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                  <text>Pag-14

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 15, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

Response cool to 40 percent tax hike

Middleport village funds total $428,410
All Middleport Vi llage fu11ds as of
March 31 totaled $428,810.14. a&lt;·eurding tu the monthl y report uf
Village Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck .
Receipts.

disbursements

from

each fu11d during the month and the
balance of each &lt;Jt the end of tlw

month,

respectJvt:ly. · incl ud t• :

general.

$9.852 .97. $11.889 33.
s treet maJnterutnce,
$4,353.39, $5.804.78. $6,590.90 defiCit ;
HUD. $49.000. $59.650 .76. $851.38 :
federal revenue shanng, no receipts. $3,254 .65. $4.793.46 : street li ght .
nu reeerpls. $1.202 .89 . $8,409.34 :

$24,732.35 ;

stret't levy, no recc1pts, no di sbursements, $175.59; f1rt: eqUipment,

$802.86, $1 ,271. 17, $2,599.74 defi Cit;

fire truck, no receipts, no disbursements. $33.444 .27; general bond

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

retirement, no receipts, no disbursemenls, $14.107 .05: planning cumrmssiun. no re ceipts. $5 .04, $139.59;

WEEKEND VALU_ES!!!

sanitary sewer escrow, no receipts,
di s bursements . $142,885.59 ; wate r
wnk . $1.000. no disbursements,
$155.369.82; water, $10,074.45,
$9,110 .59.$38,164 .62: sanitary sewer,
$8.604 .96, $9,399.91, $5,844.01; sw immiJJ g pool. no receipts, $17.03,
$344.26:
ce met e ry.
$1,525.25,
$1.100.12. $21.44; water meter trusts,
$245.$112.56.$8,1 18.01.
Recc1pts for the month totaled
$85,458.88 and disbursements
ammrnted to $103.544.85.
IHl

SPECIAL SALE PRICES IN EFFECT FOR FRIDAY, APRIL 16th AND SATURDAY,APRIL17th

-----·---

MEN'S WRANGLER

de&lt;H' tltstance, fl~eing a police Of-

Middlepurt Polrce Department 111
March , 12 uf them were madt· un
charges of driving whih• Ultoxl cakd.
according to the monthly repuri of
Pulice Chief J. J . Cremeans.
Running second !11 coun t among
the arresl-&gt; w&lt;:~ s di sorderly ITI&lt;:HIIlcr
with lO defendanl"i be1ng charged
w1th that uffen::;e . E1ght pe r~on:::;
were charged with speeding : six
w1th failing tu pay p&lt;:~rking tickets:
thret• fnr assault and three for
res1 sting a rrest a nd two each for
failure to yield the rrght of way:
drivmg under suspension: failin l-! to
p&lt;:iy old fines &lt;:~ nd costs. hC::trassmL'nt .
and fou r were charged wi th issu1 ng
menaci11g threab.
There was one arrest each on

ft t'l'r . nx·kless operation. possession

dliHgl' S

of

l'Xl'CSSI Vl'

spt'l' d ,

operat1n g &lt;-1 ve hicle w1thuut rega rd
lu safe ty, de struclHHl of prnpcr ty.
burmn g of tra sh emU debns, Ciss urt'd

WESTERN SHIRTS
So lid colors and patterns in
s izes S, M , L and XL. You'll
like this selection .

MEN'S '16.95 WESTERN SHIRTS ...
MEN'S '18.95 WESTERN SHIRTS ...
MEN'S '19.95 WESTERN SHIRTS ...
MEN'S '21.95 WESTERN SHIRTS ...

'17.14

rule s.
dunn)..! tht• month a nd 10 accident.-;

were tnvcstJgatetl .

Ther~

were 623

parkmg ml'lt·r tickets written and
pa rkin )..! 111eter co llections t otaled

$889 .50.

Hanes"
Pocket·T

Answer 54 fire calls
The Middleport Fire Department
answered 54 ca lls during the month
of March in cluding 14 fire and
rc.scuc calls and 40 emergency ca lls.
All vehrrles were driven a tola l of
98.1.2 111iles during the month according tu Fire Cl11ef Jeff Darst.

e!fect July 1, which the Senate bUI cancels.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Meshel believes the
budget deficit will grow to $1.7 bllllon. "There'll be an
additional $200 million by next July 1," Meshel. DYoungstown, predicted.
He traced thl8 to the slumping economy and Interest the state wUl have to pay on federal money borrowed for unemployment compensation.
The Rhodes administration said a 40 percent surcharge on the personal Income tax would raise $263
mllllon over the next 18 months.
Ohio now levles a minimum Income tax of one-half
percent on those earning at least $5,000 annually. The
maxtrnum tax, for those earning over $40,000, Is $lKXl
plus 3.5 percent of the excess over $40,000.
Under the admlnlstration's second option. the In-

The Daily
Voi.30,No .2S7
Copyrighted 198l

come tax surcharge would be 30 percent. Sa les taxes
would rise one-halt percent .
Either plan would be combined with a 9 percent
spending cut. exempting welfare subsidies and Insti ·
tutional agencies, to save $57 million .
The administration suggests a remedy to a soft
drink syrup tax that has been found unconstitutional.
The remedy would yield $57 miUion.
The plan also would require the liquor department
to receive a U warehouse Inven tory on consignment,
for a one-time In ventory savings of $21 mUllan. It
would e llmlnate a 12.5 percent discount on w holesale
liquor purchases. saving about $18 million an nuall y.
A state employee pay raiS(&gt; would be dela yed until
Dec. 1 under the plan and the size of the pay bill
appropriation reduced by $10 million.

entinel
I Set11on, 10 Pages
15 Cenu
A Mullimedia In (. New•papef

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 16, 1982

BOYS SHORT SLEEVE

POCKET TSHIRTS

KNIT SHIRTS

S izes s, M, L and XL - 100%
cotton
shrinkage controlled.
Solid co lors brown, It . blue,
navy , black , red , green . Save
Friday &amp; Saturdav

Sizes 8 through 20. F1ne se1ecl10n ot
styles - dre ssy
casual wear
tank

Not all waist sizes or lengths - solid co lors . Our Mr .
Leggs quality . Arranged for your easy se lec t 1on . All
sa les tina!. No exc hanges or refunds .

tops

jean s s hirts and many m o re

Stoc k up now.

Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys

$5.95 Knit Shirts ....
$7.95 Knit Shirts ....
$9.95 Knit Shirts ....
$11.95 Knit Shirts .. .

CUSTOM MADE
DRAPERY SALE

SAVE 40%

L im ited quantity - so lid colors Two pockets - po·
Jy / cotton blend . S, M , Land XL s izes . No exc hanges
or refunds . Whil e they last .

SPORT SHIRTS

-~.

'• '
} I -.:t

1}\

~~\
c.-\
"
I

.:.......

So lids. pla 1ds and pa tterns . F 1ne
..._.un111y -

-'~ , · \

..

·•

.

'

MEN'S'10.95 SPORT SHIRTS ... '8.54
'10.14
MEN'S '12.95 SPORT SHIRTS
'11.64
MEN'S '14.95 SPORT SHIRTS
'13.24
MEN'S '16.95 SPORT SHIRTS

Reg . l6 .00 to 143 .00

Sale priced

$47ho $3439

Reagan's plan draws heavy fire

JEANS SPECIAL

DOIDMANN
SPORTSWEAR

WASHINGTON - President Reagan's promised tax break lor
· parents of private school chlldren Is drawing heavy !Ire from publlc
· school supporters whlle several key lawmakers say they doubt Con·
gress wUI approve the measure.
Some 5,000 educators at the National Catholic Educational Associ·
ation convention In Chicago gave Reagan rousing ovations Thursday when he unveUed the proposal to phase In a tuition tax credit lor
private elementary and secondary education.
Under the legislation, which Reagan said he would send to Congress later this spring, parents would be allowed to take half the
tuition costs off their taxes, up to a maxlmumof$100perchlld In 1983,
$300 In 1984 and $500 In 1985.

Special rack of Wrangler ieans
in Juni0r and Misses sizes .
100% cotton and stretch blends .
v a lues to $35.00

New spring sportswea r reduc ed for two
days only .
Jackets, skirts , sla c k s and blazers .
Colors include aqua, yell-ow ,.btack and
denim . Lilac/white see rsu cker and
blue/white see rsucker
Misses siz es 8 to 20.

While They Last

Sale $12.79
Sale $14.39
Sale $22.39
Sale $26.39

lf2

PRICE

LA coroner will appeal demotion

PLAYTEX
SPRING SALE

20%0H

AND GET YOUR 1st

CHOICE nJX TOOl

Save 20% on the following Playtex lines: Free Spirit,
Body Language, Instead, Thank Goodness it Fits,
Play Tops and Play Bottoms.

'"'II

JACKSON PERKINS

ALBUM SALE

Weekend sale prices on our entire stock of stereo
albums.
Country · religious · rock - bluegrass · popular children's .
REG. $5.79 ..... ...... .. ......... . . ... SALE $4.65.
REG. $7.79 ......... . ... .. .... .... ... . SALE $6.25
REG. $9.79 ........................... SALE $7.85
REG. $12.79 ......................... SALE $10.25

LOS ANGELES - Coroner Thomas Noguchi, fighting to save his
job for the second time In 13 years, was demoted Thursday after a
six-hour, closed-door meeting with the Los Angeles County Board of
Supervisors.
.
Noguchi said he would appeal the demotion to the county's Civil
Service Commission. On Wednesday, the commission had agreed to
hear Noguchi's appeal of his JO.day suspension that began last
month,' and officials said the hearing would be expanded to Include
the demotion.
.
The board suspended Noguchi lor 30 days without pay effective
March 29 amid allegations that he had mismanaged his office, delegated authority to unqualified people and sensationalized autopsies
of some celebrities, most recently those of actor WUllam Holden and
actress Nata!Je Wood.

ROSE BUSHES
Select your Jackson Perkins roses now while selections are best. A lot of new
varieties this year. Easy to plant hybrid
roses - florabundas and climbers. Also the
Rose of the Year.

G.E.

; '«' lUll: NH~"N­
\ ~l'iJII'd " \ II

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Officials of the Hamilton Local School Dis·
trtct have proposed to cut costs by reducing the teaching staff,
eliminating some sports programs and reducing services.
Officials say they have lew alternatives to solve the system's
llnanclal problems.
The district, with 2,400 students, expects to be about $1.3 mUllan
short of necessary financing for the 1982-83 year.
The district expects to ask voters In June to approve an emergency 7.5-mlll property tax Increase for the ne?'t three years.

Ju st rtqh t for sprinq . Ltght
wciqhl but warm
Polyurathane .
vinyl
a nd
poly /co tton blend s. Waisl le n g th s
and J 4 lengths.

SALE

\

Officials may cut staff, sports

JUNIOR JACKETS

$3.00 .......... Sale 52.40
S4.50 .......... Sale $3 .60
$7.00 .......... Sale $5.60
$9.00 ...... .. . . Sale $7.20
$13.50 ........ Sale $10.80

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

e ntire selec t ion sa le pr1c

cd

,'~-- T

Ta nk tops, poly / cotton blends, kntts,
s un tops, tube tops nnd swea t shtrls.
Months siz es thru size 14.

Reg . $16.00
Reg. $18.00
Reg. $28.00
Reg . $33.00

EAST CHICAGO, Ind . - A free-standing section of highway
bridge coUapsed Thursday as construction workers were pouring
concrete. killing at least 12 people, lnjurtng 15 and trapping four
others under the wreckage, authorities said .
The accident happened at about 10:30 a.m. CST at the Cline
Avenue Extension, an overpass that was to span the Indian Harbor
Ship Canal between East Chicago and Hammond.
Authorities said 450 feet of the steel and concrete bridge collapsed
1n two parts and fell 50 feet to the construction site below. The section
was the last part of a bridge that was to connect Cline Avenue with
two steel mUlls across the canal.

Cut and 5ew n s hirts. Polyes t e r co t
ton blends 10 siz es S. M, Land XL .

SPRING TOPS SALE

wallet a break...

12 workers die in bridge collapse

MEN'S

LITTLE GIRLS'

Give your

RIO GRANDE - Kent Wolfe, 5-10 all-state guard from Southern
High School, has signed a basketball letter-of-Intent to attend Rio
Grande College.
Wolfe averaged 22 points per game thl8 season In leading Southern
to an Impressive 26-2 record. Wolfe was the SVAC's Player o! the
Year, first team all-district, thtrd team all-state, and all-state tournament team.
During his three years of play, Wolfe participated In two state
tournaments and his e!forts helped Southern wln 90 percent of Its
games. Southern's overall record for the three year pertod was 69-8.
Wolfe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wolfe of Racine, plans to major In
elementary education and physical education.
He will also be a member of the Redmen baseball team.

SHORT SLEEVE WORK SHIRTS

LAST TWO DAYS

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Wolfe going to Rio Grande

MEN'S $8.95

Friday and Saturday

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg .

$4.64
$6.24
$7.74
$9 . 34

Sale 56.00
Sale 56.50

sll.95 Work Trousers ..•.•
512.95 Ex. Size Work Trousers

992-2156

Duerk sees bright future for Ohioans

MEN'S HANES $5.50

MEN'S WORK TROUSERS

CALL

YOU GET:
• Your 1st choice of tux
• Your choice of
shirt styles

charge. The other Involves a :ll percent surcharge
plus a one-halt percent sales tax Increase.
There was disagreement Thursday over the size of
the budget problem.
Sen. Richard H. Finan, sponsor of the bill on which
Hlnlg's committee opened hearings, said It would
erase all but $68 mUllan of deficit expected by the
June 30, 1983, end of the current budget.
Howard Collier, director of the Office of Budget and
Management, placed the size of the remalnlng problem - assuming enactment of the Senate bill - at
$446.2 million.
The difference stems from pessimistic projections
about tax revenue and welfare caseloads made afler
the Senate bUI was passed. The administration also
ligures welfare benefit Increases scheduled to take

BIG APRIL SALE!

Crutsers we re dnven 993 miles

To join a special group ot spec ially selected and trained junior
people to deliver the nametown
newspaper throughout our
community. Handle real responsibility while earning spending
money!

F3mous Palm Bee.ch tuxedos 1n ~
ratnbowof colors. m1x and m~t c h
and ~~~~~ rool P~ek a color that
l.llill go VJith your dl!te's goy.m
You"ll find the perfect ou1f1t
and Ihen ..w have a surprise
for you

$19.95 Straight Leg
No Faull Denim .. . .. SaleS15.88
$19.95 Boot Flare
No Fault Denim .... . Sale $15.88
$22.95 No Faull Denim
Fuller Cut . . . ........ Sale S17.88
$24.95 Xtra Sizes (44 to 50)
Fuller cut .. ......... Sale Sl9.88

$13.24
'14.74
'15.54

Brinq in you r measurement s . Se tecl
what you need tram our big se l ec ti on of
patlerns a nd colors . We'll quot e you the
sa le pric e - quick delivery .

s29.95

Good selec t ion of sizes in all styles
pre washed blue denirn . Buy whut you
need and save during th1 s sale

uf metrijuana, leaving the .scene of
an accident and violation of jail

We need
a few
good
boys and
girls!

YOIPROMTUX

BASIC JEANS

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

DWI leads Middleport arrests
Among 64 arrc.sb made by the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov. James A. Rhodes'
proposal for raising the state Income tax by up to 40
percent has drawn a cool response trom the chief of
the House tax-writing panel.
"I think we're talking about a 25 percent tax hlke. I
doubt very much that there will be any Increase In
that area," Rep. WW!am E. Hlnlg, D-New Phlladelphlll, chairman of the Ways and Means Conunlttee,
said Thursday. His panel Is reviewing a Senatepassed bill to raise taxes and cut spending.
The bill has a 25 percent Income tax hike plus a
sertes of spending cuts to offset a state government
deficit projected by Rhodes' budget analysts to total
$1.5 b!lllon.
The administration proposed Thursday two options. One centers on a 40 percent Income tax sur-

COLOR
PORTABLE T.V.

complains.
" Here In Ohio, we're suffering,"
Duerk continued. "Where I'm
from, In northern Ohio, nobody
ever heard or a 16 or 17 percent unemployment rate except during the
depression."
He said because Ohio's livelihood
Is tied to the automobile Industry,
the state Is lacing the same problems. However, Duerk felt the automakers will recover.
"If It doesn't, we'll have to replace tha t base with something
else," he said.
The recession's et!ects are not limited to Ohio, and he said Ohio's
previous position as the state with
the second highest leve l ot u'l!employment was lost earlier this week
when Alabama, one of the Sunbelt
slates, took over with a 13.9 percent
jobless rate.
"There would never have been a
Sunbelt If It weren't for the Interstate highway system, which cut
down on transportation costs. and
air conditioning- before atr condl·
tlonlng, you couldn't get anyone to
work In the south," Duerk noted.
"But there has been such fantastic
growth In those areas that they're
starting to have water problems.
Water Is Increasingly trnportant to
Industry and that's why I think this
area will benefit."
Ohio will get a share of economic
regeneration because !t has skUled
workers, more colleges than other
surrounding states and training
programs. These factors led to the
recent Increase In jobs at Rockwell
International In Columbus, which Is
now handling some construction on
the B-1 bomber, Duerk added.
DECD and the Rhodes adrnlnls·
tration have also formed a task
Ioree of educators and political and
business leaders to pool the know!-

were Larry Heines. Steve Jewell,
Nancy Larkins, Barbara Triplett,
Debbie Weber, Darts Well.
Fred Kessinger and Robert Sand·
ers were given give year contracts
and Tom Kelly was given a continuIng contract. One year contracts
were given Cindy Bolden and
Sherry Gaga! for reading programs funded by . a federal program. The resignation of Unda
Faulk as a teacher was accepted.
Among the non-certified personnel, Nita Jean Ritchie was given a
two year contract as a bus driver
and Glenda Benedum was given a
continuing contract as a cook. Due
to the shortage of federal funds, II·

Contracts were awarded to
and non-teaching person·
nel Thursday night when the Eastern Local School District Board ot
Education met In regular session.
Given one year contracts pendIng certification were Mike Douglas, Don Eichinger, Brian
Windon, teachers, and Mery Price.
nurse.
Two year contracts to teachers
went to Betty Bow. Wayne Caud!ll,
Richard Chambers, . Kathleen
Cook. Jan Eichinger, d:;rorge Gagal, Wendy Haller, Joan McKeon,
Lisa Watts. Carolyn Tripp, Scott
Wolfe and Sherry Stallar.
Awarded three year contracts
teac~Ing

The Ohio Department of Transportation is going back to basics in

bridge replacement and saving
rnlllions of dollars in the process.
The new program is one of three
earmarked to receive funding from
the state's increased fuel tax
revenues. Highway resurtacing and
safety improvements are also are included in the plan. ''We've identified
139 structurally deficient bridges
that will go to contract by the end of
lhe calendar year,'' said OD&lt;Yl'
Director David L. Weir. Estimated
cost of the projects is$51.3 million.
In Meigs County, one span on Rt.
124 is included at a cost of $165,000.
The remainder are in Morgan,

0t

Ninety percent chance
showers and thunderstorms tonight.
Lows near 60. Winds southwesterlY'and gusty 10-:11 mph. Saturday,
showers and thunderstorms tapering off during the afternoon. Highs

,_ ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

66-'10.

.,

. NEW CLEJuc.TREA.SUR.ER

for the vru.,e ol Pomeroy II
Ellea Roagbl. Roqht wu ap-

Yf!lln•

•

..•

Despite delays, Ohio Power Com·
pany expects to have part of Its hydroelectric power plant near
Racine on Une by this summer.
Constnlctlon Manager Charles
Ca.sae11 reports the first unit of the
plant, located at the Racine locks
and d~~m on the Ohio River, wUl be
cornpleteid by mid-July. The second
unit should be completed by
September.

polatecl by Mayor Cl8reace ADdmn ' followiJ!I tile raljaaUOD
Aprfl 1, · ol J - Wal.... Mn.
Waltttt lemld Ia the Jill&amp; U

••

~

·•

'

'.

occasion, but did respond to :.macks
made on him \his past week by Democratic governor's ca ndida tl' Richard Celeste
Nter Celes te made initial remarks criticizing Duerk and DECO
for Its record. Duerk said he felt
Celeste. whi le Rhodes' Ueutenant
governor in 1915-79. " tried to under mine everylh ing Governor Rhodes
tried to do" a nd respo nded to Ct'
lestc's six point plan for helping industry and small business .
Duerk felt DECO had done much
to help small business - including
the authority to gran t $250 mill! on in
loans for development - a nd Indicated his critic was uninformed.

brary aides were not employed at
last night's meeting.
The board received a notice from
the Meigs County Board ot Elections that a three mill levy to be
voted upon In June should be a continuing levy and not for a five year
period. The board approved the
levy as a continuing one.

Reviews Cuts
Supt. Richard Roberts reviewed
\11th the board suggestions on cuts
that might have to be Invoked In the
district lor the 1982-83 school yea r
due to a decrease In state foundation funds. Suggestions were
thrown out to the board for discussion only with no actions being

taken .
They include: The Issuance of no

supple mental contracts for the next
school year. This would Include
head teachers. coaches and other
supplemental contracts a nd would
provlde a savings of about $25.000
fo r the year.
Roberts suggested that kindergarten could be changed !rom a
ha lf day s ituation to a full day
school every other day with savlngs
to amount to from $13,000 to $15,000
a year. There was a suggestion that
no leaves be granted for a ny staff
member for professional conferences a nd meetings. Another sugges(Continucd on page 101

Washington and Vinton Counties.
ODOT's new program aims to
retain bridges un their original sites.
Fonnerly. most bridges were
relocated nearby, a process that often took three to five years and cost
an average of $150,000 per project.
The national average for bridge
replacement is $250,000 per project.
"We're going back to a 'no frills' approach," said Weir. Department
engineers have simplified designs
and eliminated amenities such as
straightened approaches and
widened roads.
The new plan eliminates the need

en-

for expensi\•e, tirne-consuminl-!
vironmental studies necessary whcnn·

bridge lut·ations are moved.
" The back-tt}--basics plan is n't HJJ
propriate for all bndges." Weir
str e~ed.
" There are si tuations
where it just won't work . Wt• are
workrng un 132 more bridges that
will require consrderably mor~
study and design. We need to find tht
right locations and structun•s to

eliminate unsafe l'onditiom; .
''By moving quickly , tlw simplified brid ge designs will enable
ODOT to do three times as much
(Cuntrnued on page lOt

Plant could go on line this summer

Weather forecast

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 -SATURDAY TIL 5

edge resources In Ohio's colleges
and universities lor economic development. This will be a monitor
of changing Industry shlfts. Duerk
said.
The official also complimented
organizations Uke CO VIC which encourage Industry to relocate In
their area. and said cooperation between the community and Industry
at thi s time Is of utmost
Importance.
As a candidate lor lieutenant governor tor Seth Taft, the Cleveland
Republican seeking the GOP gubernatorial nomination In the June
primary. Duerk said he didn't want
to turn the meeting Into a political

One Meigs bridge included in projects

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 972.
In the semiweekly "Plck 4" game, the winning number was 1715.
The tottery reported eai-nlngs of $574,001 from the drawing. Earnlng5 came on sales of $996,219.50, whlle holders of wlnnlDg tickets are
entitled to share_$422,158.00, lottery officials said.

$39900

STATE TQ BENEFlT- James A. Duerk, director of the Ohio Department ol Economic and Community Development. told members of
COVIC (Central Ohio Valley Industrial Commission) Thursday night
Ohio will stand to benefit from economic regeneration because of Its
resource, educational and training advantages over other states.

Eastern Local board employs personnel

Winning Ohio lottery number

* 19 inch diag . picJure
* 100% solid state
*Automatic fine tuning
*Black matrix picture tube
*Energy efficient chassis
Dependable service after
the sale.
Special

By KEVIN KELLY
GALLIPOLIS - Once Ohio
reaches the bottom of Its recessioncaused problems, the state's economic and co mmunity
development director lorsees a
great future ahead for It and Its
neighbors.
James A. Duerk expressed his
bellefs at the monthly Central Ohio
Valley Industrial Commission
(COV!C) meeting held at Oscar's
Restaurant In Gallipolis Thursday
night.
The meeting was co-sponsored
by the Gallipolis and Point Pleasant chambers of commerce.
Duerk, a former newspaperman
and press aide to Gov. James A.
Rhodes, has been DECD chief since
:1975. and In the past eight years he
said the Rhodes admlnlstr~tlon
worked to reverse the population
decline, decrease unemployment,
add 800,000 more jobs to Ohio's
work force and saw some reversal
of general ~ecUne unW the recession took full effect In 1~.
"There will be an explosion (of
development) If the Interest rates
go down," he said. "There's nothing wrong with Ohio or the United
States that a nine percent Interest
rate will cure.''
Aside from double-digit Interest
rates, Duerk also blamed free
spending pollcles by the federal government over the past 20 years as
a contributor to the present
situation.
"We're facing a difficult situation," he said. "! hope we're nearIng the end of the recession. In
some areas ot Ohio, It's a depression. Unemployment ts 12.2 percent
statewide, and even higher In thl8
area. Earller, I heard the banker
here complaining - you know
we're In trouble If the banker

•

It Is reported that the first turbine

and generator structure will be In
place In a few weeks. The plant Is
reported to be the first of Its kind to
be buUt. The units wUl have Swissdesigned borlzonal bulb turbines
and Austrian-designed generators.
The project, which was originally
supposed to have cost about $60 million, Is expected to run about $90
mllllon due to details having been

omitted from the original contract.
Work was reported delayed once
!or about slx months to allow time
lor redesigning the powerhouse
and against because a concrete contract schedule was extended.
A recreation area near the plant
will be started and that area wiU
Include a park with restrooms, a
picnic area and a fishing pier.

�:r, "1 ~

,.,

. ·I

Commentary
The Dailv• Sentinel
Jill uurl "lro o·l
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l:iii · '~'-I!. ! JS6

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Shuttle diplomacy:
a familiar action ·
Anxious abou t Israeli wit hd rawal from the Sinal and eager to stave off a
war over the Falkla nd Isla nds, President Reagan has turned to "shuttle
diplomacy, " a familiar American response to International crises In rect•nt years.
Airborne now, a nd with no fixed return da tes, the two top men In the
State Department are seeking solu tions to the Middle East and Falklands
problems through di rec t intercession with opposing parties.
If Sffretary of State Alexander M . Halg Jr. falls - and so far his
prospects for success are not very bright -two U.S. friends, Britain and
Argenti na, could be at eac h ot her's throats.
If his dcpury, Walter J. Stoessel Jr. stumbles, MJdeast tensions could boll
over into renewed conflict. Stoessel's task Is to hold Israel to Its promise to

Haig' s mission to avert war belwPPn Britain and Argentina over the

Falklands is com plica ted by repo rted Soviet involvement In the South
Atlantic Already buying about two- thirds of Argentina's grain harvest,
and mger to take up the slack left by Common Market sanctions, the
So\"il't s are said to be snooping on the British ar mada a nd passing the
information on to BuPnos Aires.

"Td likr to see them butt out," Reagan said of the Soviets before he sent
H,lig back to his Air Force jet . Sideste pping reports the United States Is
providing data to the Brit ish. Reagan said he wan ts to rema in a " fa ir
broker' " to both sides .
Heig runs a risk that the United States might be blamed by one s ide or
the other if his mediation effort falls. U Argentina seems to be squeezed
unfairly, the historic distrust of Yankee motives might resurface a mong
Latin-America n nat ions.

Ev0n success in volves a gamble. The immediate gra titude for helping to
avert a conflict could give way eventually to resentment with whatever
solution Haig might help Britain a nd Argentina find . U the settle ment
unravels, Washmgton could become the scapegoat.
Much of the Arab wo rld perceives the U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace
plan as a pro· Israel plot. That is why Reagan has asked Stoessel to help
ovNcomr obstacles threatening to delay the Sinal withdrawal.
Herr aga in . the United States would be tainted wit h failure If the Israeli
pullout does not take place on schedule.

Capital notes
1V.'o more Ohio companies are in stor e for low-Interest loans under an

economic development financing program that alms to create ne w jobs In
the state.

The Sta te Controlling Board has approved economic developme nt department plans to loan $1.2 million to the Pultruslons Corp. In Aurora and
$750,000 to the Anthony Thomas Candy Co., Inc., Columbus.
The loans bring to seven the number authorized so far under a program
In which the state, usi ng some profits from Its liquor monopoly as security ,
borrows money through bond sa les and lends It to qualified firms.
Walter Shaeffer. a department deputy director and lis general counsel,
said a $70 million bond sale, lhe fi rst under the act, Is scheduled for
rnld·May.
The loan for Pult rusions will allow the company to buy a n existing
facUlty which it occupies a nd fin a nce construction of additional plantand
wareho use space . Shaeffer said the 15-year loan, which carries a 6.5
percent interest ra te, represents the state's 60 percent share of the total
project cost.
Ninery jobs are to be created as a result of the loan to Pultruslons, a
com pa ny which manufactures plastic-molded products used In buses and
pU fields.
The $750,000 loan to the Thomas ca ndy company for expansion Is to be
repaid in 20 yea rs at 8 percent Interest. It represents the state's 42 percent
share of the project a nd will create 42 new jobs.
-11 me Is running out for boards of election In Ohio's 88 counties to make
sure tha t polling places are fully accessible to handicapped voters.
The deadline is Nov. 1 under state law, unless a good faith effort has been
shown by the board a nd specific polling places are exempted.
Secretary of State Anthony J . CelebrezzeJr. has congratulated election
officials in Coshocton, Ashland, Clark, Defiance, Geauga, Medina, Morgan, Pa ulding, Vinton and Williams counties for their efforts at
Cjlmpllance.

But even if the bill were cast
specifically in terms of a limitation
upon the Supreme Court's jurisdic·
lion, there seems to be not the
slightest question of the power
vested in Congress to do precisely

that.

din~s tha t court-orde red busing nf

school children for purposes of
rac i al balance simp ly ha sn't
worked .
The act goes on to say thai in tts
exercise of powers ·· under Article
III, Sectton 1, and under Sect ton 5 of
the 141h Amendment." Congress forbtds the federal courts to impose
ce rta in remed ies in sc hoo l
tlesegregatton cases. Specifically ,
the courts ma y not issue a ny writ ordenng a puptl to be bused, fur purposes of achievmg racial balance,
for more than 10 miles or more than
30mmutes.
To listen to the thunderous
ca lamtty-howling of such senators
as Bwnpers of Arkansas, Dodd of
Connecllcut and Specter of Pennsylva nia, you might suppose the

cases corning before it the court
shall have appella te jurisdiction
" which such exceptwns, a nd under

4
4
4

1
1
I
3 1
2 3
1 4
1 4

such re~ ulations as the Con~ress

shall make."
The cla use requires no powers of

occult divination. The words a re not
arca ne words. They mean precisely
what they say . The power to make
"exceptions and regulations" was

vested in the Congress for a sound
reason - to provide a legislati ve
check and balance aga mst the abuse
of judtcta l power.
In point of fact, the act voted upon
by the Senate last month was not
predicated primarily on Article Ill
but on Seciton 5 of the 4th Ame ndment. All the school cases rest on the
sa me contention, lhat a ny
manifestation by a state of racia:
discrimina tion is a denial of equal

Gni i iPOI• s
We l lston
Waverly

protection of the laws. But the 14th
does noi vest exclusive power judges

to say how such deprivations shall
be corrected. On the contrary, "The
Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the
provisions of this arttcle."
The hysterical reaction of various
bar associations to las t month's acti on cannot be justified. Legislative
powers are vested in the Congress on
the assumption that they will be
exercised. For what other reasons
a re these powers delegated? If the
bar groups want the Exceptions and
Regula tiOns Clause deleted, let them
sponsor a consti tutiona l amendmtnt
to strike 11 out. But it is silly to contend that the power doesn' t really
extsl. or tf 1t really docs exist, that it
ought never, never, never to be exercised. Pfui 1

Me ,gs
TOTALS

Bwnpers

.:'J

26
20
26

39
37

r es ult s:

'"'

JWa ltsO. l i
Tto~tas

0.0),

tMrdlch 0.1! at MUwauk£1f' tHaas

tn)

Nf'W York 1Guklry 1).{)1 at Detroit tWll·
rox ().I), 1n1

Baltlmort' (D.MaMllli'Z 1·01 at Chicago
1Bums Hh, (nl
Oakland tKrough 1~1 a t ~n ll' !Ban·
nlsll.'r 1-{}J. tnl
e
Mln~l8 tJ ack.son 1).11 at Callfornla
IK.illonl).()l. tnJ

W
St . Loob
NE'W York

4

TOTALS
Wednesd ay's res ult s:

ChiC aI!\)

Philadelphia

66

29

A.ll&lt;l n\ii

56

31

Los Angeles

4
4

40

75

0 5 25 B6
20 20 424 424

3

400
n3

'

.286

WeMem Dlvbion
II

1

I
1

~

J

4 I
J 1
7 3

46
61
39 68

Pet.
GB
667 -

.1

'J2 ' ·""
""

Montrt'al
Pittsburgh

68
61

L
6

'4

Houston
San DleRO

J

San F'randsco

J

'' ...""
•

4

l ""

I
2

4

.&gt;00

6

'

Cln&lt;"lnnatl

Thunday '11 GIUTOM

·~

4~

"'

4~

6

2"&gt;11

Phlladl&gt;lph.la 8. New York 4. IJ
Plnsburgh t Montn•al .1

lnnl~s

St . Louis 6. ChlCIIRO 1

Gall1pohs 16 We ll ston 6
Waverly 18 Me1gs 8
Loqa n 5 A !hens 3
Ironton 15 Jackson 14 (9 10n1nqs)

Fnday's gam es:
Loqan a t Ja ck so n
Waverly at Ga ll1p011 s

Sitn Dil'go 2, l.DS Angell'! 0
Frlday'1 G.,nN
Chlcaj{U li....ar9on 0. 11 at Plrt.sbulll:h
tllaumgarll.'n 0.01
Montll'al IGulllrkMJn 1 ~ 1 at New York
tFa lrorl(' 1-lh, 1n1
,\tlanta 'Ma hll'r 2·01 a t 1-louston 1Ryan
1~21.

In\

Phlladelphla tl&lt;ruk.ow 1.01 at Sl. l.ouls
IF'or!lrh 1.{)1. tn l
lm Angrles !Reuss 1).{)) at San [)1('go

Athens at 1ron to n
We ll s to" at Me i qs

Cincinnati 1So to 0.11 a t San F'raoctsco
1Galf' !Hll. Ill\

1\MEKU AN LEAGUE
~· m UIV~Son

W

L

Clf'"Vt'land
Mllwi!ukl"

J

DE&gt;trolt
Toronto
N('W York
llaltlmon&gt;
Boston

J

'22

C"atlfomla
K..ansas C11)•
Mlnnf'sota
o.t&lt;J•od
T1&gt;xas

S.:Oattlf'

3

3

Cfllrago

sa;s

Pet.

2

'

Wt:Mem Dl vWon
0
6
J

""

·"""''
"'""

GB

-

NBA results

~

I

Thunday'1

J3J
ltl

I~

I 'I

667

2

,.,
I

N(&gt;w York !II MIIWIIUkl't'

2

Utah at. Houston

Thunday'" Gamt'B

Phoenix at Portland.
Golden Slall' Bl l.m Angt'(('S
Satunlay'1 Games
NI'W JE.'rsey at lX'troU
Dalla!i ,11 Denv('f
Sea ttl(' at Goldt&gt;n Stat('

,\1.111Jl(&gt;!j()la 11 . 0.1!.kland

Dt&gt;trolt &lt;&amp;. Toronto 2
0\lcago II. Boston &lt;&amp;
Owl.'land 8, Mllwaukl"f' 1
California J, SeatUl' 2

Con-

By TOM METIERS
Messenger Sports Editor
The Tri-Valley Conference, wht cli
currentl y has sevet members but
will increase to eight next fall , has
added two more schools even before
the other addtt!On takes eff ect.
Meigs a nd Miller were offtciall y
voted in as the new est members of
the TVC at a meeting of the conference officials Tuestlay, although
that addttion will not take place until
the 1983-84 school yea r.

Indiana a~oAUanta .
PhU3dl&gt;lphia at Washtnglon
('k&gt;vt&gt;lan:l at Ch.lraRQ.
San An tonio a t Dallas
Dcmwr at Kansas City

2

400

Game~~

Frklay'• Gamea
Boston at New J !'rsPy.

' ""'
' ' """""" 2
'
"" '
s
4

The following appeared in Wednesda ys Alheos Messenger :

Indiana 1111. Atlanta 102
IX&gt;trolt 120, C!Pvela nd 110
San Diego 129, Port.land I.2J

I

erosiOn of the onl y document that

stands between the people a nd a

Eastern., Tornadoes
non-league vi~tims

ty rannica l governmt&gt;nt ." The Con-

stitution has been emasculated. The
Senate's precedent ' 'cuts at the very
heart and soul " of the principle of
separa tion of powers. And so on.

WATERFORD
East ern's
Eagles dropped a close 6-4 nonleague decision to lhe Waterford
Wildcats he re Thursda y evening.
The Eagles now own a 6-3 ma rk,
while Waterford stands at 2-1-1.
Arnold went ft ve and two-thirds innings for the winners to s"trike out
eight and walk six in picking up the
victory. Ellis came on in relief to
finish the game on one strike out and
three walks.
Rob Smith got the start for
Eastern and in three and two-thirds
innings of work issued three walks,
three strike outs, and seven hits,
while giving up all six runs. Jeff
Jones came on in relief to do a fine
job, fanning three before stopping

Poor financial conditions could be deterrent
NEW YORK (AP) - One of the
major deterrents to a war between
Britain and Argentina may be the
poor financial condition of the two
na tions.
Neither can alford a long fight.
The British, already prac ticing economic austerl!y, would be forced to
sacrifice eve n more, while the Ar·
gentlnes, dreply In debt, might be
threatened with bankruptcy.
The friction hurts already. Last
week the pound fell three cents
.aga inst the U.S. dollar. Argentina
rushed to reassure creditors.
Because of their economies,
therefore, It Is conceivable the two
nations might find patriotic a nd
military enthusiasms dulled, and
tha t negotiations could assume a
more Important role In strategies.
For this to happen would be no
surprise to International banke rs,
who might claim no great military
knowledge but who see economic

factors assuming a greater role In
Inte rnational relations.
While the evidence may not be
conclusive, some of them are convi nced the Soviet Union avoided a
direct Involvement In the Polish
political and economic crisis because of the potential costs to Its
treasury.
There Is speculation also that the
less belligerent tone of Fidel Castro
toward the United States might Involve finances, not just those of
Cuba but also of the Sovlels, which
have been forced to provide Cuba

$34 bUll on, and the financing of It a t
several billion dollars a year , a tall
order In a n economy that Is dlmin·
lshlng In stze and already plagued
by Interna l problems.
Argentina also lives on exports,
especially of grain. Britain has, of
course, banned Imports from Ar·
gentina a nd has called on other
Common Market nations to take
similar action, which could diminIsh Argentina's exports by several
hundred million dollars a year.

with htlllon ~ of rl oll:tr~ In .::.111

While both countries have dire
problems, Argentina's might be
worse. Unemployment Is 12 per·
cent, Inflation 132 percent. Gross
national product last year fell6 per·
cent. The countrY depends on for·
eign credit and even In peacetime
has had to struggle to pay Its debts.
Most estimates place that debt a t

To date, according to diplomatic
sources, the Falklands operation
cost Argentina $500 million. U that
Is so, Britain's costs are even more,
and rising at a dally rate that would
present the British with a dilemma,
that of de termining how to pay for
unexpected expenditures when the

civilia n economy already has been
giving Its all.
The International community
also has a fina ncial Interest In a
peaceful outcome. The British have
froze n Argentina's assets. But Ar·
gentina could cause problems for
Britain to whom It owes several billion dollars. It could default.

Default fs an ominous prospect,
In view of diffic ulties over the PolIsh debt. Break one strand an([ others could give way too~ and the
losers could be Western banks,
holding most of Argentina's debt.

down for reliever Charlie Ritchie

who finished the game.
Eastern had its scoring opportunities, bul couldn't plate the
needed runs.
Eastern scored first on a leadoff
error that allowed John Beaver to
reach first safely. After a stolen

In a sense, therefore, the bigger
dange r to the world, bigger than a
military confrontation, could be the
strain on Its fina ncial system.

base, Beaver scored on the throw to

second after it slipped through the
tnfield and mto the outfield.
Waterford came back with two in
the frame for a 2-1 lead on hits by
Carter, Watson, and a walk to Arnold. An error and Blaker single
brought home the two runs.
All was quiet until the fourth when
Waterford clawed out four more
runs on hits by McCutcheon, Carter,
Watson, Arnold, and Eichmiller in a
fourth inning rally. Eastern plated
two more runs in the fifth on a
Leonard walk, Beaver double and a
hard hit ball by Gaul that resulted in

Robert ]. Wagman

Rememb·e r Iran?L------------------------------WASHINGTON I NEA I - Most of
us have not thought much about Iran
since the American hostages fl ew to
freedom 15 months ago.
But while Iran may ha ve been
largely forgotten by the news media
a nd the public, that country has
remained much on the minds of U.S.

intelligence analysts.
These days they are increasingly
worried about what they view as a
Soviet-Iranian rapprochement and
about the Reagan administration 's
lack of a clear-cut policy toward the
Persian Gulf region.
Most of us can recall when
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and
his followers were denouncing the
Americans and the Ru.ssians as
" devils" in equal measure. The
Iranians were particularly upset
that the Soviet Union waited so long
to endorse their revolution and that
its belated support look the fonn of
words more than deeds.
The new revolutionary govern- ·
ment made a number of anti-soviet
moves - reducing the size of the
Soviet Embassy staff, closing joint
ventures such as the Russian-

Iranian Bank and refu.sing vias for
Soviets seeking to tr:avel into,[ ran.
Today the Iranians are still
denouncing the United States as a
sort of public enemy No. 1. But the
denunciations of the Soviets have
pretty much stopped.
Mor~over, the Iranians and the
Soviets are talking about various
joint projects and assistance plans.
They have already embarked on

several ventures.
The shift began with the Iraqi invasion of Iran in September 1980.
The Iranians were caught totally unprepared and desperately needed
help. They had nowhere to turn but
to the Soviets given their
deteriorated relations with the West
and the support for Iraq among most
of the Arab world.
Over the past nine months to a
year, the SOviets have given the
Iranians food and economic aid a&gt;
well as badly needed spare paris for
their military equipment. Since
Iran's war machine largely consists
of the shah's U.S. purchases, it is
believed that at leaMt some of these
spare parts have come from Viet-

nam via third countries m deals
engineered by the Soviets.
The Soviets have also given the
Iranians techni cal assistance. That

includes one project of strategic importance to both the Soviets and the
West : the building of a naval base on
the Gulf of Oman near the vital
Strait of Hormuz and hte oil tanker
lanes.

Construction of the facility al
Chah Bahar began almost two years
ago but came to a virtual halt with
the Iraqi invasion. Now the Soviets
reportedly have taken over the job in
exchange for u.se of the base by their
warships.
All of this a id has enabled the
Iranians to devote more of their
resources to the war against Iraq
and thus has contributed to their
recent gains on the battlefield.
Nevertheless, many U.S. intelligence analysis believe that
ayatollahs still harbor deep doubts
about the giant on their northern
border. These observers think that
the Iranians are still feeling tentative and reluctant about this new
relationship but that some new U.S.

policies may dri ve them further into
the Soviet camp.
Re ce ntly the Reag an adminis tration removed Iraq from the
lisl of countries supporting terrorist
activities. This could enable the
United States to supply Iraq with
military hardware although no such
plans ha ve been anounced.
Rumors are flying around
Washington that the administration
will eventually side with Iraq and
even provide arms to aid its war
against Iran .
Sources wi thin the intelligence
community and the State Department stress that the administration
has not yet formulated a policy
toward Iran and Iraq beyond hoping
to prevent Iran from becoming a
major destabltzing influence in the
Persian Gulf.
What worries some in the State
Department is that if the United
Stales approaches the region
without a comprehensive plan, this
country may unwittingly force the
Iranians into an even closer alltance
with the Soviets.

an error.

WHS, however, held on and won 6-

Waverly tops Meigs

4, led by Carter and Wat"m's two
singles apiece. Eichmill er, Bla ker,
McCutcheon, and Huck also singled.
Leading Eastern was John Beaver
a nd Rob Smith with doubles, Chris
Allen a single, and Larry Cowdery a
Slllgle.
In Wednesda y's game it was Chns
Allen on the mound for Eastern
ra ther than Gaul as tl was ea rl1er
reported in the :&gt;-5 tie with Ha nna n
Trace.
Eastern hosts Parkersburg
Catholic in a double header Saturday beginning at 12 noon at Eastern
High&amp;hool.
Line!)core:
Eastern
100 021 0- 4 4 2
Waterford
200 400 x- 6 8 7
Batterie"' Arnold IWPI, Ellis 6th,
and Eichmiller. Smith rLPI , Jones
4th, Ritchie 7th, and Bissell.

RACINE - The Southern Tornadoes dropped another non-league
baseball contest Thursda y 7-5 tn the
Federal Hocking Lancers. Southern
dropped tl' record to 4-4, while
Federal rests at 3-&lt;l.
Both clubs pounded nut 10 hils.
Two sophomores, Tony Riffle and
Paul Harris, paced the Torna does
with two hits each. Riffle had a triple
along with a Jay Rees triple, while
John Porter, Brian Allen, Zane
Beegle, C. T. Chapman and Allen
Pape each had singles.
Bennett was the winning pitcher
for the Lancers. Green, Gillian, and
Bennett each had lwo singles for the
wtnners.

Southern plays North Gallia in a
make-up game tonight.
Southern
022 010 0-5 10 3
FH
t02 300 1-7 10 I
Batteries: Bennett IWP), Ri chards 7th, and Green. Porter I LPI ,
Beegle 5th, and Rees.

at- 1.=====;;:;====:::;~

WAVERLY - Behind a 14-hit
tack Waverly rolled to an SEOAL
girls' softball vtctory over Meigs, 188.
Natalie Lambert and Robin Buffington were the Meigs' pitchers,
while Robin Thomas hurled the win
for Waverly . Thomas walked six
batters while Meigs combined for
eight walks.
Leading hitters for Meigs were
Cindy Crooks with two singles, Kris
Snowden two singles and three
RBI's, Natalie Lambert a solo home
·run, and Jenny Meadows two single.
For Waverly Fonda Miller had a
three run home run, while Carol
Dyke had a double and two singles.

The !); ill Sentinel
!USpS 1~9181
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Published l'\' ~ry a(h:rnoon, Mondc!y throu~ h

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POOTMASTER Send a dllres.s to The Datly

Scntmcl. Ill Coul1 St ., Po1ncroy , Oh1045769.

In the mea ntime. Wdbtun will be
switching from lhe Southeastern
Ohio Athletic l.eague to tltc TVC at
lbe end of the current school year.
Although the votes for the new
members was not una nimous, it met
ihe stipulation of &lt;.1 thret.'-q uart er
majority .
Me1gs, which has been a member
of the SEOAL since being formed by
consolation in 1967 and has ties to the
league from its ea rl y days through

A big thank you

made

b~

Miller school officials for

Action along . those lines were
taken
by the Metgs. school board at
.
tb March 16 meeling , w1th formal

the league and its development as a
member of the Tri-Vallev Confcrence .. M"ll
· D. 1rec tor
1 er Athl e1IC
Bob Towner
'
·d
T
d
sat ues ay.

~

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•
._.

" We are ve ry

hap~y

to finally be

In a threc~way match al Federal
Hockmg, the junior Marauders set
three new school records and easily
outpointed the host Lancers and
Ravenswood.
Brya n Kurn set a new record for

the pole vault at 8 ' 6" and the girls'
400 meter and 800 meter relay teams

set reco rds of 110:58.00 and 2: 07.5
respecti vely. The boys' totals:
Meigs, 73 1,, Federa l Hocking, 33 1 ~
cmd Raven~w uod. 31. The g1rb
scorL~I : Meigs 85 to 36 for F -H and 13
for Rav en.swood. Result.s arc a!:i

follows:
Boys
Sho t Put

Mendows(M J. 37' 10"

DISCUS - 0iVNS(RJ. l 02' 4".
Lo ng Jump - W1 S€' (MJ . 14 5"
H1 g h Jump - Chancey (M). 4' 10"

11 0 LH
I

""
.....

•I I

.I

..... Jl100
. $23.40
.. ....20

.,

LEBANON. Ohio tAP !- Jackie
Mite took a three· length vlr tory In
the featured race Thursday night at
Lebanon Raceway, returning $ll.60.
$5.&amp;1 a nd $5.&amp;1.
The horse covered a mile in 2: ()&gt;!
2·5 seconds Cingrich Kay paid
$10.&amp;1 and $5 for plaCL'. and Jockey
P . paid $11.20 for show .
·
The 5·2 daily double combina tion
of Bird"s Champ and l:k'('mor·s
Pride paid $.124 .
There was frE'f' admis.sion for thr

crowd. wh1ch wagerc&gt;d $1 :17.211':.

bt• eilgibil' tu \"lt' for a cha111pwnsl11p
111 a g1ven sport.

At Meigs, meanwhile. Athlett c

de ve loped 1n sl' hedu lm~. tr &lt;:~n ·
spo rWtto n and fan participation.

531 JAC.KSON PIK E At 35 WE ST
Phone 446· 4 524
BARGA!N MAT!NEES ON SAl &amp; SUN
ALL S ~ArS JUST $7 00
ADMISS/OH EVERY fUESOA r $ 100

··we &lt;He IDok Hl g forward to l!l'l·

lmg into the TVC and hope lh&lt;tl
schedultng will gu Sllloothl y. [t wtll
also bt: a good muvc for us as far as
scheduling and transporta tiOn an•
co nce rned cwd will be better fu r our
fans as well." Ftshcr semi.
When the vole was l&lt;tken by the
Metgs board last tmmlh to leave the
SEOAL. Fisher allliHtled that it was
a tough decisiOn . "Changmg leagues
is a tough demtnn, wtlh the SEOAI.
being an uld league with a lot of lies

r: FR IDAY thru THURSDAY

1

l

[!IPRIL 16 thru 22J

cm tl se ntiment involved Ill par·
tic1pat111g Jll it," F1shpr s&lt;-~i d at the
lime.
The current lea~ue member Ill thl.'
TV C have Ucen in.strul't ed to make

every effort possible to work the new
qutckl y as posstble.
It IS hoped that the TV C can
opcr&lt;Jte as a 10-l eam league 10 most
sports

by

the l98J...8.4 sc hool year.

al though a team must compete
agai nst each of the nth cr sc hools to

Kennedy (M), Reese

lOOM - Wes t (RJ.l3 4
1600M - Hagqy IM ), 5 44 5
400M ( R ) - Meiqs, 54 7
400 M - Kennedy IMl. 65 1
BOOM - Poo le (R I, 2 :&lt;1 .5
700 M - West I R I, 77 9
1600 M ( R 1 M e1qs, 4 18 4

T-BONES

Girls
Sho t

McCafcrty ( R), 28' 61 1 "

Discus - 111omas (M J. 69' 9"
Lonq Jump - Swa rtz (M).

11'

DINNER

)I ., "

H1qh Jump - Neece (M/ , 4' 6"
100 LH - Harr1 son (fill/. 10 0.

100M - E n q i1 SI"1 ( M ), 14 4.
1600M - Rdll e !MI. 6 4B B
400 M (R/ , Me tqS, 58 0
400M - S l nne tt(FH) , 1 . 09 .9 .
BOOM I R i
Mc,gs. 2:07 5
BOOM - R•QQ st M I.3 ·050
200 M - Engl•s n !MI. 30 2
1600M IR), Me1QS, 5 · 17

$3.79

LAWN-BOY

SPRING SALE

$AvEssooo
SUPREME 21 '' self-propelled,
with rear bag
• Up to 30% more usable power
• Touch-N-Go control handle
• Solid-state ignitton
• Quiet under-the-deck
muffler
• Fingertip starting
~-.... • Patented Lawn-Boy
safety features
• Big zipperless rear bag
holds 50% more grass
than regular bag
'

r------

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COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY PURCHAS(

T-RONE STEAK

DINNER

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Saved wilh • Bakrd Pouto
• All ·You:Can-E.11 S.alad Bar

I
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• Wann Roll wnh 8u[l('T

I

l)n.Mn IN.._.I(IIIIOC n;WN c..-t lit YMd
..miiCJWf....,u~aa·,.~

I

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llf'IIW Al,.nq.li . . . .. , _ .

GOOD f(Jt MY PAATY SIZE

Ofllll GOOO TlflU

p

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$3.79

I

Scrvr-d wtth • Baked Pou1 o

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S*IIU..,.._.II,..... llfU .... ,.....

MAY'} &amp;12

DINNER

I

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T-RONE STEAK

I

$~.79

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COUPON MUSl ACCOt.IPAHY PUR CHA.$(

I
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• A..II ·You-Can -Ea1 S:.~ J:.d lhr
• \\'arm Roll w1lh Bun n

I

I

On..ft WI! .......,. P'C)I nUDe~~ Lavlol r. "-'
..... "'- dox.lluob ~f t..I Q f'OI ~
Sltft t.. I&amp;IP"* 10 ~~ p!IO w!lt!IIIIPJI'fli
., law At1N'11C ... "'8 ••*'-1

I
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GOOD F(ll Alf't' PARTY SIZE
OFf8l G000 THRU
p
MA't' 2 Q'}

t-~;-;;p~~;s~;--TB&lt;&gt;NUS~OUP()N1---;~-;~;;:~M;-~
_
Mon thru~ l!
:

1

#R8237

Pondrrosa

! CHOPPED STEAKBURGER
OR

PI

79 !
1

sA'e.o BAR $}
Or . . .

e

I

!

: FILEf OF FISH SANDWICH FRENCH FRIES
I

or . . .

I

SOUP . .=::.( 1

c.-. .............. ~ Aclell•
I uD1t 1un 1111 lltllaCI Sllft ,.. ~
I

RalaOillttttkObto

6Monlh .....
I Ve•r .

Lehanon results

Di rector Gurdon Fisher sees the
chan!!~ in lea~ u e.s as a solult un t o
sn111 e problems whH·h ha\'e

I

. . $20.80

ud Wett VlrtJalll

Intentionally, bringing up Lucas.
The pitcher walk&lt;:'d on a J 2 pitch to
force in a run. giving the Padres a
2-0 lead.
In American LeaguP action, It
was Minnesota II. Oakland 5; Detroit 4, Toronto 2: Chicago H. Boston
4: Cleveland H. MllwaukL'&lt;' I a nd
California 3. Seattle 2.

R ), 19 9 .

Credt~

1Year ......................... Pt.OO

JMoolh

· ·[t should be a btg boost to our
whole athletic prtJgram and our par·
ttcipation now that our you ng men
cmd women w1ll be able to compete
for league honors," he added.

:

3 Month ............... .......... '12.:45

,_
•"''

rookie

Po le Va ult - Korn (M), 8' 6"

............. 15 Cents

Sill month . .

Bevacqua stole second,

catcher Doug Gwosdz wa.s walked

Young Marauders take meet

$52.80

One Year

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Oblo aDd Wnt Vlrglall

was safe on a fleldN '.s choicC'. After

members mto thei r !:ichedules a:-&gt;

many yeet rs.

No subscriptions by mall pennitted in towns
wll!re hotne carrier service is available.

-

•

league affiliation whil'h has been

in a league. We hope to contribute to

.. 11.00
. 14.40

One Month ..

Salazar walk&lt;'&lt;l and Kurt 13t:'vacq ua

1

$entlnel oo a 3. 6 or 12 month basis.
will be given carrier each month.

·-·•-

--·-

ter submittmg its decision to wi th·
draw from the lea g u~ such as was
the case wtth Wellston .
Miller. meanwhtle. has been forred to operate as an independent sinCl' the former Mid-Ohw Valley Conference folded in the early 1970s. AI·
lempts on Miller's part to jom area
leag ues, mcludm~ the TVC, have
failed in the past.
" We are happy lo see the ex·
pansion to a 10-tcam leag ue, anti a re
partlcularly pleased tha t the
athletes from Mtller will have the
opportunity to compete m a league:·
Tnmble Principal Thomas Vii·
elmer, who IS preSident of the TVC,
sa td after Tuesda y's mt&gt;ctmg .
Acceptance 1nto the TVC brings to
a successful climax a driv e for

may remit in advance direct to The Dally

•
•
.,

Moore has faithfully supplied us
without question, money for uniforms, supplies, and entry fees for the
last 13 years.
For his backing and support, we
now in closing say TIIANK-YOU for
a job well done. - Mary Woods.

member for one full school yea r a f-

Subscrlben not desiring to pay the carrier

~

sors.

notification to SEOAL officials set at
em upcoming meeting.
Meigs will remain as a member~~
the SEOAL throu~ h the end of the
1982-83 school year. Under terms of
the SEOAL constitulion and by-laws,
£1 sc hool must remain as a leag ue

SUBSCRIPTION RA•TES
By Carrier 11r Molor Route
Onc ~ek

Aguayo, a 5-foot·9, 17~po under,
a te most of his meals the last few
days a t his a unt's horne In New
York, and he maintained that her
cooking he lped give him enough
power to hit his home run . He said
he picked on a sinker from Charlie
Puleo, IJ.l, and made good contact
to reac h the left field bullpen a t
Shea Stadium with his homer.
Aguayo said the Phlllles gener·
ally play loosely, but there seems to
be pressure on them so far this year
because of their poor 2-5 stan .
Padres 2, Dodgers 0
Jua n Eic helberger a nd Gary Lu ·
cas combined to shu t out Los An·
geles on five hits and Lucas drove
In a run with a bases· loaded walk
off Fernando Valenzuela to help
San Diego beat the Dodgers.
Valenzuela , 1·1, making his se·
cond start. was touched for a run In
the fi rs t Inning on singles by Gene
l{lchards, Juan Bonilla and Garry
Templeton .
The Padres chased last year·s Cy
Young Award winner and Rook.Je of
the Year In the seventh when Slxto
Lezcano hit a one·out double, Luis

Falcons, admitted to TVC

Pomeroy anti Middleport, had
already deetded ln lea•e the SEOAL.

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

,,

Cardinals 6, Cubs I
Lonnie Smith and George He n·
drlck hit solo home runs and Steve
Muca hurled a four-hitter to help St.
Louis beat Chicago for the Card!·
nais' fifth straight victory .
Smith hit his second homer of the
season In the fifth Inning a nd Hendrick his third a n Inning later after
the Cardinals had grabbed a 3.0
lead off Doug Bird, 1·2.
Mura, l .Q, lost his bid for a shu·
tout when Keith Moreland smashed
a two-out homer In the ninth. Mura.
whose 5-14 record with Sa n Diego
made him the loslngest pitcher In
the major leagues last season, was
pleased In going the distance In Wrlgley Field .
PhUUes 8, Mets 4
Luis Aguayo, filling In for MJke
Schmidt at third base, slugged a
three-run homer In the 13th Inning
to cap a four-run burst tha t carried
Philadelphia over New York.
The Mets had tied the score 4-41n
the bottom of the 12th when John
Stearns doubled, took third on an
Infield out and came home on a wild
pitch by reliever Sid Monge.

Marauders~

tCurtlsl).()\,lnl

Majors

tialty

•

1BIIIt' 0. 11 at Clevt&gt;la.nd

KaMas City

NA110NAL LEAGUE

W L R OR
5 0 63 26

Logan
A th ens
Ga 1! 1pOI1S
Wellston
Waver l y
Me1gs
I r on ton
Jock son

Letter to editor
. 'fie the players of the R. C. Softball
team would like to take this time to
!hank Fennan Moore for his many
years of f~nancial support. Due to
,tlie high cost of travel and motel exJ*nses and the distance we travel
each year to play ball, we have
regrettably decided to change span-

By Associated Press
To some observers, It was the
most courageous thing that Rick
Rhoden could do. For the Pills·
burgh Pirate pitcher, It was jusl
something he had to do.
" ! never really thought about not
pitching today," said the right·
bander, who pitched Thursday desplte news tha t his brother had died
In a n a uto accident
The grieving Rhoden put on a
lion-hearted pertonnance, yielding
only one earned run through the
first six Innings, to help the Pirates
beat the Montreal Expos 4-3.
Omar Moreno singled home
Johnny Ray from third base In the
nlnth Inning agalnsl reliever Woodie Fryman for Pittsburgh's winning run.
Montreal starter Steve Rogers, 1·
1, carried a 3-1 lead lnlo the ninth,
but gave up consecutive home runs
to Dave Parker and Jason Thompson tha t tied the game. Kent Tekulve, 1·0, gained the victory with
two pertect Innings of relief while
Rod &amp; urry pitched the ninth to
pick up his first save of the year.

Friday'• GIUIM'JII
Toronto !Golt 0.01 a1 Bo111011 !Eckersley

f'..u&amp;enl DtvWon

TEAM

guarantees." The ad is "a sini!-iler,
the

25

Only games scheduk'd

Friday' s games:

beginning of the end of constitut iona l
upon

34

Jackson a t L oga n
Ga llipoli s a t Waverly
Ironton a t A thens
Meigs at Wellston
SEOALSOFTBALL

a lmost that: The vote wa&gt; " the

attack

20
23
18

I 4 18 37
20 20 241 241

Wednesday '~

extingutshed by the Senate's action .
Indeed, Senator

54
30
33

Gaii•POIJ S 10 We ll ston 7
Waverly 12 Meigs 5
A them. 5 Logan 4
Jackson 9 Ironton 7

torch uf human freedom had been

stitutiOn ." The vote marked " the

&lt;.;N' ms that 0nsuring compliancf.' with e xisting accords might prove more

a rising under the 14th Amendment.

legislati ve findings - m brief, fin-

Lebanon cease·fire a nd urge a more benign Israeli rule over Its turbulent
occ upied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
In some ways, the diplo macy that Henry KJsslngerpopularlz.ed a decade

difficult than e ngineering agreements about the futu re.
Poor Halg. His shuttJe between London and Buenos Aires Is a 6,962·mile
tr&lt;'k And distance is the least of his problems.

This is balderdash. Opponents &lt;i
the measure are crying that it would
limit the appellate jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court . Nonsense. The bill
would simply regula te the remedies
that could be applied by federa l
judges in a certain class of cases

bcgin!:i with a recitation of ce rtain

deviOus

St(l('ssel is work ing In the region where KJsslnger once shuttled, but It

Loqan
A thens
Jackson

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Rhoden hurls courageous win

Scoreboard
I ron ton

WASHJ NGTON - A vast deal of
foolishness continues to be wntten
and propounded about the Senate's
vote of March 2 m the matter of
rac tal-bala nce busing. In thts
relattvely quiet period on Capitol
Hill, it may be u.seful to return not
only to thts particular vote but also
to certain broad principle s . of
pol ittcal power.
The continuing uproar is dtre(·ted
toward the Senate's approval of the
Neighborhood School Act of 1982.
Tacked on to the Justice De partment's a uthomation bill , the act

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

5EO AL BASEBALL
TFAM
WLROR

Balances and husingoc______J_a_m_es_J_.K_i_lp_at_ric_k

\.Vithclraw from the Sinai on AprU 25, to prevent a breakdown of the

i:l gO looks easy compared to lhc H aig a nd St oessel assignmen ts.

Friday, Af"l 16, 1982

Pag&amp;-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Friday, April 16, 1982

MODERN SUPPLY

399 w. Main Street
992-2164
Pomeroy, Oh.
The Store with" All Kinds of Stull"
For Pets-StabJes-Large and sm,ll Animals
· ,
. ·~·LAwns-Gardens
.
~

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lor..... ll!lltallflltl ....tdlrr._ AI,_ ·

l~tif'4111takhoult'

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OffER G000 THRU MAY 2 1982

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Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Ohio
Across From The Airport

�4-The Daily Sentine• .

Page

• UinerGf

Meigs High

Calendar
FRIDAY

SOUL FINDERS w&gt;ll smg Sunda y, 7 30 p rn al Zwn Freew&gt;il
Bapt&gt;sl Church, Lower Plams
The Rev Edd&gt;e Bo)er, pastor,
wdl sflCak Publ&gt;c rJV&gt;ted

MIDDLEPORT The Eccles
!Ia Fellowship of 128 MUI Si .
Middleport wUI hold a "-eek~nd
meellng Friday Saturday and
Sunda y a! 7 p m Speaker wUI be
Michael Vance. of Columbus
He wll l aLso speak al the mom
&gt;ng sPrv&gt;cr on Sunday Allheev
enlng service !hal da y Churck
Mc Phe&gt; so n. pastor, will be
speaker The public &gt;s mvlled 10
a !lend

CHICKEN Bcrbecue wul be
lwld Sunda y " &gt;th serv&gt;ng to begm
at II a m The event &gt;s bemg
sptli&gt;Stlrcd by the Porr.eroy Volunl&lt;'t'l r &gt;1 ,. Depa : trnent and w&gt;ll be
ht'ld at the f&gt;re statwn Dmners
w&gt;ll be $.1

MONDAY
Hullarlll PTJ wdl sponsor a
basketball ga me between the
fa culty and the s&gt;xth grade, Mond&lt;&gt;y mght at 7 30 p m at Hutland
Uernenlary School gyrnnas&gt;urn
Cha r ~c w&gt;il be $1 for adult!; and 5()
, en!!; for ch&gt;ldren Refr eslunerts
wdlbc served

A Bl Nl' l• 1'1 DA i&lt;CF. ~&lt;&gt;II bl'
ht ltl Fr rdd\ nr ~ ht ,11 lhL Rutlrmd
( 1\.14 ll'l1h I fed\Ut Ill ~ Thl'
VrdHlJ..!l T Bdnd Tlw group plt~v s
0

nu ntr \ r 111 k .111d pupulcu musH
J]lt' ddT H t' I ~ Dl)l'!l \0 tJw publit
ctnrlllw ddrnr ~~ ~~~~ ~ pr1uo rs $3 per
per son or $5 d toupk It V!lll be
t

hl'ld florn8 p rr t \P n llllnt g h l

WIDOWF. D DIVORCF.D AND
SINC I F PL' I ~on ~. 21 and ove r
dlt' 111\ 1\L'tl tu &lt;:~llt·nd a u we red
drstl drnnt·r tu bL' hLld Fr u..l 7 p 111
al ihl' H&gt;rit'\ F11 e Hall R&gt;pill
IV V:1

SATURDAY
I J::MPI.I· BEI.I.~ of Columbus
\\Ill be ctl Z1on Fll l'Wlll Haptrst
l hu r d 1 r111 HtlU\t fi82. Lower
Phtrns at 7 .lO ~&lt;t \urda\ In present
.1 \ Olctl pH Jg r a111 Publu. lllVJ\ed
0

HEMLOCK GRANGE w&gt;ll
sponsor a products party at 7 30
MtJnday mght at the hall The
pubhc &gt;S mv&gt;ted

A b&gt;g thank you goes to all persono
who supported Me&gt;gs Band Tag Day
held ApnllO
The money collected w&gt;ll be
d&gt;v&gt;ded equally among the students
who parhc&gt;pated to defray cost!; of
ba nd camp, to be held m Aug ust
On Saturda y, Me&gt;gs Jumor H gh
rnus&gt;c&gt;ans w&gt;ll part&gt;c&gt;pate m Solo
and Ensemble and Contest at Ohw

B~nd

notes

Umvcrs&gt;ty There &gt;s no adJmsswn
charge, so spectators are welcome
to attend and support the muS&gt;c&gt;ans
On Sunda y, the All-County Band
Concert W&gt;ll be held at Eastern H&gt;gh
School at 3 p m AdJmsswn w&gt;ll be $1
for adults a nd 50 cent!; for student!;
Upcormng event!; &gt;nclude a May 13
Band Banquet at 6 30 p m

Fairview News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Russell and Bermce Roush, Herbert and Mary Roush v&gt;s&gt;ted Mrs
Wdrna Anderson at Veterans
Mernonal Hosp&gt;lal Sunday and Monday evemngs
Mrs Ed&gt;th Manuel and Mrs
o;mse Manuel JOined the rorme~'s
s&gt;sters at the Ewmg Funeral Horne

MEIGS COUNTY Churches of
C'lu &gt;st Men's rellowslup w&gt;ll atlt·ml l'l'VIVOI se r VICe S at the
Pornc&gt;ov Church on Monday at
7 30 p rn Dun See,ers &gt;s the
L'\ c111~ehst for the rev rva l wh1ch
1s JHI'v\ 111 pro~re:;.s A short
bus&gt; ness rnceturg w&gt;ll be held
fo\!Pwln g the se r v ice rf
necessary

degree m conductmg, and a bachelor
of llJUSI C degree 111 organ. w1th a
mmor II! vo1ce from the Wcstrnmster
Chmr College m Pr&gt;nceton, N J He
&gt;sa member of the Arnencan Gwld
of Orgamsts, the Chonsters Gwld ,
and the Assoc&gt;atwn of D&gt;sc&gt;ple
Mus iCians
The p&gt;pe mgan has &gt;ecently been
r&lt;'bu&gt;lt by the Peebles-Herzog Organ
Co of Columbus The organ has been
&gt;n the Pomeroy Umted Method&gt;St
Church smce 1954 It ceme to the
present church as a result of a
merger bt'lween the fonner S1rnpson
Method&gt;st and Bethany German
Method&gt;st Churches
The IO&lt;'al church chn11 w&gt;ll pr esenl
an a nthem dunng the reded&gt;cat&gt;On
ser v&gt;ce The) w&gt; ll be d&gt;rected by Ed
Harkl ess
a nd accornp:m1ed by
Bogaards The anthem w&gt;ll be, "Joy
&gt;n the Mornmg ," by Nata he Sleeth

Mr and Mrs. Joe Manuel, son
Tun. Bpent Easter w&gt;th Mr. and Mrs
S&gt;d Manuel at Long Bottom Others
attendmg were Mrs Barb Talbott,
Danny , Dav&gt;d and Donett and
fnend, Harry and Jean Roush.

RIGGS US'ED CARS
q .: OAILY 9 I THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY
CHES1 ER . OHIO

1976 CHM CAPRICE Estate Stationwagon ...... '1895
1975 FORD GRANADA ........................................ '1395
PB , P S, Au t o
1976 AMC MATADOR .......................................... '1295
2 Dr . auto , PB . PS

19n FORD LTD ....'!&gt;.. ..... . ............................ '1795

SYRACUSE A m&gt;Sslonary
scr-v&gt;CC will be held al 6 p m Sun
da) cvenmg al Svr acuse Naza
rene Church
( OUN'I Y-WIDF. pra~e&gt;
Jllt't'tlll J..! Sundd\ 2 p 111 ill Hysell
Hun

Hlllttl DS

Chur t h wtth Glen

R1ssl'll ds Llctss h:c~tl er

( nuragt• others to l et ~o and

Announcements
A St .Judt· hosp1lal resea l ch cente r blkl'-a-thun planned fur Porne1 ov
has been tci!IU.'lll'd due to .J
sdledulul )..! cunfhrt \n th the Ml l)..!s
Counly Ml'nlal Relardalwn b&gt;kL'
h1ke held dnnuctlh
Tlw St Jude r&gt;de "&gt;II be scheduled
for a idlt•r &lt;late puss&gt;bly &gt;n Septelll!Jt: r All rltk r s \\ohu \\l'rt: plan·
11111)..! to pc11 trupate rn the St Jude
brke-(;1-thon e~r e III Vtted to take tn thL
rn enl&lt;J l r t:lc1 J datwn b1 ke-h1ke un Ma\
0

0

MEI(,S CPUIIl\ Ge11ealug rcal
Sol ret) hc~ s l dncell'd 1U:i meeting
scheduled fm Sunoay It has been
resdreduled lor Sund,ry, Apn l 25, al
2 p m D1susswn of the frnane mg of
the repr&gt;nt&gt;n g of Hardesty's and
Lat kul' s tustunes of Me rgs Count v
wdl be d&gt;sc ussed
There rs ct state rneetlng of thL'
Ohw Chapter of the PalatHJate
Souely at the Oluo H&gt;slm &gt;cal
Soe&gt;dy on Apr d 24 from 8 30 a rn to
4 p rn l'he top&gt;c' w&gt;ll be Research
attht• Natwnal Arcluves ' The cost
for the semma&gt; " $10 at the door
w&gt;th an oplwnal fee of $5 for the lunch Ca ll Ke&gt;th Ashle1 at 992-7874 or
June Ashle) at 247-2.144 for tra nsporliitrun ar ret nge rnenU:i

WHY PAY MORE?

havt' a

1978 FORO EXPLORER
W 1lh T o ppe r . A I Cond'
Sta n d 2 tone brown , •••• • •• ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

$3995

~~?n~ -~~~.~..~~~~...................... $1295
SPRING SAVINGS

FRENCH
CITY
RUN .

good tim''

\IRGO I ~ug . 23-Sepl 221 If you ha ve someth&gt;ng unusual to offer,
sw.h as apr od uct or serv1ce, yo ur pos:;Jbllllies for gL'lhng top dollar are
bt&gt;Uer than usual toda y
.l.IBRA &lt;Sept 23-0ct 23i ln order to accmnp hsh your purposes ltlt.iay,
dtJn I be afra &gt;d to be a l&gt; &gt;fie bold or asse rl&gt; ve You'll know how lo behave
" 1\hout ofrcndlll ~

SCORPIO &lt;Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Somethmg long overdue &gt;S about to break
loose and fmall y come your way It co uld hapflCil today. 111 &gt;n the ve ry
ll c tJ r fu ture
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23-Dcr 211 DtJn'l turn down any umtatwns
t1xla) where you rm ght have the opporlumty to make new acquaml&lt;tnces
You make fr JcrH.Js c&lt;:~s rl y cuH.l wrll meet one you'l l like
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan. 191 Pay heed to your hunches toda y m
matters affectmg your career or mcome You could get a sudden Jn:-; pll alron wlm:h wJIJ prove benerJcJal
AQUARIUS I Jan. 2()-Feb. 191 Of all the s&gt;gns, Aqua nus" probably
the most &gt;nvenl&gt;ve Th&gt;s w&gt;ll be true of you today Don't treat hghtly any
rdeds you ge t for products or procedures
PISCES !feb 2()-March 20) You're very capabletoday, and what you
setout tn do you can accmnphsh Even more adrmrable, you' ll not make a
b&gt;g thmg about your ac h&gt;evemenl!;

SCENIC HILLS
NURSING CENTER
536 BUCKRIDGE RD.
GALliPOLIS, OHIO 45631
614-446-7150

CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO

SATURDAY:
MAY 15th
RIVERFRONT PARK
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
SPONSORED BY THE
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
EMPLOYEE RECREATION COMMITTEE
AND THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
'

!

9:00A.M. '
5,000 Meters (3.1 mi.)

10:00 A.M.
.10,000 Meters (6.2 mi.l

PRE-REGISTRATION FEE $4

I

10:15 A.M.
Dinosaur Dash (1 Milel

DAY OF RACE REGISTRATION $5

All Pre-Registration Entries must be purchased no later than Midnight May 8th. All Pre-Registrations are guaranteed aT-shirt.

*Awards will be grven to
the first two male and
lema le finrshers 10 both
the 5,000 meter and
10,000 meter races.
Awards will be grven to
the first male and
female finisher rn each
age group.

• Age Groups for 5,000
meter and 10,000 meter
races;
11 &amp; Under 12· 16 17: ·, 21-25 26-30 31-35 3640 41-45 46-50 51 -55 S6
&amp; Over
*Awards wiH be given
out after the completion
of the 10,000 meter race.

•course rs flat and on
city streets through
scenrc Gallipolis.
•come dressed to run .
Shower and dressrng
facilitres
are not
available. Restrooms
are available.

ATTEND THEIR OPEN HOUSE
P215/ 75B -14
P225/75B -14
P215/75B -15
P225/75B-15
P235/75 B-15

44 .95
42.95
44 .95
46 .95

•P M etnc stllng
•Duro1blc l ull·w1dth fiberg lass
b ell construction

Yes, We Mount and
Balance FREE .
' ,I

!

'GENERAL
TIRE
SALES
PH . 992-7161
N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport

ON SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1982,

2:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. COME
AND SEE A NEW CONCEPT IN
NURSING HOME CARE.

NAty\E : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ MALE (
FEMALE (
ADDRESS:
AGE AS OF S/15/ 82 _ __
RACE: 5,000 meter ( ) I 10,000 meter ( ) I 1 mile ( )
T .-SHIRT' SIZE : S M L XL
In submitting this entry to participate in the HMCiOVP French City Run, 1
waive a.nd release any and all rights to claims for damages, demands and ac,
tions I may have against the Holzer Hospital Foundation dba/Holzer Medical
Center and The Ohio Valley Publishing Company. I attest that 1 am physically
fit, that I have sufficiently trained for my participation in this event, and that my
physical cond,ition has been verified by a physician.
Signature of Entrant

a!'

j
,'

I{

1•

99'2 2318 Pom e ro y

Savin~

Parental Signature if Ef!trant under age of 18

Return entry to: Ms. Beverly Jackson, Medical Library
Holzer Medical Center, P. 0. Box 280
Gallipolis, Q~io 45631
'

.

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

&amp;

RACINE PlANING MIU.
~~~ ·
Mtll Work
Cabmet Makmg

i

.-ling, 7.00 p.m. Prayer nleellng,

Wednes dov, 7 J&gt;.m.
r UNITI:D PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
'Mj;IGS COUNTY , Rev. Wonda Johnson,
director; Harald Johnson, dlreclor of
education .
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN , Worship 5ervlce, 9 a.m.; Church School,

' '

Wednesday
luke
24 36 49

John F Fultz , Mgr
Ph 992 2101 •
Pomeroy

20 19 29

Thursday
John

Fnday

l

992 3785 , Pomeroy

SYR ACUSE
FIRS T
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church Chur&lt;h School.
10 I S a m mormn g worsh1p 1 I 30 o
m B1bte Study Tu esday 10om Ju111 01
and Sentor H1 gh Youth Group Sunday b
pm
RUTLAND CHUR CH OF GOD Posto 1
Rev John Evom Sunday sc hoo l 10
am
Sunday
worsh1p
lI
a m
Chtldren s church
II am
Sunday
eve nmg servtce 7 00 p m Wednesday
eve ntng young tad1 es auxd tary 6 p m
Wednesday lomdy wo r sh1p 7 00 p m
HAZEL COMM UNIT Y CHURC!:i N ea r
long Bottom Edsel Horl pas l or Sun day
sc hool 10 a m
Chu rch 7 30 p m
prayer meet1ng 7 30 p m Thu rs day
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTI ST Co t
ner Ash and Plum l es li e Haymon
pastor Bob Grubb oss •stont po s1o1
Sunday School I 0 a m Mornmg Wo1
shtp II a m Wednesday and Sa t urday
Evenmg Serv1ces 7 30 p m
ME&gt;G &gt;
COOPERA TI VE PARI SH
METHODIS T CHURCH
Rev Robert McGee
1ntenm dt rector
POMEROY CLU STER
Rev Robert McGee
POMEROY Su nday School 9 IS o m
Wor shtp servtce 10 30 a m
Cho r
rehearsal Wednesday
7 p m
Re.,.
Rober! McGee pastor
ENTERPR ISE Worsh1p q a m Chur ch
School 10 a m
R•chard Rot h em•c h
po~ l o r

ROCK SPRINGS Su nday Sc hoo l 9 15 a
m Worshtp servtce 10 o m R1 chor d
Rothemtch pastor
FlATWOODS Chur ch Sc hool 10 om
Worshtp 11 a m
R1chard Rot h em1ch
p&lt;lStor
MIDDLEPORT CLU STER
HEATH Church Schoo l 9 30 a m War
shtp 10 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robtnson Pa sto r
RUTLAND Church Sc h oo l 9 30 a m
Worsh1p 10 30 a m Robert Rtder pa stor
SALEM CENTER Worshtp 9 a m Chu r
ch School 9 45 a m Robert R1der posto 1
PEARL CHAPEL Sunday School 9 30
a m Warshtp 7 30 p m
SNOWVILLE Sunday Sc hpo l 9 30 o m
Worsh1p 11 00 a m

SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Stanley Memh ed Mull s fer
' FOREST RUN Warsh1p 9 o m Chur ch
SchoollO am
MINERSVI llE ChtJrch Sc hoo l 9 a m
Worsh1p 10 a m
ASBURY Chu rch Sc hoo l 9 50 a m
Wor shtp II a m Brbl e Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMW ft stTu esdoy
SO UTHERN CLU STER
Rev James Clark
Rev Mark Fl ynn
Rev Florence Smt ih
Rev Cod H•cks
BETHANY
{Dorcas ) Wors h• p 9 00
a m Church School I 0 00 a m B1ble
study lsi 2nd 3rd and Stll Tu esdays
7 IS p m youth f ell ows h•p 2nd and 4th
Tuesdoys 6 00 p m
CARMEL and SUTTON (Wor sh1p Sun
day School and most other even ts he ld
1o•ntty ) Sunday School 9 45 ond Worsh1p
II 00 ot Sutton ftr st and tlltrd Sun day s
and at Carme l second and fourth Son
days Btble Study second fou rtll and l1f
th Thursdays 7 15 p m Fom•ty Ntght
Fellowsh1p Dtnner th1rd Thursday 6 30
pm
APPLE GROVE Sunday Schoo l 9 30
am Worship 7 30 p m I sta nd 3rd Sun
days Prayer meeting "(iednesdoy 7 30
p m Fellowshtp supper ftrst Sa turday 6
pm UMW2ndluesdoy 730pm
EAST lETART . Church Sc hoo l 9 am
Worsh1p serv1ce 10 a m Prayer mee tmg
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 1 30 p m
RACINE WESLEYAN - Su nda y sc hool
10 a m worship II a m Chotr proc t• ce
Thursday 6 p m
lET ART FALLSWors l·u p serv tc e 9
o m Church Schoo l 10 a m
MORNING STAR Worsh•p 9 30 om
Church SchoollO 30 a m
MORSE CHAPEL Church Sc hoo l 9 30
om Worshtpll am
PORTLAND Sunday School 6 30 p m
henmg Worshtp 7 30 p m
Youth
Fellowship Wednesday 7 30 p m
NORTHEAST ClUSTER
Rev R•chord W Thomas
Duane Sydenstncker Sr
She ldon Johnson
John W Douglas
JOPPA Wonh1p 9 00 a m Church
School 10 00 o m
CHESTER Worsh1p 9 o m
Church
Schoo l 10 o m Cho ir Rehearsal 7 p m
lhursdays Btbkt Study , Thursdays
730pm
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School or 9 30
a m Evenmg Worshtp at 1 30 p m Thur
sdoy B1ble Sludy, 1 30 p m
REEDSVILLE Su nday School 9 30 a m
Morning Worshtp 10 30 a m Evenmg
Warshp 1 30 p m Bible Srudy Wed:
nndoys al7 30 p m
AlFitED, Sunday School at 9 45 a m
Mornmg Worshtp at 11 om Youth 6 30
p.m Sundays Wednes&amp;y Ntght Prayer
Meellng, 7 30 p m
ST PAUL , (Tuppers Plams) Sunday
School 9.00 a m Morning Worshtp at
10:00 a m 81ble Study 1 30 p m
Tuesdav
KENO CHURCH OF CHRtST . om•• ,
Swain , Superintendent . Sunday school

,

9·30 ovory week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , Sunday
School, 9 30 a m , evening service 7 30
p.m. Wedne1doy prayer mHftng , 1 30
pm
l,

F tn cs t 10
Sec tt onat
Modular Hom es
Pomeroy, 11 00 E Matn

&amp;

" For A Reat Auc t ton
.. ca n the Real McCoy "
t 0 " Mac " McCoy
Rt 1. Reedsvt ll e, Oh
985 3944

M1ddteport
Pomeroy, 0

RIVER VIEW
When you re grow1ng up hand·me-downs a1e a
way of hie Beller a hand me-down umbrella than
none al all Exceplthat w1lh a gus\ of w1nd thts young
lady tS hkely to have noth1ng but a handle
There s ooe area of hie where a hand me down •s
allen the best there IS That IS re1tg1on
An earnesl reltgtous 1811h passed on by parent:s to
the1r chtldren begins early the essent1al bUIId•ng ol
character and conv1chon
But the rel•g•ous !81th you are handing down to
your chtldren ought to be sound lull at vitality 1n
worlfmg candt!lan

Th1s 1s one of the most,mponantlunciiOns ot our
churches They help whole fam11!es to grow spmlual
ly
to hold and pract1ce rehg1ous conv1cttons wonh
Sh8flflQ

{;()pynljro! 1982 Ke•tlllf AOvllftlll!llg ServiCe
P 0 Bo• 8024 Cllarlone•~•lte v..g.,.,.. 12906
ond Sunday E... enmg Worsh1p 6 p m
B1b te Study Wednesday l p m
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTI ST Rev Mar
vtn Modu n pas l or Steve Ltllte Sunday
sc hool wp t Sunday &lt;,c hoot 10 am
morn •ng wor~htp
II am
Sunday
evenmg wors htp l 30 Prayer me el •n g
and Htbl e sl udy Thu rsday 7 30 p m
youth &lt;,erv•ce b p m Sunday
CHR ISTIAN FEllOWSHIP CH URC H 383
N 2nd Av e M1ddteport Sunday Sc hool
10 OOo m Sun Wed Evenmg S e rv o ce~
l30pmpm
LIB ERfY Chm t1 an Ch01ch 4 l•berty
Av e Pomeroy Sunday Schoo l 10 am
W o r ~ h•p 7 30 WadnC' sdoy Servt ce 7 30
pm
CHES TER CHUR CH OF GOO Rev R E
Rob mson pa stor Su nday sc hool 9 30
o m wor sh• p se rv•cP I I n m even1ng
se rv•ce
I 00
youth &lt;,e rv1 ce
Wed
nesdoy 7 00 p m
LAN GW lllE
CHRI STIA N
CHURCH
Ro ber! E Mu sser pa slor Sun day sc hool
9 30 a m PotJt Mus ser su p! morn1ng
worsh •p 10 30 Su nday even m g servtc e
7 ()() m•d week ~ erviCe Wedne~d oy 7
pm
SY RACUSE
L H URCH
OF
THE
N AZARE NE
Rev
James B K111te
poslor Nor man Pre ~ l ey Sunday Sc ho o l
Super mt enden t
Su nday sc hool 9 30
am
mornmg wor-.. h1p
t O 45 om
ev onge lt st •c serv tce 7 p m Pray er and
Prm se Wednesday
7 p m
you th
meet1ng l p m
Em ~ UNifEO BRETHREN IN CHRI ST
Etdpn R Blok e pa s tor Sunday Sc hool
I 0 a m Rober t Reed sup!
Morn •ng
se&gt; rmon I I o m Sunday ntght 5e rv1 ces
( hrt ~ l on End eavor
l 30 p m
Song
~e rv1 ce
8 p rn
Preorh ng 8 30 p 111
M1dweek Prayer mee t1 ng 'Wednesday
7 p rn Al .,. tn Reed loy leader
CHUIK H O F JESUS LHR !S I l oc o ted
ot Ru11ond on New luna Rood ne 111 10
Fore st Acre Park Re v Ray Cle ve nge1
pa ~ tor
Rober t Mu sse1 Su nday '::tc hoo l
su p! Su nday H hoo l •0 30 om wa r
&lt;;h op I 30 p m B1b te Stud y Wed neo,doy
I :.tO p m
)oJ urdoy n•gh J p1oye&lt; o,er
VI Ce 7 30p m

SY RACUSE M ISSION
Cheny St
Serv•ces 10 am Sunday Even• ng se 1
vtees Sunday on d Wedneo,doy at 7 00
pm
BEA RWALLOW RIOvE CHURCH O F
CHRI ST Ouone Worden mm1s 1er Btbt e
clo ~s Q 30 o m mor ntng wors h•p 10 30
a m even1ng worsh1p b 30 p m Wed
ne sdoy B1ble stud y b 30 p m
NEWS TlVERSVIll~ COMMUNI fY ( h ur
ch Su nday Srhoot o;~rvi(P q 45 a m
Wor sh1 p se rv1ce 10 30 Evanget•s?• c Se•
v•ce
7 30 p m
Wednesday Pr ayer
mee t•ng l 30
ZIO N CHUR CH OF CHRI ST Pom e roy
Ham ~o nvdle Rd
Robert Purt etl posto1
Bill McElroy Sun da y sc hoo l StJpt Sunday
sc hool 9 30 D m worsh •p se rv• ce 10 30
a m SundO) wor ~ h1p se rvtce I 30 p m
Monday and Tue sday e ... enmg se rvt ces
7 30 each evenmg
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH P.r1 e
Grove Th e Rev Wdhom M1ddteswor th
Pa sto r Lhurch se r v1ces 9 30 a m Sun
day Schoo l I 0 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Je rry
P1ngl ey pa stor Sunday sc hoo l 9 30
am
morn1ng worsh1 p 10 30 a m
Wedne~doy even1ng serv1ce 7 JO
ANTIQUIT Y BAPTI S1 Rev Earl Shu ler
past or Su nday sc h oo l 9 30 a m Church
~ e r vt ce
I p m
you t h meet1ng
b
p m Tue sday B1ble SttJdy 7 p m
RACINE CHURC H OF THE NAZARE NE
Rev Thomas H Collier pas tor Martha
Wo ll e
Cho •rmon o f the Boord o f
Chm tmn Ld e Sunday School 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh1p 10 30 Sunday even.ng
wors h• p 7 30 p m Prayer mee tm g
Wednesday l 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Don l Walk er
Pa sto r Rober t Sm llh Sunday sc h oo l
sup ! Su nday sc hool 9 30 a m morn.r1g
wors h•p 10 40 a m
Sunday evenmg
wors h•p I 30 Wedne~doy even1ng B1bt e
~ tudy 7 30
Rev R 0
DANVILLE WESlEYAN
Brown pa~tor
Sunday Schoo l 9 30
a m morntng worshtp 10 45 youth se r
v1ce b 45 p m evenmg wo r ~ h t p I 30
p m proy e1 and prm ~e Wed nes d ay
7 30p m
SOUTH BETHEL (S1t .,.er R1dge) Du an e
Sydens tr 1cke1
Sr
po st o1
Sunday
Schoo l q o m
Morn• ng Wors h•p 10
am Youth Serv1ce Sunday at 6 p m

HEMl OCK G RO V~ CHRISTI AN Roger
Wa tson po slor Cren son Pratt S.unday
sc hool su pt Mornmg wor sh1p 9 30 a m
Sunday school 10 30 a m evenmg ser
VICe 7 30

Team finds new church ties
NEW YORK (AP) -After years
of. sizing up each other's beliefs, an
o!ftclal International team of Roman Catholics and Anglicans says
It has found agreement on the basts
for new ties between the two
churches
But whal the institutions wtll do
about It remains the btg question
To a stJiklng extent, the new ac
cord Issued this week ts a super
charged document, the first of Its
scope in the history of Christian div·
tslons, proposing a way through the
old obstacles.
The experts, who for 16 years
have probed, analyzed and become
directly acquainted with each
side's concepts, report concurrence
on the major points. including thai
old hurdle, the role of the pope.
The sweeping conclusions had
been handed to church adminlstrators, and the next move was up to
them. Their initial reactions, both
in Rome and Canterbury. were typ.
ically cautious and hesitant.
"That's the kind of thing you'd
expect at this stage," says the Rev
John F. Hotchkin of Washlngton,
D.C., the ecumenical officer tor
U.S. Roman Catholic bisllops. "But
the two churches now will have to
deal with It."
As tor the joint cornmtssion, it offered unananlmous agreement on
the operational framework for
overromlng past barrters and lor
establlshing a "new relationship"
between :the two global churches.
Episcopal Church Bishop Arthur

\

A Vogel of Kansas City, Mo , one of
10 Anglicans on the 20-member
jotnl team, says It resolved the
issues of the 16th century break between Rome and other western
churches.
"We found those causes no longer
were adequate reasons for division,
that there ts sutticient agreement
for mutual recognition and a
shared sacramental lite," he said in
a telephone inter-view.
"The basts for unity ts there,
yes," sai9 Vogel, whose Episcopal
Church ls the U.S. branch of the
world-wide Anglican communion.
"But It will be achieved only by living together "
Hotcllfdn said time is needed to
clarity PeoPle's questions, to adjust
to differing tenn)nology for concepts used by the world's T.!O million Roman Catholics and 66
million Anglicans, to build trust.
At the Vatican, the head of the
doctrinal offlce, Cardinal Joseph
Ratzlnger, -commented that the
agreement was not "truly substantial" for all the "totality of
questions."
But he said it nevertheless "constitutes a significant step toward
reconcillatlon."
In London, the Anglican primate,
Archbishop 'of Canterbury Robert
Runcle, said people sbould not
"leap to the conclusion" the report
bas been accepted. But he added "It
is an impressive attempt..for a way
out of our unChr1stlan dlv!slons."

461 S Th 1rd , M tdd lep ort
9977196

"!'

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Mtddleport, Ohto

QK~~;::.s

Th e

AciS
I I II

BEN

992 3978

TRINIT Y CHURCH Rev W H Perrtn
pastor Oebb1e Bock Sunday schoo l
!;upt Church School 9 I S a m worsh'F
serv1ce 10 30 a m Chotr re h eorso
Tuesday 7 30 p m under dtr ec t1 0n o f
Alice Nease
POMEROY
CHUR CH OF
THE
NAZARENE Corner Un mn and Mulberry
Rev Vtrg 1l Byrer pa sto r G len M cC lun g
osst pastor Clyde Hende rson po slor
ementus Sunday Sc h oo l 9 30 a m
Glen McClung sup! m ornmg wors h1p
10 30 a m e ventng serviCe 7 00 mtd
week ser v1ce Wednesday 7 00 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E
Motn St Pomeroy Su nday serv1 ces or
10 30 am Ho ly Commumon on th e f1rs f
Su nday ol each month and co mbtned
wtth mo rnmg prayer on the tht rd Su n
day Mornmg projer and ser mon on all
other Sundays a the m onth Chu rc h
Sc hoo l and nu rsery core provtded Co t
fee hour 1n the Po11sh Hall •mmed •ol ely
toltowtng the !;e rv•ce
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 2 &gt;2 W
Mo•n St Ned Proudfoot pastor Btbl e
mornmg worshtp
school 9 30 a m
10 30om You th meetmgs 6 30 p m
even 1ng wors htp 7 30 Wednesday mght
prayer meet1ng and B1bte study 7 30
pm
THE SALVA TIO N ARMY 11 5 Butternut
Ave
Pomeroy Envoy and Mr s Roy
Wtnmg otf1 ce rs tn charge
Su nday
hohness meeftng
10 a m
Su nday
Sc hool 10 30 a m Sunday schoo l leader
YPSM
Elot se Adams
7 30
p m
sol votton mee ttng . vo n ous speak ers and
mus tc spec tols fhursday - 10 a m to 2
p m Lodr es Home l eagu e all wom en m
v1ted 7 30 p m prayer meehng and
B1ble study Rev Noe l Hermon teacher
BURUNG TON SOUTHERN
BAPTI ST
CHAPEL Route I Shade Btbl e sc hool 7
p m Thursday worshtp se rv1ce 8 p m
POMEROY WE STSIDE CHUR CH OF
CH.RI ST 100 W Mo tn St 992 5235 Vocal
mustc Sunday worsh•p 10 a m
B1ble
study 11 a m worshtp 6 p m Wed
nesdoy Btbl e study 7 p m
OLD DE XTER BIBLE CHRI STIAN CHUR
CH Rev Rolph Smtih pa stor Sunday
sc hool 9 30 o m Mn Worley Fron os
s uper~nt end e nt Preachmg se rv 1ces flfst
and tturd Sunday s follo w mg Sunday
School
GRAHAM
UNIT ED
METHODIST
Preochtng 9 30 a m hrst and seco nd
Sundays of each month thtrd and fourth
Sundays each month worshtp se rv 1ce at
7 30 p m Wednesday even•ngs ot 7 30
Prayer and Btbl e Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulberry
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor ~lbert
Otttes Sabbath School Super mtenden l
R1to Wh1te Sabbath Sc hool Saturday of
ternoon at 2 00 w1th Worsh1p Ser viCe
lollowmg at 3 IS
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHStsler Harrtefl Worner Supt Sunday
School q 30 a m
morn1ng wors htp
1045om
POMEROY FIR ST BAPTI ST
Dov.d
Mann M1n1 ster Wdt.om Snouffer Sun
day school sop! Sunday schoo l q 30
a m mornmg worshrp 10 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST
2B2
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy Rev Wdho m
R Newman rostor Hersllel McClure
Sunday schoo supe rmt endent Sunday
school 9 30 a m
morntng worst11p
10 30 evenmg wor~h 1p 7 30 p m Mtd
week prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CH URCH De•
fer Rd
Rd
langsv ille Rev A A
Hughes Pastor Sunday Sc hoo l 10 o m
Serv 1ces on Tuesday Thursday and Sun
doy 730pm
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Ba•l ey
Run Rood Rev Emmell Rowson pastor
Handley Dunn sup! Sunday school I 0
a m Sunday even•ng serv tce 7 30. Btble
teach mg . 7 30f m Thursday
MIDDlEPOR CHURCH OF CHR IST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Lawrence Manley
pastor Mrs Russe ll Young Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Evemng worshtp
7 30
Wednesday
prayer meetrng 7:30p. m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Roctne- Rev James Satterfield pastor
Morntng worsh1p 9 45 a '!1 , Sunday
school 10 45 o m evemng worshtp 7
Tuesday 1 30 p m
la€1tes prayer
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIOOlEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Cor~er
Stxth dnd Palmer . the Rev Mark Me ·
Clung Sunday school 9 1S a m
Dan
Wh1te Sunday School supenntendent
John Re1bel Sr osst supt Moinlng
WorShip 10 15 a m Youth meetmg 7 30
p m Wednesday , tncludlng wee tots
eager beavers , 1unlor astronauts and
jUntor and semor htgh BYF,. cho1r proc·
t1ce 8 30 p m Wednes doy prayer
meellng and Btble study , Wednesday .
7&lt;10p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST Middleport 5th
and Ma1n , Bob Melton , mlntster , Scott
Saltsman, associate
mtnister Bible
School. q 30 a m., morning worship ,
10 30 o m .. evening service, 7:00 p m
Wednes day Btble Study and youth group
meetlngt. 7:00f.m
'
MIDOlEPOR • CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev Jim Broome , pastor ,
Bill White. Sun day school supt Sunday
school , 9.30 o .m, morning worship,
10;30 a .m. , Sunday evangelistic

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

'J..FRANKUN•

FoPmf!r lv A th e n ~ Cou nty
S olvtn~~ &amp; lo.l n
216 E Mam
Pomeroy
992 6655

716 ~ Secon d
Pom er oy
9'17 ]]1~

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

24 1 12

Tuesday
luke
24 13 32

RALL'S

Loan Co.

10:30a. m.

Monday
Luke

992 5130 Pom eroy

Syracu se

Aprrl17, t982
NnrmcJJh ynu don't gL't overly exc1tet.J about beci)J rung mvolved rn
porlnersh&gt;ps, but th&gt;S cormng year you may de i&gt; berately set out lo
t•slabll sh two Importan t ones Rnth wil l \l.urk out Cjdvanlageously
AR IES &lt;Marrh 21-April 19 1 Try lo spend lune loday w&gt;th act&gt; ve
peopk who stnnulate your lhrnkrng and encourage you to ex pand your
honwns You'll rt•spnnd tn vuod ad v tce
TAURUS ( Aprrl 26-May 201 Be ale rt for a prof&gt;tably development
todcJ) wh rr h "'II enabil' you to get a grea ter return rrom smnethmg 111
\\h rch you ' rL' til ready mvulved
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Germms an• know n for the1r ab&gt; hly to
ruake qwck dec&gt;swns and th&gt;s quahty " i&gt;kely to be ernphas&gt;zed even
1110\L' so tuJa y Tt ust yo ur JUdgment
CANCER I Junt• 21-July 221 Toda y you are hkely to be more g&gt;fted at
sulvmg prublems for others than you may bt• rn handlrng your own affcurs Help where you can
LEO (July 23-Aug 22 1Soc&gt;al gatherrngs won't have a chance of being
dull llll&lt;'t' you're on the srenc today . You're the ratalys t who will en-

Sundav il l l hf' fuchouse

Nahonwrde Ins . Co.

SION 7nd
Mtdd l eport
991 345'

Sunday
Manhew
26 1-8

214 E. M a m

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

1975 OLDS OMEGA ...................................... '695

Astrograph

POMEROY "'&gt;rc Depar1men1
w&gt; ll ha1e a ch&gt;cken barbeque

J

Diamond

2 DR HT , Auto , PB. PS

Pomeroy

SERVICES

Rutland, Oh1o 45775
Wm " B•II" Brown , Own er
PhOn e (6141 742 2777

4 dr PB PS Arr

1975 AMC MATADOR ...................................'895

287W Ma 1n
Pomeroy
991 9961

Presc npt.on s

992-2955

Sales and
Serv•ce

1976 PLYMOUTH FURY ................................ '1695
2 Or HT Auto Run s qood

~

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTERS

~~~~~~! ~·

;:
- .

804 W Ma•n

0

MI :IGS-MASON G11 Is' Snflb&lt;&gt;ll
A ssnuc~l1m1 Sum!,!\ dt 2 30 p m
r~t Hu\al Cruv.n bUJld1ng , Mu.J( llilt Ill's
and-or
dlt·por I
n·rn·esent.rll\ L'S t1f talh karn and
lt•rtJ..! lll' siHiu ld be pnosent

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Brown's Fire &amp; Safety
Brogan-Warner
Equipment
~
INSURANCE

2dr , HT , Au to, PB . P S. Arr

Pomeroy, Oh .
Phone 992-2975

SUNDAY

Comp&gt;ere

Automotive
Serv•ce
LOCU S\&amp; Beech Sfreet
992 9921 Middleport

of Co lumbu s, 0

19n FORD PINTO RUNABOUT ......................'1895

WINDING TRA IL Garden
Club Monday. 5 p rn at !he Ohw
HF. VIVAL SERV ICF.S at thl'
Power Co parkmg lot for a
Mt Herm.tn U11 r\L d Br eU11 en ,___s_P_"_n_g_t_o_u_r_________--1
Bogaards
Church Th""'"' Brothers "&gt;II be
.---------------------------~
s lll~Jng Sundct v mght

This Message and Church Directory Sp?nsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

Auto. PB, P S, A 1r , good co nd

2 Dr , Auto , PB, PS

SALES
&amp; SERVICE
20t. Condor St.

OR

to pay respects to Mrs. Inez Randolph a nd V&gt;S&gt;ted the fam&gt;ly

EU.IS &amp; SONS SOHIO

Rededication, recital planned
A service P' rededicatiOn a nd a n
organ rec&gt;lal w&gt;ll be o&gt;eld at
Pomeroy Umted Metho&lt;hst Church
on Sund-1y at 4 p •n Don Bogaards of
Columbus w&gt;il be the orgamst for
th1s serv1ce
Bogaards &gt;s oUperv&gt;sor of the
rnus&gt;e' llepartrnent at the Augsbw
Pubhshmg Houoe m Colum bus He "
also d&gt;rector of mus&gt; c at the L&gt;nworth Um ted Method&gt;st Church, and
has held several rn us.c workshops m
our area
Bogaa rds has a master of mus.c

Pomeroy- M&gt;ddleport, Ohro

jFriclay, Apil 16, 198'2

Mlddlepc:rt, Ohio

fE)
Ph 992-2551
786 N 2nd St
Middl eport, Oh
M T UNION BAPTI ST
Rev
Tom
Dooley
Joe Sayre
Sunday School
Sunday &lt;,c hool
Q 4~
Super• ntene nl
om eve ntng wor-. h•p 7 30 p m Pra y£'•
rneet1ng I 30 p m Wednesday
1UPP~RS PlAIN S CHUR CH OF CHR IS I
Vmren t C Wa t e r ~ Ill m1n ste1 Henn on
Blo ck ~ uper~ntendent Sunday Sc hool
Q 30 a m even•ng &lt;,erv •ce I p m Wed
nesdoy B1bl e Study 7 p m
L HE SI ER CHURCH O F TH~ NA ZA RENl
Rr&gt;v Herber t G rot e po stal honk R til e
supl Sunday Sc hoo l q 30 a rn W01 sh•p
~f'fv • ce I I o m and 7 30 p m ProyC'r
mee t• ng Wedne&lt;,doy 7 30 p m
LAUREL CliFF FREE ME fHOOI SI CHUR
CH Re.,. Robe r I Mdler pa stor Ll oyd
Wrtgh l Dt~ec i OI of Ch1r~ t•o n Edu calt on
Sunday Sc hool q 30 a m Morn rng Wo1
~ h •p 10 30 a m
Cho 11 Proct• ce Su n
day b 30 p rn Even•ng Woro; h1p I JU
p m Wednesday Pr oye1 and Btbte Stud y
I 30 p m
O~XllR CHURlH O f CH RI S! Lh orl e.,
Rus sell S1 mlntSler Rtc l&gt;. Macom b er
supl Sunday &lt;,Choo l q 30om w oro, htp
serv•ce 10 30 am B•bte Study Tu Po,doy
I JOp m
RI:: O RCA Nilt:D L HUR CH O f J\ SU'&gt;
( HR IST OF LATTER DAY SA INT S Par
ttand Ra c•ne Rood
Wdltoon Rou&lt;, h
pa ~ t o r Londo Ev om chur ch ~c h ool d ~r ec
tor Chur ch sc hoo l Q 30om mornrng
w o • shop
I 0 30 o rn
Wedne sday
e ... en1ng prayer ~e r v t ces I 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPil S.1 Rev ~o1l ShuiC'r
pa st a• Wor &lt;. h• r ~e r .,.1ce 9 30 o m Sun
day schoo l 10 30 am B1 bte Study anci
prayer &gt;e r viCE.' Thur sday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH Ktng ~bury Rood
J•mm• e Evans pas tor Sunday sc hoo l
q 30 o m Rolph Call super rntenden t
7 30 p m
Praye r
even1 ng wor shrp
mee Jmg Wednesday 7 30 p m
LO NG BOTTOM CH RI STIAN
Tom
R1ch oson po s10 1 Wa l lace Damewood
Sunday Sc hool Superintendent Wor sh 1p
ser vtce at q a m B•ble Sc hool tOo m
HY SEL L RUN HO LINE SS CHU RCH Rev
Theron Durham po ~ t o r Su nday Sc hool
at 9 30om M orn1ng wor~h1p a ! 10 30
a m Thur sday ~ erv1ces at 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a t Batd
Knob located on Lou nty Rood 31 Re v
Lawrence G lu e~encomp pa stor Rev
Roger Wd tl ooss•'&gt;tont pastor Preoch •ng
se rv 1 ce~
StJ ndoy 7 30 p m
p1ayPr
mee t tng WC'dn es doy J 30 p m Gory
G 11Htth teo de You th groups Sunday
eve•ng 6 30 p m w1 th Roge1 and \J ote t
Wil lf o rd a~ leade r'&gt; Commun on &lt;,er
v • ce~ lor st Su nday each mon th
WHIT ES CHAPEl Cootv ,lt e RD Re v
Roy Deete1 pa stor Su nda y sc hoo l q 30
am worsh1p ser vtce 10 30om Brbl e
o;, tudy and pro ye1 se r vtCe Wedne ~ do y
7 30p m
RUTLAND CHU RCH OF CHR IST Eugen e
Underwood pa stor Herb EI I10II Sunda y
sc hoo l supt Su nday ~c h oot Q 30 o m
mornmg w or sh•p and comun 1on 10 30
am
RU f LANO BIBLE ME THOOI ST CHUR CH
Amos 1 ilt1 ~ po5tor Danny Tilt1 ~ Sund ay
School Sup t Sunday ,'::tchool 9 30om
l ottowed by mornmg wor &lt;, htp Sunday
even •n g ser v•ce
7 00 p m
P10y er
mee tmg Wednesday 7 00 p m
RUTLAND
CHUR CH
OF
IHI::
NAZARENE Rev Lloyd 0 Gr •mm Jr
pa~ t o r Sunday ~c h oo t q 30 a m
wor
sh1p servi Ce tO 30 am young peopl es
~ e r v 1 c e 6 p m Evongelo 5hc ser .... •ce b 30
p m Wednes day se rv•ce 1 00 p m
FIRST SOU TH ER N BAPTIST Corne1 o l
Second Pa stor Fronl&lt;. Low th er Sunday
school Q 45 a m wor ~ h·p servtce l l
a m and 7 30 p m Weekly 81bl e Study
Wednesda y 7 30 p m
MA SON CHU RCH OF CHRI ST M•lt er
Sl • Mason W Vo Eu gene l Conger
mmr sfer Sunday B1ble Study 10 o m
Wor shtp I t a m and 7 p m Wed n e~doy
B1bl e Stu dy voc al mus •c 7 p m
UFE SCI ENCE CHURC H
12 Nor th
Thlfd St Che sh1 re Independ en t tu n
domentol serv 1ces Sunday even1ng 7 30
p m Pas l or Rev Or Ro bert Per so n s
MASON A SSE MBLY OF GOO Dudd1ng
lone Ma son W Vo Rev Ron n• e H
Rose Pastor Sunday Sc hool 9 45 a m
Mor nmg Wor sh1p 11 a m Even •n g Ser
vtce 7 30 p m Wednesda y Wom en '
Mlntstnes 9 a m {meetmg and pr ayer
Pray er ond Btbl e Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHUR CH OF CHRI ST IN
CHRI ST IAN UNI ON The Rev W&lt;lilom
Campbe ll pastor Sunday School Q 30
am Jam es Hughes supt even1ng se r
vrce 7 30 p m Wednesday even1ng
prayer meeting 7 30 p m Yout h prayer
serv •ce each Tuesdoy
FA IRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart W
Vo Rt I Mark lrw m pastor Worsh 1p
serv tces 9 30 a m Sunday sc hool 11
o m
evemng worsh• p
7 30 p m
Tuesday co ttage prayer meetmg and
Btble study 9 30 am Worshtp serv iCe
Wednesday 7 30 p m
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH
Walnut and Henry Sts Raven swood W
Vo The Rev George C Wetnck pasto r
Sunday School 9 30 o m Sunday wor
shtp I 1 am
CAL VARY BIBLE CHURCH now taco ted
on Pomeroy P•ke County Rood 25 near
Flatwood s Rev Blackwood pastor Ser
v1ces on Su nday at 10 30om and 7 30
p m wtth Sunday school 9 30 a m B•bte
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CH URCH
INC Pearl St
M1ddleport Rev
0 Dell Manl ey pastor Sunday sc hoo l
9 30om M o rntng worshtp 10 30 a m
evenmg worshrp 7 30 p m Tuesday.
12 30 p m Women s prayer m eettng
Prayer and prmse serv1ce Wednesday
730pm

MARK V SlOREMiddleport ._-~ .
Phone 992 -3480

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE
G r oce r, e&lt;,Ge n er,l l Merch.1 nd1 se
f.?.1cme 949 HSO

RUTLAND APO STOli C CHUR CH OF
JE SU'!&gt; CHRI ST Elder Jame s Miller B•bte
... rudy Wedne~doy 7 30 p 1n
Sun day
'-lc hool 10 am StJn doy n1gh t serv1ce
130 p m
P O ME~ OY WESLEYAN HOLI NE SS
Ho'' '"orwdle Rood Eo1 t Ftetds past or
Henry ~ bltn Jr
Sunday School Su p!
S.,ndoy ~(hool Q 30 a rn Morn mg War
• '11p I I o rn )un doy even1ng ser viCe
I JO rn P1oye1 Mee l •ng Thursday 7 30
pm
SYWA CUSF fl l? ') I CHURCH OF GOO
No t P en t eco~ ta t Re.,. George Ode r
pa stor War ~ h •p ~e • v•c e Sunda y q 45
a rn Sunday ~chool II o m worsh •p
~er ... •ce
I 30 p m
ThtJr sdoy prayer
mee l mq r 30 p rn
Ml YHERMO N Un•1ed Br eTh'l&amp;r1"11 1
Ch1oS ! ( hul t h Re.,. Robe1t Sond e&lt;,
pm t01 DDn W II loy leode• l oca ted •n
l e• o ~ Co mmundy oH CR 87 Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 a m Morn ng worship se r
~•ce 10 45 a m even• ng pr~ochmg ~e r
~•(e second and tou1 th Sun day ~
7 30
p 1T1 Ch11 stoon Eno£:&gt;ovor l ust and th 1d
Sunda y ~ I 30 p m Wedne.-.doy p1oyer
1neet•ng and B1bt e ~ •u dy 7 JO p m
JEH OVA H S WlfNE SSf S 37319 Stol e
Rou te 1'14 !One mde eas t ol Ru11ond )
Sunday Btbte lec tUie Q 30 a m Wa r
chtower \ ludy ro ?0 a m fue~doy
Btbte ~ l udy
I :.tD p m
lhu r .-.do y
Theoc r at• ( Sc hool 7 30 p m
Serv•ce
Mee t •ng B 10 p m
RUTlAND FREFWill BAP TIS T Churc h
'::tot em St
Ru tl and Dona ld Korr Sr
pa~too
Bud Stewor I ~u pet .n tend Pnl
Sunday Schoo l 10 a rn even 1ng wor
~ h p l 30 p on Wedne~doy e.,.e n tng '&gt;e l
vtCP 1 30p rn
CHUR CH 0 1 GO O ol Po opheq loc a l eel
on th e 0 J Whrt e Rood ott h,ghway lbO
Sunday )c hoo l I 0 a rn Super1nt enden1
John l ovedoy h r\ 1 W e dne~doy nrght of
mon th CPMA &lt;,er\' ICe '&gt; '&gt;econd Wed
ll C'S doy WMB meet•ng th trd 1h1ou gh lrtJh
you 1h &lt;,e rv•re Geo rge Cro yle po'&gt;IOI
H O P~ BAPII SI CHAPEl
570 Gran t
St MtddtepOII Sun day Sc hool 10 a m
morn u1q wQI'&gt;h•p II a m evenmg wa r
o; h tp I p m Wedne&lt;,doy evPn•ng Btb te
study ond pray er mee lt ng I p m A I
l•hated wt th Sout her n Bopt• ~1 Lon
ven J,on
BRADFO RD CHURCH OF CHRIS!
R•c k y G tbe rt po~ I OI ) !eve P1ckens
~ up e 11nl r:&gt; nd ent SL1n doy School 9 30 o
m Churc h Se r v•ce~ 10 30om
JUBILEE
C HRl ~ TIAN
Cf NTER
Geo1ge ~ C•eek Rood Re .,. C J Lemley
po sto1 John Fellure &lt;,u per .n tendent
Chu rc h H hoo l Q 30om morn •ng war
~ h• p 10 30 even•ng se1v•ce 7 p rn B1ble
'::t tu dy lhur ~ I p rn C lo ~'&gt; e s !or alt ages
Nur se ry pr o.,.•derl for wor&lt;,h•p se rv 1ces
Sl PAUl LUTHERAN CHUR CH Corner
at ) ycomorto and Second Sh Pomeroy
fhP Re.,. Wrll•om M·dd leswa r th Po stal
Sund ay Sc hoo l o t 9 45 a rn and Chu rch
'\r&gt;rvtrP~ ll a m
SAl RF D H~AR I Re v Fathe r Pout D
Welton po.,tor Ph one 997 7875 So tur
day eventng Meso, I JO Sunday Mo .,, 8
and 10 a m Conle'&gt;~•on Sa tu rday 7
/30prn
VICTORY BAPII ST
5]5 N 7n d St
M•ddl epor t Jome'&gt; E K ee~ee pastor
Sunday mo1nm g w01sh•p
10 am
even• n g ~e r v•ce I Wedne~doy eventng
wor ,htp I p rn Vtst lot ton Thur sday
b 30 pIll
rfi(NilY C IH •~Ioan A.,., em bly loolvdt e
f.Jt&gt; liber1 '::tpen r f'r
pastor
StJndoy
~( h oot 9 30 Cl m
rno1n1ng wo r ~ htp 11
a m Sunday e.,.pn ng ~e r.,., cp I 30 p m
m•dw~ek proyet ~erv • ce Wecine'&gt;doy
7 30 p If \
MO UN I Q l, .,.e (omrnur 1ty Chur ch
Lowr e l1 ((' Bu ~ h po'&gt; tor Max FolmP r Sr
S. up e1rn!Pnden l ) unday )c hoo l and mo1
n1ng wor \ h1p Q JO o m ':lundoy eventng
.-.e r vtce ! p m You th mee t nq and B•biEO
~ r ud y W !'dn e~doy 7 p m
Rou te I 01
UNIH 0 FAi lH CHUR CH
Pomeroy bypo ~s Rev Rober t Sm oth S1
po stot Rev Jame~ Cund •lt OS'&gt;os to n
pa sta• Sunday )choot 9 30 o m rno r
nmg w01s h•p t O JO o m even•ng war
sh •p
I 30
Women., FPIIow '&gt;h• p
Tu e sday~ 10 a m
Wed ne~doy n tg ht
prover &lt;, NviC(' I 30 p m
FAI I H BAPTI ) I l hurch Mmon meet
at Untied '::t leel Wor l&gt;. ers Un1on Holt
Railr oad S!reet Mo&lt;,On Morn•ng wor
sh1p Q30arn SundoySchooi1030orn
Even1ng Ser ... •ce 7 p m Prayer mee t1ng
Wedne~doy I 30 p rn M1d Week B ble
Study Thur sday l p rn
FOREST RUN BAP TI ST
Rev Nyt e
Borde n
pa sto r
lorne l1 u '&gt;
Bun ch
~u per •nt endent
)un doy ~c hool
q 30
a m ~eco nd and tour lh StJnday~ wor
sh•p ~erv • ce at 'l 30 p m
MT MORIAH BAPTI ST
Foullh and
Mo•n St Mtddl eport Rev Calv1n Mon
n1~
pa sta• Mr s Elv1n Bumgardner
sup! Sunday sc hool Q 30 a m wo r sh•p
serv1ce 10 45 a m
BURliNGHAM SOUTHFRN BAPIIST
CHURCH Route I Shade Pasto r Don
Block Afttho ted wt l h Sou thern Bopl• st
Conven1 10n Sunday sc h ool I 30 p m
Sunday wor sh1p 2 30 p m Thu rsday
event ng B•bt e study 7 p m
PENTECO STAl ASSEMBLY
RaCine
Route 124 Wdhom Hoback pastor Su n
day school I 0 a m Sunday even1 ng se r
v1ce 7 00 p m Wednesday even•ng ser
VICe Of 7
CARPENTER BAPTI ST Don Cheadle
Sup! Sunday Sc hool 9 30 o m Morn•ng
Worsh1p 10 30 am Proy~r Serv 1ce
oh ernal e Sunday s
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL
Th"d
A ve the Rev Ctork Boker po ste r Ca rl
Noll •nghom Sunday Sc hool Supt Sun
day School 10 a m
clo sse~ lo r o~l
ages Even1ng servtces b ()() Wed
nesdoy Sludy 7 30 p m Youth serv1ces
7 30 p m Fr.doy
ECCLES&gt;A FELLOWSHIP &gt;2B Mdl Sr
M•ddleport Pas l or •S Brot her Chuck Me
Pherson Sunday School at 10 a m Ser
vtces Sunday evenmg ol 7 p m and Wed
nesday at 7 p m

�•
Pomeroy

-- ln~•s ~

Heath UMW·

#.

Plans for the annual motherh
ba nquet to beheld on M ay
daug ter
10 were milde when United Methodlst Wamen of Health Church met
Monday night at the church.

~tnior ~~nt~r

The Methodist men wU1 serve the
banquet, it was noted during tbe
meeting conducted by Betty Filltz.
The Easter bazaar held by Eleanor
Circle was a success, It was reported. A retreat to be held this
w eekend at Otterbein was an·
nounced a long with a towel shower
for the church to take place at the
annual June picnic.
A piano prelude by Joan Robin·
dd
ti
b G
F
h
son aedn thevo onstiny ;ace
open
e mee g. rene
her scripture !rom Hebrews and
read the Christian prospective.
She spoke of Easter as the dawn
of a new life, a new beginning and
renewal, and concluded with
prayer. The program was by Nan
Moore, whose topic was. "Jesus
Christ, Liberator."
She read "One Solitary Lite" by
H elen Steiner Rice. Other readers
were Jaunlta Bachtel, who read the
Easter story from Luke, and com·
m ented on the different appearances of Jesus, Euvetta Bechtle,
"Jesus Resurrection"; Jessie Hou·
chins, "The Christian Faith was
Born"; and Beulah McComas,
scripture from Matt. 28 and "The
Challenge of the Church." Genevee
Chesher read scrtpture from Isaiah
and gave a conunentary on death,
not the last word.
The program leader conunented
on liberating the church and
spreading the word and a tllscussion followed on love and joy of the

hre~k

I

The official sign on the new Meigs Multi·

Purpose Senior Center went into place Thursday afternoon. Here Jay
Rowe, on the ladder. and Bob Byer compl etes th e job. The sign was made
in the woodworking shop at the ('Cuter and w&lt;:~s painted hy Lewis Sauer of
Middleport.

Meigs County area births and birthdays
.

and Carrie Camp. Blanc he Jones,
Mr. a nd Mrs. B rian Kearns, Sonia,
B. W . and A mber, Mr. and Mrs.
George Van Matre, Kevin. April
and M elind a, M rs. Kathryn Johnson . Mrs. Frances Johnson, Mrs.

DaviS

'*'
~ w~;;~;, ' ~~~MENT
,....,.,

party at the hom e of her parents,

~ ~~.~;·~:~ ~

.

was carried out in the decorations

Henry.
A surprise birthda y party was
given· recently for Thelma Henry
by her daughters. Martha Coleman, Joann Qui senberry and
Sandy Henry and the Christian
Brethern Church social building in

Mason.

LOWRIDER, Reg . $3995 .........•.••.
ELECTRA GLIDE, Reg. $5095 . ... .• •
SPORTSTER (Kick), Reg. $2495 .. . ...
BLUE KX 750, Reg. $1849 . . . . . . . . . . . .
RED KX 750, Reg. $1949 ...•..•.....•

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

ClEAR 14491 ......... ................... NOW

'31 00

INSTALLATION EXTRA
CHECK US OUT BEFORE YOU BUY
YOUR NEXT HARLEY

Games w ere played with prizes
going to Gladdie Stewart and Jo
Ann Quisenberry. The door prize

was won by Sonia Kaerns. Cake, ice
cream, punch and mints were
served to Gladdie and Evelyn Stewart, Hazel Hoschar, Jeanie, Lisa

T'Fn

...

:: d'~d~~~CII&gt;·-·

11P • Oin••"""'~'""'

~

...... Q ....

..

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.. ...... .._

,.oon•&lt;&gt;&lt;

H,....,.. ,.,woo

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JJ &lt;.,mtiO&lt; l oot

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Ul~

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fol,__. tekpllo"e ezclt.np..

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, MJ- l_,"....

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11•~

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ll Wo ~....,

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d&lt;v•ft,,.,...~..,.,.,

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tobu•

uc ........,.

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.,,.,.,mu•nv"-•"nv

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........ ."'""'""
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ll ,'o&lt;,_,
,,.,,,.,....,

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Mo.tl&amp;

FO'' "'"''

l l £o&lt;~•t!lnv
t.1 f&gt;e&lt;toU I I. Meo"-""""

....

uc.-,.,.,..,,"'
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~

1/ U_

ot ... o

Public
Notice ----------

-

LEGAL NOTICE
Sea ted bids will be
received at the office of the
Village Clerk of the Village
of Pomeroy, Ohio until
12 :00 p.m. on the 19th day
of April, 1982 tor the
following labor and the fur ·
nishing of equipment for
the construction of latera l
sewer lines under Phase 1
of the Wastewater Collection System
Extension,
Contract No. SO-l:
( 1) Contractor to furnish
one backhoe (Case 530 or
larger or equiva lent) with
a competent operator .
(2) One Pickup truck
with all necessary tools and
signs to perform the work
and labor on said construction of t.he lateral
sewerage system .
One
additiona l
(3)
laborer with experience.
141 Said bids sha lt
specify the price per hour
for the use of said backhoe
described herein and also
price per hour for the
operator of
the said
backhoe and also, the price
per hour for the laborer
with experience to construct said
lateral
sewerage lines it1 ac cordance
with
the'
specifications now on file in
the Mayor's Office of the
Vil lage of Pomeroy, Ohio.
IS)'~"'id Contractor sha ll
proceed! to connect the
latera l sewers to the
residences of the Owners of
real estate that are to be
connected with the main
line
of
the
sanitary
sewerage system and same
shall be in accordance with
the direction of the Village
Engineers in charge of the
construction of the lateral
sewerage lines.
(6) That Contractor sha ll
be reQuired to provide
work er's compensation

coverage, liability in ·
surance co11erage and all
other necessary coverages
for the comp letion of thi s
work . A lso, "Said Contractor
shall be required to execute
any and all necessary for ·
ms as provided by the
Vi ll age of Pomeroy, Ohio,
or by HUD. A bond in the
amount of $500.00 is
required for th e faithful
performance by said Con·
tractor for this operation .
171 The Vitt~ge of
Pomeroy, Ohio. reserves
the right to reject any and
al l bids.
Dated : 4·5·82
Et ten J. Rought
Clerk of the Village
of Pomeroy, Ohio
141 9, 16 2tc

"~'

...........--

UE VALUE

CHESTER,O.

915-3301

11110

__ ......... _....,
W•&lt;Nr

t.IOII

TEAFOR

IIIII

VIRGIL B. SR. ; 101.
116 E. 2nd St.

~

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

Public Notice -------------

Edmonton, Alberta, and/or

Suite

590

-

703 Sixth
Avenue, S.W., Calgary, ,
Atberta T 2 P 079 and
WESTGROWTH PETROL·
EUM LTD., S&lt;Jite 70S - 324
8th Avenue, s.w., Calgary,
Alberta
T2
P272,
Assignees:
You as
les see and
assjgnees of an undivided,
interest of a lease in which
HATTIE C. WOODARD, is
lessor. are notified that
said Lease is dated 9
January 1981 and recorded
in Volume 67 paqe 45 of the
Lease Records of Mei~s
Count y, County Recorders
Office. Meigs County
Courthouse.
Pomeroy,
Ohio, and that said Hattte
c. Woodard Intends to file

OWNER FINANCING
- Carpeted 3 bedroom
insulated home. Modern
bath, nice kitchen, por·
ch, patio, city . utilities
and garden space. View
of river . Just $32.500.
NEW LISTING - Wild
life, trees, large gard~n
spot and a duq we ll on
-.his five acres in
Lebanon Twp. GOQd
gravel road with school
bus and mail Rts. Only
$7,950.
MODERN HOME - in
our country. Has 8
rooms,
F.A .
heat,
range,
refr1gerator ,
dishwasher
and
disposal. Cellar, storage
over on 1.88 acres.
Meigs schO&lt;&gt;Is. $37,900.
2 HOUSES - Frame 3
or 4 bedrooms. Will sell
one for $13,000 or both on
good offer. A ll utilities,
bath
in each and
garages.
3 ACRES - Out, just off
hard road 6 rooms,
being remodeled. bath,
woodburning chimney,
trees. garden sp6t, and
T.P. water . Asking Only
$19,500.
ARE
YOU
DISSATISFIED WITH
YOUR
PRESENT
HOME? IF SO CALL
992-3876.

Housing
Headquarters

AUCTION
$

899

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

* b.1ckhoe
*excavating
*septic systems
*water. sewer
&amp; gas line s
*dump truck
•IUJl~S\tne

Licensea &amp; tsonded
PH. 992-7201

3 29 tt c

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Trucks
Lo-Boy
Trencher
Water
Sewer
Gas Lines
Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH . 992·2478
4 It t mo . pd

custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating .

MILLER
.ELECTRIC
SERVICE

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u .s. Rt. so East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1 3 ti c

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces ·
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742·3195
J 7 tic

SAVE 53.00 WITH
THIS AD

"Omigash! The new 'old man'
IS a WOMAN'"

54

Misc. Merchandice
SEASONAL
CLOSE-OUTS

Space Helm

l-30,000 STU . .. Only IllS ea.
4-50,000 BTU ... Only 1160 ea .
1-100,1100 Btu ... Only 1242 ea.
1-150,1100 BTU ... Only SllS ea.
Home Space Heaters
6-9,300 STU .... Onty 1158 ea.
C.sl &amp; C.•~ &amp; Sm
These will go last at tn1s price.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

•Dryers

•Freezers

~ CANDLELIGHT INN

TERMS 01!' SALE: C~$H OR CHECK
! . WITH pO~I'f'IVE 1.0.
·
. '

the Shopping Plazil at

I Washington Motel.
I
3 29

PH. 614·992 · 7848
4 12 -1 mo . pd

DITCHER. WORK

•Mobile
Sites
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Spring Developments
"Small Jobs A
Specialty"

JIM LUCAS
PH. 742·2753
35tfn

I mo

L----------~

2308 Jefferso n Ave . Point
Pl easant . Friday x Sa tur
day
8 ·3 0till
?
c lothes,dishes,
iewerly.
Et c.

Turkey Hunter s We have
mouth cal ls, slate box
ca ll s, camo gear &amp; deco ys
in stock. Spring Va lley
Trading Co ., Spring Val ley
Plaza, 446 S025.

1n
Lile,
Health
in·
suranc e. Rumley Agency,
446 -3320 .
Representing
LIF E INVE STORS
The abandoned

8

Bu sine ss c lose d
health
Anyo ne

to
having

du e

Radio and at
Television
anything
AssociaSer
ted
vice please pi ck up at 115
KerrSt . Pomeroywith on30
days or will be di sposed of .
Nqt r esponsible for con
dition .
Proof of item
required . April 14, 1982
UNDER
NEW
MANAGEMENT : Opening
Friday -the 16th . Mid ·
dleport Lunch Room . Soup
Sandwiches and Meals on
Fridays
CHOD 'S AND
CHAS'S .
The Midnight Express
band will be at Jane's Bar ,
West Columbia, W.VA .
Fri day nigt1t from 9 till 1.
Everyone we lcome .

CONSTRUCTION
Dozer &amp; btlckhoe S&lt;'r ·
me, weter. sewer ,
ponds.
found ,,t ,ons.
reclilmcltiOil .

AlSO mNSMISSIONS

PH. 992-5682
OR 992 · 7121

An tiquity
Methodist Church building
and its land is for sa le. Interested persons may sub mit bids to : Athen s District
United Methodist Union ,
211
Mulberry
Ave,
Pomeroy, Ohio -45769 A ll
bids must be submitted by
April26, t9S 2

ANO

Pom.,oy, OH.

L
4

1cen se d &amp; Aonde d
Phone 949 -1293
or9&lt;19 ·2417

4
Giveaway
ANY PER50N who has
nnylhing to give away .a nd
d oes no t ott er or a tt emp 1 t o
offer any other thin g for
sale may place an ad in thi s
co lwmn . There will be no

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
"Bea utiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
es timate s, 949·2801 or
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls

614-992-2112

3 1 t tfc

'The Automatic

"'~""
•No Energy Needed

•Water Available at Sub
zero temperature s.
•Spring Developments
JIM LUCAS
Ph. 742·2753
4-9 1 mo

10xl2 metal building Ca ll
.46·4tS9 .
TWO f ema le puppi es, 6
weeks old, mixed breed,
304675·2040 .
female
Labrador
3 months old.
Phone 304 ·675·3628 .

4:00to6:00p.m.

3·24 ·1fc

Real Estate - General

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes ex·
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Custom Pole Bldgs .
e Roofing work
14 Years Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·1583
or 992·2282
3· 17 -1 mo.

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH~ 992-2259

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new or repair gutter and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
A.ll work guaranteed.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2263
949·2160

PRACTICALLY EVERY PART OF HOUSE IS
NEW- Three bedrooms, full basement, Wood bur·
ner, fireplace, equipped kitchen and is beaut ifuL
$45,000.

2 24 tf c

~EW LISTING - Gravel Hill, Middleport - Up to
four bedrooms, garden space, storage shed, fully in·
sulated and is older homf; with many other features.
$26,900.

All STEEL
BUILDINGS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

1-----------4

REESETRENCHING
SERVICE·

REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

"2-4191

.,

YOU G'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Addons and remodeling
l-Rooling and rutter work
-C&amp;ntrete work
-Plumbing 1nd
electrical work
!Free Estimates!

V.t. YOUNG Ill
992-62 t s or 992 -73 t 4
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-JO-tlc

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Large st Radiator.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174
2·26 tfc

Annapntements

IN memory of Jeff Allen
Crump who was killed two
Sizes start from JOx24"
years ago tOday Apri l 16,
1980. Today our hearts are
heavy. Our thoughts are all
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
of you, Jeff. Oh, how we
wood buildings 24X36 .
miss you, Jeff . Only God in
Insulated Dog Houses
heaven knows. Never a
day, never an hour that we
don't think of you, Son.
Rt. 3, Box 54
Some say time heals an
Racine, Oh.
' aching heart, but oh, no, if
Ph. 614-843·2591
is not true for the love we
6-lHfc
had for yo.u, Jeff. God is the
only one who knows. Each
day we talk about such a
beautiful son we had, you,
Jeff, and many a tear is
shed. God will take care of
you. Some day we will all
meet around that Great
White Throne where we
will never be apart any
more. 1 am IO&lt;&gt;king for that
great reunion in heaven,
God has prepared for us.
water· Sewer·Eiectric
We all love and miss you so
Gas Line-Ditches
much, Jeff. We will be
W~ter Line Hook-ups
coming home to meet you.
Septic Tanks
Thank God for having a
County Certllied
swe-et &amp; loving son like you,
Rou•h Lane
Jeff. Sadly missed &amp; loved
Cheshire, Oh.
by Mom &amp; Dad, brothers &amp;
Ph. 367-7560
sisters.
· 1·7' 11fc

Utility Buildings

PRICE REDUCED- Large lot, ranch home w ith 2
baths. full basement, garage, A/C, equipped kit ·
chen and dining room in Tuppers Plains. Now
$1S,OOO.

y

Part German Shepard
male, 6 mos . old . Good wat
ch dog . Cal l att er 4:00PM,
38S 8573

~----------l------------1 retriever,

Mon.- Keg Night
Tues.-Ladies Night
Weds .-Gent. Night
thurs .- Pool Tourn.

ASSOCIATES ,
Jton Truaiell t4f.21160
"' Rote• Turner "2·5692
. ~ttte Turner "2·Mt2

One yr . Ala skan Malamute
male . 992 -6706

2

Happy Hour
Mon .- Thurs.

Garage Sa le, toot s, motors,
saws. c lothes, Misc. Sa tur
day April 17, 9 ?, 2901
Meadowbrook Dr
Point
Pleasant .
FOUR lamlly garaqe sa le
Saturday, 3100 Parr1sh
Ave., 10-4. King size mal
tre ss, box spring s, bab y
item s, men s. womens &amp;
children c lothing 304 675
3S65

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

LONE WOLF BAND
Coming Next
Tranzit

80 ACRES- With a 2 story frame home that was
recently remodeld. Has 3·4 bedrooms. Beautiful
laying land. Near Racine. $60,000.

SHERMAN Tl~LIS: OWNER
LONNIE NEAL: AUCTIONEER

Fistling Li cense on sale .
Come and see our n'ew ship·
ment ot l982 Fising Rod s,
Ree ls, &amp; Lures. Spr in g
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Va lley Plaza, 446·S025 .

Old TV 's for part s Cal l 992
3408

PH. 992-9913
Rt. 1 Cheshire, Oh.
St. Rt. 7
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
Open Mon. -Sat.
12 : 00p.m . to 2:30a.m.
Sun.12a.m. · 12p.m.
Carryout Beer
Available
Bands Every Fri. &amp;
Sat. Night
THIS FRI. &amp; SAT.

S&amp;KAUCTION
.

$4~.~~"
. .

GARAGE sa le, 128 South
Park Dr . Pt . Pl easa nt,
Thur sday , Fnday &amp; Sa tur
day,
!0 · 30 3:00 . M en.
women, ch ildren c lothing,
cry st al lamp, 75 Gremlm ,
mu ch mor e, 304-675 -2171

4 5 tiC

LOTS- One acre to 27 acres. As many acres as you
like. Water and ~lectric available. Price negotiable.

RUBBER BACK .CARPET

Sma ll &amp; Large
Carpet Pieces Bound
Room Size and Area
Rugs Bound
carpet Installation
Reasonable Rates
For More Information-

Y .ud S.1 te

SWEEPER and sewing
machine r epair, parts, and
supp lies.
Pi c k up and
delivery, Davi s Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mil e up
Georges Creek Rd . Ca ll
446·0294 ..

::P:A:R::T:S:a:n:d:S:E:R~V~IC~E~f=======l=1==l c=~-========J=J::ll::n~ charge to the advertiser

RUTLAND GYMNASIUM
'

I
I ..-----__,
I Clip This Ad lor a Free
1 Game with I paid Game.
I Elpi•es may IS.
II Located across from

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

TRAILER WITH EX PANDO- A huge living room,
2·3 bedrooms, l 1/ 2 baths, all underpinning, 2 por·
ches. window A/C, and equipped kitchen . No land.
Asking $9,000.

'

GOLF COURSE

St. Rt. )24

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrigerators

9FT. and 12FT. WIDTitS .

'

CARPET
BINDING
SERVICE

Ravenswood, w . va.
Now Open Weekends
lto4P .M.
Weather Permitt•ng

GARAGE

"

6:30P.M.

446-4782
CALL COLLECT
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

Roger Hysell

LAND CONTRAC'f·--. With $3,000 down, owner wi tt
finance this 6 room. one story home that has J
bedrooms, new roof, stoker furnac e, and a sitting
porch. $26.700.

SATURDAY, APRIL 7, AT

PH. 992·6011
s 20 tfc

1
I
I

Has River Vii!w ....:. A two story
frame home with 7 rooms, equipped kitchen, full
basement, and anice front porch. S32,000.

MISCELLANEOUS

FREE
ESTIMATES

., - - - - - - - - - - - ,
CHERRYTREE
I
MINIATURE

NEW LISTING -

TOOLS-FURNITURE
cOOKWARE

Announcements

PRICE IS RIGHT

~=========~~~~~~~~~~~~t~~~~~~~~~~t;;~======j
I
DOZER&amp;

AT

STARTING AT $4.99 Cash &amp; Carry
aWHEELHOUm

CONTRACTING

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM
IN

the tractor season, ·ls''the
Horse power and quality.

,,_,.....

utru

GOOD SELECTION OF

·-

,...

UOW&gt;Ii_ ..

for record an Affidavit of
Forec losure with the Meiqs
County Recorder, if the
lessee does not have the
lease re leased of record
within thirty days from the
date of this r,ublication, to
declare the ease forfeited
for nonpayment of rentals;
there are no producinQ, or
oil or qas wells being
dri lled, on the leased
premises ; the term of the
lease has expired; and the
said lease has been for ·
feited and is void .
The land described in
said Lease is situated in
.. ·- - --Rutland Township, Meigs
Public Notice
- -- -- - -- - -- - . - - .
County, Ohio, being 108
acres, in Section 33. boun
NOTICE
TO:
t.R.D.
COR · ded on the north by lands of
PORATION (International Betz. on the east by lands of
Resources Development Wt lcox, on the south by l t~n ·
Corporation},
29425 ds of Floyd Clean land and
the west by lands of
Chagrin Blvd. Suite 209,
1Pepper Pike, Ohio 44122,
Hattie C. Woodward,
Lessee and PET ROSE EX·
Lessor
PLORATION INC ., Room
710 - 5234 Calgary Trail,

KITCHEN CARPET . INSTALLED

T.......,,._

·~­

ucu

hu• ~.......,,

Squar~ Ya1d W'dh Pad. Installed

4-Spotd

J&amp;F

m
- ........
-~-

--·_.,.....

"w.,""''""•"'
..
' "' Aont

......... ....,,0&lt;10
""''"'"""""""'

u .......,....o....

. , . . , , , _ Ono ....
IJ~toll}10, ..... ,

-~..:ol&lt;o&lt;•tfOI

CARPET STARTING AT $12.95

)7 Side DIKharp Mower

w-~

1) ...... ,., , ,..,.. .....

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

-==========t=========~t==========-t.=========~ Specia
li zin g&amp;
Retirement

-

··

- - - ( • .. • ¥

""'""'
""'""
II Com'""~~"""-'

GIANT CARPET SALE

Scration Enalne

_,_
. . . . c-.,. -c-.··· -(-..
"·-(-·-...=
-·__
-------- --·K--··-. .

~

-MisC.Merthafldice ---

~tfiP ~wn T[JCIR!

PH. n2-3543 or 992-23S.

PH . 304 -273 -3148
3· t 9· 1 11)0.

Clau;flod _.. co.., 1M

" . ........... ..
t)um lo•W D
,,_
.... .....
''-"'"""

s4 -

SAVE '648*

Something Special
103 Washington St.
Ravenswood, W.Va .

All Makes

11n...._,
B••"'"'o-••~·•·
,., ,."

--PUbliC
Notice
-. -- - - - - - - ---

'3400

Molds &amp; Candy
Supplies
•Wilton Cake
Dec orating Supplies

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

.. ... u ...

WEEKEND ·SPECIAL
PLEXISHIELD WINDS(REEN
TIN JED 147 9~; ........................... NOW

1 (~'~"' f~'"" '• &lt;P4'•&lt;&gt;•"~"••"f&lt; l
f{•'""''~-·· ·&lt;1 "•"•""" ' '

'' ...,,., ...........

$3695
$5395
$2195
$1679
$1783

•A complete lin e of

1985-35611

~on

$4195

CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling.
FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BElWEEN.

PtiOIIE 992-2156

)0 ~ro•E&gt;'tloW""'""

1981 MILWAUKEE SPORTSTER

,

Local branches of the Meigs Coun·
ty food bank now exist at five
locations, it was reported. They are
Middleport Enerprise, Tuppers
Plains, Racine, and Syracuse. Per·
sons facing emergency food needs
should contact pastors nearest to
them . The Northeast Cluster
received food March 21 and 28 and is
now well stocked, according to the
Rev. Mr. Thomas.
It was announced that on April18,
the Pomeroy U. M. Church will
rededicate its pipe organ with a
recital by Don Bogaards, Columbus.
Rev. Ben Edwards, district superin·
tendent, will speak that morning in
Pomery, and in the evening at the
Racine-Wesleyan U. M. Church.
A skating party for the youth was
announced for Monday night at the
Skate-a-Way rink near Chester. Cost
is $50 cents for admission, and 50

3

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

01'" Write O.Uy Sentittel (IIUifitcl O.pl
I I 1 Court Sl ., Pomii'Ory , 0111,4SUt

~

WITH AN EXPERIENCED MACHINE

1979
1980
1971
1979
1979

Jr.

SAVE MONEY
MAKE YOUR OWN
EASTER CANDY
"Learn How Free"
One Simple Class
•Summer Coating s

Clttb

Committees tor the spring t16wer
show of Chester Garden Oub to be
beld AprD 24 and 25 at Royal Oak ·
Recreation Hall have been an·
nounced by the show chairpersons
Pat Holter, Sheila Taylor, Sally An·
drews, and Twlla Buckley.
The committees are Mrs. Holter
and Mrs. Andrews, schedules and
prtntlng; Maye Mora and Maida
Mora, publicity and show book;
Crystal Rayburn and Maurita
Miller, judges committee; Dorothy
Karr and Pat Barnett, entry sign
and class signs; Vlrglnta Chadwell
and Clarice Krautter, awards c'ommlttee; Betty Dean, Edna Wood,
Sheila Taylor, Janet Koblentz,
Twlla Buckley; Mrs. Holter and
Mrs. Andrews, staging and placement; Janet Koblentz and Rosemary Young, photography; Mace!
Barton and Pauline Ridenour, horticulture and .placement; Twlla
Buckley, Jenny Machler, and
Karla Chevalier, juniors, horticulture designs and educational; Eleanor Knight and Ada Holter, adult
educational; Ruth Erwin and Barbara Knight, conservation; and Ka·
thryn Mora, Mary Huffman, Jean
Frederick, Lois Kelly, and Toni
Karr, hostesses.

The Daily Sentinel

' u•o \o&gt;o ,,..,., .n •&lt;&gt;••"'•'

-

NOW

Chester Garden

Pomero -Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

cen'"
... f or skales if needed · A film will
be shown at the Syracuse As~u'J:
50 cen 8
Church on Aprtl 25 w•th a
rruss1on charge.
.
Vernon Nease noted a success1u 1
k
r March
sausage and panca e suppe ' th the
26. Proc~ were shared wt• Food
Semor Catizens. Most recen
CIHlp order totaled 130 orders, he
noted. Next meeting will be held
May 10 at the Portland Church
where the Rev. Mark Flynn IS
pastor.

fective in June, 1982. It was noted
that approval has been given by the
district
superintendent.
The
nominating corrunittee will meet on
April 26 at 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Church. Members are Thelma Henderson, Bruce McKelvey, Edith
Talbert, Eloise Connolly, Betty
Roush, James Euler, Ruth Erwin,
Mildred I hie, and Wendell Hoover,

Meigs County. Theseedswillbesupplied by the Jackson Area Miniljlries
with plants being furnished locally.
Applications for the project are
now available and anyone interested
should contact the Rev. Mrs. Smith
at 247-3444 to learn how to par·
ticipate. There will be provision for
50 garden plots.
Kermit Walton presided at the
business meeting with Rev. Robert
McGee reporting on the curriculum
for this year's School of Religion
planned by the Education Commitee
for the autumn months. The courses
and leaders scheduled are Mrs. Fay
Sauer, "The Parables"; the Rev.
Mr. Thomas, "The Book of
Revelation": the Rev. Bob Robin·
son, •·Local Council on Ministries";
the Rev. Mark Flynn, "United
Methodist History"; and the Rev.
Mr. McGee, "Lay Leaders." The
dates and times will be announced
later.
Rev. Mr. Thomas noted that he
has reserved a booth at this year's
Meigs County Fair for both the

I P•l&gt;l •&lt; \o&gt;o

992-2641

REG.
. 4'395

The gardening project of Meigs
Cooperative Parish was discussed at
the recent meeting of the Meigs
County Council on Ministries held at
the Heath United Methodist Church,
Middleport.
Rev. Florence Smith noted that
again this year the Parish will fur·
nish seeds and plants to senior
Cl. tt'zens and other persons in need in

OLM!O ""

mother, Virg inia Oavis , her g ret:~t·
great aunt. Artie Gnndley, Ressie
Shaffer,
Donald
Wayn e and
Nathaniel, Eric Hayes, Kelli Smith,
Diana Mills, Angi e and Mandi,
Rochelle Davis and Stacie Stewart.
Others remembenng Serena with
cards and gifts were her maternal
grandparents, Bill and Belly Hayes,
Steve, Gayla and Rachel Hayes, and
Dave Hayes, Metropolis , Ill.: her
maternal great-grandmother . Hazel
Hayes, Mark Davis and Chns Grindley .

Council of Ministries

...
... .l .."'·"'.

BEAT SPRING'S INFLATION

with cake, ice cream and pop being
served to those attending . At the
party were Serena's paternal gr and·

The COlli has been increased to $50.
The conununications committee will
coordinate a theme for the booth.
11 was noted that April 'll is
deadline for the "Contact." The
Rev. Mr. McGee distributed a job
description for the new parish director/coordinator and assistant, ef·

, ... .,., ".f&lt;N""

JUST ARRIVED!

99 Mill St.

Jeff and Brenda Davi s. Pomeroy .
A Strawberry Shortcake theme

Donna Byer and Elma Malinsold
with Freda Mitch contrlbut!ng.

o t; •• .-... ,

&lt;nape &lt;ltraft.smen.
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Serena Renee Dav1s celebrated
her ,;eventh birthday r ecen tly with a

·
·
· h and the
Me1gs
Cooperative
Par~
Meigs County Ministerial
Association. The booths will be adjacent to allow mannmg of both
booths simultaneously.

l """""'"'"..,..., "

i

i

by

church. An Easter poem "Indltter·
ence"
and prayer dlosed the
progr:un.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. McComas, Mrs. Robinson,

Leone Jaques, Terry and Sandy
Henry, Terry. Mike and Jeff, all of
Mason.
Alva Newell, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Scarberry, Columbus; Hoyt and Cora Ferguson,

Early American Decorator Items

Davis

Friday, April 16, 1982

Meigs 'County organizations' meeting notes

!\i u 'tip ll .~ p0.~ t1

UP GOES THE SIGN -

Friday, April 16, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

HEATING stove, coa l or
wood, works. Scrap metal,
304675 7541.
6

Lost and Found

Found : money and watch .
Call to identifY . 992 ·3486.
7

YardSale

Garage Sa le Fri. &amp; Sa t .
Apri l 16-17 _ 7·00 -7·00 . Fair field Centenary Rd ., Por terbrook
Subdivision .
Men's Clothes,
teenag e
girl's c lothes size 5-14.

Public Sa le
&amp; Auction

Ri c k
P ea r so n ,
Ex
peri ence d AUCTIONEER
Esta tes, dntique s, farm ,
household . L1 ce nse d Ohi o
WV. Buying antiques 304
773 5785. 773 91S5 .
L.E . Nea l Au c tion ee r Ser
vice
Esta t e Fa r 111
House hold Mi sc. We se ll it!
Li censed &amp; bond ed Ohio &amp;
wva . 367 7101.
Auction every Fr i. night at
the Hartford Commun1ty
Center. Truckload s of new
merchandise every week
Consigmen ts of new and
used merchandi se always
wel co m e.
R1 c hard
Reynolds Auctioneer . 275
3069
9

Wa1_1t~d

to

B~y

WANT TO BUY Old fur
niture and Antiques of all
kind s. call Kenneth Swain,
446 -3159 and 256· 1967 in the
even1ngs
CAS H PAID for c lea n. late
model used ca r s. Smi th
Bui ck-Pontia c, Gall1polis,
Ohio . Call 446 2282 .
Buyinq
Go ld,
Silv er.
Platinum. old coi ns, scrap
ring s &amp; s ilverwar e. Daily
quotes avaolable
Also
co1n s &amp; co 1n suppl1es f or
sa l e
Spring
Valley
Trad 1ng , Spring
Valley
Plaza , 446 -802 5 or 446 8026
We pay cash for late model
c lean used ca r s
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson.
446 0069
Wanted t1mb cr We cu t,
pay1ng qood pn ces Ca ll
446 0706 .
Antique oak lurn1ture.
round table s. boo kca ses,
desks. dresse r s, che st s, 1ce
boxe s. etc. Ca ll446 3759
E arly Antique co untry fur
niture, cupboards. all k ind s
of
c hest s,
desks ,
stoneware. etc. Call 367
OtJS

BEDS IRON , BRASS, old
furniture , gold, silver
dol lars, wood ice box es .
stone iars, antiques, etc,
Complete
household s.
Write : M . D . Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy , Oh. Or 992 7760 .

employment

Garage Sa le Fairfield Cen·
tenary Rd. Sat. 17th 7:00 to
7:00. Lawn trimmers, ir.
archery set, &amp; other
miscelleanous.
Mens c lothes, womens
clothes size 7·18, childrens
and baby clothing , cur·
tains and pictures. Knack ·
Knacks and misc ., furniture. Thurs. -Fri. ·Sat. Inside if bad weather. 10 till?
391 S. 2nd. Middleport, Oh.
45760.
Yard Sale 1258 Powell St.
Middleport., Ohio. Fur·
niture, fans, air·cond .,
misc .
992 -7751 .
Betty
Gilkey .

Help Wanted .

Ladies help with hoqh cos t
of livi nq or take th at
vacation that you ar e
dreaming of For 1nterview
&amp; appointment Cil ll Hol •day
tnn , Sa t . Ap ril 17111 between
10 &amp; 3 Ask for Mrs Sher
man
Woman to l1 ve 1n and ca re
for elderly la dy 5 day &amp;
niqht s per week ~a ll 388
8419
We can pay now or pay
Inter The del1nquen t child
of today 1S tomorrows
prosons inmate We ca n
wail ttl\ tomor r ow and pay
for pr1sons and law en
for ce ment or we ca n take
care oft he problem loday
The Juvenile Co urt of
Cal l1a Coun ty need s Fo ster
Parents tor th ese children
Make 1nvestment 1n the
futur e. be a Fos ter Parent
c~1 11
Juvenile Cour t 446
38 41
ExpNicnced
gym na st1c s
mstru ctor needed for sum
mer proqrams Mu st be nt
least 18 and have at teas ! 2
year s com pel 1l1 ve ex
perirnc c or 1 year teachrng
qymnaslic s
t.~ply
1m
rn cdortte ty rt f Ga ll •po lo s
Recr eill1on Ocpnrtmenl ,
518 Second Ave, Ga ll1pOI1 s
DIRECT CARE 5TAFF
needed by proqress 1ve
resodent 1al ca re f ac ll1l y
serv 1ng mental r etarded
adults wlih behAV IOra l
Pr evious ex
drsorders
perrence work 1nq wrth
people
r eq u1r ed
Ap
p11 can ts must be enerq et1 c,
cr ea t ive. pat1ent nnd ab le
to work fl ex 1bl e hou r s
$10,000 1 yr sa lary for a 45
hr. work week along W1ft1
oth er benefit s If 1nteres ted
send r esu m e to · Ohro
Residential Serv es, ln r,
Rt I Box 7 Mill Cref'k Or .
Ga llipOli s. Oh 45631
GET VALUABLE tr arn 1nq
ns n youny bUSiness person
and cnr n qood money plu s
some qrea t qdts ns a Sen
l •nc l r oute ca rr1 er Phone
us nqht away clnd qct on
nw ei 1Q1bi11ty 11s1 n t 997
2156or992 2157
Don't m1ss lh1 s one Th e
perf ect f am il y bus 1nf'SS No
risk. hnve fun , make
monf'y Cn ll 997 2088 alter
6p m
AVO N Be a success Se ll
Avon where you work or
l 1vc Ca ll 742 7755 or co ll ect
614 698 7 Ill
Baby s1 tt er Ches ter area
need orn medra l elcy hour s 1
p m to 10 p.m Phone mor
n 1nq 985 4307

12

S1tuattOns Wanted

Have room and bonrd for
elder ly
per so n
Reasonable 992 67 48
So meone to shM e M ob1 lc
H ome
and
cxpronses
Children welco111e,in New
Haven Phon e 304 882 2735

WILL mow lawn s 1n PI
ROSENBERG RECYCLI
Pl easa nt, dependable, 304
NG 307 Upper R1ver Rd
Gallipoli s Blu e building 675 1504
across from Si lver Bridg e
Plaza . Open Mon . Wed . &amp; 13
Insuranc e
Fri _ 10 to 4. Sat. 10 to J
SPECIAL IZIN G
IN 5A NDY A ND BEAV E R In
ALUM~NUM
CANS, surance Co ha s off ered
aluminum siding, sheets &amp; se rvi ces for fire in surance
cast alum .. copper w1re, co verage 1n Gall ia County
for almos t a cen tury
brass. radiator s. au t o ba t
ter ies &amp; IBM ca rds . Call Farm, hom e and per so nal
property cover(1ges ar e
446·2340 .
av aila ble to meet rn
dividua! needs
Contact
Junk car s any co ndtfion
Rn y Wedemey er, aqc nt
Call 245 -955tl or Jtltl Y060 .
Phon e 388 -8249

Garage Sa le Saturday Gold, silver, sterling,
Apri l 17, 9:00-? 382 Circle jewelry. rings, old coins &amp;
Drive, off Bulaville. Rd. in 1c urrency. Ed Burkett Bar
P l antz
Subdivi son. ber Shop, Middleport 992
Clothing, bench &amp; weights, 3476 .
sled ,
knick
knacks,
ch ildren's toys, &amp; wading OLD FURNITURE. bed s.
pooL
iron, brass, or wood . Kit
c hen cubbard s of all types
3 Family Porch Sale 86 T abies, round or squar e
Pine St ., Ga ll ipoli s. Friday Wood ice boxes . Old desk s
&amp; Saturday-9 to 5. Jeans, and bookcases. Will buy
tops, chi ld rens clothes, co mpl ete hou se hold . Gold.
glassware &amp; misc.
silver, old money , pock et
watches, chains, rings, and
Garage Sa te 503, 50S. &amp; 512 etc . Indian Art ifa cts of all
Circ le Ave .. Across the types . Also buying baseball
Street from Spring Va l ley cards . Osby Mart1n 992 ·
Hardware. Fri. &amp; Sat. 9:00 6370 . .
to 4:00.
Wanted -want to buy any
Garage Sa le 7 mi . West of base bait cards . 992 3574
Ga lli polis on St. Rt. 141 .
Lots of household items, Grave ly tractor with till ers
clothing . Saturday 9 till?
wou ld trade heavy duty
shop compressor. all after
Yard Sa le Fri. &amp; Sat. Old 4 P.M . 304·576·2323 .
160 at Evergreen. Lots of
everything.
Yard Sa te couch &amp; charr,
end tables, coffee table,
tools, clothing and lots of
misc. 6 houses from
packing house on Texas
Rd ., Ga llipoli s. Sat. 9 to5 .

tl

servlees
1_1 __ . f:ie_lp_VVant-"d
Tired of watching reruns?
Turn off the TV and earn
good S$$. Meet nice people
sel ling Avon . Cal l 446·335S.
SALES PERSONNEL
Due to new Audio-visual
program
rapid l y
ex ·
panding, firm has severa l
openings in its outside sales
dept. If you are ambious
and well groomed, we may
have a job for you . We of ·
fer:
1. Pa id vacation .
2. Profit Sharing.
3. Paid Hospitalization .
4. F lexible hours.
Car
&amp;
high
schoo l
education required . Op·
portunities of Sl,OOO per
mo. and up. For interview
call between 1PM-7PM
only, 6U·«6·2096.

1S

Schools InstructiOn

Karate the utt1mate 1n se ll
defence all private lessons.
M en, women. &amp; children
Instruction thru black belt
A lso available Karat e
unifo rms puch1ng and
k1 cking baqs. and pr o te c
lrve equipment
J erry
Lowery
&amp;
Assoc1ates
Karate
Stud10.
143
Burl1nqton Rd .. Jn ckson.
Oh Call 2S6 3074
Pnvat £' piano le ssons for
a nd
on
b cq innin g
termed1at c stud ent s Ca ll
446 8386
GUITAR
lessons.
1n
d1vidual c la sses. per sona l
attention, modest pr1 ces
Ca ll304 675 3734 .
18

Wanted to Do

The Silk House (cu stom
si lk flowers) . Compl ete
bridal line. wedding s, and
all occ asions . Ca ll367 -7566
Painting interior and ex
terior, free es tim a tes Ca ll
446·3759 .
Babysittrng in my home .
References . Call2-45·9128
Lawn Mowing Ser i ve, no
yard to big or small, hou se
painting &amp; roofing, and
light hauling . Ca ll 446 ·3159
after 6PM 1 286 5740.
Will pick up used washers
&amp; dryers. Ca tl 446·S1Sl or
256 !396.
FinanCial
21

Business
__ Oj&gt;!'_O_o:t~n~ty -

We want one stove dealer
in Meigs Co. It you have an
established business or are
a serious woodburner , con ·
tact Glen Marple at the
Valley Gem Stove Factory
in So. Zanesvil le, Ohio.
(6141454·334S col lect.
Cigarette
Vending
Business. Call30073-5651.

22

Money to Loan

REF t NANCE or purchase
your home . 30 yea r fr xed
rate _ WVa &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgaqe. 77 E Stale St ,
Athe ns. Oh 592 3051
23

Prof ess tonal
Se rvic es

P1ano
Tunrng
&amp;
Repc11r Cat l Bill ward t or
appo 1ntm e nt ,
W(lrd' s
Keyboard, 446 4372
( &amp; l_ BnokkPPprnq
tn
come tax return s for 1n
d1V 1duaiS &amp; bUSin('SSeS
Carol Nea l 446 3862

W 1ndsh1eld b r oken? Ca ll
Sou th ern Glass _ Insurance
c !a1m s wrol c omc
Fr ee
mobil e serv• cc ilvrtlioble
Ca l l 446 1011

31

Homes for Sa le

1972 Conco r d Mobile Home.
12x65 Ca ll 446 70 15 rl fi Pr
5 30 p m
Beau tiful bn c K &amp; fr ame. J
bedroom home w / ~cen1c
v1ew.
wood tJurn 1ng
fireplace , formal d1nmg.
cen t ral arr w / hent pump
Lanscaped,
I
ncre lot
w / f enced 1n back yard.
$45.900
11 °o lrnanc1ng,
sma ll down pnynwnt Cal l
446 3766
House for sale on town
Pr1ced on 1nspeci10n. 3 or 4
bdr , FR. 2 bnth s Cal l 446
1223

6 r
house. bcl l h. lull
basement 111 c1 ty l 1m• ts,
$22.000 Farm 6 r house.
bath, util1ly room, root
ce ll ar . 25 117 a. tr actor ,
farm equ1pmenf. lar ge
barn, 900 lb t obacco base .
$1'i.OOO C:rt ll 614 4.!6 4767 or
256 1773
New 3 bdr on Rt 7. 1 m1
north of br 1dqc $33.500
Ow ner will he lp hnnn cc
Cnl l 379 26 17
Hou sP for Sale Mov 1ng ou t
t own mu st sr&gt; ll 8 7 Pet
nssumab tc lonn, 1 yf'ar old
hou se . J bedrm , ')ba t hs , 2
car qoraqc $5 000 down .
assume loon M 1tlwood. w
Va . 304 273 5238 Wcr&gt; kd,ly S
Only

of

Hou sP fur sa le 7 roo m s nnd
1 1' 2 bnlh. LPon. WVA Cal l
1 304 45H I 866
Modern 3 bedroom lul l
s• zc cl, hn1 slwd bil":&gt;cmcn t. 3
lots resod cn t oa l ilnd com
mprc1al
propE' rl y 1n
K n nn ufln nerH shopp 1nq
ce nter Cnl l 446 4313
N EW INCOME LIMITS II
you earn betwren $9000 to
'!, 15.000 o year . you moy be
ab le lc buy o 3 bedr oom
t1ou~e {no t a mob1 lc home )
l or os I IIIC' ns S13S rt mon th
No clown paym ent Cal1992
703 4
Lnnd co nt rn c t !')perce nt 7
room hou se, n1ce locnt.on
Ca ll 99/ 7896

3 bd r oom modulnr home.
plus pal 10 and fl ower room.
ut 1l rty builcf•nq , S1lu a ted on
I a nd 1' ncrc of land Plen
ty of qarden space Pr .ce
nPoO! onhle by ownprr;., 747
26 7H
2
bd room
t1 ouse lull
basem ent. wo rk sho p. n l
~l l l'cl.
$28,000
t nc r1 l'd
Owner wilt help fma ncc
949 2749

7 room house on fl ncrc
lrlnd ' ' m1 ou t of Rnc 1ne
W1ll cons •der trade on
home rn M1ddl epcr t or w rll
se ll lnnd excep t acre w 1t h
hou se Also Grav·ely !r ae
lor wllh all allac llmen ts
Fay Powe ll 949 2405
HOU SE. Meadowbrook Ad
d 1to on. 3 bedroom. lam1ly
room W1lh fr1 epla ce. cen
tral a1r, ba semen t, 304 675
1542
Tw o story t10mr. 3 bedroom
lull basement. Enql1sh
Road. $10,000 down and
nssumc loa n of $33,000 at
Bsveu per ce nt . payment
$275 per month phone 304
675 3585
Leon Boden ~1rea. 4 year
old . J bcctroom. 2 boltlS .
ra nc h .$ 4.000
down,
ass um e 9' ' per cen t loan.
paympnt s $405 pn mon
th .r nc lud1nq ta xes
111
sur ancr 304 458 1587
Sclncl Hill Rand . Poont
Plf'O Srlnl. 3 bedrooms . 11 1 ,
tl uu tJil' qc~roqe , ~11 1 et(' Ct rrc,
1tnmf'd lcll f'
occupnncy
Phonf'304675 58 17
32

Mobile Hom eo;
for S&lt;~le

TRISTATE
MOBIL E
HOM ES Gallipoli S Pr1ce
redu ce d . u sed mobile
homes CALL 446 7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOM ES
KE SSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBI LE
HOM E SALES. 4 Ml
WE ST. GALLIPOLIS. RT
35 . PHONE 446 386S
For sa le or rent 12x60 2
bedroom Buddy mobile
hom e. Set up with 2 or 4
lot s. gas heat, rura l w a ter ,
c l ose ~ to town , fin ancinq
availab le. Phone 446 -1294
1977 KA J'N 14x 70, all elec
tri c, 2 bedrooms. 2 full
bath s, utilify room , wood
burn er . porche s. Ca ll 256
9330
Mobile home on 1/2 acre
lot , ha s porch , awning , un·
derpinninq, washer &amp;
dryer , etc. ·Ca II '446 -4736 .

�Friday, April 16, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Pom er oy - M id d l epor t , Oh •o

Friday , April 16, 1982

They'll Do It Every Time

Mob•l e Hom es

31

tor Sa le
19 76

tN!&gt;VRANC£ .OUV RAMRW GETS M:J
HELP N&lt;t:&gt;+l COII!&gt;!H CUS'TA!W·-..

14x70

Freedom al l
f' lec tr ,c. 3 bdr . 'l full bath
se t up w1fh underp•nn.nq ' "
Gree n
Terra ce
Park

8.

Was h e r

d ry er

HOIVCQl,;.eT
10 '1t&gt;UR BOSS 10
SHOW HIM AN
f,MPLOY&amp;EiS'
HOSPrT.AL.IZATION

Cal l

('V(' OIOQ S 446 Q94Q

77 . 14 x70 V i llage Park.
bdr ex tra •n Su lal•on . por
Ch , ca rpe l Mov1 n q out of

51

For Sil le E lec tn c s tove, 2
yrs old, co pper tone, 10 ex
cond . N ot needed !!1 new
loc a tt on Call446 8144 ,$ 125

DON'T ASK ME !
I.E.AVI: ME OUT
OF rr, f?M'ROD!
PI.E.ASE! lJON'T
EVEH MENTION

USED FUR N ITURE Cop
pe r tone gas oven. coo k top ,
s1de by Stde refrt qc r n tor ~
pc wood d•nette Co rb tn &amp;
Sny d er
Furnttur c, 955
Second Ave, Ga lllpOi ts
CCIII 446 11 71

--.Mr..'-. MY NAME I

PUH ;..?,_rf_);

stole Call1 45 92 16
l4x 70 Bayv1ew 2 bdr , F R
W1 lt1 fir epla ce. wllh ce ntral
a• r

parlla l ly

Good used K em or c r~u t o
wa sher and Copp er t one GE
etc cl lr c ranqe l tk f"' new,
$150 446 8181

fu rn.shed

Calt446 4068 , ai !N 4 OOPM
l?x68 H allmark , 3 bdr , oil
lurnance. part.ally tur
rw; ~u:•d Call 388 8469 a lt er

54

L•b ert y

3

bE'droom

m o bile

home .
l4x 70.
hrcpln ce Gcorqc's Crf'Pk
Rd Ca ll446 79 26

197 5 Case 430, doze r
tr a c tor . BOO hr s, ve ry qood
cond . $15.900 Call446 4537

44
I ? · 60

tr a• ler

excc llenr

co nd il ,on

Call 446 1552
Fu rn. shed a1r condl11oncd.

underpmn1nq , s.et up on lo t
10 M1ddlepor t

R1 IZ (frl ll MObile
tromc
Furn15h0d 8x35
Good Co nd $:? ,000 741 2665

H ou ses for Rent

41

House , J bdr tn Rodney
Vllli!gc II $?00 mo Call
446 44 16 &lt;t il er 7PM

1961

1969 F1Prtwood . 11x65 ex
pNndo. 7 bd r oom . ut1 111y
r oom 11:; bN i h, 2 por ches,
new ca r
unr1crp•nn1nq
prttnCl par tl y turn• st1ed
$6 800 747 2764 il fl cr 6 p m
1974 H il l cres t mobile h ome
17x54 7 bd r oom 9cn 39 17
r~lt c r

5

19 74 OlMnp 1on , 11x60. riPe
tr •c. washe r . d r ye r . un
dNPIOOtOQ , pilrlt illly lur
n•shcd S7.000 887 32 50 or
99) 71 3 1

US ED MOBI LE
57677 11

HO ME

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
L tC t' OSed &amp; 1nsurrd Call
304 5/6 7711
F or Srl lr 1 &amp; J brdroom
trrlilf' r s, turnt Sil('(l
Wtlh
rllr Celli ] 0 4 77] 5651

1981 A LL EL EC TRIC 17'
W1 DE
7
BEDROOM
m otJilf• home Sf'llt fl CI on lo t
u ' ,l&lt;ly ! o movr 1n to $8995
10° 0 down BA N K FI N A N
(l NG AVAILAB L E , 304
576 77 11

Hom C's tor Rent Lease or
Land Contrac t •n town , or
co untry
Ce~ll
Str o ut
Rca lt y . 446 0008
3 bdr home del u xe. poo l,
AC 7 bdr hou se, H U 0 ]04
67 5 5 104 or 67 5 5386

fRAILER

Buddy .

Br sr buy tn tow n on uc,rd 12
X flO Nn st'ua. 1976 mode l tn
r xcc l lrn t co ndtlt on
'1
hrd r oo m . nrw
c nrpct
l houqhou l $6 ,900
Phone
304 675 44 24
U-:.rd 7 bf'cJroom 14 X 60
M ob• lc nome 1973 model
we II dP I1 vrr Phonr 30 4
67 5 .U 24
M obtlr Home, 7 bed r oom
bath, $ 1700 loca tC'd nex t
CP CII Hill Fcl rm CO ~,A, Run
R o il d,
Rt
?.Co t
taq evdlr .W V
FOR RENT wilh opl ton to
buy , 11x 65 '1 b('droom all
f' lcc lr• c. 304 5t6 ?7 11

LOT CL EARAN CE 5ALE
$1 ,000 lo S3 .000 OF F ON
ALL HOM E S N Pw 14 I t
w•dc 1 bedroom . $9 ,595
12x55 ? bedroom . $4,000
Al 5o
1ntr odu c •nq
t he
h1q hcs t cnerqy C&gt;fft c 1ent
home eve r built 14x70 3
bedroom, 1 117 bnth s. w •th
2x6 s•de wnll
tu l l y tn
76
sullrliCd , R lrl c tor
ce tl•nq 70 tn wall , 21 m
ll oo r Check anyw l1ere. no
ott1 c r home tS 1nsullat ed
th1 S qood l0°o down and
low bank ltni1C01ng All
St ar e Modular Hom es . hdlf
way between H untmqton
and Potnl P leasnn t on St
Rl 2, 30 4 576 7711
33

Farm s fo r Sa l e

2 45 acres , 3 bdr m ode rn
home L garaqe Mu st se ll .
hea lth reason s, sacr1f •ce
Cal l 388 2292 , K en neth
R1chard s
Far m
76 ac r es
Good
hou se, barn, work shop.
small ch 1cken house 1 mile
w es t of Langsvill e on Sr
124 742 2860 after 4 p m
JS

Lot ~ &amp; Acrea~e

Wh at arc you wa 1t 1ng for ?
Ground does not g r ow,
peopl e do,
!h erby
1n
cr eas mg t he v alu e of any
availab le ex rsl 1ng l and
Her e's a c han ce to se1ze
upon an opportun tl y to ob
tatn 26 acres M&amp; L for only
S18,000 total 1ncludes a ll
m1neral r1ghts t ht s proper
ty on Un1on Avenue ;u st
out s1de the Corpora t•on
limit s. Ca ll John Duda s
Age ncy, Inc Zanesv tll e,
Oh• o 1·452 0229 durtng tne
day, or Lee W1nce, 1 453
4890 eve n1ng s a nd week
end s Think rt over. but
don' t put 11 off too long
TWO acre lots 150 ft road
fr on t age .
c 1t y
wa t er,
beh1nd 84 Lumber , ca ll 304·
675-6873 , 675·3618 .

SEVEN acres, Greer Rd .,
$20 ,000 . or best offer, 304675·2295 or 675 1304.

Ca ll

Furn . apar tm ent, 3 bd r ,
131 4th Ave, Ga ll tpol• s $220
per mo , water pa1d Ca ll
446 4416 a fter 7PM
Furn1 shed apt , 1 bdr ,
large, elect n c &amp; wat er
pa1d , $200, adult s Ca l l 446
4416 alter 7PM
Apartment no 3, 2nd floor
fu rniShed adu lt s only , no
pets , ref &amp; dep r eq Call
446 0957
I bed r oom furn1 shed apt
992 5434 992 59 14 or 304 8fl2

4563 I

2566

') hdr , furntshed collaqe
llf'M
H M(,
chdd i!C
CC'p l nh lc, wat er pel $190
Cn 11446 4416 r~f trr 7PM

5 r oo m a nd bath
Pomeroy 992 5621

Pets for Sa le

Furn t&lt;; lled 3 r oo m co lf agl'
10 town , one lady or a
mr~rr , pd
coup le p l ease
Drpo s tl req ut rcd , a l so
rr tr rf'n ccs no pPI S Call
446 75 43
l oca t rcl

m1
ou r
Gt or CJ('5 Cr rt•k Rd fr om Rt
7 J l)d r . cr n tr ,11 &lt;l •r Cnll
117

)6 / 77,1]

J twr lt' OO n1 CO IJO i ry !lOme . n
Ctl y SctlOO I dt slr tc l , Cl oy
T wn Dcp &amp; ret r r q $750
L111 1C,6 9363

FOU R bedrooms. 1 bflth s

Apartments 67 5 5548
APARTME NT S,
mobile
homes .
h ou ses.
Pt
P leasa nt and Gal hpoll 5
614 446 822 1 or614 245 9484

12 It n lum li s ~11nq boa t,
$2 50 38 Co lt spec ta l. $ 180
12 qauqc M ar l1n 30 F. 1896
Patt on$750 Cclll379 26 17
Locus t posts $? 00 each
Ca ll446 7993 or 446 8535
Rn ll 1tl Pool s pool Sr"l les &amp;
su ppl tes Ca ll 446 6579 or
446 1324
7 PC LR SUti C l ron t ter
we stern c, tyl r hrown and
go ld c ouch 2 cna tnb lcs,
coff ee ta bl e Oln tr , r oc kmq
cha tr , otl ornun ? mo old ,
S600 Ca ll 446 6739
Sl1 hl c t1a1 n saw 32. 18' bM ,
c arrtn g case. ex t ra s. l ew
tlr s, exce ll en t co nclill on ,
$JOO Ci1 112455691

3 Bedroom tra il er , co m
plelly I urn 446 9669

FUR NI SH E D efft Cte ncy
apartment , PI P leasant,
all utiltltes pa1d , 304 895

E xce iStOr Oil Co , 636 E
M atn Sl , Pomer oy, Ohto
992 2205

4S

Fu r m shed Room s

SLEE PIN G ROOM 5 a nd
l1 ght housekee ptn g ap t,
Park Ce ntral Hote l
46

mobile home for
rent Unfurn on Rt 35
Depos•l &amp; ret r eq u •red
Call 446 4179

2 bdr frailer f urn •shed.
adu lt s on ly , Brown Traile r
Park . 992 3324
60x \2 furn 1shed, 2 bd r oom ,
adu lf s on l y , F lat swoods
area 992 5834 after 5 p m
2 bd room trail er 1n Ra c 1ne
area n1 ce 949 2726 or 949
2736
TW O
bed r oom ,
un
furn1 shed One bedroom ef
fi CICO Cy 304 675 2722
2 bedroom mob il e home,
niCe ya rd Phone 304 675
3885
43

Far m s fo r Rent

---

---

--

Pa sture, 40 or 50 head, ca t ·
ti e no horses, abundan ce of
wa ter grass Phone 304 675·
1269
44

Apartment
for Rent

2 &amp; 3 bed room apartments
for lease or se ll 2 bedroom
house, 3 bedroom house A
and poo l HUD Program
Ca ll 304 675 5104 or 675

c

1664

1st floor
furnished ef
f1 ciency ap t 729 2nd Ave .,
Ga ll1poll s.
Adults
only ,
s hower Call446 ·0957
Apa rtm ent partially fur
nished, upsta1rs, utdittes
furm shed Ca ll a t 631 4th ,
Gallipoli s.
Delu xe fllrn. apart., cent
a1r &amp; hea t 1 or 2 adults
only Call446·0338 .
2 bdr . untur. garage apart·
ment very nice, adults
only , $150 mo. plus utilities
Call446·4336.

FURNISHED apartment,
centrally located . Adults,
r efer ences and d eposit
re quire d . Call 446·0444 at ·
ter2PM .
3 bedroom apart. 105 Court
St, $215 mo., $100 dep ., no
pets. Call «6· 2572.

8 cu II CH EST tr rclc r .
r nd tOS, Coleman lll'd1er.
p hone 304 675 5375

Space for Rent

CO UNTRY MOBILE Hom e
Pa rk , Route 33 , N orth of
Pom eroy Large lot s Ca ll
992 7479

Wanted to Rent

Wanted to rent or b uy
house &amp; a c re age Cal l 446
3851

TR OYBILT ROTOTI LLE
RS , all models D1 scou nt s 1
I mm c d•ate
sll1 pmcn t ,
Tr ades cons1der ed
Ca ll
703 94 2 3871
or
wrde
H ICkO r y Hill Nur se ry , Rl 1
Box 390A , F 1shersvd le, VA
22'139
Sca r s deluxe lrcnd rntll
$100 G1 rl s 26 m ch , 10 speed
b 1c y c le $75
100 AMP
SQuare 0 C1rc uil break er
bo x $50 a lll 1ke new Phone
304 882 3173
APPALOOSA geld 1ng, gcn
ti e, a lso 1974 Chev rol et
Mal 1bU , 304 675 6357

51

2 bdr

20 II cl1e!'&gt; l ty p e fr ee zer, 6
mo old $3 75 742 3 154 or
992 7467

Hou seh ol d Good6

SWAIN
AUCTIO N FURNITUR E B.
PAW N SH OP 62 Ol tVP Sl ,
Ga ll1 pOI1s New so l e~ beds
S2 50. use d sofa beds $100,
rec l tncr s $80, bunk beds
SJOO , bunk •e ma flr esse s
$40, maple rocker s $49,
m apl e dtne rt se ts fr om $115
to $175, bedroom su1t es
II VtnQ room
$150 , J pc
su1t es $199, 1 pc 11v1ng
r oom su1t es $1 40 , lov e seats
S70 ow l tamps $25. r•nger
wa sher s
$75 .
d ry e r s,
severa l
refr1 ge r a t o r s,
utt ltt y
ca btn e t s ,
beds,
m ec hr.n1 c's tool s,
silv er stone, TV ,s. w ood
burner s, stero 's and lots
m or e Open l Oam to 5pm ,
446 3159
GOOD
USED
AP
PLIAN CE S
wa she r s,
dr ye r s,
relflgera t ors .
ra nq es
Skagg s
Ap
pt.a nces, Upper R 1ve r Rd ,
bes1de Stone Cre st M o tel
446 7398
LAY NE'S FURNI TURE
Sofa , cha1r, r ocker, of
loman, 3 tables, $500 Sof a,
cha •r and love sea t, $275
~ so f as and cha 1rs pr~ced
from $285 to S795 T ab tes,
$38 and up to $109 H td e a
bed s,$3 40, quee n SIZe, $380
Rec l •ner s, S175 to $295 ,
Lamps fr om $18 to $65 5
pc dmettes f rom S79 , to
$385 7 pc , 1 189 and up
Wood t ab le w1th 4 c har r s,
1219 up lo $495 Des k $ 110
Hutches, S300 and $375,
maple or p1n e fln1sh
Bedroom su1tes
Ba sset t
Che rry . 1795
Bunk b ed
co mpl ete w1th mattr esses,
1250 a nd up 1o $350 Cap
ta m's beds, $275 co mpl ete
Baby bed s, $99 Mattresses
or box spnngs, futl or tw1n ,
S58 , firm , $68 a nd $78
Quee n se ts, $195
4 dr
ches ts, S42 Bed frame s,
120 and 125 , 10 g un
G un
ca b1nets,
$350 , d1nette
c ha.r s 120 a nd 125. Gas or
electnc ranges , $295. Or·
thoped ic super firm , S95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed fram es $20, S25, &amp; SJO.
Used Furntture bookcase,
5 pc. din ett set, 3 Living
r oom suite Ranges and
TV's 3 miles out Bulavil le
Rd Ope n 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am to5pm , Sa t
446 ·0322
Whirlpool 2 spd . washer ,
extra ni ce, $125. Whirlpool
dry e r, 3 te m ., SlOO. Call256·
1207

ON E 14 3 cu II chest
fr ee zer , 4 month s old One
24"
co lor
TV , Scars
ca b1n et One an t1 Qu e love
sea t Two bla ck &amp; w ll1 l e
por tabl e TVs . 17". p r ac
!r eall y new 304 895 340 7
ONE 3 HP rotollll er , 12 ft
alum tnum 10hn boa t. 304
675 4780
Go lf cl ubs, ba g and cart
P hone 304 773 5155
Ftal A llt s mod el 545, ru b
ber t.r e end load er. 2 yard
buc ket. co mplet ely ov er
haul ed wilh new eng m e, ex
cel len t con d1f •on
B l a•ne
K 1ng R1p ley, WV 304 372
6390
SPEED
Qu een
d1sh
wa shcr ,M a rqu ett e re fr1 ge
rator , S300 for both , S150
eac h 304 675 3312
MOVING, sale, sl arttng
FCiday 161h , 171h , 161h ,
19th , 10 a m 7 p m Mon
day Fnday 19th 2Jrd 9·30
to
5 30
p m
until
every thmg 1S gone. 304 675
JA i l
S5

Boa ts and
Motor s for Sa le

.

I 111 f, I I{ \I ' \
'

16 ft tn haul sk1 boa t. 90
H P Phone 304 675 1393
76

NO A N SWER W HEN WE
B UT WE TREK OUT &gt;&lt;ERE
END UP M ISS ING
:~~--- WEDDING !

TRACY S AYS .
HAD TO S END LEE
JO HNN Y OUT ON
A
L EAD - •'

Auto Part s
&amp; Acc ess one s

HI LLCRES T KENNEL
Board1ng a ll br eed s, clean
1n door o ut door
facil 1t1es
Al so AKC Reg
Dober
mn ns Ca ll 446 7795

4 F R78 14 whil e wnll
rad1a ls qood cond $1 25
FUL L se l ol'i 14 ... Ponttac
r a lly wll l 'el s Wt th tr ,m , $aO
2300 Jeffer son Ave 304 675
2396

BR IARPATC H KENNEL S
Board •n g and groom1ng
AKC
G o rd on
se tt er s,
Engl1sh Cocker Span1 e ls
Call38a 9790

77

78

A K C R eg •ster ed Basse t
Hound pupp1 es. $ 150 a
p•e cc, firm Ca ll aft er 5P M ,
4463 133
Bla ck &amp;

ulkt

e 1 •b'r~~r~o

wh1te pon y for

for~~==========:::::;===========~
~

sal
e Gen
tle e&amp;n, ndable
small
c hildr
S125 Call
256 9363

61

Norw eq 1a n Elkhound pup
P•C S $ 10 00 ea 992-)98 1

Fa rm Eq_u1pmenl

Doz er , John Deere 450 Out
s1de mou nt b la de Needs
some r epair $7 ,500 Shade
696 T2l4

ON E m al e Wa lke r Coon
Houn d, 18 month s old
Tra c k s.
trails &amp;
tr ees
coo n s $ 150 304 675 · 3 133

BOX blade Ke ll ey ba c khoe ,
hayr ake , NH baler, NH
hc"'yb1n e. mower , d 1sc.
see der
an d
f e rf111z e r
spr eader , 304 895 3503 or
304 697 1527

POODLE
pups ,
AKC
regtS f(' r cd , P ome r an 1a ns
No c hec k s. 30 4 895 3958
57

MUS ICa l
In strument s

1975 G RAVELY lr ac lo r ,
rea l good co nd1t1 on, su lk y,
bru shhog, g r ader blade ,
el ec tn c s tart phon e 304
456 1854

Drum Set,
bla c k and
chrome All c lea r hea ds,
new
ht hat
cYmba l s
1175 00 Ca ll675 6505

FARMALL H , 3 potn t h1t c h,
R mod e l Moline, c all 304
895 3441

For Sa l e or Trad e
John Dee re 450 doze r w 1th 4
way bl ade $6,700 Phone
304 67 s 2786

1977 Ol d s Cu tl ass Supr em e,
1 dr , very good cond ,
$7,850 Cal l 368 8769

1980 4 row A C no till alf
plan ter w1th hydrauli C row
mark er s and
mon 1tor
$6,200 1981 N ew H oll and ,
model 851 Large r ound
baler. h ydra ulic tw1n wrap
per , demon strat or $7 ,500
KEEFER'S Serv 1ce Ce n
le r , Sl R t 87 , Leon , 304 895
3874

For sa l e o r t rade f or
l•v es toc k , 197'1 GMC 2 ton,
qood cone! Call 367 7533

73 Spor s tcr Yama 11a 100, 53
f ord tra c tor 8N wtlh end
3 b tc yc l es Fr ye' s
tru ck au to Open 9 to 5
Closed Sun and Mon 742
7081
For Sr"I IC Jun tor SIZe prom
cfre sses '2 Stle 5. 2 StH' 7
A lso il pr
ot womens
wes tern boo t s, stz e 51 11
mccl
l1ke new Ca ll 992
5300 a ti e r 5 p m Mon thru
Fr 1 nny t 11ne o n w ee k end
Fo r Sa le Red wood pat10
se t t ab le. 4 cha•r s, urn
IJrella, i'lnd 3 lounge s 992
526d a fte r 5 or week ends
For Sal e Hard br~ c k , steel
POS I S( 4) 6 tn , s t ee l ' I '
Jo1 s ts. lumber used, used
door s ex tenor 1nter1or , trt
m . 2 mantels oak. J pr
sl1 d 1ng oak doors w1 t h
QU1d e Wc"' II S, SO l id Oa k an
ltqu e SI ,J 1rS Sp!ndle and
r all s 992 576 4 aft e r 5 o r
week end s
1979 Ford P1n to v 6 A 1r
Co n d , good
co n d •t to n
Bilha Cub 3 whee le r , Bar
!Je ll s and bench MOVING
C ill991 3083
lJ It V bo tt om bo at $150 or

trade Pho ne 30d 675 5912

- - -----

:::Film s11 pplil!:S:::::

63

L1ve stock

Fo r sa le Reg Quart er hor
se mare, 18 yrs old Pr 1ce
S500 Ca ll 446 34 13
One Regtstered Ang us bull
ready f or heavy serv1ce
Wye br ee d1ng One year o ld
0 1D bu ll Pa trt ot L ew 1s
VIlla Angus Ran ch, V 1nton,
Oh , 388 882 5
Gen tl e horse Phon e 388
9991 or 388 8623
Gra1n fee d freezer beef s,
your choiCe, $ 65 l b Ca ll
614 245 55 15

71

Autos for Sa l e

1977 Cutl ass Supr eme T
Top ca ll 992 6362
74 Chev y Ma l 1bu Class•c
wh •l e, r ed tnl ertor , 350 V 8,
64,000 mile s 949 2574

78
Chrys l e r
LeBaron
Wag on A C , P S , P B ,
leather tn t , 6 way power
seats Rad 1al t •res, cr u1 se
contr oL good mil eage 992
720 1
1979 Dat sun 2 10 Ha tchba c k ,
4 cy l . 4 speed , rear wtnd ow
defogg er , low mil ea g e,
rust proof ed 35 m p g 0 1e
hard batt ery 99 2 6235 wee k
day s 949 211 8 aft er 5 p m
H AR T S Used Cars , New
Ha ven We st V trgJnt a Over
20 less ex pe ns1ve car s 1n
s toc k

GOV E RNMENT
SUR
PLU S
CARS
A ND
TRUCK S many
so l d
through local sa les, und er
$30000 Call 1 7145690141
for your d1r ec tor y on how
to purchase Open 24 hour s
1977 BLACK on bl ac k
Camara Z 28 . JjO 4 speed ,
16,000 miles , AM FM, 8
Track, a c, r ea r w •nd ow
defoqgc r , PS, PB , ex c ell enl
cond 11 1on , phone 30 4 67 5
5693
7 4 Chevy M ont e Carl o, qood
Phone 304 675
condt t ton
7559

1975 FOR D Gra na cle 58.000
rrll es, 302 8 cyl 30467 5
7349
72

Truck 's for Sa te

1978 Fo rd 4X4 short bed.
on e owner
Ar ms tr ong
rad1al s, alum1num sl ots
367 0677 or l67 0793
64 Ford 1/2 t on flatbed, 292

Fo r sa le tea m w orkpon res
and harness, 700 lb Ca ll
446 9569

enq1 ne, enq tne 5 y r o ld ,
runs qood, body f a 1r, $250
or bes t off er. 446 41 20

Fo r sa le 2 yr old Leg horn
he n s,
60
a
bird
w S M• c h ae l 985 3956

1975 Ford p1ckup super
ca b, V 8, .:1 u t o t r an s, qood
cond Call 446 1909 or 446
9106

For Sa l e Reg1 ster ed Ap
paloosa Ma r e, w lfh Co lt by
std e Born 3 23 82 Go-M an
Go blood line s Wil l make
bea ut1fu t show prospec t
Ca ll aft er 4 30 p m 593
7390

1979 Tru ck Ram Charqer, 4
4 gre en tnt er 1or. ex
ce ll ent cond 1l 10n Conta c t
M1k e Sargent. C1t1zens
Nat1ona l Bank,PI Pt easan
I
X

- A.:£'i"V6Tl!tk
61

Farm

Eq~pF_!le n.!_ _

Ne w &amp; Used Troy huilt
Idler s Bulk garden seed
Sw 1shc r Impl ement, Inc,
Ga lliPOli S Ca ll446 047 5
1 se t ol Joh n Deer e 4 bo t
tom 16' se m1 mount plows ,
I H illsbor o tr1 ax le goose
neck 28' trailer Ca ll 614
256 6534
Grave ly Rot ary Plow &amp;
Cu ll1 va to r , FREE . for a
lim •t ed f •me, w 1th pur
chase of an y 8 H P, 2 wheel
Grave ly Trac tor &amp; Mower
Outdoor Eq u1pment Sales,
Jet 7 &amp; 35, Ga lltpOit S, PH
446 3670, Wee kday s 9 to 5,
Sal. 9to 1
Good 2 row co rn er p1cker,
shed ke pt, good work 1ng
cond1fi On, $4,000 00 Ca ll
256 1743 a fl e r 4
1972 t nt ern at1ona l trac tor
wtth slee per, stng l e ax le,
250 cu mmmgs eng1ne, good
co nd Ca ll 379· 2320after 5
Wanted 2x 12 or 14 pl ow and
d•sc Ca ll 256 1379
Rota t iller for I nternat10nal
Cub Cadet Ca l1367 7560

1-----------.J.------------I

Auto Repa tr

1 ~A V E l HE- FEELI"-' 6 LLL
6E- BACK IN TH!$ P.\RT .._1 t
THE COU NrR) &lt;;.OO N

Oualdy Au f obody &amp; Pa1nt
wo r k Pr otess tonal cust om
patnl w ork on mot or , )" c l es
Au to Tr1m Ce nter . dd6 1968

POODLE; G ROOM IN G
Ca ll Judy Taylor at 367
7770

~UII~~~ uppll e~

Bu ll d1 ng matenal s b lock,
sewer p1pes. w1n
dows, lmtets, etc Cla ude
W1nter s, R1 o Grande, 0
Ca ll 245 5111
br~ c k ,

75

PONTOON Boa t 446 4143

J o~1ct cr

~

3450

Tr ail er f or rent 10 V1nton
w1th ga rden spa ce Ca ll
446 425a
J bdr hou se tn Ce ntenary
Ca ll 388 8469. after 5 OOPM

For sal e 18 000 BTU a.r
cond tf •onPr . woodb urn mg
stove, I sofa . 2 en d tab les.
and 1 colf ee tabl e Call 446
4109
For sa le ysed R 40 D ti ch
W1l ch tr encher Call 1 6 14
694 78 47

47
Mob1le Hom es
f or Rent

100 used l 1res. f ew new. tot 5
ot excelle nt. some so so , S5
to $25 Acros s from Blu e
Founla tn M otel or Cr"l ll 4.!6
182? rl fl l'r 5

Ore bedroom apar tm en t ,
fur ni Shed and a1r co n
dtl 1oned
ult111t es pa1d
$215
(I n New Ha ve n )
Phone 614 446 7526

Large trailer lot s f or r ent
•n M1dd leport Call 992 2101
or 992 23 19 after 5PM

lu ll br1 Serncn t carpo r t. Rt
67 nort h rtwnf' 1 6 14 978
4339
42

1n

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

Dq AGO NWYND
CAT
TERY
KE NN E L AKC
Chow
puppie S,
CFA
H1ma layan, Pers1an and
S1 a m ese k it te ns
New
S1 am ese kll t ens Ca ll 446
38 44 afte r 4 p m

59

4 hrclroom Cf'lllr rll Ntr cllld
tlr~l l , C•IY wn tr r lt rP pl au'
un tur nt str rd
C')( Ct'p l
ktl
c t1 Pn
S.300 mon n, nru s
MU S I Sf' l l 19 7·1 Conco rd ulill11f' C,
Rc l f'rf'll (f' c"lnd
mobtlf' t1ornf' . 14x 70 , 3 df'P OS t I
r{'Qutrl'd
rn
brdr oom Qood con d1t. on R,"\ ( tnf' 949 ?793
pr1 CC' tncluciP&lt;, 8 x \6 ' I ron !
por ch iln o F r ,1nkl1n wood
d
r oom t urn
11 0U5f' tn
burn1nq
l t rf'p i&lt;~ C f'
Rn c,nr Oh 949 2619
t r lrphone 304 675 6378
19/3

Apartmen t for r ent
446 0390

1 bl'droom. r edecorated ,
wal k to stores Ide-al for
r r&gt; l tr eP , $100 per mo Wrt l £&gt;
to B ox 402 tn care ot th e
GalltpO it s D aily Trtbune,
825 3rd Ave Gn l l tpOit S, Qh

197 4 14 X 70 Con co rd
tr ,l iiN . PllOOf' 304 675 6378

'io6 000 L 1l l 304 773 5 156

Apartment
for Rent

56

Mt sc Mcrch and1 cc

P I("\S II C Sep tt c Tan k &lt;; S tc~lt.•
ancJ coun ty appr ovecl 1 000
ga l tank , pr1 ce $340 Oth er
s•zcs tn stock , haul 10 your
p1 ckup truck C 111 614 286
5930, Jackson , Oh RON
EVA N S E NTE RPRI SES

5 OOPM
1979

Hou se hold Goods

TH REE Angus cows w1lh
Cha rlo1 s cross ca l v es, ca ll
even1ng s 304 895 3450
64

~Hay

Good m •xed ha y Cal l 379
2145
Seed &amp; Fer111uer

Law n and Garden Fe r
td tzer Weed and F eed, 10
10 10 Ch o1ce 20 lb bag
$1 00 991137 4

1

Ira nspa ria tklll::::::·
71

vans&amp;4WD

For Sa le
1978 · Dodge
Power Waqon Ca ll 446
4740

&amp; Gram

Round Baled hay f or sa l e
Call 446 4036 or 446 6566

65

73

Auto s for Sale

72 Pont1a c ex co nd , new
v1nyl top. ca n be seen at 107
Chilli COthe rd
1973 Chevy Nova, good
cond , $900 Ca II 256 9367 or
446 0307

1967 Fa s tba ck Mu s tang,
new pa1nt 10b, new ttres
and mag~ Ca ll88 2·2030
1980 Pl ymou th Soporo Ca ll
446 4185
74 Cougar XR7, exc. cond,
very sha rp , $1,500 . 72 Mon
tego, good rust tnten o r ,
'300 Ca ll 446·9380
1

76 Datsun stationwagon,
610 with air, PB, 4 spd , ex
cl. runntng cond ., S1,400.
Call367;0157
74 M ercury Capree , good
condition Call446·4361

1978 Jee p Re neq ade, CJ 7,
oood co nd $4,900 Ca ll 756
9367 or 446 0307
1973 Jeep C J 5, 6 cy t , J
spd , lock 1n hubs, h1 gh
back bu cket sea ts, AM FM
8 track, roll bar. 12x 15 tt res
w1th wh1 te spoke r~m s, run s
good &amp; eas y on ga s. exc
con d $1,000 Call 36 7 7671
or 367 7560
1979 Ford 4 wh ee l
PICk up- good cond
2460 $4,000
1978 Toyota Land Cr u• se r ,
wi th hard and soft ca nv as
top 9.:19·2717
76 DODGE va n, 400 eng1n e,
pow er
steer mg , power
brakes, a ~r condt t iOned ,
low m11eage, heavy duty
suspens1on, $2 ,000 or bes t
o ff e r , 304 458 1513
74

_

!v'Of~r~yc\es

1980 SuZUki GS 550 L1m1t ed
Ed1t1on ex cond , 16,000
m1l es, $1 ,800 Cal l 256 ·9367
o r 446 ·0307

Ca mpmg
Eq utpm ent

71 It Ca lva cade Cam prr
Sleeps 6 Fully cont a1ned
T andum axle, r oll ou t
awn1nq, lots of ex t ra s Ex
ce llent cond . d 1nteres ted
ca ll949 2449 alter 2 p m
79

Motor Hom e
&amp;Camper s

\\\IF

1974 W1nnilbago ca mper ,
$5 ,000 In good co ndttton
Call 446 2577

-===- ~ =-=
81

'\'00 ALL SET

A !iWEET OLD GUY·
1111\GIHE liM I'O!RYIH'
ABOUT 11iE HEHHOOSE
BE IM' TOO FAA Ftl1 ~

"DYNAMITE"? 1'0
&amp;ETTER f:IJ GET
THOSE E66S,
THEM...

T'6() ....

12 Buick Electra till wheel ,
cruise control, $500 Call
446·8112.
Honda Civic -good
and body , new
paint, best off e r over
$1,000. 992·6730 .

1974 V. W . Super beetle.
GOOd cond . Priced on In ·
spectlon. Wllloughby Hill,
Chester, Oh. 985'3335 . ·.

or

Tl?tf' .;

I)

I

:./

LO AS SOON AS 1 Hr..fl N! l f
CAVE TO VORK IN I G F I
RIGHT AV/'I..Y Hl ISY DFS IG NING
DER LA.UN C H FR '

YA H 1 I RELIEF I HA.f-1 C ~U S T IN

WENTED ZE ULTIMA TF. VF APU N FOR.
Z~ SUN BELT '

Be ll Contr c"IC tl nQ GcnNn l
plumbtnq ser vt cc, 11omc
r cmodc l1 nq &amp; rep a tr s Free
es t• mntcs Ca ll 446 4002
Carpentry
r rmode l•n q and
Crl ll 367 0 19.:1

WOrk ,
r oot 1nq

Spec• al Marc h and April
on ly Gf'ne's Deep Stea m
C lcan•nq
Sco l ch Gaur d
FrPf'P Sttmat e 992 6309
RON' S TeleVISIOn Se rv1 ce
Spec1a lt 11nq tn Zen .t h and
Mo tor o l c1. Quaznr . and
hou se ca ll s Ph one 576 ?398
or 446 2454

HAPPENEI7 T017AY,

MINE, T00.1 WE'LL
HAVE TO RETURN

MY MIN!&gt; l(fEPS

J~'S

50 MOCif

HA$

1URNING ANO
TlJ~NIN G

MCJ&lt;E Y
.1'/KST THING

TOMORROWl

F &amp; K Tree T flmm1nq,
s tump r emoval 675 llJ1

T ,.

" ( :_. -. , 'a

ANI7 THEN I THINK

f"'l..

YOU 5 HO!JLI7 CALL
O N YO!Jf': ~RO THE~

\&lt;_. i

L •1 11 '

P«'EI VfNG

ORVILLE! AFTER
AlL , IF HE 'S
I?Y!NG ...

R IN GLES'S SERVICE ex
per1enc ed mason, roof er ,
car pe nt e r ,
e 1ec tr1 C1an ,
qen e ral
repalf s a nd
rem ode lm g Phone 304 675
2088 or 675 4560
Water we ll s Com mer c • r~ l
and Domest1c Tes t ho l es
Pump s Sa les and Se r v tce
304 695 3802
ADVANCED
Se ilml ess
G utt e r Door s
Offerrnq
co nt1nu ous
quttcr1 n g ,
seam less s1dtng, roof1n g,
qaraqc
door s,
fr ee
PSI I mr~ t es 614 698 8205

&amp;eni~tel~~~nl~ti~--------------------(]) Next QuestiOn
ft l Nattonal GeogrBphlc
The Thames
Spec1al
Th1 s documentary look s at
the mass1ve clean -up that
ha s re stor f!d the Thames
Rtver tO a new Vl talt !y and
follows the rtver from 1\ s
begmntng to tiS end (60
mm ) [Closed ( apt toned]

FRIDAY

4/16/82
EVENING

82

Plumb1ng

6 00

&amp; H ea t•ng

News

(]] ABC News
C1J 3· 2·1 Contact
(11, Over Easy

6 30
83

Excava ftng

Gallipoli S D1vers •fl ed Con
s t Co Cus tom dozer &amp;
Spec 1al
b ackhoe wor k
f arm rate s Call us for fr ee
es t 1mates 446 4440
84

E lectncal
&amp; Refn gera t1on

Wa sher &amp; dry er r e pa~r , all
work
quarant ee d ,
rea sonab le rates Call 256
1396
SEW IN G Ma chtn e repa1r s,
se r v•c e Auth onzed Stn qcr
Sa les &amp; Serv1ce Sharpen
Sc tsso r s
F abrtc Sho p,
Po meroy 992 227 4
8.S

o m m o rn ·••1m ··•
(l) Andy Gnffith

CARTER ' S PLUM BI NG
A N D H E Af iN G
Cor Fourth and P1ne
Ph one 446 3888 or 446 4477

Genera l Ha ulin g

1980 HONDA CM 400, Sl200
phone 304-675·6252

12' ALUMINUM boat with
oars, good condition, $150.
304·675-5904 or 675·2358 .

' •h

Fr e nc h C dy
Pa1n lt nq
res1denila l &amp; com mcr c 1a1 .
tn l eno r . ex tenor , paper
tlanq.nq ,
&amp;
trxlured
cc tl .n q s Cc"J II 367 77 84 or
367 7160

JIM S Wa te r Ser vice Ca ll
J1m Lan1 er, 304 675 7397

---· ----r- ----- --

~r

CAPTA IN ST EE MER CAr
pe t Cl ean.ng tea t urcd by
Haffell Bros ther s Cus tom
Carpet s F ree es t 11na tes
Call 446 2107

Custom haulin g, lim estone,
gra ve l, sa nd . La ure nce
D arst 742 2505

18FT. tri ·haul, in board-out
board, 140 HP, 304· 586·2626
or 304·675·3482 .

1 •

/"II

' I I' I•

Mar c um
R oo f,n g
&amp;
Spout 1nq
30 ye ar s e x
J)PrtPOC f', spe Ciilli7 tOQ 10
built up r oo f Ca ll 38 8 9857

195?._ Ha rl ey Da vi dson H ard
tail , Suici de cl utch . 949
2717 .

-. - - - -----

''!I '' '' LOHG

I'

tn ler1 0r and
plumb1n g,
roof1n g, so me remode l tn g
70y rs exp Ca lll889657

Need som e th1n g haul ed
away or so m ethmg mov ed?
W e' ll do 11 Ca ll 446 3159 or
614 286 ·57 40 a ft er 6

Motors for Sale

II (,JIN l

WAY

•II" •

PAINTI N G

For sa le l98T Ho nd a 750
custom . Lot s of ex tr as,
$2,600 Ca ll 1 6T4 ·66Hl01,
New M a r shelld, Ohio

1s - -- - - BoatSand ----

I

tiENHOU5E 0

ex t e r~ o r ,

361 ·0657

1973 KAWASAKI KZ 900 ,
good condihon , call 304-586
2626 or 304·675·3482.

1,1

flil '• I.J •

STUCCO PLASTERIN G
textur ed ce il1n gs com
mer c1a l and res 1dent1al,
free es t• rna tes Call 256
1182

f'

9 30

m ffi NBC News

I}J SSO,000 Pyram•d
(1) Gomer Pyle

()) Muppet Show
0 (I) (jQ) CBS News
(I) DrWho
(11J Ltlias, Yoga and You
I!) (1lJ ABC News
7.00 0 (2J P M Mag az ~n e
()) Good News
(I} Flashback
F~re
at
Coconut Grove
(I) Winners
(I) Entertainment Tomght
(l) Happy Days
ll) (() Tic T ac Dough
(]) OtJ MacNe•l-lehrar
Report
(1QJ News
CD (1iJ Muppet Show
7 30 0 (]) You Asked For It

(J)

Anoth ~r

lite

(I) God Bless America

(]) 0 (])

Fam1ly Feud
ffi Laverne and Shirley
CJ) Busmess Report
(1Ql Richard Simmons
rtv Issues. Ohto
&amp; (1~ Entenainment
Tonight
800 0 CIJ ffi Ch1cago Story
An 1nnocent woman 1s
sla1n . W1ng 's w1fe enters
thA country carry1ng nar cottcS and killS her hus·
band !&gt; cousm to pro1oc1
hor baby !3 hrs )
([} National Geographi&lt;:
Special
(!) MOVIE : 'Hard Coun·
try'

1980 Buick Century exc.
cond., 4 dr. with V -6 engine,
21.000 miles. Call446·8310 .

~t ~ 1

1&lt;.1 "''f ~~ ~ · ~ ~~~r~ lil 'f

GEE- IIlii.. ()\TES SURE

MO~,

Hom e
Im prove ment s

JON ES BOYS WATER
SERV I CE Ca ll 367 7&lt;~7 1 or
367·059 1

81 Hond a 50 R. $450 Ca ll

'i·'

If you nee d your trash
hauled away, ca ll Harper
304-615·5868 betwee I PM
a nd S P M . •

87

V.ph_o~st e ry

TR I STATE
UPHOL STERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave ., Gallipoli s
446· 7833 or 446· 1833.
MDWREYS Upholstery Rt .
l B"" 124, Pt. Pl easant, 30 4.
675·4154

'

'

(I) ID i12l Benson IClosed
Capt1onedJ
0 Cll (1~ Duktt of
Hazzard luke and Bo
bfeak 1nto Boss Hogg's
bank (60 m1n I
(() f1 11 Washington Week/
Review Paul Duke hosts
as lop Washington JOurnaltSIS analyze the week 's
news
8 :30 (I) Mejor LHgue Bose·
ball: Atlanta at Houston
(I) Ill f1~ Borney Miller
JCiosed Capt1onedl
(I) [11) Wall 'Stroot Woek
Louis Rukeyser analyzes
the '80s with a weekly re·
view of economtc and Investment matters.

9:00 (J) 700 Club

e llt

Phoenix '
Dolloa J .A
becomes ,a pnme suspect

(I)

0
•

(]) fit
'

'"" -

.. I

([l lnstde Story Hoddmy
Carter Ch1ef corre spondent
and anchor man w1ll pre
sent a lead s1ory each
week filmed on locat1on
10 00 (!) MOVIE . ·used Cars'
CU &amp;l r12) Strike Force
0 ([) [10) Falcon Crest
Conc lus1on
Ang•e faces
1he loss of the ent1re es
ta te (60 m1n )
([l CreatiVIty w / B1ll
M oyers The W orld o f
Norman Lear -Part It / The
Crea t•v e Per son Tht s por
tr att of l ea r h1m sell shows
us tho muht faceted per
sonallly of the man behmd
the televiSIOn comed1es
JCiosed Cap ttoned[
( 11) News
1 0 30 Cil Smg out Amen ca
CL Supetstar Profile
(11.) Masterpiece Theatre
Love In A Cold Climate
Uncle Matt refuses to le1
Ltnda marry 1 ony Krocs•g
(60 m1n 1 ]Closed Cap·
\toned I

,,

00
30

2 00
2 30
3 00
3 t5
3 30
4 00
4 30

SATURDAY

4/17/82
EVENING

6 00

6 30

700

7 ·30

8 :00

e

~ain'

(J) T~S Evening News

12:00 CD Bums &amp; All..-.
(I) Nlghtllno
(I) PBS Late Night

e

Cll Fridays Host Valone
Harper is JOined by mus1cal
guests the Cars (A) (90
m1n .)
12:30 D (lJ (!) SClV Comedy

N- ·

830

J-

(lJ
llonny Show
(I) MOVIE: 'Flower Drum

Song'
(IJ Fri~s Host Valerte
Harper 1s JOin~ by mus1cal

rn

Amerrcan
ClaSSIC
Wom en's Ehte Gymnas tiCS Champ1onsh1p
(J) MOVIE 'G1g1 '
rn ChampiOnShip Wres
tling
CD God Has the An swe r
0 (j) (1Ql News
(I) Class•c Country
111) Once Upon a Classrc

ooo mCIJCIJ O I]) ,~ III

(tal News
(]) Nashville RFD
([J D1ck Cavett 'Drugs
Addtc l1on &amp; Recovery
Concluston MacKenZie &amp;
John Phtlhps and Or Mark
S Gold art: the guests
11 30 0 m ffi Tonight Show
Johnny 1s JOined by T 1m
Conway Sammv Oavts Jr
and Juha Chtld (R) 160
m1n)
(f) Another Life
(I) Benny Hill Show
0 (]) NBA Bas ketball
Teams to be Announ&lt;:ed
(I) Captioned ABC News
~ll MOVIE : 'Murders In
The Rue Morgue'
C1Z Nightlino
1 1 :45 (J) MOVIE: 'Kill and Kill

guests the Cars {A) , (90
mtn)
(I} I Marn ed Joan
(]J My Little M argt e
(!:• MOVIE 'The Shmrng '
CD 1D f1 Z~ News
{10) MOVIE
Blood and
Black Lace
0 (]) News
(]) Bachelor Father
(I) l1fe of Atl ey
(I) Burns &amp; All en
CIJ MOVIE ' lncredrble
Shnnking Man
(]) Jack Benny Show
CD I Marned Joan
(!) MOVIE . 'The Moun
tam M en'
(I) My l1ttle Ma rg1e

9:00

M1ll on the Floss When
Magg•e and Stephen go
sathng . he tosses the oars
overboard and !he two are
forced to spend the n1ght
at an tnn jCiosed Cap·
t1onedl
(]) Gl f1Z News
ClJ Honor Sottetv
0 (j) Concern
(101 CBS New s
(11) Fast Forward
0 al New s
(I) 0 Cil Hee Ha w
(J) lawrence Wefk
()) Fawlty Towers
!tOJ Hanna's Aril
(11 ) Paper Chase
Ill (1~ Solid Gold
&amp; (l) Dance Fever
(I) No-- Honestly
f10J In the Know
0 CD CI) Harper Valle y
Stella tak es Dee and her
fnends campmg
(}) MOVIE. ' Magic Town'
(])
MOVIE
'Up the
Academy'
(J) This Week in Baseball
(]) Ill [1~ Love Boat
!Closed Cap 11oned l
0 (]) (lfl W81t Disney
(I)
MOVIE :
' Danger
Ughts'
® Classi&lt;: Country
D Cil
One of the
Boye Gramps and h1s part·
ner head for a semor cttl·
zens home
(]) Major League Baee·
ball: Atlanta at Houston
0
(lJ
(Il
Barbaro

m

Mandrell and the M an
drell Ststers Barbara and
her SISter s are 1omed by
Roy Roger s and Da le Evan s
and the Sons uf tht
Ptonem s (R) 160 m1n I
0 (]) (tOJ MOVIE 'Sa m e
T1me. Next Year
1111 V1c Brad en' s T enn• s
9 30 (]) MOVI E
Hollywood
Kmghts
(j) Alfred H1tchcock
{11 1 Sneak Prev1ews Each
week co hos ts Roger Eben
and Gene Stskel g•ve vtPw
ers the 1nstrte s10ry of
what s currently mak1ng
the sc reen at thP. loc al
mOVI C lhCillflJS
10 00 0 aJ (Jl NBC News
Reports Pr otectton For
Sale The [nsUiance Indus
Hy

({) I!) 12! Fantasy Island
A w oman mes 1u pt ove ,,

folk hero 1s really her
ancestor and a man w1 shes
for 1nne1 sTrength \AI {60

mm)

ill Au st m C•ty Lrm1t s
!ttl MOVIE
'My
Star '
1 0 30 m Rock Church

lu cky

~

0

2 6 C (E) 12. News
MOVIE ' N1ghthawks
American Playhouse
Work tnq
1~,~ ~
•'fl t:.ocle
tJdSI"!Cl 1111 S 1urh 1 ,&gt;.,, I c,
tw st st•llt nq bou k l'••lln
1ne ::. lhf' alltludf' &lt;, ot ut (!l vl
rlual::. abou t lht·1r wot&gt;.,u tq
hve::. 190 m u1 J [Cin.., l' tl
Capt 10nt'rl)
11 30 0 :1 L7, Sa tu rday N1ght
L1ve Gue ::. t ho " l J o ~ HII I Y
C.J'- h IS !Otnf'fl !Jy III Ot l
J ~Jh n {90 mm I
( tl H er~ t age Smge rs
(U MOVIE
'The FHe
chase rs'
0 (.[} 101 New s
C9 112.\ MOVI E
The
My stenans '
11 45 ffi TB S Even1ng New s

11 00

( 4.1
, 9)

1 2 00

~3)

Amenca n l ra•l
91 MOVI E
The
Challenge
tOJ MOVIE
The Kremlm
l ette r
1 2 30 r1, W eeken rl Gardener
1 2 45 l 4.) MOVIE St1r Crazy
( ~ } MOVI E 'The Joker Is
W1ld '
1 00 0 ( 2 MOVIE 'A T1m e
for Kd hn g

0

by THOMAS JOSEPH
1~

t\( '1\0S."'i

Sp!il

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I \tt .Hul ob, J
l rl(\1, 1\l

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I td1n\11 .II
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I j It !"111.111
So lo 's
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15 Allgl~.lXO il
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16
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6 I.! \til-

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7 \ 'o 11un 11 11~

IK BHith
19 Sp1n t
21 D1pl mn&lt;~l1t

10 l"rt•.ll

tr;lll
!? \l.i l!rlll

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l i \'ok11

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23 DtVI!iltlll
wor d

24 Trap
25 J enn or Uta
26 Ot 't'CI SIOil

27 Tlunmc d
211 Ftnal word
?9 Pnle or { 'u f' h
:10 ( 'ap
:u Sonwwhdl
:12 J&gt;tK'lfHJi'
:15 Slur ovt•r

Unscramble these lour Jumb!os
one lettar to each square to form
tour ordinary words

I GUSTO
I

KJ

.......-

I I

l7 llckn ·:'I
Ita li an
names.1kl·

D

39 Tr e nch ~n.nttu.,
40 Indt.tn

r J

I

rJ

I

IYORTHE ~

CK J

[j

J

5NAI&lt;E CR:EEP:5
ACR:055 )'OU R PATH

IN THE WOODS .
Now arrange !he c11cled rene1s 10
form the surpnse answer as sug
gesled by the above cartoon

1 I)( I XI XI J
(Answers tomouowl

Jumbles CREEK HOARY PLENTY BUMPER
The weather forecaster is work1ng under
pressure-A BAROMETER

I Answer

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Pave=: 10-The Daily Sentinel

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Friday, April 16, 1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Brown supports dam rehabilitation

P ROBLEM - E rosion of the banks a long the Ohio
River is u mu jur cmrl'l'rn to P ome roy and Middleport.
Offi cials of both towns have asked for help repea tedly
rega rding the was hing a way of the ba nks . ~his plrture,
takt•n by tht• !a ll· John Srolt in 1936, shows Pomeroy's

Eas l Main St. where at tha t time ga rdens thri ved, as
shown in the photo. At the present time there is very lit·
tic bank left between the riv er a nd ra ilroad tracks run·
ning along th e stree t.

Eastern.. ,

contmued from page 11

tion was that no lext):x)oks be
purc hased for the new year. Present books would be rebound a ndreplace ment books only would be
purc hased. The savi ngs would
a m ount to $12,CXXJ. Another • uggestion was that no new furni tu re
be purc hased with about four thousand being being a nnua lly now.
There would be no field trips permitted except those required to
mee t state c urriculum req uireme nts. A suggestion was made to
c hange high sc hool bt•s route pickups from a home-type situa tion to a
genera l situa tion. Another suggestion Is th a t there would be no over. tim e paid to a ny e m r loye for the
new year. Anoth er was that a U
buildings be closed to extra activities except absolutlely necessary
school fu nct ions. Roberts suggest
that only absolu tely necessary repairs be do ne to a ny of the buildings; that o n ly abso lut ely
necessary class room mate rials be

One Meigs ...
\\'or{ fn um· yea r
une-liHnl

dS

ICont inu ed from page 11

before. ctnd at

thl' cost."

said

purchased. The fin al sugges tion Is
that the board Inves tiga te a gene ral
across the board cut for all employes of the district If the state
fo und a tion moneys continue to be
cut back.
The boa rd sold a sc hool bus no
longer needed fo r $207 a nd a ta ble
saw for$61. J a m es Huff was a uthorized to a tte nd a federal project
meeting In Colum bus on May 5.
The board a pproved tlle purchase
of $13,CXXJ worth of new Instrume nts
by the Eastern Band Boosters on a
lease plan a nd voted to accept the
Instrume nts but wUitake no responstbUity for payment which wW be
paid over the next five year period.
BIU Buckley, vice president, was
in c harge of the meetin g In the a bsence of preside nt , Dorsel Larkins,
who Is a patient a t Holzer Medical
Cente r. Others a ttending we re Ber nard Shrelvers, J immy Caldwell
a nd Roger Ga ul, board me mbers,
Supt. Roberts, a nd Treasu rer
E loise Boston.

Weir ,

not111g thC:JI nmstructi un rusts ar t.'

n s ing iJ I over nine pcrcr nt per year.
Ending for the prognun com e!;
from Ohio's 11.7-cent-per-ga llon fue l
ax . The Oh10 legisla tu re a ll oted a

Deputies check
theft complaints
The Meigs Cou nty Sheriff's Department Is Investigati ng the reported theft of va ri ous items taken
from a dri lling rig near La ngsville.
The ite ms take n were valued at approxima tely $500.
The depart me nt Is a lso In vesti ga tin g a n ac t of va nda lism to a
house located on coun ty road 44 In
Oli ve Township. A large pictu re
wi ndow a nd a bedroom window
were broken out with rocks. Jim
Davis, ri , Rt. 1, Reedsville, reported the Incide nt.
Thu rsday, th e department tra ns ported Rex Butc he r , 21. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, a nd J ohn R Tyree, J r.
22, Middleport to the Columbus Correc tiona l Facility to beging serving
their respec ti ve sentences.

Veterans Memorial
Ad mitted--Sall y Cadle, Pomeroy; George Folmer, Pomeroy;
John Boling, Minersville.
D isc h arge d -- R o la nd Mo rri s ,
Mary Miller, E unice Nut ter , Nora
J orda n, Lois Clella nd , Ma rtha Hop:&lt;lns, Clare nce Taylor, Debra
Burke . Leona rd Koenig, J r .

Warning issued
Perso ns ca ug ht va nda li zing
parking me ters in the village of
Pomeroy will be fined up to $500
a nd se nte nced to 90 days In ja U the
Pomeroy PoUce warned today.

portiO n of the revenu es to the bridge
replacement prog ram as pa rt of la&gt;1
Ju ly's increase. The additiona l
reve nu es also wi ll fund 1,930 miles of
highway res urfac ing to be put in the
contract by J ul y 1.

Truck driver hurt

A driver suffered slight Injury In
a two- vehicle accide nt on Ohio 7 In
Meigs County Thursday afte rnoon.
The Gallla- Melgs Post of the
state highway pa trol said WUUa m
Kldd J r., 37, Pedro, wasn't treated
a 1 the scene_
According to the report , Kldd
was southbound a t 12: 30 p.m. whe n
he a ttempted to pass anothe r ve hic le a head of him driven by Dona ld
T. Nee! Sr. , 46, London.
As Kldd began passing on the
right, the rig ht lane e nded a nd Kldd
a pplied his bra kes, causing his
truck to jackknife and overturn
moder ately damaging the vehicl~
a nd a camper attached to the truck.
Kldd was cited for Improper
passing, the pa trot said .

Area death
F.dith Nancy Barnett
Edlth Na ncy Barne tt , 75, Route 1,
La ngsville died a t 11:50 a .m .
Thursday a l Vetera ns Me morial
Hospital, Pome roy, foUoy,ing a
short illness.
She was born Feb. 28, 1907 in Hogsell, W. Va. , to the la te Willia m J .
a nd Louise (Meadows) Neville .
She m a rried Clyde Barne tt Nov.
23, 1m. In Gallipolis, and he preceded her tn dea th in 1979.
Surviving are three sons a nd
three d a ughters, W!Uia m R, Bidwe ll; Ke nne th N., Maysville, Ky.;
Harold , Sabina ; Mrs. VIrginia
Athey, West Palm Beach, Fla.;
Mrs . Lee (Judy ) Parsons, Inez, Ky.
a nd Mrs. J ohn (Ruth Ann ) Loveday, Route 1, BidwelL Also survi vlng a r e one brothe r . Cha rl es
Nevtlle, Eureka , two sis ters, Ruth
Fowle n. of Columbus , a nd Mrs.
Jess (Helen ) Pla nts, West Columbia, W. Va., a nd 13 grandc hild ren.
She w as preceded In dea th by
three brothers and two sis te rs.
Fune ra l services will be held at 1
p.m . Sunda y a t McCoy-Moore Funera! Home , Vinton. with Rev. Amos
11llls officiating. Buria l will be a t
Meigs Me mory Garde ns. VIsitation
at the fune ra l home Saturday wW
be from 2-4 a nd 7-9 p.m .

Following a tour of the Gallipolis
Locks a nd Dam Thursday m ornIng, U.S. Rep. Clarence J . Brown
said he 'd m a ke r ehablll tatlon of the
44-year-old facWty one of the ma jor
points or his cam paign for Ohio
governor.
Brown, an Urbana Republican
who's represented his home distric t
since the Ia te 1950s, m ade brief
stops In Galllpolls a nd Pomeroy afte r hL&lt; da m tour.
Revita lizing the da m - whic h
means oblalnlng fede ra l funding to
replace the present 600-foot ma in
lock a nd 360-foot a uxllla ry lock witll
more m odern -sized passageways
- Is a part or brlngtng southern
Ohio's economy out of the doldrums, the candida te said .
" It's ha rd to measure the Impact
of Gallipolis in tenns of lost economic opportunity for the 22 million
people residing In the Ohio Va lley,"
Brown noted In a press release.
"Ohio a nd othe r neighboring slates
have been hit hardest by the current recession a nd increased barge
traffic down the Ohio Is precisely
the kind of 'shock trea tme nt' necessary to bring our economy back to
life. "
With t he a mount of coal flowing
In and out of the area, Brown said
sou the rn Ohio m erits a centra lized
coal-washing facility to help in the
m arke tabUity of the area 's coal reser ves. Additi on a l tec hn ology
should be brought In for the e tfort.
he added .
Brown, a Korean Wa r veteran
a nd fo r m e r ne wspa per executive,
said he feels confident the $1.6 mUlion proposed for a n e ngineering assessm enl of the Gallipolis project
wil' be a ppropria ted. Howeve r , due
to infla tion a nd the fact It wUI add
$30 million to the progra m 's tota l
cos t each yea r , the candida te said
Ohio a nd other sta tes "may wa nt to
pool resources to begin their job on
their own.
"As governor of Ohio, I wUI alte mpt to e nlist the suppc :t of neig hbo ring states In bringing a U our
combined e tforts a nd pressure to
bear on the Congress a nd the administration to move swlrtly on the
da m's renova tion," he said .
Brown added that he believes the
Ohio River can be Improved for
further economic and industrial e xpa ns lon muc h like Mississippi
River areas. The Ohio Valley otters

r-- ---------------------=----

Vol. 16 No. 10
_c opyrigh1ed 1982

Meeting changed
A meeting of the Pome roy High '
School Alumni Association scheduled for 7: 30 Monda y has been
changed to 7: 30p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Pa ulette Harrison.

HITCHING POST
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Oh .

Spaghetti Dinner
Sunday, Aprill8
From 2 p . m . to Whenever
All You Can Eat, S2 .00
Live Entertainment

HITCHING POST

Today's T-S

Save our RC, RC - 1 00, Nehi , Upper 10,
Diet Rite and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps
for charity.
YOUR RELIABLE MEN OF OLDS
PRESENTS OUR SPRING

SELLABRATION
'

1982 OLDSMOBILE 98 BROUHAM SEDAN

Rio Grande College a nd Co mmunity C11llege rtccntly sent a
representative to Japan !11
recruit students fo r the college
and at present, there are 44
students a ttending Rio Grande
College a nd Community College
who are dtizens Df other countries, including Botoswanna, In·
dla, Iran, Japan and Nigeria.
Besides having to deal with
college, these individuals must
also deal with living in a foreign
country, being awu y from their
homelands and .adjusting to

Air , aut oma t ic. t i:t , c ru i se, pow er wi ndows, power sea t s, power door

tac k s. power pa ss s•de rec ltnin q sea t. powe r an ten na . am fm B Irk .
s! Cr'f'O,

tt.

1ades tone

m e t a ll ic.

full

roo ftop

vtnyl

c over tnq .

It

econo my B ct nQ Mr Burd e tt e's pe r sonn l df'mO wdl nllpw you to sa ve
hundreds o l d otl i!r O:.
LI ST PR I CE"
\15, 876 . 77
12.8° c F IN A N C IN G

----$13,99309

SALE PR ICE

1,883.68

1982 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 ROYALE COUPE
A tr , nuiOrT1!11 1C. V 8 qaso l inc. crutse . t ilt wheel, am ·lm s tc r €'o, wt r e
whf'el c ov e r s. dk bluf' , cto tt1 tn tc rt o r. m tdniqht blue mctn ll ic. wh1 l e

tnndau vt ny t r oo f
12.8% FIN A N C I NG

LI ST PR ICE
D ISC O U NT
SA L E PR ICE

$11 , 3SI.l l
I ,014.61

variances

in

this

country's

language, ftmd, people and
culture. Today's •Along the
River' feature, B-1, explores
Rio's cross-cultural cmmec tion.

$10,38660
mi rr or ~ .

suprr loc k

w ~W(•Is.

12 .8°o F INAN CIN G

LI ST PR ICE
D ISCO UNT

$\0, 8 86 . 27

1982 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR. COUPE

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

Ph . 992· 211 S

Ti nted w 1ndows. supr r slock Wh(·e ls. a1r condi i •On lnQ. nu tomat1 C. Quar
11 d 1g it a l c lock , II . redwood me l i! ll ic. w lc 1oltl in trnor
12.8cio F INA NC I NG
LI S T P RI CE

Pomeroy, OH .

c:.raAIG®

CAR RADIOS

81

1982 OLDSMOBILE FIRENZA SX SPORT COUPE
4 cyl ., 4 speed . sp l i t lol dmq r ear sea t . tdt wheel, t in ted windows . spor t
super st ock whei'IS, st yl ed m i rror s, powe r slc&lt;' r•n q

12. 8% FINAN C IN G

LI ST P RI CE
D ISC OUNT

S8,4 81.76
Sl0 .13

$7 92573
I

~ - 1981 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR. COUPE
Ai r , t ilt whee l, c rui se, r ea r . de f ogq_c r , su per stoc k wh ee ls, nm f m
stereo, sport styl ed m1 rr or s, t1nt ed Window s, 5.7 L IIH di CSI' I economy
Sa les man' s De m o.
t 2. 8% FINAN CIN G
LI S T PRI CE
$ 11 ,05 3.44
DI SC OUNT
2,064 .44

SAL E PRI CE

1 Only Quick Mount a-Track Deck, Reg . $69.95 SALE $46.50
1 Only Quick Mount a-Track Deck, Reg. $71 .95 SALE $47.50
1 Only AM/FM/a-Track Deck, Reg . Sa9.95 '

SALE $59.50

1 Only AM/FM/a-Track, Reg. $139.95

SALE $93.50

2 Only AM/FM/a-Track Deck, Reg. $159.95

The return of U.S. Secretary of
State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and
rumon of a diplomatic solution to
the Falkland Islands crisis hav e
created ' ~an air of optimism/'
press reports say. But Argentine
officials are not predicting an im·
minent peaceful end to the
dispute over the Islands, and
Halg's only pu~lic comment
Saturday was, "We are working
hard." An update on the crisis
between England and ArgenUna
appean on 1).1.

923 .29

$9,317

SA LE PR ICF.

Fine Quality Car Radios and 8-Track
Decks - Ea.sy to install in most foreign
and domestic cars. Limited quantity as
listed. Music Dept., 2nd Floor.

$ 10,24 1.10

D ISC OUN T
S A L E P RI CF.

ELBERFELD$ SALE!

SALE $106.50

,$9,00000

12.8% GMC financing on all new 1981 &amp; 1982
cars ~nd trucks in stock, with approved
credit, check out the dealer at the

OLDSMOBILE SELLABRATION
AT

YOUR D EA LER ON T HE RIVER ....

~IMMONS
Olds.-Cad.-Chevy, Inc.

3 Only Quick Mounf Power Play a-track Deck
I
With FM Radio Reg. $179.95
SALE $119.50

308 E. Main St.
Mon.-Fri.
8 to 6

Ph.9jH614.

AnJ1[me
.
' ~ Appointment

Richard Gere faces love and
bombs during the blia or
Eagland durtug World War II In
"YANKS," a romantic drama
airing lonighl on "The ABC Sunday Night Movie." For program·
mlng detBIIs consult "TakeOne," your guide to en·
.;:;.:..;;;.;.._
tertainmenl.

__

Along 1he River . . . . B-1·8
Area deaths . ... . .. ~ . 1).8
Business ••. .. . ..•. ·E-1·2
Classlfleds . • ... . . • . D+7
Farm .. . . , •. . . . ..• • E-2
Local , , , , , , , , , , , .,., A~LII' I
S"te-Natloul •.••• IH·2
Sports ,, ...... , ••• 0.1-8
Tak~ne ...... .. Insert

YOUR RELIABLE MEN OF OLDS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

tntintl
Sunday , April18 , 198 2

Pomeroy, OH.
Saturday
9 to5

'

J,.•

'

35 Ce nt s

A Mu lt •m edt a I nc. News paper

40 percent tax hike·'too big a chunk' -Hinig
By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Associa ted Press Writer
COLUM BUS, Ohio (AP I - Ohi o
legisla tors a ppea r willing to ra ise
taxes in a n election year, but nollo
the levels suggested by Gov. J a mes
A. Rhodes' administration.
How;e Ways a nd Means Chairma n,
Willia m E. Hinig has all but closed
the door on Rhodes' call for a 40 percent personal income lax surcharge
to help erase a projected $1.5 billion
in red ink from the budget.
Hi nig sa id a n increase of that size,
ret roacti ve to J a n. 1, would mea n a
payroll withholding hike of 80 percent during the last six months of
th is year.
"I thin k th at's ju"t a little bi t too
hig a chunk for most people to
s wa !l ow,"
Hi n 1g,
D-New
Philadelphia , sa id.
Hinig 's committee r es um es
hea rings Tuesday on a Senatepassed bill combining a 25 pe rcent
income tax incr ease with another
round of spending cuts to help ba la nce the budget by June 30, 1983.
The governor 's proposal outlin ed
in the How;e last week also drew a
cool reception across the Slalehow;e

fro m Sena te President Pa ul E.
Gi llmor.
Gillmor, R-Po rt Clinton, said the
hi gher the ra te goes, the fewer votes
a tax increase bill ca n ga rn er m the
upper chamber.
" I don't kn ow exactly where that
mag ic num be r is ... but my expectati on is tha t before you get to a
40 per cent surcharge you ra il under
50 perce nt of the votes in the
Sena te," Gillmor sa id .
An adn, inist ration proposa l to
change la nguage in a soft drink
sy r up lax • nd ge nerate $57 mil lion in
inL·ome Urew a more favo rable
response in the House.
Leg•slators imposed the tax when
they ~ a sse' ! the curre nt budge t last
Nove1nbc r. But it was struck down
by a F r&lt;1f1klin County Common
P leas Cuurt decis ion tha t is now
being a ppealed.
Democra ts ' resista nce to we lfa re
spendin g cuts im posed unde r the
Sena te bill i" likely to be the chi ef
point of co nt en ti on ove r the
meas ure.
Under the Sena te bill, a fi ve percent increase in Aid to Dependent

Chi ldre n a nd a 10 percent hike in
Genera l Re lief benefi t.s tha t a re
sc hedul ed to ta ke effect Jul y I would
be ca nceled. In additiO n, welfa re
would be subj ect to an across- th L•
board slas h of seven pe rce nt
The Rhodes administra tion , whi ch
expects an even greater increase in
we lfa re caseloads 111 fiscal yea r 1983
tha n first a nti cipated, favors retention of the hi gher benefit payrnenl,.
" We continue to support the
modest inc reases in wei £are be n efi ~
provided by the Ge neral Assem bl y
the first such increase .sinct:
1979, " the offi ce of budget a nd
ma nageme nt told Hini g's pa nel.
But Gillmor sa id exemptin g
welfare programs from redu ctions
would be a slicking point in the urr
per cham ber .
" " I think it w11l be very difficult for
the Sena te to ag ree to a package that
includes cut.s for other stale services
but does not include cuts for
welfare," he said.
Both cha m bers have sched uled
votin g sessiOns for this week as they
return from a tw~r week sprin g
brea k. The How;e conve nes Tuesday
a lll a.m.: the Senate a t 1 ::W p.m .

Property taxes grow: Meigs up;
dollar amount drops in Gallia

1,06 1.37

SALE 1-'R ICF.

c lothing, personal l'a re ctnd Social Sl'nmty
pa yment.s.
T he burc(ju ':; c:;tunalc:-; are furnu •ll frorrr
U.S. Ce nsus data on Alllt' n r an~· bu nn).!
habrl.s. The budgets an: cunslr udt•ti 111
represent what a typica l fctm i ly of fuur wou l(l
spend on a va ri l't y of ~nods &lt;:~nd SL'n'tces .
Ann ual family budgets needed f• •r a
" hi gher" standard of lrvrng wer l' lt•d bv
Honolulu, at $50,317. followt.•d bv Ne w Yorknort heas tern New Jersey , $47,2:10 : Ancho rage, $45,1 19: Boston , $44 .821. and
Washing ton, D.C., $41, 137 . Dallcts rt.•qutn·d
the sma llest fa mily budget, at $3:1,769 : Atlanta , $34 ,62.1 : Houston , $34.728 : St. l.nLns.
$35,965, and Cincinnati. $36,599 .
Fur t ht~er standcmJ of lrv1ng. the fl \ ' t'
most expensive areas wen~: An l" hnra)..!L'.
$22,939 : Honolulu, $20,319 : Sea tlle- Evcrt•lt.
Was h .. $17 .124 : San Franl'lsl'\&gt;Oakl;md.
$11 ,080 , and Was hington , D.C.. $16.702. Th•·
least expensive areas in thi s co teg11rv Wl'I"L' .
Dal las. $14,:!92 : Atla nta , $14.419 : Buffa lo.
$14.710 : Ka nsas C1ly, $14,925: and Denvo·r.
$15,093 .

12 Sec t1 ons, 88 Page -..

Middl e port- Pom e roy- Gallipoli s - Point Ple asant

1982 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS CIERA 2 DR. COUPE

SYRACUSE, OHIO
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
•Veg e table Plants
• Bedding Plants
• Foilag e Plants and
Hanging Baskets
OPENDAILY9til5
SUNDAYlTILS

The how;ehold dolla r we nt fu rt her 1n
metropolitan areas of the South and ce nt ra l
stales.
The burea u survey s howed that 11 was
easiest to mai nta in a moderate slandartl of
living in Dallas, $22,678; Atl a nta, $23,273:
How;ton, $23,601 : St. Louis, $24 .498, a nd Kansas Ci ty, $24,528.
On a ve rage, the survey esti ma ted that a
typica l American fami ly qf fnur, with only the
hus band workin g, needed $25,407 - based on
last fa ll's prices to ma inta in U1e
hypothetica l " intermediate" standard of
living. Tha t was up 9.8 pe rcent from the
average $23, 134 needed in the fa ll of 198V.
The ave rage fa mily budget needed for
someone to ma intain the " lower" sta ndard of
li ving was $15,323 a yea r , up 9.1 pe rcent from
the $14,044 of the prtv1ous year, a nd the fi gure
for the " hi gher" standa rd of li vi ng was
$38,060, a n increase of 10.6 percent from the
$34,409 during the a utw nn of 1980.
The survey incl uded costs for food , hous1ng
- either home owne rship or rental expelbes
- tra nsportati on , health ca re, tax pay ments,

tmts

FOR

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

By MERRILL HARTSON
Associa ted P ress Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A survey of 25
major U.S. metropolitan areas shows tha t
Honolul u, Anchor age, New York, Boston a nd
Washington, D.C. are the most expensive
places for a fa mily of four to mamta in a
moderate sta ndard of li ving, the gove rnmen t
reported Friday .
The Bureau of Labor Statis ti cs com pa red
livi ~ ~ costs in the autwnn of 1981 with the
same pe ri od the year before for a "typical"
fa m ily of fo ur consisti ng of a work ing
hw;ba nd , a non- working wife and two
chil dren. The com parisons were made a t
three sta ndard of li ving levebs - lower; intennediate, or moderate ; a nd hi gh.
The s tudy at the "i nlen nedi ale" level
showed tha t it co' t the typical famil y uf four
$31.893 lo mai nta in tha t modera te standa rd of
Ji ving in Honolulu. Tha t same fa mily needed
$3 1,890 in Anchorage, Alaska, $29,540 in the
Ne w York City and the northeastern New Jersey area, $29,213 in Boston a nd $27.352 in lht•
DIStri ct of Col wn b1a, the na ti on's ca pita L

•

Extinguish fire
THE Pomeryy F 1re Department
was ea lled to the Ro bert Sca rberry
res1dence on La urel Cliff Wednesday
eve ning to extinguish a brush fire. A
sma ll ulility building was bu rned in
the fire. Twenty-one P omeroy
firemen a nswe red the call.

NfAIIw!OI!III Cec• l

Attar years of declining, the numbers or Americans with Incomes below the poverty
line recently have turned up again. The statistics, compiled by the Census Bureau
through 1980 and therefore not reflecting current cuts in social programs, Indicate
the elderly benefited most during the decline in the poverty count and are moat
affected by the upturn The small graph shows the total percen tagea ol elderly
persons who are poor and Americans wh are poor.

A1r. t ilt w hee l, r1m f m r ad 10. sport sty led
med sand stone mrlallic

PHONE 992-5776

What it costs to maintain a 'typical' family

SOU RCE Burea u oltl"le Census

"D ISCO UN T

*FIELD SEEDS
*SEED CORN
*SPRING OATS
* FERTILIZERS

Making ends meet:

by c utting the s ta te's budge t where
necessary and bri ng II back Into
bala nce.
Brown said he disagreed wtth the
Rhodes admin istra tion's contention ed ucation s hould be cut whUe
appropriations for welfare are
Increased.
Earlier this week, Brown was
one of two Republican candidates
for the governor's nomina tion
picked In a GOP poll to win the nod.

muc h promise for coal, agriculture
a nd lumber development.
F or the state , Brown said he felt
pushing for new taxes to relieve
Ohio's fiscal problems Is the wrong
a pproach.
" I' m concerned tha t they wan t
taxes Instead of going to look for
something to c ut," he said . He fe lt
the drop in a nticipated revenue
wh ic h triggered the budget c risis
should be met, Reaga nomlcs-style,

jnd es t onc vf'lour ( loth tn l crio r , wtre wt, ee! covers 57 Ltler dt ese l

ONE STOP SERVICI:

POVERTY IN AMERICA

COLUMBUS, Ohio rAP) - Between 198V and 1981 , Ohio properly
tax es increased $233 million , the
la rgest dollar increase in the slate's
history, according to a ne w study .
The Ohio Public Expenditures
Council says the total dollar increase refl ects increases in rea l
estate, public utility a nd tangible
pers ona l property taxes .
The property tax is the largest
reve nue source for cities . townships
a nd school districts in Ohio.
The council says bw;iness and
public utility ta xes totaled $1.765

billion, :i4.4 pe rcent of the tota L
Agri cultura l a nd residential ta xes
total ed $1.48 billion , 45 .6 percen t.
The lax bile per person a ve raged
$300 statewide, according to the nonprofit council whi c h monit ors government spending in the stale.
Althoug h the increase in dollar
a mount was the hi ghest eve r, the
stale's pe rcenta ge increase - 7.7
percent from 1980 to 1981 - was not
unw;ual. sa id Cha rles A. Calhoun.
council director.
The la rgest increase was In

Holmes County, whi ch r egistered a
gain of 41.4 percent.
Seven other counti es sa w increases of more tha n 20 percent.
They were Ada ms, Cha mpa ign,
Clermont, Columbiana , Ha ncock,
Meigs a nd Wyandol, the council
said.
Prope rty la x dollar amounts dropped in four counties - Gallia ,
J ackson, Mahoning and Stark.
In-1951, all property taxes total ed
$340.9 million in Ohio. They ha ve inc reased 852 percent over the past
three decad es , the report noted.

Ohio Democratic ·gubernatorial
candidates blast new federalism
By JAMES HANNAH
"ssocfated Press Writer
Pre sident Reagan ' s
Ne w
Federalism is serving as a fat target
for Ohio's three Democra tic gubernatorial candidates, all of whom
have taken a shot at it.
" I think the New Federalism
stinks," former Cincinnati city councilman Jerry Springer said Frida y
at a Columbus forwn with the two
other candidates. " It's cruel. It
creates disincentive in this country
to provide vital services."
Springer . said it will trigger a
migretion of low-income people to
siates offering more social services.
He vowed as governor not to dismantle essential social services just
because the necessary federai funds
aren'tforthcoming. "We ·will pay for
it," he said.
Former U .' Gov. Richard ·Celeste
said none of the resources will be
provided·to the state to meet its new
responsibilities and that no national
·~rnlanis have been set.
"C6ilp~ with it Is a penalty for
. being poor or for being old,"'added ·
Ohio Attorney General WiiJ!am J.
Brown.

The candida tes appeared before
a bout 500 people at the Columbw;
Metropolitan Club, the first time the
three have appeared on the same
pla tform in the campaign.
Brown said the state needs to be
managed and cited his experience as
state attorney generaL
" The first thing you need in a
governor is a manager," ~e said.
" The ra are 618 boards, commissions
and agencies in state government.
The one thing we have to do is
manage that system, inventory the
taxes and inventory the system.•'
That brought a response from
Springer, whose experience had
·J&gt;een the subject of an earlier
question.
"What this slate has not had is a
good leader," Springer said. " You
can hire a manager; you can't hire a
leader."
" There's a difference between
somebody who says he's a leader
and tested leadership,'' Celeste said
after the forwn.
_"If you were able to combine the
strengths of Jerry Springer's
Fhetoric and Bill Brown's record,
Dick Celeste would be your result,"

he said. " I don't think lerdership involves how glib a person is. We've
seen people that come into the office
and need on-the-job training. No
matte r how well motivated they a re,
you pay a big price for that. "
The candidates made opening
statements, then fielded questions
from the audience. On his pian to
fund education, Celeste said he
favors putting a lid on the properly
lax and leaning more heavily on the
corporate and personal income
taxes.
Springer said he favors the
graduated income tax and vowed he
would spend the money necessary
for quafity education.
"If we're afraid to say that, we' re
sounding just like Republicans," he
said.
,
Brown's plan included a slow increase in property taxes, coupled
with an income tax based on ability
to pay. lottery earnings and ~ kind o/
windfall profits tax.
Springer said he would favor licensing restrictions on clubs that practice sex discrimination, and Brown
said he "Would not shy away from a
(Continued Qll A-4')

.,

Ohi o Budget Director Howa rd L.
Collier hu s served as GuY. Rhod es
point ma n during hearings of the
Ohio House Wa ys a nd Mea ns Committt.·e. Thr ~uvern o r's ma in
prop&lt;&gt;sal •·ails for a 40 perrent, $700
million incom e ta x increase, or a 30
pt" rre nt in r ome ta x a nd half-&lt;·cnt
sales tax boost to raise $7 10 mill ion
in the fi scal year beginning J ul y I.

News briefs ...
Cable rate vote set f or Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS - A final vote on the proposed rate Increase to
ca ble television subscribers serviced by Ca ble nterta ln ment of West
VIrginia wW be ta ke n by the Galllpo Us City Commission a tits Tuesday meeUng .
The commission gra nted a fi rs t reading passage of the ordina nce
a t Its April 6 session.
The ordinance calls for a n Increase In basic servJ.ce of $7 to $8.50
per month. Hookup for an additional set on the system Is expected to
Increase !rom $1 to $2, and the same hike Is proposed for AM-FM
freq uency modulation. The Installation c harge for a house previously without ca ble wUI go up from $10 to $25.
In a rela ted ma tter. Green Twp. trustees have s la ted a publlc
hearing for 6:30p.m . Monday In the township meeting hall in Centenary to conside r two cable television se rvice fra nchise req uests.
They a re being otfered by Thompson Cablevfslon, Charleston,
W.Va. , and Ga!Ua Cablevlslon, Gallipolis.
The trustees are also looklng Into a service otter by Cablentertalnme nl, which proposes to build a new tower to serve the GallipoUs
area In the township.

A song for Columbia's chairman
COLUMBUS (AP ) - A group of South Side residents, angered
over high natural gas prices, converged on the suburba n home of
Columbia Gas of Ohio Inc. Chairma n Ma rvin E. White to sing their
protest
About 20 people made the trip Thursday night after White hadn't
agreed to meet with the protesters, said J ane La ne , a mem ber of the
neighborhood group. To the tune of " Meet Me In St. Louis, Louis,"
the protesters sang:
"Meet us on the South Side, Marvin
"We ha ve things to say.
"Meet us on the South Side, Marvin
" You can name the day.
" U we pay our gas bllls, Marvin
" We can't buy our meals. "
" Meet us on the South Side. Marvin
" And we'll tell you how It feels."
Ms. Lane said the group also passed out leaflets to the curious and
left a messag!' unde r the knock!'rof White 's fro nt door asking for a
face-to-face meeting.

1

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WEATIIER FORECAST- The National Wea ther Service Forecast
for Sunday predicts rain in parts of Maine and New Hampshiro•. 1AP
Laserpboto).

•

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