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                  <text>... ·.

by Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
I'LL HAVE~E
LATEST V\taATHER
R::JR~CA.5T AFTER

IT WA51HE qi&lt;EAT
~1WAINWHO

SAl~"~

1HER:lUOM~

HIV.,~IOU5

TAUC:S A&amp;l.IT 1HE
WEA"Tl-ie"R •••

ANe-a:vfE.

•... 6UT 1Ht::f&lt;E'.5 A
E5Ra&lt;EN H~r&lt;T

R:)R'~~

. ON~WAY. 11

... BUTI NEVER
METAMAN r

II

DIDN'T LII&lt;E.w

Nq~...THAT

15N'T~ -·

I WONDER IF

rrb

100 LATE TO 60
INTO 50ME Oll-tER
UNc OF W::)f&lt;K~

Nq NO •.. UH ...

"'

b Ed Sullivan

PrisciUa's Pop
OH, r c;()NI ~­
SOW: HOW I THINK
I LOSTMY
AUDIENCE.'

AH, THOSE J;JRE -ANI76RIMSTONE SERMONS
O:YES~ .'

c. • ...

..O.:t
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•.

~.WE CERTAINLY

I

!LL SAY ·..

6EUEVE IN THE
H~. REVEREND

'WEEMS&gt; .'

entinel
·1

Voi .JO,No .2.SJ
Copyrighted 1982

By Associated Press
Peace marchers were arrested
ln South Dakota and Montana. New
Yorkers paraded their finery down
Fifth Avenue and thou sa nds
braved raln ln Los Angeles to attend Easter sunrise services as
Americans celebrated Christi anity's most sacred holiday.
A Catholic priest and a Protestant minister were among four people arrested as they tried to place
Easter lilies on a nuclear missile
silo ln Kadoka , S.D .
"The Illy stands for Jesus' victory over sln and death," said the
Rev. Chrtstopher Dunphy, a priest
frqm Brookings, S.D., who called
on the government to tum missile
silos Into graln silos.
Fifteen people were arrested in
Great Falls, Mont. , after about 100
anti-nuclear marchers crossed a
white llne marking the boundary of
Malmstrom Alr Force Base.
A group ca lllng themselves
"peace pilgrims" left Seattle on the
third day of a march to Bethlehem
Christ's traditiona l birthplace:
from the ammunition ga te of the
Navy's Trident nuclear subma rine
base at Bangor, Wash.
In a different march, thousand s
of New Yorkers strolled Fifth
Avenue fro m 34th Street to 57th
Street for the a nnual, Informal
Easter Parade of pedestrians.
Cardinal Terence Cooke celebrated Mass at St. Patrick's
Cathedral, where more than 2,00}
worshippers attended each of slx
hour-long services, said pollee
Capt. Thomas Barton.
In front of the cathedral, two sisters dressed ln revealing bunny
suits cavorted among the paraders.
Dyaiia Darnell, 24, said she and
her 16-year-old sister Danlelie
chose the costumes because "it was
the only thlng I could think of that
was sexy."
Others sported traditional Easter
bonnets, Including flower pots and
a white hat wlth red rtilnestones
spelling, "Jesus Is Risen ."
It rained on the 12th annual
Easter parade In Los Angeles,

where four floats were put out of
action and another half-dozen got
soaked.
" There was a crowd, even ln the
downpour- we didn't believe It, "
said a relieved Ma rgaret Warran,
who coordinated the parade.
Meanwhile, Easter In Europe
was marked by massive a ntinuclear protests In West Germany,
a pistol salute ln Northern Ireland
and a call by the head of the Roman
Catholic Church In Poland for
peaceful coexistence between martial law authorities and the Polish
people.
Archbishop Jozef Glemp, the PolIsh primate, In a sermon to 3,00}
worshippers In Warsaw, urged the
Poles to put aside grudges ln order
to work toward a national accord.
He also asked Poland's milita ry
leaders to create a climate that
would make people feel "at home
everywhere - In the church, In the
streets, at our places of work."
"The church wants to offer Its
services for such a national accord
and I Invite everybody to join this
service," the archbishop said.
At one Warsaw c hurch , a young
girl about 10 years old knelt ln
prayer wlth a sign saying, "Jesus,
bring m y daddy back" -an apparent reference to her father's Internment for union activities. An
estimated 3,600 Poles have been detained slnce Dec. 13 when martial
law was Imposed and the Independent labor organization Solidarity
suspended.
Solidarity leader Lech Walesa,
under house arrest In a Warsaw
suburb, was united for the first time
wlth hls entire family slnce he was
arrested ln mid-December, relatives sald. He was visited by his
wife Danuta and seven children,
and they were expected to remain
untU Wednesday.
The Easter holiday for most
Poles was somber, reflecting the
continued restrictions of martial
Ia w, wldespread food shortages
and spiralling prices.

Jurors were belng seated this morning ln the trial of the State of
Ohio versus William Watson, 51, Rt. I, Reedsvllle.
Watson Is being charged wlth attempted murder and Is belng
represented by Charles Knight. Watson on Aug. '!7, 1981 allegedly
shot Craig Foley, Watson's stepson.
Foley was shot ln the lower left side just below the rib cage w1th a
.22 caliber pistol at his Owl Hollow residence, Reedsville, at approximately 11:37 p.m.

Weather forecast

I'M ~rat"'
T'J ~~~ ...
eM '100

by
Art &amp; Chip Sansom
r---...,.--_;;,

15 Cenh

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpoper

U.S. Easter
celebrations
differ from
other nations

Jury seated for Meigs felony case

DUSTY CHAPS

2 Sectiont, I 2 Poge 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 12, 1982

Mostly cloudy wlth a chance ~f showers tonight and Tuesday
morning, followed by clearing Tuesday afternoon. Lows tonight
45-50. Highs Tuesday around 70. Chance of rain 40 percent tonight
and 30 percent Tuesday. Winds southerly 10-20 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair Wednesday and Thursday and a chance of showers or thundersiAlnns Friday. IDghs In the upper 5tlo and 60s Wednesday and In
the mid~ to mid·70s Thursday and Friday. Lows In the mld-30s
and 40s.

HELP ~-z

OFF--SEveral hundred youngsters were oH ~d running upon instruction by John Weerner, announcer, Sunday afternoon when the annual
Easter egg hunt of the Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary Club was held at
the Middleport Community Park. Some 600 plastic eggs, each contain-

lng a sUp for a prize, were found by the participating youngsters nUlglng from pre-school through the sixth grade. Mayor Fred HoHman
welcomed the crowd and Middleport firemen were on hand to assist
lwtarl1ms wlth the event.
I 1

f
•
(

• ••

' I .'

'. ,

rl

Annual hunt
held Sunday
BIG WINNERS-These three
youngsters, pictlln'd with Jim
Sheets, president of the
Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary
Club, were the big winners at
the annual Easter egg hunt of
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club held Sunday at the
Middleport Community Park.
Finding the special award eggs
were from the left, Tom Buckley. Middleport, the $25 gold egg
donated by Bank One of Pomeroy; Ke,in Taylor, of near Middleport, the SIO silver egg given
by Powell's Super-Valu, and
Lena Knotts, Reedsville, the
bronze egg worth $5, given by
Krogers.

Hotel fire kills Gallia resident
GALLIPOLIS - The Easter Sunday calm was shattered around 7
a.m. when a fire ln the Park Central
Hotel, 401 Second Ave., took the life
of one of 1ts residents.
The victim was Identified as RIchard Eugene Eskew. 39. Probable
cause of death, according to Dr. Donald Warehime, Gallia County coroner, was smoke Inhalation.
The Incident was the county's
first fire fatality of the year. The
last death caused by fire occurred
last Oct. 26 when Jacklyn Wolflngbarger, 44, Patriot Star Route, also
died from smoke Inhalation when
he r mobile home caught fire while
she was sleeping.
According to police and fire reports, Patrolman Lonnie McGuire
was on duty at 7:
a.m. when a
citizen stopped his cruiser and told
him the hotel, owned by Alfred Ar.
nold. Gallipolis, was on fire.

rn

The fire department was Immediately notified and Sgt. Roger
Brandeberry arrived to back up
McGuire, who was knocking on the
hotel's front door. No one responded, and Brandeberry advised
McGuire to take out the door.
Once the door was removed, the
officers entered the building and began waking up the residents of the
40-room structure. Tt)e fil'e was
eventua lly located ln Room 24, on
the third floor' s southern corner,

facing the city park.
Brandebecry said the fire appeared to be comalned ln the room,
and the doorknob was too hot to·
touch. The door was closed and
locked and smoke was reportedly
flowing out from above and below
the door.
A res ident Informed the o!flcer
he didn't thlnk anyone was Inside
the room, at which time It was decided to make a rescue by charging
the room wlth a loaded fire hose.
Brandeberry proceeded downstairs and met Ray Bush, the Gallipolis Fire Department's battalion
chief. and fireman Bob Poling, who
went upstairs to the room and
opened It wlth a key that had al-

ready been obtained by police.
More firemen arrived wearing
face masks, and It was then Eskew's body was found . Eskew was
reported to have been an employee
of Johnson's Mobile Homes in
Gallipolis.
The fire department said this
morning the fire. believed to have
been started by a Ill cigarette, Ignited an overstuffed chair. The
blaze the n spread to the wail and

ceiling, ca using heavy smoke and
heat damage. Estimated loss to the
building was listed as $2,00J and
WlO to the room's contents.
The department sent three
trucks and 'l7 men to the scene. After Eskew's body was removed, lt
was taken to Waugh-Haliey-Wood
Funeral Home, who handled the
funeral arrangements . The Gallla
County Sheriff's Department notified the victim's next of kin .

Stolen vehicle found

The she riff's department reports
tha t a 1975 Datsun owned by Mike
Eanes, Wellston, reported stolen
Saturday morning from Meigs
Mlne number two parking lot was
recovered In Athens County near
Buchtel Saturday evening.
The vehicle had been set fire but
did not burn. Missing were the license pla tes. The vehicle was Impounded and Herman He nry, BCI
agent wlil process the vehicle for
flngerprtnts.
A 19TI Chevrolet pickup truck reported mtsslng Friday from the
Plesset farm nea·r Dyesvtue has
been ioca ted.
Robert Stealey, Belpre, reported

Saturday that within the last 10
days a house and bam he owns on
Calaway Ridge, near the AthensMeigs County line, had been
entered.
Taken from the property were
kitchen items, kitchen clock, towels, washcloths. and a pillowcase. A
wheelbarrow had been taken from
the bam that had been entered after prying off the lock. The incident
Is under Investigation .
Patrick Capehart, Coolville, reported Saturday evening that he
had a helmet stolen from his motorcycle while at the Pit Stop ln
Tuppers Plains.

Southern board names gym
'tW;~,.

SHOOI..D I PICK
lTUP AT
1WtLLCAt

t'z•

SPECiAL AW.Aims- Speelal team awanll ftlll .

w ZaDe

Beegle, best free throw perceutage; Tom

Roleberry, defeDBive award; Jay Reel, JODatbon

,.

..

.fteel, Robert Brown, Kent WoUe, Richard WoUe, and
~ger~riP1ckens.

RACINE - Saturday evening at the Sou them High School basketball banquet the Southern Local
Board of Education in special session proclaimed that the high school gymnasium "as of April 10,
shall be known as the Charles R. Hayman Gymnasium." The meeting was conducted by president
Don Smith. All members present favored the resolution.
Superintendent of Southern Local School District Bob Ord read the resolution that was proposed
by Principal Jim Adams and Coach Carl Wolfe.
Charles R. Hayman, who now resJdes near Westerville, served the Racine-Southern Schoo'
District in some capacity for more than 2!i years. Hayman served as teacher, coach, administrator
'
and superintendent before his retirement in 1963.
Hayman has been highly respected over the years as a teacher of knowledge and discipline.
Besides his high praise in the classroom, Hayman was also respected as a coach. Coach Hayman led
the Racine Tornadoes to the State Tournament in 1933 and is currently the winningest coach in
Racine-Southern History with 208 vict~ries. Hayman served as a coach for 14 seasons.
The first event to be held in the newly named Charles R. Hayman Gymnasium was Saturday
evening's Southern High School basketball banquet. Unfortunately, Hayman was unable to be
preseni. A fonnal dedication wiU take place next basketball season at the first home game, although
the entrance to gym wlll he lettered as soon as possible.

�Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
Ill ( 'uurt S tn ·t&gt;~
l'mnrrn\ . llhw

614-99:i-Z if&gt;6
.\IEII;S...MASII~

All EA

ROBERT L. WINf.ETT
l 'ub h ~ hrr

ROB HOEFLICH

PATWHITF.HF.AO

DALE ROTHf.EB. JR.

A MEI\1111':11 uf Tht· ,\~ .'&lt;H'UIIt·d Pn·~!&gt;. lnlurKI
Anwrku n Nn~i'&gt;plrpt• r l'uhli ~-&gt; lwri'&gt; 1\)&gt;,\lll' ilttiun .

Uuil~

l'n·~i'&gt; As~ndutinn

April 12, 1982

Britannia rules ?._________W_ill_ia_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley_Jr.

The Daily Sentinel
ltl;j.\ tll"J-:1t Ttl THE I NH:UF.Sl' OF TilE

~day,

und lht·

I.ETTEit." OF III'I~ION &lt;tn· 'Adt•nnwd . Thn shnuld tw lt·s~ !hun 300 .... unb lung. All
ktkn. an· suhjt·rt In t•ditin.: 11 nd mu .~t bt· si,.:iwd 'Aith nctnw. uddrt·~~ un d h·ll·phnnt·
numtwr . Nn uu~i~::rwd lt•lll'r)&gt; ...., ill IJc· poblbht•d . IA' llt·r.. shuultJ bt• in J::ond lu sh·. a dd rt•ssin~::
' '~Ut')&gt; , nul l"' f )&gt;unalith·s

Look to tomorrow

jugation of Rhodesia); and the
On the evening of Dec. 18, 1961, it terpart in Prince Andrew, a helicopmotion was made that Mrs. Thathappened that I and my wife were ter Jlllot. There isn't much more that
cher herself resign.
guests of the Portuguese am- the British can offer than the conThe report, however, is the British
tribution
of
the
prince,
heir
to
the
bassador to Washington, the purpose
fleet,
in its long march to the
British
throne,
should
providence
of the invitation being to show us a
Falklands,
is proceeding at less than
abort
the
career
of
his
older
brother
film taken during the previous sumfull speed. The trouble with full
Prince Charles.
mer of a tall-ship ra ce from Lisbon
speed is that it gels you there
There is debate in Great Britain on
to Southampton. The ambassador
quickly. And the trouble with getting
such matters as the urge for
had captained a large schooner, and
there qui ckly is that you then are
freedom
in
Poland
and
how
to
abet
counted in his crew such aficionados
supposed
to do something. Do what?
it.
Debate
on
whether
Soviet
8S-20s
of sa iling life as the Count of BarThe
Argentine
navy, while hardly
aimed
at
European
cities
and
at
celona , then the pretender, father of
overwhelming, is more than trivial.
London itself warrant r eaction so
the present king of Spain .
One carrier (old), 32 warships (old!,
The evening was interrupted by stern as economic boycott or
bulletins recounting the progress of severance of diplomatic relations. 30,000 men (young). These are outnwnbered, and outclassed, by the
All nf these, on behalf of the
the Indian army against the Porfleet, but logistical disadBritish
Falkland
Islanders,
were
instantly
tuguese colony of Goa, as securely a
vantages
very nearly even the odds,
effected.
The
foreign
minister
part of the diminishing colonial emso
as land-based Argentine
the
more
resigned
(imagine
a
British
foreign
pire of the Portuguese as the
warplanes can strike and return to
minister resigning because the
Falkland Islands were held to be
British - until last Saturday . What Soviet Union had crushed Hungary air bases in southern Argentina .
stayed in the memory was the soft- or Czechoslovakia; or because What will happen when the fl eet
territories had con trived the subreaches its destination ?
stated remark, at the e nd of the
evening, by the tall, aristocratic
Portuguese, whose anguish was in Err~'&gt; ® 1~'1.~ &gt;o~ ~o~ S'Tl'.~-ihE&lt;:.~&lt;AM
vivid contrast to tbe lyrical views of Hui.ME
N.E .R.
the great sailing ship racing to
England. Wha t he said was that he
wished, at his age, that he might find
himself not in Washington, but in
Goa, as he would have liked to end
his life by proffering his own body in
resistance to Indian bayonets.
It is not easy for a country whose
flirtation with imperialism has been
so brief as our own to understand
how the blood races in the veins of
men whose fidelity to the ir colonies
is as vivid as that of the Portuguese
ambassador. It is difficult for
Americans to understand how the invasion of the Falkland Islands by the
Argentinians could have brought on
a crisis for Mrs. Thatcher unmatched by any of those she has
withstood during almost three years
of deflation, unemployment and
civic strife. The rea ction, by British
standards. has been quite extraordinary. With few exceptions,
the Parliament is united. Two-thirds
of the entire British fl eet was,
al most overnight, dispatched to the
little islands 8,000 miles distant. The
Court of Barcelona has his coun-

N; with most other forms of hwnan endeavor, talk about " remdustrializatiOn" is cheap and relatively worthless. Virtually everyone thinks
it's a f111e idea. but a lmost nobody does much about it.
Experts familiar with the malaise afflicting the au to and steel industries, for example, suggest privately that those operations may well be
permanently and drastically scaled down as the nation enters the " postindustrial" era .
But most public-opinion leaders - espec ially elected officials - are unwilling to discuss the problem candidly or to press for the necessary
.remedial action that could lead to temorary but severe economic dislocation
for many workers.
[n other industri es, exec uti ves readily pay lip service to the concept of
protecting their companies' profits and their em ployees' jobs in the decades
to come by moving into high-technology fields - but rela ti vely few firms
ha ve actually begun to implement those lofty goals.
Located in a conununity on Florida's East Coast, however, is the
headquarters of a major corporation that has transform ed itself from a
traditional · 'smokestack industry" to a firm positiOned at the leading edge of
technology.
The Harris Corp. sta nds as a model of what other domestic corporations
must do if they are to compete successfully with firms based in Japan and
other nations where public policy stresses the importance of developing
products and services that will meet 21st century market demands.
rounded in 1895 as the Harris Automatic Press Co., the firm was
headquartered in Cleveland, an old-line industrial city, and its energies were
devoted exclus1vely to the production of pnnting presses and associated
equipment.
" When I joined the company in 1948," recalls Harris offi cial Fred W.
Baker, " we were selling two products - sheet-fed printing presses and
guillotine paper cutters."
When Harris purchased Gates !Wdio, a major manufacturer of communications equipment. in 1957. " people thought we were off our jocker, "
says Baker. "They couldn't understand why a solid compa ny like Harris
would go into a new field ."
In !967, Harris took an even bigger step toward the company's almost
total transfonnatwn when it acquired !Wdiation Inc., a finn that specia lized
in di gital technology and space conunumcations.
Although !Wdiation was only one-{Juarter as large as Harris, it provided
WASHINGTON (AP) - Like a
the technical expertise necessary to dramatically shift the ocnsolidated faith healer treating a patient,
firm's emphasis away from the production of printing equipment, a field President Reagan Is prescribing
with limited growth potential, into the rapidly expanding area of com- large doses of hope, patience and
munication and infonnation processing systems.
positive thinking to cure the
Harris, which moved from Cleveland to Melbourne in 1978, racked up an- economy.
nual sales of $1.55 billion last year, compared with $292 million only 10 years
With his economic program In
earlier. Profits soa red from $15.7 million to $104 million during the same place, Reagan says there Is nothing
more the government can, or
period.
The company today is the biggest supplier of satellite earth stations to should, do to turn the economy
the federa l government, the largest domestic producer of radio broad- around other than convince the
casting transmitters and a close second in the sale of television transmitters. growing legion of skeptics that his
Harris is experimenting with multisource data acquisition. wideband in- policies wUI work If given time.
fonnation transmission, adaptive phased arrays, data compression, hybrid
As the recession lingers and concircuit technology, electro-optic systems, laser technology, holographic fidence in Reaganomics fades, the
techniques, wavefonn processing and satellite imagery systems.
president Is putting the onus on busIts client list includes such blue-chip customers as AT&amp;T, The New York iness, money lenders, consumers,
Times, Shell Oil, Atlantic Richfield, McDonnell Douglas, Boeing and politicians - even the news media
- to show their faith. Behave as tf
General Dynamics.
Although the headquarters staff here numbers only 220, the company prosperity really Is just around the
employes 25,700 people worldwide, with domestic manufacturing facilities in corner Instead of dwelling on the
Florida, New York, New Hampshire, Rhode Island. Ohio, Illinois, Texas and
California .
Finally, although Harris has de-emphasized its original product line, the
finn has not abandoned the business that its founders started almost 85
years ago. The company today is the country's largest manufacturer of prinORLANDO, ria. (NE A) - The
ting presses.
trial ended more than three years
ago, the convicted defendant has
exhausted all of his legal appeals
and the case is closed - but the hundreds of victims who lost their
savings still haven't recovered.
More than 550 people, most of
them elderly or disabled, invested a
total of $6.25 million in a real-estate
development project that was virtually guaranteed by its promoters
to double in value within three
years.
In fact, the principal organizer of
the venture, according to a government document, "siphoned off
staggering amounts of monies for
such personal expenses as his mortgage payments, home improvements, vacations and, of cour-

The State Department has
declared neutrality in the conflict,
and correctly so.
It is easy to giggle over the idea of
Admirals Gilbert and Sullivan setting out to recapture the Falklands.
The exercise may, in the end,
merely embarrass the British, like
their penultimate fiasco in Anguilla.
There is only left to meditate the
great passion that nationalism continues to wield, and to wonder why it
is that we cannot contrive to give effective rein to such passion when it
beats, as it continues to do, in the
heart of the great dispossessed in
Poland and Hungary and Romania
and Ea't Germany and all those
other lands that have never dared to
hope that the British fleet, however
tatterdemalion, is concerned for
their sove reignty.

Little aid for

Berry's World

.

se, his mistress."

f

!'

"
" Psst! Ever tried a real Pac-Man knock-off?"

Letters to editor
Seeks support
May I please ask the people of
Meigs County to support the
Carleton School. If they could just
see how much this school is helping
our children. I beg you if you have
any doubts about this school for our
handicapped students, go see for
yourself. You will be welcomed by
everyone. They have very good
people working with the children

and adults and the adult workshop
students are so proud of their work
and they do good work. Their Cliristrnas things were beautiful. They are
going to be good hard-working
citizel18. So come on, folks, I know
times are hard but let's belp those
students now so they can help others
later. - Mrs. Anna Leamond,
Racine, Ohio 45791.

As security for their investment,
those euchred into providing the funds were promised first mortgage on
tracts within the proposed 89&amp;-acre
residential corrununity known as
The Swallows, to be built in DeBary,
Fla., a small town about 25 miles
north of here.
Instead, many of those investors
received second mortgages. None of

slow growth in the na tlon' s stock of
money will restore an era of strong
economic expansion and stable
prices.
Reagan acknowledges the housIng Industry may be In Its worst
slump In a half century, but unhesltantly rejects pleas for government
help as "budget-busting bailouts"
that will produce higher, not lower,
Interest rates. The federal budget
faces record deficits, but Reagan
rejects calls from congressional
Republicans to raise taxes and cut
military spending. Interest rateS
are the highest ever during a recession, but Reagan spurns business
cries for easier credit policies from
the Independent Federal Reserve
Board.
If there Is a hallmark to the Rea-

gan presidency, It Is Its steadfast
adherence to one economic program without flinching when things
go sour. By contrast, Jlmmy Carter
had, by some counts, seven economic policies In four years, with
each program reacting to bad economic ·devlopments and subsequent clamoring for change.
While supporters see Reagan as
a forceful leader detemtned tD sec
his program succeed, political opponents see a stubborn man who Is
too blinded by his convictions tD see
potential economic disaster. ·
The big question now ts - not
whether Reaganomics wlli su~
in the long run but whether the presIdent can convert the disbelievers
who are threatening to stop the pn&gt;
gram dead In Its tracks before an
ultimate verdict can be rendered.

victim~
. . . ______R_o_be_rt_W_al_te_rs

the parcels had access to any roads
and some were on the edge of a
sewage treatment plant; in the middle of a golf course or at the bottom
ofalake.
The federal criminal case, tried in
U.S. District Court here, was
described by one prosecutor as the
largest Florida land fraud of the
1970s. But nwnerous similar cases,
some of them involving even more
money, have surfaced in other states
during the past decade. Among
them:
- The Great Western United
Corp. agreed, under pressure from
the Federal Trade Commission, to
refund almost $4 million to approximately 14,000 people who invested in land development projects
in Caltfornia, Colorado and New
Mexico.
- A McCulloch Oil Corp. subsidiary pleaded guilty to 19 criminal
fraud charges in connection with the
sale of retirement and vacation
home sites at a 27,000-acre Colorado
subdivision.
- An FTC administrative law
judge found that the Horizon Corp.
perpetrated a "vicjous col18wner
fraud" by selling hapless customers

millions of dolllll's' worth of "virtually worthless desert land" in
Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.
- The Amrep Corp. was convicted
of conducting a fraudulent scheme
to sell $170 million worth of undeveloped desert land in New
Mexico to 45,000 unsuspecting
buyers from 37 states.
Despite years of scandal, there is
pitifully little government protection
for those likely to be bilked through
installment sales of recreational
land. In most states, the legal
prohibitions against such real-{!state
fraud range from ineffective to
nonexistent.
At the federal level, the FTC, the
Postal Service and the Justice
Department have investigated and
prosecuted major cases, but routine
enforcement Is the respol18ibility of
an obscure agency within the Department of Housing and Urban
Development whose inadequate
staff administei'S a.toothless law.
Typical of the people victimized
under those circwnstances was
~rraine Huber, a handicapped
woman confined to a wheelchair,
who invested $21,000 in The
Swallows.

r=:aa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

That money came from a modest
inheritance from her father, a New
York City fireman who sought to
provide financial security for his
widow, who was afflicted by arthritis and partial blindness, and his
crippled daughter.
Dr. Martin J. Skrowonki, another
victim, lost $15,000 - half of t4e
reparations he received from the
German government in compensation for five years of incarceration in a Nazi concentration
camp during World War II.
His youngest daughter, stricken
by cerebral PillSy, lost $3,000 she had
saved from her Social Security
benefits.
One final note about The
Swallows: The principal defendant
was Frank R. Carcaise of Boca
Raton, Fla., who was president,
board chainnan and chief executive
officer of the corporation that
proposed the development.
Carcaise also was the first chairman of the American land Development Association, the industry's
Washington-based trade association
that devotes much of its energies to
proclaiming the honesty and integrity of its members.

I f¥ArA
0195 1Jt;(¥
ATA CANI
7111&gt;

DOONESBuRY

The Daily Sentinei-Poge-3

Atlanta Braves off to
best start in 25 years
By Associated Press
Rick Mahler's job with the
Atlanta Braves Is to deny, not deliver runs.
So II wasn't unusual when Mahler
stranded four baserunners while
striking out twice and tapping to the
mound Sunday aga inst the Houston
Astros.
But the Braves' right-hander
came through on the mound, stopping the Astros 5.0 on five hits while
striking oul five and walking one
for his second shutout of the season .
"Nobody expects to throw two
straight shutouts but that's what
you Intend to do when you go out
there," said the bearded Mahler,
who had never pitched a shutout
unW the past Week.
" He was just great," said Atlanta
Manager Joe Torre of the 29-year·
old pitcher. "He never had a shutout In his career and now he has
two In one week. He's mixing his
pitches well, In command of the hitters and challenging them ."
Atlanta's victory, Its ftfth without
a loss, equaled a leam record set by
the 19!\7 Milwaukee Braves, a club
that went on to capture the World
Sertes.
Dale Murphy cracked a two-run
homer in the fourth inning a nd Bob
Horner a solo shot In the eighth to
power the Braves. Nolan Ryan, 0-2,
was tagged with the loss.

In other National League games,
Philadelphia blanked Montreali.O,
St. Louis trimmed Pittsburgh 7-6,
San Francisco whipped Cincinnati
6-1 and New York edged Chicago
5-4.
The San Diego at Los Angeles
game was postponed because of
rain. It was only the lOth ralnout for
the Dodgers since they moved from
Brooklyn to Los Angeles In 1958 and
the first since Sept. 5, 1978.
Phlllles I, Expos 0
Right-hander Mike Krukow says
he wasn't at his best, but he stlli
tossed a three-hitter In leading Philadelphia to Its first victory alter
three defeats.
" I' ve always contended that tf
you have good stuff, you can lose,"
said Krukow, who"
Garry Maddox drove In the
game's only run with a basesloaded sacrifice fly In the eighth In·
nlng off Ray Burris.
Cardinals 7, Pirates 6
Dane Iorg singled in the winning
run with two outs in the bottom of
the ninth to rally St. Louis past
Pittsburgh and snap a three-game
losing streak.
lorg's hit off veteran reliver Enrtque Romo, 0-1, came alter Julio
Gonzalez tripled home Gene Roof
with the tying n:m.
Jim Kaat, 1-0, gained the victory
although he gave up a Pittsburgh

run In the ninth on two-&lt;lut doubles
by Omar Moreno and Willie
Stargell .
Giants 6, Reds I
A reluctant Jeff Leonard powered San Frranclsco with a runscoring single in a two- run first and
capped a three-run rally In the sixth
with a sacrtf!ce fly.
"I don't enjoy hitting against the
Reds," said Leonard, a .350 lifetime
hitter against Cincinnati. "I can
think of a lot of teams I'd rather hit
against."
The Giants were aided by two
wild pitches by Cincinnati reliever
Jim Kern that resulted In two more
runs.
AI Holland, 1.0, gave up seven
hits over seven innings, getting relief help from Gary Lavelle for the
triumph. Charlie Lelbrandt, 0-1,
was the loser.
Mets 5, Cubs 4
George Foster cracked his first
home run of the season tD spark the
Mets over Chicago. The blast triggered New York's four.run rally In
the sixth inning off loser Dan Larson, 0-1.
Starter Pete Falcone worked five
innings to register his first victory
of the season.
Jerry Morales and Keith Morela nd homered for the Cubs, thetr
second each of the season.

yanks opener not worth wait

Reagan prescribes hope, positive thinking
worsening economic malady the
country Is enduring, he exhorts.
Interest rates will come down tf
only money lenders believe the government will narrow Its budget deficits and lick ln!lat!on for good; the
economy will lmprove tf only businesses show more confidence by usIng their new tax cuts to Invest In
new fac!Dries, machines and jobs;
consumer confidence will rise If
only the news media focus less on
the negative economic news.
Reagan not only talks like a true
believer In his policies, he really
acts like one. Again and again, he
has rejected calls from political allies tD alter his policies. He has
stood firm In his belief that "supplyside" tax cuts, less government lnvolvemen t In the marketplace and

Monday, April 12, 1982

City debut and his first Arnertcan
League start since 1977, surren·
dered only live hits In nine Innings.
Cabell led off the Tiger fourth with
a double, then Gibson tripled and
scored on Larry Herndon's sacrtflce fly .
Mariners 6-1, A's 3-3
Jim Esslan's fifth hit of the
game, a bases-loaded, two-out double In the 16th Inning, drove In three
runs and gave Seattle Its first·game
victory over Oakland. The game
lasted 61-2 hours, Including a ratnof
more than one hour In the lOth inning. It was the A's second 16Inning loss In four days, and their
third extra-inning game In the
week-&lt;lld season.
Rickey Henderson smashed
three hits and scored the go-ahead
run lor the A's as they beat the Maliners in the second game: Rick
Langford, pitching the A's first
complete game of the year, scattered 11 hits. The doubleheader
took 91-2 hours to complete.

started a two-run fifth with a single
off George Frazier.
In the second game, Almon
singled twice off Tommy John. The
!irst one was wasted, but his single
with one out in the sixth ignited a
two-run Inning. Almon took second
as LeFlore grounded out and
scored on Tony Bernazard's double. Steve Kemp singled Bernazard
home.
"Charley Lau (the White Sox'
batting Instructor and a Yankee
coach the past three years) told us
that you can't pull John," Almon
said. "You've got to hit the ball
where It's pitched but he got a couple of sinkers up and I was able tD
pull them."
The Yankees scored all their runs
In the opener off Chicago starter
Jerry Koosman, but were held tD
one scratch hit over the final 61-3
Innings by Dennis Lamp and Kevin
Hickey. In the second game, Britt
Burns and Salome Barojas combined on ~ five-hitter.
In other AL games Sunday, Detroit edged Kansas City 2-1, Seattle
tripped Oakland 6-3 In 16 Innings in
the first game of a doubleheader
before losing the nightcap 3-1; Milwaukee routed Toronto 14-5, Cleveland walloped Texas 13-1, Boston
stopped Baltimore 6-0 and Minnesota beat California 3-1:
- 11gers 2, RAlyals 1
Dave Rozema hurled a fourhitter in eight strong innings and
got batting support from Enos Cabell and Kirk Gibson as Detroit
edged Kansas City.
Vida Blue, making his Kansas

By Associated Press
The New York Yankees waited
nearly a week to open their 1982
baseball season.
As II turned out, It wasn't worth
waiting for.
Hosting an opening-day doubleheader at Yankee Stadium Sunday,
alter a record four games were
postponed by bad weather. the defending American League champions lost both games to the
Chicago While Sox - a 7-6, 12lnning decision In the opener and 2.0
in the nightcap.
The last two major league teams
to open the storm-delayed season,
Chicago and New York played before a crowd of 31,(0! that didn't
have much to cheer about as far as
the home team was concerned.
. A btg reason for that was Chicago
shortstop Bill Almon, who belted
five hits agatnsl the Yankees' finest
pitchers and figured in more than
one White Sox rally. With 18 family
members from Rhode Island In the
audience, Almon led off the 12th in·
ning of the opener with a 425-foot
trtple off Yankee relief ace Goose
Gossage and scored the winning
run on Ron LeFlore's single.
"That's about as deep as I can hit
a ball," he said. "He got a fastball
down over th~ plate, but I'm a
pretty good fastball hitter. Goose
was pitching In his fourth inning
and I think he was starting to lose a
little. I was geared for a Goose Gossage fastball, and maybe It was a
little less than that."
Earlier, Almon singled off Ron
Guidry In the third lnnlilg and

HERE'S LOOKING AT YOU - Cincinnati Reds'
catcher Mike O'Berry prepares to put the tag un San
Francisco Giants' base runner Reggie Smith as he is
thrown out at the plate during the third inni11g of a
game, Sunday in Cincinnati. Smith tried to score from

second base on teammate Milt May's si nglt· to left

field, but was cut down by the throw from Reds' left
fielder Mike Vail. Home plate umpire Harry Wendelstedt watches the play at right. I AP Laserpholo) .

Browns' draft list now at 12
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns have narrowed
their list of potential first round
picks In the college draft to 12 players but they are not saying who Is on
the list or what positions are being
considered.
Cleveland. by virtue of Its 5-11 finIsh in the 1981 National Football
League season, has the third overall pick In the draft.

BIU Davis, the Browns' director
of player personnel, would say little
about Cleveland's plans in the Aprll
27 draft other than to downplay the
Idea of trading the top pick.
"Right now, 1 wouldn't consider

is if somebody would give us, say,
two first ·round choices, three seconds and a third, a nd we could use
them to get six immediate starters.
But I doubt anybody is going to
make us that kind of offer," he said .
Davis said he sees the overall
depth of the draft as weak. but
some good players will emerge.
"This year in the seventh , eighth,
ninth and lOth rounds. we'll be pickIng players thai. In the good years,
would be signed as free agents,·· he
said .

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Brewers 14, Blue Jays 5
Milwaukee batters shelled Toronto starter Jlm Clancy for seven
rul18 In the first inning and Charlie
Moore smashed four hits as the
Brewers crushed the Blue Jays.
Ben Ogilvie had four RBI for the
Brewers, Including a two-run single
In the ga~e-breaklng first, and a
two-run homer In the ninth.
"I don't know tf It was magic, but
we got some bloop base hits," said
Milwaukee Manager Buck
Rodgers. "We hit a few balls right

CHEVROLET .
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�Page-4

Monday, April 12, 1982

Monday, April 12, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

-

.

. !
~

~

,..
••

J'

CHEERLEADERS- Members of Southern's varsity cheerleading squad that kept Southern's spirits
high throughout the season and during th e tournament
were, 1-r, Melodi Cundiff, Tracy Riffle, Michelle John-

son, Missy Cummins, Cindy Evans, and Lori Warden.
Each cheerleader received an award lor her efforts.
Melodi Cu ndiff received a senior award.

I

.....

(·

\

I

'

.....' '-;1

p
STATE FINALIST HONORED - Members of the
Southern Tornadoes' championship basketball tea m
hnnnred with a large fete on Saturday were, front :
Richard WoUt•, Tom Rosebe rry, Tyrone Brinager,
Rusty Cummins. Back, Manager Dwayne Dill, Kent
Wolfe, Allen Papc, Chris Bostick, Jay Rees, Robert

~.

'

_,

.-

_.,.

Brown, Scott Frederick, Nick Bostick, Zane Beegle,
and Manager Earl Pickens. Pictured with the final
gathering of the " Wolle Pack" are four of the large
rhampioru;hip trophies they won during their out·
standing season.

fl'OO:TMAS TER &amp;·•Ill address to Tht' Dall y
S.:ntmd. Ill Court St. . Pomeruy , Oluu &lt;15769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C11rricr ur Muklr Ruuk

OLDEST LIVING RACINE-SOUTHERN TORNADO- Special recognition was given to Mr. Maurice
Loll, who was honored as the oldest living RacineSouthern Tornado. Mr. Loll lettered on the first three
Racine teams beginning in 1918. Pictured with Mr. LoU

are veteran coaches Howie Caldwell, on left, and varsity Coach Carl Wolle at right. Coach Caldwell and
Coach Wolle were declared as Coaches of the year by
the Southern Local Board of i."ucalion and presented
large plaques by board president Don Smith.

!:I Cents

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Keat Wolle, -Rlcbanl Wolfe, aad Manager Earl

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Suday'1 Games

1nnlno&gt;

S483

MUwauka' H, Toronto 5

Boston G. Baltimore 0
Cleove-1aM 13. Texas I
M!IU"If'!IOta 3, Caltfomla I
Detroit 2, KaMas City I
Se9tUl&gt; &amp; l. Qakland ~- ls! gamf' 16 ln ·

nlnK'
MGnday'l Games

DE'trolt tWikv~t o.&lt;ll ~~Toronto {Leal()

...

ClUe ago 1Dotson 0.01 at Boston !TOrre'&lt;

New York tRigtwttli){lJ at Thxa~ (Tan

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Pltuburih u, St.Loult 7
New York 9. OlbiO 5
S.n Francbco 7, C1nclnnall 5, lO IJt.
nlnp
Lol Angeles G, San D&amp;eiO 0

Montrealll, Pblllde~ 3
Atlanta 8. Houston G

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

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San Frarlcbco 6, Onclnnati 1

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Only games !IChcdWcd
n-day'tGamN
Milwaukee at Cleveland
Dctrolt at Toronto
New York at Texas
Baltlmof"(' at Kansas City
Oakland at MlnnesoiJI
Seattle at Catlfontia

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Chkago 7·2, New Ya-k 6-0. t.t game 12

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Pate, who n('('([ed to make a lo·
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il short and fell int o a third plat'l' lll'

MEDITERRANEAN
COLOR CONSOLE

KaMa!! City 5, Detroit 2

'159

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Bostoo 2-3. Baltimore 0.5
Toronto 3, Milwaukee 2, 10 lnnlngs
Texas 8. Cleveland 3
Caillomia 8, MlniV'SOUl 1

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Salurd.aJ'II Gamefl
Chkago at Nt"W York, ppd. , snow
Seattk&gt; at Oakland, ppd, rain.

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SENIOR AWARDS- S~Jal sealor awards were
· jlreleated 1o maaager Dwayae om, Scott Frederick,
Alfea Pape, Tom Roseberry, Jay Rees, Robert Browa.

Vz

Wea&amp;em Dlvlldon
20\.(DJ

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,------------.1=============

CINCINNATI (AP) -The Cincinnati Reds were waiting to see
how quickly catcher Alex Trevino's
spraiDed ankle healed before clecldlng whether to make any roster
changes.
Trevino hurt the ankle during the
Reds' game Saturday agaiDst the
San Francisco Giants. He was on
crutches Sunday. _ _
·,
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Reds Manager JOhn McNliiii8J'8
said he would walt untO today before clecfd!ng on any roater IIIOYI!II.
The Reds aJao aldfered a scare
SU!JdaY when utility Infielder R&amp;faell:.andesloy was hit Deer the lett .
eye by a tllrowll'buebllli~l!r~Dcthe
pre-game WOrkOut.

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oll2.86.
team offense and was selected to the
Athens Messenger All-star Football
team.
The Eastern senior played basketba ll his freshman; sophomore and
junior yean; in high school and participated in track liaving earned the
high point trophy award his
sophomore year. He was an alternate to the delegate to Buckeye
Boys' State last year.
Riebel is a member or the Middleport First Baptist Church where
he serves as a church usher.
His selection lor the "American
High School Athlete" is based upon
h1s accomplishments in football
which have identified him as a member or a group or talented. athletes
comprised of less tlian ene percent
of all students nationwide. It is a
national honor to be selected to be
featured in the "American High
School Athlete." .

SHO
_ $52.80

SINGLE COPY
PRICF.S

3 Month
6 Month

'

Scoreboard

. .. ..... Sl.OO

Daily .

camp a struggl e .
Stadler hit a dri\·(' and J fh ·e iron
IO :.!) fft'l of ihl' hot,• on !R. II IOOkl'd

Monday Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
10•00 am t 0 9•00
.
pm

Saxonies

.

.,

week

and Stadler's fortunes went further
awry.
He bogeyed 14 with thrl'e pulls,
then took a bogey atl6 when he hit
hls drive In a bunker.
His sa nd wedge shot went past
the hole a nd slid down the other side
of the glass·like green about40 feet.
He two putted coming bac k.
"I was at 14 when I saw Pohl on
the board," Stadler said . "He was
four under and I was seven under. 1
thought, 'I have to get another bir·
die,"' It was not to happen .
Pohl birdied 16 and now the ma r·
gin was just one su·okc, and what
had bee n a stroll for Stadler b!'·

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - -- - - -

.....~: '~' . ,
SO CLOSE SO FAR- Craig
Stadler hangs his head as the ba 11
stops next to the cup on his putt
on the 18th Sunday at the Masters
Goll Tournament. The shot
caused Stadler to go into a sudden
death playoff with Dan Pohl but
Stadler won the Masters title on
the first hole of the playoff. IAP
Laserphoto I.

Member : The Asso...·tatt'd Press, Inland Dal ly Press Associalion 1:1111.1 the Amencan
Newspaper Pubhshcrs Assoctation, National
Adver tisinl! Reprt'scntativt' . Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Tlurd AVt'llUt' , Nl'W
York . New York 10017.

On~

In more than four years, had birdied 12 with a 10-foot putt, and now
th e gap was suddenly four strokes.
Pohl, who had played e ight
straight holes - the last slx holes of
the third round and the first two of
.he fourth - In eight under par that
Included successive eagles Saturday, also birdied the next hole,
No.l3, a par 5.
He just missed an eagle on a 10foot putt after hltttng a four-lron "my best Iron shot In a long time."
Pohl then bogeyed the 14th a nd,
with Stadler at the 11th, Pohl was
still four strokes back.
But Pohl birdied the par-3 16th.

T(JP NAME BRANDs-GUARANTEED LOW PRICEs-It's
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posta~e v&lt;tJd at Pomt·roy. Ohm.

Ont· Month .
Onl' Yl'ar .

lead he had at the turn.
He started the day three strokes
a head of Jerry Pale, hls playing
partner, and Spain's Seve Ballesteros, the Masters champion In 198l.
With birdies at two, stx and
seven, however, he stretched the
lead to slx s trokes over Ballesteros
a nd Tom Weiskopf, who had gained
one stroke. Pate, meanwhile, feU
off the pace by e ight strokes with
bogeys at one and four .
His game started to stray on the
par-3 12th hole, where he took a lJo.
gey after mlsslng a seven·foot putt.
Meanwhile, Pohl, the longest
driver on the tour, but a non-winner

That's right! It'sourannualafterEastersaleonALLourcarpeting.
ec tor TVs, and mlijor appliances. TREMENDOUS SELECTION-

Published t'Very 11fternoon. Mondcly lhrou ~h

John Riebel, Jr., son of John and
Glenna Riebel of Route 3, Pomeroy,
has been chosen to be featured in the
1981-82 edition or the "American
High School Athlete."
Riebel, a senior at Eastern High
School, has lettered in football the
past three years. The Eastern
Eagles were ccrSV AC champs in
1980 with a record or 7-3. This past
football season, the Eagles were the
1981 SVAC champs with an undefeated season with a record, and
were ranked fourth in the state by
the Associated Press, sixth in
Region 19 (out of 36 schools) and
ranked ninth by the UP!.
Riebel was tailback lor the
Eagles. He received the best offensive football player award having
rushed lor 849 yards (171 carries),
six touchdowns, plus two extra points (average 4.961. In the receiving
department he had seven catches
190 yards) and one TO, an average

got to sink this to wln the U.S. Open
or the Masters,' " Stadler sald after
he beat Dan Pohl on the first hole of
a sudden death playoff Sunday .a t
Augusta National Col! Club.
"The Masters was something as
a kld I dreamed of just seeing.
"Just playing It for the first time
in 1974 was a dream come true.
"This
thi s Is just
unbelieva ble."
Stadler, 28, may not flt the Image
of a Masters wlnner, but he has the
$64,00l check and he has the green
jacket. He earned them.
Ea rn them he did. He escaped
disaster after blowing a six-stroke

on Carpeting, Color TVs, and)Major Appliances

A Oivisiun uf Multimt'diu. Jnr .

•

Riebel featured In magazine

He earned all SVJ\C honors, first

AUGUSTA, Ga. (API- He's not
styllsh In the Image of Madison
Avenue, his golf game ts mostly
sell-taught, he has no agent, and,
until now, making· a run for big
riches ou tslde goU has not been of
Interest.
He's roundish, his mustache a
bushy kind that hangs far over hls
upper lip. He looks more like a construction worker than a country
club golfer.
His nickname Is Walrus, he fi g hts
being overweight and his belt Is
tucked under his protruding
stomach.
He vents e motion more freely
than most of hls peers, and he 's had
to work hard at not throwing clubs,
1101 stomping his feet, not losing hls
cool when the going got tough on the
golf course.
He Is Craig Stadler, the new Masten; champion. He could be the guy
next door.
"When I was a kld, I'd do what
many do. I'd drop a couple balls on
a green at 5 or 6 at night and say, 'I

cheerleader, manager, coaches, and
Cheerleading awards were then
administrators
received a fine
presented to varsity and reserve
One of Pomeroy.
plaque
!rom
Bank
cheerleaders. Awards were presenarranged
by
Bank
President Bank
ted by Mrs. Carla Shuler and
Barnett. In addition, each team
assistants Rita Matthews and
member received a packet of photos
Megan Manuel. Melodi Cundiff
!rom
attorneys Rick and Carson
received a special senior award.
Crow.
Principal Adams then gave a
Special awards went to the
history or the state tournament in
following
individual "' Tom
Ohio. Board President Don Smith
Roseberry,
defensive award;
made a special pesentatlon !rom the
Richard
Wolfe,
most improved ;
board and administration that
Robert
Brown,
leading
rebounder;
proclaimed Coach Carl Wolle and
Zane
Beegle,
best
free
throw perCoach Howie Caldwell as "Coaches
centage; Jay Rees, Jonathon Rees-.
of the Year."
leadership award; and all-stater
In presenting two plaques, Coach
Kent Wolfe, outstanding player
Wolle and Coach Caldwell each
award.
received separate standing
ovations.
Following is a list of honorees and
The !r""lunan team was then special awards:
presented awards by Coach CaldVarsity
well and Coach Wolle. Coach Wolle
Tom Roseberry, Jay Rees , Robert
Brown. Kent Wolfe , Richard Wolfe,
said or the team, "They lit the mold
Frederick. Al len Pape, Zane
or a Southern Tornado basketball Scott
Beegle, Ni ck
Bostick , Tyrone
team. Right now, I'll put the Brinager. Rusty Cummins, Ear l
Pickens. manager. rtnd Dewavne
challenge before them. Whether or
Dill. manager .
not they return to Columbus during
Res erv e
their careers lies on 'their '
Dennis Teaford, Kevin Curfman ,
Jason H i ll, Tony Deem, Wade Con
shoulders."
Coach Caldwell presented awards noll y, Paul Harri s. Cor ey McPhaiL
Trevor Cardone. Troy ward and
to members or his SV AC chamRusty Flagg, manager .
Freshmen
pionship reserve team that recorded
Darin Roush , Gr eg Nease. Scott
an outstaning 17-3 record.
Sc hultz , Kevin Teaford , Stev e
Next came the presentation or Teaford, David Ebersba ch . Jon
awards to the State runnerClark and Tom Greathouse .
Video Crew
up/regional champion Southern TorAllan Crisp and Greg Michael
nado varsity basketball team. Wolle
Cheerleaders
gave a long round of praise and
Melodi Cundiff, Cindy Evans,
thanks to the community lor their Michelle Johnson , Missy Cummins,
Lori Warden . Tracy Riffle . T ina
part in the successful season. He
H ill , Debbie Michael. An ne Adam s
said, "This club had a lot or class.
and Carol O'Brien .
Statisticiitn
Admittingly, this is now the most
Chu ck Hann ahs
talented group I've coached at
Scorer
Southern. What made them sucLa r en Wol fe
Tim er
cessful was their tremendous desire
Jame s Lawrence .
to win, play the game, and work
SPEC IAL AWARDS
together as a team."
Tom Roseberry , defensive award ;
"This team has accomplished
Richard Wolfe, most improved;
Robert Brown, rebounding award ;
more than any other team in the
Zan e Beegle, bes t t ree throw per
history of Racine-Southern High
cent age ; Jay Rees , Jonat han Rees.
School!"
leadership award , and Ker'lt Wa ite .
ou tstand inq player award .
Each team member received an
award !rom the SHS coaching starr . - - - - - - - - - - - - and while standing before the large
crowd received a long standing
Th e IJail ~ S~:ntind
ovation. Later each team member.
!USPS 145-9&amp;81

•

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Stadler posts sudden death win in Masters Tourney

Large crowd honors
Southern cage teams
By SCOTT WOLFE
RACINE - A large crowd Saturday eve ning saluted coaches,
managers, cheerleaders, and members of Southern's championship
basketball program, who were
honored with a large least and awards ceremony.
An impromptu session of the
Southern Board of Education was
called to order with Superintendend
Bob Ord reading a resolution
proposed by Principal Jim Adams
and Coach Carl Wolle. The
resolution, passed by a unanimous
vote, proclaimed that the Southern
High School Gymnasium from
hereafter be named the Charles R.
Hayman Gymnasium .
In the appropriately, welldecorated gymn~siwn, master or
ce remonies Jim Adams announced:
"Welcome to Charles R. Hayman
Gymnasiwn and the Banquet of
Champions 1 " Adams played a tape
of Kent Wolle's game winning shot
against Buckeye Trail, then swnn ... ..J up memories of the tournament
trail while Southern's theme song
played in the background. Adams
closed his welcoming address with a
word or thanks to those lor their support and lor the sense or " pride"
that deve loped in the area because
of the SHS basketball team.
Special guests at the banquet were
members of the 1933 and 1980 teams
that went to state tournaments.
In the absence of Coach Hayman,
team member Orion Roush announced those team members or the
"33 team who were present. Coach
Carl Wolfe recognized the 1980 team,
stating that they were " A very
special group," and that "they took
us to St. John's and broke the ice lor
us at the state'"
Special recognition "Js given to
Maunce Lull, who is the oldest
living Racine-Southern Tornado letterman. Mr. Lull, who served as an
educator and administrator in the
school district, lettered three times.
He was a member of the first team
in 1918-19, and the foll owing two
seasons, 1919-20, 1921l-21.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·- - - - - - ---

PHONE 446-8390

REFRIGERATORS
DISHWASHERS
IN STOCK NOW!

�Monday, April 12, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Legion names Buckeye Girls State delegates
RACINE ~ Tonja Salser and Cindy Eva ns have been selected as
delega tes and a lternate respectively
to Buckeye Gtr ls State by the
American

Legion

Aux il iary

u£

Racine Post W2.
Both a re jumors at Southern High
School. Miss Srt lser is the daug hter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Salser and
Miss Evans is the daug hter of Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Evans.
Buckeye Gir ls State will be held
Jum· 19-26 at As hland College,
As hla nd, Oh10. Girls State is a

program of the American Leg 1on
Auxi lia ry designed to educate young

wnmen in the du ties, privi leges,
rihhts and rcspo n sibili ti ~s of
American citizenship: to g1ve to
these citizens ill a realistic manner,
an opportulllt y to learn the problems
of ~ove r nm en t wi th special emphasis upon the eontnbut iun women

can make to the welfare of the c1ty .
coun ty. state and mt tion .

Miss Salser is a mem ber of the
Natwna l Honor Society. She is the
junior class presi dent, a mem ber of
Student Council, on the yea r book
staff, a nd in the Pep Clu b. Acti ve in
sports, she has played three yea rs on
the basketball tea m , three yea rs on
the volleyball tea m, a nd one year in
soft ball. She also plays on the swnmer leag ue soft ball tea m, a nd has
been SVAC in both vo lleyball a nd
baske tba ll . She is a lso in the c hoir a t
South e rn , a nd a mem be r uf the
Rac ine F irst Baptist Church where
she is preSident of the Baptist Youth
Fell owship.

cheerleader, on the year book staff
a nd in the choir. All three yea rs of
hi gh sc hool s he has been a member

of the Pep Club, on the baske t ball
and volleyball teams, and is on the
SVAC lea gue volleyball team .

'

. . __j

Salser

Evans

Meigs County area births and birthdays
Boring
Captain a nd Mrs. Michael Boring

1Robyn Mills) a nnounce the blrth
of their first c hild, a girl, bern April

6 al Bay Memortal Hospital, Pana ma City, Fla.
The Infant
weighed six pounds a nd was 19
inches long. She has been named
J e nna Larke.
Gra ndparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mllls, Pomeroy, a nd Mr.
a nd Mrs. Grant Boring, Reedsv ille.
Greal·grand parents are Mr. and

Mrs. Raymond Fisher, Pom eroy,
a nd Mrs. Nora Mllls, Middleport.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Boring res ide at 4718
Colorado St., Panama City, Fla.
32401.

Grandparents a re Mr. a nd Mrs.
George Nlcinsky a nd Mr. a nd Mrs.
John We rry, He mlock Grove. Mrs.
Eva Nlc insky, Loga n, W. Va. , ls a
great-grandmother.

Kim

Werry
Mr. a nd Mrs. Jef1 Werry, La n·
ta na . Fla. a nnounce the birth of a
da ughter, Candice Holla nd, Aprtl 8
at Bethesda Memorta l Hospital,
Boyington, Fla. The eight pound infa nt Is Mr. and Mrs. Werry's firs t
c hild.

Astrograph
Aprill3, 1982

Th1s com Jil l.! ~'l'&lt;:Jr you CJre likely to ll t:!hten- up your intinwtc circle of
fnl' nd.s a b1t. Thcqu&lt;tllly of the rel&lt;ilionships will become more im porta nt
than the qu&lt;l nlJ iy.
..
ARI ES !Ma rd i 21-A prili9J You have the abili ty today to arouse enthusias tic support fo r ideas 111 which you trul y believe. Mak e your presen-

tatwn wi th a dmma tic fla 1r.

TAUR US !April 2().May 201 You s hould be able Jo do yoursl' lf so me
guud today as we ll a:-; help another rega rdi ng a situalwn he or she does not

know how to ma ke the rnust of. You w1ll.

.

GE MI NI (May 21-.June 20\ When makmg deciSIOns today uwolvlllg
othe rs bend ove r back wa rds to be fair an d eqw ta ble . Your thoug htfulness
will reap di vidends bot h now and later.
.
..
CANCER !June 21-Jul y 22 111 yo u fee l your work wa rra nts 1!, th1 s IS a
J.!Ot)(l day to ca ll you r buss's atte ntion to your pcd unnanee. He or she 111ay
fl&gt;cl vou're in li n ~ for special benefits.
i. EO (Jul y ZJ..A ug. 221 Yo ur or gcmi za tional a nd ma nag~ m.c n~ :;ki.lls
will be finely tuned today . Yo ur techniques to direct ot hers Will inspire

POME ROY --A s urprtse blrthday
party was he ld fo r Cha rles Klrn recently a t the home of Norman a nd
Vera Webe r , Tupper s P lains, by
the Channel 28 C.B. F amily.
A potluck dinner was e nj oyed by
the group, Lloyd , R uth, Kevin, Jtm,
Bob a nd Debbie Brooks; Ha rold,
J ose phine a nd Gary Osbcrne;
Cha nne l 28 Rona ld and E lla Osbcrn; Bill McCiead , Cecilia a nd
Pam Murphy, Robert, Freda a nd
Roberta Larkins , Dorsel a nd P hyllis Larldns, Vida Weber, a nd Donna
Bogard .
Pictures were take n durtng the
evening a nd games were sung.
Mr s. Bogard played guitar, others
played SIJOOns and some played
with balloon s. Ke nneth a nd J erry
Larldns. Scott Ha uber called durIng t he party.

Enslen

lj

more than nne lllrection. You .s hould be able to handle th em skillfull y,
wit hout gett ing any wires crossed .
LIBRA I S1•pt. 2:t..0&lt;'t. 23 1 The r e's

H

merge

&lt;J

SCORPIO JOel. 24-N uv. 221 Dmd be hesitan t a bout call ing m
markers today from persons w ho a re indebted tu you. Your cha nces for
~ellin g what 's due ynu a re bettt·r thari usua l.
SAGITTARI US ! Nov. 23-Dcr. 211 Norma ll y 1l's bes t to stee r clea r of
siluations when• your fnends play poli ti cs. Howeve r, today yo u coul d do
you rself some good a t the ball ot box .
. ...
CAPRICOR N IOcr. 22-.Ja n. 191 Your possibil iti es for fulfilling a
secrcl ambi tion look extn·mely encourag ing today. Do what needs doing
without ca lli ng tno murh Cltlt'nl ion to yourself.
AQ UA RI US !Jan. 2().fl'b. 191 Cu nt mue to focus your effo rLs on your
newest. mos t pnurll st n~ project . l .dd y Luck will help yo u make fresh
thinl!s prosper.
PISCES !Feb. Z().Ma rr h 201 Yo u should do we ll today in ca ree r , ·
str1tus ur fina ncia l ma tters. Vigo rously purs ue any developm ents which
calll'llhancl' lhe afurcn tentJUIIL'Li .

11

Hoffman
S. Sgt. a nd Mrs. Ronald Hoffma n
of Va ndenburg Air Force Base,
Ca lifornia, a re ann ouncing the birth
of their first child, a daug hte r,
Kristen Dia na, on Ma rch 28 a t the
Va ndenburg .AFB Hospital. She
we ighed s ix pounds a nd was 19 inches long.
Pa ternal gr a ndpa rents a re P erry
Hoffma n, Middleport, a nd Connie
Hoffma n, Gallipolis. Mate rnal gra ndpa rents a re Mr. a nd Mrs. Dona ld
Tay lor of Harrisonville.
Pa terna l g rea t-grandmother IS
Mrs. Pea r l Hoffma n of Middle port.
Ma te rn a l grea t-g ra ndfa the r is
Ha rry Wa tson, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Hoff ma n is the fo rmer Donna
Tay lor .

'

Enslen
Mr. a nd Mrs. Glenn Enslen, the
former Connee Williams. are a n-

The birthday of Anna Ogdi n was
observed recently by a dinne r a t the
Hocking Va lley Motor Lodge with a U
of her chi ldren, gra ndchildren, and
great-grandchildren a ttending.
Those enjoying th e day were Mr.
a nd Mrs. Charles (Maxine) Griffi t h,
Pomeroy, a nd Mr. a nd Mrs. Herbert
(Ja net ! Jones, Dublin, da ughters
a nd son-in-laws of Mrs. Ogdin ;
Karen Lynn Griffith, Ke ith Jones
a nd Mr. a nd Mrs. J ohn (Connie
Jon
es 1 Doss,
Elizabeth
Ann

g randcahildre
n;
Doss,
great-

grandchild,
Grove
; and
the
honored guest,
Mrs. City
Ogdin
of near
Wilkesville.

/

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

1. Low overhead.
2. Family operation
3. Direct factory buying.

4. Volume buying.
5. Volume selling.
6. Small mark-up.
New2 Pc.
Living R m . Suite
Reg. 5239

138

With us, you don't have
to wait weeks for a loan

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requne&lt;l to
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t1
....,
oo
f\Jn
our
01 M1 ddvertJ:t8cl
~"' 1"1()18(1 " ' ltw. dl.l

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oHer vou vow chorc e ot a comparable rtem

"""en ihdri.JDit' •eftectrn, rr-.e s.ame savrngs or a rarncheck
!Nt'1oct' ..,.,u entr11e vo"' to pur c l'1as,e the ctdven rsed •tern at the

I!GUl.U 01 MINI
COSTCUTUI

.tdvel"'rs.ed pr rce wlthrn)) davs

Marsh- la -o • .
mollows .. ...

THE SOUTHERN Jumor H1~h
Athletic Boos ters will meet Monda y, 7:30 p.m . a t the junior hi~h.
Parents of junior high students
a nd parents of those who wi ll
have students in junior hig h next
yea r a re asked to attend the
meeting .
MARY Shrine 37, Order of the
White Shrine of J e rusal em , will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Masonic Temple in Pomeroy ;
practi ce for installa tion will be
held.

TUESDAY
POME ROY - Meigs DAV
Cha pte r 53 m eetin g will be held
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m . at the cha(r
ter home on Butte rnut Avenue,
Pomeroy. Officers for 1982 a nd
198.1 will be e lected . DAY Membe rs are urged to attend.

E" t&gt;rylh ong ,ou bu • "' II. •OOJe• •5 Qud•ante@d tor vo....r total

THE RITUAL of je we ls
meeti ng of Ohi o Eta Phi Cha pter
of Beta Sigma P hi Sorority will
be held a t 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the Meigs Inn. A potluck dinner
will be se rved. Those attending
are to take their own ta ble service.

Crispy
Rice ....

CO P YitlC HT ' " l HH KltOCU CO lllMS AN D PIKES
GOO D MONDAY APRllll THRO UGH SA TURDA Y APRIL
l ~ lft2 1N
-

'I'OME RO Y A ND GA LLI P OLI S ST O RES
WE IU SU \1 1 "HE RI GHT TO li M1f Q UANllllES . NO NE
SOl O TO O ~ .ti LEII S

$1 09

CHoat Cutte~•~·
oney ..
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$119

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Tea Bags ...

Coat Cutter

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A\IONOAU

HAR RISONVILLE
Seni or
Citizens Club will hold a free
blood pressure clinic from 10
a. m. to I p.m . Tuesday. F erndora
Story, R.N., will be present to
conduct the clinic.

Co o
YIUOW CliNG SliCED
OIHA.l\IU

WHOll 01 SliCID
KIOGEI

OICAfffiNA UO
INS TANT

Cost Cutter •.
PeOCh81 . Coo

White
POtOtOeS.1 16Co•'&lt;!1 .

Kroger
CoHee .

WEDNESDAY
A FREE blood pressure clinic
will be held by the Rutland Senior
Citize ns Club at the center on Hill
St. from noon to I p.m. Wednesd a y. Barbara VanMeter ,
R.N ., will be the attending nurse.
REG ULAR MEETING, Wednesday , Pomeory Chapte r 80, a nd
Bosworth Council 46, Royal a nd
Select Masters. Also Pomeroy
Cha pte r 80 will confe r the most
excellent maste r deg r ee.

Meets Tuesday
The Eastern Band Boosters wtU
meet Tuesday , April 13, a t 7: ~
p.m .In the band room a t the high
school.
Discussions wtU be held on
summer band camp, summer unlforms and the a nnua l band boosters
banquet which wtU be held in May
In the archery building a t Royal

r~O~a~k~P~a~rk~.~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~~~

AFRAID YOUR

Free HOW-TO-HEAR-BETTER
Hearing Consultation
held 11

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ii;neless Top
$329
Sirloin Steak ..... lb .
U.S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE BEEF
CHUCK BONElESS

Boston Roll Roast

.lb.

$219

U.S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE BEEF
BONELESS

Top Round Roast .... lb . $249
FRESH WHOlE BOSTON BUTT
SLICED INTO

Pork Steaks .. ......... lb .

$129

s129

• t~;bHOICE FRESH AMERICAN

Country
Ice Cream

Shoulder Roast. lb .
U.S.D.A. CHOICE . FRESH AMERICAN

39

Lamb Loin Chops .... lb .
IN STORE PACKAGED COUNTRY STYLE

Bacon ... ................. lb .
FISCHER'S REGULAR OR THICK SLICEO

c;;;deA
Large Eggs .......

ooz.

79c

4
7
9
Kroger BiscuitS .

IN THE DAIRY DEPT ·

•

8·01 .

C

Tub••

KROGER INDIVIDUAllY WRAPPED
SLICES

Cheese Food......
KROGER 12-CT . WEINER OR

16-oz.
Pkg .

2

Sandwich Buns ~t";:.·
FROZEN TOTIN~S

Party P1ua .......

l1.7S·ozS119
Pkg .

Meat BoIogna....

l -Ib .

$3 49
$149
$159

Pkg .

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

28

California
Celery .. ....... ... stalk

Golden Ripe
Bananas

5

4
·1
Green Peppers .....
NEW CROP fRESH

For • '

FRESH

Asparagus .... ... ... ... lb.
FLORIDA

Oranges_. ... .. .... ...

5 -lb .
Bag

$129

$159

15

EXTRA FANCY WASHiNGTON STATE t38 SIZE .
RED OR GOLDEN

Delicious Apples .. ..Each

BLOOMING

Geraniums ..

IN STORES WrTH
Dill OEPAITMIHTS

C

$139

HOT fOODS

a;;fo7.i"" WOO'""' $2 99
AVAILAall
llam · 7pm

Turkey Breast. .. lb .
FRESH BAKED ICED CINNAMON

THURSDAY, APRIL 15th, 9 to 5

Kroger
White Bread

If you have trouble understanding all that is sa1d
to you, then please stop in . We will be happy to

answer your questions, give you a hearing test
and tell you frankly it it is possible tor you to hear
and understand words better. II you can't come
in, we· 11 come to you , Manv hearing problems can
be helped . Just call us at 992-3629

89 c

•
12-o z.
W1eners ... .. .... .. .. Pkg .

SE RVE 'N' SAVE

MEIGS INN - POMEROY, OHIO

a 28

$149

Raisin Rolls ....... ~i.~:
Strawberry Pie .. s;::· $369
FRESH MAOE WITH WHIPPED TOPPING

INCLUDES : FREE HI-. POTATO SALAD (AMERICAN OR
MUSTARD) AND 6 DINNER ROLLS

Fried Chicken ..... Bucket

$4 99

HEARING AIDS

• FREE COMPUTER ANALYSIS OF YOUR
HEARING AID TO HELP ASSURE PEAK
PERFORMANCE

• ONE-HALF PRICE SPECIALS ON

AMERI C A~

BATTERIES
New 2 pc. pillow a rm living
room suite with 100% nylon

· cover and maple trim . This
Is a bargain If there ever

was one.

A LICENSED, PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

B~ ••1ta111 Hurlng Aiel Center

601 &amp;II Avilu. Hunlingltrl, Wtsl Vwgonoa

TNpttonl; 525-7221

89c
69c

16-ol

SALE OF

The Pioneer History of
Meigs co. ' l908
For 516 .00
ami
Hardesty's History ol
Meigs Co .-1883
For 520.00
R e printed by : The M e igs
Co . Pionee r &amp; Histori c al
Society,
Inc.
and the
Meigs co . Ge nealogical
S ociety.
Make checks payable to &amp;
send orders to
P . O . Box 145
Pomeroy, Oh .

... $11'

2'0'01

16'&lt;11

,~

POME ROY ~ MIDDLEPORT
COMMANDER Okey Va n
Lions Club regula r meeting, 12
Me ter of Stewa rt-Johnson V.F.W .
noon Wednesday a t Me igs Inn .
Post 9926 of Mason announces ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____J
tha t the re will be nomina tion of
office rs on Tuesday at 7 p.m .
Election of officers will be on
April 'l7 a t 7 p.m . All post me mPRE - PUBLICATION
bers are ur~ed to attend.

to be

Cost Cutter
• "Co•
~·
Shorten1ng

wrrsto~ c tr on • eoga rdl~ o t •ndn\J i dCiurer 11 ~ov .t•e not wtrs
Ire&lt;) ''C&gt;!Jt' ,..,11 repl d(.(' yOu• rler., w •li" lhe~me Or ana o r a
c ompa raOie bran{! o r ·elund yOu ' our chas.e OI •CI!

Co1t Cutter
Fig Bars ':;;•

• FREE CHECK·UP ON MOST MAKES OF

Just phone. When you see for yourself how fast we say
"yes," you11 wonder why you waited so long I CaD to lind
out how low your monthly payment could be.

In Gallipolis:
502 Second Street
Phone 446-4113

...

'"

• FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TEST

HOW DO YOU APPLY?

"

*

ADVERfiSED ITEM POLicY
E.aco o t

• FREE CONSULTATION

committee to meet.

OF

COUNT ON KROGER
SOOPER
COST
CUTTER
SAVE 10 TO 40% WITH SOOPER COST CUnERS

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUA R A N ~EE

POMLIWY -=:-:i:;;e Me1gs County P ioneer and Histor ical Societ y,
Inc. trustees will meet Monday at
7: 30 p.m . at the musewn. To be
discussed will be the reprint contract, insura nce, and transporting the old newspapers from
Colwnbus to Pomer oy.

It Will Pay You To Attend This

5

CRFDrlllRIFl'
...,..,., lfOI yoar lcwJ

POME ROY ~ Walk In Garden
Club Monday a t 7: 30 p.m. at the
home of Mildred Zigler.

SALEM CENTER ~ A PTO
meeting will be· held Tuesda y at
7: 30 p.m. a t the Salem Cente r
School. Dan Morns, supermtende nt of the Meigs Local School
Distri ct, will be discussed with
pare nts the proposal to bus
stude nts to the Rutla nd sc hool
next year. All concerned parents
a re urged to attend the meeting.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Middleport, Ohio

FOR EVERYDAY
LOW PRICES

CHESTE R ~ Chester Township trustees will meet in regular
session Tuesday, 7: 30 p. m. a t the
Chester townhall.

HEARING IS
GmiNG WORSE?

11 SAYS 1H£YU APPROVE. A

HOM£0UJN£R LOAN UP10$3qooo
IN JUST A MAff£1~ Of DAYS 111

POME ROY E lementa ry PTA,
Monday, 7:30 p.m. with science
fa ir projects. Basketball pla yers
will be honored. Pledge will be
led by first grade, a nd refrest&gt;ments will be served .

Swnmer ba nd camp, swnmer
uniforms, a nd a nnua l ba nd
booste r banquet to be held in May
will be discussed. The banquet
will be held in the archery
building a t Royal Oak Park.

EASTERN
Boosters will
meet Tuesday in the band room
at the high school at 7:30 p.m.

Ogdin

-

possibilit y you rn:.~y find yourself
p artu~s

MONDAY

Band

them to better eff ort.:;.
VIRGO 1A u~ . 23-Se pl. 221 Ma te ri a l be nefits today coul d come from

111 a sttua ti un today where you'll ga tn from helping two
l'nllt•t·tt ve int erest.

nouncing the birth of their first
child, a son , Clayton Gle nn Enslen.
He was born on Ma rch 14 a nd
we ighed seven pund.s, one ounce a nd
was 21 inches long.
Ma terna l g randparents a re Iris
and Ray Williams, Hysell Run Road,
a nd pate rnal gra ndparents are Mr .
a nd Mrs. Myron B. J ones , Lima.
Ma terna l great-grandmothe r is Lill y
Dyke, Middleport.

Pome roy

Calendar

TUPP E RS P LAINS E leme ntary Boosters' meeting will be
held at Tu ppe rs Plains School
Monday at 7: 30 p.m . Speaker will
be Linda Krasne r of GalliaJ a ckson-Meigs Corrununity Mental Health Center, Inc. She will
show a film on rirugs with a
question a nd ans wer peri od to
follo w.

Daug hter of Mr. a nd Mrs . Michae l
Evans, Cindy a ttends the F reedom
Gospe l M1ssion. She is a mem ber of
the National Honor Society a nd has
been listed in Who's Who in
America n High School Students.
She has served two years on the
Stude nt Co uncil. IS a vars it y

Monday, April 12, 1982

2 A ALOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU:·
•Silver Bridge Plaza, Gallip'olis•700 E. Main · st., Pomeroy
(

�-- ------------------

John I. Arnott, Linda Darlene Arnott to John L. Arnott, Lmda
Darlene Arnott, Parcels, Pomeroy
VIllage.
Leola Cooper to Paul W Sayre,
Parcels, Lebanon
J immy Dillon, Vwlet L D1llon to
John D Wandling, Peggy Wandling,
Parcels, Sc1p1o
Pearl Welker, Ralph Welker,
de ed , Aff1dav1l, Bedford- Pomeroy
VIllage
Harold M Sm1th, Esther B SITilth
by James J. Proffitt , Shenff, to
Harold M. Smith, Shenff's Deed,
Parceb, Sutton
Terry D Talbott, deed , Mary
Jane Talbott, Adm , Cert of trans.,
Ohve
Wilham K Harns, Manko K
Harns, Elizabeth A Harns, Eugene
Brown, Robert A Brown, Kathenne
S l:!rown, Kathenne F Brown to
Lee Burnem, Stella A. Burnem, 88
rods, Rutland
Rex Cheadle, Bonme Cheadle to
Board of Columbia Township
Trustees, I ac re, Columbia
Cla ra I. Paulsen. deed to Vada
Hazelton. Cert of trans., Bedford.
Wayne Hetzer to Charles Scyoc, '·•
acre, Oli ve.
Eugene F Eskew, deed to
Marguente Eskew, Cert of trans,
Sa lisbury
Denver Ca rman, deed to Mildred
Bowen. Ivan Ca rman, Lilah
Frecker, Cert of trans., Salisbury
Roy E Powell , Penny D Powell to

M. Warn er, 1 7¥.~ acre::;, Salisbury

Ira Ivan Wolfe to Darlane D
Kreuzer, Manlyn Joyce Crossen,
Sheryl Ann Wolfe, Certificate of
Trans . Rutland VIllage
Leonard C. Calvin, Georgia Calvin
to D E Calvm, Margaret Calvm , 2
parcels, Salem
John L. Babiak, Cheryl C. Babiak
to Franklin Real E&gt;lale Company,
Parcel, Chesler
Forked Run Hunt Sports Clu b to
BI1User Well Service, Right of Way,
Ohve.
Clara Thomas, deceased, to
Dona ld Thomas, Horton Thomas,
Eugene Thomas, Fay DeWees, Cerl
of Trans , Pomeroy VIllage
Hennan A Grueser, Anna M
Grueser to Mark Anthony Grueser,
Nancy Sue Grucser. Parcels, Bedford
Jame&gt; R Derenberger, Shirley
Perenger to Harley E Bonng,,g,
50/HIO acre, Sc1p1o
Ethel Orr, Arthur Orr, deceased,
affidavi t, Chesler Township
Helen Ruth Atkin&gt;. By Wilham A
Atkms, Ally -m-Fct. to Paul S1mon,
Ah S1mon. Lots. Pomeroy
Denzil I. Proctor, Bonme Proctor
to Denzil L Proctor , Bonnie Proctor, Parcels. Middleport
Jinna L Arnott to John L. Arnott,
Parceb. Pomeroy Village.

Adirumstrator of Veterans' Affairs,
Parcels, Rutla nd
Floyd Vmcent Hawk, Mary A.
Hawk to Carl E. Smith Petrolewn,
Inc , Right of way, Orange
Jan A. Parker, Donna Parker to
Carl E. Sm1th Petrolewn, Inc ,
R1ght of way, Orange.
R T Summerfield, Jr. , Ca rolyn
M Summerfield to Lawrence Brandel, Trustee, Parcels, Salisbury.
Lawrence S. Brandel toR. T. Summerfield, Jr., Carolyn M. Summerfield , Pa rcels, Salisbury .
Roosevelt Branham,
Poll y
Branham to Ca rol J. J effers (formerly Ca rol J Jacobs), Parcel,
Rutland.
Zana P Withrow to VIctor L.
Brown, Cert of trans . Sutton
Bra(jbury Church of Chnst, Inc ,
Guy A. Russell , Trustee, Larry
Pickens, Trustee, Wilbur H Row ley,
Sr, Trustee, to Herald 0 11 and Gas
Co., Right of Wa y, Salisbury.
Gail L Coble, Mary Elizabeth
Sievers, deed , Affidav it, Middleport.
Ella Mae Newlun, deed to
Fredenck F Newlun, deed , Harold
Newlun, Helen Newlun McCall ,
Hilda Newlun Beckett, Cert . of
trans , Olive.
Fredenck F Newlun, deed. to Betty Lou Newlun, Harold Newlun,
Helen Newlun McCall, Hilda Newlun
reckett, Cert. of trans, Ohve.
Betty Lou Newlun, Helen Newlun
McCa ll . Ca rlos McCall. Hilda

Monday, April 12, 1982

Mrs. Lois Bell visited Mrs. ije.:151e
Ervin and Mrs. Gladys Shields
recenlly at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade of
Troy spent from Wednesday till Sunday recently With Mrs. Gladys
Shields and other relatives. Mrs.
McDade visited her uncle, Ott
Boston, a pabent al Veterans
Memonal Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush, M~.
and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons were dmner
guests a recent Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs. Doug Sands at Addison.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
children, Mandy and Michael, spent
a weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Stevie
Russell and fam1ly a t Columbus and
attended the Southern Tornadoes'
basketball games a t the St. John's
Arelll! a! Columbus · Friday and
Saturday evemngs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Russell of Wolf
Pen spent an evemng w1th Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Russell and children
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
VIsited Lee Otis Hussell at Pleasant
Valley Hospital a recent Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Herbert Roush visited
Lee recently. Herbert Roush consulted his doctor at Pl~asant Valley
Hospital Tuesday.

Fairview News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs . Joe Manuel
celebrated their 28th weddmg anmversary a recent Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs Demse Manuel
at Long Bottom. Attending were Joe
and Edith Manuel, T1m Manuel,
Harry and Jean Roush of Minersville
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Sands of Addison spent a weekend w1th Mr. and

Mrs. Russell Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis, Mrs.
Russell Roush, Mrs. Doug Sands,
David Roush and fiancee, Tressa
McDermott celebrated Russell
RoiL•h's birthday by dmmg at
Shoney's Resturant m Ripley, W.
Va. a recent Saturday even mg.
Russell and Bermce Roush VISited
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp a nd
Jeremy at Portland a recent Sunday

The Daily Sentinel

CARPET STARTING AT $12.95

~==-

PHONE 992-2156

Square Yard With Pad. Installed

KITCHEN CARPET

~~tili~ t!oflce

Co lum bus, Oh10
March 26, 1982
Co ntract Sa les Legal

RUBBER BACK CARPET $4~sh&amp;tauy

Sea led proposals wil l be
r ecerved at the office of the
D rrector of t he Oh ro Depa r
tment of Transportation ,
Co lu mbus, Oh10, until 10 00
AM Ohto Standard Trme ,
Tuesday, April 20, 1982, f or
1mt')rovements rn
: arts I to 27 mc lu s,ve ar e
of fered as one contrac t and
will be co nsrdered on the
bnsts of th e total amou nt

1 I Bus tness Opportun•tr

1 Card of Thanks (patd tn advance)
'}Card of Thanks (patd '"a dvance)
3 Announceme nt s
4 Grveaway
5 Happy Ads
6 Los t and Found
7 Yard Sa le (pa i d 1n advance)
8 Publ1c Sa l e
&amp; Auc t1on
9 Wan ted to Buy

11 Money to Loan

13 Profess tonal Se r v•ces

Real Estate
31 Homes l or Sa l e
32 Mobile Homes f or Sale
33 Farms for Sa le
34 Bus mess Bu ddm gs
35 Lo ts &amp; Acreage
36 Real Es tate Wanted

Employment

services

b•d

Parts 1 thru 27
Athens, Hockrng, Me 1gs.
Noble ,
Vrnton
and
Washmgton Count res, Oh10,
on twenty seven bndges on
varrous routes and sec
t•ons, by cteanmg and patn

BETTY PATTERSON
Add r ess Unknown
Def endan t

POMEROY, OHIO

lmg

F"teld
Pa1n t 1ng
of
Extstrng Steel
" The dat e se t for co m
plet1on o f t hts work shal l be
as set f or t h 1n tnc b1dd1ng
proposa l "
Each btdder shal l be
reQutred to file wrth h1s btd
a
certtfted
check
or
cash 1er's check for an
amount equa l to five per
cent of h1s b1d , but rn no
eve n t more th an ftfty
th ou sa nd dollars, or a bond
f or ten per ce nt of hr s b1d ,
payab le to th e Dr rector
Btdders must apply, on
the proper
forms
for
qua lrfr cafion at least ten
days pnor to the date se t
for open rn~ b1ds rn ac
co rdance wtth Chap ter 5525
Oh10 Rev1sed Code
Plans and spec lfr cat rons
are on file rn th e Depart
ment of Transpor tat iOn and
the oHrce of the D 1stnc t
Deputy 01rector
The Drrector r eserves
the nght to r£&gt;tect any and
all brds

PJi. 992·2259

Pu blic Nottce

The
CO NTRA CT
DOCUMENT S may be

exam rned at th e f oll ow1ng
locatron s
Off rceof Da v rd C Rerser ,
Archt tect. 131 W es t State
Street , A thens. Oh ro -45701
Co p 1es of th e CO N

To Betty Patterson, whose
add r ess rs unknown
You a r e no t1f 1ed th a t you
r1ave been named Defen
dant 1n a leg al ac t1 on en
11n ed Char les E Pa Tt er so n,
P l a 1nt 1ff . vs Betty Pat
ter son, De fendant Th1s ac
t 1on has been ass1g ned
Case N o 18 ,120 and 1S pen
d1ng 1n the Court of Com
man Pleas of Me1gs Coun
ty, Pomeroy Oh to 45769
Th e ob 1ec t of the Comp larnt
rs for d1vorce and ot her
re lr ef
You ar e r eq u1red to an
swer the Compla1nt w lfh rn
28 da ys after the l ast
publt ca tron of th1s not 1ce.
wh 1ch wrl l be publ1shed on
ce each week. for s1x sue
cess 1ve weeks The la st
pub lr ca tr on will be made on
Ap nl 19, 1982. and th e 28•
days for answer wr ll com
m ence on th at da l e
In case of your f ailure to
a n swe r
or
otherw1 se
respond as r equ •red by the
Ohro
Rul es
of
C rvll
Proced ur e, tudgment of
default will be rendered
aoa m st you for the r e li ef
demanded 1n the Com
pl a rnt
Date March 10, 1982

LARRY E SPE NCER,

Clerk of Court of
Common Pl eas of
Me1gS County, Ohto
M e1gs County
Court H ouse

sel
Any

B IODE R,

upon

return1ng the CO NTR ACT

DOCUMENT S

promp tl y

and 1n good c ond •tt on , w dl
be refunded the paym ent,
and a ny non btdder upon so
r eturnmg the CO NTR ACT

DOCUMENTS

woll

be

refunded S25 00

Mar c h

Mayor
Cl arence A ndrews

19.

198 2

13122.291 41 5. 12. 4tc

898, 445 45

ALL GOVERNMENTAL

AND FIDUCIAR Y
FUND TYPE SFOR THE FISCAL
YEAR ENDED

DECEMBER 31 , 1981

Governmental Fund
Types
General Fund
Rece tpt s From Local Sour

ces
Ta xes

FINANCIAL
REPORT OF THE
BOARD OF
EDUCATION
M e1gs Local
School D1stnct
Me1gs County

621 S. Thtrd St .,

Mrddt eport, Oh1 0

45760
March 30, 1982

Jan e Wagn er
Treasurer of the
Board of Educat1on

614-992-5650
COMBINED
STATEMENT
OF CASH,
INVESTMENTS ,
AND FUND CASH
BALANCESALL FUND TYPESAT DECEMBER 31,
19S1
Balance
December 31, 1981
Cash tn Ban k( s)

Net

$129,267 72

$1.565.794 OJ

Tu1t10n
33.792 49
Earn 1ngs On Inves t
menls
798 40
MI SCe ll aneo us Re ce rpt s
From Loca l Sources

Renlals

715 00

Se r v rces Provtded
Other Entrtres
4,548 28
Other Recetpts From
Local Sources 323,0.47 99
Tota l Rece1pts
From L ocal

Sources

Public Not1c e

1.928.696 19

Recer pts From State Sour

ces

Unres tn c ted Gra nt s

In A1d

2,J81.5JJ 9J

Total Recetpts
From State
Sources
2,381.533 93

Tolal Rece•pts 4.JI0.2JO 12

lnstructron
Re9 ul ar ln stru c
I tOn
1,846,317 86
Specrallnstruc
Ir on
274,390 46
Vocatrona ll nstru c
tt on
457,611 40
Total l nstruc

Iton

2,578,J 19 72

SuJJportrng Se r v rces

Support Servtces

- Pupil s
- lnstru c tronal

Staff

- General Adm

6L 114 00

77,222 40
182,576 63

F •scat Se rv• ces
91 ,056 62
Operatton a nd Ma.nt

Of Plant
Servtces

Transportation
Se rvtces

I

379- Walnut

87 Uphol sler y

476,J61 07

Out

4s.-Leon

Pomeroy

•Summer Coat 1ngs
•A co mplete lr ne of
Molds &amp; Candy
Suppl•es
•Wilton Cake
Decorat1ng Supplres

PRACTICALLY EVERY PART OF HOUSE IS
NEW - Three bed r ooms, full basemen t. wood bur
ner, f treplace. eQurpped krtc hen and 1s beau t rfu l

247- Letart Falls
949--Racene

119s-Letart
937-Buflalo

741-Rutland
667- Coolvllle

Up to 15 words

One day

msen1on

S3 OJ

Up to 15 woros

Three day

msertior,

$.4 00

1nsert1on

S7 00

Excess of Rece 1p ts
and Oth er So urc es
Over (Und er) D 1Sbur se
ments and Oth er

Uses

64,087 49

Fund Cas h B alan ce,

Jan 1. 198 1

9,575 53

Dec Jl. 1981

73,66J 02

Fund Cash Ba l ance ,

Specta l Revenue
Funds
Rece1p ts From Sta te Sour

ces

Unrestr•cted Grant s
lnA rd
59,2 19 6.4
Tot at Rece rpts From
St ate Sour ces
59.2 19 6.4
Rece1p ts From Federa l
Sour ces
Rest n c ted G r ants
In A 1d (T hrough
State'
22 1,974 24
To ta l Rece rp ts
From Federa l
So ur ces
22 1.974 2.4
T ot al Rece rpts
28 1.1 93 88
I nstru ct ron
Spec tal l nstruc
tton
22 1,376 2.4
Voca tr onal lnstru c

l1 on

4.558 00

Total
1ns t ruc t 1on
125,934 25
Su pporttng Se r v1ces
Support Se r v 1ces

- Puptls

- l nstruc tt onal

Slaff

19,28 1 23

106,295 94

- Gener a l Adm 16,900 89
F tsca l Se rvt ces
673 72
Tot a l Support
Servrces Bu srness
673 72
Total Support rn g

ServiCes

14J.151.78

ments

J69 .086 OJ

ments
TransfersIn

187.892 151
5,068 88

Total D rsburse

Excess of R ece tpt s
Over (Under) Dtsburse·

Tra n sf ersOut
8, 160
Total Other
Ftnancing Sources

IUsesJ

54

J.207 64

Excess of Rece tpt s
and Other Sources
Over (Under) Dtsburse
m ents and Other

Uses
194,191.451
Fund Cash Balance,
Jan. 1. 1981
83,468 9S
Fund Cash Balance,
Dec. 31 , 1981 (10.722 .471

Total Su pport
Se rvt ces Busmess
Total Suppor ttn g
Se r v 1ces

Debt ServiCes

Total Dr sbur se

ments

3, 126 96
3. 126 96

JO I.02J 07
J04, 150 OJ

Excess of Rec etpts
Over (Und er ) D tsburse·
ments
46 ,037 51
Tran sfer s -

Out

222, 94J 90

Excess of Recerpts
and Other Sour ces
Over (Under) Ot sbur se
ment s and Other

Uses

( 176,906 J9J

Fund Cas h Balance r

Jan I. 1981

504,700 22

Public Notice

205.861 24

Fund Cas h Balan ce.

Dec J l, 1981

28,954 85

Sources

2.258.620 85

ces

Sources

11.515 16

Of Plan!

ServiCeS

5,585 63

Tolal Support
Bustness

250.791 88

Total Supporftn g
ServiCeS
250,791 88
Total Supporttng
Serv rces
250,79 1 88
Total Or sbur se

ments

250,791 88

Excess Of Rece rgt s
Over (Under) rsburse

ments

Other

(USES!

1239,276 721

F man e mg

Sources

Premrum and Accrued
Interest on Bonds

Sold

Proceeds from Sa le

6,204 18

of Bonds

1,000,000 00

Sources

1,006,204 1S

Total M1sc . Receipts
From Local
Transfers -

Out

Excess of Receipts

2.591.10

299,124 50

Fu nd Cash Bal ance,

In Atd

2,472,5J I 61

Sources

2.472.5JI 61

Recerpts From F edera l
Sou rces
Res trr c ted Grant s

In Atd (T hrough
State)
22 1,974 24

Tot a l Recet pts
From Federal
Sou r ces
22 1.97-4 24
Tota l
1

Rece tpls

I nstructron
Re9ular lns tru c

t10n

4,95J.l26 70
1,846.Jl7 86

I ton

495.766 71

I ton

462. 169 40

It on

2,804,25J 97

Voca tronal ln struc
Totallnstruc

Staff

2J

18J,5 18 J4

Ge neral Adm •n• stra tton

166,696 83
182,572 6J

Frsca l
Serv1ces
94,857 30
Fac •l•tt es Acq u1 srt•on
a nd Construct1on

Servtces

Se r vrces -

J an I, 1981

Unre strr ct ed Gran ts

Ea rn tngs On Invest
Supporttng Se r v rces
ments
11.515 16 Support Se r v rces
Total Recerpt s
- Puptls
80,J95
From Loca l
- ln struc t. onal

Tota l Rece 1pts
11, 515 16
Support1ng Serv •ces
Facllr tr es Acqur srt 1on
And Constru c t ron
Se n11 ces
245,206 25
Operatton and Marnt

557.J26 01

Fund Cas h Ba l ance,

Spec •al f nstruc
Cap1tal Protect
Funds
Rece rp t s From Loca l Sour

uses

Rece rpt s From Sfa t e Sour

ces

I CTa l t&lt;eCe lpTS
F rom Sta t e

245,206 25

Op era t•on and Mamt

Of Plant

481.946 70

Serv•ces
Transportat •on
Servi ces

1Puptls)
Total Support

504.700 22

Serv tces -

Bustness
I.J26.710 47
Total Supporttng
Services
1,939,893 50

Extracurricular Act•vities

Sport
Oriented
33,226.7S
Total Extracurncular
Activtties
3J,226.7S
Debt Services
609,637 75
Non -Programmed
Charges
8,834.40
Total Disburse·
ments
5,395,846 40
Excess of Receipts
Over (Under} Disburse-

ments

1«2,719.701

Other Financmg

I USES)

Sources

Premium and

Accrued Interest
On Bonds
Sold
6.204 18
Proceeds From Sate
Of Bonds
1,000,000 00
Total Misc . Receipts
· ·om Local
1,006,204 18
~ources
Transfers -

In

Transfers -

Out
Total Other

Pubhc Not1ce

-- -Public
- - -Noftce
---

ments a nd Other

From Loca l

233,695 ..54
236,646.37

Flnancmg Sources

IUSESl
3,207.64
Excess of Receipts
and Other Sources
Over (Under) OisburSP-

Fund Cas h Balan ce,

Dec Jl. 1981

1J,IOO JJ

Total s
Excess of Recerpts
Over (Under) Dtsburse

Dec Jl, 1981
856,450 51
ments
( 228.867 J2 1
COMBINED
Non Operatrng Recerpts ·
STATEMENT OF
Earn1ngs On Invest
CASH RECEIPTS,
ments
JIJ 90
Recerpts From Sta te Sour
DISBURSEMENTS ,
AND CHANGES
ces
Unrestrr c ted Gran ts
IN FUND CASH
BALANCES- ALL
In Atd
22.079 02
PROPRIETARY
Rece tpts
From
Federal
FUND TYPES AND
Sour ces
SIMILAR
Unres trt cted Grants
(Through
FIDUCIARY
State)
FUND TYPES 22J.213 99
FOR THE FISCAL
Total Non Operat1ng
YEAR ENDED
Rece •gts
245.606 91
DECEMBER 31, 1981
Excess tAll
Propnetar-y Fund
Recetpts Over (Under)
Types
A ll Ot sburse m ents

$45,000

Food Serv1ce
Ex cess of Rccc rpts
,
Over (Und er) Dtsburse

ments

(217.585 901

Non Operat1ng Recetpts
Earn 1ngs On Invest

ments

J1J 90

Recetpts from Sta te Sour

ces

Unrestn c ted Grants
In Atd
22, 079 02
Re cetpts from
Fed eral
Sources
Unrestn c ted G rant s
(Through

State )

22J.2 1J 99

Total Non Operattng

Recetpls
Excess of All

245,606 91

Receipts Over (Under)
A ll Di sburse·
ments (Oper at1n g
and Non Ope rat·
rng)
28,021 01
N et E xcess of
Rece ipts Over&lt; Unde r)
Disburse

ments

28,021 01

Fund Cas h Balance,

Jan 1, 1981
950.59
Fund Cash Bal ance.
Dec 31 , 1981
28,971 60
Uniform Sch. Sup.

Excess of Recei pts
Over (Under) Disburse

ments
(15,104 171
Excess of All
Receipts Over (Under)
All Disburse·
ments (Operating
and Non·Operat·
ingJ
(15,104.17)
Operating Transfers·
In
2.950 8J
Net Excess of
Receipts Over (Under) .
Disburse·
ments
Cl2.15J 341
Fund Cash Balance
Jan. 1, 19Sl
12.076.35
Fund Cash Balance,
Dec . 31, 1981
(76.99)
Non-Ekfl!lndable
Trust Funds
Excess of Recel~ts
Over lUnder&gt; Disbursements
3,822.75
Excess of All
Receipts Over lUnder)
All Disbursements
3.822.75
Fund Cash Balance,
Jan. 1, 1981
9,277.58

&lt;Oper a trng
Opcr

a nd

NEW LISTING - Gravel Htll, Mrddl eport - Up to
four bedrooms, garden space. storage shed. tull y 1n
sul ated and tS older home W1 t h many other features

al tn gJ

16,7J9 59

In

16,7J9 59

Operatrng Transfers
Out
? Q~ ftl
Net Excess of
t-1ece 1pfs Over (Under)
Or sburse
m ent s
19,690 42
Fund Cash Balance,

Jan I, 1981

22.J04 52

Fund Cash Balan ce,

Dec Jl. 1981
!41 9, lie

41 ,994 94

PubJ•c Nohce

PUBLIC NOTICE
April 21, 1982 at 10 a m

the Ra c m e Home N at ,onal
Bank , RaCine, Oh10 w ill of
f er for sa le at public auc
t 1on the fo ll ow tng
198..0

Dodge 050 ptck up, 1975

Ford Thunderb1rd, and
, 1974 Ford stat ton wagon
Rac ine Hom e Nattonal
B ank r eserves the n9ht t o
ret ect any or all bids and t o
remove any or a ll veh1cles
from the sale at any t ime

(41 12. 19, 2tc

WAtfT ADS

For a ll your wmng
needs ;
furnaces ·
repa 1r service and
Installation .
Res id ential
&amp; Commercial
Ca ll742-3195

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

3 7 tf c

I 3 li e

YOU

'S

REESE ~
G&gt; G&gt; • ·
TRENCHING
SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and remodeling
'--Roohnc and cutte• work
-concrete work
- Piumbm c and
elettrtcal WOfk
(free E.stlmiles)

V. t. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992 7314

Water Sewer· Eiectnc
Gas Lm e Dtt ch es
Wa ter Lrne Hook ups
Se pt1c Ta nk s
Coun t y Cer tr f red
Rou sh Lan e
Ches hrre, Oh

Pomeroy , Ohto

Ph 367 7160

9 30 lie

I 7 I ff c

The Automatic
Freeze- Proof W ater

" Beautiful, Cus t om
· Built Garages "
Ca ll for free s•d•ng
est tm ates. 949 2801 or
949 2860
No Su nd ay Ca ll s

•Mob1le
S•tes
•Water &amp; Gas Lmes
•Spnng Developments
"S ma ll Jobs A
Spec ta lty"

•No Energy Needed
•Water Availab le a t sub
zero temperatures
• Spnng Deve l opment s

JIM LUCAS

JIM LUCAS

PH . 742-2753

3 II Tfc

Ph 742 2753

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

80 ACRES - Wt th a 2 story f rame home th at was
recentl y remodeld Has 3 4 bedrooms Beautrfu l
l aymg land Nea r Racrne $60,000

'Fr om
th e Sma ll est
H eater Core to th e
Largest Rad1ator

REALTOR

Rad•ator Spec1allst

Jean Trussell
R'oger Turner
DoH1e Turner

949· 2660
9t1· S691
992· 5692

lB

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Expenence

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

REIUOR

All STEEL ·
BUILDINGS

~~

Utility Buildings
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
Rae m e, Oh

Ph. 992-2174

Ph 614 843 219 1

Curb Inflation l~
Pay Cash for
l,
Classifieds and !!t
Savelll
II

l

Wnte your own ad and order by mail w1 th this

coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable .

I
I
I

Name-----------------~

Tran11t
Happy Hour
Mon · Thur s

4.00 lo6 00 p m

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Sl Rl 124

Pomeroy, lli

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
llSO TRANSMISSIONS

PH. 992-SU2

OR 992-7121

Mon - KegNtght
Tues.- Lad1es N1ght
_Wed s - Gent N• g ht
ThtJr s - Poo l Tourn
3· 24 tf c

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
backhoe
excavat mg
se pttc sys t em s
water, sewer
&amp; gas lin es
• dump truck

CARPET
BINDING
SERVICE

•l•;r'l.stl.n •

License &amp; 11onded
PH. 992-7201

Sma ll &amp; Larg e
Car pet P 1eces Bound
Room Stz e and Area
Rug s Bound
Car pet ln stallatron
Reasonabl e Rate s
For More lnf orm at.on-

J 29 lf c

31411c

Phone ____________ II

General

C. R. MASH

Print one word in each

VIRGIL B. SR ., ~~ill

216 E. 2nd St.

Phone
H 614 )-992-3325
OWNER FINANCING
- Carpeted J bedroom

space below Each in·
tilt a I or group of figures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number if used .

You' ll get better results
tf you descnbe fully ,

any ad. Your ad will be ---f--'+-4-~f---!
put
rn
the proper ~~~~~~~~~~~j
classtflcaNon 1f you'll These cash rates
check the proper box
below
tnclude dtscount

NEW LISTING - Wild
life. trees, l arge garden
spot and a dug well on
th1 s f1 ve
acres rn
L eba no n Twp
Good
g rav el road w tth school
bus a nd m ad Rts On l y

) Announcement

I For Rent

1.

MODERN HOME - rn
our country
H as 8
rooms .
F .A
hea t,
r a ng e,~
refrigerator ,
dtshwasher
a nd
dtsposal. Cell ar . storage
over on 1 88 acres

5.

Metgs schools. SJ7.900.
2 HOUSES - Frame 3

6.
7.

2

3.
4.

s.

one tor $13,000 or both on
good offer. All utiltlies.

9

and

10
11 .
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

garages.
3 ACRES - OUt, iusl off
6 rooms,

betng remodeled, bath.
woodburning

chimney,

trees, garden spol, and
T P water. Asking Only
$19,500.
ARE
YOU
DISSATISFIED WITH
YOUA
PRESENT
HOME? IF so CALL, I
992-3876.
.
I

Housing
Heilclquartcrs

I
I

)Wanted
1For Sa le

.. $7,950

road.

--+-+--'+--'-t--i

gr ve pnce The Sentrnel To 1S
reserves the right to ----+-+-4-~f----i
cla SS ify, edit or r e jec t To 25

rn sulated home Modern
bath, nr ce k1tc hen. por
c h, patr o. ct t y utd rt1es
and ga rden space V1ew
of rrver Just $32,500

eac h

Custom k1tchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms. remodel1ng,
plumbing, etectnc, and
hea tmg .

I

I

17
18. _ _ _ _ __

II

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992-6011

I

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentlnel111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
. ~--..--:-------~.--.---:--

4 12 1 mo pd

ii-- - - - - - - - - - i

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard

949-2263
949·2160

1 24 lfc

s~ ~ M1 sc M erchand tce

SEISONil
ClOSE .OUTS

ANY

PERSON

who

fl as

anyth1ng to CJIVe away and
does not of fer or attempt to
offer any other lh1ng for

sale may place iln ad 1n th ,s
column There wil l be ··o
charqe lo the adverl1ser

Home Space Heatm

~9.300

STU

Only $158.,

s...

C.Sh &amp; C.t~ &amp;
These wtll co tnt atlnts prtce.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

POMEROY
LANDMARK
.14-992 -2112

New Homes - extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Custom Pole Bldgs.
• Roofing work
GregRoush
Ph 992 7583
•
;
or 992-2282
-.3·17 1 mo

I
1
I

'FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

·--·--- '

chtldren call388-9661

----- -

Mother ~Oll ~ I PJps, 2
mos old Cell 446 96J4
Half lrrsh Setter femal e,
al5o2pups Call379 216 8

Lost and Found
LOST Mnte W alk er F ox
Hound . 1n v rnc1 nlly ol
K yqer S50 RewMd Call
Arnold Slump 367 7554

cAN HELP YOU

BUILD YOUR DREAMS!

c;:;;;:=u

Nt~w

Construction
anct;ftemodelins.

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN.
PH. 9924~ or H2·231t

FO UND dog black &amp; wl11tP
face w1'h brown br own
MOund f'Yf'S mos tly Wh1IP
body wolh bl,lc k spO t&lt;&gt;
re semb les 11oun c lr1cnclly
brown f lea co ll ,lr 30.167 5

5582
LOST blo ck
&amp;
t an
coonl1 ound male neclr Rt
1&amp;

87 304 895 3395

Hu ge Garage Sale qoocl
clean merchand1 se
low
pn ces Aprtl 12 13 8 JO
AM tJ 0() PM 1003 PMr1 &lt;s h
Ave Po1nt Pleasant

H el p Wanted

'ftt'nt+on
needed
,m
medrately f\Jit 'Or part f1m e
four lad•e'S, 4 tlrs per day 4
days fler week
No ex
per 1ence necessa ry , tr an
spor ta1ton avartatll.e For
1ntrorv1 ew &amp; appointm ent

&lt;&lt;111988 287 1 or 66t 45J5
A pp1 ,c,1 11 0ns nl1W bemq :
Tnk cn for conce,SI'Xl st and ·
aT
th e '&lt;.MlclUga
w or k..
Dri\.C In
Ap pl y at the
Col ony TllC'&lt;lte r
GET VALUABLE tra1n1ng
ns a younq bus 1ness person
and ea rn qood money plus
so m e&gt; qreat Q1fts as a Sen
11ne1 rouTr carr1 er Phone
us r 1qfll away and qel on
the ei JQ ibillfy lis t aT 992
2156or 99? 2157

Full or pMt !1 mf' RN lor 7
to 3 shill Full or part l1mc
RN or LPN 101 ll lo 7 ::.111 ft
C1 ll
Nan c y VanMe ter
Pom er oy Hed l tf-] Care Cen
IN 992 6606
D on t m1 ss th1 s one The
prrfc c t fam ily bus1ness No
r 1sk
flnv e fun
make
mon&lt;'Y Ca ll 99'1 2088 a ft er

6p

Yard Sa l e

m

Maluf t' rt•::.pons•b le woman
Ia cnr e for 2 pre sc hool
chd clr en 1n our home
Ref er ences rf'Qu•red 992

7101
AVON Be n success Sell
Avon wh e re yotJ work or
l1vc Call 742 2755 o r c oll ccf

6146987 111
Publi C S&lt;1 l e
&amp; Auctton

R1ck
Pearson
E)(
pertenced AUCTIONEER
Estates, anf1Ques
farm ,
household L1censed Oh10
WV Buy1ng ant1Ques 304
773 5785. 773 9185
L E Neal Auct roneer Ser
vrce
Estat e Farm
Hou sehold M1sc We sell 1tl
Lrcensed &amp; bonded Oh10 &amp;

RE SPON SI BLE baby Sit
l f' r Mondny Fr1day days,
r eferen ces rcqu1red ca ll
614 446 7693
Lad~ to stay Witll older
co upl e. qood pay Phone
]04 458 1721

BABYSITTER needed 11"
my
hom e.
references
requ+red , 30A 675 7J 46

WVa 367 7101
12
Auct1on eve r y F r1 n1qht at
the Ha rtf ord Commun 1fy
Cen ter Truckload s of new
merchandtse every week
Cons 1gmen ts of new and
used merchand,sc a lway s
welcome
R rcllard
RPyno ld s Aurt1onPrr 275

Wa nt ed to Buy

9

Gold, srlver.
s te rl1n q,
tewelry , r1Ag"ST old co1n s &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop, M rddleport 992

S1 tu ar

~n s

Wan ted

Will c;r c for elderly person
1n ,..... f home Reasonab le

99: ·67 48

Wanted to do Mow 1ng yar
ds
Hav e own
mower
Larqe or sma l l yards In
Middleport , Pomeroy or
Rutland area 992 6057
E xper1encc
drummer,
wants
pos1t1on
w tth
es tab l iShed band
Phone

J04 675 4045

J476

13

OLD FURNITURE , bed~ ,
rron, brass. or wood K1l
chen cubbards of all ty pes
T abies. ro und or square
Wood rce boxes Old de::.ks
and book cases Wr ll buy
co mplete house hold Gold,
silver. old m oney, pocke t
wa tches, cha 1ns, nn gs, and
et c lndr an Ar tif ac t s of al l
types A lso buytng baseball

su ran ce Co ha s offered
serv1ces for f1re 1nsurance
coverage 1n Ga ll1a Coun ty
for almo st a
century
Fnrrn, t1omc and personal
proper ty c overages are
availab le to meet rn
d 1v1 dua l needs
Con ta ct
Ray Wede meyer , age nt

In su ranc e

SA NOY AND BEAVER In

Phone J88 8249

Dsby Marttn 992
15

_ _ _!_______ -

-

-

-

~-

-

Wanted work or nd1ng
pony Must be gen tl e for
sma ll ch rldren Also l oc ust

r-===...=r----:JI

sa"Vie£

T1r ecl of wa tc h1nq reruns?
Turn oil thf' TV and earn
QOOCI $$$ MN' t niCe peop\e
sell, nq A v on C~1 11 446 3358

wanted wa n t to buy any
base ball cards 992 3574

LAFF-A-DAY

Empi~'lm~f

4 yr old frght brown fema le
part datsun and part
Chl hUh Ua
gOOd
Wlfh

-

~~::====~4·:11~·1~m~o~~~~==::::~~::::~

BRASS. old

11

cards
6J70

14 Years Experience

BED S I RON

furntfur e. qold , silver
dollars wood 1ce bOxes,
stone 1ars. anl1ques, etc ,
Com pl e te
llouseholds
Wrll c MD Miller Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Oil Or 992 7760

One yr Alaskan Malamut e
male 992 6706

J069

Onlr Sill ea
Only $160 eo
Only S242 ea.
Onlr Sll5 " ·

Ear ly Ant,qtJe country fur
n1ture. cupboa rd s, all k1nds
c h es t s,
d e sks ,
ol
sto newnrc . etc Call 367

Old TV s for part5 Call 992
J408

Space Heters

3 30,000 BTU
~10,000 STU .
1100,000 STU
1150,000 STU

Ant1Qu e oak
turn1tur e,
round table s. bookcases
df' sks, dressers c tlests , 1Ce
boxes e tc Cal l 446 3759

Grveaway

PH . 614-992-7848

All types of roof work,
new or r epa 1r gutter and
downspout s,
gutt e r
cl ea mng and parntmg.
All work guaranteed .

8 20 lf c

1 • Dozers
19, - - - - - - 1 • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
20.
I • Lo-Boy
I • Trencher
21.
I" • Water
22
1 • Sewer
23.
eGasLines
1 , eSepticSystems
24.
1
4
Large or Small Jobs
25.
I
PH. 992-2478
26. _ _ _ _ __
27. - - - - - 28. - - - - - 29.
30.
31
32.
33.
34.
35.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

Wnn tcrl t11nbcr We CUI
p,1y111q CI OOCI priCC'S Call
416 Ol06

0138
4

8

•
•
•
•

Wf' pay c ash tor la t e model
c' ''cln u~ C' d c ar s
Fre nchT own CM Co
Bil l Gene Johnson.
446 0069

Me1qs Co F1sh and Gn me
will tlave a work seSSIOn
Sat Apr 10 starl111q at 9
am
A l l members are
asked to att end New kd
chen 1S bemg built

Corner of Old Rout e 160 dncf
Rout e554 Thur s , Fn , Sa t
10 5 Rarn cancels

Co mm g Nex t

Buy 1nq
Go ld ,
S1lver.
Plat1num old co 1nS, scrap
r1nq ~ &amp; silv erwar e Dally
quote s available
Also
cotm &amp; c orn suppl1es for
s ale
Spr1ng
Valley
Tr t'l dl nQ , Spr1ng
Vrl iiPy
P la~a . 446 80 25 or 4468026

614 886 5194

LO_NE WOLF BANO

I

Address---------1

1 Chesh 1re, Oh
Sf Rt 7

Open Mon Sat
12 00 p m to 2 30 a m
Sun12am12pm
Carrvou t Bee r
Avat labl e
Band s Every Fn &amp;
Sa t N1ght
THI S FRI &amp; SAT

S1zes from 4 to 6 and a ll
wood bu1ldmgs 24x36
tn sul a ted Dog Houses

Pomeroy, Oh.

PH. 992-99 13

OPE N7DAYS
A WEEK

Srzes star t from JOx24"

___ -- ___ -- _ ~.:._ _____ --- -~ ._______;:2.;:2.:.6.:.tl.:.c.J l ' -- - - - - 6 -IS_I_Ic-'
1

II

Turkey Hunt ers We have
mouth cal l s. slate box
calls, ca mo gear &amp; ctecoy s
Spr1ng Vi!lley
m stock
Tradtng Co. Spr1nq Valley
Plaza. 446 8025

4 9 1 mo

CANDLELIGHT INN

CAS H PAID l or c lean late
mod f.' l used c ars Sm1th
Bu 1ck Pon11a c. Gal ltpOII S,
Otl10 Ca ll 446 2282

F1sh1ng L1cense on sale
Come and see our new sh1p
menl of 1982 F1 s1 nq Rods,
Reel5 , &amp; Lure s Spr1ng
Viii ley Trad1ng Co, Spr1ng
Valley Plaza , 446 8025

LOST small 2 yr
old
Beaole Reword Cnll 99?
1833. c al l collec t

LOTS - One acre to 27 acres As many acres as you
l•ke Water and elec tr1 c available Pnce negot1able

111turc and An trques of aJI
k1nds, c all Kenne th Swa1n,
446 3159 nnd 256 1967 •n the
even1nqs

SWEEPER
and sew1ng
mach1ne repa1r, parts, and
sup pl1 es
P1ck up and
del1very, Dav1s Vacuum
Cleaner, one halt mile up
Ca ll
Georges Creek Rd
446 0294

Domesl1c P1qeons to cpv c
away belomJ1no to th e 1.1te
Harold Sa uer Ca I 742 2]01

Ask.ng $9,000

992-6191
ASSOCIATES

TEAFOR

hard

Guysville, Ohto
Author tied John Deer,
New Holland . Bush Hog
Farm Equtpment
Dea le r

103 Washington St.
Ravenswood, W Va .

CONSTRUCTION

in

u s Rt so East

Something Special

TRAILER WITH EX PANDO - A hugel!vr ng room ,
2 3 bedrooms , 1111 baths. all underp1nn 1ng, 2 por
ches. w rnd ow A/ C, and eq u 1pped krlchen N o land

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

12, 2tc

bath

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

$18,000

or 4 bedrooms Wtll sell

~lilt'

BOGGS

Announcements

Gun Repa1r &amp; Hot Blu1ng
We st ock modern rdl f's
shotguns &amp; hand guns All
muzzle load lnq guns &amp; rlC
cesso r 1es Best pr1ces 1n
th e area R1vers1de Gun
Shop Rt 7 Athal1a, 011

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

PR I CE RE DU CED - La r ge lot, ranch home With 2
ba ths, full basement, garage, A/ C. equ,pped kt t
chen and d1nrng room •n Tuppers Plams Now

Rev8 1773

Real Estate -

L 1censed &amp; Bond ed
Phone 949 2193
or 949 24 17
3 3 II n

-- - - - - - - - -+ ----------+----------1

LAND CO NTRA CT - Wtth $3,000 down, owner w ill
trn ance th1s 6 room, one story home tflat ha s 3
bedrooms. new r oof, st oke r furn ace, and a St ltrng
porch $26,700

Non

Operatrng Tr ansfe r s

Dozer &amp; ba ckhoe ser
vrce, wa t er, sewe r ,
ponds ,
found a fron s,
reclamat1on

'-----------"'

3· 19· 1 !!)0.

N EW LISTING - Has R1ver V 1ew - A two story
frame hom e wtth 7 rooms, eq u1pped k tlchen, full
basement, and an1ce front porch SJ2,000

DAVID L WEIR
DIRECTOR

(41 5.

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
INO

I Locat ed across from
I the Shop p1ng Plaza at
I wash .n gton Mot el
I
J291mo

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old tur
3

CONSTRUCTION

Chp ThiS Ad lor a free
Game wtlh I patd Game
[I puts may IS.

PH . 304-273·3148

$26,900

Sta te Route 124, by
r es urfa c rng W1fh asphalt
conc rete
Pavement
W1d t h
Va r tes
P rot ec t and Work Le ngth
- 36,590 f eet or 6 93 miles
" The da te set for co m
plet1on of th1s work sha ll be
as set forth •n the brdd rng
pr oposa l "
Er~ch
brdder shall be
req utr ed to ftle w tth h1 S b1d
a
ce rtdt ed
check o r
c ashrer 's check for an
amount equal to f1ve per
cent of h1 s btd , but rn no
eve nt more than f1fty
thousand dollar s. or a bond
for ten perc ent of h1 s b1d,
payab le t o th e 01rec tor
81dders mu st app l y, on
th e proper
forms.
for
qua lrfr ca tion at leas t ten
days prror to th e dat e se t
f or open 1n ~ b rd s 1n ac
cordan ce w lfh Chapt er 5525
Oh tO Revrsed Cod e
P l ans a nd spec ,f, ca t1ons
are on file 1n th e Depart
men t of Tran sportatton and
tt'\e off •ce of t he Dr strt c t
Deput y D •rector
T he D•rector r ese rves
the rrght to retec1 any and
all b rds

I·
I
I
I
1
I

EASTER CANDY
" Learn How Free'"
One S1mple Class

MEG-S R 124 CJO J7 Jl 09)

576--Apple Grove
773-Mason
882--New Haven

91s-Chester
34)--Portland

Up to 15 Words .Sue day

Public Notice

2,950 83

And Other Sources
Investments
Over I Under) Disburse·
Total Support Servtces
Debt Service
Certiftcate of
ments and Other
Pomeroy , Dhto 45769
- Busmess 1,072.117.91
Fund
765 ,000 00
Depos1t
Uses
764,336.36
Total Supporting
Rece •pts From Local Sour· Fund Cash Balance,
'1) 15. 22. 29. 141 5, 12. 19
Other
ServiCes
1.542.822 88 ces
Investm ents.
4,177 73
21S.75
Jan. 1, 19S1
Taxes
318,095.75 Fund
Total
898,445 45 Extracurr rcular Activit tes
Public Notice
Cash Balance,
Sport
Earnings On Invest·
Fund Cash Balances
Dec. 31, 1981
764,555 11
Onented
33,226.78
ments
313.75
By Fund
ADVERTISEMENT
Totals
Total Ex tracurric ular
Total Receipts
Ctasstfication
FOR BIDS
Receipts From Local Sour·
Activities
J3,226.7S
From Local
Governmental
Fund
Village of Po111eroy, Ohio
Debt Services
308,614.68
Sources
J1S,409.50 ces
Village Hall, Pomeroy, Types ·
1.883,S89.78
Taxes
Rece ipts From State Sour· Tuition
General Fund
73 ,663 02 Non-Programmed
Ohio -45769
33,792.49
Char~es
8,8J4.40
ces
Specia
l
Revenue
Separate sealed BIDS for
Earnmgs On Invest·
Total
Dtsburse·
Unrestricted
Grants·
Funds
I
10,722
.471
the construction of
ments
12,627.J1
ments
4,471,81S.46
ln·Aid
31 ,778.04 Rentals
Debt Service
alterations to Pomeroy
715.00
Total Receipts
Fund
2S,954.85 Excess of Rec etpts
VIllage Hall (Separate btds
Services Provided
Over (Under) Disburse·
From State
will be received tor the capttat Protect
Other Entities
4,548.28
ments
1161 ,588.341
Sources
31 ,778.04
Funds
765,555 11
General contract work. the
Receipts
TransfersTotal Receipts J50.1 87 ..54 Other
Proprietary Fund Types
Mechanical contract work,
from
Local
In
228.626 66 ' Supporting Services
and the Electrical c;ontract Enterprise
Sources
323,047.99
Fisca l Services
3,126.96 Total Receiot!oi
Funds
2S.S94.61 Transfersworkl will be recetved by
I Puptlsl

446-Gallipolis
367-Cheshlre
388-Vinton
24s-R io Grande
256--Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia Dist.

81 Home Improvements
82 Plumb• ng &amp; Hea t.ng
83 Excava trng
84 E lecr rca l &amp; Ref n gera tron
85 Gener a l Haul1 ng
86 M H Reparr

Pu bli c Not. ce

COMB INED STATEMENT
OF CASH
RECEIPTS,
DISBURSEMENTS,
AND CHANGES IN
FUND BALANCES -

DOC UM E NTS

ma y be ob ta1ned at the Of
ftce of th e Arch1tect upon
payment of S40 00 f or eac h '

992-Middleporl

67s-Pt. Pleasant

Ravenswood, W Va
Now Open Weekends
1 to4 P .M .
W ea th~r Perm1tf10g

I

SAVE MONEY
MAKE YOUR OWN

Sealed proposals w il l be
rece •ved at the offr ce of the
D1rector of t he Oh ro Depar
tme n t of Transporta t ion,
Columbus. Ohro, until 10 00
AM, Ohro Standard Trme ,
Tuesday, April 20. 1982, for
Improvements rn
Me1gs County, Oh10, on
MEG 5 R 124 129 85 JO 181
- State Route 124, m the
Vtllaoe nf Rac rne
and

(Average 4 words per lrne)

F 1ducrary Fund Types
Tr ust and Agency
Fund5
13, 100 33

Total

Meigs County
Area Code614

9

r=========:::;t==T.~~~IT,~==rt==========i"i

CO NT RACT

Mason co., wv
Area Codel04

Galha County
Area Code 614

uvestoeM

61 Farm EQu1pmen t
62 Wan ted to buy
63 L rvestock.
64 Hay &amp; Gr a rn
65 Seed &amp; Fer tilr zer

Houses for Rent
Mobil e Homes for Rent
Farms for Rent
Apartment l or Rent
Furn rshed Rooms
Space for rent
Wanted to Rent
E Qurpment for Rent
For Lea se

Public Not1 ce

TRACT

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

&amp;

Honor ab le Clare nce An
drews at the offi ce of th e
Mayor until 11 AM. ( ap
plr ca bl e t1me at Pom er oy,
Ohro) Tuesday, Apr il 27,
1982, and then at sa 1d offt ce
publicly opened ~ nd read
aloud

Pub lic Nohce

Box 118
Rutland . Oh10 45775
P l a rntd f ,
Case N o 18,110
- vs-

41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49

74 Motorcycles
75 Boa ts &amp; Motor s
76 Au t o Parts &amp; Accessor1es
77 A uto Repa rr
78 Camp_tng Equ rpm ent

MINIATURE
GOLF COURSE

Play Million
Dollar Skating
Game
Stop In For Card
Wed ., Fri.!!&lt; Sat.
7: 30 to 10 : 00
Sun. 2: 00to4 : 30
Available for
Private ~artie:;.
I' H. 985-3979 or
985-9996

608 E. MAIN

Publtc Not1ce

following telephone exchanges.

7J va ns&amp;4 WD

I

I

Chester, Oh.

UNIT PR I CE

71 Autos for Sa l e
12 Trucks for Sale

PARTS and SERV ICE

.,...----------,
I
CHERRY TREE

SKATE-A-WAY

Copy No 82-361

ser·.-lces

Rentals

11 Help wanted
12 Srtua t1 on Wanted
13 Insu r ance
14 Busrness Tr a rn rng
15 Schoo ls ln st ruc t 1on
16 Rad ro. TV &amp; CB Repr~rr
17 M rsce ll aneou s
18 Wanted To do

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
OF
MEIGS CO UNTY , OHIO
CHARL ES E
PAT
TER SO N

51 Household Goods
52 CB. TV &amp; Radro EQurpmen t
53 An frQu es 54 Mrsc Merchandtse
55 Bu lldrn g Supplt es
56 Pe ts for Sa l e
57 Musc ra llns t ruments
58 Fru1 t s &amp; Vege tables
59 For Sa le or Tr ade

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrigerator s
•Dryers
• Freezers

CARPET AT LAST YEAR'S PRICES

(4,5, 12,2tc

Classified pages cover the

1985·35611
All Makes

STARTING AT $4.99 Cash &amp;Carry

Copy No 82-328
UNIT PR ICE
CONTRACT

1ranspartallon

Merchandise

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

IN 9FT. and 12FT. WIDTHS

Co lumbu s, Ohto
March 26, 1982
Co ntract Sa l es Legal

F ihantlal

$899

GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTME NT OF
TRANSPORTA TION

AdRBUREements

SAVE $3.00 WI TH
THIS AD

GOOD SELECTION OF

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTAT ION

DAVIOL WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev8177J

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

INST~LLED

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Business Services

GIANT CARPET SALE

II 1111

weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart at
,.
Racme.

By Mn. Herbert Roush
Mr.
and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
Newlun Beckett, Edward D. Beckett
a Sunday with Mrs. Ethel
visited
to Harold Newlun, Parcels, Ohve.
Moore
of New Haven and Mrs.
Adnenne M. Hubbard to Carl L.
of Letart, W. Va .
Retha
Brooks
Hubbard, Cert. of trans., Sutton.
Paul and Evelyn Ables of ColwnFloyd 0. Gnff1th, Glenna M. Gnfbus visited a Sunday with his parenflth to Thomas Allen Cnsp, Mary
ts,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables.
Faye Crisp, 1.98 acres, Salem.
Mrs. Janice Fife and son Jimmy of
Charles Barr, Evelyn Barr to
Gallipolis, Mark and Debbie Lawson
Donald Putnam, Marlene Pullnan
and
children of Middleport, Kate
I 87 acres, Ohve.
'
and Onon Roush of Dorcas VISited
Roy Choddock, Donna Choddock,
Till Webb a recent Sunday.
Bob
Barkhe 1m e r ,
Karen
Mrs. Phyllis Young of Middleport
Barkhe1mer to The R1chv1lle Sporvisited her parents, Mr and Mrs
tsmen's Club, Inc., I acre, Orange.
Gerald Hayman a recent Sunday.
Denzil L Proctor, Bonme Proctor
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe spent a Fnday
to Thomas E. Roush, Rhonda L.
night and Saturday w1th her
Roush, Lot 341, Middleport VIllage.
daughter, Mr and Mrs. Bob Casper
Robert G. Pickett, Elmse M
of Columbus and attended the
Pickett to Wilham Markham
Southern Tornadoes' basketball
Sharon R Markham, Parcels, Bed:
games Friday and Sa turday
ford .
evemngs at the St. John's Arena m
Earl R Hunt, Glenda Hunt to
Columbus.
Elmer C. Newell, Darlene D.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart and son,
Newell, Parcel, Chester
Jonathon of Columbus spent a

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

a:re

Apple Grove News Notes

Meigs property transfers _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Terry R. Warner to Gary L. Warncr, 6 acres, Sc1p10.
Richard A Warner, Sharon K
Warner to George H Warner, Grace

12, 1982

Monday, April

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

post 992 284 1
-----~---

JUNKED cars. baseball
cards ,
scrap
metal s,
a lumrnu m ca n s.
fran
smtssrons,
m otors.
ba t
terr es, rad rato r s, stamps
and co rn s Offenng tra sh
pt ck up serv1 ce
H arper

Halstead Salvage Co JOO

Sc hool s ln structron

Karate t he ull1mate tn se lf
defence all pr.vate lessons,
Men, wome n. &amp; ch1 \dren
lnstruct1on t hru bla ck belt
A l so availab l e
Karate
unrtorm s puc h rng a nd
kt ckt ng bags, and protec
tt ve equ rpm ent
Je rry
Lowery
&amp;
Assoc 1ates
Karate
St udto ,
143
Burlrngton Rd, Jackson ,

Oh Ca ll 286 J074
G UIT AR
lessons,
1n
d1V1dua l c l asses, pe r sona l
atten tr on, modest pn ces

Ca ll J04 675 J734

Eleventh St , Pt Pl easant ,

04 · 6~ 5868
Also Il ea
•1111!!""'~ J Jmar
t o pe n
Mond ay
,.,__&lt;"'--::;;.;i:5~~..;.=

1hrou

Fr .day , 1 5 p m

F 1LL dtr1 or top sod , phone

J04 67S J945

17

--

_M•~ce_l_~~e~u_!__ _

Tt ee
Trrmmrng
and
removal Free est1mates.

992 6040 or 9~9 2129

·.

�Pagi
17

10-The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

MiscellaneouS

Firewood
for
Delivered. 985 3887

44
Apartment
____ for Rent _ _ _

sale .

Apartment for rent . Ca ll

'f!M6~

For sa te:weaned calves ·
ready for pastur e 69 Chevy
pick -up. Uses oi l 120f t. Qf
Qalvanized pipe . 843 ·2183,
after 7.
Will cut stumps 8 in

1!£-''

446·039().
2 &amp; 3 bedroom apartments
for lease or se ll 2 bedroom
hou se, 3 bedroom house A C
and poo l. HUD Program.

~

~;t;.EP

lOIItNA
/lbii.S:6 ...

beiow

Ca ll JOH75·5104
7664.

ground. any SI ZC, one or
several. Free es t1 mate s
992 7184 or 992 -7537
18

FURNISHED

The Si lk

H ou~e

flow ers) .

Wil l pick up old washers
and d r;yers . Call 446 -8181 or

256 1396.
Painting inter1or and ex

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

GOOD
USED
AP PLIANCES
washers.
refrigerators,

Skaggs

Call 388·8801.

Ap pliances, Upper River Rd.,
besi de Stone Crest Motel .
446-7398.

32
Babysitting in my home.
References . Call 245 9128 .

Bu s ines s

~

_ __ O_yportunity

Cigare tt e

CLEAN

Vend1ng

Bus1ness . Call 304 773 5651.

we Need Dealers, for new
stand up cookbook
Free
details. We1st PubliShing
company, {5 Main St.)

Oepl

SP0

Box

164.

Eng lewood, Ohio 45322

22 _ _M_one_'l!O _L~~n
REFINANCE or purchase
your home . JO year fixed
ra te. WVa . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage. 77 E State Sf.,

Athens. Oh . 592 3051.
23

Professiona l
Services

Piano
Tun1ng
&amp;
Repair Ca ll Bill Ward for
appoin t ment,
Ward's
Keyboard. 446 4372 .
C &amp; L Bookkeeping . In
come tax returns tor in
dividua ls &amp; businesses
Carol N ea l 446 3861
Washer and Dryer Repair
A ll work
gua r anteed
Reasonab le rates Ca ll 156

1396 .
Windshie ld broken? Call
Southern G la ss . Insurance
c l aims we l come
Free
mobile se rvi ce available

Ca ll446 1011

- - - - - - - --- -

Ileal Estate

31

Homes for Sa l e

1972 Concord Mobile Home,

12x65. Ca ll 446 7015 a ll er
5:30p.m
Beautiful bri ck &amp; frame, 3
bedroom home w/scenic
v i ew,
wood burning
fireplace , formal d 1n 1ng,
ce ntr a l air w/heat pur1p.
L anscaped,
1 ac r e lot
w/fenced in back yard,
$45,900.
11% financing,
sma ll down payment . Call

446 3766
Hou se f or sa le in town .
Priced on inspe c tion, 3 or 4

bdr, FR, 2 ba th s. Ca ll 446
1223
6 r . house, bath, full
basement in c ity li mi ts,
$22,000. Farm 6 r . house,
bath, utility room, root
ce ll ar, 25 l /2 a., tr actor,
farm eq uipm ent,
large
barn, 900 lb . tobacco base,

$35,000. Ca ll 614 446 4767 or
256 1773 .
New 3 bdr on Rt . 7, I mi
north of br1dge $33,500
Ow ner wi ll help f inance.

Ca ll 379 26 17
5 room house about I acre

of land, $10,500. Ca ll 367 ·
06 19 .
H ouse for Sa le: Moving oul
of town, must se ll . 8.7 Pet
assumabl e loan, I year old
house, 3 bedrm ., 2 baths, 2
car garage. $5.000 down,
assume loan . Mil lwood, w

va .. 304 2735238 Weekdays
Only .
NEW IN COME LIMITS. If
you ea rn betw ee n $9000 to
$15,000 a yea r , you may be
abl e to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile hom e)
for as little as $135 a month .
No down pa yme nt . Ca ll992

7034.
Land contr act. 12percen t ·7
room hou se, ni ce location

Ca ll9n7896 .
3 bd .room m od ular home,
plu s patio and flower room,
utility building , situ at ed on
1 and 'h oc r e of land . Plen·

ty of garden space

TRISTATE

MOBILE

HOMES . Ga ll ipOl is. Price
reduced.
used mobile
homes. CALL 446 7572 .

llfb111Gi!F
21

Mobile Home s
for Sa te

P ri ce

negotiabl e by owners. 247 ·

2678.
HOUSE . Meadowbrook Ad·
dition, 3 bedroom , f amily
room with frieplace. ce n·
tral air, basement, 304-675-

1542.
SIX rooms. 2 story bri ck,
1211 Main St., custom built

by Everett Lutton, 304-6752381
FOUR rooms &amp; bath, in
Mason, 4th . St. close to
school. 304-773-5261.
Two story home, 3 bedroom
full basement, English

Road, SlO,OOO. down and
assume loan of $33,000 at
asveu per cent, payment
$215. per month. phone 304675-3585.

USED

MOBILE

HOM ES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT
35 . PHONE 446·3868
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home . Se t up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water , c lose to town. finan ·
cing available . Phone 446·

35
Lot~~ ~~~.!9~ - 20 Acres, blacktop road,
timber . price reduced.
Phone304 675·7541.

1975 Houseboat, Captain 's

100 acres in cluding fiv e
ac re lake. in Wes t Co lum
bia, excf'llent hun t ing
grou nd . Phone 30 4 773·5332

Wallace, Charleston . Ca ll
30044·3896 or 304·342-3121.

or 773 5825 a ll er 5 PM.

·2 bdr . unfur . garage apart·

TWO acre lot s· 150 It r oad
frontage,
ci ly
water,
behind 84 Lumber, call 304·

675 6873.675 3618 .

992 5434. 992 59 14 or 304-882·
2566 .

Rentals

Apartments . 675·5548 .

l4x70 1978 Shannon, all
elect., excellen t cond .. 3
bdr, 12x24 room buill on,
coal &amp; wood burner, partly
furni shed, air cond ., un
derpinned. good well, 2 tg .
porches, out ·bu1lding, acre
land, moved must sell
JNrvs Run Rd . Ca ll 6"'5

2356

41

Houses for Rent

House, 3 bdr . in Rodney
Village t t . $200 mo. Call
446 4416 after 7PM
Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land Contrac t in town, or
coun try
Ca ll
Str out

45

Furnished Rooms

SLEE PING

light housekeep in g
Park Central Hotel.

apt.,

a-way bed, lik e new. Ca ll
446·3224.

79 Starcraft 16' a lum inum
v·hau l, open bow win ·
dshie ld. ca nopy , 80 Mer·
cury outboard, trailer craft
trailer . Exc. co nd . 992·2849.

54 __M
_ is_c._Merchandice

46 _____ Sp~c~~r_R!.n_! _ _

1977 KAJ'N 14 x70. al l C'lec

tr1c. 2 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, utility room, wood
burner, porches . Call 256

9330
11 ;.., 60 trailer , excellent
cond ilt on. Cull 446 1552
Furnished. atr cond1I10ned,
underpinning. set up on lot
in M1dd lepor t
1970 Hill crest l ix60 with tio
out 2 bd ., stove and refrig .,

$6,000. 247 3915 .

ga l. tank. pri ce $340. Other

76

sizes in stock, haul in your

bedroom, redecorated,
walk to stores. Idea l for
retiree. $200 per mo. Write
to Box 402 in ca r e of the
Ga ll1po l is Daily Tribune,
825 3rd Ave., Ga llipoli s, Oh
'1

45631
6
room,
unfurnished,
redecorated
and clean.
close to stores. Adults only,
Middlepor t . $185 .00 per mo.

HOME .

MOB ILE HOM ES MOVED
L1censed &amp; 1nsured
304 576 2711 .

Cal l

For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trail ers. furnished, with
air . Ca ll 304 773 5651

1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12 '
WIDE.
2 BEDROOM
mobi l e home se tting on 101.
r eady to move into. $8995 .
10% down, BANK FINAN

CIN G AVA ILABLE,
576 2711.

304·

14' WIDE, 3 bedroom
mobil e home, $8995. A l l
St ate Modular Homes, 304

576·2711

Large house 1n Ga ll ipoli s.
Asking $250 Call 446·7265
or 446 ·0644
3 BR house, 1, 2 acre lot,
pool 2 mi . from H ol zer,

$300 monlh . 446 9103.
4 bedroom, central air and
heat, city wa ter , f ir ep lace,
unfurnished exce pt
kit ·
c hen . $300 month plus
utilities . Reference and
deposit
r equ ired .
In
Racine . 949 2293.
Racine -nice 2 bd .room
ho us e comp l etely fur ·
nished. Air co nd.. all
u til i t ies paid ·$375 plu s
deposit . G len Bi sse ll 949·
280 1 or 949 2860 . No Sunday
cal ls.
N 1ce 5 room home in
Pomeroy. Ad ult s, no pets.
Refrigerator and stove
provided. $185. pf'r m on th ,
plus sec urity deposit and
utili t ies. Phone992·5292

1972 Cameron mobi le home
12 X 50, 1 bedroom. par
ti al ly
furni sh ed,
un
dcrp1ning included $4,900
304 576 2467

Mobile Hom es
for Rent

2 bdr ful l y fu rnis hed, afr
co nd ,, adults only . Ca ll 446·

411 0

1974 14 X 70 Concord
trailer, Phone 304·675·6328.

of Chath am &amp;
Ave., Ga llipoli s.

Ca II 446 07 56 or 446·4225.

MUST sell, 1974 Concord
mobile home. 14x70, 3
bedroom, good co ndition,
price include s 8'xl6' fron t
por ch and Franklin wood
burning
fir ep l ace .

lel ephone 304 675 6328
1973 GRA NDVILLE , 14x70,
3 bedroom mobile home,
ha s large kit chen wi thl aun ·
dry room Asking $6,800 .
must be moved, phone 304

Eureka, 1 bedroom. river ·
front lot , ad ults, ref . &amp; dep.

$100 per mo. Call643 ·2644 .
3 Bedroom tr ail er , co m
p letly furn . 446·9669

3852 .

Merchandise

Park. 9923324.

88n820.
Farms for Sa le

Fo r sa l e by Owner , 21 acre
farm w ith 1288 lb. tobacco
base, barn, new fence,
plenty of sprin g wa t er . 2
st ory fr a m e hou se, 6
rooms, bath, basement.
One car ga rage. Loca ted on
Davis Road in Hannan
Trace Sc hool District. For
furnther information ca ll

61056-1983 aft e r 3:00PM .

2 bd.room Mobile home for
r e nt.
Roush
L a n e,
Ches hire, Ohio . 304·773·

5882.
TWO
bedroom,
un ·
furnished. One bedroom ef ·
fi c iency. 304·675·2727 .
TWO bedroom, a ll elec tri c,

at

As hton·Upland

Road

$150. month. plus deposit
a nd utilities. Phone 304·675·

4088 .

124. 742·2860 a ft er 4 p.m .
By owner, Harrisonville,
M eigs Co. 57 acre Farm, 8·
room house, 4 bd.rooms,
30x60 ft . garage, barn, and
free gas. $65,000. cash or
will carry part on land con·
tract at resonab le interest.

992-6537.
Busi ness Buildings

Phone 304-675-4045.
14x8 OFFICE building, can
be seen ·at D &amp; Wr Se&lt;:ond &amp;
VIand or caii304-675-.U24.

For

Arno ld Skaggs 101 Court
Woodshop . 446·0978.

57

1975 case 450, dozer ·
tractor, 800 hrs., very good

cond .. $15,900 . Call446·4537 .
Locu st

Household Goods

SWA IN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAW N SHOP 62 Olive St .,
Ga llipolis. N ew sof a beds

$250, used sofa beds $100,
recliners $80, bunk beds
$100, bunkie mattresses
$40, mapl e rockers $49,
maple dinett se t s from $125
to $175, bedroom suites
$150, 3 pc. li v in g room
sui tes Sl 99, 2 pc . li ving
room suit es $140, l ove sea ts
$70, ow l l amps $25, rin ger
was hers
$75,
dryers,
sever a I
ref r i ger ators,
utility
cab in e t s,
mechan1c's too l s,
beds,
si l ver sto ne, TV,s, wood ·
burner s, stero's a nd lots
mor e. Open lO am to 5p m ,

446 3159.
GE Was her, l ate model.
like new, $150 Hoover por ·
tab le was her, 1 yr . old,
$125. Guara nt eed. 256· 1207 .

Sof a, cha ir, rocker, at·
tom an, 3 tabl es, $500. Sofa,
cha ir and lovesea t, $275.
Sofas and c ha ir s pri ced

from $285. lo $795. Tabl es,
$38 a nd up to $109. Hid e a·
Rec liners, $175 . lo $295 .,
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
pc. dinettes from $79., to

$2 19 up lo $495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. a nd $375.,
maple o r pine fini sh.
Bed room suites
Ba ssett
Cherry , $795.
Bunk bed
compl ete with m attresses,

$250. and up to $350. Cap·
ta in 's beds, $275. complete.
Baby beds, $99. M a ttresses
or box sp ring s, full or twin,

- -----

Drum Set, black and
c hrome. All c lea r heads,
new
hi -hat
c ymb a l s.

1977 St arcraft fold out cam ·
per, sleeps 6, ex. cond ..

p.s .. am·fm casse tte. Pos.
trac tion , shortbed . 44 ,000

miles. $3,700. 99HJ17 .

For Sale: Junior size Prom
dresses. 2-size 5, 2·size 7.
Also, a pair of womens

74 Monterey AC, AM· FM,

western boots, size 5SVEU

446-9203.

For Sale or Trade

medium· just like new. Call

8Ft . Pool Tabl e SlOO , J pc.
LR se t S200 . 6 ft . bar, 2
Excelsior Oil Co ., 636 E.
Main St ., Pomeroy, Ohio.

992 2205.

F IAT·AII is model 545, rub ·
ber tire end loader , 2 yar-d
bucket, completely over
haul ed with new engine, ex·
ce ll ent condition, Bl a ine

King, Ripley wv 304-Jn
6390.
JR . Hi s1ze band &amp; other

992-5300 after 5 p.m . Monday thru Fri .. anytime on
week ·end.
For sale:G.E . washer and

dryer, S150., Clothes dryers
S50. and up . Wa s her S25.
and up . 74nJ52.

Farm suapnes

Ps..

Sup re m e

pb ..

$3600. 992-6362 .
1975

Ford

6_1 ___ t:_a_!:_m Equipmen!_. _
New &amp; Used Troy built
till er s. Bulk garden seed.
Swisher Implement, Inc.,

L TO

400

Automatic,
a ll power.
Needs body work, but runs

Ha ve n West Virginia . Over
20 less expe nsive car s in

slock .

Gallipolis. Ca ll446-0475.

GOVERNMENT
PLUS
CARS
TRUCKS m a ny

J.set of John Deere 4 bot·

through loca l sales, und er

tom 16' semi mount plows,
1· Hillsboro tri · axle goose·

neck 28' lrailer. Call 614256-6534.
Plow &amp;

Rl DING law nmower , 8 HP ,

c hase of any 8 H P, 2 whee l

SUR ·
A ND
so ld

SJOO.OO. Call J.714-56H241
for your directory on how

to purc hase. Open 24 hours.
1974

Oldsmobile

Omega .

Phone 304·675·3868.

Cultivator, FREE. for a

32 in ch cut, Briggs· Str atton
motor . 2750 Red vertical rough cut bri ck. Call 304-

675-9746 or 675·2194.
TWO
.5
HP
ROTOTILLERS, I real
good, 1 bad motor , both
$150.00 JOH75·2119.

limited

time,

with

pur -

Gravely T r actor &amp; Mower.

Outdoor Equipment Sales,
Jet. 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis, PH .
«6-3670, Weekdays 9 to 5,
Sat. 9 to 1.

SURPLUS JEEP S S65.
CARS $89, TRUCK SlOO.

Dozer, John Deere 450. Out·
side mount blade. Needs
some repair $7,500. Shade

1978 FORD

gas mileage, J04-88n145.
1973

PONT lAC

hom es.

mobile

hou ses,

Pt .

French
Ci ty
Pa intin g
residential &amp; commercial.
interior, ex terior, paper
han g in g,
&amp;
textured
cei ling s. Call 367 · 7784 or

RON'S Televi s ion Serv ice.
Specializing in Zenith a nd
Motorola, Qu aza r , . a nd

1980 TOYOTA Celica, ex·

house ca lls. Phone 576-2398
or 446-2454.

Boarding

and

A K C Gordon setters.
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call388-9790.
·-- T-- - ·- - - - - POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
Puppies.

$20.a nd $25 .. 10 gun · Gun

wks. old. $65.985-3567.

registered

AKC

tri ·colored.

BOX blade Kelley ba ckhoe,
hayrake, NH baler, NH
haybine, mower, disc,
seeder
and
fertilizer
spreader, 304-895·3503 or

304·69].2527.

condition,

tractor,

real good condition, sulky.

brushhog, grader blade,
ele&lt;:tric start. phone 304458-1854.
.
~J _ _

_ L_iv~~o_c~ _ _ _

2 Reg . Polled Hereford
bulls. 18 mo. old for sale.
Call446·2109.
Reg . Polled Hereford
breeding bulls. Call614-256·
6534.
Yearling bulls Reg . Polled
Hereford, Call 379-2671 .

8

Full blooded IRISH SETTER pups. 8 weeks old. J04435,
675· 505J · P .O.Box
Gallipolis Ferrv, WV .

RABBITS , for Easter, 304675·3526.
AKC
Silver
Miniture
Poodle tor stud service,

72 - -Tr-uck"sior sale- - -- ·· - - -·
1978 Ford 4X4 short bed,

Milk cow, extra good, Jersery-Guersey. mixed, SSOO.
Call245-5439.

one

owner. · Arms.trong
radials, aluminum slots.

367 ·0672/-0293.
73
Vans &amp; 4 W. D,
- - --· - - - - - --·- 4·wheel drive 1979 Jeep CJ 7. Hard top 304 V-8. 20
m .p.g. 35.000 miles, 9925138 after 4 p.m .
1979 JEEP CJ5, 28000
miles, sharp. 614-446-7447 .

7i_ -- ~~Cl_r~l.!s_

_
1979 Starcraft 15 ft. tri haul. 80 HP Mercury, ex.

cond ., ski equipment in-

cluded, $4,000.
0394.

Call 367-

~ael

XR 80 Honda, 1980

model, excellent condition.

For sale:Appaloosa Mare,

Call245-5634.

conformation and is gentle.

Would make excellent 4-H
material. Tacks included.

992-5519 alter 5. '

_ _ _ .. _ _ _ _ _ ~ -·

calves,
30 A-675-

Hay:

Motorcycle 1970 Honda 750
with extras, very good condition. Call 367-7540.
1980 Kawasaki 440 L TO.
crash bar, foot pegs, 2,800
miles. Like new. 992·6317.
1975 650 Yamaha chopper,
low· rider,

~ ~:=-11~I~~a1n= = ~

paint

job

in

flames, runs good. Phone
304-882-2066 ater 6 Pm.

large round bales,

985-3887 or contact Albert
Parker near Chester after 6
p.m.

... ... ·····
... . ... .
'

""'

,

1976 KAWASAKI 750, 304675-2183.
1973 HONDA 350 Scrambler, $450 , 304·675-1780.

'""

Autos tor Sale

BILL, THIS 151'fT A
JOKE?. .. A C.Rl/EL

Se rvi ce.

Res idential , automotive.
Emergency service. Call

JOKE?

13UT MY f'ROTHER ORVILLE SENT

A

NOTE- - ~1/

I'P

~COGNIZE

HIS WRITING ANYWHERE.'

AND THE BANK ACCEPTEP HIS
CHECK AS THOUGH IT WAS
GOLP BULLION/

88n079.

-- - · - - Plumbing

BUT, WHY NOW. ..
AFTER ALL THf5f
YEARS?' AFTER
ALLWfVE~EN

71/ROUGH!'

~!a!il!g_

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

__

Gallipolis Diversifi ed Con·

st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special

1980 HONDA CM 400, $1200.
phone 304·675·6252

__ _·-------

BARNEY

SEWING Machine repairs,

AN' I
RETIRIN' FROM
DON'T KNOW
TH'SAWMILL
WHAT I'LL DO
RIGHT SOON, WITH ALL THAT
FREE TIME,
LEM

I HEAR YOU'RE

service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,

Pomeroy . 9n2274.
lic e nsed

and certified, all types of
wiring, low rates, guaran -

YEP··

85 .. _!'~n~r~IH~uiing_
JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367-7471 or
36).0591.

"1097531
• 3

• :o !J

J

.

EAST

• A .J 111 ti 2
• t\ K td

'

• J 8 ti

+A (/1

SOl 'Tif

+41

•

against

)

• J ti 4

· · vulnerable

non-vulnerqble .

Vulnerable · East-West

Mike holds the West hanJ
Th e biddrng is shown in the

Dealer Soulh

box ·

Nort h

East

South

:i•

Alan . " M1ke disc usses his
choices . They are: pass.
three hearts or four clubs
He mentions that on a good
day three no-tr ump m1ghl be

\ ';I S~

Pa s-;

1'&lt;~ :-~

I ' :~~~

Dh l

Opentng lead •(I

the winner . Anywa y, he
elects to pass He opens the
queen of hearts and event ually picks up 100 pomls for
down one ··

bled down three for J net
loss of 400 potnt s or n1nt&gt;

Oswald : "Mike assum es

likely that his partners will

IMPs Thrs turn ~ out tn tw
the1r actual n.·sult ·
Alan "" Had \tl1kl' b1d thrf'e
hearts. E.ast would surel y
reuse h1m to gam f' and M1k ('
would have to s tru g gle
agamst a fi -0 trump break
He might actually ha Rdle l\ .
but it would h1 · a rral pr ob
lem hand ·

of clu bs in order to take thi'

spade finesse . A hea rt lead
to dummy wou ld be. disastrous . He considers 1t most
play in five diamonds dou -

tras~

PEANUTS

HEY. PAATNER.
' I

lfS No£,

MOLlY
VOLLEY!

•
I KNOW I'vE GAINED WE16HT,

4077th.

5 "MASH"

IHl

Bemateln/

TNA~
WHAT HAS

ME
STUMPE I?/

hour
35 Eastern
Christian

37 John,
in Pinsk
38 Fonned
a cartel
39 Network
40 Entitle

don'

4 -IZ

OAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

apostrophes, the l e ngth and formation of the words arc all

hints. Each day the code letters sre dilferent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

X ZJ X MV R Z

WZZ L

YML

CIJ 8olld Oolcl

HEAD WITH MY RACKET!

Short fuM'
1:00 ()) I Menlecl . - ,
1:30 (J) My Uttle Merale

UESAJQ

1:411 (I)

Z E J ,Z X L

·()1~011

to work it:

One letter simply stands for another. ln this sample A ia
used for the three L's, X for lh e lwo O's, etc. Single letters,

BUT IF YOU SAY ANV'llliN6,
I'LL HIT YOU OVER THE

a ,(I) MOVIE: 'Columbo:

Here's how
AXYDLBAJ\XII
L 0 N G F E J, L 0 W

II

"-'1'
12:30 • rn m L&amp;te Night With
Devfd "-""""
.,
()) .Mck Benny Show
,\ J S
(J) MOVIE: 'FJ.h Gor- 1 '

&lt;111 .......

•••

41 Field
DOWN
I Anesthetized
2 Vibrant
3 Settle
things
4 Famous

actress
9 Palm leaf
10 You p1ck
cribes Beethoven· s funeral
13 Fish
and
Leonard
Bernstein
en graver
leads the Concengebouw
14" - du Nord"
Orchestra and the Chorus I
Yesterday's Answer
5 Boil
15 Night before
of Radio Hilversum. (90
6
Accompanied
16
Salt
tree
30 In h1gh
'
16
Belgian
min .)
by
19
Expeditious
dudgeon
conunune
b:30 1!1 Cll liD Making the
7
Japanese
20
Start
31
Cretan
17 "Brandy -"
Grade Harry plays marriage
23
Keep
one's
capita l
prime
counselor to save his own
18 Scarcity
sanity.
minister
trap shut
33 Deta1l
20 Short
10:00 (J) SRO: Barefoot In the
3li Wing
24
Italian
performance
8
M
usc
on
Park Viewers take a funny
cheese
I La !.I
look at newlywed Ide . Ri21 Smith and _ 11 Arthurian
chard Thomas, Bess Armsdamsel
25 Ireland
37 Ulster
trong, Barbara Barrie .
22 Italian
27 Pull
underground
12 Typ'
(I) TBS Evening New•
volca no
Ill ()) •liD Lou Grant Lou 23 Silk fabric
back
group
of library
finds himseH caught in a lo25.A Barrymore r:--r:;-;;-Tl""~1 whirlpool. (60 min.(
10:30 (I) Sing out America
26 Sites
()) June W~no: Dorothy
27 Domzetti
Ser.
opera
IHl News
11:oo • rn CIJ a())® 01 (j) 28 In the center b--+-tNews .
'29 X-rated
(J) Nnhville RFD
32 Kettle
Cll All ln the Family
(l) Newa/Spor1s/Weather
and Barker
(I) Did'. Cavett 'Cocaine:
33
Diamonds
First · of 2 pans. Lester
(sL)
Grins Spoon, Laslie Fuller
and Peter Bouma are tho
34 The Italian

Rlflea'
2:00 (J) Baahal01 Father

1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
.7H154.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Clanuny

mN-n~~&lt;on
o1t
MOVIE:·"ftoy.l Afrlcwl

Mo~R'i:vsu;;holst;;~ iit.

~~

ger buys a goat which
causes
havoc
at
the

(I) Nlghtllne
.
(I) PBS Lete Nillht
•
()I MOVIE: 'Biue-

TRl STATE
. UPHOl,.STERY SHOP
116.3 Sec. A\le ,, Gallipolis.
«6·7833 or «6· 1833.
,

... --. - -· '&gt; ·

4 12·1! 2

tAKQI OI 7&lt; 1

hand .··
Oswald

North Carolina. 160 min.(
8 :30 Ill (I) liD Report to
Murphy Murph{ s dream

~Nillhtllne

hauled away, call Harper
30H75·5868 betwee I PM
and5P. M.

a}===:ui~lif!r:Y =:

~Oil Til

+ K R7

because no one is ever going
to make correc t decisions a ll
the time Here's his firsl

enlers dummy with the k1ng

.12:00 (J) Buma 6 Allen

J IMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 304·675-7397.
your

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

can make six s pades if he

(J) Another Uf1l
(I) MOVIE: 'The Preoldent'a AMiyat'
()) Benny Hlll Show
g (I) Quincy A toon-age
glr1 dies from a botched
abortion by a drunken sur·
II"""- 160 min.)
. C1J c.ptloned ABC News
(JI MOVIE: 'Roumary'a

teed work, 304-695-3826.

If you need

Play a Swiss team

Land-

Taylor/Two

BARREL

BRIDGE

'Paul

guests.

estimates. 446·4440.

ELECTRICIAN

POSTAL

Jumblt Book No. 19, con tai ning 110 puz:Zfes.. Is available for $1.95 poslpaid
from Jumble, c/o this newspaper, 8011. 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648, Include your
nama, address, zip coda and make checks payable to Newep.perbooks

mark Dances.· The Paul
T aytor Dance Company is
featured in performance at
the 1981 American Dance
Fesnvat held in Durham.

()J) Hhchcock
11 :30 8 (lJ (l) Tonight Johnny
ia joined by Engelbert Humperdinck. Stave Landeaburg and Loni Anderson.
IAI (60 min.)

farm rates . Call USt for free

9 years old, has been shown

Hunt seat and western with
high platings. Has good

0

WINNIE

JQ4.895·3802.

_ E.!c.a~a!!.~.9 -

AWOKE

xr

I I

(Answers tom orr ow 1

tales- A WEB OF LIES

nis jn D Ma1or, Opus 123.·
Ma,.;m~ian
Schall, des-

Mr.
Tutu's
desk!

0

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Tes t hol es.
Pumps Sales and Servic e.

.. .. __ !

FINAL

rI

Could be the reft"!lt of sptnning a lol ot

Answer

Beethoven 'Missa Solem-

out o'

remodeling . Phone JOH752068 or 675-4560.

82

I Jumbles

that he has lost 10 IMP s
here It m1ght be mo re . East

CIJ

RINGLES'S SERV ICE · ex ·

83

For

He's
I'm dancin~ Father!
takin'
Hear
me tap? mone4

What
are ijOU doinq in
-lihere, Pank? You
are supposed to
be practicinql

perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician,
gen e ral
repairs
and

LOCKSMITH

.
Saturd ay s

ances: Dance In America

Shah Not Kilt'
()) 700 Club
(I) II (j) MOVIE: 'My
Body, My Child'
IIJ ()) ® M•A•S•H Klin-

F &amp; K Tree Trimming;
stump remova l. 675· 1331.

79 Ford Mustang SJ,400 or
best offer. Call742-2451.

AN ..

Print answer here:

9i_r1 becomes his nightmare.
9:00 U (l) (l) MOVIE: 'Thou

$6500.

~ - - · - -- --

1975 GRAVELY

grooming.

Collie

cellent

675-7438.

Also AKC Reg. Dobermans. Call446-7795.
. - - - - - - · .,-- BRIARPATCH KE~EI.S

COUNTRY!

Delu xe

WRECKED 68 Pontiac Le
Mans, for parts, $150. all.
phone 304-675-2529 after s ~

•

CIJ IHl Grut Perform-

ARE GEOOI~G READY
TO INVADE '\'OUR

Car p e ntry
work,
r emodelin g, and "" roofing .

way blade. Phone 304-6752786.

Boarding all br eeds, c lean
indoor -outdoor facilities.

LED ME" G U ESS ... 2EY

a.

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.

304·576·2001.

IAI 160 min.) !Closed Captioned)

Benjamin Captain Lewis
goes undercover to get the
goods on a bar owner who
is fleecing soldiers.

AILEYOOP

304-675-6605.

360 Long farm tractor , 30
H .P diesel, like new 160
hours, S5,500. firm . Phone

taken prisoner and his wife
refuses to pay the ransom

the leo Capados. (60 min .)
Ill (I) liD Private
'

rJ

1

Now arrange the c~rcled lener s 10
lonn the surpnse answer. as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon

+K R 7 5

Incredible Featured are a
lifesaving parachute device
and a 12-year-old star of

0

HESTIF

Alan : "He makes him se lf
the goat many tim es

a

Haff elt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.

COULl? BE A
PERFO~MER' IN
A FACTO~.

one."

1D Entertainment
Tonillht
8:00 II (l) (l) Uttle Houoe On
the Pl'llirie Mr. Oleson is

~ln'

pet Clea ning featured by

John Deer e 450 dozer with 4

KENNEL

REMEMBE/ltN' J
LUNCH LIKE ~ILDA ~:::"."'
6AYG I DID -

CAP TAIN STEE MER Car

55 ___ I!_UJ!C!i_'!_g~~~~~~~ __

HILLCREST

ALL KINDS 0'
UGEFUL GTUFF
LIKE THIS!

built up roof. Cal l 388·9857 .

Special March a nd April
only. Gene's Deep Steam
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Free es timate. 992 -6309

3844 after 4 p.m .

~ELL -- THERE'G ONE THING
T' BE GAIO FER: HOT

I I

II

(I) MOVIE: 'Written on
the Wlnd'
(I)
1D That' •

phone JOH7BJ75.

Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens . New
Siamese kittens. Call 446·

IT BELONGS T' MR.
OATES ! HE'S GOT

Fairmont, 4

speed, good condition, good

I I

WEST
• Q 9;
"Q JB

Mar cum
Roof in g
&amp;
Spoutin g. 30 years ex perience, specia lizin g in

LeMans, power steering ,
power brakes, automatic,
air conditioned, 350 engine,

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies. CFA

YOU &amp;fT IT"'

Call446·2 107.

I BANIC I
I [J

h':;?0'C:

Norman Leer.' In the first
of a two-pan series we
see how the king of sit
corns and his associates
translate ideas into entertaining shows.

20 yrs. exp. Ca ll 388·9652.

Bell Contracting Gener(l l
plumbing service, home
remodeling r epa ir s. Free

74 Cadlatllc low mileage, 18 FT. Irl·haul, ln board-out
good cond., $1,700. Cliii614- board, 1«1 i'fP, 304·586·2626
36H209.
or 304·675·3-482.

APAR TMENTS ,

r-J D

Oswald .
··M 1k e
Lawrence's latest book IS
enti tled 'Play a Sw iss Team
of Four.· it shows the 56
hands normally played in a
Sw1ss team with Mike faced
with a problem on eac h

()) National Geographic
Special
(!) MOVIE : 'Kill and Kill

8 N Ford trac tor S1.600.
Call JOH75-3818.

56 - - · - -Pets
for-Sale
-- -·- -

ER - 50METHIH' THAT TOOL YOU'R:E
I'IIWHG, I'IIGTER? USING~ ~HERE OlD

PAINTING
interior and
ex t erior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodel in g.

how to purchase, 602-9980575 Ext. 7965. Call refun·
dable.

3 B·edroom apartment.
Phone 304·675-4045.
·

Apartment
for Rent

textured cei lin gs com ·
mer c ial and reside nti al.
free es tim ates. Ca ll 256·
1182.

Similar bargains available.
Call for your dir ec tory on

Pleasa nt and Gallipolis
614-«6-8221 or 614-245·9-484:

44

ANNIE

ST UCCO PLASTERING

J6U160.

1979 VW. 4·spd, air cond. 19?,6 HONDA 550, 4 cyl.
Call «6·2599.
57,000 miles. sharp, 1.000
call 304·458-1639 after 5.
72 Pontiac ex. cond., new
vlnyt top, can be seen at 107 1973 KAWASAKI KZ 900,
Chlfllcothe rd.
goocl,condi!IO!l, call 304·586·
2626 or 304·675-3-482.
1976 Plymouth Volare, talr
..
cond, SBOO. Call388-9676.
BO.tsanll
Motors tor Sale

6700 Lb. tobacco to lease.
15c per lb . Phone 256-6208.

Hom e
__ ~r:n_p~o~~r:n~'!.!s_

Ca ll J6J.0194 fl

8 c u. ft . CHEST freeze r , 2

Ca ll245-5121.

.

estimates. Ca ll446-4002.

696-1234.
heater,

81

p .w ..

r ec lining bucket s, T · top ,
velour interior . Lik e new.

HART S Used Cars, New

Gravely

Coleman

Cutlass

real good . S7.00. 74n26J.

c lothing , 30H7s.2999 .

radios,

1977

Sa lon,

I&lt;

SI!F'IItes

fair cond . $500 or best offer .

&amp; Li'*HSIDEil

Rotary

I
1

1963 Corvette, red, both
tops. Call 446-1669 after 6 lik e new. $1,000. Ca ll 286·
p. m .
4657, a ft er 5:30.

FIREWOOD for sa le, sp lit
load. Ca ll466 3539.

$1,400. Ca ll446-3040.
1974 Rover tr ave l trailer, 14
ft Wren, sleeps 6. E l ec .. ref .

----- --- ---

. 7l

Farms for Rent

1979 Chevy Pickup. p.b ..

--- - ~~..!!1£~~ - - --

59

plus utilities, $50. (Jeposit,
304-675-6512.
43

79

$175.00. Call675-6505.

posts $3.00 eac h .

and delivered . $30 pickup

BORN LOSER

Motor Home

4740.

Ca ll446·4176.

Queen set s, S195. 4 dr.
ches ts, $42 . Bed fr am es,
cab inets, $350 ., dinette
cha irs $20. and $25. Gas or
elec tri c ranges, S295. Or·
thopedic super firm, $95,
ba by matresses. $25 &amp; $35,
bed fr a mes $20, $25, &amp; $30.
Used Furniture bookcase,
5 pc . dinett set, J Living
room suite. Ranges and
TV 's. 3 mil es out Bulaville
Rd. Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
fhru Fri., 9am toSpm, Sat.

(978 Dodge
Wagon . Ca ll 446·

Quality A utobody &amp; Paint
work. Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles .
Auto T rim Center, 446- 1968.

Sa le :

Power

Musical
Instruments

- -·- -

TWO bedroom, furnished
mobil e home, $165. month

Apartment building with
co mmerda l
space, North
end Po int Pleasant, low in ter es t loan assumable.

Domestic rabbits . Ca ll 675·

furnished; $175. monthly ,
446-0322
304-882·3596.
THREE feeder
_
__-_
__..__
__
-·
plus1. e lectri c ity , 30076- '"'"_
--_
--_
-- -_
-_
- -_
-_
- -_
-_
-·- -! Ho 1s t ens,
1
s·~
244
5076.
3 two bedroom trailers, one

Fa rm 76 acres. Good
hou se, barn, work shop,
sma ll chicke n house. 1 mile
west of L ang sv: ill e on Sr.

51

$58.. firm, $68. a nd $78.
2 bdr. trailer furni shed,
adu lt s on l y, Brown Trailer

388-8623.

Must se ll 69 Mu stang, body
good shape needs mlnor
repair . Ca ll446·4120.

7428 or «6· 4979.

Nelsons Drug Store.

Wood t ab le with 4 cha ir s,

446 3358 .

Gentle horse, brok e but not
finished. Phone 388·9991 or

Cabi nets. lawn furniture,
picnic tables r epa ired. See

Wanted to Rent

$385. 7 pc.. $189. and up .

Mobi le home fo r rent . Ca ll

..._.,_-_.,_,..__

Reduce sa f e and f ast with

beds,$340., queen siz e. $380 .

Ca rner
Burger

Shop. Open Mon. Sat . lOAM
to7.PM.

PASTURE for renl. 304· Gobese Tablets or cpsul es
675·511 0
and E · Vap 'wa ter pills '

Wanted to r ent or buy
house &amp; acreage . Ca ll 446·

a

Truck camper fits 8ft . bed.
Phone 304·675· 4373 or 304·
675·1478.

mobile hom e. Call 379·2617 . 1-::::::::::~.._
,.._
-_
-r--_-_
-_
-~:_~--_-_-_-~-i
56
Pets for Sale
71
Autos for Sale
~! ~-· A~)OReealr=-~ ~

And see our model 1 mile
Nor th of Silver Bridge on
Rt . 7, across from Honda

sof a, and c hair . Phone 3889755 or 446 ·1642, ex t .332 .

LA.Y NE'S FURNITURE
42

1234.

will cons id er trade in on

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomer oy . Large lo ts. Ca ll

47

-·---AUtO Pa--;.ts - ----

Pick ·up bed · lin er. Was
used in 77 chevy silverado.
Good cond. $100 . Shade 696·

Home
Builders will build ori your
tot a 3 bedr. home, car peted, r eady to move in to,

byHennArnoldandBoblee

Cll Andy Griffith
())ABC Newo
()) 3-2-1. Contact
()J) o- Eaay
8:30 G (l) (l) NBC Newa
(J) $&amp;0,000 Pyramid
()) Gomer Pyle
()) Muppet Show
• ()) liD CBS Newo
()) 0.. Who
()J) Ullaa, Yoga end You
()I ABC Newa
7:00 G (l) P.M . Mapztne
())
Grut
Day
to
Remember
w ' Carol Burnett and
Frienda
()) Entertainment T onlght
(l) Hoppy Days
Ill ()) T1c Tee Dough
()) IHl MacNeil- Lehrer
Report
IIDNewo
II ID Muppet Show
7:30 8 (l) You Aokad For It
()) Another life
(I) Sanford and Son
(I) Ill (I) Family Feud
(l) Laverne and Shirley
()) Bulineu Report
liD Richerd Slmmono
,
()J) Creativity w/ Blh
Moyers 'The World of

Patriot

20 ft . GATO R Boat trail er ,

992 7479.

(J) MOVIE: 'Hot Lead and
Cold Feet'

--~~~!s~o_r:i~s __

A home you ca n afford,

COU NTRY MOBILE Home

Ca ll304 882 2466

Near Veteran s Memorial
Hospital, 2 bd .room fur
nished on level lot . City
water and sewer . Terms
available,
$7900.
CaH
Phylis G tven . 304 736 8021
for ap po 1ntment and full
details

USED MOBILE
576 2711.

AC. 2 bdr. house, HUD . 304
6755104or6755386

8:00 8(l)ffi8(JJIIDIIID
Newt
CAPTAIN EASY

Plastic Septi c Tank s. State
and county approved. 1,000

st oo ls. 446· 9203.
Room for rent in private
home. Cal l 446 1249 .

_4/12/82

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

I
.,.~~~,-~
........ ... . .~. . . .

I

EVENING

[

Bedroom suite and a hide-

ROOMS and

Really, 446 0008
3 bdr . home delu xe, pool,

34

Call 446 4336 .
1 bedroom furni shed apt

1294

33

ment very ni ce, ad ults
only, $150 mo. p lu s utilities.

MONDAY

11

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

craft. 45 ft. long, s leeps 6,

PONTOON Boat . 446·4143.

$25,500.

Furn. apartment 3 rm . &amp;
bath Adu lt s on l y Call 446·
0171, even1ngs,
446 3733
days.

1}jfji'iMf fij}'\}

~ ~ ~~ ®

loaded, reasonable . Harry

De luxe turn . apart., ce nt.
air &amp; heat . 1 or 2 adu lts

3888 .

The Daily

Television
•
•
vtewmg·

for Sale
-- -Motors
- - - ------

ranges.

pickup tru ck. Call 614-2865930, Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

3 bedroom. unfurni shed
apt ., c lose to town . Low
ut i lities, $175 .oo per mo,
deposi t reQuired . Ca ll 446·

Ohio

- -Boats anCi - - -

dryers,

Apartment partia ll y tur·
nished, ups tairs, utilities
furni shed. Call at 631 4th,
Ga ll ipolis

on ly. Call 446 0338

Mondav. April 12, 1982

14 ft. John boat 7 112. HP

ter ior , free estimates Ca ll

446 3759

75

Sears motor, ex. cond . $550.

apartmenl, 675· 1460.

l st floor
furni shed ef·
ficiency apt . 729 2nd Ave.,
Ga ll ipoli s. Adu lt s onl y,
shower . Ca ll 446·0957.

bridal l ine, weddings, and
all occasions . Cal l367 7566 .

~ ou ~e.,«&lt;)_d G0o:cts

range t oo &amp; oven, coppertone, new 112 pri ce. Ca ll

(custom
Comp le te

s1

675· Tappe n drop in electric

or

centra ll y l ocated. , Adu lt s.,
r ef . and deposit required .
446·044..j af ter 2 p.m.

Wanted to Do

silk

. Monday, April 12, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

D Y ZD Q

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KDLTYZX

UESAJQ .

xzz

YZ

KYDL

LYZI'RR

YML

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RSSPX

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JZNL . -

YDITSN

Yeslerday's Cryptoquole:CONSISTEJ'iCY IS A PASTE JEWEL
THAT ONLY CHEAP MEN CHERISH. - WILUAM ALLEN
WHITE

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 12, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1
J uRUGUA
Buenos ~"-&gt;.""
Aires
'---· - ~- - - ---'

ARGENTINA

British blockade went into effect today
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
(API - A British blockade of the
Falkland Islands went Into effect
early Monday as U.S. Secretary of
State Alexander M. Halg Jr. flew to
London In a las t minute bid to head
off war over the remote archipelago seized by Argentina.
There was no Immediate word of
British na val activity in Falkland
waters.
The blockade went Into effect at
11 p.m. EST Sunday, about 1 Y,
hours before Halg's expected arrl·
val in London. He was to discuss a n
Argentine proposal with British
leaders In an attempt to settle the
dispute over the South Atlantic Is·
lands 250 miles east of Argentina's
southern coast.
The British government, with a
40-shlp armada on the way and up
to four British hunter·klller subma·
rlnes reportedly In the area, vowed

Special session sel
POMEROY - A special meeting
of the Meigs County Board of Elections has been set for 4 p.rn. on April

12 to open bids on ballots and other
related material for the upcoming
e lection.

to sink any Argentine vessel within
200 miles of the Islands alter the
deadline.
Halg said his 12 hours o! tallks
with Argentine leaders Saturday
produced "no agreement."
But Argentine Foreign Minister
Nlcanor Costa Mendez said Halg
was carrying "a very Interesting
Argentine proposal" to discuss with
British leaders.
Government sources, who requested anonymity, said Halg was
told any future negotiations would
depend on Britain halting Its fleet
and lifting Its blockade order. Only
then, they said, would Argentina
consider withdrawing its estimated
6,(XX} troops !rom the Islands.
Mlllltary sources were quoted by
the newspaper Clarin as saying
troops could be gradually with·
drawn and replaced with a detach·
ment of federal pollee or border
guards.
Costa Mendez, who accompanled
Halg to the airport Sunday morn·
lng, declined to e laborate on the Ar·
gentlne proposal, but said " It Is not
Improbable" that Haig would return to Buenos Aires. " It depends
on how he does In London."
Halg arrived In Buenos Aires on
Friday night following Initial meet·
lngs with British Prime Minister

Area deaths
Cress Mae Shain

VAL BLOCKADE - Map indicates the ZOO-nautical mile military
cxdusiun wne which Britain imposed around the disputed Falkland
Islands Sunday at midnight, I AP Laserphoto).

Meigs county happenings
ProbP injury mishap
An Injury accident in Meigs
County wa s reported by the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the state highway pa·
trol on Su nd ay, but the repon
hadn't been c omp leted by
presst imC'.
In a nother Sunday accident in
Ga !Jia Count y. the patrol said Anita
K_Allen. 22, Rt. 2. Bidwell, escaped
Injury at 10 a _m_ when her vehicle
rou nded a curve on Ohio 160, lost
control. went off the right s ide of the
road and struck a ditch_
The acc ident caused moderate
damage, the repon said_

Report incomplete

Star, will be held at 7:30 p_m. Tuesday_ The station of Esther will be
honored, Past and present Esthers
will be honor ed,

Tuesday meeling
A special meeting of Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be held at 7
p.m , Tuesday. Work wUI be In the
fellowcraft degree_ Refreshments
will be served following the
meeting,

Squads kept busy
Seven emergency calls were ans-

An inju ry accident in Meigs
County was reported by the Ga!Ua·
Meigs Post of the state highway pa·
trot on Sunday. but the repon
hadn't been comp leted by
press time.

In another Sunda y accident in
Gallia Count y, the patrol said Anita
K. Allen. 22, Rt. 2, Bidwell, escaped
inju ry at 10 a_m_ when her vehicle
rounded a curve on Ohio 160, lost
control, went off the rtght side of the
road and struck a ditch .
The accident caused moderate
damage. the repon sa id _

Boosters lo meet
The Eastern Band Boosters will
meet at 7:30 p_m _ Tuesday In the
band room of the high school to dis·
cuss the summer band camp, purchase of summer uniforms and the
a nnu al band ba nquet to be held in
May a t Royal Oak Park.

Special meeting
A special meeting of Pomeroy
Chapter 186. Order of Eastern Star,
will be held at 7:45p.m. Tuesday.
Initiation will be exemplified and
there will be potluck refreshments.

To honor Esther
A regular meeti ng of Harrison ·
vtlle Chapter, Order of Eastern

wered over the weekdn by local un Its, the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reports,
On Sunday at 5: J7 p,m, the Mid·
dleport Unlt took Joe Wolfe, Fourth
St. , to Veterans Memorial Hospl·
tal; Syracuse at 2:14 p,m . took
Cressa Shain from her residence to
Veterans Me morial; Racine at 1: ~
p_m_ took Mark Parsons from Anti·
quite to Veterans Memorial, and
Rutland at 2 p_m_ took Clarence
McDaniel from Rutland to Veterans Memorial. At 10:26 a,m_ Satur·
day, the Mlddlepon Unit took
Wes ley Zuspan from the station to
Holzer Medical Center; 7:42 p.m .
took Nora Jordan from Grant St., to ,
Veterans Memorial and at 8: 20
p,m_ took Florence Reynolds from
he r Mlddlepori home to Veterans
Memorial.

Cress Mae (Crls) Shain, 44, Ra·
cine, a member of Racine Village
Council, died Sunday a t Veterans
Memorial Hospital following a
s hari Illness.
Mrs. Shain was president of the
Auxiliary of the Racine Fire Depanment and was serving on Ra·
cine Village Council . She was
co-owner and co-Dperator of the C.
and D. PennzoU and the C. and S.
Pennzoll Stations.
Surviving are her husband, Cha·
rles L. Shain; four sons. Steve .Jenkins, Pomeroy; Johnny Jenkins,
Coolville; David Jenkins, Miners·
ville, and Timmy of Pomeroy; two
daughters, Mrs. Steve (Dreama)
Pickens, Pomeroy, and Cecilla Jen·
kins. Racine; five gra ndchildren;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs . Cecil
Kirk of Mason; a sister, Margaret
Miller, Rush, Ky., a nd several nleces and nephews. A brother, Harrl·
son Kirk, preceded her In death.
Services will be held at 3 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home where friends may call alter
7 this evening. Burial will be In the
Letart Falls Cemetery.

Anion Lucke

Tenn.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Monsignor Anthony Gi·
annamore and the Rev. Robert
McGee ot!lciating. Burial will be In
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home anytime after 11 a.m. Tuesday.

Elnora M. Young
Elnora M. Young, 82, Mason,
died Saturday at her home.
She was born April 1, 1900 In Cllf·
ton to the late James and Ida Wood
Hall .
She was a member of the St. Joseph Catholic Church.
Surviving are one brother, Her·
man Hall, Oxford, Pa. and several
nJeces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the St. Joseph
Catholic Church with Father Ray·
mond Jabllnske officiating. Burial
Is scheduled for St. Joseph Catholic
Church Cemetery, Mason.
A rosary service will be held at 7
p.m . tonlght at the Fogelsong Funeral Home. Friends may call the
funeral home tonight !rom 6 to 9
p.m.

Anton Lucke, 77, Syracuse, retired railroad electrician. died Sunday at Veterans Memorial Hospital
following a short Illness.
Mr. Lucke was a so n of the late
Joseph F. and Mary Meier Lucke.
She was also preceded In death by a
brother .
Mr. Lucke was a retired electrl·
clan from the Penn-Central Rail·
road and was a member of the
Pomeroy Fire Department.
Surviving are his wife. Evelyn;
hls mother-in-law, Ethel Stewart,
Pomeroy; a niece, Linda Plea·
sants, Huntington, W. Va ., and a
ne phew, Jerry Stewart of Gray,

Saturday Admisslons .. Ethel
Moore, Letart, W. Va.; Ruby Ey·
non, Pomeroy; Nora Jordan,
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges .. Eugene
Underwood, Gary Hysell, Delores
Hoffman.
Sunday Admlsslon .. Mark Par·
sons, Racine.
Sunday Dlscharges .. Dorls
Haynes, William Han.

mation In Buenos Aires. Pym reft·
era ted that Britain will nof
negotiate until Argentina withdraws completely from the Island
colony It seized April 2.

Five die in weekend accidents
COLUMBUS . Ohio had a relatively sale weekend on its streets
and highways, with just five traiflc deaths recorded, the Highway
Patrol said.
.
The patrol counts traffic deaths from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY

MEDINA- Robert L. Fisher, 20, o! Maumee, In a tw&lt;rear accident
on Ohio 3 In Medina County.
SATURDAY
FAIRFIELD- Delores Bate~. 17, o! Fairfield, In a two-car accident

Death toll rises in volcano eruption

Twenty-four Pomeroy fire responded to a fire at the Richard Julian residence, 200 Butternut Ave ..
at 5:59p.m. Sunday.
Pomeroy Fire Chlef Charles
Legar said that the blaze began In a
storage room on the second floor of
the home and was kept confined to
that area. A five-year -old child
playing with matches started thl'
fire, Chief Legar said. Damages
were set at $250. The house Is owned
by Archie Swartz.

tired had to have the hammer
pulled back before It would fire .
Herman Henry of the BCI also
testified.
Craig Foley, the shooting victim,
during questioning by the Crow and
Knight, said he had gone to work
early that morning, but did not stay
on the job any length of time.
Foley admitted he had began
drinking beer alter he left his
employment.
Foley also said he met his half·

The Daily
Voi.30,No.254

Foley returned to his trailer
home a second time between 10

was an argument while Foley and
Deem were at the Watson home.

This was approximately 6 p.m .
Foley further tesllfled he cuuld
possibly have made more than two
IContinued on page 121

entinel

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - A
House committee pondering a bill
to raise taxes and cut spending will
be given data Thursday showing
that state government may be
short $1.5 billion, up from what otll·
cials had said was a $1.2 bUllon
"worst case" deficit.
"I used to think I knew what a
worst case was but we keep oo exceeding it ," MatthPw V. Flllplc.
deputy director of the Office of
Budget a nd Management, said
Monda y.
Flllplc told the Controlling Board
the specific total of the anticipated
deficit Is being prepared for presentation to the House Ways and
Mea ns Com mittee Thursday,
which Is opening hea lngs on a
Senate-passed bill to raise taxes
and cut spending.
Meanwhile, the legislator ·
domin ated Controlling Board approved $5.6 million . in emergency
loans for another 15 money-short
school districts. They released$42.7
mllllon In loans to 21 districts last
month.
Flllplc said the latest forecast
about state government's fiscal
problems came alter the Senate
vote on the budget bUt. He would
not say how far off balance the Senate bill might be.
Total March revenues were
$607.1 mllllon, $70 million below es·
tlmates made last November and
$29 .8 million bel ow March
estimates.
Budget experts said In January
the state faced a $1.2 billion deficit,
Including a potential loss of $200
mllllon !rom pending court cases.
Flllplc said auto sales tax receipts lor March were $2£.3 million,
$5 million above estimates, but that
the non-auto sales tax for March
was $115.9 mllllon, $9.8 mUllan
below estimates.
Personal Income tax receipts
were off $5.4 million and the corporate franchise tax collection was
$9.6 million lower. Fillpfc said the
corporate revenue could be attributed to tlmlng of payments and
may be recovered.
Controllers released the $5.6 mil·
lion In school loans alter transfer·
lng an equal amount from next
year's subsidy account to this year' s budget.
The largest single loan approved
was $1.03 million tor the Madison
Local District In Lake County.

•Solid State Power
•I ndependent wheel ad ·
justments
• Powerfu I 2 cycle OMC
engine
•4 H . P. Rating
•Never rust Magnolite deck

191N. PUSH MOWER
21 IN. PUSH MOWER
211N. SELF-PROPELLED

Mechanic Street
Wafehouse

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

there. An electric blanket which was left on caused
the fire, Chief Legar reports.
There was smoke damage to the entire upstair!l of
the house owned by Ronald Cremeans and fire and
water damage to the bedroom.

Council awards project flids
Contracts for two phases o! the
Improvements to the Middleport
water system were awarded Monday night when Middleport Village
CouncU met In regular session.
Two !Inns had subrnltted bids on
a new water tank to be In the VIne
St. area and three others submitted
bids on the accompanying lines.
CouncU, upon the recommendation of Floyd Brown Assoclntes,
Marlon, accepted th~ low bids on
both·contracts.
Given the contract to provide the
tank was Natgun, Ind., Wakefield,
Mass., with a bid of $246,&amp;XI. The
second firm submitting a bid was
Preloa4 Technology, Inc., G~en
City, N. Y., with a bld of $268,900.
Awarded lbe contract for the accompanying water lines lor the
tank was Holley Brothers Construction Co., Rodney, with a bid of
$165,996.50. Other bidders were
Prater Co., Columbus, with a bid of
$206,775, and Welding, Inc., Cha·
rleston, W. Va., with a bid o!

$230,479.50.
The cost o! the water system Improvements Is being provided by a
HUD grant awarded to the vWage.
CouncU approved the report ot
Mayor Fred HoHman showing receipts of $7,!W.40 In lines and fees
for the month of March. Hottman
read a letter from Cablentertalnment announcing that a representative of the COII!PaDY will be present
for the next meeting to discuss services and a rate lncreaae.
'1be bid of Dave Ross on a truck
no longer needed for the vllJaie was
accepted. '!be Ross bid was $212,
the highest of several bids submitted for the vehicle.
Mayor Hottman 11J11101111Ce4 he

bas lnfonnatlon 011 an evaluation ot
the water system and 011 the CoOau.
mer's Coullcll work towards a
fled uturll lu rate for Council
member!~ wbo want to look It aver.
He a11o annoonced 1!1! baa wrlttell .
Plelldent Ronald Reapn and the
Corps cit Eqlneera tulllel'ln&amp;

um:.

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cash.

p.m. and II p.m. He said his wife
was not home and he called the
Watson residence to see If she was
there. He called twice and the second time he talked to hts•
grandmother.
It was brought out that Foley and
Deem on Aug. '!1 had stopped at the
home of Marion Watson and there

3 S"tions, 1 8 Pages
1 S Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. New•poper

Deficit
•
growing

LAWN-BOY MOWERS

Farmers
Bank

brother, Ronnie Deem, and they
drove around.
It was brought out th&amp;t Foley and
Deem consumed a considerable
amount of beer. Foley testified that
his memory wasn't too good on the
day and nJght o! the shooting.
Foley testified he went to hls
trailer home around 10or 11 a.m. to
get some money. He also said his
wife did not want hlm to take the
money as they were runnlng low on

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 13, 1982

Copyrtvhtod 1912

QUALITY

Your Community Owned Bank

•

It was determined that the gun (a

.22 caliber pistol) In order to be

MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

Sign up at the ·Farmers Bank.

Tbe ponUff called on Argentina and Great Britain to
sellle the Falkland Islands dispute without bloodsbed.
lAP Wirephoto).

his hand on Watson as If to search
him when a scuffle occurred.
Watson was given his rights and
handcuffed. Young said a gun was
later found later on the roof of a
shed.
Another witness testifying was
Dale Roach, supervisor o! the
crime lab with the Bureau of Crimi·
nal Investigation.
The gun, allegedly used In the
shooting, was subrnltted as state
exhibit I along with tour fired car·
t:rldges. State exhibit II was the
bullet taken from Foley's body.

ELBERFELD$

Interest
on checking
makes sense.

Fs
from the main balcony of St. Peter's Basilica Sunday.

testify.

Young, with Gary Wolle, special
Investigator lor the sheriff's depart·
ment, were called to the scene.
Upon arrival, Young said Foley
was lying on the ground In his o\vn
yard and was being attended by
emergency personnel.
Shortly afterwards, Young said
he and Wolle drove approximately
a quarter of a mile to the Watson
residence where Young stayed with
the vehicle while Wolfe walked toward the Watson home.
Watson came out of a garage and
approached Wolfe. Wolfe placed ·

JAKARTA, Indonesia - The death toll from eruptions o! the
Galunggung volcano In West Java has risen to 12 people, with scores
o! Injuries and two officials teared swept away by lava flows, a
government official said today.
Two of the victims were babies trampled to death as 63,670 people
took refuge at schools, government buUdlngs and 23 emergency
centers In the Tasllkmalaya region, 00 miles southeast of Jakarta.
The 9,154-foot volcano has erupted twice since since AprU 4. It had
been dormant since 1918.

Get the best of a checking account and the best of
a savings account in one account with a Farmers
Bank NOW Account.

blB "Urbl et Orb!" (to the City aod lbe World) blesolng

By KATIE CROW
Following the seating o! jurors
Monday, the attempted murder
trial of William Watson, 51, Rt. I,
Reedsvllie, began In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Watson Is being charged with the
alleged shooting last Aug. '!1, o! his
stepson, Craig Foley.
Following opening statements by
Frederick Crow. ill prosecuting attorney and defensive counsel Charles Knight, Deputy Sheri.tf Joe
Young was the first witness to

on Ohio 127 In Butler County.
CARROLLTON- Florence Korzenlcwski, 50, of Cuyahoga Falls,
In a one-car accident on Ohio 332 In Carroll County.
LEBANON - Kevln Ray, 24, o! Lebanon, In a one-car accident on
Ohio 122 In Warren County.
TOLEDO- An unldentifled pedestrian, about 15, when struck by
two cars on a Toledo city street.

The Farmers Bank pays you interest on your
checking when you open a NOW Account.

EASTER MFMAGE- Pope John Paul D deUven

Testimony begins in attempted murder case

FIRE -DarnAIII!S were set at a miDimum of $1500 as
the resull of a fire which stntck the two-storY home of
Carol Baker on Brick St., Pomeroy, about 4 p.m.
Monday. Pomeroy F1re Chief Charles Legar said the
fire started In an upstair!~ bedroom and was confined

Damage at $250
Velerans Memorial

Margaret Thatcher and Foreign
Secretary Francis Pym.
In London, the Defense Mlnfstry
announced that all but two Argentine warships had returned to their
home polis, but there was no conflr·

~

Rlverr.
CouncU authorized Mayor Hoffman to advertise for bids on a communication system as
recommended by the Middleport
Fire Department. A second read·
lng was given to an ordinance
changing the zoning o! RaUroad St ..
south of Page St., from S to R-3 to
allow housing there.
A letter was read Indicating that
Middleport Is a potential participant In a 10 week litter program
through the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources and If selected
tor the program will receive a crew
of six persons and a supervisor to
work In the ,community. Mayor
Hoffman reported that the Ohio
EPA has reviewed water Improvement plans. Charge tor the review
Is about $890. ·
Don Mllls reviewed Insurance
COV'!l'age on structures and contents and Bill Childs reviewed the
vtllage motor vehicle Insurance
coverage. The Insurance matters
will be taken up again at the next
meeting. Childs also discussed the
celebration being planned to honor
General James Hartinger over
Memorial Day Weekend.
CouncU discussed \he closing o!
the road Wider the Pomeroy-Mason
brtdge by Pomeroy Village. Coun·
cUman Robert GUmore said that
the closed road Is making traveting
between the communities of Pome-

roy and Mlddlepori difficult since
traffic Is backing up at the traffic
light towards Middleport.
Mayor Hoffman said he will talk
to Pomeroy Mayor Clarence An·
ctrews regarding to what can be
done In reopening the road under
the bridge which absorbs some of
the upriver traffic. The road has
been closed for several weeks.
Council also discussed drainage o!
Pearl St. near • two business
establishments.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Jon Buck, and councUmen Gil·
more, WW!am Walters, Jack Sat·
terfleld, r~rl Horky and Dewey
Horton.

Police cite driver
following mishap
Two cars were damaged and a
driver Is chDrged with two olfenses
as the result of an accident on Ebenezer St., at 9:09p.m. Monday.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven
by Calvin Mayle, Pomeroy, hit a
parked car owned by ~race Rusche! and then went Into a culvert.
Mayle did not stop, pollee said, and
he later was apprehended. There
were medium damages to the cars
and Mayle Is charged with leaving
the scene of an accident and operatIng a motor vehicle while under
suspension.

•
term
Man receives pnson
A Middleport man was given a
six month to five year sentence at
the Columbus CorreCtional Facillty
Monday.on a breaking and entering
charge.
Jolin "Buck" Tyree, Jr., 22, entered a voluntary plea of gullty to
the brealdDi and entering charge,
a fourth clelree telony.
obaqe, eoatalaed In a blu of
lnfDnnatlon prepered by the office
of Melli County Proaecutor Fred·
erick W; Crow m, reslilted from a
breaJdD&amp; and entering which oc-

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curred on April 3, this year, at the
Frtendly Tavern In Mld~rt.
A large quantity of liquor was
taken In the Incident which was Investigated by Middleport PoUce
Chief J. J.

Cremeans.

Prosecutor's Investigator Paul

Gerard .reports Tyree had been
convicted of a similar offense In
GalJJa County wUhln the past two
months . .Tyree was remanded to
the custody ot Sheriff James J.

Promtt before being transported to
Callimbus to begin blB sentence.

Racine man
hurt in wreck
ARt. 2, Racine man was Injured
In a one-vehicle crash on Ohio 338ln
Meigs County Sunday afternoon.
according to the patrol.
Mark A. Parsons, 20, was north·
bound at 1 p.m. when his vehicle
went otf the right side of the road,
travelled downhill and was stopped
by a tree, slightly damaging his
auto.
Parsons was taken to Veterans
Memorfal Hospital by the Meigs
EMS, where he was later treated
and released for his Injury.
The Gallla-Melgs Post o! the.
state highway patrol cited a Galli·
polls man In a one-car accident on
Graham School Road Monday
nlght.
The patrol said Curtis R. Gilbert,
18, was turning north from Ohio 141
onto the road (Green Twp. Rd.S) at
9:10p.m. when he lost control of his
vehicle, wento!ftherlghtsldeofthe
road and struck a fence.
There was slight damage to Gilbert's vehicle and ~ was ticketed
for excessive speed.
Mildred J. Winters, 62, Rio
Grande, was unhurt after her vehicle struck a deer 011 U.S. 35 at 11
p.m. Monday, causing moderate
$mage to her vehicle. The deer

Police seek murder suspect
NEW YORK- Three men were shot to death Monda y night in a
rooftop parking lot on Manhattan's West Side alter they apparentl y
tried to rescue a woman who was being forced Into a van , pollee said .
Chief of Detectives James Sullllvan said a witness told poUc~ the
assailant went over to the victims one a t a time and said, "What did
you see?" before shooting each In the back of the head with a
small-caliber handgun.
Deputy Pollee Commissioner Alice McGIIIIon said the three had
been on their way separately to their cars when the shootings occurred at about 6 p.m. In the lot at 54th Street and Twelfth AvPnue
near Pier 72 on the Hudson River.
All three victims were CBS employees.

Psychology professor shot to death
SAN FRANCISCO - A psychology professor who was "a sort of
guru " to some of hls students and often spoke of threats on his life to
explain fear during class lectures was shot to death In his office as
several stu nned students looked on .
The gunman, believed by poUce to be an ex-student. opened the
iloor to the office, fired four or five shots . glanced a1 the students and
fled .
Dudley Yasuda was hlt In the chest and abdomen by gunfire about
11:30 a.m. Monday during a meeting wlth eight students. He died at
San Francisco General Hospital about an hour later.
Yasuda, 43, had received threats In the past and once told his
students the man who was threatening hlm had jus t walked In and
out of his classroom, Dean said.

Alleged 'hit man' in custody
CINCINNATI - A " hit man " who was allegedly gunning for
Cincinnati lawmen In connection with a North Bend s hoollng March
17 has been arrested and is In police custody in Illinois. The Cincin·
nati Enquirer reported in its Tuesday editions.
A pollee source farnlllar with the shootings said the man pollee had
feared was In Cincinnati was arrested In Illinois over the weekend.
He had been sought on felony warrants, the source said .
Pollee officials have said threats were made agains t lawmen after
two robbery suspects were s hot to death by pollee outside O'Cull's
Drug Store.

Escapee caught in Marietta
CLARKSBURG, W.Va. -An Inmate who escaped from the Harri ·
son County jail Sunday has been recaptured In Marietta officials
said toda y.
Ronald Helmick, 35, was apprehended In a Marietta hotel just
before mldnlght Monday, said Harrison County Deputy Sheriff Dick
Martin.
Helmick and Donald Anderson, 18, broke out of the county jail
Sunday evening, deputies said. Anderson was recaptured shonlly
alter the escape.
Martin said today that during Helmick's arrest the man allegedly
struck a Marietta officer who was assisting In the capture.

Envoy dispatched to restrain Begin
JERUSALEM - The U.S. State Department's second-ranking
official Is flying to Israel to try to restrain Prime Minister Menachet:n Begin from an attack on Palestinian bases In southern
Lebanon.
Deputy Secretary of State Walter J. Stoessel also will do what one
official called "hand-holding" to guard against last -minute problems In Israel's withdrawal from the Egyptian Sinal, scheduled
April 25.
Stoessel left Washington Monday night and was to confer en route
today In London with Nicholas Vellotes, the assistant secretary of
state lor Mideast affairs, who was on his way home from Jerusalem.
The White House said Stoessel would try to head off fighting
between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday nlght In the
Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number" was 224.
The lottery reported earnings of $428,582.50 from wagering on the
game.
The earnings came on sales of $1,029,340, while holders of winnlng
tickets are entitled to share SIDI.757.50, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast
Clear and cooler tonJght. Lows near 40. Mostly sunny Wednesday.
Highs In the rnld-005. Chance o! ratn near zero percent tonight and
Wednesday. Winds westerly to northwesterly less than 10 mph
tonJglit..
l )
~ Ohio Forecast
·
'lbOI'IIda,y lbroulb Saturday:
Cbance of
'11mnday and early Friday. Olberwtae fair.
mp ... the 80s oorib to . . aoulh '1bunlday 8Dd Friday 8Dd In the
Satunlay. Lows mostly In the 4011.

.a-en

eo.

could not be found afterward.

•

.

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