-2362 .
JB 350C dozer. J8 3608
crawler. loader w -bucket
and forkt , MF44 rubber tired
losdor. 1972 Ford F700
w -cheater aJIIe end 20 ft .
lletbod. 1978 Wildo rnooo
camper, a 2 sew edge
w-power unit, Lafont 400
industrial wood splitter .
814-898-6513 .

66 Building Supplies

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KEN EL
Boarding ell breed1. Soiling
Hippy J_ack Dog Food.
Doberman: .Stud Service.
Coli 446-7795 .
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
• KENNEL. AKC Chow puppies. CFA Himalayan, Perlien and Siamese kittens.
Call 448-3844 after 4PM .
Female Engliah Setter end
pups. Call 614-388-8368.
Walker Pupa. 9 weka old.
UKC • PCA Rogiatered.
Phone 388-8194 .
Treeing Welker pup. Regis·
tered . Night champion
stock . Male or female. S60.
614 -992 -7888.
Peak -a - Poo puppy. 12
weekt old, black . Smell size.
reglotered mala. 304-8823373 after 6.
6 Beagle pupa, from good
otock e15 . oach . 304-6766146 . .
13 mo. old regiatered walker
female. trees ground hog
dey $90 firm. 304-6763133 .

57

Musical
Instruments

1983 Kimbell Organ. with
several books . 304-896 3867 .

REPOSSESSED SIGN I Nothing downl Take over pay.
menu
monthly .
4' x8' flething arrow sign.
New bulbt. !etten. Hela
Slgno . Call FREE 1 -800·
626 -7446 . anytime.

•sa.oo

69 For Sale or Trade
76 DODGE v•n .
cu stomlted-to trade for car
of equal value. or take car on
trade In 304-876 -6809 .

BEEN LOOKING FOR US? 61
We're Rawlelgh, famous for - - - - - - - - - flavora, spices, seasonings 1 980 285 Malley Fergu·
and other fine products. son, 236 hours, like new .
We're now looking for relie· Call 614-379 · 2820. ""
ble people who went e good
part·time earning opportun· TO · 20 Ferguson tractor
lty. Cell 304-675 -1090 for with tingle plow, grader
appointment .
blade 8a horH diak, e1 .800 .
Call 814 -258 -1919.
VERY nic e playpen, also
eutoma1ic cradle awing. In- 19711 C10e 4110 Bulldozer
fant w olkor , 304 - 876 - With 6 WIV blade. 2070 hrt..
7770 .
oxc . cond .. 112.100. Call
614-448-41137.

? ON'T YOU KNOW
WHAT KINV OF Tl&lt;OUBL~
A '&gt;I?UNG WOMAN ~ IK&amp;
'IOU CAN GET INTO
HITC HHIK IN G f

Alu.m~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~=~~~~=i HiinumPreuureCiunlng.
aiding, mobile hom... '
61

Farm Equipment

"
Mechenlcal tranaplanten
for aettlng tobacco. cab·
bogo. tomat..o. ate . 1 • 2
row. Swiahor Implement
Co., Sr. At . 7 North, Balllpo·
lis, Oh. 44&amp;-04715 .
NEW &amp;. Uaed Harveatore
Structurea. Automated 11'tleatock feeding-computer
feedera. Call coHect 114585-2280 . .John l. Bette.

NEW Holland hoy baler. hay
rake &amp;. box blade in good
condition, 304-897·2527.
Wanted to Buy

Building materiel•
block, brick, sewer pi~l.
w i ndows. Untolo . etc .
Cle!-id8 Win~er•. Rio Qrande, Tobllcco poundae will
P. Coll61.4 ·246-5121.
· 3 9 canto • pound .
814 ' 388 ; 8261 ·
Build your own Early American home, 2 or 3 bdr., TobaC:co pou 'ndae will
82,995 . Call 1·814 -886· 30 cents a pound .
814-388-82111 .
731 1 . See our modeL
66

=~-,

1514-949-2&amp;88 .

62

BUCK stove with pipe and all
hookupo. 304-676-6809 .
ROTOTILLER . 5 HP. e1 00.
Three HP pu1h mower, •as .
304-6711-6067 ofter 5.

Pelntlng lntorior • exterior,

Riding lawn mower, 15 hp.

810.10
per ft11.
38.... inch
inch
•6
.36 per
., 24
• 16.60 per ft . Alao pleatic
culvon in otock . &amp; Inch thru
18 inch , 8 inch 11 .80 perl1..
12 inch •3 .80 per ft . Rp n
Evana Enterpriaea, 4 ~mi.
South of Jackson on ST . RT.
93, 814-288-6930.

Cheap carpet . 11 you hovo
rental property or rent, don't
m ind alightly irregular
carpet. you can oavo money".
Pric.as start 12 .99 sq . yd .,
9 2 6173 10 6
•
· ·
9 •
Cordless telephones ideal
for use. arOund . YOur horrie,
fai'm, buaine11, etc. No
·Wires, ·receive or make calli
from 1 diatanca of 600-700
ft . from the baae unit.
Frank't Pawn Shop. 406
2nd. Ave .• Gallipolis, 446 0840.

.

28 " cut ., good cond. 304-

1--------'----

Cedor w ardrobe. antique
trunk. 3 tier gla11 table •
concrete picnic table with
bench eo . Coli 814· 2661768.

. ··

PlY
Coli
pay
Call

Want to buy tobacco poundage. will poy 36 cento. One
week only.' Coll448-977?' or
448-2484 .
63

wood . brick. aandatono
bullctng ond homn. Aloo
heavy equipment. Fully inlured. FrN eltlmatn . 8141979 Ford Fleeta. one 949-2186.
owner. 4 tpeed. am-fm - - - -- - - - -redlo. ounroof. UIIOO. 304· GENE'S CARPET CLEAN8811-3847.
'
lNG SERVICE. Recom·
mended for profe11ional
eteam cleinh1g . Scotch
72 Truckl for Sale · Guord-Free Eatimoteo. Coil
Gene at &amp;14 -992-8309.
1989 Chevrolet 2 ton single
axle dump truck. Cell 814- RON ' S Tele'tltsion Service.
·379-2&amp;71 .
Specializing In Zenith end
Motorola , Ouazar . end
77Chevy4x4Yatonplckup. houN Cllll. Calll578-2398
12.2110. Call 448·8608 .
or 446-2454 .

71

Autos for Sale

1 ton truck 1970Chevrolat.
12ft. ~with catle reeks.
37.000 acturel miles. Oood
cond . 11 .200. 614·7422480 evemngs.
•
19119 FORD truck . 1975
Hond8 Cl380 , •eoo. each .
804 28th St. Pt. .Pieaunt.
304-678-11230.

·'

1978 Ford pickup F-100.
short wheel base, black on
bla4=:k. new wide tlr81 on
slotted mage. tinted gl111.
with eliding rear window.
tool box. AM · FM 8-tuck,
*2.800 or boat offer. Call
304·676-7167 or304-6762962.

.Uvestock

7l

Vans

S.

4 W .O .

Anguo bulla 1 to 3 vro. old.
eJCcellent blood line. Slate ·
Run Fl!uma, Jackaon. Oh . 74 Jeep W•goneer 4 wheel
Coli 614 -286 -5396 or 614- drive. quod troc. PS. PB. AO.
auto. naw tlrea . mach.
286-1787.
aound. 8795 or belt offer.
Regloterad Polled Hereford Call 448 -4138 .
bull , 14 mot . old, appro .
Dodge Powerwagon.
weight 700 lba. Cell 441crulae control. AC . AM -FM
1848 or 446 -4472 .
otero . • 1 ; 800 . Dodge
Horaoa for oale. 614-992- tranafer case for $75 . Call
614-388-8328.
8102
3 veer old bull. 'II Chorolelo.
Vz Simmentel. Very nice.
gentle. Call814-742 · 2940.
Average 25 -30 lb. wun!ng
plga 140. a heod. 654 neor
Porter , Ohio . 1114-367·
0638 .
REGSTERED. grede walk·
ing horHI. L.
Kelat:er,
304-578-2178.

e.

.......
.. .....
-.... ..........
'.'.'

71

'

Autos for Sale

1978 Pont iac Firebird blue,
V-8. outo. , air, PS . PB. low
mlloago . Shorp, 14, 195.
John' s Auto Sale1, 441 4782 .
19711 Chevy Caprice Cill·
sic, 4 dr. teclen, one owner.
U ,SOO. Call 448-111111 or
448-1244.
1974 Plymouth Duator II
cyl., auto ., body ru1t, eJCc.
mechanical cond ., many
now pano. Call 4411-71128
boforo 3PM .
1977 Coprlc Claoolc Chevrolet 13,000 . 1977 Buick
Skvlork I 1 .900 . 1975
Chevy Luv I 700 . Coli 4419884.
195 7 chevrolet 2 door poat
orginal, t cyl. . rebulh trent.,
body good. runo good . Coli
446-0713 .

74

Motorcycles

1 965 H•rloy Dovldoon loot
yNr pan head , first electra
glide. 13.1100 firm. Coli
448-3235 .

1880 HONDA XR 600 •
troller. 11400. Phone 3041711-451 9. Mondoy through
Fridoy.

1870 TOYOTA Corone,
good motor, good body,
.f471i. 304· 871 ·3133.

82 Colemon pop up cam par.
.. 11 otor 8 p.m . 304 -117188 CAMARO 327, good 2011.
Interior, good tlroo, 304-

812· 2413.
84 VOLKSWAGEN , 1300.,
304·875·20118 .

79

Motor• Home• .
._ Camperl
..

.

.

1170 FORD Mner l ck,
' -~
mokea o good worlt Cor . Complng trolle&lt; 18 ft .. Trot·
wood. 11.-pa 8, nH con304-1711·34 1 • .
tained )except for bo·
1110 CheW. C11otlon, bo· throomt. fulll"!'uth ewnlng,
ex. ·
1· 4,
11·3929 low tVwtnil
otter 4:11. aell :to4•t11- cond., •1 .111. Coli 448-

:so-..•

7141.

inl"'-.

1211 weri.

.. .5 0 I'M VETOtlol' TM' LOT

OF VOU! YOU'RE NOW

.• •A N' I'M TAK. IN '
OVE R!

NULL A.NP VOID ... '

Judy ru nning off
and
leaving

Walt, l just
vacuumed

Leaving me w;th a
suit case fu fl of dirty
clothes .. that l can
bel'; eve!

that

ruq '

You should
\iave vacuumed
me
f irst !

her

dog!

Excavating

DOZER WORK By Ted
Henne . ponds. ditches.
beaements. ate. Cell 4484907 . Cartar &amp; Evans
Transportation .

WINNI E
WE JU5T

lonnie Boggs Excavetlng.
Dozer, beckhoa, dumptruck.
Work by hour or j ob. Call
446-7903.

1II 11. 197 8 Torry bo11 boot,
90 HP Marcury mot or,
power trim, 1talnt.11 ttMI
prop .• 23 lbo. elect. Mercury
thruster, live batit wells.
Tenne1... drhla on trailer.
Coli 814-387·01131 .

1877 VIking IPid . down
comper. 17 ft .. IICIOd condl·
lion. uHd very llttlo. f10oo .
814-742-2236 .

THI&gt;.T MAY BE, BUT YOU'VE
DONE A ROTIEN J OB O F
RU"-llt.J i troJ ' TH'

l cant beli eve

JIM ' S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Fomerly Dewitt'•
Plumbing . Coil 814·3670676.

1878 Chevy lmpelo 4 dr.
Hden, good cond ., only
80.259 mi., 11 ,7110 . Coli
448· 1 589 or 448-3547.

79 OM Nl, excellent condition, AM -FM ,tereo, n.w
batt•ry. good tlr•. t25oo.
304·1175-5817 . •

PCSITIONS, YOUR H IGHN I'SS~
WE WERE ELECTED F"'IR
AN' SQU,.,RE .'

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 4484477

84

1877 Terry trovol trailer. 28
ft .. o.c .. A-1 cpnd, 814 -8923787.

ME .. :

Plumbing

75

Camping
Equipment

'IOU CAN'T TI'RMtNATE OU R

&amp; Heating

1978 Chovrolot Monte
Corlo 2 dr.. PS, PB, TW, CC.
AM- FM 8 -trock. eac. cond.
Coli 448-7538.

78

LUMINESCENCE
EIMNATINQ
FROfii THE
\'iALLS...

01£0.1 1 5URE FEEL ROTTEN
THINKIN' ASWELL PAL LIKE
F100 WAG TflYIN' T' HURT

REMODELING. roofing .
paint ing. interior &amp; eKterior,.
free estimatn. 304-876· :2440 .

1880 HONDA 200 Twin
Sur. exceHent condition,
tiiO. after 1 :00. 304 -9372875.
Bo•ts and
Motors for Sale

SOIIT OF

ALLEY OOP.

Cell 304-676-1293 for con· .
crete and black top estl·
mat... metal building and
fence erection coat . Also
buying and selling hRvy
equipment. Pleaaant Mee·
dow1 Distributors and
Sales .

J .A .R. Construction Co.
Water lines , Footers,
Drains. All kinds of D itching.
Rutland . Oh . 61 4 · 742 ·
2903.

1974 Chorger 318 outo.,
new tlrea, many new pant,
runo good, t400. Call 4410713 .

...S TR~NEiE

OHqOLLY, 5ANDY .1 I qUE$5 HE

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Ono •
piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gutter. (Day 614·692-4088.1
(night 61 4·898·82015 .)

82

1874 HONDA C8 360.
1400. Phone after 6:00,
304-675-1 800.

..,THOUUHT l HEARD SOMETHIN'
50C~ THERE .. PROB'LY MOflE
ROCHG FALLIN'! FzDO SUflE
SMOOK UP TH ' F\.ACE WHEN
HE... HE ...

II·

1979 Yemoho 650 Special.
1 0.800 mllea. New tlreo and
battery. t1100 . 614-9922382 .

1980 ODYSSEY. excellent
condition. t8110 .. 304 -675·
3773.

ANNIE
~--------------~~

HEARD THE

GOOD NEWS ...

NEITHER CAN I.
FROM OFFICE BOY TO
BEING IN CHARGE OF
THE DEPARTM ENT...
ONE DAY/

I?IFFERENT?

WE NEVER

IN WHAT

KNEW YOU
WERE A

WAY???

PE61GNERI

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

M anche ster. (60 min .)

BARNEY

C1J Another

IT AN' ME ,

LOWEEZY-- '(()UR
CALENDAR 15 THREE
MONTHS BEHIND

SE~ING

Machine repairs,
atrvice . Authorized Singer
Salll &amp;. Service Sharpen
Sc itton . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 892 -2284.

TOO

General Hauling

...

Ne•d aomethlng hauled
awey or aomething movtd7
We' ll do it. Call 448-3159
between 9 ond 11.

87

Uphol1tery

(l) Catllna
([I Soap
0 (I) Quincy
(I) PBS late Night
® All In tho Family
G [jJ Nlghtllne
Honeymooners
12 :00 I}) MOVIE : ' Smokey ond
the Bondlt '
CIJ Burna • Allen
ffi USFL Football: Birmingham et Michigan
(I) It' 1 a Long Way t o
October Part 2
(I) Nlghtllne
® MOVIE: ' The Vam -

plroO:

JONES BOYS WATER SER- r •
VICE. C•ll 814-387-7471 " :
or 814 -387-0591 .

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call J im Lanlor, 304 -675 7397.

Life

e

E D ' S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE c•ll City Furniture
304 -876 -2808 or 44110831 .

85

Team f1nd s Itself m a stand·
o ff w it h a m otorcycl e gang
and th e to wn sheri ff . (A) ~60
m jn ,)
ill MOVIE: 'The Boogens'
ill MOVIE : ' Las Girls'
(]) I Spy
(!) 2nd Annual l e gendary
Pocket Billiard Stars
Cll Gl ill! Happy Days Fan·
zte encourages M elvin to get
a date with K.C. {RJ !Closed
Cap tioned )
0
(I)
®)
Mov ie
Blockbusters :
The
15
Gre at est H its 1' on• ght.' s
p~r o gra m salutes the · mos t
succassful mot•o n p•ctures
of all ti me . Gues t starr in g
Drew Barr ym ore , HarriSon
Ford and Butterfly Ouoon
{60 mon.)
(])® Nova 'Here ' s Look 1n g
at You, Kid .' A y oung boy's
fight to reco v er fro m severe
burns 1s examined. (RI (60
m1n ) [Closed Captioned ]
8:30 Cll Gl ill! Joanie Loves
Chachi Chac h1 ' s pare nts
pan1c upon lam n m~1 tha t
Joanm and Ct1 act11 havo
eloped
9:00 Q I]) C1) M OVI E 'The
Enforcer'
C1J 700 Club
(!) NCAA Div ision I M en' s
T ennis
Championship
f rom the Univ ersity of
Georgia
Cll
IEl
ill!
Three' s
Co mpany Janet learns th at
her tnend. w ho fall s for
Jack, IS marn ed (A) JCiosed
CapttOnedJ
0 Cil ®I MOVI E: 'Cradle
Will Fall'
(() American Playh ouse
'Segum · Tomght's dram a
look s at the lifo and memo1rs
of one of To ~~: as · unsung her·
ocs, Juan Nepomuceno Se·
gUin {AI {90 n11n I IClosed
Captioned\
(j{) Diamonds in the Sky
9 :30 Cll Gl ill! 9 to 5 Mr Hart 's
marital problems fall prey to
office goss1p (A)
10:00 ill Hooker The world of
pros titution IS ex omtn ed tn
th1s documontarv
C2J MOVI E: ' Silk Stock ings'
Cil 0 ill! H art to Han The
Harts try to save an Oll·nch
kmg from d1saster (R) (60
mm.) !Closed Capt 1onodJ
(jj) Newsw at ch
10:30 CIJ Star Time
(I) TBS Ev ening New s
Cl) Firing lini!J
(fl) Inside
Washington
Mark Sh1elds hos ts th1s loo k
a1 behind tho scones 111 the
nati on's c a ptlal
fJ) INN New s
11 :00 0 C2l (I) 0 Cll @ Gl ill!
News
I}) MOVI E: ' Who se Life l o
It Anywavr
I]) ESPN SP&lt;&gt;nsConter
[!) News/SI)&lt;&gt;rto / Wo ather
(lJ) Crisis to Crisis
fJ) Benny Hill Show

11 .: 30 Q I]) [!) T onlght Show
· &amp;ohnny' s guest IS Melissa

DEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR . Guoronteed work. Call anytime
814-256-6620 or614-2561207.

PEANUTS

,.
"
•.

..

''·:.
,.,.

TAl STATE
·::
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
,.
11 U Boe. Ave .. Golllpolio . •·
441 · 7133 or 4411 -1833.

MA't'SE,
BUT I UKE
MY IDEA

FOR ATITLE

I THINK VOU
5HOULI7 TAKE MY
SU66E5TION

It Was a Dark
and Stormy Night IT

•
Mery Henman . Mary
Henman
12:30 • I}) [!) late Night with
Dovld latterrnon Dovid ·s
guests are Barry Whlte and
Bob Goldthwalt. (60 min.)
(I) Jock Benny Show
8 (I) McMillan ond Wife
!'ne[jJ ABC Newa One on
1 :00

BETTER
1:30

'

&lt;2&gt;-&lt;fP

it-

WHAI THAT HEATI N 6
!!! ILL D ID .
Now ·arrange the circled loners to
form the surprise answer, as suo·
gested by the above certoon

X• XXXI I )

Msw9r:[
Yesterday's

I

H IM (

XI XJ

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles CRAZE PLAIO ZE ALOT FITFUL
Answer · Wh at tha t pic niC turned Into when it began
to drlu le- A FIZZLE

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Ch efs/ New

Orleans

E
R Trio Se!Yic.• . fully
in•ured, free ••timates.
Phone 614-367-0636. c•ll
after 6 .

work, general repairs, call
Anthony Williamson. 814367-0194 .

Great

G)
&lt;iZ Entertai nmen t
Tonight
8:00 B I]) IIl A T eam i he A

Get your carpet in thlp
ahape . Water removal. FREE '
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614-448-2107.

83

---------

e

~
News
I}) MOVIE: ' Puroui1 of
D.B . Cooper'
I})
MOVIE: - 'Casey's
Shadow'
(])Tic Toe Dough
C1J Andy Griffit h
[!) Newo/ $por1o/Weath er
([I (lJ) Studi!&gt; See
1!11 Charlie' 1 Ang elo
6 :30 Q l}) (!) NBC News
(])
MOVI E:
' Armored
Attack '
I]) ESPN' o Sl)&lt;&gt;rtsforum
CIJ Gomer Pyle
([I Gl [jJ ABC N ew s
0 (J) ® CBS New s
([I Dr. Who
(lJ) Over Easy
7 :00 Q l}) PM M agazi ne
I]) Thi o Week In tho NBA
CIJ Carol Burnett
(J) Entenalnment Tonight
[!) Charlie's Angels
0 (J) Tic T ac Dough
(J) ® 11/f ecNeil-l ehrer
ReP&lt;&gt;n
® News
Gl ~ People' s Court
Iii In Search of....
7 :30 Q Ill Lie Detect or
I]) ESPN SP&lt;&gt;rts Cent er
(I)
1!11 Major League
Baseball: Pittsburgh at
Atlanta
Cll 0 (I) Family Feud
Cil Business ReP&lt;&gt;rt
® You A sked For It

B Ill Cll D Cll ®

CID

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domitstic. Tnt · holet.
Pumps Seles and Service.
304-895-3802.

For ule or trodo Suzukl760
GT. Coli 446-7832.

1881 KX 125 Kaweookl.
exceUent · condition. mut t
aell. 1800 . Coil 304-8822887 or 882 -2822 .

BEL.I!=-1/E: lfi i..IFE
AFTEr&lt;:~~ ~APPI..~ ?

RINGLE 'S SERVICE eape·
rlenced rooftng, Including
hot tar .application. carpenter, electr~1n, maaon . Clll
304-675 -2088 . or 8754589.

-Roofing
- - and
----·
Carpentry

1980 HONDA CR 250
Eloinor. 78 Chevrolet Blozer
Cheyenne. 17-40 tlroo. lot
of extrao. 304-675-32112 .

BUT I. C.ERT'AJIJI..'{ ~
SOMI:BOD'f'D THIIJK 10 CAAC£1
M'l ~f"llCll .

r;o

F • K Tree Trimming • .tump
removal. C•ll675-1331 .

Herloy Devldaon wide glide.
Coli 448-0038.

1880 Honda Proludo . Swimming Pool. 24 ft. round
obovo ground. Pump. 1800.
firm. 814 -992·7880.

ttiese tour Jumblea,

EVENING

Marcum Roofing • Spout·
lng. 30 yurt experience.
~alllingln built uP roof.
Cell 814-388-8817.

Bottom ring 'for lilo, ... by

olio, New

Unscram~a

one latter to each square, to form
fou r ordinary words.

5/24/83
&amp;:oo

0

'illlllNl

ID~ ~THJn liC ~IAMIBOEd woRo GAME
~~~~ a ·
by tlonrl Amold an&lt;tBobLee

PLASTERING - :

t•turwd ceillntt

6 prom dre•t et stzea 7 -13,
like new. Worn onf;y once.
C• ll 446-9769 or 448 3694.

For Ale meul culvert &amp;Inch
thru 60 inch in ltock . 8111te
approved 16 gauge 1 2 inch

REAL

ARCAOE !

" AMERICAN of Mortlnovllle" chest. d r • - • twin
mlrroro. like new. 1'It yeero
old, orlglnolly t1IOO. will
...1for t3110. Coll304-871·
11135 otter l :ooc

:7f:~:::13atoves.

Television
Viewing

Y EAH; BUT NOT AS

COOl. loS A

Chevy Luv topper, tinted
glou 150. 2· L80a15 uHd
tirn . Remington 140. 304-

Pecan co.tfee table end 2 end
tabloo. 860 for ·•II . Call
446-4762.

•no.

LADI.ES juno. oi&gt;:e 7 tD 11 ,
excellent condition, other
11ema. cell 8711· 7880 .

by l..lny Wright

K IT 'N ' CARLYLE "'

Knauff Coal • Firewood
Pricoa reduced May-July.
Pick or delivered. We honor
ltEAP Vouchero. Coli 614266· 8246 .

3 piece br. suite completa,
UOO ••Call 614-268-6644 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITUR E
44 Apartment
62 Olive St., Galllpolla. 6
piece wood living room suite
for Rent
with 6 Inch flat arms 1399,
35 Lots &amp; A c rea ge
bunk bad• completa with
2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apart· bunklel 8199, 2 piece an·
ments $200 per mo . or tf . tron living room aultea 8199,
5·20 Acres wood s, over·
antron reclinera t99, othar
income is •10.000 or le11
looking Ohio River, city
HUD available. A -One Real recliners t80. maple dinette
schools. 448-3564 or 1·
sets 8179 . love seats 870,
6 1 3 - 4 2 3 - 8928 . Eatat es. Carol Yeager, Real· h i de · a· bed t250 , box
t or . Coli 304·875-6104 .
Owner I Ag ent.
springs &amp; mat1re11 twin or
full t100 set regular-firm
furnished
house
in
Smell
36 ac res at Rodney on W.T.
S120, maple dinette chairs
Watson Rd . Owner financ· ci ty. adults only. Call 448 · S35, wuh stends t34.
0338 .
ing available . Call446 -8 221
maple rockers •ss. 7 piece
after 6 weekday s.
chrome
dinette set S149. 6
JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal
Ho using Opportunity ' hat P.fece dinette set t89 , used
2}/l: acres off accesa road one
one bedroom apartments ~edroom suites, refi rgera ·
mile east of 1-76 interchange
lora. ranges. chest. dre1111r1,
fo r International Airport, rent starting 1t S167 per wringer washers . TV ' s.
month
and
t
wo
bedroom
Sanibel -Captiva and Ft . Myapartments rent atarting at dryares. &amp; 1hoes. Call 446ere . Flo rid a . &amp;40 ,000 .
$193 per montl'l . Call 448· 3159.
owner finan cing or land
2746 or leave me11age .
lease w irh over -rlda . PrinciGOOO USED APPLIANCES
pals only-614-9 92 -3381 al·
washers, dryer• . retrigera t ar 6 :30 and w eekends Furnl1hed apt ., 131 Y2 4th tora. range&amp; . Skaggs ApAva.,
Gallipolis.
2
bdr
.•
614 -992-3463 .
8185 mo .. water paid . Call pllencu. Upper River Rd .,
be1ide Stone Creat Motel .
1.4 Acre lot in Bradbury, 446-4416 after 7PM .
446 -7398.
good locat ion. trailer hook Furn
i1had
apt
..
1136
2nd
up. all utllltlel, sept ic ta nk.
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Ave., Gallipolis. 2 bdr .•
Call 614 -992 -260 2 .
I 196 mo., water paid. Call Sofa. chair. rocker. otto ·
man. 3 tables. (e111tra heavy
FIV E acres !and. down pay· 448 -4418 oltor 7PM .
by Frontier). *686. Sofi1,
ment and ta ke over pay·
chair and loveaeat. $276 .
Par1
ially
furn
ished
3
rm
..
menta, city wa ter 8r electric
Sofaaend chairs priced from
utUilial
furnished
.
Ca11446on lend. 304 -675 -2449
U85. to ess&amp; . Tabloo. e4&amp;
0171 or 446 -3733 .
and up to t126 . Hide-aTWO ac re1, septic system.
beds , • 440 . and up to ·
well , elec tri c hook ·up. % 3 bedroom apt .. t17 6 par 8526 .. Rocllnoro. t 175 . to
mile from New Haven, 304 · month plus deposit . Call e3&amp;0 .. Lampo from $28 . to
446 -3888 .
88 2 -3 358
e7&amp; . 6 pc . dinettes from
Second Ave. 2 or 3 bed - t99 .. tol436 . 7pc .. $189 .
rooms. ecrou frOm Pi c Pee. and up. Wood table with 1ix
36
Real E state
1190 plus utllitlea. Apt . at chairo 1426 . to 1745. Doak
Wanted •
6 13 3rd . Ave. waaher-dryer •110 up to f 22 6. Hutchoo.
e 176 mo . Coil 446-4222 •660 . end up, maple or pine
flnlah. Bunk bed complete
between 9AM &amp; &amp;PM .
w ith manre11e1. • 260 . and
Buying houses and apart·
ment1. Need properties with 6 rm1. &amp; bath in downtown up to 839 5. Baby beda.
favorable price end t erm s. Gellipoli1. C•ll 448 -3866 or •110 . Manr111e1 or box
springs, full or t win. •sa ..
Box 1109 Gallipolis. Oh . 448 -7548 .
firm. •ea. and •78 . Queen
4663 t .
------------- - - --- 1811. $196. 4 dr. chasti.
Apt . for rent . Half double-2
bd .room Apt. Adult s ,pre- 142 . 6 dr. chooto, 154. Bod
ferred . No pet s. 614-992- framet. $20 .and •25 ., 10
gun · Gun cabinets, •360 ..
2749 .
dinene chain • 20 . and •215 .
41
Houses for Rent
1 bed room Apt . t191 . mo . G11 or electric renges, •3215
i ncluding utilities . Equal 4,P to •376. Baby matreu...
housing opportunity . Con- 825 • 135. bod fromeol20.
klngframo
3 bdr. l'louae, cent. air, t act Village Menor Apts. $25 .
Good telection of bedroom
Addl oon. Oh, f260 . Call 614-992 -7787,
t ultes. cedar chests ,
614 -446-0176 .
. 1 bedroom opt. 814-992· r ockers . metal t abineta ,
3 bdr,. houaa 2 fireplaces. 6434, 814· 992-6914 or 1wivel rockara .
Ut ed Furniture -· bookcaae,
awimm lng pool, fence, PI· 3 04-88 2-2566.
rena••· chalrl. end table•.
tio, garage, cenuel air. Sell,
rent or trada . Carol Yeager, New 1 bedroom basement washer• . dryers, refrl gara3 miles out
Realtor . Call 304 -675 · apr . In Rutlend 'tlicinity. tora end
6104 .
1200. month plut utilities. Bulavllle Rd. Open 9am t o
Deposit e. references re- &amp;pm, Mon . t hru Fri. , 9em t o
&amp;pm, Sat .
3 bedroom, family room, quired . 814-742-2308 .
446-0322
e(lge of town, • 22 6 rant,
1200 deposit, 2 children Apartments In Pomeroy .
acceptable. Coil 446-9740 Call after 5 p.m. 814-992bertora noon.
7111 1.

\

coffee

The

Ohio

64 Misc. MerchandiM

e Twilight Zc&gt;ne

X-ray vision
NOR'f ll
+ AJ 4

:; 24-83

+ AKQI O&lt;

.5

E:AST

WEST

+ K B7:1 2

carr full y threw th e six and

'r J
+ Q J964

'r l611 32

+ 73

+ 9 B 52

l uur

+n

.

Vul nerable: Bot h
Dealer : Nor t h
Yt't&gt; sl

diam onds.

Next

an• , th rC'C mor e s pad t!S and
the las t hi gh dl.:unund to
lcav£• H threc-r •ud t• nd ing
Uunun y wa s lefl w'.ith till'
k i n~· l/ UN'n - h·n of L" lubs: Th l'·
ll .i••. t&lt;td clt•;trlv b t'l'll :dt•:t ll
5· 1·5· 2 di s t nbu lw n and wa ~
dow n to 1hn •t• s i n~ IN uns
West wa s lll &lt;lrkt• tl Wtlh lhrf' l'

. • A K 51

.. "7 ti

of

rame · a cl ub to dum my's

SOl iTII
+ Q 10 ll6
'r A KI./

No rth

t·:ast

Sout h

1•

l 'ass

1t

l'a'&gt;

2+

l'a»

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Pass
Pass

5•
!' ass

Pass
!'ass

h NT

d ubs
" In Ins pn mt&gt;." sa 1d th e
l l.l•: . 'tht· \H'Of wou ld tlilvl'
taken 1 ht• 1 Jr£' t ' - 11Hllll' nd lls.
in f&lt;tvor n( a fttwsst• aga mst

tht• du b jack a nd

~~ ~m ·

d11 wn

t wo, bu t he wt•nt up and

St'UI'l'd hIS Slitr ll ..
Wt · ha d l u :1sk l ht• pr of

about t! w play l:ih·r

Ill ·

rt' IJii t' d
" If 1ht• I I r: hart nut gtlllt'
oul of Iu s way \u shuw ftvt•

By Oswa ld Jacob y
a nd J ames J at'oby

di runomls . I nit~ h t wt&gt; ll ha vt.•
tak t•n tht• blow SIIH't.' I I'Ould
havt· \'l~ u a l l:t. t' d tlw dist n bu·

The unluck y t~x pcr t !1~ HI
trappe d us again wi th a stu·
ry about th e prof&lt;'ssor li t·

I Ulfl Wi th out all lhi~l ht'lp ,
hut I t"ould no w S t't~ lha( l'l nh
jaek &lt;~ S d ea rl y :ts wit h
Stqwrnt:.m 's X-ra y V!Sl1111 "

said , "The pro f is gett ing uld

and can't counl anymon• I
had him st•t u p for tt sun•
bultom at si x no - tr un~ p , but

I NEWS I 'AI' ~ : I! I·: NT I· : Ill ' lllti E ,\ :i~N

1

~uw'tJ-f:t¥'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
• ~ent

ACROSS
I

" Vic and

39 Of Ye"en's
capita l
IG Bambi ,

5 Contort
10 Three,

at cards
II Grosse
- ,Mich.
12 French
priest

13 Restrain
14 Negative
15 Sanskrit
school
16 Vessel
17 V isit
19 Price
rendition
ZO Evaluate

for one
OOWN
1 Tolerate
2 Bower
3 Old-time
incar- ·
cerati on
4 Watch
5 Labor
6 Capture

Yesterda y's Art'iwer
15 J o,qip Broz

ala Wilde
8 Barren
9 Three f old
11 Call

26 " - Maca bre"

18 Oulda [ed
29 H i re
19 Surrounded by 30 Aquati c

7 I m prisoned 22

" Yes, We H ave

beast

No- "
23 Calif. city

32 U nion

24 &amp;nora 's

35 Mrs. (Sp. 1
36 Guided

pa yment

title

Z1 Barl ey

Z2 profwtdo
Z4 Bequest
recipient
25 Swiss
mowtlains
ZO Then (Fr.)
27 Loki 'sson
28 Rome's

Castel
Sant ' -

31 Friend iFr . 1
3% Nucleic ac id
(abbr .)

33 Old pro
34 Centaur

of myth
36 "South
Pacific"
role
37 Silent star
R en ee

DAILY CRY PTOQUOTE - H ere's how
AXYDL B AAXR
Ia

l o w o rk

it :

LO NG F EL I. OW

One l etter simpl y st and• f or anoth er . I n thi s sampl t! A. i s
used f or the three L 's, X f or th e two O's , etc. C": nw le letters ,
apostrophes, the l ength and fo rm ation of the 1 . ords ar e all·

hintl . E ac h day the code letlers are d iff erent.
CRYnOQUOTES

EKIKEXH R

~Morgle

- YLXNDJDEK

[!) N-/81an Off
.
e (!I CNN Heedllne Newa

T he IH'Of w on tlw !wart
lead and - lo.s l lttl' spad t'
rinessc to t tu_• U r: Bt~l'k
ca m e the qu c (~ ll of dl:unu mJ:.:
T he prof wun and p layed hi s
t.Op hear ts on which the lJ.E.

'r l09 7
• 10 6

·
MOVIE:
'VIoltlng
Hours'
·
(I) I Merrled Joen
(I) ABC New• Dne on One
e(!INe
(J)
NBC
Newa

{II

lit' lll &lt;Hh' lh t• h:HJd JU ~I .t ~ :t l\
tlw onJ 1n:u·y playt•rs who h1d
1t h;ul "

AK

DSYH

LYDSKL

YX G

NSJZ E O

OJ A H

E KIK E XHR

. Ye~lenlay'l Ceyploquote:

J ZL
ZF

y D'

OKNX L KN

J ZL

GKYHN .'

"·
MOST SMI LES ARE STAR'l'ED BY

ANOTHERSMIIE.-SOURCE UNKNOWN

�Pag1

IG-The Daily Sentinel

Tuil~lly, May

I'Gn*Of Middleport, Ohio

Patrol checks
deer accidents

Brooklyn Bridge
celebrates 'lOOth
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Brooklyn Bridge, whose soaring
granite towers and graceful steel
cables Inspired painters and poets,
!!!makers and fllmOam men,
passed the century mark today, stU!
recognized as an engineering marvel from a proud, young America.
About 15,00J marchers, many In
period costumes, prepared to walk
this morning across the suspension
bridge that linked lhe nation' s
first-and thlrd-largesl cities on May
24, JJJ&amp;l
Its 276-foot towers dwar1ed any
other buildings; Its 5,.989-foot span
made It the longest In the world. It
was the first bridge to use steel wire;
II was the flrsttou seelectric lighting
across a river.
Other plans for the birthday

damage.

A car driven by Janet A.
Matthews, 45, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
received moderate damage In a
mishap on U.S. 33 at 8: :aJ a.m. '
Matthews was northboulld when
ber vehicle -reportedly struck ~­
ldlled a deer which ran Into Its path:

The bridge, ortglnally Intended
for horse-drawn carriages and now
carrying llO,OOJcarseach weekday,
was closed at midnight for the big
day. A complement of 3,00J ottlcers
was assigned to direct traffic,
keeping In mind the structure's first
party 100 years ago, when newspaper headlines reported "IM·
MENSE CROWDS AT-TRACI'ED
BY TilE CEREMO-NIES."

·--Local briefs----.
Two couples apply for licenses
Two marriage licenses were Issued In Meigs County Probate Court.
Issued licenses were Michael Carol Huddleston, 22, Minersville,
and Gladys Sue Davis, 19, Racine; Robert Wayne Couch, 29,
Pomeroy, and Karen Sue Ebersbach, 31, Pomeroy.

Plan free clothing day
Free clothing day will be held a! The Salva lion Army Pomeroy on
Thursday, May 26, from 10 a.m. until noon. All area residents In need
of clolhlng are welcome.

Police probe separate incidents
Pomeroy Pollee arc Investigating two Incidents. A lawn chair
was stolen from the porch of the Morris Snyder residence Sunday
and early Sunday morning a large plate glass window was broken at
the Dairy Valley.

Wedge reelected Point mayor
Mayor Jimmy Joe Wedge was reelected at Saturday's Point
Pleasant Primary election. Wedge defeated Democrat Dick
Thomas, 1,767 to 731 yates.
_
Other. results were city clerk, ·. Laura Casklns ov{;r Democrat,
Donna Sayre. Councilman-at-Large positions were split among two
parties. lncumben.t Russell Holland led the field with 1,479 votes;
Rick Handley garnered 1,325 votes, upseatlng Rick Lovell whlle
Russell Priddy won the fourth seat. He Is a Democrat.

Couples end marriages
One suit for divorce and an action lor dissolution of marriage
were filed In Meigs County Common Pleas Court .
Judy K. O'Neil, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, filed lor divorce agatnsl Michael
P. O'Neil, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Dorothy Jayne Owens, Cheshire, and Thomas Earl Owens,
Pomeroy, filed for dissolution of marriage.
The marrtage of Edward M. Martin and Tammy E. Martin was
dissolved. Tammy E. Martin was restored to her malden name of
Tammy E. Nibert .

Homestead exemption deadline ne~-r
The last day to file for homestead exemption Is June 2 and must
be flied a! the office of the county auditor It was anno~nced today.
To be eligible a person must be 65 or over in 19&amp;l or totally
disabled. They must own and occupy their own home and spouse's
Income may no! be over $15,001, It must be $15,00J or less.
All Income, Including most retirement , Is Included . II persons
are eligible they are to ca ll992-2698 or take Income verification to the
auditor's office before June 2, for a possible reduction In real estate
tax.es.

Veterans Memorial information
Admitted: Norma Parker, Pomeroy; Derek Cremeans, Ru!land;
John Dean, Pomeroy, Ralph Hutton, Portland.
Discharged: Maxine Marte Phllllps and Shirley Frazier.

ln-seniice emergency class set ·
Tom Parr wlll conducl an In-service class on new emergency
medical service equipment at 7 p.m. tonlghl (Tuesday) at the
Pomeroy Fire Slation .

call~

Four calls for asslslance were answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Monday and early Tuesday
morning.
At 1:49 a.m. Monday, the Tuppers Plains unit wenllo the Homer
Cole residence on Route 71n Tuppers Plains, !or Nola Await who was
transported to the Camden Clark Hospital In Parkersburg, W. Va. At
5: 48p.m. the Racine unit took Ralph Hutlon !rom the Racine Station
to Velerans Memorial Hospital, and at 11:36 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Welsh town Hill for Kevin Hudson who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital . Tuesday morning at 2:54a.m. the Pomeroy unit
was called to Butternut Avenue for James Peck who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Continue investigation

Moderate damage was Incurred to two vehlcles In an a'cctdenl
which occurred early Monday evening on Easl Main Street,
Po{lleroy,
Pomeroy pollee report that Freeman Enoch, Syracuse had
slopped behind a car mal!lng a left hand turn Into the Three In One
when his vehicle was struck !rom behind by a car driven by Susan
Zirkle. Neither driver was Injured. Zirkle was cited lor assured clear
distance.

Park landscaping funds sought

(Continued !rom page 1)
Councllman Horky reported he checked out the location and he
Council accepted !be bid of Rick has checked with ~llcttor Bernard recorrunended that the street light
Ha tlleld, $102, lor a truck no longer Fultz on the planned title search of be replaced.
needed by the village. Hartfield's properties on HudSQn St., as the
Councll discussed an annexation
bid was the highest o! three result of complaints lodged by of the Hobson area and It was
••
""•
submitted.
residents regarding the naJTOWneSs reported that Solicitor Fultz had
Mayor Hottman announced that of the street. Fultz has advised thai advised that the nanies of property
the Middleport Fire Department the street should be surveyed before . owners be secured, a petition then
,,
wUI hold an open house at 2 p.m. any deeds are checked.
drawn up and that petitions circu·'
Sunday to display the new addition
Mayor Hottman pointed out that lated by a resident of the area to be ,
.."••
to the !Ire station to the public. He the problem Is that no surveyer has annexed. The annexation Is subject
also reported that designations lor agreed to stand by a. suiVey to to the approval of the Meigs County
spending o! the next year's revenue determine the width a,i\illocatlon of Commissioners.."
- sharing money must be done at the HudsonSt.
~--------------------~-.
June 13 meeting and asked council
In questioning by councllman
'
members to come up with sugges- Horton, Mayor Hot1man pointed out
tions. He also asked council that work Is expected tobedonevery
.
members to be thlnklng about the soon In correcting a ditch problem
'
'
budge! for the next year. Mayor on Middleport Hill. Councilman
Halfman reported that he has CUmore voiced complaints of Short
•,"
·,
written the U, S. Corps o! Engineers Fourth St. residents on the removal
_In reganj to suggestions by councU ot a street light near the junior hlgh
that recreallorial ·racllltles be ·ex- "school andCdunciiman Jack Satter- ·
-;
panded In the niar1na area but !U.s lleld rePorted thai he also had
not received a reply a! this point.

Wednesday meeJing

OhJo Valley Commandery 24,
Knights Templar will meet Wednes·
day, May 25, at 7:ll p.m . All Sir
Knights are urged lo attend.

HOURS:

Homeowners:

~;~Wa~~~~

·,

any longer.

Area deaths

I

Meivina Johnson
Melvina Johnson, 84, Rt. 1,
Langsville, died Monday In Holzer
Medical Center.
BomMay13, 1899,1nSpelght,Ky.,
daughter of the late H.M. and
Rosanna Johnson, she was a
member of the Church of Christ In
Spelghl.
She was also preceded In death by
her husband, Pharoah Johnson, In
October 1976, and by two brothers.
Surviving are two sons, Estil of
Ewlngton and Chester of Rt. 1.
Langsville; lour daughters, Mrs.
Tracy (Prlcle) Tackett and Icy
Ashburn, both of Rt. 1, Langsville,
Mrs. Carson (Allie) Hall of Ewlnglon, and Mrs. Carlos (Vlcey)
Hambey of Fort Pierce, Fla.; 24
grandchildren and 45 great·
grandchildren; two brothers, Balva

.,

'

. l •. AOVE RTI SEO
K .m•r
MERCHANDISE POLICY
0... !orm

1f1lot&lt;•l •&gt;n 11 Ill hdl'ft •'"'' "''".,

l•lto olem "' ''"'" " Of' ~~ ll"&gt;oll•U ~ ~~
..IIS.-d ~·m S not ._.,~ ~ W'
~h U• &lt;l v • 10 '""' ~"'&lt;&gt;:••••" " •u iU"

'

One

-

Sale Ends Sat., May 28

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~ 1 000"11• • - liU• OI• ''""' ~~ • •&lt;&gt;"'IIA

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Save $25 Our Reg. $158

•

•

~ r'f:. 1

We Honor

Turco

18'h " Weber " Grill
Rust- ond stain-resistant,
heavy.guage steel kettle .

Model4199

The deadline for rese!Vatlons to
attend the Middleport Alumni
Banquet Is May 2S.
Reservations are $10 lor one
alumni and $l81or alumni and guest.
Checks may be mailed to Carolyn
Grueser, 1625 Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy. Rese!Vatlon tickets may
be picked up at the door.
·
Help Is needed to decorated an set
up tables Friday night at 6 p.m. at
Middleport Elementary School.
CHD..LIC()TI{E, Ohlo (AP)
The body ot Ross County Deputy
Sheri!! Mason Brown, who has been
missing since May 15, has been
found In the Ohio River In MaysvWe,
Ky., omctaJs say.
Brown was riding a motorcycleon
Ohio
near Chillicothe and
officials said It apparently went out
ot control and threw him' Into Paint

m

Ph. 304-8711-82711 .

Pt. Pleasant

to 2 p.m. ·

Rout Beef, Malhed Poqtoe1 •
""" ...... . ;Only -•3.9&amp;

Features heavy cost aluminum grill body,
nickel- chrome cooking grid, 345-sq.-in. cook Ing area, wood side shelf, auto push-button lg. nit6r, portable :· ·cart, 20- l.b .' LP tan~"
Our Reg. 5.97, VInyl Cover For Gas Grill .. ,, .,. 4 :97

.

59.

• Fvel not Included

ColorChoice

As a homeowner you

have a spe~;ial edge
today at Beneficial.

C.D. Hawhee

Consider the important Uiings you want to do right now. Adding on to
your home instead of buying a new one in today·s market could be a
good move . Cover tuitron cosls. Buy a fuel efficienl car. Liquidate
· balances you owe and come away with a srnglr monlhly paymenl
allen cons iderably lower than your Iota! present monthly outlay.
Weatherize your home . Whatever the purpose may be. you know
what you want to do.

C.D. (Carroll) Hawhee, retired
teacher and coach In the Waverly
School System, died this morning.
Hawhee was a well-respected
basketball coach In Southeastern
Ohio. Complete details will be
announced later.

1.77~mti
Water Gun
Toy gun constructed of sturdy plastic.

The full amount you have In mind.
Whether you want -$10,000, $20,000, even as much as $100,000,
find out why families like yours - worldwide - are using over two
billion dollars in· Beneficial Loans to Homeowners.
Your edge at Beneficial.
Take advantage of our experience. Your Beneficial personal financial
specialist will work with you lo create a special plan that's right for
your special situation. Lower rales are available to homeowners. You
have a choice of manageable payrnenl plans in keeping with your
budget and financial goals.

Partly cloudy tonight Cool. Low 47-52. Winds southwesterly 5-10
mph. Wednesday, variable cloudiness with widely scattered showers
and possibly a thunderstonn. High 72-77.
Extalded Ohio Forecast
Ttou'!id~ throup Sltlurday:
V~ble cloudiness 'lllund~. Fair on Friday. Chance ofshowers
or lhunderstGnnsSaturd~. Temperatures quite cool'l'hursd~ with
slow wannlng by the weekend. Early morning lows In the mld-3tls to
mld-tl5 Thund~, .-l;y In the 408 Friday and In 408 to low 001!1
Satunl~. Highs In mld-liOslo ml~ Thursday and In the Oils to lOw
70. Friday and Satunl~.
·

' Deadline near

-

Twin· burner LP Gas Grill With
Convenient Up·front Controls

Phone
Beneficial no~
for big cash
to get things
started.

of SpelghtandHillardofVirgle, Ky.;
and lour ~lsters, Lara Glimpse and
Stella Johnson , both of Speight,
Cathy Casebolt of VIrgie, and Elsie
Sowards of McRoberts, Ky.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Thursday In McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton, with Rev.
Ben Watts otftctattng. Burial will be
In Vinton Memorial Park. Friends
may call at the funeral home from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

Weather -forecast

•.only • Mflll flom f'ameiO;t....... .
Mon.·~at. Open at 5. Sun. 11 a.m.

SpeiCill Thi1

,-

'

(FORMERLY BRIAN'S STI!AK HOUSE)
.

.

.

RESTA
Rt. 82

Smokey Joe'" KeHte Grill
Sturdy 14Y.x 17 Y. " portable
grill that goe,s anywhere .

.

·~M:ee=~~VV:ed::n:es::da=y~--~=;~~~==:;~;::;~~~k~-~~~~~~==~~
Fenney Bennett Post 128. American Legion, Middleport, will meet In
regular session Wednesday, May25,
at 7: ll p.m. There will election of
officers.
·

Investigation continued Monday_
Into aRt. 124accldentSundaywhlclt
sent two Meigs County men to;
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol$
trealment of Injuries.
~
The Gallla-Melgs Post State'
Highway Patrol which did no€
release accident detalls untU Mon~
day afternoon, said vehicles &lt;lrfv€11: ,
by Troy f. Manuel, :al, Racine, and
Chris A. Allen, 19, Rt.l, Minersville~
collided. Manuel was treated 11114:
released at VMH for minor Injurl~
whlle Allen was hospitalized lor
treatment of chest Injuries.
'

CENTENARIAN SPAN - Flap llulter and, · -'venary ol Ita dedlealloo. Wortanea, atop the
vehicular and pede8trlaas tramc cnooeo the rea eot tower, llnlslt prepara&amp;lons for a huge
Brooklyn Bridge In New York Monday, one day fireworks dlaplay which wDI cap a day·long!IChedule
before a massive celebration of the span's IOOth ol.,ents Tuesday. (AP Luerphoto).

Depu1y's body found

No one hurt in two vehicle wreck

We've Got It And
We've Got It Good!

Two car-deer accidentS Ill Melp
County Monday were lnvestleated
by the Callla-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol.
, 1'1~ say Todd A. Mugrage,
18, Rt. 2, Racine, was southbound on
Ohlo331iat8: 35p.m. wllenadeerrail
. Into his vehlcle, causing llaht

celebration Included a OotUla of
shlps and boats on the E;ast River
below, formal rededicatlcm ceremonies, and a sound-and-light show and
massive !!reworks display tonight
for tens or thousands of people
expected to jam lower Manhattan and the Brooklyn shoreline.

·Emergency squads answer four

24, 1913

An answer In 48 hours.
Because you have a busy schedul~. you can call the special num·
hers to get things started right now over the phone. We'll spell out all
the details for you . Answer all your questions. Apply Ieday and in
most cases we'll have an answer lor you in 48 hours. Phone now.

At Beneficial, you're special.

RoUnd,

D Beneficiar

Seek di~lution .
Filing fol1-dlssolutlon of marriage
In Meigs County Colnmon Pleas
Court were William H&amp;nry Ward ,
Middleport, and Cathy Louise .
Ward, Rutland.

I

416 Second Ave.

~"

fiM CA. '"'~ ~

Gallipolis, OH.
Phone 446-2765

RoiJ'Id, 6.97

3.97~9~
VInyl Ta.-ctoltl
Fitted 32x78" borb4tque tablecloth.

lloyd'
SUMMER
FURNITURE SALE

ea•

Don't miss oor Special Sale
prices all this week on famous
Uoyd Fiben:raft summer furni-

ture.

Reg. ss2.00 Low-Back" Spring Bas! chair ................. Sale s69.oo
Reg. S93.00 High-back Spring Base Chair ................ Sale S79.00
Reg. s162.~ . Spring Base Lounger ........... :........... Sale SJJ7.00
Reg. Sl76. Two Seat Glider ............. ~ ............... Sale SJ49.00
Reg. S245.00 Canopy SWing ...... ,........................ Sale s2oa.oo

-~rnlt

61oft. Saran Wra~

Pkg.
10 Lunch lag•

Seals olr-tiQht to
lock In fresfmess.

Brown boOS tor a
variety of uses.

2.

lan"' Roll·on
Trac II"' llade•
Pkg. of •14 Mtcrn.l 3.5-oz.' deodorant:
smooth'" cartridges. regular. unscented.

c,...-

Eo.
Toathpaete
nov or
O ...·"UL,'

llz8.

The Saving Place®
'

K mortiS A PROUD SPONSOR OF BOTH THE WINTER AND SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES ON ABC TV.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

ltl.3,7-11)

MECHANIC ST. - POMEROY

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•

.,

'

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