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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) House members have come up
with a new version ot an alleged
budget·balancing bill, raising the
state Income tax and cutting state
spending by as much as 9 percent.
A three-member subcommittee
completed It Wednesday and sent It
to the tuJI Ways and Means Com·
mlttee, which was expected to OK It
today.
The bill retains the 25 percent Jn.
come tax surcharge in the Senate
version, but makes deeper cuts in
some spending areas whtle reslnr·
ing some of the reductions made by
the Senate in education and
welfare.
Chalnnan Wllllam E. Hlnlg, DNew Phtladelphla, said new tax revenues and spending cuts In the
redrawn bill total more than $Ul43
blll1on.
That amount, combined with $318
mllllon worth of cuts already

salesman ; Kevin Kane, Newspaper Advertising
Bureau, New York, N. Y., wbo conducted the two-hour
session; Tom Skinner, advertising manager, GalllpoUs
Tribune, and Ken Drum, executive director, Ohio
Newspaper Association.

Budget draft, piece by piece
WASHI NGTON tAP ) - Co n·
gress has no choice but to try to
draft a budget "a piece a t a time"
after the !allure of President Rea ·
gan a nd House Speaker Thomas P.
O' Ne ill J r. to resolve the lr dlfferen·
ces on "dollars and phllosophy"
during a three·hour ba rgaining
session.
"This doesn't mean tha t the government has broken down," said
House Ma jorit y Lea de r Jim
Wright , D·Texas. "Now It goes
back to the orderly process of legls·
Ia tion In the House a nd in the Sena te where It would have had to go
in any event. ''
The pres ident sched uled a na tion·
ally broadcast address tonight (8
p.m. EDT ) to discuss the afterm a th
of his unprecedented Capitol Hill
meeting Wednesday with O'Neill
a nd other congressional leaders.
" Our feeling Is we slrnply were
not met half way," said White
House Chief of Staff James A.
Baker m. He led administration
bargainers In the series of 13 budget
m eetings between White House off!·
cla ls and members of Congress
that led up to the session Wednes·

day in the richly decorated Pres!·
dents' Room off the Senate floor .
O'Neill, D·Mass., said comprom·
lse was elusive because ot "basic
phllosph!ca! disagreement" be·
tween the White House and con·
gr es slonal Democ rats . The
president believes hls "spending
cuts of last year, which he wants to
cut some more, a re not hurting
anyone out there In America," the
speaker added.
Senate Majority Leader Howard
H. Baker Jr., R·Tenn., who also at·
tended the meeting Wednesday,
said the "differences between us
were so great in both dollars and
phllosophy" that agreement was
Impossible.
Democrats said the talks col·
la psed with thelr rejection of a last·
minute compromlse proposal from
Sen. Baker - that Rea gan had ac·
cepted - calling tor a three-month
delay In the 10 percent personal in·
come tax rate cut scheduled for
July 1!Rl That was to have been
coupled with a three·month delay
In the 7.4 percent Social Security
cost-&lt;&gt;f·llvlng increa se scheduled
for thls July.

achieved In the current biennium,
are designed to wipe out a budget
detldt tor the 1981-1983 biennium o!
$1.362 blll1on,.Hlnlg said.
The subcommittee used revenue
forecasts and estlmates ot savings
as a result o! cuts which were supplied by the Legislative Budget
ott!ce.
Those estlmates were more optimlstlc than Gov. James A.
Rhodes' ott!ce o! Budget and Man·
agement, which said the deficit as
ot July 1, 1983, without any leglsla·
tlve action, would total $1.5 blll1on.
Hlnlg's subcommittee used a ser·
les ot schemes to reach the $1.043
blll1on total.
It decided to pay Medicaid providers only 90 percent ot their estl·
mated costs the remainder of the
biennium. It did the same tor nurs·
Ing homes, except that they would
receive 92 percent.
Alter the start ot the next bien·

......

&gt;-4

Si

04

IIIU

FRI.-SAT. and MON.

ONE RACK

75% OFF

JOGGING SHOES •1000

20% TO 50% OFF
OPEN MON .· SAT.
9: 30·5: 00

s martly styled ball poinl pen

- S i Iveror Gold
- Stretch Band
MEN'S and LADIES
STYLE
ONLY

$13.95

LADIES'
LITTLE GIRLS'

SUMMER SHORTS

Extra special sale prices on
our entire stock of misses
and half size dresses. sundresses. jacket dresses, 2 pc.
dresses and many, many
other styles.

Reg. 16.00 ........ SALE
Reg. 24 .00 . ...... SALE
Reg. 32.00 ....... SALE
Reg . 40 .00 ....... SALE
Reg . 52.00 ..... . . SALE

Sale 2.79
Sale4.39
Sale 6.39
Sale 9.59

LADIES DUSTERS
Zipper or snap front sty les
in terry, plisses or po·

ly / collon blends. Sizes S
thru XXL in assorted
prints and co lors.

Sale Priced

From Only

Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships
and corporations .• ,, .• , ...•. . •.. ••••• •••.•••••... ,., •• •• •••••• ,.,, •• ,. 2,003,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partner·
ships and corporations •• ,, •••••••.. , ••••.. •• ,,., .•....•••••• ,,,, .••• • . II ,848,000.00
Deposits of United States Government. ••••. , •••.• ,,, .••••• , ••••• ,., ••• , ••••••• 42,000.00
Deposits of States and political

Our new summer selection of patterns and col -

waist - Buy now for
graduation
and
Father ' s Day gifts.

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

Coroner orders additional tests

Sale 12.60
Sale 16.10
Sale 19.60
Sale 25.90
Sale 33.60

JOHNSTOWN, Ohio- Tile body ot U.S. Rep. John Ashbrook was
not buried after hls funeral Wednesday because a coroner ordered
more tests, but w1ll be buried thls week, ottlcia!s say.
Ashbrook died suddenly ot what a coroner said was massive Inter·
nal bleeding.
Funeral dlrector Lloyd Crouse Jr. said Thursday that Licking
County Coroner Dr. Robert Raker ordered the casket contalnlng
Ashbrook's remains returned to Crouse and Son Funeral Home after
Wednesday's funeral.
The coroner said later Thursday that no additional tissue samples
were needed tor testing and said he expected burial to be either
today or Saturday. He said burial would be private and that he
ellpected results !rom tests In about two weeks.

Sizes 8 to 20 in a fine selec tion of styles and colors for
spring and summer wear.

Entire Stock included .
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'

2.95 Knit Shirts . .. 2.34
6.95 Knit Shirts . . . 5.44
9.95 Knit Shirts . .. 7.74
12.95 Knit Shirts. 10. 14

Suspension~

KNilSHIRTS ·
.+
Entire stock included for this

sale. Sizes: Small, medium,

large and exira large. Short
sleeve styles for spring and
summer wear. You'll l)ke !he
selection and savings.

----

lifted on playcop

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio- The city on Thursday utted the inde!lnlte
suspension ot a policeman who appeared In un!torm In two phOtographs ot the May edition o! Playboy magazine along with a woman
ottlcer, who appeared nude in a photo layout.
. Patrolinan Douglas Radel w1ll return to work li'r!day, !oliowing
live days ot suspension without pay, City Manager Thomas M. Bay
said Thursday afternoon.
Radel had been photographed while on duty with policewoman
Barbara Schantz, who was paid
to pose nude in other photos
lor the Playboy edition.
Both Schantz and Radel were placed on lndetlnlte suspensions last
Friday. A police board o! inquiry recommen&amp;!d that Ms. Schantz be
dismissed.

MEN'S

Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of $100,000 or more. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 806,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
ending with report date :
Total deposits ••••••. ,, ••..•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 14,975,000.00

m,oo

Men's7.9SKniiShlrts .. . 6.24
Men's 9.95 Knit Shirts . ... 7.74
Men's 1o.9S Knit Shirts .. : 8.54
Men's 12.95 Knit Shirts .. 10.14

By The As._oociated Press
Britaln and Argentina main·
tained a collision course toward a
shootlng war over the Falkland Is·
lands today and the Reagan ad·

'

ministration prepared to side with
the British.
There was speculation In London
of an attack later today by British
carrier planes on the alr!leld at
Stanley, the Falklands capital and
the bridgehead tor Argentina's alr·
l1tt to the estlmated 9,(XX) troops oc·
cupylng the British Island colony.
With Argentina's ruling mllltary
junta retuslng In pull back from the
Islands its forces seized Aprll2, Bri·
taln set the countdown clock run·
nlng Wednesday with the
announcement that It war expand·
maritlrne blockade
lng Its """mtle
u..or
Falklands
to the skies
around the
over the area at noon today London

WASHINGTON (AP) -The government's Index ot Leading lndi·
cators, an important gauge ot
future economic activity, tell tor
the 11th straight month &gt;In March,
the Commerce Department reported today.

CLEVELAND - The wtniJing number .drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game ''The Number" w8s 647.
In the semiweeklY "Pick 4"
the winnlDg number was 4248.
. The lottery reported eemtnp ~ $f'l5,l!N.50 onlts dally game. The
eemtnp came on sales Or $!161.112-M, wblle holders ~ winDing
tickets are. entitled to share $4116,0, lottery omctala said.

pme,

TOWEL SALE .
tntavy weight !Nth towels · wiih matching
. washcloll1 or twtnd towel. Floral pallern on
light background In blue, pink or tan.

Directors

I, Gary P. Norris, Cashier, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition Is true and
correct to the best of my knowledge and belle!.
Gary P . Norris, Cashier
Aprtl ~. 1982

.

..

.

~- ~ · ~'

.

.'

~

televised address from the Oval Office o! the While

'

entinel
2 Section1 , 12 Pages

1S Cenh
A Muhim.dia Inc. New1paper

line.
At the proceedings, Assistant
Franklin County Prosecutor Dave
Johnson explained the check·
cashing scheme to the court and
how Collins !alsltled records of deposits of state funds with the BancO.
hlo National Bank in Columbus.
Johnson said Collins cashed per·
sonal checks in amounts between
$300 and $750, "but mostly in
amounts o! $500," each tlrne mak·
lng tt appear as it the money had
been deposited when no such deposit had been made.
Johnson estlrnated that approxi·
mately $35,(XX) was Involved in the
scheme, but Slgall contested the
amount
Collins worked tor the state treas·
urer's ottlce about 13 years before
resigning last August. He had
worked in the office two years betore state Treasurer Gertrude W.
'Donahey assumed office.
In an unrelated matter, Mrs.
Donahey came under !Ire tor $1.3
mllllon shortage ot state funds, revealed in an August 1981 audit

time (7 a.m. EDT).
The Argentine junta retaliated
Thursday night with an Immediate
embargo against British ships and
aircraft within 200 mtles of the Ar·
200 mtl
gentlne coast and for
es
around the Falklands and Its depen·
dencles, South Georgia and the
South Sandwich Islands.
It said British violators of these
zones would be "treated
accordingly."
A spokesman for British Prime
Mlnlster Margaret Thatcher said
the Argentine declaration "does not
change Britain's position one Iota.
We are sticking to our plans tor a
200-mtle total exclusion zone."
The British on Sunday recaplured South Georgia """mtles east
''""'
of the Falklands, putting one ot Ar·
gentlna's tour submarines out o! ac·

The 0.5 percent decline in the in·
dex was the same as in February,
hardly a sign that the recession
might be nearing an end.
The Index ls designed to forecast
economic trends ohe month or
more in advance.
Many economists, Including
thOse in the Reagan admlnlstra·
tlon, are forecasting at least some
recovery by late spring or summer.
But lew signs ot that are showing up
5o tar.

Pomeroy Is at !be local forefront of a
nationwide trend in hospital care :U hour emergency physician care

Mostly cloudy tonlgbt. Lows near 50. Winds southeasterly less
than 10 mpb. CbaJice ~ · ~ ~ ~t. .Varlal* cloudllleSs
· Satlq'day with a 30 percent cbaDce ~ illloWeP.' Hllba 65-70.

· ·',IN.POME · . ,

Exteeded Oblo FGiec.it

8aDcla,y lhroaP on-lay.

' 'a.- oi ...... !laadt.J.

Fair MGIIda,y ...

'l'lleldaJ. Mild.

' m.- Iaiiie apper . . to !lllli!II'~.:.W.~Iallle 3 ,
"

·~

/

House Thursday evening on the budget. During the
speech, the president had some trouble getting a red
marker to work on the chart. lAP Laserphoto) .

CARRIER ON STATIC'/ - Argentina's aircraft carrier "25th of
May" Is on station in the South Atlantic in this photo made Wednesday
and released Thursday in Buenos Aires. Tbe government announced It
w111 shoot any plane or sblp In 200 miles of Its territories In answer to the
British-announced blockade of the Falkland Islands. (AP Laserphoto).

••

....•

•to low

p

'

'.

DR'. JACit DOENINQ

,.
t

\

'

tlon, and the Sandwich Islands
have not been touched by the con·
ru
ct so 1ar.
Mrs. Thatcher was urged again
Thursday by the opposition Labor
p rty in th H
f Commons to
a .
e ouse 0
halo back t he fleet and pursue dl·
plomacy, and again she refused.
'"hi d
to
"It would be h.,; Y angerous
" h
lied
bluff in that way, s e rep
·
"Gentle persuasion ls not go in g to
make the Argen tlne governmen t
"
give up what It se!zed by force.
She said the two-week-&lt;&gt;ld sea
blockade o! the Islands had been
completely success tul and afte r taday's introduction ot the air exclu·
slon zone, the Argentine forces on
the Falklands w1ll be totall Y Iso"
ff by
d 1r "
Ia ted - cut o
sea an a ·
"It was the Argentlne invas Ion
risi
d It Is
which started thls c s an
Argentine withdrawal that must

pu.~;:::~ ~n~~~ ~= d~l~~· rered
g t
thr
vy t .. ytlredp
pa
to mee any
ea , re
Adm. Jorge Alberto Fraga told for·
d
elgn correslBpon e ntsA!at a news coedn·
fer ence n uenos res sponsor
by the Argentine J oint Chiefs of
Staff
·
U.S. efforts to arrange a peaceful
solution crumbled with Argentina's
cool reaction to new Amertcan
proposals. Amid mounting proBritish congressional pressure, a
U.S. official told The Associated
Press that the State Department
was drafting a statement support·
lng Britain.
The official said the decision to
make It public had not been made
yet But there was no doubt that the
Reagan administration , after
weeks of fence-sitting, had decided
It must side with Britain .

The government reported last
week that new orders tor durable
goods rose strongly In March. But
other '"leading indicators" in the
new report were less encouraging.
A decline In the average work·
week was the biggest !actor holding
down the March Index, the report
said, Indicating that the national
unemployment rate may well rise
above the March level o! 9 percent
- already matching the highest
mark since World War II.

Other negative Indicators for
March Included ln!tlal claims for
state unemployment aid -another
bad sign for the jobless rate vendor deliveries, raw materials
prices, stock prices and total Uquld
assets, the new report said.
Positive indicators Included new
orders for consumer goods and
materials, contracts and orders tor
new plants and equipment, riSing
building materials and an increase
In the nation's money supply.

Emergency physician is chosen

Weather• forecast

' .•.. 1STORE HOURS FRI~Y 9:30-8 P.M•.:..~TURDAY 9:~5.~~M.

. ·-· LS

BUDGET SPEECH - President Reagan points to

a chart as he poses for photograpben just after his

Veterans Memorial Jlospltol of

4.99 Bath Towel ••••.•...... Sale 3.49
2.99 Hand Towel ••• , ••••..• Sale 1.99
1.49 Wash Ciotti .... , ....... Sale 1.09

···.··

.

Indicators reveal recession still on

Winning Ohio lottery number

We, the undersigned !lirectors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge
and belief is true and correct.

s"

U.S. peace effort fails, conflict at hand

New Spring Douglas Marc
and Bradley coordinate
sportswear. New colors
and styles in
iackefs,
skirts, slacks, tops and
blouses. Misses sizes 5/ 6

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

Men's 14.95
DRESS SLACKS . 11.95
Men's 18.95
DRESS SLACKS . 15.15
Men's 21.95
DRESS SLACKS . 17.55
Men's 26.9S
DRESS SLACKS

subdivisions in United States •••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• , ••••••••••• 855,000.00

SPORTSWEAR SALE

SAVE FRIDAY and SATURDAY!

ors in sizes 29 to so'

Certified and officers' checks , . .... ,, •• , •••• ,, •• ,,,, ...... ,,,., ••••••• ,...... 64,000.00
Tota I Deposits, , •• ••• ••• , , , ••.•..••••••••• , • , •• , , , , ............ , , • , , •••••• 14,812,000.00
Total Deposits
Total demand deposits.,., •••• ,,, •••••••• , ••••••••••• ,....... 2,558,000.00
Total tlrne and savings deposits ................... ·•••• , ••••••• 12,254,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures )•• ••••• , .............. ... ,.,, ••• ,, •••• ,., ....... ; 14,8121000.00
Common stock
No. shares outstanding
5000 (par value)

-,LADIES'

lo 17118.
Reg. 18.00
Reg. 23.00
Reg. 28.00
Reg. 37.00
Reg. 48.00

ME

DRESS SU.CKS

·---~ Amounts outstanding as of report date

Reg . 3.50 . . ...
Reg. 5.50 .. .. .
Reg. 8.00 . . .. .
Reg. 12.00 ... .
SALE

4.000.00 ___

No. shares outstanding
5000 (par value), ••••• ,.,, •••• ' ••••• , ••••••••••• 126,000.00
Surplus •••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • 125,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for
contingencies and other capital reserve .... .... ......................... ·1,157,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• , 1,407,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .................... , ........ 16.219.00Q.OO

Many colors and styles. ·
Knits,
poly/cotton
blends,
terry
and
denim. Sizes 6 to 24
mos ., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7
to 14.

12.00
18.00
24.00
30.00
39.00

! ll 0 '•

Later, Bolling told reporters the
president's speech "almost assures
It w1ll tie up the Congress In a sltua·
tlon where we don't get a result"
He added that he had pushed tor
budget negotiations with the ad·
mlnlstratlon rather than contronta·
tlon this year "because I !eel so
strongly that we've got to be able to
!unction thls year, in one way or
another."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ronald E. Collins, a former cashier In
the state treasurer's ottlce, and
former Meigs Countlan , has
pleaded gullty to theft in ottlce and
record tampering.
Franklin County Judge George
E. Tyack ordered a pre-sentence
investlgatlon Thursday before lm·
posing tlnal judgment
Collins, 35, who resigned last
year, was indicted in December by
a Franklin County Grand Jury on a
six counts.
Tyack explained to Collins that
he could be sentenced !or a min·
\mum of one to three years to a
maximum ot 10 years and a $10,00
tine on the theft·ln-ottlce charge, a
third-degree felony. While Collins
sat tlanked by attorneys Herschel
M. Slgall and Larry Zlngareill,
Tyack explained to hlm that, by
pleading gullty, he could no longer
serve on a public payroll In Ohio.
On the charge ot tampering with
records, a fourth-degree felony,
Collins could face a minimum sent·
ence ot six months to two years to a
maximum of five years and a $2,500

- LCD Quartz
- 5 Functions

with an LCD Quartz Watch built
right in! Watch functions in·
elude : hour, minute, second,
month and date.
Don' t Forget Mother's Day!

s

Former cashier
pleads guilty
to theft charges

Pomeroy, Oh.

WATCH SPECIAL

PEN WATCH

(THREE YEARS)

we can produce something that's
good tor you and good tor the coun·
try and good tor the future of the
country," said Bolling, responding
without a prepared text
He said the budget problem' Is
neither Republican nor Democratic and "It's very lrnportant that
we have blparllsan cooperatlon all
the way through."

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 30, 1982

KIDDIE SHOPPE
111 W. 2nd

SPENDING CUTS

he Daily
Voi.30,No.267
Copy•lghtod 1912

SPECIAL VALUE

TOTAL ASSETS.,, ..•• •••• •••.•.•••••• ••••• . •••• •• ,,,,,,,, •••••••••••••• , 16,219.00!).00

Earl Cross
John T. Wolfe
Carroll K. Norris

SIDEWALK SALE

OTHER BARGAINS

Charter number 9815
National Bank Region Number 4
--.-Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Thousands
Cash and due from depository institutions , ••• , . . ... , ...... , ..... . ..... , • • • • • 671,000.00
U. S. Treas ury securities , ............ , ••• ,, •• • ,,, .•. ••. ,.,.,,,,,,,,, ....... 2,177,000.00
Obligations of States and political
sutxll vis10ns in the United States •• , ••• ,,., .. ,, ••• ,, ••••.•.••• ,, •• , •• ••• • 1,413,000.00
All other securities .. ... ............... .. .......... , .• • . •••••••••••• •.. ,.,.. 111,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell,, . , •• , ••••••••.••• •• ,.,,,.,, .. , ••••••••••••• 1,400,000.00
Loa ns, Total (excluding unearned income) .. .. . .. ............. 10,465,000.00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses.... . ............ .. ...... 126,000.00
Loans, Net •••• ••• ••••• .••••• , •• • ••• , ..• • ,., .. , •••••• , •• •••••••••••••• 10,339,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises,, .... . ,,.,., ... ,,, ..... , ••.••• , •.. 104,000.00

_,

ments which were to go back into
the emergency school loan lund.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on March 31, 1982 published in response to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.

.-..

general tund an expected outlay ot
$20 mllllon In school loan repay·

"You did It once - you can do It
again," Reagan said.
With the t!rst budget Reagan submitted ,o Congress thls year all but
forgotten - and ettorts to tlnd a
biparllsan alternative to It in sham·
bles - Reagan said he intends "to
forge the beginnings o! an accepta·
ble budget lnltlatlve."
·
Congressional Democrats, how·
ever, said Reagan's strategy w111
not work thls year and w1ll succeed
only in tying Congress In knots.
Rep. Richard Bolling ot Mls·
sour!, glvtng the Democrats' broad·
cast responSe lrnrnediately after
Reagan's speech, said the pres!·
dent was being too poUtlcal and
making an appeal that threatens to
deadlock Congress on the budget
Issue.
"It we work together effectively

SAVE AT ELBERFELD$

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

4

The subcommittee came up with

$20 mllUon by transferring into the

IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

Ill

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Reagan ls launching a new
budget campaign with a call to the
voters to "do It again" ar.d convince
Congress to line up tor hls economi~
program.
The president summoned con·
gressional Republicans to the
White House today and planned to
meet with prospective Democratic
allies Monday In an apparent at·
tempt to reassemble the coalition
that delivered his t!rst round ot tax
and budget cuts last year.
In a nationally broadcast address
Thursday night, the president told
the public to let "your representa·
tlves know that you think thls ls no·
time tor politics as usual - that
you, too, want an end to runaway
taxes, spending, government debt
and high interest rates."

the total addition to the bill !or those
services to $64 m1111on.

CONVERSE BASKETBALL OXFORDS
1fz PRICE s4oo
.SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

REPORT OF CONDITION

--......
iii

amountlntederaldollars , b~

SIQEWALK_SALE DAYS

DRESS SALE

lit

Reagan requests
•
voter .assistance

nlum, both providers would receive
the amount ot actual costs tor
which they were not relrnbur.!ed.
The subcommittee estlrnated the
maneuver would add about $32 mil·
Uon to the state's general lund over
the next Knnonths. The $32 mllUon
would quaLity Ohio tor an equal

SIZES UP TO 6

"That, tor all practical purposes,
was just not any deal at all and we
turned It down rather quickly,
flatly," said Rep. Richard Bolling,
[).Mo., who attended the meeting
and emerged as the spokesman tor
House Democrats.
"About that tlrne, we got to the
point where we were talking about
the lnabillty to get together on the
crucial Issues," Bolling said.
Senate Republtcans had a
slightly dltterent version.
A Senate Republican source, who
asked not to be quoted by name,
said Reagan himself altered a ~
day delay in the July 1983 tax cut It
the Democrats would split the dlf.
terences remain!ng in other areas.
Presumably, thls would have meant some adjustment in cost-&lt;&gt;!·
living increases, although not in
1982. But, the source said, Democrats rejected that otter.
"President Reagan and hls people honestly believe that thelr program Is !alr and I know that we're
convinced that It Isn't fair ," Bolling
said . "And I think It broke really on
that Issue. "

• -- +- All otherassets.......... ....................................................

Thursday, April 29, 1982,

Budget balance bill rewritten

'!
TAKE PART IN CLINIC- Approximately 75 individuals attended Wednesday morning's retail advertising clinic at the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis. The
event was sponsored by the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Left to right are Tim Halstead, Sentinel advertising

.

provided tbrough a specialty group.
Earlier this month, VMH formally
contracted with Medical Emergency
Associates, Inc., a Louisa, Kentucky, based finn, to provide around
lbe clock emergency room physician
care at the hollpib\1.
Directing the services in Pomeroy
Is Dr. Jack Kroening, a partner in

•

Medical Emergency Associates, hospitals in West Virginia, Kentucky
Inc., and a· board certified physician and Ohio. The specialty group
with a strong background in family utilizes the services of more than 30
practice and emergency medicine.
physicians in the three slates. Dr.
Dr. Kroening, a Nebraska native, Kroening says the firm focuses on :
operated a successful private prac- emergency medicine "as a
!ice in Scotts Bluff, Nebraska, for speciality, not as a sideline," adnine ye~~rs before joining Medical , ding, "we work within the adEillergency Associates, Inc., in ministrative structure and staff
May,l981.
structure of every hospital we serve
Medical Emergency Associates, to provide the highest quality
founded , four years ago, provides emergency care."
emergency room caR to seven

�/

Friday, April 30, 1982

Commentary
Ill ('uurt Sl ro•d
l'nnwrn) . Ohin
614-992-2 156
llF\ t ITf-:1) TO TilE INTt:H E.ST UF Til ... Ml· u ;S-MASII\ ,\BFA

ROIWRT L. WINf;ETr
l 'uh lt ~ h• · r

BOB fiOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
A~:.isUJntl'ublb,h•• r/( ' nntrull•· r

DALE IHJTIIGEB. JR .
•\ MFMIIEH uf nw ,h~un:ll•·d l'n·"· lnhtncl llall\ l'n•:..•
,\nwrwan i'.•·~o~ :.p:tpo·r l'uhh~ht· r ~ ,\ ~"• nutwn

A~M"'mliu n

and tho•

l .ETTEK."i lit'" OI'I N III N ~rt · ~t· hunwd . T ht' \ s hould tw J...,!oo than 300 ~unh lun,l(. All
[t&gt;lh•n an· ~ubj•· • · t tu o•tllhn ): lllltl 111\J ~ I lw ~ 1g1wd ~o~ith n.unw. &lt;tdtlrrs .~ and h·lt&gt;p hunt·
numho·r "Jn un ~ igtlt'd ldkr ~ ¥t il ho· puhlt•ht•d. l .o·\h'" .\ huuld lw Ill o~:uucll16stt- . addn·s..,ing
~'·' "'''· llttljM'r:&gt;&gt;tlllUiillt'.'&gt; .

Profiling poverty
Nter more than a year of taking little but lwnps for its efforts, the Cen·
sus Bureau finally has come out with somethin~ it can point to with some
pride.
It is a statistics-cranuned first report on the detailed information suppiled by the one-in-five households that completed a long form in the 1980
census.

How much pride the nation can take in some of those statistics is another
matter. Those pertaining to income in particular.
It " up in every category - per capita, family and household. And
poverty level - now set at$7,412 annually for a non-farm family of four .
Some 27.5 million Americans were living at or below that level at the
time of the 1980 coWl!. Who they were should disturb all Americans.
More than c1ght m1lilon were s1ngle women headmg households, a quarter of them w1th children under six .
As Census Director Bruce Chapman observed in releasing the report,
" poverty seems to attach itself to people trymg to raise children alone."
ll does much more than that.
Those 27.5 million poor Americans represent 12.5 percent of the total
population, in itself a disappointing decline of little more than a point from
the 13.7 percent of the 1970 census. Among whites alone, however, only 9.4
percent are below the line. For people of Hispanic origin, the figure was 23.8

percent and for blacks. 30.2 percent.
There is also a geographic pa ttern to poverty. While the greatest percentage decline was registered by the South, Southern states still recorded
the highest rates - 24.5 percent among all Mississippians, 46 percent for the
sta te's blacks. There are s1milar high correlations for Arkansas and
l.ouisiana, notabl y among other states

Even in thsJloltter news there is some that is less so.
The cemdis report records median family income nationwide at $19,908.
Naturally, it is higher for some. Surprisingly, perhaps, it is highest for
families of Asian origin - a median $22,075 - followed by whites with $20,840
annually . Trailing again are Hispanics at $14,711 per family and blacks, at
the bottom, with $12,6lli.
It is suggested that the high Asian showing reflects both more workers
per family and more education, a relationship supported by report statistics
in that category. While among all adult Americans, 66.3 percent have completed four years of high school, for Asians the level is 74 percent with, as
w1th incomes, a similar dropping off for the other major ethnic groups:
whites, 69 percent ; blacks, 51 percent ; Hispanics, 43 percent.
None of the bad or not s&lt;&gt;-good news can be dropped on the doorstep of
the present administration . It was, after all, not even in office when the Cen·
sus Bureau was doing its number on the nation.
But it is worth keeping 1n mind while the budget-cutting pressure continues on progran" and services that most affect the very population groups
the 1980 sta tistics identify as still in most need of assistance.
Poverty, in a nation that ha!i cou uuittcd itself tu the elimination of

dbcrimination, remains intensely discrlminatory .

Berry's World

WASHINGTON - Politics, so the
saying goes, is the art of the at·
tainable. ,You will seldom find a bet·
ter example of that rule in operation
than you will find in the matter of
providing an inspector general for
the Department of Defense. What is
, needed is an independent watchdog.
What we are likely to get is a subor·
dinate watchpuppy instead.
By way of background: Six years
ago, prompted by reports of massive
fraud in welfare expenditures,
Congress came up with the concept
of entirely independent inspectors
general. The idea was to create a
corps of professional auditors and
investigators who would be free to
do their job, in the hackneyed
phrase, without fear or favor.
Today 10 Cabinet departments and
five other agencies have such in·
spectors general. They have saved
the taxpayers millions of dollars. In
1978, efforts began to extend the concept to the Department of Defenseand with good reason : It is commonly acknowledged that the
Department of Defense, with the
most money to spend, is the most
wasteful of all departments. The
month rarely passes without a
horror story of cost overruns, pad·
ded contracts or notorious
mismanagement.
This is not to suggest that Defense
lacks aud1tors of its own. On the con·
trary. The department employs
18,000 inspectors of high and low
degree, scattered over 18 major subdivisions; without their services, the

defense establishment. Last year
the House responded to the need :
The House passed a bill to create
precisely such an officer.
Npw the House bill is bogged down
in the Senate. The Department of
Defense regularly sends witnesses
to testify th;!t the department
"strongly supports" an inspector
general, to which affinnation should
be added a footnote reading, "in a
pig's eye." The department will accept an JG only if he is "under the
authority, direction and control" of
the secretary of defense. The Pen·
tag on brass think it ''essential to any
military organization" that chan-

nels of command be preserved. The
idea of a wholly independent watchdog is an idea they regard very
coolly .

What to do? Sen. Bill Roth of
Delaware, chief sponsor of IG
legislation, sees half a loaf as better
than none. Bowing to the depart·
ment's objections, he has come up
with a compromise proposal that he
regards as the only attainable
legislation. There would be a
presidentially appointed inspector
general for defense with power to in·
vestigate anything he wanted to in·
vestigate. The secretary of defense,
whoever he might be, could muzzle
the watchdog by flatly prohibiting
the IG to probe any deeper, .but in
that event the secretary would have
to explain his veto to the appropriate
committees of Congress.
Senator Roth prohably b right :
This may not be the best bill, but it is
the best bill that has a prayer of win-

TUPPERS PLAINS - In an exciting see-saw softball encounter here Thursday evening, the Southern
Tornadoettes clinched the SVAC championship with a
narrow 10-7 victory ovef the Eastern Eagles.
Southern flaunts a 9-1 league mark to best the
league, while pickihg up the ghird girls' championship
of the year for Southern in each of the school's three
sports (volleyball, hasketball, and now softball). SHS
is 13-2overall.
Southern gained first scoring honors when Tonja
Salser tripled and scored on a ground out by Elaine
Smith. In the third inning Debbie Michael led off with a
single and stole second. Nter going to third on a passed
ball, Michael scored on a sacrifice fly by Salser.
In the top of the fourth, Mel Weese led off with a
single, stole second, then advanced to third on a ground

ning Senate approval. The Senate
historically has shown greater
deference than the House to the ar·
med services. And there may be
some merit to the hawks' objection
that Defense truly is different- that
it would be unwise to pennit a
wholly independent auditor to romp
around in sensitive areas of secret
weapons.
Very well. If agreement can be
reached on the Roth compromise,
the taxpaying public will be wellserved. An energetic inspector
general, given sufficient staff and an
adequate budget; should be able to
expose some of the more infuriating
examples of waste in the Pentagon.
If it turns out in a couple of years
that the watchdog is no more than a
puppy, the act can always be reconsidered.

out. Weese later scored on an error by the EHS shortstop.
During the bottom half of the frame Eastern
rallied to lock the score at 3-3. Linda Thoma led off with
a single, Kris Wilson singled, and Angie Spencer drove
;,orne Thoma on a sacrifice fly, with Wilson going to
second. Karen Jacks hen singled to score Wilson and
came home on a single by Lea Ann Gaul.
The Tornadoettes of Coach Suzanne Wolfe went
back to !).J in the top of the fifth on a single by Elaine
Smith, a double by Amber Warner, and single by
Becky Michael. In the nip-and-tuck battle, EHS
regained the lead at 7.fl on two walks, two Southern
errors, a single by Angie Spencer and sacrifice fly by
Karen Jacks.
Southern grabbed the lead again in the sixth and

waste would be more monwnental

·...
'~-""" "".

coordinating committees, an im-

pression re mains of a multilegged
beast with neither head nor tail.
Eleven coordinating committees
prohably are incapable of coordinating a high bulb with a socket.
The situation cries out for the appointment of one take-charge in·
spector general, responsible solely
to the president and to the taxpayers, with authority and
professional staff to investigate
anything, anywh~re, in the whole

Kovalchik paces
•
Meigs' 5-l WID

Several business owners mortgaging homes

seed money in new businesses,

rather than to meet emergencies.
But he also provides figures to show
the latter is very much at work .
Last year, he said, 30 percent of

.·

READY TO CALL PLAY- Umpire Bill Jewett gels ready to ll)llke a
call at tbe plate during Thursday's noo-coaference baseball game bel·
ween Southern abd Meigs. Slldlng in Is Southern's Kent Wolfe (8), while
Marauder catcher Dave Follrod applies tbe tag. Meigs took a 5-1 victory.
Tim Tucker photo.

applicants were rejected, though
screened by brokers, accoUiltants
and others who refer potential
customers. The ratio this year is 45
percent to 50 percent, he said.
Adding to the pressures on small
'businesses, said Hobson, is that
traditional sources are tending to
draw away from small business
loans. Banks, he said, say they can't
afford to make them, and some commercial finance companies establish
a minimwn of $500,000 a loan.
Hobson's company, based in
Allentown, Pa ., offers loans from
$10,000 to $500,000, although the latter is relatively rare.
"Our current loans average
$100,000, except in California, where
the average has been $200,000," he
said. Collateral generally is the
borrower's home, but rental and
commercial properties . are accepted.

Making possible this source of
financing has been the sharp rise in
the market values of houses. A home
bought for $45,000 a decade ago
might be worth $110,000 now.
Asswning a mortgage of $20,000, up
to 80 percent of the remainder,
$90,000, might be available for
borrowing .
Hobson's rates now range from 18
percent to 21 percent, payable in five
years, b·ut with installments made
on the basis of a !!&gt;-year loan. That
means the borrower'·: monthly
repayments are manageable, but he
is presented with a "balloon"
payment after five years.
Asswning the borrower's credit
standing has remained good, he
usually can be considered for
another loan at that time, based on
current interest rates. No one can
say what rates will be then, but Hobson suggests there is at least a chan-

co they might be lower.

One criticism of such practices is
that the loans are made on the hasis
of total rather than business income.
The important factor is the overall
ability to handle the loan, said Hobson, and therefore his company includes income from sources other
than the business.
Conceivably, therefore, a failing
business could persist as a drain on
the borrower's personal assets
when, it has been suggested, it might
be wiser for him to fold or radically
reorganize the business.
So far, however, BA Business
Credit has had few bad experienees
with borrowers. It now owns 4
houses as a result of foreclosures,
down from 6 a 'short time ago, and
Hobson suggests that if business
were better in general these might
never have appeared among BA's
assets.

held on to the ·finish as it scored three runs on a Renee
Smith single, Michael sacrifice, a walk, and an error
that put Elaine Smith on first base. Laren Wolfe then
doubled home Smith with the third run of the inning.
SHS scored two insurance runs in the seventh the
shut out Eastern for the 10-7 win.
Leading SHS hitters were Becky Michael with
three singles, Laren Wolfe a double and single, Mel
\'Ieese a double and single, Amber Warner a double
and Tonja Salser a triple.
For Eastern Angie Spencer had three singles,
while Lea Ann Gaul, Kelly Whitlatch, Linda thoma,
Kris Wilson and Karen Jacks each singled. L.aren
Wolfe was the winning pitcher and Tammy Hudson U1e
losing hurler.
In another important SV AC game Wednesday

'

RACINE - Thursday night was
Roger Kovalchik's night as
everything seemed to go the hard·
throwing righthander's way. Behind
Kovalchik's. six-hil pitching per·
formance Meigs Marauders trim·
med the winded Tornadoes :&gt;-1 here
in a non-league baseball contest.
Kovalchik picked up the win with a
strong perfonnance that allowed no
earned runs, just one walk, and six
important strike outs.
Meigs combined three timely hits
and a series of Southern fielding
miscues to post its second win of the
season. With the game never in '
doubt Meigs plated two runs in the
second on a Kovalchik single, two
walks, and an error.
In the fourth, Kovalchik blasted a
long triple and later came home
when Jim Boyer, who walked, pur·
posely got caught in a run down.
Meigs also added single runs in both
the fifth and sixth innings. Jim
Boyer added the other Meigs hit.
Although Southern outhit the

visitors, they were only able to plate
one-ruri after Tony Riffle tripled,
then scored on a throwing error in
the sixth.
Riffle JllsO had a single on the
night. Paul Harris, a hard-hitting
sophomore, led SHS hitting with
three straight singles to continue his
hot hitting streak. Southern's other
hit was a double by Rob Cunningham.
Cunningham suffered the loss for
Southern despite allowing just three
hits. Four SHS errors erased his bid
for a victory in the hattie. He fanned
five and walked four.
SHS is now 1()..6 while Meigs boosts
its mark to 2·14.
Southern plays at Eal&gt;tern tonight
in the SV AC showdown.
Linescore :
Meigs
020 Ill 0- 5 3 I
Southern
000 001 - 1 6 4
Batteries: Kovalchik (WPI and
Follrod. Cunningham ( LP) and
Rees.

Scioto Downs begins racing card Saturday

BELPRE - Eastern's Eagles
jumped out to a 2·1 lead in the first
inning, then held on to defeat the
Belpre Golden Eagles :&gt;-3 here Thur·
sday in boys' high school baseball
action. The big non-league battle
boosts Eastern to 12-6-1 overall while
Belpre drops to 1().5 overall.
Another super smooth pitching
perfonnance by senior southpaw
Uuis Allen kept Belpre's batsmen
tied up in knots as he struck out II
enroute to picking up the win.
In going the distance, Allen hurled
a three-hitter and walked six.
Seevers suffered the loss, gaining
relief from Muse in the second, and
Green in the sixth.
In the first frame, Eastern focused
a patient batting eye as John Beaver
drew a leadoff walk. Rogie Gaul
then singled and later stole second.
With runners at second and third
Mark Holter rammed a sacrifice fly .
Rogie Gaul then trotted home with
the second run on an overthrow, the
score 2-&lt;1.
In the bottom half of the canto,
Belpre retaliated with one run on a
walk and double by West. In its next
time at the plate, EHS again came
through with the necessary punch.
Rob Smith doubled, then with two
out Nick Leonard walked, John
Beaver walked, and Gaul drew a
free pass to force home a run, the
score 3-1.
All was quiet until the fifth and sixth when EHS scored single runs.
Whar proved to be the winning run
scored after Smith walked, was
sacrificed to second, and scored on a
Leonard single.
One round later Gaul singled,
Bissell singled, the one runner came
home on an Allen sacrifice fly.
Eastern's seven hit attack was led
by Mike Bissell's three singles,
Rogie Gaul's two singles, a Smith
double, and Leonard single. Belpre
threatened in the seventh with two
runs on walks to Kune and Perkins,
and a double by Frye. The final out
was recorded on a fine pick off play
at third. Belpre hitters were Green,
Frye, and West.
Dumps Pirates
Wednesday evening Eastern bombarded North Gallia 20-4 in SVAC
diamond · play. In the 20-4 route
Eastern collected 20 hits and committed just one error. The Pirates

walked the plank early and from the
first inning on it was clear sailing for
the visiting Eastern crew.
Mark Holter went four innings for
the win with two strike outs and four
walks. Jeff Jones relieved in the fifth
to fan two and walk two. Ken Neal
suffered the loss with relief from
Jow Moore and Paul Hollingshead.
Gaul had two singles and a triple,
Rob Smith three singles and a triple,
Allen two singles and a double, and
Jewett a double and single. Freshman Jay Carpenter and M. Bissell
singled twice, while Holter, Jones,
Ritchie, and Leonard each singled
once.
NG hitters were Neal, Moore, and
Reidell.
Linescore:
Eastern
210 011 0- 5 7 I
Belpre
100 000 2- 3 3 0

"People say you're not sensitive. Mr. President,
the gang at the Pentagon thinks you are VERY
sensitive!"

Today in history
Today Is Friday, AprUJO, the mhdayo! 1982. Thereare245daysle!tln
the year.
Today's hlghllght In history:
On Aprtl 30, 1789, George Washington was lnal!glll'ated as the ftrst
. president of the United States.
On this date:
In llll3, the United States purchased the Louisiana Terrt\Ory from
France.
In 1900, Hawaii was organized as a terrttory ot the United States.
In 1948, the charter of the Organization of Amertcan States was signed.
And In 1975, Communist troops of North VIetnam and the Provisional
Revolutlonaly Government took over Saigon, l!lldlng the VIetnam war.
Ten years ago: .Warring India and Pakistan agreed to a summit meeting
as a step toward reaching a peace settlement.
Five
ago: A blowout at an oD well In the North Sea r1:t NoiWay was
successtully capped atter tour previous attempts In eight days liad tailed.
One year ago: The United States, Britain anq France vetoed tour U.f'!'.
Security Council resolutions calllng for a halt to trade with South Africa.
Today'a birthdays: Actress Eve Arden Is 70 yean old. Actress eJorls
Leachman Is 56.
'!bought for today: There Is nothing either good or bad, but thinking
makes It so. - WilHam Sllakespeare, English playwright (1564-1616).

"The worst. They've ruined kids
Linda Peeples was giving the din· know.
for
life," I said.
ner. When dessert was finished she
" 'Catcher in the Rye' is a dirty
"But
we've been trying to get
said, "I have some exciting news for
book," I said. "Where did he get his
all of you."
to
read a book since he was
George
hands on such filthy literature•"
"So tell us already," someone
"He found it in the school library," 12 yean; old. 'Catcher In the Rye'
was a breakthrough, and if would
said.
. Linda said.
"My son George just read his first
Exstrom was outraged "You break his heart if we told him he
book."
ought to report the librarian to the couldn't read any more like it."
"There are books and there are
We all raised our wine glasses to school board. They probably don't
toast the occasion.
books,"
Exstrom said. "My
even know it's Utere."
·
.
daughter
came
home from her
"lfl&gt;w old is George?" Reilly
"But George seemed to enjoy it,"
English class .with William
asked.
Linda said defensively.
"He'll be 18 next month," Linda
"Sure he enjoyed it," Reilly said. Faulkner's 'Sanctuary,' and I told
said.
"It's full of sex and bad words. But it her if she ever brought anything like
''That's fantastic,'' Rowan said.
doesn't belong in a high school that in the house again I'd throw it in
"My son is 21 and he hadn't read a
library. The next thing you know, the furnace. I also reported her
book yet."
George will be reading 'Huckleberry teacher to the principal."
"George has ~!ways been a bright Finn' anti Kurt Vonnegut's
I said, "If more parents took an interes! in ·what their kids were
student," Linda bragged.
'Slaughterhouse Five.' "
"What book did he read•" FraMie
"Or Studs Terkel's 'Working,' " I reading we wouldn't have such a rot·
ten society."
Huff wanted to know.
said.
"Well, it's too late now," Lil)da
"J. D. Salinger's 'Catcher in the
"Not to mention Somerset
said.
Rye.'"
"George has already read 'CatMaugham's 'Of Human Bondage,' "
cher In the Rye.' What do I do?"
There was an emljarrassed silence Frannie Huff said.
"Wateh him closely,'' Frannie
at the table.
"Are they aU bad books?" Linda
"What's wrong?" Linda wanted to' asked.
Huff said. "Search his room. If you

find a book by John Steinbeck or
James Baldwin Wlder his bed, tben
you know he's in real trouble and I
would take his library card away
from him.''
"I wish I had kept a closer eye on
my son. I let him read Hemingway's
'The Sun Also Rises' when he was 15
yean; old; and the next thing I knew
he checked out Malamud's 'The
Fixer,' '' ExstrOm said .
"Where do you find out what books
are bad for children's minds?" Linda wanted to know.
"There are organizations all over
the country that will supply you with
lists,'' I said. "We get our guidance
from a couple who censors books in
Texas."
"What's George reading now•"
Reilly asked.
Linda said "Voltaire's 'Candide.'
"
"I hate to tell you this,'' said F.rannie Huff, "But you have a sick kid on
your hands."

OOONESBURV

each s in ~ led twice .
Ll•ad1ng Southwestern was Angie Miller with two

doubles "'"t thr&lt;'t' Hill's. Bobble llallev and Shei la

Shephe1d eac h ~

1

North Gallia defeated Eastern, 147 Wednesday evening. Tana George,
the winning pitcher, struckout four
anddidnotwalkabatter.
Tammy Hudson was chrarged
withtheloss.
Top hitters for North Gallia .were
Senita Morris and Nikki Thaxton
with four hits each. Leading hitters,
Gaul and Thomas, had three hits
each.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Sci·
oto Downs begins 121 dates o! 1982
harness racing Saturday rilght by
serving as a $20,(0) leg o! the North
American Pacing Series. ,
Scioto Downs will be the seventh
stop on the traveling series for 3and 4-year-old pacers, with the top
10 point leaders earning a spot In a
$100,(0) finale Aug. 6 at The
Meadowlands.
The series Is limited to colts and
geldings with less than $30,00&gt; tn
career earnings and fillies and

mares with less than $50,000 on
their lltetlme bankrolls.
Posttlme lor Scioto Downs' 10.
race opening card will be 7:45p.m.
There are 12 horses entered and
the top choice Is Deer11eld, trained
and driven by Bruce Riegle, who Is
,making his first start of the year tor
oWners George Segal and Brian

4 Dr . Standard.

1976 AMC MATADOR ................. ....... .......... $1295
2 Dr ., auto ., PB . PS

1977 FORD LTD ..................... ................... $1795
2 dr. HT , Auto., PB, PS, Air .

1976 PLYMOUTH FURY............. ...... ............. $1695
4 dr. PB, PS, Air.

1976 FORD Fl50 CLUB CAB ................. $2195
Auto., PB, PS. Good Cond.

1976 CHEVY LUV .............................. $1395
4 cy l. , st and .

1974 FORD .......... ..... ...................... $695
Run s good. Little rough .

1976 FORD F-100 ................ ............. $1295
Stand .

SP.AING SAVINGS
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

I

531 JACKSON PIKE ·RI.35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524
fJARGAII'tl MAfiNEES ON ~T 6 SUf't

AU SEArs JUST .12.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S 100

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

PAT HILL FORD, INC. IS NOW
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
DALE R . SANDERS-Gen. Mgr.
WE WILL CONTINUE TO SERVE MEIGS COUNTY
AND THE SURROUNDING AREAS WITH SALES
AND QUALITY SERVICE
"ALL FORD PRODUCT WARRANTIE S
WILL BE HONOR ED"
WE OFFER
•BODY SHOP-PAINT AND BODY WORK
•A FULL LINE PARTS &amp; SERVICE DEPARTMENT
•A FULL LINE OF NEW AND USED CARS &amp;
TRUCKS

PRICE MARKDOWN-DISCOUNT SALE

1981 ESCORT

1980 DATSUN .
310

2 dr ., silver, 4 sp,
AM/ FM.

~~J,56195

$5995
auto.

4 dr .. Red ,
' tr ans, air .

NOW

Pomeroy, Oh.

1

aut o,

4 dr . G reen

4 dr .. Bla ck .

1979 FORD
FIESTA

2 dr ., Green
WAS 51395

WAS 1995
NOW

1095

1

NOW

Orang e

$595

1980 FORD
PINTO

1979 FORD
FAIRMONT
4 dr ., Red and whife .

$3495

~~~ 13895

1974 MERCURY
CAPRI

1976 CHEVETIE

New Spring&amp;

Summer Hours
Mon.·Fri. 9:00 to 5:00

NOW

GRANADA

$3295

WAS 13495

SALES
&amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

WAS $5195

1979 FORD
FAIRMONT

1979 FORD LTD
2 dr ., green.
tran s., air

$4395

~~01469S

1980 MERCURY
CAPRI
2dr . r ed, 4 spd

2 dr .• red. 4 spd .

1978 FORD
FAIRMONT
1 clr . Whi te.

Wagon . Orang e

Monlsen.
As a 2-year-old last year, Deerfield had raced against the ~jest In
the country, taking a win mark of
159-2 and earning $46,&lt;XXl.

1981
CITATION
4 dr ..

979 FORD Fl50

1979 FORD FlOO

Brown ilnd Tan .

Btue.

Blue.

5995

1

WAS 56395
NOW

WAS 54295
NOW

WAS S4995

$3995

NOW

1978 DODGE
PICKUP

GradUate

Green .

to the '

WAS 52995
NOW

THE Study Bible used by

psstcxs. te~ af!d
students. Contammg

~

the fi1 felltures enq
8 departments.of

--·--

..

.)
TOI~L l"tv.L Pt11CI - N.IIIIoofLI.-

-;;·

m.u.III'RIAI...a -un•IAIIIII .._

$13.87

Bible study
helps

_______

$24.00

-

....

---~-------­

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

IGUI.Mifiiiiii:IIIWI

$16.95

_OifUCAIIJ,..........

JULY 31, 1982

rears

Mid~le~JQ.
rt.
.
Mill st

$18.00

OVER-TltE.COONTfA IP£C1Al

surprise .Your

I

\Ill 12:1 2- 10 12 3
0003400- 7 82
1.1 lkntlcy. Tam-

Auto., PB, PS .

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

The
..
BIBLE ,

BOOk Store.

.
,.

..

.

1978 CHEVY CHEVELLE ............................ ... $1895

Pirate gals take win

.That ·Will

..

·wo sir1gll's.

l.incscore:
Southern
Eastern
Batteries: Laren Wolfe 1'Il l '
my Hudson I I.P I and K. Ja,·ks.

1978 FORD TORINO STATION WAGON ............... $1095

Eastern
611 33ll 6- 20 20 I
NG
020 000 2- 4 5 12
Batteries: Allen (WP) and
Leonard. Seevers, Muse, Green and
Meriweather.

Phon.~ ~~H.97S

Trouble in the school"-Ls_____Ar_tB_uc_hwa_ld

night, Southern bombed Southwestem 2H. Sonja
Salser pitched the victory and Penny Tober suffered
the loss. SHS hitters were Elai ne Sm1th who had a perfect two for two night including a triple, and Mel Weese
and who two for three with a home run .
Debbe Michael, Ambe r Warner, l.aren Wolfe,
Becky Michael, Missy Cumm1ns. and Be,.ky Johnson

Eastern claims
•
•
two vtctortes

than it is. But despite the labors of 11

NF:W YORK I APl - Pressed by
slow sales and the reluctance of old
credit sources. many small
businesses are mortgaging their
homes.
The extent of activity isn 't quite
clear. but many conswner credit
companies are involved, and one
company, BA Business Credit Corp.,
has $100 million of such loans out·
standing and is growing swiftly .
All the loans, said William R. Hobson, president of the BankAmenca
Corp. financial services company,
are made to small businesses, often
retail outlets, restaurants or laver·
ns, with homes as collateral.
Hobson stresses that some of the
loans are for expansion, or even for

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

Tomadoettes take 1982 SVAC championship

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, April 30, 1982

Defense watchpupp.Ly_____J_am_es~-1_.K-:ilp-:::a-::-tric~k

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.

·MII)DL£POIT, OIL

PAT HILL FORD

Save our ·Rc, RC-100, Nehi, ~pper 10, .
Diet Rite and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps
for charitY.

Ill

• ,. I .

461S.THIRDST .

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PHONE 992-2196
DE

~~~
•

•

I

�The

Sentinel

Ohio

Hooton one hits Phils
By Associated Press
Around the Los Angeles Dodger
clubhouse. they call Burt Hooton
" Happy"- a tongue-In-cheek nickname lor his unsmiling demeanor.
Thursday night, he really had
something to be happy about.
"I'm just happy I got a good, solid
game under my belt ." said Hooton
after pitching a one-hitter to lead
the Dodgers to a 4-0 victory over the
PhUadelphla Phlllles. "I felt like I
had things in control all the wa)' . 1
fl?lt IJ ke I was throwing

ron ~ i s tf'ntl y

well all game."
Hooton retired the fir" 10 Phillles
hP tacrd IX'forc 11·an DeJcs2s lined
3 1-2 pitch 10 t Pntcr for a clea n single in lh&lt;' fnurlh inning. Pete Rose
then dn ·" ilte only walk the Phlllles
~ ·•. h ' : !loot on was able to pitch
Ll: ;p luhk.

l'l&lt;'.l••,us's hi t came on a mistake,
Hooton said.
Hooton . r&lt;'cording his first complete game of tl.e season In his fifth
starl. walked one and struck out
two. He brought a 4.43 earned run

average into the game.
The Dodgers got their llrst run in
the llrst inning ott loser Dick
Ruthven, ().3, on Steve Garvey's
sacrtfice ny. They made it 2-0 in the
third on a sacrifice ny by Dusty
Ba ker and wrapped up their scoring wl th two more In the fifth as
Hooton trtggered the uprising with
a double.
In other National League action,
It was San Francisco 7, Montrea13;
Atlanta 3, Chicago 0; Pittsburgh 9,
Houston 6 and Sa n Diego 6, New
York 0.
Giants 7, EXJ108 3
Da rrell Evans hit a three-run homer, c!lmaxlng a five-run, firstInning rall y that propelled San
F rancisco over Montreal.
Montreal starter Ray Burrts, ().4,
went into the game with a sparkling
1.17 earned run average, best in the
National League. But it climbed to
3.12 alter three lnn1ngs of work In
which he gave up all seven San
Francisco runs.
Rookie Alan Fowlkes, 3-1, was

Waharna .

Kent Walker sta rted the rally wi th
his third hit of the game.
A double by Randy Layton placed
runners at second and third. Those
hi ts we re foll owed by an error, five
walks, a fi elder's choice and another
Walker hit. During the inning,
Wahama changed p&gt;tchers twice.

Lyons who had relieved - "aermilt was replaced by Van Meter who
finally put out the fire . Walker Jed
the Highlander attack with four hits
in four trips.
Huff had a triple and two RBI's
while Burleson had two hits and
Layton, the winning pitcher, a
double.
Pacing the White Falcons were
Lyons with two hits in four trips ;
Zuspan with two hits including a
triple; Layne two hits; Laudermilt

and Van Meter with two hits each.
Walker and Layton combined for
seven strikeouts and four walks
while Wahama hurlers walked eight
and fanned six.
Southwestern trvel s to
Southeastern of Ross tonight.
By innings :
Wahama
Oll 151 0- 9 13 4
Southwestern
002 'lJf1 x- ll 10 0
Laudennilt, Lyons (LJ. VanMeter
(6) and Zuspan. Walker, Layton (5)
(W) and Daniels.

Illness, injuries strip field
LOU ISV ILLE. Ky . tAPI ...C u peco~ · · s

Jo:·i, a fa st·workJng

~ew

York -bred fill;·. Saturday will test
18 colts - inc luding a onP-Pyed
runner - and a gelding, survivors
from a Kentucky Derby flrld that
has been stripped by Illness and
inj ury.
!n 107 previous Derbies at Chu rchill Downs. only two fU Ues have
won - Genuine Risk In 1980 and
Regret In 1915.
Cupecoy's Joy, who ranked sixth
on the money earning list which determi ned the field at a maximum 20
3-year-olds. alsc had been entered
In today's Kentucky Oa ks for 3year-olds,
However . alter Cupecoy's Joy
drew the favorable No.I position for
the richest Derby ever with a gross

purse of $527,600, owner Roberto
Perez said , " We're In lor the big
one. !f we had drawn on the outside,
we would have scratched imme--

diately and run in the Oaks."
Bettors, perhaps remembering
that Genuine Risk paid $28.20 lor a
$2 win ticket here, don't figure to
get tha t high a payoff on Cupecoy's
Joy since she will be parl of the
parlmutel field with seven others
because there can be only 12 betting

Interests.
The parimutuel field was listed at
8-1 in the early line, which favored
El Baba , winner of eight of 10
sta ris , at 5-2, followed by unbeaten
Air Forbes Won, the Wood MemorIa l winner, 7-2, and Muttering, the
Santa Anita Derby winner at 4-1.
Cupecoy's Joy, to be rtdden by
Angel Santiago, has four victories
-ail against New York-bred competition - five seconds and four
thirds In 14 starts, earning $213,420.
Royal Roberto, a 20-1 outsider, Is
the other New York -bred in the
field for the 1V. -mile first leg of thoroughbred racing's Triple Crown.
No New York-bred has ever won
the Derby which has been dominated by Kentucky-breds who have
won 81 times.
The bay daughter of NortherlyLady Alba made her last start In
the Spiral Stakes at Latonia March
27 where she finished third. She has
been lmpesslve during her workouts here this week.
Mrs . Joe W. Brown's El Baba
won the Louisiana Derby and ran
second to Hostage, who fractured a
sesa moid earlier this week, In the
Arkansas Derby. The son of Raja
Ba ba-HaU to El, tops the money

From the nearly 60 entries in the
artistic design classes al the Chester
Garden Club's annual spring show
staged at the Royal Oak Recreation
Building, Ruth Erwin won both the
best of show and the creativity
award.

Braves 3, Cubs 0
Dale Murphy and Bob Horner hit
consecutive home runs in the
eighth inning to lead Atlanta over
Chicago.
After Chicago veteran Ferguson
Jenkins and Atlanta rookie J oe
Cowley had battled for seven scoreless lnnlngs, Claudell Washington
singled otf Jenkins, 2-2, with one out
in the Braves' eighth.

Highlanders rally to beat Wahama
South western erupted for se\·en
runs in the sixt h in111ng Thursday
evening to ta ke &lt;1 rome-f rom-behind
11-9 nmH·onference victory over

Flower designers net awards at spring show

the winning pitcher, allowingl2 hits
and strlklng out seven In his llrst
complete game.

Washington stole second and took
third on Chicago catcher Keith
Moreland's throwing error before
Murphy hit a two-run homer lor the
game's first runs. Murphy's home r , hls sixth, Increased his
league-leading RBI total to 22.
Horner added an Insurance run
with his sixth homer.
Gene Garber, 2-1, who relieved
Cowley alter seven Innings, got the
victory .

winners among the Derby field
with earnings of $384,863.
El Baba, who won twice here as a
2-yea r-old, w11lleave from the No.4
post position with Don Brumfield
aboard.
Edward Anchel's Air Forbes
Won w1ll go from post No.7 under
Angel Cordero Jr ., who rode the
colt's sire, Bold Forbes, to vlctory
In the 1976 Derby. "Sitting on him is
like sitting on his daddy," said Cordero after a workout earlier this
week.
Air Forbes Won didn' t go to the
races untll March 4 this year and
has won ail four staris. The last
horse to win the Derby that didn't
race as a 2-year~ld was Apollo In
1B82. He also was bred in Ohio
which has produced only one Derby
winner, Wintergreen In 1909.
Muttering, owned by the Tartan
Stable, heads a contingent of five
who prepared for the Kentucky
Derby on the West Coast.

Other special awards presented at
the show judged by Janet Bolin, an
accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs, went to
Maida Mora, the award of distinction; Mace! Barton, the horticulture
sweepstakes ; Mike Frost, an award
of merit in the junior division, and
Sara Machir. the horticulture junior
sweepstakes.

~~ SWINGS AWAY - Southern's Allen Pape lakes a
nlp at a Roger Kovalchik pitcb dnrlng Tbunday'a DOD-

tra veled to Federal Huc kmg and
carne away with a double victory as
the boys won 60-29 and the
Marauderettes defeated the Lancers
74-31. The eighth school record of
this season was chalked up by the
600 meter relay learn of Carole
Bai ley, Tammy Cremea ns, Rhonda
Neece and Clmrmele Turner With a
lime ol 2:05.3 .
Frtday lite yuung Marauders will
be tested in an invitationtt l meet ctl
Minford and will end their seas on in .

MASON - The Mister Bee
Classic, scheduled May 3-5 at Riverstde Golf Course in Mason, has
several of the top player:s from the
Women's Professional Golf Tour
competing for top honors.
They are:
Stephanie Farwig, Mequon, Wis.,
a three-time winner of the Wisconsin
Women's State American Champion. She played collegiate golf at
Houston Baptist University, and
joined the WPGT in 1961. Playing
her strongest golf this season with a
vic tory in the Cypresswood
Women's Open in February '82. She
is currently leading money winner.
Jane Lock, Melbourne, Australia,
who attended Preston Institute of
Technology ; 1975, '76 and '79
Australian Amateur Champion;
1973, '74 and '75 Australian Junior
Champion and 1981 Canadian
Amateur Champ. Jane is currently
fourth on the 1982 WPGT Money List
having three second place finishes
and one third place finish in five
events.
Anne-Marie Palli, Cibourne, France, winner of 26 international
amateur events in Europe and 1970

Riverdowns results
CINCINNATI (AP) -Reyes Matias won his third race of the day
when he drove catlike to victory ln
the featured eighth race Thursday
at River Downs.
Catlike was ahead by three
lengths as It crossed the finish line
at 1:48, paying $8.8&gt;, $5.40 and 4.M.

FENCING NEEDS?

a r a ud e r e t t e s

dump

Trl

league game at Seatbern. Catcber Dave Follrod awalts
tbe pltciL Melgl took a 5-1 victory. Tim Tucker pbolo_

in the various activities.

Junior World Champ. A previous event which begins at 10 a.m. each
tw~time winner on the WPGT and
day .
former LPGA player, Palli has wcm. . . - - - - - - - - - - three WPG T events thus far in 1962.
She is recipient of the Gold Medal
The Daily Sentinel
from the French Academy of Sports.
!USPS lt5-IIG)
ADlvltloa of Multlmedil, Inc.
Karen Permezel, Yackandandah,
Australia , former Australian
Published every afternoon, Monday thrO~ijj:h
Friday , Ill Court Street , by the Ohio Valley
Amateur Champion represented her
PubU!Ihin~ Company • Multimedia . Inc.,
country in World Cup competition
Purneruy, Ohio ~769 , 992·2 156. Second c lass
pootajl{e paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
for six years. She won two tournaments in 1980 and three in 1981.
Member : Tile Associated Press, Inland Dtti·
ly Press Association and the American
KareQ set an aU-time tour record
Newspltptr Publillhe~ As!lodatwn, National
with e:&gt;rnings of $14,070.75, maklng
Advc rtisinl( Representati ve, Branham
Newspaptr Sales, 733 Thini Avenue, New
her the leading moneywinner in 1982
Vorit, New York 10017.
and Ce&gt;-Piayer-of•the-Year with
POOTMASTER : Send ttddress to The Daily
Mary Lawrence.
Sentint!l, 111 Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
The public is invited to gallery the

MACll.. BARTON was tbe winner of lbe borUculture sweeplltakes
award at lbe Chester Garden Club Dower sbow.

•·.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C1rri~r or Motor Rou~

ubanon results

One w~k ..

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) -Sugar
Bob won the featured eighth race at
Lebanon Raceway Thursday, payIng $8, $3.60 and $2.M.

Miss Flying Gal was second, payIng $4.60 and $4.40. Buster Paul finIshed third, paying $4.:/il.
The 3-3 double of Hal Now Tux
and Kellytuck Ruby paid $224.M,
and the crowd wagered $176,349.
The first division ot the Ohio Sires
Stakes Series beglni Friday.
The $2.8 mllllon series w1ll have
·4-and 5-year-old trotters competing
ln four races with a total purse of
$32,(0),

'

$1.00
Month . . . . . ....... ..... . .. ... $4.40
Onl' Y eo~~r .
. . ... . ..... $52.80
On~

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
D~il y

.

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

Sul.tscnbt!rs not des1rinl! to Jlti Y thl' carril'r
may rem it in ;u.lvant't' t.bra1 to The De~i l y
Sentint!l uo a J,·t or J.,lrn)WJlh ~s is. Credit
will be ~ivetl canier.~H\Onth .

" What Price Would You Pay lor
the Coo of a Dove'." a free standing
assemblage : Maida Mora, Ruth Erwin, Pat Holter and Betty Dean.
"And How Would You Value a
Young Mother's Love' ," featuring
figurines: Dorothy Karr, Jenny
Machir, Clarice Krautter, and Karla
Chevalier, of secular design; and
Ruth Erwin, Maye Mora, Crystal
Rayburn, and Virginia Chadwell ,
religious design.
"Where But Around Us, A Planet
to Share'," a modern design using
backg(ound and special lighting :
Ruth Erwin, Pat Holter, Bette Dean
and Sally Andrews.
In the invitational classes, " The
Earth is the Lord's, with Riches Un~

No subscriptions by mail pennitkd in towns
wllt-re homl' carrierser~il"t' i..s HVHIIable.
IIAilSU88CRIPfiONS
Ohio aDd Wrt' Ylrxlnl.a
3 Month .
.. ......
S1x month .
. ....... , . .. . ... ...
I Yea r .
,
,
.
·aai~ oa·~~
ond w.. Vltl(nlo
JMonlh ............ •....
..

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o.;,;,

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$1 2.35

$20.80
$39.00
$13.00

6 Month .

. 123.40

I Ye Kr .. .. .... ....· ... ..

. $44.20

LAWN-BOY

SPRING SA-LE
'

fii J

muffler

Boy s
D1sc u s, 11 2'3", Ri der ( M) .
Lonq Jum p, 15'1'', T a te ( FH !
H1qh Jump, 5'1'', Ch ancey (M ) .
Pole va ult , 8' 0", M oo r e ( M }.
Kas ler ( F H ) .
110 L H , 20.0 . K1lc he n (M)
100 M , 13.5, Ct1ance y (M )

1600M.S ·S I 5, Deeler(FH l.

We Don't Skimp On Shrimp!

, SARA MACHIR was presented lbe junior bortlculture sweepstakes

award.

RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC-JEEP

#R8237

400 M { R). 54 .6, M e ig s.

400 M, 1:052. Kennedy CM)
BOOM. 2:216, Kast er (FH )
200 M , 28 . 7, Wi se ( Ml .

1600 M ( R) , 4:3l.B, Meogs
Girls

Shot, 31'2 11J", Thoma s (Mi . ·
D1sc u s. 71'1' ', F ollrod (MI .
Long Ju m p. 13' 831. " ' , F r as hi er

WE HAVE IT All

••••

SUGAR RUN MILLS

1600M.cRl.
6:32JB.J.
.9, Lyons(
•ooM
Melgs FH !.
400M, 1:08.9, Si nnett (FH) .
BOOM (R) , 2:05 .3. Meigs.

200M.29 .B.Engll shCMI .
1600M CR I. 50 .2. Meigs .

tBOM 1

A

U

____

' MODERN SUPPLY

~99WMainStreet
9922164
· Po
Oh
.
'
meroy,
·
The Store with" All Kinds of Stuff"

Sky blue, while vinyl
top, a-c. stereo, tilt, dlx.
Int., power windows,
wire wheels.

Red-white, V-B, auto
trans

the

In

floor,

console, 1!\Jckels, a-c,
ani-1m.

4 dr ., 4 sp., 8 ·C, am -fm
stereo. black with red

cloth in!. t-Owner .

JIB V-8, A.T., p.s., p.b..
a.c, wood grain, roof
rack, low miles,
1.
owner .

•

'

~

·'5995:

..•
•
Friday:

A1HENs

~b.~tu

s

JlQ~
+---&amp;~~~

145

f AJ/l

lo p.m.

~~·until 9 p.m.
11 M n. until 5 p.m.
$2.!10

2t~~slon:

t Vstliifents:

$J.oo

April 30, May 1·2

dealers featuring American country :anijques and
Americana for the beginner and the advanc~ collector.

0

Ohio University Convocation Center Athens, Ohio
Manager. Jim Reynolds - 6 I 41885-'3891 or 888-7 I 73
.
' •

'

0

BAUM
TRUE
VALUE
1PH.

!·

963301

'4995
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dr., ~ sp., am radio, 1Jocal owner':' Low miles.

302 Y-8, 3 sp.,

'4295-

on ''he

column.
excellent
mechanical condition, t-·
ow~r

•

tave tave.
'80' CHEVROLET

4

.CH~STER, OH.

Monday N. ht Is
All.fou-Care- o-Eat
Shrimp Night!

PLYMOUTH
PREMIER WG.

LAwns-Gardens.

ve,

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Monday 4PM To Closing

• Fingertip starting
--.....• Patented Lawn-Boy
safety features
• Big zipperless rear bag
holds 50'1o more grass
than regular bag
'

Shot . 36 '6", Meadow s ( M !

-

'

• Touch-N-Go control handle
• Solid-state ignition
·• Quiet under-the-deck

full uw:

measured, " the winners were Maida .
Mora, Melanie Stethem, Shelia Curtis, and Eva Robson; and in the interpretive design, " A Home Where
We Live, a World to be Treasured,"
the winners were Ada Holter, Pat
Holter, Mace! Barton, and Melanie
Ste them.
In the junior artistic class,
" Where, but on Earth a re There
Children and Air?," using an outdoor game theme, the ribbon winners wePe Mike Frost, Angela ChaJ&gt;rnan, and Karyn Thompson , with
honorable mention to Jonathan
Rayburn , J essica Chevalier, and
Sara Machir.
Horticulture Division
For houseplants exhibited at the
show, blue ribbons went to Mace!
Barton, Alice Thompson and Crystal
Rayburn; red ribbons to Barton,
Clarice Krautter, and Ray burn;
yellow ribbons to Alice Thompson
and Barton.
In the classes for daffodils, blue
ribbons went to Pat Holter, two, Bette Lou Dean, Pauline Ridenour ; red
ribbons to Holter, two, Dean, Mace!
TilE BEST OF SHOW In artistic design was won by Ruth Erwin who
Barton ; yellow ribbons to Holter,
also received the award for the most creative design.
two, Dean, and Barton; and white
ribbon,; to Ridenour, Holter and Bar- on plants used for food.
by En c Cham bers. Rib bons went to
ton .
In th e n on-co mp e tit ive Floyd Ridenour, first: Lesa Pooler,
In the classes for tulips , the win- educational display, there was a n second : Kri stin Heines, thi rd, and
ners were : blue, Mace! Barton, two ; exhibit by the Meigs County honora ble mention to J ason Armes,
Jennifer Machir and Pat Holter ; Agricultural Se rvi ce showing soil Christine Ka uff. and Tns ha Spenred, Holter, Thompson, Barton and samples, testing equipment, types of cer. Others exhibiting posters we re
Dean ; yellows : Thomp so~. soil builders, books and bulletins. Tara Morris , Missy Ma rcinko, Tun
Ridenour, Barton ; and whites, Bar- Howa rd and Geneva Nol a n Clark, Mickey F oster, Shawn
ton .
displayed mineral specimens, rocks Waters, Michele Garfield, Matthew
In the class for rhizomes, the win- and fossils along with books on Darling, Bri an Ba iley, Mony Wood ,
ners were Thompson, blue, with mining.
Laura Hawt horn e, Heather F'inlaw,
Barton, red, yellow and white. In a
Books on flowers from the Willie Hill, Al vin Curt&gt;s, Del Laudermiscellaneous bulb class. Pauline Pomeroy Public Library were rnilt, J ay Rcnolds, Fra nk Pa rker,
Ridenour took both the blue and the displayed and there was a garden Mary Edwa rds, Eri c Sim, and
red ribbon.
exhibit of flowering shrubs by Bob's J eremy Combs.
Other ribbon winners were Ruth Market, Mason, around a pool, com- ---------Erwin, blue, and Thompson , red in plete with gold fish and ceramic 0
wild greens ; Ruth Erwin, blue, figurines and frogs.
PRE - PUBLICATION
yellow and white, and Thomp, on ,
In the youth educational comSALE OF
red in herbs; with Thompson petition, there was a display of antiTh e Pioneer Hi s tory of
receiving a blue and a red in a litter posters by fifth graders of the
Me ig s Co .- 1908
category for other miscellaneous Chester Elementary School taught
For $ 16 .00
plants.
and
Winners in other classes were:
Ha rd es ty 's H is tor y of
Evergreens : Sally Andrews,
Me ig s Co .-1883
Mace! Barton, Maida Mora, and
For $20.00
Barton, first through fourth :
Rep rin ted by : The Meigs
flowering branches, Barton, first
Co. Pi oneer &amp; H &gt;s torica l
SYRACUSE , OHIO
and third, Maye Mora, second, and
Soc ie t y,
In c. an d the
NOW OPEN FOR TH E
Pat Holter, fourth ; and other branMeigs Co . Gen ea logi cal
SPRING SEASON
ches, Bette Dean, all four p!ac!es.
Socie t y.
•Vegetable
Plants
Sara Machir took all four ribbons
Last Da y to m a ke out
•Bedding Plants
in outdoor blooms in the junior horcheck s is May 15.
•Foi!age Plants and
ticulture division , while ribbons for
Mak e ch e ck s paya bl e to
Hanging Baskets
and se nd ord e r s to :
shrub branches went to Sara
OPENDAILY91il6
Meig s Co . Pion ee r Soc ie ty
Machir, first, third and fourth, and
SUNDAY 1 TIL 5
P .O . Box 145
to Angela Chapman, second. Sarah
PHONE 992-5776
Pomeroy , Ohoo
also took all four ribhons in the class

$AVES5()00

"mb}~~Bo~o~M~·:2~S6~.6~-~st~ew~a:r~tc~M-I_. _l~~~~~~~~~~P~H~-~9l92~-i2tili5iiii~~~~~~~~~~~F~o;r;P~e~t~s~S~ta~b~t~es~~L~a~rg~e~a~n~d~S~m;;a;II;A;n;im~a;ls;;:;;! '

Meigs' girls softball team post~d
an IH victory over Trimble Thursday evening.
Natalie Lambert pitched and batted the Ma raudereltes to the nonconference victory.
Lambert collected a bases loaded
double in the team 's four run sixth.
In addition, she hurled a three hitter.
In going the distance, Lambert
fanned seven while issuing eight
walks.
Other Meigs hitters were Mel
Dillard and Paula Horton with
triples, and Pam Crooks with a
single. Jenson and Ahle combined
for seven walks and seven
strikeouts. Trimble hitters were
Jenson, Ahle and Sonya .Jackson, all
with singles.
Linescore:
Trimble
tOO 100 1-3 3 3
Meigs
103 004 X-8 4 8
Jenson (L), Ahle (6) and Jones.
Lambert (W) and Horton.

Artistic Arrangements
In the artistic arrangement
classes, those receiving ribbons are
listed first, second, third and fourth
respectively:
"It's the Earth's Mountains and
Valleys, It's Forests and Flowers,"
tall floor arrangements : Twila
Buckley, Crystal Rayburn, Virginia
Chadwell, and Clarice Krautter.
"It's the Sky Overhead, the Summertime Showers," a mass, modern
design : Mary Huffman, Ruth Erwin,
Pauline Ridenour , and Crystal
Rayburn.
"Think of the Atom, the Wind and
the Rain, " an absract : Ruth Erwin,
Pal Holter, Bette Dean, and Janel
Koblentz.
"Think of the Gift of Color and
Grain," design using grain, fruits
and vegetables: Pat Holter, Maurita
Miller, Edna Wood, and Rose Mary
Young .

SUPREME 21" self·prapelled,
wlthi'HI'INtg
• Up to 30"/o more usable power

a dual meet with Ga llipolis on
Tuesday.
Results fro m Federal Hocking . (FHH).
ig h Jump, 4' 4", Neece (M) .
100 LH. 19.7, Harrison (M) .
100 M, 14.0, English (M ).

M

"Consider the Earth" was the
theme carried out at the show attended by over 100 gue~is. Earth
tones were used on the display tables
providing the ideal background lor
plant materials. Refreshments were
served in a cafe area where the
tables were covered with red linen
cloths and centerpieces of spring
flowers.
Pat Holter, Twila Buckley, Sally
Andrews and Sheila Taylor made up
the show committee and were
assisted by all of the club members

Top women pros to take part in
Mister Bee Classic May 3-5

Young Marauders
•
post meet wtns
The Meigs .Junior h i~ h trC:~ ck team

The

..,

CAMARO

DIESEL PICK·UPS

Red-with red Int., a-c,
am-1m tape, rafly .
wheels.

Now in stock for your
Inspection

1

'359-5

'3495

•5995 .·

(4)

'50QDealer Discount This
Only I

- Wee~-End

·ASK ABOUT OUR EXCLUSIVE-12 'MONTH OR 12,000 MILE NATiONAL USED CAR
JfAUAITYI FOR FiJRTii~R DETAILS,.·c~LL Jill WALK£R QR WENDELL .VAUGHAN.

Gallipolis, 0 .

446-9800

Featuring Our New Homemade Seafood Gumbo
· Monday from 4PM to closing you can get all the boiled
shrimp you con eat, along with fries, wann toasted grecian bread,
Shoney's own cocktail sauce, and oill all-you-care-to~eat
soup and salad bar, featuring our great new homemade seafood
gumbo, for just $4.99. Children under 12 get a free
dessert with any dinner purchase. It's a new, nicely nautical way
we're saying, "Thank yQu for coming to Shoney's:'
I

POINT PLEASANT
SHONEY'S ONLYl

�.·

•

SATIJRDAY

SUNDAY

DYESVILLE - Bean soup sup- '
per at Dyesville Corrununity
Church, S to 7 p.m. Saturday;
public invited.

TEXAS COMMUNITY - The
Unity Singers directed by Sue
Matheny will present special
music at Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church, Texas Com·
munity, Sunday at 7:30p.m. The
public is invited.

POINT PLEASANT - Singles
dance Saturday at Krodel Park,
Point Pleasant. All divorced,
widowed or single persons, 21 or
over, are invited to attend.
STIVERSV ILLE
Rev .
Robert Byer of Manni ngton, W.
Va . will be the speaker at 7 p.m.
Services Saturday night at
Stiversville Conun uni ty Churc h.
The public is invited.

Friday, April 30, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Calendar ·
ning. At the 6 p.m. evening ser·
vice, the special speaker will be
the Rev. Thomas McClung.

with music by the Charlie Lily
band from 10 a. m. to S p.m. Food
will be sold.

RACINE - Annual inspection
of Racine Chapter 134, Order of
the Eastern Star, will be held
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at Racine
Masonic Temple. Officers are to
wear chapter dresses and members are to take either san·
dwiches or a salad. The worthy
matron asks members to help
clean the temple on Saturday and
has announced a practice for Sun·
day at2p.m.

ROCK SPRINGS United
Methodist Church will have a
hymn sing Sunday at 7 p.m.
Singers will be Russ and the
Gospel Tones. The Rev . Richard
Rothemich, pastor, invites the
public.

A HYMN SING will be held at
the Nease Settlement Church
Sunday at 2 p.m. The United
Gospel Singers will be fea tured.
The public is invited.

BIG BEND C. B. Club will stage
its annual coffee break at the ar·
chery building at Royal Oak Park
Sunday . There is no admission
charge and the public is invited to
attend . Parking is free. Displays,
dealers, games and prizes wtll be
featured during the day along

7: 30p.m. Monday at the home of
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall.

RE V. DONALD Carrico of
Grove City will be guest spea ker
at Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene at 10:30 Sunday mor·

MONDAY

POMEROY - The Women's
Auxiliary of the Coon Hunters

MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,

Pom eroy- Middl e port, Oh io

Association will hold a yard sale
all day Monday on West Main St.
near the entrance of Upper
Monkey Run.

,)

OLD FASHIONED
REVIVAL
A!the United

Faith Church
Rt . 7 Bypass, Pom eroy
MAY J to9
7: 30 Nightly
Re v. Noah Burgess, Evange list.
Sp e cial s inging nightly by
" HARMONY " and other local

groUps. Pastor Rev. James Cun·
diff extends a cordial invitation

to alt.

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
'

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Qt
-

Complete

Pres cr i pti on s

992-9921 Middleport ·

992·2955

J.

29.

Pa uli ne M. Ash, class of 1932, will
be speaker and music for da ncing
wi ll be provided by Blue Velvet.
Asteak dinner will be prepa red by
mothers of Sou thern High School
junior cia,.,; members and will be
served at 6 p.m.
Classes holding reumons are 1922,
1927, 1932, 1937, 1942, 1941, 1952, 1957,
19"2, 1!167, 1972, and 1977. There is
one livmg graduate in the class of
1912and two in the cia,.,; of 1917.
Tickets for the re union are $5.50
each and the deadli ne for reser·
vations is May 25. Each person at·
tending must have a ticket. There
will be no reservations by phone and
no tickets will be sold after May 25.
Tickets are on sale at the Racine
Vi llage Cut Rte or may be secured
by sending the money and a self·
addre,;sed stamped envelope to Mrs.
Raymond Pierce, Route 2, Box 44,
Raci ne, Ohto.

F THE

The "Jaymar Swingers," a new
women's golf league has been
organized.
The Swingers is open to any person who wants to join and beginners
are especially welcome, officers
report. Sessions will be held every
Thursday at 6 p.m. at the Jaymar
Golf Course. Dues are $5 a year
the offlcers are Becky Anderson,
president ; Donna Nease,
president ; Sheila Harris, secretarytreasurer; Bernadette Anderson,
handicap chairman, and Nancy Hill,
social chairman.
The league will begin on May 6.
Meanwhile, Bill Childs is beginning Monday evening from 7 to 8
p.m. a free golf clinic. The classes
will continue on consecutive Monday ·
evenings.

r

ONTH

Dianond ·Savings &amp;

Our storewide End Of the Month Sale on carpeting, color TVs,
and major appliances ~ omes to an end on Saturday-( we' re
giving you an extra day). Some are floor models&amp; ones of a kind.
So don' t wait! Come in now for the best selection AND savings.
Top name brands, tremendous selection , guaranteed low
prices- at Hatfield &amp; Mc Coy you get all three at all 9 locations.

992·6655

Syra cu se

MICROWAVES
PANASONIC MICROWAVE· ...-----,
Magnetic Cookaround tur~

s i z&amp;fits

a lmost

MICROWAVE- JO· minute

timer, separate defrost cycle, sealedln

ceramic shell
s233
TAPPAN MICROWAVE- I 5 minute timer.
removeable glass tray, seethru window .

VID
EQUIPMENT

TH E

Rev. Virgil Byre r . pa sto r . G le n McClung .
o ssl. pa sto r . Clyde He nderson . pas tor
emeritu s Sunday Sc hool . 9:30 a.m..
Glen McClung . sup! .: mo rning worsh1 p
10:30 a .m.: evenin g ser vice . 7:00 : mid ·
week service , W&amp;dnesd oy . 7:00p .m .

J2b

E.

Mai n St. . Pom eroy . Su nday services a t
10:30 a .m. Ho ly Com m u nion on the l irs t
Sunday of ea ch month . and co mbined
with morn ing pr ayer o n the third Su n·
day . Morni ng praye r a nd serm o n on all
o ther Sunda ys of the month . Ch urch
Sc hool .ond nurse ry core p rov ided . Cof ·
fee hour in the Par ish Hall immed ia tely
following the se rvice .

s244

anywhere.
WHIRLPOOL

CHUR CH Of

NAZARENE : Cor ner Union and M ulber ry .

GRACEEPI SCOPAL CHURCH -

table, Variable power set·
tlngs, 500watts of power,
C o mpact

TRINITY CHURCH. Rev . W. H . Perrin .
pa sto r ; De bbie Buck . Su nday school
supt . Ch urch Schoo l . 9 : 15 ~ . m .: worsh ip
service . 10:30 a .m . Cho1r rehearsa l ,
Tu esday . 7:30 p .m . u nder d irec t ion of
A lice N ease. ·

POMER OY

END OF THE MONTH

Whirlpool Gibson

AND
WHITE WESTINGHOUSE
REFRIGE,RATORS
AND FREEZERS
IN SIDE BY SIDES, TOP MOUNTS
CHESTS AND UPRIGHTS!!

Main St . Nei l Proudfoot . pas tor . Bi bl e
sc hool. 9:30 a .m.: morn ing worsh ip .
10:30 a.m .: Youth meetings , 6:'30 p .m ..
evening worship . 7:30 . Wedn esday n1ght
prayer mee ting ond Bibl e stu d y . 7:30
p.m .
THE SALVATION ARMY . 115 Butternut
Ave ., Pomer o y . Envoy and M rs . Roy
Wining . offi cers in charge . Sunday holiness m eet ing , 10 a .m .: s Jnday
School . 10:30 a .m . Sundoy sch ool le ade r .
YPSM . Eloi se Adams. 7:30 p .m ..
solvation meeting , v arious spe ak ers and
music spec ials. fhur sdov ........ IO a .m . to 7
p .m . Ladie s Home League , all w omen in vi ted : 7:30 p .m . pray er meeting and
Bible study . Rev . Noel Hermon . t e actler .

BURLING TON SOUTHERN

BAPTIST

CHAPEL. Route I , Stlade . Bib le sc tloo l . 7
p .m . Thu rsdav : worship service . B p'.m .

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH Of

COLOR PORTABLES
Automati c

Fre quency

AcA

Solid State Chasis.
ZENITH
LARGE

llLtJ

s31 6

00

ZENITH CONTEMPORYDark wood Transitional
styling , Electronic lighted

·

SCREEN

COLOR

m

COLOR CONSOLES
dial

tuning,

1"l-

~

Automatic

PORTABLE- Super video range tuners ,
automati c frequ enc y co ntrol. Chroma·

Freque ncy Con lrol. s459

co l o r pi c ture tube, 10 0% so lid s t ate .

RCA
25"TRANSITIONAL
COLOR
CONSOLE- Single knob electronic tuning,

s293

RCA I J "COLOR PORTABLE- Compact siz e
- goes anywh ere. 100% solid st ate cha sis
acc uline bl ac k m atri x pi c ture tub e

ZENTIH

19'" COLOR

s268

PORTABLE- Blac k

matri x pi c ture tub e. auto m ati c frequen cy
co ntrol. co lor co rrec ti on c irc ut.

$31 2

DELUXE 19" REMOTE COLOR PORTABLE
loc kin co lor &amp; fin e tuning . all elec tronic
c h ann el se lec ti o n. 1nlln e m as k pi ct ure

autom atic

frequency

· · --

control,

view

o p e rat ed c olor &amp; tint controls, reli a ble

s435

ex tended life cha sis.

ZENITH MEDITERRANEAN-Single knob
e lec tro ni c

tuning ,

deluxe

CH. Rev.Ralph Smith . pastor . Sunday
school. 9:30 a .m .. Mr s. Worl ey Fra nc is,
superintendent . Prea ching se rv ices fir st
and third Sundays f o llow ing Sunday
School .

battery pack. $1200 VALUE
S 799
ZENITH DECK- Super deluxe, 5 hour playrecord. digital clock &amp; timer, remote

base,

fr equ e ncy control

automatic

s499

VALUES TO $23
NOW$995 T0$1

.

795

'.I'IJPP/JB
AND
WHITE WESTINGHOUSE

built in microphone. 5800 VALUE

t

s548

LAUNDRY
WHIRLPOOL HEAVY DUTY
WASHER-2
Speeds,
2
Cyclesnormal &amp; gentle,
Porcelain enamelln;;i;

3

.:::_,::;_

\

536 7
1------------~~~--------------~ WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC DRYER-2

Traceries. multilevels, and more, in solids,
multicolors and tone on tone s. Great looking
practical new styles to beautify any home .

SALE PRICES ON

finder for playback, 3 :1 manual zoom,

tube.

--;;;J

drying
temperatures. 220 volts of drying power.

CUT and LOOPS/

OLD DE XTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHUR-

control. StOOO VALUE
s5 80
RCA coLOR CAMERA· Etectron ic vfl&gt;w- 1--.;;;G;;.A;,;S;.,&amp;;.,;;Eo,;Lo,;E;.;C;,TioiR
..I.;C;.,R;.;A;.;;,;N;.;;
.G;.;E;;,;S;.;.I.;.I-

cabinetry,

RCA 25" REMOTE CONTROL COLOR
CONSOLE- Keyboard electronic tuning,
swivel

controls.
s950
QUASAR PORTABLE SYSTEM-Top of the
line, 14 day programmable, VHS system,
specielollecta, electronir. tuning, built In

s463

auto m ati c fint tuning.

co nve ni e nt

RCA PORTABLE VTFH! hour play/record,
built in rechargeable battery pack, touch

CHRIST. 200 W . M ain St .. 992 -5235 . Vocal
music. Su nday w orsh i p . 10 a .m .: Bibl e
study . 11 a .m .: wors h ip . 6 p .m . Wed ·
nesday Bibl e study . 7 p .m .
·

smooth epoxy coated drum Interior.

s182
GET YOUR PORCH OR PATIO
IN GREAT SHAPE FOR
THE SPRING &amp; SUMMER

---- .DOOJ 'Z'./IPPJUI

+tutp.oi.n±-

AND
WHITE WESTINGHOUSE
UNDERCOUNTER &amp; PORTABLE
DISHWASHERS

ALL ON SALE! I

Evening wc;&gt;rship , 7: 30,
prayer meetmg . 1:30 p .m .

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.

CASH &amp; CARRY ONLY

Rich velvet looks and breathtaking, lustrous
.. pe ncil points. Beautiful and durable stylings
that compliment todays c ontempory homes.

VALUES TO $30

Nowsgg 5 ros2395

tice, B:30 p.m. WOdnes day : prayor
meoting and Biblo study, Wodnosday,
7:30p.m.
CH~RCH OF CHRIST, Mtddloport, S!h
and -Moln, ·Bob Molton, mints tor, Scott

SAXONIES
A tremendous range ol colore, welghta and
yarn systems Including An eo. IVa, Ultrona, and
Antrons In solids, lone on to nee, ·and tweed a. A
color and pattern for nearly every room In your
home.

VALUES TO $24

Nowss 95 _Tos_

Wednesdav

gs

18

Saltsman, ~ssoclate
minister, .Bible
School, 9:30 a . m . ; morning worship .
10:30 a . m .: evening service . 7:00 p.m .

SILVER BRIDGE :PLAZA
GA.LLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 446-8390~
.
,,.

nme was when

!he blllcksmlth and wheel
..vrigh! did a thriving bu.slness and the rumble ol
Cc'U15 and wagons was a familiar sound 10 every
community Some of !lwse old w l"udes suMve
on the l1mm but they are last dJsappei'lnng

MIDDLEPORT fR EEWill BAPTIST . Co• ·

ner As h ond Plu m . l es l ie Hay m on .
pastor . Bob G r ubb . assis tant pa stor
Sunday Sc hool . 10 o . m .; M orn ing Wor ship . II o . m .. Wed nesday and So t urdov
Even ing Sen.•iccs . 7·30 p .m .

MEIGS
COOPERATIVEPARISH
METHODISTCHURCH
Rev . Robert M cGee .
int eri m direc tor

POMEROYCLUSTER

Rev. Robert McGee
PO MEROY. Sundov School 9: 15a .m .
Worship serv ice 10:30 o.m
Choi r
rehearsal , Wednesday , 7 p .m . Rev .
Robert McGee . pa stor .
ENTERPRISE , Worship 9 a .m . Church
School 10 · a.m . Richord Ro the mi ch .
pastor .
ROCK SPRINGS . Su nda y School9: 15 o .
m. Worshi p se rvice. 10 o . m .. Richo rd
Rothemich , pasto r .
FLATWOO DS. Church Sc hool 10 a .m .
Wor ship II a .m .. Richard Rothe m ich .
pa stor .
M IDDLEPORT CLU STER
HE A TH . Churc h School 9:30 a .m . War ·
ship 10:30 a .m . UMYF 6 p .m . Rob ert
Robinson . Pastor .
RUTLAND . Chu rc h Sc h oo l 9:30 a .m .
Worship 10:30 a .m . Robert Rider . post or .
SALEM CENTER . Worsh ip 9 a .m . Chur ·
ch Sch ool 9:45 o .m . Robert Rider. pa stor .
PEARL CHAPEL . Su nday Sc hoo l 9:30
a .m . Worship 7:30p .m .
SNOWVILLE . Sunday School. 9 :30a .m .
Worship 11:00 o .m .

SYRACUSECLUSTER
,

Rev . Stanl ey M erri fi ed Mi n is ter
' ~ORE ST RUN : Wors h1 p 9. o .m Chu rc h
Sc hoollO a.m .
MINERS VILL E. Chv l"c h Sc hoo l 9 a .m .
Worship 10a .m .
A SBURY: Chu rdl Sch ool 9:50 a .m . ·
Worship I I a .m . Bi ble Study 7·30 p .m .
Th ursday . UMW fi st Tu esday .

SOUTHERN CLUSTER

Wodnos day Blblo Study and youth group ..

f.m.
MIDDLEPOR . CHURCH

Acts
41 ·12

weanesday

FrtOily

ThursdiiV

Salvlday

John
Aoman5 1Conn!hians u Cofll"llh••ns 1 Thessalon•ans
15 22·28
5 I 15
4 13· 18
10 2&lt;' ·29
63· 1\
p

SYRAC USE M ISSION
Cherry St
Services 10 a m . Sunday Evemng se r
vices Su nday and Wednesday al 7 ()()
p m.

BEARWALIOW RIDGE CHURC H Of
CHRIST. Duane Worden . mi ni ster . B1b le
doss . 9:30 o m .. mormng worsh ip . 10 ·30
a .m .. even ing wor sh ip , 6·30 p.m Wed ·
nesd ay Bibl e study . 6:30a .m .
N EW ~ STI V ERSV Ill E
COM M UNIT'I'
Ch urch . Sund ay School service 9 45 o
m .. Wo r ship ser v ice . 10:30 : Evange li st ic
Service . 7:30 p .m . Wednesday Prayer
rnee ling 7 .30 p .m. Thursday
ZION CHURCH O F CHRI ST. Pome roy
Harri son vill e Rd .. Robert Purt ell . pas tor .
. Bill M cE l ro y , Sunda y sc hoo l sup! . Sunday
school . 9:30a .m .; wor ship service 10 ·30
a .m .: S.undo y w ors hip ser vice . 7·30 p .m
Monday and Tu esda y evening services .
7:30 eo ch evening .
ST. JO HN lUfHERA N CHU RC H. Pine
Grove . The Rev . W illiam Middleswort h.
Pas tor . Ch urch ser vices 9:30 o.m Su n
day Schoo l 10:30 o .m .
BR A DBUR Y CHURCH O F CHRI ST Jerrv
Pingley . pas tor . Sunday sc hool. 9 30
a .m .; m orning worship . 10:30 o .m
Wednesd qy evening se rvice . 7:30 .
A NTIQ UITY BAPTI ST. Rev Eorl Sh uler
pa stor . Su nday sc hool 9·30 a .m .. Church
service . 7 p .m .. youth meeting . 0
p .m . Tu esday Bibl e Stud y. 7 p .m .

~· '-".::lo.l;/o!ij'OJ

C&lt;ioy•!Q1'1 !\18llle•ol., ...,....,,•...,.
So • 1101• c~-"- v.. ~ ..... n906

o

and Sunday Evenmg Worsh 1p 6 p m
BrbleStudy Wedne~doy . 7 p m .
Sll VE R RUN FREE BAP TI ST Rev Mar
vm Morkm pa stor . Steve l1t1ie Su ndoy
sc hool sup! Sunday sc hool I 0 o m
mornmg worsh rp
11
1 m
Sunday
evening worsh1p . 7 30. p, oyer meet1ng
and S1ble study . Th ur Sda ; 7 30 p m
yout h se rvice . 6 p .m . Sundo~
CHRISTIA N FEllOWSHI P (M'R(H 383
N 2nd Ave Midd leport Sunday "c hool
10 ()()a m Sun . ' Wed Evenmg Se 1 • ce~
730pm pm
UBERTY Chrl!&gt; l io n Churc h 4 l iber t y
Ave .. Pome roy . Su n day Schoo l 10 a .m ..
Wor ! h ip 7 :30 . Wednesday Serv ice . 7 30
p .m .
CHESTERCHURCH Of GOD. Rev R E
Robinson . p os lo r . Sunday sc hool . 9·30
om .. wo r shi p service . 11 o m . even ing
serv1ce . 7:00 : youth ser v1ce
Wed ·
nesdoy . 7:00 p .m .
CHURC H
LA NGSVIllE CHRI STI A N
Robert E. Musser . pa stor . Sundoy school
9 30 a .m .; Pou l Mu sser. sup ! .; morn •ng
worship . 10·30. Su ndo y eveni ng service .
7 00 m•d · week service . Wednesday . 7
.pm

SYRAC USE

CHURCH

OF

.
OF · THE

MORSE CHAPEL . Church School 9 30

a.m . Worship 11 a .m .

PORTLAND. Sunday School 6:30p.m.,
Worship .

7:30

p.m .

Youth

Fellowship. Wodnesdoy. 7 :30p.m.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Rev . Richard W . Thomas
Duone Sydenstricker . Sr .
Sheldon Johnson
John W . Douglas
JOftPA. Worship 9 :00 a .m . Churc h

SchooiiO:OOo.m.

CHEStER , Worship 9 a .m . 1 Church
School 10 a.m . Choir Reheors01 7 p .m ..
Thundoys . Bibfe Study , Thursdays.

7:_30p.m.
LONG"BOTIOM, Sundew School at 9:30
a.m . Evening Worship. at 7:30p .m . Thur-

sdewllbloStudy, ~:30p . m .
,
R~EDSVIllE : Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Mornliig Worship 10~30 o.m. lvoning
Worshp 7:!!0 p.m. Blblo Study Wednesday s at 7:30p .m .

.

'

TH E

N AZA REN E. Rev
James S. K1 tt l e
po!&gt; lor . Norma n Pres ley Sunday Schoo l
Sup! Sunday Sc h ool 9·30 o . m .. Morn ing Wors h ip . 10·30 o.m Evange l is t ic
serv rce
7 p.m .. Praye r and Proise
Wednesday o l 7 p. m . You th mee t ing .
7p m
Em N UNIT ED BR E fHREN IN CHRI S r
EldPn R Bl ok e pas tor. Su nd ay Sc hool
10 om . Ro bert Reed su p! . Morn ing
s_e rmon . I 1. om . Sunday n•ght ~e r v1ces
L hm t1on Endeovor ! 30 p m . Song
~ Prv1 ce
/j p m
Preor h1ng 8·JO p m
M1dweek Prayer mee11ng Wednesday
7 p m A lv1n Reed loy leader
CHURC H OF JESUS CHR IST Located
01 Ru t land on New l• mo Rood . newl to
For es t Acre Pork . Rev Roy Clevenge r
po~ t or
Rob er t M u ssPr Su nday Sdloo l
su p I Sunday school I 0 30 a m . war
., h 1p ., 30 p .m Bib le Slud y Wedne sday
., 30 p.m .. Sa tu rday n1gh1 pr a yer ser
viCe ? 30 p m

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

Rev . Tho mas H. Coll ier . pastor . Mart ha
Woll e. Chairman of th e Bo ard o f
Chri stian Lif e. Sunday Sc hoo l . 9:30a .m .
morning worship . 10:30: Sunday eveni ng
wo r ~ hip . 7:30 p .m . Pra ye r mee t1n g
Wed nesda y . 7:30p .m
RACINE FIR ST BAPT IS T. Don l Wa lk er .
Pa stor . Robert Sm ith . Su nday sc hoo l
!&gt;Vpt ; Sunday sc hool . 9:30a .m .: morning
wors h ip . 10:40 o m .. Sund ay even1 ng
worsh ip . 7:30: Wednesday even mg B1ble
study . 7:30 .
' DA N V ILLE W ESl EY AN . Rev R 0
Brown . pastor
Sunday Schoo l. 9·30
a .m .; morn ing worsh ip 10.45: youth ser vice . 6:45 p.m .: eveni ng worship 7 30 ,
p.m .. p ra yer ond p raise . Wednesday
7:30p .m .
SOUTH BET HEl (Silver Ridge ) Duane
Sydens t rick er . Sr ..
pastor . Su nday
Sc hool . 9 o . m .: Morn mg Wor sh ip . 10
a .m .. You th Service . Sunday a t 6 p m

HEMLOCK G ROV E CHRIS TI A N . Roger
Watson . pastor: Cr enson Pra tt . Su nday
school sup ! . Mor ni ng wor sh ip 9·30 am .
Su nday sc h oo l 10:30 a .m .. eveni ng ser
VICe . 7·30

MT
UN ION BAP TI ST Rev
Tom
Dooley . Joe Sayre . Sunday School
Supenn l enent
Sunday sc hoo l
q 45
a m even1ng wors h tp . 7 30 p m Prayer
mee lt ng . 7 30 p m . Wednesday
TUPPE RS PLA IN S CHURC H OF CHRIST
V1ncent C Waters. til . m m1ste1 Hermon
Block supenn l endenl Sunday Sc hool
9 30 o .m . even1 ng se rv 1ce 7 p m Wed
nesdoy B1 b le Stu dy 7 p m
CHES TER CHU RC H OF TH E NAZA RENE
Rev Herbert Gro te . pas lor Fronk Rd f le
sup ! Sunday Sc hoo l 9 .30 om Wor sh1p
~ ervrce . 11 o m ond 7 30 p m Prayer
mee 11ng . Wedne sday 7 JU p m

lAUREl Cli ff FREE METHODIS1 CHUR

CH Rev Robert Mdler past o r Lloyd
Wnghl Dtr ec l or of Chr rsti on Educo 110n
Sunday Sc hool . 9 30 o m Morn tng Wo•
sh •p 10 30 a m Cho.r Procllce Sun
day 6 30 p m Evenmg Worsh 1p. 7 30
p m Wednesdoy Prayer and Btbl e Sludy
730pm
DEXTER CH URC H OF CHRIST Chorleo,
Ru sse ll Sr . mmt ster . R1ck Mac omber
su p! Sunday school 9 30 o m . worsh1p
serv tce 10 30 a m Bible Study Tuesdoy
7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH Of JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SA IN TS Por
ll ond Rac 1ne Rood
William Rou sh
-.a stor Lrnda Evans . ch urch sc hoo l direc
tc.. Chu rch sch oo l 9 :30 o m morn1ng
war _',ip
10 :30 om
Wednesday
even in. praye r ~e r vices . 7·30 p.m
BE THlEHEM BA PTI ST. Hev Ea rl Shul er
pas tor . Wors h ip service . 9 30om Sun
doy school . 10:30 am Bib le Study and
prayer service Thursday . 7:30 p m
CARLET O N CHU RCH . Kingsbu r y Rood
J1 mmie Eva n s pas tor Sunda y sc hool
9 30 om . Ro lph Cod super1 n tendent
even mg wo r sh tp . 7 30 p m . Praye r
meeti ng. Wednesday 7:30pm
LO NG BO TTOM CHRISTI A N
Tom
Rtch oson . pas tor . Wa ll ace Damewo od
Sunday Sc h ool Supe r int end en t . Wor sh1p
serv1Ce o l 9 o .m . Bi b le School 10 o m
H YSELL RUN HO LINE SS CHURC H Rev
Ther on Durham . pos lo r . Sunday School
o t 9 30 a .m .. Mor n ing worsh1p o l 10 30
o . m . Thur sday se r vices ot 7 30 p m
FREE DO M GOS PEl M ISS ION o t Bo ld
Knob loca te d on Cou nty Rood 31 Rev
Law rence G lu ese nca mp pos lo r : Rev
Roge r Wil lf ooss istont pa stor . Preoc h1 ng
serv 1ces . Su nday 7 30 p .m . prayer
mee ting . Wednesda y 7·30 p .m Gory
Gn ll ilh . leadeYouth groups
Sunday
eve1ng. 6 .30 p .m . wi th Roger and V1olet
Wi lli ard as leade r s. Comm un1on ser
vices ! irs I Sunday eoch mon th
W HIT ES CH APEL . Coolv ille RD Re v
Roy Dee ter pas to r Sunday sc h ool 9 30
o m wors h ip ser vrce . 10 30 o m B1ble
study ond pr ayer se r v1ce Wednesday
7 30 p m
RUTl A ND CHURC H OF CHR IS T Eugene
Unde rwood posl or : Herb Elholl Sunday
sc hool su p! Sunday sc hool. 9.30 o m
mor n mg wor sh1p ond comu n1on 10 30

om
RU TL A ND SIBL E ME TH OD IST CHURCH
Amos Tdh s. p astor . Do n nv Till 1s . Sunday
School Su p! Sunday Sc hool . Q 30 o m
foll owed by mo rn 1n g wors hi p Sunday
even ing serviCe
7·00 p m
Praye r
mee ting . Wed nesd ay . 7:00pm

RU TLA ND

RACINE WESLEYAN - Sundav sc hool
10 a .m .; worship . 11 a .m . Choir practice ,
fhursdoy , 8 p.m .
LET ART FALLSWorship ser vice 9
a.m . Church School I 0 a .m .
MORNING STAR . W orstllp 9 :30 a .m .;
Church School 10:30o .m .

AlFRED, Sunday School at 9:45 o.m.
Morning WO&lt;ship ot 11 a.m. Youth . 6:30
p.m. Sundays. Wodnosdoy Night Prayer
NAzARENE, Rev. Jim Broome
pastor ·
7:30 e.m.
Bill Whlto, Sun day .Choot supi. Sunday Mooting,
ST. PAUl, [Tuppers Plains) : Sunday
Khool, 9:30 a .m.; mornlna woishlp, · School 9:00 a.m. Morning Worship ol
19:30 a.m.; Sunday ovbngollsilc' 10:00 a.m. Biblo Study, 7:30 p.m.
,.,....tlng, 7:00 p.m . Prayer mHtlng.
Tu..,toy.
·Wodnol dew. 7 p.m.
· KENo CHURCH OF CHRIST, Olivw
UNITED ~RESIYTERIAN MINISTRY OF ' Swain, Suporlntondont. Sunday school
MEIGS COUNTYcl Rev. Wando John10rt
· 9:30 tryory wook.
~~: Harol Johnson, dlrectOf 01
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Su"day
......u•lon .
Sch9ol, 9:30 'a.m :; ·~enlng se~lce , 7:30
, HAIIRISONVK.LE P.RESBYTERIAN, Wor· . p.m. Wodnosdoy proyor mooting, 7:30
ship Service, 9 a.m.:. Church School,
p.m.
I0: 30~ . m.
'¥
•. .
rnMtlngs, 7:Q)

JoM
1626·33

Sennonette
I awoke this morning with lots to do, so I hurr.-'&lt;lly dressed. I
briskly left my house, climbed into my car and drove 50 miles to a
weekly study group. For an hour I drove as fast as the speed limit and
the curves allowed, with the nagging concern that I might be late.
: I arrived on lime and the study group got down to business and
progreSsed efficiently for two hours. Then I got back into my car 'and
began to drive toward a local hospital for pastoral visitation. The
hospital was about 40 miles away and somewhere about the 20 mile
mark, I realized that my neck was stiff, my back had a pain and that I
was beginning to develop a mild headache.
With the logical understanding that this was due to tension'! began
some tension decreasing exercises. As my stress level lessened an interesting thing happened. I began to notice the world around me and
•
realized it Ia spring.
After driving several more miles I found a place to stop, so I stopped, got out of my car and I looked. I looked at the green grass, budding trees and a blue lake. I smelled ... new cut grass, freshly turned
earth and flowers. I listened ... birds, 'small animals, and wind in the
trees. I felt ... the wind lit my hair and the presence of God. And I understood again ... "Be still and know thatl am God."
By The Rev. Wanda G. Johnson, pastor ol The United Presbyterian
r,fin1atrY ID Meigs County. Presbyterian ·churches in Harrisonville,

Middleport and Syracuse.

••

CHUR CH Of

THE

NAZ AR ENE Rev Ll oyd D G n m m Jr
pa stor . Sunday sc hoo l . Q 30 o m wor
ship ser v1ce . 10 30 o .m young peop les
serv 1ce . 6 p m Evo ngehs l ic serv 1ce 6 30
p .m Wedn esday serv1ce 7 00 p m
FI RSl SO UTH ER N BAPTIST Corner o f
Second Pa st or Fron k Lowther Sunday
sc hool . 9 45 o m . worsht p ser viCe I I
a .m . ond 7 30 p.m . Week ly 81ble Sl udy .
Wednesday 7 30 p .m
M ASO N CHU RC H OF CHRI ST M•ller
St ..• M ason . W Vo Eugene l Conger
m m 1s ter Su nday Br b le St udy 10 o m
Wor ship 11 a m . ond 7 p m . Wednesday
Bibl e Sludy , voca l m u sic. 7 p .m
U FE SCI ENCE CHURCH 12 North
Thi rd St . Ch es hi re . Indep enden t l un ·
domen to l ser vices . Sunda y even1 ng 7 30
p .m . Pas to r Rev . Dr . Ro bert Person s
M ASON A SSE MBL Y O F GOD . Ovddmg
lone . Ma son . W \ J. Rev . Ronnie B
Rose . Pa sto r Sunday Sc hool 9:45 a .m
Morning Wo r ship 11 a m . Evening Se r ·
vice 7:30 p .m . We dnesda y Women."s·
Mini stries 9 a .m . (m eeting and p rayer
Prayer and Bibl e S1 udy 7 p.m

HARTWRD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

CHRI STIAN UNION . The Rev. Will iam
Campbell . pa stor. Sunday School . 9:30
a.m .: James Hughes . supt .. eve ning ser ·
vice . 7.30 p .m . We dnesday even ing
prayer m eeting . 7:30p .m . Youth prayer
serv ice each Tuesday .
FAIRI/ IEW BIBLE CHURCH . Le tart . W .
Va .. Rt . I , Mork Irwin , pa stor. Worship
serv ices . 9 :30 o .m .: Sunday schoo l . I 1
a .m .; evening worshi p, 7:30 p .m .
Tue sday cottage prayer meeting and
Bible study . 9 :30a .m . Worship service ,
Wednesday . 7:30p .m .

OUR SAVIOUR lUTHERAN CHURCH -

Wal nut and Henry Sts .. Ravenswood . W .
Va . The Rev. G eorge C . Weirick , pastor
Sunday School , 9 :j() a .m .: Sunday wor ship , 11 a .m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH . now located
on Pomerov Pike . County Rood 25. neor
Flatwood s. Rev . Blackwood. pa stor. Ser ·
vices on Sunday at 10:30 a .m . and 7:30
p .m . with Sunday school , 9:30a .m . Bibl e
study . Wednesdoy . 7:30p .m .

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH .

INC. Pearl St ., Middleport . Rev .
O 'Dell Manley. pastor ; Sunday school ,
9:30a .m .: Morning wonhip 10:30 a .m .;
evening worship , 7:30 p.m . Tuesdoy .
12:30 p .m . Women's proyer mM ting :
Pr~yer and proise s..-vlce . Wednesdov .
7:30p .m .

•

JE SUS CHRIST . Elder James Mil ler Sib le
Wedne sday 7·30 p m
Sundoy
"oc hool 10 a m Sunday ntght serv1ce .
730 pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOliNESS Harr •sonv1 l le Rood Ea rl Ftelds pa stor .
Hen ry Eblrn Jr Su nday Sc hool Sup!
Sunday Schoo l q 30 o m Morn1ng Wor • :up 11 o m Sunday evemng ser vice
7 30 m Pray er Mee hng Thursday 7 30
pm
~ tudy

Ph. 992·2551
786 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh.

The Church m1n1s1ers to the sp~litual needs ol
man It seeks !O 1mpar1 !lw pn ne~ples of nght
hvmg &lt;'! nd h.&gt; ach men !o 10\le and hono1 God
The!o(' drl! the changeless and e1emalthin~ in
a wo1ld ut constant change dOd lh~ are as
necessary today lor wholesonw hvmg as 10
ages pas!

Sunday Monday Tuesctay

RUILAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH Of

fEJ

The conditions of human hie are thus conslanl ·
ly chang1ng undl'l lhe 1mpetusol man's 1nven·
ttw genius Age follows age in rapd suc:ct&gt;MIOO
lind change IS th(' order of the world The only
endunng th1ngs are tho&gt; things of the mind &lt;:~nd
spnl LO\Ie aod hope and fllllh are eternal

' UNI TED

RUTLA ND CHUR CH OF GOO , Pas tor
Rev. John Evan s. Su nday sc hoo l . I()
a. m .:
Sunday
wor sh ip
11
om ..
Childr en 's church
11 a .m . . Su nday
evening ser vice . 7:00 p .m . Wed n esday
evening young ladi es au)l(i lio ry. b p .m
Wed nesday famil y wors h1 p , 7 00 p .m
HAZEL COMMUNIT Y CHUR CH . N ear
l on g Bo ttom . Edse l Hort . pas tor . Su nday
school . 10 a .m .: Chu rch . 7·30 p .m ..
praye r meet ing . 7:30p .m Thursd av .

RIVER VIEW

duce lo market These haw ushered in a new
era 10 trolnsportation

p.m.

Evening

~

huck. trAiler ond troctor todoy are doing

the farm work and hauling the lllrmer's pro·

Tuesday 7:30p.m.

CHRIST IN

Racine- Rev . Jomes Satterfield , pastor .
Morning worship, 9' : 45 a.m .; Sundoy
school , 10:45 o .m .: evening worship , 7.
Tuesday , 7 :30 p.m .. laCHes prayer
meeting ; Wednesday , 7:30p .m . VPE .
M IDDLEPORT FIRST BAP,TIST . Corner
Sixth o'nd Palmer , the Rev . Mark Me·
Clu ng . Sundoy school , 9: 15 o .m .; Don
White , Sundoyo Schoo l . superintendent.
John Reibel . Sr., ou t . tupt . Morning
~onhip , 10: 15 q.m. Youth meeting . 7:30
p .m . Wednesday , Including wee tots,
eager beavers , junior astronauts. ond
jun ior and s,nlor t,lgh BYF ; choir prac-

0

Tin~

The old wagon wheel In !he p!Ciure. lellning
hgalnst the ~de Wllll of the old log shop. 1s fasl
becoming a relic of a departed era

Rev . Jame s Clar k
Rev . Mark Fly nn
Rev . Florence Sm ith
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH- Rev . Cad Hic k s
Sister Harrie tt Wor ne r . Sup! . Su nday
BETHAN Y. (Do rcas) . Wors h ip 9 ·00
Schoo l. 9:30 a .m .: m orning wor ship .
a.m . Church School 10 :00 a.m . Bibl e
10:45 a .m.
- POMERO Y FIRST BA PTI ST, Davi d • sludy . lsi , 2nd . 3rd and 5th Tu esdays
7.15 p .m .; youttl fell owship . 2nd o nd 4th
Mann , mini ster : Wi ll iam Sno uffer . Sun Tuesday s, 6:00p .m .
day school Supt . Sunday school. 9: 30
CARMEL and SUTTON (Worshi p. Sun ·
a .m .. morning worship 10:30 a .m .
School and mos t o ther even ts held
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST . 2B2 dov
joint ly .) Sunday Schoo19:45 and W o rship
Mu lberry Ave., Pome roy . Rev. Wi lliam
11:00 at Sutton first and th ifd Sundays
R. Newman , pa stor : Hersh el McClu re ,
and at Carmel second a nd fo urth Sun Sundoy school superintendent . Sunday
school. 9:30 a .m .: morning worship . . days. Bible Study second . fourth a nd I if .
th Thur sdays. 7: 15 p.m . Fami ly Night
10:30: even ing worship . 7:30p .m . Mid·
Fellowship Dinne r third Thursdoy . 6 :30
week proyer service , 7:30 p.m .
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH. Dex - p.m .
APPLE GROV E. Sundav Sc hool 9:30
ter Rd .. Rd .. langsv ille , Rev . A . A .
o.m . Worship 7:30p .m . 1st ond 3rd Sun ·
Hughes . Pastor . Sundoy Schoo l 10 a.m .
day s; Prayer m eet ing Wednesday 7:30
Services on Tue sday . Thursday and Sun -.
p.m . Fellows hip supper fi rs t Saturday 6
day , 7:30p.m.
p.m . UMW 2nd Tue sdav 7:30 p.m :.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH . Bai ley
EAST LETART . Church Schoo l 9 o .m .
Run Rood . Rev. Emme tt Row son , pastor .
Worship service 10 o.m . Prayer m ee ting
Handley Dunn , supt . Sunday school . 10
7:30 p.m . Wednesday . UMW second
a .m . Sunday evenin.,t service 7:30; Bible

School Supt . Sunday School 9:30 o.m.

4

~ TO •8°
VALUES

METHOD IST,

CHRISTIAN UNION , lawrence Manl ey ,
pastor : Mrs. Ruuell Young , Sunday

So 1ids,;rgesSn dTwgdS

PLUSHE.S

UNITED

tM~oYe~~fct-iURC~do~

GRASS TURF

2

GRAHAM

Preaching 9:30 a .m .. fi rs t and second
Sundovs of ea ch month : thi rd and fourth
Sundays each month , wo rship ser vice at
7:30p .m . Wedn esday evenings at 7:30 .
Prayer and Bible Study .
SEVENTH ·DAY AD VE NTIST. Mu lberr y
Heights Rood . Pomero y . Pa stor . A lber l
Dittes: Sabbath Schoo l Superint endent .
Rita White . Sabba th School . Saturday of ·
ternoon ot 2 :00, wi th Worship Ser vice
foll o w ingat3: 15.

~ IR S! '

II 1111

M i dd le p ort Po m eroy, 0.

Middl eport, Ohi o

SYR AC USE

are

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

PRESBYTERI A N Chu rc h Ch urch Sc hoo l
10: 15 a .m .: mo rning wors hip , 11·30 o ·
m .: Bib le Sludy , Tuesda y . l Oa. m .: Jun1or
and Senior High You th G rou p Sundav . 6

POMEROY CHURCHOf CHRIST. 212 W

s194 ~ SAVINGS !&gt;N

P om ero y

992 -3785, P om er oy

992·3978

Grocer r es ~
General M('rch&lt;tnd rc:.e
RolCine 949 ·1550

985·3944

Q~~;,;:,s

Mill W ork ·
Ca binet Making

on Carpeting, Color TVs,
and Major Appliances

FRI. &amp; SAT.
10am-9pm

RCA 19" COLOR PORTABLES

r

Pom eroy

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

"Fo r A R ea l A u cti on
th e Real M cCoy "
I. 0 . " M ac " M cCoy
Rt. 1, R ~cd sv iU c, Oh .

Ph. 992·2101

~

'~~~.~.!'• 3

~Ca ll

BEN
RANKLIN•

Savl ng 1&amp; Loa n

E. Ma i n

-

&amp;

m
...

MARK VSTORE

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

John F . Fultz, Mgr .

'J

: ··;:

Fi n es t
10
Section a l
M o d v l a ,. H om es
P om er oy, 1100 E. Ma in

RALL'S

Loan Co.

· 216

r~

992·3451

Th e

'; .

I

(I

.

&amp; Service

992 ·3321

M idd lep ort

Kingsbury Home Sales

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

\

:;

F&lt;'rm11rlv AI hen\ Cou nly

tc .Jtcp ~iq~ prtC

Co ntrol , Mec hanical tuners,

David 0. Circle, formerly of
Racine, has been appointed retail
merchandising coordinator for the
Kauffman-Lattimer Wholesale Drug
Co., Columbus.
Circle resides in Columbus with
his wife, Diane, who is a staff coor·
dina tor for Olsten Health Care. They
have two daughters, Melissa and
Laura .
Circle attended Ohio State University and both he and his wife are
graduates of Ohio Dominican .
College, Colwnbus. He is the son of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Otha Circle, I
Racine.

,..

. i"

evenin~ .

Altson Lanier Ca uthorn of Reed·
sville has been awarded a Manasseh
Cutler Scholarshi p by Ohio University for the 1982-ll.'l academic year.
The $500 Manasseh Cutler Scholar·
shps, which are based on merit, are
named in honor of the uni versit} 's
founders. they are awarded on lt1e
recommendation of Ohio University
faculty members to incoming freshmen who have demonstrated
academic excellence in high school
and potential for achievement in
college.
Ms. Ca uthorn . a fr es hman
majoring in history, is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis P. Cauthorn
of 6614l Main St.. Reedsville. She is a
1982 graduate of Eastern High
School

P. J. PAULEY,·AGENT
992·2318 Pom eroy

CHESTER - Revtval services are
still in progress at the Chester Church of the Nazarene. The Rev.
Richard James is the evangelist.
Friday singer!; will be the Harvest
Trio, and Saturday singers will be
Hannony . The reviva l will continue
through Sunday at 7:30 each

County happenings

992-SIJO Pom ero y

of Columbu s, 0
804 w. Main

The annual mother-da ughte r
banquet of the Hutland charge of
United Methodist Chu rches wtll be
held at Rutland Church, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday .
All churches uf the charge are par·
ticipati ng. Meat. beverages, rolls
and table service will be prov tded
for the carry-i n dinner. A program
will be presented in the sa nctuary
after the dinner. There will be
specia l music. recog nit ion of
mothers, and a pa ntom ime
featuri ng the roles of mothers by the
Salem Center Church.

Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment will sponsor a chicken bar·
becuc at the fi re station on May 9.
Serving will begin at 11 a.m. Prtce of
a dinner is $3.

Wm . " Bill " Brown , Own er
Phon e (&amp;14) Hl-2777

Nationwide Ins . Co.

NO

Po m eroy

2 16 S. Second
P omer oy

51 0 N. 2nd

992-9962

P o m eroy

~~~Y.~S~~ ~
~

Rulland, Ohio 45775

Country Time will be the theme of
the annual Racine Htgh School
A1 un1ni Banquet and Dance on May

282 W. Ma 1n

Brown's Fire &amp; Safety Brogan-Warner
Equipment sales and ~ INSURANCE
ServiC e

A,mouncemems

Itt

~~~~~!·

Au t omotiv e
•
Servi ce
Locu st&amp; Beech Str ee t

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
S£RVICE CENTERS

SYRACUSE FIRST CHUR CHOf GOD -

No t Pe n lec os tol Re v George O.ter
pa stor Wor sh1p ~erv1ce Sunday . q
o m Sunda y sc hool II om wors h1p
serv 1ce
7 30 p rn
Thur\doy prayer
mee t mq 7 30 p m
HERMO N Un!l e d Br e ti"TreO ••1n
MI
C hr· ~ l Chur ch
Rev Rober t Sanders
pa sto r Don Wtll loy leader loco l ed 1n
Texas Co mmun1ly o ft CR 62 Sunday
sc hoo l q 30 o m Morn•ng worsh1p ser
v1ce 10 ~ 5o m evem ng preach1ng ser
v1ce second and four th Sun day s 7 30
p rn Chr 1SI10n Fndeovor f1r st and th1rd
Sunday $ 7 30 p m Wednesday proye'
meeting anti B•b le sludy 7 30 p m
JE HOVAH S WITNE SSES 37]19 Sto le
Reu le I 24 (One m•l e eas t of Rut land )
Sunday S1ble lec ture 9 30 o m Wot
chlo wer ~ Judy 10 70 o m
lue !&gt;doy
B1ble sludy
7 30 p m
Th ursday
Theocroh c School 7 30 p m
Serv rce
M ee t1ng 6 70 p m
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST Church
So lem St
Rullond Dono\d Karr Sr
paslor Bud Siewert !&gt;upermlendent
Sund ay Sc hoo l 10 a m
even1ng wor
sh1p 7 30 p m Wedne!&gt;do~· even mg se r
v•ce 7 30p m
CHURCH OF GOD ol Prophecy l oca t ed
on tn e 0 J W h 11e Rood all h1ghwoy 160
Sunday School 10 om Supermtendent
John tovedoy ~1r s t Wednes day n1ght o f
mon l h CPMA serv1ces )econd Wed ·
nesdoy WMB meet1ng th1rd through filth
youth serv •ce George Croy le poster
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl
570 Gron1
St M1ddfepor1 Su nday Sc hool 10 o m
morn1 ng wo r shrp II o m evenrng wor
sh•p 7 p m Wednesday even1 ng 8tble
~ tudy and prayer mP.elmg 7 p m AI
f1holed w1th Sou lhern Bopt 1st Con
ventr o n
BRADFORD CHUR CH OF CHR IST
R•cky Gdberl poslor Steve P•cken s
~ u pe11n t e nden1 Sunday School 9 30 o .
m Church Se 1v1ces 10 30 am
JUBILEE
CHRISTIAN
CENTER
George~ Creek Rood Rev C J Lemley
pa stor . John Fellur e superintendent
Chur ch ~c hool 9 30 a m morn1ng war
sh1p 10 30 evenmg serv1ce 7 p .m B1ble
Study Thur s . 7 p m Classes l or a ll ages .
Nur sery prov1ded lo r wor shr p se r v1ces .
SI PA UL LU fH ERA N CHU RC H Corner
of Sycamo re and Second Sis Pome roy
fh e Rev W dl1om M1ddle sworth. Pa sto r
~ undoy Sc hoo l at Q 45 o m and Chur ch
Serv1ces II o m
SACRED HEAR l Rev Folher Poui D
Welton pO '&gt; IOr Phone 99'} 2875 Sotur
day even1ny Mo s~ 7 30 Sunday Mos s B
and 10 a m Con l essmn Saturday 7
7 30p m
VICTORY BAPfiST
525 N 2nd St
M1ddlepor1 James E Keesee po~ l or
Su nday morn1 ng worsh•p
10 o m .
even1ng se rvtce 7 Wednesday even1ng
Vt'&gt; IIOIIOn Thursday .
worsh1p -, p m
0 30p m
TRINI TY Ch m 11an A ss emb ly Coolvil le
pa stor
Sunday
G ilbert Spen cer
'&gt;C hool . 9 30om mornmg wor sh ip . 11
am Sunday even1ng se rv 1ce 7 30 p .m .
m1dweek prayer ser v1ce Wednesday
730prn

45

M6U N1 Oltve Co mmun1ty Chu rch
Lawren ce Bu sh poslor Mox Fo l nr~:c&gt;r Sr
Superintenden t Sunday Sc hoo l and mor
n1ng wor o, h1p q 30 o m Sunday even1ng
se1v1Ce 7 p m Youlh meellng ond Btb le
., rudy Wedn e'.&gt;doy 7 p m
UN I HD FA IT H CHURC H
Rou te 7 o n
Pomer o y bypO'&gt;'-' Rev Rober I Sm•lh Sr .
pastor Rev James Cund1ft as s1 ston 1
pa sl o r Sunday Sc hool q 30 o m mor
n.ng wors h1p 10 30 a m evenmg war ·
'.&gt; htp
7 30
Women ' s Feltowshrp
Tuesdays. 10 o m . Wedne'.&gt;day nrgh f
prover servrce 7 30 p m
. FAITH BAP TI S1 Church Maso n meet
n t Unr l ed Stee l Worke r s Un1on Ha ll
Ro• lr ood Stree l Ma son
Morn1 n g wor :
ship930o m SundoySc hoo l 10:30a .m
Evening Serv 1_ce 7 p m P~oye r mee ti ng
Wed ne~d a y . 7 30 p m . M 1d -Week Sibl e
Study . Thu rsd ay . 7 p .m
FOREST RUN BAP TI ST
Rev . Nyl e
Bor d en . pa st or
Corne l1 us
Bun ch .
super in tendenl Sunday sc hoo l . 9 :30
a .m .. second and four th Sundays wa r ·
sh1p service a t 2·30 p .m
M l . MO RI A H t!A PTI ST - four th and
Ma1n St . . M1dd lepor t Rev Co lv•n M in ·
n is. pas tor M r s Elvrn Bumgordner .
sup! Sunday sc hool q 30 o .m . wors h ip
serv1ce . 10 45 o .m .

BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN

BAPTIST

CHU RC H Rout e I . Sha d e Pos ter Do n
Block . A ff il iat ed w rt h Southe rn Bapti st
Conve n tion . Sunday sc h ool . 1.30 p.m .,
Su nday worshrp 2.30 p.m . Thur sdav
eveni ng Bibl e study . 7 p m
PENTE COSTA L ASSEMBLY
Raci ne
Route 124 . Wi ll iom Hobock . pos to r . Sun :
day ~c h Oo l . 10 o m .. Su n day evening ser ·
vice. 7:00 p .m . Wedn esday evening ser ·
vice at 7
CARPENT ER BA PTI ST
Don Ch eadle
Supt . Sunday Sc hool . 9:30a .m . MorninQ
Wors hip .. 10:30 a .m . Praye r Serv ice ,
alternate Sundays.

MIDOLEPORT PENTECOSTAL . Third

A ve .. the Rev . Clar k Boker . pastor . Carl
No ttingha m . Sundav School Supt. Sunday School 10 a. m . - classes for all
ages : Eve n i n ~ ser vices. 6: 00. Wed·
nesdav Study , / :30 p .m . Youth services,
7:30 p .m . Frldov .

ECCLESIA fEllOWSHIP. 12B Mill St.,

M iddleport . Pastor is Brother Chuck Me·
Pherson . Sunday School at 10 o . m . S.r·
vices Su nday even ing at 7 p. m . and Wednesday ol 7 p .m .

�Frido y,

Business Senices

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE 992-2156
O r W ri t e D ai ly Sentinel C la ssified D ep t .
111 C ou r t St. , Pom e o r y , Ohio 4 5769

---- PUbl iC Notfce -

AUCTION
Isn't it
about time
you ran a

PE NNSVILL E , OHIO
On S t . Rt. 377 in Mor ga n C o .
(Th is Listing is for one sa le to b e h e ld
o v er 3 w ee k e nd s.)

GARAGE

SALE

All of tbose unwanted
bousebold artlclesl used
clothing, old baby rurni·
ture, used tires from your
car and old toys can tie turned Into useabfe CASH. It's
easy! Just gather tbem up
make a list tben bring it
In a classifled ad and we'll
run it under our Yard Sale
beading. Tben get ready for
t.be buyers! Our classified
ads bring results !

CASH ONLY

PHONE 992-2156
The Daily Sentinel

P ubl iC Noti ce
PUB LI C NOTICE

The Lcb11non Townshrp
trus tees wdt rccerve sea l ed
b rd s a t til e olf rcc of the
c tc rk 55338 S R 124, Por
!land . 0 45770 unltl 17 00
noon Th ursd.l y May 10. 181
tor ftl (' sa le ot rl John DeerP
400 tr ac tor wrth 1or1der nnd
brl c ldlOC'
,1s rs
mny be

SC'('n

&lt;'1 1

O llrO

Ta k e St . Rt . 60 So uth out of Za nesvi ll e to M cCo nn elsv ill e or tak e St . Rt . 60 North out of Mari et-

ta to McC onn e lsvi ll e, cr oss ri ver through Ma lta on
51. Rf . 78 Wes t t or J m i l es -

st ay l eft a t t op of h i ll

onto St. R t . 377 to Pe nn svi ll e at th e BIL L JA N ES

FA RM S. 30 m iles north eas t o f At hen s or 80 m iles
southeast of Co lumbu s, Oh i o.

We've hauled i n seven '14 ' truckload s and two se m 1
loads from hou ses, garages, barns and buildings.
All tl em s belon g to one fami l y . The owne r s have
co ll ec ted ant iqu es lor seven ty years, everywhere
th ey hav e l1ved and !rav eled

Tt1c t ru s i C'CS rPSP r ve

lll C rrqht to r c 1c c t any or all
brd s Btd s will be open at
11 30 M ay 70. 1987 c11 tt1 e

14J 23 . 30 . lSi 7

boards, 2 c herry corner cupboard s 1one w/ g lass
panes), P• e sa fes , jelly cupboard s, sq . &amp; round
fab lers, dropl eaf tabl es, ove r 150 c hair s (arrow
backs, plank bott oms. etc J, and many other an ti ·
que piPCPS

Leading

flclt y

Pal·

Creek

Con-

servanc·y District, Rtg ht of Way ,
Scipio.
Ha rry Bailey, Violet Bai ley to

Lea di ng

Creek

Conservancy

Dis trict, Right of Way, Rutla nd . ·
Milo B. Hutchinson to Lea ding
Creek Conserva ncy Distn ct , Right
of Way, Rutl a nd.
Dav id E . E ll is, E lame L. Ellis to
Leading
Cr ee k
Co nse r vanc y
Dis tri ct. Right of Way , Rutla nd.

Terri Davis, Gene Davis. David
Davis, Shelby Dav is tu Lea ding
Creek Conserva ncy Dist rict, Rig ht
of Way , Pomeroy.
Ann Bailey Watson, deed ., by Ber·
tha L. Arnold, Execut r ix, to Alan L.
Pug h, J ill P ugh, Pa r ce ls, Sutton.
Ca rl J. Ba rnhill , Haze l Ba rnhill to
Ja m es R. Slout , Do rothy J . Stout ,
Parcel, Ora nge.
Benny J . Sla wter, Jeanne E .
Sla wter to Kra m er Explora tiOn Co.,
R ight of Way , Rutla nd .
J ohn W. Ritchha rt, Pa tricia Ritchha rt to Milla rd R. Va nMeter, Ve ra
E . Va n Meter, Lots 21 a nd 22

Syracuse.

BY Mar lene Harrison
Depu ly
(4) 30 (5) 7. 14, 21, 28 (6) 4.
6tc
'

fiH. 992-2259

POM E RO Y - This prope r ty shOid be so ld. LOOK
~ERE four lo ts, t hree bedrooms, basemen t.
f•r eplace. large 17'x 17' li vin g room . new dini n g area
and kitc he n. All in good condition and all on one
floor . Steal thi s a t S1d,500

CARPET STARTING AT $12.95
Squate Yard Wilh Pad. lnslalled

KITCHEN CARPET

$8

INSTALLED

OLD E R HOM E - Needs some repa ir but ha s two
large lots. Four or live bedroom s, basement, cou ld
be a rea l ni ce home for $20.500.

99

'

Rutla nd Conununity Church, Fred
E . Dav is, Trust ee. J ames R. Keys,
Trustee. Sherman Tillis, Tr ustee, to
Rutla nd Bible Methodist Church
Sherma n Tillis, trus tee, F red Davis:
trustee, Robe rt Keys, trust ee,
Rutla nd.
Flora M. Osborne, J ames Os borne
to Herald Oil a nd Gas Co., Ri ght of
Way , Scipio.
Gr a nvel Wamsley, Jua nita Warn·
s ley to Her ald Oil a nd Gas Co., Right
of Wa y, Rutland .
Alva Rife, Ha zel Rife to Her a ld Oil
a nd Gas Co., Rig ht of Way, Rutla nd .
Worl ey Rile, Pa ula Rife to Her a ld
Oil and Gas Co., Right of Way,
Rutla nd.
Robert E. Vance, Gene Va nce to
Herald Oil a nd Gas Co., Right of
Way, Rutla nd.
Edwin S. Coza rt aka Edwin
Stanley Cozart to Fi rst Baptist Church of Racine by trustee, Lot 100,
Racin e Village.
Clara J . Powell, deceased , by
J erry F . Powe ll, executor, to Larry
M. P owell, Wilma L. P owell, Lots,
Antiquity.
William Roe Nutter , Cosby Sue
Nutter to Jack Wells, 1.10 A. , Olive.
La rry E . Spencer , Beatrice Kay
Spencer to Larry E . Spencer ,
Beatrice Kay Spencer , .22 A., Sui·
ton .
Burl Drake to Ohi ~ P ower Com-

pan y, Rig ht of Way, Salem .
To rn Chapm an to Ohi o Power
Co m pan y, Right of Way, Sutton.
l..aw rciH'C W. McQua id, Audrey
Dor is McQ ua id to Ra ndy W. Ha rt ,
She rn L. Ha rt. 16 A., Salem .
Ed na Life to Ca rl E. Smith
Petrolewn , Inc., Ri ght of Way,
Oli ve.
John M. Becker, E lizabeth Becke r
to Frederick J. Stobart, P arcels,
Leba non.
Alfred Conard , Sall y Cona rd and
Bur l D. Wa lke r , Yvonne Wa lke r
Right of Way, Meigs.
'
Evely n Lucke a nd Antone Luck
deceased, a ffidav it, Sy racuse.
'
Eve lyn Lucke a nd Antone Lucke
Affi dav it, Sy rac use.
'
Thom as J. Ma r cinko, Patricia F .
Ma r cink o to Carl E. Smith , Olive.
Winn ie B. Da iley, Orner W. Dai ley
to F loyd R . Dail ey, Lawrence P .
Da il ey, Pa r ce ls , Sutton.
F loyd R. Da iley to La wrence P .
Da il ey, Betty E. Da iley, 5 acr es, Sutton.
La wrence P . Da iley, Betty
Da iley to F loyd Da iley, Steve
Da il ey, parcels, Sutton.
Nora Mae Carroll (a widow ) to
Ken Tra k, Right of Way , Rutla nd .
Betty Harris t o Ca rl E. Smith
Petrolcwn , Inc ., R ight of Wa y,
Oli ve.
Pa ul Life, Patri cia Ann Life to
Car l E. Smith Petroleum Inc ., Rig ht
of Way, Oiive.
William E v a ns to Kevin Styer,
Me linda Styler, Parcel (Surv.
Deed ), Lebanon.
Winfred C. Bla ke and Mamie
Bla ke, Deed ., Affidavit, Martinsville.
Vada Hazelton, James A. Hazelton
to J am es A. Ha zelton, Vada J .
Hazelton, 17'f.! acr es, Bedford.
Minnie Louise Jackson, Deed. to
Betty J ackson Foresman, Cert ifica te of Transfer, Middleport.
Alfred R. White, Catherine I.
WJ:Iile to Alfred R. White, Catherine
I. White, Parcell!, Salisbury.
Charles Raymond Wolfe, Lois
Marie Wolfe to John W. Van Meter,
Betty V. Va n Meter, 1.08 acres,
Letart.
Alice Adkins e ta! by sheriff to
E lden Wa lburn, Parcel, Pomeroy.
Max A. Eichinger, Judith F
E ichinger to Clay T. Illle, Jane Ihle:
Pa r cels, Salisbury.
Richard J . Chambers, deceased, ,
to Martha H. Chambers, Parcels, !
Lots, Chester - Middleport.
George L. Wrig ht, l'jellie L. Wright

" Bea utiful , Custom
BuiltG a ra ges"
Ca ~l for fr ee s idin g
es t1ma tes, 949·2801 or
949·2860.
No Sunda y Ca lls
3 llttc

EXCAVATING
AND

Do~?.N!T~a~~!?~er·
v ice, water, ewer, pon·

BaCAN\)lELJTE INN
Rt . 1 Ches hi re. Oh io
PH. 991·991 3
. Rt. 7

5

ds,
foundati o n s,
rec lamation .
Lic ensed &amp; Bonded
Phon e 949 ·2 29 3
or 949·241 7
J·Hfn

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
CLEANED

For all your wiring
needs ;
furnaces
repair service and
installation .
Residentia 1
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195
3·7·1fc

PRICE IS RIGHT

446-4782
CALL COLLECT
GALLI POLIS1 OH .
4·1t · l mo.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

CO MM ERC IAL PR O PERTY - We hav e seve ra l.

GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM

F ARMS - We have severa l.
HOM ES - We have severa l. call today

IN 9FT. and 12FT. WIDTHS
START! NG AT $4.99 Cash

COUN TRY HOM E - Near town, one ac re,
entry . $49.000.
R E ALTOR S
HE NR Y E. CLELA ND , J R ., G R I
JE AN TR USSE LL
DOT T IE TURN ER
OF F ICE

&amp;Carry

RUBBER BACK CARPET $4 ~shicarry
9

CARPET AT LAST YEAR'S PRICES

new s p lit
992-6 191
949·2660
992-5692
992·2259

rn

Detroit's cooking

to He ra ld Oil a nd Gas Co .. Ri ght of
Wa y, Rutla nd.
Ca roline We rt to R ichard Ma nzey,
Patri cia Ma nzey, Pa r cels, Sc ipio.
J am es P otte r , Gale Potter to
Thomas A. Za no, SWl8n J . Zano,
Pa rcels, Bedford .
Racine Hom e Nati ona l Ba nk to
J am es W. Suttle , G reta Suttle, P arcels, Leban on.

BINDING

All types of roof work ,
new or repair gutter and
downspouts ,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed .
Free Estimates
Prices
Call Howard
m ·2263
94Nt60
2·2H fc

~euonable

1982 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR . COUPE
Lt .. Doesk in, m a_tc hing La nda u r oof, (loth bench seats, V-6 g as
eng 1ne. automa t1c, power s teer in g, power bra kes. super s toc k
whee ls. a1r cond .. AM·FM r adio and mo re .
PlOJ
110,461.10 LIST PRIC E
·==.;;96;.:5.;;.1:;0 ROSCOE ' S DISCOUNT

12 .8% APR . GMAC
FINANCING

s9496.00 Sale Price

1982 OLDSMOBILE CUTLA SS SUPREME 2 DR COUPE
Beige w ith La_nda u v i~ y l t_o p, be ige viny l bench seat, V·6 gas e ng ine,
a utom a t• c. a •r co nd1f10n1n g, powe r s teering , power br akes, fill
whee l. AM· FM-Stereo, du a l r ea r s peak er s, tinted wind ows . ~'214
12 . 8% APR GMAC
110,556 .10LIST PRICE
Fl NANCI N.G
970.54 ROSCOE ' S DISCOUNT
1982 CHEI/ROLET MONTE CARLO 2 DR . COUPE
Cha rcoa l with dove gray vi n yl bench seat . automatic , 5.7 liter diesel
economy , _Power door locks, tinted wi ndows. sport mir ror s, tilt
quartz clock , AM·FM rad io,
whee l. cr UI Se contro_l. a uxil ia r y I"
r all yew hee ls . Drast•ca ll y R
11 NIJJ

VAUGHAN'S

CARDINAL
APERCENTAGE
OF DAY'S SALE
WILL BE DONATED
FOR CANCER RESEARCH

~~;C~~~.;~l SCOUNT

12 . 8% APR GMAC
F INANCING

1982 OLDSMOBIL E OMEGA 4 DR ~ EDAN
d _c y l. , autom a ti c. tinted windows. air condit ioning, AM· Fm ·Ste r eo,
w ~r e whee l c~ve r s~ qu a rtz d ig it a l c lock, sport styled mirr ors, whit e
w1th redwood •nter •o r .
K21 2
19599.27 LIST PRICE
12.8% APR . GMAC
.0::c
6 ROSCOE ' S Dl SCOU NT
.-,--.::.62:;:0;:.;
FINANCING
1982 OLDMOBlLE OMEGA 4 DR SEDAN
4 cyl a ut om at ic. ai r conditi oning, tinted wi ndows. AM· FM·Stereo,
Quartz c loc k. spor t sty led m irrors. L1 J a des tone me ta ll ic wi th
;223
J ad estone cloth inte ri or .
19599.27 LIST PRI CE
12.8% APR GMAC
==,.,;6;;20:;;,·::;06 ROSCOE 'S PRI CE
FINANCING

'8979.21 Sale Price

1~2CHEVROLETCHEI/ETTE4DR . SEDAN

a utom a t1 c, AM r adio, bod y side mold ings, rea r win dow defog·
1202
16170.64 LIST PRIC E'
_ _ .,:1,::80:.:,.0::0 ROSCOE ' S DISCOUNT
12 .8% APR GMAC
FINANCING

'5990.64 Sale Price

1981 CHEIIROLET LUV
Long wheel base pickup. 4 c yl di ese l with 5
so,on, . bn.~ht ~ i rrors, radi al tires , ste p bump;~ec:r;n
g ~tnureadl
·
d e v1ny l mtenor.
$8347 .35 LIST PRICE

Card·

,

11'- fitiallelip &amp; S.i~~g&amp; Ga ""' 91JW
GOVERNMENT FOOD STAMPS WELCOME

.

tr~fnhsm.ds·
WI

sa ·

..:!3~t~~R~OSCOE'S DISCOUNT .
~TOP· BY AND SEE ROSCOE'S

- - - - - - - - - -•

SUPER.SPECIAL
NTit 9 P.M.r

SUPER MARKETS
LOCUST and PEARL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I'M MONS·
-

Call Bill Ward
At Ward's Keyboard
1·446·4372
4-9 tf c

CARPENTER

JIM LUCAS

w

-

• Dozers
• Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
e Lo-Boy
•Trencher
ewater
eSewer
• Ga s lines
• Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH . 992·2478
4· 11 ·1 mo. pd .

IF"' Esti,.tesl

Ill

V. C. YOUNG
991-621 S or 992-7314
Pom ero y, Ohio
no· tf c .

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitch ens and appliance s,
c u s tom
ba throom s. r emod e ling,
plumbin g, electric, a nd
heating.

BOGGS

FREE

&amp;

ESTIMATES
PH.

All Makes

• washers
• Dish ·
washers
• Ranges • Refrige r ators
• Dryers • Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
• · ~· lf c

O'Brien Electric
Service

JUST RECEIVED
A complete line of
shrubbery,
tree s
and rose bushes .
Sf¥!
us
for
the
lowest
prices in
town.

Jr.
-·

16 YEARS EXP.
•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio
247-3534
Free Estimates
4-20 tfc

POMEROY

LANDMARK

614-992-2112

J&amp;F

J1iiiD
•AM?

CONTRACT! NG

IIIII

\

'

Ol~s.-Ca~.-Ch~vy,
308 L Mam.

.

Inc.

PH. 992-6614· .\-~.: Pomeroy, ~·

' (Anytimt ByAppoillllnlftt) . '

I

SA'9to5
IIIIDAT.

• backhoe
• excavating
• septic systems
Aytater, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
•limestone

*

Reel Eo1111 - Gonorol

EAFORI&gt;(Hi
1/lRGIL B. SR .; IIUlllMI '
216 e. 2nd 51. .

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New ' Hom es - ex·
t e nsi11e r e mod e ling
• E lectri c wor k
• Custom Pol e Bldgs .
• Roofing wor k
14 Yea r s Ex peri ence
Gr e g Rou s h
Ph. 992· 7583
or 992·2 282
d 79 I mo

I~==========~

Al TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR
I I you n eed it b u ill
or fi xed we ca n do

it .
742· 2328
RUTLAND
4 29 I mo.

l~=========~

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS
·

HrJIJ \ IIIl/

He. u lqu.u t er .•.

start from 30x24"

Utility B~ildings

CANDLELITE INN
Rt . 1, Cheshire, Oh.
Ohio Sf. Rl . 7
PH . 992-9913
OP E N
Monday·Sunday
2: 30p.m. · 2: JO a .m .
DAILY SPECIALS
Happy Hr. 4·6 Daily
Mon .- Keg Night 8·2
Tu es.- Ladies Night 8·2
Wed.- Drink and Drown
All you can dr ink 8·2
Thur.- Pool tourna me nt s
8 til over
Fri . &amp; Sat. Bands
Dr ink &amp; Drown 10·2
During Band Only
Sun.-Pina and
Pitcher Bee r

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl . 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591

~

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St . Rt . 124 Pomeroy, OH .
AUTO

&amp;TRUCK

REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992· 7121
J ·U ffc

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

Licensed &amp; Bonded

CAN HELP YOU

PH. 992-7201

BUILD YOUR DREAMS!

3·29·1fc

FRYE'S PENNZOIL
Salem St.
R Ulland, Oh.
TUES . Ihru SAT.
9 AM. to tO P.M.
SUN. 10 A.M.Io6 P.M.
Phone 742-9575
Tire sales &amp; repairs, gas
groceries. We now
have new American
made Mopeds In stock.
$395 Plus Tax
4· 18· 1 mo.

&amp;

'New Construction
and Remodeling.
FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN

PH. "2-3543 or H2-2386

AUCTION

1

'

Rodlator Spoclollst
NATHAN BIGGS
3S Yrs. Experience

•
i
;

I
.

SMITH

NELSON
INC.

MOTORS,
Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph.m-2114
2-26·11c

TOOLS-FURNITURE

MISCEllANEOUS

SATURDAY, MAY 1, AT

6:30P.M.
AT

RUTLAND GYMNASIUM

S&amp;KAUCTION
SHERMAN TILLIS: OWNER
LONNIE NEAL : AUCTIONEER

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

'

.-...~ ·.

·~ ,\,ti l fill~)

Big Yard Sa le Monday
th rough Fr1d ay. 9 to 5.
Ka n awa Str ee f. Poin t
P leasa nt . Dishes. pots &amp;
pans,_ flowe r s, iewe lery ,
c loth •ng , s hoes, &amp; much
more .

N o tresspassi ng or nun t1ng
on land ow ned by J Arthur
Evan s. Violator will be
pr oc u ted .

Ga rag e Sale F air f1eld
Ac res Sud •vision Fa1rfleld
Cen tena ry Rd May 1. 2. &amp;
3

FLEA Mark e t ope n ai r ,
Ch ill ico the Mal l Shopp ing
Cente r. U.S. 23 Chi ll ico the ,
May 14 &amp; 15, Friday &amp;
Saturday .

Huge Yard Sale Yellow &amp;
white tr ai le r , besi de Rod
ney Method •s l Ch ur ch on
Rl . 588. Ard 29 30

Ya r d Sale May 4 &amp; 5 on
Pub lic Not• ce, Ga ll ia co. Fairfie ld Vanco Rd . 4 112
r ura l Wa ter Assoc ia ti ons mi . from Ga ll ipo lis . Wa tch
announces as of May 1st. for s igns a t Fairfield (hur
1982 ta p prices will in c h. Many ite ms
c rease
as
f o l lows .
31 4' + $350 . Yard
5&amp;8' + $300 .
Sa l e Fr1day
1'+ $450 . 1 1/ 2' ·d 67S , Sa turday
1011 J r d 9 5
2' + $925.
F_o ll ow sig ns. Babv. mater
n1ty and m ore .
Ra'le n 25 au tomatic pi s tol
$47.79
J Family Yard Sa le M•sc
J enn ings "12 au tomalic house ho ld items, men
p is tol S66 .6S
worpan childr en cloth1ng
Rod &amp; reel combo, Zebco Rt. 35, Rio Gr and e . Fr iday
600$ 10.99
&amp; Saturday
Rod &amp; reel combo, Zebc-o
202$7 .99
Gian t Yard
Sale 8
Me 600 Jr . re loader lor 12 Fami ly's. Ap r il JO &amp; May 1
gauge S69 .9S
9 ·00 -5 00 . St1oe St r ing
Fede r a l 22 LR amo oox of Ridge, down Rt . 7 to Clip
50, $1.59 or $14.50 a brick . per Milt s a nd turn right ,
Mus t bri ng cop y of ad wit h foll ow s igns. At Dennis!
you . Spr in g Va ll ey Tr ad ing Baby . boy s 8. gir ls. men 8.
Co .. Spring Va ll ey P laza. women s c lothes, winler
Ga ll ipo t•s. 4d6 ·8025.
coals
t o y s,
lamps.
dresse rs, cha•rs, toy box .
all maple des k, handmade
No the
HunEdsel
t ing or
trespassing
on
Hughes
Farm, alum inium wind ch im es
Lu cas
Lane,
Poinl and afghans Other odds
Plea s ant .
and ends! Ca ll 4d6 28 47
4

Giv_eaway

2 part Te rr ie r part Coll•e
pupp ies Ca ll 388--9679

Solid white 15 month old
ma le pup, part Shepard .
Call 245 5243

tERMSOFSALE : CASHORCHECK
WITH POStTIVE I. D.

Ya rd Sal e First Time th• s
year Fn 30 &amp; Sa l 1s t 4\
Neil Ave, off of dth Ave
G atl •po l•s
Cur l a•ns .
f• sh•ng rods . r oll e r s kate s.
baby items. clothmg all
S•zes. &amp; more

Yard Sa le Sa t. May 1,9to5
AI Jo hnso n Mobile Home
Court on uppe r Rt 7 Mens
&amp;
wom e n s c lo thing ,
drapes, spr eads. do ll s,
and
genera l
2
wks
fema
o ldle. Ca
Terrie
ll446 r 21pups,
08
10 iewe rly
hou se hold d ems
some
too ls.
Need good homes for 8
mixed breed puppi es. cut e.
Yard Sa le Add•so n 1/ 4 mile
Ca ll 446·8196 .
off RI. 7 on Add• son
Bul av ill e Rd . Apr il 30, May
2 36 inc h TV . G1veaway I &amp; 2. Qu ilt s &amp; q uilt tops.
need pa rt s. Caii446-J618.
men-wom en ch ildr en cloth
es.
P upp ies to give away .
Bosto n Bull a nd Te rr ier Ya rd Sale Chilli COthe Rd .
992 70d6 .
Sat . 9.00 5 :00. Cloth es.
too ls, CB. dishes . fi s hing
One fema le Ir ish setter, 2 gear
pups, Ph one J0467S 61 40 .
Michigan Sa le 50 Ne d Ave . ·
Gallipolis . May ls i ? 9:00
Happy_ Ad s
s
d ki tt ens Ca lico &amp; Ye !'low
Tig e r . Call379 2637

?

Mo th e r's Day
and
th a n k
yo u t or
every thi ng you have done
for me We love you.
Dia n &amp;
Kei th

Yard Sa le Mi cse ll eanous
items . Sa t . May 1s t . 9·5. 107
2nd _Ave ., Ga ll ipoli s.
Yard Sale Sa turday , May
I, 9 a .m . to J p.m . 208 So .
1nd _Ave. Midd lepor t. Oh .

-Found
--Los t-a nd
----LOST Brow ni s h b lack 3 fami ly yard s a le Bob
Bi llf ol d, los t in v ic init y F isher's, Ye ll owbush Rd ..
Ga llipoli s . Ca ll 388-8810.
Rac ine. Mon.·May 3. 9 to
! ! ! 21 ft.-73 camper, Hon ·
Los t·6 m o. old Reg. Dobe r da , 2 riding mowe rs, table
man. co mes to the na m e of a nd chairs , 2· 10 speed s,
Pr issy . Rewa r d off ered. .stereo, lamp s, TV game, 21
Los t arou nd Un ion Ave. in . Black and whit e TV , se t
a rea. 99).5482.
of mir ro r s. Xmas tree ,
c lothes, cloth es. clothes
Los t nea r Portl a nd a rea. Free coff ee .
Brow n a nd w hit e fe m a le
fo x hound . 843 ·2354.
Sa t . May I. lots of ite ms for
sa le. Leading Creek Rd off
Lost· Biue Tick coon dog. Rl .7.
Lost in Ta nn e r s Run area.
Has coll ar w ith Me lvin 5 fami ly garage sa le. Rain
For res ter name on it . Call or Shi ne . 10 to 5. Fn . and
collec t JOHn2J6 1 or 949· Sat. 1st . rig ht in Syra cuse .
2157 .
992·3086. Lots of items.

6

Lost-On For es t Run
Fe ma le goat, brow n
white , cha in a round
neck . LOst 2 or 3 days
99H 650 .

Rd .
a nd
it's
ago .

Los t·1976 Dod ge Cha rger
ta il li ght by the De lbert
Smith fa rm in Racine. If
found ca ll 992·3527 or 949·
.2107 a !fe r 5: 30 p.m.

1-----vaid s ale~~

COOKWARE
COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the , Smalles t
Heater Core to lht
Largett Radiator.

SWE~PER
a nd sewing
mac h•ne repa ir, par ts, and
supp li es .
Pick up and
de li ve r y, Davis Vacu um
Cleaner , one ha lf mi le up
Georges Creek Rd . Ca ll
446·0294 ..

~==========~6~· 1~5~·1~1c~i To Joy,
H app y

H614)-992-332S

ASSOCIATES
Helen Toolord, Gordon
TNford, .and Sue Mur- .
plly.

Siz e~

Sizes from 4 to 6 and a ll
wood buildings 24xJ6.
In sulated Dog Houses

Phone
NEW LISTING 2
houses in Racine on Rt .
1124. One has 9 r ooms, 2
baths, good ca rpeting,
natural gas furnace . 2nd
4 rooms, bath ~nd large
lot. Both on ly $37,500.
COUNTRY HOME Nice location near chur·
ch and POSI office. Has 3
bedrooms , mod e rn
bath, T.P. water. car·
pet•ng, large eal·in kif·
chen. full basement and
furna ce .
BUSINESS - Car wa sh
that fakes littl e time fo
run . Building and land. ·
Good chance for you for
onl y 515,000.
NEWLY PAINTED - ·
Inside
a nd
out .
Necessary repairs being
made, level lot, 2
bedrooms, bath, porch,.
nice kitchen with lots of
wood cabinets and '
garage. Only 516,500.
.
CLEAN AND MODERI\4 '
- Real nice 8 room ~
Mme with 2 full baths, :
formal dining, good car· ,
petlng, full basement,·
garage and 2 apts. Allin
good repair. $65,000.

992-6011
a.lO·If c

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949·2100 or 949·2322
O O·Ifc

Aluminum Sidin g
•tns ulation
•Storm Doors
• Storm Window s
•Replacement
Windows
•New Roofing
Fre e Estimate
James Kees ee
Ph . 992-2772
4!2911 m o.

l

eleclrita work

SALES
SERVICE
U.S. Rl . so East
Guy sv ille, Ohi o
Authorized John Ot .re.
New Holland , Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Ser11ice
1·3· tfc

Yard Sale Thurs, Fri &amp;
Sa t. 1/2 mile on Bu tavi ll e
Road . 9 ?

11modelin1

- Roofin,and ruller WOfk
-Conm e work
- Piumbinf and

Water-Sewe r-El ect ri c
Ga s llne-Ditches
Wa ter Line Hook -up s
Septic Ta nks
County Certifi' d
Rou sh La ne
Ch es hire, Oh .
Ph. l 67·7560
1· 7· 1 tf c

J.&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl&amp;

AHHHQ Rt emen t!;

SERVICE
1Addonsand

REESE
.
TRENCHING
SERVICE

SAllE $3.00 WITH
THIS AD

SIX lam ily ya r d sa le, Thvr
sday. Friday &amp; Sa tur day. 8
3, 123 Pa rk Dr
Pt
Ev e rylh 1nct
P leasant ,
1magi nable

YOUNG'S

zero temperatures.
• Spr ing Developm ents

And Home Maintena nce
• Roofing of all types
• Siding
• Re mOdeling
• Free estimates
e 20 Yrs . experi enc e

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

'8979.21 Sale Price

~e': l .,

VAUGHAN'S

.l

SERVICE
Small &amp; Large
Carpet Pieces Bound
Room Size and Area
Rug s Bound
Ca rpet Installation
Rea sonable Rates
F or mor e informationPH . 614-992-7848
n2 1 mo. pd

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

'9585.56 Sale Price

THIS SATURDAY
AT

AND REPAIR

~

Yard Sa le

Ga r age Sa le Sa t . &amp; Su n.
May lsi. &amp; 2nd . 484 Upper Sa t May l. at 442 Grant 51
River Rd . (across from Middleport . Star t,n g 11
Ga ll ia Ru ra l Water) Two a .m . Boy s, infant ciOitl1 ng.
fa mili es . 9AM to 6PM . baby furniture , a nd m• sc
Rain ca nce ls.
Adult &amp; ch il dr en's c lothes
toys, instruments. r e l igiou~
FOUR family yard sa le .
books &amp; mor e
Grandvi ew He1qhts neM
Mason Co. Fairqrounds.
Yard Sale 17 V•n t on Ave
10 4
Ga ll ipo lis . Fri. 8. Sat Aprii Friday Sa tur day
Cl othing , toys, app liances.
JO&amp; May 1. 9to5 .
fu rniture , misc.

PIANO TUNING

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

CARPET

IEAI.TOR

DETROIT (AP) - Downtown
Detroit will be cooking again soon
and a n a ntici pated 7.5 million people are expected to Une up to sam ·
pie a m enu that ranges from chill to
c hop s uey, saue rbraten to sushi and
stutted cabbage to calamari.
The city's annual Ethnic Festival
starts Aprtl 30 a nd will be held ev·
ery weekend throug h Sept. 12 wtth
"the exception of June 4-6 when the
c ity will host Its first G rand Prtx
a uto r a ce.
E ach Friday through Sunday, a
dl1ferent nationaUty will display Its
cultural herttage through native
foods, exhibits, activities, craft
demonstrations, singing, dancing
and music In Hart Plaza along the
Detroit Riverfront.

The Automati c
Wate r

i·Pr===~~~===~~~P§h.~7~4~2·~2~75~l=~4·~9~·1~m~o=.~
C&amp;M

Yard Sale

LAFFADAY

! F r e eze-

VACA NT LAND -. We have se veral parcels.

GOOD SELECTION. OF

Thi s •s only a par l•al l1 s t of th e many .tem s to be
so ld •n lh•s ex tra large 5 day sa le We have rented
a la r ge c •rcu s ten t to use 1n co nn ec tion wi th our
larye bu •ldi n y to acco m modaf e a ll me 1tems we
have . We will be se ll mg fur n1 tur e from the large
tent on Sunday : May 2 and Sa tu rd a y, May 8 Then
we will move 1nto the bui ldmg on th e la s t th ree
days of the sa le to se ll all th e g la ss and ch1na . Be
prepared for s urpri ses, grefll values You mus t
see to apprec•ale . Come one day a nd you will want
to be he re for all 5 day s. Nothing s how n before
day of sa le . Self contained camper · s pa ce
available Lunch on pr em •ses

I

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

,_EROY, OHIO

GIANT CARPET SALE

We haye larg e col lec t io n s of figurines,
paperwe•ghts, hens on nests , toothp• c k holders,
glass bas ket s, crue ts. moustache cups, hand
pamted p lates and bow ls. sou ve n•r pla tes, over 100
old lamps of all k1nd s. sm al l co ll ec t• on of c h1na
dolls, very lar ge co llec ti on of Or ie nta l items
many mus•c bo xes We hav e Ge rman , Aus trian:
L•m_oge, Bavar ian. and Hav iland c hin a A lo t
Cap•domente ch•na Some Blue Willow . Iron stone
and Tea Leaf

Friday
and TE
Sa turday
MARS
HALL
NN ENT
Count ry Rock
NOTE:
Cr osso\'ers
T 'Vr S. &amp; Sun . ba nd
starls 7: 30, end s 1L 30.
Other nights, 10 to 2.
Car ryo ul Beer Avai la bl e
Dri nk &amp; Drown d uri ng

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

608 L MAIN

NE W LI STIN G- NEAR POM E RO Y - l'h s tor y
remode led home on a pp rox. 1/1 ac re, base me nt,
ma ny fea tures . Wan t $35.000 .

Meigs County property transfers
tcrson to

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

NE W LI STING - lN POM E RO Y - Two s m a ll e r
lots w ith a IO'x50', 1965 mobile home , equipped ki t ·
chen, coul d be good in ves tm ent . $9.000.

ClASSIPI!D ADS sure to

rlbOV C' addresS

Patters on,

days
after
the
la s t
pub lica tion of this no tice
You r Answe r to t his Com ·
pl a int mu s t be fi led wi th
th e Me igs County Cour t of
Co mm on P leas wi th i n
th ree {3) days aft e r se r vice·
of a copy of the Answer on
Pl ai ntiff's attorney, who is
Ji m
D.
Fox , 2002
Washi n gt on Boulevard
Belpre, Ohio457 14.
·
This noti ce is p ublished
on the fol low ing da tes :
La r ry E . Spencer
Cler k of 1-------..!::~~~~~~~----Meigs Coun ty
Cour t of
Common Pleas
Pomeroy , Oh io

Included 1n these 1tem s are over one thousand
p1ec es ot furniture num er ous marb letop
wa shstand s. dr esse r s, primitive
f ur ni t ure
sout he r n LoU1S1ana mu le cnes t . all k1nd s of cup'

Bill J a nes in c har ge of sa le.
AU ~ TIONE E R S - Bill J a nes, Mi ke May le, D. D.
Sm1th a nd Fo r r es t Turn er,'Appre nl ice.
PHON E 614·SS7·34ll

GcllltpOit S,

Cha r les

Publi c Not ice
George H obs tetter, 142
Mu l berry
Ave nu e,
Pomeroy, Ohio was ap poin ted Ad m in istra tor with
the Will Annexed of the
es ta te of Vir gie Hobstette r ,
deceased. tate of Rose t-till
Pomeroy, Ohi o.
'
Rober! E . Buck
Proba te Judae /
(
Clerk ·
(4) JO , (5) 7, 14, Jtc

TE RM S - Cas h or Check w/ pos 1tive ID EAC H
day of sa le ._ Pic tures take n of bu yers as need ed.
Sa les tax wilt be cha rg ed on ite m s so ld, ex ce pt to
d ~a l ers w/ ve nd er numb er. Not res pon s ibl e lor ac ·
c1d ent s.

Sou t hras t e rn

Equrprncn t ,

LEG AL NOTI CE
Rona ld D. VauQhn,
Defe n da n t, whose - las t
known ad dress is 17273
St a te
Ro ut e
104 ,
Chill icoth e, OhiP. 45601 ,
and w hose cur re nt ad d ress
is unknow n, will t ake notice
th a t Pat r icia Ann Va ughn
has filed a Co m plain t f or
divor ce i n the Meigs Coun ·
ty Court of Com mon P leas,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Case No.
18105, ca pti oned Pa t r icia
Ann Vaug hn vs Rona ld 0 .
vaughn. Said Complaint
a lleges that Rona ld o.
Vaug h n has been gu ilty of
gross neg lect of duty an d
extreme cr uelt y, and prays
for a d ivorce and other
relief .
Said Defendant wi ll tak e
notic e that he is required to
ans we r t h is ComplainT
wi th in twenty -eight {28)

5 DAY ANTIQUE SALE
MAY 2, MAf B-9, MAY 15·16

P ubl ic Notice
P R-OBAT E COURT
OF ME IGS
COUN TY, OHIO
EST ATE OF 1/IR G I E
HOBST E TT E R, DECEAS·
ED
Case No. 23, 74 2
NOTI CE OF
APPOINTM E NT
O F FIDU CIAR Y
On Apri l 26 , 1982, in the
M e ig s County
Prob a te
Court, Case No . 23742.

!'~ b t i c t-_.tot~~

Fn ., Apr. 30, Sa t., May 1
WlLDW ATER
Co untr y Rock
Thu rs .· F ri. · Sat.- Su n.
May 13· 14· 15· 16
CROSSOVE RS
Dn nk &amp; Drown a ll nig ht s
T hur s.· F ri. · Sa t .·Sun .
May 20·21 ·22·23
CR OSSOVERS
Drin k &amp; Drown a ll ni gh ts
Thur s.F ri .Sa t.Sun.
May 27·28·29·30
CR OSSOVERS
Dri nk &amp; Drown a ll n 1ght s
MONTH OF JUN E

The

Ohio

30, 1982

Ohio

Sentinel

30, 1982

-

Ya rd sa le 810 So. 2nd . Mid
dl eport , May 1 thr u 10 .
Avon, a nti que furnitu re ,
othe r furni ture , sma ll ap pl ia n ces . Sil vers tone
di sheas, clothi ng, knive s,
toys too ls. lots of misc .•
come see . Some th ing for
eve ryone.

TEN family yard sa le Sct1
Trailer Court ou t
Locust Road by K &amp; K. PI
Pl easan t . Tllursday &amp;
Friday , 29th . &amp; 30th , 10 3
only Rnin Cn nce ls New
cos metic s, lots of furnilur e.
baby items, n1c na cs.
eve ryth1n g includ1ng n doq
co llecti on

wartz'

YARD sale. 7110 L1ncoln
Ave . PI Pleasant 10 until I
? Movmg , m ust se ll kif chen
appl iances. odds &amp; e-nds
Canceled 11 rc1 1n
204 9th St Saturday 10 3
For ma ls s•ze 10. couch .
other m1sc
Yard SAle 21 1d Monroe Av e
Pt . Pleasant . Tnursday.
Fr1dC1y. Sa turd r1Y
Monday and Tuesday . /60S
Mf. Vernon, Point Pleasa nt
Chddren s adults c loth es.
furnitur e.
drapes.bed
sp reads. Et c.
Yard Sa le, Saturday May 1
and Monday Ma y J. 20 11 N
Main, Point Pleasiln t
F1ve fam ily ya rd sale. 5
miles out Crc1bCreek Road .
Ga llipolis FNry , Lo ts ol
childre n clo th 1ng. plan ts.
books. pos ter bed r oom
SUI If.' and m1S(
May lSI
thr u
nex t
week
till
everything 1S sold
Rummage Sa iC', St Pilul u
M . Church, Poin t PINI Sa nt ,

Wed ne sda y May 5th . 10 7.
Thursday 9 12
Pub li c SaltAu ction

8

&amp;

R1ck
Pearson.
Ex
penenced AUC TIONEER
Es la tes, anhques. IM m .
household L•censed Oh•o
WV Bu y1ng anllques 304
773 57R5 . 773 91FI5
L E Neal Auct1oneer Ser
Estate Farm
v1ce
Housenold MISC W e SCII1!1
L•censed &amp; bonded Oh1o &amp;
wva 367 7101

Antiqu e Show and Sal e.
Hunt •ngton Gatte r. cs, Hun
l.n gton. W. v May 8111 Noon
.till 9 :00 P M_, May 9th
Noon til l 5 :00 PM 30
Dea le r s. Anl•ques of a ll
descriptions . Exit B. 164
9

Wa nted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old tur
niture and Ant iqu es ot a ll
kinds. call Kenn eth Swa1n.
446 3159 and 256 1967 1n th e
evening s.
CASH PAl D for clean, lnl c
model used ca r s Smllll
Buick Pontiac. Gall•pol• s
Ohio. Ca ll 446 2282

Bi g Yard Sal e Thurs ., Fri. ,
Sal. &amp; Sun. Old 160 a t
Eve rgr ee n. Watc h tor
s igns. Motorcyc le, guns,
la wn m owe rs , di s he s,
cera mi c s .
vari et y of
e verything .

Saf. 9 a .m .·S p.m. Iva n
Powell r eside nce, 527 5th
St. ac ross tr on t he Firs t
Baptist Church, Rac ine,
Oh. Appliances, household
items,c loth es. mi sc . chea p.

7 Fam ily Garage Sale.
Thurs ., F r i. &amp; Sat . 2nd.
house pasl Coon Club on
Criner Road . Misc. items.

Big yard sa le . Tony Jones
res iden ce besi de Pos t Of·
fi ce in Tuppe r spl a ins, Ma y
1, 9·3.

Garage Sate 9 to 5. Thurs.,
Fri. &amp; Sat. Bidwell· Rodney
Rd . Jrd. house on right.
Lots of goodies.

May 7·8. 9 a .m .· 4:30p.m .
CR 28 mite north Of
Bas han. Ra in o r shine.
John Rose reside nce.

Garage Sale May 1, Satur· 'May 1· Oa k tabl e, fl a t wa ll
day . S04
LeGrande,
board, iron bed, vi c ·
Gallipoli s.
Furniture, t11lla, s e win g r oc ke r .
clothing, house hold items, sewing m achine, chai r s,
s tone jars. cast iron items,
ca mper. tO to S.
p lant stands, kitche n ware,
wome ns c lothes, ap·
Garage Sale Fri. &amp; Sat. toys,
pie dolls,everyday Items,
Furniture and -ttousehold a cross from Summerflelds
Items. 1 mi tes west Of Res f. ln Chester. 985·4366.
GalliPOlis on Rt. 141 .

lmmcd1r1 te opcn 1n g tor
Med•cal f(•ctmo log,s t or
QUill i ll y
ML T wit h
IJa ckqround 111 Cl1n ica l
Chf'm1s tr y Plf'ase contact
V,llley
01agnos ti c
LaiJor,l iOr,es Ad6 0353
L IV('
111 &lt;j(' fVICe
llou&lt;ol'keep,nq (1nd
COOk 1nq Crt II 388 8376

B&lt;~bv~·ller needed .n my
hon·,f' Exce llent salary .
Re t req C1ll 446 12.59

Dr,ve r / Prog
r,'!m o,rec lor 70 hrs / wk ,
&lt;;uHimer. to opcra t e / ma i~r
,,,,n sm t~ll tr uck. plan / 1m ·
pl c nwn l proqrAms Prefer
81\ 111 rduct~ t1 on o r related
11 rlcl &amp; f'xpcr,ence in
rtrMn.l i •CS.
puppetery,
muc:;•c. c; tory tell,nq Call
Ml~d , ,lmOb ii C

4&lt;1/) lJ))

J\ VO N o .....1 wccc~s
Sell
J\von wllcrc you work or
l1vf' C.111 7•17 ?755 or collec t
6 1.1698 71 11

Full or port lime R N . or
LP N for 3 to 11 s hill Call
Nr!nl r Vnn Mr lcr 992 6606
Ht•lp Wr1n !l'd
Ga ll1p0l1':.
R('\rf'il l• on O...,pn rtment
11C'C'dS 1\ S /1. Solt b,111 Um
p1rrc; lor rld u ll men's"
l c r~qu rc;
1\l ;,o nf'edcd are
urnp1re s
for
yo uth
brlSCIJrll l&amp; so l'bc111 leagues .
WMJ"S vnry wilh leC'Ig ues,
Apply 'rnmrd•o le ly at
Galt1pot•~
Re c rea t ion
DcpMirnl'nl , 518 Seco nd
Ave , or Cfl ll 4&lt;16 1789
Don·t m•s s th1'&gt; one Th"
PN IC'CI liimdy bUSiness, nO
r,skc; , h.1vr fun . make
monf'y (,111 •JQ ? 70R8 affl"•r 6

nm
PI\RI
11mP
ht•lp,
II OUSC'WOr k, W1ll1ng to run
errilncls. J0&lt;1 773 5697
A REPEAT 5ALE 12 I~
36.00\. 'f i'M iy 1f you a r C&gt; tH1
hxrct 1nco me a nd A c11ance
.=!I mr1nnqcmcnl. her e'S: an
oppor tu n •I Y to mePf your
qo.11~ Qu•ckly
WP make
.1nct c;cl l rn;~,n t e nance .
products to ttw •nduslrial
anti ,ns tll ut,on~11 ma rk ets
w. . pr ov•dC' ,, draw ptus
co mm1SS10il , furn1sh a car
c1nd qas flllowancc nnd
prov1 ctc many other tr ,nges
to cl QUilllil('(t llldiVIdUr!l al
1Cr151 7 yecHS d1rect
!,)flQ ibff' CO mlniSC,IQn SaleS.
ex per•en cP 1S il must 116
&lt;199 7700 .
riSk
fur
DICk
Moren,,

We pay cash for late mode l
clea n usea cars
French town Car Co
Bi II Gene J ohnson,
446 0069

H,1v C V&lt;'H. ~ncl"' 111 rny hOnl('
tor pl cfc•h· l\mhu t,1tory
mrm pr wom,ln 7 vr-.=.rs ;&gt;1(
pPriCfl lt'
667 3·107
1 up
persplr11flS.011
Pr1vc1!e room c1 nd board
and laundry lor elde rl y
person 997 6748
IJ

LOIS alrea dy se t up tor
mob ile home 1n Kyer Creek
Oi rs t ric t. Ca 11 d46 1462 .
Used ki tchen cabinet &amp; 1
Shoa ts hogs about 100 lbs
each . Ca ll 388·8437
Good used car sea l Ca ll
BE DS· I RO N, BRASS, old
furn itur e, go ld , s ilver
doll ars, wood ice boxes,
stone iars, i'l ntiq ues. etc .
Co mpl e t e
ho useho ld s
Wr ite: M.D. Mi ll er , Rt . d,
Pom eroy, Oh. Or 992 -7760 .
Go ld, silver , s terling .
jewelr y, ri ngs, old coins &amp;
curre ncy . Ed Bur ke tt Bar
ber Shop, Middl eport . 9'91·
3476.
OLD FURNITU RE . beds.
iron, br ass. or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards of all t ypes.
Tables, round or squ a re .
Wood ice box es. Old d esks
and bookcases. Will buy
complete house hold. Gold ,
s liver, old money, poc ket
watches, cha ins, r ings, and
etc . Indi a n Artif ac ts of a ll
types. Also bu y ing basebal l
cards . Osby Mart in 992·
6370.

Insuranc e

5A NDY AND BEAVER In
s uran ce Co h,1s alt e red
s erv1 CC'S tor f1r c 1nsurance
covcraqc 111 Gn ll1a Co unty
tor almo~ t cl ce ntury .
Farm, nome nncf personal
proper ty co verages are
&lt;1Vrldab lc to mee t 1n
Cli VIdUc11 needs
Con ta c t
HArry P1t c hford . ilgen t
Pt1 onr ·1,16 1•1?7
Sc hoo ls Instruction

Kara te the ull1mate in se lf
defence a ll pr iva te lesso ns,
Men, women , &amp; ch ildren
lns lr uc l•on lhru b la ck belt :
Also ava il able Karate
uniform s puching and
k• ck,n g bags, and protec
Jerry
t•v e equ1pmen t
Lowery &amp; Assoc ia t es
Karate
S t udio,
143
Burlmg ton Rd . Jackson,
Oh Cn ll ?86 307 '
17

Early An tiqu e co unt ry fur
niture. cupboa rds , all k1nds
ot
ches t s.
nesks .
s toneware, e tc Call 367
0138 .

s .tuill•ons Wanted

Nccc! r1dc to Oh 1o Un1vf'r
Sil y (B 00 5 1"10 ) Men Fr1 ..
Fcm&lt;'ll('
(,1 11 997 3390
Sil!urcJay s MIN 5 p m

lS
Buying
Gold ,
S•lve r .
Plat•num, ol d coi ns, scrap
r in gs &amp; sil verwa re. Daily
qu otes available
Also
coi ns &amp; coin suppl•es lor
sa le .
Spr i n g
Va ll ey
Tra ding . Spring Valley
Pla za. 446 8025 or 4d6 8026

446 3383.

Yard sa le Thur s . a nd Fr i. ·
Ma y 6·7, 10 to J on the cor ·
ner of Fo rest Run Rd . a nd
Rl .7

to gel out of the
Housr? Se ll Avon a nd
ll1r1kf' yood 1$$ Mee t fri e n d ly people Call dd6 335B .
w~1n 1

11
Auct 1on every Fr1 n• gllt at
the Hartl or d Comn-iur il v
Ce nter _ Tru c kl oads of new
mPrchnndise every wef'k
Co nsi gm ents of new and
used merchandise a lways
wel co m e
R1chnrd
Reynol ds Auct1onecr ?75
3069

Help Wanted

II

M•sce llaneo us

8Ft . Sl 1cle 1n ca mper s leeps
4$950 175 Honda trai l b ik e
1973 $450 Russe ll Young
Wrs t Co lumb•a , w Va
·'
18

Wanted to Do

Tile Silk House (CUSfOI"fl
s dk flowers) . Complete
br•dal l1ne, weddi ng s, a nd
all OCCrlSIO nS Ca ll 367 ·7566 .
Lawn Mow1ng Se rive, nO
yilrd to big or s mall, houS@
pa,nt ,ng &amp; roo t ing, and
l1 gh t haulin g , Ca ll 446 -3l S9
n tter 6PM I 286 5740 .
Wil l cue for e ld er ly man
or woman on our farm
p r 1vatr room, $700 per mo '
Ci!ll 446 816J
.
Pr~,nt,ng .n tenor and exler ,or. L M Joh n son. J0-4
67S 1128

Yards, mowed and trim ·
mec1. r easona b le rates,
re lia bl e . Phone 30H75
1804 .
Flnan Ei al
2l
Bus iness or store r oo m in
Park Cen tral Hote l.

We want one stove d~i;r
in Meigs Co. If you have a n
establi shed business or a r e
a ser ious wood burner, conWa nt to buy· Solid wood lac! Glen Ma rpl e af the
and drawer s, good ' \/ all ey Ge m Stov e Factory
Will
re fu rn is h .n So.Za nesv ill e , Ohio. 614·
4SOJ48 co ll ect.
myse lf . 304·882·3168.

�Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel
21

Bus m ess
Opportuntty

Ctgarefle
Vend tng
Bust ness Call 304 773 5651
22

46

They'll Do It Every Time

r-----

Money to Loan

PASTURE f or r ent Phone
304 675 5110
Large lot for m obile home
1n Sa nd y Hetght s area 304
675 2524

Profe ss tonat
Servtccs

A4ereaandlse

C&amp;L Bookkeeptng
Bookkeeptng 8 ta x serv tce
l or all types ot bustnesscs
Carol Neal
446 3862

51

Wtndshteld br oken' Call
Sou the rn Glass Insurance
c liltms wel co me
Free
mobile serv•ce ;walfab tc
Cdll446 1011

31

Home s for Sa l e

1977 Concord Mobil e Home.
'7)(65 Cedi -146 7015 a fter
':; 30p rn
Beau tif ul f)rtCk &amp; frame 3
bl'llr oom home w /scc ntc
vtew
wood burn•ng
ltr epla ce formn l c1tntrq ,
cen tral ,Jtr w hc&lt;lt pum r
Ldnscapcd
1 il ( rc
ot
wdenccd tn bac k YMd,
S. 4 S 900
11°o ftnanctnq.
c:,milll down PcWfllC'nt Cnll
446 3766
House for SeliC tn tov.n
Prtced on tn spcc t on 3 or 4
hdr F R 2 bath s Ca ll 4-16
1123
r
house
hr~!t1
lull
basement tn Ctty l tmt!S,
$21.000 Farm 6 r house,
bath , ultltly room, root
ce llar . 15 111 a. Tra ctor ,
farm eQutpmrnt
large
barn. 900 lb toba c co bclse,
$35.000 Crlll 614 446 1161 or
256 177 3
6

3 bdr brtck. 110U'&gt;f' C'&gt;C
cond , Em'ray ("ll!ctcnf.
c lose to H oiiN (tty School
OtslrtC I
10°o tniNeSI
assumable 1o,1n Celli 4&lt;16
7080 or 67~ 7990
5 rms &amp; 1Jrln1 Cia&lt;:. fur
nnnce slot rn wtnctows on
:&gt;54 tn 81ctw e11 O t 515 500
Ci!IIH6 1339 or 388 QJ57
1 floor . full b.JS('mrn t, cen
tral heal ano ,,,r l ull car
pel, c arpor l. 3 rlcres tO fv"td
dlcporl 9?7 Bruwnt.&gt;lll' 99'1
]935
Hou se, r educed tor QU tCk
sr'l le 3 bedroom ce ntral a•r
Excellent
loccllton
E)(
eel len T IHlrlnun&lt;t r~vntlable
Phone 30-t 895 ) 4.:1 4 .1flcr 5
PM
32

Mobtlc Hom es
for Sa le

TRISTATE
M OB I LE
HOMES GalltpOits Prtce
reduced
used
mobile
homes CALL 446 75rJ
CLEA N USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME
SALES. •I Ml
WEST . GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 PHONE 446 3868
Brtck &amp; lr amC' l)t IC'vel
home on over 1 acre of
wooded land 3 bedrooms .
oarl•nlly
l•n• s hed
basement
wdh
wood
burner
Posstblc 9 l l2°o
loan assumpTt on 556 000
Cnll446 417 9
Ca ll Sktctmore tor mob tle
homes moved Greenlawn
Transport
Cr~lt
446 7783
aays. 446 3479 evcn•nqs
Ltce nsed &amp; tnsurC'd

M obil e home on 1/ 2 acre
lot Ha s porctl nwn.nq un
derptnntng,
W&lt;l Sh er &amp;
dryer, e tc Cal l 44o 4736
tr,11IPr
CXCl' llrnt
cond ttt on (,111 .\.16 1557
Furntshed. ntr condtft oned
uflderptnntnq . set up on lot
'" M•ddleport
17 ~60

Elcona 17x65 Nobile t1orn c
for sale Furn tShed tn good
co nd on county road 1 669
5092
1971
Rtfl Crill! mobile
home 3 bd r oom atr co nd ,
to tal natural gas Iron ! kt l
c hen . parlla l l y lurn ts tled
99173 13aller5

USED MOBIL E
5762711

1-------------,r-----------..j
33

FarmsforSale

Farm 76 acres
Good
house barn, work shop,
sma ll c h• c ken hou se 1 mile
west of Lanqsvtl lc on Sr
1/4 742 2860 alter J p m
l5

Lot s &amp; Ac r ea ge

Improved llat lo ts I 1/ 4
acre $5,000 3 3/ 4 acres
$12 000 S acres a t $15,000
Ctty sc hool dtstrtct W tll
ftn ance a t 10% down Ca ll
379 2196
5 75 level acres locnted on
Hannan Trace Rd
1972
l4x70 trailer wtth 12x 14
room , total elec trt c, large
yard, frutl t ree , 2 ou t
butldtngs,
large garden
plot Cal12569352
l acre rtver Iron ! lot s, f trst
It me adver tt sed Ftnanctng
£1Vatlable Ca ll alter 1 p m

For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedr oom
tra iler s. furntShed. w 1th
a" Call 304 773 565 1

1981 All ELECTR IC 12'
WI DE .
2
BEDRO OM
mobtle hom e se tttng on lot,
ready to move tn to $8995
10% down, BANK FINAN
( lN G AVA I LABLE, 304
576 271 1
1969 R 1char dson qood con
dt l ton $3,500 Ph one 304
67 5 3773

197 2
Schultz,
three
bedroom gas heat, par
t1all y furn1shed , 304 675
2907
1973 Grandville 14 X 70. 3
bedroom mobtl e Hom e wi II
se ll furn1sh e d or un furniShed must be moved
Phone 304 882·2820

- - - -- --

1979 3 bedroom , Ltberty ,
14x70 , $14,000 , exce ll ent
condtt ton , excf'llcnt buy,
615·2474 or 304 576 2490 af
ter 4 ·30 .
Two bedroom mobile home
$4,500. Phone 304·675-6512
or contacNiugh Burris.

42

MobtleHomes
for Rent

2 bdr furntshed, m odern &amp;
c lea n Co nv en ten l loca tt on
Re f &amp; dep req Ca ll 245
58 18
TWO
bedroom .
un
furntshed One bedroom ef
f tctency 304 6751721
Mob il e Home, 1 bedroom ,
furnt shed. a ll e lec trt c.
was her,d ryer hookup, $175
month ly plu s elec lrt c tt y
304 576 2441
TWO bedroom fur ntshed
mobtle home, $185
per
mon th plu s uftltl1 es, $50
depos&gt;l, 304 675 6512

FURNISHED
mob1l e
hom e, $ 165 per month plu s
uttltttes, S50 depos tt 304
675 65 12

378 6278
18 acres for sa le Lays ntce,
mC'adows and woodlands ,
$10,000 9854 116
TWO acre to ts 150 It road
frontaqe
c tty
w a ter,
behtnd 84 Lumbe r , ca ll 304
6716873.675 3618

Houses for Rent
Lnrqc hou se for rent, 4 bdr
Ca ll 388 9909
3 bdr deluxe home, exc
ne tqhborhood, pool. cen tral
atr Call 304 675 5104 or 675
5386
F urn tshed 4 room cottag e,
near HMC. $190 Wa ter pd,
ch tld acce pt able Ca ll 446
44 16 atter7PM
For rent 3 bdr hou se fur
ntshed , 5 mt f r om town,
Sl65 Call 446 0459. keep
trytng
4 bedroom. ce ntral atr and
heat Ctty water . It r epla ce.
un turnt shed
exce pt
ktl
c hen
$300 mo nth plus
ultltltes
Refe r ence and
depostt
r equtred
In
Ra c•nc 949 2793
Trader .n Syracuse. Apar t
men t
and
house
tn
Pomeroy, house •n Letart
F,111s A partment tn New
Hav en and Mtddleport 992
7511
Ex t ra nt ce coun try home
carpe t ed na tur al
gas 1
bath's. no ch il d r en no pets
Loca ted at Snowville 698
4040
2 bd room. unfurn1shed,
Ltvtng room. kt tchen 1 1
basement. ntce and c lea n
Some car pet•ng No tn stde
pet s OcpoStl requtred 992
3090
Rac tne N tce 2 bd room .
co mpl e tely turn , AC , S160
month Depostl req Glen
Btsse ll 949 180 1 or 949 2860
Furntshed llousc tor rent 3
room s and ba th tn Mason,
W VA 992 7352
Pomer oy 2
bd room ,
remodeled, 408
Sprtng
Carpe ted. sec unty depostt
SIOO Ren t $195 Ca ll after 6
p m 992 2288

HOME

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Ltcensed &amp; tnsured Ca ll
304 576 2711

for Rent

Large tr a 1ler lots for r ent
m Middleport Cal l 992 2101
or 992 23 19 after 5PM

REFINANCE or purchase
your home 30 year fi xed
rate WVa &amp; OhtO Leilder
Mortgage, 77 E Stille 51 ,
A I hens Oh 592 3051

23

Spac~

Love ly s•x room co tt age, no
c htldr cn, $225 pe r mo nth
On e
mon t h
sec ur t t y
depost l App l y tn per so n
Fr1dily or Sa turday , May 1.
79 Jtm Hilt Road , Hen
derson, WV

42

Mobtle Homes
for Rent
- ------

Cen tena ry , 1bdr , pnv a te
lot. ref &amp; dep , $160 mo ,
adu lt s Ca ll 1 643 2644

Mobde ho m e for rent Ca ll
446 4225 or 446 0756
2 bd r
tratler furntshed.
adu lt s onl y, Brown Tr a il er
Park, 992 3324
2 bd room house tra 11er
You p ay
uttlittes
un
furn1shed
except table,
chatrs and cook stove 5175
per month $75 deposit.
367·0288

1'11 bd .room , suttable tor 1
to 2 peop le. Furn1Shed·S135.
plus uti t itles. Country
mobile home park Lot no.
35 992·7479.
2 bd room Mob1le home furni shed
Paid
utilit1es,
locatep 2 pnd 2 tenthsmi tes
on
Rt
143, deposit
require&lt;!: adults only or
couple with one child. After
992·3647

One- bed r oom mobtlf' home.
p n vate lot , a tr condlttoned,
u t •llt tes furntsh ed , out
sk trt s Hende r son
$135
Month 304 675 6730
43

Farms for Rent

80 acres, 11 ttltable , loca ted
Jl t 1 mtles west of Alfred on
CR 23 1

44

Apartment
for Rent

Deluxe turn ap art, ce nt
atr &amp; heat 1 or 2 ad ults
onl y Ca ll446 0338
Apar tm en t no 3. 2nd fl oor
f urnt shed adults only , no
pe ts. r ef &amp; dep r eq Ca ll
446 0957
Fu rnt shed ap t 3 bdr , $100,
wa ter pd , children ac
ce pt able Ca ll446 4416 after
7PM

APARTME NT S
bedroom , r ent star ts at
S152 per m onth 2 bedroom
s tarts a t $188 per mon th
Spec tal rates for Se nt or
Ct tt zens
Call 446 1745
Jackson Es tates
513 3rd Ave 3 rm s&amp; bath ,
downsl atrs,
prtvate en
tr ance, ktt chen furnt shed,
was her &amp; dryer , dt sh
washer , SlSO perm o, $100
dep Upstatr s 1 bedr &amp;
bat h, pnvate entrance, S20
week 65 Garfteld Ave
small house 3 rm s &amp; bath,
o ff street parktng tn rear,
hall basement, S125 mo ,
$100 dep Ca ll after 6 00
Wednesday eventng, 446
0830 Frtday ca ll 614 533
3884
2 bdr unfurntshed upslatrs
duplex Stove &amp; ref rtg tn
e lu ded Ref &amp; dep req
Cal l446 24 19 or 446 3949
Unfurnt shed apartment. 4
rms &amp; bat h tn Vtn ton
Re fr tg &amp; stove furnt shed
Large yard &amp; garden spot
Dep &amp; r e f r eq Ca ll 245
58 18
Downtown furn •shed up
s tatr s apar tm e nt ,
a tr
co nd , S215 pl us uttltlt es
Ca ll 446 1788
Fur n tshed apt
bdr ,
a dult s, S200, el ec tr tc. water
patd Ca ll 446 4416 after
7PM
1 bedroom furntshed apt
992 5434 992 5914 or 304 882
2566
M odern 1 bd room Tow n
Hou se A pt
m Tuppers
Ptatns area No pe ts Ca ll
304 485 5285
F urn tsh ed Apt
5 rooms
and bath no pets Depostt
requtred 992 2937
1 bd room Apt
d leporr 992 7177

tn

Mid

Apartments 675 5548
A PARTMENTS , mobile
hom es,
hous es,
Pt
Pl easa nt and GalltpOIIS
614·446 8221 or 614·245 9484
TWO bedroom apartment,
'" Henderson, phone 304 ·
675· 1972
45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
tight housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.
Sleeping room,
$125
ul1tilleS pd., slngte ma le.
Call «6·«16 after 7PM.

GO OD
U SED
AP
PLIANCE 5
washers,
dryers,
refrtg e rator s,
r a n ges
Skaggs
Ap
pl1ances, Upper R 1ver Rd ,
bes td e Stone Cr es t Motel
446 7398
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, cha.r, rocker , of
taman , 3 t ab les, SSOO Sofa,
chatr and loveseat , $275
Sofas and c ha trs prtced
from $285 t o $795 Tables.
SJ8 and up to S109 H1de a
beds,$340 , qu een stze, $380
Rec liner s, S175 to $195 ,
Lamps from $18 to $65 5
pc dtneMes from $79 , to
$385 7 pc , $189 and up
Wood table wt th 4 chatrs,
$2 19 up to $495 Desk SllO
Hutches, SJOO and S3 75 ,
maple or ptne f1n1 sn
Bed r oom su1te s
Ba sse tt
Che rry , $795
Bunk bed
co mpl e te w•th m a ttr esses,
S250 and up to $350 Cap
l a tn 's beds, $275 co mpl ete
Baby beds, $99 Mattresses
or box sp rtng s, full or twtn ,
S58, f"m , $68 and S78
Queen sets, $195
4 dr
chest s, $42 Bed frames,
$20 and $25 , 10 gun Gun
cab1 nets, $350 , dtne tt e
cha trs $10 a nd $1 5 Gas or
elec tr. c ranges, S195 Or
thoped tc super ftrm , $95 ,
baby matresses, S15 &amp; S35.
bed trames S20, S25, &amp; SJO
Used Furnt t ur e bookcase.
5 pc dtnett set, 3 L tvtng
room sut fe Ran ges and
TV's 3 mtl es out Bulavtll e
Rd Open 9am to 7pm, M on
thru F rt , 9am to Spm, Sa l
446 032 2
FL A I R FURNITURE &amp;
DESIGN,
Be m co mat
tr esses or Box sp nn gs. lull
ortwtn ,$58 U sed furnttur e
5 pc dtnett set, 7 pc dtnett
se t . studt o couch. l tv1ng
room
su•te,
com pl ete
bedroom sutte. bunk beds ,
gla ss front book case, Open
9
AM 6PM
M onday
Wednesday Fnday , 9AM
5PM
Tu esday Thursday
Sa turday or ca ll 675 1371
for spec tal appotntment

KIT ' N' CARLYLE'"

by Larry Wright

8ft
Ca mp er
with
everythtng, fits p1 ckup
truck , S600 304 675 4313 or
304 675 · 18•5
70 model
Chrysler S175

ROTOTILLER , like
$125 304 882·2239

1973 28 ft Royal K n1ght
camper , furnishedm new
carpet
Excellent cond
Ca ll 367 7844

new

Ra tt an Hangtng Swt ng &amp;
Stand Ltd e new 304 6756162

COLOR TV 's, 1 Sy l va nt a 20
mch, $125 One Magnavox
20 tn ch wtth stand $100 304
675 5007

Mtsc ._M_e~c~a~d·~ _

PlastiC Septtc Tank s Sta te
and county approv ed 1,000
gal tank , prt ce $340 Other
stzes tn stock, haul tn your
p1ckup tru ck Call 614 286
5930 Jackson. Oh RON
EVA NS ENTERPRISE S
1975 Case 450 , dozer
tractor , 1.800 hrs , ve r y
good cond, $ 14,900 Ca ll
446 4537
Ant•que
and
mtsc
house hold ttems Ca ll 446
0929
U sed de lu xe ztg zag por
tabl e sew tng m ac htne, ex
cond, S85 Ca ll 446 0418 af
ter 6PM
Ntght craw ler s, 90 cents
doz 500 ft ba ck of th e
Kanauga Ortve- 1non left

The Daily Senllnei - Page-

18

TROYBIL T ROTOTILLE
RS, all models Otscounts!
t mmed• a te
5hlpm enL
Trades cons tdered
Call
703 94 2 l 87l
or
write
Ht ckory Hill Nursery , Rt 1
Box 390 A, Fis hersville, VA
22939

- - - -- - -- -

ser\•lees

: \\~'"' I

~ ~ts

-• ,u;:

81
Home
_ _1!1!l&gt;rovem.~e'!!n_,
ts~-

DRA GO NWYND
CA T
TERY
KE NNEL AKC
Chow
pupptes ,
CFA
Htm al aya n, Per st an and
S1amese k tttens Ca ll 446
3844 after 4 p m

BR IARPAT CH KE NNEL S
Boardtng and groommg
AKC
Gord on
se ll e rs ,
English Cocker Span1els
Cai i 3RR 9790
POODLE G ROOMING
Ca ll Judy T ay lor at 367
7220
For sa le pony , mare n tce
for children, $100 Ca ll 256
6750
York sh.re Terner female ,
3 mos old 1st shots &amp; wor
med Ca ll 446 9417

POODLE
pups,
AKC
r egtstered No Checks, 304895 3958

63

71

L1vestock

Gravely nding tractor , 17
HP ,
2 c ylinder wtth
hydraultc
11ft, 50
1nch
mower and dozer blade
1981 model, new, U100 1982
list pnce 1S S5750 Outdoor
Equtpment S~ les , J et Rts
7 &amp; 35, GallipoliS Ph «6
3670 Wee kday s 9 to 5, Sat 9
to 1

6l -=-= =-livestock

_

=

Regtitered and grayed hor
ses, excellent 4-H project
English and western sad
dies everything
imagtnable tn horse equ1p
m ent and supplies, also
rtdmg lessons and trail
ndes and horse tra1n10g
Hoof Hollow 614-698·3290
Young brown lay1ng hens
forsa te 992 7713

64-

=-= ttay&amp;Grain - -

Frutt
&amp; _v~~~'?.f!s --­

For Sa le tom a to plants, all
l ead tn g var tetys, so m e
new ,
a l so
ca bbage,
ca ultfl owe r ,
broccoli.
mango p eppers, swee t
potatoes, la ter whe n seaso n
1S favorabl e
Spence r 's
G ree n Va ll ey 3 mt N of
Chester on W Shade Rd
Call befor e comtng 985
3838 Full count guaren
teed
No sund ay ca lls
D E Spence r
-

59

-

Seed

F or Sale 16ft ftber glass
Stl ve rl tne
85 Evenrude
Skt eq ut pme nt 992 6040
For Sa te 15 sheets 4x8
Celotex , Redwood 6 tn
s1d1ng E Idon Walburn , 3rd
St . Mtdd leport 997 7805
15 tt
Motor boa t w1th
trail er , 1 farm tractor ,
S800 eac h phone 458 1780

BULK
BLENDED
Agrtcu I tura I
ferttltzer
deltvered &amp; spread or
dell' ",.red &amp; dumped or
ptcked up at plant Bien
dtng serv1ce hours 8 to 4,
Monday thru Fnday, other
hours r equest on spreader
buggy r entals A complete
Independent bus1nes Farm
Equtpment senvce, Cltf
ford W
Snyder owner,
Jackson, OH , 286·4983

Dat sun , 280Z 1977, E x
ce llent Condttton Ca ll 304
675 1183
Volkswagen Beetl e 1969
S450 engme needs work
Phone 304 675 3182
76 FORD Tonno, contact
Mary Jordan, 304 743 3337
72 FORD tonno, 6 cy l
automat1c , S300. 304 675·

,.55

74

Nova
304 675 5506

Llvestaeu

_

1 set of John Deer e 4 bot
tom 16' sem t m ount plows ,
1 Htllsboro tr• axle goose
neck 28' tr a tl er Call 614 256 6534

HAY BALER , square type
Call
256 6038
after
11 lOAM
New Ford 2 row corn plan ter, never been used Call
379 2468

TRACTOR, John Deere
1010 ga s &amp; brush hog. Call
304 675 1121 After 5 00, 304·
675 1043

E xce lSIOr Otl Co, 636 E
M am St , Pomeroy , Oh to
992 2205

Heavy duty tra c tor d1sc
S600 Phone JOH75·A373

30tn
gas range $75 ,
MaytaQ ..automattc washer
S85 742 2352

Farmatt
Cub
with
culttvators anfJ_ turn plows
1n excellent condtt1on.
Phone 304·576· 2147

!,1 .._•, '

:~..,~NT

IN I , '

rc Br

rR E .;.tC'E:t...t ! E

1970 Datsun S100

304 675

1

4

4

71

Autos lor Safe

74 Cougar XR7, exc cond ,
v ery sharp, $1.500 72 Mon·
t ego, good r~nning motor,
S300 Call A46 9380.
75 TR6 Convertible A 1 con·
d1l&gt;0n, 6 cy l , 27 MPG, 2
con tops, S3,375 Catt 245·
9118
79 Cadatt1c D' Etegance, A
1 c ond ttton, fully loaded .
r eg gas, 22 MPG, 68,000
road mtl es, $7,475 Call 2.45
9118
1967 M ercedes 200 D, ex
cond , rebuilt engtne,
S4,200 Catt «6·0026
1977 Chevro let Nova Con
c ours low mileage, PS, PB,
a", AM FM, garage kept,
extra n 1ce . Ca tt «6 4053

1981 Chevy C1lation. Ex
ce llent cond , low mileage
Wtll cons1der .4 wheel dnve
on trade 992·5170

1978 Ford L TO
245 5682

Call 61•

1981 BUICk Park Ave
Dtese l Demo Save hun
dreds of dollars on this
veh tc le
Smith Ne l son
Motors of 500 E . Ma' n,
Pomeroy . 992· 2174.
1978 Corvette Stiver
ntvesary Ed1t1on all
t tons, low mt leage,
cond Gall 361·1671 or

An
op·
exc .
367·

7560
1979 Monte C~rlo t -top,
loaded with extras, 23,000
mile. Catt «6·7393.

1974 Monte Carlo auto, PS,
PB, till, bucket seats, con·
sole, AM FM cass, new
ball &amp; all, good tires, good
cond .. S1.150. Call 379·2729.

1976 Monte Carlo white,
AT, AC, tilt wheel, cfulse
1-----------..,ji.--.-_
-.;-.;·,;;-;.;;;;;-,;.;;;;;;;;;.;;;~ control, power door locks,
new tires, 55,800 mi les. exc,
cones.. AM·FM radio
tape Phone «6·A112 days,
«6·41155 nights.

8

70 Datsun S425 JO• 675 2295
or 30•·675 1304

1981 Datsun w1th topper ,
ca ll 304-675 1751

CA PTAIN STEEMER Car
pet Cleanmg fea tured by
Haffelt Brosther s Custom
Carpets Free est1mates
Call «6 2101

ON

ll EVEil5E()!

1977 Honda Gold Wmg 1000,
full dress, low m1leage
Call «6·0648 after SPM

1980 650 Honda custom,
4,700 actual miles, exc
cond Must sell $1,795 Call
446 0972

1977 Honda X L350 , gOO&lt;!
cond , $5,500 Call A46 2089
1981
Yamaha
YZ80
Ex ce llent cond S375 949
2703 or 949 2()43
1979 RM 400 SuZUki d"l
bik~ , new parts, 304·773
5170
1976 Kawasaki 750, 304 675
2183
1978 HONDA XL 350, 304
675 6S44
1981 KAWASAKI KDX 175,
927 actual m •tes, 304 882
2428
1976 Kawask1 KZ 900, ltd
p1pes, putt back handle
bars, k 1ng queen seats ,
very good cond 9500 mtles
1975 SUZUki G T 550, v ery
good
cond
Windshield ,
Stssy bar , luggage rack ,
new t•res, new tun e up
10.500 miles 304·675 5693
75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1978 16 II Chrysler Sk1 boat
and 85 H P outboard motor
with all accessortes Ca ll
A-46·8127 or «6·8286
1979 Caravelle boat, 18' I 0,
4 cyl. Chev engine, 140 hor
se Mercruiser outdnver
easy on gas, perfect con dition, many extras Call
«6·0A98
16 •;, loot deep V, runabout
with 30 H . P. Mercury
Motor and trat l er, make of fer Phone 304·675·4631

1~ ~ ===A~t~'P~fs -=
__ ~ ~~~essories

__

USED tires, Remington
XT ·12ll 60x14, good con·
dition, best offer, 30A·882
2529.

7!_ __ Auto Re.f!!'_l!"_ _

a.

Ouattty Autobodv
Paint
work. Professional custom
pafnt work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center. «6· 1968.
78

Camping
Equipment

8 fl. ' Camper for pickup,
$350. Call 2~.H316.
1975 Ford mini home, low
mileage, good condition,
loaded. $9,500. Can be seen
at 167 Layne St. , New
Haven, WV, ~·882 · 2636 .
23 Ft. Dodge Motor Home.
Phone ~·675· H8f or 675·
3226.
'
.

20·

1978 Tarus camper,
fl.
ttke new, $4300, • 304·882·
2678.
.
'
197110 FT. Sycamore truek ·
camper, gas stove, hot· .
water ~eater, i 2 • way
relrfgerato~;. • 111ower '
commode. excellellt ' con·
clition, $1,0001 Pttone 304·
773·5187,

a.

.,

mALL rns AU

&lt;Vu.

BLOOD PRESSURE, I&lt;\ORT.
SET YERSELF DOI'IN BY
TH' FIRE ~N' T~KE A
BREATHER .

BY 6QLY, THAT'G RIGrlT'
Y' KNO~ ·· IF WE FELT
LIKE CXX H' IT IIQIIIN
ONCE IT GOT WARM
WHO's T' 5TOP U~"

MM .• IT \; A PROOLEM
U5 RELICS HAVE
LAND"! YOU'RE T' FACE .. LIKE.I'IHAT
GDOO'G YER MONEY
GOING TO OlE
GOIH' T' DO YOU?
SOON!
.. REMEMBER
GOIN'
Gt'I IMMIN'
HERE"
BUT NKY HOLO

- HISTORIC
INDEED! YOO
CHEIITEO WILDA!
I'LL GET Ttl\T
DECISIOM

""==-::: '

French
CtlY
Pa1nt1ng
restdenttal &amp; commerctal,
1ntenor, ex terior, paper
hangtng ,
&amp;
textured
cellmgs Call 367 718A or
367 7160
Creattve wood decks,
pressurtzed ptne, cedar &amp;
redwood Free es timate
Call 388 9762

OF' THIS ~ l ON E LANDS
ur WF 'Ll GO r[I\( T N'\1

Spec1a1 March and Apnl
on l y Gene's Deep Steam
Cleanmg
Scotch Gaurd
Free es t •mate 992 6309

r 'C., to..INN~

II

WHl\1 \.VOU LDA
HAN"ENED IF fH '
DULl 5 1()£ I f\ND

TELL YOU WH"l

IF TH S HIN E'r SIDF

I II

II II,

11~ 11

Y'C AN '-. 1 1- It 'h:. -.,(It Jh:
Yll-.:: 1\ll,IINI' , ,• .o

l)lo.../\.1

r.ru

1

I '

~'vii

RON ' S Te lev1 st on Servtce
Spect atumg m z en1th and
Motorola , Quazar , and
house calls Phone 576 2398
or 446 2454

F &amp; K Tr ee Trtmmtng ,
stump removal 675 1331

7~ --~ Mot~r~y~ l~s__ _

a.

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West VIrginia. Over
20 tess expensive cars tn
stock

Mar c um
R ooft ng
&amp;
Spoutmg
30 years ex
per1ence, spectalmng tn
built up roof Call 388 9857

Hat c hb ack

1971 Honda 80 . Ca ll 446
1950

20 fl boat trailer. 1975
Dodge Charger, PS, PB,
AC, excellent condttlon-388
9755 or A46 16~2 ext 332

Farm SQppHes

~a~m e~p ~en t

1980 Datsun , 2 dr , auto •
17,000 mil es, exce ll ent
cond , $4,500 Call 446 7322

1975 Honda S50 , good shape
Call 256 1571

A lot of dtff ere nt parts for
350 or 400 engmes A lso par
ts for 74 Impala tntenor
perf ect 742 3063

&amp;

Autos for Sale

1J. _ _ J~ck's for S~!e _

a. Ferlllizer

.

F or Sa le Hard bnck, steel
posts(4) 6 m , stee l 'I'
Jotsts, lumber u sed, used
doors ex ten or 1ntenor, t n
m , 1 ma ntels oak, 3 pr
slldtng oak doors w 1th
gu tde wa ll s, sol td oak an
ttque sta 1rs, sp1ndl e and
r alls 9926254 after 5 or
week ends

61

U

For Sale or Trade

For sa le or trade f or ptck
up, horse or ca lll e, a 1972
GMC 2 t, 1969 2 T Ford Call
367 7533

c-

r• _ r

j.l, \ '- " '

• 1\..\"&lt;l

1\ 1~1

PAINTING
1ntenor and
ex tertor .
plumbing ,
rooftng , some remodeling
20 yrs exp Cal l 388·9652

Round bales of hay for ~ale
Call446·4036 or «6·6566
58

~

STUCC0 PLA STERING
te x tured
ce tltng s com
mer eta! and residential,
free estimate s Call 256
1182

for Sa_t_
e_ _

HILLCREST KE NNE L
Boardtn g a ll breeds, cl ean
tndoor outdtror fac1ilt1eS
Also AKC Reg
Dober
mans Ca ll 4.46 7795

'J

''

h:l \ .._ l'o ('RL"

Butldtng matenals bl ock,
bn ck, sewer ptpes, wm
dows, I mt els, etc Claude
Wtnters, Rto G r ande, 0
Cal l 245 512 1

St.

11

WI-&lt;AT15 THE MATTER
YOU PEOPL.E? DON'T
WANT A NY WEDDING C/1\KE' ? I

SJ ~ _ [u~ ld.rlgSUpf, lleS-~

CB ,TV , Rad•o
E~~men !_

54

M1 sc Merchandtce

Hou sehold Good s

SWA IN
A UCT ION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Oh ve 51,
Ga llipoli s New sofa beds
S250. used sof a beds SIOO,
r ec l tner s $80, bunk beds
$100. bunkt e mattresses
$40, maple rockers $49,
maple dtnett sets from $125
to ST7 5, bedroom su1 tes
$150. 3 pc
ltvmg room
suttes $199, 2 pc lt v tng
room su ttes $140, lov e sea ts
$70, ow l lam ps $25, nnger
wash e r s
S75,
dryers ,
seve r a I
r e frtg e rators ,
uttldy
cab tn e t s,
mechant c's tool s,
beds,
silver stone, TV ,s, wood
burners , st er o's and lots
more O pen lOam to 5pm,
446 3159

52

54

Friday, April 30, 1982

•

Ohio

RINGLES 'S SERVICE ex
penenced mason , roofer ,
carpenter ,
el ec trtctan ,
g e nera l
r e patr s
and
remodel tng Phone 304 675
2088 or 675 4560

Proper fol~s don' qo
caliln' with a fool
slunq over

arm'

If that l1 nt.bra1n's

Don' mind\
Joel~ Brtnq
Kittt,l an'
come in'

stay tn'

the

out here

Juq

ain't'
proper
folks
qo

W~ter

wells. Commerctal
and Domesttc T est holes
Pumps Sates and Serv1ce
304·895· 3802 '

call1n'

ADVANCED
Seamless
Gutter Doors
Offer1ng
contmuous
guttering,
seamless Siding, roofing,
garage
doors,
free
estimates, 614-698·82()5

a Juq?

WAIT TILL E!IU HfARS
ABOUT HOWl ST00/7
UP TO OMAR JABAR

STARK'S tree and lawn
servtce, free f er ttllzer w1th
annua l care,
tnsured
Phone 304·576·2010

E!ILL , YOU S HOUL/7
HAVE SEEN ME
TODAY I 1 fiRE/7
ZAFER .. MET
..JABAR FOR WNCH,
AN/7 SETTLE[:) MY
DEBT WITH HIM

HE'lL BE SO !'ROUP
O F ME 1

BUILDING &amp; remobetmg,
carpentry, roofmg, plum
b1ng, concrete work 304
675 ?«O
PAINTING 1nter•or &amp; ex tenor , dry wati 1 , . c: tured
ce llmgs, 304-675 1, 73

82

Plumbing

With

&lt;

;,

I THINK 1 VE SffN
THE tA5T OF HIM 1
WHfN I M f NTIONW

HE LE1 YOU

O FF THE HOOK
... JUST LII&lt;E

'THAT&lt;'

cu ~= c;s

HE

l (ALLE/7 ORl/ILI E
T0/7AY 1 HE WANT S TO
SEE ME TOMORROW AT
THREE
AT THE FA MI LY

RfALIZE/7 nE
WAS WAY OVE,q

HIS HEAP/

YOU WfR= O NE OF

THE WRIGHTS OF
WRIGHT ENTER·

ESTATE'

Pf&lt;'/SES

INTCR/YATIONAL

':

-

- - - ~ ~ !!~!if!9__ ~­
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pme
Phone 446·3888 or A46 4477

83

FRIDAY

Excavating

4/30/82

Gallipolis D•verstf led Con
st Co Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work
Spectal
farm rates Call us for free
est1mates. 446·4440

EVENING
6 00

Lawrence Sidenstrtcker
Backhoe Serv1ce Catt 675·
5580

6 30
84
Efeclricaf
___ ~ '!_efrlg_!~ati~'!_-

2

Electrietan
lt c ensed
master ,
lowest
rates
around Phone 304·895·3826.

=

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE Ca l l 367 7471 or
367-0591
Need something hau led
away or somethtng moved?
W•'l l do it Call «6·3159 or
614 286 5740 after 6
Ltmestone hauled tractor
and tra, fer·25 to 35 ton
lim1!. 992·5275 or 742 2153

JtMS Water Service Call
Jim Lan:er, 304 675·7397.
If you need your trash
hauled away, catt Harper
30A·675·5868 between 1 PM
and 5 P. M . Lawn mower
repaired.

., --

- ---

m

~ecial

(!) MOVIE· 'Terror Tratn'
Cl)
11%1 Benson !Closed
Capttonedl
0 CIJ ftQ Dukes of
Hazzird Oa1sy wants to
become Mrs Hogg (R) (60

e

----- --

Witt do general hauling,
gravel, limestone, sand
and fill dirt. 304·882·2867.

m•ol

CIJ Woman

~-: ~~~.-H-:-~~~t~~
Mobile home repair, Vee .
Escort Servfce. Catt 245·
9514.

IJ~~~jph,;hf.'~: ~-~
TRt STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave,, Gattlpohs.
«6·7833 or «6·1833.

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

_..;_

MOWREYS Uphol stery Rl.
1 Box
Pt. Plea511nt, 304·
675-4154.

m.

News
(}.) Andy Gnffith
(I) ABC News
(I) 3 2 · 1 . Contact
11, Over Easy
0 m (J) NBC News
(~ ) $50,000 Pv••m•d
(4J Andrews Ratders Part

({) Gomer Pyle
[[) Muppet Show
0 ())/1~ C8S News
(I) Or Who
'11, ltltas. Yoga and You
lit I t~ ABC News
100 0 ill P M Magazme
ill Butt's Eye
(}) Wmners
([) Entertainment Tomght
r1J Happy Days
0 (() Ttc Tac Dough
([) f11l MacNeil Lehrer
Report
rtQ) News
G&gt; f1al Muppet Show
i 30 0 (2) You Asked For It
(]) Another Ltfe
(!) Sneak Prev1ew Host
Leonard Harrts tak es a look
at
upc&amp;'m•ng
movtes
spon s and spectals
ClJ Major ~ league Base
bafl
Chtcago Cubs at
Atlanta
Cll 0 Cll Family Feud
(1) Laverne and Shtrley
CtJ Bustness Report
f10l Rtchard S1mmons
1111 Issues. Ohio
G)
f1tl
Entortamment
Tomght
8 .00 0 Cil
Jokebook
(l) Netionat Geographic

SEWt NG Machine repatrs,
service Authonzed Stnger
Sa les &amp; Service Sharpen
Sc 1ssors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2284

8,5 _ ~ ~~!r~}l~u}i~g~

o m m o m 1101 m r1~

..

Cottod Golda
f1U Washington Weel&lt;/
Review Paul Duke hosts
as top Washington journal·
tsts analyze the week 's
news
8 :30 D Cil (!) Chlc:ogo Story
Dr. · Berguom 's career 11
threatened vthen a pauerit
dtes and WaJOrtkt wants
to leave the force aher hts
• replacement is killed (90
mtnl
C1J g (jJ Maggie
~U Wilt Street Weelc
Louis ~ fWkeyser ~ analyzes
the ' 801 wtth a weekly revtew of econom.c and tn·
v8stmtf'lt matters. ,
9:00 CIJ '700 Club
, \' CIJ
~il MOVIE: 'The

e

One and Only '
0 (j) (tQl Dallas J A has a
showdown at San Angelo
tn an attempT to regatn h•s
son lA) (60 mtn )
(t tl Sweet Adehnes Tany
Ten ntUe ho s t s th e ftnal
competttton a t the annu al
gathenng ol women s bar
ber shop quartet s
10 00 1J ffi ffi McCiatn 's Law
McC iatn and Gates arc as
s•gned to proTect a deputy
mayor after she s thr ca
tened by terronsts (60
m1n)
(]) MOVIE ' The M o un
tam Men'

1 30

(10l MOVIE

Wash•ngton

Palace '
0 (1) Ne ws
ClJ Bachelor Father
2 30 (}) ltfe of R1ley
[i)
MOVIE
Cybo.g
2087'
3 00 (}) Burns &amp; Allen
lV MOVIE 'WIIhe and
Phil '
3 30 (I) Jack Benny Show
400 (J) I Marrted Joan
415 lS) MISSIOn ImpoSSible
4 30 (31 My Ltnle Marg1e

SATURDAY.

Week/

5/1/82

Rev1ew Paul Duk e hosts
as top Wash•ngt on JOurnal
ts ts analyze the week s
news

EVENING

6 00 (]) Traveler's World

(tV News

10 30 Cil S1ng out Amenca
CD TBS Evemng New s
CJ)

Wall

Street

Week

Lou1s Auk eyser analyze s
lhe 80 s with a weekly re
vtew of economtc and tn
vestment matt ers
(tV Masterptece Theatre
love In a Cold Cltmate
L1nda leaves her hu sband
and daughT er to move tn
wtth her new love, a member of the Commumst
party (60 mtn 1 !Closed
Capt1onedl

11 oo

o rn CIJ m o m 11Q1 m

(d News
Cil Nashvitfe RFD

Johnny ts lOt ned by T1m
Conway , Sammy Davts Jr
and Julia Chtld (AI (60

700

I ·

()) Another Ute
CD All In the Family
CIJ Benny Hut Show
0 CIJ NBA Baaketbalt
Playoffs: Teams to be

Announced
(I) Dick Cavett Ac1ress
Eve Arden 1s the guest
(tll MOVIE: 'The Invasion
of the ·Bee Girts'
g fl2l Nlghttlne
11:45 (!)MOVIE: 'Coddyohack'
12:00 Cil Bumo • Affen
(I) MOVIE: 'Awwr All
'&amp;oat•'
Nlghttine
(I) PBS Lite Night
g &lt;It Frideyo Host Andy
Kaufman 11 JOined by must·
cal guest!$ lhe Pretenders
IRII90 m1n I
12:30
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CAN TO, NOT TO GET WHAT WF I 'AN f 'HOM I.IFE t SIH
, WILLIAM OSLEH

�Friday, April 30,1982

Earthen holding pond very helpful
and milkhouse waste, has an earAnyone who has livestock knows
then fill with a concrete ramp at one
that animal waste is a problem that
end used for emptying. Construction
must be handled.
was completed last September and
Tom Hamm, Sutton township
Hamm started filling the holding
dairyman, decided last year that
pond at that time.
hauling manure every day was not
Hamm feels that this holding pond
for his fanning operation. He
has really helped in the
realized he needed storage for
management of his farming
animal waste so he could haul
operation. In April, he started to emply the holding pond. He has been
z:,
•Up r~mln
lS
spreading the liquids on pasture and
The village will pick up next week hayland, and the more solid
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
today reminded residents that next on the following schedule: first material willgoonhiscomground.
The advantages of a system like
week, May 3-7, is Clean-Up Week in ward, Monday; second ward,
the village. Residents are urged to Tu~y; third ward, Wednesday. Hamm's are less water pollution,
time and labor management, and
take advantage of this once a year and fourth ward, Thursday.
After clean-up week, it will be being able to stay out of fields during
free pickup service by cleaning up
necessary for lhe village to charge . wet times of the year.
their property and putting the debris
near the curb in front of their homes. $10 per truck load for any hauling
·For further information and
done for residents to cover Iran- assistance, contact the SCS office in
Meels Monday
sportation and landfill costs.
Pomeroy.
Racine Village Council will meet r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - at 7 p.m. Monday at village hall. A
meeting of the Racine Board of
Public Mfairs at 6:30 p.m. will
precede the council meeting.
manure when time best suited him.
With the assistance of the U.S. Soil
Conservation Service, the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District,
and the Agricultural Stabilization
Conservation service, Hamm
decided to build an earthen holding
pond.
The pond, designed to hold animal

Villao:e clean

management system has worked for us." SCS photo by
Robert L. First.

Racine clean-up set
Cleall-up day in Racine Village
has been set for the first and second
Wednesdays of May, May Sand May
12. Mayor Qlarles Pyles and council
members urge residents to clean up
their property and place items for
pickup at the curb . .

Trash pick-up set

Area deaths
Eunice Reed Loehr

Mabel Clara Pickens

Mrs. Eunice Reed Loehr, daugh·
ter of the late Lillian Thompson
Reed and Wllllam F. Reed, founder
of The Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., Pomeroy, died Thursday even·
ing in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
She was preceded in death by her
first husband, Dr. Wllllam L. Hobart, who practiced medicine In
Lakewood, Ohio, lor many years,
and two brothers, Theodore T.
Reed. Sr., a nd D. Curtis Reed.
Surviving are her husba nd,
George R. Loehr, Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.; a brother, Frederick Reed of
Okemos, Mich., and the following
nieces and nephews: Mrs. Lillian
R. Daniels, Vero Beach, Fla.; Robert E. Reed, Arlington, Texas;
Wllllam C. Reed, Saratoga, Calif.;
Agnes R. Schellhase, Canton; Ted
Reed. Jr., Pomeroy; Ann Hoene,
Rockford. m.
Services will be conduc ted at ll
a. m . Monday, May 3, a t the Saxton
Funeral Home, Lakewood, with In·
terment at Sunset Memoria l Park.
Cleveland

Mrs. Mabel Clara Pickens, 72,
Shade, mother of Eber Pickens,
Mayor of Syracuse, died Thursday
night at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Pickens was a daughter of
the late Homer a nd Amanda Sayre
Donahue. She was also preceded In
Emergency runs
death by seven brothers a nd three
sisters.
The R utl and E mergency Unit
Surviving are her husband, Sa·
muel Pickens, confined to the answered
M 1g E two calls Thursday, the
Pomeroy Health Care Center·, slx
e s mergency Medical Service
sons, Elmer, Letart Falls; Em· reports · A18: 15 p.m., the unit took
mett, Wesley and Donald, all of Clarence Klghn from Meigs Mine 1
Toledo; Shelby of Racine. a nd Eber t0 the Ho lzer Medlcal Center and at
of Syracuse; a daughter, Cla ra 9:01 p.m ., the unit took Robbie
Smith, Columbus; 32 grandchild· • Eads from his home on Main St. to
ren; 19 great·grandchildren; three Holzer Medical Center.

sisters, Mrs. Mamie Warner, AI·
ilance; Mrs. Daisy Pauley, Dear·
field; Mrs. Teresa Boulware,
Newburg, Mo .. a nd several nieces
and nephews.
Services will be held at 3:30p. m .
Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. James Kittle
officiating. Burial will be in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime
after 1 p.m. Saturday.

Judge ends
35 cases

Nineteen defendants were fined
and 16 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Eric Saunders, Gallipolis, Ar·
noid Tomblin, South Point, and [)e.
bra Estep, Pomeroy, $20 and costs
each, speed; William Kldd, Jr ..
Pedro, Ohfo, SlO and costs, im·
proper passing, $10 and costs no
valid trailer plates; Wllbur Wa rd,
Middleport, $5 and costs, no
muffler; David Greer, Pt. Plea·
sant, and Lawrence Hysell, Ru·
Uand, $10 and costs each, stop sign
vloiatlon; Larry Harman, Shade,
$100 and costs, left of center; John
T. Eaton, Wheelersburg, $30 and
costs. speed; Wendy A. Elkins,
Tuppers Plains, and James Birch·
Deld, RuUand, $10 and costs each,
failure to yield; Harold McGrath,
Long Bottom, $10 and costs, falled
In display valld license plates;
Reina B. Lind, Pomeroy, $22 and
costs, speed; John A. Casto, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, $175and costs, overload;
Eddie Fife, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, improper parking; Wllllam
Maynard, Syracuse, $63 and costs,
overload; Randal Kennedy. Ru·
Uand, $24 and costs, speed; Frank
Wells, Long Bottom, $30 and costs,
passing over double yellow line;
Terry Walker, Rutland, $10 and
costs, unsafe vehicle.
Forfeiting bonds were Victor E .
Cook, Pomeroy, $45.50, no valid
plates on traller; Wllllarn E. Ham·
moods, Beckley, W. Va., and Rl·
chie E. Biumenauer, Columbus,
$370.50 each, DWI; Sue A. Regan.
Athens, $70.50, speed; ; Lynn M.
Congas, Columbus, Gary E . Ad·
kins, Gallipolis, and Robert New·
ton, Jr. Centerburg, $50.50 each,
speed; Marlin D. Hughes, Galllpo.
lis, and Jack D. Owens, Waverly
$40.50 each speed; Virgil T. Hupp,
Mason, $00.50, speed; Jack L. Provence, Long Bottom, $35.50, lm·
proper backing; Diana L. Tillis,
Rutland, $45.50, fictitious llcense
plates; David J . Priddy, Rt. I, Ru·
Uand, $45.50, failure to stop for
fiashlng red light; Dan E. Morris,
Pomeroy, $45.50, failure to obey
traffic control device; Lewis E.
Humphrey, Jr., Rt. 4. Pomeroy and
.Harold L. McGrath, Long Bottom,
$45.50 each, no cycle endorsement.

Trash pick up in the vtllage of
Pomeroy will be held May 3,
through May 7, Mayor Clarence
Andrews announced today.
Schedule for pick up is as follows:
Monday, first ward; Tuesday, second ward; Wednesday, third ward
and Thursday fourth ward.
All trash must be placed at the
curb for pick up the Mayor advised.

Myers, ReedsVille; Cledlth King,
Pomeroy;
' . J)eXter.

Michael Stanley.!

l)lscharaed-Giadyl Croy, WU·
Jlalll ~· Gamet Brewer.

B

c

in 4 weeks (non credit)
Classes begin May 8)

Today~s

••

Reg . No. 75-02-0472B

attended Churchill Downs Saturday to view the running of the
108th Kentucky Derby. This year's "Run for the !Wses" was the
richest ever, worth $527,600,
willa $422,6110 awarded the
winner . See the results of the I y..
rnlle derby run on C-1.

Statement of Resources and UabUitles
Thousands of Dollars
Cash and due from depository institutions .. ....... . ... .... .. .... ... ...... $1 1,768,000.00
U. S. Treasury securities . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .. ...... " ... . ..... 2,938,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Government
ac~ncies and corporations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . .... .. ......... 1,759,000.00
Obiigat. '~of States and political subdivisions
in the Jnited States .... . . .. ... ... . .. . ........ . .............. ... ...... 3,471,000:00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures . . .... . ........ . ............ . .... . ......... 2.000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ........... . . ..... ..... ..... . ....... 58,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreement to resell ................... . .......... . ... . . ·.. ... ... .. 570,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) .... ,. ....... 20,009,000.00
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses . . ....... . ....... .. 278,000.00
Loans, Net. ........................................................ 19 731 000.00
Lease f mancmg
. receava
. bi es ...............................................
.
'
•584,000.00
'
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises .... .. ... . ........ . . .. .. .... . .. .. 611,000.00
Other assets .... . .. . ...... . ...... . .............. . . . .. .......... . . ........ 647,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ........................... . . . ................. . .. . ... $42,139 1000.00

HARMONY SINGERS
~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~;;~~~~~~

A crowd of more than 120,000

National Bank Region Number 4

Charter Number 1980

l----1-

Reglster of Historic piaThe stone water towers

Iad,lace,nt to the Glilllpolls Devel1O!IIDimtal Center have been res-

--_,
c

and the site has recently
completed as a mini-park .
which will be dedlcated May 30,
wrapping up National PreservaUon Month. See today's 'Along
the River' feature on B-1.

Amounts outstanding as of report date :
Standby letters of credit, total ............................. .. .... .. ..... 244,000.00
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
It t100,000 or more .. ......... . . . .. ..... . . ... ........ . . ............... I,818,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending
with report date:
Cash and due from depository institutions ..... . .... ... . . . .. . .. . ... .. .. !0,853,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell . . ...... .... ........... . ..... ... : .... . ..... 1,057,000.00
Total loaM .. ... ........ ...... .. . . ...... .... . .. .. ..... . . . .. . .. . , . ...... 20,644,000.00
Time certificates of deposits in denominatioll8
of$100,000ormore ........................... . ..... . . .... .. . . .. .... .. 1,806,000.00
Total deposita ......................................................... 35,936,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase . ..... ........ . , .. , ................ . 993,000,00
Total asseta ..•.••..•.......................................... : .. ; ... $4!',555,000.00

•--L

POMEROY

DIRECTORS
I .

EDISONHOBSTETTER .
liO~J;E~
...'·
·' ,,,
'

likely sent tn to

str~ fe Arg~nt mt•

entintl
Sunday, May 2, 198 2

9 Se ct.on s. 76 Pag es
A

Mult•m e d•~

In c N ew spap er

around -the-clock Inmate supervi-

sion. That mandate. for the Gallia
facility , requires the employ ment
of five full-time jailers to work 21
scheduled shifts."
Sheriff Montgomery said his total de pa rtment force - including
deputi es , In vestigator s . dis ·
patchers and secretaries - cur·
rently stands at 18. He added that
due to compensation and ciassiflca·
tlon procedures he could not "down·
grade" a df.:oll ty to the post Uon of
jailer.
~
"And, even If I could order them
down there," the s heriff added, " I
wouldn't have any deputles to serve
the public."
Montgomery said that pulllng the
number of deputies req uired from
scheduled duty and transferring
them to the jail as inmate supervi·
sors would bring hls personnel ros·
ter, ·' ... down to five deputies for 21
shifts."

Judge Roderick responded by repea ting an earlier commitment to
reopen the ja il.
" I undersU!nd your problem and
am not un sy mpathe tlc ... t ut ,
you've had a long time to work on
this," Judge Roderick said , "so,
come Monday, If the jail Is nol open
a nd fully staffed ...and I'll go down
I here and check ... l'll do what 1 said
I would do."
In Marc h, reacting to reports

that the s heriff would not reopen
the jail without add itional financial
s upport from the county commis·
s tan, Judge Roderick told Montgomery that , without assurances the
facility could be reopened, he would
move to take the financial opera.
tion of tire jail out of the ha nds of the
s heriff's department by a ppointing
a recelvH to administer It on behalf
of the court.
"Our first problem Is getting the
jail open,' ' the common pleas judge
added, " It 's your duty to justlfy to
the commissioners that you need ·
more money."
She riff Montgomery said that by
Monday the ja il would be open and
.staffed.
"I will hire jailers to staff the
jail," Montgomery sald, "lf It
(Continued on A-4 1

JAB.. INSPECI'ION- Chief Jailer George Pendleton and State Jail
Inspector Jill Kirk compare notes during Friday's inspection of the
Gallla County inmate-housing !aclllty. Final approval for reopening the
facility was granted, pending employment of a sufficient number of
fuU-tlme jailers to supervise inmate activity. Sheriff James M. Montgomery says that staff will be In place by Monday, but warns that the
strain on his budget wiD probably lead to layoffs within the department
before the end of the year.

they Invariably do, corridors outside are jammed
with lobbyists working for a variety of groups.
Manufacturers, retailers, auto dealers, utilities,
other businesses, teachers, labor unions - all ha ve
employees standing by ready to buttonhole a representatlve or senator to put across their group's point
of view.
Ostensibly, of course, each legislator speaks for the
broad range of taxpayers in a district. The parameters of the actlon they can take are defined In part by
their recognition of what they can support and still
successfull y stand for re-election.
Rep. Waldo Bennett Rose, the House assistant mi·
norlty leader, said an effective taxpayers' lobby Is
generated through legislators' daily contacts with
their constituents.

Contractors fight minority law
COLUMBUS. Ohio (API- The Ohio Contractors Associa tion a nd
two construction companies have filed suit in U.S. Distric t Court.

seeking to strike down a n Ohio law that sets aside some sla te con·
tracts for minori ty businesses.
The association, which represents about fro contra ctors . alleges
the law discriminates against white contractors. The two compa nies
involved In the suit are Whl taker·Merrell Co. of Columbus and Bates
and Rogers Construction Corp. of Chicago, with offices in Columbus .
The plaintiffs seek a judgment declaring the state law unconstltu·
tlona i as well as prel iminary a nd permanent injunctions barri ng the
state from enforcing the law .

OSU faculty opposes proposal

AG candidate Saxbe stresses
leadership during area visit

Common stock :
No. shares authorized
16,000
No. shares outstanding
16,000 (par value) ............................. 400,000.00
Surplus ..................... . . . ............ . . . ..... . . . . ................ I 520 000.00
Undivided profits ....................................... .. . . ...... . ..... 1:659:000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ... .... .... ........... ... .... . .... .. ..... .... f3,579,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .. . ... .. . .. ... .. . . . ....... . $42 11391000.00

I, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, It the above-named bank do hereby declare that this
Report of Condition is true and correct to the best It my knowledge and belief.
Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier
AP r i I
17,
1982
We, the undel'lligned directors attest the COITedness bf this statement 'It resources and
llabllltles. We declare that It has been eumtned by us, and to the best It our lu)owledge
· and belief is true and correct.
·
PAULA. BARNET!'

"Everything Is looking good but
the s taffing situa tion." Kirk said
during a meeting In Common Pleas
Judge Richard C. Roderick 's cour·
troom, "There has to be more than
a dispatc her on duty ...
She repeated the state's mandate
that such a facility be staffed with
sufficient personnel to maintain

By JOHN W. CHALF'i\NT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Seriously, now, who
speaks for the taxpayer in the Ohio General
Assembly?
It seems a n appropriate question as the legislature,
for the second time in less than slx months, considers
a statewide tax increase.
The House is expected to vote Wednesday on its
version of a Senate·passed bill ra ising the personal
income tax by 25 percent in 1982 and 12.5 percent in
1983.
'
That tax hike and others
affecting corporations
would be combined with spending cuts to offset a
projected budget deficit.
When lawmakers move behind closed doors to
hammer out final detalis of tax hike measures, as

The Oty of Glilllpolls has
structures listed in the Na-

3 327 000 00
...... .. . .. . . . . . . . . .. .. .. ......... ' ' '

partnerships, and corpOrations . ................ .. . ............... .... 30,464,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ........... . ..... . .... ..... ............. 4,000.00
Ill
Deposits of States and political subdivisaons
Ill
in the United States ............. . . .. ... . .. . .. .... . .. .. .. ........... .. 1,984,000.00
j:
Certified and officers' checks ... ... . . ........ ... ... . .. . ................. . .. 425,000.00
Total Deposits
I
................................. . . ...... ...... . ........ . . 36 I 204 I 000.00
ID
Tota demand deposits .................. . ..... ... ...... 4,294,000.00
Tota.l time and savings deposits .... . .. . ................ 31 ,910,000.00
::::i
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase .................... . ........ . ..... . .. 1,101,000.00
Other liabilities ..................... , .... ....... . . . . . . .. . .. . . ........... 1,255,000.00
1--+- TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures) .............................................. $38,580,000.00

·---1-

pla nes and rnisslit· po&lt;Jtinns

Bri~in sai d its Vulca n bombers.

Who speaks for the taxpayer?

Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,

Tim::~~.::~:~~~~~~·~~ t~di~ld~~~.-

carrtjmg t.QOO.pound bombs and

tmts

By lARRY EWING
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - After U months
of non·use as a facility for housing
prisoners and the Implementation
of over $80,1:00 In &lt;epairs a nd renovations, the Gallia County jall Is
scheduled to reopen Monday, with
a full staff of jailers.
As a result, however, accordi ng
to Sheriff James M. Montgomery,
the department's personnel budget
will be drained by early fa ll ; and,
last year's layoff of deputies
repeated.
Final approval of the facility 's
"physical and environmental" con·
dltlon came Friday following an in·
spectlon by JW Kirk, of the Ohio
Department of Correction a nd
Rehabllltatlon.
While satisfied with the jail's
physical renovation, Kirk quest!·
oned what method would be used to
supervise prisoners. Sheriff Mont·
gom ery told the state Inspector that
due to budgetary constraints he
would be forced to use- in addition
to Chief Jailer George Pendeltondispatchers a nd depuUes, whe n
ava ilable, to maintain inmate
supervision.
Kirk called that proposed arran·
gement "unsatisfactory."

ADMISSIONS OFFICE OPEN 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

of Pomeroy, in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on March 31, 1982, published in
response to cali made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code,
Section 161.

refueled in the air enroute from
Ascension Island 3,500 m1Ies nor·
theast of Stanley. new one ra 1d
during the night , followed by a
predawn a ttack by ca 1Tie r-based
Harrier ve rt ical ta keoff jets a rmed
with roc kcL'i 0:1 11d c&lt;J nnon.
Vulcans also dropped anti-pe rsonnel
mines to prevent repa1rs on the runwa ys. The Vuicans a ppare nt ma m
tas k was to crater the a id ields
whil e the smaller Ha rri ers, us in~
rockets and 30111111 cannon fire were

Sheriff predicts financial problems,
layoffs without additional funding

446-4367

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, N.A.

were undamaged but six Argenti ne
soldiers were wounded after three
waves of attacks on the South Atlantic islands it seized amonth ago.
But Bntam sa1d 1t h1t Argentine
aircraft on the ground and " severely
cratered'' the main 4,000-foot
asphalt runway at Stanley. It said
Bnllsh planes a lso hit the secondary
aarfreid at a settlement ca lled Goose
Green, 40 miles west of Stanley, and
that ali British planes and personnel
returned safely.

Gallia County jail will reopen Monday

T-S
\

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

went into a~ti?n over th e British ar rnada . It sa ad 1ts runways on Stanley

• Middleport- Pomeroy-Ga IIi pol is-Point Pleil san!

REPORT OF CONDITION

SUNDAY, MAY 2nd, 1982
STARTING AT 1:30

ELBERFE~DS .IN

'llol. 16 No. 11
Copyrighted 1982

By The Associated Press
. Waves of carrier-based British
jets and iong:range bombers a ttacked the maan and secondary a ir·
f1elds for the Falkland Island&lt;
cap ata i of Stanley early Saturday in
l1ghtmng ra1ds aimed a t grounding
the Argentines and softening them
up for a poss1blefull·scaie assault.
Argentana ciaamed at repelled the
raaders, shot down three planes.
killed one pilot and captured
another, and that 1ts jets bnefly

+

un:ba

r~se~rt;;ro;r;re;;fres;;hm;;en;;ts;.;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

LONG BOTTOM, OH I 0

BLUE LUSTRE DRY CLEAN MACHINE
AVAIL'A BLE !=OR RENT.

FALKLANDS .\TI'ACK- Early Saturday, Britain attacked Port stanley alrstl1p In the Falklands Islands. According to Arglntina's ruling mllltary junta, the attack was carried out by
Harrier,; based on aircraft canien;. ( AP Wirephoto)

Gallipolis Business College

Pomeroy Chapter 186. Order of
the Eastern Star, will hold Its annual inspection thts evening at 7: 30
p.m. Grace WUson is the inspecting
officer. AU members to take des·

MT. OLIVE CHURCH

Admltted-OthO KalT, Middleport; Helen Wtlltams, Middleport;
Verne Ord, Syracuse; David

Fighting resumes late Saturday;
dogfight, island shelling reported

I

Inspection slated

HYMN SING

. Veterans Memorial

Kestner, Minersville; Josephine

United Pentecostal Church, Mid·
dleport, will observe baby day Sunday morning, May 2.
Anyone wishing to have a baby
dedlcated at the service may call
the Rev. Baker at 985-3564.

The Rev. and Mrs. David Mann
of the Pomeroy First Baptist
Cburch wlll be the speaker and soloIst respectively at the Salvation
Army Sunday at 7:30p.m.
Eloise Adams, w.P .S.M. will
lead the meeting with . Major
Glenna Rummel a t the plano. The
public is invited to attend.

I

WORD
PROCESSING

To observe bady day

Announce program

EVERYONE WELCOME

I

. d er . gwen
.

v·ou CAN LEARN

LOADS TANK SPREADER- Tomm Hamm loads
the self-loading lank spreader. Says Hamm, "We are
just tickled with the way this animal waste

British warplanes blast Stanley airfields

By KEVIN KEU.Y
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A need for
"new, creative, energetic and vi·
gorous" leadership in Ohio is being pushed as one of the main
campaign points of the only Republican candidate for the state
attorney general's position.
"We have to maintain effi·
cient, well-otled government,
with good people involved," said
Charles R. "Rocky" Saxbe.
Saxbe's Ideas were expressed
to Gallla County residents, offi·
clals and GOP leaders during a
one-day vtslt Friday. A walking
tour through Galllpolls ended at
noon with
tund-ralslng luncheon at the Elks Hall, In which
he told some of the party's falthful that he, was Interested In
experimenting with new solutions to Ohio's problems.
One of the solutions, he said, Is
to bring "strong people" Into oftlce with him in order to get Ohio
back on Its feet economically.
-''We have an opportunity to
~ the state back into
'P roeperlty and grpwth, to get
joll&amp; 'and
this a gqod state
again," he Bllld .

Ann Jlllan Is legendary aclreae Mae West and James
Brolin Is the one she truly loved

·.

but couln't marry Ill "Mae
Wl!llt," a TV liiO\'Ie airing toDIIbt on the "ABC Sunday Night
Movie. For proll"8l1lllllng deCODiult Take-One, our
~ to area entertainment.

. .I·=

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - An organization representing Ohio
State University faculty members has Uned up aga inst a proposal
tha t outlines the dismissal of tenured fa cul ty members.
In a monthly newsletter, the OSU chapter of the American Associ ·
atlon of University Professors criticized the report by a University
Senate committee. The AAUP called for facul ty members to reject
the report at a public meeting Wednesday.
Last summer, OSU Provost W. Ann Reynolds said dismissa ls of

'

tenured faculty m embers m ay be necessary in the event of a flnan ·

'

ciai crisis. A faculty committee subsequently decided tenu1·ed fa ·
culty members could be latd oft only If entire uni ve rs ity
departments were eliminated.

l

f

a

Along the River ••.. B-1-8
Area deaths . . . . . .. . . D-8

Business . ••. . . . . . . • • E-1
CJuslfle4 ....... : • D-i-7
Edltorlal .. • • •.. . • • A·2-3
Farm ............. ~ •• E-2
IM'al • • • . . • . . . • . . • A-6-8

make

SCate-NaticiDal .•••• D-H
• • • •• • •• • .. ... C.l-8
........ wert

(ConUnued 01\ A-4)

..

NaliOnal Weather Service

at Comme&lt;ce
Cold..,.. Warm ww Occluded.., Stationary ••

U.S.

WEATilER FORECAST - This is the weather forecast for Sunday
ltcc:onllag to the National Weather Service. Showers are expected for the
=~~ •a:od~ southern porUona of the Rocky MOUDiain region. Additional
also forecast for northern New England and much It the Gulf
from the western Florida coast to the southeastern Up of Louisiana.

t

1

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