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                  <text>Voi.31,No.14
c.pyrtehted 1912

Die Cavalli

WINTHROP
WHYI5~60AFR-\ID
OF #J!;~ I 'NONDCR lF IT
COUL.D E5e sa:-AU5E OF M"Y NAME~

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By KEVIN KELLY
. Calling for a revolution in atlltudes_ and procedures toward
education, Gov. James A. Rhodes
pushed a new emphasis on
vocational and technical instruction
as a means of helping Ohio and the
nation out of its economic problems.
The state's fourth-term chief
executive made the statement at
commencement exercises Sunday
afternoon at Rio Grande College and
ConunWlity College.
Rhodes, slamming the Carnegie
Conunission's 1909 recommendation
to d!H)mphasize vocational and
technical training in the schools,
said educators then abandoned what
he called "the fourth R" in
,
education - reality.
He told the 214 bachelor's degree
and 81 associate degree graduates
that they must accept reality and set
a course not only for themselves but
for the nation because "America
needs your help desperately at this
hour.
"We're depending on you to turn
the situation aroWld," the governor
said. "Unless we protect our industries, we'll soon find ourselves in
the first chapter of 'The Fall of the
Roman Empire."'
Rhodes enumerated th e
established reasons for the nation's

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Frisbee incident causes shooting

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NEW ORLEANS - A 72-year-old man who opened fire with a rifle
after being angered by Frisbee-tossing youths was seriously woWlded
in a gunbattle with police but refused to give up for more than two
hours, police said.
At one point during the shooting, which left a neighbor seriously
wOIUlded, the gunman goaded authorities to "come in and get me."
___ . .He finally surrendered SWlday evening after negotiators began
talking to him, and he was put on a stretcher and carried onto an ambulance.
Officer Wallace Goodey said Jeffrey "Jack" Simoneaux, a 72-yearold retired Anny sergeant, was taken to Charity Hospital. He was
reported in serious condition with woWlds in his right ann, right leg
and groin, said hospital spokeswoman Sue Ellen Lewis.

Claims job not nepotism

rD UKE 10 .t&lt;.tO/

WASI:UNGTON- Heather Gradison, wife of Republican U.S. Rep.
William Gradison, says her nomination to a seat on the Interstate
Commerce Conunission is not the result of nepotism.
Mrs. Gradison, 29, a former mid-level manager for the Southern
Railway, was nominated last week to the $58,500-a·year post by the
Reagan administration.
The nomination immediately prompted criticism that her a(r
pointment was in return for her husband's favorable votes as a member of the House Ways and Means Conunittee, where all tax legislation
originates.

WHERE Tl-ESE: HaJNI?S

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13 arrested following raid

•

AKRON, Ohio - Police arrested 13 people after a raid at a Hell's
Angels Motorcycle Clubhouse on the south side. Police said the arrests
were the result of a three-month investigation of an after-hours bar
that police say the gang operated at the clubhouse.
Four men identified as members of the gang were each charged
with operating an illegal bar and illegal liquor sales, both
misdemeanors. Five other men and four women were charged with intoxication and other misdemeanors after the Saturday raid.

f

Boa~ explosion burns pair

Sansom

DUSTY CHAPS

CINCINNATI - Two men were burned and six other passengers
escaped safely when a 32-foot cabin cruiser exploded, burned and sank
in the Ohio River.
The boat eiploded SWlday near the Bellevue, Ky., shoreline after it
had fueled up at a yacht club, All eight passengers swam to shore.
Carl Weitz, 42, Cincinnati, was listed in fair condition at St. Lnke's
Hospital with burned legs. Raymond Worthington, 38, was treated for
leg burns and released.

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ts in their final two years of high
school should be enrolled in either
college preparatory or vocational
education," he said. "We don't have
to hold vocational and technical
education as a stepchild to regular
education. I know this is controversial, but every time you move
forward in education, you have
people hanging on to tradition ."
Following his address, Rhodes
was awarded an honorary doctorate
of law from the college, along with
restauranteur-sausage manufacturer Bob Evans, who received an
honorary doctorate in public service. Dr. Paul Hayes, college
president, made the presentation to
Rhodes and Evans.
Hayes also annolUlced the admission of Dr. Francis W. Shane to
fellow status to the college. Shane
was Wlable to attend the ceremony
due to ill health.
The graduates were presented by
Dr. Edward L. Donovan, dean of the
colleges . Diplomas for bachelor's
graduates were presented by Dr.
Joseph L. Bitonte, president of the
college's board of trustees, and
associate diplomas were presented
by Manning Wetherholt, president of
the community college's boat d of
trustees.

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Refugees donate money •

f?AASOM!
CJ:»JE. UP \()ffif

SANTA ANA, Calif. - Vietnamese refugees here are donating
money and in .some cases actually enlisting in _a guerrilla effort_ to
overthrow the communist government of Vtetnam, · comrnuruty
leaders say.
.He said refugees have returned to fight the regime, but he didn't
know how many, the Santa Ana Register reported. The .comrnWlist
government, which initially controlled North Vietnam, gamed control
of the enlre nation when South Vietnam surrendered in April1975. 1
Many refugees are suppo'rting an anti-comm~ guerrilla effort in
Vietnam led by Hoang Co Minh, 52, a former admiral in the South Vtet·
nameile navy

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14 killed in car bombing
BEIRUT, Lebanon- A car carrying a bomb drove into the French
Embaasy compound ln M011lem West Beirut today and exploded,
killing 14 people, pollee said.
·
At least 15 others were injured when the car exploded under the
flagpole Dying the red-white-and-blue French tricolor, 10 yards inside
the Iron gates of the waUed comj!ound.
I.

.Weather forecast
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'fonlgl¢: partly cloudy.' Low 65 to 80. 'Light and variable wlnda.
Tueaclay: mostlysunny.lflch'llto80. Cbanceofraln10percent. ·
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EVANS HONORED- Bob Evans, center. prepares
to receive his honorary doctorate in public service
from Dr. Paul Hayes, right, president of Rlo Grande
College and Comll)unity College, and Dr. Joseph Biton-

Accident leaves
two persons hurt

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AND THE THICKETS AND

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current economic blight- the influx
of foreign goods, Wldercutting
America's productivity; government overregulation and spending;
and high interest rates, which have
gone to the point where the economy
can't e&lt;pand.
"Unless we deal with reality, the
situation will only g,row worse," he
said. "We must concentrate on industrial development, lying within
the improvement of education."
This improvement, Rhodes ex·
plained, is held in vocational and
technical training, which he feels
will help to create jobs in industry.
He predicted vocational education to
reach an 00 percent enrollment level
in Ohio's high schools in the near
future.
In order to do this, Rhodes urged
the creation of a separate, statewide
board of education, independent of
the state board of regents, for the administration of vocational schools
and technical colleges.
Such schools and colleges have
grown in the past 20 years, and
Rhodes said Rio Grande is at the
forefront of a coming revolution in
technical education. However, he
said much more needs to be done to
help such schools.
"lt'sbeenmypositionthatstuden-

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1 S.Ction, 10 Poe••
U C.nh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, Monday, May 24, 1982
.
-

Governor pushing vocational education
.
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patrol for assured clear distance.
Two persons were injured in a
In another three-car accident in
three-vehicle accident in Meigs
Meigs
County on Sunday, the patrol
CoWlty Saturday morning.
cited Terry L. Life, 20, Reedsville,
The injured - Bruce E. Caldwell,
for left of center.
26, Rt. I, Middleport, and Pebbles L.
The report said Life was westClark, 19, Cheshire - were both
bound on Ohio 124 at 1:45 p.m. when
later treated and released from the
he passed a car driven by Delbert D.
emergency room at Veterans
Smith,
23, Reedsville, which was
Memorial Hospital.
parked westbound on the berm.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the state
As Life passed, he struck an easthighway patrol said the incident OC·
bound auto driven by James S.
curred at 11: 17 a.m. when Lanny D.
Rucker Jr., 23, Reedsville, causing
Tyree, 29, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, stopped
Rucker to lose control, go off the norhis vehicle on Ohio 7 at the inthern edge of the road and strike
tersection with Ohio 143 to make a
Smith's
vehicle.
left turn .
Both Rucker and Smith's vehicles
Caldwell was behind Tyree when
Clark's northboWld auto was unable were severely damaged and the Life
to stop and struck the rear of Cald- auto received moderate damage .
In other accidents investigated
well's auto. forcing it into the rear of
over the weekend, the patrol said
the Tyree vehicle.
Caldwell and Clark were taken to · Wanda S. Pelfrey, 50, Trenton,
Veterans by the Pomeroy emergen- escaped injury when her vehicle
cy squad. The accident caused struck a bridge abutment on Beech
severe damage to Clark's vehicle Grove Road near Rutland at 9: 30
and moderate damage to the other p.m. Saturday. Her vehicle was
two vehicles. Clark was cited by the moderately damaged.

te, rhairman of the college board of trust~es, during
commencement exercises at Rio Grande Sunday.
Evans was honored for his contributions tn wildlife and
natural resource conservation, amon~ ulht•r ~rtivities.

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FAVORS V().ED- Gov. James A. Rhodes, claiming Ohio's educators
have ignored reality by playing down vocational and technical education
strongly called' for a revolution in thinking toward those fields at Ri~
Grande College and Community College Sunday. He said increased emphasis in those areas of education would help the nation out of its current
economic bind.

Graduation ceremony held at EHS
By KATIE CROW
"Tonight marks the ending of one
very important part of our lives and
the beginning of another even more
important part," Kyle Young,
valedictorian, told the graduating
class in her opening remarks at the
25th annual Eastern High School
commencement exercises Sunday.
Miss YoWlg continued: "Many
people have contributed to what we
are today. We need to pause a few
moments to thank these people.
"The most influential people in
our lives have been our parents. Our
parents were behind us, supporting
US on the first day that we left for
kindergarten. Tl:ey have been there
every day since with their love, su(r
port, and guidance. They have encouraged us when we have failed
and praised us when we have suc·
ceeded. We owe everything that we
are to them.
"Through our years at school we
have grown very close to another
group of wonderful people - our
teachers. Whenever we have needed
help and encouragement, they have
been more than willing to give it. We
need to thank both our parents and
our teachers for everything that
they have done for us through the
years.
"Eastern has given us many
things. We have experienced many
things here that we will never have
the opportunity to experience again.
We have formed many friendships
thro!l8h the years. We will always
cheriSh the memories that were
made during thl.s time.
"HoWever, we cannot dwell on the
past,. but rather we need to prepare
for the future. In the words of the ·
great Slr'Winston Churchill, 'In the
past we had a 'Ught which Olckered.
In the present we have a Ught that
flames and in the future there will be
a Ughl which llhlries oVer all the land
·· and sea. • 'l1llB Ught of the future is
1Jke the light at the end ol the tunnel
which will becl!me brighter aa we
~ toward our goala. We need tq
1un:1 from the past aod turn toward

the future. Tomorrow will soon
become today and there will be a
new tomorrow."
Miss Young continued, "Yes, this
evening marks the ending of one
very important part of our lives, but
there lies much more before us. The
word commencement itself means a
beginning or embarking into the
future. The future is defined as time
yet to come or the chance to succeed.
"Life is a series of challenges.
Each day will bring a new set of
challenges. Each of us will have to
face the challenges before him.
Many of them seem difficult or even
impossible to overcome, but we
must remember that challenge is
what makes us strive to improve
ourselves. Our parents hav e
challenged us, our teachers have,
our coaches have, but the greatest
challenges have come from within

ourselves."
In closing she said : "Each of us
will choose a different road in life,
and each of us will ca rry different
memories of our high school yea rs,
but we all need to remember the of·
ten used expression . 'Today is the
first day of the rest of our lives.· "
Sarah Goebel, salutatorian, in her
remarks said, " I would like to
reminisce about our days as students at Eastern High School. I also
would like to recognize those people
who have influenced us the most We
ha ve be-en

influenced by man y

people throughout our school years .
One of the groups that has influenced us is our friends.
"Our teachers have played an important role in our school years.
They gave us knowledge and
discipline. The coaches have taught
us the importance of teamwork and
sportsmanship. Last, but not least,

READYTOGRADUATEfromEastemHighScbool

Sallday Dlgllt were; 1-r, Troy Bearha, Carolyn Bowen,

..

we have been influenced by our
families. Our families have encouraged us by being supportive and
helpful. ··
The welcome was given by
Michael Dean Hauber. president of
the class and introduction of
speakers wa s made by Roger Cecil
Gaul, vice president of the class .
The sixth grade chorus presented
a vocal number " The Rose." James

D. Page. principal , recogmzed the
top 10 scholars. gave a spectal
prescnl&lt;!l10n and presented the
graduating c\H SS.

Acceptance of tlw class was made
by Richard 1.. Roberts, superintenden t. and the conferring of the

diplomas was by Rugt' r Gaul. mern·
ber of Eastern Local Board of
Education .
•.,_ (Continued on page 10 I

'

Jeff Jones, Sberri Myers, P. G.
Crafl

'

�Page-2-The Dally Sentlner
Pomtroy-Miclclleport, Ohio
Monday, May 24, 1982

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill t 'uurt Stn·t· l
Pumt'fU\ . Ohiu

61•-99i-:Z J)6
llf:\"11TEUT11Til E

I"'JTERf.~ TOf'THE

Mt:IC:S.MASUN AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhllsht•r

RORHOEFUCH

PAT WHITEHEAD
A ~s i~t.untl'ublistwr/(

'nnlrullo·r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

A MEMUEH ul Tht· A .,.wd&lt;~h-d l'rt's~. lnlund [)wily l'rnu; A,;sodu tiun wnd lht'
Amt·rit'un Nt'...,sp&lt;!J&gt;t'f l'ublbht•rs ASMK·iatiun.
I.ETIEHS or OPINION art&gt; ...,dn1mt'd . Tht·v shuuld lw ln;s thwn 300 • ·un:h; lunK- All
lrt lt'n Hrt' lt Ubjt'r l '" t·ditinl( and must bt- lii,Kilt'd ~Ailh ll&lt;'mt', addn-ss and lt'ltphonr
numba. N+1 unsi,K11t'11 h•ltrr!'&gt; " -ill tw vuhlish.-d. l .rtlt-rs should IM· In ,Kood lMslt', addrl'f&gt;!i iiiM
l"SUt' S. nul pt'rlWIIHiilit·s .

Needed: a system for
classifying politicians
Although thoughtful observers of politics long have been dissatisfied
with the simplistic classifications of "liberal" and "conservative," finding a
workable substitute is proving to be a difficult task.
Sophisticated conservatives insist that there are important distinctions
between "old right" and " new right" political philosophies. The emergency
of "ne&lt;reonservatives" during the late 1970s now has been matched by the
debut of" ne&lt;&gt;-liberals" in the early 1980s.
In many cases, however, those relatively new classifications represent a
distinction without a difference. In addition, they cannot be integrated into a
unified, coherent system of identifying contemporary political ideologies.
One approach to such a universal classification system currently enjoying some popularity can be traced to a paper circulated last sununer by
the Cato Institute, a libertarian "think tank " and research organization
based in Washington.
The authors of that paper, Stuart A. Lilie and WilliamS. Maddox, both
are political scientists on the faculty of the University of Central Florida in
Orlando. They suggest that "at least four different belief systems exist
among the American public."
Rejecting the "single liberal&lt;onservative dimension" as inadequate to
measure the broad range of political proclivities, Lilie and Maddox sought to
identify ideology on the basis of two distinct favors - government economic
intervention and individual liberties.
Under that system, "liberals" are those who support both government
intervention and expansion of individual liberties, while "conservatives" Oj)pose both concepts.
"Libertarians" support expanded individual liberties but not government intervention, while "populists" favor economic intervention but not expansion of individual liberties.
The authors of the study concluded that 71 percent of the electorate held
consistent positions susceptible to being classified in one of the four
categories. "Populists" were atop the list with 23.6 percent, followed by
"conservatives" with 17.9 percent, " liberals" with 16.4 percent and " libertarians" with 13.1 percent.
A variation of that new classification system now has been applied to all
current members of Congress by the Baron Report, a highly regarded
political newsletter.
Isolating individual voting records that reflect a significant disparity
between positions on economic issues and stances on "social" or ''cultural"
issues, that analysis identified 45 legislators as libertarians and 35
lawmakers as populists.
The libertarians, all but one of whom were Republicans, were quite
" liberal" on social issues and somewhat more "conservative" on economic
issues - but their "liberalism" in the latter category far exceeded the GOP
average.
Thus, the libertarians are the same legislators who once were referred
to as "liberal" or "progressive" Republicans and more recently have adoj)ted the appellation (in the House) of' 'Gypsy Moths."
On the other hand, Sen. William V. Roth, R-Del., emerged as the lone
GOP " populist" in the Senate - notwithstanding his c&lt;rauthorship of last
year's Kemj)-Roth tax bill, a notably anti-populist piece of legislation.
The difficulties inherent in applying even the e~panded set of political
labels becomes obvious when attempting to classify the country's bestknown politician, President Reagan.
Although he surely isn't a liberal or a populist, he might be a conservative or a libertarian, both classifications that require a corrunitment to
free-market economics and rejection of government intervention and centralized planning.
But the president's domestic program is a paradigm of the pervasive
government planning preswnably embraced only by liberals and populists.
Thus, we're back where we started - with an assortment of politicians too
complex to be swnmarily consigned to two or even four categories.

Berry's World

"Prolonged staring at a blank video display terminal may indicate trouble not the computer."

with the operator.

I..etter to the editor

The prayer amendment
you have problems understanding the opposition to 1.1\e
prayer amendment, we do not. The
argwnents are as hard to follow as a
strand of cotton candy .
Take, for instance, Mr. Albert
Shanker, president of the United
Federation of Teachers of the City of
New York. In a recent colwnn he
embraced most of the common
argwnents against the proposed
amendment.
- To begin with, Mr. Shanker
says, he smells in the whole enterprise a desire by President
Reagan to "overturn" a Supreme
Court decision over 20 years old.
Well, I too smell such a determination. But to smell such a determination is not necessarily to smell
offal. The smell could be of frankincense and myrrh. Suppose that Mr.
Shanker had altered his rhetoric to
say instead : : "President Reagan
wishes to liberate the American
people from a Supreme Court
decision 20 years old." Since
Shanker is capable of stem-winding
himself up real good, he might have
gone on to say "even as Abraham
Lincoln liberated the country from a
Supreme Court decision 20 years ago
that legitimized slavery."
- But he forgot the question
whether a president properly urges
on a constitutional amendment
which, after all, the overwhelming
majority of the people's representatives, federal and local, would
need to ratify. It is now always
mysteriously suggested that the
court's decision meant instant aj)proval back in 1962. "Some people,
of course, didn't like that decision,"
writes Shanker. That's a little like
saying, "Some paople didn't like
Pearl Harbor." Then a few weeks after the court's decision, 49 state
governors publicly protested the
decision, ca lling for a constitutional
amendment. The holdout was
Nelson Rockefeller, and he was
probably afraid of Albert Shanker.
- We are told that the kind of
If

prayers that could be formulated for
general acceptance - for instance,
the prayers ministers, priests and
rabbis had jointly approved for New
York City and which brought on the
court's interdiction
are
meaninglessly vague. There we are
told that little children don't understand vague prayers. Then we
are told that little children would be
hwniliated if they opted out of joint
prayers, notwithstanding that the
amendment explicitly gives them
that right.
To
begin
with,
the
acknowledgment of the Lord is
neither blasphemous nor sectarian
when done in general language, and
anyone who doubts that has not attended a civic or testimonial dinner
in 20 years (a singular evidence of
the miraculous power of the Lord).
An acknowledgment of God is made
in our public coinage, in the oath of

William F. Buckley Jr.

allegiance and extensively before
meetings of Congress, though you
could never tell from the results.
Shanker goes on to talk about the
poor little eight-year-old who wants
to opt out of prayers, but is afraid he
will be beaten up by his comrades if
he exercises his option, and Shanker
gives an autobiolgraphical experience, citing his kindly but silly
piano teacher who excused "Albert"
from "singing Christmas carols" "Albert is Jewish, so he won't have
to sing them since he doesn't believe
in God." Albert was beaten up by the
other kids, kids being beastly . Who
should have been beaten up was the
lecher. And after that, the board of
education for appointing her.
Shanker cites wiui great reverence the testimony of one Richard
Cohen who says that the school
prayer decision is "about understanding and respecting the

rights and sensitivities of
minorities." Tbe only way to acqulre
any rights these days is to become a
minority. So why shouldn't believing
Jews, Protestants, Catholics and .
Zoroastrians declare themselves
minorities (which they are) and
demand the right of common
prayer• Let the little eight-year-old
atheist simply stand for his mwn
and do what other civilized people
. do, namely bow their heads and say .
nothing, and think about sex, if they
want to contribute their own personal little iconoclasm. A respect for
the rights of minorities begins with a
respect for the rights of majorities.
- And, finally, there are the highbrows . Shanker quotes Edwin
Yoder, who traps himself into saying .
that if the amendment passes, the
courts will forever be asked to judge
whether a given prayer is too sectarian.

Social Security Democratic tool
WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Reagan said he hoped to take Social
Security out of politics once and for
all, but it's still there, high on the
Democrats' campaign agenda.
A bipartisan commission, created
at Reagan's urging, is studying the
whole system, with a report due at
the end of the year. In theory, that
would shelve the issue until after the
1982 congressional elections. In fact,
there is no way to keep politics away

from a program that taxes almost
every working American and pays
benefits to one citizen in seven.
And the Democrats are not about
to leave it alone now that Reagan
has embraced a compromise budget
that is supposed to save $'W billion in
Social Security costs over the next
three years.
Reagan has not said how that will
·be done, only that current
beneficiaries will get their 7.4 per-

cent cost-of-living increase on July I
and that "we will continue to protect
the basic benefits of Social Security
recipients in the future."
That assurance covers people now
receiving benefits, not those who are
still paying taxes into the financially
troubled government retirement
system. Reagan said he would make
the system solvent and cut costs at
the same time.
So something will have to give. "It

could come from an entire restructuring of the program, actuarily
looking back down toward people
who are just beginning in the
program," the president said.
Details were left open, while the
15-member National Corrunission on
Social Security Refonn studies the
system. Reagan did say he doesn't
think the commission will recommend cutting future cost-of-living increases for current beneficiaries.

Reagan defenders resurrect index
NEW YORK (AP) -Defenders of
Reaga~omics have been resurrecting the so-called discomfort or
misery index to support their thesis
that you are better off now than you
have been at any time since 1976.
What really may be demonstrated, however, is the uselessness
of the index, a combination of the

• .0!'

f:

Monday, May 24, 1982

unemployment and inflation rates
devised by Arthur Okun when he
was Lyndon Johnson's chief
economic adviser.
Okun never intended his device to
be anything but a rough indicator of
conswner strength or weakness, a
rule of thwnb, but that was before
the politicians grabbed it and began

sticki~g

the thwnb in opponents'

eyes.
Jimmy Carter utilized it to jab the
administration of Gerald Ford, and
set himself up for a haymaker from
the right when Ronald Reagan
reminded voters that the index in
1980 was around 20 percent. ·

The index is down, and two things
are happening: 1. Its use as
propaganda is being speeded up by
Republicans, and 2. the absurdity of
treating it as a scientific
measurement is becoming more aj)parent.

Made for each other?_________D_o_nG_ra_iff
From day two of the Falklands the Falklanders' desire to remain
crisis, the problem has really been subjects of the crown.
how to give the Argentines what they
Deference to the Falklanders'
want without appearing to do so.
desire has not, however, altered the
What they want, as aiHhe-worlfi. " &gt;basic British desire to be rid of the
knows by now, is the Falkland !sian- islan~ And despite the bellicosity
ds.
of the response to the Argentine
The charge that British resistance initiative, that desire mu5t now be
to Argentina's forcible seizure of the stronger than ever.
islands represents resurgent
The present crisis vividly demoncolonialism is ludicrous. Once strates what a liability the islands
Britain got the hang of the procedure are. They may be retaken - as a
in the early post-war years, it has matter of principle. But they can't
demonstrated exceptional proficien- be held indefinitely. Even if the princy in divesting itself of empire.
ciple were worth it, the British canOne of the last remaining sizable not afford the cost.
pieces of real estate, Belize on the
So that brings the British and
Caribbean coast of Central America, everyone else interested in the imwas turned out on its own last year to passe - with the possible exception
the distress of much of a native of the Argentines, although even the
population apprehensive that the generals in Buenos Aires are
follow-up to independence might be showing some signs of at last seeing
absorption by neighboring the light - back to the basic
Guatemala.
problem: How to arrange the
The major difference between divestiture of a . British liability
Belize and the Falklands is that the without appearing to reward Argenpopulation of the latter is of British· tine aggression? .
stock. London has paid more heed to
Given governments in finn control
of their home fronts and fully
- and up to AprU 2 been guJded by -

cognizant of the realities of a confrontation, a little fast diplomatic
footwork might produce an acceptable arrangement.
But that in no ·sense describes the
Argentine government. By ·Seizing
the islands in disregard of the
political realities involved, the
Argentines created for themselves a
Falklands monster. They a~e in line
as the first victims of a rampant
Argentine nationalism seeking
revenge for any perceived yielding
to the British.
Under the circumstances they are
showing courage as well as delayed
recognition of reality in qualitying
their original · insistence on
acknowledgement of Argentine
sovereignty as a pre-condition of a
Falklands Settlement.
··
What is particularly interesting is
the fonun in which this is occurring
- tile United Nations.
This is the second time around in
this crisis for the U.N, The Security
CouncU was seized with the question
immediately following the ~izure of
the islands, held the usual emergen-

cy session ·and passed . the usual
resolution calling upon ;~ll parties to
cool it, which met with the usual noncompliance.
The U.N. hasn't had much to show
for its peace-keeping efforis for a
long time now. It lias been totally
ineffectual in the Persian Gulf war
and the destruction of Lebanon. It
has been a non-factor in the larger
Aratrlsraell conflict in the Mideast
and in the sputtering little war&amp;
across Africa and in Southeast Asia:·
It has been ineffectual in pa.;
because o! the power alignments iri
those conflicts, but also in very larg~
part because it has ceased to deal in
· realities. For most of its member~
the United Nations has ·become a
giant board upon which to plat.
elaborate diplomatic games iii
which tbe question of who wins Of
loses is less important than t~
playing of the game. .
·
•
It is just possible that the United
Nations is the pertect forum
· resolving an unreal problem such
the Falklands.

•

..
•
•

association's public education
programs abo~t mental illness and
ways to promote goocj mental
health, as well as its work for
adequate mental lll;alth services for
all Ohioans.
Please give genel'OWiiy when your
neighbor comes to your door during
the bellringer drive for mental
health. - Dorothy Johnson, Chairpei'BOII, Bellringer, Mental Health

~
~

Ruthven holds on for
2-1 win over Braves
By Associated Press
Scratch Plan A.
"Once you've lost a n&lt;&gt;-hitter, the
next thing you think about is the
shutout," says Dick Ruthven of the
Philadelphia Phillies.
Scratch Plan B.
"Then, you start thinking about
saving the game itself."
That's Plan C, and Ruthven was
thankful he did not have to use more
of the alphabet Sunday against the
Atlanta Braves.
Ruthven pitched seven hitless innings, losing his n&lt;&gt;-hit bid when Bob
Horner, the first batter in the eighth,
singled. Two more singles, by Chris
Chambliss and Bruce Benedict,
produced an Atlanta run, but Ruthven and the Phillies held on for a 2-1
victory .
Ruthven was asked if he was
aware that he hadn't allo)Ved a hit
and, if so, when he started thinking
about pitching his first n&lt;&gt;-hitter.
"Anyone who doesn't know he
hasn't given up a hit must be on the
moon or somewhere," Ruthven said.
"Unless !lose count, I always know
how many I've given up, even if it's
a lot.
· "I began thinking about the n&lt;&gt;hitter as early as the third inning,
probably," he added.
Ruthven, now 3-3, retired the first
14 batters. He did not allow a
baserunner until walking Chambliss
with two out in the fifth. He walked
one more hitter and struck out Dale
Murphy three times before Ed Farmer took over in the ninth.
The victory was Philadelphia's
second straight after losing four in a
·:row, while the National League

West-leading Braves have lost two in
a row after winning three straight.
The Braves-Phillies game also
produced a milestone for first
baseman Pete Rose, who played in
his 500th consecutive game. Rose
drove in a run in the Philadelphia
third with a grounder, and Garry
Maddox's RBI double in the second
inning off Atlanta right-hander Phil
Niekro, 2-1, scored Philadelphia's
first run.
,
Dodgers 5, Cards 0
Los Angeles right-hander Bob
Welch allowed five hits and struck
out seven to hand Bob Forsch of St.
Louis his first loss of the season.
Pedro Guerrero drove in two runs
with a triple to spark the Dodgers'
three-run first inning.
Welch, 5-2, walked just two and did
not allow a runner past second base
for his second shutout and third complete game of the season. The
Dodger starter allowed two men to
reach base in only one inning, the
fourth, when George Hendrick
singled and Ken Oberkfell walked.
Forsch, now 5-1, allowed five runs
on 10 hits through five innings.
" We feel right now we're going to
Inake our move," said Manager
Tom Lasorda, whose Dodgers
reached the .500 mark.
Pirates 4, Padres 2
John Candelaria posted his fir'i
victory in more than a year, scattering six San Diego hits over 7 2-3
innings and helping Pittsburgh snap
a three-game losing streak. Lee
Lacy drove in a pair of Pirate runs
with a double and triple.
Candelaria, 1-2, walked only one
and struck out nine before getting

'•

By Associated Press
The New York Yankees are
cleaning up, thanks to John
Mayberry.
"He really hasn't been hitting for
average yet, but he's been giving us
production," says Yankee Manager
Gene Michael. "The more he plays,
the more he's going to get his swing
back."
Suffering from a power shortage
earlier this season, the Yankees are
getting some new-found spark from
Mayberry's bat in the cleanup
position - including three hits and a
tw&lt;&gt;-rim single in the seventh inning
Sunday that paced New York to a 4-2
victory over the M,innesota Twins.
"John likes men in scoring
position. He likes to be the big guy in
there. Hitting fourth doesn't bother
him. I like that," Michael said.
Although Mayberry, who came in
a trade with Toronto, is only hitting
.244, Sunday's run production gave
him nine RBI in his 45 at-bats in New
York.
Ron Guidry, 7-1, scattered seven
hits over seven innings and gained
his fifth straight victory with relief
help from Rich Gossage, who recorded his lith save.
Loser Bob Castillo, 2-2, gave up a
one-out double to Andre Roberison
in the Yankee seventh, then issued
·an intentional walk to Dave Collins.
He fell behind Oscar Gamble 3-I and
· was relieved by former Yankee Ron
Davis who walked Gamble to load
the bases for Mayberry.
Minnesota had tied the game 1-1 in
the sixth on Gary Gaetti's runscoring single.
Red Sox 6, A's 0
Jim Rice and Dave Stapleton hit

bases-i!mpty homers in the third inning and Dennis Eckersley scattered three hits as Boston beat
Oakland in a game twice delayed by
rain and finally halted after 5-t innings.
Trailing 1.0 after two innings, and
following a !-hour, 7-minute delay,
Oakland starter Mike Norris, 2-4,
surrendered a leadoff blast by Rice,
his eighth of the year, and two outs
later, Stapleton hit his fourth of the

relief help from Rod Scurry. Candelaria helped his o.m cause when
he led off the second with a double
and scored on Lacy's triple.
Meto 2, Astros 0
RJindy Jones fired a four-hitter
and allowed only one baserunner to
reach third as New York beat
Houston for the second straight
night. Wally Backman singled home
the winning run in the Mets' tw&lt;&gt;-run
third inning.
It was Jones' sixth victory in eight
decisions this year. The one-time Cy
Young Award winner, who struck
out six, was l-3last year.
Houston starter Joe Niekro
worked seven innings, walking four ,
throwing two wild pitches and hitting a batter.
Giaols 4-6, Cubs 3-3
Jack Clark broke out of a 3-for-35
slwnp with a one-out single in the
lOth inning that drove in Chili Davi.s
with the winning run in the opener.
Davis , started the inning with a
single and took second on a single by
Dave Bergman. Darrell Evans'
sacrifice advanced the runners for
Clark, who had been benched in the
previous two games.
The Giants tied the score in the
eighth inning on Evans' basesloaded sacrifice fly.
In the nightcap, Johnnie LeMaster
tripled home two runs in San Francisco's three-run second inning,
overcoming a 1-0 Chicago lead for
the sweep. LeMaster also scored
twice in the victory, which went to
reliever Dan Schatzeder. Rookie
starter Mike Chris drove in the third
run of the rally with a sacrifice fly .

•'

"I'm surprised Eckersley pitched
as well as he did," said Oakland
Manager Biily Martin, fuming
because the game wasn't postponed.
" Norris was all over the place."
Eckersley improved his record to
5-3.
Mariners 6, Brewers 5
Manny Castillo's RBI single with
two out in the lith inning lifted Seattle over Milwaukee. Dave Henderson led off with a single against
Rollie Fingers, 2-5, and was
sacrificed to second. Fingers walked
Rick Sweet, then retired Julio Cruz
on a popup for the second out before
Castiilo hit an G-2 pitch to score the
winning run.
Bill Caudill, 5-2, the fourth Seattle
pitcher, worked the final 2 1-3 innings for the victory.
Blue Jays 7, Orioles I
Luis Leal pitched a five-hitter and
Damaso Garcia drove in two runs to
pace Toronto over Baltimore. Leal,
3-2, limited the Orioles to just four
singles and a double.
The Blue Jays broke two streaks
when they erupted for three runs in
the fourth inning to chase Sammy
Stewart, 4-3. Uoyd Moseby· snapped
the Blue Jays' scoreless streak at 23

drove in two runs and Steve Renko

hurled a four-hitter as California
defeated error-prone Detroit.
Renko, 5-l, struck out two and gave
up only a pair of walks.

__ ....
CAN'T BEAR TO WATCH - Cincinnati Reds' catcher Alex Trevino grimaces and rloses his eyes as he
puts the tag on Montreal Expos' base runner Warren
Cromartie during the fifth inning of a game, Sunday in
Cincinnati. Cromartie tried to score from third base 011

CINCINNATI I APl - John M!'Namara has weathered some vexing
times as the Cincinnati Reds'
manager. but he says his team's
dismal start this season is the mo'1
upsetting of all.
"To say the least. it's a very
helpless, frustrating feeling," McNamara said, unenthusiasticall y
picking at a plate of food in his olli e&lt;'
following a 4-2 loss to the Montreal
Expos. the Reds' fifth in a row.
OuL,ide . the Reds' clubhouse was
silent as players showered quickly.
The ballclub that perfonned a major
orf·sl!ason overhaul is mired in last
place in the National !..,ague West
with a 16-24 mark .
McNamara has juggled his lineup
gmnc after game, only to see his
club fail to produce in dutch
situations.
In language liberally peppered
with vul~arities, McNamara toltl
reporters Sunday that he hasn't bee11
through a more frustrating ex perience since taking over as Reds '

Hurdle sent down
CINCINNA Tl I APl - Outfielder
Clint Hurdle. who struggled through
a batting slwnp early in the season
and eventually was benched, has
been se nt down to the Cincinnati

Reds' Indianapolis farm club.
Outfielder Duane Walker was expected to join the club m lime for
tonight' s game against the
Philadelphia PhilliPs . Walker. 25, hit
.287 with four home runs a11d 19 RBis
in 36 games this season with the

Class AAA farm club.

SENT DOWN -The Cincinnati
Reds, mired In a staggering offeDBive slump, have demoted outfielder Clint Hurdle to Indianapolis. Recalled from the
minors was left-handed hitting
oudielder Duane Walker.

MIDDLEPORT ALUMNI

Hurdle, obtained from Kansas
City in an off-season trade. hit just
.206 in 19 games. He was given the
first chance at the starting left field
job in spring training, but went into
a hitting slwnp that lasted into the
regular season and cost him the
position.
Both players bat left-handed .

COne Alumnus)
$20.00 Banquet Dance dues
0
·
(Two Alumni)
$18.00 Banquet Dance Dues
0
COne Alumnus &amp; Guest)
· $2.00 Dues Only.

.....

send ,:heck to Carolyn Grueser, 1625 Lincoln Hgts.,
· Pomeroy, Oh., 45769.
Tickets available at door.

•

'

NAME •. • .••• • .... • . • •• , .••.•••••.••••. ·• •..•.••• ·

~

ADDRESS •..••.•••• .••••••.••••. • , •••...•.•.• • , •
.
.
" ,'

mak&lt;' the playoffs last year desprte
tht· best ovt: ra ll rcnln.i
le&lt;:~g ue

....

.~

·••'

H1mseh olt..lt•r 's average fl•ll t o .196

major

with on ~fot · -4 ga me.

McNamara also has juggled the

you can't stand thl' heat, gel
out uf the kitchen," he rnutl&lt;·red.
almost to hiJn sl'lf. " I've been in tlw
kitchen all uf my life . I'll slay therl'.
·· We'll work thrs thing oul. w,.
" ![

batting on.lt·r to try to get more run

production oul of a club that has jilloi
15 hnmc runs and no player with
mort.• than ~0 runs balled in onefourth of tht· wa y through the

don't he:tVl' peuplc in that room •lht•

season.

Cincinnati clubhouse f who art·
losers.''
Till' Reds starlt·d the season 111
ro
ggcd fash1011 . unab\t• ltJ l'Uillbllll'
g~od pill' hing and tlitting fur a stret-

" It 's just a frustrating feeling,"

Mt·Ncun&lt;:tra sc11d.

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ch. McNamara 's l·hicf !'OIIlplainl
nuw is about till' team's inability tu
get hits with men on base. The Reds
have stranded an average of 7.5
bascrunners per gaml'.
"The pill'hers actua lly have done
their job," Mcnamara said. "Our
pitchers have kt•pt us in t.hP
ballgames. I can find no fault with
our pitching ."
McNamara sa id the frustration
comes from knowin g his hitters an~
trying hard - perhaps too hard.
" I don 't think there's a man in
baseball who walks up to home plate
trying to make an out," McNamara
sa id . "Nobody wants to turn and
walk back empty-handed ."
McNamara has tried more than
two dozen different batting
arrangemenl'i in searchin g fur a
winning combination. He's gone no
longer them four strai ght ga me~ with
the sa me bolting arnmgcment.
" Wc'rl' trying to gu with the best
wt· think is available right now,"
McNamara sa id .
That's meant benching opening
day starters Paul Householder and
Clint Hurdle and using rooki e Eddre
Milner and pinch-hillers Mih V•Ii
and Larry Biitlner in lhc outfield to

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Any Alumni wishing to reserve a table for the dance
should stop at the Meigs Jr. High May 28 between 6:30
and 8:30.

try to add some offensive punch.
H~rdle was sent down to the Indianapolis [ann club Sunday, and

managt•r for the 1979 season . Thot
would lllt.'IUlk lht' learn 's fHilun• to

,---------------------------1

ATTENTION ALL M.H.S. ALUMNI!
we need volunteers for decorating- Friday, May 28,
6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. This is your alumni - Ptease
give us your help!
·

MHSALUMNI RESERVATION
$10.00 Banquet, Dance Dves
0

teammate Chris Speier's ficldt•r's t•hoke to shortstop

Dave Conreprion, but was ('Ut down on Conrcpdon's
throw to the plate. The Expo• we11t 011 to win the game
4-2. 1AP Lascrphoto).

McNamara ponders situation

Sale

..t

'

innings when he hit an RBI double.
The run also ended the Orioles'
scoreless pitching streak at 36 innings.
Angels 7, Tigers 2
Bobby Grich had three hits and

season.

••

•'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

. Pon~eroy Middleport, Ohio

;Mayberry's bat produces
new spark for Yankees

Please be generous
In designating May as Mental
Health Month in Ohio, Governor
Rhodes pointed out the prevalence of
mental and emotional iilneas and the
widespread lack of public understanding of it. He asked that
Ohioans lend their support and en&lt;;ouragement to the f~ght against
mental Ulnesa.
Duling May, the .Mental Health
Association of Ohio holds Ita aMual
bellringer fund drive. Proceeds
from the . drive support the

'

of

YEAR . GRADUATION
••••• ,., •• •· • .' .........
,
., • ·,.

••

.

�Monday, May 24, 1982

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

76ers oust Boston
BOSTON I API - The rollercoaster series is over.
When the wild and wacky ride to
the National Basketball Association
finals reached the end of the line, the
Philadelphia 76ers were ready for
another spin. The Boston Celtics got
off reluctantly.
The much-maligned 76ers rebounded from an 88-75 loss in
Philadelphia Friday night to outplay
the Ccltics for a 12()-106 triumph Sunday . That gave the 76ers the Eastern
Conference title in seven games and
" date in Philadelphia Thursday
mght fur the opener of the best-ofseven NBA title series with the Los
Angeles I..akers.
" After Friday night , we were
down ," sa id a delighted Harold
Katz , the 76ers owner. " I went into
the Spectrwn as a hero and when I
left . they I the fans I could have killed
Jill' .

Now, he and h1s team can go back
as the toast&gt;; of a town of fickle fans
whu sti ck by their Lt'ams in success

and ge t down on them in fa ilure.

BY HELEN BOTrEL
I've lived with three men during
the last six years. After we split up,
we remained friendly . We lunch
together about once a year, just for
old times' sake.
Now I'm living with Jason. We
both know it won't be forever . But
I'm the sentimental type. I want us
to have reunions after it's over, like
at a special time and place. I've
always been a sucker for the "Same
Time Next Year" story.
Jason says when you're through
you're through - those meeting~
might be hazardous to a future
marriage, mine or his.
They needn't include sex, so I'd
think our partners would understand. What do you think' -

I

Los
San

Majors

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--

with what turned out to be electrical
problems .
Fitzpatrick said he "felt a little
sorry for Danny, but not too much."

REACHING fN - Larry Bird of the Boston Celtics,
right, recbes through the arms of Mike Baotom of the
Philadelphia 76ers while going for a loose ball in the
NBA playoff game In the Boston Garden Sunday af-

.

ternoon. Philadelphia defeated Boston 121H06 to win
the eastern conference championship. (AP Laserphoto) .

engine and chassis designs, Jed this
year's chase for speed and placed
identical Penske race cars side-byside on the front row during the first
weekend of qualifications.
First Cogan shattered Tom
Sneva's- four-year-old qualifying
record with a four-lap average of
204.082 mph. Then Mears, the 1979
winner , wrested the pole position
frlin his tearrunate with a run at
207.004. In practice, Mears recorded
a lap at an unofficial Speedway
record208.7.
Four-time winner A.J . Foyt earned a start for a record 25th consecutive Indy race by qualifying
next to Cogan on the outside of the
front row with an average of 203.332.
Five other drivers, including
Sneva and former winners Mario
Andretti and Gordon Johncock, also

INDIANAPOUS (API - The 66th
Indianapolis 500-mile race, mixing
an impressive blend of youth and experience, will take the green starting flag next Sunday.
It will be the fastest lineup in
history and, for the first time since
1953, without a defending champion.
The 33-car field was completed
Sunday, the fourth and final day of
qualifications. Except for a brief
practice session Thursday, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway will be
closed until race day.
The two weeks of practice and
time trials saw a jump in speed from
a year ago, when Bobby Unser captured the pole position at 200.546
mph and went on to win his third and
most controversial Indy 500.
Teammates Rick Mears and
Kevin Cogan, helped by improved

mntn~s

Turunlt• 7. B&lt;~Hunore I
t'a!1furrllil 7. Dt-troll 2
;\lt•w Yurk ~ . Mmncsuta 2
Bustun 6. Oukla ntl 0. 5¥z m run ~s. ra m
(1t·w·ltHld 6. C hu:a~u 4, 14 mnin,ll(s
Seattle 6. Mrlwa ukt·c 5, II inninga
KarlSJIS C1l )' 5. Tcluts 3
Munday'li Gtt m ~
Mt{;rc~ur

4-31

Toronto

at

, f' lan.·y 4-21
Ct~lt f urnaa

]..(} I,

Boston / Hurst

1K1sun J-01 at

I0 I

r Splitturff 2-.J I at Chicago

KrulS&lt;IS City
, Uovt 1-{)r. rn 1

Cit•veillod 1&amp;trker HI at
•F'lhwn 0-11. lnl
Onh· ~&lt;unc s :K' hl"!...ul~
·
'nlnday'• Gamnr

1$caver 1-51. 1111
Nt•w York 1 .Z.w:hry

J.. ll

C mci nru~lr

at

Atlant.a

1· 11 . 1n1

lar 4~ ·,, 111 1
Pittsburgh 1Robrnsun ....0 l at
lcs iSb·wart 1·21. 1111

Mmnesol.ll.

l.o!!

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St. LoUIS 1Andu jar J.J l at S&lt;tn
t'tst·u •Galt' 1-31. f n 1

Fran-

Transactions
FOOTBALL
NalloBal Football Leatut
ST.LOUIS
C ARDINA L-Si~n e d
Dave
Stid,
tlefensivt.'
back;
Terry
Stieve,
~ua.rd;
Rush Brown, defeNive tackle;
Joe Youn ~. quarterback; Prince McCord
and Larry Reid , runni~ backs ; Keith
Chancey, wide receiver: St'Ott Anton , linebacker: and Mike Ma"'hllll , defensive

bat•k.

Laudermilt

qualified above 200 mph. The entire turmoil.
The last Indy winner not to defend
33-car field averaged a record
his
crown the next year was Sam
197.740, some 5.2 mph faster than the
Hanks,
who an nounced his
previous record set in 1978. And the
retirement
after the 1957 race. The
slowest speed among this year's
qualifiers, 194.154 by Mears' older 48-ycar-old Unser emphasized,
brother, Roger, was faster than 24 of however, that he will drive in other
last year's starting 33 and far ahead races this season and that he has no
of the 186.008 that brought up the intention of retiring.
The other former winners in this
rear a year ago.
year's
lineup, both three-time chamUnser, who finally ga in ed
pions,
a
re Johnny Rutherford and AI
recognition as the 1981 champion
last fall after a successful appeal of Unser - Bobby's younger brother a one-lap penalty, will be the only who qualified in the fourth and sixth
one of the seven still-active fonner rows, respectively.
This year's prize package is again
winners to miss this year's race. He
decided to pass up a chance for his expected to total more than $1.5
20th straight Indy race in order to million . Last year's purse was a
work full time as team manager for record $1.61 million, and first place
Mexico's Josele Garza, an obligation paid nearly $300,000.
he took on in the wake of last year's . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Atlanta

San Diego

Los An~eleti
HOWJloo
San Francisco
Cincinnati

19

18
18

31
22

218
21
21
19

15
11
2l
23
:M

GB

.596

-

.561

1

811Dda)' 1 O.IDf

1'-!
Philadelphia 120, 8o8I001
J
delphia Irina aeries t-3

.525
.500
.1!11

I
7

.121

7

.1134

.538

BettoiS.V..

Ea•wn Coafereoce

-

1116,

Wn&amp;en C_,ereoce

SolllnlaJ, MaJII
Los Angeie• 121, San Antonio 123, LOI
An!Jeles wins series e.G

Publi!!hed every aft~moon, Monday thl"tlW(h
Fnday. Ill Court Strt!tt, by tht Ohio Valley
Pubhshin~ Company - Multimedia , )l'l(l.,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45789, 992-2158. St!t.'Ond cl11u
pust.a,ll(e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Cnp~rifl ht

Meigs County Heart Association is
sponsoring the first "Annual Meigs
County Fun Run" on Saturday, June
5, at 9 a.m. at Meigs County
. fairgrounds grandstand area .
Pre-registration deadline is May
28. On the day of the race,

PORTRAIT.

appl11!d for.

A stunning variety of poses combined into
one portrait makes the Quintette a priceless
memory of your child to be treasured
forever. The Quintette comes attractively
matted and ready to frame. This
exclusive first-time offer is yours for
only $15.95 with the purchase of our
special $12.95 portrait package .

Mt!mber : Tht.' Associated Preas, Inland Dai·
ly Press A8sociation and tht American
Newspapt!r PublisherH AJsoclllion , National
Ad ve rtisin~ Representltive, Branham
New~paper Sale¥, 733 Third Avenue, New
Yoril, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER : Send addfft.lllo The Daily
Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio45718.

•w

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By c.,rier or
R•k

I

Bettolllev..

51&lt;.
71&lt;.
8

l..ol Angelea at Phlllde~, {n)

.100

"'

U&gt;o Anf!elea

_,Ma,n

s:t""Pbu.~piU
,.......,.,...

_,,..,

Plllladelphla at U&gt;o Angelea, !nl
l'tllladelphla at U&gt;o Angelea, (n)
l

THE
. . PORTRAIT PACKAGE

·

Subocribon not delirlnjj to pay the carrier
may remit In advaJ!CO ttltod lo 'l'h&lt; ~lloll1
S.nllnel on 1 I, I CM' 12 month bula. Chdlt
will be MIYen carrier eoch month.

95~ Depo~it

MAD.SUII8CIIIP'I'ION8
&lt;*louiWatV.....

3Monlh ... , ... .. . .'.. .. ....... .... IIUO f
Si&gt;monlll ........ . .. .. ..... ...... . ...
!Year .: .................. ...... . . ... :
-OoloilleOIIIo

...._.V/rPIII

.,

•........... ,........ ._ .... ,u.oo ·:
• Manlil :,. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . • .• .
IYear

1295

~ , .

No llllboCripllono bJ mau pennltled In town.
where horne canier lti'Vice II 1vallable.

FINALS

.500
.152
.112

Mootml I, Clndnnoti 2
New York 8, HIIUIIoo 5, 12 innings

Phila-

·~ ........................ ~

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Blackwell, the
former Shari Colmer, Pomeroy, are
announcing the birth of a daughter,
May 3 at the O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital. The baby has been named
Arica Nicole. She weighed seven
pounds, nine ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Colmer, greatgrandmother, Mamie Stephenson,

POMEROY--Riverview community vacation Bible school wW
be held at Riverview grade school,
June 14-18 !rom 9 to 11: :II a.m. each
day. The closing program will be on
Friday, June 18 at 7::11 p.m.
Theme wW be "Come, Follow Jesus." Classes wW be held tor children, age tour through the ninth
grade. Anyone under tour must be
accompanied by an adult. For additional Information, residents are
asked to contact Pat Martin, 37116233 or Marlene Putman, 378-6371.

n,. .....,,.,_.

THE

SJNGLEOOPY
PRICIIS
.
Daily .......................... UCenta t

CONFERENCE FINAUJ

PrL

l'tllladelphla 5, Allan/a 2
Clllcago I, San Fnndlco I

.

~--

·

'

'

This special package includes two 8x10s,
three 5 x 7s, and fifteen wallets .. No
.
. additional charge for grQups. Additional
packages only $12.00 with no d.e posit. .
. Poses our selection. Beautiful backgrounds
available. A~k about o1,1r Decorator Portrait.

DATES: MAY 25 THROUGH MAY 29 Tues., Wed., Sat. : 10-1,2-6
Thurs. &amp; Fr;i.: 10-1,2-5:30,6-8

..

uo 2
1B~ 1 lJ PPER RIV l R fWA n GAI LI P0 ll S
Lunch:

'v

great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Orien Colmer , great -g r eatgrandmother, Goldie Colmer.
Paternal grandfather is Ruth
Blackwell, grandfather, J ames
Blackwell, and great-grandmother
Delphia Hayes.
Other children of the Blackwells
are Amber Denielle, four, and J. R.,
age three.

-

DEAR HELEN :

While waiting for a traffic light to
change on a New York City street
corner, I fell into conversation with
an elderly woman standing beside
me. She said, "If you Jive alone and
don't use your bra in, it dries up.

That's why I keep busy; althou~h
I'm over 80 I still work."
Channed, I asked what she did for
a li ving. Her answer, " I take care of
an old lady ." Beautiful, right ' EDYTHE BROWN (Printed first in
Fine Art&gt;; Network newsletter l
DEAR EDYTHE:
Yes, beautiful' - H.
Got a problem' An adult subj ect

The United States Achievement
Academy has announced that Lisa
Dawn Ush has been named a 1982
United Stales National Award winner in business education .
A student at Wahama High School,
she was nominated for the honor by
Homer Preece, accounting teacher .
Her name will. appear in the United
States Achievement Academy offi cia l yearbook , publi s hed
nationall y.
The academy selects USAA win-

£or discussion? Yuu can talk it over

in her column if you write to Helen
Bolte I, ca re of this newspaper.

~·

t

.

and fac ilities now the re, ha ve ben

making 150 year-round all-weather
sh·•·ping accommodations. These
will be on the lower level with

and are being pa id for by donations
made by grange members and fri ends.
Faci lities for cam ping are
available to grangers and nongrangers, including church groups
and bands. Contact grange members for furth er information.

showers and restrooms.

On the upper level of the building
will be a large meeting hall with a
raised s tage a nd dressing rooms a mi
restrooms .

This building, as well as the camps

Old papers returned .to Meigs
Nearly I ,500 pounds and 72 cubic
feet of Meigs County historic
newspapers were returned to Meigs
County this past week through the
efforts of the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society, Inc., from
Ohio Historical Center in Columbus.
Arranging for the transfer for the
society was Nonna Newland, vice
president.
Included in the Jist were Middleport published papers the Meigs
County Republican 1876-77, Meigs
County News 1873, 1876 and the
Hera ld 1885- 1886 , Pomeroy
published papers included Meigs

A report on the progress on the
ball field and the installation of new
playground equipment was given at
the recent meeting of Chester PTO.
Avoteoftha nks·wasextended to
Steve Erwin for constructing the
new playground equipment. It was
voted to give $100 to the sixth grade
teacher who will use it to purchase
necessary equipment to begin setling up a scie nce center. Cassette
players and headphones will be pur-

Blackwell

registration will begin at 8 a.m. The
entry fee is $5 and T-shirts will be
given to the first 100 entrants. There
will be a one mile race and a three
mile race. Trohpies will be awarded
to the first three places in four age
groups ( 13-18, 1!1-30, 31-40, and 41 and
over).
For more infonnation, contact
Nita Wisniski at Meigs County
Health Department , Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, 992-li626.
Rebekah Faith, eight-month-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Wallace, Canal Winchester, form er
Meigs County residents, is
scheduled to undergo open heart
surgery on June I. Rebekah, a blue
baby, will have the surgery in
Children's Hospital. She has been
confined there twice since her birth.

Astrograph
It's Important this combig year to put younelf on a sensible budget.
You might not be able to do alllblngs you'd like to do, but by your next
birthday you could have an Impressive nest egg.
GEMINI (May Zl.JUDe ZO) Be sensible about your expenditures
today, but by the same token don't be stingy with friends who treat you
generously. Give, as well as take.
CANCER (June Zl.Jaly !2) Be careful today that you are not
motivated to achieve for the wrong reasons. Uncharacteristically, you
could harbor strong desires to put yourself above others.
LEO (July !3-Aag. Z2l Good advice could be offered you today, but
you might ignore it because you don't respect the source. Don't permit
your prej~ce to overrule your logic.
VIRGO (Aug. !3-Sept. Z2l Tread cautiously today if you have financial or 'business Involvements wi\h friends. There's a possibility neither
you nor they will handle things correctly.
LIBRA (Sept. !S-Oct. !3) Objectives important to you today may not
be of equal significance to yolK' ompani~ or associates. Take their
feelings into consideration.
SCORPIO (Oct. zt-Nov. !2) There's a chance that you could be a bit
too difficult to pleaae today_U this occurs,lt would discourage co-workers
from trying to help you.
·
SAGmARJUS (Nov. !3-Dec. Zll Be able to distinguish today between being oplimlstlc and confident and treating serous matters too
casually. 'lbed!Herence will speii811CCe88 or failure.
CAPRICORN (Dee. !Wan. Ill Try not to put yourself In a position
today where you are too dependent upon others to achieve your alms.
They may not be supportive.
· AQUARIUS (Jan. •Feb. Ill Tub nonnally e&amp;By for you could turn
out to be a trtne trying on your I~Jtlence today. Don't lose heart and do
work that Is far beneath your standard~.
PIIICF3 (Feb. ~Marell Zll Ignore impulseS today toward taking
foollah rlikB or gambles. Disregard your better judgment and It could
proyeCOIItlytoyou.
.
~ (Mircll Zl·Aprft 11) On the home froot today, the balance between hanpony and confrontation will be very delicate. DOn't be the one
who ldvenely tipl the .Wes.
'
. •. ' .
•
T4URV8 (Aprt11Nia)' Zl) Your"feellnga are likely to' be rather ·
:;, ·~bletoday, You mJgbt IUe.olfellle at' tiCJID!llhing·tbatwu not in: • tended' til buo.. Shrug thlnp oft
with umUe. .
· , ·· .
.
• 1.1 • '

to accommoda te about 100 persons,

Count y Telegraph 1876-1884 ,
Mosquito 1883-1885 and Journal188()1861. The only Racine published
paper was the Tribune, 1887-1890.
Rules for use of these newspapers
will be determined at a later date .
Signing for the transfer of custody
for the Ohio Historical Society was
Stephen Gut gesell, newspape r
librarian. Signing for the transfer
for The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society was Grant
Newland, who provided the transportation a nd loadi ng and
unloading at Meigs County Museum .

Chester PTO discusses field

Blackwell

~-c::::. ..--...- ]

EICWSIVE

wagered$813,~/ontheraces.

~=~=~ ::::::: : :: : ::.:::::::::::·.::: ·

NBAresults

Wttkra Dlvtaloa

li
15 )I
Saturday'• O.mes

(

offi cers to complete plans for the
work of the grange year.
Rural Life Sunday will be held on
June 13 and grangers will gather for
an evening of activities at the camp
June 12.
A tw o-story multi-purpose
building is being constructed at the
camp. The building, 50 feet by 96
feet , will have sleeping dormitories

County happenings--------

One...., .... !. .......... .... ...... 11.1111 '

F..a1kn DMaioa

19

trees on the left.
Fergus claimed the $54,000 first
prize and the the second victory of
his career with the playoff birdie after lipping out a !:&gt;-foot birdie putt on
the 72nd hole for a 6!1-273.
Floyd, who has been struggling
and remains winless this season,
had his IS-foot birdie putt stop at the
edge of the cup, completing a 68 for
his !:&gt;-under-par score.
Levi finished alone in third place
with a 68-274, and Nelson fell back to
fourth at 74-275.
On 15, Nelson drove into the
hazard, drove again and eventually
reached the green in 4 where he 3putted.
Levi drove it out of bounds once
and then drove it in the hazard.
Floyd avoided the hazard by going
left, but knocked it in the ditch on his
second shot.
Fergus also caught the hazard, but
elected to chip out into the fairway .
He then hit a 4-wood to the edge .of
the J( reen and got down in two for a
bogey.
That was the difference.

Mr. and Mrs. Greg Laudennilt,
Middleport, announce the birth of a
daughter, Brittany Ann. The infant
was born on May 17 at the Pleasant
Valley Hospital. She weighed six
pounds, three ounces. Mrs. Loudermilt is the former Claudette
Rowland of Paintsville, Ky.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Claude Rowland, Paintsville, Ky.;
Mrs. Kay Brown, Channelview,
Texas; and Ray Laudermilt,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Robert Caruthers,
Middleport, and Homer Laudermilt,
Mason, W. Va ., are greatgrandparents.

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

C.Didlal Footbllll Lei(Ur

NadoMI Butetball AuoriiUoa

25 17
23 18
21 19

The best retum for a $2 wager was
$1,968.90 and came on the 5-8-2 combination of Prince's Charm, Dr. AllschuleandWeekEyes.
The Sunday_ crowd of 5,763

.USPS IU.-1

ARGONAUTS- traded
the
righl1
to John
Fourcade,
quarterback,
to the Brithlh ·Colwnbia
Lions lor future t•onsideratiom .

NA.TIONALLEAGllE

St. Louili
New Vorl!:
Philadelphia
Montreal
Chicago
Plttaburgh

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (API Brian Mills road Netesie over six
furlongs in I : 12 3-5 to capture first
place in the featured race at
Thistledown.
Netesie returned $8 on a win bet,
$4 to place and $3.1Ml to show in the
Sunday race. The second horse,
E.P.'s Pride, paid$4 and $3.20, while
Ellie K. ran third and returned$5.40.

A Dlvbkta uf MuiUmecla, IIH:.

ne,ll(otiatin~

Toronto at New York, lnl
Baltunorc at Tcxal!, 101
Kansas City at Chica,II(O l n l
Oakland at Milwaukee. l nl
Clevda tltl at Minnesota, l nl
Detroit a t Seattle. fnl

W L

Thistledowns results

The Daily Sentinel

TORONTO

CahforniH at Boston, 1n I

spoiled an otherwise brilliant perfonnance in which he recorded nine
birdies.
Raymond Floyd, the victim of
Fergus' playoff birdie, took six shots
to complete the toughest hole on the
7,007-yard, par-72 Atlanta Count ry
Club course.
Larry Nelson, the 1981 PGA champion who had led after each of the
first three rounds and was tied with
Fergus after 14 holes, took a triple
bogey 7 and never got back into the
race.
"I was very happy to get out with a
bogey," said Fergus. " It's the
toughest hole on the course."
Only six players still had to play
the hole following a 2-hour, !()minute delay during a severe thunderstorm.
" I really didn 't want to go back out
there," Fergus said. "We were stiff
and didn't have enough time to
warm up. We did, though, and now
I'm glad we did."
The 15th, a dog-leg right, has a
mountain of stone and a water-filled
ditch on the right side and a line of

Mr. and Mrs. Mcndal Jordan,
state grange deputies from Meigs
County, have returned from the annual Grange Deputies Collterence at
Friendly Hills Grange Camp on the
Muskingwn River near Zanesville.
Deputies from 80 counties joined
State Grange Master James Ross
and his wife and other state grange

Meigs births and birthdays

500 will feature youth, experience

Montreal tt l Hlluston. ln l
Chlt.'i:l~u at Sctn Dt e~o . In I
Pltlo; bur ~ IJ, at J.os An~e ~es. fnl
Sl. Louts at San Frllfll'I:M'O. l nl

Sunday's Gam""

1

Mundlty'8 Game•
Phrladt•lphlll 1Ul rltcYI HI at

~a me

Tuetiday'l G11 mn
Ph1lar.ldph•a a t Cint·tmla ll . In 1
Nt'w York at Atl11 nta , l n l

Ddru1l 5. C.thfurm&lt;~ I

BaltHII &lt;~I' f

~mnt'

San F'rannst'u 6, Ch tt'IIJ!tO J. 2nd
Los An~clt.'s 5, St. Louis 0
P1 1tsbur ~h 4. San 01ego 2
Nt'w Yurk 2, Houston 0

Monht•al 1GU!l1t'kson 2-31 ill Houston
1 Knt'pper 2-i I , I 1\ I
Chkagu 1 Nnlt•s :;..J 1 at S&lt;t n Dll'~ ( Lol-

B••lturull't' 6. Toronto 0

Huston 7. Oakla nd 4
St•atl lt· 7. Mllwaukt•c I
f't·v. Yurll I, Mtnn~sota 0
('lut'&lt;tl(u 7. Clt•vclantl J
T··x as J. Kansas Ctty I, \ 12

P ittsburgh J
Sunday's G11mn

1Dayll'~

Gamrs

Sa tun!B y'~

St. Lows 2

Ph t l~ddphm 2. Atlanta I
Montrt'al ~ . Cmc:mna ti 2
San Frannsc: u 4. Chrcal{o J. 10 mnin,II(S.

Hy Tht&gt; A!l!itK'ial.t'd Prt'ss

Bustun
I h·trull
M1 lwauktT

An ~t·lcs 3.
D1 c~o 12.

DEAR HELEN:
I'm sick and tired of this " blessed
motherhood" bit, or else its opposite
- the poor mistreated, miserable
unwed mother.

A woman can say either yes or no.
If it's yes, she can take steps to
prevent pregnancy. If she neglects
to and conceives, she can either
abort or give birth.
She can either keep the child or
give it up for adoption. If she decides
to keep, she is req uired by law to
feed, clothe and tend to the child until its age of majority, or it will be
taken from her.
The choice is hers al l the way . So
what's all the shouting about' S.R.
DEARS.:
So what's your point' I missed it
somewhere. - H.

S

Awarded in business education

Meigs residents attend grange conference

ATLANTA (AP) - It went in the
books as a bogey 5, but it was just
the ticket Keith Fergus needed for
victory .
Fergus still had to sink a 2()-foot
birdie putt on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff to capture the
$300,000 Georgia-Pacific Atlanta
Golf Classic Sunday, but it was the
443-yard 15th hole that ruined the
day for three other players.
First, there was Wayne Levi
taking a quadruple bogey 8 that

I

~coreboard ...

ROMANTIC TYPE
DEAR ROMANTIC:
What woman doesn't fantasize
over the "Same Time Next Year"
dream? But reality could turn it into
a nightmare. Married people who
plan yearly dates with old flames
sometimes don't stay married very
long.
(But if you both remain unattached, why not' It's a lovely,
romantic way to stay in touch with
friends .) - H.

Page

ners upon the exclusive

rf'f'Om·

mendation of teachers, coaches,
counselors or other school sponsors
and upon the standards for selection
set forth by the academy . The
criteria for selection arc a student's
academic performance, interest and
att itud e,

leaders hip

qualitie s,

Lish

ent hu siasm,

motivation to Jearn e~nd improve ,

Fergus wins Classic

MARAUDERE'ITE SENIORS- Denise Coff, Kristin Anderson and
Laura Smith were three Meigs Seniors who have had an outstanding
track season this year.

The Daily Sentinel

rcspon s i bi Iit y,

Fitzpatrick takes sprint

Vail hurt

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

---Helen Help Us---

champions. Not since the Celtics
series.
Sharpshooting Andrew Toney, won their second consecutive title in
who had scored 39 points in the four- !968-69 haa a club successfully defenth game but only three in Game 6, ded its crown.
Philadelphia reached the final for
fired in 14 of 23 field goal attempts
and 34 points to lead all scorers Sun- the third time in six years. Its only
championship since moving from
day.
Julius Erving, subdued outside but Syracuse In 1963 was in 1967.
Larry Bird scored six points in an
happy inside, was a model of calm
after scoring 29 points, 20 of them in 8-0 Boston run that cut
Philadelphia's lead to IIU2 midway
the second haU.
"It was very important for me as through the third quarter. But the
leader of our team to reflect the at- Celtics came no closer and trailed by
titude our players have and stand nine to 17 points throughout tbe fourfor," he said. " It's very important th period.
"ll Toney had an off game we
not to be boastful and maintain our
dignity when we win and not be sad probably would have won," said
Bird, who scored 20 points. Robert
or embarrassed if we Jose."
The 76ers were in control Parish led Boston with 23, and Kevin
throughout the game, allowing the McHale also had 20.
Boston, foiled in its attempt for a
defending champions to take only
three leads, 7-4, 7-li and 32-31. Their 15th title, was the victim of its own
poise was in contrast to last season's mistakes as much as Philadelphia's
Eastern Conference series in which accomplishments. The Celtics turthey took a 3-1 advantage over ned tbe ball over 22 times and conBoston, then blew leads in each of nected on 43.8 percent of their field
goal attempts, both their second
the last three games.
Boston's loss kept intact the jinx of poorest perfonnances of the series.

The series that featu1ed broad
sw1ngs of fortune began with a ~
pmnt Boston VIctory. But the 76ers
won the next three ga mes. Then the
Cel l1 c~ romped by 29 pomts in Game
5 before winning aga in Friday mght.
LEXINGTON, Ohio lAP) - John
The final swing we nt to Philadelphia Fitzpatrick benefited from his chief
w1th the help, app ropriately, of a contender's mechanical problems to
player who had an up-and-down come from behind and win the 100.
mile Red Roof Inns Camel GT Sprint
at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course.
Fitzpatrick, the 1980 International
Motor Sports Association G.T.
Roadracing Series Champion, was
trailing in second behind Danny
Ongais with three laps of the 2.4 mile
CINCINNATI I API - Cincinnati
circuit to go Sunday . Ongais swerReds outfielder Mike Vai l hurt his
ved his Lola T. 600 Chevrolet from
lower back durmg batting practice
side to side trying to pick up the last
Sunday .
few drops of gasoline in his fuel
Reds Manager John McNamara
sa1d Va il strained his back while cells.
Ongais, of Costa Mesa, Calif. , took
swmgmg a bat and wasn't able to
a pit stop on lap 39 for gas and left
play in the Reds' 4-2 loss to the Monthe pits just ahead of Fitzpatrick's
treal Ex pos.
Porsche.
Vall has been used as 3 pinchFitzpatrick, an Englishman now
hiller and O&lt;'CaSional sta rter in left
living in San Diego, took the lead on
field for the Reds.
the ba ck straight as Ongais slowed

Monday, May 24, 1982

grades, forlarge
trashsecond
cansand
forthird
the
chased
the first,
restrooms, and spoons for the kitchen.
A discussion was held on the
possibility of monthly volunteer art
classes in cooperation with the
Meigs County Museum a nd
Historical Society in the fall. It was
noted that soup labels have been
used to obtain volleyball sets and 12
jump ropes. A new ditto machine
has been received and the PTO will
purchase a stand for it.
Terry Huffman and Bill Buckley
will check out present audio equipment. A gift was presented to Pal
Schaekel, past president, for her
work and time during the past year.

Miss Sherry Stollar, first grad e
teacher, was presented a wedding
gift from the PTO.
The fourth grade won the room
. d
d
th
count. Thth
e lr gra e mo ersserved refreshments. Bill Buckley,
h
sc hoo I boa'rd mem ber, spo keon t e
three mill operating continuing levy
which will bjl on the June 8 ballot.
Mrs. Carol' Layh, asSistant adrninistrator of the Carleton School ,
talked on the 1.5 mill operating levy

citizenship. attitude and cooperative
spirit, dependability . and recom-

l.tsh t:, tlw dau glltt·r nf Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph l.t sh &lt;.md tlw gran d-

mendat ion £rom a tea cher or direc-

dcmghtt•r of Mr. and Mrs LeRoy

tor.

Pu~ rsa ll . Mi;t SU/1 ,

Lutheran churches hold banquet
POMEROY -- 'Homemade" was
the theme for the annual mother·
daughter banquet of St. Paul and
St. John Lutheran Church Women
held at St. Paul Church Thursday .
Barbara Lester and Judy Eichinger had charge of the banquet
plans. Group singing of "Praise
God !rom Whom all Blessings
Flow" preceded the serving o! the
buffet style dinner. Tables were
centered with fresh flowers ar·
ranged by Margaret Blaettnar.
Patchwork placemats were used
on the tables a nd favors were miniature sun bonnets for the women
and bookmarks of patchwork over·
laid with prtnted Bible verses for
the children made by Barbara Les-

by Mrs. Eichinger.
Gifts were presented to Freda
Hartinger, the oldest person attend·
tng, Julie Elberfeld's godmother:
Denise Mora, the you ngest mother:
Libby Klng, the youngest daughter,
and the women from the Infirmary.
Placema ts were dona ted to the
Senior Citizens Center for craft ·
work . The program closed with
group stnglng accompanied by
Mrs. Blaettnar. FUty members anc;
guests attended .

ter and Teresa Schad.

Mt'tgs l-ltgh SC"!1nol Tuesday ni ght , at

welcome and Introductions. Special
Meigs County Infirmary . There
was a poem 1n trtbute to "Young
Mothers" read by Mrs . Mees.
Ot her read ings were "W hen
Grandma was a Little Gtrl" by
J udy Mees and "Our Colorful Covenant " by Mrs. Lester, a devotional
presentatlon, with everyone partie·
lpatlng. There was a fashion show
o! handmadeclothlngranglngfrom
sports wear to evening dresses .
Mrs. Eichinger narrated the show.
Models were Ruth and Tammy
Taylor, Edle a nd Libby King, Julie
Elberfeld , Becky Eichinger and
Mrs. Lester. A humorous story on
the pitfalls of sewing was presented

p

SlORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sit. a..,.111 pm

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Boosters will meet
Tuesc,lay, J.une I, not ''I'llesday,
May 25, as WBB reported to the

Sentinel.

SY R ,;\ C U 5 E ' OH I0
NOWOPENFORTH E
5PRJNG5EA50N
•V ege tab le pI an t s
• Bedding P lant s
• F oi I age p Jan ts and
Hanging Baskets
OPEN DAILY 9 til 8
5 U N DAy 1 T I L 5

PHONE 992-5 776

THE MEIGS CO. JAYCEES
ALONG WITH POWELL'S
SUPER VALU ARE SPONSORING A .....

291 SEalND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

1ST PRIZE

1st-PRIZE

3 MINUTE
SHOPPING SPREE

AT POWELL. 'S SUPER VA LUI

2ND PRIZE - $2500 GIFT CERTIFICATE
3RD PRIZE - s25oo GIFT CERTIFICATE
4TH PRIZE - $2500 GIFT CERTIFICATE

POMEROY - Joint meeting
junior and senior American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Unit 39, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
.post home.

~and

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Sundly 10 1111·10 pm

MEIGS COUNTY Republican
Women will hold meet the candidates night Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. at the Meigs IM. Bring
. covered dish. Meat, beverage
and table service will be
provided. Public invited.

POMEROY Past Matrons,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Alfred Crow, Rllcine.

~,;·,t~t~h~e;B;o;b;B;a~rt~u~n~p~oo~l~.;;;;;;;;;
1

rtt~o~b~e~o~n~th~e~b~a~I~Jo~t:.:;:::::::=~~=::=:::==~~;;;;;;;;;~=~=~~=====~~~i

THURS., MAY 27, 1982

TUESDAY

J.aun ·l Cliff Frl'e Ml'IIHxil st Chu rch .
Mus1c was pn•senil'd by Mr. and
Mrs. Frank 1m Mart111 , Mr . and Mrs
Rob B&lt;Jrton and Mrs. Shtrll'y F'nePtl
F11ur llll' lllbl'rs of till' local church
w•·rl' baptized by Hl'v . Hobert Mille r

guests were the women from the

MONDAY

MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the La Salle Hotel. All interested
persons welcome.

B1blcs were presenil'd to Mrs.
Franklin Marlin, her son, Frankli n
.Jr .. l&lt;~ura G. Snntli and Mark
Fm•nd, who will graduail' fr11111

Wilma Mees, president of the

WILL BE AWARDED AT
POWELL'S SUPER VALU ON

MEIGS Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, picnic, Monday, 6:30p.m.
at home of Loretta Tiemeyer ,
Hobson.

Receive Bibles

ALCW, opened the program with a

Calendar
POMEROY - "Let George Do
it," a (llusical, will be presente~
Monday at Southern High School
at 7:30p.m. under the direction of
Mrs. Lee Lee. Admission is 50
cents for adults and 25 cents for
students. Presented by students
of Racine Elem~ntary.

W Va

THE

DON'T
MISS
YOUR
CHANCE
TO WIN!

JAYCEES

Service to humanity is the best work of life

�Page

~The

Daily Sentinel

differ ences be tween ca nce rs and

other d1seases But now It a ppears
there a re the bcg10mngs of a few
vaccmes acting JndJrectl y or d1rec·
tl y agamst :-iOme cancers
Basicall y, dev1s10g a safe and ef·
fed1 ve vaceme calls first for 1den·
t1fymg the exact cause of a d1sease
In most cases to fa r , 1t has been a

specific v1rus or bacte nwn
In pohumye hlls. for exampl e,
th ree types of VIrus were found to
ca use pa ralytic poli o The next step
was to kil l the v1ruses, or weaken
thPm so they r ou ld not ca ust•
thscase, a nd

U.'il'

these particl es a.s

the vaccme. InJected mto the hwnan
body, the vaccme stunula(Jes produc·
!J on of prutcct1ve antibodies agamst
any future mfcct1un a nd di sease.

Vaccmes can also be prepared by

grea ter acti VIty aga 111st the
"fure1gn" cancer cells. Overall , the
results have been judged dlsappollltmg, yet there IS a tantahzmg
sumethm there
Just a pp1 ovL'll by the Fuud and
Drug Admuustra t10n

IS

a va ccm e

that 1s expected to act md1rectly to
prevent ma ny hvcr cancers It IS a
vaccme agams t hcpal1l1s- B v1rus

IHBVI . a sen ous liver mfect10n affectmg some 200,000 Amen cans
each yea r w1th severe Illness, and
some deaths Ma ny people become
ea rners of the virus, capable uf
passmg 11 along to fam1ly members
and close assoc1ates. And a
SJgmf1ca nt numbc1, of llents w1th
hepatitiS late1 develop liver cancer,
wh1ch kills some 12.000 Amcncans
annually Prcvcntmg the 1111llal
hepatitiS eould prevent later cancers
But smce thl' hver cancers
develop slowl y, 11 could take 10 to 20
yea rs t o deterrnmc how effecti ve the
HBV vacc1ne ma y be. ft 1s made
from a particula r antigen on the s urfa ce of the v1rus
Other putenllal vacemes mvul ve
the cunous family of herpes VIruses
that cause a host of troubles One,

U!iln g onl y part of a v 1rus or othe r

herpc::;

organiSms. a part. ealled an a ntigen,
that IS specific to that orgamsm The
hwnan body recogmzes the ant1gen
as bcmg d1fferent. and forms an·
t1bod1es to counteract 1t
In the many different forms of
caneer , a maJor d1ff1culty has been

fa11uhar cold sores Herpes s1mplex
Il1s the mam cause of herpes gem tal
mfectums now reachmg almost
ep1dem1&lt;· proportiOns And there 1s
mcreasmg ev1dence that 11 - HSV·II
- pla ys some role 111 cancer of the
cerv1x. perha ps a d~re ct one
Another herpes v1rus - Epstem·
Barr v1rus IEBVl - appears mvolved w1th at least two fonns of
ca ncer One IS Burk1tt's lymphona , a
ca ncer of the JaW The other IS can·
ce1 of parts of the nose and throat
EBV also IS the cause of the
Jl'I HtJ vc ly bc m g n
wfect10us
mononucl eos i s,
or
· ' k1 ss m g

to dtscove r some a nti gen, some

spec lfll' difference, between a
hea lthy cell , whether ur hve r. lung,
breast or other, and a cell that has
become ca nce rous The ant1 gen then

m1ght be ISolated and concentrated
fur use as a vaec1ne It proba bl y
would protect onl y agamst that type
of ca ncer
For years, sc l entl sl~ have tJ 1ed to
fashwn vat r mes agru nst an In·
ilivJdual's own n tnl'er - ta kin g
s()me of h1s/he1 cance r cells a nd
us1ng them 111 hopes of stunul atln g

antlb&lt;Kil e' tu attack tht• re ma 1mng
ca nce r ce lls These ex penme nts had

:strnpl ex

I,

causes

the

d1 sease "

Researchers a re scekmg vacc mes

agamst both HSV·Il and EBV,
perhaps w1th the a1d of ge n ~s ph c tn g

and monoclonal anllbody techmques
to makl• them safe and effective

ThiS v1rus 1s one of many known as
eqUi voca l r esults, neve r ve 1y
wh1ch are composed of
retroviruses,
dramatJt' and not long las tmg But
RNA
rather
than DNA 111 thelf
some ne we r experuncnl'; , desc nbed
below, show prorn1sc aga msl l ung genetiC makeup But when 11 mfects
llssues, 11 makes DNA cop1es of 1ts
cancers. a nd perha ps othe r ca nce rs
own
RNA genetiC matenal, then m·
Another a pproach was to ust• an
serts
th1s mto the genes of the host
ex 1st1n g antJ-tubt•f culus Js vcH'l'lll C.
veil
An
enzyme known as reverse
named BCG . 1n hopes of a rous1ng the
transcnptase
puts the DNA copy
body' s f{e ner al Immune syst em 1nto

together .
The HTLV apparently becomes mcorporated m the DNA of the cancerous blood eels. It 1s not detected
111 normal blood cells from the same
pat1ents or from healthy people. Anhbodles have been detected against
the v1rus 111 some patients With the
rare leukemia .
Dr. Gallo IS collabora tmg 111
stud1es of HTLV With Dr Yohei Ito
of Kyoto Um versity, since the inCidence of thiS leukemia IS h1gh 111
the southwestern part of Japan.
There are suggestiOns this v1rus
rrught be mfect10us, and Japanese
scienhsts are reported to be consldermg trymg to develop a vaccme
made out of protmns 111 the VIrus, to
prevent or treat the leukemia .
Also, there 1s speculatiOn now
whether fa~rly corrunon v1ruses, like
'flu, m1ght mteract w1th human
DNA to remoeve the " brakes" from
oncogenes.

The ne w ms1ghts mto the behav1or
of genes and v1ruses, and how they
ma y mter-react, are surgmg ahead
because of the unpress1ve new tools
of gene sphcmg and monoclonal antibodies. (See Cancer Research FYI
on Monoclonal Ant1bod1es) These
make 11 posSible to understand the
mformatwn coded 111 genes and
v~ruses, to 1dent1fy the genes and the
prote1ns and enzymes they make
that play a role mmducmg cancers.
The fact that some cancers, such
as breast, tend to run 111 fam1h es has
long suggested that there can be a
genetic mnuence 111 cancers. Fm·
dmgs w1th VIruses m ammal cancers
pomted the same way.
Just recently have come stunmng
affirmations that spec1f1c genes
truly are mvolved m at least some
hwnan cancers.
Several groups of sc1enhsts have

discovered individual genes m cells
of hwnan leukemia, breast, lung,
colon and bladder cancers. Once
isolated and placed into tissue
cultures, they can switch on the cancer process in other nonnal cells.
They are cancer agents, at a fundamental level 111 cell and human
hfe.
From ev1dence so far, these genes
seem to be either wayward fonns of
normal genes, or genes that
somehow become achvated to induce cancer.
Prime discovenes about cancer
genes have come from research led
by Dr Michael W1gler at the Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory in New
York, and Dr. Robert A. Weinberg of
the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology in Cambridge, Mass.
Dr. Wigler msolated a smgle gene
from cells of human bladder cancer,
then went on to find evidence of a
gene common to colon and lung cancers. Dr. Wemberg isolated aU or
part of a transforming (cancer)
gene from human leukem1a cells, as
well as bladder and colon cancers.
The hwnan cancer genes do not
appear to be related to any of the
v1ruses that produce cancers m
ammals.

Studies now are a1med at learnmg
what turns the cancer gene "on,"
and, next, how 1! m1ght be turned
'' off. "
If one gene turns out to produce
lung cancer as well as colon cancer,
then perhaps there 1s some common
denorrunator system for prevening
many cancers. Poss1bly there could
be some method to screen people to
determme if they have the act1vated
gene that triggers twnors.
For further informatiOn call 9927531 or come o the office on
Mulberry Hts.

By MELODY ROBERTS
The Long Bottom Community
Association will hold its monthly
meeting Wedneday, May 26, at 8
p.m. in the Long Bottom Community
Building. 'l'he builders corrunittee fi
the club met every Wednesday at 8
p.m. in the building.
The Long Bottom Senior Citizens
meet the· second and fourth
Tuesdays of the month in the
basement of the Long Bottom
Methodist Church. Free blood
pressure and we1ght clinics are held
the fourth Tuesday from 9 a.m. til
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins went
on the Senior trip as chaperones.
Mrs. Ruby Brewer, Janie Fitch,
Dorothy Wells and Phyllis Larkins
recently went to Parkersburg
together and had a good time.
Emery Weekly, Huntington, is
vacatwmng with Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Adams.
Mrs. Leota Ferrell of Mel way,
Ohio has been w1th her sisters, Mrs.
Leona Hensley and Mrs. Mae McPeek for nearly 10 weeks due to the
recovery of Mrs. McPeek from a
broken hip. Mrs. Ferrell went to
v1s1t her son and farruly in Califorma

the clubs Will be Harnsonv1lle,
Syracuse and Pomeroy. Some sur·
vey work Will be done dunng the
evemngs .

A Backyard B1ble Club 1s des1gned
fur an hour and ha lf of B1ble story.
songs. crafts, and refreshments for
chtldren m grades one through s1x .
The clubs are to be held outdoors if
weather perrmts.
If you have a ch1ld mterested 111 at·
tendmg one of these clubs, contact
Rho jean McClure at 992-3436.

The Daily Sentinel

before going back home.
Cliff Newlun has purchased a
house from his nephew, Fred
Newlun Jr. Word has it Cliff will sell
his trailer and remodel the house to
live m.
Fred Larkins fell on his front porch and tore some ligaments loose.
HIS arm 1s in a shng .
Roberta Larkins recently retur·
ned home after vacationing w1th her
aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs Burdell Dunn, in Pennsylvama.
Mrs. Grace Louden and two fnends from Florida stayed a few days
with Mrs. Ernestine Hayman before
visiting relatives in northern Ohio.
Mrs. Virginia Hayman has again
opened her beauty shop for business.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Adams were
recently visitmg his sister and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Don Ruckman
of Baltimore, Ohio.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Paul
hauber have been Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Kibble, Mary Ann and Marilyn, Tuppers Plains; Emery Weekly, Huntington, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Johnston Jr ., and
Jeremy, Tuppers Plains; Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Adams, local.

e~tFEbandlse

1 Ci!r d of Tha nk s (p a •d 1n ad va nce)
2 CMd a t Tha nk s (pa• d •n a d va nce)

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND •
CONSTRUCTION

AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rt. 50 Eost
Guysville, Ohio
A\flhorlzed John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1 3 tfc

If you need it built 1
or fixed we can do
it .
742-2328
RUTLAND
4 29 I mo

&amp; ~ckhoe ser·
vice, water, sewer, pon·
ds,
foundations,
reclamation .

'

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

3 Annou nce me nt s

51 Household Goods
52 CB, TV &amp; Radt O Equtpment
53 A nt1qu es S4 Mtsc M er chandt se
55 Bulld1ng Suppli es
56 Pets for Sal e
57 Musc 1allnstrume nt s
58 Frutts&amp; Vegetabl es
59 For Sal e or Trade

4 G111ec1way

5 Happy Ads

Rt!al Estate

6 L os! a nd F ound
7 Y a rd Sa le (pa• d •n adva nce)

8 Publ •c Sa le
&amp; A uctt on
9 Wa nt ed to Buy

employment

31 Hom es tor Sa le
32 M ob il e Hom es for Sal e
33 F arm s for Sale
34 Bu stness Bulld tngs
35 Lots &amp; Acr ea ge
36 Re al Es tate Wa nted

servlees
11 Help Want ed
12 Sttu atton Want ed
13 Insur ance
14 Bu stness Tramm g
15 Sc hoo ls ln stru ctton
16 Rad tO, T V &amp; CB Repat r
17 M tsce ll aneous
18 wa nt ed To do

41 Houses for Rent
42 Mobil e Homes for Rent
43 Farms for Rent
44 Apartment for Rent
45 Furn 1shed Room s
46 Space tor rent
47 Wanted to Rt! nt
48 Equtpm ent for Rent
49 For Lease

Dashing Cape
Printed Patlt•rn

ThiS cape " the 1deal compan·
ton for all your amvals and departures' Button 1t up over sktrts

pants to add dash lo you1
days Easy to sew'
P11nted Patlem 4850 M1sses
SIZes 8. 10, 12, 14. 16. 18. 20
SIZe 11 (bust 34) takes I 518
ya~ds 60- ~nch lab11c
$2.25 tar .... jllltlm. Add 504

01

for .... jllltlm for pWp
llld 1111141illl- S.d ID:
Aa1111 Ad-.
1 ~~I
,....,. Jllpl.

The Daily Sentinel

61
62
63
64
65

Si1es from 4 to 6 and all

-Piumbin&amp; and
electrical work
t Free Estimates)
Ph. 949·2609
949·2234
RACINE, OHIO
5·191 mo

Built Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949·2801 or
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls

Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt.l, Box 54
Racine,Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591

Pursuant

ORC.

to

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Sa1d

lit-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256--Guyan Dlst.
643-Arabia Dis!.
379-Walnut

Home Improvements
Plumbtng &amp; Heatmg
Excavatmg
Elecncal &amp; Ret r igeratton
General Haultng
M H Repatr

- Dozers
- Backhoes
· Dump Trucks

All types of root work,
new or repair guHer and

downspouts,
gutter
cleaning end painting.
All work guaranteed.
FrH Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2263
949-2160
2·24·tfc

87 Upholstery

743-Rutland
667-Coolville

TOM HOSKINS

Ph. 949·2160 or 949·2322
4 20 tic

CANDLELIGHT INN
Rt. I, Cheshire, Oh
OhiO St. Rt. 7
PH. 992-9913

Area Code 304
675-Pf. Pleasant
4s.-Leon
576-Apple Grove

WE• ..L•
REST

insertion . .. ..

$7.00

F rodily •nd Silturdey

MAR SHALL TENNENT
.Country Rock
Note
Crossovers, Thurs &amp;
Sun band starts 1 10, ('nds
II 30 0thern•ghh .. IOto2
Carryout Be er Available Onnk
&amp; Orown dunng Band N•ght
Rf 1 CheShire , Oh10
PH 991991J
Sl Rl 1

SCIUlli Y11d ~til P1d, Installed

velope marked "Bi9 on
1976 Chevrolet Blazer. '

The Board of Metgs
County
Commissioners
reserves the nght to reject

Commissioners

IVIRYBODY
Shops the
WART AD WAY

"1

INSTAWD

•

....£.s ~~~ ·

8

GOOD SELECTION, OF
NEW SPECIAL
LOWPRIQ
ONALUMINIM

lOOPING

3FT. WIDE
All Sizes
lri S'lock
New cash and
Carry Pl'lcu

ltJ

POMEROY
LANqMARK

_'"---"n_ _,

,_-..,...,.....·_,_,..
1

GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM
- •

f

~

• '

1119 n. 1nt1 12 n. iiiDTIIS

•

Clll Bill W1rd

1.

Licensed &amp; Bonded

PRICE REDUCED- On th15 cute three bedroom
in

Syracuse .

Lots

of

remodcltnQ

'

PRICE; REDUCED - TUPPERS P~AINS - A
. three bedroom double wide w1th lull basement on
' large lot. A real value at $18,000. Now recluced to
S16,20Q. A bargolnl
,• ' . '• ,
.. REALTDJIS':
992-6191
Honry 'E. Clelanii,Jr., GRI
992-S692
DoHie Turner
?49-lhll
Jean T;nlsstll
992·2259
Office

A.

'•

.'
'

"'

'• 11.
1 12.
t 13.
14.

I~

.
j

..•.

15.- --~---

15.
26.
27.
28.

29.
30.
31 . - - - - - ,J:I.
-_
:-_ 33. __
_

:u.. --.c-----

16. _:..,·.- - - ' - - - - ' - . 35.

!'1

j

•

1If

Mill Thli·Ce~~~pon wltfi :RtmiHinCt
Tht DillY.StaJI!IIl-

· 1n c:olirt s,. :'

Po.,.troy/011. 45169 .
j.. ....... ~_,._____,.
.. ~.... .,---~----1··

8

Public Sal e
&amp; Au elton

Rt c k

P e ar s on ,

Ex

Estates, a nt tques, farm ,
household L1 ce nsed Oht o
WV Bu y tng anl tques 304

773 5785. 773·9185
Auctt on eve r y F rt n1ght at
the Hartfor d Communtly
Center Tru ckloads of new
merch andtse ev er y wee k
Con stgm ents of new and

•Electric work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofing work
l4 Years Expenence

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282
4-29 I

.k

. ...

·

Perfec t Fathe r 's Day gtft,
Whtte ' s m etal detector , 15
% off
Spnng Va ll ey
Trad•ng Co , Spnng Valle y

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. 2nd ~t.
Phone
1-(614)·992·3325
NEW LISTING -

Ntght crawlers $1 00 per
doz Spnng Valley Trad1ng

5

Lttfle kool rest , tee chest by
I gloo, traveltng refresh
ment center S24 00 Spnng
Val ley Tradtng Co , Sprtng

yr old 2 bedroom home
Bath ,
carpet1 n g ,
ba sement, tnsulated ,
garage, 2 porches, 2
acres on good blacktop
road School bus and
mat! routes $45,000

Valley Plaza, 446·8025
Play Btngo for Chartty
Watch for opentng date,

3

Rodney

r

e

home

Bath

Gall•a
Co
Emergency

s

4

8

w1th

Fr• estimates
Call 843-3322.
5· 12·2 mo. pd .

'" Racine One
has
9
rooms, 2 baths, nat gas
F A furnace, carpeting ,
storm wtndows, and a 4
room home as a rental
or for mother Just
$37,500.

1 male 8 week old k ttten
Lttter framed 992-7.406
Small mt xed breed dog,
lovable &amp; does tncks. Kit·
ten possibly Stamese
Even~ngs

Let

Collect the

money In the evening
and open the doors in

Kittens to give to gOOd
home Call -446 · ~173 .

the morning . Only
$1S,OOO.
COUNTRY - Fresh air
and privacy when you

Cats &amp; kittens. Call 446·

move i{lto this one. Gar·
den space, new Iaroe
basement with wood·
burning chimney for up
and down. Over one
ocre of land. $30,000.

0808

~11992-6259
. I

z7&amp; Sycamore st ·

5104 or 675 5386
Som e on e to lt ve tn wt th
gen tl em an 69 yrs ol d Ref
req Ca II 446 2445
Want ed elderly lad y to care
for an elderl y lady Ca ll

446 4537 or 446 2158
NEWS

RELE ASE

3 beoutllul kittens to gOOd
home. Litter tro10ed. 992·
2531.

CAS H P A I D f or c lea n, tate
mode l used ca r s Smt i h
But ck Pontta c. Ga tltpolt s,
Ohto Ca ll 446 2282

w e pa y cas h tor late model
clean used ca r s
F re nc htow n Ca r Co
Btl! Gene J ohn son ,

446 0069
Want ed sw arm s of bees

Call 245 5055 or 446 1052 or
446 2801
Standtn g ttmber &amp; Ford
Bronco wrecked or blown
engtne Call 388 9906
Statnl ess stee le milk ca n tn

exc cond Call 388 8801
Pay cash for m tn t motor
liome m good cond , 79
mode l up J:: ref er ed Call

Toba cc o plant s or whol e

bed Call 388 8514
Toba cc o Beds, 446 1630 or

446 7337 or 446 47 45
BEO S IRON . BR ASS. old
furn1tur e, g old , Stiv er
dollars, wood tee boxes,
stone tars , anttques, et c ,
Complete
ho u se hold s
Wrtte M 0 Miller , Rt 4,

Pomeroy. Oh Or 992 7760
Gold , s liv e r,
st er ltn g,
tewelry, rtngs, old co tns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar

ber Shop. Middleport 992
3476

OLD FURNITURE . beds.
tron , brass, or wood K1t
chen cubbards of all types
Tab les, round or square
Wood 1ce boxes Old desk s
and bookcases Wt ll buy
complete household Gold,
Stiver, old money , pocket
watches , chatns , rings , and
etc tndtan Artifacts at all

types Also buying baseball
cards

Osby Marttn 992

6370

JUNKEO cars, baseball
cards,
scrap
metals,
alumtnum cans , fran
sm tssions, motors. bat
terles, radtators. stamps
and cams Offertng trash
p1ckup service. Harper

Look m g t or an exct ttn a &amp;
pr oftt a bt e ca r ee r wt th

Sue Murphy, Holen
Bruce Teaford,
RMIIOrs. ,41fler

m-3615 or tn-ms.

' Middl.,., Ohio
'

Carpf&gt;n lcr Work
Repa1 r
nnd rt)O m remodeling, wa ll
pan f'l tnq or cetlt ng ttl e 992

Want ed t o Do
18
The Sdk H ousP (c ust om
Comp lete
sdk fl owers)
brtda l lt ne. wcddt nqs, and
all occas tons Call 367 7566
Lawn MOwtng Sern1e, no
ya r d to btg or sma l l. house
patnt tng &amp; roofi ng. and
l tght hau11ng Ca l l 446 3159
att er6PM 1 186 57 40
Ca rpen ter work Repat r s
and room r emOdlt ng, wal l
paneltng and cetltng t ile

992 2759
Tras h co ll ecfton &amp; hau ltn g
Ca ll 446 4480
Res tdcn f tal
Elec tr tc &amp;
Plu mbtng, 12 yea r s ex
pe rt ence, al l wo r k guara n

teed Ca ll 256 1748
WI LL care f or 2 elderl y
people tn my home By th e
week or Month 304 675

76 10

FIAaAEial
21

Bu stn ess
O_pportuntty -~ _

Bustness or st or e r oom tn
Pa rk Ce ntral Hotel
22

Mo~ e y

to Loan

_

REC" IN A NCE or pur chase
your hom e 30 year ft xed
ra te wva &amp; Oh•o Lea de r

Mor tgage, 77 E Stale Sl ,
AIhens. Oh 592 3051

FLE XIBLE HOUR S' L1ke

614 592 3053

WELCOME WAGON WA N

23

TS Y OU' Representa t tve
pos ttton s '" Gal1tpolt s, Pt
Pl easant and Pomeroy
Mt ddl eport ar eas Tr a1ntng
prov1ded free and contac t

C&amp;L Boo kk ee pt ng
Bookk eep tng &amp; tax se r v tce
for all types of busmesses

Nancy Kelly 614 593 6661
12 00 to 4 00 Tuesda y

Des k Clerk and M a td
Apply at Bes t
needed
Wes t ern Wtl1t a m Ann
M otet befor e 5 p m
Need a tab? L1k e to be your
own boss ? E xce ll ent op
portuntf y lull or parr f tm e
Olde Worlde Inc w•tt tratn
and help start your ow n
For tnt er v tew
bu stness
send your r es ume to 2021h
E M a tn St Pomer oy, Ohto
Wanted per son to lt ve wtth
e ld e rly
lady
Lt g hl
hou se hold dutt es Ref er en
ce needed Restden ce RT 1.
Longbottom, Oh
Ple ase
call or wnte R K Brown ,

157

Whaley

Pl ace,

Chdlt coth e, Ohto 45601
Need ex tra money? Be a
toy &amp; gt ve de monstrator
It's easy &amp; profttabl e w or k
your own hours Th er e's no
cash tnves tme nt t or sam
pie ktt &amp; no collectmg or
delt ve rtng Call Fr1endl y
Home Parftes now 992 3561
A lso book.ng part tes

OUT STANDING

Ca ree r

Opportun1ty for the am
btftous sa les ortent ed per
son Protesstonal trammg
and
c omprehen s •v e
b e n e ftiS
provtd e d
Unltmtted tncome potent tal
wtth mmtmum travel For
conftdenttal tntervtew c all

(6141

374 8306

or

open

r es ume to Charles E
Hughes
Sr
Ag e n c y
Manager, Woodm en Ac
c tdent and Ltfe Co , 536 4th

". . ..
. . . . ... .............

Cook Wanted tor Ptzza
Shack tn Pomeroy A ppl y
tn person at Metgs tnn
Need Money? Lad•es to
work 10 to 12 hours per
week or full ttme Earn as
htgh as S850 or more per
week
Selltng Stanley
Products Call 985 4171 or

949 2360
NEED~ECRAFT

Earn 111

come demonstrattnCJ
st1tchery collectton

our
No

12

Situations Wanted

House

patnting,

roof1ng,

One male kitten, all black

with long hair. 992·3577 .
FU~L OR PART TIME
couples and lndlvlduols for
business or your own.
Local Amway Distributor
ONE, male, black &amp; white, trolns you for splended oplong haired kitten, 30A·61S· portunity. No experience
necessary. For Interview
2533.
.send nome and phone num·
to P 0 Box 3.41 Rio
PUPPY, small part Ger· ber
Grande,
Oh 45674 .
mon Shepherd, female, 3Q.I·
1675-2347.
JOBS overseas. Big money
·Home comfort cook stove 'fast. Job offers graronteed
for wood and coal. 895·3866. 1-716-1142-6000. Ext. 2843.

Ca rol Nea l

446 3862

P1 ano tuntn g and r epatr
Lane Dante ls Assoc •ate of
Brun• ca r d1's
Ga l ltpolt s
and Cunnm gham's Athens
742 2951or 992 2082

neal Estate
31 __ H_Of.!!es for Sale~
Beaut tfu l br tc k &amp; fram e, 3
bedroom hom e w / sce nte
v1ew,
w o o d burntng
fi r epl ace, for m a l dtnmg,
ce ntr al at r w/ hea t pump
La nsca ped, I acre lot
w/ fenced tn bac k y ard,
$45 ,900
11 % ftnanc tng ,
sm all down pay m ent Call

446 3766

Houses, 4 br d , 3 bdr , 2
bdr , 9% 1nteres t owne r
ft nanctn g Ca r ol Yea ger

Rea ltor. 675 5104 or 675
5386
For sa te 3 bd r hou se tn
M e r ce r v ill e,
new I y
re m Ode led On acr e lot
Mtd twe nl tes
By ap
potntm ent onl y Call 256

1464

Co untr y
L t vt n g,
3
bedroom s, ce ntra l atr , fyll
base m ent. gar age, pood", 2
barn s, all tht s on 10 acres of
beauttful r olltng land
Pr tce r edu ced for qu1 c k
sa le By own er , $65,000

Call245 91Q5

Neat , 3 bdr , brt c k home, 1
1/2 bath s, qut et netgh
borhood 10% assumable

loan Call446·7080

St . Manella . Oh 45750

Monday

.......

Profess1onal
Serv1c es

send

no deposit. Quality
Halstead Salvage Co. 300 quotas,
k1ts 1·800 424-4320 or 304
Eleventh St., Pt Pleasant, 586·3970 CREATIVE EX
304·675·5868 Also flea PRESSIONS
market

Have land" Wan t to butl d "
Nothtng down . low tnf er est ,
no pay m ent for 6 month s

m eeftng w tth tne publ tc?

concrete work. 992·2836.

TO good home, playful
young m~le dog, excellent
form dog. 304-895· 361~ .

992 7352

The

Ga llla M etgs Com mun tt y
Ac t 1on
Age n cy
CETA
progra m tS currentl y ac
ce pt tng applt ca t tons tor the
Yo uth
Em
Summ e r
pl o ym e nt
Pr og r am
(SY EP l
E l tgtbt1 tty
r e qutr e m en t
1
eco nomt c all y
dtsad
vantaged, 2 14 to 21 yea r s
of ag e Applt catt ons ac
ce pt ed Mond a y Frt day,
Ga lltpolt s. Oh , 446 461 2, ex
tenston 63 M et gs Count y
ad dress CAA offt ce at 11 7
2nd Ave, Pomer y , Oh .

through Friday, 1·5 p m

want
with
very IIHle upkeep. Well.
this one is In A·1 shape. 1
Has a Iaroe front porch; . ,
3 bedrooms, central
heot and air, full
basement, hot water
heot, nice carpeting ond
lots more. ,Asking only c
$65,000.
.

TV Repair
&amp; SeFVice·.

985·4212

1 female full blooded
S1amese cat &amp; her 10 month
old k1tten 742·2374 or 742·
2056

~;;:==~====~~~LUXURIOUS
something nice

HARRISON'S

G1veaway

Cats &amp; kittens 992·5740 or
992·2597

your money work for
you on this very little
work needed to operate

Jill$.

Volunteer

ANY PERSON who has

pers Plains lor S31,SOO
INVESTMENT
2

business.

Hall ,

anyth tn g to gtve away and
does not offer or attempt to
otter any other thtng for
sate may place an ad tn thts
column . There wtll be no
charge to the advert1ser

shower, equtpped kitchen, ...carpeting and 2
ntce level lots tn Tup-

INVESTMENT -

Grange

Hav tng a par t y. ptcntc or
homecom tng , why not have
a magtctan f o r en
ter tatnmenf? For appl call

992 23 13

Co , Sprong Valley Plaza , 256 6244
446 8025

room C&gt;ne floor modern

in home area

Sprong

Plaza. 446 8025

ASk1ng $25,000
NEW LISTING -

of all types.

silver Father ' s

Da y bar, SIO 00

Lots of frutt trees, bath,
nat
gas
furnace.
carpeting, garage tn the
basement, and pnvacy

Complete gutler work,
remodeling,

999

Vall ey Tradtng Co , Sprtng
Valley Plaza , 446 8025

bedroom home w 1th 2 8

Vin" &amp; Aluminum

l

1 oz

Ra ven 25 auto pt stol $47 49
Case sharks tooth kn 1fe ,
$50 00
Sprtng
Valley
Tradtng Co , Spnng Valley

c

nttur e and A nttques of a ll
ktnd s, ca ll Kenneth Swa m ,
446-3159 and 256 1967 tn th e

8025

Plaza, 446 8025

NEW LISTING -

275

Go ld,
Sti ve r ,
Bu yt ng
Pl altnum . old cot ns, sc r ap
22 caltber Buffalo Scout rtng s &amp; silverwa r e Da ll y
revolver , pearl handles, 4 quotes a v a ilabl e
A l so
314 nfte barr e l, 6 shot, 22 cotn s &amp; cotn supplt es for
shorts or longs, $59 95 sal e
S pr~n g
Vall e y
Sprtng Vall ey Tradtng Co, Trad1ng , Spnn g VaH e y
Sprmg Vall ey Plaza, 446
Plaza , 446 8025 or 446 8026

Reel Eatete - General

3·29 tic

21.
22.
23.
24. , _ _ _ _ __

Bu y term tnsurance and m
vest the res t No obltgalton
a nal y st s
Ruml ey
In
surance Age ncy 446-3320

Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3 24 tic

EUGENE LONG
Superi~r Siding Co.
19,-----20._ _ _ _ __

l
·t 7.
:1 ·. · - - - - :I 9
I~ JO:

utility, storage building. Reduced to$78,000
home

M a tnt ence per so n for a par
tm ent compl ex Ca ll 675

sewmg WANT TO BUY Old fur

446·0294

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•excavating
• septic systems
• A water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
•limestone

AI W1rd's Keyboard
Visa 1-446-4372
charge

17.
18. _ __ _ __

4.
5.
6.

II

PRICE REDUCED- TUPPERS PLAINS - A

· Now$16,800.

YA RD sa te, 109 Pl easa nt
Sf Tuesda y 25th 9 4 tf r a tn
wednesd ay

i- ~A~:!:~:!:~u:!:!~!~~e~e"~!s~~ ~~~~~~:::t~::e:~
and

Mtsce tlan eou s

17

loll FRE E I 800 642 3619

15

ma chtne repatr, parts, and
Pt ck up and
suppl1 es
deltver y, Davt s Vacuum
Cleaner , one halt mtl e up
Georges Cr eek Rd
Call

_5£ttool s_!_~ tructton _

Kara te the ult tmate tn self
def ence all pn vate lessons,
M en, wo m en , &amp; cht ldren
lnstruc tton thru blac k belt
A l so ava il a bl e Ka rat e
u n tf o rm s pu c h1n g a nd
ktc ktng bags, and protec
t• ve equtpm e nt
Jerr y
Lowe r y &amp;
Assoc 1a t es
Ka r a t e Stu dto.
143
Bur ltn gton Rd , Jackson,
Oh Cal l 286 307 4

1759

penenced AUCTIONEER

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH .

*backhoe

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR

( )Wanted
t l For Sale
( )Announcement
t ,) For Rent

2.
3.

A rwo

three bedroom ranch liome wtth carport, separilfc

'•

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

GARAGE

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

bedroom, one story home, new c !lrpettnQ, ff'nc cd

. back yard. gos heat. S22.SOO

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN IIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

a

tory . Call lor details ·

$ gg

O'Brien Electric
Service

Roger Hysell

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

.ci1 AI II c

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-31

MIDDLE PORT -

toll FR EE I 800 642 3619

May 24

tfem s S1 00 or less Severa l
co mforter s a nd one bunk

IN SID E sa te, new &amp; used
mer chand tse a t 212 Walnut
Street , Hend er son . starttng

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
. SERVICE
From tho Smollest
Hoator Core to the
~argesl Radiator.

CANDLELIGHT INN

Write your own od ond order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
result\. Money not refundable.

Furn1ture Retail, equ1prhent. butldtnQ, and tnven

NEW LISTING -

Htgh Sc hool Graduates &amp;
Sen tors you can earn ove r
$550 00 per month whil e
lea rnmg a valuabl e sktll
lt ke computer r epa,rer ,
shee t m etal work er , or
r efrt gerat• on Plu s you w ill
have a sec ure pa rt f1 me tob
w• t h the Am r y Nat 1on a l
G ua r d aft er sc hooli n g
Beneft ls tncl ude a Sl. .SOO 00
e nl• s tm e nt
b o nu s,
$35, 000 00 l tfe tnsu r ance
and free tu 1t ton to any
coll ege or trade sc hoo l tn
Wes t V trg tnt a Inter ested
pe r son s may ca ll (30 4) 675
3950 or tn West V trg tnt a ca ll

Ht gh Sc hool Gradu ates &amp;
Sen tor s you can ea rn over
$550 00 per month whtl e
lea rntng a v alu abl e Sktll
ltk e computer r epa tr er,
sheet m etal w ork er , or
refrt ger att on Plu s you Wi ll
have a sec ure part t tme 10b
w1th th e Amry Natt onal
Guard aft er sc hoo ltn g
Benef1ts tnctude a $1.500 00
e nlt s tm ent
b on us .
S35, 000 00 l tfe tnsurance
and fr ee tu tt ton to any
college or trade sc hoo l tn
Wes t V tr gt nl a Inter es ted
persons may ca ll (304) 675
3950 or 1n Wes t V trg tn ta ca ll

bed

8 20 ti c

9 30·1fc

SWEEPER

Its-Letart
937-Buffalo

.$400

CARPET STARTING AT $12.95
:·:

Pomeroy, Ohio

- - " The muhlnt ot tomorrow -toaayl
Soanng Ahead N~ture ' s Way
curtails your houudust problems
U P S. Service
GallipoliS 614·446-2096
Puktrsburg, W. V 304·4U-S434
Murdoch Av . &amp; Lakevtew Dr.

112-New Haven

insertion .. ···--

Threeday

Up to 15 Words ... Six day

KITCHEN CARPET

992-6215 or 992·7ll4

RAINBOW-The Amazint Water Machinr

77~Mitson

UptolSworOs

GIANT CARPET SALE

Vehtcle to be sold as 1S
wtth no guarantees Btds to
be submitted tn sealed en

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

(stlmolts)

11
B"E"s"T-AND SERVICE THE

New Homes - extensive remodeling

Mason Co., wv

SJ OU

23 Otshes, book , avon &amp;
clothes, lot s m or e

1iiiiiiii~~~~i1~:==~~~~~=1 we
usedl comm
erec ha nd tse
Rt calw
h aay
r ds

______....., PH. 992·7201
+---------1
Curb Inflation -!I1
ROUSH
I
Pay Cash for
I CONSTRUCTION
I
Classlflads and II.
~
Savel II
II
• It

NEW LISTING- BUSINESS OPPORTUN.ITY -;

of 7 30 AM until 9 00 PM.

heating.

4 20 tf c

S~L ~TH~"'E

COMING BANDS
F RI , APRJO , MAYI
WILOWATER
Country Rock
Thurs Frl Sill Sun
May I) U IS 14
CROSSOV E RS
Drink &amp; Drown IIIII n1ghts
Thurs Fn Sun
May 20..21 U 23
CROSSO VER S
Drink &amp; Drown 1111 nights
Thurs Frt Sal Sun
May 21 1119 10
CROSSOVERS
Dnnk &amp; Drown all n1ghts
MONTH OF JUNE

• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs. experience

PH.992·2259

v tew ed at the Shentf's
garage, located between
the Meigs County Cour
thouse and the Metgs Coun
ty Jai l and dunng the hours

plumbing, electric, and

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2772

PH . 992·2478
5·20·1 mo

• Roofing of all types
eSiding
• Remodeling

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

be

PARTS 1nd SERVICE
4 5 tic

.SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Se ctton

w111

~'"

Aluminum Siding

· Trencher
· Water
- Sewer
- Gas lines
- Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs

And Home Mamtenance

OPEN MONOAY SUNDAY
llOPM 2lOAM
DAtU SPECIAL S
Happy Hr 4 6 D;uly
Mon - kegN•ghll2
lues - Ladles N1ght82
Wed - Onnk 111nd Drown
All you can dnnk 12
Thurs - Pool Tournaments
ll ol over
F n &amp; Sat Bands
Dnnk &amp; Drown tO 2
Ounng Band Only
Sun - P 111a &amp; Pilcher Be er
• JO ll c

1nserteon - ...

3 Famil y Ya rd Sa le Btd

well Rodney Rd 20.21.22. &amp;

• Dryers • Freezers

e~tncalwoR

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

· Lo-lloy

OHIOVAUEY
ROOFING

Mrs. Amber Lohn, Mrs. Dorothy
Ba1ley, Mrs. Enuna Fox, Mrs Ber·
tha Parker, Mrs. Evelyn Young
were recent visitors of Mrs. Ruby
Fnck, and her mother, Mrs. Della
Curtis

Mt-R~cine

YardSale

1

Ill!!

Mrs. Betty Stewart, Colwnb~s ,
spent several days with Mr. and ·
Mrs. Charles Mash.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey VISited
a recent Sunday evening w1th Mrs . .
Della Stahl.

Up to 15 words .One day

the Me19s

veh1c le

ors

- PiumblnJind

INSULATION
Vinyl&amp;

Reel Ellltl - General

County Commt SS tOners Wtll
r ece tv e se aled b tds until 12
noon on Tu esday , June 15,
1982, tn the office of the
M e tq s County
Com
m tssioners, loc ated tn the
Courthouse,
Pomeroy,
Ohto, wtth btds to be
opened at 2 PM and t ead
aloud . for the sale of the
followmg ve htcl e
1- 1976 Chevrolet Blazer

304 67 5 22 14

e Washers
• Dtsh washers
• Ranges • Refrigerat-

Cheshire, Oh
Ph . 367·7560

3·11-ffc

6· 15 lfc

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

recently
Mrs. Della Stahl has been
discharged from Veterans Memonal
Husp1tal.
Mrs. Grace Richardson, Athens,
and Mrs. Audrey Hayes, Shade,
VISited Sunday with Mrs. Della
Stahl.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoadley Crothers,
Canton, visited recently w1th Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Howell.
Mr. and Mrs. Chfford Jacobs and
Mrs. Tma Jacobs spent the weekend
111 Columbus with relatives.
Mr and Mrs. Faye Countryman, .
Greenville, spent a weekend recently w1th Mr. a~d Mrs. Roy Howell.

Meigs County
Ara.Code614
tn-Middleport
Pomeroy
915-Chester
343-Portland
247-Letart Foils

NOTICE FOR SALE
COUNTY ·OWNED
VEHICLE

307 12

Found Brown and whtte
femal e Beag le wtth fl ea
collar a nd r abies t ab Ca ll

All Makes

water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane

-Conmtt won

" Beautiful, Custom

wood buildings 24x36.

Public Noftce

15124, 1611, 2tc

SIZES 8-20

Farm Equ 1pment
Wanted to buy
Ltvestock
Hay &amp; Gratn
Seed &amp; F erltltzer

[

I 7 I tic

(Aver- 4 words per line!

any or all b1ds No offer of
less than SI.OOO 00 will be
constdered
Mary Hobstetter,
Clerk
Me1gs County

4850

Galha County
Area Code 614
446-Gallipolis

StFJIEtS
81
82
83
84
85
86

a

1

water·Sewer·Eiectrlc
Gas ~lne-Ditches

Lost Sm a ll bla ck pood le
on Jtm Htll Rd 67 5 43q4

4

following telephone exchanges. . .

367-Ches~ire

llentals

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

4

75 Boats &amp;Motors

Farm Supplies
I blvestatll

REESE w ~
TRENCHING .
SERVICE

Lost and Found

6

4

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

76-Auto Parts &amp; Acces son es
77 Auto Repa tr
78 Camp~ng Equ1pment

L TIME Ca ll446 3358

==========:+::=========4-==========4==========4~=========~ c lathes,
F a mtl y Adult a nd ba b y
old bottl es, 1ea ns,
mt sc
110
4th
A Ve,
Gallipoli S May 28, 29. 30,
RANDY'S
Vinyl
&amp;
Aluminum
C.
R.
MASH
ALL STEEL
YOUNG'S
9 OOAM
SIDING
CARPENTER
CONSTRUCTION Bt g famil y ya rd sa le May
CARPENTER
BUILDINGS
BISSELL
SERVICE
29, 30 , 31
mtl es east of
Custom
kllchens and apSires start lrom 30x24"
SERVICE
-Addons and remodlllin&amp;
Tuppe
r
s
Pl
a
tn s on 681
pliances ,
custom
toward Reed sv ill e Look
-Roolinaand autter work
'Addoftl tnd remoclthnJ
SIDING
CO.
Utility Buildings
bathrooms, remodeling,
tor stg ns 9 d ark M os t
-Roof'"l'"- pH11 worl
-concrete wort

PHONE 992-2156

71 Autos for Sa le
72 Trucks for Sal e
73 vans&amp; 4WD
74-Motorcycles

15

II

T1me on you r hands ? M eet
6 weeks old I puppy 8
ntce
peopl e, earn good S$$
weeks old, half colli e 8. h a lf
Avon PA~T TIME&amp;FUL
German Sheph erd
949

1

BOGGS

Dour

Classified page3 cover the

21 Bus.ness Opportun.ty
22 Mone y to Loan
23 Pr otess •Qn a l Se r v •ces

G_!_ V.!_t!_way

5 kttte ns, 4 mal es, 1 f em ale

2805

-....;_.;;.

fiA3AEial

4

Business Services

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
1 11 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 4S769

Annopecemeets

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Laurel Cliff News Notes
Mother's Day attendance at the
Free Methodist Church was 122.
Choir members present were 16. A
spec1al song was sung by five members ol the church. Mrs. T1na Jacobs
was the oldest mother, and Mrs.
Angela Sellers was the youngest
mother present.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jacobs, Kentucky, Mr. and Mrs Wilham Jacobs,
Mrs. Theo DaviS, Colwnbus, spent
Mother's Day with Mrs. Tma Jacobs
and attended the mormng services
atthelucalchurch.
Mrs. Judy Wolfe and sun, Chester,
VISited Mother's Day w1th her paren·
Is, Mr and Mrs. JamesG1Imure.
Mrs. John Douglas, Byesville,
spent a night recently w1th her
mother, Mrs. Enuna Fox.
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Eblin ,
newlyweds, were g1ven an old
fashwned belhng Saturday night at
1mdmght..
Attendance at the murmng serVIces at the Free Methodist Church
May 2 was 70. A spec1al song was
sung by Mrs. Folmer, Mrs. Pulhns
and Mrs. Fnend.
Mrs. E1runa Fox was dmner guest
of Rev . and Mrs. Robert M1ller

Church hosts missionaires
The F1rst Southern Bapt1st Church
will host two student swruner
1ntss10nan es dunn g June 28 through
Jul y 2. They are Teresa D1ckens, a
stud ent from Arkansas State
Um ve rs1ty, and Lmda Boyd , a
student from Patnck Henry Jumor
College of Ala bama
The two will serve 111 the Sc10tu
Valley Assuc1at10n for the summer
months. workmg w1th different
churches for Backyard B1ble Clubs
each day for f1ve days. Lucatwn of

Pomeroy Mlcldleport, Ohio

Long Bottom News Notes

Vaccine possible cure for disease
American Cancer Society
Meigs County Unlt
By S. Michael,
Public Information
Chairman
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Sc1ent1sts have come up w1th vac·
n nes aga mst poho. smallpox,
measles, 'flu . ra b1es and other
d1seases - su why not cancer ?
The answer Involves fundamental

Monday, May 241 1982

Monday, #My 24, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

142 acre far m good hou se
and barns Ca ll 446 2599
New log hom e on n ver
fronr tn Mt dd leport 446

1552
3 bd r oo m lar ge g arage . 2
ac r es, 2 bd roo m RentaL
!lake car mobtl e hom e tn
trad e John Sheets, 3'12
mtl es South Mtddl eport R
7

IT's GETTING

~ATE

but

you c an sttll have a home of
your own 1f you earn bet

ween $9,000 and $15,000 a
year 2126 houses wtll be
built tn the state of Ohto un
der farm hom e rural
houstng
program
the
rematnder of 1982 These
homes wtll be financed
wtth no down payment and
payments wi II be low as

$125 per month See our
mode l near the Pte Pac

Any odd job. Have plum·
bing, electric, carpentry
experience. 304·675·5918 .
13
Insurance
SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance

Market on RT 50, w .
Athens or call 992 703~ for
Info Kmgsbury Homes,
1100 E Main St Pomeroy,
Oh
3 bedroom
house
In
Pomeroy . VInyl stding &amp;
fireplace Nice location.

coverage In Gallio County Priced to sell. 992·7446 .
for almost o century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are In Racine , Ohio on Broad·
ovollable to meet in· ,way . Roderick Gnmm. 5
dlvlduol needs. Contact rooms, 1'12 bath, large
Harry Pitchford, agent basement, lireploce. 949·
2834
Phone 446·1427.

�Page
31

8-The Daily Sentinel
----

Homes for Sa le

bedroom
house ,
remodeled . Will sell on
land con tra c t witn Mob ile
Home, auto .. etc . as down
paymen t . Pomeroy . 304 881
1466

J

51

They'll Do It Every Time

t-----

Ear ly American couch,
chair &amp; swive l rocker , ex .
co nd . Ca ll 446·7736.

Ira! air , ba sement, Phone

304 675 1541 .
81'1 PERCENT asumab le
loan. one year old tri ·leve l,
Meadowland
Es t a t es ,
S6 7, 500 Call 304 675 1519 af ·
ter 5 p .ml.

General Elec t ric 23,000
BTU air cond itioner . 30.4675·3818 .

OWNER wants off er , sel l
or trade . Three bedrooms,
1 baths, bri ck, corner lot,

51

304 67 5 7713.

RCA Solid Sta l e 100 Con·
sole. Could be fixed or used
for paris . 446·4173 .

CB,TV, Radio
Eq uipment

Television
•
•
viewing

T h r ee bedroom hou se,

b&lt;t sem ent, 11
304 675 3179

32

:~

acr e gr ound .

Mob1ll! Hom es
for Sale

r RI ST A T E
MOB I LE
HOME S USED MOBILE
HOME S. CAR S. TRUCKS
GALLIPOLI S.
CH ECK
OUR PRI CE S CALL 446
' 7571.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOME S
KE SSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 MI .
WE ST. GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446 3868 .
Ca ll Skidmore for mobile

41

I bedroom furni shed ap t. in

Houses for Rent

3 bdr . house, apts, com ·
mercia l highwasy fr an
rage. Call 304·675·5104 or
675 5386.

------

4 bedroom, centra l air and
heat, ci ty water, firep lace,
unfurnished except kit ·
chen . $300 month plu s
utilities. Re fer ence and
deposit
required .
In
Racine . 949·2293 .

For sale Offi ce trailer
12x.45, fuel oi l heat , a/c. one
full balh , $1,000 . Call 446
4119. 7:00·4:30.
1981 Bar on l4x60 house
trai ler w/ 101. drilled well ,
septi c &amp; sewer . Crab Cr eek
Rd , Ga l lipOl iS Ferry , WVa
446 2240 .
12x60 2 bdr . Mobile home.
Call446 4191
12 x 60 tr ai ler, excel lent
condi ti on. Call 446·1552 .
Furni shed, air condit ioned,
underpinn ing, se t up on lot
in Midd lepor t.
Cu stom built , turn ., 2 BR .
mobi le home on r ented
r iver fr o~t lot in Mason . All
elec .•
AC. W.O .. cptd .
por c hes , many extras .
Storage bldg . with work
bench . A 1 cond . Must see
to apprec ia te. 304·773·5680.

cerJ.

1976
14x70
Parkwood
mobile home, 1111 batt1. In·
eludes underpinn ing, por
ch , and aluminum building .
$10. 500 . 991-1811.
USED MOBILE
576·17 11 .

HOME .

MOBILE HOM ES MOVED
L1 cen sed &amp; insured . Ca ll
304 576·17 II .
1976.
14x70
BENDIX
mobile home, 3 bed rooms ,
excellen t condi tion , 30.4·675·
2820.
1973, 14x70, 3 bedroom,
mobile home. Will se ll fur ·
nishedf for $7,300., or un·
furni shed ·$6,800 . 30.4·881·
1820.
1972 Shulfz 12x65, gas hea t,
3 bedroom s, partia ll y fur ·
nished . 304-675·1907.
73
TRA I LER.
wa sher ,d r yer, new ca r ·
pe t ing . Wi ll se ll partia ll y
furni shed or unfurni shed,
S6300 . 304·773-5503 .
1977 Trai ler , 14x70, 304-675·
1965.
33

Farm s for Sale

Farm for sa le by owner .
114 acres on Roush Hollow
Rd . Ca ll 388·8515 .

34 ----auil ness

Buildings

Building
wi th
act i ve
luc r a ti ve business. Quick
sa le. $35,000. 991-3 141.
35

Lois &amp; Acre,_,a_.g,_
e __

Price r ed uced. 2 lots with
rural wa ter close to ci ty
lim it s. $4.450.00 . Ca ll 446·

1194.
For sale one and half acres
more or
less, ap proxi mately 600 II road
frontage
on
Cora ·
. Centerpoint Rd. near Cen·
lerpoinl. $3,000.00 Phone
682'694-1.
10 ac:res at Rio Grande on
Cenlerpolnl Rd . Rural
wafer . 614·262·5916.

1975 Case 450, dozer
tr actor, 1,800 hrs., ve r y
good co nd .• $14,900. Ca ll
446·4537.
RATLIFF 'S POOL CE N·
TER Pool s sa le, suppli es &amp;
insta ll ation . 403 2nd. Ave ..
Ga ll ipolis, Oh. Ca ll 446·
6579 . In ground· A blove
ground.

Pl .

Whirlpool ai r condi ti oner
10,000 BTU, wi ndow moun·
l ed. 16 lo 38 inche s. 110
vol ts. Call446· 1570 .

MYRTLE
BEACH .
1
bedroom condomi nium ,
ocean view , pool side unit,
$400. a week . 304·273 3689 .

174 p ieces brown un derpinning tor a mobil e
home used ju st 1 year. A
seve n &amp; one half fee t by 58
inc he wide multicolored,
braided oval rug . White
uniforms (pa ntsuits) three
different st yles. sizes 9·10.
A royal b lue (Sabre make)
portable typewriter , green .
Ca ll afler 4PM. 446·3065.

Partially furnished . 4
room s and bath. 992 -5908.

-----·-45

Pomeroy 2
bd . room ,
remodeled , 408 Spring .
Carpeted, sec urity deposi t.
$100. Re nl$ 195. Ca ll afler 6
p.m . 9911168 .

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light house keeping apt .,
Park Centra l Hotel .
Rooms with cooki ng, ca bl e,
air , $40 a week . 304-773·

Couch, rocking chai r , easy
cha1r &amp; autuma n, cotte and
end tabl e·all matching .
Cal l 379·1671.

For rent in Racine·ni ce 2 46
_S_pa~~r _B.!.!!!__ __
bd.room hou se . Complete ly
COUNTRY
MOBILE H ome
furn ished, wi th air cond .,
all utilities paid . $300. per Park , Route 33, North of
month . 9491801 or 949·1860. Pomeroy . Larg e lot s. Call
9'11 · 7479 .
House on L1nco1n Hgts. All
new
paint .
Deposit
required . No inside pe ts.
9913090

Kohler &amp; Campbe ll spinet
piano, $500 . Blue &amp; gold
tweed couc h, SSO . Sq uare
dance dresses·si zes 38·42 .
Price negoti ab le on all
ifems .145·5017

River lots for rent . Ca ll 992·
5781 afler 5:30p.m.
TRAILER lol , 90x70, Pear·
so n
Trailer
Cour t,
Ga llipoli s Ferry, 304·675·
6167 .

6 room house, unfurnished,
remode led, ex tra clean,
adul ts on ly. Pomeroy . $185 .
per mo. 304·882 ·2466.

2 wood stoves used 1 yr ..
Ca ll 379 ·1671 .

Small
trailer spaces .
Mason. 30073 ·5651.

Furnished hou se. Adul ts
on ly. No pels. 949·1153.
Deposit required .
42

-----~

455 Olds motor &amp; other par·
Is . Ca ll145-9564 .

47

Deep freezer &amp; fuel oil
l ank . Ca ll 379·1435 .

-·-------

Wanted to Rent

Bedspreads, curta ins &amp;
shams all match, ex . cond.
Ca ll446·7761 .

Wanted to rent war ehou se,
storage building or large
garage in c it y of Ga lli polis.
Ca ll446 3159 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mobile home for r ent . Ca ll
446 4115 or •46·0756.

21 c u.ft . chest t ype freezer,
good cond . Ca ll 446·7736.

rAerebandlse

Ni ce furnished mobil e
home, ce ntral air, 1 mi .
below cit y over looki ng
river , adults only . Ca ll 446·
0338.

25' B &amp; W Zen ith TV, leg
model, good cond. cau 145·
9395. $50 wilh antenn a.

Sl

SWA IN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
Furn . 2 bdr . mobil e home PAWN SHOP 62 Olive Sf .,
in Crown Cit y . Ca ll 256· Ga llipoli s. 3 piece li vi ng
room suites couc h-love
6510.
sea t-cha ir $199, 2 piece
l ivi ng r oom suites from
1 bed fra iler . Ca ll 379·1435.
$140 up, love sea t s from $70
up, maple dinet se ts from
2 bdr . trailer furnished . $9'1 lo $19'1, wa ll huggers
adul t s onl y, Brown Trailer $100., rec liners $80, maple
Park. 9923324.
roc kers $49, bedroom
su ites $150, variety of table
Furnished Mobile Home. 3 lamps, marble top stand s
bedrooms, was her ·dr yer . $30 and up, box spr ing s &amp;
( new)
$100,
On private lot . No pet s. mattr ess
severa l utilit y cab inets, kit ·
Deposit r equired . 949·2253.
chen cab inets wOOd &amp;
metal , baby beds, chests of
ONE bedroom mobi le drawers $15 lo S60, 3·way
home, 304-675·41 54 .
rec li ners $100, gas &amp; elec·
tri c ranges, refrigerators,
Mobi l e
H ome,
p I . wash stands, bunk beds
Pleasant . 614 ·446·8111 .
com pl ete with bunkies
$170, several dressers, hall
trees, beds, brass head
board beds $35, bookcases,
44·- - - APartm ent smokers, Hoover spin dry
washer , wringer type
for Rent
washers , hutch, coa l &amp;
Furni shed apt. 3 rooms, 1 wood heater s, televisions,
$195 utilities paid, adults. fans, new tools of all kinds,
Ca ll446·4416 afler 7PM .
va ri ety of Silverstone cook ·
ware . Ca ll 446·3159 .
Furnished 3 r . wi th private .
balh . 845 Second Ave .,
LAYNE'S FURN ITUR E
Ga lli polis. Ca ll 446·11 15.
Sofa, chai r , rocker, at·
roman , 3 fables. (exira
Apartment, 2 bdr ., unf ., no heavy by Fronlierl. $685.
pels. Call446·3937 .
Sofa , c hair and loveseal ,
$175 . Sofas and c hairs
For rent 1 bdr . turn ., apt. priced from $285. to $795.
$175 per mo .• $50 dep., 6 . Tables, $38 and up lo $109.
mo. lease, utilities pd .. no
beds,$340., queen
children, on pets, in c ity. Hlde·a·
$380. Recliners, $175. 1
Call 446·3667 after 5.
Lamps from S18. lo
S65. 5 pc . dinelles from $79.,
Furnished efficiency . $135, lo $385. 7 pc ., $189. and up.
ulillies pd. Share balh, Wood fable with 4 chairs, .
adulls. Ca ll 446·4-116 afler $219 up lo ~95 . Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375.,
7PM.
maple or pine finish . .
Bedroom suites · Bassetl
Furnished apr .• 3 bdr., $195, Cherry, $795.
Bunk bed
water paid. Call 446·4-116 af· complete with mattresses,
ter7PM.
$250. and up to $395. Cap·
lain's beds, $275. complete.
Furnished apl., 3 bdr., Baby beds, $99. Matlresses
or twin,
adulls, $175. Share balh.
ulillies paid. Call 446·4-116
.,., .:··-. $78.
dr.
alter 7PM.
1 "!~~-·~

12" Bell Saw se lf feed
planer, 9 set of molding
knife, 1 Shaper , several ex ·
Ira knives . $1,000 . 446·9185.

Gasoline and heating fuel.
Ca ll Exce lsior Oil Co m·
pany . 614·991-1105.

81

57

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

Musical
Instruments

Electric gui tar wi th amp
$60, Pioneer reciever 190
watts with st er o ac ·
cessories $300. Ca ll 367·
I

'" ·

For Sale or Trade

A lot of di ff erent parts for
350 or 400 engines. Also par·
ts for 74 Impala . interior
perfect. 741 ·3063.
For sale-1981 Ford Tractor,
model 1700, 4 wheel drive
d iese l. 5 ft . brush· hog. 12 in.
post hole digger. 4ft. by 8
ft . chevy utility trail er. 9927198 .

Farm Sulllllles
&amp;
61

Llv estaell

Farm Equipment

l ·sel of John Dee r e 4 bol·
tom 16' semi mount plows,
1-Hillsboro tr i-ax le gooseneck 18' fr ai ler. Ca ll 614·
156 6531.

65

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

71

BULK
BLENDED
Agric ullural
fertilizer
deli vered
spread or
del ivered
dumped or
picked up al plant. Bien·
ding service hours 8 to 4,
Monday lhru Friday, other
hours request on spreader
buggy rentals. A complete
independent busines. Farm
Equipment serivce, Clif ford W . Snyder owner.
Jackson, OH, 286·4983.

a.
a.

71

Sta ndin g Wa l nut
Phone 304-895·3647 .

trees .

BABY bassinet, pad 115.
Baby bottle st eriliz er set,
$4.00. Bed spring-full $5.00.
304·675·3801.
Hom e m ade
s tee 1
c lothes lin e post, s t ee l
swing sets. 675·3677.
55
·~--"B~u'!il!!:d~in~g~
Su~p~p~l~
ie,..sc._
Buil ding materials block,
bri ck, sewer pipes, w indows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Gr ande, 0 .
Call 245·5111.
Metal Sheets 4'x8' thru
4'x12' . Pri ces $7 .60 lo $9.60.
Exfcellenl
building
material.
porcelin ~.
enamel coaled won' I rust
18 lo 21 gauge. 614·667·3085
Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Autos for Sale

1972 MERCURY Marquis,
d' l '
4 door, a·c, good con 1 10n.
see AI iggs or ca ll 304·675·
5733, 304·675·6628.
1981 CHEVETTE. ex·
cellenl condition , one
owner, 4 speed, lois of ex·
lras, Call 304·675· 7521 afler

a.

1976 Grand Plix, PS, PB,
air, 65,000 miles, very good
cond . Call 388·8769.
1974 Olds Cutlass exc.
cond .• low miles, new tires,
new exhaust. Must sell best
offer. Call 675·6586.
For sal e 1974 Camaro with
1976 400 engine, new carb.,
new paint, new tires, new
chrome side pipes. Call-«63141 or 446·2235.
69 VW runs good, recently
over hauled, good tires,
$900. Call afler 5, 446·8328.
80 GMC PU . 6 cyl. stand .•
PS,
exce llent
cond .•
$4,000.00. 80 Datsun 2 dr .•
auto., like new, ~.250 . 00 . 78
Mustang , 4 spd., $2,000.00.
78 Dodge 4x 4 PU, sharp,
$2,600.00. 78 Cadillac Coupe
Deville, 'Loaded' . 75 Ford
PU super cab, auto., w / air
cond., nice. $1,950.00. B D
M otors, SI . RI . 160, 446·
7321 .

1976 Plymouth Scamp, six
cy linder, power steering,
aulomalic, $1195. 304·576·

1535.

a.

1975 Olds. Omega, 2 dr.
HT., p . ~ .. p.b., air, fill
wheel , good cond . $1,395.
Will accept trade. 614·667·

63

Livestock

REG . QUARTER HORSES
Training ,
showing,
breeding, sales and boar·
ding . Conlacl Dan Beam ,
Ga ll ipolis, 446·0183.

1968 Mustang 189 auto. V-8
with Keystone classics. 992·
5434.
1981 Chevelle. 2 door, 4
speed, rxc. cond. Must sell .
742·2143.

74

. TWO acre lots-150 fl . road ' Lillie house in town, qulel
frontage,
city
wafer, · Sf., 4 rooms, bath, laundry.
behind 84 Lumber, call 304· Call Earl Tope 446·0690 ,
weekdays, 446·0161 eve.
675·6873, 675·3618.

f:... ~ E.1-PWJATiOtJ~

MATI-l:..c....,...-.

fiiSJDR'{!
'F'I~
~t-A0•.

Creative· wood decks ,
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
.redwood . Free estimate .
Call388·9761.

ANNIE

'IIHE'II ! I HOPE
lli' DOGCATOlER
OID!i'T6EE filE.

- rLL HIWE T' ~T
'TIL HEGOES OOT
AGiliN T' GEE IF
SIIHOY'6 IN TH'

OCWO!

THIS IS UNFAIR, GU;z! \'OU
HAVE lURNED A S IMPLE
BLACKMAIL PLOY I NlO AN
A.RM&amp; llAC"e!!
.

Water wells . Commercial
Domesti c. Test holes.
1
Pumps Sa les and Service .
304·895·3802 .

GASOUNE ALLEY

Seamless
!ADVANCED
1Gutter · Ooors . Off eri ng
icontinuous
guttering ,
·seam less siding, roofing ,
1
Qarage
doors ,
free
,eslimales. 614·698·8205.

YoLA is vice- We come oLJt

president in here t' wind a
charqeo' · fool wstch?
What'sth'
windin'!

JIMS Pest Control. Call us
anytime for your termite
problems .
Fre e
in ·
speclions. VA &amp; FHA forms
available. Licensed &amp; in·
sured by Ohio
WV. All
'word done by a qualified &amp;
:trained service man . 304·
675·3536, 304-675·4603.

arrive

atth'
job
site,

Rufus!

a.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1978 Honda XR7S . Call 446·
3210, call alter 4PM.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4-177

1972 Honda 350 molorcycle,
ex. cond., $450 . Call 367·
0350.

83

WINNIE
THINGS ARE PICKING
..---~ UP. .. SINCE 'WE GOT
THAT TRANSFUSION
OF CAPITAL FR'OM
YaJR BROTHERIN- LAW!

Excavating

. Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Spec ial
farm rates . Ca ll us for free
estimates . .446-«40.

Reg . Polled Hereford bull .
197-S
Goldwi ng
1000
App. 1.600 lbs., $850.00 or 75 Vega A .T., p.s., till dressed, excell ent contrade for good used wheel, A cyl. boxed 030
dillon, $2,600.00. 6,000 miles
hayrake plus bool. Call 256· creme
cam,
mallory, on engine. Call 245·5297 af·
..
9303.
. header, am·fm tape, mag ter 5PM.
Lawrence Sidenstrick er
wheels, exira sharp. Good
Backhoe Service. Call 675·
graduallon
gilt.
$1.150.
304·
Registered and graded hor·
1979 Yamaha XS 1100. Exc.
5580 .
/
882·2-466.
ses, excellent 4-H project.
cond. Fully dressed. Lots of
English and western sad·
extras. Low mileage. 992·
84
E lectrlcal
e verything HARTS Used Cars, New 5170 or 992·6288.
d i es ·
&amp; Refrigeration
imagi~1J ble in horse equipHaven West Virginia . Over
ment and supplies. also 20 less expensive cars In 1977 E leclra glide classic,
SEWING Machin~ repairs,
.riding lessons and trail stock .
low mileage, very clean, ·service. Authorized Singer
rides and horse training.
musl see lo appreciate. 592· Sales
Service Sharpen
Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow.
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
1978 Mustang II.. 4 cyl, .586-4, Athens .
614·698·3290.
Pomeroy . 9'12·2284.
automatic, power steering,
power brakes, AM· FM. jExcellent condlllon Honda
4 year old Appaloosa mare. $3,000. Phone 30H75·3186 CR250M, Yamaha 80, Hon85
General Hauling
304-675·3818.
or 675·2808.
:da 50, 2 speed. Call 304·675·
JONES BOYS WATER
-1662 aller 5 p.m .
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
GRADE mare, with filly CARS $200. Trucks $150.
·co lt, J years old, half stan· Available at local govern- 74 CB 360 Honda, low 367·0591.
dard breed
registered
men! sales. Call (refun· mileage, excellent shape;
Quarter mare. 304·675·5812.
dable) 1·714·569·0241 ext. $450. 304·576·2866.
Need something hauled
away or something moved?
!1:8~;ss~sfor directory that
. We'll do if. l=all 446·3159 or
you how to purchase.
1981 HARLEY Davidson, ' 614·286·5740 afler6.
hours.
Sportster, 304·675·424.

"WE"IIIDN'T GET IT...
BILL 17117! Hl5 BR'OJHER
ORVILLE WOULI7 HAVE

~~~l

C

A HEART ATTACK
IF HE K~EW ~ILL

MEANWHILe ...
I HAVE :5&lt;A'Y\E
HEWS FOR YOU,
MR. WRIGH} ..

5HAR'EI7 Hl5

LARGI'SS WITH
~!

a.

1

Now Hauling llmeslone·fill
.dirt-top soli-gravel. Free
,estimates. Call367·7101.
1 ------~

' HAULING-Limestone, gra·
vel, sand. Ph. 742·2505.
I

Auto Parts

carb., gal and water pum·

etc. 742-3063 •

a.

Tires.

PEANUTS

II yo~ need your trash
hauled away, call Harper
304·675·5868 between 1 PM
and 5· P. M. Lawn mower
repaired .

·17

...

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
· 446·7833 or 446·1833.
' ' -:-T_ _ _ __

.,

.•·,_.

.-----~

'IT REALLY WORKS .••

m

c

~

MQWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1. Box }24, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
:67H15.c.
I

o

CELEBRITY CIPHER

jJIMS Water Service. Call
,Jim Lanier, 304-675·7397 .

parts for 350 and
«&gt;0 Chevy engine. Trans.,

1..,

o

a.

&amp; ACCtllorltl

1.4.

+A

!and

82

r

3.

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex ·
perienced mason, roofer,
e lectrician ,
,carpenter,
.general repair s and
i'emodeling . Phone 304·675·
.1088 or 675·4560 .

Molorcycles

I I

~

AI Roth revisited

'F' I~

7•2·
~r~u~c~k~·s~f~o'.!.r~S~a~le~~
ial March and April
- ~--T
Gene's Deep Stea m
For sa le 1977 Ford 700 ser.,
cab &amp; chassie very good l ' rtQ.,n;,,a Scotch Gaurd.
Qd; m;IIQ 9'/1-6309
condllion, $4,000. Call 446·
4119, 7:00·4:30.
1- - - - -- :Gene's Steam Carpet
Clean -Scotch Gaurd·Free
1978 Ford pickup standard
estimates-spring specials·
shill V-8, would considered
trade in, ex . cond. Call 446- Gene Sm ilh, 9'11-6309 .
4053.
RON 'S Television Service.
1967 International 2 Ton ·Specia li zing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
Truck, $750. 367·7533.
house calls. Phone 576·1398
or 446· 2454.
1975 Dodge D200 club cab 34
ton . V-8 auto., p.s., new
F &amp; K Tree Tri mmin g,
pain!. $1.600. 446·0341.
stump removal. 675-1331.

1973 DODGE van, ca~ be
seen at 307 Holloway 51.,
Henderson, WV . Priced to
sell.

RIVOS

News
(I) MOVIE: 'The Kids Are
Alright'
Ill Andy Griffith
(Jl ABC N,ws
(I) Electric Company
WHAI OVERillJ Over Easy
EATIN6
MAKES
6 :30 0 (]) (1) NBC News
IHE 10~50.
CII $50.000 Pyramid
Cll Gomer Pyle
Cll Muppet Show
Now arrange the CirCled tener s to
0 Cll ® CBS News
form the surpnse answer , as sug·
(I) Dr. Who
gested by the abOve cartoon
1
(jj) Ullas, Yoga and You
&amp;l (J2I ABC News
Print answer here :
7:00 0 CI&gt; P.M . Magazine
CI1 Bull' s Eye
{Answers tomorrow)
(!I ESPN's Inside Base Jumbles GOURD BLAZE SIU LE FI XING
ball
Saturda ·s
.
Y
Answer What they called that b1 g new b n dge ~
([) Carol Burnen and
THE BRIDGE OF "SIZE"
Friends
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Jumble Book No. 19, containing 110 puzztes, is ava ilable lor St 9S postpa id
(1) Happy Days
lrom Jumble cJo this newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J 0764a. lnduda your
I!) (I) Tic Tac Dough
name, lddre'u. zip code and make checks payable to Newspaperbooks
Cll (jj) M acNeil-lehrer
Report
® News
&amp;l (J2I Muppet Show
7:30 0 CI&gt; You Asked Fo• It
CI&gt; Some Call Them
~-------,
Freaks R1chard Ki ley host s
By Oswald Jacoby
this sensitive account of
some ex traordin ary human
and Alan Son lag
~ - 2.4 - 82
~ 01\Tfl
oddities .
• H 5 43
CII Another Life
Oswald: " I flrst met AI
'A Q H J
(!I ESPN Sports Center
Hoth in the finals of the 1941
t A 10 2
Ill Sanford and Son
Reisinger. My learn won , bu\
.
106
Cll 0 (I) Family Feud
this youngster of 20 al~ost
!CAST
(1) Laverne and Shirley
WICST
beat us single-handedl y. ·
• A7
Cll Business Report
• 92
Alan: "AI is over 60 now
• 654
® Richard Simmons
• K 10;
and plays much less than he
t 7J
(jj) Media Probes·
tK J986 ~
used 10. bul hi s dummy play .
+ 98 7132
&amp;J
(12)
Entertainment
+ A4
1s s(l\1 the best. Her ~ 1s one
Tonight
S011Tfl
of ht s rece nt hands··
8 :00 0
Cil aJ MOVI E:
. KQJ Iil li
Oswa
l
d
"
West
wa
s
1n
'Scout's Honor'
' .1 7 2
some sort of end play at
(I)
MOVIE :
' Night
t II 4
tn
ck
one.
but
found
th
e
besl
Moves'
+K
I.l..l
openmg of the ace and the
(]) National Geographic
four of c lubs. AI won the sec Special
Vulnerable Both
ond lrtck and led a spad e.
(!)
Australian
Rules
Dea ler: South
but Easl hopped up with the
Football
Sou th
North
West
ace and led another cl ub.
Ill MOVIE: ' Under the
Wes t r uff ed with the nine of
Yum -yum Tree'
Pa ~:-.
2t
trumps and AI underru ffed ..
(I)
&amp;l
llll That's
Pa s:-.
l'ass
Pass
Incredible Today·s show
Alan- "A I had found the
features
an
1ngemously
on ly way to make h1 s
eq uipped car , a reun1on o f
c ontract. The underruff wa s
Opt:nmg lead
tnplet brothers. a tw onecessary sin ce AI had to
headed Chi nese man . a
retain four hearts and three
tug -of-wa r between a man
diamonds 1n dummy . West
and a blimp, a bart ending
was now co mplet el y end
chomp and a kod golfer (R)
p layed If he led a hearl .
(60 m1n .)
South would let tt run to h1 s
I!) (I) ® Charlie Brown
dummy . West ("tJUid lead a
jack and eventuall y diScard
Celebration This spec1al
heart While &lt;.ill tu.· arb wo uld
a diamond on dummy s
focuses on life in and ar be good. Soulh would be lefl
fourth heart If he l ed a low
ound sc hool 1n Pean utland
Wllh a d1amond loser If AI
d1amond. 1t wo uld run to
(60 min.)
had r hurked a di a mond .
South 's queen. Wes t would
(() (ll) Great Perform West r (lu\d lead a d1&lt;'1mund
then be squeezed in heart s
ances "Dan ce 1n· Amenca ·
AI would get tw o dwmond
and diamond s when South
'Bournonville Dances .· The
tnck!-1 . but hav!' to lose a
ran off all hi s tr umps."
Danish Ballet is shown 1n
hea rt at the f1n1 sh ··
Oswald
" If AI had
rehearsal and in performc
hu
cked
a
heart
fr
om
ance with excerpts from
Bournonville "s ba llets (60
46 Shon fo r
m1n.)
ACROSS
hurrah
8 :30 (I) MOVIE : ' Network'
I Electncal un1t 48 Shame
9 :00 (I) 700 Club
49 Gave en cour
4 Poe t1c foot
(I) &amp;l G2i MOVIE : ' Paper
agement
8
Shakespear·
Dolls'
53 Footwear
ean v1lla1n
0 ([) M • A •S• H Klinger 1s
57 T1ny part1cle
12 GalliC
stricken w1th a severe
.58 Eng•ne speed
aH1
rmauve
fever (R)
readout
IJ Book
(I) (jj) Brooklyn Bridg e
60 Exclamat1on
14 Snatch
This documentary traces
61 Br1t1sh
15 Buddh, sm
the development of the
streetcar
bridge as a spectacul ar and
type
62 Bnlhance
16 Squeezes out 63 Boat.gear
heroic engin eenr1g feat and
17 R1ver 1n Afnca 64 Food
as a symbol of strength,
18 Chem1cal
ingenuity and prom1se . (60
65 Actress
¢3 For heanng
min .)
com poun d
Haywurth
10 Fest1ve
1 1 Comply w1tt1 45 Poverty -war
® MOVIE : ' Patton ' Part 20 Future t1me 66 Compass
22 Ce real grass
pomt
1
commands
agency (abbr I
2 4 In add1t1on
9 :30 (!I PKA Full Contact
19 Long wne
4 7 M1xed (pre! :
25 Song for a
Karate
DOWN
21 Mother
49 Ment1or.
sai lor
I!) Cll House Calls
23 Examme
50 lsrael1 folk
29 Egyptian
1 0 :00 0 (I) Cl) Richard Pryor
I Seep
25 Make ha1 rdo
da nce
co rpse
Show Richard plays the
26 Lepor~d
2 Shades
33 Acorn tree
5 1 Stat e (fr I
first black president and
3 Money factory 27 S1m 11ar
34 Jacob's
the banender in the "Star
52 Moder n
4 Repeat
.
28 Yawn
brother
Wars Bar.· (R) (60 mm I
5 Astronau~s
Drudge
pa1nter
30
36 By 1tself
(I) MOVIE: ' Blackboard
·· au nght
31 Young lady
54 Masked
37
Blue
fl
ag
Jungle'
(camp wd I
(fr abbr I
an1mal. lor
6 Mesdames
·
3g Long tooth
I!) Cll lou Grant Rival
(abbr)
32
Oxen harness
sh ort
41 Son
surfing gangs cause head35 A1r defense
7 Stupefy.
55 Or1ental ch1ef
4 2 Backyard
lines which land Lou in
8 Containing
group (abbr )
barner
trouble. (60 min .)
56 Pa1nf~l
fire
38 Yells
44 Probaled
(I) Outdoor Profiles
59 Hou5e pet
I'M GLAD YOU'VE
9 Barren
40 Hmdu deity
prisoner
lllJ Newswatch
BEEN KEEPING
,...~'"""T~T:":,
10:15 1ll TBS Evening News
10:30 (I) Hallelujah Hollywood
&gt;OUR EYES AN17
Gene Ke lly host s this look
EAR5 OPEN, Ml$5
at yesterday 's movie mu siCOOPER.'
ca ls and today's Las Vegas floor shows .
CII Sing out America
illJ Hitchcock
11 :oo
CI&gt; Cll
Cll ®
®
News
CII Nashville RFD
(!I ESPN Sports Center
(1) News/ Sports/Weather
Cll Dick Cavett
11 :15 1ll Allin the Family
11:30 0 (I) ffi Tonight Show
Johnny is jOined by Tony
Bennett, Buddy Rich and
Bill Rafferty . (AI (60 m1n .)
. (I) MOVIE: 'The Haunt·
ing of Julia'
CII Another Ute
Cll Benny Hill Show
0 Cll Q~lncy Quincy 's aosignment to examine a
mummy entangles him in a
smuggling caper . (A) (60
min.)
Cll Captioned ABC News
(1J MOVIE: 'Breakfast at
Tiffany's'
G (jJ Nlghtllne
11 :46 (]) MOVIE: 'The Family
Man'
Cll MOVIE: 'Fort Ti '
12:00 CII Burna &amp; Allen
(!I
NCAA
Baaeball:
c.bflty CIPI* cryplooratnl are crulec:l trom quo1a11on1 by famous people · Pa51
and pteMnt. Ead"l Ifill« In lht cipher slanda iOt anolher rooar "s..cl~ G equals u
T earn a To Be Announced
(I) Nlghtllne
Cll PBS Late Night
"V'XM . OOTM GH RYWA WAM
· G l]J MOVIE: 'City In
Fear'
12' 30 8 (]) (!) Late N111ht With
BWYII
HMNIMOW OGNM ION
'
David IAtttrmln David is .
)oined by the . Smothers
PMOL . NQU YW RYWA CFODADF
Broihers and Milton Pitts,
President Reagan's barber.
SCOLYM
160 min.) ·
1NDT WAM YPBYJM ."
Cll Jack Benny Show
Cll Sol1d Gold
.
ZFMCBDP .
8 Cll·MOVIE: 'Columbo:
PREVfOUS SOLUTION:" We didn't call il lhal al the l 1me. bul
Lovely But Llthal'
we were playing rock '~ ' rofl." . - Bill Haley
:::::Jj 1.:00 (]) MOVIE: 'The Outlaw
0215

BRIDGE

'/OU'D SEHER Hi\%

It-)

1978 M ercury
Bobcat, I ' F' '"'"' r emodeling, adstation wagon , V -6 engine,
all form of car ·
excellent
condition . penlry . Ca ll 446·7376 for
$2700.00. 304-675·3312.
free estimate, Monday th ru
1-- - - - - - Thursday only .
'1977 Mustang II , lu·lone
custom gold, hatchback. Masonary work , Logue
AC, four speed, CB, custom C ontractin g,
Rl .
1,
whee ls. $3500. 675·2635.
Ewinglon. Call388·9'139.

l,.::::::::::::::==.l.:::::::::::::::::::;.,.j

I

BORN LOSER

I

interior, exterior, paper
hanging,
&amp;
t ex tur ed
ce ilings. Call 367·7784 or
367·7160.

'S PRING
CLE A N · UP
SALE' Jiv id en's Farm
Equipment, 446· 1675.
Long tractors, Ve rmeer
balers &amp; ha y equipment,
bale movers, rotary tillers,
disc, post digger &amp; dri'f'ers,
seeders, rotary cutters.
.Blades, ga tes, &amp; front end 1975 Opel Spor'tswagon
loader. A nd see us to get r ebuilt engine, good run 'your parts &amp; complete ser· ning cond. Call245·9591.
79 CHEVY Luv, wilh lop·
'vice .
per, new t ires, new sticker,
1974 Datsun 710 Wagon, good condition. $2575.00
USED EQUIP:
I H Hydro 70, 9N Ford, 2000 exc. gas mileage, $1150. 304·773·5503
Ford, 550 Oliver, MF 65, Call 446·4222 9·5. weekend
,JD·M , Long 460 4x4 wilh and alter 5 p.m . 446·2174.
81 Toyota diesel pi ckup, 5
loaCer, disc, cu ltivators,
speed,
exce llent
fuel
iplow s,
J D
manur e 1981 Chevy Cilalion·17,000 mileage. Phone 304·675·
:spreader, Ford 501 mower , miles. New cond. Will con' 1979 Dodge Ram Charger sider 4 wheel drive on 3818.
4x4, 1978 Dodge pi ck -up trade . 9'12·5170.
81 DATSUN Tru c k, phone
4X4.
304-675· 1751.
WE BUY USED EQUIP·
Sa le by owner. 1981 Olds.
1,MENT!
SUpreme
Brougham
' ~----------------~
Diesel, 1 dr. exc. gas 7•~3~-~V~a!':n,.s~&amp;~
4 .!
W!.:·.!:D':.·_ _
Farmall C with 2 bottom mileage, rust proofed,
Sa
le
or
trade
.
1979 CJ5
p lows. 949·2063 afler 6 p.m . :cruise control, air conJeep . am·fm . cassette,
ditioning am-fm stereo alum . slotted wheels . 29,000
A N Ford Tractor. New radio, cassette tape player. miles. Asking $4,750. 446·
pain! and good fires. $1.650. Icall 992· 2342 . before 5 and 0342 or 4-16·9450.
John Deere 3 pt. corn plan- ' '~'~2 · 7683 afler S.
fer $450. 3 pl. 6 fl . blade
1979 Chevy Chevelle, 4 dr . 1980 CHEVY Scollsdale, 34
$125. 1·653·5043 .
hatchback. 4 speed, 1 ton 4-wheel·drlve, PS, AM ·
owner, low mileage, exc. FM, regular gas, 30,000
Case Hay line 9 fl . $350. 985·
Will accept trade or miles. 304·773·5150.
3581.
$3,100. 614·667·3085.
Side delivery hay rake,
spoke wheel type 3 pl.
Hookup, like new $400 . af·
fer 5 p.m. 304-882·2819.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pel Cleaning f ea tured by
Haflell Broslhers Custom
carpels . Free estim ates .
1Call446·1107.
- - - - - -- - - '-

1980 CHEVETTE, 4 door
hatchback, $3975. 304-675·
1615.

OCI&gt;ffiOCil®&amp;l ®

I

buill up roof . Call 388·9857.

· ~:s~~~~tiaiC~t yco:~~~~ii~~

MYPTE

"l I I I J IT.1"

10 yrs . exp. Ca ll388·9652 .
IMar c um
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex·
lperience, spec ializing i n

5 p.m .

one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words .

rJ

PAINTING · inferior and
e)(terior,
plumbing ,
roofing, some r emodeling.

Autos for Sale

3085.
Reduce safe &amp; f ast with
GoBese T ablels or Cap·
sules &amp; E ·Vap " Water
Pills" Nelson's Drug .

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTE R IN G
textured cei lings com ·
mercia! and r esidentiaL
free estimates. Ca ll 2561181.

Son ia's Professional Dog
Groom in g. Ca ll 61088·8547
and ask for Soni a.

AKC black and white
Cocker Spani el. male, 7
months old, SSO. 304-6751076
·
- ~- - - · --

6 :00

ser1dees

POODLE GROOMIN G.
Ca ll Judy Taylor al 367·
7120.

S9

TWO
bedroom,
un furnished . One bedroom ef·
fi cie ncy . 304·675 ·1711 .
APAR TMENT
in
Pleasant, 614 446·8111.

M isc. Merchandice

Plasti c Septic Tank s. State
and county approved . 1,000
gal. tank , price $340. Other
si zes in stock, haul in your
pickup truck . Ca ll 614·286
5930. Jack son, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

Furnished one bedroom
apar tm ent, extra ni ce,
adu lts onl y. No pets. Phone
304-675· 1386.

5 r . hou se on river,
beautiful view, privacy,
S275. pe r mo. p lu s deposi t .
Ca ll 446·4911 afler 5:30 or
weekends .

Pric e r edu ced For sale or

54

APAR TMENT S, mobi le
houses,
Pt .
h omes ,
Pleasan t and Gall i po l is.
614-446·8111 or 614-145·9484.

Centenary 3 Bdr ., 2 ba th ,
new brick, adults, no pe ts.
Ca ll 1·643-2644 . Ref . &amp;
deposi t.

3 bdrm . house. cen t. air. 2
f irepla ces , good neigh·
borhood . Ca ll 675·5104 or
675 5386 .

in·

Apartmen t s. 675·5548 .

Homes tor Rent, Lease or
Land cont ra ct in town or
cou ntry .
Call
Str out
Real l y, 446·0008 .

home s moved . Greenlawn
Tran s port . Cal l 4-46-2783
day s, 446 3479 evenings .
Li cen sed &amp; in sured .

rent. 12x60 2 bedroom
mobil e home with 2 lots .
Ga s heat, rural water .
Close to c ity limi ts. Cal l
446 1294 .

Utilities
eluded . 9'11-7 177 .

motor home
. Call 446·2203.

Unscramble these four Jumbles.

-~

EVENING

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and groom ing .
AKC
Gordon
se tt er s,
English Cocker Spani els.
Ca ll 388·9790.

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ -~
by Henri Amold and Bob Lee

I..........r. - J....... ... - I I

MONDAY
5/24/82

HILLCREST KE NNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
Indoor-ou tdoor fac ilitie s.
A lso AKC Reg . Oobermans. Call446·7795.

POODLE
pups,
AKC
r eg istered . No Checks, 304·
895·39S8.

1/ 1

Sentinei~Paee-9

.1}f}I}Nl jj)1}

Household Goods

GOOO
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators ,
rang es .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pli ances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel .
446·7398.

House. Meadowbrook Ad ·
dition, 3 bedroom, family
room with firep lace, ce n·

The Daily

Monday, IIGy 24, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••• •

.

JoHyW....'

(Jl'l Merritd Joen

�Page

1G-- The Daily Sentinel

Mlllliay, #My 24, 1912

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

tl

I

Area deaths

Reagan intensifies budget bill effort
By The Associated Press
President Reagan Is tntenstfylng
his eHorts to win House passage of
a Republican-drafted budget and to
defeat a separate bill before the Senate that would authortze $5 btlilon
to ald the housing Industry.
Reagan said Monday he will be
making more calls to lawma kers to
the next few days on behalf of a
"bipartisan recovery bill" to the
House that calls for $95 billion to tax
Increases over three years and cuts
of $76 billion In domestic a nd benefit
programs, as well as a reduction of

Clarence Struble dies
It almost never

needs a tune-up!
SELF-PROPELLED

$28 btlilon In the admlnlstratlon's
defense buildup.
It projects a deficit of $101.6 bli·
lton In ~. about $11 btlilon ln 1984
and $49 btlilon to 1985.
Reagan told reporters he made
several calls to members of Congress over the weekend.
"I believe the bipartisan recov·
ery budget has a fighting chance to
win If responsible members of the
House w1ll rally to support It," Reagan said.
The president said In a na tlonally
televised statement early to the day

nate that would authortze $5 btlilon
to ball out the struggling housing
Industry. The bill would provide
mortgage subsidies to qualifying
families. A version of the bill before
the Senate has been passed by the
House.
"This would compound the deficit problem, keep Interest rates
excessively high a nd weaken the
economic recovery," Reagan said
In a letter to Senate Majortty
Leader Howard Baker Jr., R -Tenn.
-The nation's steel executives
prepared for three-day meeting In

that House approval of the budget
prior to an International economic
summit to France to early June
would demonstrate to Western na·
tlons that the Unlted States Is serious about brtngtng down high
In terest rates.
Many economists have blamed
high Interest rates In part on deflc·
Its caused by unrestrained govern·
ment spending.
While Reagan was lobbying for a
budget, he also made lt clear he
opposed a provision to an emer ·
gency spending bill before the Se-

New York on the depressed state of
the Industry, operating at a n est!·
mated 50 percent of capacity. The
opening of the general meeting of
the American Iron and Steel lnstl·
lute was scheduled today.
- A group of business economists
said a lukewarm recovery with reduced Inflation but high unemploy·
ment Is the best the nation can
expect this summer with t he fed·
era! budget deficit soartng past $100
bllllon . A poU of the Na tional Association of Business Economists
sald the prtvate ana lysts belteve

the recession Is continuing to the
current Aprli-June quarter but that
the econony wlll turn upward this
summer.

-Yields on short·term Treasury
securities fell for the seventh time
In eight weeks at Monday's auctions, hitting their lowest levels
since last December. About $4.9 blillon In six-month Treasury bills
were auctioned at an average discou nt rate of 11 .677 percent, down
from the 12.187 percent of last
week. Last Dec. 14 the level was
11.595 percent.

Reg. $380.00

Special

entinel

$34900 .
\lol.31 ,No. U
Co ri htecl 1912

1 S~tion , 10 Pag••
1.5 Cenh
A Multimedia Inc . N•w•paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 25, 1982

At Middleport

Support given
•
highway ISSUe
Neighbors rescue quadriplegic

TO MONEY MARKET INVESTORS:

TWO
ELD.

Gay P. Gillenwater
Gay P. Gillenwater, 74, Rutland,
died Saturday at Veterans Medical
Center, Chillicothe.
Mr. Gillenwater was born in Lin·
coin County, W.Va., on Nov. 22, 1907
the son of the late Daniel and Em·
mer Estep Gillenwater . Mr. Gillenwater was a 20 year veteran of the U.
S. Army.
He is survived by his wife, Vona B.
Barnes Gi llenwa ter whom he
ma rr ied on Sept. 14, 1968.
He is also survi ved by one son,
Daniel Gillenwa ter , West Virginia;
two daughters, Patty Ann Gillespi,
Cleveland and Una Gay, Texas; four
step-sons, Homer Russell, Vera
Beech, Fla .; Gera ld Russell ,.
Wellston; Ra lph M. Russell, Columbus, and Jerry Stewart, West
Virginia; severa l grandc hildren and
grea t grandchildren; four brothers,
Guy Gillenwater, E dward Gillenwater, Billy Gillenwate r and Otis
Gillenwater, West Virginia; five
sisters, Eulah Breedlove and Ruth
Bradley, Orlando, Fla.; Sudah
Kissenger, Donna Young and Orpha
Doyle, Lincoln County , W.Va.
Funeral services will be held Wed·
nesday at 2 p.m. at the Hunter
Funeral Home. Rutland, with the
Rev. Meredith Curley officiating .
Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gar·
dens. Friends may call at the
funeral home Tuesday from 2 to 4
and7 to9.

Edwin H. Hood
Edwin H. Hood, 69, 128 South Vine
St., St. Marys, Ohio, died Saturday
eve ning at Joint Township District
Memorial Hospital where he had
been a patient since May 19.
Mr. Hood, a former Meigs County
resident, was born May 8, 1913 in
Minersville, the son of the late Grant
and Mollie Barringer Hood. He was
also preceded in death by six
brothers and two sisters.
Mr. Hood retired in 1978 from
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., St.
Marys. He was a member of Calvary
Chapel, Minster, Ohio, Lima Baptist
Alumni
Temple, Lima, and
Association of the Ohio State School
for the deaf, Columbus.
He is survived by hie wife, Hazel
Roby Hood whom he married July 7,
1951. Other survivors include two
daughters, Sue Roby, St. Marys and
Mrs. Dan (Carol) Luedeke, St.
Marys; one son, Edwin C. Hood,
Celina, Ohio; five grandchidren; one
sister, Mrs. R. A.( Erma) Thompson, Hinton, W. Va.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the YoderLong and Fold Funeral Home with
the Rev. Ronald Boldman of.
ficiating . Burial will be in
Greenlawn Cemetery, Wapakoneta,
Ohio. Friends may call at the
funeral home Tuesday from 2 to 4
and7to9.

Meets tonight

LA MESA, Call!. -A quadriplegic's respirator was turned oH by
a former classmate who sald he wanted him to "meet the Lord," but
the helpless man was rescued when neighbors broke toto the house
and restarted the machine.
Police booked Wtlilam Joseph Schlager, 22, for Investigation of
attempted murder and burglary to the Incident Sunday.
Hayes was paralyzed In a prep football accident to 1976, leaving
him dependent on the respirator for life. Sports groups and friends
collected more than $50,!lXl tn contrtbutlons from across San Diego
County to help pay some medical expenses and buy a special van so
Hayes could attend Grossmont College.

T's

SHORT·
•

Stallone unveils Rocky statue
PHILADELPHIA - Alter a long struggle, Rocky Balboa, allas
Sylvester Stallone, returned to triumph for the unveiling of a n 8~ ·
foot bronze likeness of himself at the top of the Art Museum steps,
with all the city seemingly a t his feet.
It looked just like a scene from the film "Rocky III," which premiered here Monday night, but the dedication ceremony Monday
was part of the real·llfe story of Stallone, star of three "Rocky"
movies, and something of a hero to his hometown of Phlladelphla.
In the movie, Balboa Is honored on the Art Museum steps for
brtngtng the world heavyweight crown to the Clty of Brotherly Love.

••

Second major fire guts landmark
CENTERBURG, Ohio - A second !Ire to less than a week has
gutted a downtown Centerburg landmark, prompting authorities to
call to state arson Investigators.
Tile Monday fire to the Hambletonlan Fine Food Restaurant
caused an estimated $100,!lXl damage, said Gary Durbin, volunteer
fire department chief.
A fire broke out In the basement of the &amp;J.year-old, two-story brick
building last Wednesday, he said. Dubrtn sald he ortglnally believed
that fire was caused by an electrtcal short. But he called the second
fire "suspicious."
"

Two more reasons to put it back in the bank.

6-MONTH
SUPERT

JOTO
41·MONTH

Waterloo area had heaviest rain
COLUMBUS, Ohio - If you thought It was dry to April, you were
right.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources said Monday that
ralnfall statewide last month averaged 1.8 Inches. That's less than
half the normal rainfall of 3.62 Inches for the month.
Regional averages ranged from 2.03 Inches to the southwest to 1. 41
Inches to the northeast. Heaviest rainfall to Aprli was recorded at
Waterloo In Lawrence County, where 2.85 inches fell.

SUPERT

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one of the best short-term investments BANK ONE has to offer.
It's for customers who want to eam
the best rate available on a larger depos~. You can get in and out in just 26 weeks
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6-month Super T is better than buying
Treasury Bills because you pay no fees or
commission charges.

The 30 to 41-month Super T
is for just about any investor.
With as l~le as $100 you can earn high
money market interest rates. You can
. also choose how many months you want
to invest. That helps when you're planning
an investment strategy.

Girl hurt in robbery crossfire
COLUMBUS, Ohio- An 11-year-old Columbus girl was wounded
Moriday afternoon ln the crossfire between an apparent robber and a
pharmacist, pollee said.
Kimberly Myers was shot ln the rtght knee and treated at Children's Hospital.
The pharmacist, Ronald H. Haver, :Jl, of Upper Arlington, received hospital treatment after he was grazed In the forehead by a
bullet.
Pollee said Robert Alan McNeal Jr., 28, of Gallon, was charged
with aggravated robbery and two counts of attempted murder In
connection with the Incident, which occurred at the Northside
Phannacy.

BANK ONE now offers you a wide range of
Money Market Investor Services. So, however you want to
Invest your money, now you can put It back In the .bank.
HOW LONG

Two killed in crash landing

HOW MUCH

INVESTOR SERVICE
THArS BEST FOR YOU

YOU WANT TO INVEST

YOU HAVE TO INVEST

3-Month lUPER T*

3 Montht

17,500+

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6 Montho

110,000+

lmllll Sner SUPER T

2'1t YNrl to 41 Monthl

1100+

SUPER CERTIFICATE

31ft Yu,.. or More

1500+

t-

lnlltllclul Retlr...-t ~·
!Fixed Ride)

Until Reli-t

1500

......_.Ace-'
v...........,

Until Retirement

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Council agreed to increase insura nce on the Middleport Community Pa rk from the $100.000
liability to a ra nge from $250,000 to
$500,000.
The mayor suggested cou ncil co nSider ex penditures for the re ve nue
sharing money. (a total of $11,2.131 .
Oct. 1, 1982 to Sept. 30. 1983. and

suggested that street maintenance
be considered. A public hearing will

bt• held on the ex penditures.
Yvonne Sca ll y outlined fi nal plans
for the Gen. James Ha rtinge r
festi val to be held this weekend, a nd
the role of the Middleport Chamber
of Commerce. She discussed fl ea
market areas. people comin g in with
food booths. a possible ear s how. and
a sky diver .
Counci lman Robert Gilmore advised that Bi ll Childs. ge nera l chair·
man for the celebration . has sec ured
jee ps for dignitanes. inc luding
Mayor Hoffma n and council members. to ride in at the parade.

Britain downs seven
planes, loses warship
By The Assoclated Press
Reporting seven more planes
downed, Brttatn claimed the destruction of more than a third of Ar·
gentlna's air force but admitted the
loss of Its third major warship In the
Falklands war, the frigat e
Antelope.
.
On the dlplomatlc front, Ireland
submitted a resolution to the U.N.
Security C&lt;JuncU calling for a 72hour cease-fire whUe SecretaryGeneral Javier Perez de Cuellar
made another attempt to negotiate
a peaceful solution. But British Defense Minister John Nott said a
truce would not be considered untll

Britain's troops had retaken the Is·
lands. Brttatn was expected to veto
the resolution.
British war correspondents reported waves of Argentine Mirage
and Skyhawk jets made three a ttacks Monday afternoon on the In·
vas ion task force In Falkland Sound
off the British beachhead. It was
the third such attack In four days.
The British Defense Ministry
sald Its Harrier jets and a ntlalrcraft fire from the ships a nd
shore batteries brought down seven
of the attackers while an eighth left
a traU of black smoke as lt fled,
tndlcatlng It had been hit.

said.

The planes were downed over Beirut by Israeli aircraft on a
patrol, according to the command.
A spokesman decllned to ·say what kind of Israel! planes were
Involved, but Israel frequently tiles reconnaissance ml8slons over

The etf9Ctlve yield on U.S. Treasury securities II higher than the CIU()ttd diacounl rate.

Lebanon.

Weather forecast

-- .

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:·.·B·NI(ONEQF.POMEROV
ANK ONE~ ·- -tj·•
.' ' , t -

' 'l'onlgbt; mostly cloudy with a 00 pem!llt chance of showers or
tbunderstonns by morning. Low near 60. I.:Jgbt and variable winds;
Wednesday: a 60 percent clu!nce of sbowers ~ thunderatorms.

Hlah 7!1 to IJI.

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225 attend roast
for Meigs' Diehl
•

Two hundred and twenty·flve
people Monday night attended a
roast and dinner to honor of James
A. Diehl, principal at Meigs Hlgh
School, who is retlrtng after 37 years as a n educator.
Th em~&gt; for the roast was "Down
the Tube In '82."
Diehl was roasted by Harry
Miller, New Ha ven; the Rev. Wilbur (Bill ) Perrin, Ppmeroy; Sam
Crow . Vinton County, form er
Meigs Hig h teacher; Ed Bartels,
teacher at Sallsbury; Kermit Walton, Pomeroy; Bobby Ord, superintendent a t Southern Local; John
Krawsczyn, teacher at Me lgs
High; Mel Clark, Mason; Jim Venarri, forme r teacher and coach;
Paul Case!, Middleport; Ron
Deem, former coach and superln·
tendent a t Southern Local, and Bob
Morris, princ ipal at Pomeroy
Elementary.
Jack Slavin , teacher at Meigs,
served as master of ceremonies.
Diehl coached and taught for nine
years to West Vlrgtnla before comIng to Ohio. He has served as prtnc i·
pal f0r 28 years at Pomeroy High
School a nd Meigs.
Diehl, In hls remarks, introduced
one of his former teachers, Lelah
J ane Powell. who Is 88 years of age.
Also Introduced was his college
roommate John McClung of
Charleston .
Seated with Diehl were his wife,
Ida, daughter, Jo Ellen of South
Charleston, daughter and son·tnlaw, Charlene and Ron Rutherford
of Lawrenceburg, Ind., Diehl's
brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Diehl, South Charleston and
his nephew, Tim Diehl, South
Charleston.

Alfred A. (AI) Scarberry, 54, Gal·
llpolls, will retire from the educa·
tiona! profession eHectlve July 1.
Scarberry's resignation was accepted Monday nlgbt by the Gallta
County Board of Education.
Scarberry, a native ot Meigs
County and graduate of Middleport
High School, has 32 years ln education, Including five years mWtary.
A member of the SEOAL champion Ml4dleport football team ln
l9C2 and former teammate of Gen.
James Hartinger, who will be bcr
nored tbla Wl!l!kend by the citizens
ol Meigs County, Scarberry received bls bacbelor's de(lree from
Rio Grande College, hiB master's to
achool admlnlstratlon and guidance from Miami University and
has dolle poll graduate work at
O!lio University, the University of
Dayton, and Oblo State University.

TEL AVN, Israel - Israeli warplanes on a night over Lebanon
shot down two Syrian MIG fighters today, the mllltary command

Federal regulations prohibit the compounding of Interest during lle ltrm of the depoelt.
There IJ a subsiRnU.IInterest penalty lor early withdrawal.

IN RECEPTION LINE - James Dlehl, left, Is shown ln the reception
line shaklng hands with Dick Owen. Dlehl was honored on his retirement with a roast and dinner held to the cafeteria at Melgs High School.

The In vocation was given by Rev.
Father Tony Gia nnamo and the
benediction by Rev . Perrin.

I
JAMES DIEHL the honored
guest ls pictured as he s poke to
the large crowd that attended a
roast and dinner held ln his her
nor Monday night at Melgs High
School.

Scarberry leaving education

Two Lebanon planes downed

1500+

The OH KAN Coin Club will meet
this evening in the Rll(er Boat Room
at the Diamond Savings and Loan
Co., Pomeroy.
A soctal hour and trading session, .
with out-of-town dealers present,
precedes the p.m. meeting.
A coin auction follows the meeting
and refreslunenta will be served.
Club president Edward Burkett invites tholle intereste in coins or
paper money to attend.

The resolution cites the need of the
highway upgrading for opening up
specific industrial, commercial.
recrea tional , residential and service
sites for development as we ll as to
promote the mobility of the region 's
labor fo r ce and pop ulati on,
facilitating commutation to jobs,
shopping opportunities, education
experiences, and cultural enrichment, and to link the reg ion with
national ma rkets.
River bank erosion was discussed
during the session with counc ilman
Jack Satterfield reporting on his
meeting with Bryon Thompson and
Robert First, Soil Conservation Service personnel, for an on~site review.
Satterfield not ed th ere is a
poss ibility of so me fundin g
becoming ava ilable for short term
solution to the erosion probl em if
Meigs County becomes a part of the
Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation Development. He said in
this event, the village would be
eligible for 75 percent from Buckeye

BRASll..IA, Brazil - A Brazlllan jetliner with at least 70 people
aboard crashed on landing at the Brasllta airport late Monday night,
kllJlng two people and Injuring an unknown number, airport oHtclals
said.
Tile Boeing 7'$1, owned by VASP, was arriving from Porto Alegre
and Sao Paulo.
OtflCtals said the cause of the accident was not known yet. But they
said the plane broke nearly In two.

BAN&lt; ONEoloo hlo-tu-lrullli••u

T8X-F,.. All Silvera Certificate

Hills to 25 percent from the village
on specific projects. Satterfield also
reported some technical assistance
with the erosion problem is
ava ilable from the Soi l Conservation
Service.
Ma yor Fred Hoffman noted that
Floyd G. Br ow ne Assoc iates
enginee ring fi r m is prepa rin g
proposals on remed ies and cost involved on three village problem
areas, the Middleport Hill ditch, the
storm sewer in that area, a nd th e
Locust Stree t and village property
improvement.
Hoffman said HUD has verbally
a pproved us ing mon ey in lht• si lt•
acq uisi tion and development fund
for work on the village property on
Locust St.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
A resolution of support in local efforts to get the highway needs between the Ravenswood Bridge and
the interchange of U.S. 33 with S. R. 7
designated as " the most needed
state highway improvement" was
passed by Middleport Village Coun·
cil Monday night.
The resolution was approved
following the reading of a letter from
the Meigs County Regiona l Planning
Commission urging groups and
orga nizations to get behind a move
by Meigs County Commissioners
and the Southeastern Ohio Regional
Coun cil pushing for the hi ghway improvement.

•

From 1959-64 Scarberry served
as prtnctpal a I Middleport Hlgb
School.
After serving as guidance counselor In the Ttpp City School Dis·
trtct for several years, Scarberry
returned to the area ln 1971 When he
accepted a guidance counselor per
sltlon at North Gallta High School to
Gallla County.
He later became county director
of guidance and later served as
prtnclpal at BldweU-Porter, VInton
and Addavllle elementary schools
before being named ln his present
capacity, supervisor for special education two years ago.
He and his wife, Emelyn, are~
parents ot tour grown children,
PeaY, Bruce, Jennifer and Amy .
Scarberrysayshehasnolmmedlate plans except to work on the
family farm In Perry Twp.

.

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