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                  <text>entinel
1 Sect10ns, 16 Pages 15 Cenh
A Multim.dia Inc . Newtpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 1, 1982

Reagan rej'ects anns freeze

NUCLEAR CONCERNS - President Reagan faces reporters during
a news conference in the East Room of the White House Wednesday
evening. The president, in his first prime-time news conference, rejected
any immediate freeze of U.S. and Soviet nuclear weapons. lAP Laserphoto)

WASHINGTON (AP) ·~ Pres.dent superiority" favoring the Soviets.
"The Soviets' great edge is one in
Reagan is trying to blunt a
congressional drive for an im- which !bey could absorb our
mediate nuclear arms freeze by retaliatory blow and hit us apain,"
saying it would leave the United he said.
Hatfield and other proponents of
States dangerously behind the Soviet
an
immediate freeze reacted coolly.
Union and prompt the Kremlin to
"When he Iillis about the Russians
spurn real weapons reductions.
Reagan, declaring in a nationally being able to absorb a retaliatory
broadcast news conference Wed- strike, that indicates fa ntasyland
nesday there could be no winner in a thought or feeling," the Republican
nuclear war, also invited.the Soviets senator said .
Reagan threw his support to a
" to join with us now to substantially
reduce nuclear weapons and make rival resolution, backed by a
an important breakthrough for majority in the Senate, that would
not block his plans to deploy new
lasting peace."
The Kremlin, responding today on strategic bombers, missiles and subRadio Moscow, said, "The president marines pending a Soviet-America n
supported a speedier buildup of U.S. accord on anns reduction.
On El Salvador, the President
strategic armaments, including new
bombers and ground-and sea-based said, with a right-wing coalition apparently emerging in El Sa lvador,
nuclear missiles.
"Only when that was completed, any attempt to retreat from current
he said, would his administration reforms there "would give us great
begin talks with the Soviet Union on difficulties" in continuing support
nuclea r weapons. This proves for the Central American nation.
The president, in his first public
President Reagan's intention to
~reak ;trategic
parity and to comment on Sunday's elections in
the strife-torn country, said the
~chieve military . superiority over
the Soviet Union," the statement voting "really showed that there is a
real desi re for democracy there, and
said.
Reagan said Wednesday night that I am therefore going to be optimistic
the nucleat freeze proposa l by Sens. about what happens."
Asked whether the admi nistration
Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., and Edward
M. Kennedy, ().Mass., would main- would back away from supporting
ta in a "defi nite margin of any government in El Salvador that

abandons social refonns instituted
by th~. current (J .S.-backed military-

civi lian junta led by Jose Napoleon
IContinued on Page II)

THAT WAY - President Reagan gestures during his news coo·
ference from the East Room of the White House Wednesday evening. The
president discussed his budgt•l, com·erns over El Salvador and the potential for U.S. and Soviet nuclear arms reductions. I AP Laserphotol

$50,000 fire hits stove company
Name Eichinger assistant coach
Don Eichinger was named assistant baseball coach when the
Eastern Board of Education met Wednesday evening.
The board also employed Nancy Carnahan to assist in the
treasurer's office for a period of 60 days. They also employed Carl
Snider as a substitute teacher.
They approved a field trip to Columbus for members of the special
education classes and gave approval for the homemakers to attend the
state convention.
The board also put up for bid aschool .llus and table saw. Bids on
each will be opened at the next board meeting on April15.

Firefighters extinguish blaze
MONTZ, La. - Firefighters battling intense heat and sheets of
flames fueled by gushing oil early today extinguished a spectacular
blaze sparked when a tanker collided with a tug and three barges on
the foggy Mississippi River.
The fire aboard the Liberian tanker Arkos was put out with foam
this morning, but oil was still leaking from the tanker at a rate of 3 to 4
gallons a minute, said Coast Guard Lt. Tim Sullivan. The tanker was
brimming with 350,000 barrels of Mexican crude oil when it collided
with the tug Wednesday night.
No serious injuries were reported.
The flames from the fire shot hundreds of feet into the sky, and the
glow was visible 25 miles dowl1river in New Orleans.

Higher meat prices hike bills
CHICAGO- Led by higher meat prices, grocery bills rose by almost
1 percent last month, according to an Associated Press marketbasket
survey.
The AP also found that the cost of a sample of food and non-food
items increased I§ percent during the first quarter of 1982, a sharp
contrast to the 3.6 percent decline in prices in the same period of 1981.
The survey covered 14 commonly purchased products, selected at
random. The items originally were priced at one supermarket in each
of 13 cities on March I, 1973 and have been repriced on or about the
start of each succeeding month.
The latest survey showed that the marketbasket bill went up at the
checklist store in nine cities during March and declined in four cities.

Avalanche kills three, 7missing
SQUAW VALLEY, Calif. - An avalanche during a fierce snowstorm
killed three people and left seven missing when it smashed into a ski
resort that had been closed because of too fl\Uch snow, authorities
said.
A tw()-story WQrkers' building at the snowbound Alpine Meadows
resort was destroyed in the avalanche Wednesday and shoved into the
main lodge, smashing one wall, authorities said. Four people suffered
cuts and bruises.
Another snow slide blocked the road to the resort and rescuers used
skis and dog sleds to reach the victims.

Whining Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Wedesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 632.a

, The lottery reported earnings of $422,503 from the wagering on its

daily game. The earnings came on sales of $955,872, ~htle holders of
winning tickets are entiUed to share $533,369, lottery offtctals satd.

l·Weather fotecast
Increasing cloudiness tonight. . Lows near 40. Considerable
·· ' cloudiness Friday with afternoon showers and thunderstorms likely.
Highs in the low 70s. Chance of rain l)ear zero percent tonight and 60
. percent Friday, Winds light and variable tonight.
' ~Dded Oblo Forecut ·

SaturdaythroulhMOIIdlly: ·
c~ ol . .en aDd tbwldenlormll Saturday 8lld &amp;bowen Sun&lt;.Wy. Moetly falrMOIIdlly. HJcbiSaturday Ill tbe•aad l0W11 moetlylll
A~ 411, Ceoier liaDI!aY aDd Moadlly wltb blp. Ill tbe 411 SWidlly aDd
pikW11 to ullNII MGiiday. ,IAwl in #le 281 ~y lllOI'IIluc aDd JDid.

2111tomkWIIeari)'MeailaY•

. &gt;"'

:: • ,

Losses were estimated at $50,000
as the result of a fire which hit the
Appalachian Stove Co. in Columbia
Township early Thursday morning.
Fire Chief Charles Legar said
Pomeroy firemen were called to the
scene at 12:23 a.m. and reported
lnck to their station at 2: 15 a.m. A
;lructure housing some 30 to 40
stoves sold by the company was
engulfed in flames when firemen
arrived. The building was leveled,
but firemen saved other structures
nearby.
There was a little insurance
coverage, Legar said.
Cause of the blaze has not been
determined. There was no heating
system or electricity in the building,

Legar reports, eliminating those two
factors as a cause of the fire. There
were 15 firemen, two trucks. an
equipment truck and an emergency
vehicle from the Pomeroy department on the scene.
Meanwhile , James Clarence
Jones, 57, Wintersville, is being held
in Monroe County at Woodsfiled, on
breaking and entering charges, the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
reported.

County at a li-lkr date . •Jone s 1 ~ Cilsu

The breaking and enterings occurred in Sept. 1981 at the homes of
Wallace Damewood, Char les
Williams, Howard Parker and Mark
Mora in Meigs County .
Jones will be returned to Meigs

in severallocatlUns. A lar ~~t· tile on il
well was pushed uver as well as vandalism tn the elt·ctru: company
meter.
The departm l'nt 1s also Ill·
vestigating tlw theft uf an L'lght hor-

•

-·

wanted fo r breaking

Hll

entcrings

that occurred in West Virg1nia.

The department is in ves tigall ng
an act nf vandali sm thCJI nccurred

Monday to a trailer owned by frank
Cleland located on a farm on Mile
Hill
The wcu.Jt:nt occurred Munda y
between 12:30 p.nL and 2:30 (l .ll l . 11
was reported that lw n subjects

broke 14 windows, cut the l'lect rical
wire and also cut barbed wm..! fen ce

sepower Sea rs Rota tillcr, two 15 foot
log chams and two chain binders
that were take n from the ba rn of
James Sm1th. Sharon Holl ow Road,
Rt. 1. Portland.
The depa rtment investigated an
accident that occurred Wednesday
at 11 a .m. on SR 124 in Lebanon
Townslup.
Thomas M. Theiss. Rt. 3, Racmr
was tra veling cast on 124, hauling
hay , one of the bales fell off and wa'
struck by a veh1cle tra veling east

dri ven by Donald K. Carpenter, Rt.
I . W1pple .
There was slight damage to the
Corpenter ve hicle. There were no injura•s and no citations

Hearings
on
tax
bill
after
Easter
•
bill "a serious attempt to deal with
the fiscal problems of this sta te.
There was input from both sides ti
the aisle."
At the heart of the measure is a 25
percent surcharge on the state income. tax that will help yield $519
million in new revenue from its effective date July I until it expires at
the end of the 1981-1983 biennium
June 30, 1983.
Coupled with a 7 percent cut in
spending that would cover the same
span, the bill is supposed to preclude
a $1 billion budget defi cit projected
by the end of the bienniwn .
Finan scored Rhodes and his
budget advisers for letting the state
get into such bad financial shape. He
said the Legislature was having to
"re-order priorities for this state as
opposed to another part of the state
government I the administration)."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API. - !loll,';e
leaders will wait until R 1.er Easter
to start hearings on a bill passed by
the Senate that raises taxes and
slashes state spending.
They said it will be lltlldied in the
interim, but that formal hearings
won't start until the week of April12.
The Senate ground out bipartisan
approval21-12 Wednesday, although
there was spirited opposition and
charges that it doesn't do the job.
GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes came
in for criticism from members of his
own party, and Democrats unhappy
about upcoming welfare cuts defended him.
But most members of both parties
said they were pleased overall with
a speedily drawn package that got
its first hearing a week ago.
Sen. Richard H. Finan, RCincinnati, chief sponsor, called the

Moonshine
operation
uncovered
GALUPOUS - In what law enforcement officials are describing as
the disruption of a "large moonshine
operation," the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department Wednesday
night confiscated or destroyed an
estimated 600 gallons of "mash" and
grain alcohol.
Deputies moved-in on the
operation, located on Lane-Branch
Raod, ·approximately three miles
south " Mercerville, at 10 p.m. last
night following what Sheriff James
M. Montgomery described as an extensive investigation into the
manufacture and sale of illegal
alcohol within the county.
During the raid, on property
reportedly rented by Roy Bickel, 66,
Rt. I, . Crown · City, officers
discovered six ~gallon wooden
casks containing fennenting mash
In an abandoned house.
A few hundrlid feet away, in a
bam, officers found an alleged
distillery with a ~oo "cooker"
and a ll~allon "reservoir" - both
appliances were made from metal
(CoaiiDaed oa Page 111

i

-..

.'I

Finan stressed that the top
priority in roising l.Bxes c-tnd ordering cuts is to save Ohio's fl oundering public school system.
Schools would escape the 7 percent
cut next fiscal year, but would be
reduced 3.5 percent in uperati ng sulr
sidies and from 9 percent to 15 percent in some special prog rams.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAs hland, let go at Rhodes because
previous spending cuts ordered by
him ·- including a 24 percent reduction from toda y until June 30 did
not touch welfare benefits .
Van Meter sa id that 1f welfa re
were cut as much as schools and
other serv ices to date " We wouldn 't
need to be here ... This stale is at
sea, without a ca pta in , without a
rudder, and no direction."
Sen. William f . Bowen. DCi ncinnali , who deplored that

welfa re now is to be cut , saHI Va n
Meter and others have "Used
welfare as a politica l whipping boy ."
Van Meter IS a gubernatoria l can·
didate.
Bowen smd, " 1stand here today to
defend the ~ove rnor , for his compassion, fOr hav1ng a heart, for
rari ng for the poor people."
Senate Minority Leade r Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown , claimed
revenue projections used to draft the
bill are unrel iable at best and the
state wi ll fall into yet another fiscal
crisis.

Fi nan pointed out that the bill extends the date for Ohio to balance its
budget from June 30 to Dec. 31 and
that it contains language to trigger
another 2 percent spending cut in the
last six months of the bienniwn if
re venues fall short.

u
.~

-

...........

•·.t·w·

•·-

RAIDS STILL - Gab.. County sheriff's investlgUon and deputies broke up wbat was called an
exteO.Tve alcobol manllfactnrlng operation south of
Mercerville late Wednesday nlgbL Tbe department
IU'I'I!Sted Roy Bickel, RL 1, Crown City, ill cOIIIIeCtiOD
wttb' lbe operation, but cbarges were pending against
blm at pressUme today. Based oa information they had

developed, the sherlfrs department raided a mobUe
home and bam where the still was located, confiscated
equipment and 23 gallon jugs of "hooch" around 10
p.m. Uke an episode of "The Untouchables," deputies
· are seen disposing of some of the homemade brew.
(Photo by Larry Ewing).

�'

•

Commentary

Bench's hard work pays off

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, April I, 1982

Infield .
TAMPA, F1a . (AP) - He's been
Reds Coach Joe Amalfitano, a
booed for his lleldtng a nd his batformer Infielder who Is working
ting average Is barely above .200.
""th Bench, said the Gold Glove
But Johnny Bench thlnks thlogs are
catcher Is starting to catch on at
starting to falllo place as he learns
third .
to play third base.
"He's golog to be as good as he
The Clnclnnati Reds' converted
wants to be, " Amalfitano said .
catcher has been taking 100 to 2!Xl
"He's got tremendous ability and a
ground balls a day at his new posl·
hell of a lot of pride.
tion, whlch he credits for his field·
"We've tried to get hlm lo watch
log progress and blames for his
the
pitcher as he re leased the ball.
weak hlttlng.
Before he was just watching the hit·
' 'I'm not ready to swlng the bat
ter. I don't thlnk he was setting up
ye t," Bench said . "I've spent so
pl\lperly. Now, before the pitcher
much time doing this (taking
thorws the ball, he's got somP
ground balls) that I haven't been
movement , whereas he. was sitting
swlnglng the bat.
is ."
back
on his
"I was loslng five pounds ln an
hour of wor' (before playlog an exhlbltion ga me). By the time the · Bench, who christened his third
games started, I didn't have much basema n's glove "E ·5," baseball
left."
termi nology for an error a t third
Bench got off to a rocky start In base, said his early troubles this
the spring tralolng sched ule. The sprlng showed him how fa r he had
home fans at AI Lopez Field booed to go.
him loudly when he had trouble
" It kind of knocks a de n! In your
picking up grounders off the grass confidence," Bench said . " I kind of

Helping Prof. GalbraithL---__W_illi.a_m_F_.B_uc_kl--=-ey_Jr.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill t ··wrl Stro·o•t
l' unwru\ . tlhioo

6 1 4 - !t!li - 21~

liE\ t rn:o Tll Ti l t: 11\TEU ~:.~T tW THE I\I E f(; S.. I\t.4.StiN J\11 J-:,\

HOBERT 1.. WIN(;F:TT
l'uhlo ~ ho·r

BOll HOF:Fl.ICH
' (t.·•wnll Mana.:o·r

PAT WHITEHEAD

DALE ROTHC.F:Il, JR.

,\ \H Mtti-:H ul Tho·

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Amo•n ra n o\o · ,... ~ papo-r Puhlt,lwr' h"u ·wlfnn

lni111MI Daih

Prr"~ ,\ ~~ · .. ·mtl" n

a nd th•·

·

I.FTTf-:HS t_IF til' I \ll ll _\1 art· \oto·ku nwd T ho ·~ ... huuld ho· lo·s ... thun 300 ""nl~ lung . All
ll·th·r" an• ~ uhJ••• · t In • · tl tllll ~ untl mu ~t lw ~ l )! th'tl ~ 1\ h JUlllH". :uldr• ·~ -' 11nd tl'lt•phuno·
nu mlwr . Noo Ull.\ lj!m•tllt·l h"r' "tlllw puhlt,ht·ll . l .o• llt· r~ shuuld bot in l(nud l&lt;t ~ h ·. addrt ·~~ lll l(
~ ~~ Ut"' · nnltwr ~ nnalttu-s

Letters to editor
We should apologize
The parents of Dink apologized to
Meigs Countians, but I rather
believe it is we who should apologize
to Dink and other young people like
him.

While the " Christian" pad their
pews, rep lace panes with stained
glass and plush carpel the floors of
the qu ote, " Church," unquote while " Concern ed Citizens" plant
flowers and upgrade the dog pound
- while the " Moral Ma jority" spend
hupdreds of thousands of dollars
taki ng Washington for J es us I while
their ow n hometown goes to hell I we ha ve not one alco hol and dr ug
reha bilitation center. The onl y thm g
avaialble is the Ohio Stale Mental
Institution m Colambus.
Folks, I believe we all need to set
our priorities strai ght. God made
man I all mankind - not a select few
and not anirnalsl in His im&lt;:~ge .
No wonder Jesus said - first cast
the log out of your own .eye then you

ca n more clea rly see to cast the
sliver out of yo ur brother's eye . If
the Ambassador:; of Christ are blind
is it any wonder the rest stumble
around in dark ness? Can the blind
lead the blind '
Read I Corinthia ns 5:6 through 21.
This is the gos pel (good news I - but
how shall they believe e xcept they
hear and how sha ll they hear except
11 be preached .
We want JUStice for the sins !transg ress ion of the law I of others and

mercy for our own - it doesn't work
this wa y.
If you have found grace it covers
the multitudes - otherwise you
ha ven 't found grace at a ll .
J enn ie Grins tead
P.S.: I would like to thank Roger
Stewart, J ames Acree a nd Carl
Hysel who manifest ,-....,
the forgive ness
of God when my son needed 11 most.
They didn't preach it : they li ved it.

Bob would have been proud too
Bob Roberts wasn't a round for the
conclusion of Rac ine Southern's
basketball season but I ca n assun~
you that he would have fell the same
intensity of pride that I did . The
young men who played for Ra cine
can hold their heads high. There
were no more coUrageous athletes

than these. I am proud of them.
They were a credit lo thei r community and to a ll of Meigs Coun ty
To Carl Wolfe a nd his coaching and
managerial staff I extend my heartiest congratulations.
Mike Roberts
Ne wa rk , Oh .

Spending death??
E . T. Leech, editor of the Pillsburgh Press, wrote an editorial in
1949 which for its foresig ht and
wisdom is worth rereading today .
The foll owing lines gives the fl ow
of his thoughts.
This co untry is being swept by a n
ep id e mi c of th e g immie s.
Everybody wants to be given
somethin g at the ex pense of
somebody e lse. There is a belief that
th e government some how ca n
provide a'd a nd security for all the
people, no matter what ,the cost or
how big the debt is run up.
The more government provides
the more it is expected to provide.
When individuals gel on the public
dole initiative goes down and public
expenses go up. This parallel
development destroyed the Roman
Empire. A few thousand barbarians
took them over.
In our eage rness for free sec urity
we a re in dang er of losing
eve rything. States, cities , counti es
and school districts owe billions.
there is a n idea that m oney from the

rich and from the big corporat ions
can bail us out so that all the people
can have benefits without costing
them anythmg.
There are not enough rich people
to prov ide all the money needed a nd
if the government had all the wealth
of the corpora ti ons they could not
put it on a suund footing . If th e
governme nt loo k over the
businesses a nd corporations there
wouldn 'I be a ny jobs for the
workers.
My own thinking and experiences
convinces me that this country JS in
a fix . The easy life of the last 35
years is gone and will never return.
Filly percent of our income is now
go tng to taxes. Wha tever slow down
the Federal Govermnent has given

us the state and local gove rnments
a nd free spenders a re taking away.
Wasn't it Lenin who said the
British would expand themselves
llerritoriallyl to death, the French
would party themselves to death and
the United States would spend itsetl
to death'
Gayle Price

What others say...
THE (MANSFIELD) NEWS
"Ma nsfield and
JOURNAL Richla nd County have been betrayed by their own elected state
senators who voted for a congressional redistricting pla n whlch cripples the city and county politically
for least a decade.
·
"A 'no' vote for either Thomas A.
Van Meter, Ashland , or Paul
Pfeiffer, Bucyrus, both Repbullcans, would have at least delayed
the congressional remap whlch divides the city and puts It on the
fringes of two congressional dlstrlcts, one of which Is centered lo
Loraln and Medlna cowttles and
the other which extends west to
mthln one county of the Indiana
border.
" ... the House passed the plan setting congressional dlstrlcts by a
_lopsided 66-.Jl, but It won by only a
two-vote margin In the Senate 17-15.
·One more 'nay' vote would have resulted In a tie and held up the plan.
Both Van Meter and Pfeiffer, who
have their political hearts set on
,higher office, turned their backs on
ibelr own constituents by voting
~:

'; "In the House, 'Rep. SheiTOd
:~. D-Mansfleld, and Rep.
~ Turner, R-Mt. Vernon, cast

votes against the plan.
"Ills obvious that the best Interests of the voters and the communities they live lo were sacrificed to
political ambition. There ~ be
plenty of excuses comlng from Van
Meter and Pfeifer, but there Is no
excuse ....
" ... In their upcomlog Republican
primary battles - Van, Meter lor
governor and Pfeiffer for the U.S.
Senate - you would thlnk they
would at least wish to fare well lo
their home areas .... "

Window check
NEW YORK (AP) - It the wlndows lo your home are m9re than
25 years old, they most •likely will
require attention.
A simple test Is to take a candle
and move It slowly around the
edges of the window frame. It tbe
flame flickers air leakage Is lndi·
cated, according to the Vloyl Window and Door Institute.
Air ln!Utraies around loose window frames and when the'Window
Is not shut tightly. That costs the
homeowner money - lo winter for
heating costs, and In summer for
cool,lng costs, It an air conditioner Is ·
used.

profils (shareholl!ers do) . Employees are paid what it takes to hire
them in the market - social
arra ngements involving their

Recently Professor John. Kenneth
Galbraith wrote in the Washington
Post that he had been approac hed in
his capacity as technical cons ultant
to the American Heritage Dictionary to come forward · with a
definition
of
"supp ly -sid e
economics." He had replied - wrote
Mr. Galbraith - that the editors
shouldn 't ~?oth er, because by the
lime the new e-d ition of the dictionary was published, no one would

retirement are here a question

unrelated to business enterprise. A
manuscript is accepted or rejected
exclusively on the ~si~ or whether '
the publishers d~ !!Jere is a
probability that the manuscript will
repay the ca pital costs or its
publication. Or that even if this one doesn't, the professor who wrote it
remember
that
a ny
such
meaningless term as supply-side ' wi ll be encouraged to go on. Maybe a
second book: or his third will be a
eeonomi cs had eve r existed .
Ho ho. Well, I also am a technica l good seller. For the sake or conco nsul tant

for

the

creteness, let us suppose that the difference in the nwnber of books that
need to be sold in order to justify
publication is in the first instance
5,000 copies, in the second, 10,000.

according as the arrangements an
entrepreneur faces are hospitable. If
your idea is to found a hamburger
stand, but you live in a section or
town that is zoned, that requires bonding against the possibility
poisoned meat, that requires high
corporation taxes, thai requires
negotiations with the union designed
to pennit your licensing, which
licensing requires you to submit to a
state examination probing your
credentials - why, that hamburger
stand might very well see the light or
day.

or

Supply-side economics is here to
tell us that in all probability the book
in question will be written and
published in situation B: whereas in
situation A, the book will possibly
not even be composed; almost certainly, will not be published.
Supply-side economics, then,
asserts that there is a &lt;iifference in
the non-essential output or a society,

nee

Ameri ca n

Hen tage Dictionary, and I weigh my
layman's prediction over against
Mr. Galbrai th's professional predi ction that the tenn wi ll surv ive .
Because there is need for it.
Before attemptin g a contracted
definition , dictionary-style, lei us
wander about a bit, in search of the
mea nin g of S/S.
Suppose Isituation A 1 that a
professor li ved in a society in which
economic enterprise was so sluggish
a s to affect marginally the making
of dec isions. Concretely: Suppose
imposed upon
th a t socJely
publishers a 1 high rates of taxa tion
on profils : bi non-mmpensating
deducti ons from losses: cl high
duties with respect to payments for
employees, including large contributions for Social Security , pensions, overtime, seniority; d) a
requirement by the publisher that
anyone submitting a manuscript for
publi cc:~ li on

Schmidt likes trades
'· 0

publish ers' cor poration
is The
as follows.
doesn't pay a ny ta xes at a ll on

:;,;.

...

__ .

playing off first base. Gross made it back safely and
Dernier raced safely in as Tiger catcher Bill Fahey
leaps to take the wide throw to the plate in the seventh
inning. {AP Laserphoto)

CATCH TIGERS NAPPING - Philadelphia
PhiUies Bob Dernier hits plate to score from thlrd after
the Detroit Tigers pitcher Elias Sosa threw ball to first
In an attempt to pick off Phillies Greg Gross who was

•

Richard must go to minors
By The Associated Press
The Houston Astros weren't all
that Impressed ""th J.R. Richard
and asked hlm to take a trip to Tucson. Ron Jackson wasn't all that
Impressed ""th the Detroit Tigers
and took a hike.
Richard, once one of the most Imposing pitchers lo the major
leagues, Is trying to make It bac k
from a near-fatal stroke lo 19ro. He
fell short of a big-league perfor·
mance Tuesday - a nd on Wednes·
day, the Astros suggested his best
route back to Houston might be
through Tucson, the Astros' top ml·
nor league team.
"That's his only chance to pitch,"
said General Manager AI Rosen.
Ric hard said he ~ "let God take
care" of the decision.
It Richard c hooses not to jolo the
Pacific Coast League team, the As'
tros
~ put. him on their lojured
reservellst.
" He's stU! a ways away," Rosen
d after the ().foot-8 right-ha nder
up seven hits, two wallks a nd
runs lo three lnnlngs during
an. lotr&lt;~Nuad game Tuesday.
Three of Houston's rostered
pitchers dldn 't fare much better on

come up with a guaran-

tee for 1,000 purchases of the book at
retail price . Questi on : Is the
professor, who ha• a book in mind to
wri te, e nco uraged to write it? Is the
discouragement decisive ?
The antit hetical case 1situat ion B)

The

Ohio •

Pase--2- The Daily s.nttn.l

t~~~~~~~~=~!~~

Small business
NEW YORK iAP) - The first
arunual President 's report on small
bus loess a nd competition Is out,
and for the most part It doesn't
ma ke very pleasant readlog.
"The rpots of the American economy are to be found lo the hlstory of
small busloess, " accordlog to the
report, but that history has been
one of decline lor a century. Sloce
the 1960s lis share of total output
has been under 50 percent a nd la lllog . It's 38 percent now .
The report, "The State of Small
Bus loess," mandated by Public
Law 9().302, s hows tha t lo the 19741976 recession, sma ll-busloess profIts fell faster and further than lo big
companies.
When the economy began movIng out of the pits lo early 1976, profIts rose more slowly lo s mall
companies than In large, the report
stales. But for many small companies there was no recovery. They
failed.

~eport

Failures agalo are common, and
small busloess Is taking the brunt of
them. The number reported by Oun
&amp; Bradstreet rose 42 percent between 1980 and 1981, ""th small busloess accounting for the major
portion. ·
"The larger the tlrm the better
chance It has of surviving," states
the summary accompanying the
report. "A firm mth 21-50 employees has a 54 percent chance of
surviving four years. A t1rm of
under ~ employees has a 37 percent chance of surviving four

years."
NQl all the recessl8n Impact Is
necessarlly negative. Small bilslness does a better job of keeping
workers during recession. And Its
lnnovatlon allows It to react better
to many other problems too.
The advantages of small busl·
ness haYen't been greatly appreciated by the public untn !hi! past
few years, when self-survival com-

not good reading

pelled small busloess to organize
loto groups and blow Its own horn.
Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology showed that
between 1969 and 1976 more than 86
percent of new jobs were provided
by businesses employing fewer
than 500 employees.
As the report relates, that study
showed "!ll percent of new jobs
were provided by firms having 100
employees or less" and "almost 66
percent ... by bus~ mth fewer
than 20 employees...
In 197b, National Science Foundation research showed small business to be a more prolific source of
Innovations per research and devlopment dollar than medium or
large business.
And now, the report claims,
small busloess produces twice as
many Innovations per employee as
do companies mth 500 or more
workers. Innovation, of course, Is
the source of productivity gains.

It's an old story. Small-busloess
people, who contribute so much and
who so often are overlooked, are
accustomed to but hardly satslfled
Mth !hi! situation, so neatly expressed lo the report's summary.
Small business survival, It
seems, Is a matter of llvlng by ""ts
and.jngenul~, talenls mth which
small business seems abundantly
endowed, but whlch are lacking lo
some big but anemic corporations.
• ,.,.., wmoow trames

~

NEW YORK (AP) - Replacement wlndow frames loclude traditional wood and aluminum, but the
newest type of replacement frame
Is vinyl.
In West Germany, 40 percent of
the new wlndows being Installed
are vinyl. This type of window
frame has been In use lo Europe
since the 1940s and only recently
become readily avallable lo the
United States.

Buying the sunL...---_.;:_________R_ob_e_rt_~_a_lte_rs
WASHlNGTON INEA) - Unlike
virtually all other fuel sources, solar
energy " cannot be monopolized by
giant corporations or international
ca rtels," proclaim ils enthusiastic
proponents.
" It's easy to see why the conve ntional energy establishment
feels threatened by solar power,"
says the Washington-based Solar
Lobby in promoting that energy
source as "clean, dependable,
inexhaurtible a nd economically
feasi ble ."
But " the conventional energy
establishment"- the multi-national
petroleum industry - no longer
need fear solar energy because it
;;&lt;low dominates production of two
· crucial components indispensable in
the construction or all solar systems.
Three firms - a ll wholly or subslantially owned by oil companies control approximately 80 percent or
all annual domestic sales of the
photovoltaic cells necessary to convert sunlight into electricity.
The typical residential solar installalioni also requires almost 100
pounds of copper - and more than
half or the countt')''s yearly produc- ·tion of that metal is controlled by the

mining subsidiaries of six oil companies.
Standard Oil of Indiana (Amoco)
reportedly has invested $40 million
in Solarex and owns 25 percent to 4(J
percent of that finn, which, in turn,
holds a shHre of the photovoltaics
market estimated at 31 percent to 36
percent.
Atlantic,Richfield (Arco) owns Arco Solar, which accoimts for an
estimated 26 percent to 32 percent of
all yearly industry sales. Arco's
reported invesbnents include $2&amp;S
million in Energy Conversll'i'n
Devices, $20 million in Solar
Technology International and $5
millioninNorthrupSolar.
Exxon has invested $20 million in
the Solar Power Corp., whose share
of the photovoltaics market is
estimated at 15 percent to 17 per-'
cent.
All of the remaining !inns ln the
indlistry share OQ!y about 20 percent
of annual sales - and they also inelude a nwnber oil-company subsidiaries.
Mt&gt;bil has paid $30 million for an 80
percent share in a photovoltaics
finn called Tyco.Laboratorles, SbeU

or

has paid $30 million to purchase
Solar l!;nergy Systems and Standard
Oil of Ohio has announced plans to
invest $80 million in Energy Con-

version Devices.
..
A recent study prepared for the
Small Business Administration by
the Washington-based Center for
Renewable Resources claiins there
is evidence that two of the oil company - owned
photovaltaics
producers have engaged in
predatory pricing, althougb the oil
companies deny that they have
resorted to such IUegal, anticompetitive practices.
The oil companies are, however,
strangely unenthusiastic about- the
prospects for a technology in which
they have invested substantial
resources. Their consumer advertising, for example, regularly
denigrates solar energy as a charmlng yet impractical concept that
cannot be commercially implemented at any time in this J:en-

tury.
Petroleum-Industry Influence over
the copper industry·is only sllghUy
less coocen~ted. Kennecott, which
is responsible for more than 21 per-

c.!nt of all production, was purchased last year by Standard Oil of
Ohio for $1.6 billion.
Anaconda, with almost 10 percent
of all production, was purchased by
Arco in 1977 for $784 million. Pennzoil's copper subsidiaries have captured close to eight percent
the
market, Cities Service holda more
than six percent and Amoco controlS
almost five percent•
"Contrary to most energy industry claims, there is little doubt
that the sun is going to be a major
source or energy for both home and
industry," says Friends of the Earth, a San Francise... based environmental group.
"The real disputes," adds the
organization," are over how solar
power will be implemented, which ·:
method of solar power will be most
widely used and whether it can be '
made a reality without th~ :
dpmination of the .giant oil and. '
utility companies."
·,
But the issues may already hav~ .
been resolved because the
petroleum industry luis ' ·spent .
billions of dollars for the privilege of

or

Wednesday. The Atlanta Braves
pounded Vern Ruhle , Dave Smith
and J oe Samblto for 14 hits, lncludlng Bob Horner's three-run homer
and RBI ·slngle, and downed the Astros 7-3.
Ron Jackson helped the Callfor·
nla Angels. On Wednesday, he gave
them one -a three-run hom er. the
dltference lo a ().3 victory over
Seattle.
Fernando Valenzuela made hls
first sprlog appearance for Los An·
geles a satisfactory one. The rookie
sensation of a year ago, a holdout
this year, pitched two lnnlngs of relief, allowlng three hits and one un·
earned run lo the Dodgers'
10-lonlog 8-7 victory over Boston.
The Expos beat the Rangers 3-IJ
as Ray Burris pitched six lnnlogs of
two-hit ball and Wallace Johnson
and Andre Dawson hll run-scoring
stogies In the third lnnlng.
Among the day's other Impressive pltchlng performances, Lar.ry
Christenson of Philadelphia
stopped Detroit on two hits over six
lnnlngs, fanning eight batters, as
the Phlllles romped 8-1, Mike Norris of Oakland hurled seven shutout

lonlngs as the A's downed Cleveland 3-1, a nd Tom Lollar pitched
seven four ·hlt lnnlngs ln San Diego's 5-1 victory over Milwa ukee.
Gar.ry Templeton had a two-run
homer and Dave Edwards a tworun double lo the Padres' triumph,
Gary Roenlcke hit a two-out , nlolhInning home run to propel Balli·
more past the Chicago While Sox
4-3, a nd George Brett (who had homered earlier) hit a one-out slogle
lo the lith lnnlng to give Kansas
City to a 4-3 victory over
Pittsburgh .
St. Louis beat Toronto 4-3 as
George Bjorkman hit a two-run
double lo the nlnth lnnlng, then
scored the """"log run on Mike
Ramsey's slogle. Doubles by Cesar
Cedeno, Paul Householder a nd Ron
Oester lo a slx·run fifth lnnlog carrled Cloclnnati to a 7-2 victory over
the New York Mets. The Chlcago
Cubs won their fourth In a row mth
Jwtlor Kerunedy's seventh-Inning\
slogle produclog the wlnnlng run lo
a 3-2 triumph over San Francisco.
The New York Yankees took a 9-1
victory over the University of South
Florida .

CLEARWATER. F la. (API P hlladelphla Phillles thlrd baseman Mike Schmidt Is the klod of
person who pulls no punches. He
says wha t he thinks even If It's not
popular mth people, locludlog his
bosses.
So, when Schmldt, the National
League's Most Valuable Player the
past two seasons, says he thinks the
team has been Improved by some
trades, which have been unpopular
""th many fans, It's worth listening
to his oplolon.
The deals lovolved young out·
fie lder Lorunle Smith, catcher Keith
Moreland and veteran shortstop
Larry Bowa.
Smith made a lot of funda m ental
mistakes, but he could hll, run llke
a deer a nd a lways seemed to make
things happen. He flolshed the season )"ith a 23·gam e hltting streak.
He wenllo the three-way deal ""lh
Cleveland a nd St. Louis that netted
the P hlllles catcher Bo Dlaz .
Moreland, a young catche r with
an eliecuve bat, but short lo some
areas on defense, was dealt to the
Chicago Cubs In an exchange that
brought pitcher Mike Krukow to
Philadelphia.
Bowa, the Phlla delphla shortstop
for 12 years and the best statlslically at his position lo the majors
over a long (lfriod, had contract dlf·
flculUes, feuded through the newspapers m th the front office over the
proble m , a nd proba bly was
s hipped more because of the per·

•

someplace else," he said.
The fourth-year back was a firstround draft choice In 1979. He
played about half the 1980 season at
fullback due to a variety of lojurles
to
hisJohnson,
best year.and It turned out to be
He galoed 702 yards on 169 carrtes. He galoed 376 yards In eig ht
starts at fullback, compared to 326
In eight starts at halfback.
Last year, Alexander carrled
only 98 times, for 292 yards and

OPENI111G TODAY

SEXY'S
MONDAY -SATURDAY
12 NOON - 1 A.M.

"The first few ga mes I never

really plckrd the ball up off the bat
until it was rig li t to me. Everybody
said , 'You' ve got to k('('p coming
ln .' I kept try ing to go In and I was
ln·betw('('n half the time ."
Red s Ma na ger John McNa m ara
has consldrrro using Wa yne Kre n·
chic ki as a de&gt;fc nsive repla cc m C'nt

for Bench In the late Innings when
the regular Sf'ason sta rt s. But
McNamara Is pleased with Bench' s
hard work in p rac tiCP, and dOC'sn't

worry about his lack of hitting .
" He is very capable of leading
thr league in tbattingt ave rage if
h&lt;• uses the whole field as he did last
yea r." McNamara sa id . "He was
hitting .361J last yea r and his aver·
age suffered the last few w('('ks of
thr sr&lt;:~son w h ~: n othPr Pf'OPIC' weren't producing and he tJiro to pick
up the s lack ."
Benc h f\nl shro the season at .309,
the highest average of his ear('('r.
After devoti ng so much time to his
fielding, he sa id he'll concentra te
on hitting thi s final week of thr pre-

season .
'"f1Il'

batting tille's

!lUt

Give your

wallet a break...

YOUR "OM TUX

s29.95
AND GET YOUR 1st
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Fam o us Paim &amp; 'ilCh twll'd o&lt; tn a
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Will go wt th yout di\ te·s yov.rn
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ENGINEER

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AMERICAN MADE
LEATHER UPPER
A

PAIR
caught 28 passes for 261 yards.
Mike Brown, the Bengals assista nt general manager, said the club
has no plans to trade Alexander.

~

BAILEY 'S
SHOES
Middl c pori. -Oh

r-;:::::=========:!:===========::::;~

KIDS' SHOES FOR
EASTER

1f2 PRICE
SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
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NOTICE TO ·

BAKSHY A. CHHIBBER, M.D.
(Internal Medicine and Pediatrics)
P. JAMES NAVALKOWSKY, M.D.
(Internal Medicine)
announce the merger of their practices to

ME,DICAL ASSOCIATES

• offices in
Point Pleasant and Mal

''owning~ • the.sun.

WE HAVE :A NEw TELE.PHONE NUMBER SERVING MEIGS COUNTY STARTING WED.NESDAY, MARCH 31, 1982. ·

No. 7 South Second Street

Mason, W. V.
Phone 773-5531 or 773-5532
The Profeulonal Building
2513 Jackson Ave.

j ·•

THISISA

~~

TO~L 'FREE. 24··~UR

f£
.1
j
·J

,,

} "'

.

A

Point Pleasant, W. V.
Phone 675·5511 or 675-6143
Offices

~urs

by appointment

in my

mind right now," he sa id . "But I
"1sh f ha d the films from last year
to get back in to the g roow ..

~;::==========:;i

Alexander asks Bengals for trade
CINCINNATI (AP) - After playIng the 1981 football season lo the
shadow of fullbaack Pete Johnson,
Charles Alexander says he wants to
be traded by the Cloclruna ti
Bengals.
The fonner All-American from
Louisiana State said Wednesday he
wants to be sent to a team where he
can play fullback.
"I think I'm better suited to play
fullback," Alexander said lo a telephone Interview Mth the Cloclnna ti
Enquirer from his Baton Rouge,
La. home.
"I'm not a shifty-type guy who
lh\'OWS a lot of moves ... and breaks
them for &amp;l yards. ! don't have anything against the way the Bengals
.uSed me, but I don't think I !It loto
the philosophy of our offensive
attack.
"I can't blame them, because the
things they were dotng worked. But
I feel basically I'm a fullback and
there's just no way I can play fullback Mth the Olnclnnatl Bengals
(Mth Pete Johnson there) .
"I think It would be lo the best
Interests ol both parties that I go

sonall ty conflict than just player
constderatlon .
The clu b's other catcher. vete ran
Bob Boone, was sold to Ca lifornia of
the American League

took two s teps back menwU y. The
ba ll started playi ng me. I had re·
gressed rathe r than progressro.

3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

'

�•

Page

4 The Dally Sentinel

Sports World
By WW Grlmlley
AP Comtpoadenl
Notre Dame's Richard "Digger" Phelps opened up a can of wormsPandora's box or a hive of bees, whichever suits your fa ncy - with his
charge tha t college coaches are paying as much as $10,001 a year for select
basketball beef on the hoof.
"A conservative figure," responded Oregon State's Ralph Mlller,
named Coach of the Year for 1982 by the Assocla ted Press. "They were
talklng a9&lt;Jut that kind of money 10 and 15 years ago . We've now got
lnfiatlon ."
"Digger must have had his reasons," said Tex Winter, 60-year-old coach
a t Long Beach (CaUl.) State, new president of fhe Na tiona l Association of
Basketball Coac hes. "But there Is a time, a place and a method to handle
such charges. It might have been wiser lf Digger had followed the pres'
cribed procedures."
Phelps' Informal comments created a mlld tempest in New Orleans last
weekend a nd stole some of the pre-game atte ntion from the business at
ha nd - deciding the NCAA national basketball c hampionship, which
North Carolina won dramatically over Georgetown .
Coaches were sharply divided on whether Phelps was discreet in blowIng the whistle as he did. But the most alarming feature of the controversy
was the "So what?" attitude with which the chArge was treated generally.
"They've been doing It for years and years," coaches conceded. "The
only thing that's changed Is the size of the payments."
The NCAA acknowledged as much .
"I wouldn't say abuses are rampant," said David Berst, director of the
NCAA enforcement staff. from his headq uaners In Mlsslon, Kan., "but
there's no doubt they exist. Little Is different except the scope of it.
"Remember the University of Illinois slush fund in the 1960s? Atltletes
were getting paid $4{), $50 and $60. That seemed like a lot then. It might be
trivial today . "We believe a vast majority adheres to the rules. There are
occasional violators who are seeking that extra edge. There a lways have
been."
Berst and his staff are kept busy rushing around answering alarms such
as posed by Phelps and putting out brush fires. But It must seem to them
that, when one blaze Is extinguis hed, two or Uu·ee pop up some place else.
It's almost a losing cause.
r · Berst said 17 of the nation's colleges are currently undergoing some son
of sanctions while 30-odd are under lnvestigatlon. One of the latter Is
Clemson, whlch produced the 1981 national football champion. "The largest Illega l payment we've Investiga ted. " Berst said, "was between $50.00l
and $75,00l a few years ago." The violator, unldentlfied, was properly
punished.

Baltimor~ -given
NEW YORK . Bob Lemon and
Earl Weaver are In their final seasons as managers of the New Yorll
Yankees and Baltimore Orl~l
and Bobby Cox starts his first
the Toronto Blue Jays. But the b .
gest news In the American Last
East this year Is Reggie Jackson's
defectlon from New York to
California.
Despite the Yankees' World Serles loss Lemon was given one final
year ai the helm for his longtime
lo yalty to ow n er George
Steinbrenner.
The owner bade Jackson farewell - whether It was a fond one
remains open to discussion -after
acquiring Ken Grtffey from Clnclnnail for right field . The rest of the
outfield has Dave Winfield In left,
Jerry Mumphrey In center. All can
tly and the Bronx Bombers have
become Steinbrenner's Striders, although Lemon Insists It "doesn't
mean that the Yankees are forgolng the long ball."
The Infield finds Gralg Nettles,
Bucky Dent a nd Willie Randolph
back at third, second and short, respectlvely, and first base will be
platooned between Dave Revering
and Bob Watson, with Rick Cerone
behlnd the plate. That doesn't leave
much room for free agent Dave Col!Ins except as designated hitter,
where he must con(fnd with Oscar
Gamble and Lou Plnlella.
With- Rick Reuschel alllng, the
Yankees traded with San Francisco for right-hander Doyle Alexander. who was with the team In
1976. He joins Ron Guidry, Tommy
John and Dave Righetti. The
bullpen of Goose Gossage and Ron
Davis Is as strong as any.
The Milwaukee Brewers had the
best overall record In the dlvlslon

Coach Bill Fitch. "You lose this one
and It's two In a row, you go on the
road (Friday at Atlanta), and I
don't want that ."
In other NBA actlon, Denver won
Its 11th straight game ""ith a 120-119
decision over Dallas, Kansas City
upset Seattle 116-109, Philadelphia
edged Chicago 99-98, Indiana
nipped Detroit Hll-106, New Jersey
bombed Cleveland 103-87 and Phoenix beat San Diego 127-106.
Washington ·coach Gene Shue
had hoped that hls team might have
an advantage by meeting the Celtics just after their club-record winrung streak ended.
"!liked the Idea of coming In here
following the end of their streak,"
Shue said. "! guess I hoped they
would be suffertng a nnlld letdown ."
His hopes were dashed as the Celtlcs controlled the tempo to end the
Bullets' four-game winning streak.
"We're usually Involved in tight
games with the Celtlcs," Shue said.
"Tonight we had to play their
ga me, which Is up-tempo, and as a

''I'd much rather be the short
man. I think I ~Yould enjoy It very
much . But thfs Is the way it Is."
And Splllner Is determined to
make the best of hls situation.
"If I stay as the middle man all
year, whoever the short man Is, I'll
get him some saves. That's where I
feel my value to the club Is," he
said.
In 10 exhlbltlon appearances this
spring, Splllner has gtven up one
run In 151nnlngs, striking out seven
and walklng one.
Splllner, 30, entered the major
leagues as a starter with the San
DI€JW Padres In 1974.
He came to the Indians In a 1978
trade, and In 1980 he turned In his
best performance, compiling a 1611 record while starting 30 times In
34 appearances.
Last season, though, he was sent
to the Cleveland bullpen, thanks to
an arm more resilient than any
other on the Indians' stat!.
While at San Diego, he had spent

HushPu111~

last year, but lost a playoff series to
the Yankees. Yet, Manager Buck
Rodgers feels that "many of our
players didn't have the type o! year
we expected them to have. Thus, It
most of our people have a 'normal'
year at the plate for us, we tltlnk we
are capable of winning the rugged
Eastern Division."
The Brewers return relief sensalion Rollle Fingers, who won the AL
Most Valuable Player and Cy
Young Awards. The starters are
PeteVuckovich, Moose Haas, Mike
Caldwell, Randy Lerch and Bob
McClure.
Catcher Ted Simmons has had·a
year to acclimate hlrnseii to AL
pitchers. Paul Molitor, who
triggers the offense, has been
moved from the outfield to third
base, joining CecU Cooper at first,
Jim Gantner at second and RDbtn
Yount at short. Molitor's spot In
right will be filled by Mark Brouhard, with Ben Ogilvie In left,
slugger Gorman Thomas In center
and Larry Hisle the DH,
Pitcher Sammy Stewart is Weaver's ace In the hole should someone
falter, while the bullpen will be
tough If Tim Stoddard's returns to
his 1980 form to join Tippy
Martinez.
The left side of the Infield wlll
haveanewlook-CaiRlpkenJr.at
third and Lenn Sakata or Bob
Bonner at shOrt - to go with hoidovers Rich Dauer at second and
switch-hlttlng slugger Eddie Murray at first The outfield has been
strengthened by the addition of Dan
Ford from Calltornla, to jotn Ken
Singleton, AI Bumbry and Gary Roenlcke, although Singleton may be
the No.1 DH. Rick Dempsey and
Dan Graham provide capable
catching.

The Detroit Tigers may be ready

to explode. "With the experience
gained from last year's pennant
run, we're going to be competitive
right to the end," promises Manager Sparky Anderson.
The Tigers traded for outfielders
Chet Lemon and Larry Herndon to
provide some right-handed hitting.
Kirk Gibson Is the third outtlelder.
Detroit is strong up the middle with
Lance Parrish behind the plate and
a slick double play combo In shortstop Alan Trammell and second
baseman Lou Whitaker. However,
the Infield corners leave something
to be desired and there could be a
shortage of '!itarters behind Jack
Moms, Dan Petry and Milt WUcox.
The Boston Red Sox have tirepower In ollttlelders Jim Rice and
Dwight Evans, third baseman Carney Lansford, second baseman
Jerry Rem). plus Dave Stapleton
and veterans Carl Yastrzemsld and
Tony Perez.
The bullpen Is well-stocked with
Mark Clear, Tom Burgrneler and
Bob Stanley, but much will depend
on Dennis Eckersley, Mike Torrez,
Bobby Ojeda and the rest of the
starting plchers.
The Cleveland Indians had more
starters than they knew what to do
with - until Bert Blyleven came
down with a sore elbow and Rick
Sutclltfe suffered a thumb injury.
That still leaves Len ·Barker, Rick
Walts, John Denny, Dan Splllner,
Sllvio Martinez and Lary Sorensen,

.

result they were In control
throughout."
With Bird scoring 21 points and
the Celtlcs hitting 64 percent of their
shots, Boston rolled to a 59-50 halftime lead.
Washlngton's last serious threat
came early In the fourth quarter
when an 8-2 run cut Boston's lead to
92-86. But the Celtlcs Increased It to
105-92 with 4:56 remaining and
never led by fewer than nine the
rest of the way.
Boston, which won all six games
In Its season seri~s ,with the Bullets,
took only 79 shots from the field but
made 49 for a 62-percent average.
Robert Parish had 21 points and
14 rebounds for Boston. Rookie Jeff
Ruland, led the Bullets with a
season-hlgh of '1:1 points and 11 rebounds, while Kev11n Grevey had 21
points.
Nuggets 120, Mavericks 119
Alex English scored '1:1 points and
Klki Vandeweghe added 25 as
Denver won Its lith straight game,
a club record .

Member: The Associated Press, Inland Oa 1·

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Avenu~. N~w

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Ctarrier urMotor Route
on~ w~ck . .
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SINGLE COPY

"Before the 11-game winning
streak, nobody figured we had a
shot at the playoffs," said Denver
center Dan Issei. "But we proved
we are a playoff team."
Antonio
by onlytrail
twofirst-place
games In San
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The Nuggets
Midwest Division. They are In
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Pear shaped center compact look and smaller

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Exciting modern look featuring a large

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25260

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OH.

HOURS:
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SAT. 9TO 5

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TUES. ~ THURS. 9TO 6
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INGLES FU~NITURE &amp;JEWELftY

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OUR EXPERT DIAM'OWD SETTER WILL BE
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MAIL SUBSCRIYfiONS

Lucky Lady

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of finest quality mountings.

four diamonds . Illusion head compliments

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ARRIVING
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SAVINGS.....

Publishin~ Company . Multimedia , Int.· .•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 992·21:i6. Set.'OOd class
posl.a){e paid at Pomt!roy, Ohio.

N~wspaper

TH IS WEEKEND ONLY"

You pick the mounting ...
We will do the rest

MOUNTED AS YOU
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Published every artemoon, Mondity through
friday, 111 Court Stn.&gt;et, by the Ohio Valley

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APRIL 2nd &amp;3rd

11

'

IUSPSIU..-1
A Dlvt11luo ol MuiUmtditl, lac.

Pres.~

&amp;

ZJ~~cfftJ4LtJet
But the "NO
Setting . LABOR
-is Not
COST"

The IJuil y Sentinel

Dallas had a chance to win the
game twice In the final seconds.
First Jim Spanarkel missed a shot
from the corner and Jay Vincent,
who scored 31 points, tried a tip-In
t.jlOt bounced ott the rirp at the
buzzer . Mark Aguirre added 30 for
the Mavericks.

SALLY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:..

Phone 446· 4524

some time In the bullpen with relief
ace Rollle Fingers. He says he
learned much about relief pltchllng
from the master.
"For Instance, one of the habits I
picked up from him was to constantly watch the flow of the game,
and getting to know your manager," Splllner said. "(Indians
Manager) Dave (Garcia) likes to
stick with his starter&lt;

When you're off for a ,busy day of shopping,
business or just plain pleasure, your feet will
appreciate the open comfort of these Hush Puppies® casuals. Styled with today's fashions in
mind - versatile enough to complete any out·
fit. Light on price, too.

Pay

DIAMOND
REMOUNT
SHOW

Prediction: Baltlmore, Milwaukee, New York, Detroit, Boston,
Cleveland, Toronto.

ly

Sentinei-Page-5

INGEL'S FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY

'I .'
'.

with Ed Whitson In the bullpen.
Catcher Ron Hassey will bechal·
Ienged by rookleChrlsBando. Mike
Hargrove Is at first, Toby Harrah
at third. There's also the new DP
combo of second baseman Jack
Perconte and shortstop Jerry Dyb- •,
zlnskl. Rick Manning, Miguel 01lone, Joe Charboneau and standout
rookie Von Hayes are available for '
the outtleld. Manager Dave Garcia •'
would Uketotlndaspot-tlrstbase
or DH- for Andre Thornton's bat
Cox turned the Atlanta Braves
into a respectable group and hopes
to do the same In Toronto, where.
the Blue Jays never have finished
anytltlng but last In their five-year
history.
He has some fine young talent tn
pitchers Dave Stleb and Jim
Clancy and outtlelders Uoyd Moseby and George Bell. Other hoidovers Include DH Otto Velez, John
Mayberry at first, Damaso Garcia
at second and Alfredo Grttttn at
short. The Blue Jays are hoping for
big things, though perhaps not this
year, from shortstop Tony Fernandez, outfielder Jesse Bartleld and
catcher Gene Petralll.

per~ormance

Spillner content with Indians' job
TUCSON, Ariz. !API - For a
man who'd rather be doing something else, Cleveland Indians righthander Dan Splllner sounds
surprisingly content.
"I'm pretty much set on my job
now," he said. "!feel great. This Is
the best spring training I' ve ever
had ."
Splllner has been relegated to the
American League team's bullpen,
where he Is slated to be called upon
whenever a starting pltch~J gets In
trouble early In the game.
Splllner would prefer to be a starter, or at least the short relieverthe man who often pitches the final
Inning or two of a game. But the five
starting jobs have been taken, and
Ed Whitson, acquired from San
Fran~tsco In an oft-season trade, Is
slated to be the short reliever.
"Being the nnlddle man, or long
man, out of the bullpen Is the one
job I do not like," Spillner said.
"You might get up once a week, or
even lOdays, and never get to pitch.

nod for AL ·East

i

•

VClrk , N~w York 10017.

Bird not satisfied with his
Larry Bird, who had just scored
35 points and pulled down nine rebounds, still wasn't satisfied with
hls ga me.
"! did well on the offensive end ,
but there's other things out there
too," said the 6-foot -9 forward after
hf led the Boston Celtics to a 119-109
National Basketball Association
victory over the Washlngtop
Bullets Wednesday nJght.
" I felt the passing a nd rebounding weren't going my way," said
Bird, who came off the bench for
the 12th straight time since returnIng from a broken cheekbone.
"Luckily, my shots were going in. It
seems like anytime I'm shooting
well, the rest of my game goes
down ."
Bird hit 15 of his 20 field goal attempts and all five free throws as
the Celtlcs won their first game
since Philadelphia snapped their
18-game winning streak Sunday.
"The most Important thing In my
mind was to get the first one after
the streak Is broken," said Boston

Thunday, April 1, 1982

Pomeroy "Middleport, Ohio

Today's

The

..........
..• ·--"----"--~- .,. ----- .

'·

OHIO

Q

~ --~~

�r
... ··

The

Sentinel

Ohio

Sneed seeks victory in Greensboro Open
GREENSBORO, N.C. lAP) Ed Sneed, a quiet, soft-spoken man,
had a brush with golfing Immortal·
Ity three seasons ago, missing • vic·
tory In the Masters by a
quarter-tum of the ball .
It was by that margin, on the !Ina!
hole, that his par-saving put1 failed
to !all. The bogey sent him Into a
playoff, which he lost.
Now, he Isn't even In the elite,
International field which next week
wUI play In the first of the year's Big
Four events . His only chance to
make that fie ld Is with a victory In
the $300,1XXJ Greater Greensboro
Open .
That. of course. Is a longshot.
But, Sneed said , It Isn't out of the
·
question .
"I'm playing well enough to
wtn," he said before teeing orr today In the first round on the 6,984·
yard, par 72 Forest Oaks Country
Club course.
·
"I've played pretty well ever
since Hawaii (In February) . I'm
probably playing better now than
a t a ny tlme In the last yea r and a
ha lf . maybe two years.
"I'm not striking the ball quite as
well as I did a few years ago when I
was really playing well, but I'm

scoring because my short game Is
so much better."
It has been particularly effective It
lor Sneed, a veteran of 14 years on
the PGA tour, In his last three
starts . He has been In the top 10 In
each of his last three appearances.
That solid performance helped
boost his earnings lor the year to
more than $51,1XXJ - more than he
won a ll of last season.

SHOP BAHR CLOTHIERS FOR WEARING
APPAREL FOR MEN AND WOMEN

r-.;;;;;4;a;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:ocMi41iiji;;;iiMi.iiiCQ.

It lifted him to 19th place on the
season's money-wlnnlng list and
made him a !actor to be considered
In this chase lor a $54,1XXJ first prize.
Although a number oi the game's
leading performers are skipping
th1s event to concentrate on prepa·
rations for the Masters, Sneed still
laces a formidable field that Is
headed by Ray Floyd, a former
winner of both this event a nd the
Masters, and Larry Nelson, the defending cham pion and current
PGA titleholder.
Among the other standouts are
Lee Trevino, South African Gary
Player, 1981 Player or the Year Bill

Rogers,
Bruce Lietzke
and
1982longtourhitting
title-winners
Craig
Stadler, Lanny Wadkins, Wayne
Levi, Ed Flori and Jim Simons .

The Home
Of Wrangler
And lee Jeans

.

JANTZEN SPORTSWEAR
&amp; SWIMWEAR
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LEVI'S BENDOVERS
&amp; BLAZERS
ALL WEATHER COATS
PANT COATS
DRESSES
SWEATERS
JEANS

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LEVI'S
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TROUSERS
HATS
SOCKS

Junior and Missy
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BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, Ohio

':

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Stability will be
biggest problem
KENT, Ohio (AP) -Jim McDona ld, Kent Sta te Uni versity's new
basketball coach, Is a realist. He
knows It may not be easy building a
good program at a school that has
had only three winning seasons In
the last 31 years.
·'The biggest problem will be sta·
blllty. One year It looks like they're
getting there a nd then the next year
It falls off. I wa nt to build a strong
found a tion," he said .
It will be the first head college
coac hing job for McDonald, 48, 23
years Into his career. He has been
an assistant basketball coach at the
University of Toledo since 1970.
"The first thing Is that I've got to
be concerned with the players In
the program now," he said. " I'm
going to get Involved In their lives
a nd find out how they're doing academically. If a kid has seriousness
of pullJOse In the classroom he has a
lot better cha nce of going through
with a tough basketball program.
"The guys committed to getting a
good education are the ones that
are going to help you on the court.
" ! wan t to be as competitive as
poss ible as soon as possible, which
menas a lot of x's a nd o's, getting to
know the players. watc hing film ·
sand doing a
lot of work during the summer.
"The third thing I want to do Is
maintain the futu re of the program
and that Involves recruiting."

When you color
this egg and chick,
Which shades do you
plan to pick?

;::

Sit down with your crayons, have a good time
... Just follow the bunny and color designs

baby bunn y and motlier are on their
bonnets and ba skets lor the Easter

NAME
--- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -__
ADDRESS
__________________

NAME
- -- - - - - - - - - - - - -_ADDRESS
__________________

AGE _______ PHONE - - - - - -

AGE _______ PHONE - - - - -

Kingsbury Home Sales

heritage house OF SHOES

________ PHQNE ________

HOME NATIONAL BANK
R

Kent State should ha ve a solid recruiting base with almost half of the
state's Class AAA teams located
within the Clevela nd , Akron, Can·
ton a nd Youngstown a rea. Still, the
Golde n Flashes have not been suc·
cess!ulln their Immediate area.
"We're going to change that,"
McDonald said, "by being con·
cerned a nd letting people know
we're Interested In players In that
area. I'm going to atte mpt to get
support from high school coaches
In the area."

HURRY IN TODAY
AND SAVE

7 DIAMOND CLUSTER
ROUND OR SQUARE HEAD

$8995

CON1~ST RULES

'

REG. '149.95 SAVE '60.00

YELLOW OR WHITE GOLD
DIAMOND CLUSTERS, Yellow or White

CARAT

7 BEAUTIFUL DIAMONDS
· CARAT

$2ggoo lf2 $475oo ·:

1;4

00

1

REG 595

00

SAVE 12000
1

The bunnies are holdin~ the lily Oawers,
To pr0tect thern ·from the Apri I sho1ters.

1. Just color one or more
of the drawings on these
pages, fill in the blanks
and take your entry to
the sponsoring store
before 5:00 p.m., April
18th.

3. Children may enter as
many pictures as they
like but can only win one ·
prize.

2. Entries will be judged
in two different age cate·
gories, ages 4-8 and 9·12 .

s. Decisions of the judge .
will be final.

4. Crayons only may be
used to color pictures .

~ECKLACE
14K GOLD

.E . T.Included

WAS '119"

REG. '5 00

MIDDLE

FLOATI
WITH

$24

ONLY
REG. 134.95

DEAN POLARIS
78

TREADWEAR
RATING 1.00

Black

A78· 3
878-13
. C78-14
078-14
E78-14
F78-14

NOW
FET
2.26
1.62

Pomeroy ,Oh.

Front End Alignment Most Cars
Brake Service

HEARTS
DS
95
SAVE 110.00

ALL
WATCHES

ASK FOR DETAILS

•

50% OFF

GREAT SAVINGS

14K GOLD
ADD-A-BEAD
NOW

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
Ph.992·2094

FREE EAR
PIERCING

SAVE '2 50

ALL COSTUME JEWELRY

MOUNTED &amp; BALANCED FREE

606 E . Main St.

CHOOSE FROM

$250

PH. 992 -7161

polyester
cord

.20/100 T.W. 1249.95-SAVE
.18/100T.W. 1139.951SAVE ·;~u.t~X
.10/100 T.W. 189.95-SAVE ·uu.Uio(;V
.MANY STYLES TO

14K GOLD
FLOATING HEART

GENERAL TIRE SALES

Size

Pomeroy

DIAMOND EARRINGS
00

YELLOW OR WHITE GOLD

For Quality Plus Econo
N.2ndAVE.

SAVE '60

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

FRANCIS FLORIST

$5995

Gifts of flowers,
Joy and laughter,
Remember this Easter
forever after.
NAME ~--- _ ____ · - ADDRESS -- - -- - - - - AGE _
~ ____ PHONE ____

NAME _ _ ---~- - - - - - ADDRESS _ ~- ___ -----AGE ____ .____ PHONE ..- -·

DIAMOND SOLITAIRE

F . E .T . Inctuded

Prices In Effect Thru April10, 1982

Pomeroy -Rutland · Tuppers Plains

APRIL 1st Thru 17th

DISCOUNT PRICES

FREE MOUNTING &amp; FREE BALANCE

BANK ONE OF POMEROY

Thanks to all the fine folks of the Meigs
County Area we're celebrating our 2nd
Anniversary. And we'ere passing some
great savings on to you. Stop by and
take advantage of some of the · best
buys of this year.

layaways Welcomel

"Kent Is a decent place to recruit
from . It has a good educational system . It has a good population base.
The campus Is very a ttractive a nd
has a lot to offer. The high school
basketball in the area Is good ."
McDonald had been In the running for a head job at three other
Mid-American Conference schools
In the last 12 yea rs. In !act, he was
going to change directions In his ca·
reer If he did not land a head job this
year.
"Twenty-three years ... that's a
long time to wa lt, " he said . " I was
getting frustated . I felt It was time
to something dlt!erent with my life.
There were times when I didn't believe It would ever ha ppen."
McDonald then added, "Now, all
of a sudden, good things are happenlng to and for me. I'm a bit confused by It all."

$J995
$4095

ADDRESS ____~~~~-------AGE _ _ _ _ _ PHONE _____

OF POMEROY

SAVE 196

G78-15
H78-15

Colorful eggs ...
such fun to make,
How glad we are
they didn't l1reak!

25%

OFF

. PLAIN, FLUTED, PEARL
•JEWELiY'REPAIR ·
•WATCH R.PAIR
•APPRAISALS
•FitEE ESTIMATlS

NOW

20% OFF.

The joy of. this Holy Holiday brings to mind,
A ,renewed spirit of love for all mankind.

..

tBULOVA, SEIKO
CARAVELLE

' I
NAME
.(. - ·- ------ - --- ·- - - . ADDRESS .. _ - . ... - ·- -· - - - - - - ·
AGE . - --- ... _ _PHONE --- - - - - -

•

:~

t~~
ra

.

On dwu miraculous
Ecuter mom ••
Our bcloml Lerd
wcu then reborn.

.J'

~

·

.

.113COU.RTST . .
· POMEROY,.OH.

. ' 992-205'4

vouR PROFESSIONAL JEWELER

1. •

~ (
•

•

'

Sing out, sing out
loud and clear,
The glorious
Easter day is here!
NAME ____________________

NAME --------------~-----

ADDRESS ------~~-------­

AGE

MARGUERITES SHOES
pomeroY

.

PHONE - - - - - - -

VILLAGE PftARMIQ
0

One of this Eosler bunn y · ~ favorite thing
Is to swing frorn a basket of eggs, as he sing.
NAME ______________________
ADDRESS ______________~
AGE
PHONE

ADDRESS --------~------~

AGE ______ PHONE - - - - -

Adolph's Dairy Valley
. POMEROY,OH.

K&amp;C JEW.ELRY
POMEROY,OH.

�1982

The :paily Sentinel

By The Bend

Th~y.

April 1, 1982
Page-S

Students preparing for
'Jack and Bean stalk'
The classic operetta, "Jack and
the Beanstalk" in three acts will be
.ljresented by students of Chester
Elementary School a t 8 p.m. Friday
in the school auditorium.
Direction is by Mrs. Maxine
Whitehead, a vocal music teacher in
the Eastern District, asisted by Eric
Chambers, Carolyn Smith, Kathryn
Cook, Jan Eichinger, Anna Rice,
Sherry Stollar, Steve Jewell and Betti Bow. Accompanist is Darlene
Buckley and Melissa Coleman, the
school librarian, is assisting with the
painting of the scenery . Mothers of
students have created the attractive
costuming for the presentation.
Students will give a performance
for Riverview and Tuppers Plains
students on Friday morning. At the

Friday evening showing a one dollar
donation will be asked at the door
with pre-schoolers admi tted free of
charge.
Keith Karschnik will be playing
Jack and Jodie Schaekel wlll be in
the role'Qf his mother. Mony Wood
will be Captain Kidd and Flloyd
Ridenour and Jay Renolds will play
Juliana, the cow. Announcer is E ric
Sim ; Larissa Long is Gipsy Ann;
Brian Holley is Foolernesi, the
magician, the Terry Newsome is
Blunderbuss, the ogre. chad Cook
and Kyle Davis will serve as stage
hands.
Taking part in the various chorus
groups include:
Villagers in the first act and third
act : D. A. Harris, Mike Frost, David
King, Kim Mcintyre , Jill Reynolds,

PRINCIPLES-Here are some of the principle cast members in the
operetta, "Jack and the Beans talk, to be given at 8 p.m. Friday at
Chester Elemenlllry School Auditorium. They arc Jodie Schaekel, as
Jack's mother, Keith Karschnll&lt;, as Jack. and Floyd Ridenour and Jay
Reynolds as the cow in the story.

Ohio

Couple to
appear at
area revival

NO
FOOLIN'!

Ted and Donna Stanton will
provide music on Friday, Saturday
and Sunday evening at the revival
services at the Middleport Church of
the Nazarene.
Ted Stanton, a fonner nightclub
entertainer, plays the guitar and
sings with his wife providing the
piano accompaniment.
The couple have provided special
music for Sunday schools, worship

Amy Mann, Melissa Miller, Tom
Morrissey, Becky Bauer, Mark
Mann, Susan Bawn, Julie Crislip,
Michelle Capehart, Donna Curtis,
Scott Starcher, Chad Cook, Carol
King, Patti Wood, Melanie Mankin,
Laura Allen, Gina Gibbs, Tim
Lawson, Keith Irvine, Janet Werry.
Villagers in the second and third
acts : Rebecca Kauff, Angie Cha!&gt;man, Missy Marcinko, Susan Wolf,
Trisha Spencer, Lisa King, Tina
Foster, Brian Bailey, Diana White,
Alban Curtis, Shawn Waters, Mary
Edwards . Tim Clark , Laura
Hawthorne, Willie Hill, Leonard
Hill, Lisa Pooler, Kristan Heines,
Del Laudennilt, Matt Darling, Tony
Lee.
Pirates : Paul Erwin, Randy
Moore, Jason Nottingham, Donald
Dodson, Jason Ridenour, Donnie
Spencer, Mickey Bauer, Tom Hunter, Dean Mays, Mike Hoffman,
Scott Justis, Matt Finlaw, Billy
Johnson, Ttm Tom Michael , Richie
Hunt.
Dutch Dancers: Tony Grate,
Lorre OSbOrne, Shawn Marcinko,
Julie-Riffle, Rod Newsome, Tiffany
Gardner, Keith Hunt, Monica
Adams, Matt Ridenour, Elizabeth
Lawson, Philip Woods, Alvena VanMeter, T.J . Buckley, Lee Glllilan,
Greg Rayan, Nicole Pickens.
Chinese Girls : Sandy Foster,
Danielle Scott, Sherry Laudennilt,
Jean Shmucker, Stephany Gardner,
Tina McGrath, Alesha Keney,
Michelle Malhotra, Amy Beth Metzger, Leigh Anne Redovian, Suzanne
Clay, Rene Viola , Christina Pooler,
Kathie Rush, Melisa Federick.
Magic Beans : Michael Roush,
Jeremy Buckley, Lisa Hoffman,
Kellie Ridenour, Sherri Smith.
Rhythm Band : Charlie Brewer,
John Chaney, Carie Connally,
Heather Farley, Rhonda Gibbs,
Brooks Lyons, Jason Ryan, Sarah
Harris, Jerry Lightfoot, Michele
Metzger, Kim Michael , Matt
Michael, Carrie Morrissey, Jimmy
Parker, Chris Paulton, Luciana
Scott, Tonya Woodard, Melissa
Jacks, John Ridgway, Rachael
Hawley, Jimmy Pullins.

services, revivals, prison ministries,
crusades, and campgrounds across
the state.
.
Speaker at the services will be the
Rev. Richard Jaymes, a Nazarene
evangelist from Mt. Vernon. Services will continue through April 18
at 7 p.m. each evening.
The Rev. Jim Broome, pastor, invites the public to attend.

~

,1

COLOR
PORTABLE

• Top quality black
matrix picture
tube
• 1 00% solid state
chassis
o Front access
color controls

RCA
XL -100
1g"

• Automatic frequency
control
• Mechanical tuners
• Solid State chassis

New hours
A change in library hours has been
announced by Ruth Powers, acting
director.
Beginning on Aprill, the Pomeroy
Library will be open on Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
from 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. and on
Friday and Saturday from 10 :30
a.m. to 5 p.m.
The Middleport Library will be
open on Monday from noon to 8 p.m.
and on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 10 :30 a.m. to 5
p.m.
Friends of the Library will hold a
book sale at the Middleport Library
beginning Thursday as a part of the
observance of National Library
Week.

•

T.IIPP.Iln
MICROWAVE
OVEN

are, left to right, Alesha Keney,

Amry~M~etz:e:r:,:C:hln::es=e=:P:a~rk~e~r,~rh~y~lhm=:ba:nd=m:e:m:be=ra:.=======~

Family Medicin e

•

poor workmg condition. And, since a
major cause of monoxide poisoning
is improperly fun ctioning gas
heaters or other gas-burning a!&gt;paratus, the potential for carbon
"\\
monoxide poisoning is increased.
Another source of carbon
monoxide in our environment is the
automobile. Running a car in a
closed building is especially
dangerous since the monoxide gas
can reach lethal proportions.
newly recognized carbon
mqnoxide hazard is poorly vented
recreational vehicles. Frequently
these vehicles have gas burning
heaters and stoves which can result
in a tragedy If they are not properly
vented.
Surprisingly, a small amount of
carbon monoxide is naturally formed daily in our bloodstream, and
the level of carbon monoxide in a
smoker's bloodstream is
measurably higher.
A

QUESTION: Sounds as though
carbon monoxide replaces OJygen in
your bloodstream.
ANSWER: That is correct and
part of what makes this gas so
lethal. It has approximaleiy 200
times greater affinity to homoglobin
than oxygen. Hemoglobin is the substance in red blood cells that carries
oxygen to all the cells in the body.
When it combines with carbon
monoxide it c~u1 no longer pick up
oxygen. Then the cells of the body
die of oxygen starvation.
QUESTION: What are some of the
warning signs a person might notice
if he-or she is exposed to increased
concentrations of the poison?
ANSWER :' If a person is suddenly
exposed to high levels of carbon
monoxide he or she may develop
rapid unCOIIBCiousness, slip into a
coma and die, When poisoning takes
place more Jllowly, the first symptoms may res~ble the fiu. There

Ktris; Lorre Osllerne, Rod Newsome, Alvina Van
Meter, Dutch dancer; and Sarab Harris and Jimmy

may be headaches, dizziness and
nausea which will gradually worsen
over a number of·hours. These symptonns can rapidly progress to unconsciousness if the patient is
working strenuously and thus
brethes more rapidly.
QUESTION: How is the poisoning
treated?
ANSWER: Poisoning is treated
with high concentrations of oxygen.
Breathing 100 percent oxygen wiD
result in a 50 percent carbon dioxide
reduction of the blood level in about
one hour.
QUESTION: Will a person have
brain damage after carbon
monoxide poisoning? ·
ANSWER: If no coma occurs, then ·
pennanent damage Is unlikely. Of
those who survive severe poisoning
only a small proportion wjll 'demon- strate pennanent damage ~uch as
seizures or mentallmpalnnent.

LAST

DAYS
FURNITURE

Lifestyle

Treeing contest winners at the

night hunt of the Shade River Coon
Club Saturday were George Pl~rce,
female -dog; and Gerald Barrett,
male dog. Winners of the night hunt
were Red Eblen, first place; Jay.
Tracy, second; Gene Stone, third;
RobertScarbeiTY, fourth; and Earl
Goode, fifth place.

SHOWCASE .

1st Anniversary Sale
HUGE SAVINGS ON
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•PATIO FURNITURE
•HIDE·A·BEDS

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. •LA·Z·BOY RECLINERS '
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CORNER THiRD and OLIVE, GALLIPOLIS

~5

•

Meigs personals .
. Debl!l~ McLa~ and children, '

J,ason ind Denllle, Hampton, Va. are
viaiting with Mr. anc1 Mrs. Fred .
Wmiamaon and r.t,· and Mrs. Kenneth Mclaughlin. Another guest of
the Mcl.aughlina over the weekel)d
wu their daughter-In-law, Terry
. MclAughlin, wife of Kevin w~
~ froni Cuba where he JS ·
stationed with the U.S. Marines .

here

---- ::J

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• Large oven
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Dual spray arm
No- heat drying
switch
Porcelain enamel
interior

*•

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We draw our house
• diagrams to scahrthat way •

Antron Ill Saxony/Plush

Dupont manufactures · this nylon
fiber so you can be sure of it's
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Our installers revtew .
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A household shower will be held
for Ruth and Sam Shain, whose mobile horne was destroyed by fire
Frtday on Saturday evening at 7
p.m. at the Syracuse Methodist
Church basement. All relatives
and friends o! the couple are Invited
wattend.
For those who might have clothing to contribute, __the !arnlly's
sizes are pants, 42-32 and shirts,
17~ or XL for Shain; slacks, 18 and
tops, 38 or 40 for Mrs. Shain; slze 10
dress, 8 pants and 10 shirt for their
daughter Emlly: and size 8S pants,
and 10 shirt for their son, Sam. All
of the household possessions and
clothing of the famlly were lost In
the fire. They had no Insurance.

Treeing winners

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construction for a silken touch and
solid performance. The lustrous yarns
are made of Monsantos exclusive
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TIIPPilD 30" .GAS or ELECTRIC ·
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REPRESENTATIVE-Representing some of the
costumlng to be seen in the Friday night presentation

High Styled Excitement

Single knob electronic
tuning
•
Deluxe cabinetry
•
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~

More than a hundred Meigs
County Brcwnle Scouts enjouyed a
slumber party held at the multipurpose building In Pomeroy over
the weekend.
They saw a movie, had songs and
games, and worked with crafts. Besides the 122 Brownies there were
17 adult leaders and assistants at
the overnight.
Troops represented were Ches~
ter, Syracuse, Tuppers Plains, Rac ine, Reedsville, Pomeroy,
Salisbury, Middleport, Bradbury,
and Rutland.

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistant Professor of
Family Medicine
Ohio Unive111jly College
of Osteopathic
•
Medicine
QUESTION :
Recently I read a
story about a
young man who
almost died from
carbon monoxide
poisoning while
SCHRECK
working on his·
automobile. What is carbon
monoxide and why is it so
dangerous?
ANSWER: This is a good question,
and one that is especially pertinent
during this time of the year. Carbon
monoxide is a colorless, odorless gas
which when inhaled interferes with
the bloodstream's ability to circulate oxygen. With the end of cold
weather, heating s~stenns may be in

I~==:::iiii:31

Donna and
Ted Stanton

• 15 Minute timer

Ridenour, Tom Hunter, pirates; back row, Chad Cook,
Laura Hawthorne, Trisha Spencer, Becky Bauer, Tom
Morrissey, villagers.

ON CARPETING, COLOR TVs, AND MAJOR APPLIANCES

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Brownies hold
slumber party

ROUNDING-Rounding out the chorus groups for the
oepret1a are pirates and villagers. Representing these
groups are, front row, left to right, Paul Erwin, Jason

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�I

Th11rsday,

Thunday, April I, 1982

April

I, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

MEIGS Association for Retarded Citizens, 7:30p.m, Thursday
at the Community School.

THE ANNUAL inspection of
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM ,
will be held Friday evening at
7:30 p.m., Ike Spencer, master,
a nnounces. Refreshments will be
served.

EVANGEUNE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern ,')tar, Middleport, Thursday, 7:~ p.m. at
the Masonic Temple. Officers to
wear chapter dresses. Initiatory
work will be exemplified.

THERE will be a sale of homebaked goods Friday from 10 a .m.
to I p.m. at the old Warner Insurance building on West Main
St. The Salvation Anny Home
League Ladies will sponsor the

FRIDAY
JAYMAR
Me n' s Golf
Association will meet at the club
house Friday at 6: 30 p.m. Of.
ficers will be elected and a
iliscw;:;ion held on the Tuesday
night league. All club members
and non-members interested in
league play ing a re asked to attend.
Marilyn Meier makes many of the clothes which she
and her three daughters wear. Modeling some new
spring fas hioDll at the Tuesday night style revue were

to be Homemade
held with their
Easter
sale
missions.
bread
and
rolls, cupcakes, pies, fudge, candy and cookies will be for sale.
There will also be a small amount
of good inexpensive clothing for
sale.

;J'HERE WILL be a n Easter
bazaar Friday and Saturday at
Krogers from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. by
the Willing Workers Missionary
Society of the Syracuse Church of
God .

Mrs. Meier and her three da ughters, left to right,
Nicole, Becky and Elise.

Meigs springs into fashion
More tha n 200 women turned out
Tuesay night to view the ~' Spring Into Fashion" style revue staged
cooperatively by the Meigs County
Exten5ion Service and the Fabric
Shop.
Held at St. Paul 's Lutheran Church, viewers got a glimpse of spring
at its best in sundresses, shirts,
skirts, culottes and pants, as well
as fl owing feminine fashions in
prom and bridal dresses.
The tailored look, the prairie and

country classics, the soft and roma ntic of the Gunny Sax, were aU included in the style show lineup
na rrated by Mrs. Dale Stohl , extension agent.
Fifty-seven loca I women and
children modeled spring garments
sewn at home from the latest spring
·
fabrics .
The models were Bernadette Anderson, J ennifer Arnold, Patty
Asbeck, June, Erruna and Rachel
Ashley, Maria and Rowena Averion,

I

Edie Bernard, Anna Blackwood,
Betty Blackwood, Marga ret Brown ,
Shirley Bwngardner, Bridget and
J acob Davis, Leah and Susan Danner, Anita Dean, Bonnie Fields, Debbre Finlaw, Sharon Gibbs, Debbie
Grueser, Tara Grueser, Kelley
Grueser, Danielle Grueser, Carrie
Guinther, Nancy Hill, Avanel
Holliday , Lori Huddleston, Grace
Johnson, Tammy Johnson, Beverly
Jordan, Edie King, Janet Koblentz,
Annie cha pman, Marilyn Meier and
dau ghters, Nicole , Elise , and
Rebecca, Theresa Molden, tina
Molden, Pauline Myers, Ginger
Pratt, Crystal Rayburn, Leigh Ann
Redovian, Florence Richards, Lisa
Riggs, Mary Russell, Renee Russell,
Catherine Shenefield, Janice Smith,
Saglenda Smith, Marilyn Spencer,
Ruth Ann Taylor, Tammi Taylor,
Mary Jane Wise, Pat Wolfe, Susan
Wolf, Becky Jo Eichinger and
Teresa Houdashelt.
Ada Nease of the Fabric Shop had
the closing remarks and invited
those attending to the refreshment
table .

~·

Your "Extn Touch"

Florist Siner 1957

pt.~

BAKER
FURNITURE

To be held April 2, 1982 at
8:45
p.m.
Listen · to
WMPO Radio lor the
Details.

..,.

614/992·2133
'

'

__________
'
.
'

THE PUBLIC UTILITI~S
COMMISSION OF OHIO ' ,
By : David M . Polk,
Secretary .

Save when you buy
2 Steak &amp; Shrimp
Steak Dinners

'.

~

r··-----

COUPOO.MUST ACCOMPANY PURCHASE

.__
.,

_..:_

COOPON MUST ACCOMPANY PURCHASE

STEAK. and
SHRIMP

STEAK. and
SHRIMP
---OR---

C~ (AP) -

The SLan·
dard Oil Co. ( Oh10) has agreed to
buy a mine in West Virginia and to
operate four other coal mines which
will remain the property of Republic
Steel Corp.
Under the agreement, Sohiu will
manag~ Republic's northern Appalachian coal mines. Three are in
Pennsylvania and one is in KenSohio said the transaction "substantiaUy completes Sohio's coal
reserves acquisition program."
Sohio said Wednesday it will purchase Kitt Mine, a coal mine near
Philippi, W.Va., along with 118
million tons of low sulfur fee coal
reserves in Pennsylvania and certain other Republic assets, for $105
million.
Sohio will also take over
. Republic' sf coal management and
technical organization based in

• Long wearing
Chemlgum sole
and heel

a. m. to 12 noon Saturday, April!O, in
front of the Rutland Civic Center .
Registration can also be ha ndled by
telephoning 742-3 171 before Aprill 2.
Registration fee is $8.

Must pay deposit

Files action

New residents of Racine Villa ge
moving into rental property are
required to pay a $16.50 deposit on
water. This is refw1dable when
moving if all bills are paid . The
deposit is to be paid to Betty Sayre,
agent, at the Racine Department
Store .

A s uit in the amount of $4,1 ij .25 was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Cummins Central Ohio,
Inc., Columbus, against Letart
Township, in care uf Lelc:trt Township Trustees, Rl. 2, Racine .
The suit is for goods sold and
delivered to the trustees by the
plaintiff.

Sign-up Saturday

Fire levels home

Sign up for the Rutland Baseba ll
League will be held from 10 a.m. to
12 noon Saturday, April 3, and 10

The small traile r home of Bob
White was destroyed by fire about
10 :07 p.m. Wednesday. Racine fire
department members called to the
scene of the home on County Road 28
nea r Racine said that White had
retired for the night when he smelled
smoke. Investigating , he found a
room of the home engulfed rn
flames. He had to move through the
flames to escape from the burning
trailer. He was given oxygen by
members of the department's
emergency unit.

Served with • Baked Potato
• All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar
• Warm Roll with Butter

Served w fth • Baked Potato

Dnsert and 8Mttgt nol•incWed. CIIIIOt be I.ISid Wlll'l
Ollw lliiCOUIIII. ~ llltl not lncluclld. Sties lu
lpplltii*IO fiOIW priCt WIWt r«Prtcl bw law
Atl*t~ ............

Ots51f1 and 8evef ~ not tneluded Cnot be U5ld Willi
Olt. discounts. AppiiCII:IIt lUIS tJOI IICILQd. Salls 11J1

OFFER GOOD THRU

OFFER GOOD THRU
APRIL 18, f9!!2

APRIL JH, 19!12

•

UPPER RIVER
ROAD
(Across from the
Airport)

II

BONUS COUPON

I

Ponderosa

I

STEAD. URGER

I
I
I

I

~
I
I
I

first~egree

comrnun itJt.:s

of

Howard

JL•Ilnw:1y, when• there

a nd

were ad·

drtronal rcporl&lt; of tornadoes. She
sa id offtctals dtdn't believe se rious .
damagl' f)('l' lJJTed 111 those town s.

An

uffu~ JiJI

f1n•

at tht· nearby Dmw ille
tkpartnwn t s;.~td S IX houst•

traders wt•rt• O\'l'rturned ala pn v&lt;:t lt·

rencatton £trta ncar Howard .
Th&lt;· twrskr Jut just as the peak tornado

~ca s on

bt•ga n

Ohio. The

Ill

season lasts frwn Apnl to mid·July,
the N;tttunal Weathe r Scrvtce said.
Ol11n h~HI 25 tornadtws las t year,

school.

wtth thl' till' wurst s tnkin~ Ccu·dlllgtun . Tlw 1vns ter left four people
dt•tnl &lt;IIH1 a1Jou1 5G tn jurcd .

• Lawrl!llce Wolfe, 63, of Mount Vernon, wa s trea ted and relee~ sed fr u111
Knox Community l-lo.spital for cuts
on Ius head. He scud he was at hmlll'
and had just frnr shed lunch with Ius
wife whe n th e tornado took lht· rnuf
off and drd lllhcr damage to tht•

Tornad oes can &lt;Jill! have h1t in
Olun dunn g ;dl rnunths of the year .
Tht' ftrsl turnado uf 1982 was I!,[J rliL•r
11t'll a funnl'l cloud
th1 s nt• · ...
ltlllt'b d dt1wn no t th uf l.anc&lt;:~ster Ill

house .

Fat • .t l'ld ('uunl y
The wt•atlwr st·n ·rce labeled rt a
·· num-turnall tt, .. but the h1gh wrnds
dtd wrtl~.:;.; prt'ad dc-unagc tu h ou se~
and harns Nn tHH' was rnjured .

Dilvtdct Matthews of thl' s tate
Disaster St•rvln 's A~ency sa 1d offi crals estmwtcd the twister l'aused'
$300,000 damage wlthm the Mount
Ve rnon c1ty In fill') .

I

I
I
I

II

•

•

r

CHOPPED ,
r

••• ~·

,.-

Reagan avoided endorsing
idea that the rightists would
the goverrunent.
· are watching this very
arefullv. I think that it would gi~e

.t

• •

~

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ClnnoiM used wlfll olhef dilc:ounls ~' tun
1101 \nc~Wtd . Sillltu appliCibllto ·,tfillllll'il»
r~rld by

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1... At parlteiplling 1~. ~

Sit»: ia U.S.OA ~ted 'OJ\ Ct!OPf*lliel SCOUPOH 0000 fOfl AHY PARTY SIZE

BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Carter,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
David Fox, son, Evans, W. Va .; Mr .
and Mrs. John Morgan, daughter,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Sturgill, daughter, Wellston. (

Meets Monday
A regular meeting of Racine
Village Council has been set for 7
p.m. Monday; a board of public affairs session will be held al6:30.

'-.....

~~!~~u~~~if
a goverrunent
;·
on the scene that

~!!!!·l.o •• nu

away from the refor·
have been instituted," he'

Nt:.VV

LIVII~u

nUUIVI

~UII

C

t

the nuclear weapons issue,
.said the Soviet Union has

tcbllevt!d "a, definlta margin of
lm.o.rtilrltv." An immeWate freeze

Road 1. hnrtenths of a null• south of
Ohr o 1.:!:!, at 7: :!0 a .m. when her
veh tcl&lt;' met a Gallia County Local
Schools bus driven by Raymond
Mann , 62 , Hl. 2, Patrrot. and struck
the bus' left s rde .
Then• was mode rate damage to
Grllilan's ve hrcle and slrght to the
bus. and Grllrlan was cited for
fmlure tu yreh.l.
V1r~um:t D. Holt. 65. Pome roy. was
northbound un Mt•Jgs County Rd . 3
1Lt~ ad111g Cn ·L·k HucuJ 1 at the intt:rscdrurr w1th Uh1o 7 at 7:55 a .m.
wllt•n slw w~t :, urwblt· to stop and
struck tl s topped northbound ve hicle
om·en by Char iPs J . Pennrngton. 33.
M rddleport.
The pettrol saul there was
rnoderall' tlarna i.! t' tu Holt's vehwle
and slight to Pt·nn ln J.,! tt&gt;n 's . Holt was
l'Jtl'd for a . . sun·tl dea r dJsl&lt;ince .

Market reports
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1'• 1!~

••II-

ONCE IN ALIFETIME CHANCE
Win~_S_QO ;

_,1-\L~

20°/o 640°/o OFF
ALL SUITES IN STOCK

Come in and enter
Lifestyle Furniture 's

How is it possible for Rice's to sell high quality suites lor
such unbelieveable low prices??? Here are 6 reasons :

LA·Z·DOY·
'litt1JJjforJile"

1. Low overhead.
2. Family operation
••
3. ('ired
buying

4. Volume buying.
5. Volume selling.
6. Small mark-up.

'

of U.S. and Soviet arsenals, he said,
"would not only be disadvantageous,
in fact, .evl!!l dangerous to us" but
alao would remove Soviet incentives
to negotiate su&amp;staniliil reductions.
The presille~~ ·reaffinned that his
goal "is to reduce huclear weapons
dramatically, IISs.u ring lasting ·
peace and secw'lty." He
!a red
h!a IIUJlPOI1 . of a congressional
propoeai tbat calls for a freeze in
weapons only after the United stateS .
has cloeed the gap in areas where he
says the Soviets have an edge.

SWEEPSTAKES!

New 2 Pc .
Living Rm. Suite
Reg. 5239

.

dee

son , 19, Ht. I , Ewington, was
ticketed for passing in an rnte r~ec ti o n m a three-vehicle accident at the junction of Ohio 160 and
old 160.
According to the report, Matson
was southbound al6 :05 p.m. when he
passed anothe r southbound a uto
dri ven by Henr y A. Skidmore Ill . 16,
Rt. I, Bidwell, as Skidm ore
prepared to make a left tu rn, and
struck Skidmore's veh rcle.
Matson then reportedly struck a
northbound ve hr cle dri ve n by J o)"'e
M. Block, 44 , Rt. I. Bid wel l. There
were no injuries and the accident
caused slight damage to Block 's a nd
Skidm ore's i:Ju tos and moderate to
the Malson ve hicle.
The p&lt;~lrnl said Karen S. Gilltlan,
28, Rl. 2, Patriot, was south bound on
Greenfi eld Twp. Rd. 4 tShade Hi\'&lt;'r

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

misdemeanor.
During the raid, the six barrels of
fennenting mash were destroyed,
the "still" emptied and dismantled
and ~gallon jugs containing a clear
liquid believed·-to be alcohol confiscated.
A sheriffs department spokesman
said· this morning the total value of
the destroyed or confiscated
material would approach $2,000.

PLUS SALAD BAR

Buy one,
~et O!le at

Pa ul Anderson, Dewey Camp,
Eve lyn Cox, Ruth Darst, Lowell
Davis, Amber Dennis, Mrs. Ernest
Doles and da ughte r, Sharon Durst ,
Side ny Edwards, Cathy Erwin, Paul
Eva ns, Va ughn French, William
Fry, Clova Gamble , Amber Gardner, Effi e Ha yes, Debra Huddleston,
Patricia Hunt, Juli e King, Judith
Krebs, Dale McCoy, Charlton Ord ,
Robyn Reiber , Loretta Reynolds,
Donald Roa ch, Raymond Rupe,
Mona Russell , Mrs . Mark Snyder
and daughter. Linda Staten, Gail
Truglio, Mrs. Kenneth Vickers and
da ughter, Joan Walmsley, Da rsy
Weaver, Anna Williams, Cha rles
Wi.Jlia ms.

( Continut~ fro"\ page I)

• All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar
• Warm Roll with Butter

IJJfli~ ld 'tr!!(W prict WheltltQUifld by IIW,
At Plf1KIPillll8 sre~

Meadowlands, Pa.
Completion of the transaction is
subject to the necessary government
approvals, Sohio said.
"The Sohio-Republic coal Iransaction serves the interests of both
companies," said Alton W.
Whitehouse, Sohio chainnan.
Under the agreement, Sohio will
supply Republic with 6.6 million tons
of metallurgical coal from the Kitt
Mine over a HI-year period.
"Significant advancements rn the
quality of our coal supply over the
last five years have pennitted us to
alter the blend of coal required to
produce high quality coke," said
W.J. De Lancey, Republic chainnan
and chief executive officer.
"These advan cements have
resulted in lowering our coke
requirements per ton of hot metal
and now allow us to further balance
our coal reserves and sourcing."

Admitted-Ollie Thomas, Letart,
W. Va .; Ellen Couch, Pomeroy; Bertha Riebe l, Pomeroy .
Discharged-Sharrell Stone, Otho
Ka rr, Gladys Thomas, Ann Martin,
Alban Salser, Clarence Neutzling,
Ollre Thomas.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES MA~CH 31

$138

SIRLOIN SIRLOIN
STRIP STEAK STRIP STEAK
2 Dirum $6.99
2 Dinners $6.99

• Full grain, oil tannec! leather
• Fully leather Iinse!

A penalty will be added on la te
bills. Agent Betty Sayre can answe r
any questions on billing.

Sohio purchases one
:West Virginia mine

,•

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

Residents of Racine Village are
reminded that water and trash bills
can now be paid at the Racine
Department Store or mailed to P.O.
Box 375 in Racine. Bills are due on
April15.

---OR---

PECOS

Red

Bill reminder

or 2 Sirloin

Pick a Pair 0'

!!!!!!
TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY,
-'AND THE PROFESSIONS - ·

A nice
thing to do ·

All interested parties
will be given an oppor·
tunlty t.o be heard . Fur·
ther Information may be
obtained by contscting
the Commission .

POIIIIfOY, 011.

,352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTO Florist

\\estern

Local unrts answered three
emergency calls Wednesda y, the
Meigs Emerge ncy Medical Service
reports.
Middleport at 8:19 a. m. took Betty
FreeiTU\n from Pearl St., to Holzer
Medic.a1' Center ; Rutla nd at 9:04
a.m. took Paul · Van Meter to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
8:58 p.m. took Kathy Salser to
Holzer Medical Center.

KIDDIE SHOPPE

PH. 992-2644

LEASING
..,EQUIPMENT

Emergency runs

,

w.2nd

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial

Meigs County happenings

Hours :
Mon.-Sat. 9 : 30 to 5:00

FLORIST

. .BANK ONE .. -· -.

Mt. Vernon, Ohio, home Wednesday after a tornado

SEE OUR
, SPRING FASHIONS

l1l

destroyed his home and damaged several others. The
tornado also damaged a school, but few minor injuries
were reported. I AP Laserphoto)

puis his fishing pole back into his boat in the yard of his

The Pu bile UtiUties Com ·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No . Bl-303-EL-EFC Sub·
file A, to review the fuel
procurement practices
and policies of Columbus
&amp;! Southern Ohio Electrtc
Company , the operation
of Its electric Fuel Com pOI!lmt and related matters . Thla hearing Is
scheduled to begin at
9 :30 a .m . on April 5.
1982 at the offices of the
Public Utllltiee Commls·
slon , 375 . South High
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215

CARTER'S
SLEEPWEAR

Here Rowena and Maria

EASTER

LEGAL NOTICE

Large Shipment Of
this s prin~ .

Three people were cited for
separate accidenls in the a rea on
Wednesday.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the state
highwa y pat rol said Aaron P. Mat-

PICKING UP THE PIECES - Lawrence Wolfe

Just Arrlvedlll
tecna~e rs

FOR

SATURDAY

THERE WILL BE A HOMEBAKED good sale Friday from 10
a.m. to! p.m . at the fonner Warner Insurance building, W. Main
St. , under the sponsorship of the
Salvation Army Home League
Ladies. Proceeds will help on the
Eas ter missions program of the
league. There will be homemade
bread, rolls, cup cakes, pies, candies, cooki es for sale and there

Averiun mudd dresses made by their mother.

\

Ms . Matthews sau.l state disaster
officwls &lt;Jlsu were Inspecting the

But when the rt•(jl th1n g ha rpen l'd ,
he said, " We had no warn ing, it was
on U.'i a nd gone before we had a clumce to react."
The 1,100 students were at least
mentall y ready because of the drrll,
Perry sa id. No one w::~s injured and
the students continu ed l'iasses,
although a section of the roof was
dama ged.
Perry sa rd the tw rs ler apparentl y
tore between the high school and the
Knox County Jo111l Vorationctl
School about 150 ya rds away. Abuut
500 studcnl.'i a ttend the vocatrunal

OSP cites trio after wrecks

THE UNROE FAMILY of
Crown City will sing at Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church, Mid-

THE WALT DISNEY Movie,
" Rascal," will be s h9wn Friday
at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Elemen- .
tary School. The movie is sponsored by the PTA and the admission is $1 donation . Refreshments will be sold.

\

~~============~~

THE annual inspection for the
Shade River Lodge 453, will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Friday night.
Ike Spencer is master. Refreshments will be served.

SALISBURY
Township
Trustees will meet in regular
session Friday evening at 7 p.m.
at the horne of the clerk, Wanda
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road.

The Gunny Sax is particularly popular with

THERE WILL be a soup supper
at the Salem Center Elementary
School Saturday from 4 to 7 p.m.
The menu will include chili,
vegetable, bean soup, and hot
dogs. The cost is $1.50 per person.
Tickets are on sale now and will
also be sold at the door.
RACINE - A bake sale will be
held Saturday, from 9 to noon in
front of the Racine Home
National Bank for the Southern
football building fund.

GRACE EPISCOPAL Church
Women will hold a nurunage sale
at the parish house on Friday and
Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

BIG BEND Girl Scout Neighborhood, Leaders Meeting, 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Inn.

MOUNT VERNON, Ohio (AP)
National Guard troops pulled out of
Mount Vernon today after spending
the night on patrol following a tornado which ripped across the south
end of the city and injured seven
people.
Lt. Victor Dubina said 15 guardsmen had been sent to Mount Vernon to help local authorities.
The twister struck Jess than three
hours a fter a statewide tornado drill.
Mayor Betty K. Winand sa id the
injuries were minor, but four houses
were destroyed in the city of 14,000
about 40 miles northeast of Columbus.
She sa id the tornado hit about
12:40 p.m. Wednesda y and cut
through an area about four blocks
wide and three-fourths of a mi le
long, uprootin g trees and dama ging
buildings. At 10 :10 that morning,
sirens wailed around the sta te and
the Na ti ona l Weather Servcce se nt
test warnings.
Students at the Mount Vernon
High School had taken part in the
drill ,
id George Perry , princrpal.

dleport, Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
The public is invited.
'
PICfURES of the Holy Land
will be shown by Rev. 0. G.
McKinney Saturday at 7:30p.m.
at the Nease Settlement Church.
The public is invited.

will also be a small amount of
very good clothing for sale
reasonably.

II

Page

Tornado rips Mt. Vernon

Social Calendar
THURSDAY

The Daily Sentine l

Tell us how close to the wall
our new Reclina-Way"' c hairs
can be placed and you may
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THIRD AT OLIVE, GALLIPOLIS

446-3045

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Thunday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~I

Thunda~April 1,1982

1, 1982

..

RECEIVE AID - Flood victim• receive aid at
relief center In Houth Toledo. Toni and Paul Bortlner of
1906 Glencove Street, Toledo, listen aH Mary Bandiera,
Emergency Management Specialist from the Federal

Emergency Management Agency in Chicago, explains
flood insurance requirements. Bordner quipped that
now they had insurance after the " horse was out of the
ham." (l..aserphoto 1

Republicans may shoot
down missile silo plans
WASHINGTON IAPI - President
Reagan's plan to temporarily base
the first contiugcnt uf llle new MX

missiles in existing Minuteman silos
may be shot down by Senate
Republicans who fear it might increase the chances of nuclear war
erupt mg.
GOP members of the Senate
defense

a ppr op riati ons

s ub -

MX missiles by the middle of 1983.
The goal of that pennanent basing
plan would be to make the MX
missiles + a lnajor element in
Reagan's strategic arTT!!i program +
safe from Soviet attack .
Anoth~ r Republi can member of
the subcommittee, Mark Andrews of
North Dakota, said the administratiOn appear:; to be heading
toward a " hair trigger" situation in
which the United States might be
compelled to launch a first strike
agai nst the Soviet Union.

cornrnilte e + which scree ns
military spending requests + mised
questwns Wc'&lt;inesday about the
feasibility of the tem porary basin1•.
plan .
In economi c matters Wednesday ,
" This committee ma y not make the Senate narowl y averted a shutthe funds available for the MX until down of seven major government
a decision on a I permanent J basing agencies by approving a stopgap
mode IS made and approved by spending bill to keep them operating
Congress," !:ia id Ala sk&lt;:t Republican through Sept. 30, the end of fiscal
Ted Stevens, chainnan of the panel.
1982. The move came after a 51-48
Sen . Warren Rudman. R-N .D.. vote to remove an amendment to
noted that the administration con- force a simultaneoll!i decision on a
cedes the missil es would be tax break Congress voted its memvulnerable to Soviet attack during bers last year.
the mterim period while they are in
In other cong ressional business:
the Mmutcman silos.

That. 11 was suggested, might
make it more likely that the United
States would f1re first If it was determined the Soviets planned to attack
the MX sites.
The adminiStration proposes to
put 40 MX missiles into Minuteman
missile silos 1n the Midwest, at an
estimated cost of $3.6 billion. It 1s

+ General Accounting Office Com-

ptroller Charles A. Bowsher told a
House Government Operations sul&gt;cornmittee that financial controls
within the Energy Department are
so lax that the depa rtment doesn't
know what it owns and has
sometimes bought property twice.
+Agriculture Department Deputy
Under Secretary Thomas Hammer'
supposed to develop a permanent told the House Agriculture sugar
basing system for the multiwarhead subcommittee that world sugar

prices are only pennies above the
level at which government takeover
of large domestic sugar supplies will
occur under the new price support
program .

+Senior military officers told the
Veterans Affairs education sul&gt;conunittee that a new GI Bill
educational-benefit program is vital
to the success of the all-volunteer
force.
+ The Senate Judiciary Committee voted 12-&lt;l for a bill to reduce
the liability of some defendants in
antitrust price-fixing cases by
allowing them to sue c&lt;&gt;-eonspirators
who settled out of court. The bill
could mea n billions of dollars in
savings for compames involved in
priCt'-rixing suits.

Police seek walkaway
Police
CLEVELAND 1AP I
searched today for a man, described
as dangerous, who walked away
frol'll the Weste rn Reserve
Psychiatric Habilitation ce nter.
Authorities said Anthony E.
Roden , 29, did not return from the
hospital grounds to his residential
building when he was due hack at 6
p.m. Wednesday . Roden had been
found not guilty by reason of insanity in the 1974 shooting death of a
Cleveland policeman.

be felt from Lake Erie port:; to the
industrial centers on the Ohio River.
" Whatever we do must be done
with the greatest of care so we do not
destroy our commerce," Roe said.
At the same time, he feels the
urgency of action needed to take advantage of an immediate opportunity for a major expansion of
coal exports. Deep water ports want
channels dredged to a depth of 55
feei or more to handle the new
super-colliers being built for the international coal-hauling trade.
For more than 150 year~. the
federal government has taken
responsibility for waterway development and maintenance.
Proponents of the system say the
investment has been handsomely
repaid in terms of economic growth
as · industrial and agricultural
production benefited from low-cost
water transportation.
Critics charge that the waterway
users are getting a free ride at the
public's expense.
But Roe says this is misleading in
view of the billions of dollars in
customs revenue that comes
through the nation's ports.
"Customs fees in the past supported the port system," he said.
" We now bring in $5.2 billion a year
in customs fees derived from the
water transport system."
Thirty percent of that goes to the
Department of Agriculture.
Roe said the allocation of customs
revenues is one of the questions he
intends to pursue in trying to find an
equitable solution to the waterway

Way, Chester.
D. Earl Cowen, deed. , Letha
r wen, Cert. of trans., Bedford.
James M. Oliver to John H. Utsinger, Jr., Joyce E. Utsinger, 45
acres, Rutland .
Rose M. Thomas to Malcolm
Keen, Charlotte Keen, 1, acre,
Olive.
Gladys Heiney to Blauser Well
Serv. Inc., Right of Way, Olive.
Gary P. Smith, Charlotte Smith to
Blauser Well Serv. Inc., Right of
Way, Pomeroy .
Carl E. Morris, Janet E. Morris,
Drexel B. Cochran, Betty J . Cochran
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Way, Scipio.
Lester Walburn, deed ., aka
Clarence Lester Walburn, deed ., to
Geraldine Lightfoot, Cathy Darlene
Weaver, Pomeroy-Salisbury.
Dorothy M. Rea, deed., Don E.
Rea, Cert. of Transfer, Minersville.
George D. Baer, Clara A. Baer to
Charles S. Ban;, Sandra L. Barr,

--

LAFF - A - DAY

Busmtess Services

HOBSTETTER REALTY
GeorgeS.

Hob ~ l cller

Jr

Orol&lt; er

NEW liSTING - Ni ce

problem.
Also overlooked by many, he says,
is the contribution that products
shipped via waterways make to
America's balance of foreign trade.
"The administration's position
calling for total cost recovery with a
unifonn charge, together with a
segmented charge covering, for
example, Lock and Dam 26, which
would be added together with a deep
sea port charge, would just have an
enonnous effect economically," Roe
said.
Similarly, with the St. Lawrence
Seaway, he said, "We come to a
situation where they can't absorb
too many charges because if they do,
it's going to put the whole Seaway
out of whack with other parts of the
nation and will have a material affect on the economy of the surrounding region."
Roe agreed something must be
done to equalize the situation for
Seaway shippers. Some witnesses
have urged that the federal government forgive the remaining $100
million Seaway debt or capitalize it,
as Canada did.
There are other issues involved,
such as the question of the billions of
dollars of private and public funds
invested around waterways on the
basis of commerce that could vanish
under a wholesale revl.sion of waterway policy.
Roe hopes the lengthy hearings
will "bring the whole thing
together" and that what will emerge
for the first time will be a unified
national policy on waterways.

two story hom e, 4
bedrooms, bath , par
tially furn• shed . E x
ce llent corner lot , nea r
g rade school in Mid·

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

dleport. $16.000 .00.
BROADWAY ST.
RACINE - Large lwo

And Home Maintenance
1 Roofing of all types

story
hom e wdh
beautiful woodwork
Follr bedroom s, ll v 1ng
room, family room , rec.
room, modern kit c hen,
garage
and
full
basement. Room . l or
garden on the level
119'x 124' lot . Mu st see to
appreciate . $32 .500.00 .

1 Remodeling

CORNER LOT - Mid·
dleport, spa c iou s thr ee
bedroom hom e, living ,
family
and
dining
rooms , sunny kitc hen,
full basement . Ideal for
retired co upl e. L ot
SO' x60'. One car garage.

ACREAGE

Two

acres and beautiful ran ·
c h style home with ap·
prox . 1267 sq . ft . living
w /s tora ge,
utility

building $45,000 .00
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

742-3092
Cheryllemley, Assoc .

742-3171
Rul Ettate - Generel

LISTING -

BARGAIN -

Radiator Specialist

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs . Experience

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, Oh .

Ph. 992·2174

Ph. 949·2160 or 949-ljil

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Chester, Oh.

2·26·1f c

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
" Beautiful. Cus tom
Bu111 Garages "
Cnll for fr ee sidi ng
est1mates, 949·2801 or
949 ·2860.
No Sunday Ca ll s

8398

"It's a very effective appetite
suppressant . Arter you've

struggled

with the safely cap,
you 're too exhausted to ea t.' '

1------------1
Announcem ent s

J II li e

AU. STEEL

5 Fam ily Y Md Sllle d•nC' IIc

F r e &amp; Sn t 2 m1lc s ou t Rt
I"
4 F nmdy Gnraq(' Snl e I
mile out Mill Cr ee k Rd
F ndi!y &amp; Sot 9 5 Lflwn
mower .
! •res.
cur!Ntn:..
c lothes R c11 n or sh•n e

- utitirYBuildings

Ga raq e S,11e Ap ril
2.3. &amp; 5th Lo ts o f new Avon
&amp; good c lolh 1nq 9 5 6/4
De en1e Dr , 7 m• lrom
hOSpital r1UOSS I rom Mi nk s
Auru Soli·~
LclrQC'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

DLEPORT

A

$45,000.
11

9

3

2 or 3

ljedroom one floor plan.
Bath, coal or wood fur ·
nace and 3 lot s Want

just $9,000
CAR WASH - A won
derful opportunity tor a
business minded per ·
son. Requires little tim e
to ca re for . Can you beat

SlS,OOO.
NEW LISTING
Redecorated 2 bedroom
home in Middleport with
bath, natural gas for ced
air furnace , large kit ·
chen with lots of woocl
cabinets . Utility room
and garage on leve l lot.

Only $16,500.
MIDDLEPORT - Very
nice 3 bedroom hom e in
excellent condition . Hot
water heat. formal
din1ng, ni ce carpeting ,
full basement, garage
an·d fenced yard .

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

PRICE REDUCED! On
th is 2·3 bedroom hom e
in Sy ra cuse. New car ·
peting , st orms,
in ·
sulation
Gas
he at.
r emode led bath . Plus
low interest assumab le
loa n! Ju st $25,000.

POMEROY

A 2

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Truck s
l:o-Boy
Trencher
Wafer
Sewer
Gas lines
Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs

PH . 992·2478
J.ll -1mo -pd

bedroom hom e, forced
air gas hea t. c arpet,
pat10 ,
garge
tn
basem ent . Lar ge double
lor. pr ice r educed to

BOGGS

CONTRACTING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•
•
•
•

backhoe
eHava ting
septic sys t ems
water , sewer
&amp; gas lin es
• dump truck

U . S. Rt . 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer ,
New Holl and , Bush Hog
Farm E qu1pm ent
Dealer

•lim~s t1n e

licensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992-7201

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

J 29 lie

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

RACINE Se veral 1
acre
tot s .
U tiliti es
avai lable . Aski ng $6,500
an acre for lots wi th
r oad frontage .

New Homes - ex tensive remodeling

AGRACIOUS HOME IN
POMEROY
4

•Mobile
Sites
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Spring Developments
"Small Jobs A
Specialty''

bedroom s,
hardwood
floors, gas forced air
heat. fir epla ce, front s1t·
ting porc h . A good pn ce .

$29,900.

e Electrical work
. • Custom Pole B ldg s.
• Roofing work
14 Years Experien ce

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992 -2282

JIM LUCAS

NEW LI STI NG IN
SYRACUSE - Nice cor
ner tot with 1111 stor y
fr ame hom e that has 3
bedrooms, family room ,
utility room , workshop
&amp; gar age.
L ots of
fl owe r s, shrub s &amp; trees
Pr ese nt loan can be
assumed . S35,000 .

PH . 742-2753

I 3 fi e

----------,

I
CHERRY TRE E
MINIATUR E
I
GO LF COUR SE
I
1 Rav ensw ood . w. Va .
I Now Open Weeke nd s
1 to4 P.M .
I Weill her Perm ttltnq
I
I Clip Thts Ad lo• a Free
wt1h I patd Game.
I Game
I Expires mar 15.
It Locat ed across from

the Shoppt ng Pl&lt;l7;'1 .11

3 17 I mo

I was h1ngt on M ote l.
I
3 291mo

L-----------'
l------------1f-----------l------------j
Jllfn

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.,

GRI

J&amp;F

1 - - - - - - - - - - - i - - - - - - - -- - - j f - - - - - - - - - - - i

$20.800
TRAILER
OR
BUILDING LOTS

992-6191

Jean Trussell
Dottle Turner
Office

YardScllf'S ,l l April) Cor
nN Jrd &amp; Olive

everrtunity
l •v•ng
rL..----------j~-----------1f-----------1 Aloe
produvcera
t s tor
oppo
me et1ng . 7· 00 PM, Apr il
5th ,
Shonev· s.
' Po1nl
Pl easan t tor furth er ,n
for mnt•on call (30 41 776

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

St. Rt. 124

Pome1oy, OH.

949-2660
992-5692
992-2259

DABBLE SHOP
POMEROY,

PH .

99 2-2063

STOP and look at our
fine selection of plas ter
and ceramics .
- banks
- planter s
- p.:~int
- statues
- mirrors
- spray
- plaques
- bru shes

3 Famt ly Yard s~1 1 v 7,3. 8.
&lt;1H1 lOAM 5PM CI:J it1 •1lO 8.
m 1sc qoods l / 4ml lron7 18
on r 1qh t

363 1.

YMcl Sale ell 86 P1n1' St
Char les K 1rchen

Yard Sale 132 Lay ne St.
New Ha ven April 2, 9 111 3
Lot s of baby c lathes,
m aterntt y c lothes, wh1!e
uniform s, all s•zes clo th ing ,
In
gl asswar e nnd m1sc
garag e if rCl•n

7 FArnily Ynrd Sale Oft Rt
588 on Van co
on Apr ll2&amp;3

-Addons and remodelinx
-Roofing ~ nd gutter work
-Concrete work
-Piumbin1 and

Ra c •n e F 1re Dept sponso r s
a Gun Shoot , Sa t ntgh ts
6 30 p rn , Basha n Fa c to ry
chok e 17 gauge shotgun

Rd

RUMMAGE SA L E BAKE
SALE En l rrp ri SI' Chur c h.
Route&gt; 33 . 1 ] mil e north of
P omeroy
co rp
s •qn
Fr•drly , S .=~turdily , J\prd
7,3 9 to 4 50 per · brl Ct on
Srllu rcl.:ty

Wanted to lease acreag e
l or gil s and oil r1ght s
highes t rate s Call Be tt •e
Rebhol z I 614 263 2414
Cra tl
Bazaar ,
We s t
V1rg1n1a Tra 1n1ng Sc t1ool
Library.
2300
L1n co ln
Avenu e. March 29 April 3,
10 AM l o 7 PM Proceeds go
toward buy.ng new books
and library suppl1es

Por ch Sale 505 2nd 51
April I &lt;~n et 7
M oson
Jeil n:.. st er eo C'QU•P . sporl s
( h rlr l c
,1n cl camp 1nq
Dr rlkf' 984 3708
Por ch Sale Mond&lt;IY .=tM
ruP5ctn v Ap r 5 nnd 6 tO to
·I p m 412 4th St Ra c •nr,
0 11 Cnt l949 21 44

ANY PER SO N who has

2 dog s, female, Boxe r pup
Mal e Shep herd &amp; Collie
m 1x . Ca ll446 8636 after 5

G, q ,1 ni1 C CI1Urrt1 'r'M CI &lt;, ,11 ('
April 1 3t Fr1 &amp; 5,1 1 !9 S
Lo ts of m1'lce ll nn ous .t cm&lt;&gt;
So mPit11nq l or every one .IJ
COif' 51 Nc l(f to r 1v0r M 1d
dl(' porl Rc11n cancrl'i
YAR D Sn tc · F r1d.1V 1 10 to
4 Bilby :. troller . bowl•nq
bi'lll and baq. baby CIO ft1CS.
tei'ln s. sun dre sses 5,11rm
St Rutland

electrical work
(free Estimates)

V. t. YOUNG Ill

Housing

~a1ri 1 C' I d

G &lt;~raqe Sn lr ?OlB MMQu d
te Ave. PI Plea s,ln l Fr 1
&amp; S,lt Apn l2 &amp; 3. 9 to 5 6
1 ~1m dy baby c to l hf'S , to ts ol
cto lh•nct all "&gt;• l es. m1&lt;:,(
bC'dsprecld'l . d r nper• rs. I v.
&amp; rrco rd pl nyc r F lowr r
q1rl drC'ss. &amp; br•de c, m ,ll(l

Fo r bulk del•vcry
of
gasoline, hea l •nq ad and
d•esel l uel, call Landmark ,
992 2181. Pom er oy , Oh

any th ing to ytvc away and
does not off er or a tf cm pt to
offer any other lh1n q t or
sal e m&lt;W place an ad 1n tht s
co lumn There will be no
charg e to the adverttser

CARPENTER
SERVICE

OHIO

3 Family Garaac S&lt;~ l c 339
Debby Dr1v e. G&lt;~ l !t po l • :.
Aprd 2, Frtday 9 To 6 Baby
to adult c lotht ng , wo m.=tn
s•z es 7 to 18, ma tcrn•tv
c lothe s.
to ys ,
books .
drape s,
l oots .
m1 sce llaneous Item s

3 t nmdy GMaQc S r~l r 107
9th St , PI Pleasan t WC'd
31) I 10 Sill 413 8 OOAM ?

Headquarters

,_

The Daily Sentinel

PORC H sate . April 7. 10 3,
April 3, 9 12. 810 Ma1n Sl ,
l)f'S•dc Ep• sc opnl Chur ch
Lo ts of chlldrrns c lott1rs

PHONE 992-2156

YARD sa le, 9 4, April I 3,
/ 41 5 L1ncoln,
Chilclren s
clo lh•n q, E~lslcr drC'SSf'':i,
boyss ull

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

lost and Found

6

LOST Bl ac k &amp; tan Coon
dog , ma le, approx . 7 yr .
old, r ed nylon co llar . Los t
on Rt . 554 around Ky ge r If
found co li 36 7 7442 or &lt;146
8089

1 Cr1 rd of Thanks ( pi'11 Cl 1n Mlv,lncr)
7 CMd ot Tt1ank s { pa1 d 1n ,l(lv.'lnceJ
3 Announcements
4 Gi veaway
s H appy Ad s
6 Los t 11nd Found
7 Ytlrd Sale { p.=ild lr1 rl dV(l n( l ' /
8 Publ tc Sa te
&amp; Auc t1on
9 W11nted to Buy

Employment
Services

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO .
PROBATE
DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION OF TASHA
JOY JOHNSON
·
No. 23.692
-NOTICE BY
PUBLICATIONTO: JAMES ARTHUR
WEBER , JR., last known

address: Toledo, Ohio.
You are hereby notified
that you have been named
as putative father '!f Ta~ha
Marie Bellamy. Th1sact1on
has been assigned Case No.
23,692 in the COmmon Pleas
court, Juvenile Division,

Meigs County, Pomeroy,
Ohio-45769.
The object of the Petition
is -to adopt said Tasha
Marie Bellamy by the
Petitioners and divesting
you of all parental right.
Yoli are requlredlo answer the Petition within
twenty-eight pays or object

S1 House hold Goods
52 CB. TV &amp; Rr!dtO Equ1pment
53 Antiques ·
54 Mise Merchandise
55 Building Suppli es
S6 Pe ts for Salf'
57 Muscial 1nstrum enl s
SA Frutt s &amp; Vegetab les
59 For Sa le or Tr ade

------------=:- eal Estate

)rl

Hom es tor S r~te
Mobile Hom es tor SaiP
F nrm s for Srl lf'
Bustnf''iS Buil d •nq s
Lots &amp; Acreilge
Rf'rl l Es t are Wi'lnl ect

the 15th day of April, 1982,
and the twenty·e1ghl days

will commence on that
date. In case of failure to ·
answer
or
otherwise
respond as required by the
Oh10
Rules
of
Civil

Procedure, judgment by
default will be rendered

ROBERT F. BUCK ,
JUDGE AND
EX·OFFICIO CLERK
(31 11, 18, 25 t4l 1. 8, 15, 61c

74
75
76
77
78

Motorcycles
Boats &amp; Motors
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones
Auto Repair
Camping Equipment

Gallia County
Are.1 Code 614

6 1 Farm Equ ipm ent
62 Wanted to buy
63 Livestock
64 Hay &amp; Gr ai n
65 Seed &amp; Fertilt ze r

992-Middleporl
Pomeroy

245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Oist.
643- Arabia Dist.
379- Walnut

985-Chester
343-Porlland
247-Lelarl Falls
949-Racine

742-Rulland

Mason Co., wv
A rea COde 104

Pu btic

NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS

418-Leon
176-Appte Grove

Office of Commissioners of
Jurors, Meigs County, Ohio

March 29, 1982
To All Whom II May Con- CSY Pi .
cern:
T
On Friday, the 9th day of
April 1982, atlO :OO o'c lock.
A.M., at the office of the
Commissioners of Jurors of
Meigs County, Ohio, Jurors
will be publicly drawn for
the May 1982 Term of the
Common Pleas Court of
said County .

Lauren Hoffman

wallace Bradford lti&gt;&lt;Pii)ra,tion,
Commissioners

of

Jurors

----~P
~u~b~l~
ic~N~o
~l~ic
~e
~---

LEGAL NOTICE
SUMMER YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
PROGRAM
The Ohio Bureau of Em·
ployment Services, Office

lfol:"!•!!~!9~·~n~;~1~G{~l~~1t!~
4)

1. lie

(Formerly Bar e M etal)
178 W. Main , Pomeroy

backhoe ser·
vice,
water, sewer ,
ponds,
foundation s,
reclamation .

713-Mason
882-'-New Haven

895-Letart
937-Bullalo

&amp;

or 949. 2411

up to IS Words .. Three day
Up to IS Words .. One day
Up to IS Words .. Six day

87 Upholstery

insertion .............. $4.00
insertion ......... ..... $7.00

!Wanted
I For Sale
1Announcement
I For Rent

IIHE

I,S_lCINCH
l.f YO~U USE
THE.INOH!
.

.

Open Mon .· Sat. 9· 5
3-5- 1 rna .

3 3 tfn

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

17. - - - - -- 18. - - - - - - 19, _ _ _ _ _ __

2.

20.
21 .

3.

22.

REESE ~
..1-...J i
TRENCHING
SERVICE·

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces

repair

service

Water·Sewer-Eiectric
Gas Line-Ditches

and

water Line Hook -ups

installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195

111

SUCCESSF
BUSINEsr

BRAKES·TUNE · UPS
OVERHAULSDl ESEL· EXHAUST

~~=========J~==;~=====~

inse n1on ............. .S3.0U

1.

you want it .. .
you ·ve got it .. .

Rick &amp; Bill Cogar
Owners

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949-2293

83-Excavaling

.

!NO

DOJ er

N
..:;o:.:l..:;ic'-'e' - - -

of Manpower Development
(OMO) is announcing the
Fiscal Year 1982 Title IV
Summer
Youth
Em pia ment
Program

MA.ltl STREET
~A RAGE

615-Pt. Pleasant

661-Coohlille

84·Eit;crical &amp; Refriqeration
85·General Hauling
86·M .H . Repair

Septic Tank s
county certified
Roush L01ne
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph . 367·7160
1·7·1

~~nc

CALL
USED MOWERS
' IN GOOD SHAPE

.,.....2-2tl2
INT.IHP
RIDING MOWER

1495

II HP TRACTOR'
WITH MOWER

'850
"

TURF· FLITI 7 HP
REAR ENOINI
RIDiNG

.

how much
and
to b•:.:u~l~f~l~r.::t~
a lithe
and
during
hospital. ESJ~C:ia~ly
and those
the
Ia, also Mille and
roll and those at
Friendly,

3

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, anct
Pick up and
supplies.
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georges Creek Rd.

Call

.u.!-0294.-

LOI/E TO ALL,
Nancy
,l'

-'395

.
..t

•

'
I
I

..;, 1 '

..~ "·

MALE, part Irish Setier,
good home, approx 7 mon ·
ths old, good pet for kids,
see 501 Burdette St. or call,
304-675-6311 .

ll

•

;r.'

......~~

FOU ND
Sm .
f ema l e
Beag le pup. In Rt . 160area

• •

-"~..,. ~

.

--·

'

~

•

~-

. ..

.

8

Public S;JI C
&amp; Auction

Rick
P earson ,
Ex
per1enced AUCT IO NEER .
Estates, antiques, f arm,
household . Lt ce nsed Ohi o
wv . Buying ani 1Ques. 304

713 5785. 773 9185 .
L E . Neal AUCI10necr Se r
vi ce
Estal e Farm
H ouse hold Mt sc We se ll 11!
LICe nsed &amp; bonded Oh •o &amp;

wva . 367 1101

LOST : sm a ll male beagle
dog . 2 yrs . old Ha s co ll ar

Au c tt on every Fn . night at
th e · Hartford Commundy
Cen ter . Truckl oad:. of new
m erchandise ev ery week
Co nstg ments of new and
used merchandrse a lway s
w e l co me .
Richard
Rey nolds A tl c t •oneer 275

and lag. 992 2833.

5

V.rd Sale

Ap ril 2 3 Cra ft s, T V game.
antique hoy l ork . household

3069.

A lti ze rchild
s
h
rtems.
snedr
clothtngSoul
( 4 8).
western .

9

35 Grape St Thur s., Fn &amp;
sat . 9·4 Love se t , c ha1r .
c loth es, drpa es, stool s,
toy s, bike s.

niture and Antiques ol all
ktnds, ca ll Ken neth Swain ,
446 3159 and 256 1967 in th e
eve nings .

Gar age Sal e 1st &amp; 2nd . A ll
s1zes of £.1o,fhes, and other
mis c. 101 Mabeline dr .,
Ga llipoli s.

CAS H PAl D lor clean. late

!Ja~t~d

to Bu t

WANT TO BUY Old lur

Yard Sa le old Rt. 160Saalt .

Evergreen . Fri . &amp;
Wea ther permitting .

Yard Sa le Several famili es
c lothing childrens size 2 to
adult, jeans, tops, dresses,
men 's shirts. Home in ·
terior, glassware. ni c na cs,
&amp; mi sc. 2 story
green
house on Rt . 7, in Cheshire
across from J's Min i Mart.
9: 00 to 5: 00. ThurS., Fri. &amp;

Sat.
Porch

Sale

247

Neigh-

borhood Rd . Monday April

5 thru April9 .

'

~ ~~--

7913 Spru ce Sr ThurSdi'ly ,
F r •dily,9 4 Infant 4, lad1 es
c l ofh •nQ . m1 SC ll ems. c~1m
p•nQ cqu.prncnt

Call 245·1642.

Garage Sa le sa t . April 3. 7
miles west on St Rt . 141.
beyo nd Centenary . Lot s of
c lothing &amp; household items .

=:;::;~;t=::;::.:::::::::::=:~;:~l
;;

I would like to '""''Iiiii
of those ' who

POMEROY
LANDMARK

LOST small dog Air Dale
hea d &amp; Beag le body . B lack,
white&amp; brown . Named Joe
Ca ll 367 7734 .

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
CONSTRUCTION

(Average 4 wc.rds per line&gt;

Public Notice

1411. lie

Meigs County
.Area Code 614

446-Gatlipolis
367-Cheshire

81 Home Improvements
82 PlumbVlg &amp; Heating

against you
and
the
Petition granted for the
relief demanded in the
petition dated March 5,

1982.

following telephone exchanges.

73Vans&amp;4WD

Ser lEtS

41 Hou ses for Rent
42 Mob de Homes for Rent
43 Far m s for Ren t
44 Apartment l or Rent
45 Fur nt shed Room s
46 Spa ce for rent
47 Wanted to R ent
48 Equi pm en t tor Rent
49 For Lease

_P.!!f!!i~ ~O!i~-­
to the grant1ng to the a~op ·
tion within twenty -e1ght
days
after
the
last
publication of this notice,
which will be published on·
ce each week for six con ·
secutive weeks . The last
publication will be made on

Classified pages cover the

71 Autos tor Sate
72 Trucks for Sale

388-Vinlon

Rentals

11 Help want ed
17 Sttuat• on Witn l ed
13 1nsurance
14 Business Tra1n1n q
I S Sc hoo l s tn stru c11 on
16 Ri1d tO. T V &amp; C B R eprl lr
17 M• sce ltan eo us
18 Wnnted To do

Public No! ice

21 Ousincs s Opportunit y
17 Money to L oan
23 Pr ofes:; •on rl l SN\o i CC'S

31
37
33
34
35

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

Merebandlse

Finanejal

Announcements

... .-.. ..... ·:-·

N G Opening Fr 1 A pr il 7,

307 Upper
R 1ver
Rd ,
Ga lltpolt s. Blu e building
ac ross fr om Silver Bridge
Plaza . Op en M_on ., Wed ., &amp;
Fri . 10 fa 4. Sat . 10 to 3.
Speciai 1Z1ng 1n aluminum
cans , alum 1num sidtng,
sheets &amp; cas t a lum . c opper
wi re, bra ss, rad ta tor s, aut o
baffenes &amp; 1BM ca rd s
Ea r ly An l tque coun t ry f ur
nilur e, cu pboMd s, nil ktnd s
of
c h es t s,
des k s,
stoneware. et c Ca ll 36 7
0138

N eed rear bumper C" nds.
ch rome for door s. fro nt fen
der s of 1957 Chevy 2 door
Call 446 1458

set. tabl es. d1she s &amp; m1s c

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BUILDINGS

Wa nt ed to Buy

ROSENBERG RECYCLI
Large Yard Sa l e Mov ed
here r ece ntly fr om Dayt on
m any good c l ean i tems
used and new ru gs, bed
spreads, p1 ctu re s. 18 fl . lad
der. g l assware, small ap
pl•ances, cloth •ng, First
11me 1n thts area 12 till
7PM . A pril 2,3 133 Slal e
St ., Ga llipolis Phone 446

F ish ing LicensP on sa iP
Come and see ou r new sh tp
men l at 1982 Fismg Rod s,
~----------t-----------i~-----------if-----------1 Reel s, &amp; l ure s. Spr ing
Va ll ey Tra ding Co., Spr1n g
Valley Pl aza, 446·8025
SAVE MONEY
Real Estate - General
Future Referenc e
MAKE YOUR OWN
Tur k ey Hunters We have
EASTER CANDY
mou th ca ll s, sla t e box
" Learn How Free "
ca l ls, camo gear &amp; decoy s
One Simple Class
Sizes start from JOx24 "
in stock
Spr ing Va ll ey
• Summer Coating s
Trad tng Co ., Spnng Va ll ey
Call Ken Young
• A com plete l ine of
Pl aza. &lt;!46 8025
Molds &amp; Candy
For Fast Serv ice
S1zes from 4 fob and all
Supplies
985-3561
wood buildings 24x36.
•Wilton Cake
D• 's Crall Supply, Spr tn g
PART)ANOHR...-ICE.
Insulated Dog House s
Decorating Suppli es
Va ll ey Plaza, 446 · 2134 .
ALLMAI( E ~
FR EE
Eas t er
candy
e W,H ill'f\
Something Special
mak1ng c la ss . 7.00 Thur s.
POMEROY, 0.
eDrv en
Rt . 3, Box 14
Marc h 18 &amp;
25
No
103 Wa shington St .
e R.1ngr~
992-2259
Racine, Oh .
regt slritiJUII nece s::. a r y
e 01\POU I~
Ravenswood , W. Va .
e 01Shw.l\r"IN\
Ph. 614 ·843·2191
Chocola te $1 60 lb
PH . 304·273-3148
NEW LISTING - MID·
e H OI W.llfl I .ln~\
9 ~ Ti c
6 IS li e
3· 19· 1 mo.

7 5·1fc

bedroom ni ce hom e.
CarPeting, larg e ea t·in
kitchen,
b a th,
full
basement, for ced air
furnace, and large lot .
Will sell on tim e or take
trade .

.7866 acre, Sutton.
Roger Theiss, Janet E. Theiss to
Roger Theiss, Janet E. Theiss, Parcel, Lebanon.
Earl Michael Johnson to Iris
Christine Johnson, nka Iris Christine
Bailey, 1.04 acre, Salisbury .
Archie B. Stegall, Lupe J . Stegall
to William Markham, Sharon R.
Markham, Parcel, Bedford.
Robert Campbell, Nancy Campbell to Janes E. Diddle, Ri&amp;ljt of
Way, Sutton.
Catherine F. Holman (widow),
Jacob S. Hobnan Jr., Melanie K. •
Hobnan to James E. Diddle, Right of ~
Way, Sutton.
Ray Heiney, Goldie Heiney to
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Letart.
Margaret Ella Lewis to Phillip
McFarland, Donna J.
Lots 173-174, Middleport.
Glennis H. Hoffman, Dolores
Hoffman to Henry Lee Hunter,
Jane Hunter, Easement, Chester.

Play Million
Dollar Skating
Game
Stop 1n For Card
Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
7:30 to 10:00
Sun. 2:00 to4 :30
Available for
Private Parties
PH. 985-3929or
985-9996

TOM HOSKINS

room home in Mid·
dleport that needs so me
fixing . Has 2 baths,
natural gas F .A. fur ·
nace, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
ni ce kitchen , carpeting .
Short iog to me stor es.

Askinq$19,500.
COUNTRY

From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
largest Radiator .

• Free estimates
120 V r s. ex perience

VIRGIL B. SR . '
216 E. 2nd St.

NEW

SKATE-A-WAY

1 Siding

beautiful 3 bedroom
m od ul ar ho m e, 2 baths,
garden tub , WBFP, ce n·
tral a ir , el ec tri c hea t.
r ea r scree ned porch,
built '" range . double
ovens .
Ex ce ll e nt
loca tion with ni ce lot .

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

9

Yard Sa le

-·------;;-~-_.:;.

0Ff 1CE 1-41100J

Meigs County transfers ..
Teresa Lynn Wisecup, fonnerly
Teresa Lynn Honaker, Keith
Wisecup to James Warner, Lori
Warner, .23 acre, Suttmh'iyracuse.
Rhonda J . Stockwell to Thomas
Tucker , Lori Tucker, Parcel, Scipio.
Pearl Gilkey, Clara Gilkey, Carl
Bailey, Dorothy Bailey, Richard
Gilkey, Phyllis Gilkey to Herald Oil
and Gas Company, ~ighl of Way,
Right of Way, Pomeroy .
George Knapp, Bertha Henrietta
Knapp to Larry E. Hoffman, Lots,
Salisbury-Middleport.
Dolores I. Smith I lncom.), Dewey
E. Garner, Guardian to Richard B.
Smith, Parcels, Letart.
Clifford E. Young, Marie Young,
dec., affidavit, Pomeroy.
Ruth Huber to Cecil Harold
Nelson, Waid L. Nelson, Parcels,
Salem.
Edward Crooks, Judy Crooks to
James H. Duncan, Zola Duncan,
Lot, Middleport.
Joseph Short, Gladys Short'• to
Blauser Well Service, Inc., Right of

The Daily Sentinei- Po:Je-13

Real Eltott - Oonorol

Waterway issue concerns.
some congressional leaders
WASIDNGTON (API - While
some port interests clamor for action, Congress is taking a cautious
approach to Reagan administration
proposals to end the historic federal
role in keeping the nation's waterways.
The administration wants to ii'Tlpose user fees to recover costs of
building and maintaining waterway
facilities.
The issues go far beyond the idea
of "adding user fees to compensate
for a budget shortfall," says Rep.
Robert A. Roe, 0-N.J., who has
directed weeks of hearings on the
proposals.
''The decision we make here could
materially affect the economic
dynamics of the nation," Roe said in
a recent interview.
Spokesmen for coal, iron ore and
agriculture have warned the water
resources subcommittee that new
fees on waterways could have a
devastating effect.
Representatives of Great Lakes
ports say the economy of the Midwest could be seriously affected by
added shipping costs.
Frank Kudrna, chainnan of the
Great Lakes Commission, said
charges which would be added to
rising St. Lawrence Seaway tolls
could wreak havoc with the " whole
Great Lakes water transportation
system .''
Ohio, with more than half its borders boundeq by major waterways,
has a major stake in what happens.
Effects of new costs on shipping will

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

model used cars. Smifh
Bui ck -Pontiac , Ga llipol is,

Ohio. Ca ll446 2262 .
Buy1ng
Gold,
Silv er ,
Platinum, old coins, sc rap
rings &amp; Silverware. Daily
quotes availabl e. Also
coins &amp; co in suppli es for
sa l e .
Spring
Val l ey
Trading , Spring Va ll ey

Plaza, 446·8025 or 446 8026.
We pay cash for l at e model
clean used cars .
Fren chtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson ,

446·0069 .
Wanted timber. We cut,
paying good prices. Ca ll

446·0706.
Antique oak furnitur e,
round tables, 1bookcases,
desks, dressers. chests, ice

boxes. etc. Caii446·37S9 .

BEDS IR ON. BRA SS. old
lurnlfur e,
go l d.
silver
dollars . wood •ce bo)(e s.
stone jars. an ttQu es, etc .
Co mp le t e
households
Wr tl e · M 0 Mtller. R r 4,
Pome r oy. Oh Or 992 7760
Go ld . sttver . srerl• ng.
jewelry , nn gs . old co tns &amp;
c urrency Eel Burk eH Bar
ber Shop , M• dd teport . 997

3476
OLD FURNI TURE , beds,
1r on . bra ss. o r wood K ' '
chen cubbards at c111 ty pes
T .:~b l c~. r ouncl or squar e
Wood •ce box es Old desks
and book cases Will bUy ·
co mpl ete housro hotd Go ld.
silver, old money, pock et
wa tc he s, chatn s, r.ng s, and
etc tndran Arttla c ts ol a ll
types A lso buytnq ba seball
cards Osby Marl 1n 992

6370
Would ltk e to · buy small
ga sol tne boat m otor Call

6755 103
DRESS
blue
A rmy
uniform Jil c k c t S• ze &lt;!2 .
prlnt s 36 or 38 JO.I 675 605 5
Salad Mcls tcr food c uller
Call675 28H5

Emproynwnt -

se-ryfc.es
11

Help Wanted

Would l1k C' m ttn to pou r and
l tn1sh concre te fl oo r Cn ll

388 9909

Get out and l 1ve! Mret •n
l eres t .nq pc op l rl nd make
qood $'5.$ w1lll Avo n C.1 11
446 ))58
Hii('SS itnd W,ldrf'')&lt;., ,l p
p il'l 10n be1nq cl(U'P IC'd ,
a ply 1n per son Bob E 'Jrl nc,
Stenk H ouse
Need 1mm ('d •nt ely l 1crn scd
Ide tlnd I1 CFII1h i'IQf'nt s lo
work 1nt o manaqement
446 3320, 9 noon
Garden pl owed &amp; dtsc WPSI
end of Georqp·s Cr eek Pd
Call 446 6567 after 5PM
GET VALUABL E tr a. n.ng
as a young bus•ness per ~ on
and earn good money plu s
some grea t g ill s as a Sen
ttnet route ca r r .er Ph one
us right away .=.nd get on
the ei •Q•bil •t y lts t a t 991

2156or992 2157

Full or part l•fn e R N tor 7
to 3 sh1ft Full or part f•m e
RN or LPN f or 11 to 7 shift
Call
N an c y VanMe ter ,
Pom er oy Heal Ill Care Cf' n

ler. 992 6606
Hum an Sc r v.ce Posllt on ·
The Ga ll i·a Ja ck son Me.gS
Mental Heal th Board 1S
look 1ng tor an •nd 1V1dua1
who can work on a m onth
to month con tr ac t bas1s to
see k out, fi nd and l• cense
ex tr amural care home s .n
Ga tli a. Ja c k son and Me igs
CountteS
M1 m i mum
requ .rment s : B A . or B S.
tn a human servtce held
w i th an emphas1s 1n
Psychology or Soc ta l Wor k
Please apply by submt llrng
a resume t o the Ga ll ta·
Jackson M e •g s
M en t a l
Bo~
Hea lth Board , P 0
514, Ga ll ipol ts Oh to, 45631,
The Gall1d J ackson Meig~
Menia l Health Board 1S a~
eq ual
Opportunt ty
Em
player

ASS ISTA N T

C HIEF

TECHNOLOGI ST LA80RAT
ORY
Ja ck so n General
Hosp il a t, R1pl cy w VA ~~
nnw in l f'rv•Pw•nq for an
clSSISiant
Ch1P f
for
T ec hnol og i S t
Laboratory
Job
wdl
requ tre abdlly ro wo rk •n
all nreas of
the lab,
Schedul1ng. and lr rll ntng
assts t tn wrtt1nq proccclure
manuel.
ma.nt r1 1n1ng
quai•IY co n t rol r ec ords
ma"in tan ce of cqu•pme nl •n'
elud ing min. mal and repair
and calabr a t ion And some
week end work Qualifi ed
person w ilt have 2 yea rs of
super v i s1ng exper1e nce 1n
MPri1Crll Lil botat ory, have
a B S. degree in M edt ca l
Tec hnology_, a nd be ASCP
reg 1stered .
Exce ll ent
benefit s and salary . In
terested perso n may ca ll
personnel departm ent at 1
30&lt;!·372 ·273 1 Monday thru
Frida y, for more i n ·
f orm a t ion .
Equa l em
pl oy ment oppo rtun it y M F ·
H.
Need someone to cut gr ass
once a week . Call992 ·323 4.
WORKSHOP
superVISOr·
Bus driver , H igh Schoo l
Oiploma plus 2 years
college . Regist ered Nur se.
Contact David Eakl e, c·o
Green Acres Regional Cen·
ter , P .O. Box 11 5, Lesage,
West Virginia 25537 Phone

304·762 ·2522 . E .O.E

•

'

•

...

""'

'

�11

They'll Do It Every Time

H elp Wanted

Exper •e nced
Spnng

area

to

1st floor furni shed ef
fi c iency apt 729 2nd Ave ..
Gal lipOl iS. Adults
on l y,
s h ~we r Call446·0957 .

S•tuat10ns Wanted
~

~ ----- -

So meo ne to commut e to
Charles t on

daily

Phon e

675 5E20 after 4 JO
13

Fu rni shed apt . 1 bd . $200 .
E lectrJC &amp; wate r pa1d , 2nd .
floor , adults Ca ll 4.46 44 16
after 7PM

Insurance

SA NDY AND B EAVE R In

sur ance

Co

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom unfurn•shed
apart m ent tn Crown City .
Call256·6520

babystt 20 mo old, four
days a week . Cal l446 7117
12

44

woman

Valley

1, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

nas offered

s1

co verag e '" Ga ll• a Co unty
for
a lm ost a century
Farm. hOm e and per son a l

· prope rty
available

cove ra ges
to

are

meet

'"

1 bedroom furn1 shed apT
992 5434 992 59 14 or 304·882
2566

d•v•dua I nee ds
Co ntact
Foster Lew .s. agent Phone
379 JJ lB
15

2 bd r oom ap t •n M td
d l epor t .
unfurni Sh ed ,
utiliti es 1ncluded. a1r con·
di tton tng S175 month 992
5545 be tween 7am fo 3pm

Schoo l s ln strucfton

Karate tile ult1mat e rn sel f
. defence all pr tva te lessons,
M en. women , &amp;. ch ildren
1nsfruct10n thru black bell
Also ava liable Karate
uniform s puchtng and
k1 c k1ng bags . and protec
1•vc
equ 1pmenf
Jer r y
Lowery
&amp;
A ss oc 1a te s
Karate
S lu dtO,
143
Burl1n g ton Rd , Ja ck so n.
Oh Ca ll 286 JOI•

18

Wanted to Do

H ouscclean •n g

Ca ll

367

f-----------r-----------1
JI

Homes f or Sa le

35

OWNER ou t of sta te &amp;
mu st sel l th1 s older style a ll
br1 ck 3 bedroom h ome, 11h
baths , full
basemen t ,
double ca r garage . Ex tra
h a lf
ac r e
lot
Outck
Possess 1on
Cal l eve n1ng s
304 675 3431 Day 675 3030

Grandv i ew
2 lot s at
Hetgh ts. Ca ll 675 3626 after
SPM

I F you can afford S.40S per
mon th to tal payme nt, taxes
and 1nsurance tn cl uded,
thi s ranc h w1 th 3 bedroom s,
2 baths &amp; famtly room on 'h
acre. can be yours for
smal l down paymen t Ca l l
304 458 1582. Mason Coun
ly

41 ~- HOus~ for ~ent

Rentals

0427
L •mest o ne t or dr •vcways ,

will spread Cal l 379 2642
Expert lawn mow.ng se r
v •ce . dependable, low rate,
fr ee es t• ma tes Ca l l 245
5017

The Sdk
stlk

Hou se

flowers)

(cus tom
Complete

brt dal l•ne wedd•ng s, and
a ll OCC d SiOOS Call 367 7566

By owner -close to school,
pharmac1e s &amp; hOSpt tals
Ca l l675 5468 .

51X rooms , 2 story br't ck,

Babvs•fl•ng 1n my hom e
Reterence'j ava ilabl e Cal l
446 0930

1211 Ma1n St . custom butlt
by Everett Lutton, 304 675
2381

Dom es t 1c house w ork , ex
c ellent reference s Phone
446 6670

FOUR room s &amp; bath , 1n
Mason. 4ttl St c lose to
sc hool 304 773 526 1

Custom ga rd en plow.ng
Ga ll1po l• s area Call 446
2300

c :-

Eliiliiclui-=- :=c.
~

11

~-

Busme ss
Opportuntty

C•ga r c ll e
vcnd 1ng
Bus• nes s Call304 77~ 5651

22

Prof essiona l
Se r vtces

Pruno
Tun t nQ
8.
Repa1r Cal l Bill Wnr d for
appo•nlm e nl .
W a rd 's
Keyboard . 446 4377
C &amp; L Boo k.keep.n g In
co m e tax return s tor 1n
d1vnJuals &amp; bu s•nesscs
Ca r ol Nea l 446 3861
F IRS T
and
seco nd
morgaq es lrtnd co ntra c ts,
and rec e•vable s pur cha sed
6 14446411 3
DOT SO N S Tree Serv 1c e. 15
year s exper•en ce, we c an
remove any tree anywhere,
r easonable . free est.mat.es,
1nsur ed. 304 576 2897

= ~31

Mobile Hom es
for Sa le

TRISTA T E
MOBILE
HOMES GallipOl iS Pr1ce
r ed u ce d , u sed
mob1le
hom es CALL 446 7572
CLEA N U SEO MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME
SA LES . 4 M l
WE ST, GAL LIPOLI S, RT
35 PHON E 446 3868

Money to Loan

REF I NAN CE or pur cha se
you{_ home 30 year fixed
r a te WVa &amp; Oh10 Leade r
M ort gage, 77 E Stale St ,
A then s, Oh 597 30'i 1

:n

32

Homes for Sa l e

1972 Con co rd Mob de Home,
12x65 Cal l 446 7015 affer
5. 30 p m
Beauf1ful brtck &amp; frame, 3
bedroom home w/sce n1 c
v1ew ,
wood burn1ng
f trep l ace, formal d1 n 1ng,
ce ntr al a1r w / heat pump
Lanscaped . 1 acre
lot
w / fenced 1n back ya rd ,
$45,900
11% 1tnanc1ng,
sma ll down payment Call
446·3766

SM ALL FARM FOR SALE
A n1ce 4 bedroom home
w •th 8 acres of pa sture gar
den space. barn , n1 ce ou t
build1ng s Located one mtle
tram Sl ate Rl 7 Ca ll 256
6663
F tsherme n s chotce of
l1vtng 3 bedroom, 2 ba t hs,
112 basement. near the
locks Ca ll 256 6008

NEW IN COME LIM IT S II
you ear n between $9000 to
S15.000 a yea r , you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile home)
tor as l1tfle as $135 a month
N o down payment Call992
7034
2 bd r oom 1n Harnson v tll e
$8 ,000 Ma y consider l and
contract 614·928·4.4 17
2 stor y, almost 1/:l acre . .4
bd ., 2 li ving room, kttc hen,
d tningroom , bath -small
basement, 2 1arge ca rports.
Side por c h, front porch
wood burner 949·2403·9 to
4 949-2.460 evenings

J room house. 157 Dock St .
Middleport. $3500
JOx60
· lot 992-JBBO.
HOUSE , Meadowbrook Ad ·
di llon, 3 bedroom, family
room with f ri eplace, ce n tral air, basem ent, 304·675·
1542.
THREE bedroom hom e, 5
acres, 9 mil es from town .
· Phone after 6 : 00 p .m . 304·
675·7198.

12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobtle home Se t up w 1th 2
or 4 lots. gas hea t. rural
wa ter . c lose to tow n. ftn an
c 1ng availab le Phone .446
1794
1970 mobile home El cona
wt th ex pando Large lot 1n
M er cerville Call 4.46-08 27
af ter 5
1973 12x65 trader w1th 1973
12xl7 add on trail er 3 bdr ,
2 full ba t tl , I f1repla ce,
wa sher &amp; dryer,. dt stl
washer, new c arpe t1n g, un
Ca ll
derp1nn1ng, S12 ,000
367 0 108
l4x70 1978 Shannon, al l
elec t , exce ll en t co nd, 3
bdr . 12x24 room butlt on,
coal &amp; wood bu r ner , par tl y
furn1 shed. a tr co nd . un
derp1nned. good we lt. 2 lg
porches, out butld1ng, ac r e
land. moved mus t se ll
Jer rys Ru n Rd Ca ll 675
2356
12 x 60 tr a tl er, exce ll ent
cond1t1on Ca ll 446 1552 .
Furntshed, atr co ndltton ed,
underptn n tng, set up on lot
in Mtdd leport.

197 5 Memory, 12x60 , un
derpinn in g a nd 2 por ches
742 ·2156
De l uxe 14X70 Hol l y Park,
exce l len t cond , 3 bd r oom
fully furnt shed 2 por ch's,
underp1nn1ng, ou t budding,
w1 th or w1thout land Close
to Mine no
1 742 · 3008
anyt1me

USED MOBILE
576 -27 11

HOME

MOB I LE HOME S MOVED
L •censed &amp; tnsured Ca ll
304 576 2711
For sa te 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trailers. turnt shed, w tth
atr Call 3(}4 773 565 1

198 1 ALL ELEC TRI C 12'
WIDE .
2
BEDROOM
mobile home setttng on lot.
r eady to move 1nto. S8995
10% down, BANK FIN A N·
CI N G AVA IL ABLE, 304
576 271 1
1''
WIDE , J bedr oom
mobile hom e. $8995 A ll
Stat e Modular Homes, 30.4
576·2711
1973 G RAND V IL L E , 14x70,
3 bedroom mobile home .
Mu st be moved. phone 304
682·2820
19 79
14 x 65
Norri s,
2
bedroom, assume loan, setup on rented lot Must sell
Ca ll llJ-5260.

1981 WINDSOR
mobile
hom e,
1.4 x7 0,
stereo,
m1crowave, delu xe bath,
air conditioner and many
other extras, ca ll 30.4·882·
3529.

Farm 76 acres. Good
house. barn, work shop,
small chicken house. 1 mile
west of Langsville on Sr.
124. 742· 2860 after 4 p .m

Hou se, 3 bdr in Rodney
V• ll age 11 $200 mo Ca ll
4464416atter 7PM

N1ce furntshed 1 bd room
apt 1n M tdd leport, c lose to
sc tlool
Ut1ltltes
fur ·
n1 shed S135 992·3190
Apartment s 675 5548

APARTMENTS.
mob1le
h o me s.
house s,
Pt
Pleasant and Ga lltpolts
614 446 821 1 or6 14 245 9484
For rent sma ll fu rniShed
apt. , unfurnt shed ap t
References Cal l 675 1365
45

Furn2_s~e~ RI!O~ S

SLEEPING ROOMS a nd
l1 gh t hou sekeep1ng ap t ,
Park Cen t ral Hotel

Homes for Rent , Lease or
Land Cont r act tn town , or
cou ntry
Ca ll
St rout
Realty, 446 OOOB

46 _

5 rms &amp; bath, loc ated 11 0
4ftl Ave Gallipolis, n1ce
garden space Ca l l446 3870

CO UNT RY MO BI LE Home
Park , Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy Large lot s (&lt;"!II
992 7•79

3 bedroom hou se tn c1 t y,
S150dep andS250rent Call
446 0367
Beaut1ful doublew1d e w1 fh
p tckett fence Stluated on 3
112 fenced secluded acrea .
Dnll ed we l l w1 th wood
heat
lmmed•ate
possess1on S275 monthl y
plusdepos1t Ca ll 388 9322

5 rm house 1n Ga ll1p0I1 S
Call 446 3945 after 5
4 bedroom. ce ntra l a1r and
heat, city water, lirep lace,
unfurn1shed
ex ce pt
k1t
chen
$300 mon th plu s
ut1llt• es
Reference and
deposit
rc-qu1r ed
In
Rac •ne 949 2293
Pom eroy
2 bedroom,
newly pa 1nted and car
peted A dults pref erred No
pets
Referen ces
and
depOSII requ1red 992 3054 .
I n Pomeroy, n1 ce 5 room
h ome,
stove
and
re f n gerato r
prov1ded
Availab l e April 1 Ad ults
onl y, no pets $185 per
month p lu s ut1ltt1es and
sec unty depos1 t
Phone
992 5292

42

Mob•le Homes
for Rent

2 mobile hom es for rent 2
bd r each, full y furn1shed,
a•r co nd , adult s on l y Ca ll
4464110

_Space

f~r_R _! nt

Off1ce space aya tl a.
Mtddleport
Bu s1 n
d1s tn ct A1r co nd1f10n eu .
utll1t1e s .nc lu ded $175 man
th 992 5545 7 am to 3p\"n
PASTURE
6755110

l or

rent , 304

Merebandl s:e==

s1

~ouseho!d

Goo_ds

SWA IN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Ol1ve Sf ,
Ga ll 1pol •s New sofa beds
$250, used sol a beds $100,
recltners $80. bunk beds
S100, bunk1e ma tt resses
S40, mapl e r ockers $49,
maple d1nett sets fro m $125
to $175, bedroom su1tes
$150. 3 pc llv1nQ room
su 1tes $199, 2 pc l1 v1ng
room sutles S140, love sea ts
$70, ow l lamps $25, nng er
was her s
$75,
dryers,
seve r al
refr1gerators.
ut d1t y
cab t n ets,
mechant c's too l s, beds.
sil ver stone, TV,s, wood
burners, stero's and lot s
more Open lOam to 5pm ,
446 3159
GOOO
USED
A P
Pl lA N CE S
washer s,
dryers,
re tr1g era t ors.
r anges
Skagg s
Ap ·
pllances, Upper R 1ver Rd ,
bes1de Slone Cres t Mote l
446 IJ9E

Kenmore 6 cyc le wastler
$90 a nd Norge was her &amp;
Frtgidatre g uaran t eed .
Ca ll 256· 1207

For Sale 4 13' .fire s S1ze
BIB -13. SBOO each Ca ll 675
6730

XI l-OW WPf&gt; I

S\Jpfb~ lo ~WhiMS
t:d-1'1 ~Te ~it.ltxli.

TWO pc. IIYtng room sutte,
love sea t . 13 11:lx 13 orange
ca rpet , good ca rpet , good
cond tl •on . $350 00 all 304
895-JJBB .

'1Riu:5 AT 3:3o 1N "THe

LAYNE'S FUR NITU RE
Sofa . chatr , rocke r , ot
taman , J fab les. $500 Sofa ,
T r ailer t or r ent co rner of
cha1r and lovesea t. $275
Cha th am &amp; Burger Ave,
Sofa s and chairs pr•ced
Ga ll1p011 s Ca ll 446·0756 or
tram $2E5. Ia $795. T ab i es.
446 4225
SJB and up to $109 Hide· abeds,$340 , qu ee n SIZe, SJBO.
2 Bedroom, lar ge lty.ng Recliners, S175 to S295 ..
r oo m w1th ex pando room , Lamps tr am SIB . Ia S65. 5
bea ultful furni shed, 4 to 7 pc. d1nettes from $79, to
p m ca ll 446 -1409
SJBS. 7 pc., $189. and up
Wood tabl e with .4 cha 1rs.
2 bed mobtle home . Dep &amp;. $219 up to $495. Desk $110
Hutches, SJOO and $375 ..
ref req Ca ll256 1922
maple or p1n e f1nt sh .
Bed r oom su1 tes
Bassett
Tratler wt th atr cond ., 2 Cherr y, S795
Bunk bed
bdr . tdeal for c oup le 1 m1. c ompl ete wittl mattr esses.
from ct house Ca ll 446· $250 . and up to SJSO Cap·
299 1 eve
ta m· s beds. $275 co mplete
Baby beds, S99 Mattresses
2 bdr tr ailer f urn tshed, or box sprmg s, full or twt n,
adults onl y, Brown Trail er
SSB., f irm , $68 and $78
Park, 992 3324
Queen set s, $195 4 dr
c hests, S42 Bed fr a m es,
$20 and $25 .. 10 gun · G un
In Pomeroy , n1ce 5-room
hom e ;
s t ove
and ca btn ets, S350 , d1nette
cha 1rs S20 and $25 Gas or
relrtgerator
prov1ded
Ava il able April 2 Ad ults elec tr1 c ranges . $/95 Or·
thopedic super firm, $95,
O•' ly , no pet s $185 per
baby malresses, S25 &amp; SJ5,
month plu s uttltt1 es and
bed fram es 520. S25, &amp; SJO.
securt ty depostt 992·5292
Used Furntture book case,
5 pc. dtnett set , 3 Li vi ng
TW O
bedroom,
un - room su1te. Rang es and
furni shed . One bedroom ef · TV 's 3 miles out Bulav111 e
ft c1e ncy 304·675·2722
Rd . Open 9am to lpm , M an
thru Frt. , 9am to 5pm , Sat .
446·0322
44

Apartment
for Rent
- ----

- -~

Apartment for rent . Ca ll
446 0390 .

Copper tone Kitch en a p·
pliance s s1de by s• d e
r efrigerator. built in gas
oven, gas cook top and 36
tn . hood, sofa and c hair .
Ca l l 446·1171, Corbm &amp;
Snyder Furntture

Eq~u p'.!_l~ " !

Bear L TO bow wtth qUtver
&amp; other accessortes. S100
Ca ll 446 7945

AC DC welder w 1th cab le
etc. 250 amp 's, SJ50 Ca ll
446 31139 after SPM
A home you can afford.
S25 .500
Patr• of H ome
Builders w tll build on your
lot a 3 bedr home, ca r
pet ed, ready to move 1n lo,
wi ll c onstder trade 1n on
mobile home Call 379 2617
And see our mode l 1 m il e
North of Stiver Bridge on
R t 7, across !rom Honda
Shop Open Man Sal lOAM
to I PM .

~:::::::::::::::::::::~==::=~~=~~~
S7

71

Musical
l !!_~~'!!e!lts -

Ele c
guitar.
amp &amp;
speaker , SJOO Cal l 458 1775

59

-~or ~al!~r_T!a d ~

For
Sa l e Barbi e
Doll
c lothes and all s•zes of
Raggedy ann doll s Call
992 6729
For Sa le or Trade Redbon e
fema le, 3 years old, good
hunter . Ca ll 576·2757

Lu x man Lab ref com
pon ent stero, w tth Bose 90 1
speakers . Ca ll 446·7377

Farm SQIJplles
&amp; bllleSIUEI!

Cabtnets, lawn furntture.
ptcn•c tables r epatred See
Ar nold Skaggs 101 Court
''!10dshop 446 0978
, r 011 Co , 636 E
Po m eroy, Oh10

J C P en n~ I\ LS ser1es 12
wa tt s per c hanne l rec1ever ,
2 speakers $ 100 992 5977
Motor . 302 Ford, new plugs ,
pomts. w 1res, va l ve tob , a ll
new gaske ts $125
SIC KLE bar , 42 " Wide , for
Grave l y tr ac tor . $200 00
Ree l t ype mower for
Grav ley, 36 " w tde $150 00 1
bedroom su1 te S300 304 675
4210
SAM
Some rvtll e's
Warehouse , New Era , 7
miles East Ravenswood
Je t Independence Rd R t
21. Open Afternoons on
weekends W1ll be c losed
l or repa.rs Apnl 17 thru
May 1 Surplu s renta l
Oen tm A r my cl ot h1ng
FIAT A lli S mod el 545, rub
ber ltre end loade r , 2 yard
bu cket. compl etel y over
hau led w• th new engine, ex
ce ll cnt condtt1on, Bla1ne
K 1ng , R opl ey WV 304 372
6390
FOUR prom dr esses,
9 10 thur 13 14, phone 304·
675 2045
Butldtng SuPflte s

Butldtng matenals'block ,
b r1 ck, sewer p1pes. wtn·
dows, l1ntel s, etc C laude
Wtnte r s, R1 0 G rande , 0
Cal l 145·5121
56

Pet s for Sa le

DRAGONWVND
CA T
T ERY
KE NNEL AKC
Chow
puppt es.
CFA
Hima l ayan, Persian and
S1a m ese ~ ·tt e n s.
N ew
Sta m ese kiltens Ca ll 446
3844 after 4 p m
HILL CREST KE NNEL
Board•ng all breeds, c lea n
1ndoor outdoor fa c iltt1 es.
A lso AKC Reg . Dobe r ·
mans Ca'l l 446·7795
BRI AR PAT CH KENNELS
Boa rd1ng and groom1ng .
AK C
Gordon
se tt er s,
Engl1sh Coc k er Spant els.
Ca ll JBB -9790
POODLE G ROOMIN G
Ca ll Judy Tay lor at 367·
7220 .
Gentl e horse, broke but not
finished Phone 388 9991 or
JBB 8623.

For Sale $100 6 month old
AKC registered Bassett
Hound puppy . House broke
and good w ith chi ldren .
Ca ll 992·3005 o r 992·6167
H e's so ug l y he' s cute
AKC Registered Dober·
man, bla ck &amp; rust, female,
8 months, ea rs cropped, all
shots, house broken, ex ce ll ent with children, 304458 -1513

61

-:_a_rf!l

~q_u~l!l ~.!l!

New &amp; Used T roy butlt
Idlers Bulk garden seed
Sw istle r Implement, Inc ,
Ga ll 1polts. Cal l 446·0475
1 12' John Deere whee l
dtSC. 1-se t of John Deere 4
bottom 16 ' sem1 mount
plows, 1 Hillsboro tri axle
goose-neck 28' trader Ca ll
614·256 653•

Auto s for Sale

19 77 Cutlass Sup r eme
Sa l on, Ps, ~b . p .w.
rec lmm g buckets, T top,
v elour 1nter1or L1ke new
SJ600 992 6362

79 Mu st ang $3400 742 2451
HAR T S used Cars, New
! Iaven West V1rg1n1a Over
20 less expe ns•ve cars rn
stock

GOVERNMENT
SUR
PLUS
CARS
A ND
TRUCKS
many
so l d
through local sa l es under
SJOO oo. Ca ll 1 714 569 -0241,
Ex t 1855 for your dtr ectory
on how to purchase
MUSTANG,
1970.
351
Cleve land engtne. $2500
304 675 4114
76 THUNDERBIRD. ex
cell ent co ndt1t1on. 304 675
3008, ask for NeYa
1967 Ford Fa•rlane G T . 2
door very htlle rus t ,
org 1nal patnf Ca ll 576 29 19
afler 4

John d~e r e 4 row corn plan
le r . S450 John Dee r e 14 T
hay bal er , $500 Ca ll 256
6205

75 Monte Ca rl o. Sl.OOO . Ca ll
458 1775

Wan ted MF 35 trac l or or
similar wtth l 1ve power
Call256 1379

1977 Ford p1ckup, good
c ond 6cyl Ca ll446 4554 .

M Farmall. 3 botlom plow ,
good
shap e .
93
se lf
propell ed com b1ne needs
work Ca 1161464J0297
310 Case D oze r i!'1e se1
Good cond 992 5170
For sa le 2 used rear Trac
tor I .res s1ze 18 4X34 good
years 949 257 4

T HR EE year o ld mare ,
we1ghs 700 lbs Due to foal
1n June, 304 675·6626

SPECI AL SA LE Pur eb r ed
He1ter s, Cows a nd Bulls,
Sa turday, Aprtl.· 3, 1982
Fol lowing Regular sa le at
4·00 p m Slack Ca lli e 400
head . Cows and Ca l ves An ·
nual Grass Catt le Sa le 600
hea d Sponsor ed by w est
Vtrgtnia Department of
Agrtculture NOTICE -F A
RMER S. "C onsign your
Cattle Wher e The Actwn
I s" Western buy ers eve ry
Sa turd ay 6 acres parktng
Modern r es taurant. Ca ttle
1nsured from farm to sa le
United L•vestock Sa les Co
Parkersburg, WV 26101
Phone JOHB9·2255 . Sa le
every Saturday 11 : 30 a m .
Joe Corbtft, Manager

Feeder
5076

ca l ves

Truck's for Sa l e

1977 Ford 6 cyl , J
tr.:ms , w1th topper ,
ttr es, V G c ond , $2 , 195
446 4554, no answer
4141

spd
new
Call
446

1978 Ctlevy 3/ 4 P• Ck up , 350
eng1ne, good cond . $2 ,400.
Ca ll a tier 5, 446 43 16
1979 &amp; 1978 GMC piCkups
w1th CB 's Call I 304 882
2237

$1.200 Ca ll 458 1875

Re Polled H ereford bu l l
A pprox 1.800 l bs Ca ll 256
9303

For sa le Ducks
1138

72

63 Ford F 600 dump t ru c k

Ltvestock

63

Ca ll 675

Call

675

- - -- -

6~ - __ ti!.Y~2_t:a_!n

Ground ear corn, $5.00 per
100 Ca ii675 -3JOE

Ha y for sa le . 949· 2283.

Transpartanon
7] :::_:_::::_iu!Os forsal~ ~ ~
1979 VW, 4-spd, air cond
Ca ll446·2599.
1981 Dodge Omni 024, many
options. Cai1256·6B62.

APARTMENTS ·
bedroom , rent starts at
75 VW Rabbit, good cond ,
$152 per mo. &amp; 2 bedroom ~---------"-;..,;;_ _ _. _~
__~
---~
~~
35 plus MPG, $1 ,650. Ca ll
starts at SlBB per . mo.
388·9334 after 6PM.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens Ca 11446·2745.
1981 Chevetee. Can be seen
on State St, across from
2 &amp; 3 bedroom apartments
Gallia Academy.
tor lease or sell 2 bedroom
house, J bedroom house A C
1972 Plymouth FluryJ,
and pool. HUD Program .
gOOd trans car, ssoo or beSt
Call 304-675-5104 or 675offer. Call446·0911 .
7284.

FURNISHED apartment,
centra ll y located . Adults.,
ref . and deposit required .
446-0«-4 after 2 p .m .
3 bedroom unfurnished apt.
over store building at Rt.
160 &amp;
Bufavllle
junct.
$225.00 per mo./$225.00
deposit. Ref . required. Call
«6·3888.

New a

(!) 'Lefty, the Olngeling
Lynx' Part 1 A mt xed- up
lyn x, separated from h1 s
mother and adopted by a
fo rest ranger. tries to f tnd
h1s r1ghtful pla ce m the
wilderness
(I) Ancjy Griffith
I]) ABC News
(i) 3· 2-1, Contact
li1l Over Easy
0 C%JC!J NBC News
CIJ • 60,000 Pyramid
([) Gomer Pyle
I]) Muepet Show
Ill I]) (1JI CBS News
(i) Dr. Who
li]) Lilias, Yoga and You
Ill (j) ABC News
0 Cil P.M . Magazine
(]) Weekend Gardener
(!) Time Was ... The Fifties Th e advent of televts1on ,
the Korean W ar and th e
start of th e space race are
a few of the toptcs in th1s
reflection
til y arol Burnett and
Friends
([) Entertainment Tonight
(!) Happy Days
D (])Tic Tac Dough
(i) li])
MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
® Nawa
Ill (j) Muppet Show
0 Cil You Asked For It
(I) Another Life
(]) ~nford end Son
I]) Medical Viewpoint
(J) Utvarne and Shirley
Ill I]) Family Feud
(I) Bualneaa Report
()11 Richard Simmons
[I) All Creatures Greet and
Small
tl)
()})
Entertainment
Ton!s_ht
0 C2J (!) Fame Mrs Sherwood dectdes to go easy
on Leroy. {60 mm)
(I) National Geographic

__

73

73 Camero. See
Black, Bidwell, Oh.

1976 Ford Bronco. 1n good
sha pe , 3,000. Cal l446 0899
1976 Chevy Va n 350 aut o
PS. PB, AM · FM B tr ack
custom1z ed 1ns1de and out
Ve r y good cond 1t1on S2600
Ca ll 742 2760
74 CJ5 1eep. A 1 co nd11•on.
304 VB, 2 lops, $2000 00, 304
675 -6726
M~tor~ycles

74

All used btk es reduced at
Betz Hond a, check w lfh us
before you pay to mu ch
Ca ll446 ·2240

-=

81

1977 Suzuki GS 550 fram e
mounted farmg , header
pipe, custom sea t , ex
cond , $1,095 Cal l446·0961
2· Honda mopeds, ex .
cond .. SJOO eac h. Ca ll after
5, 446·4316.
1981 Honda custom 900, lik e
new 2.000 mil es Call 367·
0215
1977 Harl ey Davidson spar·
tster , like new and 1979 CJ ·
7 J eep, V -B, 23,000 miles
Ca ll 446· 2445

1974 Honda 554, w indshi eld
low mileage, ex. cond . Call
446-0014 .
1980 Harley Davison road ·
ster 1000 CC , ex. cond . Cia I
446·0«8 .

KAWASAKI 175, good con dition, ca ll 304-675·3639 af·
fer 4 .

HONDA 90, 68 model, good
condition, 304-773 - ~771.

1960 Chevy. 3 speed. 6cyllnder. 50,000 original miles.
A·1, $1000. 992-3798 after 5.

6 :30

7:00

... ~ IT'S 00\IJblO BE,._ SlJRPRI'%.

ser~tlees

I
!

I

Hom e
lmp!"ove_men_ts__ _

1
!

STU CCO PLA STER ING
te x tured cei1 1n gs com mer eta ! and reside nti al,
free est1ma tes Ca ll 256
1182

7 :30

i

•
•

'

PAINTING
1nter1or and
ex t e r1or .
plumb•ng ,
roofing , some remodel1ng
20 yrs ex p Ca ll JBB 9652 .

FUtltiY

THIH5 1 THOU6ti - 5HE
DIVE INTO THAT ICY

OIOH'T
WATER 'TIL IIFTEf( 6HE G/1'11

Mar cu m
Roofing
&amp;
Spout1n g
30 yea r s ex
per•ence. spe cia i1Z1ng 1n
budt up roof Ca ll 388 9857

TH' TV TRUCK CC4111H' 00'1/N
TO TH' POND "'

-ARE WE GONG 1)
RUN T11AT Ranttt
5TUFF THAT CRAZY
GIRL ~~~ AI!OUT IJIJ~

~~~ -~ - --

~ - ---f------ -~ - ~ ~Boats and

-· - -

Motors for ~ale

8 :00

CAPTA IN STEEMER Car
pet Cleanmg f eat ur ed by
H aff elt Brost hers Cus t om
Ca rpets Free cst•ma tes.
Cal l 446 2 107

Spec tal Marc h and Aprtl
only Gene's Deep Steam
Clea n1n g
Scot ch Gau rd
Free est tmate 992 6309
Wa nted to do rcmodhng ,
1nte r1 or and exte rtor pain
ttng,
plumb1ng,
a nd
r oofing
Free es ttmates
985 •121
RON 'S Te tev1S10n Se rv1 ce
Spec1a i1 Z'tng tn Ze n1th and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house ca ll s Phone 576·2398
or 446 2&lt;154

GASOUNE ALLEY

Ten dollars
qone? Who's

F &amp; K Tree T r 1mmtn'Q.
stump r emova L 675 1331

been

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex
per1enced mason, r oo ter ,
car pe nt er,
e l ec trtctan .
gen era l
repatrs
and
re m odel tn g Phone 304 675·
2088 or 675 4560

Well, Gretchen

and Rover are

in and out...

Water wells Co mmer c ia l
and Domestt c Test hol es
Pumps Sa les and Se r v1ce
J0&lt;-895·3802
LO CKSMITH
Se rvi ce .
Restdential , automottve .
Emergency serv1ce Call
882 2079

WINNIE

PAINTIN G, 1nteno r &amp; ex
304·675 1118 L .M
Johnson

WHO WAS TlfAT?
WE DON'T HAVE
ANY CUS'TOIIERS
RICN ENOUGH
TO HAVE A

'

i

Plumbing
~ _H ~ at.ing _

~AI.

CAR T E R 'S PLUMBING
A ND H EA TING
Cor . Fourth and Ptne
Phone 446·3888 or 446 -4477
83

IT MV$T8f
AN APRIL
FOOtS'
GAG.

IT1S A CHECK
MAAO OUT TO
M~...

FOI'ttWf

H~

Tlf()(ISANP
Cf:)UARS/

MESSENGER

wm

. . E~c_a ~ a!•'!.9 __

Galltpohs Dtver st f ied Con st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
ba ck hoe work . SpeCia l
farm rates Call us for free
estimates 446-.4.440 .
84

BARNEY

Electrical
&amp; Re~ngerahon

0~

BULLET FOllERS
PAW EVERYWHERE
HE GOES

SEW IN G Mac htne repairs,
se r v1ce . Authorized Singer
Sa les &amp; Se rvi ce Sharpen
SCISSOrS. Fabrt c Shop,
Pom eroy 992· 227 4

IT'S A GOOD
THING HE

THAT PORE

DON'T i=OLLER

NEVER

ME·-

...

G~!r:~~-~~UJing .

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367 -7471 or
367·0591 .

PEANUTS

J IMS Water Ser~ice . 1Call
Jim Lanier, 30.4-675-7397.

COULD BE WORSE

-.. -', -.. l .

lHE LON6 WALK

AFTER LOSING TI-lE

· ·ul&gt;liOiiiery· · I

&amp;o\ME OFlllE SEASON?

For Sale· 12 fl. f iber glass
~iRI~TATe ~ ; boat, with swi'-;el seats.
UPHOLSTER)!'
SHOP
Live well, 16 ltj, trl ·haul
boat, 25 HP seaklng motor, 1163 Sec. Ave., GallipOlis.
.
all good cond . 1968 Chevy. 446· 7833 or «6·1 833. ·
Impala, body gciod ' &lt;ond.,
go cart, fiber glass body.
Call after 6PM ,or all day 1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304'
675·4154.
weekends 458·1598.

MowR.ev:f~;t.9~~;r; Rt.
-.
- ····--

-~

~--

.. - ..

WOULD

NOWHERE

ELECTRICIAN , l icensed&amp;
ce rtifi ed, all types of
w1ring, loW rates. guaranteed work, 304·895·3826.

a1

oc DOG

GITTO GO

JACKS REFRI GE RATIO·
N Air condition se rvi ce,
c ommercial,
industrial.
Phone 882 -2079

-·-

NBA
Basketball:
Atlanta at Milwaukee
I]) Ill II2l Bosom Buddies
Kip b Btl s Henry o ut of JBil
lA) [ Closed Capt1oned)
I])
MOVIE:
'Sherlock
Holmes Faces Death '
li1l Omnl
9:00 D (1) C7J DiWrent Strokes
Kimberly 's hatr turns green
after wa shmg tt 1n rain
water
(I) 700 Club
I]) Ql (j) 9 to 5 Wh en Judy
becomes a bea uty, Mr
Hart takes notice.
Ill I]) ®I Cagney &amp; Lacey
Cagney and La cey mvesttgate charges of bigotry m a
street ·gang shooting (60
mm .)
(j]) Sneak Previews Each
week co-hosts Roger Ebert
and Gene Stskel giY&amp; viewers the tnstde story of
what's currently mak1ng
the screen at the local
movie theaters .
9 :30 0 (I) Gimme a Break
I]) III II2l Taxi [Cl osed Captioned]
li]) This Old House Bob
VIla adds the f1nish1ng
touches to the house and
shows how to lay a no wa x
floor.
10:00 0 (I)(!) Hill Street Blues
Captam Furillo's birthday
1s almost forgonen due to
all of the commotiOn on the
hill (60 ,mon .)
(!) Sneak Preview Host
Leonard Hams takes a
look at upcommg movtes,
~orts and spec1als
II2l 20120
C) I]) ® Knots Landing
Karen has trouble Ianing
go of Sid's memory (60
mm.)
(i) Omega Factor
li]) News
10:30 (I) Slng out Amerlce
(!) MOVIE: 'Flesh Gordon'
li]) Hitchcock
10:46 (I) TBS Evenl'!ll News
11:00 0 (I) I]) Ill C8J ® Ill (j)
News
IIJ Nashville RFD
(!) News/Sports/Weather
(i) Dick Caven Fourth of 5
parts. Jonathan Miller is

the

11:30

11

I K] I []

Now arrange the etrcled letters to
lorm the surpnse answer , as sug gested by the abOve cartoon

Prlntanswerhere. " (

! XI I ) [I]"
(Answers tomorrow )

Yester day

s

I

Jumbles WOMEN JUICE ALWAYS BICKER
Answer What those hoboes were telltng " BUM"JOKES

Jumbte Book No. 20, cont1lnlng 110 puu:les, Ia IYIIllble lor 11 .95 poetpekt
from Jumble, c/o thla newap1per, Box 34, Norwood, N J. 07548. Include your
nanN, address, ll code •nd m•k• checks
able to New1
a.

BRIDGE
An April Fool for you
By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alaa Soatag

NORTH

1· 1-8%

+J9

Here is a pretty good hand
for Apnl Fools' Day It
doesn't show experts at their
worst. In fact, il shows what
ca n happen m a typical club
rubber bndge game Not
that the biddinR is as bad as
1t l ooks South was hard of
heari ng a nd thought b1s
partner had responded four

• A J 10 9

tKQH
• J94
WEST
• 65
• Q B3 2
t 10 B 6 2
+AQJ

EAST

+KH2

.K

tJ953
• 10 7 6 5
SOUTH

+AQIOB3

no-trump
He showed h1s two aces m
response to what he thought
was Blac kwood and w hen
North bid s1x hearts, So uth
passed rather happ1l y lie
was going to be declarer and
he !~ought he had a good
hand
The deuce of dtamonds
was l ed. Wh1le Silence IS
golden, South w as far from
Si l ent when he saw the dum m y a nd North defended hos
bidding m even more n01sy

• 7 6"

tA

+K 8 2
Vu lnerable Neither
Dea ler South
Wesl

Norlb

East

South

Pass
Pass
Pass

2 NT
s•

Pass
Pass

5•
Pas.s

Openong lead

fash1on .
Eventu a lly , South pl ayed
low from dummy and East's
j ack fell to his ace South l ed
a low heart and !messed
East took hos kong and to
~oote
Lewts
Carro ll.
' paused on ufl!sh thought "
Then he led ba ck ht s
partner's su1t

1+

+2

played hiS kong South took
h1s ace, led h1s last trump to
the jack , played the ace to
pull Wests queen and got
one club dascard. He dtscard ed his last two clubs on the
top d1amonds and made the
l ast four tncks With h1s
spades

South ruffed , led a trump
to dummy's 10 and then led
dummy's Jack of spades
East always cove r ed an
honor wtth an honor so he

~VH4
by

THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS
I Small liquid

I Dugout VIP

2 H1stoncal

measure

6 Tosca 's

period

" Vissi d ' - "

3 This moment

10 Bacon 's asset

4 Actuate

II

5 Roughed
6 Do swns

Exploit

12 White

up

7 Hold

dessert

14 Calaboose
15 Man's name
16 Opposite
of haw
17 Moslem title
18 Famous Oscar
20 On one's
Jasl -

Yesterday's Answer

power
· 8 Belief

24 Explos1ve 32 Toledo
26 Discomfort
specially

9 Border
12 Dandruff

27 Ornamented 33 Slur over

28 literary

center

13 Couch

g1ant

19 Footless

30 Ba1ley

anima l

and

22 Drop the bait 21 Bristle
others
23 Groom
:--...--.;--r.~.---

34 Japanese·
American

36 Moor
40 S1esta
41 Owned

25 Wander er

29 Topple
: 31 Art

movement
32 Pulvenzed
35 Chaney
36 Totality
37 Italian

TV network
38 Buchwald

39 Without
fail

42 Italian ·

river
43 Rental
agreement

44 Paging SOWld

45 -

with

(supported)

~eat .

0 C%l

(!) Tonight Show
Johnny ia joined by Placido Domingo. (80 min.)
(I) Another life
I]) til II2l Nlghtllne
D I]) Quincy Quincy in·
vestigatea a plastic sur·
geon suspected of incompetence. (R) (60 min.)
(I) Captioned ABC News
ilD MOVIE: 'Tony Rome'

11:46 (I) MOVIE: 'Bllndfold'
12:00 IIJ Burna &amp; Allen
l])tllii21 Vega• Dan tracks
down a call girt'a murderer.
(R) (60 min.)
Cll PBS La~ Night
12:11 (])MOVIE: 'A Nightingale
SlntL_In Berkeley Squara'
12:36 •
~..~~ Night with
D&lt;lvlcl Llt18rman David Ia
joined by author .Stephen
King. (80 min,)
&lt;Il Jeok Benny Show
• Cll MOVIE: 'MoMIII~n &amp;
Wlfe: Two Dollara on
Trouble to Win'
1:00 &lt;Ill" Monied JOlin

mm

. .IIJ)N-

'

11\JVENiED THE SLIDE
FA"!&gt;iE~ER HOPED
IT WOULD DO.

CEEDIT ]

(I)

8 :30

WHAT iHE MAI.J WHO

I I t _

(!) MOVIE: 'Stir Crazy'
(I) All In the Family
I]) Ill II2l Police Squadl
Oat Dreb•r• poses as a
shopkeeper to bu st a pro·
tectton ra cket
Ill I]) ®I Magnum, P.l. A
beautiful fash 1on destgner
htres Magnum for protectton (60 mtn )
(I) Sneak Prevtews Each
week co- hosts Roger Ebert
and Gene Stske l gtve v•ew·
ers the 1nstde st ory of
what's c urrently maktn g
t he screen at the l ocal
movie th eate rs

Bell Co ntract 1ng General
p lumb.ng se rvt ce. hom e
r et,T10de l1 ng &amp; repa1rs . Free
estima tes. Ca ll446 .4002

·-·

j~HARSHTj

~cia I

Fren c h C1 t y
Pa1n t1n g
res1dent1a l &amp; com m erCia l,
tn ter ior. extertor . paper
hang•n g,
&amp;
t ex tur ed
ce t11ng s Ca ll 367 778&lt;~ or
367 7160

82

1980 Toyota Cella ex. cond,
$65. Call657·7-438 after 5.

1980 Harley Davison FX·
WG wlde glide, ex. cond.
Cali446-73J?.

-

1978 18ft cam per. sleeps 6.
T ax l e'j, ex cond , $2,350
Ca ll 446 822 1

1977 Harl ey Dav ison E lee
tr og lide, 17,000 m1 , all th e
ex tr as. S3500 t.rm 446·8234.

7-l -

TRAP TO !&gt;!CT.

SCAMP Trav el Tra il er and
new
5t h
whee l .
All
fiberg lass. ltght we tght
Fac tory d1rect Ca ll toll
free 1 800·346· 4962 for free
co lor brochure SAVE BIG
BUCK S1

tero br,

1981 HARLEY Davidson,
304-675·4824.

vw

IT'S NOT MUCH
WE'VE 60T A

sleeps 6 Cal l 245·5415

Honda 750 CB custom . Ca ll
JBB 8711 or JEB-8673

Roger

1979
Rabbit, gas
engine, AC, AT and stero.
Call446·7377.

FARTHER. .

eo.

Vans&amp;4W.D .

1976 Dod ge Va n good co nd.
PS, PB, ca rpet on 1ns1de.
two · btg sea t s, two blJcket
sea t rn front , a1r cond ,
good chur ch bus or huntin g
van $2,000. Ca ll 379 2712

----

NOW LeT '~

WAIT; 'IOU'Rf; MAKit.IC:.
A Bl 6 MIHAKE. I'LL
9&amp;T THeY'RE L00KIIJ(9
FOR M6!

Sit de· ln ca mper w 1th gas
furnan ce. GE r ef rigerator ,
totlet. 30 gal. water tank , ·

85
J rms . &amp;
bath, good
location, carpeted, utilities
paid, furnished, $195. dep.
&amp; r ef . req . Cal l 446·7482
morntngs.

o m m Ill I]) ® 111 (j)

6:oo

1971 21 ft . Starcraft travel
trailer , self co ntatned . Ex c
cond Ca ll 675·3626 after
SPM
Motor Home
&amp; ~a!ll~~~ -

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square , to form
four ordinary words

EVENING

Ca mping

Pla stt c Septi c Tanks State
and c ounty approved. 1,000
ga l tank , pn ce S340 Other
s tzes 1n stock , haul 1n your
p1ckup tru ck Ca ll 614 286
5930, Jackson . Oh RON
EVANS ENTERPR IS ES

11f}I}N} fi}'ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
~ ~ ~~ byHenriArnoldandBobLoe

4/t.LQ2_

oua l1t y Autobody &amp; Patnl
work . Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles
Au to Trtm Center, .446 1968

~if'¥:!~

15

THURSDAY

7! _ _ ~~~~ ~~il_!r _ _

54

H 1deaway bed. other fur
n tlu re 1tem s Call 446 322~

The

Television
•
•
VIewmg·

Wtndshield broken? Call
Sout hern Gl ass. Insur ance
c l aims we l co me , fre e
mob1l e serv1ce available
Ca ll 446 1011

Movtng Sa le l1vmgroom
sofa , chatrs, tables, lamps,
2 bedroom sui tes, &amp; mis c.
Ca ll 256·6437

ss

Ohio

Hou se hold Goods

se rv• ccs for lir e .nsura nce
3 bedroom unfurn• shed
apartmen t 992·5434 or 992
5914 or 304 882 2566

1982

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~ Here's how to
Is

work

it :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ooe letter simply stands for another . In thls sample A ls

wed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
opostrophes, the length and formation of the warda ore all
blots. Eoch doy the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
. CT

BMWDV

VFH

VM

SZRPQ

NWKS
-NWKS

ZFLT

FP

FIERO

GWS

CT

F

ZFIIH

AMMD'K
CMP'S.
VFH.

WK

Yeetenlay'1Cryptoquote: AWISEMAN WILL l.IYE AS MUCH
WITHIN IDS WIT AS IDS INCOME.-LORO CHESTERFIELD

�Page

Thursday, April 1, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

16-The Daily Sentinel

(

E'LBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FRIDAY
APRIL 2nd

SATURDAY
· APRIL 3rd

liPAIL
TOWEL SALE

APRIL SALE

De~on

Sportswear

Floral patte rn in rose, orchid or tan . Excellent quality
Dund ee towe ls.

REG. 115.00
REG. 118.00
REG. 123.00
REG. 132.00

..... . SALE 19.79
.
SALE 111.69
.
SALE 114.99
.
SALE 120.79

LITTLE GIRLS'
DRESSES

• • • s1.18

;.

.'
'

APRIL SALE

,J . 1 ·~
.
' .

'

JUNIOR JEANS

'

Qu a lit y Wrangle r and Lord Isaacs
de nim jeans. Natural s traight ilfld
great straight .
Sizes 3 th ru 15.

REG. 118.00 ..
REG. 122.00 .
REG. 126.00 .
REG. 135.00 .

Dick Newell, manager of Cableentertainmenl, mel with Syracuse
council Thursday concerning a rate
increase for TV cable service.
The present rate is $7 and the com·
pany is asking for $8.50 per month or
an increase of $1 .50.
Newell explained that the addition
of the all sports program on channel
four has nothing to do with the the
rate proposal.
He did say, however, the company
wasn't going to drop channel six sin·
ce most Ohio residents requested
that particular channel rema in.
Newell explained that they are
definitely trying to upgrade the
preSent system. However, several
channels could not be changed due to
FCC regulations.
He did indicate that possibly channel 13 (on cable) could possibly be
changed to an all news channel.
After passage of the resolution,
which requires one reading, it would
be approximately 90 days before the
additional charge would be made.

JUNIOR COATS
Long v inyl rain coa ts,
hoode d poly/c otton s tyl es
wi th e lasti c waists , J/•
l ength
p o l y / co tton
st ad ium jacke t s.
Sizes7to 15.

APRIL SALE

JUNIOR
DRESSES

Reg .$ 11.00
Reg . $4 9.00
Reg. $65.00

Pnnled sund r esses, pullover

SALE $2.25
SALE $3.75
SALE $6.75
SALE S11.25
SALE S15.75

REG. $3 .00 ........... .
REG. $5.00 ..
REG . $9 .00 . . .....
REG . $15 .00
REG .$2 1.00 ........

poly kn1t s. lonq and sho r t
sleeved styl es, PilS i el pr1nt s
and sol1ds 1n poly /c olt on ,
blend&lt;;, _Jr . &lt;;.1zes 3 fhru 13

LADIES
SPRING COATS

LADIES
DRESSES

\

..
Sa le $24.79
..
Sale $30.79
.
Sale $36.79
..... , Sa le $44.29
..
Sale $~p19

EXTRA
FIRM

"'

G.E. 19 INCH

OUEENSET
Re g. $509 .90

COLOR·TV
SPECIAL

DONOR- Danny Riggs, Meigs High School senior, was one of the70
donors giving blood during a student council sponsored bloodmobile visit
on Wednesday. Student Teresa Pratt is close by to Insure that everything
is going well, See additional photos ~.nd story on Page 6.

APRIL SALE

Dress leng t hs. ' ' length s.
poly / co tt o n wi th
fitt ed
wai s ts, dress coat s and
ja cke ts.
Siz es 8 to 24 1 , _
Reg . $33.00
Reg.$41.00
Reg . $49 .00
Reg . $59 .00
Reg. $75 .00

... Sale $8.79
Sale $39 .19
. Sale $51.99

Reg. $12.00 .. Sale $9.59
Sale $15.99
Reg . $20.00
Reg . $26.00
Sale $20.79
Reg. $32.00
Sale $25.59
Reg . $43.00
Sale $34.39

APRIL SALE

$254

fJI

TWIN SET
Reg . 5339.90

$169

95

j

FULL SET
Reg . $439.90

$219

95

.

....

.

Mi 5::-.es and hillf S11e dresses f or
special occas1ons or everydily
Wf'nr .
Pr1nts. •;ollds ond stripes 1n sun
dresses. li'ICket d r esses an d 2 pc
dresses .
·

Reg . $27.00
Reg . $36.00
Reg . $43.00
Reg . $52.00
Reg . $63.00

'
'

Sale $21.59
Sale $28 .79
Sale $34 .39
Sale $41.59
Sale $50.39

J..
'-1 ' ·.
''

l .

r; .·

j

95

WADSWORTH, Ohio - A woman and her 2-month-old baby were
among three people killed when their vehicle was struck by a car
speeding in the wrong direction on Interstate 76, the Ohio Highway
Patrol said today.
Wanda Hall, 29, of Barberton; her infant daughter, Lori Hall; and
Chester Moczek, 43, of Louisville, Ohio, were killed in the crash at
10:55 p.m. Thursday, said dispatcher Nadine Tipton.
Mr.t. Hall's husband, James, and their three other children were in·
jured, as well as the driver of the speeding car; Harold Richmond, 45,
of Akron, she said.

''

Tf'L E Vi S I ON

AFC
E nerqy co nsc 10us r hii "&gt;S IS
In l1nC' biA r k Mi1lf1X PIC iur f' .

lube

Brilliant pictures, ou ts tand in g co lor per ·
forma nce in a handsomely s tyl ed portab le
co lor TV.
REG . $459.00
SAVE $60.00

APRtLSALE

LADIES' HANDBAGS

MEN'S ., 6.95

LEATHER WORK BELTS
Sizes 32 to 50 _in browr. or bla c k full gra in cowh\dP br•dl c
leather - I 1 4 1nch width

APRIL SALE!
BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

Reg. $6.00 ..... Sale $4 .80
Reg. $9 .00 ..... Sale $7.20
REg. $1i.OO
Sale$12.00
Reg. $19,00 ... Sale$15.20

NEW SPRING&amp;
SUMMER STYLES

Bo ys 5iZCS 8 10 20 1n il b1Q Se leC TiOn of
styl es Crrw ne c k s co llar ed styl es
d ressy look s
numbers
baseball
loo k s
pi'lttprn s an d SOli dS

Short sleeves in sizes S, M, L
a nd X L . Poly cotton blends,
terry cl oth s 100% co ttons
So lid s a nd stripes . Excenem
se lec t ion . Ent i re stock i nc luded
for thi s two -day sa le.

HANES 20% OFF
SPRING SALE

Men's S7. 9S Knit Shirt s .... S6.24
Men 'sS9.9SKnitShirt s .... S7 .74
Men 'sS I2 .9SKnitShirts .. S10 .14
Men's S16.9S Knit Shirts .. S13.24

BOYS DENIM JEANS

Boys$14.95Jeans
Boys $16 .95 Jeans
Boys $17 .95 Jeans
Boys $19.95 Jeans

..
..
..
..

$11.79
$13.39
$14.19
. 15.79

)

Save 20o/o in men's and boys' Hanes Red Label underwear and
men's Blue Label too. Includes T shirts · briefs · A -Shirts- boxer
s ~ort s- big men 's sizes and oorkPt T ·c::h; .....

Men's Wrangler $19.95

DENIM JEANS
stret ch or pucker . Waist sizes

27

to 42 - lengths 30 lo 36.

MEN'S WORK UNIFORMS

j

Work pants with short or long
sleeve shirts to match .
· Good selection of sizes and col ·
· ors in regular and extra large
1 sizes .

J ~

~

"

OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL8- SATURDAY UNTIL 5
FREE PARKING IN-POMEROY ALL DAY SATURDAY

ELB'ERFELD

wASHINGTON -William H. Kennedy, U.S. atlomey in San Diego,
Calif., reportedly has been asked to resign, but an associate of the
prosecutor is quoted as saying Kennedy will fight to keep his job.
Justice Department sources who asked anonymity said Thursday
night ihat Kennedy's resignation was sought because the prosecutor
confinned the identity of a CIA source,
The request was conveyed in a telephone call made to Kennedy late
Wednesday night by Deputy Attorney General Edward Schmults, the
sources said.
Meanwhile, Copley News Service quoted an unidentified associate of
Kennedy's as saying "he isn't going to roll over and play dead. He's
been treated shabbily.''

Winning Ohio l~ttery llUttlber

Straiqhf leo or boot flare 141J' oz . No Fault pre·washed
o1ue denim thai won ' t shrink ,

WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M. - As seasonal winds swept
across the desert and white sand swirled around Colwnbia, officials
wamed the same weather that delayed the space shuttle's descent to
Earth might also slow its retum to Flordia.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration officials, on a tight
schedule to prepare the shuttle for its fourth mission tentatively
scheduled for June T/, hope to get the spaceship ready for a retum
niuht to Kennedy Space Center on Wednesday.

U.S. attorney will fight for job

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

Boys $5 .95 Shirts .. . . . . $4 .64
Boys $8.95 Shirts ... . . . $6.94
Boys $10.95 Shirts ..... $8.54
Boys $12 .95 Shirts ... $10 .14

B1g se lec tion of Wrangl er and
L ee pre was hed blue denims.
Boo t and slrai qht legs. Boys
regular Slim and hu sky si zes 8
to 16. Sfuden t sizes 26 to 30 wi th
30 to 36 in cll length s.

r~

-··_
. . . . .. ... . . . .. . . .,. "'··sr-~-·-C~.

~

.... "" 56. 19

S7.9S Leath er Gi!rrison Belts, 2" width

KNIT SHIRTS

Weather may delay Florida trip

New sprinq st y les and co l ors.
macrnm es ,
V •ny l s. l eathe r s,
spacesacs an d ca nvas .

N,POME
.

Y.

$8.95 S.S. Shirts • , . , , , .. , $4 .50
S10.9~ L.s. Shirts ••...... ss.so
$11.95 Reg. Size Pants . •. u.oo
$12.95 Ex. Size Pants • , .. $6.50

e·n tinel

CLEVELAND- The winning nwnber drawn Thursday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Nwnber" was 850.
, In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning nwnber was &lt;ij15.
The lottery reported earnings of $674,116.50 on its daily game. The
earnings came on sales of $1,046,848,. while holders of winning tickets
are entitied to share $372,631.50, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast
Showers and thunderstonns and windy tonight and Saturday. Lows
tonight In low 508. Highs Saturday In mid to upper 60s, Chance of rain
80 percent tonight and 70 percent Saturday. Winds southerly 20--30 mph
tonight.
.
Exteuded Ohio Foreeul-:- Sunday through Tut!llday: Chance of

showers or snow flurries Sund&amp;Y· Mostly cloudy and cool MOI!day and
~' Highs from the mid-ale to.ll!id-408 SUnday and lllOitly In the

4011 Monday and Tuesday: Lows from the upper 208 to mi~ SUnday ,
morning and In the Monday and Tueeday,
·..

II!&amp;

~I

,

'

Newell noted his finn is considering a collection agency in the
county with payments to be made at
a local bank . He indicated it would
be a bank in Pomeroy.
Council agreed to wait before
giving the resolution the one
necessary reading since it would be
90 days hefore the increase would
take effect.
PLAN SEASON
Also meeting with council was Bill
Arnott, president of the SyracuseMinersville Baseball Association
who outlined some of the problems
he encountered in obtaining use of
the ball fi elds last year, especially
for practice sessions.

He sa id it is difficult to schedule
games along with practice sessions.
Council agreed that the deadline
for game scheduling would be May
I. Persons submittmg schedules by
the May 1 date would be given
priority. It will be on a first come,
first serve basis. Mi ck Ash is in
charge of scheduling games at tt.&gt;

15 Cen t s

(

two parks for the season
Amott said the association. will
ha.v~

seve n tea ms with 67 child ren

participating. The boosters will man
the concession sta nd Arnot~ added.
Amott also explained that umpiring equipment and bases be
stored in order that they have access
to them when needed. He said the
association had to purchase several
sets of bases last year due to several
being destroyed.
·
Arnott commended Doug Hemsley
for his work in preparing the fields .
The baseball season for the
association will be from May 18 until
July 15.
Arnott suggested that bleachers

be placed at the small field . He
stated that some material had been
donated and free labor corrunitted.
Council, however, made no decision .
Naomi London met with council
a nd reported a curbing to keep

water from running into her
basement had been torn out when
the snowplow was used during the

winter. She stated that there is
water tn her basement a1 the present
time due to the removal of the curb.

Council agreed

to remedy the

situation.

A comp lai nt was lodged by Ella
Quillen regarding water on her
property. It was brought out that the
problem is being caused by a water
break on property located above the
Quillen property.
It was anll"o"anced that the placing
of brick on the outside portion of the
London Pool building has been completed and contact with Lawrence
Hoffner will be made to paint the
doors to the building.
Attending were Mayor Eber
Pickens, Janice Lawson, clerk,

George Holman, treasurer, Milton

Varian, police chief, Robert
Wingett, grants admmistrator, Mick
Ash, Willie Guinther. John Bentley
a nd Kathryn Crow, council members, Naomi'l.ondon and Doug Hemsley .

Rescue workers recover bodies
SQUAW VALLEY, Calif. fAP) Rescue workers aided by dogs and
emebl{ency lights dug through snow
more fl!ltn two stories deep at a ski
resort, k arching for at least two
more people believed buried by
avalanches that killed six people.
Two bodies were found Thursday
buried almost 25 deep and another '
was found II feet down in the snow
from avalanches that a resort
spokesman said were beyond "our
wildest dreams."
The two known to be missing were
" preswned perished." said Placer

County Sheriff Donald Nunes.
Sco res of rescue workers worked
under lights until about 9 p.m. They
were to continue searching today.
"They have been on the line for 15
to 20 hours, " said sheriff's Lt . Nick
Mileur. '' These people are just whipped, beat. They are just exhausted."
Three bodi es were discovered
shortly after 12 feet of new snow
triggered the avalanches Wed·
nesday aft ern oon at Alpine
Meadows resort, about three miles
south of Squaw Valley in the Sierra

Meigs teachers hear

Three die in 1-76 collision

perrormiJnce

100°o Sol 1d slo e cha SS IS

oil embargo, 8.4 million people were
out of work, but the labor force was
smaller then.
In 1938, 10.4 million people were
out of work, the largest nwnber
ever, but the labor force was only
54.6 million.
The highest unemployment rate
recorded since data was first compiled in 1940 was the 1941 yearly
average of 9.9 percent. Monthly
statistics were first compiled in 1948.
Unemployment in 1940 was 14.6
1 Continued on page 121

Council hears request for rate hike

SALE 14.39
SALE 118.39
SALE 120.79
SALE 127.99

CHILDREN'S JACKETS
Swea ts htrt 1ackets, dress c oa ts, ltn cd a nd unlined
jackets a nd rain s lickers .
Comp le te ranqe of chi ldr e n' s sizes from mon th s to
s iz e 14 .

pear~nce on public television's
" MacNeil-Lehrer Report." " It lags
behind a recovery."
Private analysts say the absence
of any clea• signs of an early
busmess turnaround indicates there
will be no new hiring any lime soon
of the magmtude .needed to provide
re!Jef from n smg JOblessness.
For March, total employment was
99.5 million, about 100,000 less than
the month before.
When unemployment last reached
9 percent , at the height of the Arab

12 Pagei
A Mult•med•a Inc .

APRIL SALE

Poly/ cott on b lends, ny lon and sa ti n s tyles .

three months of the year to 1.3
But rising
unemployment ,
million. That's the highest level sin· Treasury Secretary DJ&gt;nald Regan
ce the government began keeping said Thursday, does not mean the
this statistic in 19ti7.
adimmstrallon's for-:cast of an
The Labor Department said this econonuc recovery ~his swruner IS
increase was particularly felt wrong.
.
. .
among blacks, "who historically
Unttl busmess ts hnnly on the uphave l!lJCOUnled for a dispropor· swmg, he satd, hirmg does not pick
tionately large nwnber of the up. Rather, he added, employers
discouraged. " In the fi rst quarter, tend to asstgn longer hours to
blacks comprised nearly 40 percent existing workers before hinng new
of those who dropped out of the labor · ones.
force because of frustration en- ..- "Unemployment is what we call a
countered in seeking jobs.
lOgging indicator," he said in an ap-

1 Sec tiOn s,

1

APRIL SALE

~.Jio..;&amp;i+:'

adult males, traditionally the family
breadwinners, equaling December's
higli of 7.9 percent, jhe department's
Bureau of Labor Statistics said.
Unemployment among whitecollar, blue-c~IIIar and full-time
workers as rJ whole rose from
February, wh,n the jobless rate was
1
8.8 percent. /
The number of discouraged
workers, Who the government omits
from the unemployment total
because they have stopped looking
for work, rose by 140,000 in the first

The Daily

Sundresses,
jacket
dresses, pinafores and
dresses with matching
bonnets .
Months sizes thru size
14.
Buy now for Easter!
Reg. $6.00 .. . Sale $4.79
Reg. 59.00 .. . Sale$7.19
Reg . $13.00
Sale 510.39
Reg . 518.00
Sale $14 .39
Reg . 526.00
Sale $20 .79

.
•

WASHINGTON
(A P)
Widespread layoffs and plant
closings pushed the unemployment
rate to 9 percent last month, matching the postwar high, the Labor
Department reported today.
Just under 9.9 million people were
out of work in March. Since last
July, about 2 million have lost their
jobs.
March's employment losses, the
product of the continuing recession,
cut across the spectrum of the
population, with joblessness among

APRIL SALE

Sale s3.88
Sale s2.33

s4.99 Bath Towel ..... .
s2.99 Matching Hand Towel
p s1.49 Matching Wash Cloth

Specia l group of Devon Spor t·
swea r in s iz rs S to Land 8 to 20 .
Ja c ke ts, s kir ts, pants . tops and
b louses.
Co lors in c lu de re d , whi te, blue,
mint. peac h &amp; cor a l.

Nine percent jobless rate postwar high

financial problems
A contingent of 15 Meigs Local in particular r esults from a series of
teachers recently attended a school state budget cuts in school funding
funding training session held by the a~d the erosion of the dollar's real
Ohio Coalition of Educational value through inflation. According
Organizations at Athens. This to the Ohio Education Association,
session was one of 23 scheduled " If there is no increase in state taxes
statewide by the Coalition.
and it is necessary to absorb a 16.3
In addition to teachers, the percent reduction in the 1982-83
Coalition of Educational school year, the reduction for Meigs'
Organizations, fonned 16 months school district will be $407,680.40 .
ago to fight the deteriorating school the equivalent of 4.88 mills in loca l
finance problem, includes the Ohio property taxes."
Department of Education, Ohio
On the state level, state funding to
School Boards Association, Buckeye local school districts has remained
Association of School Ad- approximately at the same level for
ministrators, Ohio Association of the fiscal years 197!).1980, 198().1981,
Public School Employees, Ohio ,..1982-1982. If the proposed 16.3 pe~­
Congress of Parents and Teachers, cent cut is increased as anticipated
and other educational groups.
to a 24 percent cut in the 1982-1983
According to Meigs Loca I fiscal year, then the stale funding
Teachers Association president Bob will have remained at the same level
Oliver, local teachers attending the forfour years.
meeting were told that "Ohio
Meanwhile, inflation has so
schools are now facing a problem
reduced the purchasing power of the
they've never had before," and that dollar that local districts are
"the most scary part is that nobody
receiving less aid in actual buying
knows how bad it really is."
power.
Persons attending the Coalition
The problem facing Ohio schools
(Continued on page 12)
in general and Meigs Local schools

Nevada .
Four people were rescued from

400 feet of the IIIOUnlainsJde, leveling

the snow slides Wednesday, includmg 74-ycar-old John Hiley, who
said ava lanches " had come down
many times in the past, but not as
bad as this."
The morning before the disaster.
ava lanche crews fired explosives into the snow to reduce the avalanche
danger, sa id Werner Schuster, vice
president of marketing for the

bury ing the parking lot. The other
rw nbled down the mountam in a
wall of snow 15 to 20 feet deep . slamming into an A-frame sk1 patrol
building and rarnm1ng 1t mto the

resort.

"The severity of the snow ca used
the snow to build up at such a rate
that we simply could not stay on top
of it," he said . " We knew that the
avalanche danger was pretty extreme:·
But he said the size of the avalan·
ches " never could have been expected, not in our wildest dreams.' '
Alpine Meadows' 13 ski lifts were
closed by heavy snow Wednesday
and the main road to the resort was
closed most of the day . But the
cafeteria and main lodge, fill ed
mainly with resort employees and
members of the ski and avalanche
patrols, were open .
One avalanche hissed down about

a 2().foot-wide swath of trees and

wood-and-gras main

lod~e.

causing

ai least $1 mi llion 111 structural
damage to the lodge.
New slides blocked the road to the
resort as rescuers made their way m
aboard snow tractors, then by fort
and on skis, to a search area about
the size of a football field.
The two missing were identified
by the sheriff's department as resort
employees Bernie Kingery, a 4().
year-old avalanche expert, and An·
nie Conrad, 22.
Authorities identified two of the
three found dead Thursday as Beth
Morrow, 22, a resort employee, and
11-year-old Lauri Nelson, whose
father also was killed .
The dea d found Wednesday buried
in the parking lot were identified as
David L. Hahn, 46, of Los Altos: Dr.
l.,froy James Nelson of Eureka ;
and Jamey James "Jake" Smith.
37, of the Lake Tahoe area.

·vouth face B&amp;E charges
fence . Both were released to their
Two Racine youths, age 13 and 16,
have been charged in Meigs County parents and will appear in juvenile
Juvenile Court for breaking and en- court at a later date.
The Meigs County Shenff's Depar·
tering and criminal damaging to a
lmenl
is investigating the theft of
trailer owned by Frank Cleland,
· tools from an outbuilding at the Bill
Racine.
The youths allegedly entered the . Hawley residence in Syracuse.
Thursday, Hawley went to t~e
trailer Monday then broke out the
building for the tools and found them
wind~s, smashed the power company meter and cut a barbed wire missing.

Ohio's jobless rate U.S' percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - Here are

the unemployment rates for the 10
largest states, released on a
~ adjusted basis today by
the Labor Department: ,
. -California, 9.4 percent, up from
8.9 percent.
-Flqrtda, 8.9, up from 7.3.
·Dllnois, 9.8, opfrom9.6.

-Massachusetts, 7.3, down from
7.6.
-Michigan, 16.1, up from 14.8.
-New Jefsey, 8.8, down from 8.9.
-New York, 8.2, down from 8.4.
.Ohio, II ,8, up from I 1.3.
-Pennsylvania, 10.1, down from
10.3.
-Texas,5.9, upfrom5.7.

DIGS OI,JT CAR IN HEAVY SNOW - Mlebael Peron, Truckee, CalH .,
digs out her car from a driveway foUowing a heavy snow stonn In the
Lake Tahoe area. Rescue worken coolinue to recover bodies of perso111
tnlpped after an avalanche smashed Into a ski resort nearby, ~ AP Laserphoto),

.,

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