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                  <text>Page---16-The Daily Sentinel

Area
deaths
Carl R Alle J

I

•

Y' r •

Carl Reuben Alley, Jr., died at birth at Holzer Medical Center Tuesday
night.
The infant is survived by his
mother, Stella Sarson, Racine, and
his father, Carl Alley, Racine ; grandparents, Lewis and Stella Sarson,
Racine and James and Anna Alley,
Racine.
Graveside services wil) be held at
Letart Falls Cemetery Thursday at 4
p.m. The Rev. Florence Smith will
officiate .

Kristin F. Wamsley
Kristin Fay Wamsley, two rnonlh
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Wam, ley, Racine, died
Tuesday at Childrens Hosp1l&lt;ll,
Columbus.
In addition to her parents the infant is survived by one brother,
Richie at home; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Teaford, Racine; paternal gra ndpa rents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wamsley, Cheshire; several aunts. uncles
and cousins.
Graveside services will be held
Thursday at 10 a. m. at Letart Falls
Cemetery with the Rev. Jim Clark
officiating. Ewing Funeral Home is
in charge

or

arrangements. There

will be no calling hours.

Lena Embleton
'

Lena Embleton, 116, of Hartford,
died Tuesday m the Pleasant Valley
Nursing Care Unit.
Born Feb. 23, 1696, in Wheeling,
W.Va ., daughter of the late Robert
and Hattie Stone Embleton, she at-

Monday deadline
The deadline to purchase tickets to
the Ge neral Hartinger dinner to be
held Friday, May 28 is Monday, May
24. Tickets are $7.50 each and may
be purchased at Middleport Department Store, Bahr Clothiers, New
York Clothing House and Swisher
and Lohse Drugs. The public is tnvited to attend. Gen. Hartinger wtll
be the principal speaker.

Reservations due
Person:; wishing to make reservations to attend the Racine Alwnni
have until May 25 . No phone reservations will be accepted.
Admission to the dinner is $5.50
and ti ckets may be purchased at
Village Cut Rate or by mailing $5.50
with a self addressed envelope to
Barbara Pierce, Racine.
The dance which is open to the
public is $4 and admission will be
paid at the door . The event will be
held at Southern High School on
Saturday, May 29.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
ADMlSSIONS--Gladys Fife, Middleport; Oliver Bailey, Reedsville;
Bernard Rairden, Hartford; Clifford
Rockhold, Reedsville; Earl Arix,
Pomeroy; Robert Cunningham,
Syracuse.
DISCHARGEs-Mary Reynolds,
Gladys Cuckler, Maurice Smith,
Bertha Reibel, Gladys Fife.

wednesday, May 19, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

I Meigs Countians hurt in accident .

tended Hartford United Methodist
Church.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs.
Harriet Rockwell of Huntington,
W.Va., and Mrs. Mary Harper d
Chester, W.Va .; two brothers, Paul
of Richmond, Ind ., and Robert or
Point Pleasant.
Funeral services will be held at
I :30 p.m. Thursday in the Foglesong
Funera l Home, Mason, with
minister Dr. Dennis Smith of.
fictallng . Burial will follow in the
Graham Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral horne from 7-9
p.m. today .

Stella Grueser
Stella Grueser, 91, 70 N. Second
St. , Middleport, died Tuesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospi!&lt;JL
Mrs. Grueser was the daughter of
the late Phillip S. and Mary Davis
Houdashell. She was also preceded
in death by her husband, Theodore,
two sisters, Lottie Yost and Cora
Hitchin s, one brother, Dana
Houdashelt.
She was a member of the Minersville United Methodist Church,
United Methodist Women, Meigs
County Senior Citizenssn, and a 63
member of the Meigs County Farm
Bureau.
She is survived by three sons, Ed·
Athens;
Elmer
Pl.
rnond of and
Pleasant
William
T. ofof Middleport; one daughter, Mrs. Bradford (Helen) Maag, Minersville;
nine grandchildren, 11 grea t grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Guy
Russell , Minersville and Mrs. Earl
Eichinger, Girard, Ohio; one
brother, John Houdashelt, Minersville.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at I p.m. at Ewing
Funeral horne with the Rev. Stanley
Merrifield and the Rev. Harvey
Koch, Jr., officiating. Burial will be
in Minersville Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the fw1eral home at
anytime. In lieu of flowers the
family requests donations be made
to the Minersville United Methodist
Church.

dleport, was eastbound ~n 124. at
II: 25 p.m. Tuesday when his vehicle

miles south of County Rd. 25,
Tuesday afternoon.
The report said Timothy K.
Bevan, 19, Rt. I, Crown City, was
northboundat2:52p.m. whenheapplied his brakes, went left of center
and struck a southbound auto driven
by Deborah J. Setliff, 24, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, causing slight damage to
both vehicle.
Bevan was cited for failure to
yield, the report said.
In a private property accident investigated by the patrol, a vehicle
registered to Charlene M. Ward, 33,
Gallipolis, went off the parking lot
where it was at 7:55 p.m. Tuesday
and rolled across the road, striking a
tree before corning to a stop.
No location was given for the accident and no damage was listed to
Ward's vehicle.
Thomas R Tobin, 23, Rt. 1, Mid-

Two Meigs County men suffered
minor injuries in a tw&lt;rvehicle accident on Ohio 124 Tuesday morning.
The men - Scott M. Johnson, 18,
Pomeroy, and Michael R. Priddy,
25, Rt. I, Rutland - were later
treated and released from the
emergency room at Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Priddy was eastbound at 9:45a.m.
when he signalled for a left turn and
prepared to make the turn when he
was struck in the side by another
eastbound vehicle driven by Johnson.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Johnson's
vehicle was severely damaged and
another was moderately damaged.
Johnson was cited for assured clear
distance.
The patrol ticketed another driver
in a tw&lt;rvehicle collision on Gallia
County Rd. 42 in Green Twp., two

ELBERFELDS

HALLMARK

SEE OUR SELECTION OF
HAllMARK GRADUATION CARDS

Mr. and Mrs. Jon Collier,
daughter, Kitts Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
John Eblin, son, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. John Edwards, son, Oak Hill;
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson, son,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Robinson, son, Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. Opie Tackett, daughter, Cottageville, W.Va.

Market report
Ohio Valley Uve~&amp;od CCI.

Mom! Report
S.Je every Saturday at 1 p.m. Prices art taken
from the sal e~ S..ttlf'da)', Mlly 1S. Trenda: Veal
calves steady, feeder ealves a2 to t$1ligher, con
12 lol&amp; higher.
Feeder steers ' Good ud Ololce ZIO to illO U..
5Hii; illOioiOOibo. IW4; 4001o101llbo. IH3.71;
500 to IIIlO lbo. 1W4; 11110 lo 7110 lbo. IIUI ; 7110 lo lUI

lbo. 41.1~47.10; ,1110 ud over 52._ _
Feeder IleUm ' Good ud Cllo4ce ZIO loillO U..
4&amp;aJO; illO 1&lt;&gt;400 lbo. 411.10-61; 400 lo 500 lbo. 46~i iOO&amp;oliOOU.. 661.10; CIOQ.to700 u.. .WO; 7(1) .
loiUIIbo. 47.1046lllli!ond"''tr-.
Feeder Buill' uooo ud Cllo4ce 110 lo illO lba.
!WI; illO lo 4111lbo: I!-61JO; 400 lo 500 lbo. 5H7;
lOll to IIIlO lbo. 4UII.III; 11110 lo7110 lbo. UJI&gt;6!; 700
lollllOibo. lUI: IIIO,ond....-IUIJO.
Hollteln Steen ud Buill illO lo IIIII lbo. 11•
116.
•
.Bullll,IIOIIIbo. ud up411.5Hl.
llaUI)&gt;Iet' Con uUUUel 111.-.10; ud pritn&amp;4ll Down.
.
V..t.c.Iveo, choice ond prime 7&amp;8.

Roush Oldaker , Lynne Dee Oliver ,
sa lut atorian .
Vic t oria R . Painter, Kath leen Sue
Parker. Alan K . Partlow. K1mberly
Ann Patterson. Larry R . Patterson,
Tammy Pettit. Jame s E Peyton,
William R Pickens, Chery l L . Pier
ce, William Bru ce Powel l. Opal
Kathryn Pugh, Matthew Queen ,
David Allen Reuter, Daniel Lee
Riggs. Lisa K . Robson. Tin a Rose,
Belinda Grimm Rush, Lori E .
Roush, Terri Lynn Roush, Vicki Lin
nea Sa ut er s, Jeffrey C. Shiflet,
Thoma s Theodore Simmons , George

Brent Sisson, Helen S. Slack.
Al f red Ray Smith Jr ., Connie L .
Sm ith , Curtiss R . Smith, Laura Gail
Sm ith, Rober t a Lynn Smi th , Lorri
Ann Snowden , M el is sa Ann Snyder,
Raymond A . Stewart Jr ., Susan
Renee Swann, T imothy C. Tackett,
Gregory Todd Thoma s, Melina Rea
Thomas, Dennis L . Thornton,
Rebecca Jean Tilli s, Timothy David
Tomlin , Angela L . Triplett, Denise
Lenia Turner , James R . Wams ley,
Terry C. Wayland, Brian E . Whaley,
Troy A . Willi s and Fredric Louis
Young .

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~~

WED.

&amp;

THURS

· t Oam

to

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DEPARTMENT STORE BURNS- Damage was estimated at $1
million In a lire which destroyed the Belk-81mpson Department Store
early today In Athens. It Is believed lightning may have caused the fire.

Fire loss put at $1 million
ATHENS, Ohio - A fire which broke out shortly before 1 a.m.
today destroyed a department store, causing damage estlnnated at
about $1 mtlllon, authorities said.
The blaze gutted the Belk-Slmpson Department Store In a fire
some witnesses said may have been started by lightning.
No one was InJured, even though a brick front wall collapsed.
Residents of nearby apartments were evacuated.
The fire apparently started on the ground floor of the two-story
structure, then spread to the second floor and shot through the roof.

29 Ohioa.._s got benfits illegally

~ I '1,•',11

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COLUMBUS, Ohio - State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson said
Wednesday he has found 29 Ohioans In 12 counties who received
$33,61B In Illegal welfare benefits from the Ohlo Department of Publlc Welfare.

&lt; ..~

e

Energy saver switch
Comp letely frost free
3.45 cU/ft freezer space
Steel- plated adjustable
slide-out shelves
Magnetic sealing doors
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Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Wednesday night In
the Ohlo Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 5TI.
The Iotter}' reported earnings of $368,099.50 from the wagertng on
Its dally game. The earnings came on sales of$852,746, while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to share $484,099.50, lottery officials
said.

Weather forecast

MID-WEEK CARPET VALUES!"
t '""''

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Buenos Aires: "The only thing standing In the way of a just and honorable
peace Is the absolute lnstranslgence and Incomprehension of the problem
on the part of Mrs. Thatcher."
The Argentines seized the Falklands from Britain Aprtl2 and have been
saying that any peace talks must ultimately lead to Argentine sovereignty
over the Islands 250 miles east of Argentina's southern Up. Britain Insists
the talks have no pre-conditions and that the wishes of tlle l,!Ol Britishdescended Falklanders be taken Into consideration.
The British task Ioree made more naval and alr attacks Wednesday to
soften up Argentine positions In the Falklands for a landing . BBC corres pondent Brian Hanrahan reported from the carrier Hermes that a des troyer carrted out "further substantial bombardment" of military targets
south of Stanley, the Falklands capitaL

entinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May

1 Sec:tiont , 14 Pag••
15 Cenh
' Muhimedio In (. Newspaper

20, 1982

Legislators await
upcoming election

on Carpeting, Color TVs,
and Major Appliances

9pm

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Voi.31,No.1l

Copyrighted 1912

MID-WEEK
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are just a few of the great values you 'II find at
every Hatfield &amp; McCoy store RIGHT NOW.
And remember you can pay by cas h, check.
or use your VISA ' or MASTERCARD' .

that these were cabled to Mrs. Thatcher early today . It was the first time In
the crisis that the U.N. secretary general has personally Intervened with
Ills own set of proposals.
Details of the plan were not Immediately known.
Perez de Cuellar said In New York Wednesday night that In hls conversations with Mrs. Thatcher and Galtleri he "suggested new Ideas which I
believe might be of assistance In ov, }ming the remaining points of
difference."
Telling reporters the time left for talking "must now be measured In
hours," Perez de Cuellar said "substantial progress" had been made In the
J2 days of negotiations, and "the cost of !allure In tenns of human Ufe and
suffering Is too high to permit us to give up our efforts."
Argentine Foreign Minister Nlcanor Costa Mendez told reporters in

he Daily

AND GIFT WRAP ON

e

BffiTHS

By The Associated Press
Britain said today It Is consldertng new U.N. Ideas for a peaceful
settlement on the Falkland Islands confilct. It also published Its own
proposal and blamed Argentina for failure to resolve the confilct.
It said no move has been made to hold back the Brttlsh armada, poised to
Invade the Falklands. Press Assoclatlon,Britaln'sdomestlc news agency,
reported "deep gloom ... about the prospects of avoiding war."
Britain said the draft agreement "represented the furthest (It) could go
In the negotiations," and that Argentina's reply "amounted to a rejection."
Perez de Cuellar called Mrs. Thatcher late Wednesday night to make a
last-minute appeal for peace and made a slrnllar appeal to Argentine
President Leopolda F . Galtieri In Buenos Aires.
Otrlclals said Perez de Cuellar also handed a new set of peace proposals
to Britain's U.N. Ambassador, Str Anthony Parsons, Wednesday night and

ON
GRADUATION DAY

Sharon Cundiff, Racine, $44, speed;
Jimmy Lambert, Dexter, $46,
speed; Robert Hall, Rutland, $63,
traffic light violation; James Kiser,
Racine, $50 speed; Old Liberty Bar
and Eileen Landaker, $63, selling intoxicating liquor to a person on the
black list; Dorothy Wright,
Pomeroy, $38, leash law ; James
Roye, Pl. Pleasant, $363, DWI; Eric
HI!, Racine, $49, speed.

(Continued from page 1)

Luther Bowles, Mrs. Douglas
Bryant and daughter, Carl Day,
Harold Denney, Marilyn Drake,
Kell y Durham, Cheryl Durst,
Marian Gardner, John Harrts, Sue
Hughes, Carla Jeffers, Joshua Jeffers, Patricia Knapp, Richard Lunsford, Annette Nitz, Brenda Petrie,
Frances Riegel, Mary Russell,
Amanda Schultz, Ruth Sellers,
Shellio Slone, Celia Spiers, Mabel
Walburn.

Britain considers peace proposals

r~D~un~ca~ni,~G~a~ll~ipo~li~s,~$~-~~9,~--~-s~~~e~ed~;~--------~--~;;;;;;.-. .~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiii~~ii~~~~~;;~~~~

Graduation

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES MAY 18

1

r;:;:;:;;::;;~~~·~~~~;;;;;~~~~~=;;;w

Andrews terminates 14 cases

Fourteen defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews Wedne.day night.
Forfeiting bonds were Carolyn
Cassidy, Circleville, $48, speed;
David Roush. Racine, $63, failure to
register; Robert Parker, Middleport, $57, speed; Donald Roush,
Syracuse, $46, speed; Jeffrey Hubbard, Syracuse, $44, speed; Bryant

struck a dee{ ~ th~d~ay. Hts
vehicle was s tg t Y
g ·
1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Legislative conferees on a tax boostspending cut bill apparently are In
no hurry to try to resolve substantial Senate-House differences before the upcoming primary
elections.
The slx members of the joint
committee held their first meeting
Wednesday and adjourned for a
week without taking formal action.
Richard G. Sheridan, director of
the Legislative Budget Office, reviewed the conflicts In the House
and Senate versions and submitted
various charts and graphs showing
their flscallmpllcatlons.
Sen. Richard H. Finan. RCinclnnati, the panel's chairman,
said he decided on a one-week
break to give conferees Iinne to absorb the data .
Although state governme nt has a
projected budget deficit of $1.3 billion lor the biennium ending June
30, 1983, the governor and Leglsla·
ture moved earlier with spending
cuts which took care of $31B m!lllon
of the shortfall.
The real crunch won't come,
even If the Legislature does n&lt;r
thing, until the start of the 1981-1982
fiscal year JUly 1, SheJidan said.
Some leaders already have said
that because of possible pollUcal
ramifications of raising taxes , the
Senate and House probably will not
act at least until after the June 8
primary.
All 99 House seats and 17 of tlle 33
In the Senate are at stake In this
year's legislative elections.
Although the conference committee limited Wednesday's deliberations to Sheridan's presenta tlon
and questioning of hlm, Finan said
there Is sure to be some tough hergaining between the Senate and
House.
He mentioned that the
Democrat-controlled House Increased the size of the Income tax
boost from $481 million to $558.6 million, while at the same time restorIng most of a 7 percent welfare
spending cut ordered by the Senate.

Pair get

"They (the House) shifted to
more taxes and less cuts, and that
doesn't make my caucus happy,"
Finan said, referring to the 18member GOP majority In the 33seat upper chamber.
Without being speclflc, the veteran Hamilton County lawmaker
said, "There will have to be some
changes If It (the bill) Is going to
fly.''
Senators approved an Income tax
Increase which figured out as a 50
percent surcharge the last slx
months of 1982 and a 12.5 percent
boost the first slx months of 1983.
This was changed by the House to
a one-year, 50 percent surcharge
starting July 1, tlle net effect being
mtlllon In addian estimated

rn

tional lncome tax revenue.

Finan and Rep. Wllllam E. Hlnlg,
D-New Phlladelphla, the ranking
House conferee, agreed that some
changes are needed In the House
version which technically Is the
document before the Joint paneL
They sa id a House amendment
earmarking lottery proceeds and
certain tax revenues for public education Is fraught with technical
problems.
Another House amendment
which will get scrutiny repeals the
sales tax on labor and materials
used In home repa irs and
Improvements.

Police seek funds
for enforcement
FOSTORIA, Ohio (AP) -Pollee
seeking more pay say they wtl1 enforce mJnor ordinances so string·
ently that the public will rally to
their cause.
Those laws Include limits on the
length of funeral processions and
restrictions on fishing In rnunlclpal
reservoirs, pollee say .
"There's a lot of things we can
do," said pollee Capt. Lionel Mason
after Fostoria City Council narrowly avoided putting a protested
20 cents an hour pay hike Into effect
earlier this week.

pris~n

Clyde Richard Adkins, 21. Galloway, Ohio, Involved In the N&lt;r
vember robbery of Vance's Service
Station, Harrt.sonvllle, was sentenced Wednesday to a terrn of slx
months to five years In the Columbus Con-ectlonal FacUlty.
Adkins entered a gullty plea on a
bill of lnforma tlon charging grand
theft In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court. Adkins was returned
from the Franklln County Jail on
Monday to face the charges.

terms

Also sentenced Wednesday In
was Steve W. Haning, lB, New
Lima Road, Harrtsonvllle.
Haning was sentenced to serve
slx months to five years In the Ohio
State Reformatory, Mansfield.
Haning had appeared earlier In
common pleas court and entered a
guilty plea to the breaking and entering charge of the HarrtsonvWe
School on Feb. 20, this year .
Both men will be transported t&lt;r
day by sheriff deputies.

~

GENt ·

WINDOWS - Buntin~ and posters featurin~ the photo of Gen. James
Hartin~l'T decorate windows in Middll•port business sl·ftion as thl' rummunuity prepares tn honor a native son as lht• rumunity prepares tn hnnur
a nati vt· snn at a numbt•r of wt·ekend artivitit·s May 27-30.

Routine matters
•
highlight session
The Southern Local Board of Education Tuesday night approved
the hlrtng of Sharla Evans as subsltute cook for the remainder of the
year.

Substitute coolis hired were
Thelnna Salser. Lois Mugrage,
June Ashley, Florence Thornton,
Geraldine Cleland. VIrginia Davis,
Dorotlly Johnson, Carla Teaford,
Sharla Evans. Joyce Manuel and
Ann Boso.

They also granted rent Increase
or $50 a month to Bill Cozart for use
of a building for garage repair.
The board approved the use of
Southeastern Ohio Voluntary Education Cooperative service for the
school system a nd hired the services of Personnellnsurance Co., for
student football Insurance. They
approved Title VI -B project for the
1982-83 school year.
Approval was given to Include all
title progams Into one program,
Chapter n of the block grant.
Joseph Foreman was given a two
year contract In malnentance.

SubstitJJte custlldla ns hired were
Robert Lewis. Thelma Salser, Lots
Mugrage, Charles Kiser. Sue Gilmore and Lois Bailey .
Delbert Smith was hired as the
driver for kindergarten a nd EMR
for 1983 and Larry Smith was hired
as a driver for kindergarten and
specia l ed ucation.
Bobby Ord, superintendent, and
Dennie Hill, treasurer, were given
permission to attend a treasurer's
clinic at Ohio University Inn on
June 8.

Substitute bus drivers hired were
Charles T. Chapman, W!lllma Downie. Bobby Dudding, Aaron Sayre,
Hilton Wolfe, Jr., and Kathleen
Morrts.

Attending were Don Smith, pres!·
dent , Denny Evans. vice president.
Charles Pyles, Sue Grueser and Robert B. Hill , board members. Ord
and Hill.

No one hurt in 'copter crash
CINCINNATI (AP) - A traffic
hellcopter for a Cincinnati radio
station made a crash landing at a
golf course today, but there apparently were no serious Injuries to the
two passengers.
The unldentlfled pilot and pollee
Lt. Bill Beahr were taken to a hospital after their helicopter crashed at

the Maketewah Counl ry Club. Both
passengers walked away from the
helicopter and weren't belleved to
be seriously hurt, a country club
spokesman said.
Beahr provides traffic reports for
WLW radio. The ca use of the crash
was not lnnml.'dlately know.

Emerson E. Evans honored

Announce school of business management
for Rio Grande College-Community College
"This Is probably the highest
honor of my lifetime. I sincerely appreciate it."
Those were the words of Emerson
E. Evans, Gallipolis, at the conclusion of Wednesday ni ght' s
testimonial dinner at Rio Grande
College- Community College.
More than 100 family, friends and
colleagues joined the Rio Grande
College- Community College Boards
of Trustees in honoring Evans and to
celebrate the announcement of the
Emerson E. Evans School of
Business Management.
"QuieUy, Emerson Evans has
done his deeds and accomplished so
much in helping the people of
southeastern Ohio," said Rio Grande President Paul C. Hayes. "It is
only appropriate that a school of
bUsineliS management be named after him because of the people he has
influenced and the success he has

had m the area. This name for the
school is chosen to reflect the spirit
and character of the most outstanding businessman
in
southeastern Ohio."
Hayes said that the school will
have an emphasis on small business
and entrepreneurship training . Also,
the school will make every effort to
be of service to the small business
and industry of the southeastern
Ohio area through selective
seminars and direct consultative
services based upon direct contact
and requests from the business and
industrial people of the area.
Hayes said the school would
establish and maintain a monthly
educational publication for all
business and industrial leadership in
the Gallia, Jackson, Vinton and
Meigs co1111ty area, with the content
being detennined by . a~ ed,itoria l
board composed of business and in'
)

dustrictl peoplt· on that four-county
area.
Several rolleaj!Ul.'S rau.l tnbutl· to

Evans at the ll•stimonial, which was
held in thl' tlilllng facilil~· at Rio
Grande, a complex that will

C\'l'O-

tually house tht' school of business
management
Dr. Thmnas W. Morga n, Chair-

man of the Department of Surgery
at Holzer Medical Cenler of
Gallipolis, Robert S . Wood.
Executive VieL~President uf Bob
Evans Farms in Columbus, and
Hayes each paid tribute to Eva ns .
Morris Haskins. Chairman of the
Board of Directors of Ohio Valley
Bank, was unable to attend, but sent
a tribute throu~h Jim Dailey,
President of Ohio Valley Bank.
Dailey also served as emcee for the
affair.
!Continued on page 14 l

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;.;i;o;;:-~;;;~;-:;::-;-;;:;;;-;-;;-:::~:;;z:--:;-:'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiT;;he Daily Sentinei-Page-3
Pag-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, May 20, 1982

Commentary
The Daily Sentipel
Ill f uurl.'itn·d
Pnm•·ru\ . llhl n

IIJ. \ Olt·.O TO Til t-

61H9i-! t.'i6
Ill· Tilt- \II- II •.'- \t,\.-.,0'\ I\ HI·,\

1\lt.IH~"'T

HOBERT L. WINGETT
PAl WfiiTF:HEAil

BOB llOF:FI.Il'fl

II A I.E KOTHGF:R, JR .
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Etill"r

:\ \IF\11U·:II uf Ttw ·h"" llllo·tl l' ro·" · ln hnHI llail ~ l'rt·!'&gt;~ "'"~~'lillt"n ;lilt\ th•·
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I !&gt;!&gt; U1 ' ' · 1111 \jWf'&lt;• IW f t\11''

Open doors
The lnfonna tlon a nd know-how for correcting the lagging productivity
problem are free for the asldng, a nd so valuable It must be thought of as a
catalyst. But It Isn't sought. It Is Ignored.
Instead, ma nagement executives seeldng to raise productivity call In
outside management consultants. The consultants Immediately seek the
knowledge they need from those who possess It. They query the workers.
The first question they ask Is: "What's wrong?" Usually they get an
eat1ul . They sometimes ask just one more question: "How do you think It
ca n be fixed ?" Again, they receive concrete, specific answers.
The answers, very sound ones, says George Labovttz, consultant and
professor, are printed up between expensive covers and presented to
management, along with a bill for consulting services rendered.
Too often, says Labovttz, managem en t blames workers for lagging
productivity, when In fact the blame lies with the m . Rather than Invite
workers to participate, he says, managme nt Ignores and blames them.
George Labovttz, 42, professor of management at Boston University
School of Management and preside nt of Organizational Dynamics Inc.,
preaches participative management with a conviction based In results.
"Management has to let people Into the process," he says. How Ironic, he
observes, tha t management detac hes ltsell !rom the reality, seeks to make
decisions In a vacuum and then blames the workers.
The general thrust of participatory management Is that Ills eas ter to
tower the river than raise the bridge, says Labovltz. That Is, It Is easter In a
recesslonary environme nt to cut costs than to raise sales.
If an employee contributes an Idea tha t save $1,(XXl, he explains , that
saving often goes rtght to the bottom Une. But for a salesman to make a
similar contJibutlon might require a $10,&lt;XXllmprovement In sales.
Oddly, the estrangement of managemen t from Its own worke rs seems to
have developed simultaneously with what Is otten considered to be mode rn , professional management. But Labovttz feels that participatory management has conc lusive ly demonstrated Its practical superiority.
In Japan, for exa mple, where each worker Is also considered his own
crt tic .
1n fact, he preaches, the best run American companies are very much
Uke we ll run Japanese concerns.They are combat-like organizations pulling together for a common goal.
In such companies, he observes, m a nage m e nt and workers partic ipate
together for the sam e goals. He sees "good m anagem e nt as experiential, "
rather than theoretical, "hands on" rather than abstract, In contact rather
than dlstant.

Regional legislative directory
UN ITE D STATES SENATORS
Washington address: Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C., 20510.
Telephone: 1202)224- 3121.
Glenn, John H. IDI, Office: 200 N. Hi gh St., !Room 600 I, Columbus, 0.,
43215, Telephone: 1614) 469- 6697 .
Metzenbawn, Howa rd IDI, Office : 1240 East 9th St. , Cleveland, 0.,
44199, Telephone : 1216 ) 522- 7272.
UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE
Miller , Cla rence E. IR I, Office : 212 S. Broad St., Lancaster, 0., 43130,
Telephone : 16141654- 5149.
, Washington address : House Office Bui lding, Washington, D.C., 20515.
Telephone : 1202) 224- 3121.
OHIO HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Ball, Claire M., Jr. I RI , Office: II East Washington St., Athens, 45701 ,
Te lephone : 1614) 593- 5591.
James, Ronald H., IDI, Office: Rte. 2, Box !95 , Proctorville, 45669,
Te lephone: 1614) 886- 6998.
OHIO SENATE
Collins, Oakley C., IRI, Office : 1005 Kemp Lane, Ironton, 45638,
Telephone : 16141532- 3460.

Berry's World

The big quL=e-=-s=-t=i--=-o_n_s__~___w_i_llia_m_F_._Bu_ck_Ley_ Jr.
In the current issue of National
Review, the journal mos t prominentl y associated with the r ise of the
Reagan moveme nt m America ,
comes now a striking a rti cle called
" A Lover's Lament for the Reaga n
Administration ." It is writte n by
Hadley Arkes, a young professor
from Amherst servi n ~ as visiting
professor a t Geor·gelown. In between, he serves the Reagan political
campaign, a nd the Reagan a dministration, as a speec hwrite r. It 1s
rt•l evant in this particular context to
point out that Mr. Arkes is Jewish.
Relevant because Mr. Arkes tells
us thai the conserva ti ve movement
stands in grea t jeopa rdy beca use
Mr. Reaga n gradually elected,
during the past yea r. virtuall y to
s ingle out for public ttltention not
that which he actua ll y belie ved as
principle, for insta nce that abortion
was wrong, that affinnati ve action
was wrong, Ulat discriminatory
taxat1on was wrong - but what he
believed at fact. Namely how !he
eco nomy would respond lo lh1s or
that s upply- s 1d e induceme nt.
Imag ine, moa ns Arkes, a situa tion
m which the fate of the Reagan admmistration, a nd to a certa in extent
of the co nserva tive movement, will
" turn on a decline in interest rates
a nd the recove ry of tht• economy"
sometime betwee n now a nd November . But tha t is a preposterous
situa tion towa rd which we a re now
headed. "Nul for nothing has il been
sa id !hal Hitl er received better advice fr om his astrologers than
rece nt presidents haVl' received
from the ir a dvisers or economics."
Arkes comments.
It ISn't tha t Arkes does n't believe
in the princ ipl es of suppl y-s ide. But
its apos tl es, he poinb out, a re
talking about co ntmgent truths, not
about principles; a nd a political
leade r must di st111 guish between
tha t which is tru e because 1t ca n be
predicted to brin ~ on economi c

behavior, which no one can forecast
with absolute certainty; and tha t
which is true irrespective of whether
it brings on inunediate ly the desired
resulb.
Co ns ider severa l questi ons, Arkes
says. Suppose that our legisla tors, in
years gone by, had decreed that
Americans should pay a tax of 20
percent, "except for Ameri ca ns of
Oriental extractwn, who will pay a!
a rate of 50 percent. '' If an America n
president had come lo power ins isting on the proposition that " no
moral inference ca n be made a bout
a man merely from knowing his
race," then therefore not only would
he be bound to disavow affinnative
action, he would be bound to disavow
hi gh taxation for Orientals. And if it
happens that, libera ted from the ir
special guilt, resulting losses in
reven ue had the effect of raising interest rates, the cri ti cs of the refonn
would ha ve bee n aw kw ard ly
s itua ted to crit icize t he president.

yet only last week when the questi on
was asked of Mr. Reagan , what were
his views on a top flat tax rate, he
turned the question aside, with a
comment to the effect that he had
not g ive n it muc h taught.
Or consider the question of abortion. " If infa nti cide is in principle
wrong" - as Ronald Reagan h&lt;lli
several times a ffinned - "it would
be wrong eve n if it could be shown
that the effort to repress the killing
of mfanb would have the effect of
raising interest ra tes a nd depressing
the economy ."
Professor Arkes gra t ef ull y
acknowl edges tha t Mr. Reagan has
asked the Congress not to fund tortured dema nds by the judiciary to
distribute th e public sc hool
population . He applauds th e
president's insistence on repai ring
our military infe riority. But Arkes is
indisputabl y ri ght that there is a
sing le issue on whi ch Mr. Reagan' s
fortunes now seem to ha ng. "One of

Racine 7 Reedsville 6
The Rac ine Reds edged Reedsville's Bombers 7-j). Brian Diehl
made a homerun , a tripl e, and a lso a
single. Da vid McMillen also made a
homerun. The winning pitcher was
David Amb urgey with nine s trike
outs and three walks. His record is
now HJ.

But Social Security is a budget
liability now , not an asset. Were it to
be stricken from the budge t before
Congress, the defi cit would be
lowered - and Social Security would
be taken off the irnmcdia te age nda
as a target fo r spe nding curbs.
Heinz and his a llies a rgue tha t the
budgeting system raises questions of
philosophy as well as nwnbers. They
say that !he inclus ion of Social
Security mak es it see m a matter of
di sc retionary spe nding to be considered by Congress each yea r, not
as social insurance that is a matter
of long-te rm cornmitmenb.
" As long as there are numbers on
Social Security in the budget we a I)prove, the Senate will be perceived
as trying to balance the budget on
the backs of Soc ial Security
benefir:iaries," Heinz sa id in
proposing thl' change.

what then were financially healthy
trust funds he ld some political advanta~-:es.

What would ha ve been a defi cit
beca me a balanced budget, and the
sha r e ear mark e d for soc ial
programs was enla rged in comparison with military spe ndin g,
whic h a t tha t time meant the Vi etna m Wa r .
President Lyndon B. J ohnson had
se t up a special commission to study
the budget process, and that panel
reco mm•·nded that what had been
three se parate fede ral budgets
become one, saying that would
prese nt a more mea ningful and comprehensive picture of federal spending and its impact on the economy.
Johnson presented his final budget
that wa y, and Congress didn ' t object. Budgets ha ve been unifi ed ever

since.

He inz is a member of the biparti sa n corruni ssion on Social Security
reform that was set up a t President
Reaga n's behest. It is s upposed to
m ake recommendations to put
Social Security on a sound fina ncial
footing in a report due at the end of
the year - after the electi ons. He
a lso is a ca ndidate for re-election .

So are the House Republica ns who
argue that Social Security should not
count as pari of the current budget.
Rep. Jack Kemp of New York
pushed the question to a vote in the
House Budget Committee, and lost ,
16-12 .

PreSident Reagan has said only
tha t the idea of a budgeting change
is interesting, and should be studi ed .

Self-relianceow..___________Ro_b_er_t_w_al_te_rs
EMMAUS, Pa . (NE Al - " We
don'! have any corporate planes,"
says Robert J . Teufel, president of
the thriving publishing firm based
here. " But we have more corporate
tractors than anybody in the
business.''
That's not the only distinction enjoyed by Rodale Press Inc., an unconventional yet hi ghly successful
company whose profitability is exceeded only by its dedication to
physical fitness and personal selfsufficiency through organic gardemng and fanning , d&lt;&gt;-it-yourself
home improvement, solar energy,
natural food and vitamin therapy.
"We're working toward helping
people become more self-reliant, to
take control of their lives and to
decrease the ir de pendence on
agribusiness and the medical
profession," says Jan HookerRaring, a Rodale spokeswoman.
Promotion of a constantly growing
agenda of public policy goals is far
more than a futile windmill-tilting
exercise for the company, which last
year reported $98 million worth· of
gross sales, a marked increase from
its 1980 income of $80 million.
Rodale's six magazines and two

news letters ha ve a combined paid
circulation of fi ve million. In additi on, it publishes 40 to 50 new books
annually and last year sold 3.5
million of those volumes.
The oldest of those magazines is
Organic Gardening, founded in 1942
by J. I. Rodale, who zealously
promoted the belief that food would
be far more nutritious - and could
be produced efficiently - if growers
eschewed the use of a rtificial fertilizers and chemical pesticides and
herbicides.
For decades, fa r mers and
agronomists beittled that approach
as unfeasible if not ludicrous. Two
years ago, however, the U.S. Department of Agriculture produced a
report that cautiously endorsed
organic fanning.
The concept needs more study, the
USDA report said, but it holds the
potential to "produce the necessary
quantity and quality of food and
fiber without adversely affecting our
soil resources and · the en-

lion, with a c irculation of 2.4 million
and a tradition of promoting
vitamins, mine rals and other food
supplemenb as the sec r e~ of good
health.
Those claims, long disputed by
nutritionists, are quietly being toned
down by Rodale Press, a company
that has become increasi ngly
respectable as outs1de rs accept
more of its once-unconventional
notions whil e it abandons the last
vestiges of the often eccentric
philosophy embraced by its late
founder .
other magazines and their circulations include New Shelter, a d&lt;&gt;it-yourse lf
monthly, 625,000;
Bicycling, 30,000; Spring, a justlaunched women's monthly, 350,000;
and New Farm, 75,000.
Those magazines differ from other
periodicals in one important
.respect : Every rec ipe, homeimprovement project and gardening
suggestion carried in their pages
must meet rigorous standards imposed by experts in Rodale's
workshops, research kitchens,
greenhouses and fields scattered
throughout this community in east-

vironment."
Organic Gardening has 1.4 million
subscribers, surpassed among
Rodale magazines only by Preven-

stole second to put the pressure on
the Trimble battery . Tonja Salser
followed with a walk, a nd after one
out, Wolfe walked loading bases.
Power-hitting senior Amber Warner
ra n the count full before drawing a
wa lk to force int eh first run . THS
buckled down for the fina l two outs
to stra nd tnree SHS runne rs on base.
While Wolfe cooled off the Tomcat
sluggers, the Tornadoettes returned
to the plate for twq more scores in
the fourth. The "Purpl e Tornadoettes" touched down to take a dvantage of three Trimble errors a nd
two walks for the scores.
After a quiet fifth inning, SHS
brought out the heavy a rtillery in the
sixth frame. Elaine Smith reached
safely on a ha rd hit grounde r, Wolfe
walked and both a dva nced on a
passed ba ll . Three stra ig ht
Whirlwinds were iss ued free passes,
thus forcing in two more markers
and a 5-0 lead . Renee Smith reac hed
base on an error before Jenny Bentley slammed a tw&lt;&gt;-run doubl e that
broke the ga me wide open.
Southern, as the visitor on the
scoreboard, plated its final two runs
in the top of the seventh when E laine

Smith reached on an error, Warner
walked, a nd Me l Weese brought
them home with a long triple, the
!icore now~ .
In its last at bat Trimble clim bed
into the batters box with a n ex tra
spurt of detennination. Jan Downs
led off with a s ingle, went to second
on a pa!iSed ball before Ann Bosman
in a pinchhitting role roped a single
to left for Trimble's only score.
Trimble went down swinging t o end
the game as the Southern gir ls clinched its first district crown .
Laren Wolfe went the dista nce for
the victory, limiting he foe t o just
three hits, three walks, and one run,
while fanning two. Barb Jensen,
relieved Sheila Herbs! in the six th
inning, suffered the loss. Jense n
struckoul seven and walked te n,
while Herbst went without a st r ike
out , but walked fi ve.
Weese had a bunt single a nd a
tripl e, whil e J e nny Bentley doubled .
SHS played errorl ess ball, while
Trimble cOJnmilte six miscues. Both
clubs had six hi b .
I .i nescore :
Southern
001 204 2- 9 :t 0
- Trimble
000 000 - I 3 6

HOME RUN - Dave Kingman of the New York
Mets is greeted at home late following his first inning
three run blast off former Me t Tom Seaver Wednesday

central Pennsylvania .
The centerpiece of Rodal e's
resea rch operations is a sprawling
30:&gt;-acre fann near the small town33
of Maxatawny, Pa., whe re dozens of
specialists work in the areas of
agronomy, horticulture, nutrition
and aquaculture.
Their goal, says Rodale, Ls " to
discover, perfect and implem ent
n ew sys tems for growing,
processing, storing and distributing
food - systems that are energyefficient, economical, ecologically
sound, hea lthful and practical."
That includes everything from
" vertical gardens" specially constructed by Rodale researchers for
big-city apartment dwellers to 12
foot-wide circular tanks designed for
suburbanites willing to try backward catfish fanning.
Elsewhere on the farm, extensive
experiments are being conducted
with amaranth, an obscure plant indigenous to Central America, that is
being touted as a high-protein, highfiber grain sistant to heat and
drought. Amaranth is not only
nutritious but has "a sweet, nutty
taste," says Rodale.

Syracuse 4 Braves 3
Syracuse little leag ue beat th e
Middleport Braves 4-3. The Braves
had six hits and Syracuse ha d four .
The winning pitcher was T. Lisle
with six walks and two s trikeouts. C.
Taylor was the sta rting pitcher with
two walks and three strikeouts.
Their relief pitcher was C. Baer.
The los ing pitc he r was Eddie Kitchen with five wa lks and 10
strikeouts. The ca tche r for the
Braves was Sean Gibbs. S. Cassell
made a single and so did S. Hanning,
M. Baker and S. Gibbs. E. Kitchen
made a homerun and a single.
Syracuse had two single plays
made by T. Lisle and C. Sayre. S. Arnott mad e two singles.
Racine 14 Coolville 1
The Racine Reds whippe d
Coolville 14-1. Donnie Riffl e and
David McMillen each made a
homerun for Racine. Rifne also
made a tripl e and a single. David
Amburgey was 3 for 4 with a triple
and two singles. David McMillon
was 2 for 3 with his homerun and a
triple. Brent Wilson was 2 for 2 both
singles. The winning pitcher was
Mark Porter with seven strikeouts
and one walk. His record is now J-{).
The losing pitcher was P. Gillian
with two strikeouts and four walks.

!{seine Wins Again
Racine really put it to the Tuppe rs
Plains Bears !HI. The winning pitche r was David Amburgey, he
struck out 9 and walked I. The Bears
only got four hits off of Amburgey.
His record is 2-{). David McMillen hit
3 for 3 with a tripl e and 2 singles.
Shannon Riffle hit a triple. There
was three doubles hit by Mark Porter, Brian Diehl and Donnie R1fflc.

c he r, he walked fiv e a nd allowed 13
hits. The ca tcher for the Yankees
was Mike Harbour a nd he made a
tripl e.
Pomeroy's record is !-{) an d New
H&lt;Jve n's record is 1-1.

NEW YORK (AP)- New York
Mets Manager George Bamberger
sent Pat Zachry to the bullpen to
teach him a lesson.
It a ppears that he learned pret ty
well, If Wednesday night's results
are any Indication.
Back from his stint as a reliever,
Zachry started a game for the first
time since May I and pitched the

Mason Wins
Mason dwnped Powell's Gia nts 9-

I.

Pomeroy Wins
Pomeroy beat the New Haven
Yankees !().6.
Pomeroy had 13 hib and New
Haven had seven. Gary Betzin g was
the winning pitcher, he pitched three
innings, walked three a nd allowed
the Yankees six hits. Ha nk Cleland
came in for the save a nd pitche d the
last three innings. He walked one
a nd allowed only one hit. Dennis
Boothe and Joey Roush wre the catc he rs. Joey Roush had a triple and
two singles, Hank Cleland had a
tripl e and a single, Gary Betzing,
Bracy Korn, John Anderson had two
s ingles each. Wesley Young had a
tripl e, and Dennis Boothe ha d a
s ingle.
Billy Purkey was the losing pit-

..

Spring sports fete May 25
The Meigs spring sports banquet
will be held May 25 at 6:30 p.m . in
the cafeteria at the high school it
was announced at the reg ular
meeting of the Meigs Athletic
Boosters.
Parents of athletes in spring sports I boys and girls track, baseball
and girls softball) are invited. Pe rsons attending are to bring two
co~ered dishes. Anyone with outstanding tickets are to turn them in
by May 22, to Sandy Iannare lli at the

J

The men's softball tourname nt
will be held June II , 12 and 13 at Middl e port. Gene Wise and Wally Hat·
fi e ld are the chainnen.
The next meeting of the boosters
will be held June 2.

HEAR THE REDS ALL
SEASON LONG ON

WMPO 92 FM

l~Ciha~te;a;u;B;ea;u;t;y;Sa;lo;n~a;n;d;C~ha;·r;lo~t;te~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;-~~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~

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mu.c.h ea.s ter
to f•j bi.lls
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MAY 20, 21, &amp;22

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JRD ST ., RACIN E, OH .
Member FDIC

)Jlu~ILY FLOCK HEADQUARTERS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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SUPPLY

1\e Store with" Ail K i~ds of Stuff"
For Pf!tS - Stables - large &amp; Small
Animals- Lawns &amp; Gardens

OFSHO,)S _"

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lrvi ng Rm. Sur te
Reg. $239

treasurer.

• 25 Hmr Breed Straight
Run Chicks
50 Lbs. Purina Chick Startena
'h Pt. Par~·myc:in

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together. I
Thr adrr a nd I )usr
and th row

Willfod at the Pomeroy Flower
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Officers elected were Charles
Cassell, president, Sandy Iannare lli ,
vice president, Judy Crooks,
sec retary and Charlotte Willford ,

Don't MISS our big~~~

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White Canvas, Navy and
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NATEIT?

"I had time to get t hlngs
was rushing too muc h.
nalln would tx- flowing
wanted to grab the ball

Floral cover 1n
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1BRMI-

Mets to a 4-2 victory over the Clnc lnna ti Reds.
"I deserved to go there because I
was pitching rotten," Zachry said.

Weekly golf results

DECK SHOES

DOONESBURV

night at Shea Stadium. Kin~man's ruund-trippn . hi~
lith of the season, helped the Mets lake a 4-2 ridon .
I AI' Laserphoto)

Zachry's lesson hard on old mates

5
TIIEN I

Today is Thursday, May 20, the !40th day of 1982. There are 225 days left in
theyear.
,
Today's highlight in history :
On May 20, 1606, explorer Christopher Columbus died in Spain.
On this date :
In 1952, riots broke out among Communist prisoners of war a! Koje Island
prison camp in South Korea.
In !964, French President Charles de Gaulle proposed an international
conference to restore peace and neutrality to Laos.

Braves 14 Pomeroy 2
Pomeroy played Middleport little
leag ue a! Middleport. The Middleporl Braves won 14-2 . Joey
Loving for Middleport made a
double. The winning pitcher was J eff
Nelso n with five walks and 15 s trike
outs.
Pomeroy 's Powel l made a
homerun and he was also the catcher for his team . Brian Tannehill
was the losing pitcher a nd th e re lief
pitchers wer e A. Hunnel a nd B.
Brothers. The total walks were 17
a nd the strikeouts we re four. Brian
Tannehill also made a tripl e.

No where to hide Social Security
WASHINGTON I API - Big governm ent though it is, there's nowhere
to h1de Socia l Security - and sponsors of tt rnov t! to change the
bookkeeping so it won't count as pari
of the federal budget inSist tha t is
no! the ir motive.
Republi ca n Sen. John Heinz of
Pennsylvania said that wo uld be as
ridiculou s as trying to hide an
elephant behind a telephone pole.
Neve rtheless, Heinz and a nd
others in the Senate and House see a
way out of the e lecti on-yea r budget
quandary in a stroke-of-the- pen
rev1sion that would ta ke the $200
billion-plus
soc ial
insura nce
program out of the overall budget.
That would reverse an overhaul
that put Social Secunty and othe r
federal trust funds into a new,
unifi ed budget in 1968. That was an
election yea r, too, a nd inclusion of

ATHENS - The Southern Tornadoettes kept their winning streak
alive behi nd an awesome defensive
effort and keen batti ng eye here
Wednesday a fternoon enrou te to a
convinc ing 9- 1 di strict champions hip
victory over the Trimble Tomcab.
The big win put yet anothe r golde n
feat her in Southern's hat to keep
alive a superlative sports season a t
!he school, in add ition to cla iming
the fi rst district sot ,ball crown ever.
The 16-2 Tornadoettes of Coach
Suzanne Wolfe have now ga ined a
berth in the regional tourna me nt to
be held in Wav erly, May 28 beginning a t 3 p.m .
In the fi rst two innings, Trimble
hurl er Barb Jensen a nd Southern
sidewinder La ren Wolfe locked horns in a sco reless pitchers battle.
During the first two innings J e nsen
fan ned four of the s ix Southern batters she fa ced . Mea nwhile, SHS pitcher Wolfe gradua ll y warmed up her
pitching ann for a near pe rfect
ga me. She went on to sca tter just
three hi b.
Southern 's ga ls staged their first
atta ck in th e third inning when Debbie Mi chael led off with a walk the n

Summer baseball results

"/ would say Glen is like the majority of America's bridges- FALLING APART/"

Today in history

the president's closest a ides 'confided' recently in an interview with
Mr. David Broder that the next nin e
months would be the ' m a ke or
brea k' time for the administraiton."
Ar kes especiall y lame nts the
dilution of Mr. Reagan's own
profoundly held sentim ents, and
gives a n illustration. In a n ea rl y
join t address to Cong ress, Mr.
Reagan endorsed the eli mina tion of
the special assistance tha t was being
furnished to workers who lost their
jobs as a result of competition with
foreign firm.s.
Mr . Reagan singled out an
ineq uity : th ere was no s uc h
provision in the law to help
American workers who lost their
jobs as the res ult of domesti c competiti on.
Arkes is right on seve ra l counb.
The future ca nnot be permitted to
rest on the relati ve em pirical accuracy of different seb of socia l
statisticians. Mr. Reaga n needs to
commune with - himself.

Tornadoettes advance
to regional tourney

'

'

�Page--4- The Daily Sentinel

Astros sweep Phils;

Scoreboard ...
Majors
BJ11w~rr...,

NA110NAL I..EAO HE
BA'mNC. lill at buUil
J Thompson,
Pltl'lbullth . .368: Bailor. NPW York.. ..147:
Mort.&gt;iand. Ctucaao. ..14."1: Hu Jones. San

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Atlanta. .14, Hornt.'f. Allanta. :lJ".
Ru J('Ml('!li . Sa n OW&gt;wo. 29, !)aWlJOn, Mon
I!'Hl, Tl. Kingman. Nt'\4' York. 'll
RBI Murphy, Atlanta. J7: Kingman ,

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l.o Smith. S t\.oul'l. til.
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11 . H \:XIV:. Phlladt&gt;lphlll. 10: Parker.
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Kln~man . :-l1•w York . l.l.
Murphy, Atlanta . 11. J nuxnpson. Pitts
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'll . r.lf•mlt&gt;r. Phllalk-'lphla. 11 , Lo Smith.
Sr l.wls. 18. Wll!.a! . Nf"A' Yo rk. 15, R.aln
1-s, Mo ntrl'al 12

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IXlUBLES
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1\tlanu• 9. M ()rtln•al l
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Gam t'fl
'Hi at

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the seesaw series of the Na ttonal

Basketball Association playoffs.
Boston's 114-85 romp slas hed the
76ers' lead In the best -of-seven
Eastern Conference final to .1-2.
Game Six Is Friday ni ght In
Phlladelph.la.
"This ga me was over In the Ia tie r
part of the tll lrd pe1iod," sa id 76er
guard Andrew Toney, who canned
just six of 20 field goal attempts a f·
ter hitting 14 of21 in Sunda.v's 119-!14
Philadel phia victory .
Boston had 85 points through
three periods, the same amount
Phlladelphla had In four.
On Sunday. the 76Prs had !!5
points after th ree quarters, just
nine fewer than Boston had for the
entire game. In the Celtlcs' 121-81

J.'

lip5haw. Toronto, J: Mon1!0n, t' hlcago

Los 1\n~' l•~ 4.. C h\car;~o 1

J. Cowt'ns, S.•u ttlt-. J
HOME HUNS. lOOrntor,, l'){"\le land. II.
HrbPk . Mlnll("SS\a , W HOf'll.!ckt•. fl.alll
mort'. 9: !larrah . Cl1•wland. '.f: Murph y.
(\t.kJand. II
~TOLEN BASES
11 llt'nderson. Oak
land , J9. lRFlort'. (1llcago. 14 . Molitor.
Mll waukw. 11. l..oprs. Oakland. II , Wath
an . K.an.&lt;;a ~ U T} &lt;l
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( ,ur.l , Kans.\~ Cit \ ' ~I. KO. 4 17. llt"ard.
ll&lt;tkland. ~I . 101. 1 91 . F B.:mnl~ tr· r .
Sl'attl!'. '&gt; 2. 71 ~ . J \'J

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71.
Padres 5, Canllnals 4
Catcher Gene Tenace's basesloaded error with one out In the
lOth Inning allowed Alan Wiggins
to score the winning run as San
Diego beat St. Louts.
Wiggins led off with a bunt single
off reliever Bruce Sutter, 2-1, then
s tole hts tlllrd base of the game.
After Ttm Flannery sacrificed Wiggins to tlllrd, Sutter Intentionally
walked Garry Templeton and Ruppert Jones to load the bases and
bring up Slxto Lezcano. Lezcano hit
a routine chopper to third baseman
Dane Jorg, who threw to tlle plate
and appeared to force Wiggins. But
Tenace failed to touch the plate and
Wiggins was ruled safe with the
winning run .

Pirates 2, Giants I
Don RDblnson survived eight
walks and three wild pitches over
71-3 Innings and got relief help
from Rod Scurry and Kent Tekul ve as Pittsburgh defeated San

triumph that opened the series,
they scored their 8lst point with
4: 39 left In the third period.
Why have the teams been taking
turns routing each other 7
"WIIh two great teams like this,
all !I takes Is one little letup tit one
area and you're going to ca pita llze," said Boston center Rick Robey. "Tonight we played defense
and were able to capitalize. The last
two games we didn't play well a nd
they capitalized."
" It s hows the capability of botll
c lubs to make adj ustments a nd
come back a lter a low point," said
Celtic M.L. Carr.
The nearly 21 -poln t average marg in of victory Is particularly unusual for the 76ers and Celllcs. In last
season's Eastern Conference final,
when the Celtlcs clawed back !rom
a 3-1 deficit to eliminate the 76ers,
th ree games were decided by two
points and two oth ers by one.
Boston has ou tscored P hiladelphia by 34 point s In the current serIes but stU! Is just one loss away
from being lolled In Its attempt to
successfully defend Its NBA title.

"It's notllke Income averaging,"
Carr said. "You don' t add up the
points a nd the team wltll the most
poin ts wins."
P hiladelphia Coach BUly Cunnlngha m agreed.
"The point s pread doesn't mean
a nything, just a win," he said.
The teltlcs got tha t Wednesday
night with a rejuvenated team detense a nd by using the two days off
to adjust their offense to the absence of playm a ker Nate "Tiny"
Arc hi bald , who dis located his
shoulder In Saturday's third gam e.

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:~ Cedar Chests~
c?.,

Middleport, Ohio

runs through tlle first five Innings,
as tlle Expos lost lor the lith time In
15 gam es.
"Too many guys can do too many
things on this team for a player to
get carried away a nd put too much
on his back," said Horner. "There's
no reason lor a guy to say he has to
hit 40 homers and drive In 150
runs."
Dodgers 4, Cubs I
Dave Stewart pitched !lve-hlt ·
ball for eight Innings In ltls llrst
major league start a nd Bill Rus sell hit his first home run since
June 18, 198l to lead Los Angeles
over Chicago.
Stewart, subbing lor In lured Burt
Hooton, brought a n 0-2 record and a
9.00 earned run average as a reliever Into tlle game. Stewart,
whose longest previous stint was 313 Innings last year against Cincinna ti, struck out six a nd walked four,
Including two In the ninth when he
was replaced by Steve Howe. Keltll
Morela nd ' s s in g le off Howe
knocked In Chicago's run before
Tom Nleden!uer came on to post
his fourth save.

IT'S EMPIRE FURNITURE'S
s :ALE ! e .S~LE.!
SAJ.$'
TH
.j

Pomeroy

top Cards

Francisco.
RDblnson a llowed lour hits before
botll Scurry and Tekulve came on
In the eighth. Tekulve finished up to
post his !Ifill save as the Giants left
12 runners on base.
Center fielder Omar Moreno provided Important hitting and fielding
support for Robinson, 4-0. Moreno
hit his first homer of the season In
the !11th when tlle Pirates scored
twice. Then he m ade a diving catch
with the bases loaded In the bottom
of tlle !lith to snuff out a San Francisco threa 1.
Braves 9, Expos I
Bob Horner went lour-for-four
and drove In three runs a nd Chris
Cham bllss kn ocked In two as
AUanta defeated Montreal. Ken
Dayley, 1-1, m aking only his second m a jor league start, yielded
the Expos' run on Andre Dawson's homer In the fourth Inning.
Dayley pitched a three-hitter betore getting relief help from Steve
Bedrosian wltll two outs In the
seventh.
The Braves battered Montreal
starter Ray Burris, 0-7, lor seven

s lons, Carlton gave up 10 hits and
had eight strikeouts, giving him the
National League lead with a total ol

Thunday, May 20, 1982

I USI'S 145-960t

BOSTON lAP! - The Boston
Celtics a nd Phliadelph.la 76ers usually fight furiously to the bitter end.
Recently, the end has come long
before the fina l buzzer.
Just 10 days after burying the
76ers by 40 points and only thrl'&lt;'
days after being crushed by 25, the
Celtics walloped Philadelphia by 29
Wednesday night to stay alive In

Rill McRa,-., KaM&lt;U Oty . n . Thom
\oo, Clf•V(']ancl. 36. LUZ1Mkl. Chicago, 29-.

..,
.., ,.,

Pad~es

Boston shocks Philadelphia

NI
H UNS H lkndt"rson . Oakland. 36. Har
rah. (')("\'£&gt;land. :tl. Thomron . l'l!•wland.
'!J. l..(oFlon-. CtllcaRQ , 28: Dauer . llaltl
rnorf'. 71. Walhan. Kansas City . 27

l'('t.
Gfl
tal
"1\.1
1
'1 14
3~
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~~
&lt;&amp;41
li
Ut
7';

14

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F'orsch.

AMI.:RH AN I.Y..A(il'E
HAlTI NG 1ffi at t:w.1ts • Boruwll . To
ronto . -llJ: Mcllrldt•. flevt• land. -Kfl.
Han·a11. Clr·wland. lll . ltWashlnRton.
M!ruw'IIJla. .N . F. Murrav. OHitlmon-

, _.\ '110.\ 'i\1. l..t:J\Ifl 't:
t~uh'l'll lll vWon
I.

J)rorl~lons r

"''"J.

, n,

'&gt;l lnn•·••nr.t ,,, ~ ....... Ynr O:. . m •
11o•\'1'111nd oil !'h h'"I{Q- on•

\\

t5

St Louis. ~. I OOJ. 3.86. Su tton. Hou.'lton.
~&gt;I . tf'.1. 2-10. R.a Jones. NN-- ' 'ark. ~ 2 .
n ~ . J 15. l'ulro. NE•w York, 4 2. 667.
J TJ.. (;art..r . Atlanra . ~ 2. 667. I 01. Ot•r
'-'"Y'- n nclnnall . ~· 2. li67. 1 ~. Wt"kh.
Los Anl(t'll':S. ·1-'l. 66'7. J .11
STil iKF:OLr'J~
Ca rllon. Phllach.• \phl.;,
11 .
C'1nc!nnar!. /iti R IIR'f'ni. Mr.-.
trf'al. ~ 1 . Lollar. S.1n Dtf'ICO. 4J. Hyan.
llousroo. 41

ll.tlllnton · .. , r .. r..rt11 1 n•
1 ~·k 1anr l ,,r !~ '~ ' '"'
1 .ll1h;ml,, 111 IJ.·\1"11

&lt;...1n PU')!n

By AS80Ciated Press
How sweet It was for the Houston Astros.
Not only did they sweep a threegame series !rom the Philadelphia
Phlllles In Philadelphia for the first
time since 1965, but they beat nemesis Steve Carlton In the process .
"Nobody expected us to do that,"
said Houston reliever Dave Smith
after saving Wednesday night's 5-3
victory over the PhUIIes. "But we
batUed the m a nd playPd rea l good
baseball ."
The Astros · victory was the first
In nine games over Carlton. The
last time they managed to beat him
was May 16, 1978, when they won f\.1
at tlle Astrodome.
Smltll was largely responsible
for Wed nesday ni ght' s success,
earning his sixth save with two
strong Innings ol pitching In relief of
Bob Knepper. He came Into the
game In the e ighth Inning after a
73-mlnute ra in delay.
The Phlllles were hot before runrung Into the Astros. having won 10
of 11 games.
In losing his sixth ga me In !Odecl-

Leaders
w

Thursday, May 20, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Kings &amp;tOO's

�Poge-6-- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Ma( 20, 1982

Pomeroy-Middieport, Ohio

Thunday, MKly 20, 1982
Tabitha Phillips was one of the
second grade students at Middleport
named to the honor roll not Tabitha
Gallagher as was reported. Other
names omitted were Heather
Gallagher, Robbie Wyatt, Melanie
Qualls, Amy Searls, Mi cha el
Thomas and Chris Weaver.

ClASS Of 19BZ

months at ,Wooster at the Western
Smithville Convalescent Center.
Mrs. Fulton was injured in an
automobile accident on April7, 1981 ,
and has been incapacitated since
that time .
MIDDLEPORT Chamber of Commerce will meetTuesday, May 24, at
7 p.m. at the La Salle Hotel. All interested persons are asked to attend .

Mary Fulton has been returned to
her home at Cheshire for the summer. She has spent the past several

77

Sout~em seniors given diplomas
Salmons, Sloter top SHS students
G r actuates 'were
RcbeCCtl Smll n. rony Amburm'y .
Brtan

Beegle . x
Buck ley.

(hopmcln,

Jr . BrendA Heck . Joseph Hem sley .

Sher r y

Borb&lt;'trrt Hl?ndrtx , Stanl ey Holter.

Robe rt Brown. Samuel

TPreso Hunt . Roy tcf' nhower Jr .
Hrlr o td Je ff ers. Susiln Jeff. Kr •stn
John son. PnTrt ck Johnson. Tc r esit

Arrn~· s,

Edw1n Ash. x

Rob1n

Bur nem .

William

ChMit~-;.

Coqar .

Ke l l y

Count~ .

Cindy Cros'l. x · Metod1 c u n
ddt, x Dent se DeL·rn, Vicky De em
DeWayne Ddl.
I amara Ervtn .
Altrtit Evan s. 0 ~1rl d Evnns . Jul1r·
FI.=!QQ, Wil ltnn, F-o ley. Ktmbcrly
Follrod. Wdltam F os iN Jr , Miltorcl
Frede rt c k . T c r e~n Cducser. M 1cnar l
Gray, Rr~lph Jclrclr ·n . Jamf's Hnrm on

John'.lun

Ptlllhp Ktnril•d . Dilv•d Li~wsnn
Jr . Alfred Lyons.. x Jenny Mtmurl.
Mc l •nd(l Morri s. O•ilnrl Nril5f' .
Grraory O'Br•rn . )(
enrol OIIV{'r.
/1llf'n Pr~pr. Ear l P•rkcns. KC'IIy
P1r krn s.
11nil P1Ncr. Chrryt
P,t~nr- ..... R•Chilrcl Rnndo lph , Darc1n

Pers. Den•S£' R•tftr . Steven Robrrt s.
Drbra Ros&lt;"' . Clifford ROsl.' berry .
BPVNIY Roush . Paul Rou sh , x
Met•nd c'l Stt lmons, Debra Se ll ers. x
R1ttt Sto l er . M•ck ey Sopher. x
E lil10£" Sm1lh , X Renee Smith. Rex
Thornton . Rttndall Tucker . Todd
VMnry, Mary Warner . Kry stttl
Winebrenner , Mary W inebrenner,
Craton Wolfe, Frank l in Wolfe, x
Kent Wolfe, Richard Wolfe and
Jocelyn Ann Zerkle .
x. Denotes National Honor
Soc.e tv .

Announcements

p.m. Tuesday at llw IHHIIL' of Mrs.

HUT! .A N I)

Lynn Shuitor , Middleport Tht• lt&gt;Sillg
attt&gt;ndancl'

h'&lt;IIIJ

will

host

tilt•

Tuesday, May 25, at6 :30 p.m. at the
Meigs Inn . The meat, beverage and
table serv ice will be provided. Those

Meigs County Republican Women
will hold " meet the candidate night "

X1 Ga mma Mu Chapter uf Beta
S1gma Phi Sorority will meet at 6:30

attendin~

arc to bring a covered
d1sh . Everyone is welcome.

ASALUTE
TO THE
GRADUATING
SENIORS
OF

HACINE

A!UIIllll

ASSOl'li.llll"lll Wll]lakt• pl &lt;:l l't' 11/l

'l llur-

sday, Fnd&lt;.J y and Saturday ni )' hh

Elt·llit'lltary

Mrs. Barbara Van Ml'Ll'r . pn•s Jdt ·nt .
t'nt·oura l-!, t'S local alulltrH II! a.-;s 1st 111
•'II':Jrnng &lt;tnd dt·t·onttm g tlw fanl1t\

studt·nts

will pn:scnt a lllUSll'ill "Ll't (;eoq.:t•
Do It " 011 MumJay at Soutlwrn rli ~·. h
Sl' houl uiHJer tlw dircl'!1on of Mrs
Lee Lee . Ad111isswn IS 50 t't•nts f• tr

Sill' &lt;.ilso

rt'lltiiHkd aluntnt

I• 'S t ·n·:J tJ !ifJ~.; IIIllS\

ht· 111

til.ll

b ~ Mo1 ~ : ~1

atlult.o..; and 25 cl' nts for slut.knts.

•

~

*
MEIGS HIGH

"'Ul' ~·

*
EASTERN.
147 graduate at ·Meigs High School
Hoffman, Oliver lead class
GnuJ uates include:
Conn.e Sue
Adk1ns.
Tanyn
J\IC'&lt;:. I11r e. Jud y Lynn Alexander,
H etc n Kr1SI1n Anderson. Jul1 Cobb
A rn old. Allen G Arnott, Robert
G r &lt;~ yson Astllcy, Rhonda K
Bar
nll,lr l. Teresa Ann Ba st1 am, Dav 1d
Gates. James M. Bent1 Jr .. K m
be rly Sue Birchfield, Kat11y Lynn
Blake. Regina Ann Blanton, Mark
Ertw,lrd Boyd, James Ray Baver
v.r tor• rl Sue Boyles. Jo:l c k M . Bral e;
Jr
Dale F
Br•ck tes, Troy 0
Brook s. John•e M Brown. LeC' E
Burncm . Mark Owen
Burson.
Cll arl es Gregory Bush
Jame s T Carsey, Kathryn J
Ct1anev . Thomas L Chapman il
Mark An thony Cline, Dentse Lyn~
CnbiJ , w.r1.am Wr.ght Co lm er , Ot• s
H Core, Lowre nce R . Co tterill. John
M• r hael Cremeans, Pamela Ann
Crooks, She l ia Cundiff , M• chacl E
Cunn .ngham, Edward Lee Dan•els:
S u 5~ln El•zabeth Danner , Phyll•s
1\nn D av1s, V•cky Lee Debord, K 1m
Dclry Jean DeMoss, Ja'fiA . Dewhur·
st. Malan •e Sue Dillard. David A
Docr fcr. Will•am
R . Donohue .
Tercsn L..ynn Dor si , Jodi Lyn~
1

Dravecky, Ri ck Eber sbach, Mtchacl
D a l e Edwards,
Tamara L ynn
Eichinger. Jeff D . Ell•ott
Angela Marie Fi sher, Mark An
thon'}l Fri end, Brenda Diane Fry,
Cha rlte R . Geary, Max Gea ry .
James Wallac e G 1bbs.
Sa ndra
Arlene Hal e, Amy Beth Halley,
Angel o:l Sue Harmon, Rob•n Lynn
H aw k, Regina Lynn Hawktns. Mary
Beth Hawl ey,
Tr.n a Ta mar a
Hayman, Beffy Ann H er a lcl. Dav id
H offman , valedicto· ian . Sherry
Lynn Hol tz . Ste ve r, Ril ey Hood .
Robert Brent Houda shelt. Dani el
lee _Hy se ll. Tra cy Frank lt n Hysell,
Davrd I annarelli
Brenda Kay Jan ey , Tony Ray
Jewell, Sc off Maurice Johnson,
S~aron Lynn John son, Duane Jones.
D• ck y Jeffery King, Rodney Dwa yne
Ktn~. Rob in Lee Kitchen . Lynn
Mane Kloes. Kail L. Knapp, Roger
Le~ Kovalchtk, Jeff ery Lambert.
Ke1th S. Linkous. 'Eric Mal one Lip
scom b, Franklin A ndr ew Martin,
Ida Mae Marttn , Roche ll e M cDa ni el.
M~rk Andrew M cG uire, Paul 0
M1 chael. Pamela Sue Mill er, Ran
dall Glenn Murray, Gary George
Nakamoto, Jeffrey Wayne N ash.

V• ctor• a Kay N ot .nqhetm. Donna
Rou c, t1 OldJker , Lynne Dee Ol •vcr,
sa lu t,ltor• an
Vt c tor•c'l R Pa.ntr&gt;r , Ka th leen Sue
ParkN . A l an K Portlow, Kimberly
Ann P.t tte r svn, Larry R Paltersun ,
Tam my Pclt•t. Jurn cs E Peyton,
Wdl•am R P1cken s. Chery l L. Pier
ce. Wlll • e~m Bruce Powell, Opa l
Kathryn Pugh, Mat 1hew Queen,
0,1v1d Allen Rf' ulcr, Danie l Lee
R •&lt;1CI S. L1 sa K Robson. l•na Rose,
Br l• nda Grimm Rush. Lo ri E
Roush, Terr• Lyn n Roush . V•c ki Lin
nf'rl Saute r s, Jt&gt;llrey C Snif let,
Tnomas Theodore Sim mons, Geor ge
Brt• nt SISSOn, HelenS Sin ' k
A lfred Ray Smllh Jr . Connt e L
Smllh , Cu r t •ss R Smll h. L aura Gad
Sm 1th. Roberta Ly nn Snll t h, Lo rri
An n Snowde n. MPii ss a An n Sny der ,
Ray mond A Stewart Jr . Su san
Renee Swan n. T1moth •f
Tackett.
Gregory Todd Thomas. Me l1na Rea
Thomas , Denn1s L
Thorn ton
Rebe~c~1 Jean T1ll•s. l1m ot hy David
Toml 1n , Angela L Tr~piC't l . D enise
Le n• a Tu rner, JamP s R Wamsley
Ter ry C Wayl_and, Br1rln E Wha ley:
Troy A Will• s and Fr·l'rlrir Lou1s
Younq

HIGH

,,
~~

SCHOOL
HIGH

SCHOOL
POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

\·'

POMEROY, OH.
DAVID HOFFMAN
Valedictorian

LYNNEOUVER
Salutatorian

Eastern graduation scheduled Sunday
77 seniors will receive diplomas

SARAH GOEBEL
Valedlctorlan

KILA YOUNG

t

__-/

SWISHER-LOHSE
PHARMACY

Jay G inth er, x · Sa rah Jane GoebeL
Dougla s A ll an Harris, x · Michael
Dea n Hauber, Gregory Allen Hibbs,
Tammy Joy Hudson, Kimberly
Dawn Ireland, Donna Carol Jacks, x
· Karen Elaine Jacks. Crystal Leigh
Jacobs Dailey .
Donald Gean Jones, Jr ., Jeffrey
Dean Jones, K Iare Bradley Kimes,
Darr~ll Lee Krautter, Patricia Anne
Lawrence, Robert Joseph Lawren·
ce. Nicklois Lee Leonard Jr.,
Cha rl es William Massar, Clyde
Jarold Morlan, Cathy Annette
Morri _s, Margery Mary Myers,
Sherrr Ellen Myers, William Todd
Norton , Kathryn Sue Pierce,

Richard Gail Putman, James Lee
Reed, Melvin Webster Reed, John
Dorset Riebel, Jr.

Edward Gould Rife, Charles Ar ·
thur Ritchie, Darrell Robinson, Den·
nis A l an Robinson, Joseph Dale
Sayre, x · Christini Ann Sheets, Ed·
ward Morris Siek, Jr., Jan Louise

Smith, James Robert Smith Jr .,
Robert Loslie Smith, x- Terry Allen

CLASS OF 1982

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

The best of luck to all you ambitious young graduates! You're
the future of our community and we hope some of you
will stay, helping our town thrive and prosper!
We're proud of each and every one
of you for a job well done!

POMEROY, OH.

RACINE HOME
NAT'L BANK

A. Presentation By The Merchants Listed On This Page.

RACINE, OH.

Snowden, Waid Ray Spencer, Paul

PAT HILL FORD

Alan Sprague, Rodney Lee Spurlock.
Jer&lt;.y Kyle Swain, Lee Tracy Swain,
Virgil Edward Taylor, Scott A l an
Van Meter, David Lee Wolf, and x .
KilaAnne Young .
x - Denotes Nationa I Honor
Society.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

THE FARMER'S BANK
POMEROY, OH.

POMEROY, OH.

Salutatorian

MEIGS AUTO PARTS
POMEROY, OH.

DALE Hill FORD TRACTOR
~OMERO(OH.

FRANCIS
.
.FLORIST
'

OH
PLUMB I

\'
I

-

K&amp;C JEWELERS
POMEROY, OH.

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
MIDDlEPORT, OH.

STATE FARM INS.
MIDDlEPORT, OH.

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
POMEROY, OH.

MEIGS INN/PIZZA SHACK

POMEROY,.-OH:·

'

I

'G/.AJ:"""

POMEROY, OH.

Ctm st op l1er Alfred Al len, Melanie
Lynn Bailey, Mi chael Ala n Baker,
Darl ene Kay Barton. Dixi e Lee
Beair, Rhonda Lee Beard, Troy Lee
Bearhs, x John Deryl Beaver, x
Tina Renee Beaver. x
Ca r ol yn
Renee Bowen , Kevin Eugene
Brook s, H an son Bryce Buck leY . Jef
frey Mi cha el Burke,)( Shery l Lynn
Bush, Brenda Sue Ca l away, x
Al ison Lani er Cauthorn , Ri cky Lynn
Chevalier, Gregory Scott Cole,
Brian Keith Connolly, Robert Leon
Craft , Cy nth ia Lynn Crites.
Debr a Fay Dailey. Glen Alan
Darling, Jeanette J . Cook Darling,
Timothy Ear l Dill. x Scott Michael
Dillon , A li so n Deni se Gaddis, Lee
Gainer. x · Roger Ceci l GauL Gary

I\

~! .i.l 'l~ \

*
SOUTHERN

c

OH.

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
OH .

EWING FUN·ERAL HOME

.Crow's Family Restaurant

POMEROY, OH.

POMEROY, OH.

'

7

Pn·pctr;tt llllls of tl tt'

autiltonurn for till' Hulland

rnceting .

EASTERN Band Boosters will
meet Tuesday, May 25, at 7:30p.m.
in the band room. It will be the final
meeting of the year. Next year's activities will be discussed.

Page

SCHOOL

Melinda Salmoru;
VAledictorian

Salutatorian

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

�Thursday, May 20, 1982

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, tlftly 20, 1982

Helen HelpUs

Scott M. Dillon, Eastern High
School, has been named a United
States National Award winner for
band.
Dillon is the son of Roger B. and
Ruth E. Dillon and the grandson of
Charles and Grace Price, of Long
Bottom.

Almost no one does, but everyone should
BY HELEN AND SUE BOITEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
O.K., I go along with thank-you
notes for gifts, but if someone asks
you to dinner or to a party, isn't a
thanks at the door when you leave
enough' - DOESN'T WANT TO
OVERDO IT

• ,&lt;

WILL TAKE PART - Mlola Conger and Kittle
Sellers. left to right, have been chosen to take part In
the All Ohio State Fair Youth Choir at the Ohio State

Fair Aug. I through Aug. 22. The two Southern High
School students were recommended by their teacher,
Mn1. Lee Lee.

Meigs groups hold meetings
Meigs FHA
The Met gs Future Homt.·makPrs of
Amenca hl'ld a p;.Jrent-dauhhlt.•r

banquet recently at the schooL
Nt'w officers were installed at the
banquet. They arr Ca nuny Morns.
president: Hebecca Hife, v1ee
president : Joy Sa ut ers, secrl'lary ;

Hhonda Jeffers.

treasurer: and

Lynn Sl;-t ter . llt.'w s reporh•rhistonan .
Both the new and l'l'llring officers
received roses while the motlwrs
and ad\·1sors were presented curs;Jgt.•s
Other guests were Mr. and Mrs.

.James Diehl.

Eastern FHA
New officers wen· mstalled at the
recent meeting uf thl' Eastern FHA

held at the school.
In stall ed Wt.'l'l' Pam Oct\'I S,
president: Hobyn Pitzer, Vlt 'e

president: Brenda Wh1te. selTt•tary:
Beth Hayman. treasurer ; Ann
Jones, histonan and song leader;
Mandee Williams. chaplain: Jud y
Jones, news reporter ; and Connie

Clark , parliamentarian.
The most oul'itanding senior was

selected and will be recognized on
Awards Day tot lhr school. AssiStance at the Children's Hospital was
di scussed.

Riverview PTO
Two t•ducational lev res were endorsed by the H1 verview PTO at a

Plans were made for a program at
Pomeroy Health Care Center at 7
p.m. on May '!1. Hevival services
were announced at the Zion Church
May 31lo June4 with Geroge Draper
as the speaker.
Needs at Ohio Valley Christian
Ce nter were discussed and it was
noted

th~1t

bowls have been pur-

chased and mattress covers are still
needed .
Ann Lambert presided at the
111eeling with the song service being

opened by Huth Underwood with the
hymn "Showers of Blessings" with
Ann l..ambert at the piano. Prayer

hymn was " In the Garden" with
Vtrgmia Wyatt giving the prayer.

Offeratory prayer was by Mar~e
PurtelL Devotions by Huth Underwood mcluded three poems.
There was special music by Lmda
Hlfflt•, Marge Purtell, and Pal Arnold "He Was There all the Time."
A skit "Through Other Eyes" was
give n by Virginia Wyatt. Ida Murphy, Mrs . Hiffle, Kathryn Johnson
and Ann Williams.
The dosing songs were " ! Know
Who Holds Tomorrow" , "Heaven
Came Down" and "Gl ory Filled My
Soul" with the closing prayer by Ida
Murphy.
A closmg prayer was held with
wearing apparel being shown by
Mrs. H1ffle. Tammy Johnson, Tina
Hiffie. Melanie Arnold, Barbara
Black. Virgmia Wyatt. and Missy
Black. A display of crafts and
homemade items was displayed in

the back of the church.
Sandwiches ctnd relis hes were Sl'fved by the host church.

meeting held at the Hi verview
SchooL
Hichard Hube1ts. superintendent
of Eastern Loca l School District,
and MHS. Carol L&lt;Jyh, assistant
superintendent. Ca rleton School,
spoke briefly on behalf of the current

A program by Pomeroy Elementary School band under the direction
of David Bowen highlighted the May

levies .

1neeting of the Pomeroy PTA.

Lucille Klfncs. president. presided
at the meeting with MJSly Newell,
first grade student. leading the
group in the flag pledge. Mrs. Well's
[Jrsl gracil' had the highest percentage of pHrenl-; in attendance.
The room mothers recognized fnr

their services dunng the past school
years were Gareia Adams, Nancy
Buckley. Margaret Cauthorn , Betty
Dill , Geraldine Hnlsinger , Jill
Holter , Shi rley Johnson, Carlo\le
Keen, Lucille Kimes, Kathy McDaniel, Teddy Mondry, Virginia
Newlun. Marlene Putman, Avis
Spencer and Cathy Spencer.

Women's Fellowship
A donat1on of $50 was made to the
Grundy Mountain Mission School at
Grundy, Va . w1lh more to be sent

""'·h month by the Meigs County
Women 's Fellowsbip of the Churches nf Clmst held recently at the
Zion Church.

read "Vitamin B and Me" along
with scripture from CoL 2. Verses 610. Marjorie Fetty read "Mother's
Bouquet", Donna Gilmore, "Hiddle
Me This", Ann Mash, "Strangers
are Friends We Haven't Met" ; with
Della Curtis reciting "The Joke's on
Me."
Games were played with prizes
going to Mrs. Jacobs, Mrs. Wright,
Eva Robson, Susie Pullins, and
Tammy Mash. Guests were Belly
Stewart, Susie Pullins, and Tammy
Mash. Others attending were Huby
Frick, Donna Gilmore. and Ann
Mash.
Hefreshments were served.

Rock Springs Grange
Several county projects were
reported on by Barbara Fry, CWA
chainnan, at the recent meeting of
the Hoek Springs Grange meeting.
There will be a bake sail' June 19
at Krogers and members are asked
to have baked items there at 9 a.m.
Athens County Pomona Grange will
visit Meigs Pomona Grange on July
2 and a potluck dinner will precede
the 8 p.m. meeting.
Pat Holter, legislati ve agent. gave
a report on several issues commg up
in the legislature. William Radford,
master, announced that the grange
bowling team placed third in the
Ohio Stale Grange bowling tournament. Reported ill were James
Euler and Homer Radford. Sympathy was extended to Hazel Van
Cooney.

Pomeroy PTA

Pomeroy Safety Patrol members
were introduced and given pins and
certificates. Plans were made for
field day on June I.
Chris Layh spnke to the group on
the operating levy for the Carleton
School which the PTA endorsed.
He v. William Newman had
devotions, with the pledge to open
the meeting being given by the sixth
grade.

Laurel Cliff
Health Club
A discussion on the hospital equiJ&gt;ment owned by the club, additional
to be purchased, and an appropriate
storage area highlighted a recent
meeting of Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club held at the home of Mrs.
Ann Mash.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs had the
opening prayer reading a "Thought
for Mother's Day." Jean Wright

JEWELRY
for him . .. for her

Mother's Day and Memorial Day
was the theme of the program
presented by Ethel Grueser, lecturer. For roll call members commented on something they recalled
from their mother's way of
housekeeping. There were readings
and poems by Ethel Grueser, Mrs.
Holter, Radford, Lottie Leonard,
Mary Shaeffer.
There was a hwnorous skit by
Barbara Fry and Nancy Morris. A
memorial service was conducted by
Ethel Grueser for all departed members of the grange. Members
ass isting were Beuna Grueser and

Mrs. Morris.
Hefreshments were served by
Mrs. Fry and her CWA committee.

DEARDWTOI:
A second "thank-you" for a dinner
party is never overdoing it, though
most people appear to disagree with
me nowadays.
I'm a great believer in aJ&gt;preciative notes or telephone calls,
mainly because I'm so pleased when
I receive them.- HELEN

DWTOI :
Notes of appreciation are not only
good etiquette, but they can also pay
big dividends : in wanner friendships, further invitations, even job
offers. People remember the person
who took time.- SUE

grateful "thank you." She told me
later the hiring choice was a toss-up
between me and another candidate!
My note broke the tie 1

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I love my husband. We've been
married only two years. But
sometimes my mind wanders and I
can't help dreaming how it might
feel to be a young widow.
I never think of divorce - just
about being sad and brave at first,
and then going on to big accomplishments and romances and
e&lt;citing things ...
I truly enjoy married life and feel
so guilty when my mind plays these
tricks. Am I - CRAZV'
DEAHCRAZY:
No, you're not crazy.
The mind has a way of manufacturing unwanted fantasies just as it
conjures up dreams over which we
have no controL
So Io~ as you love your man and
truly njoy married life. not to

gets wanderlust. Why not ask him,

after you've read this coiWllll
together' (But don't tell him you
wrote it unless he starts chuckling. )
- SUE
RAP :
Where did the expression, " It's the
pits" come from' - DON
DEAR DON:
One theory traces it to the drug
culture: When heroin addicts have
collapsed almost every vein in their
bodies, they have nowhere left to
shoot-up but their arm pits. That's
about as far down as you 'can go. SUE

THURSDAY
CHESHIHE - Gallia-Meigs
Community Aclion will hold free
clothing day for low income
people Thursday, May 20, from 9
a.m. until noon. The agency
clothing bank is located in the old
high school building at Cheshire.

DEAR DON:
An easier explanation: "pit"
means "hole." "It's the pits" then
could say "Everything's gone down
the tubes - and hit bottom." HELEN
(GOT A PROBLEM' Or a subject
for discussion, tw&lt;rgeneration style'
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)

POMEROY - The second annual Royal Crown 100 Hearl Golf
Tournament will be held Thursday by the Jaymar Golf Course.
Ladies tee off time will be 9 a.m.
with the men to tee off between 1
and 3 p.m. The fee of $10, which
includes the green fees per person, will be donated to the Meigs
County Heart Association .

McGee, Meigs County Council of
Aging, for a contribution to Jeanne's
Room at the Senior Citizens Center.
Carol Layh, asistant superintendent of the Carleton School, was
the speaker. She talked on the
program for the school for the mentally retarded and the need for the
operating levy of 1.5 which voters
will vote on the June primary.

Donna Jones was installed as the
new president of Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority following a luncheon
meeting at the Meigs Inn recently.
Others installed were Maidie
Mora, vice president; Janet Theiss,
recording secretary; Velma Rue,
corresponding secretary; Ruby
Baer, treasurer, and Lillian Moore.
city council.
Appointed cc;.chainnen of committees were Clarice Krautter,
Velma Rue, social; Ann Rupe, Betty
Ohlinger, ways and means; Norma
Custer, Pearl Welker, program;
Ruby Baer and Lillian Moore, serSYR~CUSE, OHIO
vice; and Vera Crow and Janet
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
Theiss, publicity.
,
A float for the Hartinger parade 1i •Vegetable Plants
•Bedding Plants
was discussed. Thank you notes
•Foilage Plants and
were read from Xi Gamma Mu
Hanging Baskets
Chapter and from the Rev. Robert
OPEN DAILY 9 til8
SUNDAY 1 TIL 5

531 JACI&lt;SON PIKE ·Rt.35 WElT
Phone 448·4524
IIAROAIN MATWRS 011 SAT &amp; SUN

officers
-installed
New officers were installed at the
recent meeting of Middleport
Business and Professional Women's
Club held at the Middleport Library.
Installed were Marjorie Fetty,
president; Becky Mohler, vice
president;
Alwilda
Werner,
secretary; and Frances Louise
Davis, treasurer. Catherine Welsh
was the installing officer. Gifts were
presented to eaclrone.
Plans were made lor the club to
participate in the General James
Hartinger parade. Jeanette Thomas
talked on the 1.5 miU operating levy
for the Carleton School and the club
voted to endorse it.
The silver dollar attendance
award was won by Mary Kunzelman. Refreshments were served.
Also ettending were Freddie
Houdashelt.

_
_
....
--..
,

'I
j

~~

HUTLAND - Skating Saturday from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. at the
Rutland Civic Center. Children $1
and adults $2. Persons to bring
NEASE SETTLEMENT Hymn sing at Nease Settlement
Church Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
Sunrise singers to be featured.
public invited.
RACINE - St. Jude's Bike-aThon, " Wheels for Life" Saturday at 1 p.m. Meet at Racine Fire
Station. Persons must have at
least one sponsor to be eligible for
prizes. For additional information cal1949-2093.
POMEROY - Hymn sing at
Freedom Gospel Mission, county
road 31, at 7:30 p.m. The Road
Masters from Colwnbus will be
featured. Public invited.
NEW HAVEN- There will be
a chicken barbecue at the New
Haven Fire Station Saturday,
May 22, with serving to begin at
II a.m. The menu includes
chicken, hbt dogs, baked beans,
cole slaw, rolls, pies and cakes.
Sponsored by the auxiliary of the
fire department.

CAMILLE: A l(&lt;'nll(•·\olc
dr t"~\f'd up wtth
\ lr.!p\ and mid ·

.JII

high heel\ for parlle\ c1nd

luncheon\ where 11\ TopiC

of convPr\.:t1ion 1

COLORS:
•BONE
•WHITE

SUNDAY

•BLACK PATENT

•ORCHID

SAVE
•CHAINS •PINS •RINGS
----- •HEADBAN
SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
t&lt;_,.neftt McCullouth. l .l'tl.

c ...rtn IIMtt, l .l'fl.
IOMid HMIIMf, I . Ptt.

Moft . tttru Sit. I : Nun. tot p,rn .

Sund•Y II:JI tol:I :JI Iftll Jttt .fn.
PI.ICIII'TIONS
PH . m·2fU
,,6tftdly lerviCII
1 ,..,...,..,., 0 .
E. Me; in

out

In

thl\ , lin~ ·

·

c·onh•ttt · M.c•trlm 'u l1~th1.
m&lt;~ny

C)(,.,._

' i"n' u ·ll hc• rhc• l,tvoritt•
, hnt• in HllH t lu,t•l. '

'

14%
FOR 1 WEEK
FREE

Attending beSides the hostesses
were Sherri Hysell, Julie Hysell .
Marie Manley, Connie and Chasity
Abbott, Bev Bishop, Susie and Kim
Stewart, Paula Farra, Marsha
Miller, Trudy Landon, Carol Baker.
Dorothy Bryan. Jean Gilmore, Ga1l
Tobias, Thelma and Dorothy Jef-

and Millie Farra. Jack and Elauw
Farra. Ed Hnd Carolyn Burge, Ed1lh
Fonner, Katie Lewis. Bill Gilmore ,
Bruec and Brenda Hussdl. John and
Cindy Snodgrass. Hoselta and Jim

Hysell, Jeni Stewart. Trent Lewis.
Hobin a nd Donita Manuel, Hhoncta
and Susan Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. Hysell, Mr. and Mrs.
Barney Shain, Mrs. Charlene Lew is,
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Zirkle, Mrs.\
Garnet Ervine, Mrs. Mildred Spence r, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Reed, Shcrri
and Theresa, Mrs. Laura Hoffman ,
Colwnbus. Miss Vera Beegle, Miss
Patty Shain, Mr. and Mrs. Emil
PlictJa , Mrs. Charlotte Stewart , and
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mossman .

· Meigs perSonals

MARGUERITE. SHOES
'

992-2054

O,.n ""''"''till f

t

I

I' ..

·I

Soeidy mt•l

Ft•llnwslllp room

rneetiru.:: there was group stngtng

Goodman, Eddie and F'rarwes
Mcrnlc y, Lisa Hortcn, Paule~ Wyler ,

Melba Thompson. Grace and JoAnn
Combs, Jessie Hussell. Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Garner, Sandy Peck. Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sanlimcrc, Mike and
Sally Vaneo, Sharon Hudolph, Lissa
Hill, Gold it• Hood, Hhonda Jarvis, lrrna Burge, Lucille Kin g, Vicky Ab-

bott, and Lawrence Hyst'll.
A handmade octk crcrdlt• wcts
prt·st•nll'd by lhl' pruspt:cti vL' grand f;.tlher, Jakt· Burgt'.

..Send The L1 ghl " and ·· ru Tlw
Work" and prayt•r. After a busuws."i
session a program, entttled " Tht·
Spirit of Molht:rhoud" was prt·st·n-

led by Mrs . Florent-e Adams . Tlw
Love G1fl program by Martha Lou

Bec~k. \'H..'l' presidl'nl or Chnsttan
Servtce. roll owed ::;criptu re, RtJrnans

8:28, Humans 13 :8-10. I John 4: 19-21.
Sill' had a melhWttun. " I'm Your
I ,uvt· G tft Box·· HI so a son).! wa s sung

by the group. a parody to "Sl'iwol
Days ." Florence Adams and Gctrrll't
Ervilll' presented the uffl'nngs uf tlw
Ci rcles, ~238.fi7 . Dedication pra yt·r

was by Mrs . Adams. Singmg of 'I'll
Li vt.• Fur Him" anti pra yt: r clust'd
the met'lin g. Twenty-four nwmt)t'rs
and one gul'Sl enjoyed rdreslmwnls

served by the Esther Cm'ie.
Mrs. Mildred Sw1fl of Columbus
spent SO:t lunla y O\"ernil!hl and
Mothl'r 's Day w1th her mot her . Mrs.
FrctnCIS Morns Tht•y Wt'f'l' dmrwr

Mr "'"' Mrs. Halph Hadglt·r .
lucal . Mr . ;.tntl Mrs l&lt; olwrt Hysl·ll
and Mrs. Oma Hysl·ll uf Sy rcH" US t'
\'tSJtt•d n ·t·t·ntly w1th Mr. i::IIH.l Mrs
Hay fly st·ll ;u1Li fanul~ at Rtn·vtlk.
Tt •tHJ. tht ·y also wt•ttt tu Sl'l' Mrs . Ad;-1
Hysdl ;d &lt;t rurl\";tlt·sn·nt t·t·ntt·r tll
Atill' li S, '1'1'11 11 . Mr.'&gt;. Hyst·llts an aunt
of Mrs. Bad,• lt- y and Hobt"rt Hys l·l\
Mr ~
(;rdLI
St!llps on acc·ornpttrltl'd hc·r sun . Bud Sunpsun. \11
tht·Jr hor nt· at Sl'_\·rnuur . Ind . 01nd
spt•n t two Wt't'b Hl·r St•rH n-law ;:nd
di!Ul-!hkr. Mr and Mrs. F.rrh ·st
Shul t·r of I ,dart Fa lls Y.t 'll l &lt;-tflt•r ht ·r
In rt'\ urn htHJH'

All

SALE:

FURNITURE
IN OUR
STORE!

Mr. and Mrs. Jim I ,och&lt;J r')· and
sn ns. Ch ris e~ntl .JCJJIItt', ctf lll'ill"
DHytnn, spent the C:&lt;-tsll'r wt•t•kend
w1th his pan•nts. Mr . and Mrs.

Shain

Patrick LochMy .

Astrograph
May 21. 1982

WHEN:

Substantial dr \"i lil'nds wlillw gairwd thts c·orning yt·ar frolll &lt;tny typl'.'i
uf involvements in whll"h yt iU t•ntt.·r that arl' of a ch&lt;Jrrt&lt;:tblt• natun· . Your
inll'nt ·may bt· to help ollwrs, but you'll &lt;-tl so bl· rwfit in tlw prot'l'SS.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

new Vl'n turl'S at thts tina·. tt' s hl'st ln fir st fintsh that whll'h you haw
al ready he l! Uil . Leave no Joos t· t•nds.
CANCEH (Jum· 21-July 221 Jf you haH· acausl' in which ;·ou han· JUSt
bt.'come interested, thi s is a good LlCJy to t.: olo fnends for support. Tlwy'll

9 A.M. TIL 8 P.M.

9 A.M. TIL S P.M.

back you up now .
LEO \July 23-Aug. 221 Your posSJbililll'S for fulfil lin ~ )'uur ambitions
a re eoud today . bt•t'i:HISI' you'll bt • ablt· to show others how tht.•y ,
sha re bc·ndit.s from your atlclinment.s.

VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sepl. 21

Geltin~

tuc1 ,

c·crn

dtnlt' what IH 't'ds dt)]ng will bt· of

creatcr importance to you today thi::ln who ct•Ls till' clo ry. It's success, not

applause. \hal you seek .
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0rl. 231 SonJeont· lila\' com•· to yoo today with a

WHAT: ALL FURNITURE

prupos&lt;JI re gC1rding a w.ay you could dt·\·t'lop a second source of t'arnin g~.
You'd bt' wisl' to ht:ar this party out.
.

SCORPIO (Orl.

24-~ov.

22) ParlJwrships or jt11nl efforts could turn

out very fortuna it' tutlay, cspt·c·iHI Iy if yo u arc· involn•d with som t•o nc• who
has as much to offer as you do.
SAGITTAH!US 1Nov. 23-Dee. 211 This should bt· a very product ire
day because, not only will you bc· industrrous. you'll know huw to solicit
help to accomplish your l.&lt;lsks.

CAPRI!:ORN I Dt·e. 22-.Jan. 191 Kel'pln 1111nd today: The quicker you
get your work out of llw way. lhe earlil'r you'll be a bit· tu takt· off and ha ve
fun . Don't dill ydall;·.
AQUARIUS 1Jan. 2tf-Feb. 191 Though you may be plann1ng to spend
tlw even ing at hom e, it's bes t to have a flow snaeks handy . Tht•re's a
strong possibility you'll get some dror-in company .
PISCES 1Feb. 2()-Marrh 201 Plan to gl'l in touch with or viSJl family
membt•rs today whom you've been neglecting lately. Tht• liming IS right
for both you and them.
ARIES 1March 21-Apri1191 Ways can be found toda y to unpro\·e upon
situations that affect your earn mgs and stability. Take those• lllcasuces
now which you derm neet.•ssa ry.
TAURUS 1 April 2()-May 201 Projects you personally initiate today
will have a very good t.: hctnct: for sUt'l't·ss, provi dPd you hcmd le lhe import.ant aspec·ts yourse lf and dl'lcgate only the lt·sst•r ones.

Hush Puppies

HOW MUCH:

REASON:
NEED
CASH

SUMMER REFRESHER
Refresh your summer mood with comfort and co lor. Light on your feet. these
Hush Puppie s·· sandal s are favorites
for work o r p lay You II e njoy the
price. too.

REGATIA
COLORS: •KHAKI

•NAVY

PRICE
CASH AND CARRY ONLY!
*DOES NOT INCLUDE WATER BEDS, TV'S &amp; CARPET

WHERE:

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE
240 THIRD AVE.

1 - - - - -......---Thiid ---~--~

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

1------1---Second ----+--~

Pay Your Columbia Gas Bills At:

THE SHOE BOX

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart, son
.lonathan of . CQiumhus spent
Eastern weekend with Mr. and Mrs:
Don Bell.

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

-·

I .

'

111 th1•

at First Bapl1sl Church With the
Esther Clrcll' hostesses. To open the

t' Ut·sts of Mr . and Mrs rntt Brrtdford un Mullwr \ D~t y
Mr . anti Mrs. Bill Ml'Kl'llZil' of
(;alllpnlt s spent a n •n :nt Sunday
\\till Mr . and Mrs. Hoy Hlffll' .
Tl'rt·sa Ann Sllult·r uf Ll'li1t1. Falls
spl'lll a few di::lys tJ\T r Mother's D0:1 y
wtlh ill'r grandmuthtT, Mrs . Grl'tti::l
StlllpStlll.
Mr &lt;~Jld Mrs. Halph 13adglq
\ tsikd wtth Mr and Mrs. Bni:ln Sn npsu n and Lmuly at Balttmore ctnd &lt;itlt ' tHkd tw o hast•ball ga mt•s at Libert~ Umon ll tgh S&lt;"hool wlwre lht ·Jr
grantlsnn . Dann S1rnrson. pl&lt;Jys.

Personals

. E:. NGRAVING
113COURT
STREET
POMEROY,OH.

and Tammy Hussell, Connie and
Donna Manley .

By Mrs . Frands Morris

The Bertha M. Sayre M1ss1unar;

Shain

MIDDLEPORT- Slides of the·
Holy Land will be shoWn by Ottie
McKinney Sunday at 7:30p.m. at
till! Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church, Middleport. Public invited.

COLORS :
•WHITE
•BONE

ONLY

Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Young, Mrs. Phyllis Clark,

gnl!ldch!ldren a nd

Inspection practice for Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of Jerusalem will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday with the
Gallipolis Shrine at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. All members
are urged to attend.

h.u l thft•,ulf'd wcth
\U ri.cht lor 'o

a

were Arnie Duga n, Torn Hill . M1sty1

SATIJRDAY

IOo tt•p

and

p.m.

RUTLAND - Teen Dance
Friday 8lo 11 :30 p.m. at Rutland
Civic Center. Admission $3 for
couples and $2 for singles.

LIZ:

Ore go n :

Con-

POMEROY
Mother
Daughter banquet at Bradbury
Church of Christ Friday at 6:30
p.m .

Step into the glamorous!

SINCE 1848

Portland,

7:30

FRIDAY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

\.Jncic~l

Games were played and cake and
punch were served by Mrs. Burge .

Betty Burge, Judy Riley, I.ouanna

Racine Social Events

GEMINI I May 21-June 201 Although""" lllay bt· anxious lt&gt; launch

BAHR CLOTHIERS

delic"atP

of

daughter, Mabel Wick lm•·. Nl'w
Matamoras. Hazel McCloud was
also there for her Sister's birthday

Child

CAHPENTEH
The
Democrat Central Comm ittee
will meet Thursday, May 20, at 8
p.m at Carpenter's Union HaiL

......
............,. .......

joining her

for the day.
Mildred Wilburn, 715 Sycamore
SL, daughter of Mrs. Clark hosl\'d
the Cl'lebralJon alll'ndl'd by two
sons, Paul of Middleport, and Floyd

served.

PraiseYour Graduate...

COMPLETE STOCK

Lce~gue,

own skates.

$} QOO

relati ve~

Jason David Shain celebrated hiS
ninth birthday recently at the home
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs . Da ve
Shain, Racine .
The Dukes of Hazard theme was
ca rried out with the ca ke bcihg
made by Mrs. Libby Fi sher. Atlending and sending gifts and carJs

RACINE Am erican Legion
Post 602 will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. There willlle election of
officers. Refreshments will be

SHOP OUR WOMEN'S
DEPARTMENT. WE
HAVE AN EXCELLENT
SELECTION OF BLOUSES
SWIMWEAR, SPORTSWEAR
DRESSES, ETC......

with America 's finest writing
instruments .Cross- in lustrous
chrome, gold filled or sterling
silver. From

proximately 25

three ~ reah.:ramil'hildren.

Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Dale Colburn.
GOSPEL Singer Bruce Stone
will present a concert at 7:30p.m.
Thursday night at Chester United
Methodist Church. The public is
invited to attend.

PHONE 992-5776

B&amp;PW

The 83rd birthday of Alice Clark
was ce lebrated Sunday with at&gt;-

ded. The public is invited to participate. More mfm·mati on may
be obtained from Lois Kelly. Nancy Reed or Bob Freed.
VOICES of Liberty Chorus will
rehearse for the General James
Hartinger celebration at 7:30
p.m. on May 20 and May 25 at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
MIDDLEPOHT

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Clark

etlan~ with six

servation

fers. Traci and Tamara O'dell, Jan
Housh, Patsy Ogden, Merle Manley,

Meigs ·area birthdays

Nwnerous prizc!'i will be awar-

AU SEATS JUST S 2.00

ADMISSION EVERY TtESMY I 1.00

A layette shower was held for
Charlie and Penny Burge recently at
the Riverboat Hoom of Diamond
Savings and Loan. Hosting the
sl10wer were Rosemary Hysell,
Brenda Jeffers and Mildred Burge .

Wanda and Billie .Jn St&gt;rl'Y , Georgl'

Calendar

P.S. From Helen: I'll vouch for
that 1 My first job interv1ew (years
and years ago) had me scared worry. HELEN
.-----------green. When a kind personnel officer CRAZY
guided me through it, I sent her a \,~r husband's mind also

Preceptor installs officers

Couple honored with shower

Wins award
for band

'

Wayside
furniture

�Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel

Thurtday, May 20, 1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 20, 1982

Business Services

House Republicans offer new domestic tax proposal
WASHINGTON (API - House
Rl'publlcan leaders, hoping to rebuild the ir successful budget coaliUon of last yea r, are offering a new
pla n with sharply scaled back domestic spending and $!6 bUllon In
tax Increases over three yea rs.
But Democra ts a nd Republicans

publlcans were unveiled to com·
pete wltlt the plan drafted last week
by majority Democrats on the
House Budget Committee.
House Republican Leader Robert H. Michel or Dllnols hopes to
repeat the budget victories that outnumbered Republlcans scored last
year with the "blparttsan recovery
budget" he has worked out with
conservative Democrats and mod·
erate Republlcans.
In the Senate, meanwhlle, major·
lty Republican leaders Wednesday

alike agree that finding a majority
this election year In tlte fractious
House wtll be an uphill battle.
During a flurry of Capitol Hill
news conferences Wednesday, separate plans backed by Republican
leaders, liberal Democrats and a
s m a ll group of Democrats a nd Re-

Rider training
LINTHICUM, Md. (API - More
motorcyclists are
see kin g
professional rider training before
taking to the road.
A recent Motorcycle Safety Foun·
dation survey of motorcycle riders
found that more than IS percent of
the respondents had taken a rider·
training course. Earlier studies
placed that figure at about 5 percent.
Nearly 89 percent of the training
courses had a classroom portion;
72.2 percent included on-cycle
training in an off-street setting,
while 53 .2 percent had an on-street,
on-cycle phase.
· The average length of these cour·
ses was 18.9 hours.

lllJDCET HUDDLE - Budget Director David Stockman, left. conft•r&gt; with llousc Republi can leader, Rep. Bob Michel of lllinois, Wedm·sda) ill au dfurt tu \\Ork uut a bipartisan hudgl't t·urnpromise. lAP
l .•a .... t•rphnto 1

stripped their budget of plans for

GOP budget calls tor deficits or
$115.4 bUllon In 1983; $91.3 bUllon In
1984 and $64.4 bUllon In 1~. based
on spending $783.6 bUllon In 1983,
$832.3 bUllon In 1984 and 889.4 bUllon
In 1985. It also calls tor 101.2 bUllon
In tax Increases over three years.

clal Security plan, which had to be
abandonned In the lace of divisions
In the party's ranks and a ll butcer·
taln defea I' If the savings In the
giant pension system remained a
part of the budget outline.
With the changes, the Senate

$40 bllllon In Social Security savings

over three years. At the same ttrne,
they restored $3 bUllon for a variety
of domestic programs Including
Medicare, guaranteed student
loans, housing, veterans programs
and space.
Michel's budget calls for deeper
cuts In domestic and benefit programs and thedefensebulldupthan
either the Jones plan or the proposal under consideration In the
Senate.
President Reagan has not made
a publlc commitment to Michel's
budget, although White House
budget director David A. Stockman
participated In the private meet·
lngs In which It was hammered out.
Michel's plan also leaves Social
Security Intact, but projects a $101.4
billion deficit for the fiscal year that
begins Oct. 1, $77.2 bUllon In 1984
and $50.7 billion In 1985. Total tax
Increases over three years total ~
billion.
In preparation for floor action ex·
pee ted to begin Friday, the
Democratic-cont ro lled House
Rules Committee was m eeting today to draft parllamentary procedures governing Hou se
consideration of the various bud·
geet measures.
Republlcans sought to put the
best face on their retreat on the So-

PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
~
Filled!

.SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

$1295

ONLY

Pomeroy, Oh .
Ph. Hl-2174
2·26·1fc

Middleport, Oh.

Ph. 992-6669

N. 2nd AVe.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rl . so Easl
Guysville, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Authorized Jqhn Deere,

New Holland, Bush Hog

PHONE 992-2156

Farm Equipment
Dealer

YOUNG'S
Classified pages cover the

71 Bus iness Opportunity
'}'} Money to Loan

51 Hou se hold Goods
S1 ·CB, TV &amp; Radio Equtpm ent
53 A ntiques 54 Misc. M er c h andt se
55 Build ing Supplies
56 · Pet s l or Sa l e
57 ·Mu sc ia lln strum ent s
58 Fruit s &amp; Veget abl es
59 For Sale or Trade

13 Proless•o nal Se rv• ces

.1 GIV f' rlWO V

) H clPPY Ads
b LOC. I !l nd Founcl
I Y ,) r {! S ,ll(' I P &lt;II d 1n i!d V&lt;l flCP)
A Publ• f Srll e

31
31
33
34
35
36

&amp; AUCIIOfl

Y Wdn lf' CII O B uy
--~

Ef'l!~t- =::

SN\'fRS.

~

Hom es tor Sa le
Mobile Homes for Sal e
Farm s for Sa le
Bu siness Bu ildings
LO IS &amp; Ac r er~ge
Rei! I Es ta te Wnntect

41
47
43
44
45
46
47
4A
49

Houses for Ren t
Mobil e Homes for Rent
Fnrms l or Re nt
Apa rtmenllor Rent
Furn 1shed Rooms
Space tor r ent
Wanted to Rent
EQu1 pm ent l or Rent
For Lease

Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for
:
I
Classifieds and III
Savell I
II

Wrlle your own ad and orde r by mail wi t h this
co upon Cancel yo ur ad by phone when you ge t
results Money not refundable .

Prinled Pattern

,.

I,

CASE NO

CASE

&gt;

2
J.
·'•

5.

1.
1

:L

·

:: ,

.

d

10
11 .
12.
13 .
14.

fl viu e- w e t ~ "l

nu

• ·1 dre· .

1.
' Jl 1ec~f•ne .
,1111t
·diS out c.n the au .
,I llo1·,, to sash
r '! "a ' tern 48 16 M1 ~~es

1
~ l

12, I( 1 6, 18. Stze
lakes i 718 yards

,1 J4)

29
30

~

23529

Final

151138 Seve n ·

1

I·

1J

NO . 21180

6'

labfiC.
SVI l1lf each ~altern. Add 504
101 each pattern lor ;&gt;OSI.Ige

3.

II.

&lt;

.1

Mail This Co u ~ ·
The Da 1

11 1 '.

'
'

..-·.
(

....

,.

Pom e ' "· , .:, . ., ..

lOW

•·

11
~--~-~~----------- --~-

'JO . 23205 F .nal

)\ (': aunt ol Myrtl e L Abe l s,
1-\l, mlnl slral &lt;'
of
th e
Es li'IIC ot Lou 's t:&gt; :JP L uz,
DecPdSN'
c ~:;E t Jr
'JJ26 F1 na l
4ccou nt 01 Lf'ona r d B .
Ramsbu rg, E ,cec utor of th e
'=s t i'I Je of Ea rl Ramsbur g,
... e'n &lt;&gt;C'd
~ dt ...
e)(C(;o~ ft , 1s
are
11· d 1!11 '1 r ro . su1d (1:r ounts
...v 11 1 be for hea nnu befor e
sa 1d Court on th e ~ flth day
of J~ 1n e, 1982, a t wn 1c h ti me
sa 1cl a· ·count s w ill be con
S1Cered and co ntmu ed f rom
day to da y unt1 1 fin ally
d 1sposed o f .
Any per c;on i n ter es tert
l mny fil e wn tt en e"l(ce pti on s
to sa1d acco un ts or to mat·
t er s pert a inin g
to
the
Pxec ut1on of the Court not
tess than fiv e d ays prior H

l

JUDGE
common Plea s Court ,
Prob a te Divt sion ,
Me1gS County , Oht O

151 20, 27 , 2tc
Public Notic e

PU il li C. NOTI CE
T he nnn u il l r eport Fo rm
990 PF l or the Ktbbl e Faun
dr1t 10n . Berna r d V Fu l t7 ,
Tru sl el'. IS rtvallabl e for
publi c In spec t ion ell Ber
nord v Fult1 L aw Off 1ce.
111 17 w Second Street.
P o m eroy .
Ohi o
45769
dur 1n q rcq ul ar bu s1 ness
hour s lor cl period of 180
d ays
~ ub se qu e n t
to
pu bii C.liiOn Of thi S nO! ICE.'.
(5) 16, 17, 18 , 19, 20. 2 1. 23,

71c
Public Notice

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIG S
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE
OF
E LM ER

JOHN SON , DEC EASED
C.1se No . 23744

t•• ' -~lW SPRINGSUMMER
' TA' 1G.'
'1 Ret

d~ t e d

deed

5/ 6/76

NOTI CE OF
ArPO INT MENT
OF FIDU C IARY

and

. . . . ... .$4.00
. . .... S7 .00

(0Ur11y
Proh r1f ('
Ci'ISP N o
7174 4,
Jc1 1nf'S
SI.,..1' ' &lt;;0n ,
,r, J
Hrnrl l f'y
\ 11 1' f'l ,
M t(l
t. :.·port , Oil tO 4 51~0 . w as "P
i~ fl1 0if'cl
/l dnll n i s rr rl t Or
W 1fll lr•P \/Vd l Anncxeo of
the e stntr o t E l mN J otm
sc&gt;n, c!Pt ee~scct. l ilte of 516 S.
4 tt· Ave nur, M1ddteporl,
0 · :q 4S760
Robf'rl E Buck
Prohnte Judqc /

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

( 51 20.27 ( 61 3, 3tc
Pubi• C Not1 CC'

IL E

-Addons and temodeling
-Roofing and gullet work
-CGncrele work
-Plumbing and
electrical work

l. J I , ·. If
aga t1 1~t

~&lt;··

I ,...'

tht

l~ ortn~a~t

~~rnm
REAJY

. &lt;:. E' - Ener gy eff ic tent is one way to
• H1 i s 2 3 b edroom hom e w ith new ca rpet ,
" OLe l ed ha t h a nd a nice l eve l lot . Assumabl e
J IIC\bl e. r'1w$25,500

COU.._D BE A MANSION - 3 4 bedr oom s, living
r oo m , T V room. f a mily room , o ff ice, country kit ·
c hen , 2 112 bath s, a rod a ce ll ar. On t wo l arqe lots. Does
need some' wo rk . Ask i n c. 'i.J5,000

--

.,

corner or Se . t ion 24 ; I hence
Wesl45 rods and 13 feello

.-. .Ea

IMMEDIA TE PO S~ESS ION - o f th is two bedroom
hohle wi th extt~ n s1ve r emodeli ng, loca ted ne ar the
m m cs and hil s I 1/ 8 i'lc r es of gro u nd o f w h ic h part is
!.-.need Bl ended r a t e ava ilabl e. $22,900. 00 .

.r nell
Del ong and
. ~· De long. upon
, te nt th er ei n r en ·
.;ei ng c ase N fl 1 :-d54
&lt;; &lt;..~ d Cour t I '-"' 'II off -~;
~ :.~t .a re, a l the fr oro ~ .::
11H
CO\!r- ;;1
POfTif'r"{"\1 .

"' a noiot 32

Genera l

II

Ph . 949-2609
949-2234
RACINE, OHIO
5·19·1 mo .

PubltC NottC C
pra1 se d pn ce .
T erm s of Sa le
hand

Real Estate - General

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

HOBSTETTER REALTY
George S. Hobstetter h.
Broker
PHONE 741·200i

CO UNTRY SE TTING -

14 m i . off N ew Umil Rd
Oui'lllfy
bu ilt ranch
home
Lor qe l 1v 1ng
orom . form at dminq
r oom. 3 bedroom s. 7 full
baths, lull ba se m ent,
carport wi th storage
n nd ut il1ty bld q All on 2
nire
acres
Ask 1n g

$45,000 00
ST. RT . 124 - Ju s l off
Rt . 7 N1 ce two story
hom e 4 bedroom s, bath,
t iv mq
room,
dintng
room .
kit c hen
and
u tll1t y r oo m . N atur al
qa s hea t Low utilit ies
S1tuatedon 1. 29 acres

$25,000 .00 .
CORNER LOT -

M id

dleport L arq e t wo
stor y
home, w ith :
bed rooms. bat h , I1V1n q
· room . dini n q room .
f amily room . btQ k1 t
c hen (w1th il vew of
r1 vrr J, full base ment. 1
co r qari'lge ilnd nt c£•
bnckyard
1D ril l
for
rP.ti r ecl
l o c ation
co upl e.
A s k1nq

$35, 000 00 .
FARM - 3J acrf&gt;s, w tth
a Spi! CIOUS 2 yr Old
hom e
F e atures lrtrqe
lt v inq room wi t11 bay
window, A lso 'J barns.
Ca ll for appointment

Mid ·

dl eport . Two story , tour
b edroom home . Bi g
li v1 n o
room
wi th
f1replace . large din ino
room , ea t · in kitc herl,
utilit y
rdom , b a th .
R elax
on
p orc h ef
o v~ rl oo kin~ the river .

MAKE US AN OFFER .
Asking S26,500.00 .
FARM· - 33 acres, with a
spacious 2 yr . old
home. F e atures large
living room with bay
window , deluxe kit ·
chen.
formal dinin g

. . t. .ll l '' - ... ~~··

room . larye family
room , 3 big b edrooms,

949-2660

2 full baths and 2 car

Oflic e

992-2259

garage . Also 2 barns.
Call for appointment .

&amp;"'

.~

·m·

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Sl. Rl. 124 Pomeroy, OH .

992-6191
992-5692

,

TOM HOSKINS
Ph . 949·2160 or 949-2322
OO· tl c

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

3·J.tfc

AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR
If you n eed it buill
or fixed w e can do

$21.500'
3 YFARS OLD

velma Nicinskv. Assoc .

PlloM 742-3092

cneryllemley, Assoc .
_u
Phone 742-3171
1011
1-~~_;:;.~~~~~~"-~~~~~=-=;;;,~.J l''-'~~~~~--~-1

(

9

15 f am il ies,
Lynn and
Trav is
Str ee t s ,
N ew
Hav e n
Thur sday
an d
Friday, 20 th a nd 21s1. 9 3

ors
• Dryers • Freezers
4· 5· tt c

Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992· 7121
3·ntlc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Sizes start from 30x24"

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to 6 and afl
wood buildings 24x36. ·
Insulated Dog House&amp;

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843· 2591
. 6·1Hfc

54

OPF NMONOA Y·SU NDAY

New Homes - extensive remodeling

~ · J OJ'M

OA tl"l"

1

Wed - Ortnk &lt;1 nd Or own
A

II

'(OU Cilfl drll'l~ 8

1

I nur ~ · Pool Tourno1 m cn l\
over
r ro &amp; !&gt;.U B.l mh
Ortnk &amp; Drown 10 1
Ou rmq BAnd On ly
~ on - Ptll.l &amp; P tlcfwr Bel'r

a'''

Greg Roush
Ph . 992· 7583
or 992· 2282

4 30

II C

~

INSULATION
Vinyl&amp;
Aluminum Siding

• backhoe
*excavating
* septit systems
*A wafer, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dump .truck
*limestone

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window s
•Replacement
Windows
•New Roofing

Free Estimate ·
James Keesee
Ph . 992·2772

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Buill Garages"
Call for free sldtng
estjmales, 949· 21101 or
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls

Announcements
- - ---- -------

J

SWEE PER

PH. 992·7201
J·29·tfc

COM IN G BANDS
FRI . APR JO ., MAV l
W ILOWAT ER

May IJ· I4· U · I6
CR O SSOVERS

ROOFING
All typas of roof · work,
new or repair euller and
downspouts. . eutter .
ciHnlne and palntine.
All work eu1rantHcl.
Frn Estlmetts
RHsonabla "rices
Call Howard
M9•22d
949-2160

-sewer

· Gas Lines
· Septic Systems
Larve or Small Jobs
PH.~·2471

$-20-1

Clea ner,
halfRdmile
Georg
es one
Cr eek
. Caup
ll

Buy term insurance and in
v est the rest. No obligation
analysis.
Ruml ey
In -

CROSSOVERS

Drink &amp; Drown all n1ghts

Thurs.· F ri.· Sa i .· Sun.
Onnk I Orown all nights
MONTH OF JUNE
Fnday a nd S.turday
MARSHALL TENN E NT

Country Rock

Note : Crouoven, Thun

1

CANDLELIGHT INN

Ca l l 446

ON E year o l d temi'llc. pari
b l ac k &amp; tan. A1rd ale , 304

882 2573

6128
6

Lost and Found

MIS S ING
La r ge SOI1d
b l ack.
m a le
Ghman
Shepard 1n Ga rfield Ave
area . $50 r eward Ca l l 446
4245 or 446 5454.Q
7

YardSa l e

FOUR f amily yard sa le.
Ma y 74 , 9 a .m 5 p m 501
Ftr st St .. Pt
P leasan t
Cto t hmg, a ll s1zes
GARAGE sale . l si Sille
th is ye ar May 20 &amp; 21. 9 JO
4.00 Fa1rv1ew Rd
Pt
Pl eas ant
Old
mantel
m1rror , g l assware. ol d
chairs, co rn er c upboa rd ,
old oak sew1ng mn c hm e.
n1ce
c lo th ing g 1rl s 4 6x,
boy s
17 14 ,
m ens
&amp;
wom ens. toy s, books &amp;
mtsc
YARD
sale,
several
famileis, c lo t h1ng , Avon
bott les, 22 17 &amp; 1715 Jel
fer son Ave . Pt Pleasan t .
Thu rsday . Fr1day . 9 30

3.00 .
YARD Sale , 1 mile out Sa n
dhlll Rd Pt Plf'asclnt , on
le ft . Thur sday &amp; Fr1day . 9

3
Mov1ng c1nd Y nrd sale . 7907
Sp ru ce
Ave
Po1nt
Pleasant,8 00 A M toll
Two famil y yard sa le, one
Mil e fr om Y , top of Dead
man's
c urve.
Rt
1.Pt . Pieasant, Everyth1ng,
Fr1day Silfurday

8

P ublic Sa te
&amp; A uct10n

R 1ck
Pear s on ,
E)(
pene nced A U CTIO N EER
Estates, ant1ques . ! arm .
household L1ce nsed Oh10
WV Buy1nq an 11q ues 304

773 5785.773 9 185
Auc t1on every F r1 n1qh t a t
the Hartford Com mun1ty
Cen ter Tru c kload s of new
mer c handise eve ry w ee k
Cons,gmen t s of new an d
u sed mcr c t1 and 1SC' always
w e l come
R1 c ~1a r d
Reyno ld s Auc t1 onec r 775

3069
AUCTIO N May 22.

~ Fam ily

Yard Sal e 636 3rd
Ave . . Gillli pOII S May 19, 20,
&amp; 21
II til 5
Chi ldr en
c lo t hes, fl owe r pols . bike &amp;

F LEA MARKET , r1 1 K rode I
Park 1n For t M ay 27.28,29.
daily 10 Am 8PM, Boo th e
spa ce avi'l il abl e, food and
en ter tn1nm ent . Ca ll 304

AARP
9

•

W.1nted to Buy

Bu y1ng
Gold .
Silver .
Plnt1num . old co 1ns. scrap
Garag e Snle May 20 &amp; 21 1 rings &amp; s il verware · Dnll y
Also
1/2 m i out Rt . 218 from Rt quotes av,lilable
7
2 a1r
co nd ., dr ill, CO i nS &amp; COlO SuppliCS lor
Spr~ n q
Valley
fr 1epl ace sc r ee n &amp; blower , s ale
Trad1n g.
Spr1 n q Va ll ey
c loth es, &amp; m1sc
Plaza . 446 8015 or 446 8076

•

3 Family on 160. 3 m1. from
HM C. Al l k1nds o f c lofh1ng . We pay cas h for l a te m ode l
gun s. kn1 ves Fn 21 &amp; Sa t . c lea n used c ar s
French toW n Cnr Co
22.
Bill Gene John so n .
4 Family Yard Sale 130
Third Ave, Ga ll ipolis Fn .
&amp; Sa t . 9 to 5 . C tllldr ~ ns ,
adu lt and l a r ger s1ze
c l o th inq, ro ll er
skates.
fu rn .. d1s h es , coll ectab les
Too many to li st .

446 0069
Wanted swarms of bees
Ca ll 245 5055 or 446 1052 or

446 280 1
Good used ca r wil l pay $400
to $500 Mu st be 1n good
ru nnin g cond . Ca ll 446 8278

3 Fam il y Ya rd Sa le Thur s
Fur
&amp; Fr 1 , Cheshire
n i ture, lamps . a ll stzes St andin g f 1mber &amp; Ford
c lo t hes. &amp; more m isc. Ra 1n Bron co w recked or bl own
or sh i ne.
eng1ne. Ca ll 388 9906
3 F ami l y Yard Sa le Friday
&amp; Sa turday , 8·2, Mitchell
Rd Reaso n ab le prices .

St a1n less stee le milk ca n ill
exc . cond . Ca ll 388 8801

Be st Yard Sa le Ever . Fri

Pay cas h for m1n1 motor
home 1n good cond ., 79
model u p pr etered Ca ll

&amp; Sa t. May 21 22

2 112

mil es
o ut
on
Ce nt erpotnt Rd

R to

256·6244 .

Topper for 76 Ford Curr1 er
Ya r d Sa le l /2 mile on truck Cat 446 1026.
Bul av ill e Rd Thurs . Fri , &amp;
Sat ., 9· ? Oak swi ng s, pt cn ic
tabl es &amp;
wooden law n Tobacco p l an ts or who le
bed Ca ll 388 ·8514
c h a ir s .
144
Mu l berry
Ave ., BEDS IRON. BRA SS. old
Pomeroy . Thur s., Fri ., Sa t . furnitur e , go l d. s il ver
doll ars, wood ice boxes.
10 a. m . to 5 p .m .
stone jar s, antiques, e tc.,
Comp l e t e
hou se h o ld s
3 f ami l y yard sa le. Fn Wr1te · MD . Mill er . Rt 4,
1
May 21 &amp; Sa t . 22 . 2 h mile s Pomeroy , Oh . Or 991 7760
up Hy se ll Run Rd Seve ral
household items.
Go l d , s ilv er,
st erlin g,
jewe lry , rin gs, old coins &amp;
De pol 5 1.• Rvtl a nd Watch c urrency . Ed Burkett Bar·
for signs. 742-2326.
ber Shop, Middleport . 992 ·

AND REPAIR
Call e111 Ward
At Wds KIJbolrd
1-446-4372
Chllrtt

IS

Wa11ted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur
n lfure and Ant1ques of all
k1nds . ca ll Kenneth Swa1 n ,
446 3159 and 256 1967 1n the
even1nqs
CAS H PA ID tor c lean. l a te
mode l used ca r s Sm1th
Bu 1c k Pont1ac. Ga ll1poli s.
Oh10 Cal l 446 2787

Sc hoot s tn sf ructton

Kara te the ulttmat e in se lf
def ence a ll pr1va te lessons.
Men. women . &amp; c hi ldren
tns t ruct10n thru black belf
Al So available
Karate
unif or m s puch1ng
and
k1 Ck1n g bags , a nd pro tec
t1v e eq u1pm ent
Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
Assoc 1at es
Kara t e
S tu d 10.
143
Bu r lin g ton Rd , Jackson,

Oh Ca ll 286 3074
17

11

Help Wanted

FULL

OR

PART

Mt sce ll aneous

Hav1nq {l party , p1 c n1 c or
homecommq, why not hnvc
n maq1 C1t1n f o r en
tc rf a1nmrnP For i!ppt cnll

992 7352
TIME

coup les an d ind 1v 1duals l or
bus1nes s or
your own
Local Amway 01Sir1bu tor
tr ains you tor splended op
portunity N o ex per1 ence
necessa ry For 1n terv1ew
send name and phone num
ber to P 0 Box 3&lt;1 1 R10
G rand e. Oh 45674
People who l1k e
make qood $$$
Avon Ca ll 446 3358
H1 qh School Grnduates &amp;
Sen 1ors yo u can ea rn ove r
$550 00 pe r m on th w hil e
1earn1nq a val uabl e sk il l
ltk e co m pu ter repa1rer .
sheet metal work er . or
re fr 1qcrn t 1on Plu s you will
have a SC'cu r e p art l1m e 10b
w1th th e Amry Nat 1ona1
Guard
afte r
school1nq
Benef1ts 1nctude a $1.500 00
enl1s tm en t
bonu s.
$]5,000 00 l1fe 1nsurancf'
and fr ee tuii 10n to clllY
co ll eqe or trad e sc hool 1n
West V1rq1n1a In ter es ted
perso n s may ca ll (30A) 675
3950 or 1n Wes t V1rg1n1a ca l!

lol l FREE I 800 642 36 19
H 1qh School Gradua tes &amp;
Sc n1o rs you can enrn over
$550 00 per m onth whil e
1earn1ng a valua bl e skdl
!1ke compu ter r e pa~rer .
sheet m et a l worker . or
refr1qern t1 on Plu s you wilt
have i'l secure part tm1 e tOb
w1th the Amry Na t 1onn1
Guard
alt er ':&gt;C ilOOI1nq
Benefits 1ncludc a $1 ,500 00
e-nl1stmrnt
bonuo:, ,
\35,000 00 l1 f c 1nsuroncr
and fr ee tu1t1 0n to nny
co ll cQC' or frild e sc hoo l 1n
Wes t V1rq 101il lnlere strct
pPr sons may cn ll (30 4) 675
3950 or 1n Wes t V1rQ11l1~1 c.1 11

loll FREE I 800 642 36 19
Ma1nten ce pprson tor r~pM
tmcnt complf'x Cnll 67 5
5104 or 675 5386

18

Wa nt ed t o Do

The Silk House rcus tom
Silk
flowers)
Complete
br1dnl l1ne . wedd1nq s, nnd
nil occas 1ons Ca ll367 7566
Lnwn MOWillQ SP riVl' , no
ya r d to l)IQ or &lt;:&gt;mn ll housP
pnon t 1ng &amp; roolinq . nnd
l1qlll hau11nq Call 446 3159
ofl er 6PM 1 286 57 40
CMpcn ter w ork
Rf'pn1r s
and room rernodllnQ . wall
pnnel1nq illld c ed1nq t11 ,.

992 1759

-

Ou !S1df' ll OUSP pa1n1 1nq and
plumb1nq
Hn vf' ref s &amp;
PXP FREE f'S I c nl l Boo or
John . 446 8695
frn sh collf'C I1 0n &amp; nnul.nq
Calt 446 J480
PIOWinQ . Cli SC irlq &amp; tJu&lt;:&gt; rt
rl OCILI InCJ Cn l l 446 24JO
Plow 1nQ. ri1SC1nq, &amp; bush
11oqcpnq Cr1 ll AJ6 / JJO

WI LL c iC'an basements .
QM c1QC'S. Odd lObS 8. liqht
hiiUionQ . ]04 675 3734
Spr 1nq
CIP.ln 10 Q
illld
llOU':&gt;e keep1no . rra son ilble
rn t f' s Phone 304 675 !107

Financcial
11

Bu s1ness
Opportun 1t y

Buc.•nf'&lt;;S or c; l orf' room 1n
P,lrk Cf'n lr dl HOlf'l
L,1wn M OWN &amp; Cnrdpn
fr t1r tor ~ (llf' &lt;, IOC rliPcl nt
JunCitOn O! Rf':, I!'\. ]5 ill
K.11lo1U{ I il
rtOIIl Q QO Od
I)U&lt;;IIl P'&gt;!:. Ownp r Wilnt &lt;; ro
rf'l tn ' C.1ll 446 )670

3476.

Some one to ltve 1n w11t1
Qenllemnn 69 yr s old Rf'l
reQ Cnll 446 2JA5
Lcldy l o c lrrk 1n retail
&lt;:.lo r e
M1n 1mum WMi e
mu&lt;:.t he~ve qood reteren ce&lt;:.
Wr1te to bo x 208. Gnll1pOI 1S,

Oh
Necdf'd c., ,tr er 1 I I? dily&lt;; &lt;1
week Ch ildr en II &amp; 13 Cal l

446 3852
EXPANDING . MUST BE
ABLE TO START IM
M EDIATELY Becnuse of
ou r
un1QU€'
expa n s1on
prOQram W(' clre hirlrl(f Ill
the Ga ll 1p011S P omf'r Oy
&lt;1 r ea
I Sta rl1nQ salo r y of Sl .OOO
mon th . ba se d on per
lormancC' f or t hose wh o
QUi! l 1f y
'}
Wf'
otter
P&lt;'HCI
ho s p~tai1Ial10n ,1 nd pr olil
shon n q
3 No layo ff s. no str1ke s
J
Ma n a qemen t post f 1on&lt;:.,
avn1lab lf'
5 H iqh Sc h oo l educn t1 on
and ca r rf'Qu1red
For co nf1denta l 1n l erv1r. w
Celli between 6 1.:1446 7096, 1
4 weekdays and 10 11 Sn t
Need women to work 1n
motel as n ma1d C1rclr' s
Mote l. 446 4501
Start a t the top Sell Avon
We ' r e th e world 's lMqcs t
d1rect !&gt;t:' ll 1nq compa ny
Ca ll now 7 &lt;~ 2 2755 or collec t

614 698 7111
NeC'd a 1ob? L1ke to be you r
own boss? Excellent op
portun1t y lull or par t l1m e
Otde Wo r lde In c w ll! t ra1n
and hel p s tart y our ow n
bus 1ness . For 1nfNV1 ew
se nd your resum e to 702 112
E . Main St Pomer oy , Oh 10
Wanted person to !1V C' w1 th
l ady
Ltqhf
e l derly
hou se hold dut1es Ref eren
ce needed Res1dence R T 1.
Longbottom , Oh
Pl ease
ca ll or w r 1te R K Br own .
157
W h ale y
P l a ce .
Ch1llicot he. O h io 4560 1
Coc ktail wai t ress wan ted ,
1mmed ia t e
po Sif iO il S
avai lab le, f u l l and part
t1m e Apply 1n per son or
c all for appotn t men t The
En t e rt a1 n er.
P o1 nt

11

Money l o Lo,\n

REFI N ANCE or pur c hr1&lt;&gt;P
yo ur !lomf' 30 YC' M rno: ed
rill! ' w vn &amp; 0 1110 Lei'lc1f'r
M o r1 q ~1qr
77 E Sl ,ll f' Sr .
A thl' n s Oh 597 3051
H,lv f"' l r1n cP W ~1nt to !Judd?
Nn H1tnCt rtown , low tll l f'rP"&gt;I
no Orl ymrnt tor fo rnon tt1&lt;,
614 597 3053

ProfeSS !OOol l
Sc rv1c es

13

C&amp;L BookkcPp1nq
Bookkccp,nq &amp; tn)( srrv1ce
tor r1ll lypC'S Ol bu 5ollf'S'&gt;f' 5
J46 3867
Cnrot Nr cl l
P•nno IUrl iiHI clnn reprl1r
Lr1 1lf' OrlniPI S A &lt;;')O( Icll e ol
Brun 1c nrn r· s
G i'11l i iJOI IS
ol0d (Uil 0 111()1Vllll'&lt;; Alhf'll &lt;.,
J47 ?9C. 1 or 99? ?08?

Reat
3I

Eslat~

Home s for Sa l e

BCrlU I II UI br1 c k &amp; lr am e. 3
bf'droom homP w 1scen1c
'o/1f'W ,
wood burn1ng
r1rrp la cc . tormal d1n1nQ ,
Cf'ntrnl .:11 r w / heat pump
L ansc t'lped .
1 acre lot
w / frn cf&gt;d 1n back ynrd .
)45 ,900
11°o ilnan c1nQ.
small down payment Cnll

446 3766
For satr J bd r house 1n
MC'r c Prvl!le ,
llPWI y
rcmOdf'IC'd On ncrC' to t
M1d
t wenlir s
By
ap
po1ntmcn t only (nil 756
146&lt;!
Coun t ry
L1v1nq .
3
bed r ooms . ce n tr nl n1r, lull
bnscmf'n l . qe~ r nor, pond.'}
bMn s. cl ll f h1s on 10 acre s of
benu ,liul
r o 111n ct l nnd
Pr 1cr r edu ced tor qu1ck
~ nle
By owner . S6S.OOO

(R II245 9 105
Nf&gt;w IOQ home on r 1ver
lr ont 1n M1ddlf'port 446

1351
Ho use and
oar nqe. 17
c1Uf'S 1,010 II a t r 1vpr Iron
taoc 1 m1 &lt;"hOvf' App le
G r ove . Oh1 0 $J7 . ~00 Will
cons1der tr ilc!f' tor t1ouse
ilncl lot ot f'Qual vnluP 614

247 2245

Pl easa nt. WV 304 675 6700
12

Situat1ons Wanted

Man wan ts femal e to l1 ve 1n
and
help cook ll)eal s
E lwood M1nni s, 388 ·9035

3 bd r oom le~rq e QrlrilQC , 2
acres. 2 bc1 room Rrntal.
l ilke c e~r mob ile t1om e 1n
tr cldC'
J Oiln Shcf' tS, 317
mil es Sou th M1dd !epor t · R

7

Saturday May 22 on Co. Rd .

34 behind Memory Gardens
College
.scholarships · Ccmctary . 1st road to the
available .
Free
in ·
r ight, 2nd trail er on right .
formation . Ruml ey
In · 9·? .
surance Agency 44.\-3320.

22 caliber Buffalo Seoul

OLD FURNITUR E, b ed s,
iron, brass , or wood . Kit ·
chen c ubbards of all type s.
Tabl es, round or squ ar e.
Wood ice boxes . Old d esks

Wanted so m eone to stay
w i th eldl erl y l ady . 8PM to

BAM . Ca ll4ol6 4537 .

2 se par a te yard sales, five and book cases. Will buy

House paintmg , r oof i ng,
c oncrete work . 992 2836.

N ew Haven . Thursday and silver, old money, pocket'
watches, c h ai ns, ring s, and
etc . Indian Artifacts of all
types . Also buying baseball

A n y odd iob. Ha ve plum :
bing , elec tri c. ca rpentr y
expe n ence . 304 675-5918 .

famili es . Midway Drive at comp lete household . Gold ,

revolver, pearl handles, 4

n

ca rds . Osby
6370.

Marlin 9n
.

1rain or shine . .

.PIANO TUNING

Daily Sentinei-Page-11

10 00

a m . Househ o l d il cms .
too l s. t=tn t,qu es
Russell
Terrys ' Es ta te Furn1ture
and othe r d rms Jun 1or
Youn gs' ac r oss ! rom Mt
011ve sc hool. Ash ton . wv
proceed s Russell Terry ·
esta te qo to Billl s Chi'lpf'l
Chu r c h

Garage Sa le May 19 &amp; 20,
B· JO 5 00. Vil lag e of Ce n
tervill f' off Route 35 Boy s 67 5 1814 , 675 102 1 or 675
1876 aft er 5 PM Sponsor ed
&amp; gi rl s c lothtn g .
by M ason Co unt y Chapter

3/ 4 rifle barrel, 6 shol,
Friday ,
9 -4.
Used
shorts or longs, $59 .95 . , clarinet,old desk, lawn·
PH . 992-991J
51. Rl. 7
Spring Valley Tradlhg Co .• 1mower w ith grass catcher,
•n•tuc
~~~~~~~~~-4] Spring Valley Plaza, 446- all sizes c lothing, Avon bot·
8025 .
Illes, odds and ends. Held
'lt. I Ches hire. Ohio

1

556

7947

surance Agency 44.\·3320 .

M.ly 17· 21-19· JO
CROSS OVER S

4·20-lfc

·Dozers
. ·Backhoes
· Dump Trucks
- Lo-lloy
·Trencher
·Water

ma c hine r epair , parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
d e liver y , D av is Vac uum

44&lt;\-3320.

Dr mk &amp; Drown a ll n1ghh
Tllurs ·Fri. ·Sun.
M;~y 20· 21 · 2NJ

16 YEARS EXP .
•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio
247· 3534
Free E~timates

PULLINS
·EXCAVATING

sewing

l"ndi v idu a l
a nd
g r oup
health
and
p en s i ons.
Ruml ey Insur ance Agency

Co untr y Rock
Thu rs · Fri ·S41 1 Sun.

Sun . banlt starts 1: JO , enlts
II : JO . Other nights, 10 to2 .
Carryout Bur Av• ilablt. Drink
I Drown durinO Band Night.

H. L WRITESEL

and

446-0294 ..

O'Brien Electric'
Service

3-.11-!fc

614-992-2112

AHRDQREements

Licensed &amp; Bonded

4/291 1 m o .t

POMEROY
LANQMARK

-·

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

r-==========~~~==========~-----------1
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

- -Misc.
- - -Merchandice
-------

JUST RECEIVED
A complet e lin e of
shrubbery, tr ee~ and
rose buses. See us for
th e lowes t prices m
town .
1 u sed Whirlpool
Coppertone
Refrigera tor
S200

l lOAM

~ PE C I AL !'&gt;

H;~ppy Hr 4 11 Oi11ly
Mon - l&lt;rq Nt gh1 8 1
rue\ - L.ldo('~ Ntqhl8

• Electric work
•Cu stom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofing work
14 Years Experience

6 y ell ow k1ttens

$ 10 .000

PH . 992-9913

6

5 bea u t1f ul pupp 1es r eady
tor adoption . Mother old
enqi1 Sh shee p doq Father
unkn own , ca ll 985 445 4.

Housing
Headquarters

CA NDL E LIGHT INN
Rt . L Chesh.re, Oh .
Ohio S t. Rt . 7

4·29 · 1 mo.

All STEEL
BUILDINGS

2 part german shepard
p ups H ad sho ts spaded

TWO pups , 1 qood for hun
l1n g the ot her pe t 304 675

Ph . 367· 7560
I · 7· 1 ti c

PARTS and SERVICE

Lo ts of n1ce c lea n c loth 1ng
for boys,
g1r l s, m en ,
woman s,
g 1rl s
1ea n s,
ce ram1 cs. H ome lit e c ha1n
saw, croqu e t se t , co lor
bur st ca m er a, old Avon
doll s, tot s m or e. Turn r1 ght
top of Hartford H i ll . fir st
house on left T hursday and
Fr td ay. 9 tit ?

0645 .

POMF. ROY
I wn for
onp I r r1 me llO!TI P&lt;;
7
Qilr&lt;'HWC. ,
7 b,ll ll &lt;; . ,111
u tilti•C&lt;.. an d lrvt•l lr. t.-..
Ask1nQ i7R ,500 Wrl nt nn
n lle·r
MIDDL F. PORl
bf'rlroom modrr n t1nmf&gt;,
? ba t hs, rr ntr ,l l llf'cl l.
f.=tmd y room
flrlr.lQf',
,1nrt l.1nw lot Nt•eds rl
l11tl e r ep.11r bul .1 qonrl
buy
MIODLFPORT
Modf'rn kli rhrn . 3 or .t
bNtr ooms ? bil!h c... q,l&lt;;
ce ntral herll. smnll
bC~ sernPnT , f ron t porrh
.1 nd leve l lo t /\sk1nq
only $19 .500
IOACRF:S
or rlnypar r
o f i t W tlt c r .1nd r lf'C fri C
Wf'S I
Of
i'IVill lclble,
R utl anrl LM fiC' Tr C'f&gt;S ,
qood s 11rs f or A f r.:~m r c;,

water· Sewer· Electric
Gas Line· Ditches
water Line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .

• washers
• Dish washers
• Ranges • Retrigerat·

3 ton g hatred k ilt ens 6 wks .
old , B l ack &amp; wh1te Ca l l 446

$32 . 500

dttlf

All Makes

5 ca ts and II k1tt ens Ca ll
446 0808 , on Ke lton Rd

Look s

992

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

D

cnr

Th1&lt;; onf' rc.1Hy look s
n1 c e
H,1 &lt;. 7 r ooms
mod Nn b~1rll , porche s.
Crlrpo r t. 3 cor g,1rr1qc,
,lncl l clr Qf' lrvr l lot lor rl
fi Md en or other tJ &lt;;e
Ju sr $28 .000
SPF.C tAl F INAN C IN G
Srnnll rtnwn p,wmcnt
will bu y lh1S 10 room
11omf' 1n R.1c1nc Gns
lu rnnff',
woodburn1n&lt;1
lirf'Pir1CC , m odern IJ,11tl ,
I MQf' lo t With llUIJby
sh op of ?4' x41 " On l y

4 '19 1 mo.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Sma ll bre ed male dog.
h ouse
bro k en,
ge ntle
nnture. Ca ll 446 J067

R FOECO RA TE D

742· 2328
RUTLAND

SAVE Sl.OO WITH
THIS AD

Call 379

2674

l1kP new 1ns1de nnd ou t
H i'ls J bC'd r oo m c;, tub
b&lt;1th . c te
bi!Sl'I)Oarct
llertr .
h 1qhcst
b1ll
$ 17700 Can you he rll
Thrll? L MQe lf'vel IOI
Wrlnl $39.500

it .

ti c

7

Ca ts or l(l ff en s

qnrclQf',
.nroe Sllrlrle
trr es , I lowe r s. ilnct onr
ilcrf'
Cnn you brat

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

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

nrlt
qn lflq,
s F Afoyer
f ur .
Crlrpel
.1nd formal d 1n 1nq
N EW li ~T IN G
8
room older t1ome 1n
1
ClOOd CO ildlfiOrl hil S 1 '
b&lt;1th s. d1r \ ~ nc1· Clrl 'i

I ':,~\. .

Giveawav:

1 Br1 ti any Spr1nger Span ie l
6 mo ol d Call 388 9895

fn(lc£'
hen .

F A

4

ANY PER SO N who has
any th1n g to g1ve away and
doe s no t off er or a ttempt to
ofl rr any o ther th ing for
sa le may place an ad in th 1s
col um n There wil l be no
c harqe to the adve rt iser

NF W
l ! STING
Sw1mm t0 Q pooL nf'w 1
eM oaraqe , 7 shi'ldy l oTs,
lclrQf' 7 r oom hOU&lt;&gt;f' w ll h
111 b&lt;H hs. mOc1f'rn kll

cnsh in

JAMES J . PROFFITT
SHER IFF
ME IGS CO UN TY
15. 20 . 27,1613, 3tc

RIVER FRONT -

M e 1~ S

._

742-2003 .

~21.900 .

• rder of
te Com
Oh io, 1n

Call

G eorg e
Hob st e tter ,
Adm . of Virgie Hobstetter. Dec., with Will
Annexed.

N E W LISTING - CHES HI R f. -· n 11 7 story fra m e
home w rih ~eve n r ooms, thr r C&gt; bcctrooms, storage
buil ct1nq, good qardon o,.ytlli hNr1r -.. i'l nd gr apes

. I CE

,

526,000.

N EW LI STIN G- FIVE POINT S
Ap proxima tel y
eiqh t years old and 1s cl bcau t1lul Sl)l1 f entry type
home w1th rhr ec brdrooms . f r1mily room, 2112 baths,
t w o cu r q,:,ragt·, dec k , ,1nr1 m,ln·( mor1 · I C'a lur es On e
ac r e o f yard Blended rat e c~vn d i!IJ i f' 11 $49,900

Cler k

f •

Nice 6 room , bath ,
bunga low with 1 11 acres
of ground, two story
barn , in good condition ,
locat ed on Ro se Hell ,
ju st off St. Rt . 33 nea r
Pomeroy . Priced at

.

M t' l&lt;l'&gt;
CourL

I'

Generel

HOME
FOR SALE

Real Es lte -

On M&lt;ly /th, 1982 , 1n 1!1f'

c.

Real Estate -

r ecorded in Vo l 263, Pag e
611 of the M e ig s Cou nt y
Deed Rec ord s
EXCEP TIN G
A ND
RE SE R V IN G unt o Mill ie
M Martin, E sta Ours and
P earl v . B a rring er , their
heirs and assrgns for eve r .
an undi vided three -fourths
inter es : in and to a ll
mineral s tnc ludin g coa L
oi L ga s and all . o ther
minerals of eve ry k1nd and
descnptio,, und erlying th e
soil wtth the right to enter
on sa id premtses, prospec t ,
ex p lore and dri l l for an
mtn e ,
excava t e
and
re m ove the same with all

'""t..)S,
MUM BU.
c:p·, •.nouf ~ Send

free i 'atlc111 ~..&lt;O u pon

ins-ertion ..

Public N otice

' . 1Jtr'' ~ ~

.

RANDY'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

. S3 .&lt;XJ

inse rtion .

Up to 15 woras . Thr ee day
Up to 15 Word s .. Sj}( da y

m ac h 1ner y, ap.p 11an ces, h)(
tur es and things necess ary
or co nve n ien t ther ef or and
th e r1qht to u se so mu c h of
th e s urf ace as may b e
necessa r y for the drill i n g
and minin9 as a for es a1d .
Apprat se d
pr1 ce
$1.800 00 Can not be so ld f or
less th an 2/Jrd s of th e a p

15 c _ -----~16.

I. j / d

ins.en ton

the County Road to th e cen
ter of sa1 d road. the n ce 1n a
So uthea s t er l y
d1r ec ti o n
alon g sa id r oad 8 rod s to
the Northeast cor ner of a
On e Ac r e tra ct · owned by
Anna Powell ; th ence Eas t
abo ut 40 r ods to th e east
l ine of Sec tion 24, th ence
North 8 rod s a long sa 1d Sec
!ton ltne to th e pla ce of
beg inn1ng , co nta 1ning two
and one ten th acres, more
or Jess .
EXCE PT 1.0 acres con
veyed to Kat hr yn Evan s by

4~

3:

One day

Phone
H 614 )·992 ·3325

• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e20 Yrs . ex peri ence

Custom kitchens and ap·
pliances ,
custom
bathrooms , remodeling ,
plumbing , electric, and
heating .

no

VIRGIL B. SR .' ':-:~~
216 E . 2nd St.

eSiding

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

9·30· tl c

985 3961
N o h sl1 1ng on my property
M ax1 ne Diddl e Se ll er s

And Home Maintenan ce
• Roofing of all types

Phone 949·2293
or 949· 2417
3 ·3·tln

Pomeroy, Ohio

Ga l f Lessons &amp; C I ub repair .
John T ea ford . Ches ter, Oh .

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

'
Licensed &amp; Bonded

N tgh t c r aw ler s $1 00 per
do z Spr 1ng Va ll ey Trading
Co, Spring Va ll ey Plaza,

Play B1ngo for Char tt y .
Wc1t c h l or open 1ng da te,
G rang e
H a ll ,
R od n ey
Ga ll ia
Co
Vo l unteer
Eme r ge ncy

Real Eatate - General

Dozer &amp; backhoe ser·
vice, water, sewer, pon·
ds ,
foundations .
r ec lamation .

992 -6215 or 992-7314

11'15-- Letart
937- Bullalo

949-Racine
742- Rutland
667- Coolville

the da te set f or hea r i ng .
Robert S. Buc k

Send to:

I

343-Portland
247- Le larl Falls

Public Notic e

~ina I

Account of Howard M .
Lawr ence and Clarence
Lawr ence, Co ·Administrat ·
ors of the Es t at e of Char l es
Byron
La wren ce,
Decease d
CASE NO . 22779 Final
Accoun t of Howard M
1_.-.w r en cr
.=.nd Cha rl es
1 , ·trPn ce. ( 0 '\f1rr, nis t rat
CJ r
'he (:="·,· t1 01 James
1-1 Law r encf' ue1....eased

I

6 -----7. - - - - · - 8.
9.

NO

teenth Account of Hun·
tin g ton N a t ion al
Bank
Tru s t ee o f
th e
Trust
c r ea ted under th e L ast Will
and Testamen t of Velma
w F e tger, Deceased .

) Wanted
) For Sale
) Announce m ent
) Fo r Rer.t

t
I
I
I

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET TLEMENT
OF
AC ·
COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

CASE

4

Up to 15wo rd s

Pomeroy
985--C hester

4 2 1 1 mo

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

V. C. YOUNG Ill

67s- Pt. Pleasant
458---Leon
S76--Apple Grove
173-Mason
882-New Haven

992- Middleport

Public Notic e

Public Nottc e

CASE

. !. ·fO Jnt

Meigs County
Area Code 614

446--Gatlipolis
367- Cheshire
388-Vinton
24~- R io Grande
256-Guyan Disl.
643- Arabia Dist.
379- Walnut

81 Hom e Improveme nts
82 · Plumbin g &amp; Hea tin g
83 Excava tin g
84 E lecr ica t &amp; Re fr1 qer a t1 0n
85 Ge neral H au l ing
86 M . H . Repair
87 Upholstery

Account of Dat sy M . Saun ·
d er s, Exec utri x of the
Estate of Theodore R .
Sa under s, Deceased

Phone--------- 1

tl"&gt;h'

Gallia County
Area Code-614

"T he machine of tomorrow-tooay!
Soaring Ahead Nature' s Way
Curtails your house dust probl ems.
u .P .S. Service
Gallipolis 614 -446·1096
PiHkersburg , w.v. J04 · 41S· ~4l4
Murdoch Av . &amp; Lakeview Or .

3 12 2 mo pd

electriulworl

Mason Co. , 'WV
Area Code 304

Valley

L 1Hie kool r es t, ice c hes t by
I gloo. traveling refre sh·
men t cen ter $24 00 Spr tn g
Va ll ey Trt=t dmg Co ., Sp rmg
Va l ley Pl aza, 446 8025

RAINBOW-The Amazing Water Machine

Complete gutter work,
complete remodeling,
roofing ol all lypes.
Worked in home area
20 years.
Free eslim~les
Call 843-3322.

lfreo Eslimaln)

serviEes

A cc ounts and vouchers of
th e
foll ow tng
nam e d
ftduc iaries have been fil ed
in the Probate Court, M eigs
Cou nty , Ohto , for approval
and se ttl ement :

I'1

! h t •''

- PiumbinJ and

(Free Estimates)

I•
Address--------- ~ i

1Ktutl

-concftte won

( Average 4 words per line)

I
I
Name ___________ ,,
I

Pr1nt one word 1n eac h
space below . Each in ·
t,t ,al or group of figures
co unts ns a word . Coun·
nnme and address o ..
phone number If uset.
You ' ll get be tter re su ll ·
il vou describe fu ll 1
41ve pnc e. The Se nt 111
reserves the r tgh t
clt=tss d v, ed it or r ete
1 any ad . Your ad wi ll b put
1n
the
p rop c
c1a ss d1 ca f40n if you · .
c hec k the proper bo.
below

'Adlklns 1nd remOOelinl
- Roofintand rutter work

following telephone exchanges. ..

74 Motor cyc les
75· Boat s &amp; Motor s
76 Auto Part s &amp; Accessor ies
77 ·Au to Re pair
18· Camp1ng Equipm ent

6 1 Farm Eq uipm ent
62 ·Wanted to buy
63 L1vestock
64 Ha y &amp; G r ain
65 Seed &amp; F er lil tzer

Lightly Does It!

~----------------------;

71 Autos for Sa le
7'1 T ru ck s for Sa l e
73 Va n s &amp;4WD

Farm Sgpplll:s
&amp; tlvestae!c

-Rentals

\\ H&lt;' IP Wnntecl
I ? S1t unl'lon Wnn l f'cl
11 ln&lt;;urnnce
14 13U'i11ll'"&gt;S TrrlllllllQ
I S '"&gt;clloOh lnstruc i 10n
16 Rdd iO, IV &amp; CB Rf'prllr
I I Ml '&gt;( f'lliltlC'OUS
IH Wc1nh•tl To do

:I
:

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Transportation

Sp ring

446 8025.

REST

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

I·Hfc

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

1 (M d o l Thank s (pa•d 1n ndv clnccl
? (.JrCI o f I hank ~ ( pcltd Hl adv,lncc )
1 J\nnouncf' mcnf s

WE SELL THE BEST AND SERVICE THE

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service

- - - - -- -

550 .00

DIST

------------~~~~~~~====4------------U

VILLAGE PHARMACY

Rav en 25 auto pi stol $-47.49 .
Case sharks tooth knife ,

MR. V

CAN HELP YOU
.BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling,

Radl1tor Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

ASST. STYLES &amp;COLORS

STOP BY
TODAY!

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From lhe Smallest
Heater Core lo the
Lorgesl Radiator.

FOLDAWAY
SUNGLASSES

y~ ~2!! ~

Announcements

Pl aza. 446 8025

PH. 992-3543 or 992-2386

NOW IN STOCK!

The

Tf'ading Co. , Spring Va ll ey

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN

WE CARRY AFULL LINE OF
PRESCRIPTIONS AND
HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY
AIDS.

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport,

l.oz . . 999 • silver Father's
Day bar. SIO.OO . Spring ; Th'r ee family sale. Sandy
Valley Trading Co., Spring · i·Helghls , Pl . Pleasant,
Valley Plaza , 44&lt;\-8025.
Thursday, Friday, 11 :30 Iii
5 :00. Follow s igns, 304-675Perfect Father's Day gffl, · 1504.
While' s metal deleclor, 15
'HI off . Spring Valley
' Trading Co.. Spring Valley Yard sale Thursday and
Friday, K and K Lot IS .
' Plaza, «6·8025.

'

One owners used 1981 or

1982
low
mi le age ,
customized van . 304·6755914alle r5p:m .
Cash for comics·ballcards,
opposite
Gino's,
Chesapeake, Ohio. 11·6 :30
PM . except . Sunday and
Wednesday .

11,_;~~j ~-..-~! ~

:= '

SANDY AND BEA VER In ·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire ,insurance
c overage in Gallia County
for
almost a ce ntury .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to m eet in ·
dividual needs . Contact
Harry Pitchford, agent .

Phone 4ol6· 1427 .

IT 's GETT IN G LATE bul
you can still nave a nome of
your own '' yo u ear n bet
ween $9 ,000 and $15,000 . a
year . 2126 hou ses w ttl be
bu ilt m the stat e of Ohi o un
d er
f ar m
h ome rvral
hous1ng
program
the
remainder of 1982. These
hom es will be f tnanced
wit h no d ow n pa yme nt and
pay m ent s will be low as
S125 . per m onth See our
model near th e Pt e Pac
Mark e t on R T . 50, W . •
A then s or ca ll 992 7034 lor
info . K tn gsbu ry Homes,
1100 E . Ma 1n St . Pomeroy,

Oh .

5 room house, b ath w ith
shower
in Middl eport .
Coul d park 14x 70 trader .
Pr iced right 992 ·7244 .

�-----~--

3 bedroom
house
1n
Pomeroy. Vinyl siding &amp;
firep lace
Ni ce loca t ion .

They'll Do It Every Time
.------.

LAYNE'S FUR NITUR E
Sol a, c harr , r ocke r , at·
taman , 3 t ab les, (ex tra
heavy by Fro nti er ), $685.
Sofa. c hai r and lovese at,
$275 . Sof a s an d cha irs
pri ced fr om $285. to $795.
T ab ies. $38 a nd up t o $109.
Hid e a -beds,$3 40., qu ee n
si ze, $380. Rec liners, $175.
to $295 ., La m ps f ro m $18. to
$65. 5 pc. di nettes f r om $79 .,
to $385 . 7 pc, $189 . and up
Wood tab l e witt! 4 chairs,
$2 19 up to $495 . Desk $110 .
H ut ches, $300 . and $375.,
m ap l e or prn e f in ish .
Bedroom sui tes
Bassett
Cherry. $795
Bunk bed
co mp lete wrlh ma tt resses.
$250 and up to $395 . Ca p
ta1n's bed s, $275 . co mplete.
B.=~by beds, $99 . Ma tt resses
or box springs, ful l or twi n,
$56 , f irm, $68 and $78 .
Queen se t s. $ 195 4 dr .
che st s. $42 5 dr ches ts,
$5 .: Bed fram es, $20 .and
$2 5., 10 gun Gun c ab i ne ts,
$350., dinette chairs $20 .
and $25 Gas or elec tr ic

House, Meadowbrook Ad
d il1on , 3 bed r oom, family
room w1th ftrep l ace , ce n
tral a1r, basement. Phone
304 675 1542

r H R E E bedroom t1ouse. , 1
hasemen t, 11 1 acres of
Qround . 304 675 3279

Proper ty

t or sa le
407
Str ee t ,
Point
Pleasan t . Pt1one 304 576
Lew1 5

7266
Si'tndhdl Rand. 3 bedroom s,
11 1 baths, doub l e garage,
~ - l ec lri C

8

occ upan c y,
30&lt;'~ 675 5817

PERCENT

1
'

all

a sumab le

one year old tr 1 leve L
Menclowlanrj
Es t a t es.
&gt;67.500 Call 304 675 1529 af
to~w.

IN 5 p m~

a n qes
.
t'l~::::::::::::~~~~~~~::~~::::::::::::~ rmatr
csscs.
- -- =R l!lffifiE=O___
~-

Mob il e Ho m es

]2

for Sa le

CL EA N U SED M OBI LE
HOME S
KESSEL ' S
QUAL ITY
MOBILE
HOM E SALES . 4 M l
WE SI . GAL L IPOLIS . RT
JS PHONE 446 3868
C 1l t Sk 1clmorr f o r mob1 lf'
110mr&lt;, moved G r ePn lawn
Trrln c; por t
Cnl l 4462783
o ,w •;, 446 347 9 f'VP n 1nqs
L ICC' nscrl &amp; rnsured

PrrcC' rf"duccd For sa le or
rt•n t
1/:x60 7 bedroom
rn obilf' home w illl 7 lots
rural water
G r1 s twa !
C lo~r to r rty lrmds
Cr1l l
·1 -16 17? 4
F-or o:;r~ l e Ofhcf' trail er
I 2:x4S . luf'l oil heat. a/ c. one
1\J II b&lt;l l h. $2 ,000 Call 446
·1119 . / OOJ 30
1Y81 Garon l4x60 hou se
tr&lt;lil er w; lot. drilled w ell
sP p l rc &amp; '&gt;I'WI'r Cr ab Cree k
RcL Gnl l rpol rs Ferry, WV n
,J .16 7740
1) • 60
tro ll er, exce l len t
co ndrtron Cal l 446 1552
Furnr shecl, rl rr cond llronc d.
undNp rnn1nq , se t up on lot
111 Mrctdtrport

turn r'&gt; hCd
bd r oom
n 10b 1le homes
Brown s
rrndcr PM k . MinerSV Il le,
Olr 997 3324

.1

bur l!, turn . 7 BR
mobrle home on rf'nled
r rver t r ~nt l ot 1 n Mason All
f' lr' C . ce n t A C. W D. c ptd
porches. many ex t ra s
Storaqe- bldq with work
twn ch A I cond Mu st sPe
lu rlPD:'C' Cril tf' 304 773 5680
Cu~ t om

IY70 Gr eqory trarler . 12x65
7 bedroom. arr· co nd . unrt ,
rnrch &amp; ownrr1g, qood
c ond , wa sher &amp; dryer
spacf' . $5 ,000 Lo t .11so for
rPn l 992 6093
J076

14x7 0

ParKwood

mobile hOmC', 11 ' bath 1n
c ludC'S under prnning, par

rn. ond atumrnum bu ld 1ng
5 10.500 992 2821
Do ubl e w i de
l or
sa le
74x64 Exce l len t cond 2
b.1 Hr's
To moved f rom
Sy r ,l CUSe 992 2638
1959
Ironwood
hou se
tr n rlcr . 8x35 , $1,200 747
1306 alt er 5 or sec at New
Lr ma Rd : Rutland. Oh .

HOME

U oED MOB I LE
576 271 1

MOBILE HOME S MOVED
L rce nsed &amp; rnsured Call
304 57 6 2711
1976,
14x70
B ENDIX
rn ub rl e home . 3 bed rooms,
rxcellent co nd it ron, 304 675
2820

1~!3. l4 x7 0. 3 bedroom .
m obil e hom e Wri t sell fur
nrshed t fo r $7,300, or un
furnis hed $6,800
304 882
2870
1977 Sl1u it 7 11x65. gas hea t,
3 bed rooms, partia ll y f ur

nrshed 304 675 2907

TRAILER . 12x52, PMC. 2
bed r ooms . On ren ted lot.
30' 675 5658
73
TRA I LER.
wnsher. dryer , new car
petrng. Wi ll se l! par t ia ll y
t urn rshed or un f urnished,
56300 304 773 5503

Apartm ent
for R ent

44

- ----

H ouses f o r Re nt

IRI STATE
MOB I LE
H OMES
U SED MOBIL E
HOM ES. CA R S, TRUCKS
GALL IPOLI S
CHECK
OUR PR ICES CALL 446
1577

KIT 'N '

51

Priced to se ll 992 -7446

1mmrd .

3 bdr house. ap ts. co m
m er c ral
hrghwa sy Iron
! age Call 304 .675 5104 or
675 5386 .
Hom es for Rent. Lease or
Land co ntr ac t rn town or
Cr1l l
S tr ou t
co untry
Realty . 446 0008
Older tr am twusc 1n R 10
Gr ande (lrPn Co il .J~6 3758
or 446 3888
J
bdr
co untr y homf&gt;
ovndablc 111 Clay Twp, cr ty
schoo ls. $750 per mo plu s
dep Stove &amp; r r f r1Q rn
c!ud rd Crlll even 1ncl ?56
9363

rwo bedroom hou se on
Raccoon Cree k . one year
lease r equ rrcd Be fore 5 00
cn ll 446 0093 , attN 5 00 co li
446 0795
•I bdr

houst' l or rent ov er
lookr nq rrvcr 3 m r ou t of
Gallrpol rs . $750 mo Ca ll
.446 1615 or 446 11·14
•I bedr oom, ce ntr a l arr and

hra t . c rty water, fir epla ce.
unfurnrshect f'xcept
krl
ch1•n
S300 month plus
ut 1l il1f' S
Refcrf'n cc ancl
dPpO&lt;:.rl
requ 1rpd
In
Rnc rnc 9.19 7793
PomNoy 2
bel room .
408 Sp rrnq
r eniode1ed.
Cnr pPt cd . secur rly dcposrt
$100 Rent $ 19 5 Ca l l r11ter 6
p m 99'1 22 88
POM EROY. 105 Sp r rng
Ave Nr c e frv e room house
w 1t h two bedroom s. bath ,
l rv rnq room. d 1n 1no room .
krt c hen wilh c; tove and
r elr1qat or fur n 1shed Bnck
ynrd Storm windows. rn
sula ted. tor ccd arr furnace
makr ut rl 1lr es l ow dur i nq
lrca trnq '&gt;enson $165 pc~
month
r('ll l
sccu r1t y
deposil $100 Adu l ts. no rn
S1dc pe t s Phone 997 5'19'2.
niter 5 wcf'kdrlys , nnyl 1mc
wrrk cnds
For r en t 1n Racrne nrce ?
bd r oo m hou se . Compl etely
furnr strccl. w rt h a rr co nd .
nil ufrl it rcs pard $300 per
monttr 949 2801 or 949 2860
House on L rnco ln Hg ts Afl
nrw
po rn !
Dcpo s il
r cq urr ccl No rnsrdc pets
992 3090

De luxe !urn apart , ce nt.
(l l r &amp; heat 1 or '2 udu lt s
on ly Ca l l 446 0338
Furn1s twd apt
bdr,
adult s. $200, electr rc. water
pard Ca-ll 446 4•ll 6 after
/PM
Furnrsirecl 3 r wilh prrva te
b,l th
845 Seco nd Ave ,
Gcl ll rp olrs Ca ll 446 2215
? bdr ,1 partm c nt rn Vrnton
Cl enn. conv~ nrcnt locnt10n
Ref &amp; Stove t urn , $135 mo
Ca ll 245 58 18

Apa rtmcnf. 2 bdr, un f .. no
pP ts Call 446 3937
Fo r re nt 1 tJdr turn , apt
$175 per rn a . $50 dcp, 6
mo lease. utilit ies pd . no
childr en , on pet s, rn c1 t y
Ca l l 446 3667 after 5
Par lral l y furnrst1ed
r ooms and bnllt 992 5908

4

Furn1 shed ,1p t 3 room c, &amp;
ba t h 997 56? 1

? bd room ap t . turnr shed.
u t iliti es pa rd
No pets,
drunks. or dope
John
Sh ee t s. 312 rn r Sou th M rd
dtcpor t R 7
111 M1cl
\ hd room npl
d l epo rt $185 PN mon th
992 7177

Ap ar lrn Pn t s 675 55,18
APARTME N T S.
mobr le
t1om es.
hou ses.
PT
Pleasant a nd Gall 1potrs
614 446 8221 or614 2459484
Furn rstre d one bed room
npilrlmcnt. ex tra n1ce.
nd ul l s on ly No pets Phon e
304 675 1386
F urni shed Roo m s

SLEEPING ROOM S cl nd
l 1q lrl hou sc keepr nq npt .
P,1rk Ccn tr n l Hot el
Roo m s ~ r th coo k1nQ , ca b le,
arr, $4(j a week 304 773
56\ I

46

Space for Rent

COU N TRY MOB I LE Home
Pa rk, Rou t e 33. Nor t h of
Pomeroy . Lnrqe lot s Cal l
997 7479

TRA I LE R lot, 90x 70. Pear
son
Trailf'r
Cour t
2 t)d room
unfurnrshed. Gnl lipOir s Ferry . 304 675 ,
!r ouse rn co untry, wr nr 1 6167
acre and wood burner
PrPfrr olctPr co up le or no S m n ll
t r,1 1l er
spoce&lt;;
m orf' t ha n 1 chil d $160
M i'lson 304 773 5651
rent an cl $150 dcposr t 742
2753
47
Want ed t o Re nt

42

Thunday, May 20, J982

Ohio

Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Mobil e H om es
f or Rent

Moh1 lc home for ren t Cu lt
446 4225 or 446 0756
N rce f urnish ecl rnobr lc
home, ce ntral arr , I mr
be l ow c i t y over look inq
rrv er , adu lt s on l y Cnl l 446
0338
Furn 2 bdr mobile home
rn Crown Crt y Call 256
6520
2 bdr tra il er f ur n1 shed,
adu lt s on l y, Br own Tra il er
Park, 992 3324 .
Mob ile home on Cher r y and
3rd off 124 on th e le ft No
par ti es. no drunks, no pet s
M ayme Cu ster M ann i ng . 2
bd. r ooms, f old out couch
992 5249 .
2 bd room
l rarler
rn
Racine .· De pos t! r equ i red
949 2726.
ON E bed r oom
home, 304 675 41 54

to r en t ware house.
s to rnqc bu il d ing or large
qarnqe rn c il y of Ga l l rpolfs
Ca ll 446 3159
Wr~nt e d

mobr le

51

Hou se hold Good s

SWA IN
AUCTIO N FUR NIT URE &amp;
PAWN SH OP 62 Olive Sl ,
Gn ll rpo l is. N ew so fa beds
$250, used so f a be ds · $ 100,
rec lr ner s $80 , bunk beds
$100. bu nki e ma ttresses
$40. ma pl e roc k er s $49,
map l e d ine ft se ts fr om $125
to $175. bedr oom su 1tes
l iv in g r oo m
$ 150. 3 pc
sui tes $ 199, 2 pc liv rng
room su i tes $140, love sea tS
$70 , owl tamps $25, rin ge r
washers
$75,
d ry e r s ;
seve r a l
r efri ge r a tor s,
u trlrt y
c nh i n e t s,
mec ha ni c's too ls, beds,
silve r stone, T V,s, wood burn er s, st er o's and lots
mor e_ Open lO am to 5pm ,
446 3159 .

$325
Baby
$25 &amp; $35, be d
f r ame s $20. $25, &amp; $30 Used
Furnrturf'
bookcase,
rJnge s i!ll d TV' s 3 mi les
ou l Bu lavdlc Rd Open 9am
tu 71Jn1. Man thru Frr, 9am
to Spm, Sa t
446 0322
Rcw's Usect Furnrtur e. Ad
Oak swi ngs
d 1so n, Oh
$18 95. cop per tone kd chen
ca b1n et $35. che st $45,
dresser $35. LR cha rr $25,
swinq rng crad le $25. brea k ·
lcl St se t $35 . nnlrQUI ' 11U tch
$ 150 Open 9 til 5 C1 l l 367
06]7

GE auto we~s lr e r .
$175 Ca l l446 8181

52

l 1 "-~'

new,

Buildin g m at er ia l S bl ock,
br ick, sewer pipes, w in·
dows, I inte ls, etc. Cl aude
Winter s, Ri o Gr a nde, 0.
Ca ll 245-512l

.

RCA So l rd Stat e 100 Con
sole . Could be fr xccl or used
for par t s. 446 417 3
Brownrng Eagle '23 chann el
base stat ion, tr ilnsm rtter.
and rece1ver.
i!lld
104
power mike, $300 fr rm 245
9501
M i sc. M erc hand1 ce

Pi as tr e Se ptic Ta nk s St ate
and county approved 1.000
gal. tank, price $340 Ot her
srz es rn stoc k, hau l rn your
p rckup tru c k . Call 614 286
5930. Ja c kson. 0 11 RON
EVA N S E N TERPR I SES
197 5 C.l &lt;&gt; f'
450 , dozer
tra c tor. 1,800 lor &lt;c, . ve r y
goo d co nd . $ 14 .900 Ca ll
446 453 I

RATLI F F 'S POOL CE N
TER Pools sa l e, supptres &amp;
rns tatlat10n 403 2nd Ave .
Gallrpol rs, Oh
Call 446
6579
In qround Ab l ove
ground

174 p re ces IHo wn u n
de r prnn 1ng fo r a mobil e
home used jus t 1 yea r . A
seve n &amp; one hal f fee t b y 58
inche w rde mu lt ico lored,
brai ded ova l rug Wh ite
un if orm s (p an tsu it s) thr ee
cli lf er ent s tyl es. si zes 9-10.
A roya l blu e (Sab r e m ake)
po rt ab le typew r i ter , g r ee n
Ca ll aft er 4PM . 446·3065
455 Olds m otor &amp; ot her par
IS Ci! lt 145 9564
Srm plr c rty ro ta ti ll er $11 0.
and el ec t r ic swee per $25.
qoodcond Call256 ,137 1.
Gaso lin e and hea tin g f uel
Ca ll Exce lsior Oil Com pnny . 6 14 992 2205
2 tires and t ubes 600:x 16
949 2063 aft er 6 p . m
For sa le lo nq bed top per tor
c ompac t t ru c k , 2 se t s tool
boxes. srde mou n t B f l. 2
w ind ow ai r condr1roners,
10x20 . aw n in g, V 6 b lack
M ax . outboa r d 175 HP
mo tor boat and t rai ler ,
14x24
S t urdy
H o u se
bu ld ing . 304 675 4424 .

TRO YBI L T ROTO TILL E
RS. A ll mod el s. Di sc ounts!
s hipm e nt,
I mme d iate
Tr ades co nsi der ed . Ca ll
70 J· 942· 3871
or
writ e
Hi ck ory Hill Nur se ry , Rt . 1
Box390 A, Fi sher svill e, VA
22939.
Push m owe r . 30k675 2396 .
Tent . 8x 10, li ke new. $7 5.00 .
304 675 511 5
Stan d i n cJ
Wa l n ut
Phone 304· 895·3647

tr ees.

35
P r ice r edu ced . 2 lots with
r ur a l Wa t e r c lose to c ity
l imits, $4,450.00. Ca ll 446 ·
1294.

----- - , -

10 ac res at Rio Gr ande on
Ce nterpo int Rd . Rur a l
wa ter . 61 062·5916 .
T WO

ac re

lot s·150 ft . r oad

fro nta ge,
c ity wa t e r ,
be hind 84 Lumber , ca ll 304
675 6873, 675·361 8.

132

A. Mason

Co. nea r

Roc kc as tle and MI. Oliv e
c hurch. Timber and gas
well on land . Suitable for

hunting

camping
$500.00 per acre. Phone 304·
4~ · 1893 .

PAS TUR E torr ent, 40hea d
ca ttl e, no horses, good f ence, abundan ce w ater &amp;
gr ass. 304 -675· 1269 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

TWO
b e dro o m ,
un ·
furni shed . On e bedroom ef
fi c iency . 304-675-272 2.
One bedr oom furni shed
apartm ent, .utiliti es pij id.
304 -675-1897 .
•

Spani el s.

61

__ '=-_a r'!' Equip~!_n_!

ON E New H o ll a nd
Hayba ler , 304 -576 -23 45

Son ia's Prof ess iona l D og
Gr ooming . Ca ll 614 388 8547
and ask for Son ia

63

POODLE
p up s.
AKC
reg ister ed No Checks, 304
895 3958 .
A K C bl ack and w h i te
Coc k er Spa ni el, ma le, 7
m ont hs o ld , $50 304 675
1076.
Fruit
&amp; V~ g_e tiJ tJ!~ S

Vege t able
Pl a nt s, r ed ye llo w p ink
t o mat oes.
br occo li , bru sse ll spr outs,
75 cent s doie n -- Pepper s.
Phone 304 675 3056.
Sweet pot at oe pl ant s -7 d if
f ere nt va r i ti es, Rober t W .
Lew i s, Rf 124, Raci ne. 843
2432
For Sa le or Trad e

A lo t of diff er ent p arts for
350 or 400 engrnes . A l so par
ts for 7A Im pa l a . int eri or
per fec t . 742 3063
For sa le-1981 Fo r d T r ac tor ,
mode l 1700, 4 whee l dr ive
diese l. 5 ft . bru sll hog . 12 in .
po st ho le digger . 4 It by 8
ft chevy ut i l i t y tr ai ler . 992
7298
FOR sa le or tr ade· F or d
5000 diesel $4500. MF 165
di esel $4500 . M F 35 di eses
delu xe $2995. Oli ver 88 ga s
$67 5. New 5 ft . K ing cutter
mow er $450 . No r easonabl e
r efu se d .
Sid e r s
off er
Eq u ipm ent.
H en de r son ,
304·675 742 1

=:Fa rm sopplies
&amp; Livesmctc
F arm Equipm ent

l ·set of John Dee r e 4 bo t
tom 16' semi m ount pl ows,
1 H i ll sboro tr i ax le goose
nec k 28' tra il er . Ca ll 614256 6534 .

'S P R IN G
C L EA N - UP
SALE' Jrvi den 's F a r m
Equipm en l, 446· 1675.
Long tr ac tor s, Ve rm ee r
ba ler s &amp; hay equipm ent,
ba le m ovP r s, rotary till er s,
d isc, post d i gger &amp; driv er s,
seeders, rotary cutter s.
Blad es. ga tes, &amp; f ront end
loade r _ And see us to ge t
your parts &amp; c ompl ete se r
v ice
U SED EQ UIP ·
I H H ydro 70, 9N Fo rd, 2000
For d, 550 Oliv er , MF 65,
JD -M . Lo ng 460 4X4 with
load er. d i se, cultivator s,
p l ow s.
JO
m a nur e
spr eade r , F ord 501 niowe r,
1979 Dodge Ram Charg er
4x 4, 1978 Dodg e pi ck -up
4x 4.
W E B UY U SED EQUIP
M E N T!
For sa le pull type lime
spr ea der . Ca ll256 - 1206
New H ofl a nd 66 Ba ler -949·
2609 or 949·2234 .
15 ft. gr a in bed with twin
horst, steel side board s and
tao I gate . $700. Call 742·2306
aft er 5 p.m . or see at New
Lima Rd .", Rutland , Ohio.
Farmall C with .2 bottom
plows. 949 2063 alte r6 p .m .
941
8 Catapillar end·
loader , good condition, 30-4·
458·1542.
Sid e delivery hay rake,
spok e wh ee l type 3 pt.
Hookup, lik e new $400 . af·
ler 5 p.m. 304·882 ·2819.

7 ! ~_Autos f~Sale

68

Li ves tock

REG . QU ARTE R HO R SES
Tr a inin g,
showi n g.
br eed ing, sa l es and boa r
din g . Con tac t D a n Beam,
Ga lli pol is, 446·0183.
Reg.
Quarter
hor se
yea rli ng ge ld ing, ex ce ll ent
show pr ospec t, sh own sue
cessfull y at ha lter . Dan
Seam, Ga ll ipo l is, 614-446
0183.
Reg . Po ll ed Her ef or d bull.
A pp. 1,600 lbs, $850.00 or
t rade f or
good
u se d
hayra k e pl us boo t. Call 256
9303
Regist ered and graded hor
ses . excellent 4 H proj ec t
E ng li sh and wes tern sad
e very t hing
d i es
i m aginab le in hor se equ i p
m ent and suppli es, a lso
ridin g lessons and tra il
ri des and hor se tr ai n i ng .
Ruth Reeves , H oof H oll ow .
614 -698 3290
Yearl in g
742 2535 .

Charo l ais

bu ll.

4 year old Appa loosa mare
304 675 3818
P igs Phone 304 675 3308 .

65

~

71

- -- ---- - -

-

APARTM E NT
in
Plea sant, 614·446·8221 .

Pt .

and

Apartment for · rent . call
304·675_- 596H alter 5 P .M .

-------------

1972 M E R CUR Y. M a rqui s,
4 door , a·c, good con diti on .
See A I iggs or ca ll 304·67557 33, 304·675 662 8.

E fectric 23,000
G e neral
BTU air conditioner. 30.4·
675-3818 .

- - - - - - -- --- -

DON'T BE AFRAID OF ME, BOY. I
JU 5 T WANT TO Bf YO ll R FR if N

Ho me -- -~

Jili:iji rta ffiiii::;
-- ---~---=

Auto s fof" Sal e

1976 Grand Pti x, PS, PB , &amp;
a ir, ·65,000 mil es, ve ry good
co nd . Ca ll 388 -B/69 .
1978 Hond a Ci v ic, Hond a
m at1 c. $2, 950. Ca ll 446 7523 .
For sal e 1974 Ca m a r a w ith
1976 400 engin e, new ca rb .,
new paint , new tir es, new
c hrom e sid e pip es_ Cal1446
3142 or 446·22 35 .
69 V W run s good, rece ntly
over haul ed , good tir es
$900 . Ca ll after 5. 446·8328 . '
78 M er cury Bobca t , A -1
cond. $2, 300 . Call3889354 .

1970 Bui ck LeS abre good
running cond ., good in·
l erior , $500. Ca ll 446·3077 .
Nova. new 400 engin e, 4
speed on th e f loor, cutla ss
whee ls, cutlas s interior,
comp. tun "!d up. Will se ll
with ra cing accessori es. 69
model and w ell worth
$1495 . Call742·3063 after 5.
1978 Pontiac Phoeni x , vinyl
top, v ·6, 4 dr ., autro., air,
46 ,000 mil es, new battery ,
tires &amp; front shocks within
the last ye ar. Recently
tuned up. $2,895 . 985·4242 .
1977 Efectra ·Giide Classic,
low mileage, very clea n .
Must see to appreciate. 592·
5864, Athen s.
1981 Chevy Citation -17 .000
miles. New cond . Will con sider 4 wheel drive on
. 992·5170.

CARS and Trucks, most
makes and models under
$200.00.· Sold through local
government sales. Call 1·
714-569·0242 Ext. 1855 for
directory on
hOw to
pruchase.

PAINTIN G
interior and
plumbin g,
e x t e ri o r ,
roofing , som e r etnode ling.
20 y r s. ex p . Ca ll 388 -9652.
Mar c um
R o ofin g
&amp;
Spquting. 30 years ex peri ence, s p ec i a li ~ ing in
built up roof . Ca ll388 9857 .

CA PT A IN S TE~MER Ca r ·
pet Clea ning featured by
H aff e lt Brosther s Cu stom
Carpets. Free estim ates.
Call4462107.

l.J.!_!_ _j_.....t:~e~~~d!!;!L=~~~I !614·446·4630.

cHARLI~. ED!/18, LEFT'/, M11&lt;£, fETe,

lbM I T~RR'I.

~f-) I

..EFF '.'

72

Truck ' s for Sal e
-- ----- ·--·

For sa le 1977 Ford 700 se r .,
cab &amp; chass ie ve ry good
condi*ion , $4,000 . Call 446·
411 9.7: 004 : 30 .

C it y
Pa intin g
&amp; co mm er c ial ,
interior , ex terior , pa per
&amp;
tex tur ed
h a nging ,
ce ilings. Call 367-77 84 or
'307 7160.
r ~s id e ntial

79 CH EV Y L uv, w ith toppe r . new tir es, new sti c ker ,
good conditi on . $25 75.00
304 773 5503

E xpe rt r emodelin g, ad ·
diti ons, a ll form of ca r ·
pentry . Ca ll 446 -7376 for
fr ee es tim ate, Mond a y th r u
T hur sday only .

81 Toyot a diese l pic kup , 5
speed,
exce ll ent
fu e l
mil eage . Phon e 304·67 5·
381 8

Ma sonary w ork , Logue
Co ntr ac tin g,
Rt .
1,
Ewin gton Call 388·9939.

73

Van s &amp; 4 W . O.

1974 Dodge 4x 4 318 eng ine
au to, mu st se ll , $1,500 or
bes t off er. Ca ll446·4002.
1980 CH EV Y Scottsdal e, l 14
ton 4-whee l-driv e, PS, AM F M , r egul ar gas, 30,000
mi les. 304 77 3 51 50.

FOR sa le. 1979 Jee p CJ 5,
$5000.00, lot s of ex tr as, call
304 -675 -4610 aft er 3: 00p.m .
1978 Intern ational Sc out
4x4 pi ck up 31.000 mil es, ex
ce lt ent c ondition and rub
ber $23 50. 304·895·3477
. 78 Jee p, E xce ll ent shape.
$3,600 304 88 2 3501 aft er 5
1977 Fo r d tru ck , 4 whee l
d r i ve. $3000.00 . No ru sr .
304 576 2337 .

79 Bron co . 304·895·3594 .
74

80 Yamaha Super spec icll
good c ond ., r easonable. R.
J . Browning . Call992 7685 .
1981 Harl e y
Davidson
l ,OOOcc sport . Blk . stock ..
mint cond ., 980 m, Lots of
Chrome . $3,500 . or $1.700
assum e loan . Call 797 ·3218
after 3 p .m .
19781h Harley David son ,
low mil es . 304 -675 -1897 .

1982 Yamaha 920
virago. 304·882·2482

Dir·

74 CB 360 Honda , low
mil eage, excellent shape,
$450 . 304-576·2866 .
1981 YAHAMA 650 , ox
cellent condition, 304·882 3331.
1981 HARLEY Oavidson,
Sportster. 304 -675-4824.
1981 Kawaski KDX 175, ex cellent condition, Sl.OOQ.
Phone 304·882 -2428.
Boats and

- ~~~~~.!i!' ~ · -

14 fl . John boat with 40 HP
John
motor,
el ectric
trolling motor, plus extras.
Asking $1,300. Call446·2948.

1 __

- qlA55 OF MILK AN' A
HUNK 0' APPLE PIE!
ANYTHIN(j ELSE, KID?

(60 mon I

Cil
MOVIE:
'Cardiac
Arrest'
(]) National Geographic
Special
(!) ESPN Sportsforum
II)
MOVIE :
' Captain
Horatio Hornblower'

Cil

Auto Parts

--~~~ess~!j~~--- -­

Different parts for 350 and

Gl ~ Dr. Seuss
Special
'The
Gnn ch
Grinches the Cat 111 the
Hat .· The Ca t 1n the Hat In cur s the wrath of the
Grm ch 1n th1 s an1mated
spec1al.
0 Cil ® Magnum , P .l.
M agnum IS COnVInCed th at
he has see n h1 s dead w 1fe
(AI (2 hrs.l
CI) Sneak Previews Eac h
wee k co-hos ts Roger Eben
and Gene Stskel g1 ve viewers the lll Sid e story o f
w hat's curr ently mak1ng
the sc ree n at the loca l
movie thea ters .

Specia l M ar c h and A pril
only . Gene's Deep Stea m
Clea nil'l g. Sc otch G aurd.
Fr ee.es tim ate. 992- 6309
Ge ne's
St ea m
Carp et
Clea n-Sco tc h Gaurd ·Free
es timates -sprin g spec ia ls Gene Smith , 99 2 6309 .
RON 'S T e levi sion Se r v i ce.
Spec ializing in Zenith a nd
Mot o rola , Quaz a r , a nd
hou se call s. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

Wt=LL, NOW ... THIS COULD
BE A WHOLE NEW BALL

IT LOOKS LIKE TUNK'S GOT US,
UMPA 1 I CAN'T STALL 'IM ANY

LONGER!

GAM E ! ~ E H ! ~ EH!

F &amp; K Tree Trimming ,
stump remov a l. 675· 1331.

B :30

RINGLE S'S SER V IC E ex·
peri ence d ma so n, roof er ,
ca rp e nt e r ,
e l ec tri c i a n
r e p a ir s a nd
g e n e ral
r emode lin g . Ph one 304·675·
2088 or 6 75· 4560.
Wat er w e ll s. Co mm er c ia l
and Dom es ti c. Tes t hol es .
Pump s Sal es and Se rvi ce.
304 895·3802.

5-20

GASOLI NE ALLEY

You ain't
i;ell me
what kind

ADVANC E D
Sea ml ess
Gutt er - Door s
Off e ring
c ontinuou s
gutt e ring ,
seaml ess siding, roofing,
gar age
door s,
fre e
estimat es, 614·698·8205

o'comp'm~!

We'll discuss while we
rides overt' th' dump t'
pick upth' cannon an'
th' rope!

JlMS Pest Control. Call us
anytime for your termite
probl e m s.
Fre e
in speqion s. VA &amp; FHA form s
available . Licensed &amp; in·
sur ed by Ohio &amp; WV . All
word done by a qualified &amp;
trained service man . 304·
675 -3536. 304·675-4603 .

82
E xc ellent condition Hllnda
C R250M. Yam aha 80. Hon
da 50, 2 speed . Call 304·675
4662 after 5 p.m .

-~ --

ANNIE

~~t~r!=y_cl e s_

1978 Hond a XR 75 . Call 446·
32 10. ca ll after 4PM.

75

rn

Cr ea tiv e w ood
d ec k s,
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
r edw ood . Free es timate .
Call388·9762.

Plumbing ·- &amp; Hea_tin_g_ _

.CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Al1one 446)888 or 446·4477 .

WJNNIE

ORVILLE ...
YOU'RE GOING
TO OUTLIVE'
AU OF US-'

83
Gallipoli s Diversified Con -·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Spec ial
farm rates . Call us for free
estimates. 446·4440 .

YOUR PULSE ANP BLOOP PI?F&lt;;&lt;;i.II?E I
ARE GOOP! AND ASIPE FROM
YOUR OCCASIONAL ATTACKS OF
GOUT, )OU'RE PRETTY &amp;MRN
SOUNO..• FOR A ~ER ~-.Jil
YOUR AGE!

OH, WE Ail. ARE ...
EVENTUALLY/ 6UT }QJ'RE

A N)?'!XIfat'~AC,
ORVILLE! )0/J SPENP
TOO MUCH TIME THINKING... ABOUT &gt;t:J()I(SELF'

Lawrence· Siden s trick er
Ba ckhoe Service . Call 675 ·
5580.

84

Electrical

-~-~e!r~g~!~~~l! .
S E~fNG Machine repairs,
servJCe . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Ser'vice Sharpen
Sc1ssors . Fabri c Shop,
Pomeroy . 992-2284 .

85

~

Mb.NV f16H f&gt;S
1\.lf:.l2.f:.. ~ IN

~4!_n~r~(H~~~i~g__ _

If\(~ t:oNf Q.JOW,
MO!lRIS, 'f05f 5P-'{ ~-

'fHt. 6f:;A.

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367 -7471 or
367 -0591.
~eed ~something
hauled
away or something moved.,
We'll do it. Call 446·3159 0 ~
614-286-57 40-afler 6.

Now Hau.ting

lime~t~ne-fi~l

400 Chevy engine. Trans ., ' dirt-top soil -gravel. ·Free ·
carb., gas (tnd water pumps, etc. 742-3063. .
Hanshaws Used Tires.
Lucas
Lane,
Point
Pleasant. 304-675·7360.

estt.m ates. Call367-710l.
- -· .- ---J IM6 Water Service. Call
Jon\ Lanier, 304-675-7397.

------

-- -- -- --

Auto Repair

'

(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City
Cil Gl ~ Mork and
Mindy Mork and M1ndy
nde a tim e warp bac k to
the prehistoric era
Ill To Be Announced
(jj) Media Probes 'T V
News .·
Thi s
ep1 sode.
hosted by John Camero n
Sw ayze. s tudies how the
dnve for ratmg point s ha s
led to some pretty am azmg
new sroom
'packages· .
/Closed Captioned!
9 :00 0
Cil CD Diff'rent
Strokes Arnold goe s to
ballet class with Kimberly .
(I) MOVIE: 'The Dain
Curse' Part 2
Cil 700 Club
Cil Gl ~ Barney Miller
Conclusion . Barn ey and hi s
men face their last day 1n
the 12th precinct building
\Closed Capuonedl
(l) To the Manor Born
CID Sneak Previews Each
w eek co-host s Roger Ebert
and Gene Si skel give view ers the in side story of
what 's currently making
the sc reen at the local
movie theaters
9:30 0 Cil CD Gimme A Break
Nell' s ex-hu sband sho w s
up looking for a loan . (A)
(I) Hitler's Master Race
This documentary explore s
the SS - Hitler' s personal
police - and their pla.1 for a
master race . Narrated by
Hal Holbrook
Cil Gl ~ Taxi Tony returns to the boxing game
as manager of a young
heav;weight (AI [Closed
Captoonedl
Ill Up Pompeii
(jj) Last Chance Garage
Host Brad Sears demon strates the fine art of
changing a flat tire and
provides a look at the
quality-control end of the
auto industry.
10:00 0
Cil CD Hill Street
Blues Captain Furillo demands a conference of local gang chiefs and Balker
is aided by Captain Freedom. /R) /60 min 1
Cil MOVIE: 'The Day·
breakers'
Cil Gl ~ 20/20
0
Cll ® Uly For
President Lily announces
her candidacy for President
of the United States. /60
min .)
Ill Jazz at tho Snowbird
(jj) Newswatch
10:30 Cil Sing out America
(]) TBS Evening News
(ll) Hitchcock

~

If you neeil-Y~.;;. . trash
hauled away, call Harper
304 · 675 · ~68 .between 1 PM
and 5 P . M. Lawn mower
reparred .
·

8_!. _ _ ~~.1 =

1969 _PONTIAC' Bonneville,
;fully equipped, \Yith alr
conditioning, good con·
dltion, prlce 5650. phone

BORN LOSER

Fr e n c h

1974 Fo r d Pinto H atchb ac k ,
4 c yl. aut o., exce ll ent co nd .
Ask in g $1, 150. 992 3027 or
949 271 5.

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

B U LK
BLE ND E D
Agr i c ult ura l
f er tili ze r
deli ve r ed &amp; spr ead o r
deli ve red &amp; d umped or
pi ck ed up at pl a nt. Bi en
din g service hour s 8 to 4 ,
M ond ay thru Fri da y, othe r
hour s r eques t on spr eade r
buggy r ent a ls. A co mpl ete
ind epend ent bu sines. F a rm
E quipm ent se ri vce, Clif
for d W. Sn yde r ow ner .
J •c k son. OH, 286 ·498 3.

-

19 77
O LD S
C futla ss
Suprem e, pow er stee ring ,
powe r br ak es, autojmatic,
a ir co nditi onin g, AM · FM
radio, 45,000 mil es, ex ·
ce ll ent co nditi on, ph one
304 675 2039.

=---

TRISTATE·
UPHO!o:SrERY SHOP
1163 S~c . Ave ., Gallipol is.
446·7833 or 446·1833, •

Ouallty AutobOdy &amp; Paint
work . Professional custom ' MOWREYS Qpholstery Rt .
paint work on motorcycles. 1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304·Auto Trim Cente~, 446·.1968. 675·415&lt;4.
.
----- --"-----~---

---

II

O Cilffi O Cil® ID ~

MOVIE : ' The Heist'
Andy Griffith
ABC News
Ill Electric Company
(jj) Over Easy
6 :3 0 0 Cil Cil NBC News
Cil $50.000 Pyramid
II) Gomer Pyle
Cil Muppet Show
0 Cil ® CBS News
Ill Dr. Who
(jj) Ulias, Yoga and You
GJ ~ ABC News
7 :00 0 Cil P .M . Magazine
Cil Time Was.. the
Sixties Dick Cave tt hos ts a
look at th1s deca de of
change and unres t.
Cil Bull' s Eye
(!) This Week in the NHL
II) Carol Bumen and
Friends
(I) Entertainment Tonight
ffi Happy Days
0 Cil Tic Tac Dough
Ill (jj) MacNeil -Lehrer
Report
® News
CD ~ Muppet Show
7 :30 0 Cil You Asked For l t
Cil MOVIE : ' Up River'
Cil Another Ute
(!) ESPN Sports Center
ffi Sanford and Son
Cil 0 Cil Family Feud
Laverne and Shirley
Cl) Business Report
®) Richard Simmons
® All Creatures Great
and Small
0)
~
Entertainment
Tonight
B:OO 0 Cil ffi Fame Bruno fall s
1n love with a g1rl w ho has
an 1ncurable di sease (R)

ST U CC O PLA ST E RIN G
t ex tur ed ce iling s com m er c i a l and r es identi a l.
fr ee es tim at es. Ca ll 2561182.

POODL E G ROOMIN G .
Cn ll J ucfy Tay l or a t 367
7220

byHenriAmoldandBobLee

HELITC6

0

Cil
Cil
Cil

Improvements

L.--:----:::.
. ,. .,. .,....--r-------~------------~
r
- - -

\9 ~~ ®

Unscramble these tour Jumbles
one letter to each square to for~
four ordinary words .
'

News

Stf"liEeS
el~ ---

ftlfji~ ID'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

EVENING
6 :00

R efri ge r a tor,
G ene ral
El ec tri c frostfree , almost
new, window fan , set store
sc a les cal culated . 304-675·
7674.

G E heav y dvty washer
SlOO. K enmore coppertone
dryer , like new, SlOO,
gu a r a nteed . Call256-1207 .

5/20/82

24' se lf conta ined ca mper ,
$1.600. Ca ll446 191 2.

76

Whirlpool
Hd. wash er,
Whit e Westinghou se dryer,
GE 14 cu.ft . refrig .-no
frost , stoves. See at 447 4th
Ave .. Ga llipoli s alter 12 .

THURSDAY

27' Av ion trave l tr a il er , ex.
cond . Call446·3258

20 ft. Gator boat trailer .
,388 -9755 or 446-1642 ext . 332.

Farms for Rent

Motor Hom e

Winna bago motor home
exc. cond . Ca ll446·2203.

Mobile
H ome,
Pf
Pleasa nt . 6 14-446 -822 1.

43

Television
•
•
vtewtng

_-----~ -~amp~~ --- ___ _

34 _ B_u ~ n~s..s Buil~ing s

Bui l di n g
w ith
ac t ive
l uc r ati ve bu sin ess. Qu ic k
sa le. $35. 000. 992 3142

DICK TRACY

-

BRI A R PA T C H .K E NN E L S
Boa rdin g a nd gr oo min g .
AKC
Go rdon
se tt e r s,

61

camping ·
__ ~ q~pJ!l e n! _

79

I

HILL CRES T KE NN EL
Boa rding a ll breed s, c lea n
f ac iliti es.
i nd oo r -outdoor
A l so A K C Reg . Dober
m ans. Ca ll446·7795.

For sa le or trilde Dav 1s 700
tren c he r
and
bnckhoc.
qood co ncl . Cc1 l l ?56 1216
Wh rr l pool arr c ond rl roner
IO ,r)OO BTU . wrndow moun
l ed. 26 to 38 1nches, 110
volts. Call446 1570

$f'iDeR!

DR AGO NWYND
CA T
KE NN E L . A K C
TE RY
C h ow
p up pies,
CF A
Hima l ayan , Pe r si an and
Si a m ese k ittens. Ca ll 4463844 aft er 4 p. m .

E ngli
sh 9790.
Coc k er
Ca
ll 388

78

The Daily Sentinei- Poge- 13

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1978 Stal&lt;r afl folddown
ca mper . Phone 304·675 -2753
or 675·4025.

56 ___ ~~ ~s_f_~~_!~

59
54

by Larry Wright ·

YoK. ( A DeAl&gt;

Me ta l Shee ts 4'x8' thru
4'x 12' . P ri ces $7 .60 to $9.60 .
Ex f c;e l le n1
buildin g
por ce lin e,
m a t er i a L
enarne l coa t ed w on ' t ru st
18 t o 22 ga uge. 614667·3085
Tu pper s Pl a in s, Ohi o.

58

CB, T V, Ra di o
E qu ip m ent

CARLYLE '"

Thunday, May 20, 1982

11 :00

PEANUTS

WELL, SCHOOL, IT'S

News

I SUPPOSE YOU I-lAVE
PLANS FOR THE SUMMER

I AAVE AN

UNCLE IN
NEW MEXICO
I'P l.IKE TO

V!S/T•.•THE
REST OF OUR
FAMILY DOESN'T
CARE MUCH
FOR HIM

.,

.

T HE M A N IN T HE
MOON APPEAR'5
T IR:E D M 05TOFTHE
TIM E f5 ECAU5E HE'S
USUAL.L.Y THI S.

tCLAGEe:i
IJ

Now arrange the crrcled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug gested by the above cartoon

I I
M&amp;-Ner: KI I J KI XJ KI I II]
(Answers tomorrow )

Yesterday's

I Jumbles
An swer

HA VOC WE IGH PRAYER FROSTY
Wh at' s the kev to crossi ng t he streei safety?
-"C SHARP"
.

Jumble Book No. 19, cont~;lnlng 110 puzzles, Is ava ilable lor $1.95 poetpald
lrom Jumble, cJo this newap.per, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648_ Include your
name, addr.aa, zip code and make ch.cka payable to Newspaperboots

BRIDGE
Mistiming costs South
By Osw ald Jacob y
and Alan Sonta g

NORT H
• A97
+ AK1064
+ A Q 10 7

North ove rbid hiS hand a
tnlle to _
get , t o the gr and

slam on Ius own momentum
tr ac t

wa s

sa ti s fac tor y

..

second

+ 5
SOUTH
+ AK84

+ 53
+ K J 98J
V ulnera ble Bot h
Dea ler South
West

No rtb

Eas t

Sout
I+

Pa ss
Pass

2+

3+

Pass
Pa ss

2+

Pass

4 NT
5 NT
7+

Pass
Pass
Pass

s•

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

4+
~·

Pass

Openmg l ead t J

di amond and be tn hts ow n
hand . T hen he could pl ay hi s
l ast t rum p t o pull East' s l as t
o nP a nd to dtsca r d one of
dum m y's hea rts T he other
small hea r t wo ul d now go on
th e kin g of spades The ace
of hearts wo ul d be an entr y
and dumm y' s l ast dt am ond
w ould t ak e t he 13t h tnck

South had m er el y mtsttm ed his c r oss- ruff After

the

+6 4 2
.Q6

"Yes," came a chorus.
cashing

+J 65
. J 5 4 32
• Q9 8 7

+J 2

mdeed
South lost no time at all m
finding a w ay t o lose the
grand sl am H e won the di amond l ead , cashed dummy's
ace of clubs and l ed a second
club to his own hand .
He paused for a moment
to tak e stock of the 3-1
trump break and l ed his last
diamond to dumm y. Now he
ruff ed a diamo nd, played
ace of spades, r uff ed a
spade, ruffed a di am ond and
ruffed another spade. He
w as m dumm y with a good
di am ond, but unfortunat el y
could not cas h it. East still
held a trump .
"Could I hav e m ade the
hand '" ask ed South .

EAST

WEST
+QI 0973
• K 10 8

after South ha d bid both
bl ack suits, but the fmal co n-

hi gh

trump , South should pl ay ace
of spades. ruff a spade, cash
dumm y's
seco nd hi g h
di amond. r uff a diamond .
ruff a spade, ruff another

Ans wer to Prevro us Puzzle
goddesses
v 0 T E V A "' p
B u s
1 You /Fr l
4 7 Take up gas
I 0 E E
A v 0 N
l s T
5 Sweet
molecules
P E N E T R A T E
A 0 E
potatoe s
50 Oa s Vaterland 9 A R R I N G
E N
R U
9 Pounds /abbll
/abbo I
N E 0 .A C E S
12 Alf (prefoxl
51 Tnm oH
l
E
A
0 N
v 0 l E
13 Tra ct
bran ches
u T T E R s
E S
E l
0
'
14 Astronauts '
52 Area in
E A v E s
s E
~~
"all right "
Pa c1fic
I S A
R E E 0
T 0
/comp . wd I
57 Reso rt
Mi 5 T . 0 0 A
A U N T E 0
15 D10ne
58 Al/ 2 wd s I
c R E E l
H A H
17 As1an tree (var ) 59 Rules
R E l A y R A c E
A V 0
A N T s
18 Autho1
60 Ove&lt; /poet iC! A l AN
N E
M E s s
Fleming
61 Thtn plat e of G y M s
19 Most doc 1le
meta!
43 Absoluiely
20 _
21 Hides
62 Everg reen s
Breckenndge
45 Corpulent
24 Glimpse
21 Cle an a fl oor 47 Plus
DOWN
25 freeze
22 Coazy
21 Rub out
48 Oprum (sl)
1 Actor Hefl1n 23 H1dd en
31 Man's
49 Boom
2
Poverty-war
24
Earli
es
t
born
nickname
agency /abb l l 26 Auto club
50 Gamecock
32 Infamous
3 Flower holder 28 Tapestry
sp ur
Marquis de
4 Planting
29 Rai sed
53 Hawa11an
5 Tall tale
34 B10nches of
platform
volc an o.
6 Clumsy boat
learning
Makes
30 Col orad o pa rk
Maun a _ _
7
35 Hawaiian
J
J
Poeti C
54
Au tom ot1 ve soacQuaintanc
e
instruments
prepositi On
8 Poncho /vao I
37 Eagles nest
Lone
Clety (abbr 1
36
9 Ta~dy
39 T10ito1 (sl.l
performance 55 Form er la bor
I 0 Catcalls
40 English poet
38 A10b coun t1y
g10up (a bbo I
11 Playlet
42 Leakage
41
Typ1cal
56
f oo l
16 Water holes
44 Plundeo

4 6 ArtiSti C

ACROSS

~~~

I+.,

"'

'

·"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cetebrity Qpher cryptogram~ ... crMted from quotati0rl1 by lamou• people, pasl
and pr-.nt. EliCh lett• In tl'leelpMr llandl 101' another TOday 's c~ · F eq•als IV

MOVIE:
'Mean
Streett'
(I) Naohvlllo RFD
CI1 ESPN Sports Center
ffi ,Newo/Spo&lt;to/Weather
(I) Dick Cavett
11 :30 D Cil Cil Tonight Show
Johnny is joined by Carl
Reiner. (60 min.)
(I) Another Ufe
(]) All 1n the Family
(I)
(jJ Nlghtllne
I!J (I) Quincy Quincy
works as the technical adviser on a movie '

e

"UP

XCTCE

ISH

JYFMV

OKT

USNL

ES

EVL

OCEV
CF
EVL

EVL

EVL

XCTCE

ES

HKXCH

TESMZUKF

SXKJ

SIICML

ANLTCHLFE

FKEYNL

Si

K

OSSHTVLH ."

PREVIOUS SOLUTION:"My doctors have come to two
conclusions. One, I do have a heart ; second . th at it is in need or
repair ." - Henry Kissinger
02 13

,,
I·

5-20-81

+2

0 Cil Cll 0 Cll ® Ill (jJ

ill

ALMOST VAcATION TIME

J

iO

�Page

14

Lawmakers ponder r--el-.-e_v___at_o_r~-=--·.--::--b--:-:le~m_s
.
_

Area deaths
Jean Smith, Dayton and Audrey
Henry, Jackson, Ohio; one nephew,
Ben Philson, Racine.
Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m . at the Racine Meth·
odlst Church with the Rev. Howard
Shiveley and the Rev. James Clark
otflclatlng. Burial will be In Letart
Faits Cemetery. Friends may call
a t the Rawllngs-Coats-Biower Fun·
era! Home, Middleport, anytlme
Friday. The famlly will receive
friends Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
and until noon on Saturday at which
time the body will be taken to
churc h to Ue In state.

Edith A. Hayman
Edith A Hayman. 87 Racine,
died Wednesday at Gran t Hospital,
Colum bus.
Miss Hayman was bom June 15,
1894 at Pomeroy the daughter of the
late Leonidas and Aurllla Harpold
Hayman. She was also preceded In
death by three sisters and two
brothers.
She Is survived by seven nieces,
Grace, Jane, a nd Ruth Ellis. a ll of
Columbus; Kathryn Phltson and
Ma ry Lew Johnson, East Letart;

Meigs County happenings
Uand; PauUne Elizabeth Taylor.
Middleport ; Gary Wayne Walker,
Belle, W. Va .; Cheryl Lynn
Kropka, Middleport; Hazel Lillian
Ferrell, Galllpolls; Denise Tlllls,
Rutland.
DISCHARGEs ... Jo hn David
Klng, Woodrow Troy Zwilling, Robert Wesley Cundiff. Andrew
Cross. Wllbur Row ley, Sr.

Didn't strike pole
Due to a reporter's error, Dora R .

Hysell, 61, Long Bottom, was !ncar·
rectly Identified as driver of the
vehicle which struck a utility pole
following a collision with a vehicle
driven by Bert IV. Teaford, 57, Rt. 2,
Racine. on Meigs County Rd . 281ast
Saturday.
The Gallla -Melgs Post of the
state highway patrol said Teaford 's
vehicle was the one which struck
the pole.
Hysell was cited for assured
clear distance In the Incident.

Will place flags

1

Middleport Pollee Chief J . J . Cremeans wa rned today that the par·
ents of unUcensed persons riding
mopeds In the vlllage wU1 be cited
Into court .

Conlullll'd fnun JX!IJ.t•ll
O::tfHI groccnes.

Goa l F.stablished

F.vans has long been actiVe 111 the
field of health care, ha vi ng served as
trustee of the Holzer Hospital Foundation and Exec uti ve conunittee
member of the Holzer Medical Cenkr. Helped orga nize and served as a
Trustee of the Ohio Va !ley Center
F'ound£J ti on,i nc.
He has bet•n an adive member of
his church for more tha n 50 years
and has served as trustee. In the
field of education, he has served as a

HayPs s&lt;:11d that a $1.1 mill JUn en·

dowrm·nt goal has bl'l' ll es tablished ,
$100,000 of wlm·h would be ea rmarkt•d for lht• n·nm · &lt;:~t l on of the
ru rrl'nt dJntll)-! fcH"i!il~ in to the
buslilL'SS sc huo! and tlw rL'Illallllkr
to equ1p and upd&lt;.-~te tht • c lass romn s

and pru ~ranl~ .
To date. $84:1.000 has bt·t·n ril'd~t·d
and ,I.! IV\' IL
Acconllng to a school spokes m&lt;:~n .
the l'Ufl'l'llt dllllll,l.! hall Will bl' lnO\'l'd
mtu &lt;J lll' W 30,()()()..squan· foo l campus

member of the Ga llipolis City School

D1striet's Board of Ed ucati on and
was instrumenta l in the establishmen t of Rio Gra nde Community

c t•nter that IS expel'lt•d to be I'Olll-

plcted July 15. At that tmw. !ht·
built.hng whwh houses thl' currl'nt

dinin g hall will be converted Into a
seven l'loss room complex that will
house the
business sc hool. A
business ltbrary and office space for
the business faculty will be included
m the {'OIIlplex .
Evans wa s born on a farm near
Cadmus, In l.t'WI S E. and Bertha
Keller E vcms. He was next to the
youngest of 10 ch ildren. He attended
Cadmus Elementa ry School a nd
gn1duatcd from Gall1a Academy
H1gh School 111 !928. In 1931. Emerson married Evelyn Gertrude Tope.
Ttll' y have three :-;ons - Merrill,
Dt:tniel and l ..&lt;:~rry ~ &lt;HH.l ten gnmdduld ren
He has se rved a~ prl'sirlt:nt a nd
enns uIIan t at the 0 h1o Va II e y Ba nk

College.
Evans continues tu demonstrate

C:t

fmn resolve to do hi s deeds in

LEASING
. .EQUIPMENT

!f!!!!!
TO BUSINESS, ·INDUSTRY,
_,AND THE PROFESSIONS
BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

614/992·2133

E. E. Davis award for outstanding
health servi!'e planning and development in the region. Emerson was
Gallia County's Man of the Year in
1976, and became the first Rio Grande College Fellow in 1900.

·-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!

durin g a 34-yem· e~ssocia tion with 1
that co nce rn . Ht• has bee n engagt'd
111 f&lt;:~ n n in g and cattle breeding mo~ t
,,f his life. ln 19:17. he and his brother,
J ohn, founded the Evans Park mg
Co. whe re Emerson s~ rve d as
pres1dent and dirct'lor until it was
sold 111 1972. Ha vmg been one of the
orga nize rs. he served as ehairman
of the boa rd of Bub Evans Farms.
Inc.. unt1 i 197 1. He continues as a
diredor, se nior VICe- president a nd
chairmnn of the finance committee
of that organizatiOn.
In 1956, he organized Evans Enterprises, wh1 ch is a f"mily held corpont lion d ce~ li ng in co mmercial a nd
real esta te properties. Other
bus iness ve ntures include fa rm SUfr
plies, home accessor ies, furniture,

Infant
Summerwear

,~,
\' ·c;

992-3629

\'nur " Extra Touch"

~~,;"""'' '"'

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Flonst

Ross District faces indebtness
COLUMBUS, Ohio- State Auditor Thomas E . F erguson says an
analysis of the Union-Scioto Local School qtstrtct In Ross County
shows It will be $278,001 ln debt by the end of 1982.
Ferguson's examiners analyzed the district's cash Dow which Is a
first step for a district to take In seeking a state loan. Voters In the
dlstrlct voted to raise their school taxes by 3.4 mills last November.

SAVE THIS WEEKEND ON TOPS AND JEANS YOUR FAMILY WILL
NEED DURING THE COMING SUMMER.

CHILDREN'S
TOPS

Reg. 15.75 . ......
Reg. 16.50 .... ..
Reg. 19.00 . . . . . .
Reg. 112.50 .....

Defendant, alleged drug pusher
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Docume nts opened In court this week show
pollee belleve a man charged with kUling a university coed had
made several young women write suicide notes a nd have sex In
exchange for drugs.
The documents show pollee sought evidence to support such a llegations when they got a wa rrant F eb. 26 to search the apartme nt of
Roy Sage tour days after the body of Catherine Wanner was found
there . She had been shot In the head and chest.
Sage, 47, also was shotln the head and chest. He recovered and Is
In county ]all, charged with aggravated murder In the death.
Sage told pollee at the tlme that he and Ms. Wanner, 18, su!ferro
the wounds In a suicide pact.

Stock up for your ch tl dren's
summer wardrobe .
Tanks, k nt ts , sun tops,
blouses and sweat shi rt s.
Lirtle boys &amp; gir ls s•zes · 6
mos . to '14 mos , 2 to 4, 4 to
6x. 7 to 14.

Our ent ire stock of jea ns for l diiP
Q•r ls and boys is included tn th ts
srtle
E las ft c watsts , 5 pocke tt jeans,
pa .nters pants .

Sale '4.59
Sale '5.19
Sale '7 .19
Sale 19.99

REG . $3 .00 ..............
REG . $4 .50 ... ..... ......
REG . $6 .50 .....•.•..•...
REG. $9 .00 ... . ...... . ...
REG . $12 .00 .............

SALE $2 .39
SALE $3.59
SALE $5.19
SALE $7.19
SALE $9.59

SALE

JUNIOR JEANS
Wra ng ler and L ord Isaacs in f asn.on
poc kets. 5 pocke t st yles , belted styl es
and baseball pants. Qua l ity denim
jeans at sa le prtces!
Jr . sizes 3 thr u 15

Reg. 18.00
Reg. 122.00
Reg. 126.00
Reg. 128.00
1

Sale 14.39
Sale 117.59
Sale 120.79
Sale 122.39
1

Fewer senrices will be offered

JUNIOR
TOPS&amp;
BLOUSES
Pullover
kntt
t anks,

COLUMBUS, Ohio - There will be fewer Ufeguards and some
weeds may not be mowed at Ohio's 71 state parks this summer due to
the parks' budget cuts.
Attendance Is expected to climb to a record 40 mllllon from Memorial Day to Labor Day this year, up from 35 mllllon a year ago.
The department's budget was cut 10 percent from the level InItially approved last fall.
In addition, both the House and Senate versions of a tax Increasespending cut btl! before a joint conference committee would Impose
another round of reductions that could total up to 9 percent.

sleeveless button front s,
pea sa nt sty les, V neck
knit s plu s many more .
Sizes S, M , Land XL .

Reg. 17.50 .... Sale '5.59
Reg. '12.00 ... Sale 19.59
Reg. '17.00 ... Sale '13.59
Reg. '24.00 . . . Sale '19J 9

Hinkley said 'quite intelligent'
.

LADIES'

TOPS &amp;
BLOUSES

MEN'S

BLUE JEANS

Tank tops, knits,
sleeveless
styles,
long and
short
sleeves and solids,
stripes and prints.
Complete range of
misses and extra
sizes.

Reg. 119.00
Reg. 122.00
Reg. 130.00
Reg. 135.00

Sale 115.19
Sale 117.59
Sale 123.99.
Sale 127.99

of · our men's
denim jeans,
styles,
cut
·eans .

Reg . $8.00 ... Sale 56.39
.. SaleS8.79
R~g . Sl6.00 . SaleSI2 .79
Reg. SZ4 .00 . Sate S19, 19
Reg . S28 .00 . Sate S22 .39
R~g . Sll.OO

Men's '19.95 Jeans
1
15.60
Men's '21.95 Jeans
'17.10
Men's '23.95 Jeans
1
18.70
Men's '29.95 Jeans
'23.40

WASHINGTON - The man who shot President Reagan Is "quite
Intelligent," but he Is consumed by self-hate, uncomfortable with hts
sexual feelings and desperate when he has no one to cUng to, a
psychologist says.
Dr. Ernst Prellnger, testlfytng Thursday In the trial of John W.
Hinckley Jr., also said that only one "normal" person In a mlllion
would have scored as poorly as Hinckley dld on a test measuring
severe mental depression.
Prellnger, a Yale University psychologist called by the defense,
said Hinckley's thoughts and feelings came out In Interviews and on
written tests. The doctor Is returning to the witness stand today tor
cross-examination.
The psychologiSt was the thlrct defense witness to testlfy that
Hinckley suffered from an extreme mental Ulness when he shot
Reagan and three other men March 30, 1981. Hinckley has pleaded
Innocent by reason of Insanity.

MEN'S

KNIT SHIRTS
111

w . 2nd

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

Pomeroy, Oh .

Ideal for wear right now . This
sale inc ludes all our men' s knit
shirts and tank tops. Terrifi c
se lection of styles and co lors in
a ll sizes. Perfect for graduation
gifts and Father' s Day in June.

Men's 16.95 Knit Shirts . . . 15.55
Men's 19.95 Knit Shirts . . . 17.95
Men's 111.95 Knit Shirts .. 19.55
Men's '14.95 Knit Shirts . 111.95
BOYS

DENIM JEANS

Slim and regular sizes
8 to 14. Studerit sizes 26
to 30 waist, lengths 30
to 36 and husky slze.s 8
through 20.
Basic and
Fashion
Styles.

Boys 114.95 Denim Jeans
Boys 116.95 Denim Jeans
Boys 118.95 Denim Jeans
Boys 119.95 Denim Jeans

• 111.60
. 113.20
. 114.80
. 115.60

ELBERFELD$ IN
.,

0.3 percent, less than the0.5 percent
of March a nd the 0.7 of February.
ln a ll, the unadjusted Consumer
Price Index stood a t 284.3 In April,
meaning tha t a hypothetical llst of
goods and services costing $10 In
1967 would have cost $28.~3 last
month.
Next year. the Labor Depart ·
ment will adj ust the widely crltlz·
Iced housing component of the
Index by replacing that ca lculation
with a "rental equivalent " formula.
Had the rental equivalent been
used last month, the department
said. prices wou ld have registered
a seasona ll y adjusted decline of 0.2
percent - an annual rate of 1.8
percent.

entinel
2 Secliont, 1:2 Poget
15 Cenh
A Multimedia In c. Newspaper

Seven hurt in area accidents

TOPS &amp; JEANS SALE
Children's Jeans

line had set records In March.
Overall transportation costs,
whic h Include gasoUne prtces, fell
1.6 percent. Partia lly ot!settlng the
drop In gasoline prices were higher
costs for both new a nd used cars.
In other areas, the new repon
said :
-Medical care costs, up more
than a ny other segment of the CPl.
rose 1 percent, matc hing the March
rise. Prices for hospital rooms
jumped 1.2 percent and doctors'
tees were up 0.6 percent.
-Apparel costs edged up0.1 per·
cent , less than the 0 .~ percent gain
posted In each of the two previous
months.
-Entertainment prices were up

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 21, 1982

Officials overcome hijacker

LADIES &amp;
TOPS, SHORTS AND PLEATED
PANTS BY DEE CEE.
ALSO T-SHIRT LETTERING
AND TRANSFERS.
TRANSFERS INCLUDE
PACMAN, SMURFS,
AND MANY, MANY MORE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Voi. 31, No . 13

Copyrigktltd 198:2

THE FINEST FOOD IN TOWN AND ALL LEGAL BEVERAGES SERVED

SALE

vegetagle costs also decllned. Restaurant a nd alcohoUc beverage prices were up, however.
-Housing costs jumped O.B per·
cent, boosted by a 1.2 percent gain
In hom e prtces themselves a nd a 0.6
percent gain In mortgage Interest
rates. Rents rose a slight 0.2 per·
cent, the smallest gain In two years.
-Fuel oU prices fell 3.8 percent,
the largest drop since the departmen t bega n recording s uc h
monthly price trends In 1952.
-Gasoline prices plummeted 6.7
percent. the largest drop since
these costs were first recorded
monthly In 1967. Over the las t 12
months, gasollne prices have
plunged 12.5 percent.
Prices for both fuel oll and gaso-

he Daily

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FLORIST
PH. 992 -2 644

bor Department Is based on a more
precise calculation of monthly
changes than the figu re the department makes public.
For the 12 months ending with
Aprll, today's report said, lntlatton
rose 6.6 percent.
All the calcula tions reflect adjustments for normal seasonal variations.
The Aprll report gave these
brea kdowns of price activity:
-Food prices rose 0.3 percent,
reversing a 0.3 percent decline In
March.
Big Jumps were r ecorded In prices for beef and pork while poultry
prices rose moderately. For thesecond straight month, egg prices
were ott sharply. Fresh fruit a nd

POMEROY

~~ OFF

OP EN MON .-S AT .
9:30 -5: 00

worldwide oll surplus.
Aprll's tlgures bolstered many
economists' predictions that, for all
of 1982. Inflation as measured by
the CPJ should be In the range of 5
percent to 6 percent.
In Its new report. the Labor Department said the Index rose a seasonally "djusted 0.2 percent In
Aprll , after falllng 0.3 percent In
March. It had advanced 0.2 percent
In February a nd 0.3 percent In
January .
March's decline was the tlrst
since Aprll 1965 and the sharpest
drop since 1953.
If prtces rose for 12 straight
months at Aprll's 0.2 percent, the
yearly jump would be 3.0 percent.
The annual rate reported by the La-

222 Main St.

20(17/0

Save your sales slips for
non-sale items. Ask us for
details.

EVERY FRIDAY 1fz SATURDAY
NIGHT TO THE HITS OF TODAY FROM 10 TIL 1 WITH
JAY HILL

LADIES' DRINKS 1/zPRICE
Rock &amp; Roll and Remember
with all the hits from
Yesteryear.

presented to him. These in clude
di stingui shed service awa rds from

l-lome Economi cs. He received the

DANCING

LADIES' NIGHT
'60's NIGHT
TliURSDAY 9:30-12:00

secret. In spite of that fact, many
honors and awa rds have been

th e Gall ipolis FFA, the Gallia County Soil a nd WC:Jter ConservCJtion
Distriel a nd the Ohio State Uni ve rsity College of Ag ricultu re a nd

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prtces rose In AprU a t a modest
annual rate of 3.0 percent, reboundIng from their sharpest drop In 29
years, the government said today.
Higher food and housing costs,
which offset fresh record declines
In gasoline prices, were largely
responsible.
But even with the Increase In the
Labor Department's monthly Consumer Price Index Inflation so far
this yea r was stlll running at a tow
level of 1.5 percent, calculated
a nnua lly.
The overall easing of the Index,
which averaged 8.9 percent last
year and 12.4 percent In 1980, has
been widely attrtbuted to the stubborn recession and the lingering

THE MEIGS INN

pletely a nd a nything above that
would have been covered a t the 80
percent level ," Stackhouse said.
The bill would a uthorize an Indemnity fund from which farmers
could seek reimbursement l1 warehouses ha ndling their grain go

Warning issued

ADMISSIONS .. · Homer Gra ·
ham , Racine; Clarence Gans,
Pomeroy; Clarence Longstreth,
Pomeroy; Mary Lucille Kauff,
Pomeroy; Oscar Imboden. Mlnersvllle; Rlley L. McClelland. Ru·

HAPPY HOUR
4:30. 6:30
Monday-Thursday
DRINK 1fz PRICE

Consumer prices increase in April

. .BANK ONE .. _

broke.
Financing for the $4 mllllon fund
would come from a fee of up to onehalf cent per bushel on grain sold.
Although the fee would he paid by
licensed handlers, It Is expected to
be passed on to farmers.
The measure Improves the Agriculture Department's a blltty to
oversee elevators to determine
which might be In financial trouble.
It establishes requirements for
fiscal solvency that an applicant for
a grain handler's license must
meet.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State
Agric ultu re Director John M.
Stackhouse Is backing a bllt before
a Senate panel aimed at protecting
farmers from taking losses when
grain elevators close.
The bllt Is before the Senate Agriculture, Commerce a nd Labor
Committee.
It Is by Rep. Dale Locker, DAnna, and cleared the House May
5.
Queen City Grain Inc. filed a petition for bankruptcy In Cincinnati
the next day, leaving about ll
farmers In southwestern Ohio, southeastern Indiana and northern
Kentucky unpaid .
The farmers were owed amounts
ranging from $307 to $58,948. for a
total of about $553.001.
"The !allure In Cincinnati just
adds to the llst" of elevator bankruptcies In Ohio over the last decade, Stackhouse said Wednesday.
He said 33 !allu res have cost
farmers more tha n $4.2 million.
Had the blll been law. Ohioans
affected by the Cincinna ti faclltty's
problems would have been helped,
he said.
"The first $10,001 of the loss
would have been covered com-

Members of Ell Dennison Post
467, America n Legion. Rutland,
wlll place flags a tthe cemeteries on
Sunday May 23, beginning a t 9: :JJ
a. m. All members a nd their sons
are urged to he lp.

Veterans Memorial

Announce •••

Thui'ICiay, May 20, 1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

CEBU, Phlltpplnes - Otflclals and passengers overcame a
grenade-wielding hijacker today more than eight hours after he
commandeered a Phlltpplne domestic airliner carrying 114 people.
Nobody was hurt, a spokesman for the Natlonal Defense.Department said.
The man, identified as Ray Valayo, a former sugar farmer about
55 years old, took over the twin-jet BAC"111 during a 30-mlnute filght
from Bacolod to Cebu, the Philippines' second largest city

SIZES 8 TO 20
BOYS KNIT SHIRTS
Short sleeve styles and tank tops in a
big se lection of styles and colors for
warm wea ther wear. Famous makes.
Save now .
BOYS S5.95 KNIT SHIRTS , , ... , $4.70
BOYS S7.95 KNIT SHIRTS . , , , .. S6.JO
BOYS $9.95 KNIT SHIRTS ... .. . S7.90
BOYS S11.95 KNIT SHIRTS ..... : 9.40

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game ''The Number" was 835.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 6853.
The lottery reported earnings of $412,568.50 on Its dalty game. The
earnings came on salee of $910,701, whtle holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $498,132.50, lottery ottfclals said.

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT SHIRTS
Solid colors and patterns in 5, M. L and
XL sizes. van Heusen, Campus and
wrangler brands. Full cut and tapered

styles. Savings are great.

Weather forecast

Men's 11D.95 S.S. Sport Shirts.••• 18.25
Men's 112.95 s.s. s'Port Shirts •• ,.19.75
·Men's 114.95 S.S. Sport Shirts .•• 'll.ZS
Men's 116.95 S.S. Sport Shirts ••• 112.75

Sixty percent chance of showers or'th\lllderstorms tonight and
Saturday. Lows tonight around 60. Highs Saturday near !Kl. Winds
tonight southerly to southeasterly around 10 mph.

Exta.decl ForecMt
Sunday lbroulb 'l'uelday

a..- ollbbwen or lbuDtlealtoiu• 8ultidaJ 111111 'l'uelday. Fair
MGDda)'. IIJ&amp;IIIID lbe 'lOti 111111 low 811. Lon mill&amp;t.J Ia lbe 581.

EROY
..

..

,

KlLA YOUNG

Young wins
scholarship
RIO GRAN OF: - Kli~ Annt• Yn unl'
of Hl'L'lls\'1\le ht:ts bt•t•fl awa rd t'd lhl'
Mei gs County Honors Schola rs hip to
Rin Grantk Collegt' and Cm1un u rut~

Coll ege.
Rio Grandt• Colll'I.!C nfft· rs a
sL" holarshiptu a graduat in r-: Sl'lllor 111
t'ac h of llw public hidl sd1ou\s 111
Ml'il.(s County ecw h yea r. Tht·
Sl' hola rshl p is effeclin· from ti lt' fall
quarter of lilt' yea r of the awa rd and
t' nds with the spring quarter uf !ht·
fourth yt&gt;&lt;U'.
Youn g, daughlt•r nf Mr. t:tnd Mrs.
futy Ynun l!. ha s been a di vt· in hi g h
st' hool in thl' m e~ rc hm g pt•p, a nd con-

ce rt

band s,

g 11·ts'

ba s kl'lba ll

managl'r, and thl• Na tumal Honor
Sncidy . Stw wi ll 1-' r ad u e~tL' f nHn

Eas tern High Schnol Sunday and
c:ll'('O unt ing.

w il lm&lt;::~ jor 111

DeLaval seeks
football post
An action against the Southern
Local School Board for htrtng a
non-certified lndtvtdual for the posl·
tlon of head football coach has been
filed In the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
The action, flled by Gerald R.
DeLaval, Route 6, Athens, with the
State of Ohio, ex rel, and as an Individual, charges that the school
board hired a non-certified lndlvldual for the position of head football
coach and asks that the action he
decllared null and void.
DeLaval charges that hiring the
non-certified lndtvtdual ts In violation of the equal protection clause of
the U. S. Constitution and also the
contract of the Southern Local
Teachers Association since he Is qulallf1ed for the position. DeLaval
asks that the board comply with the
negotiated contract with the Southern Local Teachers Assocla lion
since he, DeLaval, IS quallf1ed for
the position.
He asks that the board be enjoined from paying wages to the
non-certified lndtvtdual and that he,
DeLaval, be awarded the position
of head football coach with salary
from December, 1981, along with
costs of the action.
Also ttled In the Court was a forclosure action by the Diamond SavIngs and Meigs County against
Thomas L. Goett, et a!, Syracuse,
In the amount of $Z7 ,254.23.

In juries wen&gt; reported to seven
people In two area traffic accidents
Investigated by the state highway
patrol on Thu rsday.
Four of the ln]urtes were caused
by a two-vehicle crash In Meigs
County In the morning.
The patrol's Gallla-Melgs Post
said two vehic les, one driven by
Roger F. Dillard Jr., 2~. Syracuse.
a nd the other by Larry C. Holsinger
Jr., 20, Rt. 2, Racine, were south·
bound on Ohlo 7 In Sallsbury Twp.
at 8:20a.m.
Dillard 's au to struck Holsinger's
In the rear, causing Holsinger's
a uto to turn around. go backawrds
and then strike a n emba nkment.
The DUlard vehicle then continued
on after the collision and also struck
a n embankment before coming to a
rest.
In jured were Dillard, Holsinger,
a passenger In Dlllard's vehicle.
Leonard L. Va n Meter. 31, Pomeroy; a nd a passenger In Holsinger's
car, Ric hard R . Ha ll , 19,
Midd leport.
The patrol reported that the driv·
ers and Van Meter were taken to
Veter ans Memorial Hospital for
treatment by the Meigs EMS. Hoi·
singer and Va n Meter were both

treated and re leased, but the hospi·
tal had no record of treating Dll·
lard. Hall claimed Injury, but was
not treated.
Severe damage was reported to
both vehic les and DUlard was cited
for DWI and assured c l ear
dis ta nce.
In the second Injury wreck, the
patrol sald an eastbound vehicle
driven by Edward T. Ca in, 37, Rt. 1.
Gallipo li s. was trave llin g o n
Georges Creek Road near Addison
Twp. Rd. 16A I Polecat Road 1 at
8:20p.m. when hls auto went left of
cente r on a curve.
It then colllded with a westbound
ve hic le driven by Gordon G.
F is her, 58. Rt. 1, Gallipol is, causing
modera te damage to Ca in 's vehicle
and slight to the Fisher auto.
Injured were three passenger&gt; In
Fishe r 's vehicle- VIcki L. Fisher,
28; Missy L. Fisher. 6; and J a mes
E . F is her. 2. all of Rt. 1. Gallipolis.
The patrol said the three were
taken to Holzer Medical Center by
the Ga Ula County Volunteer Emer·
gency Squad . but the hospital had
no record this morning of any being
treated.
The acc ident was stU! under In·
vestlga tlon this morning.

A Wellston man was cited in a
one-ve hicle accident on U.S. 35
Thursday morning, the patrol said.
Richard E. Morrison. 18, was
eastbound at 8: 15a.m. when hereportedly lost control on wet pavement a nd s truck the guard raU,
moderately damaging hls vehicle.
Morrison was ticketed for unsafe
speed for conditions .
Two other one-vehicle wrecks
were Inves tigated by the patrol on
Thursday.
·
Thomas J. Mulherin, ~7. Ravens·
wood, W.Va .. was eastbound on
Ohio :lJB, eig ht -tenths of a mlle east
of Ohio 12~. at 7: lO a.m . when hls
ve hicle went off the right side of the
road, cam e back onto the road,
crossed over. went down an em ·
bankmc nt and ca m e to rest In a
field .
The dri ve r was not Injured and
there was slight damage to hls
vehicle .
According to the report, David A.
Jo nes, 22. Canton. was northbound
on Gallla County Rd . 33. one mlle
north of 35. at B: 35 p.m. when he
drove off the righ t side of the road
a nd s truck a n embankment, causIng slight damage to hls tractor
tra ller rig .

British raiders attack islands
By The Associated Press
British forces landed on the Falk·
la nd Islands and attacked fuel and
ammunition dumps and mllltary
depots today, Britain reported . It
said the raiders were supported by
warship bombardment of Stanley
a nd other areas of East Falkland
and Harrter jet-fighter attacks on
the main base on West Falkland.
The Defense Mlnlstry In London
said a Brttlsh hellcopter ferrying 30
men between Brltlsh ships ditched
In the South Atlantic before the attack, a nd that nine were rescued.
,,e body was recovered and the
,\her 20 troops were missing and
presumed dead .
It was Britain's single biggest
loss since the con!Uct e rupted Aprll

2.

around 4,500 men In a n around
Stanley, the Falkla nds capital the biggest sln&amp;le concentration of
t he estima ted 9,000 Argentine
troops on the Isla nds.
Between l ,!XXJ a nd 1,500 Argen·
tine troops a re estimated to be a t
Fox Bay.
McDona ld gave no estimate of
the numbers of Britis h troops
la nded .
The deaths of 21 men aboard the
helicopter, belleved to be a Wessex
troop-carrier, was the s ingle blg·
gPst toss to the British forces since
th.e contllct began. It brought the
Br1tlsh death toll to 45 since the task
fo rce sailed April 5.
Twenty seame n died May 4 when
a n Argentine mlsslle destroyed the
Royal Navy destroyer HMS She f·
fie ld, two Harrier fighter pllots
were kllled when their aircraft dls·
a ppeared on patrol, one pilot was
s hot down. and a seam an wlll killed

There was no lmrnedla te reaction from Argentina to the British
announcement of attacks. The Brtt·
Ish military ac tion was launched af.
te r peace talks collapsed on
Thursday.
The British Defense Ministry spokesman. Ian McDonald, said of the
raids: "early Indications are that
Middleport Pool will open for the
they are achieving their objectives.
season
on Sunday, May 30, It was
"Bombardment from ships In the
a
nnounced
today.
task force conllnued In the vlclnlty
The Middleport Recreation Com ot Port Stanley and other areas In
mission has hired Rusty Bookman
East Falkland."
as
park and pool director and Helen
He said Harrters were attacking
Ztnn as swimming Instructor.
the Fox Bay area. which Is the
Pool rates are as follows : week
main Argentine base on the other
days from I p.m. to 5 p.m., $1 for
main Island, West Falkland.
adults and 50 cents for students;
McDonald said the British attack
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., 50 cents for
was direct against "Argentine milItary targets, Including fuel and adults and 25 cents for students;
ammunition dumps and mllltary . pre-school children will be admit·
· ted tree at any of the above hours If
stores.''
accompanied by a parent; weeBritish mllltary sources have
kend rates, Saturday and Sunday,
said there are between four and slx
from 12 noon to 6 p.m. $150 for
Argentine battalions totalling

accidenta lly, the British report .
British Forelgr Secretary Fran·
cis Pym said earlie r today that " In
the a bsence of a peaceful settlement , the military pressure wUJ
continue to bulld up and and attri·
tlon aga inst Argentina wilt
continue.
Pym spoke In a radio Interview
following the collapse of the U.N.
peace Initia ti ve and disclosures by
British government sources that
the British armada had been given
the go-a head for landings and hltand-run raids deslgred to squeeze
the Argentines Into surrender.
The British Defense Ministry
said Thursday that a Sea King hellcopter wi th a crew of three " got
Into dlffl c ultles In appa llin g
weather conditions" during a reconnaissance mission a nd went
down near Tierra del Fuego, at the
tlp of South America a nd 450 miles
from the Falklands.

Pool to open Sunday, May 30
adults a nd 75 cems for students,
pre-schoolers Ire€ If accompa nied
by parent.
Pool rent a l is$35!orone houranil
$25 per hour for two hours or more.
Jndtvtd ua l passes are $20; famlly
passes are $ll plus $5 for each add!·
ttonal child . The date when passes ,
wlll be avallable will be announced
next week.
Swimming lessons. whic h will
begin the middle of June. will $12
for the first child In a family and $10
for each additional chlld In the
sa m e family . Junior and senior Ufe·
saving lessons wlll be $15.

Applicants sought
Syracuse residents who will be
attending colleges, universities or
other a.ceredlted schools of higher
education this fall are Invited to
apply for 1982-83 carteton MemorIal Scholarships.
Application forms can be obtained from Milton Varian, secretary of the Carleton College Board
,of Trustee, any time. Completed application forms must be returned to
Varian by June 23.

BANNERS- Several banners such as this one are beln~ used in Middleport as a welcoming gestun· fur
the General Hartinger weekend .

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