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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

The 6-month $10,000 Super Tis
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
or have ~ automatically renewed. And the
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+

&amp;-Month lUPER T*

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

I tOO

~

a

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.

.

�- - - - ---- --------·.

Commentary
I I I ( nurt."itro ·o·l
l'nnwru~ . llhtn
6J4-99l-l ll6
Ill· \ ot U I TO Tm 1\"Tf-:HL"iT OF Tilt- 11.11-11,,..._1\USO\ r\11 f-:A

ROll

HOEFLICH

Ethlnr

•\ \11" \11\t'.ll uf Till' ·\~"" · o ;tlnl l'rn~. lnliu•l Bltil _l
.\mo·ro• aol ' ''"''ll;tpo·r l'uhlt-.lwr' '''"""1&lt;1\looll

l'rn ~ A~MM · iutwn

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I /· rlt-.H."' IIF OI'J'\, II 1'\ aro · IHin•Oh'd Thn -.lwuhllw lo · ~~ !hun :100 'Anrtb Inn~ . ;\II
lo·th·r, &lt;~rt ' ,UhJo·o t '" o·tllllll l! and mu'L tw ' tj!llo 't l · u th ll411llt ' , athlro· ~, :md lo·lo•tthnm·
numho·r \ n un, tj.! lll'tl ktto·r' v.oll iM· puhJt , Jwd l .o·lto·r' ' huuld lw 111 j.!no~ella .. k . atldrt · ~~inj.!

,,,,w,

WASHINGTON - President
Reagan last week sent to Capitol Hill
his proposed constitutional amendment on prayer in public schools. If
wisdom and prudence prevail, the
resolution will be quietly buried in
the judiciary committees.
Sad to say, wisdom and prudence
seldom prevail in an election year.
This resolution will be a tough one to
vote against. Mr. Reagan would
write into the Constitution this
provision :

PALE ROTHGEB. JR .
'\o · ~~

Pomeroy-Middleport, ()hio

Tuesday, May 25, 1982

One'no'vote~

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WfiiTEHI·:AII

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

noo\ j i&lt;'T"•mtl tto t·~

Depression thinking
If you had to select one factor as important beyond all others for the
that an economic depression is entirely possible, you

~rnw ing feelin~

would have a very difficult lime doing so.
Would you si ngle out federal Reserve policy because, in part, it was a
similar tightening of the screws by the nation's central bank that, researchers point out, helped turn the 1929 crash into a depression'
Is Fed policy needlessly scourging the domestic economy, preventi ng it
from achieving its production and job-creating potential, when the roots
of infla tion might have grow n elsewhere?
Would you put the blame on the inability of the White House and
Congress to cut the federal budget when all profess to believe that less
spending is essen tial to any economic recovery?

Perhaps you would focus on the disasters in the homebuilding and
automobile industri es, which radiale to infect businesses of almost every
type in every major geographical area of the country .
How would you rank the abysmal failure of forecasts by some of the
most important business people. the most noted economists. the most
poweriul government figures' Disillusioning, frightening , isn't it'
Such forecasts, generally calling for an improving economy. have been
so far off the mark that they would seem to be a big factor in creating uncertainly . And uncertainly undermines the confidence necessa ry for individuals and corporations to make major financial corrunitmcnts. In any
depression scenario, uncerta inly is likely to play a big role.
What do you make of corporate officials issuing statements of support
for President Reagan's economic program. which they say will lead to an
improved economy, and then failing to follow through with plans that
would prepare them for serv ing an improved and expanded economy ?
Where in the list of factors do you put the worsening corporate liquidity
situatiun. a problent that prevents companies from expanding, and in fact

forces them to lay off workers and eliminate dividends'
The precarious financial condition of many corporations. marked by
failure and near failure of some of the biggest names in industry, is otr
viously fnghtening other companies out of the1r expansion plans. How
important Is this factor in adding to depression thinking'
Where do you fit in this situation : The conswner is now bemg reli ed
upon to lead the country out of recession but about 17 million of them are

unemployed. have given up looking for work or, against their wishes,
ha ve had work hours reduced to less than full-tune employment'
Sorting out the vanous factors - trying to determine which is cause
and effect - lli an almost1mposs1ble JOb. Cause is seen to be effect and effectto be ca use when you tra ce the strands of economic activity.
Rather than taking on the almost impossi ble job you may simply say and be correct in saying it - that many factors today arc creating doubt.
disillusionment, uncerta inly, indecision.
And economist and psychologist alike will quick ly tell you that such a
eornbination can lead tu depression .

Berry's World

" Nothing in this Constitution shall
be construed to prohibit individuai
or group prayer in public schools or
other public institutions. No person
shall be required by the United
States or by any stale to participate
m prayer
Several things arc wrong with this
proposition. For one thing, " indi vidual prayer" never has been
prohibited by any court at any lime.
Nothing on earth prevents a school
child from bowing his head over his
desk and saying a silent prayer
whenever he feels so disposed.
Neither have the courts had a
word to say about prayer in "other
public institutions." Over the years,
various atheistic petitioners have
complained of prayer in the houses ·
of Congress. in stale legislatures and
at military installations. Sessions d
the Supreme Court itself are opened
with prayer : "God save this
honorable Court ' " To the extent that
the amendment seeks to authorize a
custom that is nowhere prohibited,
the amendment is quite simply un-

____________J_a_me_s~J._~_·p_am_·_a

a practical matter, the saving sentence has no meaning. Attendance at
a public school is compulsory ; the
child has to be there. few children
ever would risk the conspicuous embarrassment of refusing to do what
the teacher and other chi ldren are
doing. Saying that classroom prayer
is voluntary cannot make it so.
Second, the amendment's protection of "group prayer" plainly implies a structured, organized service
of some kind. But what kind ' Are
stale boards of education to provide
an official prayer for use statewide'
Is every local board to compose its
own? Is the group to be led by individual teachers or pupils' Once we
embrace the idea of "group
prayer," we embrace laws respecting an establishment of religion .
The First Amendment has
prohibited such laws for nearly 200
years. Do we truly want to cast that

long experience aside'
Third, one problem with institutional prayer parallels the
problem often encountered with institutional food . The ·group prayers
that would be sanctioned by thlli
amendment would be canned peas bland, innocuous , inoffensive
recitations, perfunctory rituals
devoid of spiritual meaning. Heartfell prayer demands something
more.
Mr. Reagan is quite in error in his
v1ew of the present stale of the law.
He says that the high court "has effectively removed prayer from our
classrooms," but it is only institutionalized prayer that the court
has condemned. The president says
his amendment " will restore the
right to pray ." but so far as the individual child is concerned, that
right never has been suspended .
In his statement of May 6, the

president asked a rhetorical
question : "How can we hope to
retain our freedom through the
generations if we fail to teach our
young that our liberty springs from
an abiding faith in our Creator'"
Some of us might respond by
suggesting that our liberty springs
from something else entirely . Our
free institutions may have been
divinely inspired, but they are
rooted in mortal instruments - the
rule of law, the common defense, a
written Constitution. Faith in our
Creator is a thing apart, a matter of
personal conviction, not of public
policy .
further in his remarks, Mr.
Reagan said nothing could convince
him " that a moment of voluntary
prayer will hann a child." fair
enough. But we ought not to adopt
constitutional amendments because
they will do no hann.

f

r

The issue involves one subject
only : group prayer in public schools.
That 1s what we are talking about,
and it is ali we are talking about. Let
me argue a case against it.
first, on this matter of "voluntarism ." The Reagan draft says, in
effect, that no child shall be required
to participate in a group prayer. k;

Hard edge wears off Reagan's policy
mcnl and his people ha ve nothing to
fear from the Unilt•d Stales,"
Reagan said in his Mother's Day
declaration at Eureka Colle~c .
He is hesitating on arms shiprm:nts to Taiwan and sent Vice
President George Bush to seck the
approval of China 's Communist
leaders.
Ht• has eased up on trying to block
a pipeline to carry Si~rian natural
gas to Weskrn Europe.
Poland's debts ha ve not been
called.
And. s tron g word s notwithstanding, the administration is
proceeding with new caution in the

Caribbean .
At his news conference last week,
Reagan brushed off criticism from
the right that he is a new and less
conservative man.

"I haven't changed," he said with

a smile. Needling reporters just a

yl'l force him to accept larger defencuts and to ease up on Social
Secunly.
It shouldn't be surprising, then,
weapons.
that Reagan is willing to adjust his
But while insislmg he's ~en con- fon·ign policy, as well. Reagan's
sistent, Reagan acknowledged it ~h1fl toward a more moderate
look him "a little while" to propose foreign policy may be due in part to
the new treaty slashing superpower the advice he gets.
arsenals.
: Secretary of State Alexander M.
Al'lualiy, it look 16 months. And Haig Jr. , a " Cold Warrior" by inthe proposal he finally unveiled had stinct but a subtle operator by
some of lh&lt;· earmarks of the most ar- training, may be taking on the mandent arms control advocates.
tle of "foreign policy vicar" he
Ideology inevitably gives way to sought at the outset.
pragmatism in the nuclear age.
Demoralizing feuds with the While
Besidt.•s, Reagan's economic policy
House have subsided since Richard
and his record as governor or ;V. Allen resi~ned under pressure in
California show considerable January as the president's national
flexibility.
security adviser. Allen'~ departure
Reagan gave up on a balanced removed an ideologue, as well as a
budget by 1984 and dropped his op- Haig rival.
bit. he suggested they look up h1s
1980 campaign statements ca lling
for sharp reductions in nuclear

Sl'

position to new taxes. Congress mav

The Gates SyntL=d=r=-o=--=m==II~e____A_rtB_u_chw_a_Id
.
f

'

~
g

"Maybe the reason you appeal to me so is that
you really have your act apart."

Today in history
Today is Tuesday , May 25, the !45th day of 1982. There are 220 days left in
the year.
'Today's highlight in history :
·on May 25, 1961. President John Kennedy asked the nation to strive to send
Affiericans to the moon within a decade. The first manned moon landing
came in 1969.
·Also on this dale :
in !836, Rep. John Quincy Adams spoke out against the annexation of
Tei&lt;as. Adams said he was concerned the move could trigger a war with
Mexico.
"In 1963 leaders of six African nations, meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia,
f~nned the Organization of African Unity.
:In 1979, an American Airlines DCIO lost an engine and nosedived into the
ground at Chicago's O'Hare Airport. The crash killed all '!12 people aboard,
tlie worst disaster in the history of U.S. aviation.
·ten years ago: The manager of President Nixon's re-election campaign
said he regarded the question of who would be Nixon's vice presidential running mate "an open question." John Mitchell's remark led to speculation
jl(ixon was preparing to seek an alternative to Vice President Spiro Agnew
op the 1972 GOP ticket.
-Fi.ve years .aao: South Moluccan extremists holding hostages in the
Netherlands backed down from a threat to start killing them when the government refused to honor the deadline-for. .their dema~
' One year ago: Mario Andretti was declared the wiMel"~polis
5ilo after race officials voided the earlier declared victory· or d.. ·
.. ~
Unser. Andretti's victory was the result of a one-lap penalty race offlc ...J
$pOSed on Unser.
·Today's Birthdays: Writer Herman Wouk is 65. Fonner White House News
secretary Ron Nessen is 48.
; irhought For Today: What sculpture is to a block of marble, edUCiltiOD is to
~soul.- Joseph Addison, English atatesman-writer (1672-1719)
·

••

It seems that Los Angeles Police
Chief Daryl Gates has been under
fire because so many blacks were
dying from a vicious "chokehold"
the police use to cut off the supply of
blood to the brain.
Gales said in defense of the L.A.
force, that he had "a hunch" that
blacks are more susceptible to neck
injuries because more blacks are injured with the hold than whiles.
" We may be finding that in some
blacks when it (the chokehold) is applied the veins or arteries do not
open as fast as they do on normal
people," he told the L.A. Times.
"There may be something arresting
the ability of the blood to flow again
(after the hold). We're going to look
at that very carefully."
What Gates doesn't know is that a
lot of work has been done in the field
of black mortality by Professor Kiu
at the University of Kluxclan.
Klu is the one who disccvered that
more young blacks were killed by
police bullets than white suspects,
and thus arrived at the conclusion

Southern advances
to state regionals
CHJLLICOTHE - The RacineSouthern Tornadoes kept pace with
tradition here Monday evening,
whirling to a hard-foughl4-1 district
championship victory over the South
Webster Jeeps in an errorless ball
game played at Zane Trace High
School.
The championship victory gave
the high flying Tornadoes the right
to play in the regional tournament
on friday afternoon in Portsmouth.
Game lime is scheduled for 3:30
p.m.
Kent Wolfe, given the starting nod
from Southern Mentor Hilton Wolfe,
Jr. responded in fine style. Wolfe pitched a superb game in going the
distance recorded I I key strikeouts
and one walk. Wolfe's battery mate
since Little League, Jay Rees, contributed three singles in three trips.
In the first inning, Wolfe fanned
two of the three batters he faced
before the Wolfemen had their chance at the plate . The Southern batters
climbed into the batters' box with a
keen batting eye for three walks and
a single in the initial round. Southern
look a I~ lead on Joe Bob Hemsley's
walk, a stolen base, and a Jay Rees'
single. That particular single was
one of three big hits by Rees in the
game.
Despite a walk to Wolfe, a fine
double play ball erased Southern's
remaining chances in the inning.
In the second inning Southpaw

Kent Wolfe lightened his belt for
three straight strikeouts to retire the
side. The bats of the Wolfe Pack
were also idle in the frame and the
score stood at 1~ .
South Webster lied the game in the
third on back to back doubles by
Veach and Patterson, but the lone
marker proved to be the Jeep.' only

to Southern's senior leadership and
overall team effort.
from the third through the sixth
inning, Wolfe retired II batters in a
row, but in the seventh inning the
Jeeps threatened as Holbrook
walked to lead off the inning . Wicker
struck out, but Crabtree rammed a

score.

third .
With the tying run at the plate
Wolfe reached back for a little extra
and struck out both Lewis and Dutiel
to end the game, thus adding the
district championship trophy to
Southern's already growing list.
Besides the team trophy each mdividual player also received an
Ohio Athletic Association plaque.
Southern is now 17-6 overall. The
17 wins by this year's team lies the
school record for most wins in a
season set by the 1977 SVAC championship team, who posted a 17-3
record.
Southern will face Unioto's Sherman Tanks in the Regional semifinal game slated for 3:30 p.m . at
Branch Rickey field in Portsmouth
on Friday. May 28.
Lineseore:
Class "A" District Championship
game:
S. Webster
001 000 0-1 4 0
Southern
100 030 x- 4 5 0
Batteries : Kent Wolfe IWPl and
Jay Rees. Meixnev i LPl and Lewis.

Both teams went hitless in the next
inning and South Webster went down
in order during the 'Opening half of
the fifth round.
In the bottom half of the frame the
" Wolfe Pack" brought out the heavy
artillery. The Tornado bats came to
life as Allen Pape, Southern's fine
senior second baseman, drew a
walk. Joe Bob Hemsley , who played
a flawless shortstop, sacrificed him
to second with a perfect drag bunt.
Rees hit his third straight single,
but Pape had to hold up at third due
to an excellent recovery by the
Jeeps' cenlerfielder, who came up
with the ball rapidly. District Allstar Wolfe then doubled in Pape
before Tony Riffle lined a single
which brought home Rees and
Wolfe.
Riffle's fine overall play and two
run rap, along with all-star Rees'
outstanding play provided
Southern's main offensive punch.
Riffle, one of the younger members
of the team as a sophomore, added

·~J

double to put runners on second and

'•••

that there is something in blacks
that will not fight lead poisoning. In
another study, he postulated that
more black suspects in haqdcuffs
were injured in police cars on the
way to station houses than while,
which he attributes to a metabolism
defect in blacks who lose ltleir balance when being roughed up in the
backseat of automobiles.
In his most recent paper tilled,
" Racial Weaknesses As Applied to
the Gates Syndrome," just
published in the Police Gazette,
Professor Klu writes :
"With regard to chokeholds in the
United States, three times as many
blacks as whites suffer severe jnjuries to themselves before being
booked at the police station. For
reasons that cannot yet be medically
explained, blacks require twice as
much oxygen when being choked as
whites. This phenomenon, known as
'Gates Syndrome,' has doctors perplexed, particularly because a
black's arteries cannot deliver sufficient blood to the brain.
lEY,

THAT'S
6/IEI(T,

5/R,IA/e..

I '

" A normal white person can
withstand being choked for at least
three minutes without passing out.
In tests at several Los Angeles
police stations, black volunteers
passed out in less than two minutes.
One theory expounded by visiting
Professor Bother of the University
of South Africa, is that, when
arrested, a black's fear of the police
causes his veins to contract at the
moment he is being choked. When
the hold is released the trawna
remains and it is impossible for the
blood to go to the head.
"Professor Lembeck, of the
National Police Institute of Houston,
disagrees with Bother on his lrawna
theory and maintains the 'Gates
Syndrome' can be attributed to a
vitamin deficiency caused by a
black person's diet. Lembeck says,
'Cutting off a normal victim's windpipe for a reasonable amount of time
should not cause lpldue damage,
unless the victim is lacking vitamin
F, which is essential for breathing.
Therefore it is recommended that
MfT5
ASIEIII:ER

the arresting officer use a choke hold
only after he has been given training
in mouth-t&lt;rmouth resuscitation.'
"There is not enough data
available at this time to accept
either Bother or Lembeck's
theories. The racial connection has
been established as a cause of
"Gales Syndrome' but the 'why' is
still a question mark.
" Unfortunately Civil Rights
organizations in Los Angeles are
trying to cut off research work in
this important area by demanding
the chokehold be abolished before
the medical cure for 'Gates Syndrome' can be found.
"I submit this would be a great
mistake for black people
everywhere. The circulatory system
of blacks has tremendous scientific
importance for the justice system of
the country. Until we find out why
they can't tolerate choking as easily
as a nonnal white person, the
mystery of black fatalities in Los
Angeles will never be solved."

OOONESBURY

ROCK SPRINGS - Eight members of the Meigs High School girls'
track team recently qualified for the
regional track meet at Muskingum
College this past weekend, thus
keeping alive hopes for advancing to
the Ohio Slate meet.
.. The Meigs team of Coach Gordon"Fisher complelf4 an outstanding
regular season, and now has shown
its prominence in the area by sending eight talented female athletes
to the regional.
Sending eight competitors to a
regional track meet is quite an accomplishment and reflects the fine
talent, altitude, dedication, and
hours of hard practice put in by the
Meigs' girls.
for some it will be a new experience, a foundation for future
goals.
For others it will be the final chance to reach the slate, a goal they
have sought for several years.
Even after graduating more than
a week ago, two seniors have shed

their caps and gowns for their more
appropriate running gear. the two
senior track stars are Laura Smith
and Kristin Anderson, respective
district champions in the discus and
400 meter run. These two girls have
been hard at work and have set fine
examples for the younger girls that
have the ability to fall in their foolsteps.
For Laura Smith, it will be her
third straight attempt to make it to
the state meet in the discus. Laura
placed fourth in 1980 and fourth in
1981 only to miss the state by one
place each year.
For Kristin Anderson, it will be
her third attempt to qualify for the
stale. She just missed the 400 meter
dash in 1980 and narrowly missed it
in the 800 meter run in 1981. These
two will certainly be exerting an ex·lra effort to reach their goals as
champions.
Laura Smith won the district
discus championship with a fine
throw of Il9'2" . Kristin Anderson

won the dislrict400 meter run with a
tremendous lime of 61.9 seconds for
a new school record.
The 3,200 meter relay team was
second in the district with a 10 :27.3
clocking which is also a new school
record. Paula Swisher took second
in the Long Jwnp with a fine leap of
16'5".
The 1,600 meter relay team was
second in the district with another
school high of 4.18.3 minutes. Team
members are Kristin Anderson,
Amy Erwin, Renee Willis, and
Laura Smith. Qualifying on the 3,200

.·
l

r

DISTRICT CHAMPS - Shown left to right art·
District 400 meter run champion, Kristin Anderson.
Discus champion, Laura Smith, and Distrir l runner-up

are making tht.•ir final hids for a state tournament ber·
th aftt•r narruwly miss ing ch:uu·t•s in tlw prt'\'ious two
years. Andt•rsun ;md Smith an· st·niors. whilt• Swisher

Paula Swisher in the long jump. Anderson and Smith

is

8 Marauderettes qualify
for regional track meet

necessary .

WASHINGTON IAPI - Now and
then, he' ll snap at the Soviets to
' 'butt out" or accuse them of expanding "a rmed conquests."
And in the true Cold War tradition.
he branded them as aggressive dictators even while offering an olive
branch of arms control.
ABide from the sharp rhetoric.
though, the hard edge is wearing off
President Reagan's forei gn policy despite his insistence that he really
hasn't changed.
His proposal for a U.S.-Soviel
treaty that might cut back nuclear
arsenals more than 50 percent is the
obvious example. But there arc
others.
He has invited Soviet President
Leonid I. Brezhnev to a summit
meeting " to build a new understanding."
" I will tell him that his govern-

1982

il

junior .

,, ·..::

...·~

..,

"'•(

;· --

...

)tn L___.

QUALIFIES - Members of the 400 meter rcla)·
learn that qualified fur the Distrirl Trark meet wert·.

Amy Eru:in. Rhnnlla Haddux, Linda Stewart. and
Paula Sw isher.

team are Kristin Anderson, Amy Er-

win, Kristin Bailey, and Laura
Smith.
The 400 meter relay team was
fourth at 53.2 seconds with team
members Paula Swisher, Linda
Stewart, Amy Erwin, and Rhonda
Haddox ail on the run.
Others placing in the meet were
Laura Smith, sixth in the shot-put;
Paula Swisher. sixth in the 100 meter
dash; and the 800 meter relay team
which was fifth .

53 1 JACKSON PIKE Rl JS WEST
Phone 446 · 452 4
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Seaver, Reds battered again
By Associated Press
Tom Seaver, for years one of the
best pitchers in baseball, Is bafiled.
Things have never gone so wrong
for so long.
"I've been pitching poorly for almost two months," Seaver said
Monday night after being bombed
by the Philadelphia PhUIIes. "I
don't think I've ever pitched this
badly for this long of a time."
Seaver gave up seven runs on
nine hits in five Innings, absorbing
his sixth loss in seven decisions as
the PhUIIes beat the Cincinnati
Reds 9-1. The victory was Philadelphia's third In a row, whlleth~ Reds
lost for the sixth straight time.
Bo Dlaz drove In three runs and
homered to back Steve Carlton in
his first victory over Cincinnati
since May 19, 1~.
In the rest of Monday night's National League action, San Diego defeated Chicago S-2, New York
downed Atlanta 5-3, Montreal
blanked Houston 2-0, St. Louts shut
out San Francisco 6-0 and Pittsburgh routed Los Angeles 9-3.
Seaver was 14-2 last season and
finished second in the NL Cy Young
balloting to Fernando Valenzuela,
and he says he hasn't a clue to his
terrible start.
Carlton, 5-6, spaced four hils over
eight innings with three walks and
three strtkeouts before getting lastInning relief help from Warren

Brusstar.

nm

Padres 8, Cubs 2
Lollar won his f1tth game

without a loss, working seven Innlngs and getting offensive support
from Ruppert Jones, who·extended
his hitting streak to 13 games with a
3-for-3 performance.
Jones drove In three runs, and
San Diego took advantage of some
sloppy Chicago fielding and wildness by Cubs pitchers Dickie Noles
and Dick Tldrow to score five runs
in tbe third ln¢ng. The Padres had
just three hits in the Inning, but Chicago committed two errors and
ylelded three walks.
Met!! $, Braves 3
Ellis Valentine drove in his first
two runs of the season with a tw&lt;r
run homer, and New York extended Its winning streak to three
games behind the pitching of Pat
Zachry and NeU Allen.
·
Valentine's homer staked Zachry
to a 2-llead in the fourth Inning, and
the Mets ·right-hander handcuffed
the Braves untU the eighth when. he
yielded a run on three hits. Allen
relieved Zachry with none out in the
eighth and pitched two hitless inn1ngs for his lith save.
The Mets put the game away
withthreerunsintheslxth,chasing
rookie starter Ken Dayley, 1-2.
Glenn Hubbard homered in the
Atlanta first.
Expos 2, Altros 0
Montreal won Its fourth in a row
with a pair ot unearned runs, and
Bill Gulllckson and Woody Fryman
teamed on an eight-hit shutout.
The Expos scored both their runs
in the sixth Inning on an error by

PRINT, SIR.

first baseman Denny Walling and
AI Oliver's run-scortng single. Gut-

lickson held the lead untU walking
the first man in the ninth, and Fryman finished up.
The Astros now have gone scoretess in the past 21 innings and have
lost three in a row.
Cards 6, Giants 0
Joaquin Andujar pitched a six-hit
shutout, hls second of the season, to
lead St. Louis over San Francisco.
WUIIe McGee led the St. Louts attack with a three-run trtple in a fiverun fourth inning.
Andujar did not allow an extrabase hit while strtklng out five and
walking none. The shutout was the
fifth pitched against the Giants this
season.
Andujar pitched his first shutout
since 1917 on Aprtl17 when he had a
three-hitter against Philadelphia.
Pirates 9, Dodgers 3
Pittsburgh snapped a 2-2 tie with
six runs after two were out in the
seventh Inning, and the Pirates won
their second straight after losing
three in a row.
Lee Lacy got the rally started
with a tw&lt;rrun double, and Tony
Pena also drove In two runs in the
Inning. Jason Thompson drove in
Pittsburgh's tlnai run with a ninthInning homer, his 12th of the
season.
Don Robinson, 5-0, pitched Pittsburgh's first complete game of the
season, scattertng 10 hils while
strtldng out five and walking three.

RUNNER-UP HONOR - Also
gaining distrtct runner-up honors
was the team of Kristin Anderson, Laura Smith, Renee
WUiis, and Amy Erwin in the
1,600 meter relay. This group of
Coach Gordon fisher's crew
broke another scbool record with
a 4:18.3 clocking in the 1,600
event.

Tournament set
The Syracuse Fire Department
will sponsor the Bill Hubbard
Memorial Softball Tournament for
Class B&amp;C teams, May 29-31 at
Syracuse Ball Field.
The first four place teams will get
trophies. Individual jackets will go
to the first place team and shirts to
the second place finishers. Entry fee
is $70 plus two softballs.

{-;=======================~
Nobody can protect your

\

Reds sign

'

new
,. '

10 year contract

'
'.CINCINNATI (AP) -A new 10)'l!ai' agreement has been ~
tJet.ween the ClncblliatJ
and
WtW·AM i-adlo.
~

Re\ls

Oub president Dick Wagner said
Mooday that WLW radiO wUl conUnue to~ 88 !be tiaphlp ItaIIIII
~·

.

for the Reds radio network through
1982.
OWnenblp ct the radio station Is
being lraDsterred trom Mariner
CommUIIIcatioll4 Inc. to the Ten
Elgllty Corp., wblcb will auume
the new JO.year agreement

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Los An~·h-'
Houston

C"levt.&gt;land !Sorensen J.J1 at MIIUlel!Ota

m

'll

17

PIU!&gt;hol)lh

Chk''"

..

17

,. "'
"., "
" "

"' Loul.o.

t llll.lls U
' ! . In )

GB

!I ln.. An~.'ll"!&gt; 1
fo. S.:1n f'ra nc1sro0

CAUFORNlA AN(;EI.S- SI.gned Oa vt'
lioltt, pltrhu

l'ut'!Wiay '11 Glllflftl

o\".J ]I'f\lU('[ II ~ ~. 111 1

St Louis tl.&lt;•Pol nt
c\'&gt;£'fi1 MIIt1ln011 , 1n o

~.(),

at S.an F'ran

Wf'd~'11 GllllW!I

LOS

ANGELES

DODGERS- P\act'd
Burt Hoolon. pltC'hrr. on the 2\~ay dlsaDIPd lbl. obtalnf'd Vlct'nl r Romo. pttchf'r . ! rom thf' Mt&gt;x1can I.J.•aguf': pllt('(_&gt;d Jay
JohnstOflf' , oo.ttlf"ldrr. on walvl'n for tl1l'
pllfllO!'I' ul giving hlm his unconditional
r't'k.~M'

it/Ill n'l.:a!Jtod Ron RoenU.:1~.~;•, uul
llrldn. from i\lbuqllt'ftll.l(' ot thl• Pac llk'

at J.ar;

outs in the ninth when Hal McRae
and Cesar Geronimo hit back-toback doubles.
He now has 14 straight victories
dating back to last season, tltree
short of the American League record of 17 set by Johnny Allen ot
Cleveland in 1936-37 and equaled by
Dave McNally of Baltimore In 1968-

pitcher this season.
The Indians drove Mlnneeta
starter Pete Redfern, 2-6, off the
mound In the second with three
more runs, one those being Rick
Manning's second homer of the
year.
Orioles 7, Blue J"YS 5
Gary Roenicke stroked three Jilts
and drove In two runs to lead the

69.

The major league mark of 24
straight victories was established
by carl Hubbell of the New York
Giants in 1936-37.
Indians 9, Twins 2
Oeveland pitcher Len Barker allowed only four hits and tookadvan·
tage of the Indians' 11-hit attack
that included a three-run homer In
the first inning by Andre Thornton.
Barker, 5-2, struck out six and
gave up two walks in recording the
fifth complete game by a Oeveland

RAMS-S\grwd Doug

lin. tight ffid
P III LADELPtii A

EAGLES -

M.1J1

t:a.'4.t'rn Ul vWon

Run~tg{'T ,

~nll'r .

S t.Pvf'

KPnfii'Y .

KUard . Rob Taylor. otfmslw tac kll'. and
W1J!'y Brown. tight {'nd

"

flos10n

2JI

DPtrolt
Ml lwaukf'('

~

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Baitinxln·
('\pvdand
Toronto

'a)

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Ll
14

17

2.1

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4?1

17

24

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Calllornla
Kan...a~ C'll\
Oakland

2)1

'!l

15
18

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23

19 '!i
ll
't:J
11
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19

("h ]Ca,ll'O

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641

19
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GB

1
7
8l..:r
10 '.,
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~1 3

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651

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10

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14

m,

Mond•y ·~ ftam~

lial tlmun· 7, Toruntu ~.
California at Bos1on. ppd . ratn
Otic ago .l. Kan.o;as Ctty I
tlevf'land 9. Mlnrl(':ooo\.a '1
Onl ~ ~arnt -s

&lt;.t·hPdukd
Gunl'!'l

1\wtwta.y "~

t'all lornla •Kisorr .'\..01 al llo!;ton 1Hu rs1
1~11 . 1n1
Toron to ofio!t 0 I t a t !"'•""' York dol\n
l:l.altlmor!' • l'almt•t l 11 at T('Ka S 1Mf'd

PITT S BUR G H
S H~ ELERS Slgnl'd
l'fo\(' Harris. dt'IPnsl vt' back
~~
LOUl ~ CAH.DINALS-Signl"d Dar
nl'l.l Bailf'y, lln!'backt&gt;r , artd Jam~&gt;s WI\
WA S HI NG T ON

· · COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Bender's Pride, driven by Dale Ed·
wards. won the featured eighth
race at Scioto Monday to pay $4.60,
$3.20 and $2.40.
In second was Big Sam, paying
$3.60 and $3. Myona Gene was third
for $3.80.
The winners' lime was 2:02 4-5.
The ninth race trtfecta of 5-2-1
paid $559.50.
A crowd of 3.188 bel $300,097.

Grorgt&gt; 1..1.-wts. llnf'backec Darryl Minor.
ruMlng back: I..('(' Nonll. center. and
J ohn McCollum and Juan Ta ylor. lfWlrds.
Canadian FOOlba.U Le~
HAMIL'm N TIGER CATS- Signed Wal
tt•r Sroojl't'r. def('nslw• tac kll', an d 11&gt;\Pr
r;ali"S. quar\('rback
HOCilEl.

NaUonal Hocby lla«lH'
PHIL ,\DELP HI A
FLYER SS(Jmf'd

Taras Zytynsky and Andrt• VUIPrtN vf'. df'·
lf'flst'flt('n , to multi )'f'ltr f'Oilt rac t'
GENERAL
US A A MAT EUH
BOXING
ITDER
ATION - Nam{'(l HooS('vl'h Sund!'rs coor

TIEMPO

DIAL

dlnator-&lt;uach

All SEASON

ball team coached by Dan Brisker
who Is now the Kyger Creek High
School principal .
Hartman, who has his team
working hard on weights, wt11 have
to rebuild a Bobcat team which wt11
return just five lettermen.

It may be all the tire you ' 11 ever need
all year round! Has smooth -riding
polyester cord body, double steel
cord belts . Specially compounded
tread rubber for sure grip in any
weather ... wet, dry, hot or cold .

FREE MOUNTING

Whitewall
Size
P185/ 75R 13
P195/ 75R 14
P195/75R 14
P205/75R14
P215/75R 14
P225/75R14
P205/ 75R 15
P215/75R 15
P225/75R 15
P235/ 75R 15

FR78-14
GR78-14
HR78-14
FR78-15
GR78-15
HR78-15
LR78-15

Blackwall
P155/80R 13
P165/75R 13
P195/75R14
P165/ 80R 15

Metric
Metric
ER78-14
Metric

Reg .
80.00

Fits
BR78-13
BR78-14
E~78- 14

85.50
92.15
96.00
98.00
102.35
97 .00
101 .00
104.40
111.75
61 .95
68.25

87 .75
74.10

Plus F . E .T . t.401ol .9SperliNI

The Daily Sentinel
I LiS I'S 14S..9601
A fh \· i ~ iunoll\1ultimt• dia , lnr .
l' ubl1~l h ·d l'lt·ry afl•·nu~•n. M••ltday thruu~ ll

Fnda .l . Ill ( 'tlurt St n•t• I . IJ~ tlw Ollt• • Vallt'\'
Publ1 ~h t111! Cntt• pa n~
Multunt•dJiL l nl':.

1'"11 11'1'"-1. Otu ..
j)I &gt;S i it l.!t'

~ :,769 .

992-2 \flG

St· • ·u•~tl das.~

pau l it! P to t tll' n •y . Ohu 1

Mt•tnl)1 ·r Tht· A ~.~ ·~ · T ctlt·d i'r•'!-&gt;.'&gt;. lniHill.l D&lt;11·
ly l'r•• s.~ A .~ ~tWtH ltult alld !Itt· Alltt'nL·a n
N''" Sflil p·n Puhhsht-rs A .~.~· ~ ·• t~ Lt n lt , Naltt•tMI
Ad 1 1· rii Stlll ' H · · pn· ~ t · rr l•• l t 1· 1·. Bra nlt;ml
~t'~'&lt;'~ PaJWI ' Sa l• ·.~. 7J:I T h1r, J Al,·rtu•·. N1•y,

Yoork . N••"' Yurk 10017
I'O."iTMASTF B S,·utl

.uld rt·~~

1" Tht• D;ul\

St·ttl md . I ll ( 'uurt St . Pullit'fll\ . Olu u -1 ~769 :.
S l' RSC ' HU"T I O ~

lt AH:."i

n, Ca rri,·r ur Mu lu r ituuh"

U lh'"''~'k .

11.00

lhtt· M"nth

$4.40
$52.80

Or~t · \'o •;1r

('( H'V

I'Rin:."
[);u I ~

l ~Ct• nb

Su l i~T tbt· r ~

uul tlt'sl fll ll! \ 11 J&gt;ilY tlw t' arr wr

lltil~ rt 'llll l Ttl aJ \·atlt't' dll't't'l
St• n\ ll ii' J llll it J, 6 llf 12 1111111\h

\ u Tlw Darly
i&gt;&lt;tSt!&gt;. r rl•tJi \
· "• ll lw 1! 1\'l"ll t'&lt;tr r wr •·adr uu tnlh.

Nu ~ UIN 'f l[)\tii!IS

b ~· ltlllt] Jlt'rltH llt-d 111\IIWilS

"hn•· hut!I t' t ·a rflt'l ' St'l'\' lt 't' ts a va dahl•·
MAll . SURSCRII"TIONS
Ohiuand Wt's\ \llr,.:inia
'I Mutt\ h
Stx lltllll\h

$ 1 2.~

$20.80 '
$39.00

1 Yo·a r
Rat t·s Oul'\idt• Ohiu
a nti Wt•st \ ' irl(inia

:! Muuth

ARRIVA
RADIAL
WHITEWALL

~verything

you need in one great ·
t1rel A steel belted radial with big ·
ger footprint, more grip in mud and
snow. Great traction in rain ,
hydroplaning resistance, tread wear
and _durability . Plus responsive
handltng and quiet ride . Natural
contour helps prolong tire life.

FREE MOUNTING

Computerized Wheel Balancing
3.99 Per Wheel

I y,.,u·

74.95
91.35
95.15
105.35
109.65
111 .90
110.75
• 115.40
119.30
127.80

Plus F . E.T. I.Sl to 2.9S per tire

.,

suo

59.00
61.00
64.00

60.oe
65.00
69.00

$42~78Xll

Whitewall
Size
Fits
P185160R 13
P195/75/Rl4 ER78-14
P20S/75R14
FR78-14
P205/Jo:SR 15
FR78-15
P215/75R 15
GR78·15
P225/75R15
HR78·15
LR78-15
P235/75R15
Plus'F.E.T. U91o3.06pertlr~

SAVE

Note! Rib count and
sidewall styling vary with
size. Not all tires look ex·
actly like tire

• Attaches to Your TV

·

'
&amp; Bl.ACKWALL

Keep an Inventory

_.

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

.............
-pa••m•..,••••

-

g a a ...... • • • • • • • •

SEE IT AT YOUR NEf.REST
RADIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER
' PRICES MAY VARY AT iNOIVIDUAL STORES AND DEALERS

FREE

MOUNTING

Now yQu can 'I afford not to
buy one! It's a computer the
whole family will enjoy! 21&gt;300t

Mrs. JoAnn Robinson was al the

Dorothy Johnson, BeHringer drive
chairperson for Racine, announced
that three workers will go house-tohouse during the May campaign,
collecting for mental health.
" The need is great." said Johnson.
"Most people don't realize that mental and emotional problems affect
one family in four, and can cause
physical symptoms. Our campaign
this year stresses the importance of
'Mental Health for Every ... Body'."
The Bellringer drive will benefit

The Gerlach and Allied families
will hold a reunion on May 30, at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds (grange
hall) with a potluck dinrler at I p.m.
plates and table service will be
provided.

. 4,f,Ge

· 4i'.oo
66.01

.....
61.01

n.lt
71.01

7UO
76.08
11.01

'

Reg.

.S.i.Ze.

Reg.
38.00
41.00
45.00
47.00
48.00
50.00
52.00
52.00
53.00
56.00

A78x13
B78x13
C78·14
D78x14
E78x14
F78x14
G78x14
H78xl4
F78x15
G78x15
H78x1S
L78x15

Sale
28.50
31.00
34.00
35.00
36.00
38.00
39.00
39.00
40.00
42.00

Salt :

44.10 •.

99.05
103.14
104.22
108.63
112-19
120.15

St.IIO :

suo

66.00

. The phone number of Joe Struble,
who is In charge of the Memorial
Day parade in Pomeroy is 992-3424
and not 44&amp;-3424 as was reported.
A photography workshop on
fiBture and closeup photography will
be held June 11 and 12 at McClure's
:Barn by Leo HiD. The registratioo
fee is $25 and interested residents
&lt;.re asked to contact Rhojean Mc:oure, 992-3536.
Racine American Legion Post 802
:Will hold memorial services at 2
;p.m. at Letart Cemetery. From
'there the legionnaires will go to the
:Oreenwood Cemetery at 3 p.m. The
:aaclne band will participate.

62.00
62.80

69.00
74.00
76.00

Sale
30.00
33.00
36.00
37.00
38.00
40.00
43.00
42.00
43.00
4S;to
49.00

Drew Webster Post 39, Americalr
Legion, wiU join other Meigs Count)'
Legion Posts to fonn one color guar4
fbr the Hartinger parade on Satm'
day. Commander RoliChl urges all'
Legionnaires to participate. They
to meet at the Pomeroy bridge
on Saturday at 9:30a.m.

5TH

'ME.IGs·IIIE'·CENTIR
j

•

POM_E.~Y, OHIO

'

.,-

•

•

•

\

F. :Riut~~~. ;.·

-

•1882 Tandy Corp.

., :..· ---•, ...

''

Rutland Nazarene junior girls
sponsor Mother's Day dinner

Members of the juntor girls class
of Rutland Church of the Nazarene
·hosted a Mother's Day supper recenthe Mental Health Association of
Ohio, a volunteer citizens' advocacy tly at the fellowship hall in Rutland
organization dedicated lo preven- for · thetr mothers and grand·
ling mental illness and promoting mothers.
mental health. The Mental Health
Sharon Barr assisted the juniors 111
Association is not a state age ncy and making corsages for the honored
must be supported by private con- guests and each one brough t a
tributions such as those collected in covered dish for the fellowship supthe May Bell ringer campaign.
Bellringer workers in Racine are
Becky Mallory . Cindy Cross and
Michelle Johnson.

I. Do you own yoor own home?
2. Has your home increased in value?
3. Have you paid off any part of your
original mortgage?

Attendinu were Stephan ie Walker ,
'
Judy Miller. Sandy Walker, La une
Biuck
Black •
" · An 'u1c Bla•' ·k · Sh·•ron
o
Mrs. Earl George, Rebecca, RoberLa and Lena Na pper, Mrs. Walter
Hysell. Angie McDonald, Shirley
Sinurunons. Mrs. Fern Grimm . and
thejumorleacher.Goldie Ca rson

,.

~

: Mn. Olga Gaudin, F\. Laude!\
'lliJe, Fla., 18 vlaltlng her siBter Iiiii
:brother-In-law, Mr. anil Mrs. Lelallil
:stsson. Pomeroy. Mra.·Gaudtn will
:Sttend the Pomeroy Alumni •
:S.tunlay night. Her clua will lll!l ·
\celebrating Ita 50th reuliloo.

.,'

:.UUR'r Roush have

dt 'l' t'ast· d mt· !llbe r ~.
Ruse
Ht ·ynolds and Me~ry Martin wt•re
namt·d to han· llw st'l'\' ll 't'. Offtnrs
will lw hnslt'sst'S fur till' Junl'
llll't 'll ng.
Thl' Pht latht•a wil l sponsor a
fan•wt •l l rt't"t 'pl!OII for ttw Don Erwin
fauul~ . who will 1110\'t' ltr 11Hha na tn
.Junr . Rlt 't' and Bt'lly Ml'Kllllt ·y will
t ·cH ·ha 1r ttw rt'l'e pt 1u11 .

ttf

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRJ:ICUSE, OHIO
NOW 0 pEN FOR THE
SP R l NG SEASON
•V ege tabl e Plants
• Bedding Plants
•Foilage Plants and
Hanging Baskets
OPEN DA 1L y 9 til 8
SUNDAY 1 TIL s

PHONE 992-5776

,--------------------------.L_:~~~~~~~~~~~~
OPEN DAILY 10·9; SUNDAY t-6

c:..--..
Sale Ends Saturday
The

Place®

KMC 737 BLACKWALL

RAYON BEL TED
RADIALS
Our Reg . 37.97- 155170SR1 2

24.97
Plus F.E.T. 1.55 Eac h

Mfr. Treodwear Rating 120 ·
Estimated 36,000 Miles

KMC807 BLACKWALL

STEEL BELTED
RADIALS

34.97
Plus F.E.T. 1.92 Each

Mfr. Treadweor Rating 180 ·
Estimated 54,000 Miles

DO
DO

' Mt!!ltQOw~oOitngDO..OOilUS ()epi ol
lfQI'l5P(Ifl01101'11 VntiQim lwe Qvao•~ o;I«&gt;Oir&gt;Q•Y&gt;It""

DO

If you've answered "Yes" to all of the above questions,
continue with this test. You could be on your way
to becoming rich.

, Revival servicett will be held i&amp;
Syracuse Mission located oo Cherr)'
l)treet from May 7J6 to May 30, 7 p.RL
"each evening. Speaker will be fhe
: Rev. Wilbur Leifheit.

and

Jllo llwr ant! grandnurlht·r .
1'111 · Jww nwd 1ng w1ll ht• the
Plulatllt'a llll' IIH Jrta l st·n·H't' tn honor

per .

y,. No

CARRY OUT ... INSTALLATION AVAILABLE

4. What is the current value of your home?
5. Multiply this amotint by .8 and write it here.
6. How much do you still owe on your home?
· 7. Subtract answer 6 from answer 5.

Eo.I0.97

Ntumedi
w .

Price

10.97~wg

- ~~~~~INGS

;.on..

Sole

Fit many American-made and foreign cars. The Nl selling
repl~cement s~k with P/,6"-inc:h bore and 50% more ·
work ing capac1 ty than a stordord l-inc h shock absorber

. The amount you've written in #7 is the amount
you oould 1xrrow anytime you need it from City Loon
and Savings. With that kind of money at your disposal,
you'~ alot richer than you may have thought
Contact City Loon and Savings today. Because
nolxxty knows you like we do.
Ia. 13.11

;coii)Jiibua . where tbey
~lly to vlllt her llrotber, .
Wbo~la ~at ' · .
ifJun ~ llll'Pl'Y· ,_. llii
:vllllld~. 8lld Mli Ltlny ~r

12.97

Eo.

Monro·Matlc" Shocks In Popular Sizes

Mr,li

125 E. Main St., Ph. 992·2171

."Our lest" Premium Radial-tuned Shocks
Rodlal-luned shocks In sizes lo fil many Amerlcar&gt;-made
autorroblles. Engineered and designed for cars with
radial. bios and belled fires. Available ol savings.

~

~ 8lld . .; aDd ~·
;at1.
,' '
I,
.. '
~r_1'·~·
~ fl!nillJ•
I'. ._ _ _. . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,
'
•t
•

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

G._,i
,~·~

0

--.1.·-~-

sman .
Recogni zed and prt'sented roses 111
tTystal vases wen.· Bt: ul ah Housh.
oldest moth er : T rudy Willw111s.

TAKE THIS TEST
FINDOUT
IF WMrRE RICH.

.' The Modern Woodmen oJ
Burlingham will spo1180r a ham ~
ner on Saturday from 11 a.m.~:·
p.m. In addition to the ham dinnlit
they will hold a bake sale and will
seU bomemaile ice eream. '1116!
proceeds from the event wiU Ill
given to the emergency squads.
Carry-wt dinners will be available ..

~rrespondence

t']Ost'd tht' meeting with pra yl' r .

Our Reg. 47.97 - 175170SRI3

are

! POMEROY--Mr .

DOWN TO EARTH TIRE VALUES NOW THROUGH

president. and

give n by Mitzi Salt -

the~=======================~

85.95

. Reg .
40 .00
43.00
47 .00
49.00
50.0,0
53.00
55.00
57.00
54.00
56.00

Roush,

bles~in g we:~ ~

May 26,1982
Changes are likely this coming year where your social interests are
concerned. You will find new outlets and will add to your circle of pals as
well.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be careful not lo act too impulsively on advice today that could cost you money if it is wrong . It's possible that
what's told you might contain flaws .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You're likely to get what you go after
today, but you may do so in ways that will not win you many admirers.
Keep your image in mind.
LEO (July 23-Aug: 22) Matters that you leave to others but should be
laking care of yourself could get all foul ed-up today. Be a doer, not a
delegater.
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You will be wise not to bank too heavily
today on "iffy" situations. Be optimistic, but also be realistic regarding
your possibilities.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your chances for success are good today,
but be prepared to make a second or even third effort. You'll win if you
keep trying.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Imagination, resourcefulness and hard
work will gain you your ends today. If you hope to gel by on your luck and
charm, forget it.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Conditions affecting joint ventures
could be far more complicated today than they may appear on the surface. Don't leap into anything without first looking .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jao. 19) Neither you nor your mate should
make important decisions today without consulting each other. You
might not be operating on the same wavelengths.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. 19) Subdue temptations today to point out
the faults or mistakes of others. In turn, you might be told things about
yourself you won't want to hear.
PISCES (Feb. ~March 20) You could be susceptible to point out the
faults or mistakes of others, in turn, you might be told things about yourself you won't want to hear.
·
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9) When you analyze tricky situations today,
you will recognize the pitfalls. Even so, you may decide to act contrary to
your best judgment.
TAURUS (April ~May 20) Keep pace with your duties and responsibilities today. If you slow down, there's a chance everything could pile
up and overwhelm you.

· Salem Township Trustees will
:!flee! Friday at 10 a.m. at
:firehouse.

Whitewall

'

· Blackwall
Size
A78x13
B78x13
C78x14
o78x14
E78x14
F78x14
G78xl4
F78x15
G78Xl5
H78x15

Dorothy

.n ru ngt·st tnulhJ 'I : Ge rtrudt• Mil lt•r.
1110l1Wr w1lh most t' hJ idren; Duns
Hal It · ~,
tJitltlwr
w1lh mo s t
dCJU !2 hlt ·rs: Ht•lton Rt·y nolds. motlll'r
of ultlest 1'111ld : Se:~lts man , motht•r of
yuun t:es t l' hi ld : Ht·ynoltls, PhiiCltheii
nwmbl'r llw lmlgt·st ; and Nora Rll't ',
past pres uknt .
A pOl'lll " WhC1 ll s A Mot her ?" was
n ·ad by Rt·ynnlds. Salts man spoke of
tht• tnfiUt'llt 't' on llt' r lift• by ht'r

Astrograph

51.10

Sill
41.00

he ld rt'cenll y at lilt' c hurch.
The wt·lnunr was exkndetl by

Bellringers named for drive

Announcements

Reg.

Tht• annual mdth,·rtdau ghll'r
banq uet of the Pln liJlhea Wnllll'll of
Middleport Churc h of Ch nsl wa.'

PROCLAIMS-: Tuesday, May 18, the Village of Racine along with
other communities on the loeat scene observed "Senior Citizens Day" in
accordance with the National observance. The event was staged by support of the Racine VIllage Council and Mayor Charles Pyles, above, wrote
a proclamation In bonor the Senior Citizens In the community. Many local
businessmen, Including a display created by Joanne Tuttle in the window
of Tbe VIllage Cut Rate, were Included. Pol1ed plants were presented to
Seolor Citizens by the village. The plants were distributed by Mr. and
Mn. CarroU Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland, Kay Warden, Etta
Mae Hill, Wilma Johnson, Martha Lou Beegle, and Jeanette Lawrence.
Plants were donated by Harris' Greenhouse In Portland, Hubbard's
Greenhouse, Syracuse, and Stobart's Greenhouse and Htll's Greenhouse,
both of Racine. The village would like to make this observance publicly
known In bonor of all Senior Clllzens in the community.

39.01

69.75

A pageant of bndes was held with

Middleport Philathea hold banquet

44.00
54.00

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and the invoc·ation . After lhl' dinner .

RACINE - Twin City Shrinettes will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Cora Beegle,
Racine.

63.00

RADIAL

ride.

Ready-to-Run InstantLoading Program Paks

Mrs. Robinson pla yi n).! music from
each d&lt;·cade. 1900 lo 1980. The pastor

POMEROY Women's
Fellowship ri Meigs County
Churches of Christ will hold a
meeting at Pomeroy Day Care
Center Thursday. Each church
will take part in the program.
Refreshments will be served.

Sale
49.08
53.00

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and honors to the one~ who ca me the
fart hest. llw oldest a nd the youngest
bntil-s . Flnwt·rs from the table Wt' rt '
gtve n as pnzes.

lliURSDAY

POWER STREAK 1-l

Programming

V!t'kiP Houchins was master of
ceremonies. A table of wedding pictures was VIewed by t hosp attending.

POMEROY - Wildwood Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
home of Mrs. Mary Nease with
Dorothy Smith, ro-htlltess. John
Rice will be the guest speaker.

Signf'd
Kenny Daniels. conv,&gt;rback . IUchard f ok&gt;y, d!'fPI\Si vt&gt; back Jl'fl Hayt&gt;S. pu nter.

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Mothers."
Belly F'ullz, Jllired in her grandfa ther 's wedding suit. gave a tribute

WEDNESDAY

REOS KI NS-

S I N C ; J.t~

. Scioto results

"Cha ngi ng Role of Contemporary

IIams, defpru;Jw md.

Hartman assumes KC grid position
Mark Hartman, 24, Addison, var·
slty assistant tor the past two season, has been employed as head
(polball coach at Kyger Creek High
School.
Hartman, a gtaduate of canal
Winchester Hlgh School and Otter·
bein College, succeeds Deryt Well
who stepped down !rom the post
last mon th .
While In high school, Hartman
played three years of varsity foot ball both as an offensive and defensive lineman. He also played
offensive center on the Otterbein
:O,uege team before being forced to
sfi out with an injury.
His high school team complled an
overall 2&amp;- 2 record during his three
years and while a senior in college.
Hartman assisted with the North
Westerville High football program .
As a varsity assistant he worked
with the offensive and defensive
lines.
While at canal Winchester, Hart()1an was a member of the basket·

Tht• dimng room was decorated in

bridal motif by Jeanne Bradbury
and Mrs. F'ullz. The program and
music were by Mrs. Robinson, and

HARRISONVILLE Golden Age
Oub will meet Tuesday night at 7
p.m. at the hall. Members are
urged to attend.

51-

.o\.\1.t: tu CAN LEAGl'E

pwno for a group si ng. Speaker fur

the evening w•s the Re v. Arthur
Lund whose lop1c was the

A mother-daughter banquet at the
Heath United Methodist Church,
Middleport, carried out a bridal
theme with many of those attend ing
modeling their wedding gowns.
The Methodist men cooked and
served the steak dinner to about 100
members and guests. The Rev .
Robert Robinson gave the welcome

EASf MEIGS - The Eastern
Band Boosters will meet
Tuesday, June I, not Tuesday,
May 2S, as was ~eported to the
Sentinel.

Ilartll'ft . defenslw end. and Kforry l..odl ·

,~k-5 . 1m

TUESDAY

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

FOOt'BAIJ.
Football leapt'

ANGEL~

Bridal theme highlights church banquet

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

N&amp;&amp;kl~W

LOS

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

Orioles over Toronto.
Roenicke's first hit, a home nm
In the first inning, gave Baltlrno~a
1.j) lead. It was his 10th homer of the
season.
The Orioles chased 106er Jim
Clancy, 5-3, in the second wttll four
runs.
Baltimore starter Scott McGregor, &amp;-3, worked 71-3 Innings for the
victory. Tim Stoddard came on In
the eighth and gained his third uve
. of the year.

The

Ohio

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

BASKETBALL
NaUonal Bulu!U!al AMoctaaioo
NI:IA- Namf'd Gordon "&amp;'olty" Stlrlln~t;

at l'lnclnna tl . •n•

at San Olf'go. 1n 1

l ~ttsbur~h

tort! threw well and I thoughtil was
going to be a 1-!J game."
In other American League action, Oeveland blasted Minnesota
9-2 and Baltimore edged Toronto 75. callfornta at Boston was rained
out.
Spltltortf, 24, was coasting along
until the sixth inning when the
White Sox scored three runs. Greg
Luzlnksl drove In one with a single
and Tom Pactorek singled in two
more.
Kansas City Manager Dick
Howserdldn'thavetobelmpressed
by the White Sox pitcher who now
has a 27-6 career record, Including
a 1EKJ slate In Comiskey Park.
"I realty like the way he goes af·
ter the hitters," he said. "He attacks the hitters. You have to give
him credit. He really has a good
Idea of what he's doing."
Hoyt'sshuloulbldendedwtth lwo

\'IC1' prNildl&gt;nt

" '""' York at Atlanla , 1n1
~ontwa l at Houston. t n t
Oun~o

By Associated p.,...
Being the winningest pitcher in
the major leagues with the league's
best earned run average doesn't
krep a pitcher Immune to crtlldsm. Just ask Chicago's LaMarr
Hoyt.
The rap against Hoyt Is that his
teammates have been overly generous in run production. In his last
fl ve starts before Monday night the
White Sox had scored 52 runs.
That changed Monday night
when Chicago eked out a3-l victory
over the Kansas City Royals. The
27-year-old right-hander scattered
eight hits a nd struck out eight to
register his ninth straight victory of
the season.
Hoyt said he felt he needed to win
a tight game lo prove something to
his detractors.
"To a point, yes," said Hoyt, who
boasts a 1.45 ERA. " (Paul ) Splll-

'

Coast i.Raguf'

"' UW.'&gt; " ' Siw ~·rant·tso:~l
l'hll&lt;~rlf&gt;lphl ,t

Le4ue

Na&amp;ktnal

Phlladfolph!a 1\'hrtstmsoo J.- .1 1 .11 C'ln
rtnnatl t lla rrts f~-&lt;l •. 1111
S1'W York 1S..~ott 'l.l 1 at Atlan ta 1Mail
IN J.-.li, on1
Montn•al •Bums r~; , at Hrus ton
oRuttl•• ll• . 1n 1
Chlf'af.:: u LIM'I kln~ lA • at San ~n
oWf'lf'h 1 II , 111 &gt;
P\rtsbur¢'1 IIUv:dl'tl 14 • at l.o.w. Angpll&gt;s

1912

25, 1912

Hunt records ninth straight win for White Sox

Scoreboard...
Majors

Tuetday, twJy

Pomeroy- MiddlePort, Ohio

Poge-4- The Daily Sentinel

'

0

•

�Page--6-- The Doily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

T.

Tuttday, May 25, 1982 :

Ohio

- - -Helen Help Us--- Meigs organizations hold meetings
Hospital volunteers not dotty-brained females
By HELEN ROTIEL
DEAR HE LE N
We are wn tmg to protest thl'
stell'Ollp tcal portrayal of the
husprt~l

\Oiunteer on .such shows a."i

CBs-TV '' House Calls"
Contr i:lf\ to what v1cwers may

ho!-iprt.al vol unteers hctH'
LOifll' .t lung \\ay from being on!;
prnk lcidtl's' or. as Lh1.s particular
sh!M unplte:s. dutty-b r a med guodhtarkll wmn~n who g1ve of therr

assulfll'

tlllll'

bet.ru se that rs &lt;I ll they hcn e to

uffl'r

At the Unl\ ers rt) of Calif or rlla
De:~' rs.

tu

Mt&gt;dr cal Center 1n SaLra nll'n-

nur \olun lePr st' rvr ces depcu t-

llll'nt rs 800 stron g, co-educa twnal ,
and run .ts a pr ofesswnal re venueprodu&lt;.:rng ulllt Wt• prov rde an rnnovi:ltlve rrugram In whrLh studenls

mterested rn hea lth ce:u eers and
peupk who \\'ant to sta) Involved 111
the pr nt t•ss of &lt;:a nng for other s. drt'
sough t Wl'. plaLl'. vol untee r s tn uu r

famtl\ p1acttce c lmu, pedtatltL s
""rd . chtld play cenlct , dcnldl
Lltntt
t•ar-nose-throat 1 IJntt

IHburatmtes, emL'I gency 1oom and
other ar eas
Natu rally , Wl' s till perform those
tr adtttonal se r v1ces such CJ s
upt•rahng tht.• hosp1l.dl 's g.: shop
pi OV!Liing p&lt;ttlent CSCOJts dciiVl' l lll g
111atl elL Gladly too
Pll'&lt;tSt' pr mt thts, Helen. so
IL'adet s "til know that the vol unteet
sptrtt ts cd tve and wt.•llm our natton s
husp tl als
NANCY M
Sf:QUF:IRA, Pt es tdent, Vulunlee t
Set VICes, UCOMC
DEAR NANCY
Gladl1 pttnled Hosptlal vuluntt·er s dese r ve i:l gr eat,bJg hand
l:!ul don 't act use 'House Calli'
of
st ere ot yp i ng
beca use 11
:-; howcases one somewhat dotty
he lpc 1 Humor thnves on exaggeJalt un Look how the senes zeros m
un hosp1tal CJdnumstr atoJs and
t•lderh doc lotS - are they totnpl.llntng? ~ H
IJI"AH Hf:LF: N
1'1 11s letter 1s dtreLted to l.arr\ ··
\\ lw 1s siLk to dea th of th e wmhn g
dtHI gnd sillllg of toothless gums b\

the eld erl y," who l he says ) want
11101 e than lhetr share of atd
How s hort rs hrs m emo ry' What tf
Ius pat en[!; had been s tck lo death of
hts wa tltn g and gnashmg of toothless
gu111s when he was a baby Would he
llCi ve :su1vrved?
Older people have pa td thetr dues
If eve ry able-bodted chtld , at
ddullhood, 1ct urn L'll JUst a raclton of
the cat e that was grven to them,
there wo uld be vet y few elders 111
need of oul!; td e atd - K B t AGE 37)
DEAR HELEN
I' m stck to death of people like
I&lt;i t ry " He wa n[!; old people to
wea t used clothes, cal day-old
bread, mea tl e:s.s mcal:s, ha ve no TV
They lived lht ough the Grea t
Dl'pre:Jslon Isn't that enough ? My
g1&lt;1ndmother extsl!; on $3,000 a yea t
and th&lt;~l 's barely ex1stence I'm for
gtvtn g the elderl y more, not less' NOT ASF:NIOR CITIZEN
READERS
Larry got a thorough drubbmg
Not one co rrespondent ag reed wtlh
hun, and seve t a l hundred wtshed
htm a bad old age " - H

Wildwood
Garden Club

Thursday mormng Ftve-Pomts exer·
ctse class wtll change to Wednesday
mormngs startmg 111 June

Members of the Wtldwood Garden
Club held an all-&lt;lay oultng m Lancaster recently wtth members
vtsttmg the Anchor Hockmg Glass
Shop, the Wearever shop, Sunnystde
Nur se ry, Farmer 's Country Store,
and the Calico Shop. Makm g the lnp
were May Holle r , Ada Holte r , Ca rne
Grueser, Mary Nease, Evelyn
Hollon, Dons Grueser, Jane Harns,
J uamta Wtll, Betty Milhoan, Peggy
Moore, and Mareta Arnold

Auxiliary 263
Contnbultons m memory of Mrs
Luctll e Cousms and Mrs. Zueleha
Smtlh to the Amencan Legron Chtld
Welfare Foundatton were made
when the Lewts Manley Awuliary
263, Mttldleport, met at the home of
Mrs Nellie Wtnston
Mrs Margaret Bowles pres tded at
lhe meeltng. Offrcers retamed for
another year were Mrs Bowles,
prestd ent. Mrs Lucrlle Saunders.
second vtce pre.s tdent , Mrs Florence Rtchards, secretary; Mrs. Lula
Hampton, treasurer ; Mrs. Mmme
Washmgton, chaplam, and Mrs.
Gowles, htslon an .
Mrs Bowles was elected delegate
to the swnmer convenlron m Athens,
June 3 Mrs Rtchards wtll serve as
a lternate
Mrs Wmslon, chaplam, asstsled
wtlh the openmg ceremony. Mrs
Hampton gave htghlighU; from the
legtslaltve bullehn regardmg lhe adtmmslraliOn's lax reductton and
defense budget, a nd Senate Btll 266,
lhe Veterans Adrmmslralton and
Departmen t of Defense Health Care
Acl, now ready for lhe prestdent's
stgna ture
She also commented on lhe untmgralton'btll recently mlroduced 111
both House a nd Senate whtch calls
for a nalronal tdenttftcattOn system
for everyone lookmg for employment as a means of dealing wtth
the problem of tl legal ahens
Refreshments were served by
Mrs Wmston

Slinderella
Ca role Oatley lost the most wetghl
al the Chesler Slmderella c lass w1th
Ctndy Holsmger betng the runner-up
whtle a t lhe Mason class, Audrey
Grant, Maxme Kesterson and Ca ndy
Van Meter lted for the most wetghl
lost and Kalhenne Mttchell and
Helem Grtmm for runner-up
In the Tuesday mghl Pomeroy
class , Emma Paugh lost the most
we tght and Jane Hysell and Carole
McFarland lted for runner-up The

Vaccine may be possible cure for cancer
EDITOR'S NOTE The foUowmg
article Is a correction from Monday' s edition of the Sentinel. The
newspaper regrets the cm&gt;r

t

Amt•ru·an Ca nt l'r S o l' ll't\
Meigs f: nunty Umt
ByS Mtehuel.
Pubht lnfo rrnatw n
Cha1rman
Pomeroy, Ohto 45169
SL JentJ ;.;ts hdVt.' t o1 ne up v. tlh v e~t ­
Jnt's d).U-:t tn sl pulm smallpox

mec~slt•s.

'fl u rablt~~ c~nd nthe1
disea ses - so why not tttncer 1
The an.s\t\er tnvol vl's fundcunt·ntctl
dJffctenet.•s betweL'n t anLers and
othe1 drseast·s But ncm 1t appears
tht•re Ctre tht· beglllnlll)..( s of a few
vau.: rnes &lt;Jl'tln g rndu edlv or duectl ) e:tgatns t some t anc t·r s
B&lt;tsiCi:ill y. dt•v Jsing a saft a nd effed rve \dlt' JnP calls fn st fur Jdentl f) rng lh t' exact &lt;.:e~use of a dJ sei:lst•

In must tases to feu 1t hc~s bet•n r1
OJ lJlH lt• rtUJII
In poltmnyehlis. for l'X(:llll pl t
thrt•e tvpl's of \ t1 U 'i wt·n· found tu
ta ust' para lyltc poilu The nex t step
was to kil l the v1 rusc!'i or wei:lkt·n
thcrn so lht•\ l'OU]tJ no t UIUSt'
thsea se i-Jild use these part1cles (JS
thL' vctel me lnJL'l tt.'d 1nto tht• human
body . lht• v,JeC IIlt' stu nula tes produt twn of pruted1ve antlbO&lt;.hes a~aJn st
a ny futUi e mfect ron and dl st• &lt;:~se
Vat unes t'CHl also be prepared b)
Willlg only part of a \1 1us or oth er
orgamsrn s, a part, called an antl,l;!e n.
lhalts spell ft c to that organtsm Tht
human bod y r tcugmzes ttw antigen
a~ belllg d1ffe1 l'lll. dlld [OI IIIS CHltJbulli l'S lu LUUiltt.: Jact 11
In the mam Utfferenl fm Ills of
tantcr, d maJor d1ffrtult y ha s bt'ul
to disl uvt•J some anttg~:n, sulllt'
s pce rf H different e, betwee n d
hea lth y te ll whl'lhet 01 It ve t , lung,
breast or other , a nd a cell that h:J.s
become ca ncerous The a nti gen then
tm ght be tsola led and concenll (!ted
fm use .t s a vacL me It probabh
"ould rt uletl unl; "I~U IIlSllhatty re
of cantl' l
For yea rs. sc rent tsls have l! ted to
fa sh1un vcHT mes dga rn st an lndJ vtdual's own t ance r - takm g
some uf ht s/ her ca ncet cells and
usmg th em 111 hopes of stunulatmg
a nltbodll's to attack the remammg
cancer LCi ls These ex penrn ents had
eqw vueal resu lts ne ve r \ ery
drama ltt and not long lasllng Bul
some nt•w er expe1 rm ents. desc1tbed
spt'l lf lC V II US

show pr ormse agamst lung
ctllrt.' l s. and pel haps ot her c,lfllt' l s
Anothe r app r oCJch wa s tu use cu1
t xtstmg a nti-tube r culos1s vcH.: Ctn e,
nell ned BCG -111 hopesilla rouslnJZ the
bod) 's gene1al Imm un e sys tem rnl u
I.! I ec~te r
&lt;H'llv lt y e~gcun s t lht•
ftll t' lgn · t culL er tells 0\ era II . the
r t.'sult.s ha ve btt'll JUd gL•d chsct p-po rntln g )et the! L' ts a l.dnld hzmg
smndhtn llwr e
Just appt ovctl by the Food and
Or U/2 Ad Jmnlstr al10 n 1s H vacc rn e
th"l IS expeLled to atl tnd treclly to
p1even t man; liver cancers It 1s a
\ctcu ne aga1nst hepot1t1 s-B vuus
1 HBV I, e1 ser 1ous !1ver rnfelt1on affcdmg sonw 200,000 Ameneans
e&lt;il h year w1th ~evcre tl!ness, i:llld
some deaths Man y people become
(ell rl L' r S Of the Vlt US, Cii piib(e of
petss mg rt along lo famtl\ rnembc1 s
c~ntl
l lose
assoc iates
And a
slg tllflcant numbe r of tle nL'i With
lwpa lllt s !&lt;:ltl' l dt:velop ltvt'J Lii llCl'I,
\\ hll h kills S U/llt: 12 000 Alnl'I ICiillS
r~nnuall)
P1eventmg the llllt l,il
htp.tllll s tould pre\tlll l1::1kr l &lt;:tlll t•r s
But sJn u· the hve1 c.: O:Jncers
dt•velup s low I) tlt ould lake 10 to 20
~ t'Cifs to detL'I mme hm.., dfecltve the
HBV tUtCIIlL' may be It IS made
fr 0 111 a Pi:ll lll'Uif.H cmt1gen on lhe sur-

1t 1mght ta ke 55 yea rs to

i&gt;eiO\\

'dlllt'l.

t

p1 o\ l' that 11 protec.:tcd women, smee

fdll'Ofthe vl!us

Otl1e1 plltenltal Vt:!CCines tnvulve
the Lunous fcmuly uf herpes VII uses
that caus&lt;' a host of lt oubles One,
herpes simplex I , causes the
famtl ta r cold sore' Herpes st tnpl ex
llts th e mam cause of herpes gemta l
lllfecl JOns now r eachmg climost
t•ptdemtc pt opotltons And there ts
1111 1easmg ev tdence lhaltl - HSV-11
- pla)s so111e rule 111 ca ncer of the
t t'J v1x perhaps a d1rect one
Another her pes v1rus - EpsteinBa n vtrus I EBV I - appea" mvolved w1th at least two forms of
ca nce r One ts Burkt!t's lymphona, a
eancer of the Jaw The other 1s ca n' L' l of parts of the nose and throat
I ~ BV also Is the c&lt;:~use of the
bL'nl gn
mfeetwus
r ela t1 ve ly
mononuLieO !'l ls
or
k1 ss 1n g
dtscase "
Researc hers arc seekJn.l:( vace rnes
aga tnsl both HSV-11 a nd EBV,
pet haps wt lh the atd of gene-s phcmg
and monoclonal a nllbody techmques
lu ma ke them sale and effecltve
It IS dtffll ult to produce such vact lilt's and tl co uld lake 30 to 40 yea r~
to pt uvt• th at they were effecll ve If
· breast

btedst l ame1 takes so long, usuall),
to ti l!\ eltlp

But 'est a rchers have some ca use
f.,, oplllnt sm Ill the fa ct tha t
J &lt;-i pdllt'st• sC il' ntlsUi ct rL' well along 111
dt'\ rslll1-! a \ aLclne aga rnst tht' herpt·s '1rus Vanl'l'li CI zuslt~ 1 . that
tauses both L' hllkenpox and
sh tn gles Fur tht•r . there IS an exl)l'l llllt' nl.dl vaL L'Ifll' now agamst
r~no l ht • r
h erpes
v 1ru s.
t} l Oillq.! dlu,llus, that ca uses
Sl' IHJ\I s ur fatalrllness rn new born Infan ts dlld other d1 se&lt;:1ses
As tnd tLa led eatltet . a dn eel alt.tLk " "" IllS! four types of l un~ can' t• r ts also bemg pus hed, a1mcd at
the lllHJOI cancer k11l er among
Alltt' tt cans Dt Ancl Hollmshead of
Gl'P I I!l
Was htn gton Umvcr s1ty
p1 tx.lut t's the vacc mes. 1solatmg and
1
pur Jfy1 11 g a nti ge ns Ull the surfet&lt;:CS of
lung cancer cell s She ca lls them
tunHH ds:;oCJated cml1 ge ns or TAA
111 a toope ralt ve study wtlh Dr
Thmn.Js H M Slt•wart ofthe Um ve rst l) of Ottawa , a climctan. the vacl rnl's fr um thl'll ca ncers were ~ Jven
tlllt t ' a month for thr ee months,
follnw 1n g surgPry to 28 pat1enl..s
Fltt' years later, 80 pe rc ent were
st il l alive, compared wtlh 50 percent
of 24 patten[!; not n•ct•tv mg vaccmes
Dt Holli nshead fashiOned vacttnes aga msl sq uamous cell , large
tell a nd small cell ca t cmomas. and
t~dt• nu,na s of th e lung
Ntlw lllOrt' than a dozen ca nce r
t enlt'ts 111 the Untied Slates,
Ca nadi:l E ngland a nd F ran ce are
lakllll.! petrt 111 a larger. long-term
st utlt of the efficacy of th e vaccmes,
Ill \ ol vmg
up tu 100 pet t rents
rll'l'rv mg \accJ nes, a nd some 200

some fortun~te break to di scover a
conunon ant1ge n assoc ia ted w1th
many fo rms of ca ncers. from whi ch
m1 g ht L' orne one or seve ral
multlpotcntla l vaccmes.
Hope for lhts poss tbtlily was
strengthened m Octobet , 1981, wtlh
reports from three maJOI' Amencan
laboratonl:!s of a smgle natura ll y occurr mg oncoge ne 1cancc r ge ne l
from pt-~tJt • nts wrth ca nce rs of thl'
bladdet. L'O ion and lung th us lhe t e
rnoy be a cm runon denornrna tor
ca use as well as a means for pr eve ntmg these dtseases, of whtch a
mulltpolenlta l 'al'Ctne would be one
a pproach
For fUtlhet tnformal ton call 9927531 or cornt' tu tht~ ra nl er office on
Mulberry Hts

-

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125-Petal ~ills
124-fasy Gilts 'n' llmaments
1UStitdl 'n' Patdl Quilts
122-StuH 'n' Puff Quilts
1zo.tlodlel Your lllrdrabt
Art of
Crochet

~

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a list: tbeD brig it
In a classified ad and we'D
run.lt UDder oilr Yard Sale
bea!llnl. Thea'get readv for
the buJ:,n! 00 classlf[ed
renlll!

c;:ASHONLY

PHONE 992·2156

mle oulls bard 'work.

Stepka was lrJmml!'l JI'UI for
bls gra,ndfalber. (AP Luerpboto)-

1

~,v~ ~ri~:s~~~Se~~i~t
0

To15 u M "M[s 7.0G
reserves the right to
classtfy, edt! or reiecf To25 ,. M $7.00 11' M " ' ~
any ad Your ad wilt be
lu., •• M . , . . . . . .
puf In !he proper To35
ctasstlicaflon lf you'!t -....,.,J--..I---1.-__.--1:
check !he proper box
These cash rates
below
Include d1scount
1
(
(
(

)Wanted
) For Sate
) Announcemenf
l For Rent

.

-'

v·

17
18 .
19,
20
21
22. - - - - - 23
24
25
26.
21
28.
29.
30. _ _ _ __

_ _ _ j;

1

I

2. - - - - - 3
4
5. _ _ _ __
6, _ _ _ _ __

'

1
8. _ _ _ _ __

I

9. _ _ _ __

_

10. _ _ _ _ __

I 11 . - - - · __

i

12. - - - -- 13. - - - - -14. - - - - - 15. · - - - - - 16.
~all

·

31. - - - - - .~2 .

_ _ _ __

33. - - - , - - - - ' - -

:w. - - ' - - - - -

35.

This Coupon with RemiH~nce
The Dally Sen.tlnel- ' .
111 (ourt St.
·Pomeroy, Oh: 4SJ69
.

I

I

Prlnt one word In e a c h : space below. Each In·
filial or group of figures
counts as a word Count
name and address or ~·-•· 1
6
phone number If used. ~•• •• de .:.. _ d8 • ~~~­
You' !I get better results
V ••••
Y• w•r•

Fresh a1r

Sue Murphy, Helen and
Bruce Teaf~rd, All
R·ealtqrs. , A'fter
992-3615 or 992 -3~25.

11

P~on•---------

9

nnd pr•vacy when you
move tnto th1 s one Gar
den space, new large
basement w1th wood
burn1ng chtmney for up
and down Over one'
acre of land 530,000
LUXURIOUS - Wan!
somethmg n1ce w1th
very little upkeep Well
th1s one IS 1n A 1 shape
Has a large front porch,
3 bedrooms, ce ntra l
heat and a1r , full
basement, hot water
heat, n1ce car petmg and
lois more Askmg only
$65,000.
'

rj

1

Addre••·--------.·

nat
gas.
furnac e.
ca rpet1n g, garage 1n th e
basement. and pnvacy

COUNTRY -

The Daily Sentinel
NO NoriJiNG! - Tbls alp 011 b1a graodfalber's
seems to rule out au activity, but Stephen
Nicholson, 14, found oullballbe one activity II doesn't

Name __________

NEW LI ST ING - 3
bedroom h om e w1th 2 8
a
c
r
e s
Lots of tru1 t tr ees, bath,

rooms, 2 bath s, nat gas
F A furn ace, ca r.pe t1n g,
storm wtndows, ilnd a 4
roo m home as a ren ta l
or for mo ther Just
$37 .500
INVESTMENT - Lef
your money work tor
you on th1s ve ry lrttle
work needed to operate
bus1ness Collect the
money 10 th e eve n1ng
and ope n th e door s '"
Only
the morn 1ng
$15.000

=~Just ptller &amp;bem up

ads b

o~~~d~r~er !Y

wrlfe your
!.11 with 1;1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

INVESTMENT
2'
hou ses 1n Rac 1ne One

bOUBebold arUcles, llle!f
clotblug, old bal}y 011'111ture, used tires fiom your
car 8Dd old toys eau tie taroeel Into useabre CASH. It's

YOUNG'S

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

.

11

sfove

forwoodandcoal 8953866

·-·

co.

-Roof'"l'::.f"""
••d

Curb Inflation -1I
lI Pay Cash for
1I·r---------1
11
Classifleds and l

Askong $25.000
NEW LISTING - 8
room one floor modern
hom e
Bath w1th
shower, equ1pped k1t
chen, ca rpetmg a nd 2
nt ce leve l lots 1n Tup
pers Pla1ns for $31.500

All of &amp;bose UD'!'BDted

firm

WLIQI

_(

Phone
1-(614) ·992·3325
NEW LISTING - 5
yr old 2 bed room home
Bath,
car p e l1ng
ba se m ent. 1nsu lated
Qarage, 2 porc hes, 2
acres on good blacktop
road School bus and
mad rou tes $.45 000

_.,

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR

l

ha s

,

..."•...

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

m

h lfo oo

VIRGIL B SR
216 E. 2nd 51

c:G~:::fw::k

A

~~=========j~~~~~~~~~~~

992-6191
992 5692
949 2660
992-2259

\OIOfl I Oli&gt;

.... _...... "'"'''"''

Isn't it
about time

34 '

NEW LI STING - MIDDLEPORT - A lwo
bedroom, one story home, new ca rpetmg fenced
back ya rd, gas hea t $22,500

REALTORS
Henry E Cleland. J r, GRI
Dottte Turne r
J ea n Trusse ll
Offtce

C R MASH
CONSTRUCTION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

-1

)0)- . . . . .. . ...

UD 00 .. ........

POOBATE CO UOT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
ES TATE OF IN EZ A
RANDOLPH, DECE ASED
Ci!Se No 23129
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On May 12th 1982 1n the
Me 1QS Coun t y Proba te
Court . Case No 23719,
Clarence E Ra ndolph, Sr,
Route J Pomeroy. Oh10
45769
was
appo1 nted
Exec ut or of the es tate of
rn ez
A
Randolptl ,
dec eased late ot Bedford
Township Me iQS Cotmt y
Oh10
Rober t E Buck
Probate Judoe/
Clerk
I 51 18 25 161 I. 3fc

121-Emolojoe Pllldrooft Quilts
127-Af&amp;fqns 'n' Doilies

Alice....

&lt;M- l -

.

Wrp.o•

~

I

13~$.uter(ashioos-Siasla.56

•ulutaft Dlttl

·····-

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

: ome

Doily~

'Addo"''~~~~!~~~

mruiiJ

NEW LISTING - BU SIN ESS OPPORTUNITY
Furn1ture Re tail, equ 1pmen t. bulld 1ng, a nd 1nven
tory Ca ll for details

.......

Public Not1ce

132-QuiH Orililllls

Here's Blondte "m person,"
our newest celebnty doll!
She's about 25" lall, the
famous comtc stnp personality
doll all the world 1om. Pattern
7207. tilsue pattern pteces for
doll end Dlllfit dtrec!IOIIS lor
makma her &amp;olden 11m curls incl.
SUS lor each pattern. Add
501 each pattem lor posia&amp;e
end handlina Sen• to:

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

r---------------------~

All CIWT 110011$ .$2.00 ooch
All Boob Md Cataiol-add 504
•• lor pastace 111d handltn&amp;.
135-Dolb I Clalhes On PaJide
134-14 qaidt Midline Qutlls
133-fashiOII ltolnt Quillin&amp;

Dt Hollinshead IS al•o de vtstn g
'fAA's aga mst melanoma , cancer of
lhl' colon. ova n es, bladder, bram
anti oth er s1tes She a nd associates
are also hopmg lo delermme
whPlheJ s uch vaccrnes 1mght
rt olcd ht gh-nsk tndiVIduals agams l
ca ncers such as asbestos workers
\\ ho smoke Ciga rettes
1 A vaccme to pc rnut Ciga rette
smoket s lo tntlulge lhetr habllts not
tn the offmg 1
A smg le vaec me agamsl ALL ca ncel s appears most Improbable
Cur n·nt 1cscarch 1s du ected more to
fmdm g spec tft c vaccmes fm spectftc
types ant! stles of ca ncers. But, who
knows' - there tru ghl come about

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

PRICE REDUCED - TUPPERS PLAINS - A
lhree bed room double w1de w1th full basemen! on
large lot A real value at $18,000 Now red uced to
$16 200 A barga ml

tn MI .........

The

I~~F=~~~~~~~7
--

PR tCE REDUCED - On th1 s cute three bedroom
home rn Syracuse
Lot s of remode l•n g
Now$ 16,800

~-'·

•• , Ohio

NEWS RELEASE The
Ga !1 1a Me1gs Com munitY
Ac tt on Age ncy CETA
program 1S c urrent ly ac
cepttng app l1cattons for the
Summer Youlh Em
·
6
Lost and Found
ploym e nt
Program
(SYEPJ
El1grb1l lf y
LOST
Prue
bred
COllie
.
From s~hR.VtCSEmallest
1
Los t 1n vmo n1t y Spruce St. requ~remen t
d •sad
Ext Sliver choker, goes by econom1 c a l ly
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator.
All types of roof work,
name of Ang1e Ca ll 446 · vantaged 2 14 to 21 years
new or repair guner a nd
of age App l1 ca t1 ons ac
3561
Radiator Specialist
downspouts,
gutter
For all your wiring
cep ted Monday Fr1day,
NATHAN BIGGS
cleaning and painting.
00 4 JO a t th e c A A of
All
needs;
furnaces
Los t Sma ll black poodl~ a
Call
992-6259
f1 ce, 417 1/2 2nd Ave,
35Yrs. E•perltnce
work guaranteed.
on J1m Hill Rd 675 4394
Gal l1pOI1S, Oh, 446 4612, ex
.SMITH NELSON
repair servrce and
tens1on 63 Me1gs County
Free Estlm1tes
installatiOn .
Found Brown and whtte address CAA off 1ce at 117
MOTORS, INC.
Reasonable
Prices
276 Sycamore St. female
Call Howard
Residentta I
Beagle w1fh flea 2nd Ave Pomery , Oh,
&amp;C
· I
coll ar and rab 1es tab Ca ll 99'} 2313
Pomeroy, Oh.
949·2263
ommercra
Middleport, Ohio
304 675 22 14
Ph.m-2174
941-2160
Call742-3195
2·2Hfc
3-7·1fc
5 21·1 mo
2·26·1fc
Desk Clerk a nd Ma 1d
Yard Sale
needed Apply at Best
Western W111 1a m Ann
t - - - - - - - - - - , 1 2 Family Yard Sa le Thur Motel before 5 p m
sday a nd Fr•day 52
·
' '
EUGENE LONG
Sycamore Sf 10 !II ? Boys
Cook Wan ted for P1zza
Sha ck. 1n Pomeroy App ly
Superior Siding
bike m"'
1npersona tM e1gslnn
c r
k h
Vtnyl &amp; Alumtnum
B1g 4 tam dlf yard sa le May
us om 1tc ens and ap29, 30. 31 4 miles east of
p t Ian c e s '
c us f0 m
• backhoe
Complete gutter work,
Tup pers Pla inS on 681 Need Money? Lad•es to
bathrooms, remodeling,
* excava tmg
toward Reedsvi ll e Look. work 10 to 17 hours per
Water Sewer Electnc
plumbtng, electrtc, and
*
sephc syslem s
COmplete remodeitng,
tor 5/g ns 9 dark Mos l week or lull l1me Ear n as
Gas L1ne· D1tches
heating
*A water, sewer
.
&amp; gas lines
roofing of all types.
•lems Sl 00 or less Severa l high as $850 or more per
Water L1ne Hook-ups
Sell1ng Stanley
com
forters and one bunk week
Septic Tanks
FREE
• dump rruck
Worked m home area
bed
Products Call 985 41 71 or
County Cert1f1ed
• limestone
949 1360
Roush Lane
ESTIMATES
Licensed &amp; Bonded
20
years.
Thurs
and
Fr1
Bed
Cheshtre, Oh
PH. 992-7201
Free estimates
cloth es, cur ta1ns, l1nens. Lawn Work need pari l1me
Ph. 367·7560
PH. 992-6011
In a Ell iS across fr om Bet person to cu t lawn and
1·7·1 fie
3
29
ttc
Call
843-3322.
a 20 tf c
tr1m around bu 1ld1 ng and
ty's Carry ou t, Chesh1re
5 172m o pd
edqes Must be respons1b le
wdltnQ to work Call
Wed a nd Th urs lots of and 7772
between 8 a m and
SAVE Sl.OOWITH
r - - - - - - - - - - , 1------------1 glasswa re, dep ress1on. old 992
10 p m week. days
furn1 tur e. and cloth•n g 117
THIS AD
m1 off Rt 124, outs1de
PIANO TUNING
Sa lem Cenfer, close fo Dan NEEDLECRAFT Earn tn
come demons tr at1nq our
CARPENTER
AND REPAIR
vll te 742 2583
st1tchery col lect1on No
New Homes -- ex - ~
tas no depos1 t Quality
Call Btll Ward
yard sa le, May 26 27 . quo
k,ts I BOO ~24 4370 or 304
tensive re modeling
At Ward's Keyboard
Cha rl es McLa1n Sr ll4 586
3970 CREATIVE EX
Rac1ne, Oh Books. c lothes. PRESSIONS
wori
• E lect nc work
vosa 1-446-4372
furn1tur
e
9
to
5
•Custom Pol e Bldgs
Master Charge 4·9 tf c
All Makes
jfu'~:.~,
•Roofmg work
• Washers
• Dish elednulwotl
S1tuattons Wanted
14 Years Expen enc e
IN SIDE sale, new &amp; used 12
washers
(frn Esttmatesl
merchandiSe
at
212
Walnut
House
pa1n 11ng, roof1ng ,
:r~anges • Refngeraf·
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Greg Roush
3
Announcements
Street. Henderson. s tart1ng concre te work 992 2836
eDryers eFreezers
992-6215or992 7314
Ph . 992-7583
SWEEPER and sew ,ng May 24
PARTS and SERVICE
Pomeroy, Ohoo ff c
or 992·2282
4 5·ffc
ma ch1n e repair parts, and
t3
In suranc e
9 30
Var1ety Yard Sale a t An n1 c
1s Vacuum
de l1very Oav
=======::::::::~+==========~======·~29=l=m=o~~ suppl1es
P1ck
up and Johnson house, 2 mil es SANOY AND BEAVER In
Cleaner one half m il e up from N Haven on Un1 on surance Co has offered
Georges Creek Rd
Call Campgrou nd Rd Thurs , serv1ces for f1re 1nsurance
coverage tn Gallla Coun t y
446 0294
Fn ,&amp;Sa f May27 ,18&amp;29
COMI NG BANOS
Vinyl &amp; Alum mum
tor almost a ce ntury
FRI APR JO , MAY 1
Farm , home and personal
WllOW ATER
SIDING
Buy term tnsurance and tn 9
Publ1 c Sale
CounTr y Roc;~
property coverages are
Thu n Fn Sil l Su n
ves t th e res t No ob l1 ga t1 on
&amp; Aucfton
availab le to meet 1n
M.av ll 14 ~ ~ 16
analys1s
Rumley In
CROSSOVERS
d1V1dual needs Contac t
R1
ck
Pearson
Ex
sura
nee
Agency
446
3320
Dronh &amp; Drown ill I n o gh l ~
Sf Rf 124 Pomeroy , OH
per.enced AUCTIONEER . Harry P1tchford agen t
fhurs ff&gt; Sun
Mav101 11111
Es tates. anttq ues. farm , Phone 446 1477
n cal1ber Buffalo Scout house hold L•ccnsed Oh10
CROSSOVF R ~
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
Onnh &amp; Drown all n1ghl~
revolver . pearl handles, 4 WV Buy1ng ant 1ques 304
" Beautiful, Custom
lhur' Fn Sat Sun
I5
Sc hoo ls I nstruct1on
3/ 4 r1 fl e barrel 6 s hot, 22 773 5785 773 9185
Bu11t Garages"
REPAIR
M,ly J118 19 JO
shorts or lonqs $5Q 95
CRO SSOVE RS
Call for free s1dmg
Kara te the ulf1mate 1n se lf
Also Transmission
Or.nh &amp; Drown il ll n1qhT\
Spr1 ng Va lley Trad1 ng Co.
esttmates, 949 2801 or
defence a ll pnva te lessons
MO NTH OF JU NE
Auct•on
every
Fr1
n1ght
a
t
PH.
992-5682
Spr1
ng
Valley
Plaza
446
949·2860
f rod ;~y ar.d Salord;ty
the Hartford Commun .ty Men, women &amp; children
MUI'S HAll. TENN ENT
8015
No Sunday Ca tls
or 992-7121
lnstruc t• on thru black be lt
Ce nt er Truc kloads of new Also
Cou nTry R o(~
available Karate
3 24 lie
NoTe Crossovt&gt;n Thun &amp;
mercha
nd1se
every
week
3 11 ftc
Sun band \!arT\ 1 JO ends
1 oz 999 silver Fa thers Cons.gments of new and uniforms pu ch1nq and
11 JO Olhcr ntghl\ TO IO1
ckmg baqs and pro tec
used merchand1 se a lways k1
C.uryoul Bct&gt;r A ~il llabl e Dnn k
t1
ve
equ1pment
Jerry
Va ll ey Trading Co Spr1n g wel come
&amp; Drown dunng Band NtqhT
R1 c hard
Day
Asso c 1ates
V.JIIcybar
P laz.J$1000
446 8025Spnnq Reynolds Aucf10neer 275 Lowery &amp;
CA NDLELIGHT INN
Karate S tu diO, 143
R 1 1c ht&gt;\h&gt;
re Oh•o
3069
Burltng ton Rd Jackson.
PH '1979'111
ST R11
Pe
rf
ec
t
Father
's
Day
gil!;
4/]41!!(
Oh Call 286 3074
Wh1 te's metal detec tor 15 BEDS IRON BRASS. old
%
off
Spr rn g Val ley furn1tur e, gold
s liver
M1 scell aneous
Tr ad tn g Co Spnng Vall ey do ll ar s wood 1ce boxes, 17
Pl aza. 446 8025
Stzes s tart from 30x24"
stone 1ars an t1 ques, etc
Carpen ter Work Repa1r
And Home Mamtenance
Comp le te
households and room remodel1ng wa ll
Utility Buildings
• Roofing of all types
Raven 25 auto p1sto l $47 49 Wnte M 0 Mille r , Rt 4, panel1nq or ce .t1ng tile 997
Srzes from 4 to 6 and all
• Su~mg
Case sharks tooth knd e. Pomeroy , Oh Or 992 7760
2759
wood bulldmgs 24x36
e Remodelrng
$50 00
Sp r1n g VaiiPy
Insulated Dog Houses
• Free estimates
Trad1 ng Co, Sprinq Va ll ey Go ld silve r , s t erl1ng,
18
Wa nted to Do
e20 Yrs expenence
Plaza 446 8025
1ewe lry nn gs, old co 1ns &amp;
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
The Sdk House (custom
currency
Ed
Burkett
Bar
TOM HOSKINS
Rt 3, Box 54
N1 gh t craw lers Sl 00 per ber Shop. M1dd leport 992 silk fl owers) Complete
Racme, Oh
Ph 949 2160 or 949·2322
br1dal l1ne wedd1 ngs. an d
doz Spr.ng Va lley Trad1nq 3476
Ph
614·843·2591
4 20 tf c
all occas1ons Call 367 7566
Co Spr1ng Va lley Plaza,
If you need 11 bu11t
6· 15 fi e
446 8025
OLD FUR NITUR E. beds .
or ftxed we can do
1ron, brass or woocl K 1t Lawn Mow1ng no yard to
It .
L1 ttl e koo l res t, 1ce chest by chen cubbards of a ll types . b1g or s ma ll Rel1ab le and
742-2328
Ig loo. tra ve ling refres h· Tabl es, ro und or s quare . dependable For es t1m ate
RUTLAND
ment ce nter S24 00 Spr 1ng wood 1ce boxes Old des ks call 446 3159 a ft er 6PM 256
4 29 1 mo
RANDY'S
Va lley Tr ad1ng Co . Spr .ng and bookcases Wil l buy 1967
complete house hold Gold:
Va ll ey P laza 446 8025
CARPENTER
sli ver Old money pocket Tras h coll ection &amp; haul1ng
watches cha ms, nngs, and Call 4.46 4480
Will
to
lady
who
took
th
e
SERVICE
lnd1an A rt1fr~ c t s of r~ ll
pocket book at K Mart etc
-Ad dons and remodeling
Reel Eltate - General
types
Also buyrng baseball
pl ease return p1cture to
Restdent1al E Jec tr1 c &amp;
-Roofing and gutter work
16 YEARS EX P .
Ollie Swarn, Rt 1 Box 193, ca rd s Osby Mar t 1n 992
Plurr,b1ng. 12 years ex
6370
-Concreteworll
•Restdenhal
Crow n C1ty, Oh 45623 or
pcr1ence. all work gua ran
please drop 1n floor or
HOBSTETTER REALTY
-Plumbtng and
•Commerctal
feed Cal l 256 1748
Small eng1ne parts for a
somew here a t K Mar t
Geotae S Hobstetter Jr
electncal work
•lndustnal
Sea rs Crafl sman 4 117 HP
Brobr
(Free Esltmates)
Racine, Ohto
rototlller eng 1ne Ca ll 388 W1ll do baby S1H1nQ 1n my
PHONE 742 2003
home Cal\6 14 388 9755
Ph 949-2609
247-3534
9060 or 245 94 12
949·2234
Free Esttmates
Flower lor Memorta l Day
COUNTRY SETTING RACINE, OHIO
nex t to bank •n M1ddleport . Good used Jet Ae ra tor sep· WILL care for 2 elde rl y
1; .. m1 off New Lim a Rd
4 20 tf c
9
QualitY bu1lt ranch
t1 c tank motor Phone 446 people 1n my home By the
week or Month 304 675
hom e
Lar ge l1 v mg I
to 8PM :
week . 2594 alfer 5 30 PM
76 10
orom, form a l dm1ng II
Grea t permanent spec 1a l
room, 3 bedrooms, 2 full
S15 at Billie Jean's Beaut y
=-- ,_~ _
baths, full basement,
- =~ "-Shop Ca ll Bill 1e or W1nn1e
carport wr th storage
Financial
304 773 9123
serwlees
and ufllofy bldg All on 2
n1 ce ac res
Ask 1ng
Gtveaway
4
S-45.000 00
Help Wanted
Vinyl&amp;
11
21
Bus .ness
ST RT 114 - Jus! off
SALES &amp; SERVICE
ANY
PERSON
who has
Opport~mt "t_
Aluminum
Sidmg
R t 7 N1ce two story
T1me
on
your
hands?
Mee
t
anythrn g to g1ve away and
U.S. Rt. so East
•Insulation
home 4 bedrooms, bath,
does not offer or atte mpt to n1 ce people, ea rn good SSS . Bus1 ness or s tore room 1n
Guysvt!te, Ohto
•Storm Doors
llvmg room , d1n1ng
offer any other th.ng for Avon PAOT TtME&amp;FUL Park Cen tral Hotel
A'dthorized
John
Deere,
•Storm Windows
room , k1tchen and
sa
le may place an ad .n th1s L TI ME Ca ll 446 3358
New Holland, Bush Hog
•Replacement
ut1hty room Natural
column
Ther e wr ll be no
Money to Loan
22
Farm
Equ1pment
Wrndows
gas heat Low utrlrt1es
charge
to
the
advert1ser
H1gh
Sc
tlool
Graduates
&amp;
Deater
•New Roofing
S1tuatedon 1 29 r~cr es
Sen1 ors you can ear n ove r REFINAN CE or purchase
Farm Equipment
$25,000 00
Free Estimate
S5SO
00 per month whil e your home 30 yea r fixed
Krttens to g1ve to good
CORNER LOT - Mod
Parts &amp;Service
James Keesee
1earn1ng
a valuab le sk ill ra te WV a &amp; Oh10 Leader
home Ca tl.&amp;-46 4173
dleport - Large two
1 3 tt c
computer
re pa1re r, Mor tgage, 77 E Sta t£&gt; St ,
llke
Ph . 992-2772
storv home, wrth 'J
shee t metal wo rk er, or A!hens. Oh 592 305 1
4/29/ 1 mo'
bedrooms, bath, l1vrng
Cats &amp; ktttens Ca ll 446· refr1ger at10n Plus you wrll
room, d1n1ng room ,
0808
have a secure part t1me JOb Have la nd? Want to budd?
familY room , b1g k1t
w1th the Amry Na t1ona l Noth1n g down, low 1nterest,
chen (With a vew of
Guard after sc hoo11 ng no paymen t for 6 month g
rrver) ; full baseme nt, 1
Benefits 1nclude a $1,500 00 614 592 3053
ca r garage and ntce
e nl1 s tm e nt
bonus ,
C&amp;M
backyard
ID ea l
$35,000 00 l1fe .ns urance 23
Protess1onat
tocat1on for re t1red
EXCAVATING
and free tu1tr on to any
Serv1ces
couple
As k1ng
college or tr ade sc hool 1n
$35,000 00
-Dozers
AND
C&amp;
L
Bookkeepmg
West
V1rgm1a
Interested
3 beaut1ful k1ttens to good
FARM - 33 acres, wtfh
-Backhoes
Bookkeep1ng &amp; tax serv1 ce
persons may ca ll (304) 675
home
Lrffer
framed
992·
-Dump Trucks
a spac1ous 2 yr old
CONSTRUCTION
3950or rn West V1rg tn1 a ca ll for all types of bus1nesses
253 1
home Features large
Carol Nea l
446 3862
Doltr &amp; backhoe ser· Lo-lloy
fOil FREE 1 800 642 3619
l!vmg room wrth bay
vice, water, sewer, pon·
-Trencher
wmdow, Also 2 barns
One
male
k1tterl,
a
ll
black
ds,
foundations,
-Water
H1 gh School Graduates &amp; P1ano tun1 ng and repatr
Calf for appomtment
wtfh long haor 992 3577
reclamation.
-sewer
Sen1ors you ca n ear n ove r Lane Dan1els Assoc 1ate of
-Gas Ltnes
RIVER FRONT - Mtd
$550 00 per monfh whtle Brun1 card r's Ga llipolis
dteport Two story, four
Licensed &amp; Bo~dod
· Septic Systems
M1 xed breed pupp1es to lea rmng a valuabl e skill and Cu nnmgham's Athens
bedroom home Btg
Phone 949-2293
Large or Small Jobs
good home Ca!t 446 0065
like computer repa1rer, 742 2951 or 992 2082
liVing room With
or 949·2411
PH . 992-2478
sheet metal worker, or
fireplace, large dtn1ng
Ca!t247· retngerat1on Plus you will
room, eat-1n kitchen,
-"Real estate
have a secure part t1me 10b
22605refngerators
utttify room , bath
~
wtth the Amry Nat1onal
Rela x on porche!'
affer schooltn~,
overlooking the nver
3 beauftfut ktttens litter Guard
Beneftfs
tnclude
a $1 ,500 00
MAKE US AN OFFER
tramed and tree 1f you can
b on u s,
ASking $26,500 00
IUD
Ul~l provide love, and a good enlistment
$35,000 00 life msurance For sa le 3 bdr house 1n
home 992 2531 .
FUM - 33 acres, wifh a
and free tu1t10n to any i ~.~
newly
spacious 2 yr. old
WE SELL THE BEST AND SERVICE THE
college or trade school m IM ercervt ll e,
acre lot
home. Features large
Kittens
4
black
&amp;
while.
3
West V~rgm1a Interested [Mi_
d· twent~~~ By ap·
· REST
!tvlng room Wlfh bay
female and 1 male Ph 446· persons may call (304) 67S· po ntmenf only Call
256
window, deluxe kif·
2823 after 4
3950 or'" Wesf Vtrglnta call 1 ~ 4
chen, formal drnmg
IOIIWIIOft:.y
loll FREE 1 800·642·3619
room, large family
_
-,
Amuin1 Wiler MKhinf _
----- -----K•ttens
3
7
weeks
old
Ph
room, 3 blg bedrooms,
·:
' 'Tfto macftfnt of tomorrow-toaOyt
Counfry
Living , 3
446·9542
Some one to live tn With bedrooms, central a1r, full
2 full baths and 2 car
soortnt Ahead Nature's way
.
Ref
.
gentleman
69
yrs
otd
garage. Also 2 barns
basement. garage, pond, 2
&lt;;aft for appointment.
Curto lit yoor -•dust prollloms.
Black gerbils. Call 882-3145. req Calf 446·244.5
barns, att this on 10 acres of
U.P.S. Sorvfct
beauftfut rotltng land.
Velma Nlctnsky, Assoc. ·
· 'GalflttOliU14-446-2016 .
f'llllo74Z·:tiiZ
Ptrktnllory, W.V. :Jt4-44U414
PUPPY, small par! Ger· Wanted elderly lady to care Pnce reduced for quick
cneryllemley, Assoc.
Mu_~ .lv. &amp; Lah~fto!_ ~~: _. man Shepherd, female, 304· for an elderly lady Calf safe By owner, 565.000.
446·.t537 or 446·2158
Call 245 910S
P:h:o:n:e~74:2:-3~17~1-~
· _jJ~. .
~···
rm~'" ., 615·2341.

w

I,

PRICE RED UCED - TUPPERS PLAINS - A
t hree bedroom ranch home w1 th ca rport, separate
ut il1ty, storage bur ldl!lg Reduced to$28,000

.. ~ c ....... .
141

""

~

nnt

_

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

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Meet Blondie!

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Retl Ett1te - Gentrtl

P omtor ~ Q~ , O~Utt

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f"ll"wlnll tele,,hon f' I'Xrh•"ll""

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POMEROY
LANQMARK

( U.n1{il'fl llii/!I'.S NU&gt;f.,. tht&gt;

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A ltvouc;~ ndrmk t1

Thun - Poollourn;~ments
• hl over
'" •&amp;'"
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onn~
crown
10 1
Ou nngBand Onlv

l:lllCKlHE

O ~ d , ~e n"n ~ l 0&lt;~\l lh l!'d Or~ !

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1

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIG S
CO UNT Y, OHIO
EST ATE OF GEORGE J
LOWTHE R, DECEA SED
Case No. 23766
NOTI CE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On May 7, 1982, 1n !he
Me1qs Co unty Proba te
Co urt Case No 23766,
Ka thryn L Spence r and
George D Lowther, Route
J Alba ny, Oh1o 45710 was
appo1 nted Co exec ut ors of 54 _ Mrsc. Merchandi(e
of Geo rge
J r·-=:.:_~~~=====..,
the ther,
estatedeceased,
Low
late of
Rou te 3 Albany, Oh10
NEWSPEC1AL
457 10
LOW PRICE
Robert E Buc k
ON ALUM1N1M
Probate Judge /
Clerk
ROOFING
151 10. 15 16) I. 31c
3F T WID E
All S11es
In Stock
New Cash and
Carry Pnces

PHONE 992-2156

. . . . .. ... o ,,

.,.....n

tun - lildu:!s N•ghTB 1
Wed - Dnrn.a nd Drow n

"' " '

Pt.rb~~~_!_•c_e __

And HS lhl• yeHf'j pas.s quickly by
Ours are tilt! fondest Jnt!flloncs aiJvt•
Toour blt•sst•tl pan•nls fromus all
Happvanmvcr.;ry of SIXIy·fl ve Vl'ars
- ByMargaret Da\ls

(

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.......·~ .....

......... ''"' g,,,

4 6

M'"

Exec utr1x of th e estate of
Ber t BOd lmer, deceased,
l&lt;lle ol 175 S Second Ave ,
M•dd lepo rt, Oh i045760
Robert E Buck
Probafe Judge/
Clerk
(5 / IS 15 (61 1 31,

Al11tle of somethmg wcw1shto ... hare
Into e;u h y~: ur w~: leave bchmd
Somethmg we hope for lroublt'll mmds

"&lt;•~pn ~ {~ ul

~'

v

So mtoeach d&lt;!) of our l1ves we g1ve

' "' \r&lt;•&lt;' I " .

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

no » Hu o '&gt; '

MC&lt;QS

ThOSt.' arc t ~ thmgs that n1J;Ike vur l 1 vc~
Those are Ihe l hm~s tu which Wt'l ltng
Thu.se are tht•paths thai others trod
Thost&gt; arc Ihe songs thai others Sin,!!.

..... . .

~

,

Many a swnmer sun has s hone
Many a n und rop fell

.....

• vt.g•~ nfJuorn

1

Mr and Mrs UiiwJo N~atn•

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"\Hft
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t;:========~T;::========::~;::===::;====:::;1~:::::::::::::::::::;:r.::::::::::::::::::~
AP"J,&lt;&amp;~~CTEMDE"NT
c: 1N?,~~~~~~e~b~N
i~'t,~~:ri:
H. L WRITESEL '
MILLER
HARRISON'S
OF FIDUCIARY
OhooSI Rf
On May 10. 1982. In Ihe
PH 992 991 3
ROOFING
ELECTRIC
Coun ty Proba te
OPE NMONDAY SUNDAY ',
TV Repair
Coun Case No 23767,
, Jo PM , Jo AM
SER
ICE
Helen L Bod1mer. 175 ~ DA tl sPECIAU
V
Second Ave. Middlepor t..
H.1 ppv Hr
oa 1v
&amp; Service
Oh,o 45760 was appo mfed
- Koo "••"" '
BOD
! MER,
DECEASED
f STA
BE o T
C.He
NoTE23767oF

Manya year has come &lt;:~nd ~one
Man) a tJde rose and fell

II&gt; (OHIS!

U

Business Services

TO OUR PARENTS

Announcement was made at the
May meelmg of Metgs County
Ge nealogtcal Soctely lh•l th e book ,
· The Descendants of J osep h
!Y
Snowden'' 1s a va riable now
The book cos[!; $16 75 and may be
obtmned by wntmg to V1rgmra W

1 bv&gt; "'»O!&gt;J&gt;o u• '&gt;
!I.,.,... to , oon

-,

COUNTY,OHtO

A him on the hrstor y of Metgs
County was shown by C E
Blakes lee of the Metgs Htslon cal
Soctely at a recent meetmg of the
Salisbury PTO
Karen Sloan presided a t the
meetm g Wllh the m embership
volmg to purchase lhe Hardesty
Htslory and lhe PIOnee r Htslory of
Metgs County for the school library
The PTO wtll also suppl y refreshments for field day It was also
dectded lo have a fund-ratstng dmner someltme next school yea r wtth
proceeds to be diVIded between the
PTO a nd the track fund for the
Metgs Htgh School.
Representatives of the Metgs
County Health Department and the
Board of Mental Rela rdatton asked
members for support of lev tes mlhe
June pnmary
The fourth grade won the pnze for
the room count Devotwns were
gtven by th e Rev
Rt c hard
Rolhem ch, pastor ol the Rock
Sprmgs Enlerpnse and Flatwoods
Umled Methodist Churches

0&lt; Woo lt

o•

May 25, 1982

_P_Occc0o. ,BF"A"l,'.-~'"'f~ ~s:!':U_R_T_

.

Salisbury PTO

The Dail y Sentinel

(~, ""''
' " " "" l
&lt;
,... 1 ,,..,

,

Pubhc Not1ce

Snowden, 3955 Btgelow Blvd , PtlU;burgh, Pa . 15213 It concerns the
descendant&lt; of Joseph Snowden and
hts wtfe, Marga ret Hamng Snowden
The pnce wtll be mcreased to $21.15
after July !5
Mrs Jun e Ashley gave an tn·
fonnaltve report on the Oh to
Ge nealogtcal Soctely convention
whtch she attendetl 111 Colwnbus,
Apnl30 and May I

Meigs County
Genealogical Society

.........

..1.

O'Brien Electric
Service

L=====:5:1::l:m=o=:j~=========~ 9-A~-

da~~-~

J&amp;L BLunn
INSULATION

BOGGS

•

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

~~=======3=J:ff:n::t:====~5-~2~0-:l:m=o~.pd=·~
VACU••aa

IL___

ii..............

'•

•

�The

Sentinel
J1

Homes tor Sale

They'll Do It Every Time

Houses, 4 brd ., 3 bdr., 1
bdr ., 9% i nter est owner 1
f inancing .

Carol

'N' CARLYLE""
Standin g Walnut
Phone 304-895-3647 .

Yeager

Realtor, 675·5104 or 675·
5386.

•

ser lees

o-.. • •

trees .

BABY bas51 ne 1, paO SIS .
$4.00. Bed spring·full $5.00.
304·675-3807 .

Neat, 3 bdr ., brick home, 1 ·
1/2 bat h s, quiet neigh ·
borhood. 10% assum ab le ·
loan, best otter . Ca ll 446

Home
Improvements

147 acre farm goOd house
and barns . Call 446 2599 .

red cei lin gs co m ·
I and r esidentia l ,
estimat es. Ca ll 256-

Buildi ng ma teria ls b lock,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Gra nde, 0 .

in Middleport . 446 -

1557 .

News
(!) Gymnastics:
Championships
(1) Andy Griffith
(I) ABC News

20 yrs . exp . Cal l 388·9657 .
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting: 30 years ex·
perience} specia lizi ng in
built up roof . Ca ll 388 -9857 .

Ca ll 745·5171.

CAPTAIN EASY

USGF

Unscramble these tour Jum~es .
one letter to each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

I'll
,_ b

I TANCH~
I I [lJ

Cll Electric Company
(jj) Over Eaey

6 :30 0 (l) (1) NBC News

THE OW~ '!&gt;I&gt;,Y!7 THERI;
ARE NONE ?0 Wlf&gt;E THAT
~ FOOL CANNOT OVERTAKE THEM .

(l) National Collegiate
Boxing Association Barry
Tompkins and Larry Mer chant report from nngs1de
on today's top college
boxe rs.

I BRILEMj

Cil $50.000 Pyramid
(1) Gomer Pyle
(I) Muppet Show
0 (I) @ CBS News

Cll Dr. Who

7 :00
HILLCR ES T KEN NEL

Bui l ding
wi th
ac tiv e
lucrative business. Quick

3 bedroom
hou se
1n
Pomeroy . Vinyl siding &amp;
firepla ce
Ni ce location .

sa le . $35,000 997-3 147

Prt ced to sell 992 7446

35

Boarding a ll breeds, clean
i ndoor·outdoor f ac i 1ities.

Lots &amp; Acrea9_e

Price reduced . 2 lots w ith
rural wa ter c lose to c it y
limits, $4, 450.00 . Call 4-46·

In Ra c1 ne, Ohio on Broad
way . Rodertck Grimm 5
rooms, 11h
bath , large
basement , firepla ce. 949 -

687 ·6944

8' '1 PERCENT asumabte
loan , one year old fri ·leveL
Meadowland
Es t ates ,
$67,500 . Call 304 675 1529 af
fer5p .ml

675 6873,675 3618 .

OW NER wants off er, se ll
or t rade_ Three bedrooms,
'J ba t hs, brick . cor ner lot,

41

Apar tm en ts. 675 5548 .

APARTME NTS,

TWO
bedroom , un
furn1 shed . One bedr oom ef·

ticie ncy . 304-675 2722 .

MYRTLE

Pt .

BE AC H.

1
bedroom co ndominium ,
oce an v iew, pool side un i t,

$400 a week . 304-773 3689
45

Ches tnut St . Ca l1446 3870.

SLE E PING

Furnished Room s

ROOM S a nd

li ght hou sekee ping
Park Cen tral Hotel.

ap t .,

Room s with cooking, ca bl e,
air, $40 a wee k. 304·773

5651
Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom e
Park, Rou te 33, North of
Pomeroy . L arge lots. Ca ll

$100 . Re nt $195. Ca ll after 6 997- 7479.
p.m . 997-7788 .
TR A IL ER lot, 90x70, Pea r
Trai l er
Court,
For rent in Rac ine-ni ce 2 so n
bd .room house. Co m p letel y Ga ll ipolis Ferry, 304 -675·
furni shed , w ith ai r cond ., 6167
a ll utiliti es paid . $300. per
month . 949·780 1 or 949·7860 . Sm a ll
tr ai ler
sp aces .

For sa le Offi ce tr ail er
12x45, fu e l oi l hea t , a/c. one

tu ll ba th , $7,000. Ca ll 446·
4119,7: 004 30.

Mason . 304-773565 1.
6 room house, unfurni shed,
remode led, ex t ra clea n, 47
Wanted to Rent
adults onl y. Pomeroy . $185 .
Want
ed
to rent warehouse,
per m o. 304-887·7466.
stor age build ing or large
garage in c it y of Ga ll ipoli s.
Furni shed hou se. A dults Ca ll446-3159.
only
No pets. 949·2253
Deposit r equired .

1981 Baron 14x60 house
tr ailer w / lot, drilled we ll ,
septi c &amp; sewe r . Crab Cr eek
Rd. Ga ll ipolis Ferry, WVa

446 7740.
12 X 60 tr a il er , exce ll ent
conditi on. Ca ll 4-46· 1552 .
Furni shed, air co ndi t ioned,
underpinni ng, se t up on lot
in Middleport .

2 bd .room . Car pet in living
room . E lec. r ange in kit ·
chen. Clean and ready t o
move into. 992·3090.

;.Custom bu i lt, furn ., 2 BR .
mobile home on r ented
river front lot in Mason. A ll
elec., ce nt . AC, W.O., cptd .
por c hes, m a n y ex tras .
Stor age bldg . wi th work
bench. A · 1 cond . Must see

Merebandlse
l1

Household Goods

TER Poo ls sale, suppli es &amp;
inst all ation . 403 2nd. Ave .,
Ga llipoli s, Oh . Ca ll 4-46·
6579 . In ground · Ablove
ground .
174 pieces brown un·
derpinnin g for a mobi le
home used ju st 1 yea r . A
seven &amp; one half f ee t by 58
inche wide mult icolored,
bra ided ova l rug . White
uniform s ( pantsui ts) thr ee
di ffer ent st y les, si zes 9·10.
A royal blue (Sa bre m ake)
portabl e t ypewrite r , green.

Couch, rockin g chai r , easy
chair &amp; autu man, cofte and
end t able -all ma tching.

Ca ll 379·767 1.
455 Olds motor &amp; other pa r

ts . Ca ll7459564 .

65

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

BULK

BLENDED

Agricultura l
fertilizer
delivered &amp; spread or
delivered &amp; dumped or

3 fema le Toy Peekapoos ,
a ll whi te, 6 wk s. old . May

POODLE

pups,

AK C

895·3958.

ding service hours 8 to 4,
Monday thru Friday, other
hours request on spreader
buggy rentals . A compl ete
independent busines. Farm
Equipment serivce, Cli f·
ford W. Snyder owner,

Ja c kson , OH , 286·4983.

For sa te rabbits New
Zea land white , so m e good
fry ers a nd other . Ca ll 304 ·

Kohl er &amp; Cam pbell spinet
tweed couch, S50 . Square
dance dresses -sizes 38·42.
Pri ce negotiabl e on a ll
items. 245 -5017
2 wood stoves used I

57

1976 Gra nd Pli x, PS, PB , &amp;

Musical
Instru m ent s

-

-. -- --

E lec tri c guitar with amp
S60, Pioneer reciever 190
wa tt s w ith st ero ac cesso ri es $300 . Ca ll 367 ·

7606 .
For Sale or----Trad e -

59

74 Chevy 3/ 4 ton truck
f rame &amp; rear end . Ca l l 388 -

9684.
A tot of differe nt par ts for
350 or 400 engines. A lso par·
ts for 74 Impa la, int erior
perfec t. 742·3063.
For sa le-1981 Ford Trac t or,
mod el 1700, 4 w hee l drive
diesel. 5 f t . brush-hog. 12 in.
post hole digger . 4 ft . by 8
ft . c he vy uti l i t y tr ailer. 992·

air, 65, 000 miles, very good

cond . Ca ll388 -8769 .
1975

Ope l

Sporlswagon

- - ----- -

For sa le: u sed R40 Ditch
Wit ch trenc her . 1·614·694·

7842 .

Ca ll 446-4772 9·5. Weekend
and a lle r 5 p.m . 446·2174.

81 Toyota diese l pi ck up, 5
spee d ,
exce ll ent
fu e l
mil eage. Phone 304 -675 -

-- Vans&amp;4W.D.
- - - -Sa le or trade. 1979 CJS

61

Bedspreads, c urtain s &amp;
sh am s a ll m atch, ex. cond.

1·se t of John Dee r e 4 bottom 16' se mi mount plows,
1-Hill sboro tri ·ax le goose·
neck 28' trailer . Ca ll 614-

756 6534 .

Jeep. am · fm . cassette,
alum . slotted wheels . 29,000
miles . As king $4,750. 4-46·

1980 CHEVY Scollsdale,

'S PRING
21 cu . ft . chest type freezer ,
good cond . Call 446-7736.

25' B &amp; W

Z~nilh

TV, leg

model. good cond . Ca ll 245·
9395. $50 with antenna .

17"

Be ll

Saw se ll

feed

pl aner , 9 set of molding
knife, I Shaper , seve r al ex·

Ir a kn ives. $7,000. 446-9785 .
Upright fr eezer 12 yr s. old

$75 . 17,000 BTU a ir cond ..
used 4 month s. Ca ll 245-

9489 .
For sa le used V30 Ditch
Witc h trenche r . Ca ll 1 - 61~ -

CLEAN UP

SA LE ' Ji vide n's Farm
Eq uipm ent, 446-1675.
Long tr ac tors, Vermeer
balers &amp; hay equipme nt,
bale mover s, rot ary tillers,
disc , post digger &amp; drivers,
seede r s, rotary c utters.
Blades, gates, &amp; front end
load er . And see us to get
your parts &amp; complete se r vice .

USED EQUIP :
IH Hydro 70, 9N Ford, 7000
Ford, 550 Oliver, MF 65,

J D·M, Long 460 4x4 with
loader , di sc, cultivators,
plows,
JD
manure
spreade r , Ford 501 mower,

1979 Dodge Ram Charger
4x 4,
4x4.

1978 Dodge pi ck -up

WE BUY USED EQUIP·
MENT!

1981 Chevy Citalion-17,000
mil es. New cond. Will con·
sider 4 wheel drive on

Sa le by owner. 1981 Olds .
SUp reme
Brougham
D iesel, 2 dr . exc. gas
mile age, ru st proofed ,
crui se control. air con ditioning am -fm st er eo
radio, cassette tape play er .

Call 992-2347 befor e 5 and
997-7683 after 5.
speed, exc. cond . Must se ll .

1973 DODGE va n, ca n be
seen at 307 Holloway St .,
Henderson, WV . Priced to
se ll .

plows. 9497063 afte r 6 p.m .

--

Vega A.T., p.s., till
wheel, 4 c yl. boxed 030
c r e m e cam,
mallory ,
header , am -fm tape , mag
wheels, extra sharp. Good

graduation gift . 51,150. 304882·7466.
1975 Pontia c Astre 4 cy l.

,a uto .. good cond . $975.,
991-7645.

power brakes, AM -FM.
$3,000. Phone 304-675-3186
or 675-7808.

or 446-7454 .
K Tree Trimm ing,
slump r e m ova l. 675-1331.
--- -- - - - - - RINGLES 'S SERV ICE ex perienced mason, roofer,
ca rpent er,
e l ec tri c ian,
ge n e ral
re pairs and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675-4560 .

ALLEYOOP
SOLUTION IZ OBVIOUS, YOUR
GRAZE! VE MUST B UILD P..
COUPLE MORE LI'.UNCHERS UND
REGAIN VEP..PONS S UPERIORITY!

Water wells . Commer cial
and Dom estic. Test holes.
Pumps Sa les and Ser vice.

304-895-3807 .
Sea ml ess

G utte r -Doors . Offering
continuou s
gu tt eri n g,
seam less sidi ng, roofing ,
garage
doors ,
free

estimates, 614-698 -8705.

1978 Honda XR75 . Call 446·
3710, ca ll a fter 4PM .

anytime for your termite
probl e m s.
Fr ee
in ·
spec flons. VA &amp; F t '
.r ms
availabl e. Li ce11:,LL1 &amp; in-

1972 Hond a 350 m otorcyc le,
ex. cond .. $450. Ca ll 3670350.

What fer is we

That there's th'
watch we has
.L'
1&lt; WI'nd ;l
,

sured by Ohio &amp; WV . All
word done b y a qualified &amp;
trained service man. 304·

unload in' this
fool cannon?

675-3,536, 304-675-4603.
1979 Yamaha XS 1100. Ex c.
cond . Fully dressed. Lots of
ex tras. Low mil eage. 992 -

5170 or 992·6288.
1977 Electra glide c lass ic,
low mileage, very c lean,
must see to appreciate. 592·

Plumbing

&amp; Healing
CARTER'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477

5864, Athens.
83 _ ___::E:;:X,_,C:::a_:V:::
a;:
li:::n.l!
g_ _
Honda ,

low

mil eage, excellent shape,

$450. 304-576·7866.

Gallipolis Diversi fied Con st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;

backhoe

1981 HARLEY Davidson,
Sporlsler, 304-675-4874.

work .

ce ll ent

condition.

Sl.OOO.

Special

farm rates. Call us for free
estimates . 4-46-4440 .
Lawrenc e

1981 Kawask i KD X 175, ex·

YOU MEAN YOUR
BROTHER- IN - LAW

Sid enstricker

STILL HOLI75 A
GR(IIJGE AGAINST

Backhoe Service. Ca ll 6755580.

YOU~

Phone 304-882·7478 .

anl --;--

75 - - - -; o;;s
Motors for Sale

with 40 fl trailer. $17,500.
614-446-9520

automatic, power steering,

PEN!

GASOUNE ALLEY

HART S Used Cars, New

It, 4 cyl,

cabin cruiser. 36ft, loaded

16ft. 1978 Slarcrafl Fish·

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

$4,000 or best offer . 9923154.

---------76

Auto Paris
&amp; Accessories

Hanshaws Used
Lucas
Lane ,

Tir es.
Point

BUT THAT
HE ANI7 HIS MOTHER
HAD HIGH HOPES
WAS SO
MANY
FOR 61LL.1 THOUGHT
HE'D MARRY INTO
YEM5A60/
SOCIETY_ THEN I
I SHOULI7
THINK YOU'VE
CAME ALONG ...

PYMI/EP
YOURSELF
~lfllllri\E!IY NOW.'

· SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Soles &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

3 bedroom s, partially fur ·

bedrooms,

1969 PONTIAC Bonneville,
fully equipped, wllh air
conditioning, good con·
dillon, price $650. phone
614·446·4630.

washer-dryer.

On private lot. No pels.
Depos it required . 949-2253. '

TRAILER,
ca r -

peting. Will sell parllolly
1

$6300. 30H73-5503.

ONE bedroom mobil
home, 304-675-4154.

8S

170iNG~

)

Need

something

MY BIG TOE
TELLS ME WE'RE

We' ll do il. Call 446-3159 or
614-286-5740 after 6.

IN FER A SPELL
OF BAD WEATHER,
PAW

Now Hauling limestone-fill

HAULING -Limestone, gra vel , sand. Ph. 742-2505.

min.l

]Closed

Comfort Muriel invites a
skid row bum to join the
family for
Thanksgiving

BARNEY

ha uled

8 fl. insulated truck topper .
Call 304-458-16114.

2 '
(jj) Danger UXB From
Masterpiece Theatre 'Unsung Heroes.' Brian confront s a bomb w edged in
the wall of a burning build ing and is reprimanded by
his senior o fficer for his
reckless handling of the

9:30 (I) ID !ill Too Close For

away or something moved?

Pleasant. 304-675-7360 .

(l) MOVIE : ' Look Back In
Anger'
Cil Bull' s Eye
C!J This Week in the NBA
(1) Carol Burnett and
Friends
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(1) Happy Days
0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
Cll (jj) Mac Nei l-Le hrer
Report
®I News
ID (l2l Family Feud
7 :30 0 Cil You Asked For It
Cil Another Life
(!) ESPN Sports Center
(I) Major league Base ball: New York Mets at
Atlanta
(I) 0 (I) Family Fe ud
(1) Laverne and Shirley
([) Business Report
®l Richard Simmons
(jj) MOVIE : ' His Girl
Friday'
UJ CI2I Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 0 (l) (1) Bob Hope
Birthday Special Bob celebrates his 79th birthday
from tha Un1ted States Na va l Acade my a t An napolis.
MD . (2 hrs .l
Cil MOVIE : 'The Ameri canization of Emily '
(I) National Geographi c
Special
C!J 1976 Wimbledon
Highlights
Cll ID (l2l Happy Days
Fonzie arranges for h1 s
grandmother to movo 1nt o
a retirement home. (R)
IClosed Ca plionedl
0 (I) @ The Book of
Usts Thi s variety hour fea tures inlerviews w1th people who form the bas1s on
w h1ch several o f the hst s
are compiled . (60 m1n.)
Cll Danger UXB From
Masterpiece Theatre 'Un sung Heroes ' Brian co nfront s a bo mb wedged in
the wa ll of a burning bwld ing and IS reprimanded by
his senior office r for h1 s
reck less handling of the
lit sk . (60 mm .) !Closed
CaptionedJ
8:30 Cll ID !ill Laverne and
Shirley Shirley finds herself
handcuffed to a fleeing
bank robber iRI \Clo sed
Cap11onedj
9:00 Cil MOVIE : ' La Cage Aux
Folies II'
(I) 700 Club
(!) Worid Figure Skating
Championships from Copenhagen
CIJ ID
(l2l
Three's
Company Jack, Janet and
Terri get en snarled tn a
tangle of misunderstand Ings \60 min .l
0 (I) MOVIE : ' Stand By
Your Man'
(]) American Playhouse
·o ppenheimer." The sc ientists of the M anhattan Projec t beg in lif e tn the Army
barrack s atmosphere o f
Los Alamos and Oppenheimer is given hi s security
clearance despit e rese rva tions about hi s past . (60
min.I]Ciosed Captioned]
®I MOVIE : 'Patton' Part

task . \60
Captioned]

General Hauling

dirt-lop soil -grave l. Free
estimates. Ca'll367 -7101.

Auto Repair

Quality Autobodv &amp; Paint
work. Professional custom
pain! work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446-19611 .

71----:-

Camping
Equipment

16' PULL camper, sleeps 6
or 8, see at 307 :~ollowoy St.
Henderson, WV.

1977 OLOS
Cfullass
Supreme, power steering,
power brakes, aulolmallc,
air conditioning, AM-FM 1963 TROTWOOD camper.
I
miles, ex- 14', sleeps six, electric
phone . brakes, $800. 304-773-5657 .

1977 Trailer, 14x70, 30.1-6751965.
:
1982 Nashau 14x70 with
7x2Q expa nd o, 2 bdr, 2
Jbalhs, fire pl ace, a ll e lec- ,

19n MERCURY Marquis,

4 door, a ·c, liCJOd·condllion.
See AI lggs or call· 304:675-

assumable ·

,loan. Call 304-576-2706,

Fo~ tale truck camper, 811.
may e11tras. Sleeps 6, exc.
cond., 11150. Coli 1-304-3382
5PM,

5733, 304-675-6628.

~ ~j~:;t;;;;;:;;:;:-;~~-;:;-;::;, dl l~e,;rl,-;-A;;;;~;;-~;;:
American

1971 SChultz all electric
bdr., air cond .• storm win- H
'&lt;tows, kitchen appliance,
$5,500. Call 675-.CCWl.
.l---:::-:=---- - -

TELL ME ,

MISS COOPER,
HOW'S MY
BROTHER's
BUSINESS

mP .M. Magazine

AN'MV ITCHY
VORE TOE
NOSE TELLS ME
AN'VORE
I'M FIX IN' TO
NOSE ARE
GITCOMPANY
BOTH RIGHT.
MAW

HERE
COMES A
BLAST OF
HOT AIR
TO VISIT
A SPELL

dinner . IRI

10:00 0 Cil Cll TV 's Greatest
Commercials

Ed

McMa -

hon and Tim Conway host
TV 's best and funniest
commercials . (60 min .)
(l) MOVIE: 'The Fan'
(I) ID (l2l Hart to Hart A
Jonathan Han look -a lik e
plots to take over the
Harts' corporate empire.

Yesterdays

II

Jumbles EMPTY ViSOR POLLEN FONOL y
Answer What overeatmg makes the torso -

" MORE SO"
Jumble BGOJ No. 20, conta ining 110 puules, is available tor $1.95 pos tpaid
from Jumble, cJo this newspaper, Do• 34, Norwood, N.J. 07646. Include your
name, address , zip code and make checks payable to Nawspaperbooh

BRIDGE
The professor returns
By Oswald Jacoby
a nd Al a n Sontag

I &amp; swivel rocker,
Call 446-7736.

' l l COOin .•

1980 CHEVETTE, 4 door
llafl:hback, $3975, 304-675·

~~~~~~~~n,-6,_5·----------~.J: _____________

(jj) Newswatch
10:30 Cil Sing out America
(!) '80 U.S . Open Golf
Hilltea
(I) TBS Evening News
(jj) Hitchcock

repaired .

Cut energy costs and
prevent
leaks
wllh
professional roof coaling, ' ·
also blocking and leveling . 1
and other services.
'
17

il

Upholstery .

TRISTATE
\ UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis,
446-7833 or 446· 1833.

v's

Upholstery Rt.
Pt. ~leasanl, 304·

.

'

..

''
J

., A K6.1
• 10 3

+ KQJ874
WEST
EAST
+K.1 ~
+Q IU 8 5

just s howed to th e st ude nt
with the ex plana ti on that It
is rather simpl e. but most
interesting

He pointed out th a t C:ast

., 8 4

., 5

• QJ9852
+ z

+A

7 62

t A74
IU ~

SO tiT II
+ A3

would have had no troub le

maki ng four spa des 1f he had
bee n a llowed to pl ay 11.
The n he pomted ou t that
with a spade lead Sou th
wo ul d w r ap up five hea rt s.
but wtth' a club lea d the
de fe nse could se t South two
tr icks.
Fina ll y, he as ked the stu den t thi s questiOn . " My part ner ope ned the deuce of

9 QJI09 72
t K6
• 6 53

Vulnerable · Netthcr

Dealer: North
West

North

East

South

3+

1+
4.,

1+
4+

59

Pa ss

Pa:-.s

!'as:-

clubs. Yo u ca n see that we
could have set South two
tricks How d1d 1t happe n

Open •n g lead

z•

+2

th at we on ly set htm one

tri ck?"
"Dtd your partne r m ake a
mt stak e'" asked th e st ud ent
"No, a nd I didn 't ett her.
althoug h my pla y cost us a

his ace of diam onds before

tn ck." r eplied t he Professor

at tr ick two the chances
were th at West would have
tried to put hun tn wtth a
spade Sou th thl·n would
have take n ht s &lt;.tCe. drawn
trumps and madt· ht s 11 trick co ntract

gtvmg the club ruff
As he exp la1ned . 1f he had
s tmply led the mne of cl ubs

The stude nt was the n ab le
to work out how t he defen se
had gone. See if you ca n do
the same.
T he Prof took hi s ace of

clubs a nd proceeded to cas h

~tW'M'~t~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
40 Belgian

ACROSS
I Fencer's cry
5 As of now
10 Surfeit
11 Lofty
12 Indian city
t3 Mick
Jagger's ex
14 Sea (Fr .)
15 Youngster
16 "Uttle I know"
t7 Postulate
t9 Hawaiian
game
ZO Word
with s ilver
21 Kent's
fellow
reporter
2% With regret
%4 Egyptian

river
DOWN
I Disney pooch
2 Horatio

3 Cup of
cheer, e.g.

I Bralunan

"'

Yesterday's Answer

title

5 Let -

15 Loyalist
t8 Blanch
2t Lummox
22 Disgrace
23 Golde n
24 " Fan Tutti "
28 Sword lvar.l

(ignore)
&amp;U.S . gov't.
agy . in WWII
1 Be in heaven
SOld
9 Prepares
11 Demean

28 Bard's
work
29 Billiard
s hot
30 Take part in
35 Philippine
tree
36 King (Sp.l

Ouistians
!5 Remedy
!&amp;Fog
Z'l Nigerian

tribesman
28 Amusement
3t Original
32 Kimono sash

33 11 Brandy - "
34 Temper
36 Respite
37 Military

conunand
38 To be (Lat.)
39 Gildersleeve 's
nepbew

DAILY CR'YPTOQUOTE II

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

it :

One letter simply stands for another. In this sa mple A is
used for the three L's, X for th e two o ·s, e t c. Single le tters,
apoatrophes, the length and form a ti on of the word• are all
biota. Each day the code lett ers are differe nt .

11 :00 0 Cil Cll 0 Ill liD Ill en

PEANUTS

M, H, Repair

t4

some time, but is back with
us again. Here is a hand he

Cll Firing Une

11 you need your trash
hauled away, call Harper .,l
. 304-675-5868 between I PM __.
and 5 P . M. Lawn mower

~ - :l~ - 82

NOillll

The Professor has been
away on a sa bbati ca l for

tioned]

JJMS Water Servic.e . Call
. Jim Lanier, 304-675-7397.

"CIIIIIr
(An swers tomorrow)

\AI 160 min.l ]Closed Cap-

Furnished Mobile Home. 3

nished. 304-675-7907 .

MEANWHILE.. ,

Pomeroy . 992-2284.

master 50 h.p. Mercury JONES BOYS WATER
motor ,
trailer , elect . . SERVICE . Call 367-7471 or
trolling motor, aux. motor, 367-0591.
many extra's. Like new.

77

1971 Shultz 12x65, gas hea t,

OVER THAT RACKET
COioiiH' FROM TH'

RON'S Tel evi sion Ser v ice.
Specia li zin g in Zenith and
Motoro la , Quaz ar, and
hou se ca ll s. Phone 576-2398

J IMS Pest Con t rol. Call us

Chris Crall Constellation

stock .

I CAN'T I6R NOTHIN'

LICEI'ISE ••

-- -

1975 Buick LeSabre. 747 2605.
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less ex pensive cars in

-HEAR YfHOT, "BULL

SAI'IDV 15 EISEI'!HERE-HA~IH6
TROUBLE WI'Tli THE LOCK 00 THE
006NAPPER' S PEN -

Gene Smith , 992 -6309.

___ Mo!~ ~ y~ les_ •

74 C B 360
75

IF SAHD'f'S IN M'RE -

Ge ne's St ea m
Ca rpet
Clean -Scotch Gaurd-Free
est ima t es-spring specia ls-

ADVANCED

747·7143 .

1978 Mu s tang
Farmall C with 2 bottom

'I•

miles. 304·773-5150.

1981 Chevelle, 1 door. 4

Ca ll446·7767 .

~-

ton 4-wheel ·drive, PS, A M ·
F M , regular gas, 30,000

1980 Bl azer full y equi ped,
$6 ,500. Ca ll446-3108.

- BUT EVEI'\IF
HE /5- l OOH'T
THINK. 1 HAVE
ENOUGH t#OtiEY
T' PAY FOR A

F &amp;

plates. Ca ll 446·3147 or 446·
7735.

4340.

A PHON'!' ...

3818.

0347 or 446·9450.

1972 Bui ck 4 dr . Sedan, ex.
cond .. good tir es. Ca ll 446-

~

$2575.00

1974 Camara with 76 sm a ll
engi ne, new paint, new
tires, new c rome si de

2 bdr . trai ler furni shed,
adults only, Brown Trailer
Park, 992·3324.

2820.

furnished or unfurnished,

79 C HEVY Lu v, with lop·

73 --

exc. gas mil eage, $1150.

- 1 G\l:SG I COULD JUST
Mill. TH' DOGCATCHER

Special M arc h and April
. only . Gene's Deep Steam
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Free estim ate. 992·6309

ton . V -8 auto., p .s., new

pai n! . $1.600. 446-0347.

1/JITCJ-\

1 bed trail e r . Call 379·2435 .

mobil e home, 3 bedrooms,
excellent condit ion, 304-675·

new

1975 Dodge 0100 c lub ca b 'I•

1974 Datsun 710 Wagon ,

tr ade . 997·5170 .

Farm Supplies
&amp; bl!leSID£1!

I nternation a I 2 Ton

rebuilt engine, good run ·
ning cond . Ca ll 245-9591.

- ----- ----

BEND IX

1967

l:AIA SB"LL£t:K. ..
TALL ,ABOJ\
'31¥.- touR,

ANNIE

before 8 a nd afte r 5 : 30.

Truc k, $750. 367 7533 .

lDWN-\D
CALL 11-\AT

wrrn

For sa le 1977 Ford 700 ser., roofing , siding, spouting,
cab &amp; chassi e very good · f encing, painting, r epairs &amp;
con dition , $4,000. Ca ll ~46 - cleaning . 446 -2000, ca ll
4119, 7 :00·4:30.

H,AJlD50M5 ...
'3CRr 0 1= Ll t&lt;£-

l\410&lt;,VJ..~'f' AAIR ..

CHRISTIAN 'S
CO N STRUCTION .
Constr .,

Truck's lor Sale

71

81 DATSUN Truck, phone
304·675· 1751.

in Crown Ci ty. Ca ll 7566570.

304-576-2711 .

1977 Mustang II , tu ·tone
custom gold, hatchback. Masonary work , Lbgue
Rt.
1.
AC , tour speed, CB, custom Co ntra c ting ,
. Ewington . Ca ll 388·9939.
whee ls. $3500. 675-7635.

Autos for Sale

Furn. 2 bdr . mobile hom e

Li ce nsed &amp; in sured . Ca ll

- -- - - - - -

FA1HER LOOK L/1&lt;£
'.'.li-IEIJ l Fii'ST
M£-HIIM ... ?

Thursday only .

.. :na.HIE MD

TERRIBL'i

'MIAT DID ;\?Jf2-

1978 M e r c ur y Bob cat.
stat ion wagon, V ·6 engine,
exce ll e nt
co nditi on . penlry. Ca ll 446-7376 for
free est imat e, Monday thru
$7700.00. 304·675·3317.

per , new tires , new sti cke r ,

71

vr ..

Dee p freezer &amp; fuel oil
la nk . Ca ll 379·7435.

OH, HE:- IJJ/6

- - - ------

good co ndition
304· 713· 5503

675 3945 .

7298 .

piano, $500 . Blue &amp; go ld

Ca ll388-9767 .

pi c ked up at plant . Bie n·

0338 .

MOBILE HOME S MOVED

•tric, $2,000 &amp;

Sonia' s Prof essional Dog
Groom ing. Cal l 614 -388·8547
and ask for Son ia .

r eg istered. No Checks, 304·

1975 Case 450, dozer ·
tract or, 1,800 hrs .. ve r y
good co nd ., $14,900. Ca ll
446·4537

Ruth Ree ves, Hoof Hollow .!
614-698·3290.

BORN LOSER

Expert remode l ing, additions, al l form of car ·

-~--

5930, Jackson , Oh . RON
EVA NS ENTERPR ISES

pa ny . 614-992·7705 .

Ni ce fu r ni shed mobil e
home, cent r al air, 1 mi.
below ci ty ove r looking
rive r , .::~d ult s only . Ca ll 446·

HOME .

POODLE GROOM ING .
Ca ll Jud y Taylor a t 3677770.

31. Ca ll 756 1361.

Gasoline and hea ting fuel.
Call Excelsior Oil Com -

Mobile hom e for rent . Ca ll
446-42 25 or 446-0756.

to apprec iate. 304·773·5680.

Ca ll 388·9790.

Plas ti c Sep ti c Tank s. St ate
and county app r oved . 1,000
ga l. t ank, price $340 . Other
sizes in stock , haul in your
pickup tr uck . Cal l 614·286·

694-7847 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

42

Boardi ng a nd grooming .
AK C
Gordon
sette r s,
Eng l ish Cocke r Spani e l s.

Ca ll 379-7671.

46

Pom eroy 2
bd . room ,
remod e led, 408 Spring .
Car peted , sec ur i ty depos i t .

446 1794

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

Regi sterfld and gr.::~ded hor ·
ses, excellent 4-H proi ec t .
Engli sh and western sad·
dies ·
every thin g
imaginable in horse equip·
ment and supplies, also•
r iding lessons and trail
rides and horse training .

74

Hou se 4 r. &amp; bath, new l y
r emod el ed, loca ted 1701 112

4 bedroom , ce ntr al air and
heat , c 1ty water , f ir epla ce,
unfurnished except
k it chen . $300 month plu s
util ities. Reference and
deposit
r equ ired .
In
Racine . 949 -2293 .

Price reduced For sa le or
ren t. 12x60 2 bedroom
mobi le home w i t h 2 lots.
Gas heat, rural wa ter .
Close to c1 ty l imits. Ca ll

Misc . M e-rc handic e

Ca ll alter 4PM, 446·3065.

APARTME NT
in
Pl easa nt , 6 14·446877 1.

675 5386.

Call Sk id mor e for mobile
homes moved . Green lawn
Tra nsport . Ca ll 446·'1783
days. 4-46 -3479 even ings .
L 1ce nsed &amp; i nsured

mobile

home s,
ho u ses,
Pt .
Pl easan t and Ga ll ipol is.
614· 446 822 1 or6 14·245 9484 .

fi rep laces, good neigh ·
borhood . Call 675·5104 or

CLEA N USED MOB ILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUAL IT Y
MOBILE
HOME SALES , 4 MI .
WES T, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 . PHONE 446 3868 .

washer,dryer,

7143

3 bdrm hou se, cen t . ai r , 2

7571.

73

Unfurnished 3 bd .room .
Stove and refrigera tor fu r ·
nished. 739 2nd . St . Mid
dleport . A ft er 5 cal l 992

5 r
house on r~ver ,
beautiful view, priva cy,
$275 . per mo. plu s deposit.
Ca ll 446 49 22 aft er 5: 30 or
weeke nds.

TRI · S TATE
MOBILE
HOMES
USED·MOBI LE
HOMES , CARS, TRU CKS .
GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK
OUR PRI CES . CALL 446

54

RATLIFF'S POOL CE N·

Centenary 3 Bdr ., 2 bath ,
new bric k, adu lts, no pe ts.
Ca ll I 643 2644 . Ref. &amp;
deposi t .

Mobile Hom es
for Sale

RCA Solid Sta te 100 Con

e lu ded . 992-7177 .

Rea lt y. 446·0008

304 675 3179.

14 x7 0

Houses for Rent

Hom es for Rent , Lease or
Land co ntract in town or
co untry .
Ca ll
Strout

Three bedroom hou se, 1/z
basement, 11/J acre ground

19 76,

1 bedroom furni shed apt . in
M idd leport
Util i t ies in

675·5386.

HOUSE . loca ted in Pt
Pleasant, 3 bedrooms, cen·
lra l ai r , lull basement. 8
percen t f inanci ng, we will
co n sider
tr ad in g
f or
property or taki ng mobi le
home for down payment,
any reasonable offer con
side red . Call304 895 -3444.

USED MOBILE
576·2711.

Part ia lly fu rn i shed . 4
room s and bath . 992·5908 .

3 bdr house, apt s, com ·
mercial highwa sy fran ·
tage . Call 304 675-5104 or

304 675 7713.

32

1 bdr . apt . in Rio Grande. I
block f rom col lege . Call af·
te r 5, 145·9 171.

TWO acre lots 150 f t. road
front age , c ity
wa t e r ,
behind 84 Lumber , ca ll 304·

304-675· 1547.

so le. Could be fixed or used
for parts . 446 -4173 .

Furn . 2 bdr . ga rage ap t
Dep. &amp; ref . r equir ed . No
c hildren. See at 1100 2nd .
Ave ., Ga ll ipoli s.

10 acres at Rio Grande on
Ce nterpoint Rd . Rura l
wa ter . 614·262 ·59 16.

Hou se, Meadowbrook Ad ·
d it ion, 3 bedroom. fam il y
room with firepla ce, cen ·
trat air. basement. Phone

7PM .

__ Eq u !f~ent

65 Watt Kenwood r ece iver
$375 . K ·960 Yam aha casset ·
te dec k $400. Cr a ig be lt
Furnished apt ., 3 bdr ., drive turntabl e $190. 1 pr.
adu lt s, $175. Share ba t h, 75 watt Realisti c speakers
util ties paid. Ca ll 446·4416 . $200 or com plet e system for
$900 . Ca ll 675·76 14 alter 9
after 7PM.
p. m .

For sa le one and ha lt acres
more
or
less,
ap ·
3
bedroom
house,
remodeled . Will se ll on · proximately 600 It road
frontage
on
Co ra ·
land contract wi th Mobile
Ce nterpoi nt Rd . near Cen·
Home, auto .. etc. as down
payment . Pomeroy . 304- terpo int. $3,000 .00 Phone

7466

52

Furnished ap t ., 3 bdr., $195,
wate r paid . Ca ll -446 ·4416 af
ter 7 PM

1294 .

7834 .

887

Also AKC Reg . Dobe r ma ns . Ca ll 446·7795 .

CB,TV, Radio

Furni shed eff ici en cy . $135,
ut it ties pd . Share bath ,
adu l t s. Ca ll 4.46-4416 after

1535.

Creative wood decks,
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
redwood . Free es timate .

D

Now arrange the Circled lener s 10
form the surpnse answer. as sug
gested by the above cartoon

Print answer here:

(fil Lilias, Yoga and You
ID (l2l ABC News

1976 Plymouth Scamp, six
cy linder, power steering,
automatic , 51295. 304·576·

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

&lt; ,..,

6 :00 o mm o m® ID (l21

interior and
terior,
plumbing ,
roofing , some remodel ing.

~ ~ ~~ ~

.......··--=--· ··-·" ..

5/25/82
EVENING

ss --suiiding supplies

New log home on river

TUESDAY

TUCCO : PLASTERING

Hom emade
s f ee l
c lothes l in e post, st ee l
swi ng sets. 675-3677 .

7080

Television
•
•
v1ewmg

by Larry Wright

Baby bottle sterilizer set,

front

1}fjl)'i.\.ft fj)'i} j'jlt THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

I

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News
MOVIE: 'Tho Man
With Bogart'o Face'
Cil Nashville RFD
(!) ESPN Spom Center
(1) Newa/Spom/Wetlthor
Ill Dick Cavett
1 1 :30 8 (l) (1) Tonight Show
Jonnny is joined by Suz ~
anna Ptashetto. (60 min.l
Cil MOVIE: 'Deeth Hunt'
(J) Another Ufe
(]) All In the F8111lly
(]) Benny HIU Show
• (])Allee

CRYPTOQUOTES

Cil

THAT'S THE DUMBEST

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I'VE EVER HEARD I I

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IT'S HARD TO BEAT A GOOD, BIG MISTAKE.--SOURCE
UNKNOWN

�,,.•,
Page

10-The Daily Sentinel

Campanella wants to restore .
,.
'

Judge ends
23 cases
Eighteen defendants were lined
and live others forfeited bonds In
Meigs County Court recently.
Fined by Judge Patrlck O'Brten
were Leslie Burnette, Cincinnati,
$24 and costs, speed; Bobby Porter,
Rutland, $100 and costs, reckless
operation; Thomas Roush, MlnersvUie, $10 and costs, stop sign; Joel
GUpln, Ashland, Ky., $19 and costs,
speed; Steven Frantz, Smlthv1lle,
$22 and costs, speed; Dora Hysell,
Long Bottom, $10 and costs, assured clear distance; Lois Hager,
Pomeroy, $22 and costs, s(ieed;
Charles Wilson, Middleport, $52
and costs, overweight; Doris
Starcher. Middleport, $5 and costs,
no mu!fler; Wilbert Lowe, Little
Hocking, $21 and costs, speed;
Bobby Searls, Ravenswood, Sll
and costs, permit violation, $577
and costs, oveiWelght; Daniel Taylor. Middleport, $25 and costs.
speed; John Evans, Rutland, $25
and costs, littering; Nlcklous Leonard, Jr., Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
following too close; Dwaine E.
AJJen, Pomeroy, $150 and costs,
three days confinement, license
suspended ~days, right to drive to
a nd from work, DWI; Yvonne S.
Young, Pomeroy, $21 and costs,
speed; Henry 0. Smith, Rt. I,
Reedsville, Sll and costs, !allure to
stop for school bus discharging passengers; Steve Haning, Harrlsonv1lle, $50 and costs, dlsorderly
conduct.
Forfeiting bonds were Glenn R.
Bissell, Long Bottom, $45.50, illegal
load ; Thomas A. McVey, Winfield
and WalterS. Smith, Mason, $50.50
each, speed; Mitchell Chapman,
Pomeroy, $45.50, expired operators
license; Mike E . McDonald, Pomeroy. $45.50, Ulegal rear bumper.

Driver faces
reckless
charge
Alan K. Partlow. Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy. was charged with
reckless operation and possession of
a controlled subsl&lt;lnce, following an
accident Sunday ·on West Main St. ,
Pomeroy .
Pomeroy police r.e port that Partlow was traveling east on West
Main Street when he lost control of
his vehicle which left the right side
of the highway, crossed the
sidewalk. and traveled 169 feet
before coming to rest against
another embankment.
Also under investigation by
Pomeroy police is a hit-skip accident
on Mulberry Ave. Police report that
Sharon Cunningham of Syracuse
was traveling south on Mulberry
when a car going north sideswiped
her vehicle causing moderate
damage .
Police are also investigating the
disappearance of a !!l-inch color
television set from the storage room
at Veterans Memorial Hospital and
an incident at the Vtllage Green
Apartments where Susan Yerian's
car was scratched on the passenger
side. top and trunk.

Tuesday, May 25, 198*:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

confidence to auditor's post

~

....

I

AUDITOR'S CANDIDATE - VIncent Cwnpanella, standing, RepubUcan candidate for Ohio auditor, dlscus8es some Issues with Dale
Rothgeb Jr., Ohio Valley PubHshlng Co. news editor, during Campanella's visit with Gallipolis Dally Tribune stall Monday. CampaneUa feels
leadership and confidence need to be restored In the auditor's job In
Ught of the recent S1.3 mUll on theft from the state treasury unearthed In
an lnvestlgatlon.

VIncent C. Campanella wants to
restore confidence In the Ohio audl·
tor's office, a confidence he feels
has been seriously eroded under
the administration of present auditor Thomas E . Ferguson.
Campanella, 39, the only declared candidate lor the Republican nomination lor the job, stopped
In Pomeroy and Galllpolls Monday
afternoon durtng a pre-prtmary
campalgn tour o! southern Ohio.
Presently a Cuyahoga County
commissioner, Campanella said
he's "uniquely qualllled" lor the position because of a diverse range of
experience In accounting on the
pubUc level - former Cuyahoga
auditor, deputy county auditor, and
budget director and Ia w director
for Cleveland during the administration of Mayor Ralph Perk In the
1970s.
"! worked very hard to save the
people of Cuyahoga County money," he said, "and I feel we have a
better opportunity to save now at
the state leveL"

.··•

ury audits In 1977 and 19'78, said Fer!
guson told Donahey she had a smaU
surplus. However, another audit
wasn't conducted until 16 month!!
later, which Campanella said Is a
·
violation of state law.
In the 1980 audit, which showed
the $1.3 mllllon shortfall, Fergusoo
blamed It on Inadequate record;
keeping procedure. In other word$;
Ferguson was pass~ the bliune
onto Donahey for his !allure to COf\·
duct an audit, Campanella
claimed..
.
Campanella feels Ferguson Js
hurting the credlblllty o! his office
through this and an alleged two per;
cent kickback his employees make
to a Ferguson slush fund. "Even his
employees are disgusted with
him," he said.
"I think what we need Is a leader;
who'll work with schools and cities
to help them save money," Campanella said. "We don't need a 'gotcha' kind of auditor who spends hJs
time Issuing press releases."

Campanella feels the state Is suffering from on~ntry accounting
which has placed cities and school
dlstrtcts In the "dark ages."
He said the state now only accounts for Its cash Items, material
bought at the moment. He said a
double entry procedure- accountIng for future, planned purchases
- Is more efficient and worked
under his audltorshlp In Cuyahoga
County.
A doubl~ntry system allows lor
an accurate reflection o! the state,
county or city's financial position,
he said, keeping better track of
expenditures.
One o! the main points o! Campanella's campaign - because he's
running against an Incumbent - Is
reminding the public the $1.3 rn!lllon theft from the state treasury
revealed by a state Investigation revealed Incompetence not on the
part of Gertrude Donahey, the state
treasurer, but that of auditor
Ferguson.
Campanella, quoting from treas-

Zones 1, 2, 3, 4, WS, NS

.---.:

~The saving Place

'"""" · · """'""' ...J1r-~S~A~-L-E~•.~~--=AL~L
=:::::1
fUR NITU RE

Area deaths
Wilma Buckley
Mrs. Charles (Wilmal Buckley,
78, 919 Braun Ave., Belpre, died
Saturday at her residence following
a lengthy illness.
Born at Long Bottom in Meigs
County, she was the daughter of the
late Benjamin F. and Margaret Bell
Milhoan, Whiteside. She was a member of the Belpre Church of Christ.
She is survived by her husband of
59 years. Charles Virgil Buckley,
two sons, Paul G. Buckley, Coolville,
and Howard A. Buckley, Marietl&lt;l :
two daughters, Mrs . Charles
!Phyllis) Ayers, Belpre, and Mrs.
Harold I Mary Helen I Humphrey,
Belleville, W. Va .: a brother, Hobart
Whiteside , Parkersburg, and two
sisters, Mrs. Cora Souliea, Akron.
and Mrs . Esl&lt;l Guillaurn, Kansas
City, Mo.: five grandchildren, four
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were today at 11
a. m. at the Vaughan Funeral Horne
at Parkersburg, W. Va. with Ronald
D. Laughery and Jack E. Thorn offieiating . Burial wa:s in Reedsville

Cemetery.

Stella Kloes
Stella E. Kloes, 89, 147 Mulberry
Ave.. Pomeroy, died Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Daughter of the late Abe A. and
Mary Reinhart Massar, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Norman L. Kloes. Surviving are a
sister, Hilda McLain, Lancaster ;
niece Mrs. J . W. Shaw, Amherst,
Mass., and two nephews, Manning
Kloes, Middleport, and Robert
Kloes, Marietta; several cousins,
great-nieces and great-nephews.
She was a member of Trinity

Cl~~~eral services will be held at 3

p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with burial in the
BeechGrove Cemetery. The Rev. W.
H. Perrin will officiate. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2 to 4
p.m. and from 7 to9 p.m.

IN OUR
SJQ REl.

_- _-··- - ..........-

. -·-···-............. .
~--·· ·-·--·..,...·-.·--···
....··-···-·-·-"·
....
.........
_,_
.
.. ·-·-"'· ,__..,....·-..,,..
..................
- ................
0.. ..... - - ............ _

'

-~-··
........
.

.. ....

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

Louise M. Matlack
Louise M. Matlack, 57, Tuppers
Plains, died TUesday morning at
St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg,
following a brief Ulness.
Mrs. Matlack was born In Burmlngham, AJa., thedaughtero!the
late Austin and Ada Barkley Kendrick. She was also preceded In
death by one sister Mia Price.
She Is survived by her husband,
Carl Matlack; !our brothers, Lloyd,
Harry, Jack and Roger Kendrick o!
Burmlngham; live sisters, Polly
Cost! tan, Patsy Grover, Peggy Carney, Shirley Swisher, and Linda
Kendrick, all o! Burmlngham.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home In Coolville. Rev.
Gary Taylor will officiate. Burial
will be In the Christian Church
Cemetery, Tuppers Plains.
Friends may call at the funeral
home alter 2 p.m. on Wednesday.

011 Our Reg. Price

Charcoal In 20-lb. • Bag
Quick -lighting briquets
make your cookouts easy'
'Nerwr

1. 33

"'~'i Y
FRIDAY ~~\\C:.~'\·l..r.cOA

t1:\t"~t~ ~-

Bernard Pennington
Word has been received of the
death o! the Rev. Bernard R. Pennington, 48, o! 175 N. Taylor Ave.,
Oak Park, ru., son of 01 J. Penning·
ton, Silver Ridge Road, Reedsv1lle.
Memorlal services wlll be announced later.

"

11 ~\\\

WHEN:

Our Reg . l78

300 Paper Napkins

Absorbent 1-ply napktns
ll "ltox13'12" eo Whtte. colors.

9A.M. TIL5 P.M.

Reg,

Our
Reg.
68¢

.Our

WHAT: ALL FURNITURE

23.7737

15

4A!ve
~5%

~~vd

50 Hot/Cold Cups

Insulated Coolef

Plastic foam cups
for hot and cold
drinks. 6.4-oz. size.

Polysty rene cooler
with urethane foam
insulation 35 qt '

HOW MUCH:

Musicial slated
A musical " Teen" will be presented by the Southern Junior High
School students Tuesday at 8 p.m. in
the high school auditorium. Mrs. Lee
Lee is the director. Admission will
be $1 for adults and 50 cents for
students.

...

f .

Veterans Memorial
ADMISSIONS-- -Vera Luckett,
AJbany; May Gilkey, Middleport;
Robert Richard, CUlton; Linda Imboden, Racine; Bernard Mlthoan,
Long Bottom; Jesse Plantz, Middleport; Mary Fryer, Middleport,
NeUle Denny, Mason.
DISCHARGES---Riley McClelland, Clarence Longstreth.

HONORED at a roast and dinner Monday night at Meigs IDgh School
was Jwnes Diehl, principal at Meigs mgb School who Is retiring after 37
years as an educalor.Pictured are Mr. and Mrs. Diehl foOowtng the
evening's activities.

FATHER'S DAY
SALE

REASON:
NEED
CASH

88

ePkg

Choice Of Tasty Cookies
Great for lunches and snacking. l2-to-12'h-oz.' packages
'Netwt

PRICE

Emergency runs
Six runs were made by local
emergency units Monday the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reported.
At 2:02p.m. Tuppers Platns was
called to Chester lor Bernard Mll·
hoan who was laken to Veterans
Memortal Hospital; at 1: 48 p.m.
Middleport was called to Pearl
Street lor Clara Riley who was
laken to Galllpolls Medical Plaza;
at 5: 12 a.m. Middleport was called
to Sycamore Street tor Cindy Smith
who was laken to Pleasant Valley.
At 4:~ p.m. Middleport was
called to SR 143 lor Tina Rl1lle who
was taken to Holzer Medical Ceo·
ter; at 8: ~ p.m. Mlddleport was
called to Maple Street lor William
Plantz who was taken to Veterans
Memorlal Hospital; at 10: 14 p.m.
Middleport was called to Locust
Street tor Mary Fryer who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Give him
the most
comfortable
seat in the
house! We've
got a huge
selection
of sumptuous
vinyl and velvet
recliners
... just for Dad!

Mime

Dad
Glad
with a
New

Father's Day Sale Prices on our complete
-stock of Recliners, Rockers, Swivel Rockers
and Rocker/Recliners.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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

WtiERE:

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITU.RE
240 THIRD AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Sale Price

~ayside
F~rnlture

..

•

1.57~~~e

K marr Instant Tea Mix
A favorite with tea drinkers
ln~tant tea in 3-ounce· size.

..,.,..,

3

48 Reg.
0ur

•

4 .57

Sale
Price

50 Trash Can Linen

4 Rolls Bathroom Tissue

Liners fit 20-30-gal. cans.
15-mil p lastic . 30x37".

Soft. 1-ply tissue. Each roll has
500 sheets. ea. 4.5x4.4".

7.77 ~~~ee

Kodak" PR·IO"Instant Film

Single pock yetlds 10 instant
color pnnts Save at K mo~ .

THANK YOU FOR SHOPPING AT K MART

�</text>
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