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                  <text>The Daily
Voi .30 ,No.16J

""'
by Dic'k Cavalli

WINTHROP
I
THINK Q-liR5 5&lt;\"15
'ROWF" WHEN
HE BARK6.

1 S.c:tion, I 0 Pau••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mond~y, April 26, 1982

Copy•lahtod 1982

15 Cenh

A Multim.dla Inc. Newtpaper

Fighting continues on South Georgia Island

NO, HE ~E6N~...
HE &amp;.'75 "'M::l:JF."

I

Ya.J~E~ ...

en tine

By The Ali8oclaled Press
Btitain sald lts forces extended thelr control of remote, barren South
Georgia Island today but indicated some of the Argentine gartison escaped the lnltlal battle and were stlli flglitlng.
The Btitlsli Defense Mlnlstry sald following tile capture Sunday of Gryt·
vlken, South Georgia's cltlef narbor, "Btitlsli forces are now in control of
Lelth. There are no repotis of any casualties at Lelth."
A spokesman for the mlnlstry decUned to elaborate, but the reference to
casualties indicated there may have been fighting.
Press Association, Btitain's domestic news agency, sald a government
source desctibed the action at Lelth, another harbor about 15 mlles north of
Grytvlken, as a "mopping-up operation." The agency sald, "It lB beUeved
flgh~ took place."
The earUer Btitlsh announcement of the recapture of Grytvlken Sunday
sald the small Argentine gartison surrendered, and Btitlsh hellcoptergunsltlps badly damaged one of Argentina's four submatines.

The Argentine government disputed that British clalrn, reporting late
Sunday nlght that lts forces had "fallen back" and "continue to flght in
intetior zones" of the ley, 120-mlle-long South Atlantic Island 1.140 mlles to
the east of Cape Hom. But lt sald communications with tile garrison had
been cut "for tactical reasons."
Argentloe mllitary sources, who asked not to be identified, sald there
were about
troops on the Island and they destroyed tile principal port
installations before spUttlng into three groups and retreating.
The Btitlsh Defense Mlnlstry sald following the capture Sunday ofGrytvlken, South Georgia's chlef harbor, "Btitlsh forces are now in control of
Lelth. There are no repotis of any casualties at Lelth."
A spokesman for the ministry declined to elaborate, but the reference to
casualties indicated there may have been fighting.
Press Association, Btitain's domestic news agency, sald a government
"'urce described the action at Lelth, a former whaling port about 15 miles
notih of Grytvlken, as a "mopping-up operation." The agency sald, "It ls

m

belleved fighting took place."
Press Association defense correspondent Robert Hutchinson sald Brit·
lsh forces would Ukely attack tile main Falkland Islands group, fro miles
notihwest of South Georgia, ""'1tltln the next 48 hours."
Quoting an unnamed government of1lclal, Hutchinson sald the llkellhood
ls that British troops will establish "some kind of btidgehead" in a remote
areas of the Falklands to pressure the Argentines to come to dlplomatlc
terms over sovereignty of the South Atlantlc colony. The islands, ruled by
Btitaln since l.Jl33, were long claimed by Argentina. whlch seized them on
Aprll 2 and 3.
Ptime Minister Margaret Thatcher was meeting with her war Cabinel
today as the 24-day-old ctists escalated and was scheduled to address the
House of Commons later ln the day.
Sunday's British announcement of the recapture of Grytvlken said the
small Argentine gartison the~ surrendered, and Britlsh hellcoptergunsltlps badly damaged one of Argentlna 's lour submarines .

'

I'vE- HAD ENOLJ&lt;:iH O'F --

'iOLJ'f&lt;E ~Z'i'/
I SAY HE'
aA..'/5 "ROWF"/

1'HI5 NON5ENOE... IM
. ~INC'i 1V qR,A5 A NAP.

Wrecks leave
eight injured

WODF':! WARF~
ROWF~ ARF~

HOWF ~ · RLiFF ~

~~R:RF~
WURF:f~F?

Yl pe; ?- HAI&lt;F?

YOU'RE OUI
OF
'faJRMIND/

_____

Prisc-i lla's Po.....,
WHAT HAVE 'rOLl

BEEN READING
LATELY, HOLLYHOCK?

IT WAS

FA'SCIAATING.'

ITTOI...P HON
SECRET AGENTS
GET INFORMATIQI.I···

ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL- Ohio Attorney General Wllllam J .
Bro1111 says there are three issues thls year in the gubernatorial election
-lobs, jobs, jobs. Brown seeks the Democratic nomination for governor.
( AP Laserphoto).

Additional Jobs,
major Ohio issue
/

DAYTON, Oltlo (AP) -Statistics can spW off newspaper pages

. Into the streets. It happened to Ohio Attorney General WUUam J .
Brown on a Dayton sidewalk.
Brown and Rep. Tony Hall, D-Oltlo, were talk!ng outside Montgomery County Democratic Headquatiers wlien a man appeared carrying a pa1r of used - but pollshed - sliver-buckled boots.
A cigarette bobbing from the comer of Ills mouth, the man made
Ills sales pltch but got no buyers. He resumed Ills course, sUpping
back into the forest of labor statistics that show more than 600,00J
Oltloans are out of work.
For Brown, who Is running for governor, lt was a slgn that Ills
campaign Is Qn the tight track. He says there are three Issues this
year - jobs, jobs, jobs.
Brown's opponents for the Democratic nomination, former Lt.
Gov. Richard Celeste and former Cincinnati councllman Jerry
Sptinger, don't disagree. And the three have battled to make thelr
blueprints for economic recovery heard.
But Brown's presctiption Is compUcated. It squirms uncomfotia·
bly in a nutshell and doesn' t lend itself to snappy "buzzwords" that
grab attention. However, It appears weU-omcelved, with a reallstic
view of tile powers of the governor.
Brown proposes to spawn jobs by using the power to control the
costs of energy and health care, ease the regulatory burden on small
business, squeeze a greater share of federal funds out of Washing·
ton, and merchandise sucli Oltlo assets as lts central location, agticultural base, transpotiation system, skllied labor pool and water
supply.
Ctitics accuse Brown of falling to get specltlc, and Ills news conferences are often battlefields, with repotiers flr1ng and Brown
dodging.
"The one thing the people of Oltlodon't need Is a one-Une statement
on tax policy," Brown says.

1 ·LOVE CRAZ.Y

DREAM? UKE THAT.'

PlliNTEO IN

by Art &amp; Chip Sansom

DUSTY CHAPS
ABa, I WAA 10 11a'l ft.. ~ CWD lRIQl.
OtJ 'fOU,, ~I
PlJf "THIS Q.l ".

r ANAOA

"tHIS Bel IER
Be~,

Eight people were injured and
numerous others clted in a seties of
weekend tra!flc accidents wltlch
kept the Gallla-Melgs Post of the
state ltlghway patrol almost constantly on the run.
The first setious accident involved a bead-on collision on Mill
Creek Road, six-tenths of a mlle
notih of the the Galllpolls clty llmlts, early Saturday nlght.
The patrol sald a southbound
auto dtiven by Timothy L. Lawhon,
33, Rt. 1, Galllpolls, colllded with a
notihbound vetucle dtiven by Dennis L. Coughenour, 22, Rt. 4, Galll·
potts, at 6:30p.m.
Injured were Lawhon; a passenger in Ills car, Margie L. Lawhon, 63, Rt. 1, Galllpolls;
Coughenour; and a passenger in
Coughenour's velllcle, Sherti L.
Barcus, ~. Galllpolls.
Lawhon and Barcus were taken
to Holzer Medical Center by the
Gallla County Volunteer Emergency Squad, where Barcus was
later treated and released for cuts
and bruises. The hospital had no
record of treating La'whon.
Margie Lawhon and.Coughenour
were apparently not treated. There
was moderate damage to both veltlcles, and Coughenour was clted for
OWl and no operator's UceiiS('.
A Rutland man was huti in a twoveltlcle collision on Oltlo 124 near
the Melgs County vlllage Saturday
afternoon.
According to the repoti, Dtana L.
Tillis, 22, Rutland, was eastbound
at 4: ~ p.m. when she turned left
into a private dtive. Another veltl·
cle, dtiven by David L. Grate, 36,
swerved tight wlien he saw Tlllts
make the turn but was unable to
avold colltslon and struck Tlllls'
veltlcle.
Grate complained of injury and
was taken to Veterans Memotial
Hospital by the Melgs EMS. Information on Grate's treatment was

unavallable from the hospital's
emergency room this morning.
There was sUght damage to both
vehicles, the patrol sald. Tillis was
clled for flctitious license plates
and Grate ticketed for assured
clear distance.
The patrol sald WWlam E. Hammonds, 31, Beckley, W.Va., was
eastbound on Oltlo 7 at the junction
wlth 124 at 7:45a.m. Saturday when
he reportedly sUd through a stop
sign, went across 7 and struck a
guard raU.
There was moderate damage to
Ills car, and Hammonds was taken
to Veterans by the pa trot. He was
later treated and released with instructions, according to a spokesman. Hammonds was clted for
OWl.

The report sald a veltlcle dtiven
by Stanley G. Spencer, 19, Raxford,
N.C. , was southbound on Gallla
County Rd. 28 at 12: 30 p.m. Sunday
when lt lost control on a curve, went
off the left slde of the road and
struck a tree.
A passenger, WWlam R Soward,
17, Ewlngton, was injured, but not
treated, the patrQl .~. Swncer's
vehicle was moderately damaged.
Troopers sald Curtis L. Holliday,
28, Galllpolls, was eastbound on
Ohlo 14lin Perry Twp. at 9:30p.m.
Sunday when Ills auto went off the
tight slde of the road and came to
rest against a post.
Holliday was injured, but not
treated. His auto was sUghtly damaged and he was clted for OWl.
In other accldents, the patrol sald
two veltlcles, one dtiven by Lula
Kitchen, 34, and the other by David
L. Holter, 43, both of Gallipolis, both
turned from 7 onto BulavtlleAddtson Road at 4: (l) p.m. Saturday when Kitchen slowed her
vehicle for traffic and was struck in
the rear by Holter's veltlcle.
The patrol sald sUght damage
1Continued on page 10)

21

_up to .,(01, 'lbe. Cbupa I'SI)ted

'.. . '

".

Cardinal Cody dies Sunday
CHICAGO - As c hurch offlclals prepared for the funera l of Cardinal John P. Cody, uncertainty clouded the future of e probe into
allegatlons he misused church funds - charges a lllelong friend
believes were "the direct cause" of hls death.
The splritualleader of the nation's largesl Roman Catholic archdlocese dled early Sunday of an apparent heart attack a1 the age of 74.
He had a history of heart trouble and had been conlined to hls home
in recent months after a lengthy hospital stay.
The controversial. strong-wllled churchman was under federal
scrutiny following allegations he lllegally diverted up to $1 rnllllon in
church funds to hls step-cousin, Helen Dolan Wilson.

Seven die in traffic accidents
COLUMBUS At least seven people were killed in traffic accidents
in Oltlo thls weekend, according to the HJghwa y Pa trot.
The patrol counts fatalltles from 6 p.m . Friday 10 mldnlght
Sunday.
The dead :
SUNDAY
NEW PHILADELPIDA -Sandra Wardell, 18, New Pl1lladelphla,
in a two-car accident on clty street ln New Pl1lladelphla ln 1\iscarawas County.
RAVENNA- Aprll A. Oblak, 18, Ravenna, and Frank C. Oblak,
15, Ravenna, ln a one-car accldenl on state Route 14 in Portage
County.
MOUNT GILEAD- Darvln L. Brown, 47, of Winchester. Ind., a
passenger, ln a one-car accident on Interstate n In Morrow County.
SATURDAY
CINCINNATI -Steven Bowman, 21 , of Cincinnatl , a pedestrtan
struck by a veltlcle on a Cincinnati c lty street.
LISBON - Clyde A. Dotson Jr .. 22. of Leetonia. In a one-car
accident on a Columbiana County road.
DELAWARE- Dlona L. Grashel, 19, of Westerville, a passenger,
in a twO:Car accident at the intersection of Ohio 605 a nd 371n Dela ware County.

TOOl, Italy -A tlre raged unchecked for more than 40 minutes at
an antlques falr ln a 15th century bulldlng, killing a t least 34 people
and injuting nearly 40, because thls town of 18,00J people has no flre
protection.
Giuseppe Zamberlltti, the cabinet minister In charge of clvll defense, sald It took more than 40 minutes to gel !lre trucks from fou r
nearby towns. Thelr crews couldn't control the intense names until
helicopters sprayed water onto the burning Palazzo del Vignola.
Heldt Jarratt, a New York Clty woman who escaped after Ute
explosion and flash flre Sunday, sald the flremen dldn '1anive for an
hour.

Two indictments
returned by j~ry

years

Dwain Edward Helton. 48, Pasadena . Texas. formerly of the
Reedsville area, was sentenced to a term of one 10 10 yea rs when he
entered a voluntary plea of gullty to a charge of corrupting a minor,
a felony of the third degree this momlng ln Melgs County Common
Pleas Court.
Helton appeared on a bill of lnformatlon prepared by the offlce of
the prosecutlng attorney Fred W. Crow. IT!. The charge resulted
from incidents whlch occurred in late summer and fall oll~l and
involved Helton having sex with a 14 year old Melgs County glrl.
Helton had fled with the glrl to Texas In December. He was
arrested ln early Aprll by Texas authorltles on a warrant from
Melgs County.

Raging fire kills 34 people

Bl~'l ...

Two indictments were returned
Monday when the Melgs COunty
Grand Jury met in Its flna1 session
· ot the January term..BrlnleY Seth, Pomeroy, was
charged with traf;flcklng (sale) in
marijuana, a felony ol the third degree carrying a possible penalty ot
not less than one nor more then 10
in a proper penallnstltutln ol
the State and tine up to $5,001. The
charge resulted flom the alleged.
sale ol a poWJd of m.artJuana to an
1!JI(IercoVer agent in Poml!roy in
March ol this year.
Earl Phelps, Pomeroy, was
cbatged with two counts 01tratftck·
1118 (sale) In •m.rt.Juana and one
count ~ poe·es"on ol marljiJllllll,
eiiCli count. beiDg a felooy ol the
third degree carryiJII a pqu!blepenalty ot DOt -leilll than one 1101' niore
than 10 yean In prtiCI1 aDd a IIDe !1

Man sentenced after guilty plea

44 sailors await political asylum
PANAMA CITY, Panama - Forty-four Pollsh sallors who
thought they were in U.S. territory when they jumped ship in Panama after the military crackdown in their Communlsl homeland
are stUl waiting for polltical asylum.
Panamanian authotities say the sallors, held at a mllltary post,
are growing frustrated, bored and increasingly concerned over the
well-being of thelr famllies in Poland.
A source at the Foreign Mlntstry sald Panama has senl along the
sailors' requests for admission as polltlcal refugees to the Unlled
States, Canada, Australla, South Attica, West Germany and
Venezuela.

from tile alleged sale, on two separate occasions In March ol this year
ot Matijuana to an ·undercover
agent In Pomeroy.
Both Seth and Phelps were arrested by Meigs County Sher1f1 deputies in March on tile charges but
were free pending action by the
grand Jury.

Four laJ;Re garbage-type plactlc
bags containing marijuana were
·seized under a search warrant obtained by the
of1lce at
the time of the orlglilal arrests.
Seth and Plielps will.appear before common pleas Judge John C.
Bacon for arraignment in ·.the near
future.
Prosecuting attorney Fred
Crow, m, presented the cases to
. the IP'8ild Jury aDd wllliePJe&amp;ent

Weather forecast

prosector's

w.

the State ol Ohio when Seth and
Pllelps Ill to trial 011 the charges.

.

•'

~ - Flnt piaee ,wbmen of lite "origin of the cannon cootest" beld at Syracuse Elementary recendy were Beeld Lavendar, lotermedlate division, 8Dd Mark Brown, prlmat'y dlvllloo. Mn, Rutb
StearanpoDBOred the contest ID wblcb aD sludenlll parUelpated. Most of
tbe wlnDiag euJries agreed the cannou was ouce located ou "Company
HW" beblnd the preseat bome ol Bob Louks. It wu moved to tbe school
yard by llle late Cliff WllllamJ. Tbe canuou wu fired as a memorial on
the Foqrtb of Jaly. Sbowll wltb the old reUc are !rout 1-r, Beeld Laveudar
·and Mark BI'OWII; becli, Ratb Stearns.

I

Cloudy tonight with a 50 percent chance of showers. Lows around
48. Winds notihwesterly 10-:ID mph. Tuesday, cloudy with a 30 percent chance of showers. Highs in the mid-50s.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Wednellday tbrouRb Friday:
Fair Wednellday aad 'lblll'8day, Chanoe ol showers Friday. IDgbs
In &amp;be 1101 Wednellday, 1D the 808 'lblll'!lday aad In the mld.als to low
'lOI Friday. Lows ID the mlcl-a8 to low to&amp; Wednesday aad 'lbursday
81111 In the to&amp; Friday.

�Monday, April 26, 1982
Page-2_:The Daily 'Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'Commentary
Berry's World
1H~ B~J\\SH
A.f?.f. (}&gt;MIN6~

1Hf. 6((\'\\SH

~~ tOMlN&amp;.l

Wrtff¢
liN/~ I- t\~ Ml&gt;

'Ill~I W'~ ~

I

~y,

Direction

zerou~_______w_il_lia_m_F_._B_uc_k_ley_J_r.

The Great Budget Compromise
has yet to ~ announced, but almost
every recent version of it projects
either or both of the following:
namely, suspens ion of year three's
tax reduction; and/or a four percent
surcharge on incomes over $35.000
or $40,000. The Year Three proposal
is an invitation to economic incoherence and the end of
Reaganomics. The second proposal
1s economi ca lly trivi al a nd
philosophically obnoxious.
To deal quickly with Year Three:
If taxes are not then reduced, the
total reduction for year one and year
two would add up to 15 percent.
(There is no scheduled reduction in
the 50 percent marginal rate. I No
matter how much progress Mr.
Reagan makes against inflation in

political ends in mind. They wish
their names to appear on the nightly
news as those who have the courage
to vote against the rich. Big dea l.
The additional revenues ar e
exiguous; it is the point of the thing
the potiticials have in mind to make.
That point should not be tolerated by
Mr. Reagan, who has the constitutional authority to veto the surcharge.
Notice several fa ctors . The first
is that we are prepared officially to
label as rich famili es earning
$35,000. This will surprise many such
families, who are already paying
taxes of 50 percent on the marginal
dollar, are trying to send children to
college, some of which cost over
$10,000, and are paying interest on
their mortgages of 14 percent.

These tense weeks have all the makings of AI Haig's finest hour.
And goodness knows he can certainly use it. He has been, during the past
year plus, possibly the most embattled secretary of state in the nation's
recent history.
His particular problem is that most of his battling is with domestic
rather than foreign adversaries. When he isn't skirmishing with the White
House staff or leading a cha rge against skeptical committees on Capitol Hill ,
he's being upstaged on the world stage by Caspar Weinberger,
unquestionably the most peripatetic defense secretary in the nation 's
history.
The Falklands crisis, however, has given Haig the opportunity he has
been seeking since before the Reagan inauguration . He has taken undisputed
charge of foreign policy - or at least the issue of the hour.
And in the most showy possible way - as a shuttle diplomat.
There is much he can contribute in the role. A deft intermediary who has
the confidence of both sides and comprehends their interests and sensitivities can often see solutions the impassioned adversaries are blind to. At
the very least, he ca n be the medium of reaching a free-sav ing compromise
perfectl y apparent to both sides but a way out that national pride, left
unassisted, might block.
On the other hand, shuttle diplomacy can have its disadvantages. The
highly publicized shuttling between capitals precludes any possibility of settling a dispute quietly through normal diplomatic channels. It may encourage, or impel , the involved governments to harden their public
positions. It distracts attention and energy from issues of considerably more
long-term importance to the world's peace and prosperity and if it fails, the
intermediary and his government are losers along with the original antagonists .
History provides evidence for both possibilities.
As a shuttle diplomat, Haig's mentor, Henry Kissinger, was in a class by
himself - with which evaluation he undoubtedly would be the first to agree.
He reveled in the role. to the extent that if crises of sufficient magnitude had
not come readymade during his era it might be suspected that some would
have had to have been manufactured to keep his energies and interest
adequately engaged.

payers by a mere 15 percent is to
leave them pay ing taxes well above
those legislated. If Mr. Reagan
averages seve n percent inflation
during years one and two, then the
tax reductions will amqunt to zero. If
he manages one percent inflation
during those years, taxes will be approximately at the level they
reached during the first years of the
Carter administraiton.
But focus on the exhibitionistic
surcharge. How much revenue
would it bring in? Depending on
whether it is initiating at the $35,000
income level or at the $40,000 income
level, between $5 billion and $4
billion. When you are fi ghting a
deficit in excess of $100 billion, $5
billion is hardly enough to justify the
abandonment of a philosophical
position, namely that all tax reductions must be reductions right down
the line in order to put an end to the
costly and pernicious victimization
of economic success in America.
What particularly irks is that the
proponents of the four percent surcharge obvious ly have excl usively

That expose on television, Channel
8, by Bill Moyer, lay ing all of the
problems of this country at the door
of the President shows show far the
press, that includes radio and
newspapers. will go to abuse the
sacred rights of free speech. They
don't give the news - they slant the
news and twist the fa cts.
If there is anybody who ought to
feel guilty in this country it's the
mud-s lin ge rs,

monkey

wrench

slingers and the people who took a
solvent nation 50 years ago and
spent it into bankruptcy.
What disgusts me most about the
press is having it come on a few
hours before a presidential speech
and tell me what he is going to say.
Then right after he goes off these
know-it-ails come on and tell me
what I ought to have gotten from the
speech.
Attacking President Reagan has
become a popular political sport.
The Kennedys, the Mondales and the
Tip O'Neals play that broken recordunemployment, big deficit and high
interest rates - H-E-L-P US
HUBERT. Those guys could care
less about the poor. They got an inflation proof tax-free income. They
live like royalty and will retire for
life-like royalty .
Why do the reporters and the com-

-~~ ----------

--

~~

-............___

years, Christian sects have been

includes any lcC::Iching of religion in

giving their corrununist rulers a
headache in the Soviet Union itself.

this officiallyatheistic country .
While Western journalists have
publicized the plight of Soviet Jews,
more than half the prisoners of conscience in 19111 were Baptist, Ad-

As tonishing r eports seeping out of

serious enough to warrant a con-

ve ntis ts,

certed crackdown by the authorities.
The particular targets of their anti-

J ehovah 's Witnesses or other
Christian church members, sourced
told my reporter Jeff Nesbit. Most
were convicted under tht• slander
statute, which carries a maximum

turn out religious literature. The

mentators ally themselves with the
Baptists have a clandestine
left' It's because they are allied
publication called The Christian,
with the liberals, the big labor
while the Adventists have one called
leaders and those soft on comThe True Witness.
munists. That way they keep those
In addition, the underground
million dollar salaries rolling in .
presses have been turning out
I heard a leading commentator
everything from Bibles and hymnals
say with reference to the craze to
to critiques of Soviet law.
freeze our atomic shield, " It's better
This clearly has the Kremlin
to be Red than dead." The answer he
worried. Amnesty International
got was, "Not while I am on a ship
headed for America ."
The press will take something out
of context and then blow it up ad infinitum . That way they can at least
find a contradiction . At a news conWASHINGTON INEA) - In a dazference reporters act like a bunch of zling display of the shortsightedness
first year medical students with for which all politicians are
their first cadaver. What business is notorious, the Democratic Party
it of some long nosed reporter ·ho\\1 ... today Is in a state of mind

Russian

Orthodox,

to confine Christian leaders in mental hospitals for "treatment. "
Even more fri ghtening is the law
concerning depriva tion of parental
rights. Soviet courts ca n take
children away from their paren ts
and ship them to another part of the
country if the elders have "neg lected their duties" in child-rearing.
One such duty is to educate children
in " the sp1rit of the moral code of the
builder of conununism," according
to the Soviets' Fundamentals of

Seven." the Pentecostals who forced
their way into the American Embassy 111 Moscow in 1978 and were

somewhere between euphoria and

his own money to charity? Or
whether the President cuts his own
winter wood. What kind of a mentality is so news hungry that he
would print a person's income tax
return in a newspaper and then
proceed to analyze it with a fine
toothed comb?
We need the press, but not a
hostile and self-serving press if we
are to survive as a nation and continue the American dream. - Gayle
Price.

nirvana .
The Democrats' ecstasy is the
produc t of the precipitously
declining popularity of President
Reagan and his Republican Party a development likely to lead to
resounding GOP defeats in this
autumn's elections and again in
1984, possibly enabling the
Democrats to recapture control of
the White House and the Senate.
But serious observers of contemporary politics (including many
thoughtful Democrats) who are
willing to ·look more than six months
or two-and-a-half years into the
future are not especially sanguine
about the Democrals' long-tenn
prospects.
Their problem, in the words of
political analyst Michael Barone, is
that the Democrats "seem fixated
on reviving or somehow duplicating
the natural majority that President

The Daily Sentinel
Ill ( ' uurt Strt·•·l
Pumt'nl)', flhiu
il4-9t2-2 15&amp;

llf.\'IITEil m THE I NTF. RF..~T Of TiiF. Mf-:JCiS. MASUN ARF.A

tuary in the embassy basement.
The amazing thing about the
Kremlm's crackdown is the evidence it gives that Christianity still survives after more than 60 years of offi cial repression. The regime's fury
is a lribute to the courage and
devotions of Chri stians determinedly practicing their faith in

Legis lation . There are docwne nted

def1a nce of the overwhelming power

Besides outright prosecution, the
corrununists have other official

cases of children having gone into
hiding to avoid being kidnapped by
the state.
The authorities have been quite
successful in their crackdown on

of hostile rul ers.
WHITE HOUSE PIPEUNE :· In
June 1967, a group of anti-Vietnam
War protesters in Lansin~. Mich.,
were seeking contributions, and

weapons

Christians.

rno!:.1

those who res ponded with money

members of the Baptists' loose
governing body, the Council of
Evangelical Christians and Baptists
in the U.S.S.R. , have been m pnson
since January 1980.
This widespread official persecution of Christians has gone virtually unnoticed in the United
States. Only rare cases are reported
here - like that of the "Siberian

received thank-you notes. "This note
is to acknowledge your ... con-

sentence of three years in prison.

to use

against Soviet

citizens brave enough to practice
their religion.
Belief in Christianity is defined by
Soviet law a s a form of
schizophrenia. With a certain ironic
Marxist logic, a Soviet c itizen who

dares to practice Christianity might
reasonably be deemed crazy and out
of touch with his environment. At
any rate, this statute has been used

For

example,

Franklin D. Roosevelt put together
in the 1930s and 1940s."
'
Barone, the author of the highly
regarded Almanac of American
Polit(C$, argues persuasively in a
recently published monograph that
the New Deal political coalition not
only has become unglued but is
likely to never again be reassembled.
The demogra~ components of
that coalition included Southern
whites, Northern blacks, Jews,
Catholics, union members holding
blue-collar jobs and ethnic voters.
Those groups, alienated from the
mainstream of society as recently as
the 1950s and 1960s, clustered around
the Democratic Party because they
"felt they needed some special
protection or encouragement from
the federal government," Barone
notes in a paper prepared for the
National Policy Exchange.
But as those voters attained with considerable assistance from
the Democrat.. - the recognition
they long had sought, the party
become the victim of its own suc-

ce'sses.

A series of civil-rights laws, conceived by Democrats in CQngress
and the White House, gave blacks an
unprecedented measure of social ,
econOfTliC and politi ca l in dependence - while simultaneously
alienating Southern whites from the
political party they had embraced
since Reconstruction.
Roosevelt's legislative program,
,Wmilar initiatives promoted by
Democrats· in the ensuing decades
and a protracted period of
prosperity and economic growth
produced a substantial degree of
parity for blue-collar voters who
previously viewed themselves as
isolated members of the " working
class."
At the same time, crucial elements of the Democrats' constituent
base were being eroded through
developments beyond the party's
control.
Union membership within the
country's labor force, which peaked
in the years inunediately following
World War II and stood at25 percent
in the mid-1950s, has dropped below
20 percent today.

r-------,

George plays musical chairs
as Michael replaces · Lemon

tribution to L.an.sing Vietnam Sum-

mer," they read. "We are grateful
for your support. In the near future,
we will bring you up to date on the
deve loping swruner plans." The
notes were signed by the secretary
of the organization's steering com-

mittee, David A. Stockman.

The major urban areas of the Nor-·
theast and Midwest contmue to
produce impressive Democratic
majorities on a percentage basis but yield fewer actual votes for the
party because their population has
steadily declined.
Notwithstanding the compelling
evidence to the onctrary, the
Democratic Party persists in perpetuating the myth that it maintains
the allegiance of - or can readily
reconstruct - a coalition that
probably has been irrevocably
disbanded.
.
A recent report on a nationwide
political survey conducted for the
party, for example, refers to
"traditional Democratic groups like
minorities, unskilled laborers
lower-income

voters

and

NEW YORK (AP) - George
Steinbrenner ts doing the "Yankee
Shuttle" again - this time with tamtltar dance partners Bob Lemon
and Gene Michael - and morale on
his defending Amerlcan League
champions has hit rock bottom.
The New York Yankees owner
announced Sunday, only a few
hours after the club broke a threegame losing streak by beating Detroit, that Lemon, his 'manager,
was tired. He was brlnglng back
Michael, the former Yankees general manager-turned managerturned scout.
At baseball's winter meetings
last December In Dallas, Steinbrenner llad announced that MIchael would return as Yankee
skipper tor l!fl.'l, when Lemon
would retire as manager. MIchael's return came only 148 games
early.
Steinbrenner, tnturtated that the
team had lost a six-game World
Serles to the Los Angeles Dodgers,
reportedly was ready to !Ire Lemon
last winter. A plea by Lemon that
he be given another chance Is said
to have convinced Steinbrenner to
delay his plan.
Since Steinbrenner, acting as the
head of a consortdum, purchased
the Yankees on Jan. 3, 1973, he has

presided over eight managerial
changes, beginning with the resignation of Ralph Houk on Sept. 30,
1973.
Michael also becomes the third
man In the past tour years to get a
second shot at managing the Yankees. The others were Lemon and
Billy Martin. Only once In slx years
have the Yankees had one manager (Dick. Howser In 1!8l) tor an
entire season.
"I've only been here two weeks,
and It seems like there's one controversy after another," said shortstop Roy Smalley, acquired by the
Yankees In a trade that sent reliever Ron Davis to Minnesota . "I
guess everybody else Is used to this
by now, but I'm not."
Steinbrenner announced the !IrIng of Lemon In a lengthy statement distributed by IIv Kaze, the
club's media director, at the Stadium at about 8 p.m. EDT. Kaze
said there would be no other comment . In the statement, Steinbrenner said, "No one Is more
appreciative of Lem's great loyalty
to the organization than I am. He
has always been loyal to the Yankees and to me In whatever role he
has been as~ to assume."
"It Is just that Heel that It !sin the
best lnterest,s of the club that this

Riverdowns results
CINCINNATI (AP) - It took a
photo tlnlsh, but Billy w. captured
the featured ninth race Sunday at
River Downs, completing the mlle
course In 1:38 1-5.
Billy W. returned $7.!ll, $3.40 and
$2.60. Timeless Statue was second,
paying $3 and $2.60. Lady of Fame·
was third and paid $3. The No. 4
entry won ttve out of 10 races durIng the day.
The 4-4 double ot Happy Mac and
Flbi1llate paid $346.!ll, and the
crowd of 5,824 wagered $667.693.

Wood
Chair
Maple

The Daily Sentinel

unio~

SAVE

ns.oo

to not slide as he scores the tying nm in the ninth innin g

when Reds' pinch hitter Mike Vail drove both players

HOUSTON (API - Cincinnati time. Before that, we'd had a hard
and Houston, both trying to Ught time putting It together. This lineup
tires under their teams' dismal looks pretty good to me. We'll beaU
starts this season. battled tor 10 In- right when everybody start.s hitt ing
nlngs before the Reds finally together."
cracked together tne two !llnt- . The Astros had the game under
control until the ninth Inning when
stones they needed for a spark second baseman Dave Concepcion Concepcion led oft with his seventh
htt of the three-game series and
a nd ptnchhltter Mike Vall.
Vall's ninth-tnnlng single pro- Johnny Bench reached first on Phil
duced two runs and forced extra Ga mer's fielding error prtor to
lnnlngs a nd Concepcion's lOth In· Vail's pinch hit single up the
ning sacrtflce fiy scored the win· middle.
nlng run as the Reds rallied tor a 4-3
victory over the frustrated Astros,
The O:.~i l v Sentinel
who now face a 12-game road trtp In
14 days.
,\ llt l t., iun,f Mul tinw dia. ilw
"Thts ball club has the makings
l 'u!,h._ll,·d &gt;'\ &gt;'r\ ;t f1• •r!I&lt;M&gt;I\. Moond;n thn•u rl·
of a contender," Reds Manager
Fnd.t .\ l lll '.,urt St n· d . !;1 l ilt' Olin• \',d in
John McNamara said. " We've felt
l 'uiliL~htlll' l '••ttt p.ml
.VIulltl twdtd lr to
1' 10 t1Wt 11 1 . 1&gt;1u" 4 ~ili9. !19 2&lt;!1~ St•o·und ' l .t ~'
that way all along."
pu~I &lt;J ~\' 'p;tl d .tl l 'o1 11 11'r11~ 01110 •
Until the late-Inning heroics by
Mt' lll lk' l' Tho· A~.~ •Wt.tlt•d l'ro ·~:- . l ni dlld 1);11 ·
Vall and Concepcion It appeared
ly Pns.-. A ss•&gt;~ 'Ht \toll ami tile Allll'lll'&lt;lll
that Houston rlghtllelder Terry
N,·wspa)Wr Publ1stwrs 1\ss•&gt;l 'tHII&lt;•n . !'-l&lt;lli&lt;lllal
Ad 1 ,·rl "till'
H •·pft''-t'lll,tl il , .
Hr ;mlt,ttT•
Puhl had Ignited the Astros with
1'-int ~ P.IPO:'l Siiln. 7.1.1 Tl nnl Al o'IIU o', 'it·&gt;~
three runs batted In on a ho,me run,
York . 1\t · &gt;~ \'11rk 100!7
double and sacrtftce fiy .
POSTMA."'TE!i So·nd , uldn ·-.~ to Tlw D&lt;~ tl&gt;
Puhl's three-hit performance
St'tll 1111'1 . Ill ( 11111'1 .'\1 . l'«llh'l'H\ . (Ill I ,f ;)l ti~ l .
ended a .167 start after a seasonSl'fi.SffHPTIO N HATES
long search tor the proper batting
n, rarrit•r ur Mntur Buult·
Oth· \.\ &lt;•o•k .
$1 00
stance.
On t· ,\1 un\h
$4 40
"I've been trying everything posOrw y,.,u
$.)1 80
!'l i N(; I.E Cfii'Y
sible I know to find out what's been
PB IC'ES
wrong," Puhl said. "It's been a long
15t't•llb
Da d.1
search but I've gone back to my
Sub~• fl\)1'1' '&gt; n"l th''&gt;tfllll' tu Jl;t~ llu· &lt;';Hrw•
original stance as much as
1llill rt·tnll 111 ,nh.tnt ·•· dtrt•d [, , Tl w J)a ll l
So·n·lilhl u ll i l :!, 6 "r 12 IIHJi tlli hi!~ I.'&gt; ( ' r,·d;t
possible."
\.\d!JJI• ~IV I 'l ll 'ill'f ll'l' o'ilt'h ll lll ll\)1
Puhl's hitting performance and
N• • ~ uh ~1Tt pl1••ll '- j,~ ttldil ))l'f'lllllll'd 111 I • \.\II '
starter Don Sutton's pitching shut
" l11•r•· il&lt;~l llt' t·,t rrwr wn·•···· ~~ ,n itt lab lt·
out the Reds tor slx Innings until
MA II . S\JRSCRIPTIIINS
former Astro Cesar Cedeno
Oh inrtml Wt •s l \"iq:iniu
doubled and scored on Dan
:! Month
$1 2 1:i
S1)( llll•llll•
i 20 80
Drlessen's ln1leld hit in the seventh.
I y,.,".
$:19 no
Vatl's ninth lnntng single to cenHutn OuL-. ult• Oh1u
ami \\ •·~ 1 \'ir).!in ia
ter tleld tied It ott rellever Joe Sam.! !\11111\h
$1.1 00
bi to and C oncepcion 's
fiM ..uth
$~.1 ~ 0
$·H. l0
I Yt ·&lt;tr
game-winner came off loser Randy
Moffitt, ().1.
"The last two games have been
pretty consistent," Concepcion
said. "Our pitchers have come
through and we've hit at the rtght
to

.

!fred

·--

Mleblel IUid Le.lllllll.rY~. :I!nl\l- ••tlnta ·.. Y~ee maaagen. (AP
Laserpbot).
. '
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SWORb il~'
SllRCERER R
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SJIJA ~ J N'I.A '; N:[ ~

u~

&amp; JOO

KHp •n .,-.out foT
tha funniHI movl&lt;'

abou t &amp;"""'"ff up
..,•• onad..!

SV AC ONLY
W l T R OR
7 I 0 75 25
Southern
6 I 1 72 22
East er n
3 3 1 45 43
Hannan Tr ace
3 5 0 43 45
Sou thwes ter n
3 5 0 46 61
Kyger Creek
0 B 0 19 95
N ortn Ga lli a

New maple
hutch and
buffet,
42r78

TRAILMASTER
Model 45-K
45-65 lb. Weight, Right Hand

SAVE $100

pc. wood
sef ·

95

OUT AGAIN, IN AGAIN-¥ Lem!JD, right, wa
SUDday algbt
as maDIIger of llle New York YUkeel, llle Amerleb Leque Club IIJio
~ Owuer Gecqe S.teblbnmlel', wllo Dade llle IDQGIIIIICemeat In 8
mtemeat, Slid ~- wOI be IIIKeeeded by GeDe ¥Icblel, left. Both

addreula«

~

TEAM

Reg.
89.95

1

$29995
l#

,

,. , . ..1

n ..,O:.nt..'l' .ul&lt;l ma~:t.

SVAC standings

REG. SJ99.95

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

:~ •mber. No ••d&amp;Ded leUen will bt pablilbed. LeUen 1hould be 1111ood LIIJ ll!,

ROSSBl.iRC. Ohio 1AP1
Danny Smilh of Hendersonville.
Tenn ., won the firsl United States
Auto Club Sll\'l'r Crown race of 1982
Sunday al Eldora racewav.
Smit h passed Rich Vogler or Indi
ana polls on Ihe 56th of 60 laps after
Vog ler had led all lht• wav unl !l
then. Vogler ca mr In s0eond .
Other lop flni shrrs were Ron Shuman. Mesa. Ariz .. lhlrd ; Jerry
Weeks. Anaheim, Ca ll!, founh,
and Larry Rice, BrownsiJurg, Ind ..
fifth .
Larry Dickson of :Vl ,ll·iriW. Ohio.
won I he 2().!a p srmi ·fealure .

r-;============:;

N.ew S pc. wood
dinette
R~g. S259.95

lEITERS OF OPINION art ftlcomed. 11wy 1boakl be 1n1 tlulo- wonb 10111. AU
· lt&gt;Uen are 1ubjed to f'diUq aDd muJt be "IBN '4111111 oaurw, addrtn aDd lclepboae

Crown ract• winnt•r

Late rally gives Reds
come-from-behind win

New 7
dinette

AliNillblnt Publhdlt'r/Cootrnllrr

~~

in with a bast' hit off Hnuston Astrus' rl'lid pitf'hl'r .ftm
Sambito Sunda y in tht• Astrudqnw. Ht·tls won tht· gamt·
in 10 innings, 4-3. ( AP Last•rphoto 1.

TIES THE SCORE- Cincinnati Reds' Dave Cm&gt;
cepclon signals pinch runner Paul Householder, right,

Prices in effect thru Sat. May 11 1982

SAV--e-Sfoif.

A MEMBER uf Ttw A...IM'Ialed ~~. lllliiDd Dally Pftu Auociatloo aDd tht
• Amtric'aD Ntwlp!lpt:t Publl1bml A111odadw.

3

COMPOUND BOW

members. ''
That same poll, however, provides
fresh evidence to support a theory
that has gained substantial acceptance in recent years - that
neither political party has the longterm SUp[l(Jrt of a firm majority of
the electorate.

BOB HOEFLICH

New1Ed.itor

Page

'. .'

Finish .
Reg.
49.95

Publi~tht'r

....... aol p&lt;noaallllft.

change be made now, " Steinbrenner said. "I have discussed It
with Lem. He understands my feelIngs even though I had promised
him the entire season."
The victory over the Tigers Sunday was New York's first at home
this season, and the Yankees still
were two games under .500 at S-8.
"When we lose, It gets so much
more compllcated here, " rellet ace
Rich Gossage saJd before the announcement, although rumors of
the tiring were widespread. "It has
become very depressing around
here.
Michael Is no newcomer to the
Yankees, many of whom are tamlllar with his managing style from
tast season. Michael, then general
manager of the club, was reassigned to the tleld by Steinbrenner
on Nov. 21, 1980, replacing Howser.

All

DOONESBURY

ROBERT L. WlNGETI
PAT WHITEHEAD

lenzuela, 2-2, although the Mexican
lett-bander gave up only three hits
In 71-3lnnlngs. But he lett the game
with one out and the bases loaded tn
the eighth alter giving up a single
by Jet! Ransom and two walks.
Steve Howe struck out Joe Morgan, who homered In the first, but
rellever Dave Stewart gave up a
run-scoring Infield single by Jack
Clark and Leonard's second homer
of the season to left-center tleld.
Cubs 5, Pirates 3
Larry Bowa, batting just .169 goIng Into the game, sllced a two-run
double to climax the Cubs' tour-run
fourth lnnlng as they snapped a
!our-game losing streak.
With Pittsburgh leading 3-0,
Gary Woods doubled In the first run
ott loser Rick Rhoden, ().2, and
Bowa followed with his two-base hit
down the left field llne. Bowa then
scored when pinch-hitter Steve
Henderson singled.
Randy Martz, 1-2, got the \1ctory
In rellet, blanktng the Pirates on
two hits the last tlve lnnlngs.
EX[J08 5, Milts 2
Andre Dawson had three hits Including a pair of run-scoring ~In­
gles, and Scott Sanderson tired a
tour-hitter tor seven lnnlngs to lead
Montreal past the New York Mets.
Sanderson, 2-1, recorded 17
straight outs, Including a sacrtflce
fly by Ron Gardenhire, after the
Mets loaded the bases with no outs
In the second Inning. Sanderson
yielded \0 reliever Jet! Reardon,
who worked the final two lnntngs
tor his third save.
Dawson twice singled home Tim
Raines, who doubled In the first In·
nlng and walked and stole second In
the fourth.

given an uneasy, unofficial sa nc-

FDR coalition dead"-''_______R_ob_er_t_~_al_te_rs·

the President or any one else gives

outlasted Houston 4-3 tn 10 lnntngs
and Sari Francisco defeated Los
Angeles S-3. San Diego was rained
out at Atlanta.
It's been a season of winning
streaks In the NL, with Atlanta capturing a record 13 In a row to start
the season and San Diego sttll workIng on a l().game spree In addition
to St. Louts' 12 straight.
'We knew It had to end one of
these days," said Cardinals Manager Whitey Herzog. "We were facIng Carlton today, and then we play
Houston with all of those good arms
wattlng tor us."
Sunday's victory was only the
fourth In 15 games for the Phlllles,
who also,had lost their last three.
The Phlllles scored the game's
first run In the fourth ott loser Andy
Rlncon, 1-1 on an RBI single by
Gary Matthews.
Rookie Bobby Demler and Ivan
DeJesus had run-scoring singles tn
the fifth, and Demler came home
with DeJesus got caughi tn a
rundown.
The Phlllles sent nine men to the
plate and added tour more runs 1n
the eighth ott relievers Dave LaPoint and Jim Kaat. Pete Rose and
Manny TrUlo had sacrtflce Illes,
Matthews hit another RBI single
and Garry Maddox knocked In a
run with a double.
Glanla 6, Dodgers 3
Jet! Leonard spoUed Los Angeles' bid tor Its t1tth straight victory with the first grand slam
homer of his major-league career
In the bottom of the eighth Inning
tor San Francisco.
Leonard's blast also snapped the
Giants' tour-game losing streak
and hung the loss on Fernando Va-

1

estimates that at least 115 Baptist
and 30 Adventists in the past two
years have been imprisoned for · 'anti-Soviet slander" - an offense that

Russia recently indicate that the
Christian " problem" has become

By A8soclaied Press
P hiladelphia Manager Pat Corrales says reports that Steve Carlton's fastball Is dead are greatly
exaggerated.
"Steve has been throwing the ball
as good as I've ever seen him, but
has not been winning," Corrales
sa.ld after Carlton picked up his first
victory as the PhllJies beat St. Louts
84 Sunday. "Today he had a real
good fastball. He had real good
stuff and excellent velocity."
Carlton, a three-Ume Cy Young
Award winner who doesn't talk to
reporters, lost his first tour decisions with a 6.85 earned run average. The worst start In his career
started whispers that the 37-yearold lett-hander, the National
League's all-Ume strikeout leader,
had lost something.
But on Sunday, Carlton held the
Cardinals, who had won their previO)lS 12 games, to one run and
three hits through eight lnntngs
while strtktng out eight. He tired tn
the ninth, allowjng tlve more hits
and three runs.
"He's pitched the same way all
year. He's got the same fastball
and the same sllder that he's had
since spring tratntng," saki catcher
Bo Dlaz, who was acquired by the
Phlllles In the ott-season. " I can't
compare him to last year because I
The dltterence Sunday, Dlaz
said, "was that we gave him some
support and that's what he's been
needing."
The Phlllles made et!lclent use of
nine hits, scoring three runs tn the
t1tth and tour In the eighth.
In other NL games, Montreal
tripped New York 5-2, Chicago
topped Pittsburgh 5-3, Ctnctnnatt

, 1MmrA~PTo GO ThE EXrRA MILL .' SAID~ m51DENT

Middleport, Ohio

Carlton, Phillies snap
Cardinals' win streak

wasn 't here."

WASHI NGTON - Perhaps emboldened by the partial success of
the Catholic Church in standing up to
the Polish government in recent

presses of various Christian churches.
Since 1979, Baptists and Seventhday Adventist' have managed to set
up secret "publishing houses" to

Upset with press

tionality . Although it is conjectural
whether he will come out in favor of
a surtax, indeed Mr. Reagan came
out for tuition tax credits - but only
for families ea rning less than $50,000
per year. That dangerous concession, so easy to make in order to
appease the 7 p'clock news-types, is
to welcome back into one's house
that philosophical malfunction that
says you have got to have especially
severe politics against those who are
economically successful.
Quite apart from such a policy's
arg uing against exactly the ec:
conomic successes we need in order
to do something about '!F'employment and reindustrializatfon, it
reinforces the egalitarian notion and
philosophical arguments.

A problem for Soviet.;;z.S_____Ja_ck_A_n_de_rso_n

religious zeal arc the underground

Letter to editor

What is illuminating, however, is
how small the recapture figure is.
Its smallness recohfirms that taxing
the so-called rich yields very little,
because - on the scale of government operations - the rich haven't
that much to offer. The figures for
1977 show that if you took the whole
of what remained, after taxes, away
from those who pay over 50 percent,
you would recover only enough to
take care of running the government
for less than a week. The overwhelming tax burden is on the middle and lower incomes - because
the high income group doesn't have
enough money.
What especially saddens, then, is
the appa rent marc h of the Reagan
administration away from propor-

~~

years one a nd two, to relieve tax-

Shuttle time: AI
Haig's finest hour

April 26, 1982

Pomeroy

'199

(}

:}

-

-~-

=--- -

Tri-County Sport Shop ·
-~

Next To Mason County Fairground
675·2988
Store Hours - Mon . thru Sat. 93 0 a.m . 3:00 p m..
Closed Sunday

�Monday, April 26, 1982

POITMIJ'Oy-Middleport, Ohio

~ge-4- The Daily Sentinel

Missed opportunities costly.;
•
WID
Orioles hold on for 2-1
By AfMOclated l're88
The Chicago White Sox were
standing on the hot comer, watch·
lng a lot of golden opportunities go
by.
The White Sox left six runners In
scoring position Sunday - IncludIng four at third base - and the
frustration added up to a 2-1 loss to
the Baltimore Orlole5.
"The ninth lnnlng was a Uttle
hard to beUeve." said Chlcago Manager Tony LaRussa. "All the things
we did, and we couldn't get a run

ln."

third inning home run fair alter just mlsslng the left
field foul pole. The Royals went on to lop the Indians 6-3
in Sunday afternoon's rain delayed game In Kansas
City. IAP Laserphoto) .

IT WAS A FOUL BALL! -

Cleveland Indians'
manager Dave Garcia (right) , third baseman Toby

Harrah (front center) and pitcher Bert Blyleven (rear
re nter!, argue with third base umpire Jim Evans I left)
after Evans ca lled Kansas City Royals ' George Brett's

By

New Yoril: l. M ootreaJ 0
Pltt.oiburJh 8. Chicago ~
Sa n ~ 6. Atl ant.a 4

The~...,._

AMERICAN LEAGU£
........ llh·w L
l'rt.
GB
617
u
6
Of•trol1
I
9
6
l:loston
571
II&lt;,
6
Mtlwau~
Ck&gt;vl.'land
Nl'W York
8
3JJ
~
ll
Toronto
Baltl morr
' 10
WcMem DlvWoo
11
,
California
L'hlc""'
9
2~
Kansas Ctty
9
10
SeattJP

""
' "'"'
"'
m
""

'

QllXIand

'

Ml""""m

I'

"'"'"" ,,'"

10

1' 12'

T"""

"''"'"
-'"

Saeurday'a Garnm
Detrott 7, Nl'W Ycrk 2
Boston 8. Toronto 7
Baltlrmrt' 7, Chicago 4

..

"'

·~

MUwauke&gt;P 4. TPxas I

Ctncinna!l 3. ltou.ston 2
UJs Angeles 1. San F'ra ncbco 6
~'•Game~

Sa n Diego at A.l.la nta, ppd .. rain
Mo nt rt'a l ~. NI.'W York 2
Plilladelphia &amp;. St. Loub 4
Chk'ago ~. Pittsburgh

San F'ranciK'O 6, Los Angt"le. J

MondaY• Game~
Plttsburth tCandelarta 0.1! at
Atlanta tMahler l&lt;ll. (nl
Houston t Ruhlfo 0.21 at St.Loul.!i
Jfo.tartln 2-11. tn t
Only games !k'heduled
~IGJIITIM

CtnclnnaU a t Chicago
at r\tla nta. ' "'

HOU!!On II St. I..OdlJ, I n I
Nt'W Yortt at San D~etro. tn t
Phlladrlphia at Lol Anaeles. tnt
MontrPal at San F'rancbro. tnt

NBA results

Ka!U&amp;J City 5. Cleveland I

California t. Oakland 2
See. tlk' J, Minnesota 1

.............,._

Na&amp;ul BMketball ~

.... "'"'""'

Sunday'• GaroN
Boston :'1 . Toronto 4. 12 Innings
Nt'W York J, Detroit I
BalUmore 'l. Chicago I
Kai\SJU Ctty 6, Clfrve!and 3
M1lwauke&gt;P U , Texas 6
CalUom1a ~ Oak1l.nd 1

WE'n'ER.'Irl OONFERENCE
S&amp;tunlay'• Game
PhoeniX 124, Ot&gt;nver U9 ,

Phoenix wtru1 ser1es 2-1
Sunday'• Gamt
SMtUe lOt.. Houlton &amp;\,
St&gt;llttlP wtns IM.'I1P!I 2-I

SMIDt ~. Ml1111e!tot1 4, U lnl"trlp

Moocl.Y• G.,._

Eu&amp;tm Coall!l'mOe
~·aGamM

lhston 1(8, WaslllniUJn 91,
l:lmton lead.s !lel1es ).{1
Ptilladelphia 1%1, MUwaullee 122,
Ptilladrlphta leads Jer1es I .{I

~aGanMII

Texas at Toronto, 1n1
Kansu O ty at Boston. en)
St&gt;aft](- a l Cleveland. Cnl
Oakland at Ba!Umort&gt;, 1n1
California at N£'W Yor\1.. en)
Chicago at MUwaukl'f'. 1n1
De1rott a t Ml~ta . 1n 1

w~·.o..­

MIIwauke&gt;P at Phlladelph.la

w-. ""'*'-"

~··Game
Phoenix at Los Angeltl
San A.ntonk&gt; at Seattle

W~y'IGMne

NA.110N..U. LEAGUE

?tol&gt;nlx at l.oli Angt'les

EM&amp;emDI~

L

Pet.

San A.ntooio at Seattll&gt;

G8

S1 LouJ,o,

lJ

765

~

Montre•l

8

3

Nt'W York

PltUbul'l(h

9
~

615
:ibJ
~

6

L"hlcBSfO

6

u

m

Phtladclphla

4

11

2fi7

Wetllem DlvWon
u J
U
4

3~

Transactions
Weekend !:lporW ~
JWIEB.UJ.

...,...,..._..

CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Purchued the
cont ract of Emesto Elcam!g&amp;, pltctler,

m

I Y.t
~Y.t

rrom

6
375
San F'Taoclsro
6 ll
m
CtnctnnatJ
6 l2
m
Houston
Sab.Jnlay'• G..,..,..
Sl Louts 7. Ph11adelpnta 4

7
7Y.t
11

Alla nt.a

" " Di&lt;IIO
LosAngt&gt;k's

~

9
\0

813
733

-

Edrnon1011 of the Paclftc Coast
League. Optioned Juan Agosto, pttcher, to

Edmonton.
KANSAS CITY ROYAlS--Placed V.~
Aiken!. tint ba!eman. on the l.XIa y db·
a blfd\l.st.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - InJury and Ulness have cost the 1(1!th
Kentucky Derby .Orne ot Its top
prospects, but a one-eyed colt with
claustrophobia bas survived to become a center ot attention durtng
Derby week.
"I wouldn't trade his chances
now with anyone," Tom Gentry,
one of Cassa!erla's owners, said
Sunday after the colt galloped on
the Churchill Downs track In preparation for Saturday's Derby.
Cassalerla Is easy to spot In the
stable area because he stays In a
spectaUy-bullt stall In tront ot barn
43. He can look through the Iron
bars on au tour sides ot the stall.
"He had to have one," said Gentry In between handing out yellow
Cassalerla T-slllrts to b1ends and
media. "He bas an open pen In Calltornla. But when he arrived at
Keeneland last week, he was put In

The Meigs' track girls won the
James R. Ogg Lancer invitational
track and field meet held at Federal
Hocking Saturday.
This is Meigs' second invitational
championship m two weeks. Meigs
won the Rotary Relay only a week
ago.
The team scoring had Meigs with
94 points, Morgan 88, Berne Union
64, Nelsonville-York 59, Federal
Hocking 44, Wellston 32, Warren 21,
Eastern 16, Alexander 10, Miller 4,
Waterford 2, Vinton County 0.
In all, Meigs set three invitational
records : Kristin Anderson, 400
meter dash in 63 .0 seconds; Laura
Smith, discus, 114'2¥.! "; Karen
Goggins, shot put, 30'4" .
Kristin Anderson won the meet
scoring trophy with 32 points.
Kristin won the 400 meter dash, first
in the 800 meter dash 2:34.8 minutes;
first in the long jump, 15 '2'1'•", and
anchored the second place 1600
meter relay team.
Paula Swisher, Unda Stewart,
Amy Erwin and Rhonda Haddox
were first in the 400 meter relay and
second in the 800 meter relay.
Kim Fraley was sixth in the 100
meter hurdles. Paula Swisher was
third in the 100 meter dash and sixth
in the long jump.
Susanna Will, Renee Willis,
Kristin Bailey and Laura Smith ·
were (ourth in the 3200 meter relay.
Amy Erwin, Renee Willis, Laui-a
Smith and Kristin Anderson were :
second in the 1600 meter relay.
Meigs' record is: 47 wins and eight

"He's a stall walker and has to
have that freedom . We called Churchill Downs and told them the problem, so they built this 1&gt;ne."
Reportedly the open stall cost

$1,!nl.
While Cassalerla Is missing hts
left eye as a result ot a foaling mishap, he stlU has the legs and heart
which could stamp htm as a Derby
winner In this year's wld~pen affair which figures to draw 15 or
more 3-year-()lds.
"The accident occurred within 24
hours after he was born," Gentry
said. "He was getting up to be
nursed when he scraped his eye
against the board In the bam. They
trted to save It, but It had to come
out a few days later."
Cassalerla, a dark brown
Kentucky-bred son of Pretense--

Special Charm, has registered ·
three victories in 12 career starts
and has been out of the money only
once.
When asked about his temperament, groom Jose Mercado said,
"No problem, very nice horse."

Cassalerla, however, does present a problem on the race track. He
has been Involved In several bumpIng Incidents related to his vision
problem.

In three

ot

his four starts this

year, he has bumped other horses
or been bumped, llkely costing hlm
better position.
The 20-20 Stable colt, who also Is
owned by McAnally, breeder
James Brady, Jim Mamakes and

Mrs. Jack Robbins, raced eight
times as a 2-year-Qid, posting two
wlns, two seconds and tour thtrds.
Prime contenders tor the 1V.mlle Derby appear to be unbeaten
but lightly-raced Air Forbes Won,
Louisiana Derby winner El Baba
and Arkansas Derby winner
Hostage.
Star Gallant's stock dipped when
Llstcapade, a 56-1 shot, beat hlnn by
1 y. lengths In Saturday's $57 ,lrJO
Derby Trial at one mile, the
opening-day feature at Churchill
Downs.
While It wasn't certain whether
Star Gallant would go In the Derby,
Llstcapade will have no opportunIty since he wasn't nominated.
However, his trainer, Dewey
Smith, and owner, Mrs. Joe W.
Borwn, do have a good chance with
El Baba, wtnnerotelghtoflOstarts.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OU student
is awarded
scholarship

...
G
,

-~~

:.

'

~

(.

!

..

ON

POINT PLEASANT

Monday 4PM To Closing

We Don't Skimp On Shrimp!

Monday N. ht Is
AU.fou-Care- o-Eat
Shrimp Night!

OPEN
HOUSE
The Meigs County Branch of
Holzer Clinic.ltc ••..
.... is conducting an
Open House in its facility at
150 Mill Street
in M_i~dleport on

To whom it may conce rn .

POINT PLEASANT
SHQNEY'S 0 -NLYI

Pursuant to the requirements of Sec110n 4909 .19 of the Rev1sed
Code of Oh10, the Columbus and Southern Oh1o Electric Company
hereby gives nollce that on December 31, 1981. it filed with the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio . an Application lor authori ty to
amend and 1nc rease its rate schedu les which are under the jurisdiction ol the Public UtilitieS Commi ssion of Ohio.

r

POMEROY - Past Matrons
Club, Pomeroy Chapter 186,
O.E.S. 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Edna Schoenleb.

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
installations of officers at a
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Meigs Inn.

MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Commer ce, 7:30p.m . Tuesday at
LaSalle Hotel to make plans for
observance of General James
Hartinger weekend.

RIO GRANDE - A special of
Rio Grande Community College
Board of Trustees will he held
Wednesday at 7 p.m . in Rio Grande College Board Room. Considera tion of bids for a parking
lot proj ect and for cabinets will
take place.

,-- - - - - - - - - - - - - l

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, regular meetinK .
noon Wednedsay at Meigs Inn .
POMEROY
Comma ndery

24,

Oh10 Valley
Wednes day ,

When

a check

received from

a customer

in paym e nt for se rv1 ce

rendered is not honored by the bank due to insufficient funds. the
custome r will be cha rged $6 .00 to pay the additional cost incurred by
that the bank was 1n error .

Per Month:

INTERRUPTIBLE POWER - SCHED ULE 1-P

Preaenl
Winter

Propoaed
Summer

P~aent

Propoaed

On-Peak Hours

Summer

Winter

Summer

Customer Charge

$5 00

$5.00

$500

$5 00

Frrst 3000 KVA or
le ss of ma xtmum
demand

Over 3000 KVA

Energy Charge

BOO KWH

4 61c

4 6tc

6.28c

6 2Bc per KWH

All additiOnal KWH

I BSc

4 61c

3 t 3c

6 2Bc per KWH

$t 0.000 00

$1 2.500 00

3 20

4 00

I 20

The demand c harge ha s been 1ncreased I 10m $2 10 per KW to
$3 67 per KW . the excess KVA charge from $0 40 to $0 60 per KVA .
the energy cha rge Irom 0 60c to 0 65c per KWH . and the c red1t per
hour o f 1nterrup t1on has been 1nc reased from 0 28c to 0 50c per KW

$20.705 DO
6 B5
per KVA

Ott -Peak Hou rs
Excess demand

Per Month

A $250 00 Serv1ce Charge has been added to thiS rate schedule

Demand Charge

Winter

a maxtmum pe rtod of twelve month s co mmenctng wrth

All rate sc hedules are system-w1d e

RESIDENCE SERVICE - SCHEDULE R-R

Per Month:

tn eff ec t for

th e ellec t,ve date o r until recove ry of $4.848 .000

the Company for processing the check. unless the c u stomer shows

GE NERAL SERVICE - LARGE - SCHEDULE G-4

F~rst

A new Rrder . Alder No 2 - ln tertm Surcharge ' lor Rec overy of
Temporary Addi llona l Oh1b Gross Rece1pt s Tax . has been 1ncluded on
all proposed ra te sc hedules II reads as follows

An Jnterm su rcharge of S 00054 I per k1lowa11 hour shall be applied to all rate schedule s sub,ec t to th1 s r1der The r1der shall rema1n

Th e residential rates have been modified and increased as
follows

t 20

1 20

SPECIAL PROVISION S APPLICABLE UNDER SPEC IFI ED CONDI TION S TO SPEC IFI ED SCHEDU LES - SUPPLEM ENT NO t 4

per KVA
The mtn1mum mon !hly charge for breakdown se rvt ce has been
me rea sed from $3 75 10 $4 50 per KW of serv tce requ Hemen t

Ene rgy C hr~rge

SMALL USE-LOAD MANAGEMENT - SCHEDULE R-R-1
Preaent
Per Month:

Fr rst 400 KWH per
KVA ol maximum
demand

Proposed

Winter

Summer

Winter

Summer

$5 00

$5 00

$500

$5 00

Customer Charge

First 700 KWH

3.63c

3 63c

5 65c

5 65c per KWH

Next 100 KWH

3 63c

NIA

5 65c

NIA per KWH

Over BOO KWH

1 BSc

3.13c

NIA

NIA per KWH

1 160c

Over 400 KWH per
KVA of max1mum

per KWH

0 55c

0 55c
per KWH

Proposed
Winter

Summer

$7.00

$7 .00

$7 00

$7 00

CHURCH AND SCHOOL SERVICE- OPTION - SUPPLE MENT NO 18
Max1mum charge has been changed lrom 60c per KW and 6c
per KWH to 70c per KW and 7c per KWH

PRIVATE AREA LIGHTING SERVICE- SCHEDULE AL-1

SPACE HEATIN G- HEAT STORAGE SE RVI CE - SUPPLEMENT NO
20
$1 20 per KW and the Energy Charge has been InCreased I rom I OOc
per KWH to 1 20c per KWH

Rete
per Limp
Nominal lamp

6 70c per KWH

6 70c

5 DOc

500c

!50 KWH per KW in
excess ot 5 KW
Billing Demand

1 85c

4 B1c

3 13c

6 28c per KWH

PJI Additional KWH

1.00c

2 DOc

1.70c

3.00c per KWH

The General Service rate s have been modified and increased as follows.

Type of lamp

Wattage

Present

Proposed

Mercury Vapor

'100
I 75
400

$4 .75
5.20
8.15

$6 25
685
10.85

100
'150
200
·2so
400

$6.00
6.75
NIA
9.75
1 t .50

$6 .85

High Pre ssure
Sodium Vapor

The Summer/Winter diflerential has been deleted lrom all General
Service Schedules.
The off-peak hours have been cha nged from the hours between 10:00
p m. of each day and 6:00a .m. of the following day for all days to the hour s
between 11 :00 p.m. of each day and 7:00a .m ol the following day for all days
Sundays and holidays remain off-peak.

GENERAL SERVICE - SMALL -SCHEDULE GS-1

Preaent

Proposed

Summer

$5 .00

$5 00

$500

7.23c

B.66c per KWH

maximum demand in Summer months

and 130 KWH per KW in excess of 6 KW

customer's bill by approximately 26% and th e sma ll use res,den llal
custom er's bill by approximately 3 1% The averag e rncrease to r
sm all and medium general servi ce c usto m ers 1S es t1m ated to be

15.6% and lor all other se rvi ces. th e increa se 1S es t1mat ed to be appro &gt;~ imately 25%

250
400
1000

$1 2 30
14.30
NIA

$10 .75
12.50
22.75

5.211c

640c per KWH

All additional
KWH

2.70c

2.70c

3.47c per KWH

authorized by the Comm1ssion and the rate of re tu rn on the value of
the property affec ted is inadequate . unJust . unreasonable and JnsuiiJ -

Rate
per lamp

cient to yield just com pe nsa tton and that the ra tes proposed w •ll not

Nominal Limp

Minimum charge increased from $5.00 to $6 .00 per KW applied to the maximum demand in excess ol 6 KW Out not tess !han $5.00.

Type of lamp

Wattage

Present

Proposed

Mercury Vapor

175

$ 8.50

$11 .25

High Pressure
Sodium Vapor

100

11 00

150

11 .75

t2.60
13.45

Propoaed

Summer
STREET LIGHTING SERVICE- SCHEDULE SL

Or'\-Peak Hours

Next 950 KW

5.70

$548.00

Next 2000 KW

5.35

6.55 per KW
6.20per KW

Over 3006KW

4.40

5.25 per KW

.50

.50 per KVA

Excess KVA Demand
Charge

~

Per Month :
Rete
per Limp

10.17per KW
Nominal Limp

Type of Limp
_ 61 per KVA

Mercury Vapor

Off·Peak Hours

Excess (jemand

2.00 ·

2.00per KW

2.00per KW

High Pressure
Sodium Vapor

Energy Charge
First 200 KWH per KW
of maximum ~emand but
. notl~ss than 50,000
KWH

2.25c per .KWh!

of maximum demand

t .t9c

1.34c per KWH

Over 450 KWH per KW
. of maximum demar&lt;~ _

0.60c

Q.60c

Next 250 KWH per KW

'

Wattage

Present

Proposed

'100
175
400

$ 4.25
4.75

$5.60
6.25
10.30

tOO
150

••250

$ 5.75
6.25
NIA
9.00

400

10.00

200
2.10c

1.305 c per KWH

ixir KWH

I,

ANY PERSON . FI RM , CORPORATION . OR ASSOCIATION MAY
FILE . PURSUANT TO SECTION 4909 19 OF THE REVISED CODE . AN
OBJECTION TO THE INCREASE OR INCREASES PROPOSED BY
THE COMPAN Y WH ICH MAY ALLEGE THAT THE CO MPANY'S AP PLICATION CONTAINS PROPOSALS THAT ARE UNJU ST AND
DISCRIMINATOR Y OR UNREASONABLE

The Com pany 's Application sta tes that th e rates presenlly

5 20c

. $360.00

Public Utilities CommiSSIOn of Oh1o lollow1ng 1ts hear1ng on the fi led
application

Per Month :

Next 600 KWH

First 50 KW or less
of maximum demand $320.00

The ra tes . charges and oth er prov1S1ons proposed above are
subject to c hanges . Includi ng changes as to amoun t and fo r m by the

c rea se Ce rt atn elec lr1 c rates and c harg es. am e nd ce rta1n te rm s a nd
.conditions of serv1ce an d rev1se It S deprec 1at1on accrua l rate s and
re se rves

PRIVATE AREA LIGHTING SERVICE- SCHEDULE AL-2

demand

Winter

9.95

The Company' s Applical1on 1s lor authonty to amend an d to In -

in excess of 6
KW maximum

maximum demand in Winter months

c harge lor Recovery of Increased Oh10 Gross Rece1p ts Tax 1n R1der
No 3.

111 5
13 15

•Ptus 140
KWH per KW

•Plus 150 KWH per KW in excess ol6 KW

All rates are sub)SCI to the Etectr1c Fuel Component Rate 1n
Atder No 1. and pr esen! ra tes are also subject to lhe lnler tm Sur-

Ba sed on the twelve m on th pertod e ndtng June 30 . 1982 . thereque sted rate s would mc rea se the reorese nt at1ve regu la r res 1den t1al

Each additional pole and span of wire has been increased !rom $1.75
to $2.20 and each 150ft . span of wire has been increased from $0'. 40
to $0 .50 .

Energy Charge
First 400 KWH'

High Pressure
Sodium Vapor
Floodligh t

The Off-Peak Hou rs have been changed from the hour s between
10 00 p m ol each day and 8 00 a m of the lollow1ng day to the hours
between 11 00 p m of each day and 7 00 a m of the lollow10g day

7.75

•No new installations aHer Oc tober 1, 1982 under th e proposed rate
schedule .

Winter

Customer Charge

These rate s w1ll rema1n the same except tor c harge s under

R1der No 2

The d ema nd c harge ha s been inc rea sed l rom $1 00 per KW to

Summer

First 750 KWH

SERVICE FOR SMALL

Other sc hedules have been modified and 1ncreased as follow s

Energy Charge

Per Month:

OPTIONAL UN METERED COMM ERCIAL
FIXED LOADS- SUPPLEMENT NO t6

1 34C

Per Month :

Winter

Customer Charge

1 16C

pe r KWH

d~mand

Energy Charge

defeats.

-'

MI{)DLEPORT·POMEROY
brapch AAUW will hold an annual spring dinner at Meigs Inn
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. Members
may take a guest. Speaker will he
Harriett Wood, the branch's consultant. New officers will be mstalled .

POMEROY - Joint meeting
Junior and Senior American
Legion Auxiliary units, 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion Hall .

The followmg Service Cha rge Clau se is inc luded under th e Rul es

Oemand Charge

Interested members of ·the ·public are in.ited to iCJurl
this new facility.

TUESDAY

and Regulation s lor Electric Se rv1ce

Prtaent

THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1982
FROM 6:30 TO 8:00 P.M.

port City Hau. Those Interested
are urged to attend.

The substance of the rate revisions proposed 1n the Applicat ion
filed on December 31 , 1981 , is as follows

For en Increase In Electric Rates

Per Month:

. Monday from 4PM to closing you can get all the boiled
s~p you~ eat, along. with fries, warm toasted grecian bread,
Shoney s own cocktail sauce, and our all-you-care-to-eat
soup and ~ ~· f~turing ow: great new homemade seafood
gumbo, for JUSt $4.99. Children under 12 get a free ·
~rt W!th·any. ~r purchase. It's a new, nicely nautical way
were saymg, Thank you for coming to Shoney's:'

POMEROY - Ohio Association
of Public School Employees
Chapter 17, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the Meigs Junior High School.
Election of officers and representatives for negotiating team to be
elected. Door prize will be awarded.

will confer order of Red Cross
and Malta . All Knights Templar
invited .

Notice ol Application to

GENERAL SERVICE - MEDIUM - SCHEDULE GS-2

~Our New Homemade Seafood Gumbo

MIDDLEPORT - An organl-

za IlonaI meeting of MeigsMason Pony League will be held
Monday at 8: 30 p.m. at Middle-

conference room.

The Public Ulltllleo Commission of Ohio

Per Month:

Look whats cookin'at

Calendar

POMEROY
Ladies
Auxiliary, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, 2 p.m. Tuesday in the

HOEFLICH

Preunt

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Sam
Snead and Don January won the
Legends ot Golf Tournament by 12
strokes, shooting a 9-under par 61 to
shatter the aU-time scoring record.
The duo posted a 54-hole total of
'n -under par 183 on the Onion Creek
Golf Club, which broke the record
ot 23-under 187 by Tommy Bolt and
Art WaU. Never had a team earned
this best-ball title tor golfing greats
50 and over by more than two
strokes.
F1nlshlng second were the teams
ot Bob Goalby and Roberln DeVIcenzo, Littler and Rosburg, and
Bob Toskl and Chln-Sei-Ha at 195,
15-under. Goalby-DeVtcenzo shot a
final round 7-under 63, Toskl-Chln
had 66, and Littler-Rosburg tired

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

MONDAY

Jayne Lee Hoeflich of Pomeroy
has been awarded a Distinguished
Professor Scholarship at Ohio
University for the 1982-33 school
year. The full tuition scholarship is
awarded on the basis of exceptional
scholastic performance. A junior
majoring In physics, Hoeflich is a
member of Ol)io University Society
for Physics Students, Ohio Valley
Chapter of the American Harp
Society, and tbe university chapter
of the Society for the Preservation of
Anachronism. She is the daughter of
Charlene and Bob Hoeflich, 109 High
St.

Snead, January win

64.

Meigs wins
Lancer meet

the normal stall and he really cut a
number.

26,1982

OPTIONAL DEMAND RATE- SCHEDULE RLM

OONI'l!:RENCE SEMIP1N..\LS
Bell oiSeven

fUton 1Hunt ().() and Rainey 0.1'
at Otlcago IEscarl'l'ga ().()and Dotson
II
or Koosman 0-01.2. 1n1
Only K•rre schedllled

W

J

C'tnclnnatl 4, Houaton J. 10 tnnlnp

Pittsburgh

mance by MUt Wllcox. The righthander limited the Yankees to one
run on live hits through six Innings
when Randolph htt hls one-out h&lt;&gt;mer In the seventh.
Red Sox 5, Blue Jays 4
Rick Miller doubled home the tiebreaking run with one out In the
12th Inning to trigger Boston over
Toronto. Glenn Hoffman led off
with a single and was sacrtftced to
second. Toronto's Jerry Garvin
came on to relieve Joey McLaughlin and Miller htt his first pitch tor a
double to score Hoffman and give
the Red Sox a 4-3 lead.
Jerry Remy followed with a single to score Miller before the third
Toronto pitcher of the Inning, Roy
Lee Jackson, retired the side.
Mark Clear, who came on tor
starter Bobby Ojeda In the eighth,
gained the wln after gtvlng up a
homer In the bottom ot the 12th to
John Mayberry, his second ot the
gam e.
Angels 5, A's 1
Bobby Grieb drove In three runs
and Brian Downing htt his seventh
homer as California beat Oakland.
It was the ninth win without a loss
at home for the Angels, who wasted
little time grabbing a 3-!llead In the
first Inning against Rick Langford.

One-eyed colt becomes derby attention getter

Scoreboard...
Majors

Precisely. The White Sox managed a single, a stolen base, a double, a wild pitch and a walk but
came up empty-banded In the tutlle
flnallnnlng and the Orioles went on
to wln thelr second stratght game
after nine consecutive losses.
Rudy Law opened the Chlcago
ninth with a single off Dennis Martinez and stole second, but was
thrown out at third on a grounder to
second baseman Rich Dauer by
Jerry Hairston. Ron Le.Flore then
doubled but Hairston was out at the
plate on relay throws trom lett
fielder Gary Roenlcke and shortstop Bob Bonner.
A wild pitch enabled LeF1ore to
reach third base tor the third time

In the game. But after Tony Bemaza rd walked , LeF -lore was
stranded there tor the third time
when Tippy Martinez came out of
the bullpen to _strike out Steve
Kemp for the tlnal out.
"Those are the kind of games I'm
used to," said Baltimore Manager
Earl Weaver. "I'd been looking torward to one tor the last 11 days or
so. I missed the thrill and the
excitement."
Rick Dempsey htt a two-run homer In the tlfth Inning for the Orioles' winning runs and Dennis
Martinez won for the lith straight
time at Memorial Stadium 111th
last-()ut rellet help trom Tippy
Martinez.
Chlcago stranded nine runners
before scoring In the eighth on a
double by Harold Baines and a twoout single by Mike Squires, hts third
ht t ot the game.
Yankees 3, Tigers I
WtlUe Randolph' s homer broke a
1-1 tie In the seventh. leading New
York over Detroit. It was the Yankees' first victory at home this season and snapped a three-game
losing streak.
The Tigers, meanwhile, had an
eight-game winning streak stopped
despite a solid pitching pertor-

~y,April

7.75

$6.55
7.20
9.25
10.30
t 1.45

'No new Installations afler January 1, 1980.
'• No new Installations alter October 1 , 1982 under the propo$ed rate
schedule.

produce more than a fa ir return on such property and are necessary
for the assu rance of adequate serv1ce . tmpr ovemen t of ear n1ng s and
financial sou ndne ss

The Company prays that the CommiSSIOn ( 1) lind that the Application. Exhibit s and Schedules are filed 1n acc ordance w1th Sec t1on

4909.18, Ohio Revised Code. and the rule s o f the CommiSSIOn . (2) approve the proposed Notice lor Newspaper Publica tiOn . (3) fi x a date
for a hearing : (4) lind that the present rate s. pn ces . c harges and other
provisions ol the schedule s affected by such Appltca t10n are un)ust
and unreasonable and insuiiJcient to yield Just compensallon lor the
service rendered thereunder. (5) find and determtne that the rate s.
prices . charges and other provisions of the schedules tendered lor liling are just and reasonable . and approve such schedules in the form
tendered and make such schedules effec tive as soon as 11 is practicable to do so; (6) find that the proposed deprec 1ation accrual rate s
and reserves are proper and adequate cha rg es lor depr eC1a t10n and
make them effective as soon as it is practical and lawful to do so. and
(7) grant to the Company such other and turther relief to whiCh it may
be entitled .
A copy of the Application and all attached Exhibits and
Schedules are available for inspection durmg normal business hours
at the office of The Public Utilities Commiss1on of Ohio . 375 South
High Street. Columbus, Ohio 43215, and at the ofl1c e ol the Applicant, 215 North Front Street. Columbus. Ohio 4321 5.
Recommendations which diller from the Appl1cation may be
made by the Slafl of The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio or intervening parties and may be adopted by the Commission
COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY
BenT . Ray, President and Chief Operating Officer

�Page

~The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

~~

Ohio

April 26, 1982

~nda~April26, 1982

Rutland to host Russ Morgan Orchestra
Does Your Heart Beat for Me?
That's not a personal question but
actually the name of a song to which
severa l hundred area residents will
be dancing on Thursday, May 13,
when the nationally known Russ
Morgan Orchestra plays at the
Rutland Civic Center.
"Does Your Heart Beat for Me?"
has been the openmg theme of the
Morgan Orchestra for many years
and w1ll be among the many
"oldies" to be presented by the band
m tis Rutland appearance. Morgan
d1ed in 1969, but the band lives on under the direction of h1s son, Jack,
who wtll front the mus1 cal group at

the Rutland cenl~r.Jncidentally, the
Morgan band is a road band which
travels in a private bus. It does not
use pick up area musicians. They
ph:1y their own arrangements, over
1,BOO of them passed down from
Jack's father .
The band presents an entertaining
show during its appearance and for
that reason the Rutland Civic Center
was chosen as the site for tne local
event sponsored by the Royal Oak
Ballroom Dance Club. The stage will
provide the elevation needed so that
those attending can v1ew well the entire presentation.
After a nwnber of years in the

Membership years recognized

FAMED - Tht• famed Russ Morgan band "ill be at the Rutland
Civic Center from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight

1111

Thur:-;day, May 13, under

the direction of tht·latr Morgan's son. Jac·k.

Apple Grove holds serviCe
Sunnsl' scrvrn• was helll Ea:-ill'r .11
Apple Grovt• Umtcd Methodi st ( 'liur·
ch wtlh Mrs. Hussell Housh lt'&lt;HIJn,c
the Sl'fV\l'l'
There wa:s group srn gu1g uf At
the Cross" ond unrsun praymg of llw

Lord's Prayer . Mrs Dullv Wolfe
read scnplure from Matthew 28 Tlw
Easter s t o r ~ was read by Mrs
Roush as a dr ;;llugw.: wtlh h~ rnns
bemg sunj.! by tilL' congrcg&lt;:ttron rncluding .. AI Calvary,.. .. Bil'ssed
Redeemer. " " Jesus Pa1d It All ...
and " The Old Hugged Cross ..
Rev. cmd Mrs. C&lt;Jrl Hrcks sang d
duet . " I KnDw My Redeemer l.t\ L's··
and Dallas and DunJM Hill salle
" There's Room r~t tlw Cross F or
You." Tl1e chorr sa ng " Who c1l M ~

Door IS Stamhng 'I
Poem.-; were

"

" H C:lVL'

Yuu

Tnne 'l"

by Mrs. Hill , and " I Know He Cares"
by Mrs. Roush . Closmg

th ~

servu:e

was the Rev Mr Hicks wrth praH'I'
Mrs. J an Norns wa s p1amst ·Tiw
church wa!'i decoratL•d wJth IJilL'S ll\

Donna Hill and a stone by
and M1kc Sarsons

Dean

H1il

/\ hr t•akfr~ st was ser ved folluwmg
tht' :-il'l"\' tl'l'

At 9 d rn the Easter scrv rcc was

pn·sen1t'd lly the youth of the churt ll, wrlil DallCJs 1-hllrn charge
Th ere w;_r s cu ngregatwnal smgmg
tlf .. i'!lL' Old Rugged Cross" and

pral\'1' b~ Dully Wolfe. Hev Mr and
Mrs ll rcks sang a sung , i:HllJ the
nnnr slt•r spoke on the resurrectiOn

Thcrl' were poems by Brenda Hunt,
F:nr (llld /\my Wagner, Mandy 1:1nd
Mlt'hal'i Husscl l. Rya n and Tracy
:-.!urns. Dea111c Hill . Dully and
\11t'h.ll'l Hi ll, Stacey and Chns
Sht~nk. and Courtney Roush. Jenny
dlHI .lull lluush, Michael Ables,
H~o~n Nurn s, Deallle ami Harmony
II ill pn'St'llied "Easle r," and a
gr uu p !rghll'd ca ndles tu symbolize
llw

I' L' i-llrTwamn ~

uf E;.:tster

Tile uffcnn g was taken by Ed
1\uush and Dean Hill and the Rev
Mr Hr cks closed Uw servrce wrth

rrayl'f.
An Easter cgg hunt foll owed the
progra111. Altendance wa s 64 &lt;:l rHJ the
uffer rn g ws $244

Charles B. Moody, Grand Master
of the Grand Lodge of l"ree and Accepted Masons of Ohio, w1ll be on
hand to present 25 and 50 year awards at the Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, al 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Among those rece1vmg the awa rds
from the Grand Master, a resident of
Zanesville, will be Lee W. McComas,
Middleport, former supennlendent
of Middleport Schools, and Martin
Wal~er Essex, Columbus, former
supermtendenl of Middleport
schools and state superintendent of
public mstructJon. Both former Middleport school superintendents will
be receiving thetr 50 year awards.
On ha nd for the observance also
will be Ted Reed, Pomeroy, Grand
Treasurer of the Grand Lodge of
Free and Accepted Masons of Ohio,
and other distinguisl_led Masons.
Mr. Moody rcce1ved his BS degree
111 busmess administratiOn 111 1939
and his degree in law from Franklin
MOODY
the Bethesda Hospital fo undation
and is a member of the Bethesda
Hospital Board of Trustees. He is a
past treasurer of the United Way
and the Zanesville Improvement
Program.
The Grand Master has been acllve
10 all bodies of the Masonic Lodge.
He was elected Grand Treasurer of
the Grand Lodge of Ohio in 1973 and
remamed 10 this office until elected
and installed as Grand Master on
Oct. 16, 1981.

Wolf Pen News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ba iley and
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Reed were
Easter Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Sargent and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma and
Iva Johnson were Easter Sunday
VISitors of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr,
Dav id and Michelle of Rutland.
Gladys Tuckerman, Mr. and Mrs.

NOTI CE TO
CO'NTRACTOR S
STATE OF OHIO
'DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Co lumbu s, Ohio
April9, 1982
Contrac t Sa les Lego11
Copy No. 82-401
UNIT PRICE
CO NT RACT

Lester !"rank were Easter d10ner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Hamng and Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summerfield,
Candi and Mrs. Robert Russell spent
a week 10 Hot Springs, Ark .
Mr. and Mrs. Pa ul Darnell and
fanunily were Easler v1sitors of
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves.

The Daily Sentinel

April27, 1982
Take advantage of any travel opportumlies you gellh1s conung year.
even 1f they are JUSt for.8hort tnps. Yqp'll be lucky 111 mak,mg val ua ble
contacts on your journeys.
TAURUS.(April 20-May 20) Don't become so inunersed 111 mundane
affairs today that you fail to find time to enjoy yourself. Stopping to smell
the roses is also very important.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Malenal opportu111lies could unexpededly develop today from condJlJons which m1ght not 1mliall y look too
hopeful. Keep your antenna tuned.
CANCER (June 21-July 221 Your ftrst effort today may not produce
the type of result for which you hope, but you could gel surpns1ngly lucky
on your second try. Keep plugglllg.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Persons will not respond favorably today if
you're delllandJng. Make others aware of you r needs a nd Jet them
ong1nate the1r Ideas for helpmg .
VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Selftshly motivated mvolvements aren' t
apt to work out too well today. However, efforts expended to benef1l
others, as well as yourself, bring success.
LIBR~ (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The harder you try today the Juckll'r you
get. so don t loss 111 the towel too early_ You have the ab1hly to turn losers
mto winners when you perstst.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You ca n't do much to enhance your 1mage
today tf you let associates see you're able to laugh at Your mts takes Keep
ego out of the picture.
SAGITIARIUS INuv. 23-Der. 211 Situations and cond1l10ns wh1ch
were lucky fur you previously are likely to be so again lod"Y· Step back
and let Lady Luck do the spadework.
CAPRICORN IDer. 22-Jan. 191 If there IS a favor you mtend to ask of
a fnend tl's best that you make your n.:.quest tht.s aftt!rnoon, ratht!r than t n
pul1l off. Tune could change things.
AQUARIUS IJan. 20-Feb. 191 There are defllll le career opportumties
a.rGund you loda ~, but you must ad on them promptly once you see the
Signals. Delays dtlute lhe1r potential
PISCES I Feb. 20-Marrh 201 Though 11' s ea rl y in the week, schedule
sm~e fun aehvtttes for th1s t!ve mng tn break up your usual routm c, Just
don l make too late a mght of it.
ARIES,&lt;Marrh 21-April191 Don't be dismayed early 111 the day 1f
t&gt;lhers aren t as coopera lt ve as you feel they should be. All wtll smooth out
and you'lllaler ga 1n the1r s upport

DAV IDL WEIR
DIRECTOR

1 Cord of Thanks (pardr n iidv~lnce)
1 Card ot Thanks (par e! tn ~l dv~ln ce)
3 Announ c ement s
4 Gtveaway
5 Happy Ads
6 Los t and Found
7 Yard Sale {pct rtl r1 &lt;ldvonc r·J
8 Publt c Sa le
&amp; Auctron
9 Want ed to Buy

e mpteymenF =
ser·•iees

NOTIC E TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMEN T OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
April16, 1982
Contract Sales l egal
Copy No. 82 -469

·

UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
( PMS -OOOSI2171

Sea led proposals wtll be
r eceived at the off 1ce of the
Direc tor of the Ohto Oepar
tment of Transportatron ,
Columbu s. Ohio, unttllO :OO

Ohio Standard T1me.
, uesday. May 18, 1982, for

~ - M .,

improvemen/s in ·
Adams. A hens, Brown,
Gallia, Highland, H oc ktn g,
Jackson, Lawrenc e, M eigs,
Monroe, Morgan, Nobl e,
•Pike, Ross, Scioto, Vrnton
'and washington Counties.
Ohio, on various locat ions
by apply ing retroflective
polyester
pavem e nt
· marking materia l for lines.

41
47
43
44
45
46
47
48
49

Hou ses fOr Re nt
Mobile Hom es for Ren t
Fa rm s for Re n t
Apar tmen t for Re nt
Furnished Rooms
Space for rent
Wan ted to Rent
Equipment for Rent
For Lease

P~blic

Public Nohc e
bust ness en lerprt ses wtll b~
n ff orded lull oppor tu n tly to
submtt btds tn r esponse to
lhts tnvtta tr on and will no t
be drscrtmrna ted agarns t
on the qrounds of ra ce,
co lor, or natrona! or rQrnal
tn con side ratron for an
award
" Mrn1mum wage rates
for tht s projec t have been
predelermrned as r equ•red
by l aw and are set forth rn
the btd proposal."
" The date set for com
pletron of th1 s work shall be
se t forth rn th e brddtng
proposal "
Eac h bidder sha ll be
requtred to file wr th his bid
a ce rt1fi ed c heck or
cash 1er 's chec k for an
amount eq ual to five Per
cent of his bid, but in no
eve nt more than fift y
thousa nd dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of hi s bid ,

paya ble to the Director.

Bidders must apply,
the
proper forms,
qua lif tcation at least
days pri or t o the date
for openin9. bids in

on
for
ten
set
ac -

Notice
ment of Tr8rlspa;:latron and
th e offt ce of the Otstrict
Depu ty D1rec tor
The D1rector reserves
the nght to r e1ec t an y and
all bids

DAV ID L WEIR
DIRECTOR

Rev8 1773

141 26. 151 3. 2tc
Public Notice

NOTICE ON
FILING OF
IN VE NTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs

County, Court of Common
Pleas •. Probate Division
To the Execvtor or Ad·
ministrator of the estate to
suc.h of the following as are
restdenrs of the State of
Oh1o, vrz . - the surviving
spouse, the next of kin , the
b~nefictaries
under the
Wtll ; and to the attorney or
attor neys r epresenting any
of the aforementioned per·
sons :
Erna Elizabeth Jesse

The Ohio Department of I
Transportation here by
nollfles all bidders that it 1 cordance w1th Chapter 5525 376 East Ma in St '
will affirmatively insure
Ohio Revised Code.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, case
"t hat In any contrac t en s and specificat i ons
No. 23.656.
fered into pursuant to this arePl~n
on file in the Depa rt ·
You are her eby notified
advertiseme'1t,

mi n orit y

Farm supplies

61 Farm Equrpm ent
62 Wanted to buy
63 L• ves tock
64 H ay &amp; Gra m
65 -Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Meigs county

Gallia County

Area Cocle6t4
446-Gatlipolis
367-Cheshire
311-Vinton
24s-R lo Grande
256-Guyan Dis!.

ser.lees

Area Code 614
99:1---Mtddteport
Pomeroy

91s-Chester
J4l-Portland
247-Letart Fans
N9-hcine

6-t:J--Arabia Dist.
81 Hom e Improvem ents
82 Plumbing &amp; Heati ng
83 -Excavating
84 Elecrical &amp; Refri ger ation
85-General Hauling

86-M H Repa.r

741-RuHand
447-Cootvilte

379-Walnul

Up to 15 words . One d ay

th~ttiel n-vent ory and Ap

prar se ment of the esta te of
th e
a f o r e m e nt io ned ,
deceased , l ate of sa id Coun·
tv .. were fli ed tn th• s Court
Sa 1d Inventory and Ap·
pra•sement wrll be tor
hea ring before thrs Court
on the 13th day of Ma y,

1982, all :30 o'clock PM_

A ny person desirrng to
f ti e exce ptrons thereto
must fil e them at least five
days prror to the date set
for hea ring .
Gtven under my hand
and sea l of said Court, this
22nd day of April1982

Robert E. Buck
Judge
By Carolyn G Thomas
141 26, C51 3, 2t~eputy Clerk
Public Notice

NOTICE BY
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
REQUESTING OFFICE
SPACE FOR THE' MEIGS
COUNTY WELFARE
DEPARTMENT
In accordance with seclion 307.86 ot the Ohio
Revised Code, sealed bids

---- - PubliCNotice - - ------- - - - - -----wil! be received by the
Mergs . Cpunty Board of
c;omm1ssroners, in their of free, located in the cour-

Up to lSWords ... Sixday

re~d ~loud for the following

mee~ , the. conditions and
specr!•cat+Or:'S as follows :
Offtc~ Bu1lding to house

FARMS

___

Wehilvescverr+l

COUNTRY HOM E'
entry $49 ,000

Near town , onf' c1cre. llf'W spit!

REALTORS
HENRY E . CLELAND, JR ., GRI

J EA N TRUSSELL
DOTTIE TURNER
OFF ICE

997-6191

949-2660
992-1692
992-1219

rn

19, 26. 11C

-

.

Real

All of those unwanted
household articles~ used
clothing, old baby rurniture, used tires from your
car and old to_ys can tie turned Into useabre CASH. It's
easy! Just gather them up
make a list. then bring it
In a classified ad and we'll
tun it under our Yard Sale
heading. Then get ready for
the buyers! Our classified
ads bring results!

insertion

- __ $.400

insertion.

.. SI.OO

"Welfare
Department
Buildlnq." Bidder to fur thetr own bid form .
th e Meigs County Welfare nish
The Board of County
Department, 3,000 square Commissioners may ac cept the lowest b1d, or
feet mm+mum total space ;
? •.500 square feet select the best bid for the
mmtmum office space
intended purpose, and
consisting of a minimum of reserve the right to reject
15 rooms, toilet facilities any or all bids, and or any
for men and women and at par! thereof.
least 15 P,arking. sp8ces for
automol)+les.
Meigs County
Commissioners
~ental required for said
buJ.IdJOg and related
Mary Hobsleller,
facJII!Ies should be broken
' Clerk
down for a 1 year, 2 year
Approved :
and 5 year basis. All bids FredW. Cfow, Ill
sh,ould Indicate lhe rental
necessary for the bidder to W 26, (5) 3, 2tc
provld~ maintenance for
'
the exterior and Interior Of
!he ~ullding and lhe rental
requ1red If the main ·
tenance Is provided by the
undersigned,
The Bo~rd of County

-

lr------••••••~.;;.;;.;;...

__

llllill

Square Tard With Pad. Installed

. $899
INSfALUD

GOOD SELECTION OF

GOLD·SEAL CONGOLEUM
·•

Rave nswood, W. va
Now Open Weeke nd s

I

tto4P .M.

1
I

Weather Permttf tng

Ph 742-1/IJ

The Daily Sentinel

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy, Oh .

Ph.992-2174
2 26 tic

0138

zero temperatur es
• Spnng Development s

JIM LUCAS
4 9 I mo

St. Rt . 124 Pomeroy , OH

Water -Sewer· E l ectnc
Gas Lme-Dttch es
Water lrne Hook -ups
Sept1c Tanks
Co unty Cerfthed
Roush Lane
Chesh1re, Oh .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also TransmissiOn
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3 74 ti c

Ph J67 -7160
1 7 1 tic

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG
backhoe
excava tm g
sep t1 c systen.s
A water , sewer
&amp; gasltnes
• dump truck
• lim estone

All STEEL
BUILDINGS
Utility Buildings
Stzes from 4 to 6 and all
wood butldmg s 74xl6
Insulated Dog Hou ses

Licensed &amp; Bonded

PH. 992·7201
3 29 tic

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt ), Box 54
Rac rne, Oh.

Ph 614-84J-119 1
6 IS ti c

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION
eMobile
• Water &amp; Gas Ltnes
• Spring Developments

" Small Jobs A
Specralty ''

JIM LUCAS
PH. 742-2 753
3 5 tfn

') WEEPER .1nd o;pw,nq
m~1ch1nf' rcp,lrr , p.1rt s. illld
o:,u ppltC '&gt;
P 1rk up .1nd
flC' Itvf'ry , OrlVt'&gt; V,lCUUrll
Cl&lt;•cmf'r , onf' t1,1lf mrll' up
Gt• orqf' &lt;, Crr·f'k Rc1
C.1ll
446 0?94
Ft 'i lltnq Lt ct•nsf' on &lt;, ,lll'
Com1• .1nd c,ce our nf'w sl11p
ml'nl ot t98} F •S•nq Rod ~.
Rf'l'l'&gt; . &amp; Lur es Sp rtnq
V.=tllf'y 1 r.ldrnq Co , Spr1nq
V~l lh · y PIM&lt;l, 446 8075
Tur kf'y Hunlf'r S Wf' ltrlV('
mouth r,l ll 'l. &lt;; lntf' 11ox
r ,lll 'i, r ,1mo (!t' .lr &amp; d&lt;'f Oy':&gt;
111
&lt;, l oc k
Sprtnct V.l l 1f'y
I r,l(llnct Co Spr tnQ V.111t·y
Pl ,l /,1 . 446 R015

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
And Home Mamtenance
• Roofing of all types
1 Sid1ng
eRemodehng
• Free estimates
e10 Yrs . ex perience

TOM HOSKINS

Ph. 949·2160 or 949-2]22
4 10 tf c

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kttchens and applrances ,
cUstom
bathroom s, remodelrng,
plumb+ng , elec tnc , and
heating .

II

8f ' .tOit drld ll f' r PU f"l
J67 111]
C. 11 .m d k tlt f·n•,

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH_ 992-6011
8

20

O'Brien Electric
Service

u .s. Rt . 10 East

1 3 tf c

ti c

Eltate - General

16 YEARS EXP:
•Residenti'l
·etommerctal
•Industrial
Custom Alarm
Systems
Racine, Oh io

247-3534
Free Estimates

1

•• 9 n.and 12 Fr. wnirtts'

·ST~~TING AT $4.99 Cas~ &amp; Carry

RU~.BER ~:CAR~p· $4~&amp;

~

Nt ce locatron nea r chur
ch and post offrce . H as 3
b e droom s,
m ode rn
bath ; T P . water , ca r
peting , large ea t in kit
c hen, full base ment and
furnace

't

that takes little t i m e to
run Building and land.
Good chance for you tor

•

only S1S,OOO.
NEWLY PAINTED -

"
.,.

1••
~

:
..
:
"
...

BUSINESS - Car wash

-

Real

nice 8

room

with 2 full- baths,
formal dining, good car·
peling, full · ·basement,
garage and 2 apts. Allin
QOQdrepatr,. S65,000.
-ASSOCIATES
Tnford, Gordon
;r.;,o;;.~ · •nd . su• ~ur~ome

l'""

Phon e 742 -9575
T1re sa les &amp; repa+rs, gas
&amp; grocen es. We now
hav e new Amencan
made Moped s tn stock .
Sl95 Plus Tax
4 18 I mo

4 20 tic

I Wanted
I For Sale
) Announc ement

I For Rent
I.

2.

17
18. - - - - - 19, - - - - - 20.
21. - - - -- 22. - - - -- 23.
24.
25.
26.
27. - - - - - 28. - - - - - 29. _ _ _ __

12.
13.

u.
------1$. · _ _ _ _ __
16.

-30. - - - - 31. - - -- - 32.
33.
34.

35.

'· Mall This Coupon with Remittance
· · · · The'Delly Sentinel' 111 Court St.
r:&gt;omeroy, .Oh. 45769

. ---.------

---------~
I'

PH. 992 -991 J
Rt I, Cheshtrl?, Oh

St. Rl . 7
OPEN/DAYS
A W EEK
Open Mon .-Sat.
12 · 00p.m . to 7: 30am
Su n 12am,· 11pm .
Carryout Beer
Ava1labte
Bands Every Frt &amp;
Sat . Ntght
THIS FRI &amp; SAT .

LONE WOLF BAND
Co m1ng Nex t
Tra nt1t
Happy Hour
Mon .-Thu rs .

These cash rates
include discount

t n sitle
and
out.
N eces.sary repair s being
made, level lot . 2
bedrooms, bath, porch, .
nic e kitchen with lots of
wood.\ cabinets
and

garage.,.Qnt~ .s 16,500.
CLEAN ANO'I&gt;IO DERN

Salem St.
Rutland, Oh .
TUES . thru SAT _
9 AM. to 10 P.M.
SUN . 10 A.M. to6 P.M

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Mon. - K eg Ntght
Tues . - Ladtes N1ght
W eds. - Gent. Ntght
Thurs. - Pool Tourn
3 24 ti c

Mntnl&lt;"•nf'nce M ec han• c
mus l have c xper .ence ns a
lf'il cl m cc hnnr c rn one of thf
l nuqnt • r ll.l tr .1 nc l ') p&lt;
!.1r ly
1\mf' r l(,ln tn clu slr till t rade s A pply lor
ltV11111room &lt;,Ut ll'
Goo&lt;! pos tl ton ill Oh•o Job Ser
vt ce, 45 Olive St Gal l rpolt s
1 on\1 C.1l l 446 1865
on A pn l 78 , 19 &amp; JOfh , from
8 30AM l o 4 OOPM Star
1 k t!l f'n&lt;; IO ljiVf' clW ,ly (,111 t rnq r ate $6 35 per hr
1146 7?66
nr
446 16?0
,uty lt nl ('
HrQhw ny
!ru ck dr1ver
SIMI 1m1Tlf'CI1CIIcy
le ave
I .111 W Wlltll ' &amp; 111,11 k pup . m(' SS nqe Pnvf' lopc at Save
11.1&lt;; 1 h.11n
.1pprOl&lt;.
t, M or e St,111 0n, Upper Rtver
tnnc, ol &lt;l .n &lt;HI',l o t I &lt;II ott Rd. Ga\ l,pol tS
Pnrl &lt;; moulto Ret ildfl 9579
FOUR krltt•no.,
In
lt 0m1 . JO &lt;l 4'JR I S91
6

q onr l

lost nnd Found

Los t Fo)( hound tcm ~11 c
blrl Ck , wh•k ilnd lrt n No
c ot1 .1r Ha s slr•nq nround
11 • nec k LOS!tn Billd Knob
" ' ' l fl43 3443

.t f .tm rl y Ynrr1 S.l iP 20/5
( ttdtlldm Ave &amp; 20 18 1/?
Erl StNn Ave, Grt lltpOII S
Or s,qner !f'illlS, malerral,
br.1nd
n.lmf'
c lothe s.
Qlrl SSWilrC' , r+ppl1il0Cf'S 10
? Tuf' &amp; Wf'd
Y ilrCl ~&lt;1 1 C' April '/6 May I.
10 6 Co tt on Holley r f'S •den
&lt;"f'. JNry ·.-, Run Road Frf'f'
lll•mc,
Pubtrc Sa le
&amp; Auc tton

Rt c k
Pear 'io n ,
Ex
perrencPd AUCTIONEER
E stafcs, r+nlrques. l ilrrn .
household LtccnsC'd Ohro
WV BuytnQ anttquPs 304

773 5785. 77J 9185
L E Neill Auct1onee r Scr
v rcr
Es tat e Filrm
Hou sc11old Mrsc Wf' sell rfl
Ll cf'n sf'd &amp; bonded Oh10 &amp;
WV rl 367 710 1
Auctron eve ry Frt n tQhl nl
the HMif ord Commun•tv
Cen ter Truckloads of new
mer chc1 nd 1se every week
Con s,gmcn ts of new rtnd
used merchi!OdJ Sf' nlw,lyS
welcome
Rrchr1rd
Reynolds Au c troneer 175

9

Wanted to Buy

AVO N Be n suc cess Sell
Avon wh NC' you work or
ltvr Cn l l 74 ? '17 55 or co llect
( 61 d 698 711t
Full or PMI t tme R N or
L PN l or 3 to 11 shill can
Nnn cy va n Meter 9916606
JOB S oversen s B•Q money
!.1 st Job off ers qu.1ranteed

I 716 842 6000

17

S1tuat 1ons W&lt;tn fed

Need rrde t o OhtO Un1ver
srly (8 00 5 OQ) Mon Frt
Ff'm,:~ l r
Cnll 992 339()
S,lturd.1y S .1fter 5 p m
Hilv c&gt; vn ca nc y 111 my home
Ambu latory
tor Pl clerly
mnn or woman 7 years e)(-pr.r.enu
667 31107
Tup'
per splil1n s.Oh
TrC'e
lr.rntntnq
and
rf'movill Frre es ftm a tes
991 6040 or 1411573
13

In surance

SA NDY AND BEAVER In
surilncc Co has. offered
SNV1 ces f or ftre rnsurance
co veraq e 111 Gall ta County
tor
nlm os l
a ce ntury
FMm. nom e and personal
property c overnges are
ilVil1lable
to mee l rn
d rvtdua l needs
Co nfa c t
Ray Wedem eyer, aqen t
Pllonc 388 8?49
15

Sc hool s InstructiOn

Ke~rate

!he u tt1 mate rn se lf
defence nil pr •vate l essons,
Men , women , &amp; ch il dren.
1nstr uc1 10n thru b l ack belt
Al so ilViltlab l e
Karat~
untl orm s puchmg and
kt CktnQ bnq s, and pro tec·
Jerr~
l •vf' eQutpment
Lowery
&amp;
Assoctales
Kr1rat f'
Stud t o,
143
Bur11nq1on Rd
Jn ckson,
Oh (r1 11 286 3074

17

Mtscellaneous

Corpe nt er work, remod ltng
or r eparrs, ceilrnq ttl e and
wrtll p;tneltng A l so parn
linq 992 2759
Wanted to Do

J UNKED cars. baseball

FOWLER. CONSTRUCTION
CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling.
FRQM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BElWEEN
. PH. ttt-3543 or ttt-2316

....

949 2851

3069

4.00-6.00 p.m.

Need mc~lurC' reliable man
to ltv c 111 wt fh
elder l y
coup le as n c ompanron tor
husbnnfl. who nee ds some
il SS 1Stnn cc C.=t ll 446 1.697 or

H17&lt;J

8

CANDLELIGHT INN

Hel p Wanted

C.11 1 H6

Yard Sate

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service

FRYE'S PENNZOIL

r,1 11

l o· r ll&lt;'ilr Portlnnd 4 Fox
tHr u'l cl':&gt; 11 lound cal l 843
)]'-.&lt;l

Guysvtlle, Oht o
Authonzed John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equtpment
Dea ler

Go ld. Stiv e r . s terltng ,
tew elry , rtngs . old co tns &amp;
curren c y Ed Burkett Bar
bcr Shop, M•ddl eport 991
3476

Wr+nt to qet out of !h e
House' Se ll
Avon and
mr1ke qood $$$ Meef frren
dlypcoplc Ca ll446 3358

lin

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BEDS IRON . BRASS, old
l urntlure , qold,
silver
clollr~r s, wood 1ce boxes ,
stone 1&lt;1r s. ~1nt • qu es, etc .
Co mpl e te
ll ouse holds
Wr rl e M 0 Mrller, Rt 4
Pom eroy . Ot1 Or 991 7760 ·

1\ NY

Ltcensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949·1293
or 949·1417

BOGGS

?5 I a 50 H P outboilrd motor
Cill l1 56 6640

4

Dozer &amp; back hoe ser vtc e, wa ter, sewe r , pon d s,
foundation s,
rec lamatt on

33

Announcements

3

PER SO N who tld "&gt;
dnyltllfl(t IO CIIV(' ,tW,lY .ln{l
doc •&lt;, no t ntlf r or ,tll&lt;·mpt to
nttr·r .1ny ol! trr lh•nq tor
&lt;; ,lit m,ly pl,lCf' tlll tlfllll lh tS
r olumn Jll.•r•· wtll hP nn
1 tl ,Htt f' to till' .lclv••rl r&lt;, t•r

Srzes star t from JOx24 "

•
•
•
•

An llqu e oak
lurnllur e,
round lilb tes. bookcases ,
desks. dre ss er s, c hes ts, rce
hoxes, p te Call 446 3759

• No Energy Needed
• Water Ava1lr+b le r+ t

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Radiator Spet: talist

NATHAN BIGGS

E,l rly An ft que c ountry fur
ntturc. cupboard s, all krnd s
ot
c h es t s,
de s ks ,
.s toncwa r(', e tc Ca ll 367

~

1-------3_2~~~J

W

35 Yrs . Experience

1'- I

I

1

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Buy1ng
Go ld ,
Sr l ver ,
Plil1rnum , Ol d COi nS, sc rap
r tnq s &amp; srl verwMe Darly
qu o fe s ilvatlable
Also
corn s &amp; c ot n suppltes for
Sille
S pr~ng
Valley
Trr1d•ng , Sprtn g
Va lley
Plnzil . 446 8015 or 446 8016

446 0069

;:--. "

sub

1 Wash1ngton Mo tel

CASH PAl D tor clean, l ate
model used cars Smrth
Bu1 c k Pontta c. Ga lltpol ts,
Oh10 Cal l 446 2282

We pay cas h f or lat e model
ctcun used c.Jrs
F r c nchtown Car Co
Brll Gen e Johnson ,

The Automatic
Freeze-Proof Water

I
Chp Th1s Ad lot a Frtt
I
Clmt Wllh I pltd c.me.
I
[l p"" M., II.
I
I Located across from th e I
I Shopp1ng Plaza at I

From th e
Smallest
Heater Core to th e
Large st Rad1ator.

PHONE 992-2156

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

CASH ONLY

hou ses 1n Ritctne on Rt
1124 One has 9 r oo m s, 2
baths, good car peting,
natur alga s furnace 2nd
4 room s, bath and large

CARPET STARTING AT $12.95
KITCHEN CARPET

r-----------1 CHERRY TREE
I
MINIATURE
GOLF COURSE

614-992-2182

ntlur e and An ft ques ot all
k tnd s, c al l Kenneth Swa 1n,
446 3159 and 756 1967 rn the
cve ntng s

4 II I m o pd

4 5 ti C

I
I
I

POMEROY
LANDMARK

PH. 992-2478

PARTS and SERVICE

DAVID L_WEIR
DIRECTOR

NEW LISTING

GIANT CARPET SALE

enclosing the .bid must be
marked "Sealed Bid,"

3 II ttc

For all your w iri ng
needs ;
furnaces
repair service and
installation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
3 7 ti c

VIRGIL B. SR.·
216 E. 2nd 51.
Phone
1-(614 )-992-3325

_SJ ou

-----------~

com m t ss 1one r s
may
require add itional contract
provisions with the sue ·
cessful bidder. including

• Dryers • Freezers

~: Rev 8 17 73

67s-P!. Pleasant
451---Leon
576-Apple Grove
71l-'Nson
11:1---New Haven
Its-Letart
937- Buffalo

·- - -----54
Misc. M-erchandice-

~_ll_b! ic_ fio!_i~ --

No Sunday Calls

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

UNIT PRICE

CO NTRACT

ors

PH. 614-992-7848
4 12 1 mo pd

GARAGE
SALE

Sealed proposals w •ll be
received at the of free of the
D ir ec tor of the Oh tO Depar
t men f of Tran sportat1on ,
Co lumbus, Ohto, until 10 00
AM, Oh 10 Standard Trme,
Tuesday , May 4, 1982, for
tmprovements 10
Athens, Ga 11 ra, Hockrng ,
· Merqs, Monroe, Morqan,
' N oble.
Vrn t on
and
Washrng ton Coun t1 es, OhiO,
on va n ous locat 1on s by rtp
plytnq pa1nt f or ce nt er ,
la ne and edqe ltnes
Pavement
Wrdth
Varres
Pro1ect L ength 0 00
feet or 0 00 mtle
Work L ength - VMrous
· teet or Va rr ous mtl es
" The date se for com
pl etron of th1s work sha ll be
as se t forth 111 the b1ddrnq
proposa l! "
Each b tdder s hall be
.. requtred to file w 1th hi s bid
4a
cer ttf red
c h eck
or
: cashrer's check tor an
• amoun t eq ual to f1ve per
cent of h• s b1d, but 10 no
.. eve nt more than
f1ft y
thousand dollar s, or a bond
1
~ for ten per cent of hts b+d ,
a payable to the Otrector
: Brdders must a ppl y, on
.. the proper forms,
fo r
~ qualrfrcat10n a t l eas t ten
~ days prror to the da te se t
' f or openrnq b1ds rn ac
~ co rdan ce w rth Cha pter 5515
, Qhio Revrsed Code
~
Plans and spec tf1 cat tons
ar e on ft le 111 the Depart
111 ment of Tran sportatron and
the otf tee of the D1 strict
r&lt; Deputy Drrec tor
: The Dt r ec tor r eserv es
.. th£' rrohl to retect any and
~ a ll b1ds

949-2860.

Small &amp; l arge
Carpet P1ec es Bound
Room SIZe and Area
Rugs Bound
Carpet lnstallatron
Reasonable Rates
For more lnformatton-

Isn't it
about time
you ran a

r-.

" Bea utiful , Custom
Bu11t Garages "
Call for fre e stdtng
es ftmates, 949-2801 or

CARPET
BINDING
SERVICE

REAlTOR

• Washers
• 0 1sh ·
was hers
• Ranges • Refngerat -

4 1 1 mo

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

• Dozers
• Backhoe s
• Dump Truck s
elo-Boy
• Trencher
• W.1ter
• Sewer
• Gas L1nes
• Sept tc Systems
Large or Sma ll Jobs

All Makes

446-4782

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Wehave sc vNill

HOME S - We have severrt l, cil ll tod;ty

lot Both only S37,500
COUNTRY HOME -

thouse, Pomeroy , Ohio un- but nollimi~d to, the right
lit 12 noon on May 11 1982 of the option to cancel lhe
The bids will be opened at2 lease, If necessary .
The front of the envelope
P.M. on May 11 , 1982 and

buildmg lease. Each bid to

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

Copy No 82-400

(Average 4 words per line)

Pubhc Nofic_e _ - -

VACANT LAND - We hr+ve several par cP IS

Contract Sales Legal

~SOtl Co,, WV
Area COde 304

insertion ..

Up to 15 wor~ s . Three day

87 Upholstery

CALL COLLECT
GALLIPOLIS! OH.

; 141 19, 26, 2tc

&amp; Llwi!SIBEII

RentalS

11 Help Wan ted
17 S• tu at.on Want('d
13 Insurance
14 Busrness Tra tntng
I S School s ln stru c tr on
16 Rad•O , TV &amp; CB Repa tr
17 Mtscellaneous
18 Wanted To do

Public Nottce

31 Hom es l or Sa le
3? Mob rle Homes for Sa le
33 Farms for Sa le
34 Bu srne ss Butldrngs
35 Lo i s &amp; Acreage
36 Rra l E st ate Wanled

POMEROY
Th1~ property sh old be sold LOOK
HERE - four lots, three bedrooms, ba sP ment .
!rrcpte~ cc, larqe 17'x 17' l rv1nQ room. new d1ntnq arc.1
r+nd krlchen A ll tn qood condrtron and cltl on onf'
l loor Steel! I thr s at $24,500

Apnt 9, 198 2

following telephone exchanges.

73 Va nsi!.4 WD
74 Motorcyc les
75 Boats &amp; Motors
76 Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77 Auto Reparr
78 Camp~ng Equipment

PRICE IS RIGHT

OLDER HOME
Needs some rep.:\ •r but IM'i two
1~1rqc lots Four or f1ve bedrooms bil se mcnl. coulc1
be il rea l nr cc hom e lor $70,500

a

CLEANED

WANT fO BUY Old fur
JUST RECEIVED
A complete lin e of
shrubbery, trees
and rose bushes .
See us for th e
lowest pnce s '"
town .

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

N E W LISTING - NEAR POMEROY
11 1 story
re modeled home on approx ', acre. basemen !.
many fea tures want SJS,OOO

Wanted to Buy

!

PHONE 992-2156

71 A utos for Sa le
72 Trucks for Sa le

NE W LISTING - IN POMEROY
Two s mr~tl l'r
lo t s w rth a lO'xSO', 1965 mobile home, equrpped krt
chen, LOu ld be good rnvestment $9,000

Co lumbu s, Oh1o

Classified pages cover the
51 Househo ld Goods
52 CB, TV &amp; Radto Eq ur pm ent
53 Ant iques 54-Mise Mer chand tse
55 Building Suppli es
56 Pets for Sa le
57 Musciallnstruments
58 F rurts&amp; Vegetables
59 For Sa le or Trade

SAVESJ.OOWITH
THIS AD

NOTI CE TO
CO NTRACTOR S
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Merebandise

?1 Bust ness Opportuntty
'11 Money to Loan
23 Professtona1 Servrces

POMEROY, OHIO

Public Not•ce

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory,Ohio45769
_

- Fjeane.al

The Daily Sentinei-Page--7

Business Senices

Rev 8 17 73
(4)

Ohio

608 E. MAIN

PH. 992-2259

Sea led proposa l s w tll be
recerved at th e offrce of the
Dtrector of the Ohio Depar
l ment of Transportation
Columbus , Ohro, un ttl 10 oQ
AM , OhtO Standard Ttm e
Tuesday , May 4. 198? , to;
1mprovemenls rn .
A thens, Gall1a, H ockrnQ
Mergs, Monroe, Morqan '
Nobl e.
V rnton
and
Washrnqlon Counl tes. Ofl10,
on varrous r ou tes and sec
Iron s, by furnr shrnq, rn
s tallrnQ and r ep l ilc 1no
rar sed pavemen t milrker s
and r~placrng prrSmilltc
re tro reflec tors
Pavement
W1dth
Vanes
Pro1ect Length
0 00
feet or 0 00 mrle
Work Length - Var r.ou s
feet or Varrous miles
"T he date set for com
p letton of thr s work siMI! be
as set forth rn the brddrnq
proposa l ·:
Each btdder sha ll be
r eo urred to ftlc wt t h tlts b1d
a cerltfted c h eck or
cas hier 's check for iln
amoun t equal to ftve per
ce nt of hi~ btd , but rn no
event more than
ftft y
thousand dollars, or a bond
· for fen per cent of h+s btd,
payable to th e D 1r ec tor
Btdders mus t apply, on
the
proper forms.
for
qua lrfr cafion at l east ten
days days prror to th e dale
se t l or openmg b1d s 1n r+c
cordance w rth Chilp ter 5515
Oh10 Revtsed Code
Plans and specrft ca tron s
are on Ide .n the Depart
ment of Tran spor tatron and
the otfrce of the D 1s1n c t
Deputy Dr rect or.
The Drrecto r reserves
the rrght to r e ject any and
illl btdS
I

Astrograph

Umverstty m 1951.

He was named president of the
Citizens Nationa l Bank , Zanesville,
m1966, a position wh1ch he held until
hiS retlfement on Sept. 30, 1981.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Moody are active members of the Ftrsl Umled
Methodtst Church. They have three
sons, Donald, Dav 1d and Charles,
and four grandc htldren
Moody IS a past preSident of the
Zanesville Rotary Clu b, the
Zanesv ille Area Chamber of Commerce and was a member of the
Zanesville City Board of Education
for 16 yea rs servmg as president for
10 years. He served as treasurer of

Public Not•ce

Dunng the 1950s the band continued to be popular and in 1958,
Morgan was joined by his sons, J ack
on trombone and David on guitar. In
1965, Morgan was booked for an
eight week engagement at the Top
0' The Strip at the Dunes Hotel in
Las Vegas that extended to 11 years.
However, Russ Morgan died in 1969
leaving the band in the hands of his
son, Jack.
The appeara nce of the Morgan
Band will be from 8 p.m. to midnight
on May 13 and tickets are ava ilable
through Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Wheeler, Colony Theater, Gallipolis,
446-0923; Joan and Bruce May,
Rutland, 742-3022; Bank One,
Rutland Branch, 742-2888; Janice
and Tom Reuter, 99:;.5565; Mary and
Tom Bowen, 992-2919; Sports, Inc.:
593-3277, and Pat and Earl Punk,
Athens, 592-1143; Mick's Barber
Shop, Joan and Mick Williams,
Mary and Gerald Powell, 992-2622.
Only a Iunited nwnber of tickets will
be sold on the bas1s of first come, first served.

music business, having started at
the age of 14, Russ Morgan joioed
the Freddy Martin . Orchestra as
plano player in 1934. He worked also
as a trombopist and arranger and it
was with the Martin band tha t
Morgan devel~ped his "wah-wah"
style on tbe 'trombone which would
be his widely recognized sound some
years later.
While working at Brunswick
Record in New York, Morgan was
discovered by Rudy Vallee dnd it
was at Vallee's insistence that
Morgan fonned his own orchestra.
Vallee even arranged for the first
booking of the Music in the Morgan
Mannet Band at the Biltmore Hotel
in New York City. The Morgan Band
remained at the Biltmore for two
years.
The band enjoyed record breaktng
runs in famed hotels, ballrooms and
theaters across the country and its
records such as "So Tired,"
"Cruising Down the River, " "Please
Think of Me" and many others made
tt big ori the charts.

Pomeroy_:__Middleport,

cards,
sc r a p
metal s,
1.,.,;;. 1 alum1num ca n s, tr an
sm1ssrons, motors, bat
t er ies, rad1ators, stamps
and co rns Offering tr ash
pi ck up service
H arpe r

Halstead Salvage Co. 300
. Eleventh St.. Pl . Pleasant.
304 -675 5868. Also fl ea
mark et

open

M onday

Lawn Mowrng Sertve, no
yard to btg or sma ll. house
pa rnlrnq &amp; roofrng, and

l• ght hau ling Ca ll 446-3\59
alter 6PM 1 286-57 40
Writ care for eld erly man
or woma n on our f ar m ,
prtvate room , S700 per mo

Ca ll 446 8163

through Friday, 1-5 p m.

Lawn ma 1ntenance, q ualtty
se rv1 ce , reasonab le rates

Ca ll 245-9283
Paint1ng 1nterror and ex
teri or, L M . Johnson, 304·

67S 1128

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
Elnantlai
21

They'll Do It Every Time

for Rent
Deluxe turn, apart., cent.
air &amp; heat. 1 or 2 adults

Opportunity

on ly . Call446·0338 .

Business
selling out.
Patriot area . All types of
tools, welder mounted on
SLATS KCePS

SHARPENING
HIS PENCILS

.W.·0957 .

So MUCH,

3 bdr. apl . al 105 Court s l..
Gal lipoli s. S215 per . mo.
Ca ii.W.·2572.

THERE'S NO
TL+IC RJro
ANYIIOAA ··

Apartment. completely
furn ., a ll elec tri c, 3 r. &amp;
large porc h. -458 Second
Ave .. Gallipoli s. 1 or 2
adults only , S200 per mo .•
plu s security deposit . Call

L~a!!_~

REFINANCE or purchase
you r hom e. 30 year fi xed

446· 2236 or 446·2581.

rate . WVa . &amp; Ohio. Leade r
Mo rtgage, 77 E . Sta te St..

bunkie

Professional

ITS IN THE
BASEMENT,
NEXT TO
THE
FURNACE!

dition, $1,000. Phone 304·
773-5181 .

mattresses

S40, maple rocke~ $49,
maple dinetl sets from $125
to S175, bedroom suites
$150, 3 pc . living room
suites S199, 2 pc . living
room suites $140 , love seats

--~
&amp;Campers

1975 Starcrafl pop· up cam·
per, sleeps 8, heater, ice

6 :oo

Priced to sell. Ca ll 446· 1641

serwlees

C&amp; L Bookkee ping
Bookeeping &amp; lax service
fo r all t ypes of businesses.
Ca rol N eal 446 3862

Real Estate
31

CLEAN USEiD MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SA LE S, &lt; MI.
WE ST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 . PHONE 446·3868.

Homes for Sale

1972 Conco rd Mobile Home,

12&lt; 65 . Ca ll 446 7015 a fler
5:30p .m .

For sa le or rent 12x60 2
bedr oom
Buddy mobile
hom e. Se t up with 2 or 4
lots, gas heat, rural water,
c lose to town , financi ng
availabl e. Phone 446·1294.

Beautifu l bri ck &amp; fram e, 3
bedroom hom e w/scenic
view,
wood - burning
f irepla ce, formal dining,
cen tral air w / heat pump.
L ansca ped, 1 ac r e lot
w / fen ce d in ba ck yard,
$45,900 . 11 % finan c ing ,
smatl down paym ent . Call
446·3766 .

14x70 Vil lage Park
L..JS tom built, 3 bdr . extra
in sul ation, porch, carport .
Moving out of state . Ca ll
77,

14H2 16

House for sa le in town .
Pri ced on inspection , 3 or 4
bdr ., FR , 2 baths . Ca ll 446

6 r . house, ba th . full
basem en t in ci ty limits,
$22,000. Farm 6 r . hou se,
bath. utility room, root
ce lla r, 25 112 a., tr ac tor,
farm equipmen t, large
barn, 900 lb. tob acco base,

$35,000. Call 614 446 4767 or
256 1773 .
3 bd r . brick house, exc.
cond ., Energy efficient,
c lose to Holzer Ci ty Sc hool
Distr i c t
10% interest
assumab le loa n. Ca ll 446 -

1973 Tor ch' mobile home,
14x 70. Ce ntral air, 2 bdr .,
with den ., ex . cond ., $7,900
Ca lli 614 286 5637 .
For sa le 1965 Pren ston
trai ler, double framed , 3
bdr _, new car pet &amp; c ur·
fa in s, stove &amp; refr igerator,
kitchen tab le &amp; chairs. 2
sets of underpinning . Call
after 5PM &amp; ask for Kim,
379 -228.4

7080 or 675 2990 .
Modern nome, '] bdr ., 5 r .
by owner. Full y ca rpeted ,
well insu la ted, large lot,
c it y sc hoo ls. Ca ll 256·6060
or 446 -4006 .
For sa le
with 6
· Located
Asking

6 rm . &amp; b ath house
acres of ground.
5 miles from town .
$24,900 Ca ll .d.A6 ·

750 4.
5 rms . &amp; bath, gas fur ·
nanc e, storm windows on

554 in Bidwe ll , Oh . $15,500 .
Ca l l 4.4h IJ39 or 388·9352
2 rooms a nd bath· full size
basem ent with shower . 54 x
111 lot . Good view of river .
8361/ 1 East Main , Pom eroy .
99 2·6347

75 11.
Extra ni ce co untry home·
ca rpeted -natural
gas -2
bath's, no children -no pets .
Loca ted at Snowville. 698 -

4040.
2 bd .room , unfurnished,
Living room , kitchen· 1!1
ba sement, nice and clean.
Som e carpe ting . No in sid e
pets . Deposit required . 992 ·

3090 .
FOUR bedrooms, 2 balhs ,
full ba se ment, carpo rt , Rt .

Bx-4 2 trai ler, 2 bdr., fur ·
nished, good cond . Call 446

9596.

4339 .
TH~EE

S250.

bedroom

hom e,

monlh , 304-675·3431

evening s, 304 -675-3030 days .

1980 1-4&gt;&lt;70-Large room , 3
bdr . and porch added .
$13,500. owner wil l finance
with S6.500 down and rest at
8 perc ent int . Sitting on 2
n ice acres that ca n be ren ·
ted r ea so nably . 614-985·

Lovely si x room cottage, no
c hildr en, $225 per month .
On e month
sec urity
deposit. App l y in person
Friday or Saturday, May I,
79 Jim Hi ll Road . Hen·
derson, WV .
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 Bedroom Hou se, loca ted
in Plants Sub. S250 a man ·

lh, plus $100 deposit . Ca ll
.W.·1851

304 576·2711 .
JJ

L a rge garden, located
down Rt . 7, c ity water . Ca ll

alter 5, 446·0571 .
60 tt mobile hom e t or rent,

couple onl y. Ca ll 36).)743 .
2 bdr . partially furn ., Rt.
35 . De p. &amp; ref . req . Ca ll446·

4229 .

Sa nd H ill Road, Point
Pl easant, 3 bedrooms, Jill,
double garag e, a ll electric,
immedia t e
occupancy .

Lots &amp; Acreage

Improved flat tots . 1 1/ 4
acre $5,000. 3 3/-4 ac res

$12,000. 5 acres a l $15,000.

Phone 304675·5817.

City schoo l district. Will
f inanc e at 10% down . Call

379 2196 .

3 bedroom house, Ga llipoli s

bdr . trailer, air con ·
ditioned, located 1/2 miles
from Hospi tal. Call after

-

Farms for Sale

For sate 2 lots in M emory

Garden, $300 . Caii.W.· 139l.

--

~~~

2 bdr . trailer furni shed,
adu lfs only, Brown Trailer

Park, 9n3324 .
2 bd .room house trailer .
You pay utilities· un ·
furn ished· except tabl e,
chairs and cook -stove . $200 .

per month . $100. deposit .
367 ·0288 .
60x12 furnished , adults
on ly, Flatwoods, sma ll gar·

den plot ava ilabl e. 992o5834
after 5 p .m .

TWO acre lots-150 ft . road
fro nt age,
city
water ,
be hind 84 Lumber, ca ll 304·

HALF mil e out Millstone
Rd ., 5 rooms, bath 31h
acres, ca ll after 6 p.m . 304-

THREE
trail ers,

2
one

bedroom
at

Ashton -

Upland Road, $150. monlh ,

675·6873, 67D618 .

plus deposit and utilities.

576·2771.
32

TWO
bedroom,
un ·
furn ished. One bedroom ef ·

liciency . 30H75·2722 .

30H7s.2583 or 67Hl31 .

Mobite Homes
for Sale

61,000 miles. 9'/H322.

TWO bedroom apartment,
in Henderson, phon e 304·

tr actor, 800 hrs ., very goOd

For Safe : Hard brick,

cond ., Sl4,900. CalloW&gt; 4537.

posl5(4)

For sa le 7ft. pool table and

Joists, lumber -used, used
doors-exterior -interior, tri ·

675· 1971.
4S

ROOM S and

light housekeeping
Park Central Hotel.

apt.,

Space for Rent

COU NTRY MOBILE Home
Pa rk , Roule 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Ca ll

9'11 7479 .
Large trail er lots for r ent
in Middleport. Ca ll992·2101

or 'l'ln319 after 5PM .
PASTURE for rent . Ph one

30H7s.5110.
47

Tobacco teases f or Ma son
Cou nt y, onl y up to and in·
eluding 12,500 lbs, wi ll pa y
12 cents per lb for leases.
M .L . Meadows, Rt . I, B ox

61 , Pliny . WV . 25 158 .Phone
30H3U589 .

Merebandlse

Sofa, cha ir, rocke r , ottoman, 3 tabl es, $500. Sot a,
chair and lov esea t , $275 .
Sofas and chairs pri ced
from $285 . to $795. Tables,

$38 and up lo $109 . Hide a
beds,$340., queen size, S380.
Recliners, $175. to $295 .,

Lamps from $18 . to S65 . 5

JVC, Sony stereo system,

304-675-1513.
BROWN eggs, S.85 dozen,
Deliver once a week, Rt. 2,

Jerrico, 304-895-3395.

$219 up to $495 . Desk SilO.
Hut c hes , $300 . and $375..
mapl e or pine fini sh .
Bedroom suites
Bassett

Bunk bed

comp lete with mattresses,

$250. and up lo $350. Cap·
fain 's beds, $275. complete .
Baby beds, $99 . Mattresses
or box springs, full or twin,

$58.. firm, $68 . and $78 .
Qveen sets, $195. 4 dr.
chests, $42. Bed frames,

S20.and S25., 10 gun · Gun
cabinets, S350. . dinette
chairs S20. and S25. Gas or
electric ranges, S295. Or thopedic super firm , $95,
baby malresses, S25 &amp; S35,
bed frames S10, S25, &amp; S30 .
Used Furniture bookcase,
5 pc . dinett set, 3 Living
room suite. Ranges and
TV 's. 3 miles out Bulavill e
Rd . Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am to5pm, Sa t .

446·0322
Upright freezer like new
$225, wringer washer S65,
36' Whirlpool gas range$95,
32' electric range S65,

55

Building Supplies

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintel s, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .

Cal l 245·5111.
Sears garage door, steel,
9x7 with instructions, used
approximately 8 months,

like new . S125 . 304-675-6133.

56

Pets for S.ale

Houses for Rent

hom e, S185 per mo. plus

Clipper Mill 3 bdr., $300
mo ., $150 dep . Call446· 1780.
Large house tor rent, 4 bdr.

Ca ll388·9909.
Small modern countr¥
home. Special rate for
seniors. Write P .0 . Box 10,

3 bdr. hou se on Chatham

675'4424.

Ave., Gallipolis. No pets,
S165 per mo. Call446·3617.

S50 deposit . 304-675-6512.
TWO bedroom, furnished ,
mobile home, $185. per

proofed, exc . cond . $5 ,500 .
742·2423.

Sp eedq u ee n

HILLCRE ST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor -outdoor facilities .

Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Ca ii.W.· /795.
BRIARPATCH KENN
Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.

Caii38H790.

S7

- - - - -- - - - Musical

-

- --- - - - - - -

WHIRLPOOL

MARLBORO bass amp.,

Instruments

month plus utilities, $.50,

good condition. Sl75. Phone

deposit, 304·67H511 .classi -

year old, $400, 304·675-7416.

304 .675 .3540 .

1979

Cavalcade

1969 Richardson, gOOd con ·

dition. $3,500. Phone 304·
675·3773.

2 bdr. house in Rio Grande,

S200 P" rrro. Call 2.S·9325
or 2.S·5364.

th ree

bedroom gas heat, par·
tially furnished, 304·675·

-4 bedroom, central air and
heat, city water , fireplace,

2907.

unfurnished
c hen. S300

except
month

kit·
plus

Reference

and

deposit
required .
Racine. 949-2293.

In

utilities.

Apartment
for Rent

Apartments. 675-5548.
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614-l..S-9484.
Furnished efficiency apart·
ment, Point Pleasant, all

utilities paid. Phone 304·
895·3450.

ONE bedroom fumlshed
apartment, private enStove-and refrigerator fur· trance, air-conditioned, all
nished, hook-up for washer utilities paid, outskirts
and dryer. Back yard. Henderson, S235. month, '
Storm windows, well . in· .304·675-6730.
sulaled, forced air furnace.
Adults preferred, no pets. Efflency apt. in private
Security deposit required . home with private en·
Phone 992·5292,
trance. 304·675·3220.
Nice two-bd.room home on
Spring Ave., Pomeroy.

f

Travel

trailer . 29ft. bvilt in mi cro·
wave . 4 burner stove oven.
12 cu. ft . refrig. freezer, 2

beds. 6 fl . bath
$4,500. 742·2413.

Similar bargains available.
Call for your d irec tory on

room .

1947 FORD Coupe, good
negotiable, 304·675-2207 .
1973

PONTIAC

De lu xe

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

72

Farm supplies
&amp; thestaeu
61

Truck's for Sale

78 Ford PU short bed, 6
1·sel of John Deere 4 bot· cyl., 3 spd,_. 21.500 miles.
tom 16' semi mount plows, Call before 2 :30 PM, 446·
l ·Hillsboro tri ·axle goose· 9471.
neck 28' trailer. Call 61• ·
256-6534.

Gravely riding tractor, 11
HP , 2 cy linder with
hydrauli c lift, 50 inch
mower and dozer blade .

1981 model. new, $4100. 1981
list price is $5750. Outdoor

Equipment Sales, Jet . Rls.
7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph . 446·
3670. Weekdays 9 to 5, Sat. 9
to 1.
TRACTOR , John Deere
1010 gas &amp; brush hog. Call

304-675·1111. After 5: 00, 304·
675-1043 .
Livestock

"-"-- --"=== '-- 2 Reg . Polled Hereford
bulls. 18 mo . old for sale .
Call446·2109.

horse

guelding,

1981 4· H Champion, Contest
Division. Also small mare
western pleasure, -4-H
project since 1979. Both are
gentle and well trained .

Caii2.S·5252.
Horse's and

1979 Truck Ram Charger. 4
X -4 green interior, ex·
cellent condition . Contact
Mike Sargent, Citizens
National Bank, Pt . Pleasan·

farm

wagon, 8 wk . old Walker
Pups., can be registered.

Motorcycles

1980, 250, on or off, Honda
bike with helmet, $800. Call
256-6640 or 446-2094.

1977 Honda Gold Wing· lOOO,

actual

custom,

miles,

exc.

1-1,:::::::======-L~::::::::::::::::::::::::~

1979 RM 400 Suzuki dirt
bike, new parts, 304-773-

only 2 months, like new,

Cal1446·4036 or 446-6566.

... , . , . ......
_.... , .. ."

40,000

1979 Starcraft15ft. lri haul,
80 HP Mercury, exc . cond.,
skiing equipment. Call 367·
0394.
For Sale : 1979 Slarcrafl 18
FT. Fish and Ski boat, 140
hp. Mercury motor with
power trim and stainless

steel
prop.
Mercury
thruster trollIng motor.
Hummingbird depth fin der. Two batteries. Drive
on traitor with auto-lube

bearings. 7 life lackels-4
sets of water skis. $4,500.
Call992·3083.
14FT john boat &amp; trailer, 20
H P Mercury
motor,

1979 Chevelte 4 dr., 4 spd.,
radials,

Motors for Sale

mi.,

exc. cond., $3,200. Call 446·

2350.

1546,

.

1959 Rambler for parts,
$75. Call 2-45-9263 alter 4.

carpet,

swivel seat, livewell, 304·
675-4558.

:===:::=:=::==:===

76

Tall gate for 73 to 81
Chevrolet PU. Call 256·

6309,

.I

LIAUGHIN' /AT US!!

GASOLINE ALLEY

Poor Pank! Mr. Tutu doe!?n't ~o he's ma~inq
fll be't he lhPiowP in corporal Pank practice
an extra hour
qot his hide
'"' i '""" ,,., ~· rri' '
ever4 da4!
tanned!

Phone 304·576·?Ql0

Mr. Tutu cauqht
Pank with the
mone4 in his
pocket!

Plumbing
&amp; Healing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone.W.·3888 or .W.·4477
Excavating

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates . Call us for free
estimates. 4-46·4440.

WINNIE

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

TIIAT'S RIGHT..

SEWING Machine repairs, .
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·228-4.

AFTEii' FIRING
Z#Eii'_ m'NNI&lt;f
C)iii.JSQH44'

1n; Ml'litAml£
THAT I SEE
10U.'

MAKE IT

OKA'Y; WILEIUR ... WMORJIOW

'111£

AT THREE ... HERE AT MY
PLACE l BUT THE VISIT

&amp;WRWtY
&amp;48ncw.~
WHEI?E V'lf

MUST EIE EIR'IEF... 1)\ol

A YIRY S!t'K AWl/

ARST MeT/

,1/I/Prlt JAIIM'...

around. Phone 30H95·3826.
85 .......

BARNEY

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

I BEEN
SLEEPIN'
THREE

Limestone hauled lractor
to 35

Auto Repair

ton

limit. '1'11·5275 or 74nl53.

SOLID

OAI/5··

J IMS Water Service. Call

If you need your trash
hauled away , call Harper
304·675-5868 between I PM

and s P. M. Lawn mower
repaired .
Will do general hauling;

gravel, limestone, sand
and fill dirt. 304·882·2867.

Ouallty Autobocly &amp; Paint
work. Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446-1968.

71

M, H, Repair

Mobile

·Home

'

PEANUTS

Serivce

Rooting painting, blocking,
&amp; leveling. Escort Service.
Call 245-9514 after 5PM.
.

Private

'

I CAN'T
STAV IN
BED NO

LONGER

IGINCHAj

PAW JUST GOT
HIS SECONT

WIND

Now arr ange the Circled loners 10
lorm the su rpn se answer . as sug ·

rJ r

gested by the above cartoon

"V1,

Answer here :

IIIII)ITJ"
(Answers tomorrow )

Saturday 's

Jumbles PATIO

I Answer

STEED

([)

Great

Perform -

®I

Report

to

Cil 700 Club
(!) MOVIE : ' Willie and
Phil'
II)
El
~
MOVIE:
' Babysitter '
0 (I) @I M•A•S•H F.rso
o f Two Parts . A thtef
makes life mt serable for
ohe 4077oh . IRI
(]) (j] lan Mckellen Plays
Shakespeare In h1 s per"
formance , Mck ellen traces
h1 s own Invol ve ment w1 th
Shakespeare,
portrays
many of the Bard 's great
c hara cters and comm uni
cates his endunng lov e for
h1s plays and poetry . ~90
min .)
9 :30 0
([) ®I Making the
Grade Eleven years at
Franklin High tak e the1 r toll
on Harry .
1 0 :00 0
(l) (1) One Step
Closer Debby Boone stars
in this show , filmed in Detroit, with guests Dionne
Warwick and James Coco
160 min)
0 (I) ®I Lou Grant Lou ,.
arrested for drunk driving .
1Ri160 min)
{]) Friendship Years
10:30 (I) Sing out Ameri ca
ffi TBS Evening News
(]) We Were German
Jews Thi s is a personal
account of Herbert and
Lotte Strauss· dramatic es·
cape from a Nazi co ncentration camp , their building
of a new life and thw
coming to term s with the
Holocaust . !60 min.)
® News
11 :oo
®J
(jj)
News
Cll' Nashville RFD
HBO Theatre: Table
Settings Three generations gather- at the dinner
table In this com edy about
family problems . Starring
Robert
Klein ,
Stockard
Channing and Eileen Heckan .
(1) News/Sports/Weather
®Hitchcock
11 :30 0 Cil CD T onlght Show
Johnny is joined by Bert
Convy, Erma Bombeck and
Manhattan Transfer. IRI
160 min.)
Cil Another Life
ffi All In the Family
(I) Benny Hill Show
D (I) Quincy Quincy becomes involved in a crusade to demonstrate a
community's need for a
new coroner's services . (R)
160 min.)
(I) Captioned ABC News
(JD MOVIE: 'The Seven
Minutes'
(JJ Nlghtline
12:00 (I) Burna &amp; Allen
(I) MOVIE: 'Harlow'
(I) Nlghtllne
([) PBS .Late Night
(JJ MOVIE: ' 'The
Deeth of Ocean View
Park'
12:30 8 (l) CD Late Night With
David Letterman David is
joined by Ted Nugent and
Walter Wiliams, creator of
'Mr. Bill'. (60 min.)
(I) Jack Benny Show
(!) MQVIE:
' Up tho
Academy'

a

a

BLA ZER

AN IDLE BOAST
Jumble Book No. 19, containing 110 puutes. is ava ll allle to r $1 95 postpaid
fr om Jumble, cJo this newspaper , Bolt 34, Norwood. N.J 07648.1ncluda your

NO RTH

Oswa ld· "Hugh Ke lsey's
newest book is ca ll ed ' More
Killing Defense a t Bridge ·
Like all of Ke lsey's book s 1t
" tough , but wel l worth

m

1-26 ·82

• 86
• J 86 5
t A Q7 3

+ AK5
EAST

reading if you want to sec

WEST
+Q 75

def ense at its best ''

• A 74

• K (.J lU V

t K9 64
• 10 73

+ Q84

Alan "Even the firs t hand

m the boo k ts a hum -dmger

+2

+AKJ 1094J
. 32

You Signal w1th the 10 and
he cont inues wtth the seve n
to you r nin e You lea d the
kin g and South ruff s wtth the
nine Now he play s ace-klngpck of trumps Your part ncr wms w1th thP queen &lt;Jnd
yo ur s1dr ha s t hree trtck s

m"

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+

Vulnerable · Ne1\hf'r

Dea ler No rth
Wes t
Pass
!'ass

hav 1ng to di sca rd You had
let a diamond go on the k1n g
to Jet

t JIU8 52
SOUT H

You are East and your part ner opens th(' ace of hearts

of spades You ca n't afford

0

CENSUS

Suggested that he was proud of ttl e fa cti hat
ne worked less ttlan anyone el se -

([) ®

ances 'Brahm s P1ano Con·
certo No
2 1n B·Fiat
MaJor · Claud•o Abbado
conducts the Vtenna Phtl harmonic m Brahm s. wnh
sololt st M aunz1o Polltnl

8 :30

~A ITEc::&gt;.

BE ING

Q!jwa ld " You a lso &lt;trr Jn
t he cm bar rass1ng positiOn of

m

Need something hauled
away or something moved?

and trailer-25

®I

o rn m o m

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 36).)471 or
367-0591.

16

· 1974 Chev, pu; Reese Hit·
~ eli, rlf(N brakes, U·lolnt, ex'
cellenl meehanlcal cond., I.H.VIti\,''WV ."')ji·I82~RII36,
S650. Call319·2469. •
~
===..::.,.~.;,__..,,J. ...:./- - ' - - - r - -

'

IN MOO WOULD 8&amp;

([)

9 :00

service, free fertilizer with
annual ca r e,
insured.

I I I

WHAT ONE MOUSE
5AIO TO THE OTHER'
A5 HE SAW THE TR'AP

Benjamin Ca pta1n Lew1s
becomes averse to taktng
orders a ft er attendtng a
se lf -assemveness se mtnar

Murphy Murphy recetv es a
death threat from a man he
sent to prison .

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessorlea

77

1975 Chevrolet Impala, 4
door, automatic, PS, PB,
:air, 51,000 miles, very good
cond. One owner. Call 446-

motor,

TUNK AN'
A COLUMN OF
MEN HAVE
MARCHED
AC'l(OSS OUR
BORDER'

... 1F 1 H~DN'T GOTTEN
TO IT FIRST, EVERYIIOCW

STARK'S free and lawn

83

w / Bill

MOVIE :
'Roman
Holiday'
(I) (i) ~ Today 's FBI Ben

304·895·3801 .

82

Creativity

ffi

Electrician
li ce nsed
master ,
lowest
rates

Boats and

trolling

OR

YOU'VE GOT NO··

SP£/AA STUCK 1M IT!!

Jim Lanier, 304·675-7397.

'' ' ,

7'-!l_ _~A~u~to!!s.!fo~r'-'S~•!!Ie!...........,.l
74 Cougar XR7, exc. cond.,
very sharp, $1,500. 72 Mon·
tego, good running motor,
$300. Call446·9380.
new

,

STUFI'EO CDRYniOSAURUS
IN TH' Z:OO WITH lA

Water wells . Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

84

1981 SUZUKI RM 60, rode

7S

~11/l.SHIIL

8 :00

TO ·"

VOU GOT SOME NERVE,
OOP••• LE~VIH' TH""T

remodeling . Phone 304-6751088 or 675·4560.

~IJ

SHRAIG

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

and hts agents try to solve
a case that tnc ludes a mur·
der and the tappmg of a
gasoline p1pel1ne (60 m1n )

perienced mason , roofer,
carpe nter , electricia n ,
general
repairs and

mileage.

Call446·0648 after 5PM.
~.700

IF YOU'IlE II

RINGLES'S SERV ICE ex·

675-2440.

·1980 650 Honda

a\TEG OUTGIDE YOUR
CHAMBERS AND COULDN'T
HELP OVERHEAAIMG '"

J

Play killing defense

Moyers "Nauonal Center
for
A tomospherrc
Re·
sea rch.· Moyers eKamtnes
the research betng done by
the NCAR to mak e ratn fa ll
where it is needed
CD Gll Entertainment
Tonight
0 (l) (1) MOVIE : 'Side
by Side: The True Story
of the Os - mond Family '
(I) National Geographic
Special

0

7443 .

low

1

K Tree Trimming,

BUILDING &amp; remobeling ,
carpentry , roofing , plum·
bing, co ncrete work . 304·

Registered and grayed hor·
ses, excellent 4-H project .
English and western sad·
dies ·
everything
ir(laginable in horse equipment and supplies, also

Hay &amp; Grain
64
o:!__ _~CL"~="'--­
Round bales of hay for sale.

&amp;

For sale 1977 Vespa moped
good cond. Call after 6, 446·

dress,

, N0-1'1'1 AFRAID

HE'G TH GAVE THIG YOUNG
~TIQUE LADY THE I'IIWNG
DEALER II'IPREG510N . I'M
WHO '"
ACTUALLY HERE

esti males, 614-698·8105.

1980 Honda CR 250, exc .
cond. Sl.100. Call388·8659 .

full

FORGIVE filE, '(()(,R HONOR,
I l'iAG WAITING FOR MR.

or .W.·2454.

74

1976 Kawasaki 750, 304-6752183 .

Two registered horses, 304·
576·2405.

- THIG 15 A
CLOSED
HEMING,
SIR. PLEASE
LEIIVE AT
ONCE!

RON'S Television Service .
Specia lizing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house ca ll s. Phone 576·2398

co ntinuou s
guttering ,
seamless siding, roofing ,
garage
doors ,
free

Arthur Spencer, 985·3891.

Hoof Hollow. 614-698·3290.

ANN IF:

Spec ia l March and April
only . Gene 's Deep sream
Cleaning . Scotch Gaurd.
Free estimate. 992·6309

ADVANCED
Sea mle ss
Guller -Doors . Off~ring

$450.00, 304·675-7416.

riding lessons and trail
rides and horse tr.aining .

ceilings. Ca ll 36).)784 or
367·7160 .

t.

5170.
colts,

®

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

rJ r

BRIDGE

0 (l) You Asked For It
Cll Another Life

(I) Business Report
®l Richard Simmons

stump removal. 675·1331.

1975 Ford F -100 pickup,
$800. Good work truck. Cal
388-8152 .

John Deere 4 row .corn
planter, $450. Call156·6205.

French City
Painting
residential &amp; com mercial.
interior, exterior, paper
hanging ,
&amp;
textured

[j

~

name , address. :lp code and mak e checks payable to Newspaperbooks

(1) Laverne and Shirley

'

by Henn Arnold aM Bob Lee

MacNeil -Lehrer

(I) Sanford and Son
([) 0 Cl) Family Feud

l

~----- --

CID

...

Report
® News
E1 &lt;121 Muppet Show
7 :30

Caii.W.·1107 .

F

Farm Equipment

63

([)

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffell Broslhers Custom

how to purchase . 602-9'18 - can3aa-9762 .
0575 Ext . 7965 Call refun·
dable .

304-675-6605.

~·

44

SUR PLUS ' JEEPS $65 ..
CARS $89., TRUCK SIOO.

restorable condition, price

POODLE
pups,
AKC PALAMI NO mare, 7 years
registered . No Checks, 304- old, SSOO. 1 Dapple Gray
895·3958.
pony, $100. 304-773-5092.

washer, S100. Magtag 3 tep
dry.er, good cond ., S90,
guaranteed . Call156· 1107 .
washer

directory on how to pur·
chase.

For sale:1975 GT 380
Suzuki motorcycle . Call
985·4411 or 9'12·7165.

3844 after 4 p.m .

&amp;
dryer, apartment size, 1

fie
d trailers on Hereford
ads
TWO
Lane, 304·576·2103.

23,000 miles. 360 high, low
range, ouadrac trac, rust

S200. Sold through local
government sales. Call 1714·569·0241 exl. 1855 for

Quarter

St. Bernard puppies AKC.
$75.00. 985·3867 .

mobile

J -10

CARS AND TRUCKS, most
makes and models under

Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call «6·

Whirlpool auto. washer,
real nice, SllO . GE dryer,

2 bdr. furnished

Honcho

--------.

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ex ·
perience, special izing in

Carpets. Free estimates .

cond. Must sell $795 . Call
446·0971.

446· 7398.

Skaggs Used Appliances,

' I'

Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive ca rs in
stock .

7001b. pony for sale, 6 yrs .
old . Call156·1528.

30076-2441

Whirlpool dryer $95, Sears
gas dryer $125, covch S35·J
to choose from , over stuf·

steel

A lot of different parts for
350 or 400 engines. Also par·
ts for 74 Impala . interior
perfect. 742·3063 .

Jeep

(1) Happy Days
([) Tic Tac Dough

0

BORN LOSER

HARTS Used Cars, New

ste~l

m , 2 mantels-oak, 3 pr.

1979

cond .

DRAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies , CFA

POODL E GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

we'll deliver . Phone 304-

HOME.

Kin g. Ripley, WV 304-3726390

For Sale or Trade

6 in.,

Fair

o rn m o m ® m &lt;121

Friehds
(l) Entertainment Tonight

buill up roof . Cal l388·9857 .

sliding oak door..s with
guide walls, solid oak an·
tique stairs, spindle and
rails . 992·6254 after 5 or
week -ends.

Sears riding mower, 7 hp
26• cut S300. Bolen 650 trac'
tor -32• mower , elec tri c
start, new motor $300. 949·

.fed c hair $25, love seat S25,
black and while TV S65.

Gallipolis, Oh 45631.

USED MOBILE
576-2711.

7842.

Mobile Home, 2 bedroom,
furnished , all e lec tri c,
washer ,dryer hookup, $175.
monthly plus electricity .

Used 2 bedroom 14 X 60
Mobile hom e, 1973 model

home. 3 bd.room· air cond .,

R65 Ditc h witch trencher
wi th di ese l eng ine. 614·694·

675·1210 .

Avacodo

total natural gas· front kit·
chen, partially furnished .
992·7313 after 5.

-~-

Wood table with· 4 chair s,

Furnished mobile home
S165 per mo . plus utilities,

mo)lile

E xce lsior Oi l Co., 636 E.
Main St ., Pom'e roy, Ohio.

BABY furniture, phone 304·

exc. cond ., $90. Call 446·
8181.

Ritz -Craft

8271 .

$385. 7 pc .. $189 . a nd up.

utilities, $50 deposit. 304·

1971

30' GE se lf cle aning oven,
GE frost -fr ee refrigerator .
Both white, used only 2
months, exc. cond . Cal l 446·
5131. ex r . 29. Evening 446·

pc . dinettes from S79., to

675·6512 .

Elcona 12x65 Mobile home
for sale. Furnished· In good
cond. on county road 1. 669·
5092.

1979 King 2 horse trailer ,
lik e new . Ca ll 614·2-45·5252 .

Fiat -Allis mode l 545, rub·
ber tire end loader, 2 yard
bucket, complete l y over
hau led with new eng ine, ex ·
ce lt ent co ndition. Blaine

Village II . S200 mo . Call
446·4416 after /PM .

Schultz,

tractor , .Sears, new engine
&amp; battery , exc. cond, $695.

S9

2066.

---- · -~-- -

House, 3 bdr. in Rodney

1972

1200. 10 H P 36' c ui lawn

--- --

Wanted to Rent

mobile home se tting on lot,
ready to move in to . $8995.

Phone

dozer ·

9n22os.

41

thoughout $6,900.
30H75·4424 .

450,

Caii.W.·115S.

1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12'
WIDE,
2
BEDROOM

Best buy in town on used 12
X 60 Nasnua, 1976 model in
excellent cond ition . 2
bedroom,
new car pet

Case

ping·pong table with act .,

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING

1975

675·2295 or 6751304.

air . Cai i 3007J.565 1.

1976 Plymouth Volare. 2

EVANS ENTERPRISES

SEVE N acres, Greer Rd.,
S20,000. or best offer, 30-4·

lientals

20 yrs . exp. Cal l388·9652 .

3190.

Phone 30H75·4088 .

For sal e 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
tr ai lers, furni shed, with

10% down, BANK FINAN ·
CIN G AVA IL ABLE, 304·
5762711.

pickup truck . Call 61086·

tempos, cassette recorder ,

$750. Call after 3PM 245·
9533.

door, $1,300.

Cherry, $795.

Fer r y. 100 X 100 fl . lol .
S7,000 down, t ake over Va
loan at 811• per cent . Phone

gal. tank , price $340. Other

ds, loot pedals, 7 rythm

PAINTING · interior and
exterior,
plumbing,
roofing , some remodeling .

Lowery Organ 2 keyboar·

5930, Jackson, Oh . RON

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

5 : 30 PM, 38a.9760.

Farm 76 acres . Good
hou se, barn, work shop,
small chi c ken hou se. 1 mile
west of Langsville on Sr .
124 . 742·2860 after 4 p.m .

J5

1 bd .room furni shed in Midd leport. Utilities pa id. 992 -

4110.

FOR RENT Unfurni s hed, 2
Li censed &amp; insured. Call

and county approved. 1,000

-~ ---- ---

4395
MOBI LE HOME S MOVED

54 _:::M,.,i~
sc"._,M
,e
,rcoc:.::h,a:::n,:o
d:,ic,e_
Plastic Septic Tanks. Slate
sizes in stock , haul in your

2 bdr. fully furni shed, ai r
cond ., adults onl y _Ca ll446·

12 x 60 tr ail er. excellent
condition . Ca l l 446 1552 .
Furni shed, air conditioned,
und erpinning , se t up on lot
in Middleport .

L eon Baden ar ea, 4 yea r
old , 3 bedroom, 2 baths,
ran c h , $4 , 000
down,
assume 91/ ) per ce nt loan,
payment s $405 . per man ·
th ,1 ncluding tax es x in ·
surance. 304·458·1582.

992-5434 . 99B914 or 30H81·
2566.

46

62 north, phone 1·61-4·928 ·

M ob il e home on 112 acre
lot, porch, awning, un derpinning, washer &amp;
dryer, et c . Ca ll446·4736 .

1213 .

Trailer in Syracuse, Apart ·
m en t and house
in
Pomeroy , house in Letart
Fa ll s, Apartment in New
Have n and Middleport . 992·

1 bedroom furnished apt .

...,

m

446·3159.

- -

Windshield broken? Call
Souther n Gla ss . Insurance
c la im s we lco m e. Free
mobile serv ice ava ilable .
Ca ll oW&gt; 1011.

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

(I) ABC News
([) 3 -2- 1, Contact
® Over Easy
6 :30 0 (l) (1) NBC News
$50,000 Pyramid
(!) What On Earth? Fascinatmg facts about the
world of scte nce and hu·
man beha vtor are pre·
se nted.
ffi Gomer Pyle
(I) Muppet Show
0 ([) ®I CBS New s
([) Dr. Who
(jj) Lilias. Yoga and You
&amp;l &lt;121 ABC News
7 :00 0 (l) P.M . Magazine
Cll Bull's Eye
(!) MOVIE : 'Gigi'
(I) Carol Burnett and

Services
-·

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

News

after s cal l 446·7076.

I

[ SOUHE

ffi Andy Griffith

box, stove, double fuel
tanks, awning &amp; many ex ·
tra . 1 owner, exc. cond.

~ THAT SCAAMBLEO WOAD GAM E

~ ~~~ 'XI

Unscramble these lour Jumbles .
ana lener to eactl square. to form
four ord1nary words

EVENING

S70, owl lamps S25, ringer
washers
$75,
dryers,
several
refrigerators,
utility
c abinets,
mechani c's tools, beds,
silver stone, TV,s, wood·
burners, stero's and lots
more. Open lOam to 5p m ,

f!:!J

MONDAY
4/26/82

Motor Home

79

'ifJt\INf ~'if

Television
•
•
viewing

FEW BL-OCKS AWAY: SOMEi
L-AST-MINUTE ACTIVITIES
Ar:IE U&gt;JOEI'I WAY-

water heater, 2 way
refrigerator, shower &amp;
commode, exce ll ent con ·

S150, us~d sofa beds SIOO,
r ec liners $80, bunk beds

The Daily Senlinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

April 26: 1982

1971 10 FT Sycamore truck · .
ca mper, gas stove, hot·

2 bedroom , unfurni shed,
garage, adults on l -,t. $150
per mo .. Ca II 446·4336.

Athen s, Oh . 5n3051.
23

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,

$100,

Monday,

Camping
Equipment

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

Gallipolis. New svfa beds

Apartment no. 3, 2nd floor
furnished . adu lts on ly, no
pets, ref . &amp; dep. req . Ca ll

C igar et t e
Ve n di ng
Business. Ca ll 304·773·5651 .
22 ___~oney !O

s1 - - Houle hold Goods

44

Business

truck , cuffing equip., &amp; etc.
Tandem trailer si ngle ax le,
2 12 fl . lruck beds. Also
propert y for sa l e and lot s
more items. For more in
formation ca ll 379·2322 .

Monday, April 26, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport,,Ohio

North

Eas t

lt

Pass

1•

I NT

!-'a s~

4•

Pa s~

!'a s~

Sou th

Opemng lead • A

a heart go so you mu st

c1 th er unguard your qu ee n of
c lubs or JB Ck o f d1 a m onds

1t S{'e m s that

At f1rst gl ance

you shou ld throw the fo~r of
clubs and hope that yo ur
partner hold s the jack ."
Alan· " Kelsey says you
must look further and sec
th at vou not only must throw
a d1"arnond . b•Jt you mu st
keep on w1t h d1amond s as

Jon~ &lt;t s you ha\'1' 111 m o ke
dJ !-'(' JTdS ..

Oswald -- si Hlth ' ur.-ly ha:-.

a seven l'ard ..;padt• !-' UI\
ll rnce. 1f tw ha " ]U \ I onP
diilmond . lhl' JJamonJ
finesse will g1vl! tHm lO
1rirks So vnur nnlv r h;mre
to brJt drd~lrt'J" 1\ lhi.JI ht• IS
vo 1d of diam(•nd :-. ·

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Flesh
wound
5 Aspects
11 Toward
s he lter
12 Playpen 1tem
13 Roman
historian
14 Stellar
15 Ca li gula 's
hello
16 Locate
11 Function
19 _ and Yang
20 " All the
Things
You - "
21 Wine-judgin g
tenn
22 Skin
aperture
24 "Adam - "

40 Sailin g
hazard
DOWN
I Festive
2 Vibrant
3 Little Foys,
by num ber
4 Ca ll for
a ttenti on
5 Laud
6 Speediness
7 Aleutian
isla nd
8 Went roa mong
9 Super la tiv e
in grammar
10 Moon goddess
16 Unfailing
18 Challenge

Yesterday 's Answer

21 Italian
28 French
nvcr
s ilk
22 Kneeca p
29 Tonne nt
23 Be a glutton 30 Go lf
24 " l.ulu"
store
composer
:12 Riding pace
25 Vacation
34 Fiddler 's
pla ce
vehicle
:16 Spanis h
26 Superficicompose r
ality

25 Grotto
26 Old hand
27 Consumed
28 Make
effervescent
31 Blending
33 War of
Jenkins' 35 Gratify
36 Starch
source

37 Arthurian
character
38 European
capital
39 Killer cat

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrpphes, the length and formation of the . words are all
hints. Each day I h e code letters are dolferent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
BRZDEN,

W XT W

I KG R Q

MTAASRN

PKQWTS

RHRN ,

CEW

IRQNRURQTZFR

XRZQH

GXOFX
DN

KYW

DZ

MDNB EDN R .

GDSSTQM

TENWDZ

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: I BEUEVE THE FUTURE IS ONLY .

TI:1E PAST AGAIN , ENTERED THROUGH ANOTHER
GATE. -siR ARTHUR WING PINERO
.,

�~y.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

'''

Meigs County happenings •.
Will meet tonight
The Oh-Kan Coin Club wlll meet
this evening In the River Boat room
at the Dalmond Savings and Loan
Co., Pome roy .
A social hour and trading session
will precede the 8 p.m . meeting.
There wtll election of officers and
out of town coin dealers wtll be
present .
A 25- lot coin auction wlll be held
following the r"eeting. Refreshments will be served and David Edwards, president extends a nd
Invitation to all those Interested In
coins or paper currency to attend .

Marriage license
A marriage license was Issued In
Probate Court to Roger Alan Carson, 20, Middleport, and Phyllis
Ann Dav is, 18, Rt . 1, Mlddleport .

Ends marriage
The ma rriage of Jennie Lee Ash·
ley and Robert Grayson Ashley
was dissolved In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

Meets Tuesday
The Me igs Athletic Boosters wlll
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m . at the
high school.

Church of the Nazarene Tuesday at
7: 30p.m.
Guest speaker wlll be the Rev. R.
D. Brown. There will be special
s!ng!ng. Rev. Broome, president,
extends an an Invitation to all to
attend .

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions --C had
Wise, Cheshire; Gladys Thompson,
Long Bottom; Michael Kincaid,
Portland.
Saturday Discharges--Charles
Ohlinger.
Sunday Admissions--Anna Bareswtlt, Middleport; Bradley Hoftrrian, Mlddleport; Eloise Ball,
Columbus; Garnet Beaver, Cheshire; Mary Pickens, Racine.
Sunda y Discharges -- Matilda
Rowley, Clara Gilkey, Bertha
Braden, Lucllle Vaughan, Edgar
Greenlee.

Emergency Medical Service
reports.

Probes bike theft
The Pomeroy . Police Department Is Investigating the theft of a
!().speed bicycle from a porch at the
Wayne Pierson home on Mechanic
St., over the weekend. The department Is also Investigating damages
to a car owned by Sharon Icenhower. The vehicle was extensively
scratched by some type of Instrument. It was parked on Osborn St.

Brown will speak

Squads kept busy

The Meigs County Holiness Association will meet at the Rutland

Local units were kept on the
move over the weekend with numerous calls, the Meigs County

The Middleport Unit at 11:25 p.m.
took Anna Bareswilt from Page St.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Rutland at 6:34p.m. took David Grate
from the scene of an accident on
Cook's Gap Hill to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Racine at 11:14 a.m.
took Phyllis Stobart from Route 1.24
to Pleasant Valley Hospital. Pomeroy at 12: 46 p.m. took Tom Reed to
Veterans Memorial Hospital from
a brush fire the Pomeroy Department was fighting In the Darwin
area. The Orange Township De-partment was on the scene of
another brush fire on Silver Ridge
for an hour at 1: 11 p.m. Saturday.

Ashbrook funeral Wednesday
JOHNSTOWN, Ohio (API Funeral services are scheduled
Wednesday for U.S. Rep. John M.
Ashbrook, who was the Ohio Republican Party's top contender In
this year's U.S. Senate race.
Ashbrook, an outspoken conservative who represented Ohio In
Congress since 1961, died Saturday.
He was 53.
Funeral services are scheduled
for 1 p.m . Wednesday at the John·
stown Baptist Church. VIsiting
hours Tuesday are 2 p.m.-4 p.m.
and 7 p.m. -9 p.m. at Crouse and Son
Funeral Home In Johnstown.
Ashbrook collapsed Saturday at
his apartment-office In Johnstown,
said Dr. Edward Carlin, emergency room physician at Licking
Memorial Hospital In Newark. He
was pronounced dead at the hospital at 12:28 p.m .
Ashbrook's physician, Dr. Robert Young of Johnstown, said one
of the congressman's aides notll!ed
him just after 11 a.m. Saturday that
Ashbrook had fainted. Young arrived within mtnutes and said he
detected "no productive
heartbeat."
Licking County Coroner Dr. Robert Raker, who per1ormed the InItial autopsy on Ashbrook, said his
preliminary finding Indicated the
congressman died of massive hemorrhaging In the stomach and
bowels.
Raker said his findings showed
the gastritis ~ttac k probably occurred sometime Saturday mornIng, "two to three hours before he
actually died." _
Consequently, he explained, Ashbrook's body would not have exhibited symptoms - such as an
unusual bowel movement - which
might have alerted him to seek
medical help.
"This usually doesn't happen this
quickly," Raker said of gastritis attacks In general. "The patient wlll
usually have a chance to know

something's wrong and do something about it."
Because Ashbrook's attack occurred so suddenly, Raker said,
"He may have felt a little weak ;p1d
tired, but then who of us doesn't feel
weak and tired from time to time?"
Raker said more tests wlll be per·
formed to determine the cause of
the hemorrhaging, with the results
to be released In about two weeks.
"As far as we know, he never had
a previous attack," Raker said.

\

He said he understood the congressman was not on any type of
medication, did not take asplrlns,
and did not drtnk either alcohol or
coffee - all believed to contribute
to gasto-lntestlnal disorders.
Asked II the autopsy revealed evidence that Ashbrook had ulcers,
Ralker said there was "absolutely
none.' '
In 1972, Ashbrook had sought the
GOP presidential nomtnatlon, but
failed to win a single delegate vote

Area deaths

Harry A. Staats
Harry A. Staats, 67, Letart, died
Sunday morning at his residence.
Born March 20, 1915 In Carnegie,
Pa., son of William W. and Mary M.
Sayre Staats, he was selfemployed, worked as a heavy
equipment operator, attended the
J .O.U.A.M . of New Haven and was
also a member or the Vernon United Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Nora F.
Staats; two daughters, Bernita L.
Meadows of Nettle, W.Va., and
Bonnie D. Smithson of Letart; a
son, Larry of Mason; three brothers, Stanley and James, both of
Letart, and William of Aleron; four
sisters, Edna Livingston and
Velma Johnson, both of Akron, Doretta Clarke of Wisner, La., and
Lily Kelv!ngton of Letart; and
seven grandchlll)ren.
He was preceded in death by a
son and two brothers.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, with
the Rev. Tim Scarberry officiating.
Burial will be In Hof!man Cemetery, Letart. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 3-5 and 7-9
p.m. Tuesday .
J .O.U.A.M. of New Haven will

\

hold services at 7: 30p.m. Tuesday
at the funeral home.

Lucille Clark
Lucille Clark, 94, Coolville, died
at O'Bieness Hospital In Athens
Monday following an extended
Illness.
Miss Clark was born at Coolville,
a daughter of the late Luster and
Eva Noyse Clark. She had been a
resident of Coolville for her entire
life.
Miss Clark had made her home
lor the last several years with a
niece, Mrs. Roscoe (Marguerite)
Burdette of Coolville. Also survivIng are two other nieces, Mrs. Darrell (Betty) West of Albany and
Mrs. Homer (Eva Mae) Leeth,
Coolville; a nephew, VIctor Clark,
Coolville, and several cousins and
great nieces and nephews. Besides
her parents she was preceded In
death by two brothers, Charles and
Marcus.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the White Funeral
Home In Coolville with burial to be
In the Vanderhof! Cemetery.
Friends rnay call at the funeral
home anytime after 6 p.m.
Tuesday.

•

enttne

"""-........._
Voi.30,No.264

I
row, left to right: Teresa Basham, Brenda Fry, Paula
Swisher, Renee Willis, Rowena Averion, Kris
Snowden, Cindy Crooks; second row, left to right:
Robin Kitchen, Suzan LighUoot, Greg Thomas, Greg
Taylor, Stephanie Houchins, Dick King.

INDUCTEES - Thirteen Meigs High School
students were inducted Into the National Honor Society
at a special Induction ceremony held Sunday at 2:30
p.m. in the school cafeteria. New members are, first

Panel works on tax, spending cuts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A bill
raising taxes and cutting spending
to try to solve state government's
money problems will be rewritten
this week by a three-member
House subcommittee.
Already approved by the Senate,
the proposal is before the Ho!lse
Ways and Means Committee,
where Chairman William E. Hlnlg,
0-New Philadelphia, wants to try
to avoid numerous amendments.
The bill boosts the state income
tax by 25 percent and cuts most
state services by about 7 percent In
a bid to erase a projected budget
deficit for the 1981-1983 biennium of
up to $1.5 billion.
Hinig asked the members of his
panel to bring their amendments to
a meeting of the full committee on
Tuesday morning.
He said he will hand them to a
three-member subcommittee for
study.
He said hopes the substitute will
be ready by Wednesday and that
the full committee can vote on It
Thursday. Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, said he wants It

on the House Door the week of May
3.
Howard L. Colller, Gov. James
A. Rhodes' budget chief, has told
the committee that because of the
state's increasingly bad revenue
picture. the 25 percent Income tax
boost approved by the Senate Is not
adequate.
He suggested boosting the Increase to 40 percent, or as an alternative, making It 30 percent and
comb1n!ng with It a hall-penny Increase In the sales tax.
H1n1g and other House leaders
have all but ruled out any further
boost in the sales tax, which was
increased from four to five cenls on
the dollar four months ago.
"And we're going to try to keep
the income tax hike at 25 percent,"
the veteran Tuscarawas County
lawmaker said.
In order to keep the budget In bal·
ance, he said, "We're going to have
to look at some other things."
He wasn't specific except to say
there probably will be onl:' amendment to boost the tax on soft drinks
and soft drtnk syrup.

Negotiators count on
recommendation
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Negotiators for the White House and Congress, struggling to come up with a
budget compromise, apparently
are counting on a Social Security
study commission to recommend
enough spending cuts to hold next
year's deficit below $100 bllllon.
The latest worksheet being used
by participants in the month-long,
secret talks shows a deflclt of $95
bllllon to $99 bllllon for the 1983 !Iscal year. But that includes $10 btllion In unspecified cuts In Social
SecuritY.
Sources say the negotiators are
counting on Congress to enact those
cuts after getting a report from a
bi-partisan commission studying
Social Security.
But that comnilsslon Is not ex-

Wrecks••
(Continued from page 1I
was reported to both vehlc,Jes and
Holter was ticketed for assured
clear distance.
A trailer being hauled by Mlchael
R. Gibson, 31, McArthur, overturned and suffered slight damage
at 8: 50 a.m. Sunday while travelling over a rough bridge on Ohio
325, one-tenth of a mUe north of U.S.
35. No InJury wils reported to the
drtver, the patrol said.
The report said Timothy E.
Price, 18, Rt 1, Cheshire, pulled
from Maple Avenue 1n Cheshire
onto 7 at 2: 45 p.in. Sunday and collided with a southbound vehicle
drtven by Pamela P. Moyer, 26,
Athens, causing slight damage to
both vehicles.
Price was cited for !allure to
yield. the report said.
Carrie K. Chapman, 42, Pomeroy, was eastbound on Ohio 143 In
Meigs County, two-tenths of a mile
east of Ohio 684, at 9: 30 p.m. Sun·
day wben she swerved to avoid a
deer, went off the left side of the
and sii'\ICk an embankment
Her auto was severely damaged
lll1d the drtver escaped without
Injury.

Late last y.ear in another stopgap
tax measure, the Legislature lm·
posed a tax on soft drtnk syrup. A
court held subsequently that the tax
Is unconstitutional because It dls.crim!nates against one segment of
the industry.
Although the court decision Is being appealed, H!nlg said "We're gtr
ing to try to come up with
something that hopefully will be
constitutional."
The tax still Is being collected.
Hlnlg said state officials are proceeding on the assumption It wlll
have to be paid back if the court
decision stands.
The Legislative Budget Office estlma tes a $57 mUllon revenue loss
lor the fiscal year starting July 111
the tax has to be repaid.
H!nlg bas a proposal, which he
apparently will put into the budget
balancing bill, which would addresses the constitutional question
by cutting the earlier tax on syrup
In hall and at thesametlmeextend·
lng It to Include bottles and cans of
soft drtlnks.

RALLY FOR THE TROOPS - A large crowd held a Monday af·
lernoon rally In the square across from Government House In Buenos
Aires In honor of the troops defending the Georgia Islands from the
British, according to the sign In the foreground. ( AP Laserpholo).

Hunters bag 97 wild turkeys
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Hunters killed 97 Wild turkeys Monday, the
first day of the state's two-week turkey season, the wUdll1e division
at the Natural Resources Department said.
The kill was down from a record 139 gobblers taken on last year's
. opening day, officials said.
The wildlife division said that despite this, It still expects the 1982
season to match or better the 1981 season, when a record 5T7 turkeys
were killed.
Vinton County led the 20 counties open to turkey hunting, with 18
reported killed.

Aprll24, 198%

peeled to submit a report unlll
somewhere around the end of 1982
- as much as three months after
the Oct. 1 start of the 1983 fiscal
year.
The sources, who asked not to be
Identified by name, offered no explanation Sunday of how Congress
could be expected to enact the cuts
quickly enough to make up' the $10
bllllon for 1983.

500-H~

Choi~·c 1 300-500

lbs .

lbs. 4MI .

Fc1.-dcr Hc1fers : !Good .and O.okc 1J00..500 lbs.
47.50-57: 500-700 lbs . 42-56.50.
Ft•t-dcr Bulls: rGOOll .and ChuJt'l'l JOO..fiOO lbs.
:;].75-62 . ~ : 500-700 Jbs . ~~ :'ilaughtl!'r Bulls : I Ov~r I ,000 lb.'!. 1 40-49. 7~ .
Slau~htcr Bulls : lOver 1,000 lbs .l 40-49 . 7~ .
SJa u ~ hl.t•r Cows : Ut illllt.'S 37-4!.50: Ccmlkrs

&lt;tnd Cullers 'l/ .50-39.
HulstcinSpring .. r Cuws I By tht• Puund 146-~9.
Cow and Cit If Pairs : fRy the Un1t 285-SOO.
Vt ·als . IChott't•culd Prnnt•l fi0-79 .
Ruby Calves: 1 Ry lht' Hc1:1d 1 29-97 .50 : R) the
Pound 56-n.SO.

Mayors fear crime rate to climb

Hu~ s : INu. I , Barrows :.:~nd li1ll~ l 200-230 lbs.
~2-53 .

Rult·hcr Sows 42-::.4 .50 .
Huh:ht•r 8tJHrs JB.-43 .
Ft.ot.'t!cr Pigs: 1By lhL• He;,u l 1JrH)() _

WASHINGTON - Many city officials fear an increase in youth
crtme resulting from cuts in federal funds for summer jobs, according to a survey by the U.S. Conference of Mayors.
"Members of Congress and the mayors of America's principal
cities share a concern that unemployment ... will create serious
problems in our cities during the summer of 1982." said the report
prepared for Rep. Henry S. Reuss, chalnnan of the congressional
Jolnt Economic Committee.
"Over half of all cities participating 1n the survey expressed the
fear that youth crime, in one form or another, would Increase in the
summer as a result of cutbacks in summer youth employment," the
study said.

SHf.EP PRICES ,

In addition, the worksheet shows
projected cuts of $16 billion to $18
bllllon lor 1984 and $12 billion to $16
bllllon - aU from recommendations the Social Security study commission will make to Congress.
The negotiators have been considering recommending a delay
and a reduction in the 7.4 percent
cost-of-Uvlng increase Social SecurIty recipients are schedllled to receive July 1.
House Derqcx;rats have resisted
such cuts and Ills not clear whether
they still are being discussed at the
barga1n!ng 11\ble.

Ft't'i.lcr l.cunb!'l41r50.50.

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTORS
214 W. Main

Hinckley gets look at jurors

Pomeroy

WASHINGTON -John W. Hinckley Jr., lsgettlnghlsflrstlookat
the prospective jurors who w1U be asked to decide whether he was
Insane when he shot President Reagan nearly 13 months ago and
thus not legally responsible for his actions.
Ninety prospective jurors received notices to report to U.s. Dis. trtct Court today where jury selection will begin in an ornate, 200seat ceremonial courtroom. ·
Security measures for the start of the trial, as tight as for a
presidential appearance, Included two metal detectors and a portable X-ray machine In the corridor outside the courtroom. Bombsniffing pollee dogs and gun-toting law enforcement officers wlll .be
stationed Inside and outside the grey, stone building.
·

992-2668

ELBERFELDS

Berserk cop kills 62, himself
SEOUL, South Korea - A drunken policeman went berserk and

used carbines and hand ~nades to kill 62 villagers and wound about
20 before taking his own life early Tuesday, National Pollee
reported.
'
A spokesman said the last two victims were slain when the 'n·
ye~~f-old policeman, Woo Kum-kon, exploded a grenade In a farmhouse to kill himself.
Many of the wounded were In critical condition lind It was feared
the death toll would rise.
State-run KBS radio said Woo began drinking heavily after an
argument with his 25-year-old wife Monday night and then went on
the murderous rampage in the .uJage of Kungyu, Ulryoog County,
200 miles south of Seoul.

SHIMMER
THROUCOH
SUMMER

.-~

roaa

"4

gloc9d 1'Satln Brocade" ..

Winning Ohio lottery number

Nylon trtcot gown .-rh

quiltl&gt;d VOI&lt;e matches !he
luxury·Wrap robe In

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Monday night In
the Ohio Lottery's daUy gMie "The Number" was 1!8. ·
Th!! lottery reported earnings or Jl(l3,101 from tbe wagering on Its
dally game. The earnings came on sales of $900,881, while holders of
WJnntitg tlckela are enU~ to share $357,881, lottery officials said.

acetate/nYlon tricot.

Plnl&lt; or Blue Small. Medium. Lorge
&gt;

ANNUAL BANQUET - Distributive Education
Clubs of America,, Meigs Chapter, held 118 annual
banquet recently to honor employers. i&gt;ECA members
and employers recogulzed 'were Bob Ashley, Powell's
Super Vatu; Jim Boyer and Dale Brickles, Kroger'•;
Bill Cogar, Melgllml; Jobn Creme&amp;~~~, Vllla1e Pllarmacy; Vicky Debord, Dattoa'• Drill Store; Jay
Dewbunt, Tbe Dally Senlblel; Gary Ginther, G 1: J
Auto Parts; Trlna. Ha)'IIUIII, Avoo Prodacll; Sberry

t

UIIGERIE
DEPI.

Holtz, Powell;s Sal"!r-Vala;' Brent Houdalbelt,
Vaugban's Cardinal; David laODBrell~ Marguerite
Shoes; Scott Jobusoa, Wendy's; Terry Wayland, Kentucky Fried Cblueo. Pictured are J.r, Jay Dewbunl,
DECA employe Gl Tbe DaOy Senlblel, Dave Harrill, Gf.
lbe advertllblg ataff at Tbe DaBy SeDIIDel, wllo ~~
cepted lbe award oa bellalt Gl Tbe Dally Seatblel, 111111
Jobn Blaetblar Gl • adviiOry committee. AD employers were preseDtecl·I~~Uon awanll.

I

W~ther fo~t

:·

Clear tonight. Lows near 40. Chance of 'precipitation 10 percent.
w!Jids nortlieriY J.O.~ mph. Sunny Wednesday. Highs near 00.

.'

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2nd Floor

I

t'

•

•

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.ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY .: .
,..•.,
•

'

Thatcher told the House of Commons Brtta!n's recapture of South
Georgia Island Sunday "In no way
alters" her desire for a peaceful settlement with Argentina. But she
warned repeatedly that "time ts
very short" and said In a television
intei;v!ew Monday night, "It's obvtous you simply cannot go on sit·
tlng there forever ."
British defense analysts said the
war fleet's next step probably
would be an air blockade around
the Falklands archipelago, 250
miles off the Argentine coast, to cut
of! supplies and reinforcements to
the estimated 9,(XX) troops Argenuna put ashore there after seizing
the Bri~h colony on Aprtl 2.
In Washington, Argentine Forelgn Minister Nlcanor Costa Mendez asked the Organization of
American States to demand that
Britain withdraw Its fleet from the
South Atlantic, while Secretary of
State Alexander M. Halg Jr. said
the withdrawal of Argentine troops
from the Falklands in accordance
with the U.N. Security Council resolution adopted April 3ls "the surest
guide to a peaceful settlement."
The OAS meeting gave Costa
Mendez a prolonged standing ova·
lion, In which Halg did not Join, but
did not even applaud the American
secretary of state.
Costa Mendez said Sunday night
that Argentina was suspending
peace negotiations with Britain because of the British attack on South·
Georgia, but U.S. officials said
Halg Is stlU hopeful a diplomatic

solution can be arranged . Pres!dent Reagan In a speech Monday
said the U.S. mediation effort

wou ld continue beca use "t he
sea rch for peace Is the surest way
to preserve all that we cherish."

.

I

\

v'

;'

I

i
I

I

t

"
L
•

HAIG APPLAUDS - Secretary of Sla tt• Ail•xandt·r Huig applaUib
during a special session of the Organization of Anwril'an Stalt·s, Munday
in Wnshington, to disC'USS tht• Falkland lsland'l situation . 1 i\P Last•r·
photo) .

Middleport council tables TV rate hike

AUkns Uv~l~w-k &amp;.In

n-6.1.50:

B~'The ABsoclaled Press
The rltlsh war Deet neared the
Falkland Islands today, and Its
commander warned the Argentines that time Is running out. Most
British papers predicted an attack
on the Islands "within days."
"South Georgia was the appettlzer," said Rear Adm. Jotm Woodward aboard the Royal Navy
carrier Hermes. "Now this Is the
heavy punch comtng up behind ...
This Is the run-up to the big match
which, in my view, should be a
walkover."
Press Association, Britain's domestic news agency, said British
government sources Indicated Brit·
Ish commando teams would be
landed on the Falklands lor reconnalssance missions by Wednesday.
But British military experts told
The Associated Press they did not
expect a major tanding for at least
two weeks, until the 1,500 Royal Malines aboard the British task force
are reinforced by some J,(XX) commandos and paratroopers en route
to the South Atlantic.
Argentlna's ruling mllltary Junta
claimed early today that Its forces
on South Georgia were continuing
to light and said the British announcement that Argentine troops
there had surrendered were "absolutely false."
The British Defense Mlnlstry denled a report in the Times of London that a commando team had
already landed in the Falklands to
pick a landing site for an Invasion.
Prime Minister Margaret

Mayor's vote breaks tie

Market report
CA TI'I.E PRICF.S
Ft•t-dcr Steers: ! Goot.l &lt;:tnd

IS Cenh

A Multimedia In c. New1poper

Argentines get warning

'·"-I

...

1 Section , 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 27, 1982

Copyrighted 1982

.·

On Sunday at 7: Cll p .m., the Mlddleport Unit took Margaret Geiger,
North Third Ave., to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 1:15 a.m.
took Charlene Cremeans from
Pagevllle to O'Bieness Hospital In
Athens and at 11:39 p.m. treated
James Denison at his Main St.
home. Racine was on a brush fire
call for two hours at Antlqulte at
4:31p.m. and on a second brush fire
call at Bald Knob for two hours at
8:39p.m.
On Saturday at 10:36 a.m., the
Middleport Unit took James Searls
from Pearl St., to Holzer Medical
Center; at 4:53p.m. treated Pearl
Fields and Margie White at the
scene of an auto accident on Route
7; at 8:06 p.m., took Lewis Ellis
from Lincoln St., to Veterans Memorial Hospllal and later to the
Holzer Medical Center.

April 26, 1982

..'

Ed 6 d ()hlo Forecut
'l'llarlda1tllnllllll 8 I dar.
.

.

I

(

.

'

tile period. IIIPIIallleupperllltoJoW. . 'l"'lllnday,
ai!l!llallle I .' ' . . lo ....... ......, MdSalardaf. J.-.lllllle upper
...........

: ~..
~'11~-~~'"!!""~
- ~·~llle~·~Pit~:W.~~,~-=!~~·~~-~·__;,- ~.'--J

By BOB HOEFUCH
A request for a rate increase by
Cablentertalnment was tabled for
two weeks at Monday's regular session of Middleport VIllage Council.
Dick Newell, representing thecable firm which serves the village,
oulllned cost increases which have
taken place In the past few years.
Cablentertalnment plans Improvements to Its system, but those
Improvements are not based on
whether the rate Increase Is approved or not, Newell stated. An
additional power source will be
ready to go In a couple of weeks and
plans are being made for providing
a cable news network for subscribers. A new trunk Une Is being In-

stalled from West Columbia, W.
Va., to Ohio, Newell said.
Newell said the cable service has
not had a rate increase since 1979
and that the return on the company's investment is no where near
where It should be.
The new rate hike would increase
the one set subscrl.ber from $7 a
month to $8.50 with an increase
from $1 to $2 for a second set. Senior
citizens and disabled persons would
still receive a 25 percent discount
but their rate would be $6.38 a
month instead of the present $5.25.
Installation charges would go to $15
Instead of the present figure of $10.
A pay station would be established
In Meigs County.

Compromise hope
fades once again
WASIUNGTON (AP) - With
budget talks between the White
House and Congress grinding to a
halt, adm!nlstratlon officials and
House Democrats are blaming
each other for !allure to reach a
bipartisan compromise.
"The American people should be
relleved and dellghted to know that
(President Reagan) doesn't have
any plans to waver and wobble and
feebly cave in to calls for expediency under the guise of compromise,'' said Treasury Secretary
Donald T. Regan, a negotiator.
Negotiator Rep. James R. Jones,
0-0kla., replied, "If the president
Is rigid in the view that no significant change Is necessary in his economic program, then there Is no
hope for compromise."
A fiurry of charges Monday prereeded what may be the final
stages of the talks. Negotiators
were expected to meet again privately late today at the White
HoUBe.
· As the month-long talks progressed, sources reported the nego-

!Ia tors moved from hope of
reaching a detailed compromise on
Reagan's embattled budget to an
attempt last week Instead to settle
for broad targets. Now, there are
doubis that agreement can be
achieved on general targets for tax
increases and spending cuts.
If the talks collapse or end Inconclusively, that would mean the Republican majority In the Senate and
the Democratic-controlled House
would begin work quickly on their
own alternatives to the unpopular
spending plan Reagan submitted to
Congress Feb. 8.
Senate Majority Leader Howard
H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., who has
maintained an upbeat public
stance on the budget talks, ac·
knowledged Monday that he was
'"somewhat discouraged" by the
situation.
Sources who asked not to be
quoted by name said Monday that
the negotiators have given up talking about a possible change In the
7.4 percent Social Security cost-ofliving Increase scheduled for July.

Councilmen Jack Satter11eld and
Allen Lee King said they were not In
favor of the Increases. Satterfield
said 35 percent of the population of
the town Is senior citizens and he
feels that they cannot afford Increases. King said lnfiatlon may be
headed downward and he termed
the reception of the cable service In
early months this year as 'terrible' .
Newell said the company took
over the service last August and
that time is needed to provide Improvements. In addition, the com pany fought the hardest winter In
years which created man y
problems.
Newell asked for the first of three
required readings on the ordinance
to Increase the charges of the company. Council had a split vote on the
proposal with councilmen Carl Horkey, William Walters and Satterfield voting to table the matter for
two weeks. Councilmen King, De-wey Horton and Bob Gilmore voted
against tabling the proposal. The
vote of Mayor Fred Hoffman broke
the tie and the measure was tabled
until the next meeting.
Newell had pointed out that even
II the first reading had been done
Monday night, the increase could
have not gone Into effect for several
months since three readings and

approval of the thi rd is requ ired .
Council gave a thi rd reading a nd
adopted an ordin ance making Railroad St. a residentia l area In
zoning .
Mayor Hoffman a nnou nced a
pre-&lt;:onstruc tlon confe rence on the
water tank and water Improvement~ In the VIne St. area lor 2: 30
p.m . on May 6.
Ma yor Hoff man announced
clean up week In the town for Mav
.
3-7.
Council authorized the expendi·
ture of over the designated $9500 for
the rehabUitatlon of Jwo more
homes In the community incl uded
In the HUD program.
Mayor
Hoffman reported that he had sent
letters concerning erosion along the
river bank. He has received an
answer from Cong. Clarence Mlller
which council did not feel Is encouraging. Mayor Hoffman said representatives from the U. S. Corps
of E ngineers had visited the community last week In response to a
letter. Photographs were taken of
the erosion proble ms, but Ma yor
Hoffman Indica ted he Is not optimIstic about anything being done.
No second given
Councilman King said tha t dogs
running loose In the community Is
1 CtJnlillUl'd un page 10 1

',.'

.

"''

WIC, year-round
health program
A Women, Infants and Children
Supplemental Food Program, COJ'IIo
monty known as WIC, is being con·
dueled by the Meigs County Depart·
ment of Health on a year-round
basis.
The program provides, at no cost,
nutritional foods· for pregnant and
breast-feeding women; infants to
one year of age and cJtlldren, ages
one through the fifth. birthday.
to qualify for the -program,
residents must be certified as
needing supplemenlal food by a WIC
staff member, live within Meigs
County and have a certain Income.
WIC gives coupons for only high

protein vitamin enriched mineral
full foods. Participants receive only
milk, iron fortified cereals, eggs,
non--processed cheese, 100 percent
fruit juices and dried beans.
The program was started to help
people who are anemic, overweight
or underweight, pregnant or breastfeeding women or new mothers, em·
phasizing the importance of proper
foods at this time; · women with
health problems during pregnancy;
very small Infants and others .
Residents . may check with the
health deparbnent's WIC personnel
to detennine their eligibility.

·'

CONFER- Debbie Lavalley, Meigs County Health Department WIC
program worker, confers wllb VIckie GUmort and her son, Richard, on
aspecla of lbe WIC program oHered on a year--round basis lbrough the
bealth department.

,

••

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