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~

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Seven die in row house fire

PAliNH D ~ IMPlE lOCKING f!ATUJ.&gt;I

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BALTIMORE - Seven people died today and another was injured in
the second major row house fire to ravage this city in four days, fire officials reported. ·
Details were sketchy, but fire department officials said the blaze
broke out in the northwest Baltimore home at about 4:10a.m. and was
declared under control at 4:37.
Among the victims of the one-alarm blaze were five children and
two adults, who were declpred dead at the scene, said fire U. Don
Crouch.
Last Saturday, 10 people died in an early morning row house fire
when a candle ignited a sofa and quickly swept through the home
where the residents were sleeping.

Soviets didn't dominate meetings
NEW YORK - Many American church leaders returning from a
·religious peace conference in Moscow say the meeting produced an
evenhanded appeal against nuclear arms, and wasn't Sovietdominated as critics had charged.
Several also criticized Western news coverage of the meeting last
week and defended the Rev. Billy Graham's participation, saying he
made a positive contribution and that detractors had misrepresented
him.
"He was a tremendous ambassador for all people of good will,
proclaiming the good news of Christ and hope for peace in the world,"
said the Rev. Reinhold Kerstan of the Baptist World Alliance in
Washington. "He has been treated very unfairly by some Western
people. He was not 'used.' His ministering spiritually wherever he
could sets him apart from any such cheap criticism of his role."

Two die in moving accident
NEWARK, Ohio- Two men were killed and three others injured in
an electrical accident while moving a bam, fire officials say.
Officials identified the dead as Mark Moore, 21, and Steven Carpenter, 23, of Zanesville.
Another man was hospitalized and two others were treated and
released.
The five were employees of a moving company and were moving a
bam Monday when the barn's lightning rod hit an electric wire, fire officials said.

Three die when trucks collide
FRAZEYSBURG Ohio - Two truck· drivers and one passenger
were killed in a colllsion between two tractor-trailer rigs, the Highway
Patrol says.
They were identified by the Highway Patrol as Kenneth England, 32,
of Lancaster; Jackie Murphy, 31, of Lancaster, a passenger m
England's truck; and Daniel Gee, 44, of Philo.
.
The patrol said the accident Monday was on Ohio 16 east of
Frazeysburg.

Shooting said on impulse
WASHINGTON- John W. Hinckley Jr. acted on impulae when he
· shot President Reagan and then "waited to be blasted" so he could enter a magical union with actress Jodie Foster, a defense psychiatrist
says.
Dr. William T. Carpenter Jr. insisted Monday that Hinckley was
driven to shoot by his innef world offanta.v. Time after time, he rejected a prosecutor's attempt to paint the defen,dant as a calculating
killer. .
Carpenter was the first defense witness in Hinckley's trial to testify
the defendant was too mentally ill to appreciate the wrongfulness of
.his cri~J!e. His testimony has ended after three days on the stand.

99.~.

NELSON'S DRUG STORES

JOHN PORTER

ZANE BEEGLE

Delegates chosen
Two juniors at Southern High council , pep club and is a lettered
member or the football and baseball
School are delegates to boys' state.
teams
.
They are John Porter, son of Mr.
Porter attends the Racine Baptist
and Mrs. Frank W. Porter, Jr., Rt. 3,
Racine, and Zane Beegle, son of Mr . Church.
Beegle is tak1n g college
and Mrs. Don Beegle, Rt. 2, Racine.
preparatory
courses at Southern , he
The you\hs are being sponsored by
is
a
member
of the Na tional Honor
Racine American Legion Post 602
Society,
pep
club and lettered In
and Racine Home National Bank.
basketball,
baseball,
and football .
Boys' state will be held at Bowling
Beegle was a member of the !982
Green University from June 19-June
State runner-up basketball team . He
'!/ .
Porter is takin g c oll ege attends East Letart United
preparatory courses at Southern Methodist Church.
High, is a member or the student

Delta Queen freed;
resumes river trip
SAVERTON, Mo. - The Delta
Queen, a vinU!ge paddlewheel
steamer stranded in the middle or
the Mississippi River for nearly two
days, was pulled free Monday by two
towboats and with a triumphant
blast on her whistle chugged upstream toward St. Louis.
Approximately 70 spectators
cheered as the Delta Queen was
pulled free about eight miles south of
Hannibal, Mo.
The passenger boat witb its fancy
trimming that recalls the gilt-andgold 19th Century steamboat era
Mark Twain described in "Life on
the Mississippi," was attempting to
pass through a lock on a return trip
to St. Louis from Hannibal when it
bounced off a dam pier, hit another
pier and came to rest against the
dam.
One crewman suffered a broken
collarbone in the collision. No
passengers were injured.
The crew and 187 passengers, formally dressed for dinner, abandoned
ship by climbing up ladders and a
portable gangplank to the dam.
"The crew reacted wonderfully,"

said Ida McKinley of Alt~na , lll. " By
the time I 1\Qt out of the 'tiining room,
there was a guy in a chef's hat
already standi ng at his post by a
lifeboat. "
Perry Moran, a vice president at
Delta Queen Steamboat Co.'s
headquarters in Cincinnati. said,
" Our plans are to have the Delta
Queen proceed under her own power
to St. Louis, where we anticipate
making temporary repairs."
He refused to comment on
damages or why it had remained at
tpe dam Sunday as four boats stood
by awaiting permission to rescue it.
Lock workers said two towboats, th e
J.W. Hershey and the Del Butcher,
finally were hired for the removaL
President Stan Thune said the
Delta Queen " is seaworthy a nd in
good operating condition" despite a
3-by-4-foot gas h in its wooden hull
above the water line.
The 285-foot boat is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places
and received nationa l publicity
several years ago when President
Carter chose the vessel for a family
vacation.

By KATIE CROW
Contracts to begin work on the interior of the senior high building will
be signed today according to Mayor
Clarence Andrews .
Pomeroy Village Council Monda y
ni ght accepted bids for a lterations to
the Pomeroy Village Hall (former
senior hi gh building) FMHA project.
Bids accepted ea rlier were
general contract, C. A Yeager, Inc.,
Portsmouth, $29.765; mechanical
contract, C&amp;C Plumbing a nd
Heatin g, Athens, $17,057; electri cal
contract, Sun Electric, Athens,
$15,200; toU!l a ll three bids, $62,022,
plus constrction co ntin gencies,
$4,978: other expe nses including
bond counsel. interest. etc, $3,000,
ma king a total of $70,000.
Council , in other business, acce pted the bid of 3-R Industri es, Carl
E. Shenefield, Langsville. The bid is
for hook-ups of la teral sewers. The
other bid submitted was from
Pullins Excavating Inc., Pomeroy
Jim F recker , who IS working with
Ji m Schivinski, constru ct ion
manager, told coun cil it would cru,t
around $15,000 for the hook-ups.
"This is only a guess" Frecker
remarked. Nei ther bid had a tota l
figure.
The bid of 3-R read, 37 sewer line
hook-ups, backhoe service $20 per
hour ; operator $23 an hour ; truck
and hand tools $2.50 pe r hour ; labor
each man $16 an hour. It was pointed
out that it would be difficult to determine the total cost as each hook-up
would take a different amount of
pipe and work to each line would
vary.
Frecker also told council bids for
paving should not be advertised until
lateral hook-ups are completed and
cost or the hook-ups ar~ known.
John Anderson, cou~cilman, read
a letter from the corps of engineers.

Huntington, concerning erosion
a long the ri ve r bank above the
Kroger Store.
The letter stated the Corps would
not aid the village financially ,
because in its estimation the
problem was not ca used by flooding,
but by internal erosion . Technical
advice was offered.
Anderson also said the Soil and
Water Conservation may have some
money avai lable on a cost sharing
basis. Anderson will contact the corps or engineers for technical
assistance and the Soil and Water
Conservation for any finanacia l

assistance.
Larry Wehrung, councilman ,
reported Kim Zarney will meet with
coun c il next Monday ni g ht and show

slides of restoration in other cummunities and what could be done to
upgrade Pomeroy. All interested
persons are invited to a ttend the
meetin g.
Wehrun g also asked about th e
status or drilling an addit iOnal water
well for the village. He said it was
his understanding that the Board of
Public Affairs was In terested '"
taking opl1ons on land to drill an additional welL Howeve r. Wehrung
noted he understands now that they
arc not interested. It was indicated
that possibly fi nances was the
problem.
A letter was presented from Oh1u
Drilling Co., regardtng phase onl' of
the investigation fur a new wei!
water supply for Pomeroy.
The letter stated that Pomeroy
has the hardest water and Syracuse
wells -onl y :;oo feet upstrea m from
Pomeroy wells is much softer. The
letter suggested that tht&gt; village obta in a n option to purchaSl' property
for a new well. The maltL·r was
referred to Kim Sh ields and lhe
Boa rd of Public Affairs.
Bruce Reed inqu ired about
payments by lot owners at Beech
Grove Cemetery tu help maint;un
the cemetery. It was noted thai lot
owne rs may pa y for lot maintenance
at city hall . It was suggested tha t the
finance committee meet with the
cemetery trustees to work out a
solution to the problem .
Dick Newell of Ca blen tertai nment
met with council regarding to approving the first reading of an ordinance to increase ca bl e rall'S.
Bill Young, coun cilman sa 1d he
could not approve the ordmance
callin g for a rate increase a fter contacting other cable compames in th e
state.
Newell noted tha t his compa ny did
not have to U!ke a back seat lo
anyone.
The ordinance which was turned
down calls for a base increase from
$7 a month to$8.50; from $1 to $2 per
set; 75 percent of the rcguli:lr mon-

thly rate to be charged to seni or
citizens and disabeled persons: from
$10 to $15 for connecti on drops and
not more that $25 for a ny Iwon-

nections.
!Continued on page 101

Electrical fire loss at $200
The Pomeroy Fire Department
answered a call just after 11 p.m .
Monday to the Sav-More Service
Station on W. Main St.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
L.egar said damages totaled $200.
However, he said, it was a good
thing that the fire was discovered

before it had advanced further. It
was beginning to catch rafters of the
structure on fire when the dPpartment arrived. The £1re started at an
electrical box and was reported by
an employe who sm ell ed smoke and
detected a problem at the electrical
box.

Absentee balloting begins
County

Absentee baUclts are available at the Meigs
Board of Elections
the June a primary, It was announced today.' .
The office w!U,be ~Monday \hrough Friday fn.n 8:30a.m. to
4:30~m.
.

tot

On Saturday, May 22.Dd29 and June,~. the office Is.open from 9a.m.,

unW noon. Jyne5 is the last day ballots will be available.

,.. ...

last night include Amy Beth Redovian , kinderga rten :
Heidi Cobb, h1 gh school, a nd Courtney R Knapp, km de rga rten.
The board approved resolutions a uthorizing parti cipation in federa l programs for the next school year.
These include $167,000 for the ECIA Chaptt•r I
program, formerly Title I ; $21,000 fur ECIA Chapter 2,
formerly other title programs and for Title Vl-B wl11 c h
provides federal monies for specia l educatwn and
education of the ha ndicapped.
The regular mPeting of the board lasted only about40
minutes-a novel situati on in the distn r t whl' n '
meetings genera ll y last for several hours. The board
then moved into excl'utive session tu tilsruss
negotiations a nd personnel.

VOI .JI,NO. lO
Copyrighted 1982

• mtllil tlakn
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from a supplemental contract as band director. The
board failed to act at its last meetin g on hiring Hill as
director of ins trumental music, but did indicate that it
would hire him as a teacher. Hill res igned following
that meetin g.
At last ni ght's session, David Sheets was hired as a
substitute custodian. Given supplemental contracts in
addition to those awarded Gordon Fisher were David
Warga , boys' head track coach; Jess ie Vail, junior
hi gh track; Tim Saunders, head baseball coach; Rita
Slavin, girls softball ; E;d Harkless, assistant band
director.
Professional leave to attend a TAG workshop in
Athens on May 13 by Suzy Ca rpen ter was approved.
New tuition students approved for the next school year

$999

2SY•" • U"
2S'It"

The board voted to advertise for bids on the track
facility which has been pending for several years after
Cassell again spoke stating the Meigs Athletic Boosters
have made plans to absorb the additional costs more
than $25,000 which the board earlier earmarked for the
construction of the track. Banks have even been contacted and have indicated that the boosters can borrow
money on a note if necessary to build the track facility .
James Carpenter, assistant superintendent, said
specifications drawn up for the,track indicate it will be
a top noteh facility .
Accept reslguallon
At a 4-1 vote, with member Larry Powell casting the
dissenting vote, the board accepted the resignation of
Douglas Hill as director of instrumental music and and

he Daily

Tum your bec:kytrd Into-a 1portt comptl•lll

RIG ....H

"'

,,

By BOB HOEFUCH
The Meigs Local School District Board of Education
meeting in regular session Monday night hired Gordon
Fisher as athletic director and girls' head track coach
and agreed to advertise for bids for a track facility at
Meigs High SchooL
At the last meeting of the board, no action was taken
on employing Fisher for the two posts to which he was
named last night. However, at Monday night's meeting
Kristin Anderson, on behaU of the girls' track team,
and Charles Cassell, on behalf of the. Meigs Athletic
Boosters, appearing before the board recommended
that Fisher be named to the two positions. Remarks by
both were complimentary to Fisher and his services in
the two positions.

VOLLEYBALL/
BIDIIITOI SET

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Board rehires Fisher as athletic director

IGLOO COOLER

UJ

Moclel . 214111

------·

DELTA
QUEEN
FREED
The Delta
Queen, spoanded in the
middle of the Mississippi
River for the past two
days, was pulled'free Monday by two towboats
before chugging upstream
to St. Louis. The passenger
boat was attempting to
pass through a lock on a
return trip to St. Louis
Saturday night when it
bounced off a dam pier, hit
another pier and came to
rest against the dam near
Hamllbal, Mo.

AND
I•

�Tuesday, May 18, 1982

Commentary

Bureaucratic burden__J_am_e_sJ_.Kil_·p_atn_·c_k
WASHINGTON - Stuart M.
Statler, a maverick Republican
mentor of the Conswner Product
Safety Commis:;ion, struck a nice
blow for common sense the other
day . In the process, he provided a
splendid example of what we mean
when we talk about the
"bureaucratic burden."
The story requires a little
background. Nine years ago the

llll 'uurtSirt·d
l'unwru\ . Oh11 o

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HORERT 1.. WINf;E'I1'
ROll HOEFLICH

commissio n

DALE ROTilGER, JR .
Nn~~

Ethtur

A !l.lt-.l\li!EH ul Tht· Al&gt;l&gt;unakd l'n-,l&gt;, Inland !Jail ~ l'n•:&lt;..' Al&gt;MWiltli1111 antl lht•
,\nwrwan 'l.:r l-l ' JiilfWf l'uhltl&gt; ht·r'

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treated in their emergency rooms.
The number of hoslJ\tals is now down
to 74, but the systerjl it,;eif remains
essentially unchangt'd.
A couple of weeks ago . the commission voted on a propoo,al further
to reduce the scope and complexity
or the NEISS operation. On this vote
Mr. Statler lost, 3-2. He then
delivered himself of a sterling
dissenting opinion explaining\. his
point of view. One problem, he ~id,
is that the system - helpful as it
may have been at first - now
delivers too much.
" It gives us far more than we
need. It provides volwnes of data
which we cannot, will not, and
should not ever use."
The trouble is that the system
picks up everything. Mr. Statler
cited random samples of emergency
room report,; on the ca uses or accidents : "Struck nose against waterfount&lt;~ in ... Dropped sewer cover on
toes ... Dropped record albums on

ti'\ Ut ''· nniJM'f\UII~IitJt·lo .

Recession hits
in oil country
Oklahoma's oil-fueled economy raced full speed as hard times hobbled
the rest or the nation. But a slowdown in the search for energy is costing
the sl&lt;lte thousands or jobs and it,; " n•ccssion-proof" image.
For the p&lt;1sl two yPrt rs the boom in gas a nd unre~ulatcd oil gave the
,-kite surpluses - $350 million IS projected this year - while other states

paul the bus fare to send their unemployed to Oklahoma .
Jobless workers Jured by the state's unemployement rate, once the
nation's lowest. flocked from the Frost Belt to Ji ve in tent cities and labor
111 the oil fit• Ids.
Firms sprang up virtually OVL'rmght looking for oil, and companies expandl'd to prudu('t' thl' goods lll'l'dl'd to keep the boom goin g.

on head."
"To me it i.s an embarrassment,"

Mr. Statler continued, "that this
cniTunission collect,; information
about frivolous incident,; which are
only faintly associated with conswner product,; - which do not even
approach the perimeters or
unreasonable risk - and then uses
those incidents in projecting
national injury estimates. Why
bother? Who cares? Such figures are
as meaningless as they are useless."
At the end of all this factgathering, the corrunission's staff
prepares a priority list of products
most likely to cause injuries. But
over the past nine years, the ranking
or product codes has changed scarcely at all. Thousands of these
carefully tabulated accident,; involve incidents about which the com-

mission can do nothing at all. The
NEISS estimates of injuries nationwide, extrapolated from the sample
of 74 hospitals, "are really only ballpark nwnbers ." Mr. Statler futilely
urged lhtt the nwnber of reporting
hospitals be cut in half, that reporll;
be required semi-weekly instead of
daily and that other constructive
changes be made.
Alas, the gentleman's four
colleagues issued a stuffy statement
or rebutl&lt;ll, saying that Mr. Statler's
dissent contained "more rhetoric
than substance." They strongly
disagreed with his recommendations for economy. His
proposal that the reporting of
irrelevant accidents be ended, in

their view, would save nothing. Indeed, it would cost more to eliminate
a product code than to keep it on the
reporting forms .
It's a small matter - $1.3 million

for NEISS out of a $700 billion
federal budget - but small matters
often contribute to large insight,;.
Our government is bogged down in
hundreds of entrenched programs,
that fall into this same pattern. Crop
reporll;, accident reports, air samples, water S&lt;~mples, morbidity
dal&lt;l, the conswnption of spinach in
school lunches - you name it, the
government wants it reported. And
all these reports must be received,
analyzed, swnmarized, compiled
and interred. Some small fraction of
the data is truly important; ·a large
amount may be moderately useful;
much of it isdal&lt;l for data'ssake.
Jimmy Carter warned upon this
costly bureaucratic addiction.
Ronald Reagan is warring upon it
now. Presidents come and pre~iden­
t,; go, but lile clerks Jive forever.
Great toppling tombstones 1

MARAUDERETIES ADVANCE - The Meigs
girls' track team has been enjoying an outstanding
season and has advanced to district competition In 10
events. Members, front, l·r, are Sue Wise, Denise Coli,
Kristin Anderson, Laura Smith and Renee Willis.

Seven SOuthem East em

and f~rms havt• vanished as quickly as they appeared .
The same thing is ha ppening in other oil slates. The drop in oil prices
hlis t·us t the I .ouisilinli sla te trcas ur}' &lt;:~bout $80 mill ion . Texas is in d state

budget standoff bn·ause petroleum-related l&lt;lx receipts are down.
wh1ch cuunb on oil for 90 percent of its revenue, has cut state

spemlmg plans by 25 percent.
" It 's hit like somebody just threw a sw1tch," said Thomas McLane,
skiff repreS&lt;·ntatlve of the United Steelworkers or America in Tulsa.
"This IS just an mdlcatwn that Oklahoma is feeling lhc effect,; or the
rt•cesslon just like Uw rest of the country .··

Enlistment turnaround shows growth

· Industry uffll·1als say there 's Jess oil being drilled because 11 isn't
profil&lt;lblc to gel it out of the ground . Anti because of the Jack of profit,;,
many new firms ha ve bailed out.
Must of the wells in Oklahoma arc drilled by independent,;, who claim
tlwy !&lt;Ike all of the chances 111 the nsky drilling process, and then provide
~ctroleum to the major oi l companies.
Spokesmen for the indepPndPnL'\

bl&lt;:~rne

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - An
enlistment turnaround has occurred
in the Ohio National Guard over the
last four years that mirrors growth
in the units run by other states as
well.
Guard officers at both the state
and national level say an improved
package of incentives has been
largely responsible for increasing
the nwnber and quality of recruits.
But rising costs are posing
problems for one of the most popuiar
benefit,; offered by the guard in Ohio
- free tuition at a state-assisted
college or university. Total enlistment,; in the Ohio Army and Air
National Guard are almost 20,000,
slightly over the authorized strength
for both organizations.
That is a sharp improvement from
1978 when the army guard, for
example, had 12,068 members, 84

the slowdown on a wor ldwide

oi l glut, the fallmg price of crude, inflation, high interest rates and what
ffilillY see CI S a vacillating government policy toward energy .

Will Bowman of the Oklahoma Employment Securities Commission
estimates that unemployment among the oil-related manufacturing industries has reached "i nto the low thousands."
Bowman said Oklahoma's overall jobless rate could soon reach 6 perc·ent - double the figure of one yea r ago - but still well below the
national jobless rate of 9.4 percent.
. Layoffs have been announced by a number of companies. CMI in
Oklahoma City " typica l. CMI, which makes roadbuilding equipment, added 600 workers to branch out into the manufacturing of oilfield equipllll'nl last yea r, but now has laid off 500 workers, a spokesman for the firm
said .
· Despite tht• layoffs at the manufacturing level. oilfield spokesmen said
ihey're optimistic. Many believe the downswing could be a lull while the
bloated petroleum market shrinks to normal levels.

Berry's World

"Drunken drivers don't kill people people!"

percent of it,; authorized strength.
Legislation which took effect in
1978 created the Ohio National
Guard Tuition As:;istance Program,
providing free tuition at higher
education institutions in return for a
six-year enlistment.

A Legislative Budget Office
analysis shows both the nwnber of
students and the average cost per
student
have
increased
dramatically in recent years.
In fiscal year 1978 the program
had an annual cost of $43,402,
covering 146 students at an average
cost of $297.
But enrollment and the cost of
tuition have risen steadily since
then. Spending cuts brought about
by the state budget cnmch have also
complicated the situation.
A revised estimate for the current
fiscal year put the annual cost of the

program at $3.2 million, covering
2,500 students at an average cost of
$1,2110.
Earlier this year, the State Controlling Board pwnped $764,951 in
emergency funds into the program
to meet higher than anticipated
cost,;. As a result of the fiscal
problems, Adj . Gen. James C. Clem
said persons enlisting in the guard
under the scholarship program must
enter a unit that is below its
authorized strength.
Current Ohio Jaw contains no
provision limiting the program to
the amount appropriated for it.
Guard officers have said that if
future funding problems occur, a
change in the statutes may be
needed to solve them.
Lt. Gen. La Vern E. Weber, chief
of the National Guard Bureau, said
enlistment gains have also been

recorded nationally.
Weber, in Ohio last week to deliver
a speech, is the liaison between the
guard unit,; run by the states and the
U.S. Army and Air Force.
He pegged current strength in the
army guard at 407,000 and in the air
guard at 99,000, with units in 2,600
communities across the country.
"We now have a good across-theboard incentive program," Weber
said in citing reasons for the
recruiting boost. "This improved
package of incentives is one
ingredient."
He also traced it to increased
public support for the military.
Weber said the $5.2 billion federal
budget proposed for the national
guard in fiscal year 1983 would, if approved, represent an increase of
about 12 percent over current spending.

Drymn

cars kill

·rroday in history

Unlike most people, I take Civil
Defense very seriously. While the
evacuation plan for Washington
hasn't been fully worked out, I know
what we're supposed to do. When the
sirens go off, we're all to get in our
automobiles, grab our credit cards
and head for Lickety Split, West
Virginia .
The other evening around five
o'clock I decided to take a dry run. I
came home and told my wife, who
was in her housecoat and curlers.
"Get in the car, we're going to
have a practice evacuation drill."
"Let me get dressed first."
"You don't have time, Do you
think when the real thing happens,
the Russians are going to wait for
you to get all gussied up? Grab the
credit cards and let's go."
"What credit cards should I
take?" she asked.
"American Express, Visa, Master
Charge and Diner's Club," I told
her. "If we use up our credit line on
one, we can switch to another."
"Do you have gas in the car?" she
wanted to know.
"I have half a tank."
"That won't get us to Lickety

: Today is Tuesday, May 18, the !38th day of 1982. There are 'lZI days left in
ihe year.
Today's highlight in history :
On May 18, 1980, Washington's Mount St. Helens volcano had its biggest
eruption in 123 years, prompting the evacuation of residents up to 30 miles
away.
: On this date :
In 1736, England's witchcraft statutes were repealed.
In 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte was proclaimed Emperor of France.
In 1878, Colombia granted a French company a nine-year concession to
~uild the Panama Canal.
. And in 1941, Italian forces in Ethiopia surrendered during World War II.
; Ten years ago: Four bomb-disposal experts parachuted into the Atlantic
~nd boarded the luxury liner Queen Elizabeth II foUowing a bomb threat
aboard the vessel.
·
: :Five years ago: In an assessment of his first 100 days in office, the Soyiet
newspaper Pravda said President Jimmy Carter had given the American
pUblic sennons instead of concrete action.
.
One year ago: Italian voters overwhelmingly rejected an atJempt to
repeal that nation's·llberalized abortion laws despite a eoncerleiJ dunpaign
by the powerful Catholic Church:
.
.
Today's birthdays: Singer Perry Como is 69 years cild. Pulitzer Prize. ·•
winning author John Updike is 50. And baseball star Reggie Jackson is 36.
Thought for today: Qf we are not ashamed to think it, w6 should not be
ashamed to say it.- Cicero, Roman scholar (106 B.C.-43 B.C.).

All-Ohio Players
Class AAA A ll en Anderson,
Lancaster ;
and Todd
Nuzum ,
A t hens.
Class AA - Barry Smith, Warren ;
and Charlie Roberts, Ironton .
Cl ass A - Kent Wolfe, Southern .
A ll -Ohio Coach - Tom White, Lan
caster .
Southeastern District a ll · star s :
Class AAA -East
Scott McVicar, Marietta ; Troy
Warne, Marietta;
Eric Estes,
Marietta ; Todd Knotts, Marietta ;
Jim Ang le, Logan ; Chris Vatdt .
Logan ; Todd Nuzum. Athens; Jim
Schanzenbach, At hens. Alt . - Mark
Eschbaugh, Marietta, and Coach
Bi ll Woode ll , At hens.
Class AAA -West
Allen Anderson, Lanc as ter: Rick
Leach, Lancaster; Tom Graham,
Lancaster ; Bill Maier, Lancaster;
Stacy Alltop, Miami Tra ce; Phi l
Young, Lancas ter ; Chris Posey,
Lancaster : Jeff Hughes. Miami
Trace . Alt.
Keith Crow ,
Chi lli cothe ; Mike Free. Chi lli cothe,
and Coach Randy Burnside. Miami
Trace .
Class AA -East

Art Buchwald
Split."
"I'm sure if the real thing happens, the Civil Defense people will
have emergency gasoline trucks all
a lung the highway. After all, they
can't expect us to evacuate
Washington during an atomic bomb
attack and not supply the petrol.
Now stop talking and get in the car.
We have to pretend this is not a
drill."
As soon as we got near Key
Bridge, we found cars bwnper to
bwnper. We moved 10 feet every
five minutes.
"What's going on?" my wife wanted to know.
"It's normal rush hour traffic," I
explained.
"If it's like this now, what's it
going to be like when they try to
evacuate the entire city?"
"They'll have National Guardsmen on every corner to move the
traffic along," I said. "It wouldn't
surprise me if they emptied
Washington in 20 minutes. The
Soviets are ·in for a shocker when
their missiles hit Ground Zero and
find nobody there."
· We made it over the Key Bridge in

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

45 minutes and moved smoothly
along the George Washington Parkway at 25 miles an hour until we hit
the Beltway and were slowed down
to 15."
"I guess you didn't get out of town
as fast as you had hoped," my wife
said.
"That's because this is just a drill.
When people know they're racing
against a Soviet ICBM, they'll be

Split six hours later.
It was dark, and no one was on the
streets. We knocked on the door of a ;
farmhouse. A man carrying a •
shotgun answered it.
;
Hi," I said, ~~we're from :
Washingf.on, D.C., and were told to •·
~

doing 80 Jniles an hour.''

comfortable."

"How do we get to Lickety Split?"
my wife asked.
"I guess the Civil Defense people
haven't put up their signs yet.
Where's the map?"
"We don't have a map of West
Virginia."

"I told you to always keep a map
of West Virginia in ,the car. You
never listen to anything I tell you."
She started to cry. "Let's go
back."
"We can't go back until the Civil
Defense people tell us it's safe.
Washington, as far as this drill is
concerned, has been completely
vaporized."
By asking .directions from 40
people, we finally got to Lickety

alA

OIAIR.

I

Montgomery,

Class AA -West
Joe DeCamp, Wheelersb urg, Paul
Newman.
Whee l ersburg ;
Ray
Perry , Whee ler sbu rg ; John Colley ,
Coal Grove : Kyle McKnight, Coal
Grove ;
Chuck McKnight, Coat
Grove; Charlie Roberts, 1ron ton :
Dusty Miller. Greenfield·McCiain ;
Toney Zornes. Rock Hill ; A lt . ~
Scott Atkins, Wheelersburg ; Chris
Smit h ,
Ironton ; Coach David
Waller, Coal Grove.
Class A -Eas t
Chris A ll en, Eastern; Charlie R1t ·
chie,
Eas t ern;
John Beaver ,
Eastern; Bruce Fout s, Trimble:
Kent Wolfe, Souther n ; Joe Bob Hem
stey, southern; Scott Holbe rt , Trim
ble ; James Huff. Southwestern ; Alt .
~ Jay Rees. Souther n . Roger Gaul.
Eastern, and Coach H ilt on Wolfe ,
Jr ., Sou ther n .
Class A-West
Gr eg Zickafoose, Paint Va ll ey ;
Jeff Leeth , Paint Va lle y ; Flint
Tackett , Lucasville -Va lley ; J . D .
Merritt , Lucasvi ll e-Va ll ey ;
Stan
Doddridge, Lu casv ill e-Val ley ; Ted
Wheeler. Frankfort ·,Adena ; Mike
Kinney, Ironton St . Joe ; St eve
Lewis, Ironton St . Joe ; Alt . - Vince
Hasnauer. Ironton St. Joe ; Mark
Dennis, Frankfort·Adena; Coach
Joe Bokovifz. Ironton St . Joe.

any better than we can!
Look Jo us tor qual1ty Homeowners Insurance. ~nc l udmg Renl m
and CondommiU m Package Plans We Jeatu1e very at! I aCtiVe rales
dlscounls. andvaluableaddltlonalllemssuch as lnfla!lonPIOtec
loon Call us todav'

lfil!.ETL~,..~
Insurance

$1 305 60

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

Wellston ; :-

Barry Smith, Warr en; Ga ry Ellis,
Fair l an d; Dale West, South Point,
Kevin Crager, Fairland; Dave West,
Belpre; Terry Lync h, Warren ; Phil
King, Gallipolis; Alt . - Eri c Court
ney , Nelsonville York ; Dave Cot
trill. Vinton County ; Dan Peyton .
Alexa nder ; Coach John Lemley .
Fairland .

Nobody can protect your

HOME

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mighty
Classy, ridden by Dick Dailey, won
the featured eighth race at Scioto
Downs Monday to pay $20.40, $7.40
and$440

........

Open DliiJ 10-9

Sundly 1-6

The Saving Place ...

Our Reg. 134.88

94.88

49.97

Gas String Trimmer
Automatic string advance .
15" cutting swath .

thru SAT.

SALE

Savings
from
our
garden
shop

Our Reg . 57 .97

(450)

•

WED.

( 451 )

Paramount Electric Blower
Double insulated . Will easi ly b low debris from patios .
walkway or lawn .

~----------------~----------------------~
Our Reg 13.7 1

Our Reg. 97c

77¢

Still in running
RACINE - Southern, which
claimed five out of six SV AC
championships this season, is
still on the move In both the boys'
baseball and girls' softball
programs.
The girls' softball team which
defeated Symmes Valley last
week in the sectional championship game to advance to the
district tournament at The Plains
this Wednesday at4 p.m. The sectional champs of Coach Suzanne
Wolfe wlll play the Trimble Tomcats for the district crown. Last
week at Rio Grande College, the
Tornadoes of Coach Hilton Wolfe,
Jr. earned a berth in the district
tournament at Chlllicothe on
Thursday. Game time for the
Southe~outh Webster game is
set for 4 p.m. Thursday at Zane
Trace High School, just north of
Chillicothe. Winner of that contest wlll advance to the regional
tournament next week.

9.99

(452)

Geranium Plants
Beaut-iful geraniums in 4 inch
pols . SAVE.

(453)

Diazinon Insect Spray
Contro ls foilag e in sects .
I art .

(455)
Our Reg 6.27

Our Reg. 1.97

4.99

1.37

Hanging Plants

Miracle-Gro
or
Miracid

Lovely polled plants in 10"
han g ing baskets. Large assort
ment .

Plant food for
garden or house
plants . 8 oz.

•••

eiono~n~ul
q~i~~l'l

,_.,...,o•-v

11

come to Lickety Split in case of an

~

atomic attack. We thought we'd •
arrive early and look the place over •
just to see where we'd be the most •

Our Reg. 64.97

fann."
"Don't shoot. Haven't you heard
from the federal Civil Defense
people? You're supposed to open
your homes to us until they can
rebuild the capilli!."
"Thirty seconds."
"We'll sleep in the !)am,'
pleaded. "We're not'proud."

"Fifteen seconds."
My wife.pulled me away from the
door towards the car.
"I'm reportmg you to the Federal
Emergency Management Administration," I yelled at him
"You're. making their atomic war
evacuation plan into a farce."

:;
: ':
·~
,,
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..,.

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Our Reg . 8.43

(456)

4 cu. ft. Wheelbarrow
Contractor type, steel
bearings. 16" t1res.

YOU CAN PUT A SET
OF721'SON ... "'"w...'..""' ....
.....
FORUPTO
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Some. ..... .,. Auat WOfttl w1lllng tor. Thla
Ia one of them. lgttl now, 11¥1 up to 138
on alit of four gu-llYing, toog-WNtlng,
aurt·tractlon 721 Urea011&lt; mool _,,.1 ri&lt;IIIIJ.

P215f75AU

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2.23
2.48
2.08

2.50
2.71

3-01

No lrldl·ln I'IM(Ied . All prk:11 plul 1111.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
,

Ph.H2-2Gt4

Lawn Food
20-10-5 covers 5,000 sq. ft .

,.LT.

,,.,. ldwrt/Hd IJI'Iof.

. AN E. Mlln

nylon

Flowers or Plant Box
Enameled s tee l.
Our 4.87 ........ .... . .. . (459) 3.99

1.73

~..,.,

:~==~~~:=::.,~:,fiW ~

body,

2.99

1.02
2.1.

721o!MIINIW.-..

Rogulor _, NOW

20 lb . bag

(458)

Our Reg . 4.27

low ""' "'"'
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11.71

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P1111r1110AI3

P17!175AU
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P1t&amp;n'!iRU
P205f75A1•

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"You got one minute to get off my

DOONESBURV I"::

I WANT'

Todd

Scioto results

:'~,;~:::::,~::~:::~~::

Players on district team

ATHENS - In a meeting of the
Southeastern Ohio Baseball Coaches
Association meeting held here
recently, selections were made for
the Southeast District all-star
teams, which will square off in a
double-header Sunday May 30 at
Athens. Of those selected for the
district team, seven of 10 in Class
" A" were Meigs Countians.
Representing SVAC-Sectional
champion Southern were Kent
Wolfe, Joe Bob Hemsley, and alternate Jay Rees. Veteran Southern
baseball Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr. was
named as the Class single "A" coach
for the East all sl&lt;lr squad.
Also representing Meigs County
were Chris Allen, Charlie Ritchie,
and John Beaver, who were members of the Eastern Eagle baseball
team that compiled an out,;tanding
16-7-1 record. Roger Gaul was
named as alternate.
Besides being named to the
district all-star team senior southpaw Kent Wolfe, "Class A player of
the year," was named to the allstate team. Wolfe, an all-Ohio selection, will play in the state all-sl&lt;lr
game later on this season.
The district all-stars are divided
into two equal groups making up an
East·West all-star classic · to be
played in Athens . Only seniors are
eligible to participate in the contest.
Below is a list of All-District selections :

The talented Meigs Marauder
eluding the two mile relay that took
in the sport.
girls' track team of Coach Gordon
Saturday the following individuals second at II :45 minutes. Team
Fisher advanced to the district tour- advanced to the Ironton districts : members were Laura Smith, Kristin
nament in 10 events after taking a Laura Smith was the sectional Anderson, Susanna Wise, and Renee
third overall finish in a strong sec- discus champion with a throw of Willis. The mile relay squad of Amy
tional held at Belpre Saturday.
107'5\'z". Kristin Anderson won the Erwin, Kristin Anderson, Laura
Despite some excellent individual sectional with a 62.4 clocking in the Smith and Renee Willis took second
efforts Meigs settled for third behind 440 yard dash. Laura Smith claimed with a time of 4/ 26.1 minutes. Meigs
champion Sheridan with 108 point,;, fourth in the shot put, 31'8"; Paula stood foiJrth il)dhe 440 and second in
New Lexington 100 point,;, and Meigs Swisher was fourth in the 100 meter the 880 behind the running of Paula
with 85. Belpre followed with 53, dash at 13.7; Kristen Anderson took Swisher, Linda Stewart, Amy ErNelsonville-York 51, Morgan 21\'z, second in the 880 yard run with a win, and Rhonda Haddox.
Others scoring were Karen
and Alexander 12.
time of 2:33.3 minutes while lightMeigs has enjoyed an out,;l&lt;lnding ning quick Amy Erwin was second in Goggins who claimed fifth in the
shot put and sixth in the discus. Anseason on the trackside with another the 220 yard dash at 28.3 seconds.
fine showing by its female athletes.
All four of Mei~s· relay teams ad- derosn also daimed fourth in the
Around the bend area the local vanced to district competition in- long jwnp.
athletes known as "Gordon's Girls"
have spent many fine seasons on top - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

$5l~s~~u~~t~a~ KN~bl~or~:: af~~

'

swer phone ... Put seashell in nose ..
Suffered blow to head while in pillow
fight."
Two reports provide remarkable
examples or the dangers that lurk in
dangling clauses if not in conswner
product,; : " Playing in graveyard,

slowed thl' pl'lroleum business. Workers in industri es throughout the
dnllm g process &lt;HL' getting pink sltps. And many of the overnight " oilies"

S.,ond row- RArwena Averton, Linda Stewart, Rhonda Jeffers, Retha Yost, Amy Sisson, Rhonda Haddox,
Amy Erwin and Paula Swisher. Back row- Ruth Fry,
Kristin Bailey, (Coach Gordon Fisher), Trtna Reeves,
Teresa Pratt, Angie Van Cooney, Karen Goggins. Absent was Kim Fraley.

Wolle chosen to all state team

toe ... Ran into door running to an-

Now a glut of oil worldwide, which has depressed prices, has sharply

Ala ske~ ,

the

provide dai ly report!; on all injuries

I.ETI"Eil'i OF fii'I NIO."' an· 'Adt ·umt·d . Tht· ~ l&gt; huult!IM· h·s" thunlOO -Aords funK. All
ll'lto·r' an• l&gt; Uh)t'• I tu editinr&lt;: ami lllUl&gt;l ht· "i~rwd ~ith twnw, Hddrr~l&gt; ~md ll'lt'phont'
numlwr \u un .. i~twd 1.-th·r:-. 'A til ho:· puhlbhrd . l.dtrn. lo hnultt bt· in ~o•Milol ~h'. addrl'sliin)l

'

estab lished

National Electronic Injury Surveillance System NEISS). The idea
was to compile data on injuries that
result from L'Onswner product,;.
Toward that end, 130 hospitals
originally were put under contract to

tombstone fell and hit knee ... While
siting on toilet, bathroom ceiling fell

The Daily Senlinei-Page-3

10 Marauderettes advance
to district track events

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, May 18, 1982

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEilEAD

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· Pomer6y, Oh.

Front lnd Alltnmtnt Most C1rs .
Ire Itt Strvlct

Our Reg. 13.17

9.99

Garden or Lawn Hose
Rubber vinyl 112x50 ft .

Our Reg. 2.84

(460)

2.17
Decorative Stone
1 Natural ornamental stone.

Our Reg. 77c

t(461)

!or

(462)

$}

Jobe's Plant Food Spikes
Great for houseplants.
spikes .

Fertilizer

185 UPPER RIVER RD. , GALLIPU-[IS, OHIO

'

,

�Tuesday, May 18, 1982

Tuesday, May 18, 19k

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

GRIN AND BEAR IT - Mookle Wilson, New York Mets' ce~t­
terfielder, dives for a hit off the hat of the Cincinnati Reds' Cesar Cedeno
at Shea Stadium Monday night. The hall rolled to the wall and Mookle
came up empty. Cedeno was credited with a second inning double. The
Mel' spent a good part of the night lying on the ground chasing Reds' hits
and making two errors while losing 11-2. IAP Lasewhotol .

l

Scoreboard...
Majors

Leaders

Hy Th ~ Anorialt'd Prt"ss
AMF:RICAN LEAr.UE

NATIONAL LEAGUE

B,\TTING i65 at bul'il
J .Thumpsun,
PttL-.burKh. .369 ; Moreland. Ch1n1.gu, .351:
Ba1lnr , New York , .347 : RBtnes, Montreal.
:\39 : Lu.Smt lh , St.l..outs, .329
HUNS IM.Smtth, St.Louts. JJ: Murphy,

Eash'm Dtvl!ilon

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L

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GH

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2J

12

&amp;57

Ud r ,tt

21

12

636

18
15
14
14
14

I~

19
19
19
:ll

545
441
424

7'-z
8

424

8

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l' urH!l l o&gt;

Wt&gt;s trm Di vision
24 13

l;t lt f.,tru.t
t'h u •II'''

22

Kart,a:-. 1'ttl
Oak l,uHI

·

S,·;tlll•
MLI LILI':&gt;"I..I

12

20
20

"
17

16
10
II

22
21
rl

~

41 2

81".1

6&lt;9
647
588
541

2 1'2
•

1

'?

421

8 1'1

323

II
JJI'l

289

Munday's {;amt'ti
( 1w ill!" 8. Tt·K&lt;ts 6
Kan ,OI .~ CLI\ 7. Nt•v. York 0
( Jn h &lt;;&lt;HLH :~ sdwdult·d
Tut'sday 's GH mt's
Tm onlo •S\ Lt'h 2-4 1 &lt;1\ CII'Vt'land iSut ·
dJfft• 2· ) 1. I 111
Mmnt'SII\&lt;1
1Wl!lutms 2·21
at BaltLLnon•
• l l M&lt;~rtult' t :1-31 . 1n1

St·atlh'

•F B&lt;~nmslN
4-21
&lt;tt
Bustuo
I f. l' kt'l"'S h'\
4-21, I Jl I
Oaklantl 'Nurn ~ 2· 31 &lt;I I Ddrtlll M orn~
~.11. f ll l
Tt ·Ka.' 1 Mt•olwh 2·l l at Chwa.;u 1 Hoyt 71

fH . •Ill

• lknku

t",t hf,.rma

at

:1-1 •

MLiwauk"'

ICt ldv. l'll 2·:1 1. • Il l

Nt•w Yurk t{;u!dn
~ -2 1. • 11 1

5-J 1 at Kansa s

('1ty

, Frot'~ t

W1•dnesday' Gamt&gt;s

Tuwntu .t l Cit'\ t•land . tn L
MLilllt' ~ul&lt;t at Ba llunore. • n 1

,II

So.';t ll lo•

Oakl;utd

uo~t un .

;~\

Do•lrt•ll ,

11\ 1
1 /l l

Tt • X; t ~ at l 'lw a cu. 111 1
Ca hftJrtll&lt;l ill M il ~to' &lt;!Ukt'o:. ' o L
N1' " York &lt;1\ K;msa~ CLI}' . 1n l

NATIONAl. LEAGUE
F.a slt·rn ()h·i!don
w I.
Pl"t. f.B
611
22 14
St I,II UL .~
19 16
~43
21"l
i'h LJii dt·JphLil
19 17
.528
3
No•w Yurk
16 17
Monlro•al
14
18
438
6
P Ltl~ IHir&lt;;ll

... ..,

I~

20
Wt·~ tfrn Dl\lision
2:l
13

Chlr&lt;U:"

Atl&lt;trLiii

18
17
16
16

$;HI ])u•!.!ll
Lu~ A Ill!!' It&gt; ~

( 'uw m natL

15
19
19

429

6'"

639
.545
472

-

21
15 21
$;tt l Frtlfii 'I S\ 'U
Muod~a)· 's r;amt's
Mtmlrl'al 4. Atlanta 0
('uu-mnttt L 7. Ne14' York 2
ll uu:-ton

Huu..~ ton 6,

Onlv

PhL latll'lph1a

~&lt;utlt'5

30.

...

Hu .

J unt•s,

S~n

Dll'lo(O.

29:

Hornt• r. AllanUI .

RBI : Murph}. Atlanta , 34 ; Ktn!o(n\Hn ,
Nt• w Yurk . :\2 . Mort'ltllld. OlJ cH..;o, 29;
J Thompson.
PLttsburl-(h.
29 ;
B.DLat,
PhJla&lt;h'lphLa , 25 , Herulnek , St.Loms, 25
HI TS WL bon. Nt'w Vurk, 49; Lo.Snuth,
St Loms. 47 . Murdand . C'h rea!o(u, 46 : lkster. CLO&lt;"Illna\1 . 4!'J : KmKht , Houston, 44
DOUBLES Garrwr, Huu..'llun. 12 : Par\t ··r . PLtL~bur~h . 10: ln. Srmth, St. l.ours .
10 . Km!o(hl. Huus\CML, 10: 6 TLt&gt;d W1th 9.
TRIPLES Wdsun. New York , 3: Ruse,
PhLhHit'l ph La .
3;
lit'rr, St.
!.oms. 3:
H HauLLrez. AlhHLlli . 3; Coneepc10n . CLilnnnatL, 3: Ot•stcr. CmeumalL , 3.
HOME HUNS Km!o(rnan. New York . 12 :
Murphy. Atlanl&lt;t, II : J . Thompson, PLtl~·
bur Kh. 10 : Hl"nll mk . St.LouLs, 9; Horner ,
At\HilW, 9

STOLE N BA.."'ES
Moreno. PLII.sbur~ h .
22 : O..·rnu·r. PhLladelphnt , 21. Lo .Srmth,
Sl l.IJUJS. 18 : WLl son, New York, 15 : JUun·
''·' · Mon\rl"al . 12
PITCHING 15 Del"ls wnsJ · Sutton, Houstnn, 6-J. 657. 2 .W : 1kn•ny1, CmnnnatJ , 41. .800 . 2.3:i : Ha . Jon~s. New York, 4-2,
667 . 2 89 . PUit'O, Nt•w York , 4-2, .667.
3.72. G&lt;trbt·r . Atlanlli , 4-2, .667. 1.76;
Wt•ll·h. Los Anl!dt•s. 4-2 . .667, 3.72 ; Noles,
('hwa.;u, ~3 . 625 . 3.7 1: RuKers. Montreal,
5-3 . 625, 1 66 . Valt•nwela. Los AnKeles, ~
J . 625, 2.43
STRIKEOUTS
Sotu. Cuw mnall , 66 ·
Carlton. PhLlatlt·l phm . 63 : IWKers. Munln•al . 51: Hyan. How;tnn. 41 : l .ollar , San
1&gt;1•'1.!0. 41
AMERICAN LEAGUE
UATI'ING 16!1 ;tl balsl
Bonnell Torunto,
.«0 : Mdlnd~.
Clevelaml ' .il2 ;
Harrah. Clevdand,
376 ; Coope;, Mil·
waukc1•, .l:J4 : E.Murray , Baltimore, .350.
RUNS · H.Henderson, Oakland, 32: Har·
rah , Clevl'luntl, 29: Thornton, Cleveland,
27; 6 TLl'{l WLlh 25.
HBI. Thornton, C l~v~Ja nd, JJ : McRat! ,
Kansa s CLty. 11 : OglivLe, Milwaukee, :Ji;
Hrbek , Minnesvt.a . 26 : Baylor, California,
25 : IJJtlllsk L, ChkaKO. 25 : Otis, Kansas
f' Lty, 2$

31'l
6

457
432

6''l
71..z

41 7

8

I

sc:ht'l.lull'ti
1\rn;day's Games

·

Atlttnl&lt;l,

KlllKIIIHil, Nn~· Yurk , 26:

Atlimla 1 Dayley 0-1 1 at M ontrt•al tG ul ·
2·21, I n )
CLnt· mnutJ 1St-avrr 1-4 1 at New York
1H.Jones 4-21, 1n1
Houston l J .N it•kru 3-31 at PhLlatlelphta
11tutlw l'n 2·31, 1111
St l.ouLs IF'orst•h 4~ 1 at San DLt' ~u
I ( 'ur tL S 2· ] 1, In I
( 'hlt·a~u
1Mttrlz 3-31
at Lm An ~ell's
1Wt'lr h 4· 21, l n l
P L t l'ibur~h
Camit&gt;l&lt;ma
0-11
at
S&lt;!n
Frannst·u l i.askt•y 2-21, In)
Wt'dnetiday'11 Gamn;
I'Lil~ bur l( h at San fi'r aneLSt'U
Atlanta &lt;~I Montreal , In 1
("mt"Hmat l at N~w YoM!.. l nL
Hnus tmL 111 Phlladdph!a , 1n l
St LHUIS at San Dlei(O, 1n 1
('tunu.:u nl Los An~-:e les, In I
lwks u n

1

NBA results

HITS
Harrah. Cleveland. 47 ; Cooper,
MLiwaukct•.
ti :
IA"F'lon·.
C ht ca ~o.
C) ;
Boe hle, &amp;·atilt•, 42: DownmK. Cal ifornia ,
41 , Wathan, Kan.'&gt;ils Ct ly. 41
OOUBI.F.S
Ot1s,
Kansas
Ctly,
14:
Whitt•. Kansas CLt)'. II; MdUte , Kansas
City, 10; 7 TLt•d W1th 9.
TRJPI.ES Evans, B~ ton . 3: McBnde,
Clt·vdantl, 3: Herndon, Detroit , 3: Yount,
MLiwaukl..'c, 3; U~h.aw, Toronto, 3; Cowt•ns, ~a tti c. 3: G . Wri ~h t , Texas, 3.
HOMF. HUNS: Thornton , Cleveland, 10;
Hrbt·k. Minnesota , 10: ROt'nieke, Baltirnon·. 9: Murphy. Ottkland, 8: Harrah,
('ll'vl'i&lt;Hitl , 7: O~liVLI',
Milwaukee , 7;
Downm~. California,
7: H.Johnson , Mm·
llt'SOla, 7
STOLEN
BASES :
R.Hcnderson. Oak·
land, 38; IA:flore, . Clltl'HKO, 13: Lopes,
OAkland,
11 : Mohtur,
MLiwaukct•,
10;
Watturn, Kansas City, 9
PITCJ-ONG f5 Dedswns l : Hoyt , Oli·
ral.(u, 7 ~ . 1.1100, 1.43 ; Gu1dry, NeW Vorl!. ,
5- J, .833, 3.00 : Za hn, Ca lifornia , ~I . .83.1 ,
2.07: Bl:lrker , Otveland, 4·1, .800 , 2 . ~ ;
Ca udtll. Seattle , 4-1 . .1100, 1.88 : Darwin
Tt·x.as. 4-1 , .800. 1.96; Eekersley, Bo~1on:
4-2, .667. 2.19. Vukovteh, Mil'l'·auke~. of.2,
.667 . 3.79: Claney , Toronto, 4-2 . . 667, US :
Burns, Chteal.!o. 4-2. .667. 2.81 · FrMt
Kansas Ctt)', H . .667 , 4.05 : F.Banmstt'r:
Seullle. 4·7 . .667, 3.68.

Falcone, 3-1, to tie the score 1-1.
Householder scored the gG-ahead
run on a grounder to second by Ron
Oester.
The Reds scored two more in the
fourth on a single by Mike Vail and a
throwing error by Mets shortstop
Tom Veryzer, and a run scored in
the Reds fifth on another Mets
throwing error, this one by Hubie
Brooks at third.
" In 162 games, there are 'X' ownher of games that you play like
this," Mets Manager George Bamberger said. "The drive wasn't there
tonight. You could sense it. The guys
looked like they were dead. You
have to get these games out of your
system."
New York threatened to pull
within striking range in the fifth
when George Foster, a fonner Red,
came to the plate with two out and
men on first and third. Foster
worked the count to 3-2 before fanning on an offspeed pitch.
"Tonight, we had the opportunity
and didn't do it," Foster said.
"That's the game of baseball.
Leibrandt changed real well, and I
just couldn't hit it. Everything was
located just right."
The Mets did get one hack in the
eighth after Wilson singfed to chase
Leibrandt. Hume walked the fir:;t
batter he faced, John Stearns, on
four pitches. Foster's grounder forced Stearns at second and sent
Wilson to third, and Dave Kingman
hit a sacrifice fly to left.
But the Reds came hack with two
more in the ninth on a single by Dave
Concepcion, consecutive walks to
Cesar Cedeno and Wayne Krenchicki and a two-run single by Eddie
Milner.

Expos prevail
despite protests
By Associated Press
Shakespeare didn't have the
Atlanta Braves and Montreal Expos
in mind when he wrote, " Me thinks
he doth protest too much."
But it would be hard to protest any
more than the Braves and Expos did
Monday nighl as Montreal's Steve
Rogers fired a two-hitter for a ~
victory.
Both teams announced prior to the
sixth inning they were playing the
game under protest. The Braves
claimed Rogers had a foreign sul&gt;stance in his glove and should have
been ejected. The Expos charged
that Atlanta starter Bob Walk should
have been removed for pitching with
a handage on his finger.
Home plate wnpire Jerry Dale
made Rogers change his glove
before the fifth inning and also had
Walk remove the handage.
"He's a great pitcher, don't let me
take anything away from him,"
Atlanta Manager Joe Torre said of
Rogers. "The ball was moving real
good. We suspected he was using
pine tar. I just want to cover all the
angles."
Rogers couldn't understand what
the fuss was about.
"I use a conditioner on the pocket
of my glove to condition the
leather," he said. "There might
have been a buildup in the glove, and
that, combined with some dirt,
might have made it look like a
foreign substance."
Crew chief Bob Engle, umpiring at
third, said there was no trace of pine
tar on any of the balls.
"It's a matter for the league
president to decide," Torre said.
Rogers, :;.,'!, lowered his NLIeading earned-run average to 1.66
with his second shutout of the
season. He struck out eight, walked
two and gave up a one-out single to
Bob Horner in the second inning and
an infield hit to pinch-hitter Ken
Smith in the eighth .
Astruo 8, PblUJes I
Houston put together seven singles

for five runs in the fifth-inning and
Vern Ruhle, making his first start in
17 games, pitched a four-hitter and
retired 21 of the last 23 Philadelphia
batters.
Meanwhile in the American League,
Billy Martin must be remembered
as the man who insisted upon
making what turned out to be one of
baseball's most one-sided trades.
The year was 1976 and Martin,
then making his first tour as
manager of the New York Yankees,
developed a dislike for pitcher Larry
Gura.
So in May of that year Gura was
·shipped to Kansas City for a catcher,
Fran Healy, who played one season
before becoming a broadcaster.
Gura makes no effort to hide his
resentment toward Martin, and he
has become one of baseball's most
consistent pitchers. His 74-40 record
and .649 winning percentage in that
span is second in the American
League only to Ron Guidry's .720.
He's been most uevastating against
the Yankees, and the six-hit, 7~
shutout he tossed at the New
Yorkers Monday night hiked his
regular season record against his
old club to ~2.
In the only other American
League game, the Chicago White
Sox downed the Texas Rangers~.
Whatever animosity Martin felt
toward Gura is returned in full. The
smooth-throwing lefthander admits
he no longer derives special
gratification beating the Yankees
since Martin no longer is their
manager. His vendetta, he said, was
never against the Yankees.
"It was against Billy," he added.
"Now the vendetta is against
Oakland," where Martin manages.
Roger Erickson, 4-4, making his
first start since corning to the
Yankees in a trade with Minnesota,
ran into some sizzling Kansas City
bats. Willie Wilson singled, doubled
and tripled and George Brett, John
Wathan and Hal McRae drove in two
l1lllll apiece.

Transactions
BASEBALL

American Lape

National BaP.etbaU Auociltloo

CONFERENCE FINALS

DETROIT
TIGERS- Recalled
R1ck
outfielder. from Evansville uf the

L~ac h ,

Belt of Seven
Eutern Conference
Wednnday, May 11
PhLladelphLH at Bootou, (n)

American Association .
TEXAS
RANGERS- Oblained

Randy

Bass. outfielder, on waivers from the San
Die~o:o Padre11.

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

1982 All SEOAL
softball team
Player - School- Pos.

Kim Mullen, Wel lston. c
Pam Crooks, Meigs, 2b
Yock Emerson. Logan, Jb
Lori Laning, Logan, p.
Jacque Johnson, Logan, c. f.. p
Janet Walker. Ironton. c. f., ss, p
Shari Howard. Gallipolis, ss
Pam Lee, Athens, c
Angela Mollica, Athens, s.s.

Second Team
Beth Potts, Wellston, p
Ronda Pendleton, Waverly, 1b
Natalie Lambert, Meigs, p

--- -·

Yr.

12
12
12
12

12
12
t2
12
11

12
11
11

Kim Cotterill, Logan, ss

Dee Vermil lion, Logan, c
Amy Davis, Jackson, c.f.
Allison Fletcher, Ironton, Jb
Renee Halley, Ga ll ipolis, p, If
Nancy Evans, Gallipolis, p, If
Honorable Me'lti"'n

HEARING TESTS
SET FOR
MEIGS COUNTY

THURSDAY
MAY 20th
9 AM to 12 Noon

Wil Be Given By
H. W. Mattingly
11

BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, Ohio

11
11

Anyone who has trouble hearing is we lcome to have a hearing test
using modern electronic equipment to determine if his loss Is one

11

10
11

Melissa Spencer, 12, Wellston; Sue
Robertson, 12, Waver ly; Krls
Snowden, 11, Meigs; Angie McFann,
10, Logan; Teresa Barnes, 10,
Jackson ; Carolyn McMaken, 10
Ironton; Jill Miller, 9, Galllpolls1
Krls Kroner, 11 , Athens.

Michaels

-·-------------------~----~-'---

Tara Linden and Raymord Jef- ~
frey Michael Jr., celebrated their
first and second birthdays recently
at the home of their parents,
Raymond and Debi Lawson Michael
of Middleport. Tara is two and her
brother is one.
A cake decorated with miniaturl'
Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls in a
playground scene was served with
refreshments. The cake was made
by Mrs. Michael's aunt, Marlene
Lawson, Letart, W. Va .
Attending and sending gifts and
ca rds were Mr. and Mrs . Robert

•

E II is

Lawson, Racine ; Maxine Michael

Gaul

Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Jim Kise;
and family , Racine ; Joyce Dill and
children, Rutland; Mike and Kathy
Salser, Langsville: Mr. and Mrs .
Herman Michael, Chris and Crystal
Simpkins, and Heather Mitchell
Middleport.
'

Mrs. Lucy Gaul was honored with
an open house recently in olr
servance of her 86th birthday .
Mrs. Rodney Gaul, Mrs. Cecilia
Murphy and Betty Farrar served
cake and punch to the guests with
Pam Murphy and Lea Ann Gaul
registering the guests.
The open house was hosted by
Mrs. Barhara Sargent and children,
Roger, Rodney Gaul, and Ceci lia
Murphy . Gifts and cards were
presented to the honored guest.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. V.
Clay Tuttle, Middleport ; Mrs. Betty
Farrar, Mrs. Leona Machir, Mr. and
Mrs. Ziba Midkiff, Mr. and Mrs. J.
M. Gaul, Mr. and Mrs. Hoger Gaul ,
Rogie and Lea Ann Gaul , Chris
Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith.
Maxine Goeglein, Jackie, April and
John Brickles, Jodeena , Greg,
James and Gary, Jr., Hysell, Sara
Cullwns, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Blackwood, Edith Sisson, Bernice Hawk,
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs. Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Curtis, all of

E II is
A party was held recently in ol&gt;servance of the lOth birthday of
Richard Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Ellis.
Cake, ice cream, potato chips and
kool-aid were served. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ellis, paternal grandparents, Mrs. Peggy Ellis,
Bobby and Tracy, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Justus and Christy, Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Hoffner, B. J. Hoffner,
Jennifer Tyree and Sally and Aaron
Price, Mrs. Clara Ellis and Billy,
Mrs. Martha Carter and Adam, Mrs.
Blanche Parsons and Amber sent
gifts but were unable to attend .
Games were played at the party.

\.

....
\

Bills' Joe Ferguson

Nt'Y.'SJli:IJ.H.'r Sah·s. 73.1 Thml
Yurk . No·w York 10017

BIRMINGHAM, Ala . (API
Fred " Dixie" Walker, the leading
hitter in the National League in 1944
with the Brooklyn Dodgers, died
following a long bout with cancer.
He was 71.
Walker spent six seasons in the
American League as an outfielder
with the New York Yankees, the
Chicago White Sox and the Detroit
Tigers before going to Brooklyn,
where he hit .357 in 1944 and was
known as "The People's Cherce."
Walker, a three-time All-Star, hit
better than .300 in 12 of his 19 major
league seasons, had a lifetime
average of .306 and collected 10 hits
in two World Series (1941 and 1947) .
He finished his career in 1949 with
the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Revival services at Church nf

Nt•w

A \' l'll Ut' ,

POSTMASTEH · St·ntl adtln·ss tu Tht• Dally
So·tLtL Jit'l. I l l ('oJUfl St ., P• •ttlt' fll~ . Ohm 45769.
SUBS&lt;' RIPTION RATF.S

H\ ('ljrril'r ur Mutur Ruult•

OntJ. wet•k .

. S1.00

Uut• Month
Out· Yo•a J'

$4 .40
$52.80
SING I.E COP Y
I~RI( ' f'-&lt;;

1~

J);ul~

Ct•nts

Suhscnlwrs not tlt'SJI'UL J: to J»&gt; Y tht· t:arnt•r
Jna_v n·nnt LLL advilnt ·t· tiLrt'rl 1" The Dally
s ,•ntmcl nn il :J. 6 nr 12 munth hasLs. Cn •dJI
• wLII bt' ~ L vcu n trrit•r t•adt nwnt/1 .

towns
wlwrt• home ea rri1•r serVIl't' JS av:ulahlt'.

Nusubsn1pl1uns by Lnatl]Wntllllt•d 111

MAII.SURSCRIPTIONS
Ohiu and Wt'NI \lir..:inia
.1 Mt•nth

. $12.35
120.80 .

Sill LIIIJIL!h

Rail's Oul~idt• Ohin
and Wt·st \'irKinia
3Muuth .
6 Munth .
I

.. SIJ.OO
.. $23.40

Yo •&lt;~r

$44.20

RACINE - The administrative
board of the United Methodist Churrh, Racine, will meet May 25 at 7:30
p.m. instead of the original meeting
date of May 19.

by a repn:SI'IIli-ili Vl' of the Ml'i gs

Maternal grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs . James Guinther,
Syracuse. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. David Hud·
dl eston, Racine.
Maternal great-grandparents
are Naomi London. Syracise, and
the late Herman London, and Mr .
and Mrs. Shirley Guinther.
Pomeroy.
Paternal great-grandmother is
Grace Holter, Hacine.

Justice

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE
N•zarene
Worne:.'s Missionary Society,
Syracuse, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
with election of officers. Nada
Kittle is the president.

CHESHIRE - Galha-MeJg&gt;
Community Action will hold free
clothing day for low income
people Thursday, May 20. from 9
a.m. until noon. The agency
clothing bank is loeated in the old
high school building at Cheshire .
HACINE Fi remen's Auxiliary
will sponsor a kitchen showe r for
Sam and Ruth Shain who lost
their trai ler by fire on Ma1Th 26.
The shower will be held Thursday. May 20, at 7:30p.m. at Ihe

sggg
.

incl udes the grel'n fee s per pl'l"·

son, will bt• donated to till' Me1gs
Co unt y He;Hl A ss oc iation .
pn ze~

Nwncrous

will bt' aw&lt;Jr -

ded . Tht• public 1s 1nvited to par-

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYR~CUSE, OHIO
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPR ING SEASON
•Vegetabl e Plant s
•Bedding Pl a nt s
•Foilag e Plants and
Hanging Baskets
OPENDAILY9tit8
SUNDA Y1T IL 5

PHONE 992·5776

MAY
SALE
DAYS
DRY IDEA
ROLL·ON
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
REG OA UHSCEHTEO

Cake and ice cream were served

REG . RETAIL

S UJ

NEW
FREEDOM
.SUPER MAXI PADS

REG RETAIL Sl3. 16

PLAYTill
BABY
NURSER KIT

Mr . and Mrs. Gary King, Gary, Jr. ,
Tony and Jeremy .

.~,::$598
REG . RETAIL $1 .88

'BARGAIN IIATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S 2.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUfSDAY S 2 00

NEW
FREEDOM
SUPER MA XI PAD S

REG RETAIL S I 62

PLAYTE:X
DISPOSABLE

ic71t811'""'
Bonus ip,=-~~~ ·
c . ·'i

4(kl

Mr:;. Swaine Allen, Porn~roy , and

531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt . 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524

REG RETAIL S4 69

··~~153

and games were played with prizes
going to Misti and Shawn King .
Attending were his grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs . Jack King, Mrs. Jess it•
Ferrell, Dick, Ca rla and Darla Kmg,
Mr . and Mrs. Danny King, Misti and
Shawn, Greg King, Nancy Samos,
and Mark Friend. Unable to attend
were Mr. and Mrs. Clyde H. Smith ,
Hob and Karl, Long Bottom, Mr. and

CANCER (June 21-July 221 Situations where you use both your logic
and chann will be carried off successfully today . In areas where
emotions govern your actions, setbacks are likely.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You'll treat fri ends in accord with your views
and opinions amicably today . However, you m1ght come down lou hard on
those who disagree with you.
VIRGO IAug. 23-Sept. 221 A joint venture you're invol ved in might nut
be the blessing you first thought, because its disadvantages could oulweigh its benefits.
LIRRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 231 If you have problems with others on a ont'
t&lt;HJne basis today, the fault may not be entirely theirs. Ask yourself
honestly if you're being too hard to please.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Important responsibiliti es should be attended to first today, while you are fresh and energetic. Tackling difficult
situations when you're tired could lead to making serious mistakes.
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Even though you will know what
best serves your self-interests, there is a possibility you might yield to
peer pressure today and do things against your better judgment.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jan. 191 Although you will be capable of
holding your own in any given situation today. there is a chance you may
assess things negatively and view yourself as the underdog.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb. 191 Be on guard today if you are participating in a friendly competitive game. The one you may go against
might be someone who can't handle losing.
PISCES (Feb. 21).March 201 Your financial prospects look encouraging at this time, provided you don't do any deficit spending. Think
twice before taking on new long-tcnn obligations.
ARIES (March 21-Aprill91 Unless you select companions today who

POMEROY - The second •n·
nual Hoyal Crown 100 Heart Golf
Tournament wi ll be held Thursda y by the Jaymar Golf Course.
Ladies tee off tunc wi ll be 9 a.m.
with the men to tee off between I
and 3 p.m. The fel' of $10. wh!l'h

bt• obtained from Luis Kelly . Nan·
cy Reed or Bob Freed .

THURSDAY

Matthew Alen Justice, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Brian K. Justice, Hyse ll
Hun, Pomeroy , observed his first
birthday recently with a party at hi s
home.

Gaul

invited.

lictpa te. Morl' tnformatton may

79

(J

REG REJAJL S I 99

JOHNSON'S (-

.:$i;'

9

TUB &amp; TILE,
CLEANER

=

REG. RETAIL S I J9

SPtCE TTES OR lotLNI ATVRE
OAANG E Sli CES

$119

17-oz.
•ero&amp;ol

REG. RETAIL 99•
REG RETAIL fl. 19

E:XCALIBUR
CHILDREN'S
SUNGLASSES

··~· J9e

49e

REG. RETAIL 69'

REG. RETAIL $2 . 19

PROFISSIONAL

HAIR
BRUSH

89e
GPB~r*CI

~a~r~e~a~s~e~n~t~hus~·ia~s~
· c~a~bo~ut~t~h:e~s:a~Jn~e~t~h~in:g~s~t~ha:t~i~n~te~r:es:'!~y~o~u~,~th~e~y~'ll~p~u~t~a~l_~~~~~~~~~~~~_J
damper on your ·tJ~
progress.

r

,..

OFF
lABEl

REG RfTAIL J3.9.S

PEPSODENT
TOOTHPASTE
RETAIL
REG.
12.00
6.S·c)Z .

99e

CLAIROL
FINAL NET
SOFT HOLD. Ul T HOLD OR
UL T HOLO UNSCENTED

REG. RCTAIL 1173

PEPTO·

BISMOL
6-oz .

$169
1- 4 - - -

· POMEROY - There will be a

hymn sing at Nease Settlement

ST. JOSEPH

Church Saturday, May 22, at 7:30
p.m. Featured singers will be the
Sunrise Singers. The public is invited to attend.
r.o.}·:·,t,• . . •.•, . ........ !l

'", :

· Tickets for the Pomeroy Alwnni
Association hanquet and dance to be
held on May 29 at the Meigs ~gh
School cafeteria remain on sale at
New York Clothing House and
Swisher-Lohse.
: Alwrmi may also mail checks for
Fl for each ticket along with a selfaddress envelope to the Pomeroy
Alumni Association, Box 202,
Pomeroy. The fl ticket is for both
~ banquet and t~nce with
music to be provided by "Dynasty."
·I The dance is open to the public 11t
per person.

-

/ ' ' '· ·· ·· · · 'fWIW'I ~ ·--

. : - - - - - ------

-

- --

-- ;--;

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monitor, anci18,CIOO-ctiii1'11Cter memory-all In one bHutitul
desktop unit. Learn to program with our eaay-to-raed manual, or add an optional cuaette recOrder to uae e wide variety of I'Hdy·to-run programs. Easily expendable to our
deluxe 2-dfak bualneaa ayatem.

ftad1e/haek
A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

f2

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
R.ADIO ,SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR·PARTICIPATING DEALER

PRICES MAY VARY AT I DIVID~ STdRES AND DEALERS

: RUTLAND - TJ\ere will be a teen
Pance May 21 from 8 p.m. to U,:30
p.m. at Rutland Civic Center. Admission is $2 for singles and $3 for

.,_, TMC!y Corp.

Collples.

.I

C~~~~A~:·s
.______

Each Chipper dinner
Includes: TWO golden brown
fish flleta, crlap french fries,
creamy cote slaw, and two
southern style 'hush puppies.

lOtlor-- .Me 2. 1'lea

Captain
........ D's.

.

31

t•bl•t•

REG REWl " "

SARAN WRAP

49e
85 c:
_____._____
~
·· ·

REG. RETAIL lUI

FAMILY PACK

COMBS
tl PIECES

53c

I

l~~

BRACH'S
LYSOL BASIN,
JELLY
CANDIES
SP(AAMIN T lEAVES. BL G BEN JElliES .

RACINE - St. Jude's Bike-AThon "wheels for life" will be held
Saturday, May 22, at I p.m. Persons
are to meet at Racine Fire Station.
Persons must have at least one sponsor to be eligible for prizes. For adilitional infonnation call94~2093.

Our Most Affordable TRS-80
For Professional or Home Use

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• Games for
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Program

lwld . Program will ill' presented
Museum .

a sourpuss might spoil your da y.

POMEROY - A hymn sing will be
held Saturday, May 22, at Freedom
Gospel Mission, county road 31, at
7:30p.m. Featured will be The Road
Masters of Colwnbus. The public is
invited to attend.

.. 139.00

I Yt'ar

SALISBUHY PTO. 730 p.m.
Tul·sda y . Studt•nt art show to bl'

Justice

fidential information that could bt• profitable to you. Even if the returns
might not be large, they'll stili be worth runsidt•ring.
TAURUS IApril 21).May 201 Duties and res pons1 bi lilies must be efficiently scheduled today, or you could end up workmg very hard w1th little to show for your efforts.
GEMINI IMay 21-JuneZOI You'll bt• in a sociable mood today, but you
must be selective of the group you'll be mvolved with. Aclique containmg

An alumni queen will be crowned
at the annual Racine Alwnni to be
held at Southern High School on
Saturday, May 20. Dinner will be
served at 6 p.m. followed by a dance
from 9 p.m. until midnight.
Tickets for the dinner are on sale
at Village Cut Rate for $5.50. Per·
sons may send for reservations but
must enclose a self-addressed envelope to Mrs. Raymond Pierce , Rt.
2, Box 44, Racine. No reservations
may be made by phone after May 25.
Admission to the dance is $4 .
Candidates for queen are Jenny
Manuel, Denise Riffle, Rita Sloter
and Mary Winebrenner. The winner
will be chosen by those attending .

Haci ne Fire Station. The public is

REG. RETAIL $2.87

From time to time this coming year you ma y bl' pri \·y to somt' con-

Mrs. Ted Riley Jr., Middleport, is
a patient at University Hospital,
Columbus. Her room number is 567,
Means Hall.

Mr. and Mrs. David Huddleson,
Racine, announce the birth of a
son, Jesse Davis, on May 13 at
Holzer Medical Center.

TUESDAY

'

May 19, 1982

Christ in Christian Union will be held
at the Pearl Street Middleport chur·
ch, 7:30 each evening through May
23. Rev . Leland Hale y is thl'
evangelist.

Huddleston

'

Astrograph

Wise on Sunday evening .

Calendar

• ••

RUTLAND - There will be
skating Saturday, May 22, from 7:30
p.m. to 10:30 p.m. at Rutland Civic
Center. Admission is $2 for adults
and $1 for children. Persons are to
being their own skates.

Weekend rev1val services will be
held at Rock Springs United
Methoidst Church at 7:30 p.m. Dick
Ash will be speaker and singing will
be by Harmony on Friday, Enterprise and Rock Springs Choir
with Bill Crane and Debbie Grueser
on Saturday, and the ROCK Springs
Choir, Flatwnod Singers and Jane

Hula and North-South all star
The Dave Diles golf tournament
has tackled one of pro football's top
games .
Ferguson is well-known for his
quarterbacks.
charity work, too, and has often been
Joe Ferguson, the talented signalcited for his outstanding off-the-field
caller for the Buffalo Bills, will be on
hand for both the dinner and the golf
accomplishments. He will be accompanied here by his wife Sandi,
event June ~10.
Ferguson is a nine-year National
and Bud Tice, the head trainer for
Football League star who came out
the Bills.
of the University of Arkansas to , - - - - -- - - - - - - - NFL stadium.
He led the Buffalo Bills to the 1980
The Daily Sentinel
AFC Eastern Di vision cham~USPS lfS-9601
pionship. Ferguson, who came out of
A Uivitolnnnf Multimedia, lnt·.
Shreveport, La ., has been Buffalo's
Publislwtlt·very afternoon. Munda y thruu)! h
regular quarterback since his rookie
Fru.l&lt;ty . Ill Court Strct'l. by the Ohw Valley
Pubhshinl.( Ctllllpan y · Multlmc\hll . \lit' . ,
season of 1973. In 1975, he set a Bills'
Punlt'L"Il}', Ohio 45769 , 992-71:;6. Scl'ulltl dHS!I
record by throwing a scoring pass in
postal.!t' pmd at Pmncnty, Ohw
a dozen consecuti ve games.
Mt•tntwr Tht• Assoc:ratt'll Pre.'l~. Jnlant.l Oa t·
Ferguson earned all-American
I~ Prt'ss Assoo: mtLon ami 1111' ALtiCflt'all
Nt·WS]l&lt;lpt·r Puhl1slh 'I"S ASSIII.'talHILl , Natwn;tl
honors at Arkansas, played in the
Aoh•,•rt tsL lll! R,•prt•st·nttttl \' t', Rranham

Dixie Walker dies

Pomeory .
Madl, Carolyn, Marolyn Barton,
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Chaffee,
Henry Smith, Reedsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Doug Bissell and son, Betty
Chevalier, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Murphy
and Pam, Tupp•rs Plains; Mrs.
Floyd Weber, Mrs. Terry Hoffman,
Lisa and Brair, Mrs. Elizabeth Clay,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Masters and
Jeff and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Riffle.
Long Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Moore,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Dunn , Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Bowles,
LaDonna and Lisa Nelly, Tom and
Anita Moretts. Dayton : Mr. and
Mrs. Elson Bowles, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Bowles, David Bowles and
Melanie Green, Athens ; Mr . and
Mrs. Russell Archer, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Warner, Guysville; Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Gooch,
Ga llipolis; Rev. Richard Jaymes,
Mt. Vernon; Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Gaul, Mike, Sara, and Jeremy, Vincent: Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes,
Richard and David Gaul, Opal
Wickham , Margaret Christy, Letha
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Bawn,
Gay ann and Todd Clay, the Rev . and
Mrs. Herbert Grate and Herbie,
Mrs. J ean Frederick , Mrs. Nancy
Morri ssey, Tom and Ca rr ie,
Chester.

County happenings

Bills' Ferguson
in Diles Tourney

which ·may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss will be ex·
plained and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.
We Also service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes For Sale.
IF YOU CAN NOT COME INCALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT .·
PHONE Hl-3629

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Meigs County births and birthdays

Leibrandt, Reds
beat Mets, 7-2
NEW YORK (AP) - It was the
eighth inning, and Cincinnati Reds
Manager John McNamara had a
word of advice for pitcher Charlie
Leibrandt.
" Hwnie was warming up. Mac
told me to just go out and throw as
hard as I can, and 'We'll come out
and get you if you mess up,"'
Lei brandt said.
Leibrandt gave up a leadoff single
to New York Mets center fielder
Mookie Wilson in the eighth,
bringing on Reds ace reliever Tom
Hume, but it still represented
Leibrandt's longest outing of the
season.
Leibrandt, a left-hander, scattered eight hits, struck out five and
did not issue a walk in the Reds' 7-2
victory over the Mets Monday night.
What impressed both Leibrandt and
McNamara about the outing was the
pitcher's control.
In the spring, Lei brandt " had been
getting behind the hitters, not
challenging them," McNamara
said. "Now, he's started to throw
strikes."
Leibrandt said pitching coach Bill
Fischer had "impressed on me to be
aggressive and challenging.
Everytime I go out, I try to remember that. They'll get their hits off
me, but if I don't walk anybody, I'll
be OK ."
Leibrandt allowed a first-inning
run when Wilson singled, went to
second on a grounder, stole third and
scored when catcher Alex Trevino's
throw sailed into left field .
In the third inning, though,
Leibrandt singled with one out and
came home on a triple by Paul
Householder off Mets starter Pete

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

�Pa g e---6- The Daily Se ntinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May 18, 1982

Drew Webster iuniors awarded
A trophy tor the best all-around
program among junior American
Legion Auxiliary units in the state of
Ohio was won by the Pomeroy
juniors of Drew Webster Post 39 and
their adviser, Mrs. Harry Davis.
The trophy was presented at the
Department of Ohio's 31st Annual
Conference held at the B exley Post
in Coiwnbus Saturday.
" Reach Out and Touch Juniors"
was the theme of the conference by
246 Auxiliary members.
In addition to the trophy award,
first pla ces in the state wer e also
r eceived by the unit in children and
youth, veterans' affairs a nd

rehabllltation and history by Robin
Lehew.
Certificates were presented to the
juniors in the adopt a grandfather
contest, with Amber Rankin
receiving an award for her conference cover. Kim Patierson and
Robin Campbell also received awards for their foreign relations scrapbook and travelog.
Certificate for second place in
money rontributed to the Deaf and
Blind School in Namibia, the forei gn
relations country for the year, went
to Kim Patterson. The unit also
received a special citation for a well-

Tuesday, May 18, 1982

rounded junior activities program.
Sherri Fox, the newly elected
Eighth District junior president, attended along with her mother, Mrs.
Martha Hanel, Middleport.
Going from the Pomeroy unit were
Mrs. Davis, Mrs. L&lt;lretta Tiemeyer,
unit president; Mrs. Osby Martin
and Adam, Mrs. John Hankie, Amber and Laney, Kim Patterson,
Robin Campbell, Anita Smith, Erica
McClintock, and Mrs . Rhod a
Hackett.
Each first place winner received a
desk flag and book on flag etiquette
besides the certificate.

Business Services
.---------,----------"'"----------r----------1%

J' '

Trading
Spring Valley
Valley
off. Co.,
Spring
Plaza, «6·8025.

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION
CAN HELP YOU
BUILD ¥OUR DRU~MS!J
New Construction
and Remodeling.

25 . .The day camp is open to scouts
for $Band to non-scouts for $9.

Wednesday, Thursday and Friday,
and for the Brownies on a Tuesday
night in the lodge. Special programs
will include a night hike, cra fts, and

Registrati on forms are available
from any troop leader, or from Mrs.
Shirley Cogar or Mrs. Janet Simpson. This yea r the local units will be
joined by scouts at New Haven.
Harold and Rhea Norris will be the
day camp directors. Adult volunteers do not have to be registered but
will be re quired to complet e

a n awards ceremony by the eamp.-

training. The first training session ls

fire on Thursday night.

June 3 at 7:30p.m . at the Meigs Inn.

juniors, cadettes and seniors on
TROPHY

WINNER

-

Veda

Davis,

Junior

American Ll•gion Auxiliary adviser, Drew Webster
Post 39 , Pomeroy, sea ted , left, and Kim Panerson,
j unior president, display the trophy won for the best
:J II·around prngram in junior activities in the state of

Ohio. Pictured with them displaying other awards are,
from the left, Amber Hankie, Laney Hankie, L&lt;lrena
Ti emeyer, Auxiliary pretildeut, Robin Campbell, Anita
Smith, and Erica McClintock.

VACUUM SWEEPER EXCHANGE &amp; SERVICE
Authorized Factory Dealer for
Compact,tfoover, ·eureka, Regina,
Panuonic Vacuum .

RAINBOW-The Am11in1 Water Machine
" Tht machine of tomorrow-toaav t
Soaring Ahead Nature's Way
,. Curt• li s your house dust problems.
u.P·.s. Service GallipoliS 614·446·70"
Parkersburg, w.v. J04·4U-S0 4
Murdoch Av. &amp; Lakeview Or.

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN
PH. 992-3543 or 992-23..

Personals

FRYE'S PENNZOIL
Salem St.
Rutland, Oh.
TUES. lhru SAT .
9 AM . to 10 P .M .
SUN.IOA.M. to6 P.M .
Phone 742-9575

Mr. and Mrs. J a mes Gi lmore have
returned from a visi t in Hilliard w ith
their daughter, Sandy Darst, and
her family.

Mrs. J ea n Wri ght cmd gra ndson,

Tire sales &amp; repairs, gas

&amp;· groceries. We now

Jason, spent May 7 and 8 with Mr.
and Mrs. John Anderson and Kell y,
Cambridge.

have new American
made Mopeds in stock.
5395 Plus Tax
4-18-1 mo_

Vinyl

OHIOVAUEY
ROOFING

&amp; Aluminum

Complete gutter work,
complete remodeling,
roofing of all types,
Worked in home area
20 years.
Free estimates
Call843-3322.

VIRGIL B. SR .' ~!'!!!!!'\
216 E. 2nd~· ·

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
eSidlng
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e20 Yrs. experience

Phone
1-(614) -992-3325
NEW L I STING
Swimmtng pool . new 2
car garaqe, 7 shady lots.
IMge 7 r oom house wi t_t1
11 1 bilths . modern kit ·

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949·2160 or 949-2322

OO·tfc

-----------~=========~-==========:.JI

PHONE 992-2156

U.S. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
AUthorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-Hic

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 court St., Pomeory , Ohio 45769

AnmruneemeR:ts

71 Business Oppor tun it y

Thrtn k s (pard 1nilclv2!nce)
Th ank s (p,:H d 111 nclvclncel
3 1\nnouno'rncnts

1 ( M CJ of
')(Mel ot

17 Money to Loan

13 ProfeSSIOnal Services

·I GIVf'!lWdY
~ HrlPPY 1\ d':o

Real Estate

6 LOS I c'lnd F ou nd

YcHd Sale (p,lid rn cldVr1rlt \')
fl Pu!)lrc Sale
&amp;Auc li on
9 W,111t C' d to Buy
J

31
31
JJ
)4
35
J6

Em-ptll'lfiH!fl£

Homes tor Sa le
Mobile Homes f or Sa le
FMms for Sa le
Bu siness Buildings
Lo t s &amp; Ac r ea ge
Rea l Estate WontPd

_-sel"t'lres-

SUCCESSFUL
BUSINESS
IS ACINCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH!
.
-

Th~t 's

right! When you u se a column
inch or mor e in newspaper a dv er tising
or

c la ss ifi e d

you

to

receive

your

mon e y -saving

me s5ilge.

Five Plus Vest!
Printed Pallern

-4626

SIZES 8-20

Public Notice
PROB AT E COURT
OF MEIGS
COU NTY , OHIO
ESTA TE OF GEORGE J.
LOWT HER , DE CEASED
(&lt;l~C No. '23766
NOTICE OF
APPOINTM E NT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Mrly 7, 1982, 1n tn e
M('I CI"&gt; Coun ty PrObrl l e
Court . Case No 23766.
K ~lt h ryn
L SpencN r~nd
Georqe D Lowther, Route
3. A lbrlny , Ohio 457 10 was
appo1nted Co e&gt;cecu tor s. of
111 ('
es t ale of Ceorq e J .
Lowther . decec'lsed. IMe of
Rou tf' 3. Albilny . Oh 10
457 10
Rober t E Buck
Probate Judqe/
Clerk
l SI 18.?5( 61 1. 3tc
Public Notice

reach

thousand s of potential buyers that are
eilger

Farm Sgpplles

s,,.

PROBA TE COUR T
OF MEIG S
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTA TE
OF
BERT
BOOIME R. DECEA SED
C.lSe No . 23767
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On May 10. 1982. in th e
Me1q~
County Probat e
Cou rt , Case No. 23767 .
Helen L Bod1mer . 175 5.
Sec ond Ave _, M 1ddleport,
Oh10 45760 was appo1nted
E)lecu trnt of the estate of
Bert Bodimer . deceased.
la te of 175 S Second Ave ..
M1ddlcport. Oh10 45760 .
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge /
Clerk
151 18 . 1S !61 I . 31 c
2

In Memoriam

PaHern Dept
!Insert name of JOUr paper)
243 West 17 Sl, New Yortl, NY
10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS,

ZIP, SIZE, and STYU NUMBER.
Savings Breakthrouch! Send
now for NEW SPR ING·SUMMER
PAnERN CATALOG Sew and get
manelous clothes for much less.
free Patlern Coupon - choose
from over 100 styles. $1.50

All CRAFT BOOIIS .. $2.00 11&lt;h
12J.Pillow SHw-olfs
124-bsy Gilts 'n' Omamtnts
12Hotal Quilts
126-Thrifty Crafty Flowers
8oois and Catalog - add 501
each for postage and handling.
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Board of Tru stees of
Cotumb is Town ship will
hold a public hearing June
5, 1982 at 8 P.M. at the
township bui lding for the
propo se d
budg et
and
proposed use of Revenue
Sharing Funds for year
1983 .
All
citizens
(especially senior citizens)
are invited to attend.
(5),

18, Uc

61
62
63
64
65

Farm EQ uipment
Wanted to buy
Lives toe k
H ay &amp; Gr ain
Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Classified pages cover the

71-Autos for Sa le
72· Trucks for Sa le
73 Va ns&amp;4W D
74 Motorcycles
75 Boa ts &amp; Motors
76 Auto Parts &amp; Accessor 1es
77 Au to Repair
78 -Camp_ing Equipment

IN MEMORY OF
OUR BELOVED
DAUGHTER ,
DEE ANN MANLEY
Sometimes we ca n't
help but question,
Why things happen as
they do ;
And He knows how
much it hurt us ,
To say goodbye to
you .
But God knows what
is best for us,
we must not question
why;
He stands with arms
outstretched in love,
And sees each tear we
cry.
'
He knows our every
heartache,
And He shares our
pain and loss;
He tells us to bring our
burdens to Him,
And leave them atthe
foot of the cross.
Missed,
loved
and
remembered. Mom &amp;
Oad.

YOUNG'S

following telephone exchanges. ..
Gallia County
Area Code614

446-Gallipolis
347-Cheshire
l88-Vinton
24s--RioGrande
256-Guyan Disf.
643- Arabia Dist.
379- Walnut

Set lees
81 Home Improvem en ts
82 Plumbing &amp; Heati ng
83 -Excavating
84 -Eiecrical &amp; Refrigeration
85-Gener al Hauling
86 -M .H. Repair
87 Upholstery

'Addonl11d rtmodtlin1
-Roofinltnd pHil wort1

Area Code 304

Area Code 614
992-Middleport

67s--Pt. Pleasant

-Concrt • won

458-Leon

Pomeroy

-Piumbin11nd
eltdricalwortl
· (frn blimalnl

576-Apple Grove
773-Mason

98s--Chester
342-Porttand

882-New Haven

247- Let•rt Falls

742-Rulland
667- Coolville

Up to 15 word s . .One day

inserTion

Up to 15 worCis ... Three day

insertion .. .. ......... .Soi .OO

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Public Notice

Classified Ads

LEGAL NOTIC E
The Ohio Balance of
State Prim e Sponsor 1S an
nounc1 ng a State Pr1me
Sponsor Coun cil meet1ng
on May 20, 1982, to be held
"'' The Harley Hot el in
Co lumbu s,
Ohio . T he
mee t ing wi ll co mm ence at
JO · OO a.m . and is open to
t he genera l publi c
A
rec ord of the proceedings is
maintained by th e Office of
Manpower Development,
1160 Dub l in Road. Colum
bus. Ohio. 43215

bring you
extra cash
for
shopping sprees

( 5J 17. ltc

Real Eatete - Generel

t----------•1
HOBSTETTER REALTY
Btohr
PHONE 742·2033

COUNTRY SET TING 14 mi. off New LJ rna Rd .
Qual 1ty built ranch
home . Large living
orom, forma l dining
room , 3 bedrooms, 2 ful l
baths, full basement,
ca rport with storag e
and uti l it y bldg. A ll on 2
n ice ac r es . Ask ing
$45.000.00.
ST. RT . 124 - Just off
Rt 7. Nice two story
home. 4 bedrooms, bath,
living room , dining
room.
kit c hen
and
uti l ity room . Natural
gas hea t . Low utilities.
Situatedon 1.29 acres.
$25. 000 .00.
CORNER LOT - Middleport Large two
story home, with 3
bedrooms, · bath, living
room, dining room,
family room, big kit·
chen (with a vew of
river); full basement, 1
ca r garage and nice
backyard .
ID e al
loc ation for retired
co uple .
Asking
$35.000.00.
FARM - 33 acres, with
a spacious 2 vr. old
home. Features large
li ving room with bay
window, A lso 2 barns.
Ca l l for appointment.
RIVER FRONT - Middleport. Two story, four
bedroom home . Big
living
room · with ·
fireplace , large dining
room, eat-in kitchen,
utility room , bath .
Re l ax on
porcheS
overlooking the river.
MAKE US AN OFFER.
Asking$26,500 .00.
'1 Velma Nlclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3012
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171

-

-.

-

Public Notice

-

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT

OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF INEZ

A.

RANDOLPH, DECEASED

Cilse No. 23729
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On M ay 12th . 1982, in the
Mei qs Cou nty Probat e
Court. Case No 23729,
Claren ce E . Ra ndol ph, Sr .,
Route 3, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
was
appoint ed
E)lecutor of the eslate of
In ez
A
Ra ndolph .
decea sed. late of Bedford
Townsh1p, Meiqs County ,
Ohio
Rober t E . Buck
Probate Judqe/
Clerk
C5i 18.15. 1611. 31c

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SAL E
Not ice is hereby g1ven
lhc"lt on Thur sday, Mr~y 20,
1982 at 10 :00 A. M . a private
SC\ If' w ill be held at the of
fi CF.'S of The Central Tru st
Co., N.A. of Middleport.
Ohio to se ll for cash the
followinq co llatera l to wit :
New Borlfs
1 1979 Starcraft Jet Boi'lt
Ser. No SJA 014001079
w/ 460 Ford motor
1 1979 St ar cr aft Can Am
Ser _No. ST ROOI/303079
I 1979 Starcraft II'
Tri s tar
Ser .
No.
STRE79930379-F9 198 HP
Mer e. New Tra iler .
1 1979 Trail R Craft Boat
Trai ler Model H025·S6TA
Ser . No. 76866 Used Boat
1974 Skeeter Bass Boi'lt
Model H290 16' Ser . No.
STR EG2 164M74J
The Central Tru st Co.,
NA r eser ves the r ight to bid
alth is ~ l e .

PH. 992-6011
8-20-tf c

insertion .............. $7 .00

W

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Curb Inflation
I
.!
Pay Cash for
I! Classlfleds and
:.I1
Savelll
·..
·•

-

• Washers
• Dish ·
washers
• Ranges • Refrigerators
e Dryers • Freeters
PARTS and SERVICE

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Write your own ad and order by mai l with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results . Money not refundab le.

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH .

Nam•-----------------l1
Addr•••---------

Waler-Sewer-E lectric
Gas line-Ditches
water Line Hook ~ ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·7560
t-7 -1 ttc

All MaWes

1

1

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
'

Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

CANDLELIGHT INN
Rt. 1, Cheshire, Oh .
Ohio St. Rl. 7
PH . 992-9913

Housing
Headquarters

OPE N MONDA Y·SU NOA Y
l : lOP.M_· l : lOA M
OAil Y S P EC t A l ~
Happy Hr . •·• Dail y
Mon .- I&lt;E'!J N1ght 1·1
Tuu .- ladii!S N1qht 8 1
WE'd .- Ormk and Drown
All yoll can drink 8·1
Thllrs .- Poo l TollrnamE"nh
I til over
F n. &amp; Sat . Band'
Drink &amp; Drown 10· 1
Dllnne Bilnd Onl y
Sun.- Piucl &amp; Pilcher Beer
&lt;1 JO If&lt;

New Homes ex tensive remodeling
•Electric work
•Custom Pole Bldgs .
•Roofing work
14 Years Exper,ience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282
-4 ·29·1 mo.,

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all

1

rtl=t~

T

Wood bUildings 24X:I6.

Insulated Dog Houses

1R~AI1Y

NEW LISTING - CHESHIRE- A l'h story frame
ho~~ with seven rooms, three bedrooms, storage
~u d dtng, good garden with berries aAd grapes.
• 71,900.
.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - of this two bedroom
ho_me with extensive remodeling, located near the
mmes and has 1 1/8 acres of ground of which part is
fenced . Blended rate available. $22,900.00.
SYRACUSE - Energy efficient is one way to
desczribe this 2·3 bedroom home with new carpet
new remodeled bath and a nice level lot. Assumabl~
loan available. Now S2S,S\)O.
COULD BE A MANSION - 3-4 bedrooms, living
room. TV room, family room, office, country kit·
• chen. 21h baths, and~ cellar. On two large lots. Does
need some work . Askmg $35,000.
REALTORS:
Henry E . Cleland, Jr., GRt
Dottle Turner
Jean Trussell
Office

J
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

JUST RECEIVED
complete line of
shrubbery, trees and
rose buses . See us tor
the lowest prices in
town.
1 Used Whirlpool
Coppertone
Refrigerator
5200
A

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992-6191
992-S6n
949-2640
992-2259.

[B
.....

!Wanted
)For Sale
)Announcement
)For Rent

I.

il
II

2.

II _
18.
19,
20.
21.

3.

22 .

II

••5.

23.

1t
11

6.
7.
8.

jl
:I

11

l

i

I
1

25.
26.
27.
28.
29.

9.
10.

Vinyl

30. _ _ _ __

12.

31 . _ _ _ _ __

1• .

32. - - - - - 33. _ _ _ __

15.· _ _ _ _ __

lo4. _ _ __

16.

35.

Aluminum
SIDING

"Be1uliful, Custom
Buill Garages"
Calf tor tree sldln;
estimates, 949-2101 or
949·2160.
tc~o Sunday CIIIS
3· 11-lfc

_

H. L WRITESEL .
ROOFING

'The Dally Sentinel-'
11 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

)

I

All IVIIH of roof ~~torte,
now or rtiNIIr tuner ollcf
downapouu, ' 1utter

1

All work

r·
•

·--~~~-~-------------

clunl!'l
~

\

.,.,.lit'.,_lnftnt.
Md. ,
~lief

,.,.220

,

- ~

3·29-tfc
•
- "

COMING BANOS •
FRI., APR . JO .• MAY I
WllOWATEA
Country Roc:tl
Thun.· Fri.· So'lt .- Sun .
Mly ll· l&lt;I· U· I6
CROSSOVERS
Drink I Drown.JII nitllts
Thun.· Fri.· Sun.

Service
· 16 YEARS EXP.
•Residential
•Commercial
•Industria I
Racine, Ohio
247·3534
Free· Estimates
4·20·flc

&lt;

' "

CROSSOVERS
Drink &amp; Drown all ntttlh
Tbun .· Fri .· So~t .· Sun .

Mly :t1-21· tf·JO

CROSSOVERS

Drink I Drown 111 nigllh
MONTH OF JUNE
Frid4v and Saturday
MARSHALl TENNf:NT

. covntr.y Roell

Note : CrOIIOVIrt, Ttlurt. I
Sun. INIItd starts l cJI, tl'lds

-

t4fo2UO.

CANDLELIGHT INN

.
,.

Rt. 1 chesl'lire.onlo

SERVICE
rom lh t - S me ff •• I

~,.:, R~:i:tor~

""

'

"'

• ' •
• •• '
, . . . . ..... . . . . . . . . r-

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek R/1. Call

oW&gt;-0294..

Mly 11t-'II · H ·'U

· COMPLETE

· ""· "'·""

"·

•u

Self completing retirement
.programs In event of
disability . Rumley 1n·
aurance 1,\gency 446·3320.

·.,,.,;,.

1---------~

,=no
i'

~;

t

;valley Plaza, 446·

7

Yard Sate

ANY PE RSDN who has
anyti;J ing to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thiAg for
sale may place an ad in thi s
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

2 white Persian kittens, 2
part Boxe r &amp; part co llie
puppi es. Call388·983'.
A sack of Readers Digest,
«6-9579.
5 Kittens, 6 wks . old, half
angora, mother ca t , 11
months old . Ca ll after 5:30
p . m . on weekdays .
Anytime on weekends. 379·
2307.
1 Brittany Springer Spaniel
6 mo. old. Cal l388-9895 .
Cats or kittens. Call 3792674_
Small breed male dog,
house broken,
gentl e
natu re. Ca ll «6-3067 .
5 cats and 11 kittens . Ca ll
«6-0808 , on Kelton Rd .

3 long haired kittens 6 wks.
old, Bla ck &amp; white. Call 446·
~.

2 par t german shepard
pups. Had shots- spaded·
992 - 6556

5 beautiful puppies ready
for adoption. Mother old
english sheep dog. Father
unknown, call985-,..54 .
CAT, 1-409 Ka nawah St. ,
JO.C -675-5019 _
7

Yard Sale

Garage Sale May 19 &amp; 20,
8:30·5:00. Village of Cen·
tervi lle off Route 3S. Boys
&amp; girts clothing .
5 Fami ly Yard 'Sale 636 3rd .
Ave .. Ga llipolis. May 19, 20,
&amp; 21. 9 til 5. Children
clothes, flower pols, bike &amp;
misc .
Garage Sale May 20 &amp; 21. I
112 m i. out Rt. 218 from Rt.
7. 2 air cnnd., drill,
frieplace screen &amp; blower,
clothes, &amp; misc .
3 Family on 160, 3 mi. from
HMC. All kinds of clothing.
guns, knives . Fri. 21 &amp; Sat.
22.

19th thru 22nd, 9·5, 4'12
mile! off Rt. 7 on Eagle
ridge . First farm past
.church.
At Jack Ables residence
across from old Locks on
338. Apple Grove church.
May 20·9to 4. Rain cancels.

:2 separate yard sales, five

families. Midway Drive at
New Haven. Thursday and
Friday,
9·• ·
Used
ctarlnet,old desk, lawn·
mower with grass catcher,
all sizes clothing, Avon bot·
ties, odds and ends. Held
rain or shine.

May 19, 20th, 9 :00 to ·. First
block off MI. Vernon, Pl.
Pleasant.- Furniture.
clott\es. ·

15 famltlel, Lynn and
Travis
Streets,
New
Haven . T-hursday and
Friday, 20th and 21st,9-3.

Help W~nted

11

Lots of nice c lean clothin g Help Wanted Fema le ·
for boy s, girls, men, combined sa les and office
. Must be able to work
woman s,
girls jeans,
ceramics, Homellte chain well with the publi c and be
saw, crOquet set, color· able to t ype, file, operate
burst camera, old Avon cash register , and other of ·
duties . Serious
dolls, lots more . Turn right fi ce
top of Hartford Hil l. fi rst inquires send resume t o
house on left. Thursday and P .O. Box 3-43, Middleport.
Oh. I nclude phone num ber
Friday, 9 til? _
and age .
I

Start at the top Sell Avon
We' re the wor ld's largest
direc t selling company
Rick
Pearson,
Ex · Call now 742 ·2755 or col lect
perienced AUCTIONEER . 61H98 -7111 .
Estates, antiques, farm ,
household . Licensed Ohio·
WV . Buyi ng antiques. 304· Need a job? Like to be your
own boss? Excellent op·
773·5785, 773-9185.
portunity full or part time.
Olde wortde inc. will train
Auction every Fr i. night at and help start your own
the Hartford Com mun it y business. For interview
C'enter . Truckloads of new send your resume t o 202 117
merchandise every week . E. Main St . Pomeroy , Ohio.
Consigments of new and
used m erchandi se always
w e l co m e.
Ri c hard Wanted -person to live wi th
lad y .
Light
Reynolds Auctioneer . 275· e ld erly
household duties . Referen ·
3069 .
ce needed. Residence RT . l.
Longbottom , Oh. Please
9
Wanted to Buy
ca ll or write R.K . Br own ,
157
Whaley
P l ace ,
WANT TO BUY Old fur
niture and Antiques of all Chillico the, Ohio. 45601.
kinds, ca ll Kenneth Swain,
«6·3159 and 256· 1967 in tn e Cock tai l waitress wanted,
evenings.
immedia t e
positi ons
ava ilabl e, full and part
CASH PA ID for clean, late time . App l y in person or
model used cars. Smith ca ll for appointmen t. The
P o i nt
Buick -Pontia c, Ga ll ipolis, E nt er t ai n er ,
Pleasant, WV . 304 675·6700.
.Ohio. Cal l 446 -2281 .

23

Page---7

Profeuiona I
Services

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
for all types of businesses.
Carol Neal
«6-3862
Piano tuning and repair
Lane Daniels· Associate of
Bruni cardi's· Ga llipoli s
and Cunningham's·Athens.
7•2 -2951 or 9'12 2082 .

Pubfic Sale
&amp; -Auction

Gold,
Si lver,
Flowers f or Memorial Day . Bu y ing
Next to Bank in Mid- Pla tinum , old coi ns, scr ap
dleport . 9 a.m . t o 8 p.m . 7 rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available. Also
days a week.
coins &amp; co in suppl ies for
Sp ring
Va ll ey
sa l e .
Trad ing, Spring Va lley
Plaza, 446·8025 or 4-46·8026.
4
Giveaway

Buy term Insurance and in ,wednesday, 9·2. 133 s. Park
- t the rest. No obligation ·Drive, Pt.Pieasanl.
analysis.
Rumley
1n·
aurance Agency 446·3320.
·Three family sate. Sandy
;Heights, Pl. Pleasant,
22 caliber Buffalo Scout Thursday, Friday, 8:30 til
revolvei', pearl h•ndles, ' ,5:00. Follow signs. 304-675·
~A rifle barrel, 6 shot, 22 ·1504.

""'"'
•..w... or · longs, S59.9S.
=--------~
!$prlho Valley
Trading ,;o.,

'

PUBLIC NOTICE -We are
trying to keep the cemetery
at Letart Falls in its
present condition, but must
depend on your interest
and help to insure that your
lot will be kept clean this
y,ar. Please send check,
cash or money order to
Clarence Norris, 2326'1 Hill
Rd., Racine, Ohio •5771 . SlO
for one lot, $5 for v, lot.
Thank You , The Letart
Falls Cemetery Trustees.

Sidewalk Sale whole length
of VIne St. in Racine, May
20. Numerous items such
as clothes, dishes, living
room suite, chairs, co lor
TV, storm doors, utility
table, etc. Free Coffee.

Ucensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992-7201

O'Brien Electric

RADIATOR

.,4.992-2112

•backhoe
*OXCIValing
• septic systems
* Awater, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dumplruck
•limestone

ll :lO. OtMr nlthts, II to 2.

" ' " Etitlmata
ReaSOIIIilrlt l'rlc"
Clll Howanl ·:

. ,,

CONTRACT! NG

Carryout IH; Aw•l .. ble. Drink
I Drown clurint land Nltht.

Mall This Coupon with Remittance

~~~~~

&amp;

BISSELL
.SIDING CO.

----'---------- -- - - -----_ __ __

11 .

,I

-·

3

2•.

1
1

L

Rl. 3, Box 54
Raclne,Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
6·

POMEROY
LANQMARK

~

J&amp;F

Aluminum Siding ·
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
•New Roofing
i=ree Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
4Y29/ I

Misc. Merchandice

54

C5i 11 . 18 . 19 . 3tc

NEW LISTING - FIVE POINTS - Approximately
e1 ght y~ars old and •s a beautiful spl it entry type
home Wtth three bedrooms, family room , 21f, baths,
two car garage, deck, and many more features. One
acre of yard. Blended rate available at $49,900.

--

742-2328
RUTLAND
.4·'19· 1 mo.

THIS AD

Sizes start from 30x24"

PH.992·2259

or fixed we can do
it.

..... SJ.OU

Reel Ettete - Oenerel

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

11 you need it built

FREE
ESTIMATES

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-30-tfc

l----------------------1
I

I
.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR

Custom kitchens and applilnces,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
he1tlng.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Bfs--Letart
937-Buffalo

949-Rilcine

Up to 15 Words ... Six day

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Mason Co., wv

Meigs County

,

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949·2293
or 949· 2417
3·3-tfn

----------+--'---------+-----------11

"

' '

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
insta nation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Caii742· 319S
3-l ·tfc

Dozer &amp; backhoe service, water, sewer, ponds,
foundations ,
reclamation .

(Average 4 words per line)

GeorgeS. Hobstetttr Jr.

NOTICE OF

Elast1c etfortlessly nt ps the
wa~st ol liVe PRlnY -EASY
DRE SSES- you 'll want every one
of them for day and evenmg. And
I he vest that tops lhem so neatly.
Pnnted Partern 4626 MISses
s,zes 8. 10. 12. 14 , 16. 18. 20.
12 (bust 34) takes 3 118
yards 4 5 - ~n c h labnc
$2.21 for eKh paHern. Add 104
for nch pattern for postace
and handlin&amp;. Send Ill:
Anne Adams
1 'l I

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

&amp; Ll¥eSIDEII

41 Hou ses l or Ren t
42 Mobi le Homes for Rent
43 Farm s for Re Al
44 Apar tm en t for Rent
45 Furnished Rooms
46 Space for rent
47 Wa nted to Rent
48 Equipment for Rent
49 For Lease

IJ ln&lt;;u ran C!'
1-1 Bu s1ness Trai n1n q
15 Sc t10o ls 1nstru c t1on
16 R ol diO . fV &amp; C B qepcll r
11 M1'-.fC' IIc1neous
IS W,ln lt•cl lodo

it di sp l ay

51 Household Goods
52 CB, TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53 Antiques 54 Misc. Merchcndise
55 Building Suppli es
56 Pets for Sa le
57 Musciaf Instrume nts
58 Fruits&amp; Vegetabl es
59 For Sa le or Trade

flentals

II H ('lp Wiln ted
17 SIIU illiOn Wilnt ed

be

.*Aerenanalse

nace,. nAt
carpe
t1ngF, AIoyer.
chen
qas
fur
and form al din1nq
NEW LI STING 8
room older home in
oood co nd1t1011 ha s )1 17
ba ths. dif' ' .. (\ nal gas
F.A
{ ~~. 2 car
garage, .drge sha de
trees. flow ers. and one
acre. Can you beat
111.500?
l YEARS OLD - Looks
like new 1nside a nd out
Has 3 bedroom s, tub
billh, ele. bClseboard
hent , h1 q hes t bil l
$127 00. Can you beat
that ? Larqe l('ve t lot .
Want $39,500.
REDE CORAT ED
Thi s one rea ll y looks
n1ce
Has 7 rooms.
modern bath. por ches.
carport , 3 car garage,
ond Iorge leve l lot tor a
qarden or oth er use
Just $18 .000
SPEC IAL FINAN CIN G
~ Small down pC\yment
wi ll buy thi s 10 r oom
home 1n R;1 C1ne. Cas
fur nace , woodburni ng
firepla ce. modern bath .
larq e lot wi th hobby
.shop of 24'&gt;c 42' . Onl y
$32 .500
POMEROY ~ Two for
one fram e homes 2
garaQf'S. '1 ba ths. a ll
util ities and level lots
Ask ing $28.500 Wan t an
ofl e'r
MIDDL EPORT
4
bedroom modern t1orn e.
2 bath~ ce ntr nl hen t,
family room. gnrage,
and larqC' lot Needs o
litt le repa1r but a good
bu y
MIDD LEPORT
Modern k itchen. 3 or 4
bedroom s. 2 bath s. gas
cen tr al · heil t. small
basement. front por ch
and leve l lot Aski nq
only $19.500
10 ACRE S ~ or any part
of it Water and elec tr ic
ava ilabl e,
wes t
of
Rulla nd . Larqe tr ee s.
good sites for A fr ames .
SIO.OOO.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

FjAaAEial

Night crawlers SI .OO per
doz. Spring Valley Trading
I Co., Spring Valley Plaza,
446·8025.

Rul Eototo - Oonerol

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

5· 12·2 mo pd .

The Daily Sentinel

Raven 25 auto pistol 547.49 .
Case sharks tooth knife,
$50.00 . Spring
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, «6·8025.

Another one will be held at the camp
si te in late June.

Deadline for registration is June

The Meigs County Girl Scout day
ca mp has been set for July 12
through the 16th at Camp Kiashuta .
" Pioneer Day" will be the theme
with the day camp activities to be
ca rried out from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m .
There will also be overnights for

Announcemeliii

Perfect Father' s Day gift,
White's metal detector, 15

Scouts day camp dates set

The Daily Sentinei-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

We pay cash for tate mOdel
clean used ca rs .
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson,
446-0069.

12

-

----:-:c-- - - - - - -

Situations Wanted

Man wants female to li ve in
and help cook meats .
ElwOOd Minn 1s, 388·9035.
Have vacancy in my home
tor elder ly . Ambulatory
man or woman. 7 years ex·
perience
667 ·3402 . Tup·
persplains ,Oh.
House painting, roofing,
conc r et e work . 992 ·2836.

Wanted swarms of bees . Welding . gas and electric.
Call 2-iS-5055 or 446 · 1052 or field or shop. Phone 304·
«6-2801.
675 -3677 after 4 P.M .
- -._
Wanted to buy spira l stair Any odd job. Have plum ·
way . Call 446 -7231 aff er bing, elec tri c. ca rpentry
5PM.
experi ence. 304·675·59 18

_____

Good used car wi ll pay 5400 - - - - -~--- .. 13
"-'sur a nee
- _ __cln
t o $500 . Must be in good
runnin g cond . Call446·8278. SA NDY AND BEAVER I n
surance Co. has offered
Good used small manure services for fire insurance
cove ra ge in Gallia County
spreader. Call37n605.
f or alm ost a ce ntury .
Farm, home and per sonal
Standing timber &amp; Ford property coverages are
Bronco w r ecked or bl own avai labl e to mee t i n
engine. Ca ll 388·9906 .
dividual needs. Contact
Harry Pi t chford. agen t
BED S-IRON , BRASS, old Phone -4-46· 1427.
furnitur e, go ld . silv er
dollars, wood ice boxes,
} _ Sch~cii sln s truc~o~ _
stone jars, antiques, etc., 1
Compl ete
household s. Karate the ultimate in self
Write : M .D . Miller , Rt. 4, defence all private lessons.
Pom eroy , Oh . Or 'I'IU/60 . Men, women, a. children .
Instru ction thru black belt .
Gold, silve r , sterl in g, Also avai lable Karate
jewelr y, rings, old coi ns &amp; uniforms pu ching and
currency. Ed Burk ett Bar · kicking bags, and protec·
ber Shop, Middleport . 992· live eq uipm ent . Jerry
Lowery &amp;
Ass·oc ia tes
3•76.
Karate
St udio , 14'3
OLD FURNITURE , beds, Burl ing t on Rd., Jackson,
iron, brass, or wood . Kit· Oh . Ca ll '1 86·3074 .
chen cubbards of a ll types.
Tables, round or square . 17____ MiSc-el-lan_e_o_u_s - Wood ice boxes . Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy Having a par~y. picnic or
co mplete household . Gold, homecomi ng, why not have
silver, old mone y, pocket a magician for e n ·
watches. chains, rings, and ter tainment? For appt. ca ll
etc. Indian Artifacts of a ll 9'12 -7352.
types . Also buying baseba ll - - - - - - - - -cards. Osby Martin 992· l_! _ _ Want ~t~Q_
o __ _
6370.
The Silk House (custom
silk flowers) . Compl ete
One owners used 1981 or
1982
t ow
mileage , bridal line, weddings, and
all occasions. Ca11367·7566 .
customi zed va n. 304·675·
5914 after 5 p .m .
Lawn Mowing Seri ve, no
ya rd to bi g or sma l l. house
painting &amp; roofing , and
light hauling . Cal l 446-3159
Set 'lEeS
after 6PM 1 286 -5740

ema•erment

11

Help Wanted

FULL OR PART TIM E
couples and individuals to r
business or your own.
Local Amway Distribu tor
trains you for splended op·
portunity . No eKperlence
necessary . For inter view
send name and phone num ·
ber to P D Box 341 Rio
Grande, Oh 45674 .
People who like people
make good SSS se lling
Avon . Call «6-3358.
High Sc hool Graduates &amp;
Seniors. you can earn over
$550.00 per month while
learning a va luable skill
like computer repairer ,
sheet metal worker, or
refrigeration . Plus you wi ll
have a secure part time job
with the Amry National
Guard after schooling.
Benefits include a $1,500.00
enlistment
bonus,
$35,000.00 life insurance
and free tuition to any
cbllege or trade school in
West Virginia. Interested
persons may call (3041) 675·
3950 or In West Virginia call
toll FREE 1-800-642·:1619.
High School Graduates &amp;
Seniors. you can earn over
ssso.OO per month while
learning a va luable skill
like computer repairer,
sheet . metal worker, or
refrigeration . Plus YOU will
have a secure part time lob
'with the Amry National
Guard after schooling.
Ber~eflls include a $1,500.00
enlistment
bonus ,
. $35,000.00 life Insurance
and free tuition to any
college or trade school In
West VIrginia. Interested
persons r'nay caiiiJO.Cl 675·
3950 or In West Virginia call
toll FREE Hl00· ~2· :1619 .
Malntlince person for apar·
tmt!nt .' complex. Call 67551~ or 675-5386.

·Licensed Insurance agent
needed. Apply Rumley tn·
. Y •rd sale ThursdaY and surance Ageru:y «6·3320.
: Friday, K and K Lor 15.

Will do window clea ning for
hom es or business, ex ·
perienced . Ca ll388·8198 .
Carpenter work Repairs
and room remodling , wa ll
paneling and cei ling t ile.
992 -2759 .
Ca mera
&amp;
Projector
Repair . Any mak e or
model.
Photographi c
Repair Serv ice, Bob~ y Er·
win, 130 Bastiani Dr. Ca ll
«6-488 • .
Outside house painting and
plumbing . Have refs . &amp;
exp. FREE est . ca ll Bob or
John. 446 -869 5.
Need Your Lawn Cut . Ca ll
.u6-7921.
Trash collec tion &amp; hauling .
Ca ll446-&lt;480 .
WILL clean basements,
garages, odd jobs &amp; light
hauling, 304 -675-3734.
WASH &amp; wax cars, $12.00,
JO.C-675 -2517.

Fleaeelal
21

Business
Opportunity

---""'-"'-= ==-'---

Business or store room in
Park Central Hotel .
Lawn Mower &amp; Garden
Tractor Sales located at
Junction of Rts. 7 &amp; 35 in
Kanauga . doing good
business. Owner wants to
retire. Calf «6·:1670.
22

Money to Loan

Real EstaR!
Jl

--

-Homes
- - -for
- Sale

Beautiful brick &amp; fr ame, J
bedroom home w/ scenic
view,
wood burning
firepla ce, formal dining,
central air w/ heat pump
Lanscaped, I ecre lot
w/ fenced in back yard,
$45,900 . 11 % finan cing,
smal l down payment. Call
«6 3766.
6 rm s., 112 bastment &amp;
other buildings , 4 a c re~ .
rural water . near schools.
Mercerville ar ea Call 256
6691.

New log home on nver
front in Middleport. 4-46
1552 .
House and garage, 12
acres-1,010 ft . of river fronTage. 1 mi . at&gt;Qve Apple
Grove, Ohio . $37,500. Will
consid er tr ade for hou5e
and lot of eq ual va lue. 614·
247 2245.
3 bd .r oom large garage, 2
acres, 2 bd .room . Ren tal .
take car mobile home in
trade. John Sheet,, 31'1
m i les Sou fh MidQ iepOrt·R·
7.
IT 's GETT IN G LATE bUt
you can still have a home of
your own if you earn bet
ween $9,000 and $15.0011. ~
year . 2126 houses wi ll be
bu ilt in the state of Ohio un
der farm home rural
hou si ng
program
the
remaind er of 1982. These
homes will be financeQ
with no down payment and
payment s will be low 15
$125 . per montn . See our
model nea r th e Pic P1c
Market on RT . 50, W.
Athens or call 992 7034 tor
info. Kingsbury Homes,
1100 E. Main 51. Pomeroy,
Oh .
House, MeadowbrooX Ad ·
dition , 3 bedroom, family
room wi th fir ep lace, cen
fr at air, basement, Phone
304675-1542 .
HOU SE for sale by owner ,
4 bedroom s, cal l lor ap
pointment . Phone 304 675
3270 alter 4 p m .
THREE bedroom house, , 1
basement , l'IJ acres of
ground, 304 -675 J279
Property for sale
407
Lew i s
St reet , Po1nt
Pleasant, Phone 304 -576
1266.
Sa ndhill Road, 3 bedrooms.
1117 bath s, doubl e garage.
immed . occ upancy, all
electnc. 304-675 -5817 .
HOU SE on one acre . no
down payment, $250. per
month, black top road , call
evenings· 304·675· 75&lt;~~ 1 .
APARTMENT building 1n
Pl . Pl easant. $400 . a montn
inco me, phone evenings
304 -675-7541 .
HOU SE
&amp;
acre .
overlooking
Kanawha
River, in Ambrosia, ca ll
eveni ngs-30-4·675 7541.
House $500 . and marer1a1s
to tear it down. Ph one 304·
273 -3078 or 372-6778.
81h PERCENT asumable
loan, one year old tri ·leveL
Meadowla nd
Es t ates,
$67.500. Call 30H751529 at
ter5p.ml.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TR I -STATE
MOBilE
HOME S. USED-MD81LE
HOME S, CARS. TRUCK$.
GA LLIP OLIS
CHECK
OUR PRICE S. CAL L «07572.
CLEAN USE D M061LE
HOM ES
KESSE L 'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
H OME SALES. 4 M I.
WE ST. GA L LIPOLIS. RT
35. PHONE 446-3868.
Call Skidmore for mobi le
homes moved . Green lawn
Tran spor t. Ca ll 446·278J
days, 446·3479 evenings.
Li censed &amp; insured .
12x60 2 bedroom mobile
home w ith 2 lots . Gas heat.
rural water . Close to ci t y
limits. Ca ll4•6-1294.
3 bdr. house for sale by
owner, 1 1/ 2 acr es, level
lot, has barn &amp; 2 out
buildings _Call379-2550 .
12 x 60 trailer , excellent
condition . Calf 4~ · 1552 .
Furnished, air conditioned,
underpinning, set up on lo't
in Middleport .

4 furnished 2 bd.room
mobile homes . Browns
Trailer Park, Minersville,
Dh. 992·332 • .

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rate. wva. &amp; Ohio. Leader ' Custom built, turn., 2 BR .
Mortgage, 77 E. State St., mobile home on rented
Athens, Oh. 592-3051 .
river front lot in Mason. All
elec., cent. AC, W.O., cptd.
Have land? Want to build? porches, many extras.
Nothing down, low Interest, Storage bldg. with work
A· I cond. Must see
no payment for (&gt; months.
to appreciate. JO.C·773·5680.
61H92-3053 .

:,

- - -·

, __..,__

---

�Pomeroy..:.Middleport, Oh~~

Paglr-8-The Daily Sentinel
l2

They'll Do It Every Time ·

Mobile Homes
for S•lt

54

a.

1974 Buddy 14
bd .room total
57 .soo. m -6326 .

· 1975 Case 450, dozertractor, 1.800 hrs .. very
good cond, $14,900. Call
4-4&lt;1-637 _

70, 3
electric.

X

1976
14x70
Parkwood
mobile home, llh bath. Includes underpinning, por·
ch, and alum inum building.
$10,500 . m -2821.
USED MOBILE
576-2711 .

RATLIFF ' S POOL CEN TER Pools sa le, supplies
Installation. 403 2nd. Ave .,
Gallipolis, Oh . Ca ll 4-4&lt;16579. In ground·Ab love
ground .

a.

HOME .
77 Chevy pick up. 74 Mini
motor home. 77 Mavrick, 16
ft . self c ont~in ed ca m per .
Call245-5034.

MOBI LE HOME S MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured . Ca ll
30076-2711.

71 chevy PU , good cond .,
price $600 . 76 Chevy PU
with self contained s lidin g
camper, sleep 5. $1,700. 1
row cu ltivat or, $65. Ca ll
367 -7238.
For sa le or trade Davis 700
trenc her and back hoe,
good cond .• Cal l 256-1216.

1972 Shultz 12x65, gas hea t.
3 bedrooms, partiall y fur ·
nish ed . 304· 675· 2907 .

ll

Farms;o;-sale-

sma ll farm tor sa le one

mi te from state r out 7. Call
256-661&gt;3 after 4:00.
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

2 lots with rural water c lose
to c ity l im its , $.4 ,850.00 . Ca ll
4-4&lt;1· 1294.
10 acres at Rio Grand e on
Ce nter point Rd . Rural
water . 614·262 ·59 16.
TWO ac re lot s· ISO ft . road
fr on t age,
ci t y
water ,
behind 84 Lumber , call304·
675-6873.675 -36 18.

20 ACRES. b lack top r oad.
wa ter. timber , Gr ear Rd.
a r ea.
51 2, 000 .
phone
evenings 304-675· 7541 .
132 A. Mason Co. near
Rockcasfle and Mt . Ol ive
church. Timber and gas
we l l on land . Su itab le for
hunting a nd campi n g
SSOO .OO. Phone 304 -458 -1893.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

J bdr. house, apt s, com·
mercial hi ghwa sy fron ·
t age. Ca ll 304-675 5104 or
675-5386 .

New r edecor a ted 3 bdr . in
ci t y. Refer ence and no
pets. Ca ll 4-4&lt;1· 11 58.
Homes for Rent , Lease or
La nd contract in town or
coun tr y .
Call
Str out
Rea lty , 4-4&lt;1 0006 .

---------Older f ram house in Rio
Grande area . Ca ll 446 3258
or 446 -3868 .

--------J bdr . co untry hom e
availabl e in Clay Twp., cit y
sc hools, S250 per mo. plus
dep. Stove &amp; r efrig . in·
eluded. Ca ll evening 256·
9363 .

Two bedroom house on
Raccoo n Cr eek, one year
lease r equired . Before 5:00
ca ll 4-46 -0093. after 5:00 ca ll
4-46-0795.
4 bedroom , ce ntral air and
hea t, ci ty water , firep lac e,
unfurnished except kit ·
chen. SJOO m onth plu s
utilities. Reference and
deposit
required .
In
Ra c ine. 949 -2293.

N ice furnished mobile
home, ce ntral air, 1 mi.
be low c ity over look ing
river , adults only . Ca ll 4460338 .
12x65 modern &amp; c lea n, 3
bdr ., furni shed, utilities pd .
except tor electric . Convenient location on Upper
River Rd. across from
John Deere Tra c tor Sales.
Sec. dep. req . Ca ll 446-8558
after s.

For sa le 55 ga l. drums $5
each or 3 for $12. 5 g~l.
plastic pails Sl each. For
inf ormation ca ll 446-9575 .

COU NTR Y MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North ol
Pomeroy . Large lots. Ca ll
992 -7479 .

Insu lated Toppe r, fi~3
sm all
imp ort
pickup .
$75.00. Call 379·2307 after
5:30 weekdays.

Large tr ailer lots for rent
in Middleport. Call991·2101
or 992·23 19 after 5PM .
Sm a tl
t rai ler
spaces .
Mason. 304 -773 -5651.

Gravely Tractor w / 50"
mower, liv ing r oom suire
( blue). washer &amp; dryer
(Kenmore). Pou lin cha in
saw. 367 -0315.

co-"'-~~~----

49

For Lease

Furn. 2 bdr mobi le home
in Crown City. Ca ll 2566520 .

TOBACCO allotment for
lease, 2300 lbs. 15 cents per
lb. Mason Co. Phone 304 675 -2848.

2 bdr ., unf. , mobile home,

IJ8!FEbandlse

REPOSSED SIGN!
NO
DOWN PA YMENT! Take
ove r pay ments of $59.60 per
month. 4'x8' flashing arrow
sign ." Compl ete w / new
bu lbs
le tters_ Cutliff
Signs. Toll lree 1·800-551 ·
3070. Ask about R E PO .

a.

12x60, with expand o, on Rt .
35. Ca li"-'&lt;1-4229.

Sl

Household Good s

2 bdr . trailer furnished ,

SWA IN
adults on ly, Br own Trai ler A UCT ION FURN ITURE 8.
Park , 992 -3324.
PAWN SHOP 62 Oli ve St.,
Ga llipolis. New sofa beds
Mobile home on Cherry and $250, used sofa beds $100,
3rd. ott 124 on the left . No rec liners sao, bunk beds
parties, no drunks, no pets. $100, bunki e mattresses
Mayme Custer Manning. 2 _$40, mapl e rockers $49,
bd .rooms , told ou t couc h. maple dinett se ts from $125
992 5249.
to $175, bedroom suites
$150, 3 pc . living room
suit es $199, 2 pc . living
Mobile Home . 61~ - «6 · 8221.
r oom sui tes S140, love seats
$70, ow l lamps $25, ringer
washers
$75,
dryers,
43
Farms for Ren t
seve ral
refrigerators ,
c abinets ,
PAS "TURE for rent , 40 head utility
ca ttl e, no horses, gOOd fen- mechani c's tool s, beds,
ce, abundance water &amp; silver stone, TV ,s, wood burners, st ero's and lots
grass. 304-675 -1269.
mor e. Open lOam to Spm ,
4-46-3159.
44
Apartment
tor Rent
GOOD
U S ED
AP Delux e turn . apart ., cent. PLIANCE S
washers ,
air &amp; heat . 1 or 2 adults dryers,
r efrig era tor s,
only . Ca ll 4-4&lt;1-0338 .
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap pl iances, Upper River Rd .,
Furn ished apt
I bdr., bes ide Stone Cr est Motel.
adults, $200, electri c, water 4-4&lt;1-7398.
paid. Ca ll 4-4&lt;1 -4416 after
JPM .
LA YNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, r ocker, otFurni shed 3 r . with private toman, 3 tabl es, $500. Sof a,
ba th . 84 5 Second Ave., chair and loveseat, $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced
Ga llipolis. Ca il"-'&lt;1-2215.
from $285. to $795. T abies.
Furnished apt. 3 bdr., $195. $38 and up to $109. Hide-aChild r en acceptabl e, water beds,$340_, queen size, $380.
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
pd . Ca i4-46 -4416 after 7PM _
Lamps from S18. to $65. 5
pc. dinettes from $79., to
Furnished apt. 1 bdr ., nice, $385 . 7 pc. , $189 . and up.
$235 _ Ultities pd ., adults. Wood table with 4 chairs,
Ca ll"-'&lt;1-4416 alter 7PM.
$219 up to $495 . Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375.,
2 bdr . apartment In Vinton. m aple or pine finish .
Bassett
Clean, convenient loca tion . Bedroom suites
Bunk bed
Ref . &amp; Stove furn ., S1J5 mo. Cherry, $795.
comp lete with mattresses,
Ca ll 245 -5818.
$250. and up to $350. Capfa in's beds, $275. complete .
Apartment, 2 bdr ., unf ., no Baby beds, $99 . Mattresses
pets. Ca lf "-'&lt;1 -3937.
or box springs, full or twin ,
$58.. firm, $68. and $78 .
1 bedr oom furnished apt . Queen sets. $195. 4 dr.
992 5434. 992-5914 or 304-882 - chests, $42 . Bed frames,
2566.
S20.and $25 ., 10 gun - Gun
cabinets, $350.. dinette
Part ia ll y furnish ed . 4 chairs $20. and $25. Gas or
electr ic ranges, $295. Or ·
rooms and bath . 992-5908.
thopedic super firm, $95,
baby matressel&gt;, S25
$35,
Furni shed apt . J room s &amp; bed fram es $20, $25, &amp; $30.
bath_992-5621.
Used Furniture bookcase,
5 pc. dinett set, 3 Living
2 bd.r oom apt., furnished, room suite . Ranges and
utilities paid . No pets, TV's. J m iles out Bulaville
drunks, or dope . John Rd. Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
Sheets, l'h mi . South Mid· thru Fri. , 9am to 5pm, Sat.
4-4&lt;1-0322
dlePOrt -R-7.

Whirlpool air conditioner
10,000 BTU , window m oun ted, 26 to 38 inches, 11 0
vo lts. Cail"-'&lt;1-1570.
Gaso line and heating fuel.
Ca ll Excelsior Oil Com·
pany . 614 -992 -2205.
Air Compresso, ·KelloggAmerican, 11h H. P. 2 stage,
80 gal. ve rt ica l tank . Ver y
good condition. SBOO . Also
cherry logs for sa le. Jerry
Well992-7844 .
5x l 9 coff ee table wi th 2
magazine doors and I open
compartment . Matc hin g
end tabl e 26x26 with c losed
in boo~ compar tm ent .
Simu lated dark wa lnut
wood fini sh S40. for both
985-4256.
Air Compressor· Ke llogg American , Ph H.P. 2 stage,
80 ga l. vert ical tank . Very
good condition . $800. Also
cher r y logs for sa le. Jerry
Wel l 992 -7844.

POME ROY , 205 Sprin g
Ave .-- Nice five r oom house
with two bedrooms, bath,
living room . dining· room ,
ki tchen with stove and
refrigator furnished . Back
ya rd . Storm windows, in sulated, forced air furnace
make utilities low during
heating season. $165 per
month
rent ,
security
deposit $100. Adults, no in·
si de pets. Phone 992-5292,
after 5 weekdays, anytime
weekends .
2 bedroom unfurnished,
L.R ., kitchen, basement,
nice &amp; c lean, some car·
peting, range in kitchen, no
inside pets. Dep _ req _ 992·

3090 .
Apartments, homes, office
space. smal l business,
rooms for rent . Clea land
Realty, m -2259 .
For rent in Racine-nice 2
bd.room house. completely
furnished, with air cond .,
all utilities paid . $300_ per
month. 949-21)01 or 949-2860 .
House on Lincoln Hgls. All
new
paint .
Deposit
required. No Inside pets.
992-3()9() .
3 room turn . house
Mason. 992-7352.

In

THREE bedroom house,
nlce_lcatlon. 304-675-1384.

1 bd.room apt. in Mid·
dleport . $185 . per month .
992 -7177 .

5x19 coffee tabl e with 2
magazine doors and 1 open
compartment . Matc hing
end table 26x26 with c losed
in book co mp artm ent .
Simulated dark walnut
wood finish $40 _ for both
985·4256 .
For sa le long bed topper tor
compact tru ck , 2 set s too l
boxes, side m ount 8 ft . 2
window air conditioners,
10x20 awning , V-6 .black
Ma x. outboard 175 HP
motor boat and tra iler ,
14 x24
Sturdy
Hou se
building . 304 -67 5·4424.
Open Friday, Saturday,
Sunday
1: 00·7 : 30
pm
ONLY , Sam Somerville's
Warehouse, 7 miles East
Ravenswood, Junct ion Independance Road - Rt . 21.
New Era, Surplus Rental
Clothing ,
Army
Camouflage,
Combat
boots, jungle boots, 14 oz .
denim jeans $10.00, Packs.

White electric stove, exc.
cond ., new living room
couch .
Ca ll
446 -3945 ,
evenings.

Apartments _675-5548.
APARTMENTS, mobile
hom es,
house s,
Pt.
Pleasant and GallipOlis.
614-446-8221 or 614-245-9484.
Furnished one bedroom
apartment, ex tra nice,
adults only . No pets. Phone
304-675· 1386.
T WO b e droom , un furnished . One bedroom ef·
ficiency . 304·675-2722 .
Two bedroom furnished
apartment with carpet
throughout , located in
R lpley _
Reasonably
priced. 304-273-3078 or 3726778.

Ray's Used Furniture, Ad ·
dison, Oh. Oak swings
$18.95, coppertone kitchen
cabinet .$35, · chest W,
dresser $35, LR chair $25,
swinging crad le $25, break last set $35, antique hutch
$150. Open 9 til 5. Call 367 0637 .
GE heavy duty washer
$100. Kenmore coppertone
dryer, like new,
1
guaranteed . Call 256 _1207 .

s oo,

Full mattress, box springs,
$65 . Double hung w.mdows,
38x57, 42x60, $15 each, 304-

675·5976 .
Fireplace screen, damper,
grate, angle iron, range
top, two 15x7 wheels, $10
each. 304-675-5976 alter 4.

GE auto washer, like new,
$125. Call 4-4&lt;1'8181 .
Woodburner .

Phone

30-l-

675-4638.

General Electric 23,000 .
SLEEPING ROOMS and BTU air conditioner. JO.l- ·
light housekeeping apt., · 675-3818.
Park Central Hotel.

- ~1.

$75.00.

Building Supplies

52

CB,TV, Redlo
Equipment

Bt=TTER TEL-L.
SQUAD ABOUT

Pets for Sale

DRAGONWYND
CAT TERY
KE NNEL. AKC

I

\

bedroom

hOme, 30H7H1SI.

mobile

News

CAPTAIN EASY

FLYING All NI GHT.. .
ROAD5 ... I HAVEN'T

IT'5 NOT FAll: NOW. T ~l 5 15
THE PHONE SOOTH I'JE CALLED
YOU FROM LAST NIGHT.

IN A LONG TIME-.

min atur e.
Silver - gray,
male poodl e, 8 mo. old,
wormed , all shots, house
broke, Registered , and
loves chi ldren. 446-1023 .
Sonia's Professional Dog
Gr oom ing . Call614 -388 -8547
and ask for Sonia .
POODLE
pups.
AKC
r egistered. No Checks, 304895-3958 .

R eg .
Quarter
horse
yearling gelding, excellent
show prospect, shown sue·
cessfully at halter. Dan
Beam , Gallipolis, 614-446·
0183 .
Reg . Poll ed Hereford bull .
A pp. 1,600 lbs., $850.00 or
tr ade for good used
hay rake plus boot. Call2569303.

AKC b lack and white
Cocker SpanieL male, 7
month s old, $50. 304 675·
1076.

Registered and graded hor·
ses, exce llent 4-H pro;ect .
English and western sad·
di es ·
eve rythii1g
imaginable in horse equip·
ment and supplies, also
riding lessons and trail
rides and horse train ing .
Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow.
614-698·3290.

.58
Fruit
_ _ _.:&amp;
~
V! get,.a._.b..,le
.,s.____

Yea rlin g
742 -2535.

Mortguage lifter tomato
plants $1.00 doz . Charles
Bec htle, upper Five M ile
Rd .

TEAM work horses with
harnesse s. One Seminol e
bull . 304-882 -3239.

--------

PUPPIES . AKC Si l ver
Minature Poodles. Phone
304 -882 -3596 .

Sweet pota t oe plants·7 dif·
f er ent varit ies, Robert W.
L ewis , Rt. 124, Rac ine. 843·
2432 .
59

F.or Sale or Trade

A lot of different parts for
350 or 400 engi nes. A lso par·
ts for 74 Impala . interior
perfect . 742 -3063.

&amp; bl' es!DEI!

Charol ais

bull.

2~ - 6534 .

Painting ,
roofing ,
p l as t ering &amp; ch imney
r epair. Ca ll 388 -8198 for
fr ee es timate.

1978 Mustang II , 4 cy l,
automatic, power steering,
power brakes , AM · FM .
$3,000. Phone 304 -675-3186
or 675-2808.
1966 IMPALA SS Con vertiab le, $1200. or will consider trade on motorcycle,
phone 304-675-2508 .
Truck's for Sale

11

1976 Ford 3/ 4 ton pi ck up.
good cond . Ca li388 -8769.
56 Chevy ton and 1h dump
t r uck . 742·3094. $1500.
56 Chevy ton and 1h dump
truck. 742 -3094 . .$1500.
73

Vans &amp; 4 W. O.

•

Sf'E:I-05

---------

SLIP, NJD IC£r5
UP5!rr IF IT _;,--------1.
Sl-lOiJS_

Inter ior &amp; Exterior Pain·
ting. Need a new r oof or
gutters? We give fr ee
estimates, references . Ca ll
446·7677 .
Expert remodeling,
ditions, all form of
pentr y . Call 446-7376
free estimate. M onday
Thur sday on l y .

t:;o aJ A

ad·
ca r for
thru

M asonary work , Logue
Contract i ng ,
Rt.
1,
Ewing t on _Ca ll 388·9939.
Spec ial Marc h and April
only . Gene's Deep Stea m
Cleaning. Scot ch Gaurd.
Free estimate. 992·6309
Gene's
St ea m Carpet
Clean· Scotch Ga urd· Free
es tim ates -spri ng spec ial s- ,..,
Gene Smith, 992 -6309.
~

- NO U5E PRETENDIN' Tl1'
WORST HAGN'T HAPPENEDSANDY WOULD HAVE
ANSWERED MY CALL
LONG AGO -

1974 Doege 4x4 318 engine
auto, must se ll , SLSOO or RON 'S Television Se rvi ce.
best offer. Ca ll446·4002 .
alizing in Zenith and
- - - - - - -- - - -- hA.,nt,nrn,l• . Quazar, and
house call s. Phone 576-2398
1980 CHEVY Scottsdal e, lN. or 446 2454 .
ton 4-whee l -drive, P S, AM ·
..
FM. regular gas, 30,000
F &amp; K Tree Trimmin g, ... f
miles. 304-773-5150 .
stump r emov a l. 675·1331.

Tnree quarter horses. Ca ll
304 -675-5955 .

FOR sale, 1979 Jeep CJ 5,
$5000 .00. lots of extras. ca ll
304-675-4610 after 3:00 p.m .
1978

International

Scout

4 year old Appaloosa mar e.

4x4 pickup 31.000 miles, ex-

304 -675 -3818 .

ce llent condition and rub ber $2350. 304-895-3477 .

,s- seec~&amp;-Fertiliier

--

BuLK
BLENDED
Agricultural
fertilizer
delivered &amp; spread or
delivered &amp; dumped or
pi cked up at plant. Blending service hours 8 to 4,
Monday thru Friday, other
hours request on spreader
buggy rentals . A complete
independent busines. Farm
Equipment serivce. Clif·
ford W. Snyder owner,
Jackson, OH, 286-4983.

71

Autos for Sale

1976 Grand Ptl x, PS, PB, &amp;
air, 65,000 miles, very gOOd
cond . Call 388-8769.

'SPR IN G
CLEAN - UP
SA LE ' Jividen 's Fa rm
1969 Chevelle SS 396, 4 spd .
Equipment, 446-1675.
Call"-'&lt;1-6632.
Long tra ctors , Vermeer
bal er s &amp; hay equipment,
ba le movers, rotary tillers, 1978 Honda Civic, Hondadisc, post digger &amp; drivers, mafic, $2,950. Call 4-16-7523.
seeders, rOtary cu tt ers .
Blades, gates, &amp; front end 1977 Capri with sun roof ,
loader. And see -us to get $1,300, good cond . Call 256your parts &amp; complete ser- 1768
vi ce.
USED EQUIP :
I H Hydro 70, 9N Ford, 2000 1970 V.W. Body, rough, but
Ford, 550 Oliver, Mf 65, runs very good . Rebuilt
J D-M, Long A60 4x4 with engine. $500.00. 256-6808.
loader, disc, cultivators,
p low s ,
JO
manure For sa le 1974 Camaro with
spreader, Ford 501 mpwer, 1976 400 engine, new carb .,
1979 Dodge Ram Charger new paint, new tires, new
4x4, 1978 Dodge pick -up chrome side pipes. Call4463142 or 446-2235.
4x4.
WE BUY USED EQUIP MENT!
. 69 vw runs good, recently
over hauled, good tires,
MF tractor, Ford 501 $900. Call alter 5, 446-8328.
mower, plow, potato plow.
Will sell separate. Call 4-4&lt;1- 77 M ercury Bobcat, A -1
7322 .
.
cond ., $2,300. Call 388-9354.

----- -

941 B Catapillar end loader, good condition, 30_
4458 -1.142.

1970 Buick LeSabre good
running cond., good Interior, $500. Call446-3077.

k
Side delivery hay ra e,
spoke wheel type 3 pl.
Hookup, like new $400 . atter 5 p.m . 304-882-2819.

Nova, new 400 engine, 4

78 Jeep, Excellent shape.
$3,600. 304 -882 -3_501 after 5,
1977 Ford tru ck, 4 wheel
drive, $3000.00. No rust .
304-576-2337 .
79 Bronco'. 30-l-895-3594 .
74

1981 Harley David son
1,000cc sport. Blk . stock .,
mint cond., 980 m, Lots of
Chrome _ $3,500. or $1 ,700
assume loan. Call 797 -3218
after 3 p.m .
1975 SUZUKI 100 dirt bike,
$400. Honda Z50, S200. 304675 2848.
19781f&gt; Harley Davidson,
low miles. 304-675-1897.
E xce llent c ondition Honda
CR250M, Yamaha 80, Honda 50, 2 speed. Ca ll 304 -6754662 after 5 p.m .

Water wellli . Com m ercia l
and Domesti c. Test hol es.
Pumps Sa les and Servi ce .
304-895 -3802 .
ADVA NCED
Seam less
Gu tt er )Doors . Offering
co nt i nuou s
g utter ing,
seam less siding, roofing ,
garage
doors,
fr ee
est imates, 614-698-8205.

.. .what I were
considerin:
fool that I is,
o' makin' 40u
vice-president

·~---._of!
82

Plumbing
___ !._!:!!!'ting - -- CAR TER 'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor. F6urth and Pine
Pnone 446·3888 or 4-46·4477

Dir·

a.

7S
Boats and
----~~'!!:~lor Sate
1979 Starcraft 15 If_ tri haul, ski &amp; fishing boat, 80
HP Mecury, ski equipment,
exc. cond . Call 367-0394.
14ft_ John boat with 40 HP
John
motor ,
electric
trolling motor. plus extras.
Asking $1,300. Call 446-2948.
20 ft . Gator boat trailer .
388 -9755 or 446-1642 ext. 332 .
Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

76

Gallipolis Diversifi ed Canst . Co. Custom dozer
b ac khoe work. Special
farm rates. Ca ll us for free
estimates. 446-4440.

Different parts for 350 and
400 Chevy engine. Trans.,
carb., gas and water pumps, etc. 742-3063.
----~----

---- ---

J IMS water Service. Call
Ji'!" Lanier, 304-675-7397 .

- ~ - --~- ---.....:...

__.............
....

,.

JT!

~100,000

GIFT!

. IT SK!f'PEP MY

e&gt;tPVT"/

···-:-

.. - -

Upholstery

.

. MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304675-41~.

Of 1H~
YKNOW. -.---

1'M 1R'{IN&amp;, 1'0 DRDM
LlP 1&gt;.. flW MOR£:...
Btl-ioL.Dt~ .

:oo om m o m

I

- --------

If you need your trash
hauled away, call Harper
304-675-5868 6etween 1 PM
and 5 P. M . Lawn mower
repaired .

87

~ IN 1Ht f:.Yt..

__ -

TRISTATE
UPHQ~STERY SHOP
· 1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
hOflle
446-7833 or 4-16-1833.

- --··......,,

HIM FOR

,HIliP/

8 ~ . _ ~~!~~~ !t~ U_!!~9- _

72 Dodge Dart 318 &amp;nglrle, le73,,gFil'leord L TO, 2 door, 351
1
1
V8, S«JJ. JO.l-_882-3168.
~~~ tr:;'!;:" '~ ~~:
Radlattor plirts,and etc. 304:
197,7 Electra-Glide Classic, 1·9317-2;rss.
low mileage, very clea_n.
Must see to appreclate: 592Auto Rt(l!lr
5864, Athens.
.:--'---'------"'===~Ouallty Autobddv
Paint
work.
·Prolesslonal'custom
' HARTS Used Cars,
paint_work on l)'lOforcycles.
iHaven west VIrginia.
Auto Trim Center, 446- i968.
'!20 less expensive cal'$
!stock.
·
I
. •
.
79

Cond. Ce11.3258.

LIVES .. _

-,

---- -·- --

; ----~·~~--~.-~-~------­

IT GAVEC7 OUR

FORGOT

TO 7NANK.

FORGET A
THING LIKE A

SEWING MachiM repairs,
service. Authorized Si nger
Sales &amp; Ser vi ce Sharpen
Scissors . Fabri c Shop,
Pomeroy . 992-2284.

Need something hauled
away or something moved?
We'll do it. Call 446-3159 or
614-286 -5740 after 6.

'27' Avlon trev;eltraller, ex.

~ROTHER I
ORVILLE.

~IT£ GEN£1(0(15
OF HIM 10 SENC7
Yo.J THAT CHECK.1

L. I DON'T V•l•"''"'"
BUT I WAS SO
TENSE DURING
MY VISIT ... ANO 50
INTIMIR4TEP 8Y
01\'VILLE ... THAT

Appliance
se rvi ce
On
refrigerators,
fr eezer,
washers, dryers &amp; elec tric
ranges . Call 4-16-8295. ·

68 Pontiac 350 engine and
transmission, 4 &lt;;rager
mags and tires, 2 Claytons
60, 2-15", tots misc . Pontiac
parts. 675-2529 after s_

a.

SLEEPING LAST
NIGHT .. - I KEPT
lliiNKING OF YOUR

BILL .- HCHV
CO(ILP YOU

IT WAG REALLY

- - ~ ~~~efr!_9~~!P~ -­

Pleasant. JO.I-675·7360.

n

I HAD T/?'0(/e.tE

8-4 ---·~· electriCa, --­

JONE S BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Cali 367 -7471 or
367-0591 .

2-14" fires, poly
radials. 304-773-5417.

WINNIE

L awrenc e Sidenstri cker
Backhoe Service. Cal l 6755580.

Now Haul ing limestone-Ii i!
dirt-top soil -gravel. Free
estimates. Call367 -7101 .

~

Too bad we ain't fren's
no more ... jes' when I is
startin' m' new comp'nt.j ...

a.

stee l

I

GASOU NE ALLEY

JIMS Pest Cont rol. Call us
anytime for yo• ·· · ::rmite
problem s .
r 1ee
in ·
spections . VA &amp; F HA form s
available. Licensed &amp; in·
sured by Ohio
WV . A ll
word done by a qualified &amp;
tr ai ned servi ce man . 304675·3536, 304 -675-4603 _

8_.! _ -~x ca~.a~I!S __ _
1982 Yamaha 920
virago _304-882-2482 .

Hanshaws Used Tires .
s~d on the floor, cutlass Lucas
Lane,
Point
wheels, cutlass interior,

1978 Pontiac Phoenix. vinyl
v·6, 4 dr., autro., air,
46,000 miles, new battery,
tires &amp; front shocks within
the laSt year. Recently
tuned up. $2,895. 985-4242.

RINGLES 'S SERVICE experienced mason, roof er,
ca rpent e r ,
elec tri c ian ,
ge n e ral
r e pa i r s and
r emodeling. Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675 -4560.

Motorcycles

F. A . Soccer: The
Road to Wombloy
Cil Andy Griffith
(I) ABC News
(]) Electric Company
® Over Easy
6 :30 0 (I) ClJ NBC News
(I) Chartia. The lonesome Cougar Pt. 1 A do mesticated couga r k1tten
find s problems 1n nat ure
and civiliza tion when he
answer s the call of the
Wild .
(]) $50.000 Pyramid
CIJ Gomer Pyla
(I) Muppet Show
0 (I) ®I CBS News
Cil Dr. Who
(fi) Ulias, Yoga and You
Ol (D ABC News
7 :00 0 (I) P.M . Magazine
Cil MOVIE: 'Sex and the
Single Parent'
(]) Bull ' s Eye
(!) This Week in the NBA
([) Carol Burnett and
Friends
([) Entertainment Tonight
CIJ Happy Days
0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
Cil (jj) MacNeil-lehrer
Report
®I News
Ol (D Family Feud
7 :30 0 (I) You Asked For It
(I) Strange Death / Desert
Fox The mystery behmd
the death of Hitler' s favor ne general, F1eld Mar shal
Erw1n Rommel . 1s examIned .
Another life
(!) ESPN Sports Cent er
(I) Sanford and Son
(I) 0 Cll Family Feud
CD laverne and Shirley
()) Business Report
® Ri chard Simmons
[1) Mount St. Helens
'Why They 01ed .. Th1 s pro gram asks hard quest1ons
about the poliCieS, proce dures and Judgement of
former Govern or 01)(18 lee
Ray and USGS sc1en t1Sts at
the scene
I!)
(ill
Entertainm ent
Tonight
8 :00 0
(I) ClJ Marco Polo
Th1rd of four pan s. Marco
earns the enmit y of a pow erfu l courtier, the royal
coun returns m tnumph to
Pekmg and M;:uco •s Introd uced to spaghetti. (2 hrs )
i1l MOVIE : 'FFolkes'
(]] National Geographic
Special
ffi 1974 Wimbl edon
Highlights
([) MOVIE : 'Stalag 17'
CIJ 1!1 (D Happy Days
Joanie makes a dec1s1on
about her co ll ege educa tion . IRI )Closed Ca plloned)
0 CII ®I The Book of
lists Th•s variety hour fea tures mterv1ews w•th people who form the bas1s on
w h1 ch seve ral of the ltsts
are comp1led . (60 m1n .)
(I) ' Danger UXB ' From
Masterpiece
Theatre
'Dead Man Shoes · F~rst of
13 part s. In th1 s epi sode,
Brian finds him se lf posted
to a new bomb d1spo sal
company
(60
min )
/C losed Captioned\
® Ohio University Sym phony Orchestra
8 :30 Cll 1!1 ® laverne and
Shirley Laverne and Sh1rley
double date with younger
men . (R) /C losed Ca ptioned ]
9 :00 (I) MOVIE: ' Blackboard
Jungle'
(]) 700 Club
(!) World Figure Skating
Championships from Co penhagen
Cll Ol (D Best of Three ' s
Company Lucille Ball ho sts
this retrospective that recap tures the funn1est moments of Three 's Com pany . (60 min.)
0 C1J MOVIE : ' fallen
Angel'
()) American Playhouse
'Oppenheimer, Pan II ' In
the fall of 1942 Oppenhei·
mer leads a group of sc 1e n ~
ti st s
in
what
became
known as t he Manhattan
Project . (60 m1n.l \Closed
Captioned/
®I MOVIE : ' Panon· Part
1
1 0 :00 0 Cil Cll Quincy Conclu sion. Guiney mu st identify
the cause of the ep1dem1c
aboard the ocean liner . (60
min .)
(I) MOVIE : 'Caveman '
(I) Ol (D Hart to Hart
The Hans face a two mil ~
lion dollar death suit . (60
min .))Ciosed Captioned\
(I) Firing Uno
(jj) Newswatch
10:30 (])Sing out America
Cil TBS Evening News
® Hitchcock
11
®J
tD
News
(I) MOVIE: ' Fifth Floor'
ill Nashville RFD
C!l ESPN Sports Center
CIJ News/Sports/Weather
I]) Dlck Caven
11:30 D Cil CIJ Tonight Show
Johnny is joined by Willie
Nelson. (60 min .)
(}) Race For the Pennant
'The Rookies' Hosts Tim
McCarver and Barry T ompkins take a look at baseball
rookies throughout 'the

m

ANNIE

~.,

6'-'1'--__,_F__,ae_r,_,
m,_E,_qu"'i,_.p:em:ee,_,n,_,_t_
1-set of John Deere 4 bottom 16' sem~ mount plows,
1-Hillsboro tri ·axle goose·
neck 28' trailer . Call 614-

361·1160.

78 FORD Mustang II
Cobra . Good running con dition, need littl e· bOdy
word, 70,000 -miles, $1700.
Phone 304-773 -5157 or 304-.
773 -5978.

FUTLE

[) I

C!l

Autos for Sale
Creat i ve wood decks,
pressurized pine, ceda r &amp;
redwood . Free estim at e.
Cai i 388 -9762 .

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square to lorrn
four ordinary words
·

(]

s:oo o m m o m ®I m tD

&amp;
tex paper
tur ed
CFA _~~~~~~~~~~===r~~~~~~~~;;~ hanging
interi or , , ex terior,
ce ilin gs. Ca ll 367 -7784 or

1968 Volkeswagen _ Phone
304-882-3239.

1}ftlfwt fii}\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHenriAm.:&gt;ldandBoblee

EVENING

a.

71

Television
•
•
vieWing
5/18/82

Fren c h C ity
Pain tin g
residential
commercia l,

Himalayan,
Persian
and ·
Chow
puppies
.
Siamese kittens. Call 4463844 after4 p.m .
___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
6_! __ Far'!!._ ~~ ipment . _
HILLCRE ST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, c lean New Holland 66 Baler-949indoor -outdoor fa c ilities. 2609 or 949 -2234,
A lso AKC Reg . Dobermans. Call446-7795.
One 880 Ol i ver Diesel Row
Crop Tractor _ Phone 304BRIARPATCH KENNELS 682 -3239.
--'
Boardii1Q and groomi ng .
Gordon
se tt ers , 63
A KC
Livestock
E ng li sh Cocker Spaniels.
Cali388 -9790 .
REG . QUARTER HORSES
Training,
s howing ,
breeding, sales and boarPOODLE GROOM IN G.
Call Judy Taylor at 367 - ding. contact Dan Beam,
Gallipolis, 446-0183.
7220.

Th e Daily Sen tin ei- Pag e- 9

TUESDAY

CAP T A IN STEEMER Ca rpet Clean ing featured by
·Haffelt Brosther s Custom
Carpets. Free es tim ates.
Ca ll"-'&lt;1-2107 .

Wlnnebilgoi _)llotor
exc. eood. &lt;;i114j6-2203.

ONE

PL-ACE-

Marcum
Roofin g
&amp;
jSpouting . 30 years ex perience, specia li zing in
buill up roof _Cai l 388 -9857.

Metal Sheets 4'x 8' thru
4'x 12' . Prices $7 .60 to$9 .60.
Exfce ll e nt
building
material.
porceline ,
ena mel woated won' t rust
18 to 22 gauge_ 614-661 -3085
Tuppers Plains , Ohio.
56

Home
Im provements

PAINTING
in ferior and
ex terior,
plumbing ,
roofing , some remodeling .
20yrs. exp. Ca ll388-9652.

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winter s, Rio Grande, 0 .
Ca ll 245-5121.

top,

Furnished Rooms

Rooms with cooking, cable,
air, S«l a week. JO.l-773-

55

n~ w .

Pomeroy-Middlepclrt, Ohio
DICK TRACY

STUCCO PLA STERING
textur ed ce ilings co mmer c ial and re sidential,
free estimates. Ca ll 2561182 .

comp. ·tuned up. Will sell
l ___________l,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ with racing accessories. 69
I'
model and well worth
$1.195. Call 742c3063 after.S.

Refrigerator,
General
One bedroom furnished Electric lroslfree, almost
apartment, utilities paid. new. window fan. set store
· scales calculat~ . JO.l-675304-675-1897.
7674.
45

Tent. 8x10, li ke
304 -675-5115.

Farm SQIDIIes

Air Compressor -Ke llogg·
Ameri can, 11!2 H .P. 2 stage,
80 gal. vert ic al tan k . Very
good condition. S800. Also
cherr y logs far sa le. Jerr y
Well992-71144.

81

Push m ower . 304-615·2396 .

Eggs, .50 per doz. for any
A ir Compressor -Ke llogg· a mount .
Mr s.Ciifford
Ameri ca n, 1111 H .P. 2stag e, L e ifheit.
Rock Springs ,
80 gal. vert ic al tank . Very .s t .R t.33 . Pomeroy . 992 -34-4&lt;1
go&lt;Jd condition . $800 . A lso or 992 -5836.
cherry logs for sa le. Jerry
Well992-7844 .

a.

Pom e roy - 2
bd room ,
remodeled , 408 Spring .
Carpeted , security deposit .
$100 . Rent $195. Ca ll after 6
p.m . 992 -2288.

One roll top ches t, hand
craft ed solid cedar, $175.
304 -675 -3489.

Tuesday, May 18, 1982

ser.lees

by Larry Wright

"'

Misc. Merchandlce

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved . 1,000
gal. tank, price $340. Other
sizes in stock , hllul in your
' pickup truck . ·Call 614-2865930, Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

1970 Gregory trailer. 12x65.
2 bedroom, air cond . unit,
porch
awning, good
cond ., washer &amp; dryer
space. S5,000 . Lot l!IISO for
rent . m -6093 .

Tuesday, May 18, 1982 _

PEANUTS

J.MEAN, IF ITS SOME'Til1N6
'{011\'E AI.IIN\YS WORRIED

A80I1T, I'ERIIAI'S VOV SHOOLD
JUST REALLY TRY IT•••

SOMETIMES WE JUSTAAVE

TO~ AAEAO AND TRY

SOME'THIN6 TO FIND OUT

I-lOW O'lllERS ~EL, AND...
WELL, IF NO ONE NOTICED '(()I}
!lAD LfFT, THEN AT LEAST

YOIJ'p KNOW
EVERYONE

I KIJ 0
~HYNDIG

M16HI E3E
8ETTERTHAN
AN IND I FFE~ENI
5 1N6ER.

J

] KJ I I I

ILAFTOA I
(J I 0
Answer here . A[
Yes terdays

Now arrange the CirCled letter s to
form the surpt1se answer. as sug gested by the above cartoon

XXXI I XXX) ONE

(Answers tomorrow)
SIXTY JOSTLE OFF SET
Answer Why It might b€1 COflS idered '.'ulgar to si 11 g 1n
lhe batfllub - IT'S SOLO (so low)

I Jumbles GROOM

BRIDGE

Don't try to guess

r----- - - -

lly Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Don 't try to guess when
yo u can give your partner a
chance t o tell yo u what to
do . He may not help you. but
we repeat. Gi ve him a

NOt\ Tit

+J

chance.

WEST
• 86
• K62
tK H
+ Q98fiJ

You open the six of clubs
after South reaches three notrump after a Stay m an

EAST

.A

• 10 7J 2
10 7 4
t 53
K 74
SUUTH
KJ 5
• QJ 9 3

sequence .
Your partner produces th e
king and South promptly
grabs the tri ck wi1h the ace
Then South pla ys ace and
nine of diamonds. The sm gles play er takes his kmg
right aw ay and must then
decide whether or not to

+

+

tA 9
+A 10 52
Vulnerable: North-S1lu lh
O.al er· North

co ntinue clubs. Give East

Wes t

t he 10. In that case. a lo w
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and run off the rest uf 1he
tricks.
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that ha d yo u led a hea rt yo ur
side wou ld have collec ted
two hea r ts and four clubs
plus the diamond and scor ed
plus-300 instead of see mg
game and rubber go away .
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about hts ace of hear ts Just

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Pass

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about the ar(' of hearts.
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lhe 10 of lha1 SUi t. Thr lllghest he&lt;H t ht&gt; ca n spare· Vou
w11l lead a hea rt a P l 1; ,

duck the nine of diamonds

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(abbr)
group (abbr)
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waste
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63 Baner
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Mohammed
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42 Worthl ess
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diethylamid e
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serv~ces

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION:''Our representative religion in western
culture is physics." - William Hurt
0211

�Page-HI-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 18, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IStella
Area death I
Grueser

ELBERFELDS IN.POMEROY

Mrs. SteUa Grueser, 91, 70 North
Second St., Middleport, died this
morning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Ewing Funeral
Home.

Bo~ds forfeited

•'

,.

Two defendants forfeited bOnds
and three others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Monday night.
Forfeiting were Richard C.
Harrison, Middleport, $375, posted
on a charge of driving while intoxicated, and Gregory · Haning,
Pomeroy, $50, excessive speed .
Fined were Harry A. Pettit,
Pomeroy, $75 and costs, reckless
operation; Jimmy Morrison, Middleport, $50 and costs, offensive
language, and Thomas Scally, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly
manner; $50 and costs, destruction
of jail property and $100 and costs,
resisting arrest.

'

~~'

... ~. .•' ,,,.I

COVETED - DouglaB M. Hill. director of the
Meigs High School Band, presented the coveted Arion
and John Pbllllp Sousa awards at Tbunday night's
hand banquet. Receiving their awards from HW, left,
are Rita Rhodes, the Arion award as the ootstandlng

junior mUJlcian, and Jeff Nash, the John PhWp Sousa
award given to the best senior musician with oulstandlog leadership. On behalf of the hand, Rochelle
McDaniel and Helen Slack presented a gilt to Director
Hill.

Freshmen
b an d
m embers
received a small letter and they in ·
elud e Kristin Bail ey, Tammy Clark,
Oarrin Cre m ea ns, Amy Erwin, H . J .
Grimm , G lenda Gum , Rhonda Had·
dox. Beth Hobstefter, Usa Hoffman,
Be tt y
Ann
Loftis,
Jol e ne
Moodispaugh, Char lotte Ly ons, Lin da Noel. Trina Reeves , Norma
Rhodes, Linda Riggs, Kim Roush ,
Sherry Sayre , Karen Spenc er, Suzan
Thoma . Robyn Ve no y, Den i se
Stega ll.
Sophomores received large letters
an d they are Sherr y Arnold , Tammy
Black, Megan Ca le, Bi ll Anderson ,
Barb Cha ppelear, Charlie Davis,
Pe nn y Dewhurst, Patty Duffy , Lynn
Epple. Jeff Gi lk ey, Scott Hysell .
Rhonda Jeffers, Todd John son, Cin
dy Musse r , Dawnette Norris, Christi
Quivey, Be cky Rite, Cheryl Riffl e,
Pa ul Riggs , Amy Sisson , Vaughan
Spencer. M el v in Van Meter, Zandra
Va ugh an, J eanni e Welsh , Sonia
Wise .
Juniors r ece ived r epli cas of the in·
struments th ey play and this group
inc lud ed Jamie Acree , Robin
Barr e tt.
Karla
Brown , Barb
Grueser. A nita Harmon , Angie Hat·
f ield, Roxa nne M c Daniel. Steve Pat·
terson , Rita Rhodes , Chris Ri ch·
mond, L ynn Slater, Joyce Stewart,
K ri stal Sisson. Julie Spencer.
Seniors were awarded engraved
trophies . That group includes Kim
Birchfield. Vic ki Boyl es, Susan Dan
ner, Ter esa Dorst, Mark Friend ,
Brenda Fry , Mary Beth Hawley ,
Robin
Kit c hen ,
Lynn
K toes.
Rochelle McDaniel. Jeff Nash , Lyn
ne 01 iver , Dan Riggs and Helen
Sla ck .

~~SC 6000 Camera

Full 5-year Warranty
4-Eiement. All-Glass I 2 B Len s
Automatic 8 UII1 -tn Flash
Instant Flash Rer.yclo
• Motonzed Ftlm Ad v:lnCf'
• Close-up Capab1hly to I
• But!t-ut Cover Handle

I

u··

Meet Wednesday
The Meigs County Fire
Association will meet at the Chester
Fire Station at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday . The forestry division wiU
present the program.

Banquet honors musicians
Meigs High School Band members were rewarded for their instrumental efforts during the
past year when the annual hand
banquet was held at the high
school cafeteria last week.
Presenting the numerous awards was Director Douglas M. Hill
who recently resigned from the
teaching staff of the district.

KODAK
•
•
•
•

AN IDEAL GRADUATION GIFT!

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

TO MONEY MARKET INVESTORS:

Umlt4

DlliPOtiab•le Lighter
Adjustable flame. color choice.
Coupon Good Mov 19 lhru May 22. 1982

WITH AS LITTLE AS

K marf Coupon

'500.

Contract

(Continued from page I )
Also meeting with council was
John Koebel of Columbia Gas Co.,
concerning a gas rate ordinance
calling for an increase of four percent the first year and five percent
the second year.
It was pointed out that the Columbia Gas contract with the village expires July 16.
Council, at its last meeting, informed Koebel the village had joined
the coalition (II communities combined effort to negotiate lower gas
rates) and planned to stay with it.
Council moved to reject the
proposal and referred the matter to
the utility committee.
Ellen Rought, clerk-treasurer,
will attend breatholizer school in
Columbus on June 8, 9, and 10.
Jack Krautter, street superintendent, gave a report of activities of
his department and was given approval to repair the tamper at a cost
of $75 and to purchase $1,500 worth of
hot mix to repair pot holes. The
meeting was opened by prayer by
Mayor Andrews. Attending were
Mayor Andrews, Ellen Rought,
clerk-treasurer, Larry Wehrung,
Bruce Reed, Bill Young, John Anderson and Betty Baronick, council
members, Krautter and Police Chief
George Stitt.

If
money market rates, you
new 3 ''!:&gt;··"'P.~r .;,ul,.rt::l
Certificate which requires a minimum deposit of only $500. You
can choose to earn either a fixed or variable rate of interest The
fixed rate guarantees a long·range return on your investment
Interest on the variable rate Certificate is adjusted each month in
line with current money market rates. Of course, both Certificates
are insured by an agency of the federal government
The fixed and variable rate Super Certificates are two of the
many Money Market Investor Services BANK ONE offers. So
r~member, no matter where you've invested your money before,
nbw you can put it back in the bank.
·
Stop by any BANK ONE office for details.
HOW LONG

•fi. Ol.
Coupon Good Moy 19 Thru Moy 22. 1982

.. K mart' Coupon

HOW MUCH

INVESTOR SERVICE
THATS BEST FOR YOU

YOU WANT TO INVEST

YOU HAVE TO INVEST

3 Mo111h SUPI!R T'

3 Monlhl

17,!500+

I Month SUPI!R T'

IS Monlhl

110,000+

lmiiiiS.Ver SUPI!R T

2'1• Yeer110 41 Monthe

1100+

Veterans Memorial
Admitted; Mary Fry, Middleport;
John King, Reedsville; Mary Van
Meter, Rutland; Wilbur Hanning,
Middleport; Curtis Luckeydoo;
Rutland; Pearlie Jewell, West
Columbia, W. Va.
Discharged: Earl Arix, Michael
Hewitt, Dorothy Brewer.

Conservation urged
There are problema with the
Racine Villag~ Water Sy~ and
residents were Biked today to·take
every measure to ~rve water
1188ge until further notice.

-·&lt;f

'·

~

,1'"

~-

~""

BANI&lt; ()N£::·:
I

Coupon Good May 19ThnJMoy22, 1982

1

K mart· Coupon

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