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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

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.ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY .: .
,..•.,
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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."

.

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v'

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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.
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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.

,

••

�T~y, April 27, 1982

'C ommentary
Th e Daily Sentinel
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h·t kr' a n · ' "ht•·•L \u ,.,[,li n t.: am i rnu' t lw ''l!lll'tl "01 1\ h n;m w. a!ld r n •·' a nd td r jl h•~m·
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'" II'''· n ul JW f '~ •ll ot h lt• ·'

Why root for Britain?

Pag-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesdoy, April 27, 1982

~USed re~~~l~a=ti~O~D~____________k _m_es_ J_.K_i_p
WASHINGTON - Ove r the nex t
couple of weeks, members of
Congress will have to make up their
minds on the Federal Trade Comm ission's pending regulati on on the
sale of used ca rs - whethe r to bu y
this lemon or to call off the deal. The
proposition is one more piece of
paternalism. It ought to be junked .
This r egula ti on has bee n limping
around legisla tive halls longer than
an old DeSoto. Back in 1974, when
the reg ula tory clima te was a good
deal sunni er, Congress directed the
FTC to work up a used-car
regulation . Earl y in 1976, the FTC
published a first draft. E very body
wa lked around the idea , k1cking the
tires: nothing much happened. In
Septembe r 1978 the FTC produced a
" final staff report" that weighed
half a ton. The report delighted
Ralph nadcr a nd· depressed the car
deal ers.
Aga in , nothi ng much happened.
On Capitol Hill the clima te got
ctull y. At one point 51 senators
signed a noti ce to the FTC that the
then-pending rul e would have to be
remodeled . Las t Augus t the FTC
produced its final repaired and
repainted vers ion . Unless both
houses of Congress adopt resolutions
of disapproval by mid-May , the
regulation will become effecti ve s ix
months later . The House Commerce
Committee is expected to report a
veto resolution almost a ny time
now; if the House a dopts the
resoluti on. as expected, the Senate
probabl y will follow along. Then we
would ex pect some fonn of court
cha llenge to the legislative veto, a nd
the whole proposition could be
parked for months or yea rs.
The regulation. if it eve r goes 1nto
effect, would apply to eve ry usedca r dealer in the na tion - about
70,000 small-business men. A deale r
would be defined as a pe rson or company selling more than fi ve used
cars in a 12-month period . The rul e
would require eve ry suc h dealer to
post a window sticker on his
a utomobiles. The sti cker would info nn prospecti ve customers tha t " a
selle r' s spoken promises may be no

good," oer perhaps that "spoken
promises a re diffic ult to enforce."
" Ask us to put all promises ' in
wr iting," the sti cker continues.
" You can ma ke a seller keep written
promises.''
Afte r tha t fri endly beginning, the
window sti cker would list 14 ge ne ra l
ca tegories of possible defects, su!r
divided into 52 specific problems.
Does the r ar suffer from "abnorma l
vis ible ex haust discha rge?" Are th e
shock a bs orbers functioning " improperly ?" Do the bra ke linings or
pads ha ve a thickness of Jess tha n
J/32 inch? The deal er would be expected to di sclsoe informa tion a bout
any scientifi c defect of whi ch he is
aware.
At first g la nce the reg ula ti on looks
pretty s piff y. Afte r all , wh y
shouldn't a dea ler be compelled to
disclose the existence of fault y

brakes or a rusted muffle r ? If a head
gasket needs to be replaced, isn't
this something the buye r should

know?
The problems here a re threefold.
Without a burea ucr a ti c a rmy the
regula tion could not possible be en·
forc ed . The rul e wo uld a dd
signifi ca ntly to a dealer's cost of
doing business, thus increasing the
pnce of used cars a nd dri vi ng more
sales into the unreg ula ted ma rket of
owner sales. The rul e woul d broaden
the power of fede rol a uthority at a
time when the trend toward state
responsibility is gaining momen·
tum.

The whole propositio n, it seems to
me. a mounts to ove rkill . Today's
used-ca r dea lers are lhe desce ndants of the horse trade rs of yore.
Doubtless th ere we re some unscrupul ous traqe rs in the old days -

Today's

Sports World

_a t_ric_k

By WW Grimlley
AP Corret~poadeol

men who would palm off a m ea ntempered beast as a sweet old mare
that ha d been ridden only to church
on Sunda ys - and doubtl ess the re
a re some sly fellows in the used-car
bus iness today. Any industry tha t
a nnua lly sells 19 million units of
a nything will ha ve its ba d actors.
But it is simply a wrongheaded
public policy to lay the heavy hand
of the federa l government on a
business that can be effectiv ely
policed by its own members a nd by
loca l authorities. The civil courts
are not incapable of dealing with
outright fraud . Existing Jaws on express a nd implied wa rranty still function. The a ncien! admonition of
"caveat emptor" - buye r , bewa re '
- st 1ll a pplies .
The last thing on ea rth the
depressed auto industry needs right
now is a nother wet blanket of rules.

U George Steinbrenne r were a physician Instead of a ballclub owner and
a patient came to hlm with a cold, he probably would order the appendix
out or amputation of a leg.
He acts Impulsively, this high-strung, head-strong, often Insensitive boss
of the New York Ya nkees .
He admits he Is demanding and Intole rant of anything short of the
ultima te. He must be No.1. No.2 won't do. The Avis slogan, "We try
harder," Is a repugnant motto to him. The name of the game Is not to
compete but wln, win, win. The end jus!lfles the means.
So a nice, old fellow named Bob Lemon becomes the latest casualty In
this fierce drive to feed relentless ambition. After managing lor only 14
games of a 162·game season, the grandfatherly Hall of Farner Is crassly
dumped as manager and succeeded by young Gene Michael.
Michael knows the feeling.
Last September, he too was abruptly !ired as were BW V!rdon, Billy
Martin and Dick Howser before him. Lemon joins Martin as being twice
burned. Unde r Steinbre nner, the re have been eight managerial changes In
10 years.
The ouster of Lemon on suc h short notice Is hard to understand under
any circumstances. It Is mind-boggling whe n thrown against the poigna nt
scenario of the winter meetings In Hollywood, F1a., last December.
Although planning to give the job to Michael on a long term basts,
Steinbrenner nevertheless rehired the 62·year-old Lemon , a loyal em·
ployee and respected pilot, lor the 1982 season, Michael to come back and
carry on the next three years.
The Yankee owner called some writers to his suite to explain his ratlC}nale, and it was so touching it hit you right here.
"I was going another direction," he explained, "but when Lem showed
up - having lost 25 pounds and not having had a drink lor months- and
requested that he be allowed to manage one more year, how could I refuse
him?
"Every time I have called him to do a Job, he never asked when, where
or how much. I felt that, because of this loyalty, he should be given this
chance."
Recalllng Steinbrenner's record lor snap managerial shakeups, ·repor·
ters ~&lt;Sked If such a move didn't put Lemon under the guillotine -once the
Yankees sagged, out would go Lemon, In would come Michael.
"No," Insisted Steinbrenner, " I gave hlm my word. Even If we 're 20
games behind, Lem will stay as manager. I w!ll only replace hlm If he
requests it in the case of bad health."
Lemon was flushed with pride.
" I've never had a chance to go a full season," he said . "George wants to
see If l can go the route - me, too.''
Now Steinbrenner Is saying, in effect, he had hls lingers crossed .
He didn't mean a word of lt.
Now It's down the drain lor a man's dream.
But what of the Yankees? Wlll this sudden shift resuscitate "the greatest
:alent money can buy?" Don't bet on lt.
These are not the proud, swashbuckling Yankees of old. It Is a confused,
disoriented lot, and has been from the start of spring training.
"I haven't had any fun all year," complained Goose Gossage, the relief
ace. "It was the most depressing spring I've ever had."
"No," Insisted Steinbrenner, "!gave him my word. Even II we're 20
games behind, Lem w!ll stay as manager. I w!ll only replace him If he
requests It in the case of bad health."
Lemon was flushed with pride.
"I've never had a chance to go a full season," he said. "George wants to
see If I can go the route- me, too.' '
Now Steinbrenner Is saying, In eHect, he had his lingers crossed .
He didn't mean a word of it.
Now It's down the drain lor a man's dream.
But what of the Yankees? WUI this sudden shift resuscitate "the greatest
talent money can buy?" Don't bet on it.
These are not the proud, swashbuckling Yankees of old: It is a confused,
disoriented lot, and has been from the start of spring training.
"I haven't had any fun all year," complained Goose Gossage, the relief
ace. "It was the most depressing spring I've ever had.''
Steinbrenner virtually mandated that players be at camp- a drudgery
anyhow- two weeks In advance. Then he brought In Olympic coaches and
Installed exotic electronic equipment to be used In Intensive batting and
!'Inning exercises.
Players were treated not like pros but like a regiment of Marines or a
flock of collegiate rookies. Steinbrenner's personal heroes have always
been the late General George Patton and Vince Lombardi.
The club was Jaded by the time it lett Fort Lauderdale. The boss not
satisfied, kept reaching out and buying fresh talent, overloading the roster
and creating frictions.
"It's like somebody goes to a candy store and buys everything," said
pitcher Tommy John.
Shortstop Bucky Dent found himself playing second fiddle to Roy Smalley and Larry Milbourne. Dave Colllns, an $aOO,&lt;XXl-a-year first baseman,
was spending more time on the bench than on the field.
"I don't know what's going on?" said Dent. "When you don't play, you
lose your rhythm."
General confusion pervaded the clubhouse.
The Jesson Steinbrenner hasn't learned Is that money can't buy every·
thing - loyalty, morale, pennants and success.
When success failed to come Immediately, Steinbrenner panicked. Peer
pie got hurt - mainly Lemon but Yankee tradition as well.

God bless the Bntish. Wha t other na tion ca n surre nder its territory but
not its di gnity?
The Arge ntme gene ra lm c ha rge of the Fa lkla nd Islands invasion force
ma y have won the initial military skirmish, but he ce rtainl y lost the battle of
good ma nners when Rex Hunt, the British colonial governor, refused to
sha ke ha nds as he surrende red his tiny garrison.
" The ge ne ral looked ve ry angry a nd told me, ·r think it's ungentlema nl y
not to sha ke ha nds,' " a n indi gna nt Hunt reported a fter being evac ua ted to
Grea t Brita in .
" [told hi m, ' I th ink it 's very uncivilized to inva de British te rritory. You
a re here illega ll y.· ..
For eve ryone except the belli ge rents th emselves. however, the Falkla nds contretemps unfortuna tely in vokes fond memories of Gil be rt a nd Sullivan
operettas or Peter Selle rs movies .
It's a bsolutely 1mpossible to keep a straight face about a tiff tha t
features suc h hi gh dudgeon and low stakes. Even the geography is abs urd .
The Falkland Isla nds may not be the end of thL' world, but you certainly can
see it from there.
Actua ll y, yo u ca n'l see muc h of an ythmg most of the time beca use the
blea k, windswept 200.isla nd a rchipelago 1s pelted by cold rain or snow a bout
250da ys eve ry year.
No self.respecti ng wa r is cond ucted these days without comprehens ive
coverage by this country's telev ision networks, but th e remote Jocatwn and
"We'll flood your district with billboards, yard sig~s, ~umper sticker~,
a bysma l clima te of the Fa lkla nds pose pa rti cula r problems in this case.
The conve nti ona l Channel 5 Ey.,.in-the-Sky Tra ffi Copter simply ca nn ot
buttons brochures, radio and TV spots - anythmg 1t takes to get 1t
sta y aloft in the almost perpetual winds that reg ul a rly attain ga le force across that you're the candidate who doesn't believe in labels."
a nd the rein li es a n opportunit y fo r the Defense Depa rtment to ma ke some
money to offset its oft-c riti cized expenditu res.
Eac h of the fre.,.s pendin g television netw orks undoubtedly would lunge
a t the opportunity to lease a spa re aircraft ca rri er outfitted with all-wea the r .
heavy-&lt;:luty helicopters.
Meanwhil e, the British a rmada - wtu ch thoughtfull y call ed two weeks
in adva nce to make its rese rvation for the war - st eams furiously toward
the desolate Falklands while the rest of us enjoy an escalating exchange of
msults between the would-be combatants. The sma ller the stakes, it would
released today, Is up only 7 percenl
NEW YORK (AP I - There Is
selves, advlslng clients to get Into
Mic higan economist, described the
a ppea r , the greater the patriotic passions a roused .
or so In the past 12 months.
ne ver an off season lor Investment
situation In a speech recently. We
lina nclal assets: stocks and bonds
Eve n if the prize is incons equential , the Britis h ca n a lways be counted
That's d!slnfiatlon, which you
advisers , which Is to say that durare, he said, either on the brink of
and other Uquld assets that do best
upon to put on a good show, es peciall y with the superb cast they have
should be reminded Is not deflation.
Ing bad times a s well as good they
doom or on the threshhold of the
In stable times.
mustered for this performance.
The latter Is when prices a ctually
· stand ready to tell you where to put
greatest golden age eve r known.
Get out of collectibles, they say.
The re's Prime Minister Marga ret Tha tche r , all starch a nd white gloves,
fall from earlier levels. In contrast,
your money.
The adviser cannot ..be lndecl·
They earn no Interest, advisers
who rejected the possibility of fa ilure and procla imed tha t " we mus t go
dislnflahon Is a slowing of the rate
There are se veral reasons for
slve; he must reach conclusions,
point out. Gold? The typical adcalmly, qui etly to succeed ."
at which prices rise.
this, not the least of which Is the
even when the y represent a break
vice: a poor Investment during dlsQuietly indeed. Jest Spa in not ice tha t the Britis h fl eet has tempora rily
Over the decade and a half of ris- lnfiatlon and strength in the dollar.
need to earn commissions. But
with hls old habits and a break with
abandoned Gibraltar. a nother crown colony in the middle of now here
Ing Inflation, investment advisers
these are difficult times lor advisthe economic past, as lor example ,
coveted by somebody else.
But nobody really knows, do
put their customers Into tangible In·
ers. And If they figure It all out,
In forecasting disinflation.
Then the re's Lord Carrington , the erstwhil e foreign secretary who had
they? The advisers could be all
vestments they felt would lnfiate
which hasn't always been the case,
the bad fortun e to ass wn e that Argentina was again bluffing about snatchmg
What's so hard about that? Only
wrong. In fact, there's a school of
the most: gold, real estate, collect!·
you might say they w!ll have
the Falklands.
that lnfiatlon has been with us now
thlnldng that says the consensus Is
bles, commodities, raw land.
earned their commissions.
When this country's secretanes of state a re wrong, they never
lor 15 years or so, long enough lor
likely to be wrong and that II you're
People bought up anything that
Tough days because of the rare
acknowl edge the fac t, Jet alone have the grace to feel embarrassed. The
people to assume It was like the
smart you'll bet against lt.
might become rare, comic books
posslbllltles, the extremes of which
hapless Lord Ca rrin gton . to his credit. resigned posthaste " as a point of
The consensus changes - in fact,
artd line art allke. In so doing they
may be summarized as the col- bachelor uncle, a famlly member,
honor.''
something to llve with foreve r .
very often - supporting the adage
tipped the demand-supply scale
lapse of the economy like a worn
The Ar gentines have nobody nearl y as appealing. Their leaders are
But Inflation dropped sharply In
that If you forecast, forecast often.
which, in eHect, made the sought
out star, or the economy being cata·
mi litary dictators, their country has an a bominable human-ri ghts record
the
past
year.
The
producer
price
And sometimes what had been a
after
Items
relatively
rare
indeed.
pulled to the economi c
a nd their econom y is a shambles.
Index has risen only 4.1 percent,
Now, expecting more price staconsensus simply shatters Into a
stratosphere.
While Lord Carrington invoked " honor ," Arge ntina's fo reign minister
confusion of conflicting notions.
blllty. advisers are reve rsing them·
Thomas Gles, a Unive rsity of and the consumer price Index. to be
talked cra ssly of " politics," explaining in one intervi ew: " As long as the
crisis lasts. it helps me a lot. That's the wa y politics works around the
world ."
As a result , most Americans will be rooting for the British and the 1,800
English-speaking inhabita nts of the Fa lklands, eve n if the latter are out---:_A_rt--:-B-:-:-uc-:-:-hwa::-:--:-:-ld
nwnbered almost 400-tC}-1 by their 700,000 sheep.
If a clincher is needed, there' s the delicate matter of Argentina' s
" ! hope you took his side," l said to
accusing him of making the .
so much to tool up for a bomber, that
People outside of Washington say
proposal to annually " process" 48,000 of its millions of penguins - a
Hindenburg.
estimate too low so he could get the
that those of us who Jive here don't he only broke even on 50, and his
euphemism for grinding the lovable b~rds mto prote m meal for export to
" Of course l did. What do you
contract. ' '
care what a piece of defense equir&gt;- profit came from every one he built
think
lam - a whistle blower?"
Japan .
"
What
did
you
do
?"
Mass
baker
ment costs. We care a Jot. Just the after that."
When Ameri ca's school children find out a bout that tawdry venture, the
"So
did you give the guy the orasked.
.
" A few years ago," said Groton,
othe r night a group of us we re sitting
public-opinion ba ttl e will be decisively concluded , Rul e, Britannia 1
der ?"
"
!
told
the
GAO
man
to
butt
out,
"
you
could
equip
the
entire
Air
Fora round Harry's Bar and Situation
" I told him to go ahead and start
and it was none of his business what
Room, and Hindenburg, a Pentagon cefor $20 billion."
tooling
up, because l was certain
the actual cost of the B-1 would
" Well, it's a different world now,"
purchasing agent, said, " ! walked
even
if
he
couldn't bring them in at
finally be. l said we needed them as
into an airplane shop today and said Hindenburg, " and you're lucky
·
the
price
promised,
we'd dig up the
gap
plane
until
the
Stealth
a
stop
guess how much they were asking to get a hangar for $20 billion."
money
somewhere
to get the job
bomber
got
off
the
drawing
boards."
"So did you order the planes?" I
for B-1 bombers?"
finished
."
for
you,
"
Groton
said.
"
Good
Massbaker said, " Ten billion asked Hindenburg.
" It was the only thing you could
"The GAO bureaucrat claimed he
" ! was about to when some wise
dollars. "
do,"
Groton sa1d. " The re isn't a man
Congress
and
he
was
worked
for
guys
from
the
General
Accounting
" Don't you wish it," Hindenburg
alive
who knows what a B-1 bomber
responsible
for
keeping
defense
came
in
and
said
he
wanted
to
Office
replied. " The man who waited on me
is
going
to cost until he actually
costs in line, and while $7 billion
said he could not build one for less go over the estimates. You know
makes
one."
seem
to
be
a
lot
of·
money,
didn't
how picky those guys can be. Af.ter
than $20 billion. "
"What did the GAO guy do? " I
there was a principle involved."
he checked out the figures, he said,
We all whistled.
•
asked.
"What
was
the
guy
behind
.
the
'These
planes
are
not
going
to
cost
"Of course," said Hindenburg,
"He
stomped
out
of
the
shop
in a
doing?"
counter
$20
billion.
They're
going
to
cost
$27
"those are 1982 dollal'll, but even so,
rage
and
said
he
was
going
to
re
port
"He
was
in
tears.
He
said
it
was
billion.'''
I thought this was a lot of money. So
"You mean,'' said Hellman, "he unfair for anyone to expect him to me to Congress."
I told the guy if he didn't come down
" Big deal," s9meone said .
in his price, I might only order 50. was making a stink over a lousy $7 build 100 bombers for $20 bill!ont and
"
Congress
pays as much attention to
if he thought Congress was going to
billion."
You know what he said?"
t~e
General
Accounting Office as
hold
him
to
.that
estimate,
he
would
Hindenburg said, " l couldn't
Nobody in tile group did.
James
Watt
does Lo the National
bid
on
the
planes
in
tile
have
never
"He said if I only ordered 50, I'd believe it. He actually embarrassed
Audubon
~iety .' ·
first
place."
the
plane
builder
in
front
of
me
by
hav~ to pay double, because it cost ,
'
"

Investment advisers seeing tough days

We really.t__C=--::a...:_r__:e___ ____

-·--

Today in

"! called Ha nk Peters t Bait!·
more gene ra l ma nager) a nd we
ta lked a bout starting a new dlv·
lslon." Wagner joked. "We'd ha ve
Baltimore (4-10), Houston (6-12) ,
Cincinna ti (6-ll I a nd Phila delphia
14-ll )."
The Reds open a two-ga m e series
Tuesday aga inst t he Chicago Cubs
In Chicago.

Schlichter may go high in today's NFL draft
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Art
Schlichter a ppeared optimistic
about a high National Football
League dra.lt selection today afte r a
second workout Monda y before
Baltimore Colts' assistant coac hes.

" It we nt real good," the Ohio
State quarterback said of a 90-

minute drlll on the Ohio State cam pu s lor Colts ' Coac hes Ze ke
Bartkow ski a nd Roger Theder .
" They worked me on m y tec h·
niques, to see If I'd Improved on
the m ," s aid Schlichter . "They had
m e throwing all different types of
passes and dropping back In the

pocket. I t hink they' re Inte rested ."
Schlichte r admitted hls c ha nces
of being drafted second or fourth In
the opening round by Baltimore
hinged on the Colts swa pping cur·
re nt qua rte rback Bert J ones to the
Los Angeles Rams. The Colts have
the second selection a nd the Rams
the fourth .

Cremeens, Well resign posts
The Gallla County Local Board of
Education has begun accepting a r&gt;plications lor head football coaches
a t two county high schools follow·
lng the resignations Monday night
of Larry Cremeens at Hanna n
Trace a nd Deryl We ll of Ky ger
Cr eek.
Both will remain on the teaching
staffs at those schools, but, c hose to
step down !rom coaching.
Cremeens, a Hannan Trace
graduate, held the head football
coaching position lor seven years.
Hls best season came In 1.979 whe n
he guided the Wildcats to a !1-{).J
record and SVAC championship. ·
The following year, HT ca me In second with an S.2 slate.
During his tenure, Hannan Trace
compiled an overall, 27-28-3 record
including a 4-5 slate this past
season.
Cremeens was granted a lour
year contract as a teache r at Mon·
day's board meeting.
Well had served as an assistant
football coach at Kyger Creek nine

years prior to becoming head me ntor In 198J.
During hls two years, Well 's
team s complied a n over all 9-11 r.,.
cord Inc luding a 5-5 ma rk this pa st
season.
Well was granted a continuing
contract as a teacher Monday
night. In addition, he received as
supplem e ntal contract as activities
coordlna tor.
Head coac hes reemployed were
J ohn Bla ke , North Gallla, football
a nd ac tivities coordinator; and
J ac k J a m es, Southwestern football
a nd baseball.
Head basketball coaches hired
lor a nothe r yea r were Keith Cane r ,
Kyger Creek; Bruce WUson, North
Gallla ; Mike J enldns . Hannan
Tr ace a nd Llo y d My e rs ,
Southwe stern.
Assistant coaches named we re
Mike Mullord a nd Mark Hartma n,
Kyger Creek, In football and Hart·
man In basketball; Thomas
Weaver, Kyger Creek, freshman
basketball; Mike Mulford, junior

Pro-am play to precede
Mister Bee Golf Classic
MASON
The Wom e n' s
Professional Golf Tour will be
featured in the Mister Bee Classic
slated for May 3-5 at Riverside G.C.
in Mason.
This is the inaugural appearan ce
of the WPGT in West Virginia.
"We are pleased to be hosting the
classic, and I'd like to encourage
everyone to come out and watch
these young women compete or to
play in the Pre}-Am," noted Gary
Roush, Host Professional.
Volunteers are needed to a ssist
with scoring and communications
during the tournament, giving local
residents the chance to get involved
with the pros. A training m,eeting

will be he ld prior tn the event.
A Pro Am will precede regular
tournam e nt play on Sunday . Ma y 2,
with a 10 a. m. s hotgun start. Men
a nd wome n amateurs are invited to
participate.
The Mister Bee Class1c will begin
each da y with tee times at 10 a.m .
The field for the 54-hole event will
cons ist of man y of today's most
promising women professionals. Ar&gt;proximately 50-60 competitors are
expected .
Anyone interes ted in playing in the
PrC}-Am or wishing to voluntee r
s hould contact Mr. Rous h at 1304)
773-9527.

hig h bas ke tball; Sharon Va nnoy,
volley ball a nd girls basketball , a nd
Ardith Ma yna rd , junior high gir ls
baske tba ll.
North Ga llla ass ista nt s em ·
played we re T heodore Lehew, as·
sls tant footba ll and head wres tling;
Ron Twyman , bas ke tball and foot ·
ba ll ; Stephe n Saunde r s, junior high
footba ll; David Moore, fres hma n
ba ske tball ; J ohn Denny. junior
hig h boys bas ke tba ll ; Pa trick
Stout , baseball; David Moore, soft ·
ba ll a nd Lanlta We ntzel, volleyball
a nd girls basket ba ll ; Pa tric k Stout.
junior hig h boys basketba ll and
Tim Stout , jun ior hig h girls
baske tbal l.
Ha nna n Trace assista nt coac hes
Include Ga ll Belville, girls volley·
ball ; J ohn Lus he r , girls bas ke tba ll ;
Mic hael J e nkins, baseba ll a nd Don
Saunders , softball .
Othe r coac hes a t Southweste rn
a re Melvin Carter. girls basketball,
junior high baske tba ll, a nd soft ·
ball; Brad Pa inte r , tennis and junIor high football; Cynthia Wilson ,
volleyball; Penn y Roush, girls
track; Lloyd Myers, reserve bas ·
ke tball and Jack James, boys jun·
lor high baske tball.

"They 1 Bartkowski and Theder)
were very pos iti ve. but they
couldn't co mmit to me, " said ·
Schl ic hte r. "Baltlmor~ a nd Hous·
ton are my best chances."
Houston, whose ge neral ma n·
ager ts Ladd Het~leg , a 1968 Ohio
Sta te graduate, had the eigh th s.,.
lection In the opening rou nd of the
NFL draf t tod ay In New York .
" We're still up in the a ir with
Jones," sa id Ma t1y Goldman. the
Colts' marke ting coo rdina tor. " If
no lrade is made. we'd go more for
defe nse. If you sec a trade made.
we m ig ht switc h di rec tions."
Fra nk Kus h, the Colts' new head
coach. new to the Ohio State ca m·
pus for a long talk with Schlichter
about three wee ks ago. Represent a·
tives of Hous ton. Chicago, Los AngPIPs. (;rppn Bay a nd Pit tsburgh
also have ta lked to thr record·
sett ing Buckeyes· qu a rterback .
The &amp;.foot ·3, 210-pound SchUch.
ter, just turn ed 22, ranks with
Brigham Young's Jim McMahon
as the beSI college qu arterbacks
available in the 1982 draft. Both
were expec ted to be' c hosen high in
the opening rou nd.
Schlichter started a ll 48 of his col·
lege games, ranking second on the
Blg Ten Confe rence's .:.'.lltime total
offense list next to former Purdue
quarterback Mark Herrma nn.
Sc tlllchler accumulated 8,850 ya rds
in his four seaso ns . 7,547 of which
cam e via the a tr .
He brtlke 16 school records, .
throwi ng for 2.551 yards as a senior
for the Big Te n CC}-c ha mpions. He
plied up 458 ya rd s passing in an
ea rl y season loss to F lorida State
last fall .

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WASHINGTON REDSKINS-Sta:ned
Ed

DEAN POLARIS
78

~ns!ve em: Willie Holley aM
JOhnny Stoutamire. oomerbackl: Frank
carr, wide R!Ct'tver, aM Rod s..llta.

Jacltlon,

Publi~ l~

t&gt;vcry artt!rnoon. MOnday Lhroulo!h

polyester W!!!:!~~~~!!:!!!!....j.lli.

Fnday, I ll Cuurt Strett , by the Ohio Vallt&gt;y
Pubh s hin ~ C'nmpany • Multimt&gt;thu.
Ptlllll' I'O)' , Ohiu 45769. 992·2156. Sa.'Ond

posl.alo!t' paid at Pom~roy , Ohio.

1m:.,
class

Mt&gt;mbcr : Tht· As:~ot:ittiOO Press, lnlttnJ D1:1i·
lv Press Assod1:1liun 1:1nd the Am~rit'1:1n
Nt•wspttJ)t'r Publislwrs Assud~:~lion . National
Atl v ertisin ~.:
Reprt~s enll:lli ve . Branhttm
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POSTMASTER : St•nd address lo Tlw Daily
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Today's highlight In history:

:On Aprtl27,lS21, Ferdinand Magellan, the Portuguese navigator whose

. ''

3Month

sMonth

.
''

llot&lt;toOotltdeOtllo
ud w.. t Vtrllola

'

.... .. . : . ... ............ .. fii,OD
.... .. .................. .. $21.i0

!Year ................... ·.. .. .... f4UO

- '

,_ . -.

·'

cord•~~~~~~~

~

No :~ubscripUo/lli by mail pennlttt!d in towruJ
wlk t'e home cctrrier .servit.'l' is available.

~'

Wagner said he pla ns no drastic
actions suc h as wha t New York
Ya nkees ow ne r George Stein ·
brenne r did when he !Ired Ma nager
Bob Lemon a fte r the Ya nkees slow
start .
"U It helped to sna p at people, I'd
snap a t people. " he said. " ! guess
people a re surpri sed that I haven't
popped off a t the ballc lub, but this Is
not New York."
Besides New York a nd Clncln·
nat!, othe r usually strong clubs
have gotte n off to s luggis h sta rts.

IPOO'IBAJ.I,

Subsc:ribt'rs not de.s irin~ to I*Y tht! t-arrier
trwy remit in advam'l' direl't to ~he Dai ly
~ntitk l on i:l 3, 6 or 12 month basts. Cl't!d!l
will ~ l(iven earrier each month.

~'(;

DICK Wi\GNER

become a free agent and trading
outfielders Ken Gr1Hey and Geor ge
Foster. TheReds had!lve new starters opening day.
"The thing you have to do Is be
ve ry pa tie nt and put your gam e
pla n In place and stick wltll It, "
Wagner said . 'Tm not patient a t
a ll. But you don' t put a ballclub (0.
gethe r In three days, and we' re not
going to take It a part In three da y s.
" ! don 't think It's panic time.
The re's a n old saying, 'When the
going ge ts tough, the tough get gC}lng.' l think our ball club can be real
tough.
" I think this club Is good e nough
to compete a nd be good enough to
conte nd, " he said. "I've seen lead s
like this (Atlanta's 717 game adva ntage over Cincinnati in the Nationa l
League West I dissolve In a week.
a nd we' ve got 23 weeks left. Tha t's
one-third of a game a week, l! m y
m a th Is correct. "

IUSPS1.9181
A Divisiun of Mulllmtdbl,lnt·.

hi~tory

· - -- ---4' 1--·- -- - - - - --

CINCINNATI (API - Reds P resident Dick Wagner says lack of hit·
ting from the heart of the ba ttlng
orde r and poor relief pitching has
contributed heavtly to the Reds'
slow start this season.
" We haven't had good produc tion
out of the fourth-and fifth-place hitters, and the relief pitching until the
last lew days has been very ... poor.
Anybody can see that, " Wagner
said. "You can't hide the record ."
Cesar Cedeno and Johnny Benc h,
batting fourth and fifth, have Jus t 11
runs batted In combined . The
bullpen has failed to hold lead s In
!!vEl games.
I'll's relatively simple ," Wagne r
said. "You have leads and you can't
hold the m . We could just as easily
be 10-6.' '
The Reds a re 6-11, but Wagne r
said he Is not ready to dismantle the
team h e built during the off-sea son
after le tting outfielder Dave Collins

The Daily Sentinel

Daily.

n

change ~

N_,_.......,

pUchinl coach. an advance ICOUI. An·
nounc:ed that Jell
wtll bl!corne

In the year.

I

8ALTIM ORE ORIOLES-Aulped Tim
tematkmal 1..eaJue fer rehabWtaUon.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Piaced Gralj:
Nettles, third bueman. on the 1.5-day diaabled lbt. Rl!caDed Dave ~· pitch·
er. rrom Cohunbw o1 the International
Leque. Named Stan WUllamJ, plt.chlne
coach. Named Jen')' Walke1, the fanner

Today Is Tuesday, Aprtl 27, the 117th day of 1982. There are 248 days left

u.s.

N - ........
MONTREAL EJCil'ai-Purchued Dan
Norman, wtnelder, from Wichita II. the
American Al8oclatlon. OpUoned Brad
Mllla. third bUemln, to W~ta .

Stoddard, pUcher, to Rochester ol the ln·

S/111£

eltpedltloll was the 11rst to saU around the world, was killed by natives In
the Plllllpplnes.
Pn this date:
1n l&amp;l), SlmoD Bolivar abdicated as president of· Colombia.
1
in 19&amp;5,
aDd Soviet troops In World War met at the Elbe River,
cuttlng Gennany In two.

Wagner not ready for wholesale

buUpen CO&amp;Ch.

IWIEMLL

..__ ........

DOONESBURY '

7Hf/ltS 8EtN A/DTOf lmslfii-

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Transactions

Berry's World

"Has Argentina given you any ideas about the
U.S. base on Guantanamo Bay?"

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~~D~

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Page-4 The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 27, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, April 27, 1982

Knight leads 6-4 Astro win
ST. LOUIS iAP) - Les Moss,!.;
ling In for Mel Wright as a Houston
Astros coach, says all pitchers
should be blessed with Nolan
Ryan's problems.
"He was ln the 90s all the way,
even In the eighth and ninth Innings," sald Moss after viewing
Ryan's fastballs during the tightbander's 6-2 conquest Monday
night of the St. Louis Cardinals.
"The mistakes he makes he corrects himself."
Ryan, who had been ott to hls
worst major league start, notched
hls first triumph ln flve decisions
with the backing of heavy Houston
hitting.
In Monday's only other National
League contest. the Pittsburgh P lrates handed the Atlanta Braves
their fourth straight defeat by rallylng to a 6-4 victory.
Against John Martin, 2-2, the Astros also only talntly resembled the
club that dropped 11 of 15 contests
slnce winning twice over St. Louis
ln a season-opening seties.
Ex-Cards outfielder Tony Scott
singled sharply ln the flrst, with

ros

'2
'\\ROOt'
\

•

~
'

-

*

7

"'a .

- -·

.\

Lebanon results
GF:TS FIRST WIN OF SEASON - Houston As tros'
pitrht·r ~ulan Ryan is mt't by managt•r Bill Virdon and
&lt;·nat'h ()on Leppt·rs as he lt·aves the mound after rcror-

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - FamUy Reunion took the lead early to
w1n the featured eighth race at Lebanon Raceway Ftiday night by
one length.
Family Reunion !Inlshed the
course ln 2: 06 4-5. It paid $3.20, $2.l'IJ
and $2.40. Jeanie Bay was second,
paying $28.60 and $21.l'IJ. Bonnie
Blue was third, paying $9.60.
The 2-7 double ot Pleaslng Art
and Precious Bret paid $8.20, and
the crowd ot 1,442 bet $123,662.

ding his first win on the season Monday night against
the St. Louis Cardinals. Ryan has lour losses go with
the one win. He defeated the Cardinals &amp;-2 while giving
up lour hits. 1AP Laserphoto 1.

Eastern takes doubleheader
HEMLOCK - In a Saturday afternoon twlllblll Eastern's Eagles
easily grabbed two victories from
the Miller Falcons. 12-4 111 tht• opener
cu1t1 17-5 in tilt' rugtltrap. Tht• tw u
tnwnphs boost the f:a gle dtamund
men to 1~5 on tht• se&lt;Json .
Coach Halph Wigal 's hard-hitting
f:agle s openetl the Jay with a 13 hit
&lt;:~ttack amJ several other h&lt;::~rd
.SJJiashes that resulted tn 10 F'alcun

t•rrors.

After Miller hall platl'tl ont• run 111
the first, F:askrn dttl the same . un
s1ng les by Bogie Gaul, M;uk Holter,
antl an HBI single by Chns Allen
that tied the score.
In the next frame . Mark Hol ter
ret1red the side w1thuut mcidenl as
h1s Eagles rallied for seven unport.ant runs in th&lt;tt C&lt;~n t o. Roge r
Btsse ll leu off wtth a walk , Deron
Jewett r c&lt;t Chcd SClfdy on &lt;W error CIS
dttl Ja y Carpenter, then Johnny
Beaver smackeU Cl two run single .
Rogie Gaul then stepped Into the
batter's box antl roped a two run
single, Mark Holter was hit by a pitch, and after two were out Roger
BJsscllashcU &lt;:t dnve that was scored
ail erro r allo wing two more runs to
store .
· The Eagles plated a single run In
the thtrtl a ntl three more Ill the fourth to l&lt;Jke the 12-4 triumph.
Mark Holter went the distance to
pick up the victory, fann ing three
and not walking a single batter. Hub
Burgess sl&lt;Jrted for Miller and suffered the defeat before being
relieved by Woods in the fifth . They
combnted to fan SIXand walk five.
Eastern hitters were John Beaver
w1th three singles and a double,
Hogte Ga ul two singles, Ntck
Leonard a tr iple. Ja y Carpe nter a
double , and Holter, Chris Allen, J un
Newell , antl Larry Cowdery each
singles. For M11ler, Chns Jewett had
two singles, and Jim Gill. Shawn

Harvey, Rob Burgess, and Brian
Morgan each singled.
The next ga me sl&lt;Jrted out much
rluser than the first game, however,
when the contest ended , Eastern enjoyc•d an even bigger romp in the
rngh tcap.
After two innings EHS held a 2-1
advantage when Beaver and Gaul
tlrew walks in the first, Holger rammed an RBI single, then afte r a
fielder's choi ce, Holter ca me home
on a throwing error.
f:HS gradually built its lead over

~ur

nesday , Belpre Thursday, and hosts
Southern on Friday in • make-up
game from last night.
Linescores :
E
171 300 0- 12 13 5
M
100 020 1- 4 6 10
Batteries : Holter IWPI, and
Leonard, Cowdery. Burgess ILPI,
Woods, and John Imler.
Game two :
E
202 353 2- 17 14 3
M
100 031 0- 5 5 4
Batteries : Jones IWPI, Allen 5th,
Smith 7th, and Leonard , Cow d ery

Riverdown results
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jockey
Clllton Schwing rode Exterminate
to victory ln the featured eighth
race Monday at Rlver Downs.
Exterminate was ahead by three
lengths when It crossed the finish
llne at 1:13. It returned $5.40, $4.20
and $3. The Bloody Best was second, paying $4.40 and $3.40. La

'

Ray Knight belting hls second ho- eight games of the season) I was
mer one out l;lter. Two Innings af- not overly concerned. Now we've
terward, It became 4-0 alter Knight lost four straight and I'm not overly
doubled and Jose Cruz crashed his concerned either," said Chicago
Manager Tony LaRussa. "'Thl! Is
first homer.
Knight, the third baseman ob- AprU."
The Red Sox return home tor an
talned by Houston ln an ott-season
trade from Cincinnati, labeled a 14- eight-game stand, hoplng to surhit attack assembled by the Astros pass the nlne-game wtnlng streak
Boston rolled up ln September 1~.
overdue.
Ryan, who fanned five and "Maybe we should stay on the road.
Chuck Ralney, who posted hls
walked two, yielded an unearned
run when shortstop Dickie Thon last victory on June '1:7, 1~. scatbooted Smith's smash for a two- tered just five hits and struck out
base error and Tommy Herr five ln the nightcap to galn the
tripled ln the third for St. Louis' shutout.
Ralney, 1-0, got all the support he
first hlt.
The Astros hurler was working needed from Rlck Miller, who
on a three-hitter untll Smith slngled drove ln the first run ot the contest
to open the Cards' eighth. Smith with one of his three singles to
stole second, moved to third on keyed the 13-hlt Boston attack.
That run was the only scoring
Herr's fly ball and scored on Keith
through five innings as Rainey got
Hernandez' grounder .
Atlanta lost Its fourth straight locked Into a pitcher's duel with
home game following a 13-game Chicago's Emesto Escarrega, 0-1,
winning sgtreak to open the season. a 32-year-old rookie up !rom the
Bill Madlock's two-run homer ln Mexican Leagues.
In the opener, Jim Rlce decided
the eighth broke a 4-4 tie. The PIrates tied the game earlier ln the another pltcher's duel by singling
lnnlng when Dave Parker doubled home Wade Boggs with the winning
and scored on Jason Thompson's run ln the eighth inning.
single.
Boggs led ott the Boston eighth
Madlock then unloaded against with a slngle, the flrst hit ot his mareliever Larry McWilliams.
jor league career, and was sactiThompson and Mike Easler also flced to second by Jerry Remy.
homered as the Pirates.
Rlce hlt an 0-1 pitch from Rlchard
Meanwhile, wlnnlng streaks - like Dotson, 1-2, up the middle to break
most cats, dogs and horses - are a 2·2 deadlock and hand the win to
color blind. But while animals are Luis Aponte, 2-0, who came on In
reluctant to change masters, win- relief of Bruce Hurst In the bottom
ning streaks are not, exchanging of the seventh.
their White Sox for Red Sox ln the - - - - - - - - - - - blink of an eye.
~
' "It wasn't cold a t all. It turned out
to be a beautiful evenlng," Boston
Manager Ralph Houk said Monday
night atter hJs Red Sox overcame
40-degree temperatures and btisk
SYRACUSE, OHIO
winds to sweep a doubleheader
NOW OPEN FOR THE
fromtheChlcago WhlteSox3-2and
SPRI NG SEASON
5-0. It extended Boston's winning
• V egelabl e Pia nt s
streak to seven games.
• Bedding Plant s
The Red Sox·Whlte Sox double•Foilage Plants and
header, both make-up games, were
H~~~i~g~:tt~t~ til
8
the only Ametican League contests
SUNDAYlTILS
played Monday night.
992 5776

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY
branch AAUW will hold an annual spring dinner at MeigS Inn
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. Members
may take a guest. Speaker will be
Harriett Wood , the branch's consultant. New officers will be insta lled.
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.

Hartinger weekend.
MEIGS COUNTY Holi ness
A.ssociatiun Tuesday at Rutland
Church of Nazarene at 7:30p.m.
Guest speaker will be Hev. R. D.
Brown. There will be special
singing. The Hev . Broome,
president. extenti.s an Inv itation
to the public to attentl .

and

Joint meeting

Senior

American

Legion Auxiliary units, 7:30p.m .
Tuesday at Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion Hall.

MEIGS Athletic Boosters
Tuestlay at 7:30p.m. at the high
school.

MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Commerce, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at

HAHRISONVILLE GO ld en
Age Club. 7 p.m., Tuesday
evening at the town hall .

Astrograph
April28, 1982
This coming yea r strive to develop greater proftnency work-or
careerwise. Situations could later develop to offer rewards and adva ncement for competency .
TAURUS !April 21)-May 201 Unless you ha ve something complimentary to say of coworkers today, it's best to keep your thoughts tu
yourself. Criticism will generate friction .
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Shop prudently today and avoid making
imp ulsi ve purchases. You could later have buye r's remorse and end up
owning something you might never use.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you spend too much time today
dwelling on what might go wrong, you'll lose your initiative antl accomplish nothing . It's occasionally necessary to gamble.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Try not to let an unpleasant happening between you and another condition the way you will treat this person toda y.
Bygones should be forgotten.
VIRGO IAug. 23-Sept. 22) Be equally as generous with friends today
who have treated you graciously in the past. They won't be there when
you need them again if you fail to do so.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0rt. 23) What you hope to accomplish toda y may
prove a trifle difficult to pull off. There 's a chance you may make matters
worse by attempting it the hard way .
SCORPIO !Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Normally, when thmgs go amiss you are
capable of handling in stride whatever occurs. Today, however, you
might blow small setbacks out of proportion .
SAGniARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Be careful today not to be drawn into a friend' s complicated affairs. Once you become involved yo u may
have some problems in trying to extricate yourself.
CAPRICORN 1Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Goa ls important to you toda y may not
be of L'qUal importance to yo ur companions. In matters req ui ring teamwork, bt&gt; sure you a rt&gt; bot h in synrh .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 Deviating from your blueprint today
could lead to making mistakes, and there is a chance that you might have
to do the work over aga in. Follow the ru les.
PISCES !Feb. 21)-March 201 Be aware of your limil&lt;Jtions today and
uon't try to tlo something for another that you may not be able tu handle .
One can't be an ~xpert in a ll areas.
ARIES IMareh 21·Aprill91 It will prove wiser to make minor concessions today in order to appease your mate than to take a rigid position

Wed. thru Sat. Sale

POMEHOY
Le~ion,

FROM 6:30 TO 8:00P.M.
Interested members of the public are invited to tour
this new facility.

A bean soup supper will be held 5
to 7 p.m. Saturday at the Dyesv ille
Commumt y Church . The public is invited.

Mary Shrine 37 will hold a bake
and rwrunage sale May 3 and 4 in
the former Warner insurance
building, Pomeroy. Persons with
donations are asked to call 92().7853
or 992-7495.

Amencan

Feeney-Bennett Po.st 128,

Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order
of the Eastern Star, will meet in
special session on May 4. Initiation
will be held for two candidates.

Middleport, and its Auxiliary,
6:30 p.m. dinner potluck at the
hcttl with meetings to follow .
There wi ll be nomination of officers fur both post and auxiliary.

...................................
Ladies
:
.

POMEHOY - MIDDLEPOHT
Lions Club, regular meeting,
noon Wednedsay at Meigs Inn.

7-Diamond
Cluster

POMEHOY - Ohio Valley
Corrunandery 24, Wednesday,
will confer order of Red Cross
and Mall&lt;! All Knights Temp lar

-

,.. .,____________ -"

!~~~~0~3~~.~~~:1NG $1

RIO GHANDE - A special of
Hio Grande Commumty College
Boa rtl of Trustees will be held
Wednesda y at 7 p.m. in Rio Grande College Board Hoom. Consideration of bids fur a parking
lot project and for cabinets wi ll
lake place .

I

1
I

Incredible Value!

I
1

$4950

THURSDAY
EASTEHN Local School Board
will ha ve a specia l meeting Thursda y, 7: 30p.m. at the high school.

.i

~!

OFF

100 or 400 ASA C ~~process
Req )R p r1 n ts L 1mr t 1 ro ll per co upo n

(. Q ~..pon must ac c omp a ny order

Exp~res

5112 / 82

'----------

Compare at $125.00
: 1/'.e w ill p1 Ck up .111 r,,,n&lt;h('CI&lt; '&gt;
: on \,l si wccl&lt; ' &lt;, &lt;; pect &lt;11. now , .n
: tonq .H wppll ('&lt;; 1,\St If you c.1n
:buy d •nmonds ilt i1 better pncr
: th.ln oun. . bu y th e m!

RACINE - Special Meeting,
fulcinc Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
Thursday with work in the
Master Maso n Degree; refreshments following

_)-

: 35mm COLOR PRINT

invited .

DUTION DRUG CO.

:

:
:

:

N . 2nd AVE ., MIDDLEPORT, OH .

:

JEWELERS .~
.~ TAWNEY
424 Second, Gallipolis
..................................

m~eting.

WITH THESE FOOD
GROUND CHUCK····LB. $} 49
CHUCK ROAST............ LB. sl 49 CHICKEN LONGHORN
12 OZ. FRANKIES .......... 99¢ FRANKS CHEESE
69( 12oz.
BOLOGNA .............•.... LB. 79¢

••• for a brilliant picture
in color or black-and-white

CHUNK

ROYAL CREST

BUTTERMILK &amp; VIT. D ... :~.~~L~.
VALLEYBELL

.

.

FESTIVAL ICE CREAM .•.... ~2.~~~~

99¢

BANANAS
JPOUNDS

$}39

99¢

Thursday Only

• 20 Elements
• Signal SpliHer
Included

R. C. COLA

$
ttage Cheese ...~!~.. 119
.

R. C. 100
DIET RITE
UPPER 10

24 OZ.

BROUGHTON

VAWES!
LARGE BAG

ICE . . . . . . . . 79¢
REGULAR SIZE

JAR LIDS

4

DOZEN$}

00

••

• UHF /VHF /FM

THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1982

invited.

Meigs County HEACf will hold a
bicycle safety check for those who
will be purticiput11 1g in the Hikt"
Bike un Sa turday , May 1.
The safety check Will be held
behmtl Meigs High School near the
shop area from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
H!dl'rs, if they so Lics1re. may leave
their btkes inside the locked building
until tune of the event.

se e!'

u

OPEN
HOUSE
The Meigs County Branch of
Holzer Clinic Ltc ....
.... is conducting an
Open House in its facility at
150 Mill Street
in Middleport on

Hymn Sing, Mt. Olive Church,
Long Bottom, Sunday, I :30 p.m .
with the Harmony Singers. Public

On Tuesda y, May 4, from I to 4
p.m. the seventh and eighth grade . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - bands will rehearse at Meigs High
School. Bus transportation will be
provided .
The Meigs Band Boosters will
meet uu May 3 at 7 p.m. at the high
school in the band room. Parents of
band students, grades 7-12, are encouraged to attend.
The spring concert will be held on
May 4, at 8:30p.m. in the auditorium
at Meigs High School.

POMEHOY - Wildwood Garden Club, potluck luncheon, Wednestlay, noon at Forest Run
Methodist Church. Edith Talbert
wilt be guest speaker.

where opposition exists.

'

tendan ce .

WEDNESDAY

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 1-6

ulJ!;ervance of General James

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

Individual band pictures of Meigs
Band ' members will be taken at
Meigs High School on April 29 and 30
from 6 tu8 p.m., it was announced.
On Monday, May 3, from 7 to 9
p.m., a dress rehearsa l for the
spring concert will be held. Gue&gt;t
soloist will be Dr. Rei lly. All students in the concert are to be in at-

LaSalle Hotel to make plans for

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

Junior

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Announcements

Calendar

be~~ e~_j6~th~-~Im~le~r~IL:P~I~,~M=o~yl:e~r,~O=w=e=M~
· a:·n=d~~F:e~a~th:e~r:w:a~s~~~rd~,~pa:ylng~~$5~.---~·~·Wh~~~:w:e~w:e~n:t~~~O~(~th~e~flr~s~t~~~~p~H~O~N~E~~·~~~~~
Gill.

the
nextfor five innings
plodtng
in the fifth . In that
rnund Ja y Carpe nte r tnpled to lead
off the frame and Deron Jewett
smgled home. Beaver reached on an
error, and Gaul deli vered a two run
triple, Holter reached un an error
with another run corning home, then
on a ftelder 's choice another run
trotted home , the final being 17-5.
Hogte Gaul, Holter, and freshman
Jay Carpenter each tnpled and
singled, Chris Allen and Larry
Cowdery singled twice, Jewett had
three safeties and Smith smacked a
ont~bagger . Morgan tnpled and
smgled, Moyer si ngled, Jewett
singled. and Gill singled for the
Falcons .
Senior Jeff Jones got the sta rting
nod for Eastern and worked four innings. He fanned one, walked five,
and scattered a couple of hits in a
good outing. Chris Allen came on
with some left-handed heat in the fifth to fan four and walk two in two inmngs of work. Hob Smith worked the
seventh and wa lked two in a clinching performance.
John Imler sl&lt;Jrted for Miller fan11\ng five and walkmg one in suffenng the loss. Jeff Moyler came on
m the fo urt h, and Owens relieved in
the seventh.
Eastern plays a t Alexand er
Tuesday at North Gallia Wed-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8

16 oz.

BTLS.

EXTRA LARGE
USDA

EGGS................. ~~~-~-

69¢

NORTHERN TISSUE
4 ROLL PACK

99¢

GENERIC

PAPER TOWELS

'Bullseye!' TV Antenna

41.97

!'v~!~vi!i~~~~Y~ .!~e!~~n!n~a

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pre-assembled with snap-open elements for do-ltyourself Installation. 20 elements capture all available
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rosion. Signal splitter Included at no extra cost.

\~~w•• ~
stgno~

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the Orbl~ 360 rotator comes fully
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Mast Not Included

COKE IN
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'

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$159

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50

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BAG

49¢

AROLL
~~--

�- -- ---- ---Page

6-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

April 27, 1982

Meigs County area groups' meeting notes

Public Notice

Racine Auxiliary
Officers were named at the April
21 meeting of Racine Firemen's
Awdllary held at the hall.
They are Ruth Shain, president;
Mae Deland, secretary; Beulah
Autherson, first vice-president;
and Jane Johnson, second vice
president.
A special meeting was set for
TUesday night at 8 p.m . to meet
with the firemen . The awdllary
bylaw committee will meet at the
firehouse at 7 p.m. to change, re.
vise and add to the constitution. The
Frtday night games have been can·
celled until further notice.

Homebuilders Class

(

~
\} '
·"• 'Y

\,.
,I

''

1; J

.

, /

The Homebuilders Oass of Mld·
dleport Church of Christ endorsed
the 1.5 mUI levy for the Carleton
School for the Mentally Retarded at
a meeting held Aprtl ~ at the
church.
Jeanette Thomas, a member of
the Board of Mental Retardation In
Meigs County. explained the need
of Carleton School and urged sup.
port of the levy which Is needed to
provide operating lunds for the new
school which ls under construction
and will be ready for use this

tr

PROCLAMATION SIGNED- Mayors Clarenrt• Andrt•ws and Fred
Hoffman sign a proclamation declaring April 30 as "Beta Sigma Phi
Day." The)' are pi&lt;'tured with, ll'ft to right, Ca rolyn Grueser, president of
Xi Gamma Chapter: Clarice Krautter, president of Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter; and Jenellt• Haptonst.all. J&gt;n:'sidl"nt uf the Ohiu Eta Phi Chapter.

Beta Sigma Phi Day
-~et for this Friday
April 30 has been dt'stgn&lt;:Jlt'd as

lMa S1gma Ph1 Day

tn Mtudlt-port
a nd Pnmcroy by procl;une~twn
Signed by the mayors ol the villages

l" for11 1 the OhJtJ Eta Ph1 Chapte r
l'llill'lcred 111 Odnber 1949. The
tH"I ).! tnal membe rs were Nonna

Koeh lL·r

Am s bary,

VIrginia

Fredd1e Houdm;hdt,
Hhea l-lu nmr ut. Jeanne Morgon,
Ph) ll1 :-. Mullen, Nor rna. Jca. n St1vers,
Rel t tt· W1se. ond E u1lh Young.
Bb z t..'Wi l'Z.

The da y has bet•n set astLie b~ BL't&lt;l
S1gma Phi, rnarktng tL'i 51s t i:lrl niversary thi!i year. il .'i the slC:~rt of
"Be ta
S tgma
Pht
Year . "
Proclamations ha ve been s u~ ned 1)\

Th1s yt:i:tr. fnur of the origifetl char·

ofticials around the wurld to bnng
attcntwn to lhe ubsen·;:HH'l' uf the

LL'r 111embers are complettng 33
Yl'ars uf l'Uilltnuo us membership.

wo r ld' s

They are norma Amsbary C uster.
Mtldred Karr. Teresa Swatzel, and
Pl•arl Welker .

la r ges t

G re ek

lelil'r

women's sen ice. culturrtl and sonal
organization.

It ts an orgamzatwn that ha!'l
grown to include 250.000 members 111
1-2.500 chapters, loca leu 111 36 countries i:l&lt;'ross the wo riU and ha s
become known for il' chantab le .

heolth a nd c ultural urgamzat1 un,

ri.mct ralstng a nd dona tions .
, Llfe, lea rnm g and fnend s htp are
the by-words of Beta Sigma Ph1
whi ch had its begmntng Jn the rntrl~t
of the depress ion by Waller W. Russ.
U was desig ned at that t nne tu
·provide an outlet for women who. 111
those hard f1nanc1al tnn cs , could nul
attend co ll ege and we re obltgaleu lo
r.e matn home and s upport thetr

families.

Walter

Ross

pruv1ded

these women w1lh a program of
cultural s tud y so that they could
'liave a chance al intellectual ami
social growth.

The X1 Gamma Mu Chapt er was
urganized 111 1%1. A third chapter,
Preceptor Beta Bela. wa s formed in
1973 wtlh lhe Sti ve r Ci rcle, an
honorary degree for Beta Sigma Ph1
members of 25 years. be1ng awarded
lu 10 women. In 1981. the Laureate
deg ree. Lhe h1ghest to be awarded to
members who had compl eted at
least eigh t yea rs in a prece ptor
chapter was bes towed on 18 membl•rs of the chapte r

Many projects ha ve been ea rned
ou t by Beta S igma Ph1 in Me1gs
Cou nty . The gro up donated $500 to
the Me1gs County Pioneer and
Htston cal Soc1ety, youth ha' e been
sponso red at Buckeye Boys' Stole
and Buckeye Girls' State, a room at
old Meigs General Hospital was fur-

ntshed. etnd members have assisted
The firs t c hapter wa s fo rmed in
~b1Iene, Kansas. lnte rnattona lly.
the chapters hav e created several
special funds to wh1ch they contribute - the International Loan
·Fund through wh1ch 1L' membe rs
.help each other, the lnternatJUnal
·Endowment Fund. which ha s
donated over a rmll ion dollars to
health researc h gro ups: homes for
underpnvil eged children. the Exem·
plar Fund wh1ch he lps s upporl
Lite racy Village in Indi a. and a
college scholarship fund for members or their sons or daughters.
Beta Sigma Phi came to Me1gs
County 1n April 1949 when several
young women in Middleport. join ed

w1th many fund dnves including the
Mothers' March of Dimes. helped
w1th lhe Red Cross Bloodmobile and
I
ass is ted wtlh g1fts to the fo rmer
Me1gs County Children 's Home and
other organiza tions

On Thursday nighl the anni versary of Beta Sigma Phi will be
observed w1th a Founder's Day
ce lebratt on m Athens. Clarice
Krautter is c hcli rman of the

evening's acllv ities whtch Will inclu de the presentation uf awards to
members for outstanding work
dunn g th e pas t year. Donna Jones
will pre•ent the message from the
International Executive Counc1l of
Beta Sigma Phi.

BETA SIGMA PHI FAMILY - Betty Ohlinger aDd her two
llaaghters, Su88D Baer aDd Sonya Wolfe, a~ aU Beta Sigma Phi memllers. each Ill a dlffereal chapter. The lbree have a lolal of 25 membenblp
years aDd are lbe oaly molbeNiaagbter group Ia lbe lbree c~pters.

summer.
Kathryn Evans presided at the
meeting with Dorothy Roach giv·
lng devotions. There was a read·
lng, "The Invisible Florist," by
Willard Boyer who also had prayer.
Roach read "Vlslt the Sick." It was
noted that Denver Rice Is a patient
at the Pleasant valley Hospttal.
Evans gave grace before refrershments were served by Roach
and Thelma Boyer. Others attend·
lng were Delcle Forth, Dorothy
Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Wilson,
Coleen Van Meter, Mr. and Mrs.
WU!ard Boyer, Glen Evans and
Edna Evans.

Friendly Circle
· Pretc:lil'l' uf Pattencl'" from tht•
writings of David Livingston was the
toptt• of Mrs. Dorothy Woodard's
progra m when Fnendly Circle mel
Tuesday cVt•ning at Trimly Church.
The quiet hour and the American
lnd1 a n's version of the Lord' s
Prayer wen: int'luded 1n the
program wh1ch closed w1th a postEaster narration of New York's
Easter parade.
Tht• devotiOnal period by Mrs.
Woodard included scripture from
Genesis 6 on ships from " When the
Bible Speaks to Me." a poem. "Life
ts Uke a Ca ndle," a nd the Lord's
Prayer in untson.
Mrs. Paulint• Mayer received tht'
offering. Mrs. Marie Hauck presided
al the business meeting when a
report on Eastern projects we re
hea rd. A thank you note was read
from Mrs. Eva Dessauer. and a
sympalh} card ws signed for M1ss
Dorothy Reibel.
It was re ported that the basket order has been delivered and plans fur
future projec~ were discllli.sed. PtL'·
lures of the church windows were
displayed by Mrs. Paul Nease.
Following the meeting small gifts
were exchanged to the accompaniment of a narration by Miss
Mary V. Reibel. Proceeds were added lo the organ fund .
Miss Reibel and Mrs. Mary E.
Chapman served a dessert course to
13 members. Favors were nolepa&lt;b
and pencils.

Rock Springs
Health Club
Mrs. James Conkle of Cheshire
hosted a recent meeting of Rock
Springs Bette r Health Club.
Mrs. Arland King presided at the
meeting which opened with the
Lord 's Prayer and the pledge to the
Oag. Mrs. Ethel Grueser gave
devotions using scripture from
Psalms 37 and a meditation, " And
He Shall Bring It to Pass."
It was noted that new officers will
be elected in May. The program was
prepared by Mrs. Harold Blackston
and lbe readings included "Sheets of
Skin" by Mrs. Arlee Abbott; "Soon a
Living Contact Lens" by Mrs. Ethel
Grueser; "Cancer Watch" by Mrs.
Lottie Leonard; "Endangered
Species" by Mrs. Roger Leifheit;
"Emotions and Hearth" by Mrs.
King; "Way to Gout" by Mrs.
Wa lter Morris; "ELectricity for
Broken Bones" by Mrs. Roger
Leifheit; "Cramps in the Night" by
Mrs. Wilmetta Leifheit; "Bow Your
Head" by Mrs. William Grueser.
A contest was conducted by Mrs.
Hugh Bearhs and won by Mrs.
Morris and Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
Mrs. Fred Goeglein will be hostess
for the May meeting. Mrs. Conkle
and Mrs. Blackston will have charge
of the program and contest.
Refreshments were served to
. those named and Mrs. Vena Whaley,
Dorothy and Michael Leifheit.

Bend of River Artists
A work session of the Bend 0' the
River Artists Council will be held on

April29 at 7 p.m . at the home of Mrs.
Juanita Lodwick for all officers and
interested members. Work will be
completed on the display racks and
the sculplure tables.
On May 6 there will be a personal
art project work time at the McClure's Barn Studio at 7:30p.m. Also
that evening, Janet KoQientz , a part
of the artists in the schools program,
will present a poetry workshop.

Philarhea Women
The operating levy for Carleton
School for Reta rded Children and
Adults was e ndorsed by th e
Philathea Women of the Middleport
Church of Christ at a recent meeting
held at the church.
The group also voed to contribute
$50 to the levy promotion fund . Mrs .
Jeanette Thomas was guest speaker
and talked on the need for the levy .
Beckie Loving installed the new
officers, Dorothy Roach, president :
Mitzi Saltsman, vice president; Bel·
ty Mc Kinley . secretary; and Fane
Cole. treasurer. The installing officer presented each of the officers
with a stained glass hanger.
Ri chard Gilkey was a g ues t. Delr
bie Mellon had prayer.

TOPS
Keithel Hatfield and Nancy Vance
were the top losers at the weekly
meeting of TOPS OH 1456, held at
Rutland.
Mrs. Hatfield was presented a
eash gi ft and ribbon. Last week 's
best loser was Linda Bailey with
Sandy Sergent as the runner-up.
Begimung May 4, the club will meet
at the Rutland Civic Center. Weigh'"will be from 6 to 6:30p.m . with the
meeting from 6:30 to 7 p.m. Anyone
mterested in joining the group may
call742-2233 for more mforrnation.

Group II

Salisbury PTO

DAR

B&amp;PW
Membership, requ~rements and
res pnstbililtes . was the program
topic at the Monday night meeting of
!he Middleport Bustness and
Professional Women's Club held at
the Middleport Library.
Marjorie Fetty presided al tl"'
session w1th the program bemg in
e harge of Freddie Houdashelt.
Others participating were Becky
Mohle r, Jean Moore, and Alwilda
Werner.
Offil'ers' reports were g1ven and
the attendance award was won by
Mrs. Werner. Named to the
nominatin~

vlee

president; Roberta Ridenour,
~ eedy family. Arrangements were
president; Janet Hoffman, secrea·
also made to remember a shut-in
try; and Carol Erwin, treasurer.
with a gift on her birthday .
Elizabeth Searles was named to · They will be installed at the May
have devotions for the Sanborn
meeting.
It was noted that new blinds for
meeting in May with the circle rnem·
the gymnasium have been In·
bers to assist w1th a dessert
stalled. The PTO will continue to
smorgasbord.
Mrs. Searles had the opening
sponsor the scouts at Chester hall
and It was voted to conlrlbute $50
prayer, with Mrs. R1ggs g ivin g
dev otions from l Corinthians 13 with
toward the utilities. Plans were
"Love" as her topic. She used
made for the PTO to serve the Ches·
" Faith" for the program with each
ter Alumni banquet on June 5 as a
member giving her definition of
money·maklng project. Parents
faith as it applies to he r daily life.
will be contacted lor food
Mrs. Riggs ex pressed apdonations.
prec iation for work during her term
The room count was won by Mrs.
as circle chairman, and noted that
Kathryn Cook's fourth grade. Sixth
Mrs. Lillian Demoskey w1ll serve for
grade room mothers served rethe commg year.
freshments. A book fair was held.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Mary
Brewe r, Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs.
Plans for the annual mother.
Gwinnie White, Mrs. Ethd Hug hes,
daughter banquet were discussed
Mrs. Katheryn Metzger and David
and committees were named at a
Riggs . A prayer circle closed the
recent meeting of Group 2 of Midmeeltng .
dleport First United Presbyterian
Church held at the church.
Mrs. Donald Lowery reported on
Library books and a color televt·
the plans tor the banquet, which
slon which the PTO purchased for
will be held on TUesday, May 11.
the school were on display at the
Also discussed at the meeting was
recent meeting of Salisbury PTO
the recent ordination of Rev.
held at Salisbury Elementary
Wanda Johnson and the 40th wed·
School.
ding anniversary celebration for
A feature of the meeting was a
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lowery.
program by the fifth and sixth
Mrs. Tom Rue conducted the
grade band students ol David
least coin offering using an article
Bowen. Selections played by the
on Australia written by Frances
llfth grade band were "Twtnkle,
Bailey. Members read portions of
Twinkle, Uttle Star," "The United
the study book and participated In a
Nations March," "Slightly Misty,"
discussion. Mrs. Paul Haptonstall
and "Space Bird," and "Pirate's
presided at the meeting with Mrs.
Parade."
Harry Moore giving devotions on
The fiag ceremony was led by Sa·
' 'These Days." The closing prayer
llsbury Junior Girl Scout Troop
was by Mrs. Moore. Refreshments
1100, wtth Barbara Beegle giving
were served by the hostessses,
devotions.
Mrs. Thomas Rue and Mrs. Myron
Plans were made for serving
Miller.
Pomona Grange dinner Friday and
the mother.&lt;Jaughter banquet of
Rock Springs Ualted Methodist
Tips on saving electricity were
Church, May 7. The PTO has
g1ven
by Rosetta Lis le Redovian at
rented - the Skate.a·Way Rink for
the
Friday
meeting uf Return
May 22 for students and their
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
families .
Daughte rs of the American
Officers elected were Karen
Revolution held at the Meigs Inn.
Sloan, president; Judy Humph·
Introduced by Mrs . Robert
reys, vice president; Jeanie Roble,
Ashley,
Mrs. Reduvian. div1sion
secretary; and Helen Corsi, treas·
estimator
for lhe Columbus and
urer. The sixth grade won the prize
Southern
Ohiu
Electric Cu. talked on
for room count.
" Watching Your Watts. " She had a
quiz following her talk.
Mrs. Clyde Ingels presided at the
"Jesus Christ, Liberator" was
business meeting and gave remarks
the program topic presented by
from the President Ge neral's
Mrs. Hllda Yeauger at the recent
messag e. It was announced that
meeting of Forest Run United
magazine subscriptions are due to
Methodist Women held at the home
Mrs. James Brewington by May 30.
of Mrs. Evelyn Hollon.
Mrs. James O'Brien, sarety comEmphasis was on the fruits of the
mittee chairman, gave suggestions
splrlt, joy, love, kindness, self·
on safe driving , and the report on
control, honesty and patience. "The
national defense was by Mrs. Gene
Certainties of Easter" was read by
Yost.
Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs. Kathleen
Next meeting will be held in the
Scott, Mrs. Faye Hamilton and
church social room of the Baptist
Mrs. Mary Nease. A lighted candle
Church in Racine, May 14 .
represented "Jesus, Light of the
Refreshments were served by
World." A poem, "Suppose," by
Mrs. O'Brien, Mrs. Brewingturl,
Mrs. Y eauger closed the meeting
Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs. Roger
and ''ThoughtsofEveryDay"were
Luckeydoo, and Mrs. Irving Karr.
read by Evelyn Hollon.
Devotions were given by Mary K.
Roush and Included a reading, "A
Mrs. Ben Philson and Mrs.
Man Thlnketh" by Nonnan Vln·
Dwight Wallace represented MeigS
cent Peale and "The Lord's
County at the recent meeting of
Prayer." Thirty-eight shutin calls
Southeast Ohio Lung Association
were reported and a dessert course
held at Western Sizzlln' Steak
was served by Mrs. Hollon and
House, Athens. Both are board
Mrs. Mae Holter.
members ol SEOLA.

committee were Miss

Houdas he lt. Mary Kunzelman, and
Mrs. Mohler. Mrs. Moore, Mrs.
Ed1th Forrest, and Miss Houdashelt
will serve on the auditing com-

mittee.
Louise Davis, finance chairman.
reported on the club finance and
va rious activities planned. Dues for
the 1982.a3 year were payable.
A discussion was held on the Equal
Rights Amendment and the
movement to get the ratification
deadline moved forward.
Refreshments of cookies. fruil and
candy were served.

Electa Circle
Assis tance to a loeal needy family
was planned when the EJecta Circle
of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Sociely of the Middleport First Bap.
lisl Church met recently at the home
of Mrs. Cathy Riggs.
Concluding a year of projects, the
E lecta Circle members voted to give
the ba lance in the treasury to the

Forest Run UMW

Announcements

Chester PTO
New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of Chester PTO
held at Chester Elementary School.
Elected were Twlla Buckley,

b •ds

will

be

re~e 1ved by the Villaqe of
Middle port in the off ice of

2·DAY
PUBLIC AUCTION

P m ,

FRIDAY, APRIL 30, &amp;
SATURDAY MAY 11 1982
Time 10:00 a.m. Each Day

t h~ Mayor. Vi llage Ha ll,
M•ddleport, Ohio, unt i 12: 30

May

6,

lo ll ow 1ng tt ems

f or

the

Item l , Quantity I, 100
watt , low band, tone con ·
tr ot. private line, 2 chan nel
base s tat1on tr r.nsmitter
with 1 tramsm ,t/2 recetve

lrcquenctes, muted second
rece1ver. P L Code 'JA
Item / , Quantity 1,
Re mote Control Console,
1onf' control, privilt(' line,
F 1/ F ·2 sw it ch, m ut ed
second rCC('tver. s~per
v1 s ory
swdch.
ltne
OpNotinq llqht, tntcr com
swllch , 2.:1 hour clock wt fh
d1qi ta lled rPrtdout
It em 3, Quanttty 2.
, ~&lt;emOTe Co ntrol Co nso le,
tonf' contro l. pr1vate lm e,
F 1/ F ') sw d ch, muted
second rece tver , intercom
swi tch, 24 hour clock with
'digi tal led readout .
Item 4, Ouanttfy 1. Un tty
Gatn Antenna .
5, Ouant1ty 1. 50' of
11"Item
Foam He lia)( Cable K1t .
All R F cq~:~ ipm ent mu st
be of one ma nufa ctu rer,
wtth th i'l t manufacturer
hi'lv1nq total responsibility
to provtde o complete
work ing s ys tem
Pricinq shall include
comp le te inst&lt;'l llaft on by an
r.x pene nccd and qu olified
contrnc tor
The Vlllaqc of
dle port re servps the rtqflt
to rc 1ecr any or oil bt cls ilnd
to watv e 1n formaliflf'S
b1ddinq
I4J10. 17 . 1tc
Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
MICHAEL SHAY FAW
PLAINTIFF
VS.
ENETT A. FAW
DEFENDANT
NO . 18,087
LEGAL NOTICE
Enett A. Faw, whose last
known place of res idence is
926 Fa1rmont Avenue,
Sa lisbury, N. C. 28414, is
bei ng notifi ed that on the
8th day of F e bruary, 1982
Michael Sflay Faw, p lain
tiff , filed his co mpla int for
divorce a9ainst her as
defendant 1n the Common
Pleas Court, Me 1gs County,
Oh to , Case No . 18,087,
demanding that he be
divorced from the sa id
Enetf A Faw on the groun
ds of gross neg lect of duty
and e)( tr e me cr uelty , and
ask ing for othe r proper
relief
This noti ce will run once
eac fl week for SIX con·
sec uttve weeks. the la st
publication being on the
lllh day of May, 1982 . The
defendant wi ll have twen
ty eig ht days from ttle da y
of las t publi ca tion 1n which
to a nswer sai d comp laint .
M1chae1 Shay Faw.
Plaintiff
J . B. O'Brien,
Atto rney tor Platnt11t
14 1 6, 13, 20,27 151 4, II , 6tc
PubliC Notice
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIG S COUNTY
ESTATE OF VAZIE LEE,
DEC~ASED

Cilse No. 23731
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On April 5th , in th e Me iqs
county Probate court,
Case No. 23731. Arch1e Lee,
3rd Stree t, Sy racu se, Oh1 0
45769
w.=ts
appointed
Executor of the estelle of
Va11e Lee. deceased, late
of Jrd Street. Sy ra c usr,
OhiO .:15779
RoberT E Buck
Proba te JudQ et
C lc rk
(41 13, 10. 17, 31 c

All listed antiques and chaHets from the 1875
Farmer's Slore and the late A.K. McClung
family home will be sold at auction. The
Farmer's Store has been in continuous
operation by this family since 1875 &amp; Its
contents will be sold on Friday, April 30. The
store is located on U.S . Rt. 33 in New Haven,
W. Va. The contents of the home will be sold
on Saturday, May Land is located approx. 1
mile west of the store on U.s . Rl. 33 In lhe
'Image of Hartford, W. Va. These locations
are approx. 7 mi. east of Pomeroy, Ohio. The
store items will include spool cabinets,
display cues, Elgin Iron coffee grinder wlth
eagle, needle cases, fine dye cabinets, Jersey
coffee box , all types of flne display items,
barrels and wooden boxes, cash registers,
many old scales, coin operated Items, many
fine oak gl. showcases, display cabinets and
shelving, fine adv. Items and signs, old tlns,
old inventory items, crocks, early wood
barbl!r chair, plus 100's of sm. Items and lg.
items related loa 100 yr. old country store of 3
generations . EVERYTHING SAVEDtlt
Saturday, May t, sale atlg. family home will
include early drysink, grandfather clock,
outstanding brass bed, 3 pie sales; 2 stacking
bookcases, 6 carved walnut chairs, lg. dbl .
brass student lamp, spinning wheel, fine
rockers, halllrees, sol of oak chairs, sq. oak
tabte, walnut and cherry chests, many fine
stands and tables, six trunks, youth beds,
many chairs &amp; rockers, marble top
sideboard, old clocks, child's items, oak wall
phone, manv beautiful antique dishes,
Heisey, carnival, colored gl., fine china,
figurines, depression, poHery, etc., victorola,
quilts, fancywork, many fine primitives,
Oriental rug, toy train, kerosene lamps, dolls,
books, many pictures and frames, mirrors,
baskets, crocks, graniteware, 4 brass and
copper keHies, ironware, hil·&amp;·miss gas
engine, line of household furniture, many
tools of all types, plus Ions of olher items.
Plan to attend for a Jg. 2 day sale.
TERMS- Cash or good check wilh I D.
AUCTIONEER- Mike Ctum &amp; John Clum,
Thornville. Ohio 1-614· 246·68S1 .
LUNCH
SALE MANAGER- Zelma Kaylor , 304.882·
2697 (call lor information)

l

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Sizes start from JOx24"

Utility Buildings
Sut!s from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x36.
Insul a ted Dog Houses

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

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 61H43·2S91
6· 15·tfc

3· 11 li e

Real Estate - General
-==========,
,-

JUST RECEIVED
A complete line of
shrubbery,
trees
and rose bushes.
See us
for
the
lowest prices in
town .

~

-·

TEAFORD(H
VIRGIL B. SR . REAlTOR ·
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

1-(614)-992-3325
NEW LISTING 2
1hou ses in Ra cine on Rt .
124 . One has 9 room s, 2
baths. good carpeting,
natural gas furna ce. 2nd
4 room s, bat h and large
lot . Both only $37,500.
COUNTRY HOME Nice loca tion near c hur
ch and post office Has 3
bedroom s,
mod er n
bath, T.P . water , ca r
pe ting , la rge eat ·m kif
chen , full basemen! and
furnac e .
BUSINESS - Car wash
that takes little time to
run . Building and land
Good chance for you tor
only $15,000.
NEWLY PAINTED In si de
and
out
Necessa ry repairs betng
made, leve l tot. 2
bedrooms, bath, porch,
nice kit chen with lot s of
wood cab inet s and
ga rage. Only $16,500 .
CLEAN ANO MODERN
- Rea l nice 8 room
!"lome wtth 2 full baths,
forma l dining, good car
peting, full base ment.
garage and 2 apts. All in
good repair $65,000

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614-992-2112

1/JY•Hll

AST&lt;11111/f

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

ASSOCIATES
Helen Teaford, Gordon
Teaford, and Sue Mur·
phy.

Housing
Headquarters

Call Bill Ward
At Wa1d's K@yboard
1·446·4372

Radiator Spe-cialist
NATHAN BIGGS
JS Yrs. E)(perience

.:1 9 tfc

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Pomeroy , Oh.
Ph.992-2174
2·26 lie

Addons 1nd remodelin1

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• backhoe
• e)t'cavating
• septic svstems
• Awater, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
•limestone

CLEANED
PRICE IS RIGHT

446-4782

Licensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992-7201

CALL COLLECT
GALLIPOLIS1 0H .
4·lt I mo.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

'~~~

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742 -3195
3· 7 tfc

• washers
• Dish washers
eRanges 1 Refrigerators
• Dryers 1 Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4 5 li e

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
st. Rt. 124 Pomeroy. oH .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992· 7121
32.:1 ftc

w·

- ltoofintlnd rutter work
-Concrete •oB.

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

-Piumbinf Jnd

eleclriCJ wort
!free Esliml ltsl

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7JI4
Pomeroy, Ohio
9 30 tf c

Dozer &amp; backhoe service, water, sewer, ponds,
foundation s ,
reclamation .

f-- - - - - - - - --1

licensed &amp; Bonde d
Phone 949·2293
or 949·2417

FRYE'SPENNZOIL
R ulland, Oh .

REESE

TRENCHING
SERVICE

HOBSTETIER REALTY
George S. Hobstter Jr.
Broker
OFFICE 742-2003

NEW

LISTING

~

Water-Sewer· E lectric
Gas Lin\- Ditches
Water Line Hook· ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .

4

bedroom frnmc home on
St . Route l:l4 ExTra
qood localion '1 en
c losed porches S1ts on
j l ol acres, qrcaf qar clen
s par Some furnrshtnq s
tn c tuded AsktnQ only
$15 .000 00
N EW liSTING - Form
- 33 acres wi th lovely 2
yr old home . The larq e
s pacious rooms tnc lud e
3 bedrooms. '1 full baths.
t r~mi ly room.
laundry ,
llvtnQ room r1nd dream
k.rtchen . 1 crtr qaraqc
lht S farm IS mostly
pasturr and located on
hardtop road Se ll1n q
pri ce 1S $69.500 00 Mor e
land 1S neqo tt ab lr
NEW LISTING ~ On 51
Route 338 in Ant1quity 2
brd room fram e fl omr
with basement
New
wt nnq and drilled well .
One car qaraqe. Won ' t
last tonq at $11,50000 .
Ca ll today
PRICE REDU CE D -·
This hou se 1S an ex tr a
qood buy!! 1 3 bedroom .
total elec tr tc. J1:1 balhs
with countr y sefti nq
Owner wants to leave
s tat e Look at th ts one
today . Makes an ex
ce ll en l starter home itt
iln affordable price of
only $18,000.00
Cheryllcmtey, Assoc .
Phone 742·3171
Ve lmn Ntcins ky , As soc.
Phone 742-3092

=======R:•:•:I:E:••:•:••=-=G:e:•:•:••=======;

Ph. 367-7560

TUES. thru SAT .
9 AM . to \ 0 P .M.
SUN . 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Phone 742-9S7S

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Tire sales &amp; repairs, gas
grocenes. We now
ha ve new American
mad e Mopeds in stock.
S39S Plus Tax
.:1 18 1 mo.

&amp;

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
• Siding
• Re modeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Y rs. experience

TOM HOSKINS

-- - - - - - 'AlliBBIBRIIH!IIlE

Ph. 949 ·'1 160 or 949·2322
4 10 li e

Card of Thanks

Service
16 YEARS EXP.
•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Custom Alarm
S t
ys emS
Racme, Ohio
247 ·3534
Free Estimates

~===~~=·1~1=·1~m~o=.P§d~.:l-~==========~~======~4~~~
Reel Eototo - Gonorol

Salem St.

3 3 ffn

3-19 li e

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

1

:

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator.

1

4

Misc . Merchandice

Mrs. Virginia Hartley and Fran.
chon Overturf have returned from
Culwnbus after spending several
days with their brother, John E,
Overturf, who has been ill.

Winners in Lhe annual Easter
picture coloring contest sponsored by The Daily Sentinel and
Big Bend merchants received
their cash prizes Saturday.
presented by David Harris of The
Sentinel's advertising deparl·
ment. First place winners
received $15: second, $10 and
third, $5. Winners are, front, I to
r, Angela Abbott. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jirruny Lee, Pomeory:
Suzanne Clay, daughter of Mr.
l!ld Mrs. Ronald Clay, Chester:
Dawn Shuler, dau~hter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lynn Shuler, Letart. fir·
st through third, respectively, in
the · fQUr through eight year
category; back, I to r, Harris,
Dina Shuler, daughter of Mr. and
Mn. Lynn Shuler, Letart, first.
arid Wendy' Fry, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Fry, Syracuse,
third, in the nine thrtll{h 12 class.
Second place winner in the older
group was Scott Hanning, son of
Mr. and lllrs. Donald Hanning,
Bradbury. Scott was W18ble to be
present for the photograph.

All STEEL
BUILDINGS

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

: ~~~~~~er
ewater
esewer
eGasLines
• Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH . 992·2478

1----------------------tI

I~=========~[:::::::::J[:::::::::Jr:=========j

: ~~~~~~es
• Dump trucks

54

- - -Yard
- ·-Solo
-- - -

Business Services

PUBLIC NOTICE
Se!l led

/

The

Ohio

c R MASH
•

•

CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and appliances ,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric. and
heating .

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

The Be rt Bod1mer family
wtsh to ex: te nd our !hank s
and apprec tallon to the
Mtdd leport Emergency
squad , Or R .R Ptckens,
Rev Mark McClung, mem
bers of th e F1rst Bapt1st
Church and our fr1ends and
net ghbors for thP. fl owers,
food . prayers. and ex
press 1on s of s ympathy
dur1nq the dea th of our
l1u s band
and
tattler
Announcements
SWEEPER and sew1nq

3

Small &amp; Large
Carpet Pieces Bound
Room Size and Area
Rugs Bound
Carpet Installation
Reasonable Rates
For more informationPH. 614-992-7848
412 ·1 mo . pd

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rt. SO East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Oeere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Paris &amp;Service
1 3· ft c

'''£i}~ater

ROOFING
All tvpes of roof work,

• No Energy Needed .
ewater Available at
sub
zero temperatures.
• Spring Developments

new or repair gutter and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
Allwork guarantee-d .
Free Estimates
Jleasonabte Prices
Call Howard
949-2263
949·216o
2 24·tf c

POMEROY, OHIO

PH. 992-2259
NEW LISTING - IN POMEROY - Two smaller
lots with a 10'x50', 1965 mobile home, equipped kit·
c hen , could be good investment. $9,000.
NEW LISTING- NEAR POMEROY - 1'1' story
remodeled home on approx. 1/ 1 acre, basement.
many features. Want $35.000.
POMEROY - This property shold be sold. LOOK
HERE - four lots, three bedrooms. basement,
fireplace, large 17'x17' living room , new dining area
and kitchen. All in good condition and all on one
floor . Steal this at $24.500.

located across from the
Shopping Plaza at
Washington Motel.
3·29·1 mo. J

J-----------'

OLDER HOME - Needs some repair but has two
large tots. Four or five bedrooms, basement, cou ld
be a real nice home for $20,500.
VACANT LAND - We have several parce ls.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - We have several.

PH. 992·9913
Rt. I, Cheshire, Oh .
St. Rt. 7
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
Open Mon.- Sat.
12 :00 p.m . to 2:30am.
Sun. 12 a . m.- 12 p.m .
Carryout Beer
Avarlable
Bands Every Fri . &amp;
Sat. Night
THIS FRI. &amp; SAT .
LONE WPLF BAND
Coming Next
Tram it

Happy Hour
Mon.- Thurs .
4 : 00·6: oo p.m .
Mon . - Keg Ni~ht
Tues. - Ladies Night
Weds. - Gent. Night
Thurs.- Pool Tourn.
3·24-tfc

CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling.

992-6191
949· 2660
992-5692
992-2259

.

,

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
·AND EVERYTHING IN BElWEEN
PH. ft2-3S43 or ft2-23..

R t ck
Pearson. Ex ·
pe r1en ced AUCTIONEER .
E s tat~ ·s.
anttQues, farm,
hou sfl llold Licensed Ohto
WV Buying a ntiQues. l04 ·
773 5785, 773 9185
L E Neal Auctioneer Ser ·
vt c e
Estate Farm
House ho ld Misc . We sell iP
Ltcensed &amp; bonded Otlto &amp;
WVa 367 7101
Au c tt on e\lery Fri . night at
the Hartf ord Com munity
Center Truckloads of new
mercha ndt se every week .
Cons tgm ents of new and
used merchandise always
we l come .
Richard
Reyno lds A u ct t on~r . 175·
3069
Auc tt on at Mason Fire
Depar tm en t , Mason
W.VA .. Wed . 7 p.m . There
will be new tents, Ree se
!railer httches and other
new merchandise . Auc
ltoneer Rtck Pearson.
9

wanted to B_ur

WANT TO BUY Old fur
niture and AntiQUeS Of all
kinds, ca ll Kenneth Swain,
446·3159 an d 151&gt;· t967 in the
evenings .
CASH PAID for Clean, late
mode l used cars. Smith
Butck PontJac, Gallipolis.
Oh io Ca ll 4.46·1282
Buvtng
Go ld,
Silver ,
Platinum , old coins, s.crap
rtngs &amp; silverware. Dail y
quotes available Also
co in s &amp; coin supplies for
sale
Spr tng
Valley
Tradi ng , Spring Valley
Plaza, .:146·8025 or 4.46 8016
We pay cas h for late mOdel
c lean used cars
Frenchtown Car Co .
8 111 Gene Johnson,
446·0069 .

25 to 50 H P ou tboard motor .
Call151&gt;·6640.

Turk ey Hunt er s We have
moulh ca ll s, s la te bo x
calls. CC'Imo gear &amp; decoys
•n stock . Spro ng Va ll ey
Tradt ng Co., Sp r ing Va lle y

Lots already set up for
mobile hom e 1n K ye-r Cr~k
Otrstricf . Ca ll446· U62.

No Hunttng or trespasstnQ
on ttl(' Edse l Hugh es Farm ,
Lu cas Lane . Point
Pleasant

BEDS IRON , BRASS. old
furniture. gold , silver
dollars. wood tee boxes,
stone 1ars. a ntiques, etc.,
Comp le te
households
Wnte · M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh Or992·77W.

4

ANY PERSO N who ha s
i'lnythtng to g1ve away and
does no! offer or a tt empt to
offer any other thtng for
sil le may place an ad 1n fh1 S
col umn . The re w ill be no
charge ro tfl c adver i1Scr .
Cat and k11tens. Ca ll 446
8319

cond Ca ll446 1865
3 k1ttcns to g1ve away Call
446 7266 or
446 7620
i'lnytime
Ta n w wh1te &amp; black pup,
has c hatn, app rox
6
mos old 1n area of 141 off
Portsmouth Rd .:146 9579

Gold. silver, sterling ,
jewe lry , rtngs, old coins &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport 991 ·
3476
OLD FURNITURE . beds.
tron, br-ass, or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards of all types
1 ables. round or square.
Wood ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases Will buy
com plete household . Gold,
si lver, old money, pocket
watches, chains, rinQs, and
etc . Indian Arttfacts of a11 1
types Also buying baseball ·
cards. Osby Martin 992·
6370.
WANT tobacco leases for
Mason Countv onlv. Any
amounts up to and in ·
eluding 12,500 pounds. Will
pay S.12 per pound for
leases. Phone 304·937·2S89.

Ma le Cockapoo. 2 months
old Ca ll 446 8361

hom e, 30.:1 458 1593

Lost and Found
Sma ll black dog, fema le,
bobtail ed, part dasc hund ,
Apple Grove area . Phone
304·576 2181.
Watch 1n little league fi e ld
Harmon Park . Ca ll lden·
tify and pay for ad . Phone
304 675 S751 .
Yard Sale
4 Family Yard Sa le 2025
Chatham t..ve. &amp; 2018 112
Eastern Ave , Gallipolis.
Designe r jea ns, material.
brand
nam e
clothes,
glassware, appliances. 10·?
Tue . &amp; Wed .

I~::=~~~~~~~=d~~~~~~~~~~~ 1Thurs.
Family
Yard
Sale
Wed . &amp;
10·7.
Mapl
e console,

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

Public 5ale
&amp; Auction

An tt que oak fu r nttur e .
round tab les, bookcases,
des.ks, dressers, chests, ice
boxes. etc. Ca ll .446·375' .

JIM LUCAS
Ph. 742·2753
4·9·1 mo.
:~~~~~=~~~~t~~~~~~~~~~ ca
NtCC
t Half
LOvtng
grownlong
992 3489
hatred
.
l
CHERRY TREE
FOUR ktftens. to good
·CANDLELIGHT INN
Mlt&gt;UATURE
GOLF COURSE
Ravenswood, W. Va .
Now Open Wee~ ends
tlo4 P.M.
weather Permitting

a

F1sh 1ng Lt censC' on sa le
Co me and see our new ship
ment of 198 2 F1 s 1ng Rods,
Reel s, &amp; Lures Sprtng
Va ll ey Trading Co ., Spring
Valley Plaza . 446 8015 .

,-----------

608-E. MAIN

Yard Sa le, Apnl 17 to May
1, from 9 t ill 0, 1st house on
right on Broad Run Road
!rom Sporn Plant . clothes,
chain saw, e lectric motors.
art objects, artificial
flowers, d1sfled, lawn
mower , harlequin books,
kntck knacks .

Early An tique country fur
nrture , c upboards, a ll kind s
chests ,
desk.s .
of
5toneware , e tc. Call 367
0138

Lougne chatr Amertca
and 1 pc
1~~::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~
Early
n
The Automatic
H. l, WRITE SEl l.v•n
groom s u•t e, Good
1

2205
Pleasant
Lincoln Ave. Point

ma chtne repa1r. pa rt s. and
supplte s
P1 ck up and
delivery , Dav1s Va cuum
Cl eaner . one hall mde up
GC'orq e s Cree k Rd
Call
446 0294

~=======1=·7=·=1=11=c~~=======8:1:0:II:c~~ Plaza, 4.:16 8025
CARPET
BINDING
SERVICE

Friday, Apnt 30, 9 ttJI 0,
Mens, womens, c hlldrens
clothing, Misc . tovs. tires.

AM · FM
radto · record
player, ladies new 3 spd.
bike, entrance door , elect.
dyer , lots baby items. 6th
house on O.J. White Rd.
Yard Sale Wed. 9 to 5. 16Q
St ., New Haven .
Jeans, tops, dresses , shoes,
records, books, ni c nacs &amp;.
tupperware .
Yard Sale · April 26·May L
10·6, Cotton Holley residen·
ce, Jerry's Run Road . Free
Items .

EftQJIB i'dllll

Sen:ltes
11

H~lp Wa~t~

Want to get out of the
House? Sell Avon and
mr1ke good SSS. Meet frien ·
dly p(&gt;()ple . Cail446 3358.
Ma1ntaincnce Mechanic
mu s t have experience as a
lead mec hani c in one of the
tndustnal trades. Apply for
pos ttt on at Ohio JOb Ser
vtce. 45 Ol1ve St, GallipoliS
on Apnl 28, 29 &amp; 30th, from
8· 30AM to 4'00PM. Star
tinq rate S6.35 per hr
AVON Be a succes~ . Sell
Avon where you work or
live . Call742·2755 or collect
614 698·71tl .
Full or part time R.N. or
LPN lor 3 to t1 shill. C~IJ
Nancy VanMeter . 992·66&lt;N.
WELCOME ·WAGON HAS
JOB YOUR LOOKING
FOR . I mmediafe positions
avallable . We offer
something different from
the 9 to S routin&lt;!. You work
your own hours. vou meet
new people, do something
really worth while and eren
at same time. Don't miss
this opportunity. FrPO
training• class May Jrd.,
4th, &amp; 5th in Charleston. 1n·
teres I? Call Friday 304·Jol3·
6202 or write Nancy Kelley,
76
Abnev
Circle,
Charleston, WVA 2531~ .
Equal Opportunity Em·
player .

�27 1982

Sentinel
11

Help wanted

They'll Do It Every Time

RN ' S OR LPN 'S RN ' or
L PN 'S for II to 7 Sh tft at
Sc eni c Hills Nur stn g Ce n
ter Call 446 7150 bew tccn

BA M 8. 4 30 PM
11

St!uat10n s Wanted

1-/JIN'(;.IlV'
#AL , QV

1M STAI&lt;V€11! CANT
~ GI'T AI€ A HUNK OF

ASTRICT
OIET,
I'L£40!:

I:M FIIMtSHfP!!

APARTMENTS
bedroom , r ent starts at
$152 per month . 2 bedroom
starts at $188 per month .
Spec•al rates for Senior
Ca ll 446 ·2745 .
Ci ti ze ns
Jackson t;:s t ates

"""'EO

OLICGHIA .
V6T'S ~40SPrT,.._I. ,

""""""'-'"""'" ·G~~~~~
JOWA

.....-4
1 bedroom furni shed ap t .
992·543-4 . 992·5914 or 304·882

ANI?-»tc

GIIYWHOS
NOr OHA
PtET

1nsurance

2566

SANDY ANO BEA VER In
su ra nce co has ofl er eo
&lt;;(' r VICE'S fo r ftre .nsur ance
coverage 1n Ga ll i a Count y
l or
al most n centur y
F nrm . hom e and pe rso nal
pro pert y cover ages ar c
ova tl abl e 10 m ee t tn
d 1v1dua l needs
Con tact
J88 8?m
49e ye r,
R"1o
rly ne Wede

Is

K~1ra t c the u lt tm a te .n sell
de fence all pr •va te lessons.
Men, wom en, &amp; c htldre n
lns tr uc t• on tnr u bla ck bell
A l so a vn d a b le K a r a t e
untf orm s puchtng and
ktdunq ba gs, an d pr otec
live eQu•pmen t
Jer ry
L owe r y
&amp;
Assoc •ate s
Ka r at e
S t udto ,
14 3
Bu r lt ngton Rd . Jack son ,
Oh Ca ll 786 3074

J1

Homes for Sa l e

J b~ U roo m house , Gal l!poh-:,
Ferr y 100 X 200 If lot
$7,000 down , tak e ove r Va
toa n a t 81~ per ce nt Ph one

304 67 5 2583 or 675 61 31
HALF m il e out Mtll stone
Rd , 5 room s. balh ) 1 1
acr E'S. call aft er 6 p m 304

576 2771
32

17

M 1sce 11 aneou s

18

Mobi l e Homes
for Sa l e

TRIS T ATE

8F t sl tde tn camper slee ps
4 $950 175 Honda Irat i b tke
1973 $450 Ru sse ll Younq ,
West Co lumbta . W Va

MOBIL E

HOME S Ga llipol is Pri ce
r edu ced , u sed
mo btl e
nam es CAL L 446 7572

CLEAN USED MO~ILE
H O M ES
KE SSE L 'S

Wa nted to Do

ThC' Sdk House { custom
sd k flowe r s)
Comp le te
br •da l l tn e. w edd 1ngs. an d
all OCC aStOns Call 367 7566

Q U AL IT Y

M O BI LE

HOME SA LE S, 4 Ml
WE ST, GA LLIPOLI S, RT

L aw n M ow tng Sen ve , no
ya rd to btg or sm all , house
pa 1nt .ng &amp; r ooft nq , a nd
ltg ht ha ulin g Ca l l 446 3159
c'l ft er 6PM 1 286 57 40
Wdl car e tor eld erl y mr~ n
or wom an on our l arm ,
pr tvc'lle roo m . $700 per m o
Cal l446 8 163

77 , 14 x70 Vt llage Park
custom bu ilt , 3 bdr ex tr a
,nsul at ton, po r c h, carport
Movt ng out of state Ca ll

245 92 16

Ca rpen ter wo rk . r em odl tn q
or r epr11rs. ce tl tn g Id e and
w a ll Pr1 ne ltn q A l so pa tn
t.n g 99 '2 27 59

F or sa l e 1965 Pren ston
tr ntler . dou bl e fr a m ed , 3
bd r , new carpel &amp; cur
ta tns, stove &amp; r efrt ger a tor ,
k•l chen tabl e &amp; chatr s. 2
se ts of un de rptnn tng Ca ll
after 5PM &amp; ask lor K .m .

379 2284
Pa1n l tnQ .ntcrtor and ex
l er to r . L M John son , 30 4

675 I 128
Ya r ds. m ow ed and lr• m
m ed. r easonabl e r at es .
relt abl c
Ph one 304 67 5
1804.

12 .. 60 lr a der . exce ll ent
con dd ton Ca ll 446 1552
Fu r ntshed , a tr cond ttt oned .
und erptnn1n g, set up on lot
.n Mtdd leport
E lcona l'2x65 Mobile hom e
lor sal e F urnt shed in good
cond on co unt y road I 669
5092

21

Bu stness
Opportunr ty

C t g ar c tt e
Vend .n g
Bus• ness Call 304 773 565 1
22

REFIN A NCE or pur chase
your home 30 year ft xed
r at e W Va &amp; Ohro . L eader
M orlqa qe 77 E Slate St ,

A th r ns, Oh 592 305 I
13

1971
R1 TZ Cr a ll mob il e
hom e 3 bd .r oom atr cond ,
tot al natural ga s front ktt
c hen. part 1a tly furn ished .

HOME

MOBIL E HOM ES MO VED
L 1ce nsed &amp; tnsured Call
304 57 6 ?7 11
F or sa le 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
tr a il er s. turn1 shed, W1lh
o• r Call 30 4 77 3 5651

Pro tess ron a l
Services

C&amp; L Bookkeeptng
Bookeep tnq &amp; la x ser v tce
tor alllypes of bu stn esses
Carol Nea l 446 3862
Wtn ds llt el d br oken ? Call
South er n Glass Insur ance
c lat ms we l com e
Fr ee
mob ile scr vtce av o da ble
Call446 1011

1981 ALL E LECTR IC 12'
WID E,
2
BEOROOM

Hom es for Sa l e

1972 Concord Mobil e H om e,
12x65 . Call 446 70 15 alfer
5 · 30p m
Beauttful brr ck &amp; fram e, 3
bedroom nome w / scent c
v•e w .
wo o d burntng
lirepla cP. forma l din tng,
cen tr a l air w / hea t pu mp.
Lan sc aped, 1 acr e lot
w!fen ce d rn ba ck yard ,
$45 ,900 . ll 0 o ftnan c ing ,
small down pay m ent Call
446 3/66.

1969 R tChard son , good con
d .t. on $3,500 . Phon e 304

1972
s c nu lt z.
thr ee
bedr oom ga s heat , par
! tally lurn1 shed , 304 67 5

1973 Grandvil le 14 X 70, 3
bedr oom mobil e Hom e wi ll
se ll furnt shed or un
furn tshed mu st be moved

Phone 304-882 2820
33

Farms for Sale

Farm 76 ac res
Good
house, barn, work shop ,
smnlt c ht ck en house I m i le
west of Langsvtlte on Sr

35

~ L~ts &amp; Acre~~e _

Improved fl at lots 1 1!4
ac r e $5,000 . 3 3/4 ac r es

379·1196.

close to Holzer C1 ly Schoo l

TWO acre lo ts-150 fl . road

c ity sc hool s . Ca ll 256-6060

Ci t y schoo l drstrict Will
finance at 10% down. Ca ll

frontage,

ctly

water,

be hind 84 Lumbe r , ca ll 304·
675-6873, 675·3618.
SEV EN acres, Greer Rd ..

or 446-4006 .

Rentals
For sa te 6 rm . &amp; bath house
with 6 acres of ground.
Located 5 mites from town .

Asking $24,900.
7504.

Call 446·

5 rms . &amp; bath , gas fur ·
nanc e, storm windows on
554 in BidwelL Oh $15,500.
Call 446-1339 or 388-9:!&gt;2:

1 floor, full basement, cen·
tral heat and air, full carpet. ca rport, 3 acres in Mid·

dleport. 927 Brownelle,
3935:

992-

Furni shed 3 room cott age
in town one l ady or marri ed
couple. Ca ll 446· 2543 .

TWO bedr oom apartm ent,
tn Hender so n, phone 304

good cond .. $14 ,900 . Ca ll

Houses for Rent

Furnished apt. 1 bdr ..
adults, S200, electric, water
paid .

Call

.t-46-4416 after

7PM.
Clipper Mill 3 bdr., S300
mo., $150 dep. Call :U6· 1780,
Small modern country
home. Special rate for
seniors, Write P .O. Box 10,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631.

0

45

Furnished Rooms

air . Ca ll 304·67 5·5104 or 675 ·
5386.

light housek eeping
Park Central Hotel.

SLEEPING

4 bedroom , central air and
heat, city water, fir ep l ace,
unfurntshed except
kit ·
chen . SJOO month plu s
utilltte s
Refere nce a nd
depostf
required .
In
Racine 949·2293 .

ROOMS a nd
apt .,

__ ~m_p ~~e_!Tl!'!_fs_
j

46 ___S.e_a_ce

t~r

Rent_

Mobi le hom e spa ce for
rent , private lot in Cen ·
tenary . Ca ll 446 4053 .

Ni ce two·bd .room home on
Spnng Ave , Pomeroy
Stove and r efrig era tor fur ·
nished, hook ·up tor washer
and drye r . Back yard .
Storm windows, we ll in
sulated , for ced air furna ce.
Adu ll s preferred, no pe ts.
S ecur~ t y deposit required

COU NTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Rout e 33, North of
Pomer oy La r ge lot s. Ca ll

992 7479
Large trailer lots tor r ent
in Middleport. Ca ll 992 2101
or 992 2319 alter 5PM

Phone 99 1 5292.
Furnished 4 r oom hou se f or
r ent tn Ra c tne 949·2619

PASTURe for rent Ph one

304 675 5110 .

Trai ler 1n Syracuse, Apart
mfn l
and
hou s e
in
Pomeroy, house rn Letar t
Falls, Apar t ment 1n N ew
Haven and M idd lepor t 992

47

.
..,.~ ~ I
I===========:;==~========~

7511

61, Pliny WV 25 158 Phone
304 931 ·2589 .

Extra niCe cou ntry nome
c arpe t ed · natural
ga s 2
bath 's, no children no pe t s.
Loca ted at Snowvi lle . 698

$750 . Ca ll after 3PM 145·
9533.

For sale 7 ft . pool table and
prng pong table wit h ace.,

304·675·3540.

10 H P 36' cut lawn

~ab~~~r~~~~~·. ~~~~~n~i9~~

~O!_~~!.f'_T!~~!. -

59 -·For Sa te : H ard br ick , stee l
posts(-4) 6 in., st ee l ' I '
Joists, lumbe r ·used, used
doors-exterior · interior , tri ·
m, 2 mantels·oak, 3 pr.
sl iding oak doors with
guide walls , so lid oak an·
tique st airs, spindl e and
r ails. 992-6254 afte r 5 or
week ·ends.

30 ' Gt. self cl ea ning oven ,
GE f ros l · fr ee r ef rigerator
Both white, used on l y 2
month s, ex c . cond . Ca ll446·
5131, ex t . 29 Evening 446 ·

827 1
Golf c lub s. you t h model.
e)(ce ll en t condition wi th
bag &amp; c art, $35 Ca ll 446·

A tot of different parts tor
350 or 400 engines. A l so par·
ts for 74 Impal a . inter ior
perfect . 742 ·3063.

3886
Small 2 cu shion sofa ,
green, orang e, &amp; gold floral
Herculon, ex c . cond , Sl 50.

1979 Jeep H oncho J 10
23, 000 mil es . 360 high , low
range, ouadrac tr ac, rust
proofed, exc. cond . $5,500 .

Ca ll 367 ·7759
Storm wrndow s, doors, wtn·
dows, various srzes ·Chea p ·
c lcthing stze 10·12, mi sc .
llems
Ca ll
446 · 7109
any tim e.
Gold sof a 92 inches long,
smaller c ouch green print
Both tn good cond . 2 mat ·
chtng swivet c ha1 r s, good
cond . Call 4.46 0990 .

51

Sof a, chair , rbcker , ot·
tama n, 3 tables, $500 . Sof a,
chair and loveseal, $275 .
Sofas and cha rrs priced

3090.
Rac1ne Ni ce 2 bd .room,
comp letely !urn ., AC , $260.
mon th Deposit req G len

B•ssell . 949 280 1 or 949·2860.
T HR EE bedroom home,
$250
month, 304675 343 1
eve ntn gs, 304·675 ·3030 day s.
Love l y srx r oom cot t age, no
ch tldren , $225 per month
One
mon th
securi t y
depos1 t Apply 1n person
Friday or Sat urd ay, May 1,
79 J•m Htll Road, H en·
derson, WV .

from $285 . to $795 Tab le s,

Daytime 992·3768 Ask for
Brtl or Barb Mill er .

BABY furntture, phone 304

675 121 0.

- ~u_ ilding su.ppl~es

61

S20.and $25.. 10 gun

Gun

Ca ll245·5 121.

ca btnets, $350 .. din et te
cha trs $20 . and S25. Gas or
elec tr.. c ranges, $295 . Or·
thoped ic super firm , $95,

2 bd .r oom hou se trail er .
You pay utiliti es • un
fu rnished
except table,
chairs and cook · stove . $200.
per month . $100. deposi t.

367 0288.

446·0322

60 x12 furnt sll ed, adults
only , Flatwoods, sm a ll gar·
den plot avai l able 992 5834
after 5 p.m

Upright freezer li ke new
$225, wringer washer $65,
36' Whrrlpoot gas range $95,
32' elect ri c range 565,
Whirlpool dry er $95, Sears

gas dry er Sl25. couc h $35·3

TWO
bedroom,
un ·
furnr shed . One bedroom ef ·
ft c ien cy . 3,04·675 ·2722

to choose from, over stut ·
fed chair $25, lov e sea t $25,
black and w hite TV $65.
Sk aggs U sed Appli ances,

bedroom

446·7398.

Ashton·

Up land Road, Sl50 . month ,
plu s deposit and ut il1tie s.
Phone 304 ·675·4088.

Whirlpool auto. washer,
rea l nice, SilO . GE dry er,
exc cond ., S9 0. Ca ll 446·

8181

Mobile Home, 2 bedroom ,
furni shed, all electric ,
washer,dryer hookup, $175.
monthl y plu s e lectricity .

304-576·2441 .

1976 Plymouth Vo lare.
door ,

S1.300.

Fair

2

cond .

on trad e. 991·5170.

mak es and models und er

S200. So ld throu g h loca l
governm ent sa tes. Call 1·

714·569·0241 ex t. 1855 tor
di r ec tory on how to pur·
ch ase.

1947 FORD Coupe, good
r es tor abl e condition, pri ce
negot tab le, 304·675·2207

PONTI AC

Delu xe

4 row corn

Gravely rrd tng trac tor , 17
HP , 2 cy lind er
with
hydraulic
li ft , 50 inc h
mowe r and dozer blad e.

Pets for Sa le

Chow
puppies ,
CFA
Hrm a la ya n , P ers •an and
Sia m ese ktttens . Cal l 446·
3844 afte r 4 p .m

1979 Pontiac Bonneville
Stationwag e n ,
P S,PS,
Power seats, AC, below
loan va lue. Ph one 304·675·

2499.

HILLCR ES T

1972 Old s Oe ll a 88 , 350,
S600 . Phone304-576 2181
1975 Chevro let Nova, 6
cylinder, good conditione d .

Da tsun ,

280Z

1977.

E x·

ce ll ent Conditton Ca ll 304·

list price i s $5750. Outdoor
Equipment Sa les, Jet . Rts .

675· 1183 .
V o lk swa gen Beetl e 1969
S4.50. engine needs work .

Phone 304-675 ·3182 .

KENNEL

2089 .

"

-

-- -

74 __ _ ~~t~r~Y5t~s.

.

1980 Honda CR 250, exc.
cond . S1, 100. Ca ll 388-8659.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boa rding and groom in g.
AKC
Gordon
se tt e r s,
Engli sh Cocker Spani els .

Wa nted to buy good used
adjustab le pi ck up diSC .

Ca ll446 ·4053.

Ca ll 388·9790.
For Sale 147 Cub Cadotte
&amp;

POODLE GROOM ING
Ca ll Jud y Tay lor a t 367·
7220.

Internat ional
tractor
mower . Ca ll 36~7560 .
TRACTOR,

Purebred Beag le 4 m os.
old . Color balck. white &amp;
tan . S75 for both or wi ll

trade . Call 367-0544 bet·
ween 3 8. 6 PM .

r eg istered . No Checks, 304·

guaranteed. Ca ll 256· 1207.

895 -3958.

pups,

~

John

1977 Honda Gold Wing-1 000,
full

dress,

low

mileage.

Deer e

1980 650 Honda custom,
4.700 actual miles, exc.

1010 gas a. brus h hog . Call
304-675 1121. Aller 5 :00, 304·
675· 1043.

cond . Must se ll $795. Call
446·0972.

Heav y duty

1979 RM 400 Suzuki dirt

63

AKC

1980, 150, on or oil, Honda
bike with helmet, SBOO. Ca ll
256·6640 or «6-2094.

Ca ll 446-0648 after SPM.

tractor disc

S600. Phone 304-675-4373.

St. Berna rd puppies AKC.
$75 .00 . 985·3867 .
POODLE

1

bike, new parts, 304-7735170.

Livestock
Reg.

Polled

Hereford

bulls. 18 mo . old for sale .
Ca ll 446· 2109.
Horse's and colts, farm
wagon, 8 wk . old Walker
Pups .. can be registered .

~r~h~r-S~e~\e~, ~8~ ~~~-

1976 Kawasaki 750, 304-6752183.

1975 Honda CB , 200 T, UOO .

75

- - - ~~~v~r.!~fL __ _

ment and supplies, also

1972 Monarck 15 fl .
fiberglass bass boat, 73-70
'H . P. Chrysler Motor. foot
Hoof Hollow. 614-698-3290.
control trolling motor, live
well, bilge pump, tots of exPALAMI NO mare, 7 years ·tras, 52,500. Phone 304-773·
old, $500. 1 Dapple Gray 5521.
~ny, $100. 30073-5092,
16 'h loot dC~p V, runabout
Twa registered horses. 30-t· with 30 lf.P, Mercury
Motor and trailer, make of·
576·2405.
fer PhOne 304-675·-1631 ,

Deluxe turn . apart., cent.

riding lessons and trail
rides and horse training.

furnished . adults only, no
pets, ref . a. dep. req . Call

446-0957 ,

completely

turn ., all electric, 3 r , &amp;
large porch. 4.58 Second
Ave ,, Gallipolis. 1 or 2
adults only, S200 per mo,,
plus security deposit. Call
«6·2236 or 446·2581.

sso

2 bdr. apt . at
112 J ro,
Ave, Gallipolis. Adults
only, no pets , Call 446· 1163.

Goats, 3 baby American
' Alpine bucks. Phone 614·
&lt;158· 1825.
•'

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

~~~-:: ~~&amp;'G?~~~~'

Oualltv Autobooy &amp; Paint
work . •Profesilonal custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto. Trim Center, ""'·1968.

Round bales of hay tb; s.a le.
Call 446· -4036 or446·6566.

AfJD Wl1f'RE' ~E:'s c;.v'~""''

· Fm\\1~ l:l AIHBOCN! l'LL-

pe t Ctean tng featured by
H aff elt Brosthers Custom
Carpe ts. Free es t•m at es.

.. ,BWIJS6

WIT\1 M&amp; ...

Crea ti ve wood
decks ,
pressurrzed pine, cedar &amp;
redwood . Free estimate .

Ca ll 388 9762

ANN IE

- A FEDERAL
MARGHAL7

Spec 1al March and Apri l
only . Gene's Deep Steam
Clean in g. Scotch Gau rd
Free estimate . 992·6309

SIT
001'111,

t:I!I'J7"' I Y~6

OH, NOJ'M NOT ,..

WOMAN!.'

RON'S Televisi on Ser v i ce .
Spec ial izing i n Ze nith and
Motoro l a, Quazar , and
hou se ca ll s. Phone 576 2398
or 446·2454

•. NOW, MY NAME IGGAMUEL PLOVER,
YOU, OEilll OF THE GTATE AGR.i·

! CUllURAL COLLEGE. MY 100R

GiR ,1

,_,. .......-OF MR, OATEG' FARM WAG AH
ASTON/511/Nf!J E'IPERIEHCE!

F &amp; K Tr ee· Tr imming,
stump removal. 675· 133 I.

RINGLES'S SERV ICE e• ·
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter ,
e 1ect r1 c ian .
ge n era l repa•rs
and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·

7088 or 675-4560 .

ALLEYOOP
BY RIGHTS, I OUGHTA HANG

water wells . Commercia l
and Dom esti c. Test holes.
Pumps Sa les and Service .

YOU OU1' T'Din' FOR .U.YIN'
SUCH A. LOW·POWN DIRn'
TRICK ON US!

304·895 3801.
ADVA N CEO

WHY, WE THOUGHT YOU
WERE DEAD WH8N WE
SAW THAT HIDE .lUST
U.YIN' THERE WITH
TN' SPE""'
H

•

WELL, WHY DIDN'T
TELL Mil THAT IN
TH' FIRST PLA.CE?!!

••••

Seam less

G utt er · Ooor s. Oft errn g
co ntinu ou s
gu tt e ring ,
seamless siding, rooftng,
garage
doors ,
tre e
estimates, 614·698·8205.
STARK'S tree and lawn
se rvi ce, fr ee tertitrzer wrth
annua l care,
insured .

Phone 304 576 ·20 10 .
GASOLINE ALLEY

ca rpentr y, r ootin g , plum ·
bing, concrete wor k . 304·

[don't think theLJ'II

~er

675 ·2440 .
82

be real I~

.,_---._ friends!

Plumbing
&amp; _H ~a.tir:tg

Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477
__ E ~ c a~a tin_g _
9 :30

WHY SO SUSPI ·

MEANW/1/LE .. ,

CIOUS, BILL? HE

E lectrica I
. ~ ~efr ! g ~r at~on

PfP61VE YOU

ONE 1111/WKEP
7110U$11NP

SEW IN G M ac hine repairs ,
se rvi ce. Authorized Singer
Sa les &amp; · Se rvi ce Sharpen
Scissors. Fabr~c Shop,

tMALWAYS
Pi&lt;'OMPT

WHEN IT

PtJtt/IK'S'

t1/17N'7 HE~

Pomeroy . 992 ·2284.

COMES TO

BUSINESS/

General

H _a~ling

JONES BOY S WATER
SER VICE . Ca ll 367· 747 1 o r
367-0591

304·675·5868 be tween 1 PM
and 5 P . M . Lawn m ower
·

Will do general hauling ,
gravel , ltmestone, sand
and fill dirt . 304·882 -2867 .

PEANUTS

~·- ~· ~~p~ir

Mpbile Home Serivce
Roofing painting, blocking,

&amp; leveling. Escort Service.
Call245·9514 after 5PM. ·

_Uphotst_ery

TRISTATE
...&lt;
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
"
1163 Sec. Ave ,, Gallipolis.
«6·7833 or 446·1833,

'

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt . ''
l Box ]24, PI , Pl&amp;asant, 304·

67S-~r54 ,

Comfort Jack re refuses a
date w nh an old htgh

sc hool

tr~end .

1 0 :00 0
CII
Things

(AI
CD Shape

of

Cil OJ (l2J Hart to Hart
Two women w ho m odeled
furs w1th Jennifer are mur-

dered . (A) (60 min I [C losed
Captioned[
(jj) News
1 0 :30 I]) Sing out America
Cil TBS Evening News
(]) Firing line
(jj) Hitchcock
11 :00 0 11) Cil Q (() ®l OJ (l2J
Nashville RFD

Sorvino. (60 m1n .)
I]) Another Ute
Cil All In the Family
Cil Benny Hill Show
0 (]) Alice T om my ·s
friend, the htgh school basketbaU star , falls for Alice .
(AI
(]) Captioned ABC News
® MOVIE: ' The Law'
Ill (J2) Nightline
12 :00 Cil Burns &amp; Allen
11) MOVIE: 'Battle of the
Commandos'
11) Nlghtline
0
Cil
WKRP
in
Cincinnati
Jennifer ac cepts a date with Herb. (A)
(]) PBS Late Night
Ill (J2) Fantasy Island A
would-be attorney finds he
must defend himself and a
construction worker desires to romance two of
the world's most beautiful
women . (R) (60 min .\
12:30 0 Cil (J) Late Night with
David Letterman David is
joined by photographer Josef Karsh and Robert Klein .
(60min.)
(I) Jock Benny Show
Gl MOVIE: 'Laot Married
Couple In America'
(I) Fentaoy loland

lf you need your trash
hauled away, ca ll HC~rper

.- - .. -· ...

Cil OJ (l2J Too Close for

Johnny IS joined by Paul

limit. 992 5275or742 2153 .

17

(]) On l ocation · Don
Rickles and hi s Wise
Guys T he m aster of tn su lt
comedy and ad -lib lrnes up
a host ol fun ny wr se guys
Gues t starnng Wayland
Flowers
and
Madame.
Bruce Baum and Jackte
Wakefield .

(J) News/Sports/Weather
11 :30 0 11) (J) Tonight Show

Limes tone hau led tractor
and tratler 25 to 35 ton

,

., I

''

•'
- ' - - --7--

~
'
- - ·-

. ,.

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

I

'

~

I I I J
I RAPTYNj

rx
~ CRA LIG+.,.--,
[ J rJ _ I I
1

1

AN ART ICL E O F
CLOTHI NG A 6 ENTLE MA N ,V\ IISHT HAVE
A ROUND THE ARM ,
Now arrange the C•rcl ed le t1 ers t()
form the surpr tse ans wer as sug
ge sted lly H1 e &lt;lbove ca r10on

"0-[ I I J-r In"

Answerhere .

!An swers lomonv.,,
Jumble s HOU SE

Ye s1erd ay s
1

An swer

EATEN

GARI SH

ACHI NG

What one mouse scud to HH' Jlhe r as
the trap be tng ba1 ted - CH EES E IT

~11· '·tJW

-----

--

BRIDGE

For It

Gl MOVIE: ' Ruckus'

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

.,

0 11) You Asked
Cil Anoth e r life

Cil

Need som ethtng naul ed
away or so methin g mov ed ?

I~

[)

- - - - -- - -- -- - -

News

New-a

BARNEY

repa ir ed .

G()OI?/ I'!? lii&lt;E
ZAFER' CALLED
TO E!E THE
RIGHT AFTER
FIRST TO EII?EAI&lt;
YOUR INVITATHE NEWS! I
TION! HE WAS
lM811t!NG SO,
RI?EPZAFBC
1 COUlPN'T MAKE· ANI? l'M HERE
TO I&lt;'ETURN
HEAI75 OR TAILS
OF HIS CONVEI&lt;' ·
YOUR 'LOAN'/
51\TION !

Electrician
li ce nsed
ma ster ,
lowes t
rates
around Phon e 304 895 3826.
85

MacNei l-lehrer

1975

WINNIE

~ :·

name, address, zip code and mak e chec ks payabl e lo N ew spa perboo ks

(jj)

Saudi Arabia ·sau d•
Arab1a.
The
Km gdom ·
Frrst of tht s 3 part s Th1 s
senes chron tcles the hi story of the country through
the re1gn of K1ng Fat sal tn

Lawrence Side ns tri cker
Ba ck hoe Se r vice . Ca ll 675·

--1

(])

(J) Major l eague Base ball: Pittsburgh at Atlanta
Cil Q Cil Family Feud
ffi Laverne and Shirley
([) Bus iness Report
@ Richard Simmons
(jj)
MOVIE :
' Danger
lights '
Ol
(]%1
Entertainment
Tonight
8 :00 0 11) CD Bret Maverick
A band of renegade Confederates allempt to rob
Maverrt: k of gold from the
U S Mint. (60 m1n J
(I) National Geographic
Special
GJ MOVIE : 'Smokey
Bites the Du st'
Cil El (l2J Happy Days
Joanre and Chacht play
mat chmaker wtth an un·
lik ely couple (AI [Closed
Capt toned]
O ®® O .E.D.
(]) Saudi Arabia Saud•
A rabta.
The
Krngd om ·
Ftrst of tht s 3 pan s Th rs
se ne s chrontcles th e ht s
tory of the co untry through
the rergn of Ktn g Fa1sal tn
1975 .
8 :30 Cil OJ (i2J Laverne a nd
Shirley l enny and Squtggy
try to get Joe y Hea th ert on
to read one of thetr sc rtpt s
(A) !Cl o sed CaptiOned)
9 :00 0 11) CD Flamingo Road
M 1chael tell s Constance
who her real mOther ts and
Constance confront s the
hos pttaltzcd Lut e-M ae (6 0
m rn)
(I) 700 Club
I])
I!)
(ll1
Three's
Company Jack and Janet
m tstake a p sychJa tnst for
an esc aped pat1ent {RJ
[Closed Captioned[
Q Cil ® MOVIE: .The
Jayne Mansfield Story'
(I) American Playhouse
"Pnvate Contemmenr .· Tht s
ongmal sc reenplay drama tizes a young sold•er 's la st
family reun1on before betng
sent to frght 1n World War
II (90 m1n ) 1Closed Captioned]

Cor . Fourth and Prne

84

Happy Day s

®

Gallipolis Di ve r si fied Con ·
st Co. Custom doz er &amp;
ba c khoe work . Special
farm rates Call us for fr ee
estimates. 4~ · 4440 .

DRY

,CLEAN_(~

Jumble Book N o . 20. conla inmg 1 10 pu.ul e~ ·~ ava1lahl \l l or S 1 95 p os l paid
!rom Jumble, d o tf"l;s newspaper. Be- 34 . N orwood N J 0/648 Include yo ur

®l

CARTER ' S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING

I

I.

. ... DID YOU .JUST Sf&gt;..Y
TUN!&lt;; AND HI S MEN
WERE INS IDE
....-- - .
OUR !!ORDERS?

J~l

Q Cil Tic Tac Dough

OJ (l2J Family Feud

7 :30

French
Ci t y Painl1ng
resrdenttal &amp; com m er cial,
in terior , ex terior, paper
hanging ,
&amp;
textured
ceilings . Ca ll 367 7784 or

r-- -

1

Report

lV

WTIJOI.JE.Y TO BORN!

F~ A ~~ 10 TAl(£ IT

Call 446 ·2107

iJ.E;'LL~ ~L£

I'V~, ~Ai.JAI.JA,

Boats and

imaginable in horse equip-

air &amp; heat. 1 or 2 adults
only . Call 446-0338.

~~I W,I'Mf,Dila.IJ\IJ6A

CAPTA IN STEEMER Car

J IMS Water Service. Ca ll
Jim Lani er , 30-4·675 ·7397.

Registered and grayed horses, excellent 4-H project. 80 HP Mercury, exc , cond.,
· . English and western sad· skiing equipment. Call 367·
dies ·
everything 0394.

for Rent

CD

BORN LOSER

Phone 304-675-3794.

1979 Stare raft 15 II , tri haul.

Apartment

Mar c um
R oo fing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ex
perience, specializrng i n
bui II up root. Cal l 388·9857 .

5560 .

Boarding a ll breeds, c lean
For sa l e Gr ave ly tractor
indoor outdoor faciliti es . .wrth
mo we r , s ulki e,
Also AK C Reg . Dober · rototrtler ,
plow
&amp;
mans. Ca ll446· 7795.
culti va to r , Sl ,050. Call 446·

Avaco do
Spe e dqu ee n
washer, $100 Magtag 3 tep
dryer, good cond., $90,

Faces Red perform s many
of hrs class tcal routtnes
Gues t str~rnng Sht elds an d
Yarne ll.
ffi Carol Burnett and
Friends
(I) Entertainment Tonight

PAl NTI NG.
interior and,
exterior
plumbing
roofing, some remode l1n g .
20 yrs . exp Ca tl 388 9652 .

83

304-882·2254.

1981 mode l, new , $4100. 1982
1 a. 35, Ga llipo lis. Ph . 446·
3670. Weekdays 9 to 5, Sa t. 9
to 1

1182

BUILDING 8. remobeling ,

plante r, $450. Ca ll 256·6205 .

DR AGO NWYND
CAT ·
T ERY
KENNEL. AKC

derson . Phone 3{)4-675-6730.

Apartment ,

Deere

like new . $125 . 304-675 6133 .

One bedroom mobile home,
utilities furnished , air con·
dittoned, outskirts Hen·

44

9755 or 446·1642 ex t. 332 .

304·675 6605.

r:_arr!! EquiPf!l!."!

John

TWO tr ail ers on H ereford 1.:::::-:;;:;::::-::-=====-L~
-:
-:-:_:-:::::-:-:_:-:,:-:::-:-:._~

Lane, 304-576-2103.

20 ft . boat tra iler, 1975
Dodge Charger, P S. PB ,
A C. exce ll ent condition·388·

256·6534 .

Sears garage door, stee l.
9x7 w•th rn stru ct•ons, used
approximately 8 months,

5~

14,200. Call«6·0026 .

Le Mans, power steenn g,
power bra kes , automati c,
air conditioned, 350 engin e,

1 se t of John Deer e 4 bot·
tom 16' se m1 m ount pl ows,
!·Hill sbor o tri ·axle goose·
neck 28' trailer . Call 614·

$58.. firm , $68. and $78
Queen se ts, $195 . 4 dr .
ches ts, S.:t2 Bed frames,

1967 Mercedes. 200 D, ex.
co nd , rebuilt e n gi n e ,

1973

Butld1ng m a teri a l s b lock,
brick, sewer pipes, w1n·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grand e, 0 .

Used Furniture bookcase,
5 pc. dtnett set , 3 Li v mg
r oom sui te. Ranges and
TV's 3 miles out Bul av ill e
Rd . Open 9am t o 7pm , Mon.
t hru Fri., 9am to5pm , Sa t.

one a t

Ca ll 992-3562 after 6 p.m .

Wood table with 4 c hatrs,

baby matresses, S25 8. S35,
bed fram es S20, S25, a. S30 .

tra ilers,

304 675 1513 .

55

Park, 992·3324

2

JVC , Son y stereo system ,

S385. 7 pc.. $189 . and up .

Mobil e Homes
for R ent

THREE

For
Sa l e . 3
yr .
old
Registered Appaloosa hor·
se, greenb rok e, friendly .

~1-VHmsr--

2 bed r oom unfurn ished
house Phone 30.:t·675 41 91.

S650. Call 379·2469.

CARS AND TRU CKS, mos t

St , Middleport. 991·2805.

t extured cei lin gs co m ·
m erc ial and r esiden ti a L
free estimate s. Ca ll 25t.·

367 ·7160.
1974 Chev . PU , Reese Hit·
ch , new brak es, U· joint. ex·
ce llent m ec hani ca l cond .,

HARTS U¥d Cars, New
Haven West V irg1 n ia . Over
10 less expens tve cars in
st ock .

304 675 6233 .

ta 1n' s beds, $275 . compl ete.
Baby beds, $99 . Mattresses
or box springs, full or twin ,

1959 Rambler for parts,
575. Ca ll 245·9263 aft er .:t.

$4,500. 742·2423.

:::Farm supplies

$250. a nd up to $350. Ca p·

8546 .

1981 Chevy Citation . Ex·
ce ll ent cond ., low mile age.
Will consider 4 whee l driv e

F ormals , worn once. Ca ll

Hutches, $300. and $375.,
mapl e o r pt ne ftn1sh .
Bedroom su•te s
Bassett
Cherry , $795.
Bunk bed
complete wi t h mattresse s,

19 75 Chev rol et Impala , 4
door, automat ic , P S, PB ,
arr, 51,000 mtl es, very good
cond . One owner Call 446·

1979 Cava lcade Travel
trailer. 29 ft built in mi cr o ·
wave . .t burner stov e oven .
12 cu . ft . r efrig . freezer, 2
beds, 6 ft . bath r oom .

$38 and up to $ 109 . Hrde·a·
beds,$340 , queen SIZe, S380.
Rec li ners, S175. to S295.,
L am ps fr om $18 . to S65. 5
pc . d1 nettes from $79 , to

$219 up to $495. Desk $110

74 Couga r XR7, exc. cond .,
very sharp, $1,500 . 72 M a n·
tego, good runnrng motor,

62,000 mil es. 992·6322 .

For Sale· 15 sheets 4x8
Ce totex , Redwood 6 in
sid ing . E Idon Walburn , 3rd.

7842

LAYNE ' S FUR-NITURE

---

Ski e quipm e nt . 992-6040 .

Exce lsror 0 1l Co. 636 E
Main St . , Pomeroy , Ohr o .

R65 Otlch Wtl ch trencher
wi th dtesel engrne 614 694 ·

Hou se hold Goods

---- ·

- = A~u!_O! f~r_Sale

742·2423.

For Sa te : 16 ft . fiber g lass
Silverl1ne . 85 Evenrude .

4040
2 bd .room, unfurntshed,
Ltv tng room, kt t che n · 'i J
basement, nr ce a nd c lean .
Some carpeting No Inside
pets. Deposi t r equ rr ed . 992 ·

71

S300 . Ca ll446 ·9380.

992 2205

Merchandise

1ranspartatlan

Musical
Instruments

Lowery Organ 2 keyboar ·
ds, foot pedals, 7 rythm
tempos, casse tte recorde r ,

Wanted to Rent

Tobacco lease s for Mason
Cou nt y , onl y up to and tn
eludi ng 12, 500 1bs. w rit pay
12 cents per tb tor leases .
M . L Meadows, Rl . 1. Box

"

MAR LB ORO bass amp ,
good condit ion. $ 175 . Phone

$200

Home

STUCCO PLASTERING

Call 446· 11 55.

Sleeptng
room,
S l 25
utrllttes pd, single ma le .
Ca ll 446·4416 after 7PM .

81

'

byHermArnold andBob Lee

o rn m o ® ®J OJ G2l

News
(]) Andy Grillith
Cil ABC News
(]) 3 -2-1 , Contact
(jj) Over Easy
6 :30 0 11) (J) NBC News
I]) $50,000 Pyramid
Cil Gomer Pyle
Cil Muppet Show
Q Cil ®l CBS News
(]) Dr. Who
(jj) Lilias, Yoga a nd You
OJ (l2J ABC News
7 ' 00 0 Cil P.M . Mogazine
Cil Bull's Eye
GJ Red Skelton ' s Funny

Setwl£15=

~~~ .._

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one lener 10 each square. lo form
lour ordrnary words

'

EVENING

773·5187.

f

446·4537 .

Apartment no. 3, 2nd floor

41

I

\!:!}

I ..., . [J
._........

4/27/82
6:oo

ft\f\frut fi;}'\l W THAT SCRAMBLED WOR D GAME

~

VINEA

TUESDAY

1971 10 FT Sy cam or e truck
ca mper, ga s stove, ho t ·
wa t er heater, 2 way
refrigerator , shower &amp;
com m ode. e xcellent con ·
dition, $1.000. Phone 304

'

675 1972.

3 bdr de lux e home , e xc
neighborhood , pool, central

wv , 304-882 ·2636.

Phone 304 675·1181 or 675·
3226 .

p1c kup tru c k. Call 614 286·
5930 , Jackson , Oh . RON
EV ANS ENTERPRISE S
1975 Ca se 450, dozer ·
tractor , 1.800 hrs., very

IT'S

23 Ft. Dodge Motor Home

Merchandice
-Misc
- -. - - - - --·
Pl astic Septic Tanks . State ~
and count y approved. 1,000
gal. tank , price $340. Other 57
s1zes in stock. hau l in your

895 3450 .

$20,000. or best offer, 304·

675-2295 or 675-1304.

54

mobil e

Haven ,

Senti

Television
•
•
vieWing

SEEN T~E
PERFECT WEDDIN

1975 Ford mini home, low
mileage, good condition.
loaded. S9 ,500. Can be seen
at 167 Layne St.. New

AP

or 245 5364 .

2907

3 bdr . br rc k house, exc.
cond .. Energy eff icie nt,

Modern home, 2 bdr., 5 r .
by owner . Fu ll y ca rpeted ,
well insu lated, large lot,

$200 per m o. Call 245 ·9325

U S EO

446 7398 .

Furn ished efft c tency apa r t ·
ment , Point Pleasant. all
uttlit tes patd. Phone 304·

2 bdr house in Rto Grande ,

2 bdr . trai ler tur n rshed ,
adu lts only , Brown Tr a il er

$12,000. 5 acres at $15,000.

7080 or675 2990 .

Call388 ·9909

C IN G AVAIL ABLE , 304
576 2711

$35,000 Ca ll 614 446·416 7 or
256 1773

District
10%
int e r es t
assum ab le loan . Call 446·

Large hou se for rent , 4 bdr .

42

124 742 2860 a ft e r 4 p.m
6
house, bath, full
basem ent tn c 1ty ltmit s.
S22,000 Farm 6 r . hou se,
ba t h, utility room , r oot
ce ll ar. 25 112 a ., tr ac tor ,
farm equipment, large
barn, 900 lb toba cco base,

Moder n 2 bd room Town
House Apt
in Tupper s
Plai ns area . No pets Ca ll

PLIANCE S
washe r s,
dryer s,
r e f rige r a tor s,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Cres t Motet.

APARTM E NT S,

Hou ses for Rent

mobil e hom e se tt rng on lot,
ready to mov e rn to $8995
10° 0 down , BANK F I NAN

675 3773
31

41

992 73 13 a lte r 5
U SED MOBILE
576 271 1

Money to Loan

G OOD

homes ,
h o u s es,
Pt .
Pleasant and Ga l1i po lr s
61.:1 446 8221 or 614 245·9484.

35 PHON E 446 3861::1
Fo r sa le or r ent 12x60
bedroo m
Bu ddy m obd e
hom e Sc i up w 1fh 1 or .4
to l s, gas nea l , r ura l wat er ,
close to town . ftnan c. ng
.w adabl e Ph one 446 1294

L awn m r~ tnl e non ce. qu a l tt y
serv• ce. rea sonabl e r a tes
Ca ll 245 9?83

31 90 .

Apar tmen ts 675·5548.

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

Schoo l s ln struclton

446 3159 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ca mping
~~iP'!'~n!_

by larry Wright

Ga llipolis. New sofa beds
$250, used sofa beds SlOO.
recliners SBO. bunk beds
S!OO, bunkie mattresses
S40, maple r ocke r s S49,
maple dine tt set s from S125
to S175, bedroom suites
SI SO, 3 pc . li vi ng room
suites $ 199, 2 pc . li ving
r oom suites s 1dO, love sea t s
S70 , ow l lamps $25, ringer
washer s
$75,
dryers,
se v e r a l
r e frigerators ,
utility
cabinets ,
mechanic ' s tools, beds,
silver stone, TV ,s, wood ·
burners, stero' s and lots
more Open l Oam to 5pm,

1 bd room furnished in M1d
dleport Utiliti es paid . 992

304 485·528 5.

aqent J~

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

SWA IN
AUCT IO N FUR NITUR E 8.
PAWN S HOP 62 Olive St .,

7PM .

-.,;._.,.

HavP va cancy m my home
tor el der l y
Am bul a tor y
ma n or woman 7 years ex
ON •ence
66 7 3402
Tuo
per spla .ns,On

78

Apartment
tor Rent

Furnt shed apt . 3 bdr ., $200,
water pd ., c hildren ac ·
ceptab le . Call446 ·4416 after

fji&lt;€AC7 OR ANYTHIN(; 7

AY'
kx:JO ···

Need rt de to Ohto Unt ver
s.t y ( 8 :00 5·00 J M an Fr t ,
Fe m a l e
Ca 11 99 2 3390
Sat urd ays after 5 p m

1J

44

27 1982

More killer defense
By Oswald Jac ob y
arid Ala n Sonia~
"1RTII

+i

HPrP is a nother hand f r om
" More Kllllng Defense :tl
Bndge .' · You get off to I ii &lt;'
luck y ope mn g of th e thr er of

li

4 27 82

'1

• !.14 l
t K (J .I 1

+ .1- .,

hea rt s E ast 's quren falls to

WE ~ T

E \\ 1

South 's ate a nd Sou th r uns
off four spade tr ick s Y l)u
hav e to dtsc;.ard on th e fourt h

• y li:l
• t\ Ill H!
t ,\ H '•

• !II;J I

• v; ,

• yi h ~
+ (.J I ll \I

+H h ~

spade
Your f1rst th ought IS \IJ
stm pl y let a small dub 1=:11
Yo ur c l ubs look usl'IPS"
tn df'Pd
Hugh Kel sey has you look
further South nC'eds s1x 11 !"
sevrn po mt s 1n clubs for 111 :-t w o no-t r ump ope mng I f lw
hold s a s ma n y as th rC'l' &lt;ll:r

SOI"TII

+ oiK&lt;JJ

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Dr &lt;Jit-r Sou th

mo nd s hr ca n·be sur C' of low

spades. unl' h('a rt . tw o dl .t
mond s a nd tw o club" fl)! 111"
n1ne tn cks TIH:rd orP \"(Ill

m ust p l&lt;..t~· h1m fur JUS\ t\~ o
dta mond s 1f you want to tlt'.t t
t hC' thr et' no.'tru m p co nt r; wt
Nu w vuur J t ~ l · ar d 1 ~ • lt' .J I
Chu c k ir d1 amu nd U&lt;·clttrT r
wlil CJtta ck d1 a rnond s .111d
vo u mu st w1n thr "&lt;'&lt;"e nd 11111 '
and lea d J cl ub \' our p;u t
nc r ts sure to ~ l' t tn \~ tlh .t
elu h to lea d a hC'ar t \' our
thr ee h t.•&lt;.~ rt s v.·J!I hl'tlt tht•

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Wh y co uldn

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c huck e d a C" \ub and m adC' \h ('

sa nw

Brcausr South

p l;n •"'

I

rluh" .d \1

dt!!JH II"

~
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Sourp uss

DOWN
I Sports s h ut

5 German cit y

featurl'

t

10 Draw the II Land of

Hill

:1 Choler
4 Turhan 5 WheL'ilOrtl'
6 Soperlali Vl'
sui fiX
I Curtail
KSel1n
a scnes
!J Hegtst.rn• d

plenty
12 Nervou s
13 Twtst inward

II Mellow
15 Bullri ng
cheer
16 Kind of gra ss
17 Des •gnaled
19 " - Wars"

II Kadn e r
15 Ba clcn olo-

20 Actress

gt st' s wtrr

Miranda

21 Head I Fr. I
22 White
poplar

18 Italian c 1ty
19 Stance

·w Impel
·n CatlliH"II"

2:1 .\ (" trt "·-is.
Honn 11·
2,1 ],..'; td

. ~! ("ti!T I 'I

or Zllll . I' i.!

l

;1 '-'ITI)lt

2S l..ayl'r.
as of p;nn t

:!7 Mu ~ lt ·n1 l l tl t•

27 Th1 r d

:1MSl ola g

12 St ytmcd

:! 1 Hrttt.... h I ~ U il

HPwh \

f ':l pll\"1'

chromclr r

1;1bb r

1

25 Baslinadoed
26 Tissue
27 Sire's
pride
28 Arab
la nd

29 Spank
33 Man 's
nickname

34 Jet 35 Edge
36 Slllt of
oleic acid
38 Long (fori
39 Vocalist
40 Kiln
41 Evil
personified
42 Make
one's way

27

~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

lo

work

it :

AXYDL BAAXR
II

LONGFELLOW

One l ett er simply stands f or another. In thi s sa m pl e A· 1s
used for the three L's, X f or the two O's, &lt;' t r Smgl e l ett er s.
apostrophes, th e length and formation o r th e words arc all
hints. Each day the code lette rs arc diff e re nt.
CRYPTOQUOTES

zx

J DC

NZOQDCO
X I KG

U

ED

G

NZI I

KS YZK

K Y D (' 1,:

I D Y E
RGOQ

I K0

K f' K Y
,) ll ( '

Q

II Q K

G I D Y K

AJ I K

Yesterday's Cryptoquole:

GENIUS , THAT POWER WHI CH
IN
DISGUISE.- HENRY Wli.I.ARD AUSTI N

DAZZLES MORTAL EYES, IS OFT BUT P E RSE VE RANCE

�T~y, April 27, 198~

Candidate Saxbe will visit Gallipolis:.

'

ANNUAL BANQUET - Distributive Education
Clubs of America, Meigs Chapter, held its annual
banquet recently to honor employers. DECA members
and employers recognized were Bob Ashley, Powell's
Super Valu; Jim Royer and Dale Brickles, Kroger's;
Bill Cogar, Meigs Inn; John Cremeans, Village Pharmacy ; Vicky Debord, Dutton's Drug Store; Jay
Dewhurst, The Daily Sentinel; Gary Ginther, G &amp; J
Auto Parts; Trioa Hayman, Avon Products; Sherry

Holtz. Powell's Super-Valu; Brent Houdashelt,
Vaughan's Cardinal; David Iaooarelli, Marguerite
Shoes; Scott Johnson, Wendy's; Terry Wayland, Kentucky Fried Chicken. Pictured are 1-r, Jay Dewhurs~
DECA employe of The Daily Sentinel, Dave Harris, of
the advertising staff at The Daily Sentinel, who accepted the award on behalf of The Daily Sentinel, and
John Blaettoar of the advisory committee. AU employers were presented appreciation awards.

Services available

Area deaths
Leland S. Sayre
Leland S. Sayre, Healdsburg,
Callf., died March 22, at Healds·
burg. He was buried In Oak Mound
Cemetery, Healdsburg.
He was born at Letart Falls on
Nov. 28, 1890. son of the late Otis
and Hallle Weaver Sayre.
Mr.Sayre practiced law In
Healdsburg for 55 years. He was
preceded In death by his wife, Phyllis Sawtell and a son, Lee.
He Is survived by two grandchild·
ren, two nephews In California and
several relatives In Meigs County.

Gerald K. Grate
Gera ld Kenneth Gra te, 76,
Langsville. died Monday morning
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. GratewasbornJunel, J905ln

Middleport

The Bureau of Crippled Child·
reo's Services of Ohio Is available
to assist famllles with !lnanclal
needs If the farntly meets the
proper medical and !lnanc!al ellgt·
blllty requirements the Meigs
County Health Department has
announced.
The health department can assist
you with the proper referrals.
Children !rom birth to 21 years of
age wtth crippUng or non crippllng
conditions can qualify for the
program.
Last year 611 children of Meigs
County were aided through the a us·
plces of the Bureau of Crippled
Children's Services.

Salem Township to the late James
E . and Cora Gregory Grate. He
was also preceded In death by one
brother, Frank and one sister,
Vella McCumber. Mr. Grate was a
retired farmer.
He married his wife, Hazel
Gardner June 18, 1927 who survives . Other survivors Include one
daughter, Mary Birchfield, Middleport; two sons, Harley and Harold
Grate both of Langsville; four
grandchildren and five great
grandchildren; one brother, Hollis
Grate, Langsville.
Funeral services wt11 be held
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Hunter
Funeral Home In Rutland, with the
Rev. Lloyd Grimm officiating . BurIa l will be In Salem Center Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral homne Wednesday !rom 2
to 4 and 7 to 9.

the Ohio State University College of
Lllw, receiving his degree in 1975.
Saxbe was first elected to the 75th
Ohio House District, which includes
Champaign, Union and parts of
Logan and Clark Counties, in 1974.
He has won re-election easily in 1976,
1978, and 1980.
His legislative duties include

membership on the House Judiciary,
and Criminal Justice Committee;
where he serves as ranking
Republican member, and also on the
House Financial Institutions Commlttee, the House Civil and Com·
mercia! Law Committee, and the
Correctional Institutions fnspection
Committee.

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

ELBERFELD$
MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

QUALITY

LAWN-BOY MOWERS
•Solid State Power
•I ndependent wheel adjustments
• Powerfu I 2 cycle OMC ,
engine
•4 H.P . Rating
•Never rust Magnolite deck

Motorist cited

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

Mildred Evans, Gallipolis, was
cited for assured clear distance as
the result of an accident which OC·
curred on the Pomeroy·Mason
Bridge Monday.
Pomeroy Pollee report Dayton
Spencer, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, had
stopped at the traffic llght when his
vehicle was struck In the rear by a
car driven by Mrs. Evans. Damage
to the Spencer vehicle was moder·
ate and llght to the Evans car.

Special Purchase

Our Reg. 6.27

Mechanic Street
Warehouse
,.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

2.88 .

4.97:~

Men's Basketball Sneakers
Canvas shoos made to perform! Cushioned insole. professional -type sole White or novy.

Frenchtown Car Co. presents

* CALVACADE OF CARS *

...
Loving

~

wishes for

!Continued from page AI 1

creatllng quite a problem and are a
danger to children and senior citizens. He moved to authorlze the use
ol tranqulllz!ng bullets by the pollee
In shooting a nimals so tha t they can
later be picked up by the dog ca tcher.There was no second on his
motion . King also discussed a ditch
along Middleport Hill which Mayor
Hoffman said he will have an eng!·
neer look at In the near future. King
asked that an appeal for support be
made to the Meigs County Commissioners In regard to the river bank
erosion problem.
Mayor Hoffman said he feels
sure the commlssloners wUI support the community In Its bid for
help with the problem . King Inquired about railroad property be. lng abandoned In the community
and was told that the property must
be abandoned for one year before It
can be disposed of by the railroad
company. The official abandonment took place In December, 1981.

Rocky Saxbe, the unopposed
Republican preliminary candidate
for Ohio Attorney General, will be in
Gallipolis Friday, April 30 for an all
day session. He will be meeting with
community leaders and will attend a
fund-raising luncheon at the Elks
Hall at noon.
Saxbe was born in Urbana . Saxbe's family has long been prominent
in state and national politics. His
father, William B. Saxbe, was Ohio
Attorney General, United States
senator for Ohio, Attorney General
of the United States, and Amb;lssador to India.
After receiving his B.A. degree in
History from Southern Methodist
University in 1969, Rocky entered
the United States Marine Corps,
where he served as a Tactical Air
Observer and Naval Gunfire Spotter. He was an Infantry Platoon
Commander with the First Marine
Division in Vietnam .
He rece ived an honorable
discharge as a Captain and entered

Mom

Councilman Horky said complaints are still being received on
the dumping of trash on Broadway
St., and Mayor Holbnan w!ll check
tha t matter. He also reported that
Rep. Clair Ball, Athens, wUI visit
the community to look a t the levee
and ri ver area of the town. Councilman Gilmore asked that work proceed with the blacktop of the
basketball court at the park and
was assured by Mayor Hoffman
that work will be started soon.
Councilman Satterlleld spoke on
the need for repair of Railroad St.
Other routine matters were dis·
cussed by council to cone lude the
meeting.

'77 DODGE DIPLOMAT 2 DR.

'81 MERCURY COUGAR XR7
Sky Bl ue w1th white landau top, cruise, AM FM
st ereo and only 19.237 mit es Very nec'lt &amp; c l ean

Ola ck on black, 318 enpine, AM · FM radio, new
Prrm• um radi c11 S, w1r€' wheel covers, spec ia l accent

' tropes.

On Sunday, May 9. tell
Mom know how much
she means to you with
a Hallmark card.

lo:"~l: ;:n:::~::/~471

low .

$3m89s

i)&amp;,"t'!i"''h,....,

I~'&gt;PO!&gt; .AII ( I

VACUUM CLIANER

BAGS

'78 DODGE PICKUP 4X4

'73 PLYMOUTH SCAMP 2 DR.
Brtmboo cream with gold vinyl root. Sli!nf S1x,
power steerinq . Two words descr1b es the condition
of thf' car. CREAM PUFF . 4.4 ,507 tow, low miles
One Local Ownpr

Veterans Memorial

©

This Adventure 150 is an excellent pickup, inside
ilnd out . Custom toppe r, chrome foot rails, 318
enqtne, rtuto lrans. and 34,275 m•les. Locally
owned

44

.Sale
Price

1982 Hallmark Cards, Inc.

Admitted--Gladys Croy, Pomeroy; Clarence Longstreth, Middleport; Thomas Justice, Middleport;
Ottle McKinney, Racine; Asa Hosldns, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Mary Bissell, Eloise .
Ball.

Vacuum Cleaner Bags

DUTTON
DRUG CO.

Kmart- disposable bags for many
rnokes' and mqdels. 2 to 5 In pkg.
I

Crer~m

ex terior with Buckskin landau top ilnd

buckSkin int erior . Crui se controL AM 8 trftck
ster eo. lilt wheeL chrome plated Wheels .One locrtl
owner
WAS Sl99S
SALE

Our

· llg "ttoneycomb.;' Tumbler

'81 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
A1r cond., AM· FM stereo, specia l accented two
tone paint, Rat lye whee ls and much more.

'•

$7499

'81 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. ·
T~is family s iz ~d se~an is e'lltrfl Sht'lrp, only 14 .750
miles, V ·6 engme, a•r cond .. pnwf'f windows i!nd
AM FM radio .

H you own your own home, chances are you're·a

lot richer than you think. just look at how much your
home is worth today. The difference between its present
value and your mortgage balance is your equity.
And you can probably borrow against that equity from
City loan and Savings any time you need money.
How much can you borrow? It could be a substantial amount -$20,000, $50,000, $100,000 or more.
Hyou're house rich and money poor, City loan
and Savings has the money to help you even things out.
Because nobody knows you like we do.

125 E. Main St., PofTl!'roy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2171

t'IR; '••.

l

Finished in sterlinq si lver with ca rmine interior
i!nd mrttchinq landau top _ Equipped with cruise
con tr ol, AM F M stereo , rallye wheels and much,
mu ch mor£'

R,&amp;Q. _38¢ . ,''

&amp;J 1:\ CITY ~N &amp;. SAVINGS
\::1 ~ a Control Data Company

\

Middleport . Oh .

Only 8',675 mi les on this compact dark blue ex·
terior, 4 cylinder. power steer1ng, AM· FM
cassette . Doub le sharp.

Ar~tic ~hite ~ith dark blue landttu top· and Mitt·
ch_1ng vmv l tnm.- 302 V-8, ~ir c,ond. 39 a49 1
miles. New Premtum tires .
·
'
ow

.,

OVER 40 lATE MODEL CLEAN CARS TO CHOOSE FROM.
"Home ~f the Sliarpest. Used Cars in the Valley"

renchtown.Car Cll4r

~91 · 1640 Eastern~··· Gallipolis

44&amp;-0069

Bill Gene Johnson

.

TeriJ Hamilton -

"We .Appreclet,
Yourlullneal"

Altractlve•.tllshwashEir-sdfe
tu"2bler hOlds up to 16' ozs:.,

.-~v Light With

lulbs

I V40•WCltl fluorescent bulbs,

.,.,.,,n_hooks. reflector. Heavy

1.97~~~.2.77

Lantem Or Portable Lamp

Save On l·gallon Gas Can

Waterproof. floating lantem or Indoor I outdoor lamp hangs/ stands.

Handy can for car or work. Save.
o .ur 3.97, ?-gallon Gas Can, 3.27

�</text>
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